YKAK'S DONATION $8,219,088 Now York, March 19.—The Rocke feller Inundation announces appro priations made during tho year end ed December 31, 191 (i, amounting to $8,249,088.96. Tile largest appropri ations of the year wore for war re lief, amounting to $2,690,000. The total amount appropriated for war relief since the beginning of the war is $4,181,952.04. Will pay for the chance to heal Catarrh After an experience of 25 years, during which time 50 million Americans have UFed Kondon's Catarrhal Jelly, the manufacturers of this remedy feel so sure that it will relieve catarrh that they offer to pay for a chance to prove its benefit to any catarrhal sufferer. They announce that any resident of this community can go to almost any drug store and get a com plimentary trial can at the expense of the manufacturers. If the druggist has no gratuitous packages, the person may buy a 25 cent tube with the unqualified understanding that if that first tube does not do that person more than a dollar's worth of good, he or 1 ' she can get their quarter back from either the druggist, or the Kondon Com pany at Minneapolis. Over 35,000 druggists know Kondon's Catarrhal Jelly is effective, harmless, clean and pleasant to apply—apd they know the Kondon people will gladly live up to this offer "quarter back if not worth a dollar." Address— MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. "New Life" from Cadomene "New Front Cadomene! May 17. 1910. Dear Sir:—l am taking Cadomene Tablets and they are putting new life in me. I had a bad case or Grippe this past winter and my physician's pre scription did me no good. I saw Cado mene recommended as for my condition and I sent 20 miles distant to get them. Now alter using them only one week 1 am gaining strength, eating with a relish and sleeping like a baby. Please send me your Health Book and oblige. W. H. Pennington, Wharton, Ark. Cadomene "Can't He Heat!" Oct. 10. 1916. Gentlemen:—Please send your book on Health. I am on my second box of Cadomene Tablets. They can't be beat for nervous people. Very truly yours, D. Mcßride, 121 North St., Rochester, N. Y. Vndoniene Put Him On Ilia Feet! Dear Sirs:—l beg to make a statement regarding Cadomene Tablets. I have taken one box and it has put me on my feet. 1 feel tine and am going to con tinue taking them till I am completely well. Wishing you success, 1 am. Yours truly, F. W. Barbean, 1327 Inca St., Denver, Colo. Note.—All druggists sell Cadomene Tablets, a physician's great prescription for nervous ill-health, livery sealed tube bears formula and guarantee to satisfy or money back by the proprie tors. —Advertisement. tr "■ \ I GEORGE H. SOURBIER g FUNERAL DIRECTOR 1310 North Third Street Bell Phone. Auto Service. I - Opening For Fashion ISflffiSjß This ' our fourth year in business, finds us with floor rllV\n® space double as large *as \ve /AM|w ,iacl a year affo ' Tllis f^ 1 "" ' JpWaM mitS a s^ow ' n S °f the newest //! L l in women ' s ancl misses' , , ready-to-wear garments that J ' N * s more extensive in variety of assortment than any we / / !Ms£ have shown heretofore. To -/ JlPi introduce this store to a mhk. greater number of women we flEgfoija have made special reductions 1 %L * or fashion Show Week, some of which are as fol- Suits in serges and poplins. Silk Taffeta Petticoats in all made up In gold, " ,U8 I tard^,, t ?! l - Popular colors with changeable have' the P new a^>eltod a box Regular $5.00 values, pleated effects, und plain tailor- specially priced at #3.48. Other cd *II.OS to $10.50 petticoats from 00c to *I.OH. These are marked down specially Top Skirts in silk taffeta, with low for Fashion Week, the newest stripes In black and white and blue and white; $7.50 Beautiful Lingerie Waists values; specially priced at f4.V5 trimmed in lace or embroidered effects and square neck. These Fibre Silk Sweaters in pink, are regular values, special Copen and gold. Uirgo square at ..* *|.ON collars and sash belt. These , .sweaters are sold In many stores Another lot of 98c Waists for $7.75; our price S4.ON at >,.. 5 C limm-O I I I k m tiMIHBI * € MONDAY EVENING, BUT THIS IS HOW HE DID IT ~ \( NO \Wt£ P HO LONGER HOLP6. \ ;>-T£RRORS FOR tc*—WHY, posing excm) ! ( Qf= ~ • - * \ f NEW SONG VOICE ' OF CONSCIENCE "Arc You Half the Man Your Mother Thought You'tl Be," Should Be Widely Heard By Dorothy Dix There's a new song—a song with a punch that goes straight for the heart and administers a knockout blow to all who hear it. It is called "Are You Half the Man Your Mother Thought You'd Be?" If I were Mr. Carnegie or Mr. Rockefeller or Mrs. Russell Sage, or any other philanthropist with money to spend for the betterment of the world, I'd buy millions of copies of that song and distribute them broad cast over the land. I'd hire musi cians with the voices of angels to sing it in cabarets and music halls. I'd have hurdy-gurdies play it on the street corners, and phonographs war ble it in parlors, and -I'd start the greatest reformation in all history. For that simple little song is the voice of a man's conscience crying out to him. "Are You Half the Man Your Mother Thought You'd Be," you loafer, you quitter, you man-afraid of-work? "Are You Half the Man Your Mother Thought You'd Be," you man with the blear eyes and the shambling figure, reaching out shak ing hands across the bar for another glass of, whiskey? Happy Is. He Who Can Answer the Question in the Affirmative. "Are You Half the Man Your Mother Thought You'd Be," you smug, prosperous hypocrite, with your fair public pretensions and your rotten private deeds? "Are You Half the Man Your Mother Thought You'd Be," you successful man, whose riches have been wrung out of the necessities of the poor or the toil of littlp children? "Xre You Half the Man Your Mother Thought You'd Be?" Fortu nate and happy he who '•an answer that question in the affirmative, for full as the world is of evil, there is one I thing in it that is eternally high and | noble, and that is a mother's aspira ] tions for her children. Whatever a i woman may be herself, she wants her I children to be good. Have you ever watched the ex j pression on the face of a mother as i she looked down upon the babe on j her breast, .particularly if that babe was a man child? lii her face you see all love, all tenderness, all hope, ail ambition. It is the look that ar tists have tried to paint and that we call the Madonna expression. Other people may see in the child only an ugly, red-f.aced mite of hu manity, with rudimentary features, and no hair or eyebrows, and with about as much indication of intelli gence in the face as a cream cheese. But the mother sees the hands of a Paderewski in the pudgy little fists, or the brow of a Webster in the bald head, or the strength of a Jess Wil lard in the feeble little legs. Always she sees something great and good. She never sees the weakling, the dere lict, the tramp, the drunkard, oi* j the thief that the baby so often be comes. And that is God's mercy to | mothers. The romance of a woman's life is ] not her brief courtship and marriage, jas novelists would have us believe, j Her real romance begins when she | holds her first son in her arms and dreams over him the lo*g, beautiful dreams of motherhood. He is to achieve all the great things that she was debarred from even attempting to achieve by reason of sex and lack of opportunity. He is to fulfill all of her hopes and aspirations. He is her incarnate ambition, soul of her • soul as well as flesh of her flesh. | livery U. S. Mother Cradles a Future I'resident in Her Arms, i It i£ because the eyes of mothers I are so full of dreams of what their i sons are going to do that they are so I soft. They are looking afar off, adown the years, and seeing their sons great and useful, and successf*ri men, and their mothers sharing in their triumph. And if, as has been said, in France every soldier carries a marshal's baton in his knapsack, be sure that every American mother cradles a President in her arms. It is this dream of what their sons are to be that makes motherhood worth while to a woman, that gives her the courage to go down into the valley of the shadow and battle with death for the little life that she be ! lieves is going to be a benediction to | humanity. How cruelly bitter then j must be the disappointment of those ; mothers who see their dreams come I to naught, and the sons for whom ; they have paid such a price in travail jof no account, failures, or worse, j What an ideal a mother's hopes for her boy raise before him! What | a goal to strive for, to pick oneself up out of the mire and try to win i back to, if one has failed! That's | why I would set the whole world ' singing, "Are You Half the Man Your j Mother Thought You'd Be?" : "Have you kept your promise to her | That you made while on her knee? Can you truly say you're half the man to-day That sho always thought you'd be?" lAUceck I PLASTERS I 17k# World's Greatest H External Remedy* / M E Rheumatism, y Lame Back, \-£r } I "Any Loca^^^^s£ WEAR FROM GRIPPE Home Missionary Tells How She Restored Her Strength. "I am a Home Missionary, was weak and run-down after a hard spell of Iji Grippe. I had headaches, indi gestion and pains in my chest, and was tired ail the time. A friend askod mo to try Vinol and the result is I am free from those troubles aitd I feel well and strong and able to bo to work again." Mrs. Hattie Johnson, Towanda, Pa. The reason Vinol was so successful In building- up Mrs. Johnson's health Is because it Is a constitutional remedy which contains beef and cod liver peptones, iron and manganese pep tonates and glycerophosphates, all l conibinod in a delicious native tonic wine. We wish every person in Harrisburg who is suffering from a weakened, run-down, devitalized condition would try Vinol on our guarantee to return their money if it falls to benrlit them. Cleorge A. Gorgas, druggist, Ken nedy's Medicine Store, 321 Market St., C. F. Kramer, Third and Broad Sts., Kitzmiller'a Pharmacy, 1325 Dorry St., IlarrlsbuiK. Also nt tjie leading drug store in all Pennsylvania towns HXRRISBURG TELEGRAPH UNPARDONABLE SIN IS COMMITTED Men With Brains, Who Should Know Better, Depress and Dis courage Weak Souls We hear a great deal about the heroism of soldiers In these days, and there aro hundreds of men who are wearing medals, crosses and other em blems of distinction which have been bestowed upon them for their bravery. A halo of glory surrounds the name of thousands of dead heroes, but right here in our own land of peace we have heroes. In early November, the Santa Clara, a steamer, was stranded on the Oregon shore. Robert Shearer, a winch driver aboard, left the ship in a lifeboat loaded with women and chil dren. According to an eye-witness, all those who were able to swim had reached shore, when Shearer, with a child in each arm, Anally crawled out on the beach from the swirling waters. With both hands engaged he had waged a deathly battle, but had refused to re lease either one of the children to as sure his reachiug shore. Blood was streaming down his face from where a piece of wreckage had hit him. He placed the children on shore and gasped, "There's a woman out there, 1 am going back to get her." He never returned. Jersey Hero Saves Two Boys at Cost of Own Life. Surely this man is as great a hero as any one who dies in battle. Only a few days ago Ira J. String ham, 21, of No. 250 Pacific avenue, Jersey City, gave up his own life in rescuing two boys from drowning in the Morris Canal. While returning home this young man, in the morning of life, heard cries under the Pacific avenue bridge. Two boys of eight had fallen through the ice. i Stringham threw off his coat, shirt, j hat and shoes, and leaped from the bridge. Conscious that he was in dan ger of losing his life, he hurled a wal let containing Ifis identification card ashore. Then he stepped out on the ice. An instant later the ice gave way and he found himself in the freezing water with the two boys. He grasped a sinking boy in each arm and began to make his way slowly toward shore. Two employes of the Public Service Corporation hurled him a rope. Both boys were slowly drawn to safety by means of this rope. It was cast again to Stringliam, but before he could grasp it lie sank back and disappeared. His body was recovered later. On the lapel of his coat was found the badge of the Christian Endeavor Society. Baggage Smashers Throw $1,000,000 About Like Ordinary Luggage j Chicago, March 19.—Mrs. J. K. stewart, widow of the speedometer in- Aentor, who died in Aiken, S. C., last Monday, believed in preparedness in money matters. A suitcase was found in the death chamber which, with other personal property, was forward ed to the Merchants' Loan and Trust Company here, trustees of the Stew art estate. When the case was open ed yesterday $690,000 in $5,000 and SIO,OOO gold notes rolled out on the table. Certified "checks to the amount of $296,000 also were found in the j bag, which was supposed to contain I articles of small value, clothing and some jewelry, and possibly a second will. Scant attention had' been paid to it on its trip to Chicago. The finding of nearly $1,000,000 in the suitcase wa sas great a surprise to friends of the family as to the offi cials of the bank. It was reported that the case with its precious con tents was checked in the baggage car I when the funeral party left Aiken early in the week and that the bag | gage masters threw it about like an j ordinary bug. No heed was paid to it, as none of the party knew what it contained. MAJOR C. K. GILLETTE DIES Philadelphia, March 19. —Major Cas sius E. Gillette, who during Mayor Weaver's administration came from the United Htates Engineers to Philadelphia to serve as Chief of the Filtration Bu reau and Investigate alleged irregulari ties in contracts ana the filtration wo r • died yesterday at his home of heart trouble. Major Gillette was born In New York in 18G, and was graduated from West Point in 1884, going there after to Wlllet's Point and Chicago, to which points men in the engineering classes are assigned for special duty. ■ After graduation he was stationed at | several coast point and came promi j nently before the public in Savannah, ; Georgia, by his investigation of Gov ernment contract work, which devel oped tlfe Green and Gaynor scandal. In the furthering of the Government's plans for the Panama Canal, he was one of the engineers who advocated th e lock plan, which was adopted in construct ing the waterway. Capitol Hill Notes Complains or Telephones. jj, q Andrews, 2421 North Fifth street, to day filed aln informal complaint against the practice of the Bell Telephone Company in Ha?risburg relative to re movals, installation and branch ex changes. Two Arguments Heard. The Pub lic Service Commission to-day heard arugments in the Factoryville com plaint against the Lackawanna's re moval of the tracks in that town and the Emerlck motor bus case from Bellefonte. .Many Will Attend. Many legisla tors and Stale ollicials will attend the biennial dinner of the Legislative Sons of St. Patrick to-morrow night at the Board of Trade. A number ot former members will arrive to-morrow for the festivities. Claims List is Reasonable. The Bell Telephone Company to-day fVed an answer to the complaint of Dr. F B. "Kann, of this city, against the re fusal of the company to list him in the telephone directory in accordance with his request. The company claims that Its rules are reasonable. Inspections On. Major G. F. Hamilton has joined the Eighth Regi ment inspection party having con cluded his inspection of the State Arsenal. The inspections will be finished next week in the Eighth's dis trict. Mr. Gillespie Dead. John D. Gillespie, county road engineer of Alle gheny for year and talked of for State Highway Commissioner, .died yester day after a long illness. New Coal Company. The Miller Run Mining Company of Chambers burg, has been chartered with $lO,- 000,.capital. The incorporators are W. H. Spcer, Chambersburg; Ej M. S. Mc- Kee, Altoona, and E. B. Reed, El dorado. Object to Ideation. The cltv of Wilkes-Barre, bus filed a protest against the location of the proposed sewage disposal plant for that city, ac cording to word received here from Luzerne county. 1 House Dynamiting Still Mystery to Local Police Police to-day were unable to unearth any information leading to the arrest of the person 'or persona who yes terday morning about 1 o'clock tried to dynamite a foreign boardinghouse at 719 South Second street, run by Wil liam Linti. The dynamite was placed in a barrel partly full of coal and wlien exploded shattered the rear of the building, tearing the walls apart, breaking doors and windows. The shock of the explosion was felt for a square around the building. v Two women and nineteen men were asleep in the building when the explo sion occurred. None was Injured. The building Is owned by I. Sharosky, South Front street, and was damaged to the extent of several hundred dollars. Steelton Snapshots Degree Team Meeting—A meeting of the degree team of the Steelton Moose will be held to-night. The team will go to Middletown Wednesday evening and' to Elizabethtown Thursday to as sist in degree work. Steelton l'crxoutlii—Harry I. Newlin, connected with the, Bethlehem Steel Company at Sparrow's Point, was in town to-day. Street Commissioner Ja cob Meshy was in Philadelphia and Chester over the week-end. To Conduct Funeral—The Rev. George N. Laufter, pastor of St. John's Luther an Church, will go to Pitcairn to-mor row evening to conduct a funeral. ,Sn>all Fire.—Little damage resulted ifrom an oil tank blaze at No. 2 forge, of the local steel plant, last even ing. The Citizen, Baldwin and Paxton lire companies answered the call. ASSOCIATION' MEETING Nothing but routine business is scheduled for action at the monthly meeting of the Borough Business Men's Association, in Electric Light Hall to morrow evening. SOX OF FORM 10It SECRETARY OF PLANT I-OSES HIS LEG While at work in the local plant of the Bethlehem Steel Company this morning John'Tenney, aged 26, 9 North Fourth street, had his leg cut off in an accident. He was taken to the Harris burg Hospital, where his condition was reported unimproved late to-day. Tenney is a son of Frank Tenney, a former secretary of the old Pennsyl vania Steel Company. LEIIMAN-ROI>DY WEDDING Miss Ethel Grace Roddy, of Ann vllie, and Arthur Howard Lehman', Swatara street, were married Satur day evening at 7.3 o'clock by Justice of the Peace James L. Dickinson. MRS. JONES TO LECTURE BEFORE CIVIC CLUB Mrs. Mabel Cronise J ones of Hur ris'iurg. will address the Civic Club this evening in the .First Presbvternn Church on "A Trip Through Yellow stone Park." The Commuity chorus . will take part in the program. Mem • hers of the chorus aro requested by Prof. W. M. Harclerode, the leader, to meet at the First Methodist Church at 7 o'clock for rehearsal. [ MIDDLETOWfI- - -1 Funeral services for Mrs. Annie Zeig ler will be held from her late home to ' morrow afternoon at 1.30 o'clock. The ! Rev. Joseph Weirich will officiate. Bur • ial will be made In the Middletown cera ' etery. Robert Keiper, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Keiper, and Miss Mary Stoner, of Highspire, were united in marriage Sat urday afternoon at Hagerstown, Mary land. ; Miss Sara F. Antrim entertained a. number of friends at her home Satur day afternoon .at a St. Patrick's jotty, when she announced her engagement ! to Clyde S. Gerberich, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. 8. Gerberich, of East Main street. Those present were: Dorothy Campbell, Clara Beck, Roinalne Ken nard, Helen Kramer, Geraldine Brandt, Ivy Hoffman, the Misses Carrie and Ella 1 Hoffman, Bertha Romberger, Tillie 1 Nissley, Stella Laverty, Katherine Es sig, Mrs. Robert Hemperly, all of town; Mrs. Robert Kramer, New Cumberland; Miss Mary AVolf, Wrightsville, and Mrs. L. B. Notestlne, Harrisburg. Miss Eula Lingle, of Philadelphia, is the guest of her parents, Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Lingle. Webster Shalkop, of Philadelphia, has secured a position in the foundry de partment of the Wincroft stove works. Mrs. Frank Taylor, of McKeesport, is the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Brindle. Fred Beck, of Conway Hall, Carlisle, spent Sunday In town as the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Beck. The school board will meet in spe cial session this evening. George I. King, Jr., a student at Mer cersburg Academy, is spending a few days in town. Robert Keiper has accepted a position in the office of the Middletown Car Company. "IT'S A GREAT TONIC" SAYS SAMUEL POTTS ij J&t' "Will Rightnour spoke so highly of Tanlac and I read so much about it in the papers that 1 made up my mind to try It myself," says Samuel Potts, a prominent resident of Monocacy, Pa., "and 1 am greatly pleased with the speed with which I got better. The symptoms that alarmed me so soon disappeared and 1 have been toned up in every way. I tell you it is a great tonic." "Why, for years I had been troubled with, a catarrhal condition and I couldn't seem to relieve. I had attacks of giddiness every now and then and my stomach was bad, very bad. It felt as If it was all worn out. "The catarrli had affected the mem branes of my nose and throat and had even affected my hearing. But my stomach gave me the worst trouble. I had distress and pain after every meal and I woujd become filled with gas and it would creep up around my heart making it beat faster than it should and sometimes making me gasp for breath. 'And when a body gets catches and pains around his heart it makes him worry and frightens him. But Tanlac has llxcd me up and I don't hesitate to say it is a great tonic." Tanlac, the famous reconstructive tonic, is now being introduced here at Gorgas' Drug Store, where the Tanlac man is meeting the people and ex plaining the merits of this master medicine. MARCH. 19, 1917. FLORIDA TOURISTS CLAMORING FOR TRANSPORTATION HOME Fear of Traffic Trouble Causes Exodus; Soil Is Wonder fully Productive; Great Development Strides Taken (Editorial Correspondence) Florence Villa, Fla„ March 15. —Thou, sands of people from all parts of the North and West who invaded Florida In the early winter, many of them before the holidays, are now clamoring for transportation to get back home. They came on th instalment plan, but are now insisting on leaving within the next ten days or two weeks. The soil of Florida *is fertile almost beyond belief. Vegetables are grown in enormous quantities, especially in the muck lands which are now being drain ed in great areas. Wondrrful System of Canal* Along the Ocklawaha River, the most tortuous stream in the world, whose course has been straightened by a won derful system of canals in recent years, thousands of acres have been converted into rich and phenomenally productive soil. In tills district 3,000 acres repre sents the development of a tract whose yield of corn and potatoes has been little short of marvelous. As a test of the soil 100 acres were planted in corn and the yield was 142 bushels to the acre. The average Pennsylvania farmer would probably be tickled with an average of .10 to 40 bushels. Last season 1,000 acres in the same section produced 94,000 bushels, which wq*s sold at an average of sl.o£ per bushel, the crop netting over all expenses above SBO,OOO. This ought to be encouraging for the vacant lot potato and corn movement In Harrisburg. I should add that in this big cornfield the small ears—nub bins, you know—and the stalks were not gathered but the owners turned into the field 200 or 300 head of cattle and about 3,000 liogs, which were fat tened through their own foraging. The cattle and liogs jvere sold at a big profit. ROO BuslietN Per Aere This year the owners of the same tract have planted 600 of the 1,000 acres In Irish potatoes, the seed costing $15,- 000. On this muck land, so rich In all the elements, the yield of Irish potatoe In former years has been over 300 bush els |Jer acre, or 100 barrels. In the same ratio the crop of potatoes from the 600 acres this year will be about 60,000 barrels which should, at present prices, realize for the owners $6 to IS per barrel—approximately >560,000. As soon as the potatoes are picked corn will be planted and should be ready for plucking in Steptember or October. Cabbage could then be planted and gathered before the next potato season, unless the hog and cattle feeding should be resumed. „ About 3,000 acres of this rich black land was sold for $750,000. As the drainage of the river bottom costs from $lO to sls an acre, the profit can be readily figured. V Not Good For Cornf Certain distinguished soil expert of the University of Illinois was sent a sample of this rich earth for analysis and reported back that it was no good for corn. He had found very little po tassium and declared-it would not pro duce corn. He was advised that the person who had shipped the sample had gathered the dirt from between rows of corn ten to fifteen feet high and that there had been gathered about 140 bushels per acre. He asked for another sample and submitted a similar analy sis. Still not convinced he came to Florida this winter and seeing a pile of • corncobs as big as a barn, where 94,000 bushels had been shelled, he concluded there was no doubt concerning the corn-growing quality of the soil. In the Everglades humus 40 feet deep has been discovered, the residue of cen- Millcr's Antiseptic Oil Known As Snake Oil Will Positively Relieve Pain in Three Minutes Try It right now for Kheumatism, Neuralgia, Lumbago, sore, stiff and swollen joints, pains tn the head, back limbs, corns, bunions, etc. Af ter one application pain disappears as If by magic. A never failing remedy used Inter nally and externally for Coughs, Colds, Croup, Sore Throat, Diphtheria and Tonsilltis. This oil is conceded to be the most penetrating remedy known. Its prompt and Immediate effect in re lieving pain Is due to the fact that it penetrates to the affected parts at once. As an illustration, pour ten drops on the thickest piece of sole leather and it will penetrate this sub stance through and through in three minutes. Accept no substitute. This great oil is golden red color only, livery bottle guaranteed; 25c, 50c and SI.OO a bottle, or money refunded. Sold by GeTo. A. Gorgas' Drug Store, Harrisburir.—Adv. HHHHHHIHRMHHHH . J Damaged By Water Sale Starts To-morrow r Sides & Sides Commonwealth Hotel Building ' • turles of decaying vegetation in the lake region. My authority for these statements Is ex-Mayor Gillette, of Tampa, who is widely Interested in the development of the resources of the peninsula. So, after all Florida is something more than the winter playground of a few thousand visitors. Many fine resorts, however, are being established outside the beaten path of the east coast und the problem now Involves the railroads and hotels. E. J. S. SHOOTS DOWN 35th PLANK Paris, March 18.—Captain Guyne mer, the famous French aviator, brought down his thirty-fifth German airplane. ENGLISH COAST SHELLED London, March 19. —German tor pedo boats shelled towns along the Kentish coast early Sunday morning, but did little damage, according to an official statement issued last night. "Some enemy torpedo boats and de stsoyers approached the Kentish coast at 12.45 o'clock Sunday morning. They fired a number of shells at cer tain coast towns. There were no casualties. The material damage was slight, one occupied and two empty houses being hit." LIVING ON YOUR NERVE Everybody has a store of nervous en* I ergy. When work or worry without sufficient rest exhausts this store a con dition results that medical men call r neurasthenia. It is commonly met 'with in those who have had keen anxieties, as tliosa who have cared for sick relatives, bus | iness men who worry over their affairs | and neglect to take vacations. Women | who are too active socially, anyone wlio , has too much excitement and too littlo rest may show the symptoms. The complexion becomes pale, you imagine unpleasant things, your brain insists oil working when you want to £0 to sleep. Sometimes you are mel ancholy. Things that used to please you no longer do 80. Constipation ia usually present. You worry about yourself and your work and cannot for get your anxieties. No doctor can cure neurasthenia. You have to do it yourself. The first thing is to write to the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y., for the booklet on the home treatment of nervous disorders. If you want to start the treatment before the book comes get a fifty-cent box of Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills from the nearest drug ■tore and follow the directions carefully. Get the Habit of Drinking Hot Water ' Before Breakfast Baya we can't look or feel right j with the eystem full of poitons. Millions of folks bathe internally now instead of loading their system with drugs. "What's an inside bath?" you say. Well, it is guaranteed to per form miracles' if you could believe these hot water enthusiasts. There are vast numbers of men and women who, immediately upon arising in the morning, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of lime stone phosphate in it. This is a very excellent health measure. It is intend ed to llush the stomach, liver, kidneys and the thirty feet of intestines of'the previous day's waste, sour bile and in digestible material left over in the body which if not eliminated every day become food for the nitons of bac teria which infest the bowels, the quick result is poisons and toxins which are then absorbed into the blood, causing headache, bilious at tacks, t'oUl breath, bad taste, colds, stomach trouble, kidney misery, sleep lessness, impure blood and all sorts of ailments. People who feel good one day and badly the next, but who simply can not get feeling right, are urged to ob tain a quarter-pound of limestone phosphate at the drug store. This will cos>t very little but is sufficient to make anyone a real crank on the sub ject of internal sanitation. Just as soap and hot water act on the skin, cleansing, sweetening and freshening, so limestone phosphate and hot water act on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. It is vastly more Important to bathe on the Inside than on the outside, because the skin pores do not absorb impurities into the blood, while the bowel pores do. 15
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers