The Store That fTyTk TTk T I™* f\ \T n The Home of Makes Them K HNNfc h Y S All Advertise U ILi/ A KJ Prices| / Standard Medicines Saturday Sale of Saturday Saturday Saleof Rubber Goods oOc Lsoline Oil 27c JO ctC6 ;n m r~ , „ p r\ , , , • i -n u r j • j - n , r .. ... 28 x)c size Mary Garden Cold Cream ..... 38c NOTICE—Our rubber goods specials will be found in our new department, SI.OO Hood's Sarstfparilla S7c 'W Garden Knee Powder 73c 1* on the second floor. In charge of lady attendants. > Y'lntx'''' 28c -^ 2urca Powder .7777777 75c 50c s\le stuuiri'rcfiialf*27c I Saturday Sale j Saturday Sale of Bulb Syringes I SI.OO Pinktfam's'Veg." Compound 7.7.7. 62c Fl °rayme Face Powder 79c 25c size Satin Skin Cold Cream 15c FoUdtaili SyHngeS and AtOlllizerS p . Iludnuts Pace Powder 39c -resize Satin Skin Creaseless Cream ..15c ' b cinrt'-" 0 " 10 tZU C Hudnut's Rice Powder 17c -^ c s ' ze tream 39c 51.25 Fountain Svringe 83c 50c Atomizer 38c SI. OO .argol •••••••■ 55c Car „ len p p owd 77 '7 29c s ! ze Pompejan Massage Cream .... 25c $1 75 Founlain Syringe $1.35 <sc Atomizer 48c 00c Limestone Phosphate 19c , „. . .. _ , £s "* -Jc size I'ompeian Night Cream 15c OQ r- . . . : , Q , /.ic Atomizer 58c 35c Fletcher's Castoria 19c Bla „ ch ° Powder 32c 25c shte Hind's Cold Cream, tubes .... 17c f "f.",'.': •*£ Atomiser 78c SI 00 1 isterine 53c - a ice 1 owder 27c sOc size Hinds Honey and Almond $1..0 I.a . alle rountain S>rmge sl.lß §1.25 Atomizer 98c cV-; u miti Mil Cl7c Rogers & C.allett Rice Powder 21c Cream 31c $1.23 Cleveland Fountain Syringe 98c ' „,7" . * , U .....$2 75 Rogers & Ga „ ett Face Powder .... 39c Daggett & Ramsdell Cold sl.lß Fountain Syringe 98c . loc Melhnsl ood 50c j ess p acc Powder 1C Cream .. .. . . 15c $2.00 Goodyear Fountain Syringe .... $1.35 Blllb SvNngeS /.">cjads Kidney Salts 41c Woodbury's Face Powder is- ~- C IZ ° a,t " s Cold Cream 20c $1.73 Madewell hountain Syringe ... $1.23 25c Red Cross Kidnev Plasters 15c Tctlow's Swandown Face Pnu-Vw Or -o° s,ze C^ eme DeMeridor 14c $2.50 Goodyear Fountain Syringe ... $1.63 50c Bulb Syringe 38c 50c Sal-Hepatica 28c Sanitol Face Powder 7.. . l sc J s . ,zc De^ e " ( ! or 27c $1.50 Combination Fountain Syringe .. 98c 65c Bulb Syringe 48c Clm-les' Karn p mi ~Ur Slze Ingram s Milk Weed Cream ... 29c $2.00 Hub Combination $1.48 Bulb Svring ; 58c T,\' nnc ;.'";: Colgate's Charms l icePowrW s?° s, '°° sizc ln & ram ' s Milk Weed Cream, 67c 52.00 Combination $1.43 SI.OO Bulb Syringe 78c sl.oo Scott s Emulsion 75c J a Haronessc Powder szc Palmolive Cream 25c $2.25 Puritan Combination . $1.65 $1.25 Bulb Syringe 98c 25c At wood's Bitters 14c Lady Marv Face Powder io~ ? ! zc Knowltons Massage Cream .. 39c 51.75 A-Grade Combination $1.15 $2.00 Ladies' Rotary-spray Syringe ...$1.38 SI.OO Danderine 57c likava Face Powder -n° r!?. C *V tl)rc - is,crs ' Cold Cream .. 17c $1.50 Challenge Fountain Syringe $1.23 25c Vick's Vap-O-Rub 15c Manilla Poudre de Riz 7.77.777. 38c 'S'- V° lct Ccrat * 11° s2 ' s ° C ' ood - vear Combination ....... $1.68 25c Hill's Cascara Quinine 14c f Marquesc Powder ....777.7.7.77. IPc 50c IS 77777 777 "' 29c Saturday Sale SI.OO Oil of Korein Capsules 57c Urchld Powdcr 79c 50c Lady Betty Cream 7. 39c Saturday Sale Rubber NeCCSSitieS 25c Blaud's Iron Pills. 100 14c c roc Iad >' Mary Crcme 39c u A n 25c James' Headache Powders 13c ——- 25c Ideal Cucumber Cream 18c IfOt Water DOttlCS Rubber-lined Sanitary Aprons 21c ■ ci • r • . Cr% 4- • J_ __ O 1 _/ 50c Charles' Flesh Food 29c Rubber Soap Trays 38c '\* 7* S ,' V n - , oaturday wal6 OX Hub Hot Water Bottle 67c Rubber-lined Sponge Bags 21c Nuxated Iron tablets 59c , SatlirHav Qalo nf $1.25 Grade A Hot Water Bottle 65c Rubber Sheeting, single coated, the yd., 65c .ioc Glover's Mange Remedy 29c I OIIPT Ua j Ol $1.35 La Salle Hot Water Bottle 73c Hard Rubber File Pipes 39c I SI .00 Milk's Emulsion ....' 67c V W """ L WvlCO Dental CreaiTlS r :'"- v Hot Waler Bottlc .•••• 98c Rubber Hath Tub Mats $1.78 50c Ely's Cream Balm Pinaud Lilac W'-*pr i- i r-. w- $1.75 Goodyear Reliable Hot Water Rubber Complexion Brushes 19c H V " , 29c ' naud Lilac U atet 48c Kolvnos Dental Cream 14c Bottle $1.23 Rubber Bath Sprays* 69c ;: c lustcr °le 18c c e nth°roN X J?° gate's Dental Cream 20c 51.50 Royal Red Hot Water Dottle ...'9Bc Rubber Crutch Tips, the pair". 7.77.77. 10c 25c Gingerole • i7 c 27c Pebeco Dental Cream 27c $1.75 Puritan Hot Water Bottle $1.19 Rubber Garters 23c 52.00 Eckman's Alterative $1.20 7V \moni7rrl rTrnu IS ° alp^en T ° Dental Cream 15c SI.OO White Hot Water Bottle 58c Corrugated Rubber Mats / 38c I 15c Alpine Tea 6c $1 OO Ke klly Y>rrti;'c'r^ n ' c y °" S , ental , 15c $2.00 Goodyear Hospital Special $1.48 Perfume Atomizers 78c 35c Drake's Croup Remedy 18c si 00 Delatone ! P enlal - Cream 13c $1.75 Hudson Water Bottlc $1.35 Rubber Plant Sprinklers 78c 50c Lysol ....I 29c gl 00 Othine 'Vro'c\i\l' 'i 0 " 11 ,* PaStC 15c ?25 ° Hest Grade Goodyear $1.63 Rubber Air Pillows $1.78 M 50c Rheunia (for Rheumatism) 28c toe Doris ®49 zodon . t Paste 17c $1.75 Madewell Water Bottle $1.19 Rubber Bath Shoes 98c ■ 25c Jayne's Expectorant l sc ElKado DeSlatorv Ic! l ne V P fc 17c ? 2 -°° Wcarevcr Water Bottlc sl-35 Rubber Toys 23c B Utpdaton 27c Arnica looth Soap 15c $2.50 Standard Water Bottle $1.78 Large Rubber Toys 48c KENNEDY'S 321 Market Street 1 LESSON IN HONOR OF MIGHTY RAGE Jesus, With Scourge of Cords, I'tters Biting Words of Virile Man (By William T. Ellis.) Here is a lesson in honor of a righteous rage. We welcome it. j Prudence and expediency and self- i interest have so long dominated the i counsel of our safe and serene land j that there has been real danger that the nobler moral qualities would be atrophied. Business, which is al- j ways timid and craven and a compro- ; miser, hp.s so long been our chief in- j forest that it has threatened us with a worse form of paralysis than that about which the press said so much i last summer. Now, in the high time- ] lircss of Providence, there has been j apportioned to us this International ! Sunday School lesson which shows Jesus, with a scourge of cords in His hand, flaming with holy wrath, dis cretion cast to the winds, and utter ing the biting words of a man virile enough to show indignation. Gentle as she who nursed Thee at her breast (Yet what a lash of lightnings once Thy tongue To scourge the hypocrite and Phar isee!) — Nerve Thou mine arm. O meek. Ol mighty One! Champion of all who fail, I fly to! .Thee: 1 Chaste as the virginal lily on her stem, Yet in each hot, full pulse, each trop ic vein. More filled with feeling than the flow'r with sun; No anchorite, hale, sinewy, warm with love.— I come in youth's high tide of bliss to Thee. : —Frederic I-awrence Knowles. This sublime figure of the angry j Christ is needed to put spine and I KEEP LOOKING YOUNG It's Easy —lf You Know Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets The secret of keeping young is to feel young—to do this you must watch ! your liver and bowels—there's no need j of having a sallow complexion—dark rings under your eyes—pimples—a bil ious look in your face—dull eyes with no sparkle. Your doctor will tell you i ninety per cent of all sickness comes from inactive bowels and liver. Dr. Edwards, a well-known physician in Ohio, perfected a vegetable com pound mixed with olive oil to act on the liver and bowels, which he gave to his patients for years. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the sub stitute for calomel, are gentle in their action, yet always effective. They bring about that exuberance of spirit, that natural buoyancy which should be en joyed by everyone, by toning up the liver aud clearing the system of impurities. You will know Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets hy their olive color. 10c and ioc per box. All druggists. FRIDAY EVENING, i spirit into a land and day threatened with neryelessness. Only this morn- i ; ing a friend who has just ended a jslow, careful and painstaking quest 1 irom the Atlantic to the Pacific and ! back again, and from Mexico to the i Canadian border, gave it to me as ; his sober verdict that most of the people- in America are not greatly in terested in the war, or in the supreme i moral issues involved in it. Their' chief concerp is that the United Stales should be kept out of the war; ' | and the est. he added, is a bit re- j sentful that it has not shared in the! war profits which have been so richly < harvested by the east. Of deep pas sion over anything connected with' the war the slaying of the At - i menians. for instance this man! found none. In social and political and com-! mercial life we confess to finding a cynical indifference to moral consid- 1 erations. The political corruptiotiist | is a club-fellow and personal friend of the eminent churchman, and sure I of his vote. The notorious roue finds j few men refusing his hand. In many social circles it is no impediment to ! have had a checkered career of scan dal and divorce. The financial crook and the industrial oppressor lose' none of their luster as "leading citi- j zens." Politics of a disreputable kind '< may ensconce itself even in the high- ! est places of the church, but nobody : minds enough to attack it openlv W anted: The Man Willi a Scourge All of which implies that there is need to-day for a visit of the Spirit l ot the Christ with a whip of cords, i J,M Uth sll ou'J be taught the Christlikeness of righteous indigna-1 Hon. Nobody is following in the train' ot the Strong Son of God who is not aru ' ( l u ' c k to express abhorrence evil even concrete evil that! would menace His own welfare. God's ®, ause r ;alls for good haters, to whom ' •r 1 '"Justice and oppression are' °i ' , !!. '? f 8 " 1 of -i certain Xew I England ( hristian that when a notor- ' hi l , IS H a^° Stle °' free loV( " appeared at nis door one day he cried out, "Bo gone. ( I abhor you! I abhor you!" a .~ a -Y s , we would call that shock r forrn -" even as all the cor c"s 01 o'Jf lord's day stood antl reproving at His outburst of indignation, against the temple grafteis, when He drove them from the sacred courts. pmulilum a Panted criticism of Philadelphia s men of the old fami lies and select social circles was made 1 to the effect that they possess the most charming manners in America I and count for least in the life of their community. They have polish, but not punch. Their famous urban- L n! 10t . distu '" bed b >' the fact that Sr iti a . c,ty and 8,1110 notorious [. i ? shameless political corruption and debauchery. Something of the same sort ot malformation of the moral motors afflicts a multitude ot other persons, irrespective of geo- S L ap J lines - Breaches of form es ff of d God e ' l ir re deepl> ' tha " bre^h e talk about the gentleness of Jesus, and we pass over the fact that He was God s great Champion of< °. bat ' led for truth clear "it 1 fe IT of Calvarv - He was a per-' feet gentleman and showed bv His thiT da , rinK , anil<l the traffickers i the temple that He possessed the courage which is a 'first quail tv of every gentleman. In this spectacle of the blazing-! ejed Jesus, driving before Him the edsht?n 0U ! S h n ' erchants "ke frighten- . infiniiTP' ' s no warrant for the , infantile practice of "getting mad" over tritles that displease us. "Get ting mad and righteous indignation are very- distant relatives indeed a ( hristian and a gentleman is not ex-i it ~r his ten, Per": he keeps, for use on proper occasions. I An Kclto of Obcrammergau Seven years ago I saw the won-i derful Passion Play at Oberammer ! gau, and it was a spiritual experi ence. Xew light was shed upon the life of Christ for me by that drama ias enacted by those Bavarian peas ■ ants. Never before had I seen so clearly the relation between the driv ing out of the money-exchangers from the temple and the crucifixion. The "big business" of His day. whose enmity He incurred by that act, never let up on Jesus until it had | slain Him. All through the plav the i sinister plottings ot Pharisee, priest jand businessman, against the lie- I former who hail dared attack a vest ed interest, ran like a thread of black; 1 until at the end. the spectators saw the exultation of the conspirators lover the death of Jesus. One of the j directly causative factors in the arrest and c6nviction of our Lord was the relentless persecution of the men | with whose business He had inter fered. They thought it "legitimate." It I was one of the accretions of the years, i Usage sanctioned it. Custom and j convenience buttressed it. Worship ers in the temple wanted animals lor offerings, and they needed money changed; so why not provide for the | transaction in the temple court itself, i How easy it is to put man's conven ; ience above God's glory! For in the practice itself there is abundant warrant in heathendom. ; The most interesting fair in the city of Peking is in a temple. Japan's great temple at Osska has a verit able mart of secondhand wares in its i courtyard. 1 have bought trinkets in the yard of the Mosque of St. 'Sophia, Constantinople. Even in the | courtyard of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem the peddlers ply their trade. But Jehovah's house ; should be a house of prayer as the' ■ Scripture says. | If this episode in the early life of > Jesus, at His first passover is a les-1 [ son in righteous indignation and cou ; rage, it is also a lesson in funda mental reverence. God's house is holy. He cannot be worshiped bv those who do not bow down in spirit before Him as the One altogether and alone worthy of adoration. Wise parents and teachers who study this lesson will have considerable to say about behaviour in church and Sun day school. Irreverence is a basic de tect in the character of the youth of to-day; what Christ thinks about It is wiitten large in the story of the temple cleansing. „. H , mv to t'lean up the Church With respect to the church of His time Jesus was a member, but a re former. lie stood fast for the insti tution and fearlessly against all who corrupted and misused it. In His eves he abuse of the Church was more evils er *7 t tha Vi the exposure of its i evils. He would nut counsel the cov nart'nf ' mmorallty and crime on the part of member or minister, "for the er to Htm ,h W ° rk - ,', ! ' ur,ty was ( ' eal '- 1 DreHrm* .V I>r " Je; character more precious than reputation. Thn° ,"' llat of the church to-day' & s& srtwssftfLS, : blight ot ecclesiastical politics which ■prevents the real life and spirit of to a shrinking f"' findlnst expression; ! "J a Shrinking from many of the dav's ! church's U „ e ron." lC \ a,e wtt hln the fni f.„ Proper sphere; and to a wil and defeat's* °lt £ eaknes ? efl - defects ! church gathering franklv and''"tear*' lessly faces its tasks and Its own ade quacy thereto; for it is muciT easier and more comfortable to listen to I glowing addresses which interpret i facts in a fashion that ministers to I self-complacency. As In the days of Jesus, so now I the strength of the church lies in the i HAKRISBURG TELEGRAPH ■ great mass of obscure, loyal. God [ ! seeking people. There is nothing else t about a Billy Sunday campaign quite ■ so remarkable as its uncovering of the ' hosts of Heart-hungry Christians . eager to hear God's word and willing to do God's work, whatever the sac-! ; i rifice entailed. This is the four hun-' , dredth anniversary of the Reforma | tion. and it should (ill Christian ,! minds with thoughts of presentday .'reformation. Just as in the old i-hurches of Kurope masterpieces of painting or fresco have been discov ered beneath the overlay or white* . wash and grime, so beneath all pres- j . ent excrescenses of the church may ' be found all the beauty and preeious ness of holiness und reverence and , loyalty. The Cleanser and the Cross Because He embodied the best moral sense of the nation, and be cause He had courage, Jesus dared to drive out the temple merchants, with no other warrant than that He was right. Truth needs no creden tials outside of itself, Corruption is aJways cowardly. 1 once knew a crooked publisher and bogus reforrn er who left home when Billy Sunday I arrived, on the plea of illness, from which he recovered as soon as the evangelist hud left town: Nobody needs a special commission or official I equipment to become the champion of righteousness. Every true man is bound to stand against evil. ' Contemplating this drastic scene in the courtyard of the Jerusalem Tem i pie tables overturned, merchants scurrying to escape with their wares crowds thronging to see the excite ment we have thoughts of Christ as the cleanser of life. He has come! to cast out evil from society and from ' the individual heart. Once let Christ take possession of the hearts of the I majority of mankind and there would ' no longer be the intrusion of avarice "into holy places; rio longer traffic!;- ! | ing in sacred things: no longer a tem perance question; no longer a drug I evil; no longer an exploitation of the I poor; no longer a corruption of poli tics and debauchery of justice; no i longer unlovingness and suspicion and ear and hate. only He can effect this great salvation. The world will not be delivered by treaties or peace pacts: the righteousness which is the law of Christ's Kingdom alone can sa\e us. Life becomes clean only when it is cleansed by the power of UO(I. x Challenged by the beholders. Jesus ?rvn#i f, r ? nce to a s >snificant and cryptic sentence: "Destroy this tem p e, and in three days I will raise it up. He meant, as John savs the temple of His Body. Thus, at the be ginning of His ministry, we find that the cross was supreme in his thought. ward to ih HaViour ' f < looked for- M. COns , Un,mat ' on on Calvary. He kneu Himseit. as the Baptist had acclaimed Him "The Lamb of God" and destined to be slain. The sov ereignity ot sac-riHce was already manilesting Itself in Htin |,'v „ ! I this hour of spectacular triumph He was entering into His Passion e - nrsNii-^sM AN- UKA vkS" #25.000 t*iK Al>\ ANCINtJ EDUCATION' Lancaster. Pa.. Jan 25.—Tt.e will of' David .S. Johns, a retired business man provides for a fund of $23,000 i which is to be held in ti'ust for the ! I purpose of higher education in Upper! Lcacock township. EGG PRICE WHOPPING Waynesboro. Pa., Jan. 3.—The hot- ' I torn is dropping out of the egg market here. Eggs are coming down in price | every day and the price quoted at the . stores is 3 2 cents per dozen. New U. S. Submarine Is Taken For Deutschland Newport. J*. 1., Jan. 26. The re cently launched American submarine : <3-1, which hits been stationed l.ere, | quietly slipped her moorings yester ; day and for the first time showed her i new iines to marine observers on the west shore of Narragansett bay. The new type of submersible sub merged on an even keel after the fashion of German undersea vessels, and when the G-l came out of the mist that had l.ung heavily over the 1 bay and then took the German dive, shore watchers who had picked up ! the craft at a distance of four miles thought they had sighted the German merchant submarine, Deutschland, in bound for New London, Conn. Robs Folk Who Freed Him From Cold Cell Pottsville. Pa.. Jan. 26. Because kind-hearted citizens of Port Carbon last night considered the borough lockup too cold for the confinement of a man suspected of theft he was lei go. I He promptly entered the office of ithe Conrad Lumber Company, stole a dozen eggs and sold them to a saloon keeper for grog. He then burglarised several other places, including the home of Oliver Link, where he stole > ; jewelry, and sat down and ate a meal, j ending up with smoking a cigar. Leav- i i ——————— _____—— —— Says People Fail in Life Because of "Nerve Hunger" Says Hopes are Destroyed and Tells How and Why marvelous transformation that increases all bodily and Cadomene Tablets Restore, Rejuvenate and nerve energy, and redeems the patient to health, to Strengthen Nerves, Body and Brain. strength, to ambition and staying powers, beyond the imagination. This is a truth: It is the Bright, Active, Clear-Eyed, Strong-Nerved individual who becomes successful at RferiT work or play. Strong, well-nourished Nerves is the V—t? w ; ] secret of success, socially or financially. wj w Too many try to live regardless of Health, Strength, Jll Vc XdK Ambition, Energy and Hope. They exceed the Speed A fjt \ lIA 'Vilk^ Limit. They dissipate their nerve-strength and energy B W EOi Gkp' v and fail to re-imburse or store up a reserve. Thereafter ■ ( they only "exist." At the same time they are taunted f with the natural desire to live, to enjoy, to accomplish, 1 ) Without Energy, Ambition and Strong Nerves you 11 cannot Hope to enjoy the fullest measure of success in If your heart-nerves do not throb strong enough to give your senses keenest relish, to make ycur brain f., work acutely and your body respond to every dictate Jf* of your mind, then you become "dull,** listless, sluggish, hopeless, despondent, and you become less and less t nraia capable in every way. f/ mtmmmlK HHalHfli v_ CADOMENE TABLETS BRING STRENTH s® " y°l re a Tictim of oTerwork, worry disease exeasaea or dissipation of the mental and physical 'forces—if' you feel and balance to the body, nerves, blood and brain ° • * e , nk ' nyrvnua, trembling, and suffer with headache*, i Lt let^,r^ C ° r l gi r atCd a l d pr " Cribed b >- of 1 direful dTs physicians only, but in recent years have become so •" feneral Innblllty to net naturmiv at all times, if von hare well known that probably more than two million men l, ,he bl,,e *" "> pteasureß „t life are no longer enjoyable, and women use them to regain poise, strength and am- lir ";'V nil y° u up—to bition when the nerves have been overdone and under- reinforee and nourish the bodllv r mi.tu?e£ fed. Cadomene Tablets represent a perfect conibina- '* u are " 0 " , on H m o n , v -baek if-not-sotlfled-guarantee, and if j tion of vital elements—such as iron, phosphorus and rooneV' back* ple,Bed w,th resulU you et CTer y ot your vegetable extracts of tonic, alterative qualities as to | . „ , , „ . I produce when taken by "nerve-sick humaos" a really with full dfrMtioo'a " Cadoueue ia soiled tubes, JANUARY 26, 1917. mg, hie tfear butt and lii>" overshoes, he departed. State police are hunt ing for him. 002 ACRES IN BERKS COUNTY PURCHASED BY 1)L I'ONT CO. Reading. Pa.. Jan. 26. The du j Pont Company of Wilmington. Del., I has taken title to 902 Veres of land ! in Robeson township, this county, be j longing to the estate of Colonel L. H. ! Smith, proprietor of the old blu.st fur-' i n;tre at Joanna. The sale was made iby his widow, Mrs. E. Jennie G. ' Smitl., and the children, j At the same time, title to 1200 ' acres of woodland in Robeson town- \ ship, this county, and West Nantmeal land Warwick townships, Chester i PHYSICIANS TREATMENT FOR THROAT, CHEST AND LUNG TROUBLES You Just Itub it 011 Over Throat and Chest—Relieves by Inhalation and Absorption. Simply apply a small quantity of Famous Korkola over the throat, chest and back covering with a warm rlannel cloth. The body neat releases the in gredients that are Inhaled in the form ut vapors while the penetrating oils 1 and fats are quickly absorbed through 1 the pores, healing and soothing the I tired, aching throat and chest. All night I j count*', were sold by the same estate to Ij. T. Brandon, H. Ft. Karl, C. I>. Raker and Edwin J. Ott, of Pottsville for $20,000. The iron, copper and i more mineral rights are reserved fn the sales. N , 151 1.1, TO LICENSE WRITERS Hartford, Conn.. Jan. 26.—A bill Was introduced in the legislature pro viding for the examination and. licens ing of journalists by a commission of live to be appointed by the governor. Under the proposed measure a licensed writer on daily and weekly. , papers in the state would have to have |at least six months' experience. A | license would cost $lO and Would be subject to suspension. [ 1 long the good work goes on loosening 1 j the phlegm, soothing the iullamed j membranes and opening up the air pas i sages. Go tn your druggists and ask for a small jar or Famous Forkola anil begin I the treatment at once. Thousands have used the Korkola treatment instead of | nauseous internal dosing for Colds and Cataarh, Sore Throat. Bronchitis and even incipent X J neumonia. Your* druggist or H. C. Kennedy can I supply you.—Advertisement. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers