12 OF INTEREST TO We Make Ou i By Beatrice Fairfax • T am a trained nurse," writes C. S. J. a great many people look down En me. Why is there a prejudice like his?- Trained nursing is a splendid and inoble profession, and most people of Common sense and intelligence rec bgnize It as such. Any other attitude Aoward the profession which gives it toelf over to administering to the sick ■ind suffering is a relic of the dark ages *wrhen education and knowledge of the pimple facts of life were thought to mark a woman indecent. No human being was ever good be fcßuse she was ignorant. Good she may *have been in spite of being ignorant. 'But the woman who knows life in all jits aspects is a finer, bigger, stronger poul than the shrinking creature who in •conversation still disguises her per fectly respectable legs as limbs and (■who doeß not hesitate to display a few inches of silk stockings elsewhere. Modesty and decency belong to the (Individual, not to the class or the walk of life. Some, of the finest women I thave ever met belonged to the nursing Of course, nursing is prac tically essential to medicine and sur- Bfery and has a distinct value in help ing the world solve its problems of ■health and healing. And If a few silly girls go into the .nursing profession with the idea of marrying a rich patient or a doctor that does not mean that even those girls will •not, in the process of learning it, wake ■to a respect for their splendid calling. In certain walks of life temptations (are frequent—that I grant. The mani- Icure girl who works in a hotel barber ishop may be subject to temptations and 'may be weak enough to yield to them. COMMITTEES TO DO THE PRUNING •Chairmen Will Save the Gov ernor Trouble in Deficiency Bill This Year General deficiency bills to provide money to pay bills incurred by depart ments of the State gtyvernment for which there was necessity but no funds and to furnish the cash to run the government until the end of the fiscal year where required, which have generally been rushed through in the early days of legislative sessions, will have the limelight played upon them this session. The big bill presented a few days ago to carry something like $820,000 will not only be the subject of a public hearing, but will be pruned with vigor by the appro priations committees to save the Gov ernor the trouble. When Governor Brumbaugh sent the estimates of shortages to the persons in charge of the draft of the bill he suggested that there might be places where the fig ures could be "scaled." The committee will doubtless take his suggestions. As a result of meetings held yes terday with heads of half a dozen de partments and some study of esti mates made by others the committees will probably lop off something like $235,000 and make every chief tell why he should have any money. The conferences yesterday disclosed the fact that where the Governor reduced last session there were deficits, notably in the printing department, because of the rush of orders to start off the compensation, child labor, State in surance and other new branches of government, and public grounds and buildings, where the Mansion improve ments and purchases in a rising mar ket ate a big hole. The two appropriation committee chairmen have declared that they do not intend to stand for anything "that Sore Throat, Chest Colds and Coughs Conquered Over Night Jut Rub on a I.lttle MuMarine and Away Goe Backache, Headache, Plurly and Neuralgia The minute you rub on MUSCARINE for any pain, ache or soreness you'll know that ail the misery and agony has started to go. It is verv penetrat ing and won't blister. Any druggist anywhere, will recom mend it, praise it; guarantee it. He will tell you that it is better than any liniment, poultice, hot water bottle or ointment. A 25 cent box of this wonderful dis covery will do the work of 50 mustard F SUNDAY fl ™ Round Trip February 18 1 WASHINGTON I I - BALTIMORE SPECIAL TRAIN LEAVES Hiirr|*bttP(C 7.03 A.M. Eminsvllle ... 740 i u f-TV >w Cumberland. .7.15 A.M. Yo.tr I,'Ti . <"2 S] Golditboro 7.30 A.M. f k 8.03 A.M. V 5 York Haven 7.38 A.M. Baltimore, Arrive* 0.83 A.M. EE 1| Monn Wo" 7.43 A.M. Waahlnicton 10.40 A.M. = IletnrnlaK, leave* Ua,hln K (.>n 5.80 P. M.( Baltimore .55 P. M. ||| PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD llMilllllllllM llllllllll^O^jiiiiiiiOßa^l l " BIM '" a " M * a ™ BM '' g=3a " B ''' 31ll * M —' ws^mk ——11 mmmiM Full Heat Value In Every Lump of ou K COAL ! 1 hat's what you want and is what you'll i w ' g*fl receive. * Assured of little waste and best service, it I X/ " s the coal you should order and use. mm J- B - MONTGOMERY !! THIRD AND CHESTNUT STS. Bell Phone 600 C. V. 4321 j THURSDAY EVENING, Own Places She yields because she is weak —not because she is a manicurist. As a clerk behind the counter or a stenographer or an actress, she would have met temptations and succumbed —not be cause of her profession, but because of her nature. The world had an attitude of whole sale condemnation toward stenograph ers until very recently. It is waking up to the fact that the girl who works in a business office side by side with men and on a sane basis of sensible In terest generously shared, is likely to lose her silly, cheap coquetry and her sense of sex consciousness —or lose her position. Women who write or act or sing or pose for moving pictures would like to be accepted or rejected on the basis of their ability to make good; and if they are not —as tragically enough they sometimes are not —It is the men with whom they must deal who are largely to blame and who ought to be con demned. No profession can be condemned or praised. The strong woman makes something of so ordinary a profession as shampooing heads; she glorifies housework; she Is dignified as a dem onstrator of tea biscuits. And the weak woman does not amount to much; when she inherits a factory of which heredity makes her the figurehead. Wholesale condemnation of one pro fession is as foolish as wholesale praise of another one. The individual makes or mars her own profession. So that a woman's means of earning her liveli hood be honest and open and dignified; so that she trade on her skill and ability and knowledge rather than on her sex, no human being has a right to condemn the work she is doing or she who does it. would embarrass any department and that they will be serious in dealing with figures, and Governor Brumbaugh has assured them of support. The chairmen will do all of the cutting- on the bill, and if they continue the policy the Governor's burdens in dealing with appropriation bills will be materially lessened. It is understood that the commit tees will go Into the deficiency of $29,000 reported by the Auditor Gen eral and request some Items and the reason therefor. It is likely that the printing bills will be taken care of, but that the department will be warned that it must be very careful. Whether cuts will be made in this line is not known. General Powell last night sent letters to the head of each de partment asking for a prompt state ment of expenditures to the end of the calendar year. The Dalx resolution, calling for such information, and also for the rock bottom estimates of what will be needed to run the government for two years, has been passed. It is concurrent and will demand the in formation. The Auditor General is the official who will supply it. Capitol Hill is commiserating with the attaches of the Department of Public Printing and Binding, who have no chief and whose payroll was held up last month because there was no one to sign it. Chief Clerk Thomas J. Bell was given the right to give orders for printing, but not to sign payrolls. The term of A. Xevin Pomeroy, who was asked to resign when the speaker ship fight started, will expire Feb ruary 8, and the Governor will likely send in the name of D. Edward Long to succeed him. Long will be the first department chief appointment to face the music in the Senate. The State's big printing and paper contracts must be let soon. The bids for them will be opened late this month and business involving hun dreds of thousands of dollars must be taken care of. The Capitol is also awaiting With keen interest the appointment of a judge to succeed the late Judge Charles X. Brumm, of Schuylkill county, which is causing more letter writing and visiting here than usual. WORK ON $70,000 MOOSE HOME Bethlehem, Pa., Feb. I.—The local Order of Moose started work on its new $70,000 home in Broadway on the site of the first hospital in the borough. plasters. In two minutes Earache. Headache, Toothache and Neuralgia vanish. Tonsilitis, Bronchitis, Pleurisy and deep-seated Coughs go over night. Rheumatic sufferers joyfully praise it for the way it speedily stops the agony and reduce the swollen joints. After all other remedies have failed thousands have overcome the misery caused by Sore, Burning Feet, Corns, Bunions and Callouses. Ask for MUS TARINE. 23 cents in yellow box. Never sold in jars. Get it at Clark's Medicine Store. Mall orders tilled. Begy Medicine Co., Rochester, N. Y.—Advertisement. MAKE THIS APRON OF GAY TOWELING Match the Colored Border With Cross Stitching or Bul garian Embroidery By MAY MANTON 9291 (IT ith Basting Line and Added Seam Allowance) Slip-on Apron, One Size. It is not always true that the protective apron is a pretty one, but here is a model that combinescharmwith utility. It isabso lutely simple, too, the easiest thing in the world to make and is especially designed (or toweling, the side edges of which re quire no finishing. It is exactly 18 inches wide and is cut all in one piecc._ The back extends to the waist and is joined to the belt which is buttoned over the front. The opening of the neck is sufficiently large to allow slipping on and off without any other opening. It may be made square or round. In the illustration.it is made of colored linen toweling and is em broidered with simple cross-stitch design, the work being done in a bright shade of red. The pattern is perforated for the shorter length. For the lone: apron will be needed, 2 ' yards of inatetial 18, 27 or 36 inches wide. For the shorter apron I?* yards of any width. The apron pattei n 9-91 is cut in one size. The embroidery pattern No. 975 includes 3 yards. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department ot this paper, on receipt of ten cents for each. BIRTH I) A V SURPRISE Elizabethvllle, Pa., Feb. 1. A birthday surprise party was tendered | Mrs. E. L. Steever at her home in j Main street Tuesday evening. The ! party consisted of Dr. and Mrs. J. W. 1 Sliaeffer, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Deibler, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Steever, Mrs. Sny der, of Philadelphia, mother of Mrs. Steever; Miss Stella Weaver, Lewis C. Buftington, Dr. W. L. Stevenson and Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Daniel. Luncheon was served. , BURIED AT LYKENS Lykens, Pa., Feb. I.—Mrs. William Thomas, aged 4 8 years, of Scranton, died at her home on Sunday. The body was brought to Lykens and buried . from the home of Robert James, a brother-in-law. Funeral services were conducted yesterday afternoon by the Rev. Mr. Davies, of the Episcopal Church. LARGE NUMBER CONVERTED i One of the most successful evan gelistic campaigns ever held in the i State Street United Brethren Church has just closed. The services were conductd by W. C. Mealing, of Wll liamsport. During the services 135 persons were converted. Many of the converts will be admitted to church membership next Sunday. BREAKS A ~ COLD IN A HURRY i. "Pape's Cold Compound" < is pleasant and affords Instant Relief. A dose taken every two hours until three doses are taken will end grippe misery and break up a cold. It promptly opens clogged-up nos tril and air passages in the head, stops nasty discharge or nose running, relieves sick headache, dullness, fev erlshness, sore throat, sneezing, sore ness and stiffness. Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blow ing and snuffling! Ease your throb bing head! Nothing else in the world gives such prompt relief as "Pape's Cold Compound," which costs only 26 cents at anv drugstore. It acts with out assistance, tastes nice, causes no Inconvenience. Ue sure you get the genuine. Don't accept something else. HAREUSBURG TELEGRAPH THE ENEMY —BY— GHDRGE RANDOLPH CHESTER & LILLIAN CHESTER AKtM •( "THE BALL OK FIRS," eta. Copyright, 1915. Newspaper Rights, Hearst International Library. International Feature Service. (Continued) Bow-Wow opened his eyes. Dark ness, shot with glimmering light. He reached out his arms. Space! Groan ing, lie sat up, painfully, and en deavored to locate himself. Through the windows there came the faint illumination of the street, and the moist, cold air of the snow. A door stood ajar, letting in a slit of dim radiance from the room beyond. Bow-Wow shivered. He was thinly clad. He was trembling too, from head to foot, with a strange nausea. What' was this thing which had happened to him. He was in a lux uriously furnished blue room, and on a bed of easy mattresses and clean white linen. He had no more memory of this room than if he had never seen it before. He had come into this house in a drunken stupor, he had lived a year of clean life, and now he was in a drunken stupor again, a torpor which joined and linked itself almost without joint to that other tor por, blotting out the intervening year as if it had never been. How had he come here? In all his fuddled con sciousness he could lind no trace of an answer to that mystery; and the effort at any thought, further than his physical self, wearied and weak ened and sickened him. He gave up, the vague and feeble attempt at reasoning, and returned to the one Idea which he could comprehend; whisky! He rose and tottered out of the room. He found himself in a softly carpeted hall. There was a light at the end, a flickering, wavering red glow. With many a stop for breath, and strength, and steadying of nerves, he edged along the wall until he reached a large lounging-room, com fortable with leather chairs and couches, where a half spent log in the fireplace cast the ruddy reflection of its dying flames upon well chosesn pictures and queer objects of art from every quarter of the world. Dazed, bewildered, he stood, swaying, and blinking stupidly at the fire. There was a redheaded man in a lounging robe asleep on the couch. Bow-Wow did not know him. Whisky! He looked all about, and now occurred a strange phenomenon. In Bow-Wow's mind there was no memory of this room: but his body remembered! It led him automatic ally to t)ie lounging-room table, the library table, the buffet, the pantry. No whisky! He must have it! There was a burning in him. There was f°ver in his veins, and yet he shivered with the cold. "Whisky! Whisky!" His quivering voice started in a whine and ended in a wail. Automatically he wandered back to his bedroom, and then again that queer memory of the body direct ed his sodden mind. He knew a bar relhouse which kept open all night. Mechanically he opened the cupboard and drew down the first clothes he found, a plain brown business suit, and dressed himself with quick, ner vous little jerks. As unconsciously he took money from the drawer in his dresser and stuffed it in his pocket. These things were done as independ ently of his mind as if he had been a clock-work figure. Whatever grain of actuating intelligence he had was centered on the one thing: whisky! The taste was on his tongue! He passed out through "the loung ing-room, and, as his eyes fell on the red-headed man asleep on the couch, he moved stealthily. Instinct pointed out the red-headed man as a foe. as a detaining force; and, aside from his need for a drink, the inherent prompting for freedom had come up on him. He was cramped here. He began to be aware of coercion, and ihere is no human soul so debased, so feeble, that in its depth it docs not resent coercion. From Billy's room there came the sound of deep and regular breathing. It meant nothing to Bow-Wow, no more than all this unfamiliar fur niture. In that chair he had sat night after night, as Harrison Stuart, and had dreamed his drearps and plan ned his plans. It meant nothing. In that seat by the window he had con ceived the daring solution to the prob lem of the floating dome, and on the wall above it, illuminated by the ruddy glow of the lire, was a beautiful water color sketch of the floating dome in completion. Nothing. Near the door was the telephone. How many nights and mornings, in the past months, had Harrison Stuart stood and talked to Jean jid Tavy. Stop, you Bow-Wow, who hold, con fined within you and cramped into some hidden recess, the soul of Har rison Stuart! Here, at last, is some thing which will rouse that numbed mind two exquisite portraits just opposite the blazing fire; Jean and Tavy, picture with the skilful brush of Tommy Tinkle, so that there seems almost consciousness in the loving eyes; words upon the tender, curving lips! These at least should arrest him. His bleared gaze passes over them stupidly. He turns the latch, he walks into the hall, he closes the door softly behind him, he descends the stairs, he walks out into the street. The dawn Is streaking the sky, just such a dawn as that which broke upon him the morning he found Jean; but it carries with it no asso ciation, as he lurches down the street. Something at the curb catches his eye! It is the blackened and damp ened butt of a cigar. He stoops and picks it up. Righthand pocket. CHAPTER XXXIII Harrison Stuart Conquers His Enemy "Early morning in the Sink. Damp and cold outside, damp cold In side; but a fire in the big cannon ball stove was doing its best to dispel the eternal gloom and the eternal chill which hung in this section of the Inferno. The morning bartender was on duty, a pin-eyed man, with broad cheek-bones, and a low forehead, and a thin-lipped wide mouth set so low down that it seemed to cut off his chin when he spoke. A shivering and quaking figure came through the door; Red Whitey, out from whatever warren he infested. They are early risers, these whisky drinkers. A beer drinker sleeps later. Tlrere was no conversation between the bartender and the customer; for Red Whitey was not yet alive. With infinite fumbling, he fished a nickel from his pocket and dropped it on the bar, and the worn looking bottle came out, together with a small glass. Red Whitey put his hand around the top of the glass so that it would hold more, and poured It full to the top of his finger, and lifted it to his mouth with three separate jerks, the pin-eyed bartender looking dully on. | This style of drink was allowed to regular customers, for the first morn ing's morning. After the drihk, Red Whitey, with a shudder and wry face, shivered over to the bench near-the stove and Bat down, and waited for the drink to take effect. It would warm him awake In a minute or-two. Pittsburg Joe. He slouched in. shivering and rubbing bis hands. His shirt was open at the neck, and- his thin coat hung on him like a wilted rag, covered with stains of so many sorts and ages that it looked like a record of crime. "Some cold, Bo." His voice was so hoarse that it might have been a late fall bull-frog's. He reached up under his arm-pit, and, from some mysterious recess in the coat lining, he produced a much folded and soil ed dollar bill. "Ladle out a schooner." The glass of beer forthcoming, he emptied in it some crystal-like pow der from a red pill box, stirred it with a bar spoon, and drank the mixture slowly but steadily, without seeming to swallow, much as if he were pour ing it into a funnel. The effect was almost instantaneous. He shook his shoulders and his eyes brightened. He began to tald volubly, with a curious break from his hoarseness to a me tallic shrillness. He told where he had been the past month, and all that he had done, with a dozen contradic tions in his wasted lies; and when the bartender had enough, and walked away, Pittsburg Joe sat by lied Whltey and told him the rest of it. Tank Tonkey came presently, as big of girth as ever and as pendulous of chin; then two more of the old win ter guard; then Piggy Marshall; and the day's business at the Sink was fairly begun. It consisted o{ sitting and warming, and waiting for some one to buy a drink; and It was largely a silent business, requiring much quiet concentration. Only the voice of Pittsburg Joe kept shrilling on and on. The pin-eyed bartender looked up in astonishment as a quite unusual customer came through the door. He was an old man in a neatly pressed suit, but without short or collar or tie, his breast being covered by a silk pajama jacket. His face was waxen white, his eyes were bleared, and there were huge puffs under them, his lips were formless, and even his sil ver Vandyke seemed to be seraggly and distended from the loose puffiness of his skin. Every muscle of his face was laxed, so that his countenance was filled with putty-like lines. "A little whisky," he asked, and threw some money on the counter; a bill; live dollars. The pin-eyed bartender hesitated a moment, then he reached under the bar and produced a bottle of labeled whisky. From the same hiding place he produced a gentleman's glass. Tlfb new customer, with a formless smile at the size of the glass, stretch ed his hand around its brim, and poured until it was full to the top of his finger, and lifted it jerkily to his mouth, and drank; while the bar tender rang up a double drink, and threw out change for a four-dollar bill. Hq laid the other dollar beneath the bar, for slipping in his pocket, later. |, , "Kind o' cold," he observed, byway of friendly encouragement. Red Whitey was all aquiver! fte edged over close to Piggy Marshall and whispered in his ear: "John Doe!" "Bow-Wow!" Figgy spoke quite confidently, but he sat still, and stud ied the new customer with perplex ed professional interest. Red Whitey motioned Tank Tonkey to come closer. "You don't suppose it's Bow-Wow!" Tank Tonkey shook his head. "I dassent make a guess" he husk- Red Whitey, trembling with the eagerness of a rat terrior, turned to Pittsburg Joe. "Say; is that Bow-Wow?" "Naw!" The contempt of Joe for the osker of that question was pro found. "Well, go lamp him, that's all I say," advised Red, his curiosity at the shaking point. "Go lamp him!" "Sure." Pittsburg Joe was ready for anything. He had that in him which gave him extreme confidence in himself. He could jump over the Brooklyn Bridge if he tried, lie look ed back and winked three times, as he crossed to the bar and lounged near the stranger. He made a thor ough inspection, and still was doubt f.Vi* „ >>ut he winked prodigiously. Hello, sport," he ventured. The new customer, clumsily picking up his change, turned slowly and gaz ed at the intruder with heavy lidded eyes, swaying and nodding, then a formless smile came upon his lips. "Hello, Joe. Have a little drink." Bow-Wow! They were over at the bar as one man, and he knew them all; he called them by name! They clustered round him like flies! The pin-eyed bartender wiped his hands Briskly on his apron and got ready for business. Bow-Wow had put his change back on the bar in front of him, and drew it in a heap "Have a little drink." Would they have a little drink! They would, as many as Bow-Wow would buy! The bartender reached for the labeled bottle, but Red Whitey stopped that economic waste. "Regular stuff for him, Phil. You don't know this guy. He's one of our old buddies. Name's Bow-Wow." "Hello, Red." A husky, guttural voice, each sentence interrupted with labored breathing. "Have a little drink." Others arrived, for the rulers of the kingdom of rest were at their city home now. The season of their reign was past. They came in apath etically, one by one, but as they saw the throng at the bar, each quickened his pace to eager briskness, for the day's business promised to be good. Bow-Wow had more money, plenty of it, and he did not notice that, in paying for the constant succession of drinks, he broke bills with astonish ng rapidity. He did not notice that the pin-eyed bartender kept out an average of twenty per cent for him self. He did not notice that coins slipped away on all sides, from his heap, and that even bills disappear ed, as his change was dumped in front of him. Except to see that the little glass was set before him frequently he did not notice anything; that his haqds were white when they should be gnarled and black,, and that his nails were polished and well-trimmed when they should be stained and rag ged and black-rimmed; that these were malodorous creatures who hung upon his shoulders and slapped him on the back and called him Pal, and 80, and Buddy and Bow-Wow that the floor was a filthy mire, that the atmosphere was fetid and foul that gradually what little there was left in him of the semblance of God's own image was dropping away and leaving him to be submerged in his loathsome swinehood! And the swine in him was happy. It was being drenched with whisky. Jerry-the-Limp. He came In more briskly than the others; but when he saw the throng at the bar his leg shortened, and his mouth took on a piteous droop, and he came forward limping. (To Be Continued) FEBRUARY 1, 1917. Health Insurance and Compensation to Come Up Proposed health insurance and amendments to the workmen's com pensation act will bo discussed at a meeting of the Dauphtn County Medi cal Society to be held Tuesday eve ning:, February 6. The regular meet ing of the board of governors will be held February 27. Dr. Davis S. Riesman, of Philadel phia. will address the members of the Harrisburg Academy of Medicine at their monthly meeting Friday eve ning February 23. The North Branch of the County Medical Society will meet next Tuesday evening at Millers burg. SHOWER FOR NEWLYWEDS Duncannon, Pa., Feb. 1. Mrs. Charles Ebner gave a linen shower at her home in North High street Mon day evening for Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Lehman, Jr., newlyweds. Refresh ments were served and the young couple were the recipients of many handsome and useful presents. Those present were Mrs. William Potter, Mrs. Frank Fenstemaker. Mrs. Mary Grler, Mrs. ,1. W. Felils, Mrs. J. L. L. Bucks. Mrs. J, L,. Hess, Mrs. Harry Snyder, Mrs. "Walter Miller. Mrs. Charles Sieg and Mrs. Edward Tarman, of Harris burg; Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Lehman, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Lehman, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ebner, Misses Katli r.vn Kline, Merle Dnnkle, Helen Shade, Nellie Klnes, Alelna Quigley, Isabella Fenstemaker, Alice Miller, Lillian Jackson and Ivy Patterson. The young couple will take up their residence in Marysville. MRS. SARAH ROWE DIES Blain, Pa., Feb. 1. • Mrs. Sarah Rowe, aged 87 years, widow of David Rowe, died at the home of her daugh ter, Mrs. A. J. Wentz, in Bucks county, on Sunday after a brief illness. She was a lifelong resident of Blain and vicinity. One sister, Mrs. Matilda Ma gee, of Kansas, aged 91 years, and one brother, William Mumper, 86, survive. The following children also survive: Mrs. A. J. Wentz, of Bucks county; Mrs. Elizabeth Henry, of Blain; Mrs. Sylvester Shields, of Blain; Mrs. Ma tilda Delancey, of Iowa; Albert and William Rowe, of Texas; Ira Rowe, of Philadelphia: David Rowe, of Blain. The Rev. J. C. Reighard officiated at the funeral to-day. CIVIL SERVICE EXAMS The United States Civil Service Commission anounces the following examinations to be held in this city lon March 26, 1917: | Clerk, Departmental Service; eleva tor conductor. Departmental Service (men only); general mechanic. De partmental Service, (men only); stenographer, Departmental Service; stenographer and typewriter. Depart mental Service; stenographic clerk. Departmental Service: subelerical (messenger, skilled laborer and watch man), Departmental Service; type writer, Departmental Service. MARRIED FIFTY YEARS East Prospect, Pa.. Feb. I.—Mr. and Mrs. W. 11. Young, lifelong residents, to-day celebrated their golden wedding anniversary. Guests were present from all sections and the veteran couple, who are enjoying good health, received many handsome gifts. GREAT REJOICING RY RHEUMATIC CRIPPLES IT So Crippled You Can't Use Arms or Ix"(ts llhcuma Will Help You or Nothing to Pay. ir you want relief in two days, swift, certain, gratifying relief, take one-half teaspoonful of Rheuma once a day. If you want to dissolve every par ticle of uric acid poison in your body and drive it out through the natural channels so that you will be forever free from rheumatism, get a 50-cent bottle of Rheuma from H. C. Kennedy or any druggist to-day. Rheumatism is a powerful disease, strongly entrenched in joints and mus cles. In order to conquer it a powerful enemy must be sent against it. Rheu ma is the enemy of rheumatism—an enemy that conquers it every time. Judge John Barhorst of Ft. Lor amie, Ohio, knows it. He was walking with crutches; to-day he is well. It should do as much for you; it seldom fails.—Advertisement. The Greatest Medical Authorities in the World have made public statements in which they endorse the value of such ingredients as are contained in Father John's Medicine. These great physicians say in substance, that these in gredients "are beneficial not ably in wasting diseases and those maladies which are connected with or lteve their origin in colds and in debili tating and wasting diseases." To detail here the statements of these various authorities would require too much space, but if you desire to see these statements in more complete form, write to Father John's Medicine, Lo well, Mass., and we will be glad to give the names of the authorities quoted, with brief excerpts from their public statements. Father John's Medicine is a pure and wholesome body builder, contains no alcohol or dangerous drugs. Best for throat and lungs. OUCH! LUMBAGO? Try Musterole. See How Quickly It Relieves You just rub Musterole in briskly, and usually the pain is gone—? delicious, soothing comfort comes to take it* place. Musterole is a clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. Use it instead of mustard plaster. Will not blister. Many doctors and nurses use Muster ole and recommend it to their patients. They will gladly tell you what relief it gives from sore throat, bronchitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and aches of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). Always dependable. _ SALTS FINE FOR ACHIHB KIOHEKS We eat too much meat which clogs Kidneys, then the Back hurts. Most folks forget that the kidneys, like the bowls, get sluggtsh and clog ged and need a flushing occasionally, else we have backache and dull misery In the kidney region, severe head aches, rheumatic twinges, torpid liver, acid stomach, sleeplessness and all sorts of bladder disorders. You simply must keep your kidneys active and clean, and the moment you feel an ache or pain in the kidney region, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any good drug store here, take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and is harmless to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity. It also neutralizes the acids in the urine so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder dis orders. Jad Salts is harmless; inexpensive; makes a delightful effervescent lithia water drink which everybody should take now and then to keep their kid neys clean, thus avoiding serious complications. A well-known local druggist says he sells lots of Jad Salts to folks who believe in overcoming kidney trouble while it is only trouble. tAsk The Merchants For Whom We Work As To Our Ability We will gladly furnish you with the list, but here's • good plan: Notice the clean* est windows— WE "DID" THEM. Harrisbnrg Window Cleaning Co. OFFICE—BOB EAST ST. Bc-li Phone 85-'e With both Winter and Summer tops. Com pletely overhauled and repainted, looks like new. Especially adapted for an all-year JITNEY The Overland-Harrisburg Company 212 North Second St. Open Evenings iSMES?!, Get our estimates for reftnishing your brass beds and chandeliers Do fore deciding to buy ntw ones. We refinish brass beds, chandeliers, re plate silverware and We Refinish Band Instruments In a most pleasing: manner and at most reasonable prices. Automo bile work a specialty. A phone call or card brings our representa tive to your door with an estimate. Bell Phone 2833 Harrlsburg, Penna,
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