Knocks Obstinate Coughs in a Hurry A Simple Home-Mad* Remedy that Geta at the Cause. Thousands of people normally healthv ta every other respect, are annoyed with fc persistent bronchial cough rear after year, disturbing their sleep ind making life disagreeable. It's so needless—there's an old home-made remedy that will end such a cough easily and quickly. Get from anv druggist "2% ounces of Pinex" (50 cents worth), pour it into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar svrup. Begin taking It at once. Gradually but surely you •rill notice the phlegm thin out and then disappear altogether, thus ending a cough that vou never thought would end. It also promptly loosens a dry or tight cough, stops the troublesome throat tickle, sootnes the irritated membranes that line the throat and bronchial tubes, and relief comes almost immediately. A day's use will usually break up an or dinary throat or chest cold, and for bronchitis, croup, whooping cough and bronchial asthma there is nothing better. It tastes pleasant and keeps perfectly. , ~ , , . Pinex is a most valuable concentrated compound of genuine Norway pine ex tract, combined with guaiacol and is used by millions of people every year for throat and chest colds with splendid results. , To avoid disappointment, ask your druggist for ''2*4 ounces of Pinex" with full directions and don't accept anything else. A guarantee of absolute satisfac tion or money promptly refunded goej with this preparation. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. BEAUTYDOCTOR TELLS SECRET Detroit Beauty Doctor Gives Simple Kccipe to Darkon Gray Hair and Make It Soft and Glossy Miss Alice Whitney, a well-known beauty doctor of Detroit, Mich., re cently gave out the following state ment: "Anyone can prepare a simple mixture at home, at very little cost, that will darken gray hair, and make it soft and glossy. To a half pint of water add 1 oz. of bay rum, a small box of Barbo Compound and % oz. of glycerine. These ingredients can be bought at any drug store at very little cost. Apply to the hair twice a week umil the desired shade is ob tained. This will make a gray-haired person look twenty years younger. It is not sticky or greasy and does not rub off. CATARRHAL TROUBLES REALLY LOCAL Especially of the Xose and Tliroat Here is a new treatment that no mat ter how many things you may have tried or however stubborn your case, it does the work. You don't have to wait days and weeks to see if it will help you. You will feel the effects at once. Conditions of long standing are re lieved in a very short time. Simply go to your druggist and ask for a small sized package of Famous Forkola, and refuse all substitutes. Forkola quickly heals and soothes the swollen. Inflamed membranes, stops the discharge and opens up the clogged nose and air passages in a truly won derful way. Thousands of sufferers claim that Famuua Forkeia him cared their Catarrh forever. Your Druggist or H. C. Kennedy can supply you.—Advertisement. Sore Throat and Chest Colds Conquered Over Night With Mustarine Just Rub It On, It Will ,\ot Blister. There surely is nothing so good on earth as Mustarine. The minute you rub it on you'll know that the misery, pain and agony has started to go. It penetrates and will not blister. Don't worry about that Cold in the Chest, that hacking Cough or Sore Throat, for Mustarine applied to-night will make you feel line and dandy by morning. Thousands use it for pain of Neural gia. Lumbago, Neuritis and for swollen aching Rheumatic Joints. Use it for Chilblains and Frosted Feet. Druggists everywhere can supply you but be sure you get the original Mustarine in the yellow box—2s and 50 cents. Never sold in jars. Get it at Clark's Medicine Store. Mail orders filled. Begy Medicine Co.. Rochester, N. Y. To Relieve Catarrhal Deafness And Head Noises Persons suffering from catarrhal deafness and head noises will be glad to know that this distressing affliction can usually be successfully treated at home by an internal medicine that in many instances has effected complete relief after other treatments have fail ed. Sufferers who could scarcely hear have had their hearing restored to such an extent that the tick of a watch was plainly audible seven or eight inches away from either ear. Therefore if you know of someone who is troubled with head noises or catarrhal deafness cut out this formula and hand it to them and you may have been the means of saving some poor sufferer perhaps from total deafness. The prescription can be prepared at home and is made as follows: Secure from your druggist loz. Par min (Double Strength), about 75 cents worth. Take this home and add to It 'i pint of hot water and 4 oz. of granu. lated sugar; stir until dissolved. Take one tablespoonful four times a day Parmint is used in this way not only to reduce by tonic action the inflamma tion and swelling in the Eustachian Tubes, and thus to equalize the air pressure on the drum, but to correct any excess of secretions in the middle ear. and the results it gives are nearly always quick and effective, y Every person who has catarrh in any form should give this recipe a trial, I'M ON MADE THOMAS P. MORAN HEADQUARTERS FOR ] SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES ————— — Use Telegraph Want Ads TUESDAY EVENING, CAN RECLAIM MUCH BARREN LAND NOW State Tests Show That It Is! Feasible; Franklin Makes Good Showing Estimates that 5,000,000 acres of | barren land in Pennsylvania can be re- | claimed by reforesting on a systematic j basis were made to-day by the State Department of Agriculture after study j I of reports of the success attained with j reforesting tests. About 21,000,000 j trees have been set out on 13,000 acres i of land, including State lands where ! favorable and unfavorable conditions i were observed. The oldest reforesting tract, located j In Franklin county, and planted in i 1902 with white pine, shows 90 per) cent, of trees living. In other sections j from SO to 90 per cent, of trees set out i | are reported as living and flourishing, i I while one small tract reports every l I tree planted as growing. Most of the j | results are declared at the Capitol to I compare favorably with reports on ! German reforestation operations, i The reports for 1916 show that al | most 6,000,000 trees, practically all grown in State forestry nurseries, were : set out. and one tract took almost j 500,000 trees, which will be studied by i I foresters. This year's operations will ; be on as great a scale if labor and i funds are available when needed, it is < | stated at the Capitol. Lizard Barks Like Hound Dog; Can Be Heard a Mile j Galveston, Texas. Jan. 16.—A speci- 1 I men of the barking lizard was cap-! I tured near Mordina dam, 38 miles, I west of San Antonio, in Medina county, Texas. The lizards grow from 1 18 to 24 inches long. Their bark Is { I like that of an old hound dog, and j can be heard for a mile. They only i ! bark in the Springtime and in damp, j i rainy weather, commencing late in I j the evening and ceasing at daybreak. 1 j It is said that the barking lizards are I i only found in the section of the coun- j j try extending from Medina to Devil j river, which is about 20 miles. PLAN SOLDIERS' MEMORIAL Judges n Wllken-narre Set Aiide f 1 OO.IKH) For Monument Wilkes-Barre, Pa.. Jan. 16.—The Ave judges on the county bench yesterday voted SIOO,OOO of the county's money for a soldiers' and sailors' monument. Two succeisive grand juries had rec ommended that such a memorial be built for the soldiers and sailors of the Civil War. Each believed at least $150,- 000 should be spent for it. The judges decided that a suitable one could be erected for two-thirds of this sum. 1 G. A. R. members have been pleading for many months for such a memorial i and have beer engaged in bringing it to the attention of the grand juries. ! WOMAN, 103 YEARS OLD, DIES One Great-Great Grandchild Among the Survivors of Mrs. A. Zagurnki Hazletoi. Pa.. Jan. 16.—Mrs. Apolina I Zagurski, 103 years old, died here from general debility. Up to a few months ago she was in the best of health, and retained her faculties to the end. She ] was born February 9, 1813. in German j Poland, and came with her family to I America in 1870, settling at Highland, ! a mining town, and later removing to Hazleton. Mrs. is survived by five chil dren, thirty-three grandchildren, forty nine great-grandchildren, and one great-great-grandchild. PICKS IP $3,000 BRACELET Mna Receive* Reward For Finding Ornament In Street Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Jan. 16.—"While I walking to his home, Frank Blaum, of • Ashley, found a bracelet in the street. '< Believing It to be a cheap bit of jewelry 1 he gave it to his children as a play- i thing. j Several hours later he learned that ! Mrs. F. M. Kirby, wife of a wealthy man, had lost a bracelet valued at 83 - i 000. Blaum took the ornament from i lus children and went to the owner's! home. Mrs. Kirby identified it and paid I i the man a reward of SIOO. CONFERENCE AT XKWVILLE Mechanicsburg, p a ., Jan. 16. _On ' Thursday. January 25. the Cumber land \ alley Conference of the Worn-1 an s Home and Foreign Missionary! S y^°„ the r ,^ cst Pennsylvania S>nod of the Lutheran Church, will be held in St. Paul's Lutheran Church Newvilie, with morning and afternoon ; sessions. The morning program in-1 eludes: Devotional service: Gleanings: from Africa: Johoida's Chest: busi-I ness. Afternoon, subject, "An After- : jnoon in India;" devotional service:! ; Needs of Women; Missionary Elemen- ! jtary Schools; Aims and Results; De- i j fects and Needs; Work for the ! ! Suedras; addresses by the Rev Mr i I anti Mrs. J. Roy Strock, Guntur, fndia.' i MEASURES CONDEMNED New Bloomfleld, Pa.. Jan. 16 Ira M. Long, inspector of weights and ! measures of Perry county, repor's that I during the year he examined 1 267 ; weighing devices, of which 571 were i found to meet the requirements of the ' (law, .30 were adjusted and 466 or' almost 40 per cent., were condemned; ! 1.253 measures of the 1,820 inspected! ; were found to be entirely satisfactory, | i 230 were adjusted and 337. or almost ' 120 per cent., were condemned. Ten ! informations were made for short weight and a fine was imposed in each ! [instance. I DYING FROM STAB. TWO ARRESTED Reading. Pa.. Jan. !.—Charles B. ! Martin. 38 years old. la | n a dy | nK POn . dltion at the Homeopathic Hospital here with a stab wound near the heart and Dominlco Falasco and William 'Meo charged with being his assailants are ,in jail accused of attempted murder According to Martin, the stabbing fol lowed an altercation and an Instrument made from a file was used, WOULD HALT WATER CO. BALE Reading, Pa. f Jan, 16.—Councilman B Frank Ruty has applied to City Solici tor Dickinson for pteps to check the sale to the city for $82,000 of the Glen* side Water Company until 11,000 feet ' of frontage charges shall have been collected. . 1 WORKMAN I>OSI\.S ARM Waynesboro, Pa., Jan. 16. John Mills, a young married man, of Mer cersburg, employed in the Byron tan nery there, lost his right arm Satur day afternoon when it was caught in a dehairlng machine and ground to shreds. Later surgeons amputated it near the shoulder. BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. Onepackage ! nroves it. 25c at all druggists. , To-morrow, Wednesday, the Great Clean Sweep Sale Swings INTO ITS THIRD WEEK OF REMARKABLE VALUE GIVING —with never a let-up of interest never a let-up of effort the heavy selling. To-morrow's offerings i f any on our part to supply new quality merchandise at real sav- are considerably more worth while than those offered v , , . , . , , , . during the opening days of this sale, both from the stand ing. You have kept us buy-fresh reductions have been of quaUty and low price , Rea d the list of saving, and made on better quality lines to fill the vacancies caused by be prompt to take advantage. February Issue Delineator _ £ Women'. pAiTC rv Sole Agents For Ready For Distribution. Ifte Ueail OWCCD 0l & MiW lUAIj. DreSSeS BUTTERICK PATTERNS First Floor. Center. j | A 7 J, Klr . t Floor, Center. —„„ v—and Dress Skirts Provides More Special !i , er woh nd )t s or Sje ii Attractive Values For Wednesday £L !| cm*™ nd"scarf to $3.00, for ... plci/5 ii Don't delay if you want a wonderful special bargain in a Coat, 'j Sets; Worth SI.OO, Made in attractive new styles, of ! Dress or Skirt. Special additional reductions on many garments to- /£k I I for 3c/C I blife' o serge a " t Aßsorted anl 'i morrow - Be hand promptly. '■!; Assorted colors and color oombi- Kioor. J and Misses' up to $9.00 COATS for $5.00 ji - j \wworted nmterlnlw, color* nnl all Risen. wE Girls' Blue Serge and Corduroy I ; Women's and Misses' up to $11.50 COATS for $7.50 I ! m '"m A ™ l> * Ks . ,> _ vv ONI ' Y Dresses; Worth QC • m color,, ,,.r,c,Tnd Mens Natural Wool Under- o h ; rtS : Worth . 75C '... 49 C finished; made of tine tjrade HanriKome new atylea In all color*, matcrlulN and nIKCM. All sizes, but shirts onlv. Good blue serge and corduroy. 6 to 14- 1 winter wefirht seeo. d Floor. jj Women's and Misses' up to $ 1^4.50 CO ATS for $9.50 ||J® 1 '""r wJ 1 1 Attractive wide flare wtyle In all color* aud hlkch. Ladies^and'-chudren's* 1 Wool * | Women', and MiW up to $16.50 COATS for $11.5011111111 ji tlI . ( Heautlfful l'lu*h and tur trimmed Htylen anionic thcnc. All wizen. iyibuk ft-■' iI w iMm I: J Mittens; Worth 1 C? |! l! Undershirts- Worth OO 25c, for 15C !; Women's and Misses' up to $20.00 COATS for $13.50 |i to 50c, for 38C Assorted colors pjo 0 r' Zeß ' ]' Snappy, wtyllah model* In all color*, fahrlcw anil mlkcm. hT ![ Good, warm undershirts; in all ' , j! j Women's and Misses'up to $25.00 COATS for $14.75 l/l If '•> ***** WEDXE9MAY OMJY < i Stunning ntylew In ntunnlnic fabric*, color* and nil nlbcm. ! 1 One Lot of Women's Crepe de j! ]! \ Chine Georgette Crepe and |> Women's to $16.50 Plush Coats $10.95 Women's to $3.50 Skirts, $2.49 i! Women's" Flannelette^'Nieht Worth tc> npe 1 omen ' s *° $22.50 Plush Coats $18.50 Women's to $4.50 Skirts, $2.89 ij Gowns; Worth CQ $4.00 tpl # I/0 Women's to $30.00 Plush Coats $21.50 Women's to $5.95 Skirts. $3.89 • SIOO, for Di/C sorted colors and size ind ends; a 3-11 Women's S2O Extra Size Coats $14.50 I Women's to $8.95 Skirts, $4.89 1 Rood heavy flannelette. Assorted First Floor. ]| J! 8 Second Floor Bargain Basement Bargain Basement Bargain Basement A Sale of BED BLANKETS at Exceptionally Low Prices KtoSl P,eces Cotton Blankets QQ r Heavy Cotton BLANKETS Extra special worth Worth to $1.25 for .. Worth to *1 Q e Wor!?, 1 worth $1.39 Good weight and sUe gray only $2 50 for sl. 0 Worth SXjO yd. in a big assort- )5C pink and blue borders. / Large size colored borders. Made Soft silkv finish w"de Rood HH „aP.Ttlty Fine soft finish JA) Kood an<l heavv in , a wonderful sortment of pat- Splendid grade in a de- Woolnap Blankets (to iq BOd Rood quality. terns. monos. sirable width. xir r \ \V ———m^ ~ , " —> Worth to $2 75 ,or / Plaid Blankets m 49 Bed Sheets I Keel Spreads Wonderful good qualities. full \ Worth to $3.00 for Kxeellen, n „„,.,.e at three re- SiZe Snd heavy - COl ° red b ° rdCrS - -r Another value. woolnap S2SeoV'ex"?; C^o-Tu-?y e ".ltl! , r,cc " extraordinary big rl- gig Heavy Woolnap Blankets Plaid Blankets, soft and heavy; BED SHEETS S."Ve Crochet BED SPREADS (!(),., '.*■ 'r beautiful pattern, full size. oixyu orlxiiC<lo ftt <p $x.25 crochet BED SPREADS Worth to 90x90 BED SHEETS 89# *1.30 Crochet Bed Spread, ffij OK $3.50 for * TIT A ,ri/t"r D riDT?C $5.00 Fancy d* O QC PILLOW CASES excellent ... . BLANKET ROBES ... , (bO.i/t) Rraden, hemmed ready for u*e, full $-.00 Crochet Bed Spread. $1.49 Tan and gray Plaid Blankets, ex- splendid assortment of attrac- Woolen Blankets .. e, 12V4e and Ise each. f2.30 Crochet Bed Spread. j£| 70 tra large and heavy; pretty pat- t! Y e Patterns and color combin- . o . BOLSTER CASES; Extra l VI. " atlons 2.4 and K.B Full double bed size, attractive .pedal, full . . terns. plaid patterns, extra heavy quality. $2.50 Card Tables, $1.39 E * ,rn Special— F.xtra Speclnl FOOD CHOPPER 8 Rolls of Toilet Oil Mopg Tea Kettles ~ EITIU SPFCI \l with leatherette or felt top. white Pllaae 'vorth-i. 11 Paper; spodal Worth 75c Worth 82.95 Vo mahogany finish, good size. Crepe; Worth 15c I(u ' "®V 100. Special for 0 - Ncw Process LINOLEUM; yard l"*v a yd. J/OT tCOC 49$ JpI.J.J Worth to 65c; W ILL OW BASKETS 10 it a yd. oJin" an "o.ogTni Equipped with 50-ft. Clothes C ?fr °" gtufge °Llumin a uZ " >U 30c, 49c and Full 30 inches quality and 28 five knives, chops T . - 04 with polished largre size; rare Elegant patterns for bath- Mc * wide; inches wide. all kinds of food. -Line for fr'Hp handles. value. ' room or kitchen, 2 yds. wide. ls^S , ~=Take Your Pick Men! # I s 81.95 VESTS, S£yJ£\ '! Hm Of slo.ooand SI2.SOOVERCOATSfin |"K.- n sit jugi. .. To-morrow Wednesday for .... *r / KJJTJ) \ — The kind of Overcoats any store in town offers you at SIO.OO and ' | !| !' n .1 $12.50 now. Think of it! While everybody is talking higher prices we = /K*V—-Ji !' DOjS l/lOining upCCIdIS offer genuine all-wool SIO.OO and $12.50 good, warm, Winter Overcoats ///\ I !' at ' ....'. 99c Oxford Grays, in all this season's newest winter models. Belt Backs, /// !' J Lined and without lining. Broken^"lot.V several Conservatives and EngHsh Effects. Real SIO.OO and $12.50 values. All /ft \ J ;! f different shades. sizes. JMI y '! ■J Boys' $5.00 and SB.OO X./'/' I | | m.i.umkiu gg j j- r— ' Moves, Forgets Number, Sleeps in City Hall St. Louis, Mo.. Jan. lfl.—Mrs. George McGulre moved to East St, Louis from St, Louts a few days ago, She visited here to-day with her three year-old son, Theodore. When she re turned she was unable to find her home, forgetting the number and lo cation, She walked top hours and, finally, bewildered and exhausted, applied at the East St, Louis police headquar ters for aid. She was driven around in the patrol wagon for some time in an effort to locate where she lived, but the trip proved fruitless. She and her son were taken care of by the matron. Her husband works in a packing house. Mothers-in-Law Are Poor Home-Wreckers Chicago, Jan. 16.—Mothers-in-law as domestic trouble makers stand ac quitted. Only one per cent, of the cases brought into the court of do mestic relations this year were caused by interference pf mothers-in-law. Ninety-five per cent, of the 2;# 14 rasps worA dim to drink HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH TOBACCO CROPS BREAK RECORDS Kentucky Farmers Get Big Prices For 200,000,000- Pound Yield Louisville, Ky., Jan. 19. —Kentucky farmers who raise approximately one third of the tobacco produced in the United States, and about one-tenth of the crop produced in the world, are enjoying the unusual position of mar keting: for record-breaking prices a crop of almost record-breaking cUe. In addition to being one of the largest crops ever produced in this State, Kentucky's output this year is of unusual quality. Leaf, lugs and trash, as they are called in the term inology of the tobacco trade, are of the finest character. The leaf tobacco is long, clear leaf which comes from the middle of the plant; lugs are the heavy leaves, posibsly spotted by the soil which has been splashed on them by rain, which grow at the bottom, while trash is made up of small im mature leaf at the top of the plant. So good has the quality been that farmers are becoming accustomed to receiving proportionately higher nrices for the poorer grades than they !do for the best. These poorer grades I are essential to the production of cer tain brands of manufactured tobacco and the bidding for them has been keen. Even frosted tobacco, which in i former years sold for one or two cents a pound, and was used only for the making of un extract shipped abroad to be used in fortifying certain sorts of foreign tobaccos, are bringing prices farmers would have been glad i to obtain for trash of the first grade last year. Within recent years Kentucky farmers have received an average price for all quantities of white burley, the backbone of the tobacco crop in this State, of about $lO a hundred pounds. Sales on the various markets I this year have been at an average price of sl6 to $16.50 a hundred pounds. The crop of white burley this year will run well over 200,000.000 pounds. As a result of these conditions mill ions of pounds of tobacco are being rushed to market by the farmers of the State each week, and it is esti mated by tobacco men that farmers have now released a greater portion of their crop than has been out of their hands at this season for many years. About 200,000,000 pounds of to bacco are sold each year on the Louis ville "breaks" In hogsheads. This to bacco is sold on the basis of a sample drawn indiscriminately from the in terior of the hogshead. Much of the tobacco bought on the "loose leaf" floors is packed In hogsheads and re sold on the "breaks." In addition a large quantity of Kentucky tobacco goes to the market at Cincinnati. JANUARY 16, 1917. Thief Gets "Yob," J Returns Jewelry > Quincy, 111., Jan. 6.—When Mrs. O. H. Tharp, of this city, looked In her mall t box the other day she found a child's f necklace, a watch fob. a plain gold ring I and a note which read: ' "Dear Boss: My ole woman sick. I r swiped $11.95 and some more stuff from > yu the other nlte couse my kids was ' hungry and now I got a yob and I am I goln to pae yu back. I am goln to i send back some stuff now. Donn't have | me pinched pies." On the back of the note was "Wlsh- I lng yu a happy Xmai." Baby Flees Fire Via Clothesline i Chicago, Jan. 16.—An eight-months old baby girl, suspended from a third story window by a clothesline, was a ■ sight which startled firemen who re sponded to an alarm from the room ing house of Mrs. Mary Jones. | The baby's namo Is Lona Ida Liovelacc. Her parents, cut off on the third floor by smoke, fastened the line under the Infant's arms and low ered her. She was none the worse • for the experience. Six persons were 1 carried down on ladders. The Are , was extinguished PRESENTED WITH WATCH Carlisle, Pa.., Jan. 16. Follow ing a banquet tendered by friends at which he was presented with a watch. Robert C. Weeber, for seven year' secretary of the Carlisle Y. M. C A left here for New Brighton, Pa where he has been elected secretar> of the Chamber of Commerce there James G. Linn, of Carlisle, has chargt of the activities here for the present. ACT QUICKLY' ■ Delay 'Has liccn Dangerous in Har rlsburg Do the right thing at tho right time. Act quickly in time of danger. In Mme of kidney danger Doan'a Kidney Pills are most effective. Plenty of Harrlsburg evidence of their worth. Mrs. Geo. Greenour, 2001 Penn street, N., Harrlsburg, says: "About twe years ago I found It necessary to take a kidney medicine, and as 1 had heard so much about Doan's Kldne/ Pills, I got a box at J. Nelson Claifk'a Drug Store. 1 used them mainly for my back, which was weak and lame and made It miserable for me, es pecially when stooping. This one box of Doan's Kidney Pills cured the trouble and It has never returned." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't sim ply ask for a kidney remedy—get Dean's Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Greenour had. Fostcr-Mllburn Co.. Props., Buffalo. N. Y 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers