Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, January 27, 1917, Page 9, Image 9

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    OF INTEREST TO THE WOMEN
"THEIR MARRIED LIFE"
Copyright by International \t Service
"Mrs. Curtis, the boy is here for the
comfortables," Mary said, coming into
Helen's room early one Saturday af
ternoon. '"Are you ill, ma'am?" as she
spied Helen lying on the bed. "Don't
get up—l'll get them."
"There they are on the chair,
Mary." Helen said, lifting her head
front the pillow. "Just put some paper
around them and tell the boy that I
said he was to hurry them, time
I waited forever for them to be clean
ed."
Mary took the silk comfortables
and went aut into the hall where
the boy was waiting. Helen could
hear her issuing orders, and then
the door was closed and Mary came
back again.
"What is it, Mrs. Curtis, cafl't I
do something for you?"
"Why, I don't know what it is,
Mary. My head feels so heavy and
aches, and I am dizzy when I sit up."
"1 noticed that you didn't eat any
lunch," Mary said, sympathetically.
"But you must take something.
Does it feel like a cold coming on?"
Helen shook her head. "No, I don't
feel myself. I can hardly hear my-v
self talking to you, Mary. It's my
head; if the pounding in that would i
stop 1 think I'd be better."
Helen was too faint and sick to
talk much, and she simply* lay still
on the pillow while Mary tiptoed out.
All that Helen could think of rest.
If she could get to sleep for an hour
she might l'eel better. They had de
cided not to leave until 5. The drive
out didn't take more than an hour.
But her head began to get worse.
The throh was intolerable. Helen
was almost crazy when Mary came
back with a,box in her hand and some
water.
"Here. Mrs. Curtis; just take this j
and you'll feel better in a few min-1
utes."
Helen did not even ask Mary where
the pills caine from; she simply raised!
her head and obedientlv swallowed I
two with some water. Then she lay
back on the pillow, little lines of pain !
wrinkling her forehead.
Sometime later she fell into a doze. I
and was awakened almost rudely by j
Warren's shaking her violently.
"Going to sleep all day?" he quer-!
led.
Helen stared at him dazedlv, then !
slowly she remembered. Her head
lelt better, but she felt too languid!
to move.
"Warren, I'm sick," she managed to I
whisper.
"Where do you feel bad?"
BIG MONEY [
SAVING SALE I
of all Ladies', Men's
and Children's Cloth
ing at the big Stores
outside high rent,
high price district.
One-half and one
third former prices.
\
Have Your Bill Charged
If You Wish
J
Gafely & Fitzgerald I
Supply Co. I
THE LADIES! NEST
,\ OF THE P ,
ORDER OF OWLS
will be instituted at tlic
BOARD OF TRADE
NEXT TUESDAY EVENING, JANUARY 30TII
Ladles who wish to become Charter members and take Dart in the
organization proceedings should get their applications in at once Char
ter members save $.50 in entrance fee. Application blanks and' fuH in
formation can be obtained trom Deputy Organizer R. F. Webster 223
South Fourteenth street, Harrisburg. Bell Phone 2643-R. '
The Burning Question
fis completely anil satisfactorily answered by
OUR COAL
It solves every coal problem with ease, con
venience and true economy. (] What we say,
.we i notll—and what we mean, we say.
J. B. MONTGOMERY
THIRD AND CHESTNUT STS. .
Bell Phone 600 C. V. 4321
The Telegraph Bindery
Will Rebind.Your Bible Satisfactorily
SATURDAY EVENING,
I "My heart feels heavy. Mary gave
' me some pills for it and the pain is
j gone, but I feel so tired."
Warren snorted, almost impatient
| ly: "You haven't any will power. If
! you had gone out for a brisk walk
I after lunch instead of moping around
! the house all day, you wouldn't have
been so miserable."
"Hut I haven't had the time, dear,"
Helen tried to explain. "There have
been too many things to do. No
woman .can get ready to go away,
even over Sunday, without planning
things and ordering things."
"That's what all' you women say.
I've heard this talk about women's
work being as hard as man's, and it
makes me smile. You women have
a maid to do the work, and you
think that planning meals and over
seeing things mean hard work. It's
really funny."
Warren was disappointed and
afraid that Helen was going to spoil
the trip, or lie might have consid
ered before speaking in that way.
Helen's feeling varied. 'When he
began to speak a feeling of weak
ness almost overpowered her, but
now she felt indignant and angry.
"Warren, if you are going to do
any more shouting, will you please
go out in the hall or somewhere so I
can't hear you? I am going to try
to go Kith you if my staying home
will spoil it, but I tell you plainly
that I have seldom seen a man dis
play his selfishness so plainly. You
don't think about anybody but your
self, and i£ other people don't think
exactly the same you have no more
use for them. I
"I know I'm a fool, and that I go
right on thinking in your way and
doing as you want me to, but things
won't always be that way. Some
time you'll go too far and then I
shall really do something that I
have always wanted to do and that
I have recently had offered to me.
Now please go out before I say any
thing more."
And Helen, almost in tears propped
weakly back on the pillow. She was
conscious that she had almost told
Warren about the position Ned
Burns had offered her. Warren
without a word had left the room,
and Helen wondered dully what he
was thinking. To tell the truth,
Helen's wild words had startled him
more J than she knew, and he was
genuinely sorry that he had spoken
to her with so little feeling.
(Watch for the next instalment of
this interesting story.)
BECOMING FROCK
FOR LITTLE MISS
11 Simple Garment With Middy
| Effect Makes Practical Dress
For School Wear
By MAY MAN TON
9283 QVith Basting Line and Added
Seam Allowance) Girl's Plaited Drese,
6 to 12 years.
Yoke dresses are an£ to be becoming'
to the school girl. This one with its
plaited sides is exceptionally smart and
attractive. It is simple too and eas> to
make, with the plaited sections are sim
ple straight pieces that are held by
means of the belt. There is a middy
! closing and the neck can be finished with
a sailor collar or cub to form a square.
Here, the materials blue serge trimmed
with plaid serge. But this is a dress that
can be made from light weight broad
cloth or cashmere or can be made from
any one of the heavier washable ma
; tep'als—pique, gabardine or gingham, and
! each or all of these are liked tor the school
; girls' ijfcar. Colored linens are especially
pretty with trimming of white, the edges
! cf which are scalloped with a color.
For the 10 year size will be needed, SJ/4
! yards of material 27 inches wide, 4 yards
1 36 inches wide or 3 yards 44 inches Wide
with J 2 yard 36 inches wide for collar and
trimming.
The pattern No. 9283 is cut in sizes
from 6 to 12 years. It will be mailed to any
address by the Fashion Department of
this paper, on receipt of filteen cento.
MARRIED AT PHILADELPHIA
New Cumberland, Pa., Jan. 27. —
Announcement is made of the mar
riage of Miss Ruth D. Blessing and
Joseph A. Fisher which occurred in
Philadelphia Wednesday, January 17.
Mr. and Mrs. Fisher will reside in
New Market.
AID SOCIETY MEETING
Shiremanstown, Pa., Jan. 27.—The
monthly meeting of the Ladies' Aid
| Society of the United Brethren Church
' will be held at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Samuel Drawbaugh, in Green
street, Monday evening.
MOTHER OF NINE
CHILDREN
Able to do Housework by
taking Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
Springfield, Mass.-"After the birth
of my ninth baby I was in a weak, run
Jj i pains in mjr leftside,
Hk' I ten. My doctor ad
| vised to try I
JJHUi, atreneth so I can
now ao all my own
house work and
■ hope you may pub
my experience
with your Compound for the benefit of
other mothers." MADAME EUGENE
BEDARD, 659 Main Street, Springfield,
Mass.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound is so successful in overcoming
woman's ills because it contains the
tonic, strengthening properties of good
old fashioned roots and herbs, which act
on the female organism. Women from
all parts of the country are continually
testifying to its strengthening, curative
influence.
If you want special advice write
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confi
dential), Lynn, Mass. Your letter will
be opened, read, end answered by
women only.
"MY FRANCIS IS HEALTHY, THANKS
TO FATHER JOHN'S MEDICINE."
cine has saved mc in any
r( ' n c 1 t jyivc
cough but builds him
5? at ?" . fl cts as a tonic and laxative too.
Francis 14 a big- healthy boy (3 years old)
and it is Father John's Medicine that puts the
S? 111 cheeks." (Signed) Mrs. John
McDermott. 2334 Mountain Street, I'hiia., Pa.
Father John's Medicine docs not contain
alcohol or dangerous drugs.
HEADQUAHTERS FOR
SHIRTS
SIDES & SIDES
v
HAKRISBURG TELEGR APH
THE ENEMY
—BY—
Gr#)RGE RANDOLPH CHESTER & LILLIAN CHESTER
AutboM of "THE BALL OF FIRE." etc.
Copyright. 1915. Newspaper Rights,
Hearst International Library. International Feature Service.
(Continued)
Let her dry her . tears and
straighten her head, and fold her
j hands together calmly; for now she
must approach, another grave prob
i lem; herself. What of her love? It
! was given. She knew that, now, but
| the knowledge brought her no joy.
I There is this strange thing about the
j love of such simple natures as Tavy's
land Jean's; It can Be covered with
debris of every offending sort, but,
scrape amid the refuse, and it is al
ways there. It will survive abuse, it'
will survive anything. She despised
that love, in this black hour, with only
the company of tne cold stars and
the bending trees and the lonely
lights which shimmered in the lake.
She would have plucked it from her,
if she could, but she realized the fu
tility of'that even while she reasoned
with herself; and the knowledge was
a humiliation to lier, as if in herself
there was something of baseness, as
if she herself were doing something,
in loving Billy, which was a part of
this degradation he had suffered. It
was incredible that in her there was
! still a spark of fondness for this hud
dled object, the touch of which had
repulsed her, this creature which
breathed so heavily in its stupid
slumber. Yet she was clear-eyed
| enough, truthful enough, and un
smirched enough of soul to realize,
j and admit, that the spark was still
there. Very well, then, let her say
It. let her acknowledge it, to her
shame. She had given her lovb, and
it could not be recalled. Love, which
exists, not to be beaconed or dismissed
|at will. What next? Oh, Billy!
Billy!
j What next? That was a harder
problem thau any, a problem she
| should not have had to face. Why,
j she was only a little Tavy. That very
| night she had been a girl, in her
daipty little white chiffon frock, with
the light of merriment in her eyes,
with imps of mischief twinkling in
her glossy black curls. Now, sud
denly, she was old, With the burden
of womanhood heavy upon her soul.
She had joined the ranks of them
who have borne the weight of all the
world's woes since the world -began;
and that Tavy was not crushed by-the
intolerable weight is the reason the
world has lasted.
| What next?. Xot every love finds
| fruition. There are loves which are
! the better for stifling. There wan
; der through the world a eounrless
J army of silent women who have not
dared love where they would, and so
have paid the price of dwelling apart,
I but have completed. Happiness? Pos
j sibly not; but self-respect, yes. For
a long time she pondered that, while
. she passed between the swaying
I branches down the west drive and
up the east drive, and across bv the
ghostly fountain splashing away in
its great basin below, its pearl-like
drops leaping up to catch the light
of the stars, and dropping in glee,
after their confinement, to rush away
on a long, long journey they knew
not where. They were free, those
drops in the fountain, free to swirl
and eddy and glisten, and tumble over
rocks and splash up in foam and
spray. Free! .
Free? There is no such thing as
freedom. Those drops in the foun
tain were forced through a dark pipe,
and their channels were made for
them; and so are the channels made
for human life. Even let her decide
to send Billy away forever, and
cramping her love for him so that
it should allow other things to grow
in her heart, her future course was
forced upon her. Where was happi
|ness? >Vhere was it kept hidden?
There had been happiness in her past
though she had scarcely noticed it at
! the time, but searching through everv
nook and cranny of her future, she
j could net find it again. She could
not be happy if she married Billy,
i She could not be liapppy if she did
. '\ ot -, , u Ver y well. then. let her sav
I that there was no happiness for her
, except in the joy which she might
bring into the lives of others, except
as she carried her sorrow in cheerful
ness. and with a smile of patience
on her lips and in her eyes; the smile
of Jean. How well she understood it
npw v l eg, she would sny it calmly
and with cheerful patience, here
under the far-off, blue, star-studded I
vault of the sky; there was no hap- '
piness for her. What next?
.i .? avy . saw 11le Kray shadow of
that next moving before her, she
smiled the smile which is never seen!
• ut at the summit of pyre Duty
And so she came, at last, to the a'l- !
lotted pleasure of all the women of i
Jean Stuart's strain. From mother I
to daughter, through a long race, had I
descended that one great privilege of
self-sacrifice; only Tavy had found It
young, so young that she had not yet
, h6r ut ?V ? nly her girlhood.
She was thankful, now. for the gor
geous party at the Bennings', even
though it had resulted in this disaster
;'. or >?"£? Kl ' e , had seen the glitter of |
the lights, had heard the languor of ■
the music, had tasted the joy of'
youthful happiness, before she grew
old, and had set upon her raven curls I
the unburnlshed and unglitterine i
crown of duty. Very well, then )eU
?n^f r i ' Happiness was but!
a selfish pleasure, after all.
Where did her duty lie - ' Vol tr.
herself. To her mother; the mother
who had suffered so many years in'
sweet patience, who had worn her
crown of duty until its lusterless
giay had spread into her hair'' Yes'
much of her duty was there' Ami
to her father; the father who had
come back from the dead. They
would ha\e each other, the father
and mother, and they would be so
busy in scraping together the crumbs
of happiness which were still left to
them, that not much self-sacrifice
would be required of Jean. Where
else lay her duty? To Billy lif
moaned in his torpid slumber. His
head hung far forward so that h s
col ar impeded his breathing, but his
body was so numb that It only knew
fortoble; so It moaned!
She lifted his head and rested it back
against the cusliloln. It lopped fhere
a moment, and settled in a corner ■
What was her duty to Billy? Three
imes she passed the fountain, still
leaping at the stars, and splashing
,with weird softness into the great
basin. Three times she passed the
gray stone panther on the bank, and
the overhanging rocks at the head of
the park, and the gaunt, dark hotels
at its lower end, and still she was re
volving over and over in her mind.
't were some monotonous
Sphynx-like enigma which had no
answer; what was her duty to Billy?!
l(h-? aW !l!' t ii ° V u!' . the cartb * ,lere fame l
that thill which is the shudder of'
the universe at awakening. Out of !
the east stole long gray fingers of!
light, and the stars paled, as if their
eyes were dim and sleepy from their
long vigil of tho night; the fountain!
splashed in its pool with a metallic
ring, as if now it must wake to work,
and hammer out the hard prosaic
fancies of the day rather than the soft
poetry of the night; and the lump
which huddled in the corner of the
cushion#, stirred, and suddenly sat
bolt upright, and was Billy!
There was a cold sensation on one
side of his face. It had been pillow
ed upon something warm; Tavy's
shoulder. She was just removing her
cramped arm from about him. Oh,
yes! They were coming home from
the Bennings'. Great party! How
late was it? All this while he was
blinking his eyes and readjusting him
self to life. But Tavy's face! How
drawn it was, how pale, how hollow
her eyes!
"Tavy!" With a sudden flood of
memory, he realized what he had
done: and hideous contrition grip
ped him.
"Yes, Billy." The dead voice, but
still with infinite sweetness In it, the
sweetness of them who have been
through the fires, and have been puri
fied thereby of all their dross.
"Tavy: Tavy!", There was some
thing pame in his throat which chok
ed his utterance, but he talked above
it. He humbled himself In deep ab
jectness; he poured forth all his re
-1 gret, all his grief, all his compassion
that he had thrust again this shame
upon her; but his emotion stirred
nothing In her, though she put her
hand in his and smiled forgivingly
upon him. Then he realized that the
end of the road had come, that he
must take back his ring, that he must
keep his word, that he must not
plead Yor reinstatement, but must go
j away, so that she might forget him,
j and the pain he had brought her.
"No, Billy.'*. Her voice was low and
I calm. She had fought out the answer
!to her enigma, while the dark sky
i paled to the dawn and the stars
dimmed. "I am going to marry y6u.
j 1 have work to do in the world, some
i reason for being here; and that is it.
You need me."
This again overwhelmed him. He
could not believe that she knew what
she proposed. He could not permit
her to make the sacrifice. He could
not promise, even to himself that he
was safe!
"You don't understand, Billy," she
quietly told him, and there was that
in her strength, in her immense
superiority over him, in the towering
of her soul into heights where he
could not follow, which awed him in
to silence. "I did not mean that you
need me to keep you from this; but
that you need me when you have
done this." She was thoughtful for
a moment, gathering up the threads
Jof her still unfinished reverie. "We
must drive around the Park again.
[ I have not yet decided whether to see
j mother before or after we are mar-
I ried."
CHAPTER XXIX
Ham and Eggs!
Xo one heard the click of the ele
vator, no one heard the hesitant foot
steps in the hall; for the long-sep
arated husband and wife now sat in
the window, near the dawn, all their
story told; and they wer.e hand in
hand. The low-lying gray cloud had
repented of its dullness at the sight
of the ecstasy in their faces, and had
snatched from the eastern sky a per
fectriot of carmine glory;
At the ring of the bell, however,
'hey hurried to the door, and there,
at last, was Tavy, her poor little white
chiffon frock damp and wilted; and
in her face was the grayness of the
dawn, in her eyes the deadness of the
morning stars.
"Daddy!" cried the weary voice, and
she sprang into his arms; then, after
an embrace of but a second, she turn
ed to her mother and drew her to
them, and hound them together in
her hungry clasp, and wept.
"Where is Billy?" asked her father,
as soon as she was calm; and he step
ped out into the hall. Xo Billy was
there!
"He went home," explained Tavy,
dropping listlessly into a chair. "I
would not let him come up with me."
"Where have you been all night?"
Jean. Only tenderness in that ques
tion, tenderness and love.
"In the Park, driving." A little
hesitation. "Billy was drunk. I
kept him out until he woke up, sober.
I meant to marry him to-day; but he
refused."
"Thank God!" Her father's tone
was like one in grateful prayer. He
came to her, Jean's hand in his. "We
must send for Billy," and, with in
finite compassion, they sat beside her
on the window seat.
"I do not want him." Still the dead j
voice. "I offered him liij life." Then'
she poured out the whole story of her
drive in the Park, of the steps bv
which she had arrived at her decision
of self-sacrifice; and Mrs. Stuart's
heart sank as she looked at her daugli- |
ter, for where her little girl had sat,
only the evening before, there was |
now a woman, the director of her own
destiny, the arbiter of her own fate,
and the bearer, God help her, of her
own burdens! t
"You will love Billy more for this
her father gently told her. "Xo good
man would accept a gift of which he
was so unworthy. And Billy is good."
He told them the goodness of Billy,
of all that he had done for Harrison
Stuart, and as he recounted the tale
of sympathy and kindliness and
whole-hearted helpfulness, Tavy's
head came up and some of the dull
ness left her eyes.
(To be continued)
BREAKS A COLD
IN A FEW HOURS
First dose of "Pape's Cold Com
pound" relieves all
grippe misery.
Don't stay stuffed-up!
Quit blowing and snuffling! A dose
of "Pape's Cold Compound" taken
every two hours until three doses are
taken will end grippe misery anjj
break up a severe cold either in the
head, chest, body or limbs.
It promptly opens clogged-up nos
trils and air passages; stops nasty
discharge or nose running; relieves
sick headache, dullness, feverish
ncss, sore throat, sneezing, soreness
and stiffness.
"Pape's Cold Compound" is the
quickest, surest relief known and
costs only 25 cents at drug stores.
It acts without assistance, tastes nice,
and causes no inconvenience. Don't
accept a substitute.
JANUARY 27, 1917.
Burns Convicted of
Publishing Lawyer's Papers
New York, Jan. 27. William J.
Burns, head of a private detective
agency, was found gulity here yester
day of surreptitiously entering the
law offices of Seymour & Seymour,
making copies of private papers and
then publishing them. Burns was em
ployed by J. P. Morgan & Co. to trace
a "leak" of information about con
tracts for war supplies for the en
tente allies from the Morgan offices.
To obtain the information sought
Burns gained access to the Seymours'
offices.
Marked Cards Change
Poker Game to Fight
Washington, Pa., Jan. 27. When
a "marked" deck was found in a
poker game at Shire Oaks, near .Mo
nongahela, a riot resulted. State
Troopers, railroad detectives and Mo
nongahela constables were rushed to
the scene In an engine that was com
mandeered fo rthe purpose.
Fifteen arrests were made. Ten
i persons who were in the gambling
place were taken to the Memorial hos
pital, Monongahela, to have their In
juries attended.
HOPE COMPANY BANQUET
The one hundred and third anni
versary of the founding of the Hope
Fire Company was marked with a
large banquet In Maennerchor Hall,
North street, last night. Refresh
ments were served on the buffet lunch
plan. The Hope quartet consisting of
Edward Halbert, George Shoemaker.
William Windson, 3rd, and Porter
Hammond gave several selections.
Members of the company who re
cently returned from tlio border were
guests of honor.- They were: Cor
poral George Shoemaker, Robert
Gowan, Charles McClure and Ilarry
Solomon.
SOPHS WIN DEBATE
The opening debate of the inter
class series at Central High School
yesterday afternoon was won by the
Sophomore class. The Freshmen op
posed the winaers. The question of
discussion was: "Resolved, That State
wide Prohibition Is a Better solution!
of the Liquor Problem in PennsyM
vania than County Local Option."
The Sophs had the negative side of the
question.
The winning team was composed of
Stuart Wagner, Miss Rita Buxbaum,
Miss Grace Peake and Ross Hoffman,
alternate. The Freshman debaters
were William Wright, Miss Mary Rod
ney and Miss Sylvia Gingrich with
Richard Molsopple as alternate. The
next debate will be held next Friday
afternoon.
i
BOY 19. SHOOTS FATHER
STRIKING AT HIS MOTHER
Johnstown, Pa., Jan. 27. When
Lloyd Kesslar, 45, returned home
about midnight last night and started
a row with his son and his wife, Elmer
Kesslar, 19, In bed upstairs, became
alarmed, grabbed a revolver and has
tened downstairs in time to see his
fatlifer strike at the mother.
Without hesitation, the young man
fired twice and his father fell to the
floor, seriously wounded. One bullet
penetrated the left arm. The other
cut off the little linger of the left
hand, Kesslar is in Memorial hospital.
The son is under arrest.
ACTRESS HURT IN SURF.
RESORT MUST PAY $:5,500
Trenton, N. J., Jan. 27. -- Having
seen with their own eyes what a float
ing log did to one of the young wo
men's legs while she was bathing in
the surf at Deal, jurors in the United
States court here yesterday awarded
Miss Beatrice Forsythe, an actress,
|3,500 in her suit against the borough.
Miss Forsythe claimed that the log
hit her right leg, fracturing it and
resulting in the limb now being bowed
and an inch shorter than the left
member. Evidently thinking Jersey
jurymen were "from Missouri," the
actress raised her skirts to her knees
in the courtroom, and the verdict fol
lowed quite as a matter of "form."
TIZ-AJOY TO
SORE, TIRED FEET
I Use "Tiz" for aching, burning,
puffed-up feet and corns
or callouses.
Good-bye, sore feet, burning feet,
swollen feet, tender feet, tired feet.
Good-bye, corns, callouses, bunions
and raw spots. No more shoe tight- |
ness, no more limping with pain or I
drawing up your face in agony. I
"Tiz" is magical, acts right off. "Tiz" j
I draws out all the poisonous exuda- j
j lions which puff up the feet. Use j
J "Tiz" and wear smaller shoes. Use :
j "Tiz" and forgot your foot misery. \
All!, how comfortable your feet feel.
Get a 25-cent box of "Tiz" now at
J any druggist or department store.
Don't suffer. Have good feet, glad j
! feet, feet that never swell, never hurt,
I never got tired. A year's foot com
' fort guaranteed or money refunded.
IF HOT OR
KIDNEYS BOTHER
Eat less meat also take glass of
Salts before eating
breakfast.
1 Uric acid In meat excites the kid
neys, they become overworked: get
sluggish, ache, and feel like lumps
of lead. The urine becomes cloudy;
the bladder i* irritated, and you may
be obliged to seek relief two or three
times during the night. When the
kidneys clog you must help them
flush off the body's urinous waste or
you'll be a real sick person shortly.
At first you feel a dull misery in the
kidney region, you sufTer from back
ache, sick headache, dizziness, stomach
gets sour, tongue coated and you feel
rheumatic twinges when the weather
is bad.
Eat less meat, drink lots of water;
also get from any pharmacist four
ounces of Jad Salts; take a table
spoonful in a glass of water before
breakfast for a few days and your ,
kidneys will then-.act fine. This fam
ous salts is made from the acid of
grapes and lemon jui(;e, combined
with llthia, and has been used for
generations to clean clogged kidneys
and stimulate them to normal activ
ity, also to neutralize the acids In
urine, so it no longer Is a source of
Irritation, thus ending bladder weak
ness.
Jad Salts is inexpensive, cannot in
jure; makes a delightful effervescent
lithia-water drink which everyone
should take now and then to keep
the kidneys clean and active. Drug
gists here say tlrey sell lots of Jad
Salts to folks who believe in over
coming kidney trouble while it is only
i trouble. _ _ t
*1 .
DOES RHEUMATISM
BOTHER YOB?
Many Doctors Use Musterole
So many sufferers have found relief
in Musterole that you ought to buy a
small jar and try it.
Just spread it on with the fingers. Rub
it in. First you feel a gentle glow, then
a delicious, cooling comfort Musterole
routs the twinges, loosens tip stiffened
joints and muscles.
Musterole is a clean, white ointment,
made with oil of mustard It penetrates
to the seat of pain and drives it away,
but does not blister the tenderest skin.
It takes the place of the mussy, old
fashioned mustard plaster.
Musterole is recommended for bron
chitis, croup, asthma, pleurisy, lumbago,
neuralgia, sprains, bruises, stiff neck,
headache and colds of the chest (it often
prevents pneumonia).
Medicated Smoke
Drives Out Catarrh
Try This Pleasant Herb Smoke.
Sent Free By Mail.
Dr. Blosser who has devoted forty
years to the treatment of Catarrh, la
the originator of a certain combi
nation of medical herbs, flowers and
.aT-f-j berries to be
smoked in a pipe
8r —A or ready prepared
O r—ltk CN. c, g are tte. The
RPA *3 \am ok e - vapor
V\l S/)a lt \ reaches all the air
A* I/AStv Passages of the
l ,Cr-r head, nose and
.V throat. As tlx
OTw 1 disease is carried
i j£v) ,nto these pae
/ sages with the nlr
tilMKßir sfS you breathe, so
the antiseptic,
healing vapor of
this Remedy Is carried with the breath
directly to the affected parts.
This simple, practical method applies
the medicine where sprays, douches,
ointments, etc., cannot possibly go. Its
effect is soothing and healing, and is
entirely harmless, containing no tobac\
co or habit forming drugs, it is pleas-'
ant to use, and not *ickening to those
who have never smoked. No matter
how severe or long standirg your cass
may be, we want to show you what
our Remedy will do.
To prove the beneficial, plpasant ef
fect, The Blosser Company, 650 Walton
St., Atlanta. Ca., will mail absolutely
free to any sufferer, a saniplo that will
verify their claims by actual test. This
free package contains a pipe, some o'
the Remedy for smoking and also
some of our
medical cigar
ettes. If you jftrWJk j
wish to con- _ _ *
tinue the treat- S
ment, it will ! 1 VLx. 'jT
cost only one ) ia**" l/L
dollar for a V
month's supply ? /L >
for the pipe, or ilWj
a box containing tSIO
one hundred r 4t/' PR /HI
cigarettes. We *.l^^
pay postage.
If you are a sufferer from Catarrh,
Asthma. Catarrhal Deafness, or if sub
ject to frequent colds, send your name
and address at once by postal card oi
letter for the free package, and a copy
of our illustrated booklet.
wmmßSmßmm.
Big Bargains in
Used Cars
Make it possible for
every man in Harris
burg- to have
A Good
for very little money,
a small payment down
and the balance
monthly.
The Overland-Harrisburg Cc.
212 XORTII SECOND ST.
BOTH PHONES
Advise
About
Lumber
To obtain the max
imum service from
wood it is necessary
to know something of •
the individual quali
ties of the many vari
ties.
We have made a
careful study of the
lumber business. Tell
us what you intend to
build. We will advise
you the kind of lum
ber to use that will
give you the best re
sults.
United Ice & Coal Co.
Forster & Cowden St.
f GEORGE H. SOURBIE9) I
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
laio North Third Strait
Dell Pbone. Auto Service. I
9