12 B. & L. READY FOR BUSINESS JWest Shore Association Will Start Next Monday With Capital of $500,000 Lemovne, Pa, March 27. —On Mon day next the West Shore Building and Savings Association will open for busi ness. The first regular meeting will be held in the Lemoyne company build ing at 7.30 o'clock, at which time sub scriptions to the first series will be paid. The association was chartered March 14, with an authorized capital of $500,000; 2,000 shares of instal ment stock; 4,000 shares of paid up stock, with a par value of $25. Applications for stock may be made to any of the officers, directors, the agencies,, or by written request to the secretary, A. Elwyn Strode, Camp Hill. Agencies for the payment of dues will be established as follows: Camp Hill, M. F. Tripner's grocery store; Enola. Dr. Roy H. Holmes, drug store; Lemoyne, Sheaffer & Eshel man's hardware store; New Cumber land, J. R. Hutchison's jewelry store; Washington Heights, J. H. Bower, Jr. v , general store; West Fairview, West Fairview Library, Main street; Worm leysburg, C. H. Miller, general mer chandise store. Successful business men from each borough 'are on the board of directors. The officers of the association are all property owners on the West Shore. The financial officers are bonded. The by-laws of the association will be found in each of the receipt books, as well as the interest table. Each member of the association must sign the constitution and by-laws in his or her book. The Old Age Sign Double Crossed V I ' Don't let gray hair make you look years older than you are, for it is now an easy matter to tint gray, faded or bleached hair in a harmless way. The new preparation. "Brownatone," is proving so popular that thousands of people of refinement and many leading hair-dressers are now using this won derful product exclusively. "Brownatone" meets every demand and fulfills every test required of it, and is so simple to use that no pre vious experience is necessary. Comes ready for use—no mixing and is en tirely free from lead, sulphur, silver, zinc, mercury, aniline, coal-tar pro ducts or their derivatives. There is no danger of irritation or a poisoned scalp when you use "Brownatone," because it is guaranteed harmless. Produces the most beautiful shades from light golden to the deepest brown or black. Will not rub or wash off and cannot be detected. Most all lead ing druggists everywhere now sell "Brownatone" in two sizes, 25c and SI.OO, and in two colors one to pro duce "golden or .medium brown," the other "dark brown or black." Get a 25c bottle from your dealer to day. or if you prefer, a sample bottle with interesting book will be mailed on receipt of 10c, to help pay postage and packing charges, if sent to the manufacturers, The Kenton Fharma cal Co., 672 Scott St., Covington, Ky. Sold and guaranteed in Harrisburg by Clark's Medicine Stores, 300 Market street, 306 Broad street, and other lead ing dealers. Miller's Antiseptic Oil Known A Snake Oil Will Positively Believe Pain in Three Minutes Try it right now for Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Lumbago, sore, stiff and swollen joints, pains in the head, back and limbs, corns, bunions, etc. Af ter one application pain disappears as if by magic. A never falling remedy used inter nally and externally for Coughs, Colds, Croup, Sore Throat, Diphtheria and Tonsilitis. , This oil ts 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. Every bottle guaranteed; 25c, 50c and SI.OO a bottle, or money refunded. Sold by Geo. A. Gorgas' Drug Store, Harrisburg.—Adv. 'r — ' ——— Belts Abdominal, surgical and supporting belts. All stand ard makes, shapes and sizes, and special ones ob tained on measure-orders. Private Fitting Room Forney's Drugstore Second St., near Walnut L ——— * . It's hard to understand why some people will put up with such un sightly chandeliers and brass beds when, at small cost, they could be made to look like new. Remove the Tarnish From Brass and Silver If you would like to know how Utfle it will cost you to have your chandeliers, brass beds, silverware, etc., refln ished, phone us or drop us a card. We do all work en trusted to us In such a careful fanner that you cannot~l*lp but be well pleased. Both Phones, Harrisburg. Pa. t TUESDAY EVENING, WARN OF SPRING FOREST FIRES Snow Is Rapidly Disappearing From Woods; Many Dead Leaves The annual warning of the ap proach of the spring forest Are season was issued to-day by Commissioner of Forestry Robert S. Conklin. Re ports from the northern counties state that but little snow remains in the woods except on the north side of the hills, and in the southern part of the State the dead leaves are practically bare. Twt weeks more of dry weath er will usher in the series of confla grations which disgrace Pennsylvania every year. No fire warden system or method of protection can reform the born fool who forgets his fire, says the Commis sioner. His change of heart must come from within. Pure carelessness caused the burning of 150,000 acres of forest last year in Pennsylvania, and of over 300,000 acres in 1915. "Our working force is as well pre pared as it can be with the small amount of money left from last year," said the Commissioner, "but un less we get the active help of every man who visits or lives near the for ests we can expect nothing better than a repetition of last year's record, which was above the average. The men who take most from the forest often give least in return, as wit ness the fact that the heaviest fires usually occur during trout fishing and hunting seasons. A man would not think of burning his neighbor's barn will thoughtlessly allow his brush lire to escape and burn over his neighbor's woodlot, which may contain in embryo building material for a hundred barns." The usaul warning notices are being posted on the State forests, and the following suggestions are offered to those who are willing to help con serve what remains of Pennsylvania's forests: If you see a fire, try to put it out. If you can't put it out, immediately notify the nearest forest fire warden His name will be published in this pa per within the next two weeks. Break your match in two before you throw it away. If you are one of those who "can't see no sense in that," try it. , Bury your pipe ashes and cigar or cigarette stubs, or else throw them into o stream. Have a cleared spot of at least ten feet in diameter around your camp fire, and then be dead sure the fire is out before you leave it. If you own or use engines, put spark arresters on them. It may save you costs and damages later on. Don't burn your brush on a dry, windy day. If in doubt, ask your fire warden. The Department of Forestry is glad to have you report on the conduct of its officers, but your report will be im measurably strengthened If it can be established that you have done your own duty in preventing and extin guishing fires. HOW ENGLAND SOLVED THK GLASS PROBLEM "All sorts of curious problems have c ropped up." says Sydney Brooks in the March Number of National Ser vice magazine, "in the course of this huge enterprise [i. e., the mar velous reorganization of British indus try for the manufacture of munitions of war]. One was the problem of chemical and optical glass. Without optical glass of the finest quality an army cannot be provided with gun sights, range finders, periscopes and telescope sights for the snipers' rifles. Without chemical glass, capable of standing a very high temperature, n explosives works can get along for even a single day. For both these vital purposes our home-made glass was all but useless. We depended on Germany for the best kind of op tical glass and on Austria for chem ical glass. What did the government do? It first commandeered every ounce of the right sort of glass to be found in the British Isles. Then it ransacked America for more. Then it put the whole problem up to the men of science and told them to discover the formulae and the methods of manufacture in use in Germany. The men of science retired to their labora tories and in a fortnight reappeared with all the necessary information." COURT COSTS LOWER Court costs for the March criminal sessions totaled $2,467.78, according to figures compiled by County Treasurer Mark Mumma. Costs for criminal court usually total almost $3,000, but county officials attribute the drop to the fewer number of cases, and the disposal of many of the cases within a day after they were scheduled to be tried. Costs were divided as follows: Constables, $278.96; police, $172.50; grand jury, $344.64; petit jury, $1,032.58; tipstaves, $162; witnesses, $477.10. fEVEN IF YOU HAD A NECK At Lonj Ai This Ftlliw, And Had 50RE THROAT iOOWN "0 NSI LINE WOULD QUICKLY RELIEVE IT. A quick, safe, soothing, healing, antiseptic relief for Soro Throat, briefly describes TONSILINE. A small bottle of Tonsiline lasts longer than most any case of So rm Throat. TONSILINI relieves Sore Mouth and Hoarseness and prevents Quinsy. 25c. tod 50c. Hospital Size SI.OO. All Druggists. THK TOWSILINK COMPANY, . . Canton, Ohio. GREATEST CATARRH DOCTOR 111 WORLD Here Today In Harrisburg, Pa. When a sufferer from Catarrah be gins to breathe the pure wholesome healing air of Hyomei into the sore, inflamed membranes'and tissues'of his nose and throat, he usually decides then and there that he, and Catarrh are going to part company forever. Its surprising how quickly Hyomei does work. Blessed relief conies in less than five minutes. The clogged' nostrils open, the nasty mucus discharges, 'spitting, choking, etc., all stop and the head, nose and throat clear out like magic. Hyomei does more. It kills the germs which breed catarrh and ends the disease. Safe, clean, pleasant and harmless to use and very Inexpensive. H. C. Kennedy and other leading drug gists say "money back" If In any case It falls. Better than stomach dosing, spraying, gargling, etc., and beats greasy ointments two to one. No won der happy users call It the "greatest catarrah doctor In the world."—Adv. BUT THIS IS HOW I WHAT po nou MEAN TO Sft/ voo kaven'T \| > HEARD OF ME-—'ME GREAT ATONES? —' ) [ WHY.'I-WAS FELLOW WHO.TOOK J HE^prni^ Business Firms Offer Jobs to Princeton Boys Princeton, N. J„ March 27. Princeton seniors are no longer job less. As a result of a job-market es tablished on the campus a few weeks ago corporations from many sections of the country are now writing for employees with an eagerness indicat ing a great demand for college men. Most of the jobs offered the Prince ton boys are at a salary of from SSO to S7O a month, but a number of cor porations offer specialized work at j considerably higher salaries. The firms who have written to Princeton's job market include large department stores, railway companies, public service corporations, automobile and other manufacturing plants, broker age firms and chemical manufacturing companies. It is a notable fact that in several of these instances firms speci fy that they desire men whose ideals in life are for service rather than per sonal gain. The Princeton committee on busi ness opportunities, organized by the seniors themselves, is now busy at another angle of the situation, that is, trying to find men to accept the posi tions. HOPES FOR TEMPERATE CHINESE NEWSPAPERS A new native paper, the Hsin Shun Pao, has been started at Shanghai with Chinese and British capital. It is received by the foreign press there with pats on the back. One says: "The history of journalism in China has hitherto followed closely on the lines of the experience of other coun tries. During the revolution of 1913 there were few Chinese newspapers which appeared able to exercise any restraint upon their language, and even yet the newspapers of the cap ital have hardly learned the bounds of fair criticism, as evidenced by the protest which the diplomatic body was recently compelled to make to the Chinese government against the in temperance of local editors. Of such exurberance time is a great healer; and in the capable hands of Its editor, Mr. Hsl Tzu-pei, we do not doubt that the Hsin Shun Pao will set a standard worthy of the journalism of any country." TO START WORK ON NEW CHINESE RAILROAD The Chinese ministry of communi cation, says the Far East, Is complet ing arrangements for the construction of the long-proposed railway line to connect Peking and Jehol. The road will traverse the districts of Shunyi, Miyun, Cupelkow and Lanpin, and will of course open an important field for commercial development. The route has already been laid out and surveyed. It is estimated that the con struction will take about three years, and will cost in the neighborhood of $12,000,000 gold to drawn from the profits of the Peking-Mukden and Peking-Hankow railways, $4,000,000 the first year, $3,000,000 the second, and $5,000,000 the third year. Any deficit will be met by the flotation of a short domestic loan. USED RAILS BRING SAME PRICE AS WHEN NEW The high price of steel may be said jto have wiped out the depreciation j which resulted from 26 years' use of ! the rails In an electric car line, run- I ning out from Tacoma, Wash. This fact was brought out a few months after the company began to improve four miles of its track with new and heavier rails. The old 40-pound rails were torn up and stored In the yard of the company. Since the war began some 260 tons have been sold to' log ging companies for $7,800, which is S3O per ton, or just what they cost when they were laid twenty-five years . ago. Even the teel which formed the ; track at the curves, and ordinarily would be regarded as worth while, sold for half Its original cost.—From the April Popular Mechanics Magazine. BE INDEPENDENT I have always regretted that I did not remain a free-lance —an independ ent agent—until I was twenty-five. If I had done so, I am sure that I could have made a more profitable and a wiser choice when it came to the selec tion of a career. As it was, I took a salaried job and blundered on from one job to another until I reached the place where I now am. I have been mixed up In some moderately big things. However, I don't recall that personally I have ever done any par ticularly big thing, and even if I felt that I had, I should be obliged to admit that I had done It with another man's money and in another man's name. This might not have been the case with me and others like me if we had not taken salaried jobs until we were twenty-five.—William Max well in "If I Were Twenty-one," in Collier's. HAY BILL "FLINT-LOCK LAW" "The worest enemies of real pre paredness." says Colonel Roosevelt In the March Issue of National Service, "arc not the out-and-out, peace-at any-price, professional pacifists, for these are such a foolish folk that they cannot do lasting harm. The wordt enemies are the advocates of a sham preparedness. The best example Is of fered by the mischteveous and thor oughly unpatriotic Hay Military Bill, at the last session of Congress—a bill which represents fiint-lock legislation of the worst type." HARXUSBURG <&£& TELEGRAPH Publication of Honor Roll Increases School Attendance Duncannon, Pa., March 27. —Since the announcement by Assistant Pro fessor John DeHaven, of the High school that the namds of those having a perfect attendance record would be published in the HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH, the percentage of per fect attendance has increased fifty per cent. Following is the list of those present every day for the month just closed: Harry Arney, Henry Arter, Blake Alander, Lee Bucke, Leroy De- Haven, Dewey Kennedy, Donald Kluck, Edgar Kirkpatrick, Alfred Mil ler, Grant Mixell, Russell Noss, Wil liam Page, Clifton Pines, Edward Reiter. Alida Buckaloo, Elanor Crom leigh, Amelia Cope, Grace Fry, Wilma Harper, Ruth Johnston, Martha Mil ler, Mae Morrow, Alberta Morris, Grace Nickum, Martha Perry, Martha Michener, Ruth Wilkinson, Blanche eli. During the erftire six months Don ald Kluck, Wilma Harper, Mae Mor row, Martha Perry and Clifton Pines were present every day. Safety First Bulletins For Alien Mine Workers By Associated Press Washington, D. C., March 27.—Cir culars in foreign language and em bodying lessons in first aid to the in jured are to be distributed by the Bureau of Mines in furtherance of its safety first campaign among the mil lion miners in the United States. The first of a series of circulars for the benefit of foreigners have been issued in Italian, Polish and Slovak. In announcing the plan Secretary Lane said that it "is not only an addi tional effort toward the safety of the miners, but is also a step in the line of good citizenship. There is no possi bility of making a good citizen out of a dead miner, and our first duty in behalf of good citizenship is to help prevent miners from being killed." To make the circulars of educational value and to teach and encourage for eigners to learn the English language, the foreign translation is printed on one page and the English equivalent on the other. WHAT "BARRAGE FIRE" IS An interesting feature of artillery fire is the "curtain" or "barrage" fire. This means simply keeping up such a terrific fire on a certain area that an enemy cannot or will not cross it. When an infantry attack is launched, a barrage on the ground be yond the enemy's front line prevents his reinforcements coming up while the attacking infantry are having it out with the defenders of the trench. If the attack carries beyond the first line, the artillery of the defense promptly interposes a barrage to pre vent its reaching the second line. If the attack on the first line fails, the defending artillery puts a barrage be j hind the attacker's line, to prevent reinforcements cjbming up to it, and to enable the victorious defenders to counter-attack and destroy the enemy in his own trenches. It is merely a wholesale development of a long es tablished method of supporting the infantry.—Major E. D. Scott, in Na tional Service Magazine for March. OCR WEAK DEFENSE What of our defenses against sub marines? Practically nothing has been done since 1914. These defenses are chiefly destroyers and fast motor boats, airplanes and dirigibles, nets and booms. We have to-day two less destroyers in commissio nthan we had in 1914, or forty-nine in all—Just about enough to scout with our battle fleet. Three more can be finished this year. We have sixteen old-style tor pedo boats. . GRANDMOTHER KNEW ; There Was Nothing So Good for Congestion and Colds as Mustard But the old-fashioned mustard-plaster burned and blistered while it acted. You can now get the relief and help that mustard plasters gave, without the plas ter and without the blister. Musterole does it. It is a clean, white ointment, made with oil of ■ mustard. It is scientifically prepared, j so that it works wonders, and yet does not blister the tenderest skin. Just massage Musterole in with the finger tips gently. See how quickly it brings relief—hoyw; speedily the pain disappears. Use Musterole for sore throat, bron chitis, tonsilitis { croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, headache, conges tion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and aches of back or joints, ! sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chil blains, frosted feet, colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). BURLESON TACTICS ANGER DEMOCRATS Legislation to Curb Postmaster General Expected at Special Session Washington, March 27.—Postmaster General Burleson's recent announce ment that postmasters o£ the first, sec ond and third class were to be placed under civil service April 1, may de velop into a boomerang for his admin istrative liberties. There is a serious discussion among certain members of Congress now in Washington—not less than sixty Democrats among them — of the desirability of framing legisla tion at the coming special session that will put a decided crimp in his powers as head of the postal system. It is the climax, they say, of original service policies which have wrecked more than one House political career and which unquestionably cost the Democratic party not less than 500,000 votes last November. The Republicans declare the Postmaster General is de stroying the country's postal efficiency for the sake of an administrative rec ord. "It isn't difficult to note what raised Cain with the Democrats at the polls last November," said Speaker Champ Clark. "It now seems a question whether or not we can again control the House. This latest idea of placing tirst, second and third class postmas ters under civil service will likely put on the finishing touches." •"Civil service for postmasters is all right/' said Representative Van Dyke, of Minnesota. "It is the ideal and what most of the far-seeing public men want. But how is this latest an nouncement going to work out? I don't know, and, as a matter of fact, I suspect no one else knows. I have grave doubt., I propose to introduce a civil service bill for postmasters the first day of the extra session that will mean civil service in fact." Some members don't hesitate to say privately that pique is responsible for the order. Ever since Congress shack led by legislative action a near anni hilation of the rural service and later failed to enact into law some of Mr. Burleson's pet service schemes such as government ownership of the tele graph and telephones, one cent drop letter postage, elimination of the pneu matic tube service and a departmental guaranty fund for bonding postal em ployees, relations between the postof- Hce department and Congress have been pretty well strained. This was heigtened within the past six weeks when Senator Hartwlck, of Georgia, established the existence of confiden tial orders for -a revision of the rail way mail service which would, in ef t'eet, stop the greater part of the work ing of mails on trains and compel a return to the old system of dispatching offices under the guise of terminal dis tributing points. The criticism from this discovery added considerable fuel to the flames. It will therefore be seen that Mr. Burleson's latest order takes on a decidedly cumulative atmosphere, and to the mind of an average mem ber of Congress the presence of pique seems pretty well established. Incidentally, many national legisla tors now here say that complaints of miserable mail service have become so frequent lately that they are be coming chronic, and this fact isn't go ing to help future postal legislation from the department standpoint to any substantial degree. There are some Republican Con gressmen who venture the assertion that Mr. Burleson has determined to deprive! the legislative branch of all postal patronage because of the lamen table failures of his legislative pro grams In the past four years. They seem to see in it a desire to chastise fellow Democrats. "There may be something after all in the Vice-President's 'snivel service." Just now it looks to me like the He publicans are playing rotten politics. They should let the P. M. G. continue to run amuck with weird policies. It will help two years hence." The House member who expressed this view is a Southerner and regarded as a regular. Obviously it would not be policy to re veal his name and he made that re quest.' K Y I.IOS VI 1.1.K HOTEL GOES "DRY" York, Pa.. March 27.—The Jack Hotel, Kylesville, Lower Chanceford township, has gone permanently dry. Judges N. M. Wanner and N. S. Ross yesterday is sued a decree refusing to grant the license to Charles E. Prey for the pur- I pose of immediately transferring 4t to Harris L. Crumbling. The case had been hanging Are ever since January and at tracted wide attention. Combing Won't Rid Head of Dandruff The only sure way to get'rid of dan druff is to dissolve It, then you destroy i>. entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; apply it. at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub It In gently with the finger tips. Do this to-nigin, and by morning most, if not all. of your dandruff will bf none, and three or four more appli cations * jvtll completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dan druff vo" mnv have. You will find, too, that all Itching and digging of the scalp will stop at once, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It ts inexpensive and never fails to do the work.—Advertisement. 1 NO MORE FOOT MISERY ICE-MINT I A NEW DISCOVERY STOPS I SORENESS AND CORNS I FALLS OfT | Just a touch or two with ice-mint ] and your corns and foot troubles are j ended. It takes the soreness right out, I (Jien the corn or callous shrivels and lifts off. No matter what you have tried or how many times you have been disap pointed here is a real help for you at last. You will never have to cut a corn again or bother with bungling tape or plasters. Hard corns, soft corns or corns be tween the toes, Just shrivel up and lift oil so easy. It's wonderful..You feel no pain or soreness when applying Ice mint or afterwards. It doesn't even ir ritate the skin. This new discovery made from a Japanese product is certainly magical the way it draws out inflammation from a pair of swollen, burning, aching feet. Ice-mint imparts such a delightful cool ing, soothing feeling to the feet that it lust makes you sigh with relief. It Is the real Japanese secret for fine, healthy little feet. It is greatly appreciated by women who wear high heel shoes. It ab solutely prevents foot odors and koeps them sweet and comfortable. It costs little and will give your poor, tired, suffering, swollen feet the treat of their lives. Sold and recommended by good druggists everywhere.—Adv. MARCH 27, 1917. RARE MALADY CAUSES DEATH Lykcns Salvation Army Girl Dies From Hodgkin's Dis ease at Pittsburgh Lykens, Pa., March 27. —Miss Myrtle C. Richards, a Salvation Army worker, aged 21 years, died at Pitts burgh, March 22, from the Hodgkin's disease, which Is very rare. Only one case of Hodgkin's disease was ever re ported to the local registrar and phy sicians say there are very few cases. The body was brought to the home of Isaac Williams, her grandfather, here, on Sunday where funeral services were held at 3 o'clock In the afternoon, conducted by the Rev. Alexander Gib son, of the Methodist Episcopal Church, assisted by Mrs. Potts, a Sal vation Army worker, of Philadelphia. There were about twenty-five beauti fuj designs of flowers. Burial was made in Odd fellows cemetery. ARMS AND THE ARMY "We, in England, have learned, and in a pretty severe school," says Sydney Brooks, in the March issue of National Service magazine, "what should have been tolerably obvious even before experience had driven it unforgettably into our consciousness: that armies cannot tight without weapons, and that raising an army, drilling it, and training it are far simpler processes than arming it. It is amazing—or would be if the folly of governments had not long ago bereft pne of the sense of wonder —how often this fundamental prin ciple, this almost stupefying common place, of preparedness is overlooked. Men talk as though they Viad really accomplished something when they have federalized the National Guard or added to the numbers of the regu lar army or changed this or that fea ture of its organization, or voted a great increase in the appropriations for the navy. But what they have thereby achieved, if anything, amounts to very little, almost, indeed, to noth ing, unless simultaneously they have taken steps to insure an ample supply of munitions. The men you can al ways get. At the call of the nation volunteers will always be forthcoming in abudance. But if it takes time to convert them into soldiers it takes far longer to furnish them with the all but infinitely variegated implements of modern war." GUARDSMEN NOT TO BLAME If we are to ask the 150,000 men who compose the National Guard to hold themselves ready for first-line service in case of war or for patrol and police duty in time of peace, it is not they who are to be blamed for expecting substantial remunera tion from their fellow-citizens for undertaking this task. The more that we require of these men the more the Nation must be prepared to pay them. The condemnation of pay for the militia has often missed its mark. It is by no means the men of the militia who are at fault. The trouble lies In tolerating a state of affairs under which it is necessary to bid for the military service of citizens in com petition with the rewards of com mericial life.—National Service Mag- SHORT TREATMENT WITH POSLAM HEALS PIMPLES Those pimples are unsightly and should not be tolerated. Clear them away; please your friends and remove the cause of embarrassment to your self. To get rid of them is simple—ap ply Poslam at night, and leave it on in the daytime too, when convenient. Pos lam acts quickly. You can soon see benefits. It is absolutely harmless. bo effective is Poslam that a little of it will cover a large surface. It is its QUALITY, not the quantity of it, that does the work. Sold everywhere. For . free sample write to Emergency Laboratories, 32 West 25th St.. New York City. Poslam Soap, medicated with Poslam, brightens, beautifies, freshens complex ions.—Adv. Dangerous To Health PERISHABLE food should be kept in a well-iced refrigerator. It is dangerous to health to put food out of doors where germs are always flying about and arc apt to settle on the food through loose covers and torn paper wrappers. Besides germs, dust ' and dift are blown upon food from rugs shaken out of windows and from soot and smoke and dirty streets. The proper care of food demands the constant use of ice. Alspure Ice is made from water that has been filtered, boiled, reboiled, skimmed and again filter ed. United Ice & Coal Co. Forster & Cowden Sts. EDUCATIONAL School of Commerce Troup Building ' IB So. Market Sq. Day & Night School Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Stenotjrpe, Typewrit lag and Penmanship Bell 480 Cumberland 24V-Y Harrisburg Business College A Reliable School, 31st Year SICU Market St. Harrlnburg, Pa. YOUNG MEN'S BUSINESS INSTITUTE Hershey Building JUNIORS BURN 1917 BANNER Duncannon Boys Then Place American Flag on Pole; It Still Waves Duncannon, Pa., March 27.—Pupils at the local High school pever watt until the end of the term fo,r the an nual flag fight. They always have that battle settled before the advent of the busy days of graduation. Members of the senior class raised a large 191 s :' . banner one evening last week on th® flag vole of the High school. Thj(| then cut the ropes to prevent it being torn down, the certain fate of all ban.- ners in previous years. The flag pole is much too shaky to allow much climbing, which dismayed juniors for some time. Finally, how ever, the idea of burning the banner with a torch seemed the most feasible. One was fastened on the end of a pole and the 1917 was soon a few ashes. Again the juniors were at a loss; they had no banner ready to take the place of the destroyed one. Led by Leroy DeHaven, three other juniors decided to fling an American flag to the breeze. They knew the seniors would not molest that flag. The flag still waves over the school house. Ambition Pills For Nervous People The great nerve tonic—the famous * Wendell's Ambition Pills—that will put vigor, vim and vitality into ner vous tired out, all In, despondent people in a few days. Anyone can buy a box for only 50 cents, and H. C. Kennedy is author ized by the maker to refund the pur chase price if anyone is dissatisfied with the first box purchased. Thousands praise them for general debility, nervous prostration, mental depression and unstrung ner* os by over-indulgence In alcohol, tobacco, or overwork of any kind. For any affliction of the nervous system Wendell's Ambition Pills art unsurpassed, while for hysteria, trem bling and neuralgia they are simply splendid. Fifty cents at H.. C. Ken nedy and dealers everywhere. Mail or ders filled, charges prepaid by Wendell Pharmacal Co. Inc., Syracuse, N. Y.— Adv. Rebuilt Visible TYPEWRITERS —for the home Almost (lail.v, the average business man or woman has occasion to use a typewriter I at home— J —yet. the occasion scarcely demands a [ SIOO expenditure for a _new machine. To meet that demand, we offer a limited num ber of factory rebuilt machines practically good as new. , And our low office ex penses enables us to sell these rebuilt ma chines at really trifling cost to you. See them —with no ob ligation on your part to buy. Geo. P. Tillotson 211 l/ocust St. Hell Dial j 3762 4802 I GRADUATES^ Our line of Commence ment Invitations, Pro grams and Announce ments is now ready and we invite your in spection. This year's samples are designed with a special view of meeting the growing demand for the displaying of class colors, and the varied designs are most beautiful and pleasing. These Goods Can Be Famished Either Printed, Embossed or Engraved To Sait Purchaser Visiting or Personal Cards < Engraved or Printed Get in touch with our Sales Department without 5 delay. Let us know your de = sires and we will submit j' samples and quote prices. ; THE TELEGRAPH , PRINTING CO. 216 Federal Square HARRISBURG, PA. ttsg" Good Printing The Telegraph Printing Co*
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers