Parade and Flagraising at Newport on Saturday Newport, Pa., April 26.—Patriotic red, white and blue posters promi nently placed in all parts of Newport and throughout Perry county, calls attention to the great parade and flagraising ceremonies here on. Sat urday afternoon. The parade will move through the principal streets, starting at 3 o'clock, and there is | a place for every man, woman and child of the borough. All the orga nizations of the town will be in line and five bands or drum corps been assured. At the flagraising ceremonies in Center Square, Governor Martin G. Brumbaugh will be present and de liver an address on "Our Duties to Our Country. " Mrs. G. A. Matson will speak on the work of the Red Cross Society, and Sergeant John H. Blake, of th United States Army recruiting service, will be on hand to receive enlistments for the army and navy. AID SOCIETY SOCIAL. New Cumberland, Pa., April 26. The Ladies' Aid Society of the Baughman Memorial Methodise Church, New Cumberland, will hold a box social In the Sunday School room, Tuesday evening. May 1, at 7.45. A short musical program will be rendered during the evening. A Sure Way To End Dandruff There is one sure way that has never failed to remove dandruff at once, and that is to dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, just get about four ounces of plain, common liquid arvon from any drug store (this is all you will need), ap ply it at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. By morning, most if not all. of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will com pletely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. You will find all itching and dig ging of the scalp will stop instantly, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better —Adv. ORRINE SAVED HIM FROM DRINK That Orrine really does bring quick j relief to those being tortured by the j liquor habit, is the testimony of many mothers, wives and daughters. This scientific preparation prompt ly kills all desire for whiskey, beer and other intoxicants. It can be given in the home secretly without loss of time from work. No sani- j tarium expense. We are so sure that Orrine will j benefit that we say to you, if, after a | trial you fail to get any benefit from its use, your money will be refunded. I Costs only SI.OO a box. Ask us for j free booklet telling all about Orrine. j Oeorge A. Gorgas, 16 N. Third street, Harrisburg; John A. McCurdv. Steel ton: H. F. Brunhouse, Mechanics-j burg.—Adv. j "I Felt So Tired and • Lazy," He Explains Stoclton Man Says "Whatever My Trouble Was It's Gone— Thanks to Tanlac WAS QUICKLY RELIEVED "Maybe it was just laziness. 1 , don't know, but the doctors said 1 had catarrh of the bladder," say Robert E. Miller, a steel worker, of Bteelton, Pa., "but I do know that I hadn't enough gumption to lick a i postage stamp. "I felt so tired and lazy that work was a labor for me and some con stant Irritation of my bladder made life almost unbearable." "I doctored for a long time with out Retting any satisfaction until some of the boys in the mill told me about Tanlac and urged me to try It." "Well I was ready to try any thing. I felt that bad, so I'started ! In. Why It wasn't any time at all, j seemed to me, before I began feel ing some better; then I felt a whole i lot better and now, whatever my trouble was it's gone and I feel fine as silk." "I eat and sleep fine and my work goes as easy as anybody could wish. Tanlac sure is a great and good med icine and I'm going to pass the word along." Tanlac, the famous reconstruc tive tonic, is now being introduced here at Gorgas' Drug Store, where the Tanlac man is meeting the peo ple and explaining the merits of this master medicine.—Adv. $3.00 —TO— New York AND RETURN Via READING RAILWAY SUNDAY MAY 0 Special Excursion Train FROM ' I.v.A.M. Harrisburg 3.35 Hummelstown 3.50 Swatara 3.55 Hershey 3.57 Palmyra 4.04 An/ivilio 4.13 Lebanon 4.24 New York (arrive) ... 9.40 RETURNING—Leave New York from foot West 23d Street 6.50 P. M., foot Liberty Street 7.00 P. M. same day for above stations. ——— ■/ EDUCATIONAL School of Commerce Troup liulldins 15 So. Market Sq. Day and Night School Hook keeping, Shorthand, Stenotype, Typewriting - and I'enntim Mhlp Hell 4*3 turaberlnnd U4O-Y Harrisburg Business College A Reliable School, 31st Year "*St> Market St. Uarrlaburic, Pa. THURSDAY EVENING, WEST SHORE NEWS Ministers' Male Quartet to Give Concert at Lemoyne Lemoyne, Pa., April 26.—T0-mor row evening the Pennsylvania United Brethren Male Quartet, composed of ministers of the conference, will give a concoct under the auspices of the beginners, department of Calvary United Brethren Sunday School. The members of the quartet are: First tenor, the Rev. W. 11. Beattie. Ureeneastle: second tenor, the Rev. P. R. Koontz, Lemoyne; lirst basso, the Rev. R. R. Rhodes, York: second basso, the Rev. A. R. Ay res, of New Cumberland. I'TXERAIi OF H. B. SMITH Camp llill, Pa., April 26.—Funeral services for H. B. Smith, formerly of Dillsburg, who died yesterday morning', at the liome of his daugh ter, Mrs. John Wolfe, will be held to-morrow afternoon at 1 o'clock from the home of his son. R. L. Smith, at Dillsburg. Burial will be made in the Dillsburg Cemetery. He is survived by his wife, Louise Smith: six daughters. Mrs. George Spahr, New Cumberland; Mrs. George Wolfe, Mechanicsburg; Mrs. John Wolfe, Sliiremanstown: Mrs. John Wolfe, of Camp Hill; Mrs. M. H. Gettys and Mrs. George Gates, of Harrisburg: four sons, Calder, of Mechanicsburg: R. L. Smith, of Dillsburg; L. R. and C. W. Smith, of Harrisburg. * . PARTY ON GIHI/S BIRTHDAY I New Cumberland, Pa.. April 26. — Mr. and Mrs. George Adams, of Elk. ; wood, entertained on Monday, night, complimentary to their daughter. Juanita Frances Adams' fourth birthday anniversary. The table dec orations were pink and white roses. The guests were: Miss Frances Reilly, Juanita Adams, George Adams, Jr.. Sophia. Oscar and Mar guerite Stegar. Evelyn Darland, Wil liam Reilly. Mrs. Potter, Mrs. John Hoffman and Mr. and Mrs. Adams. RED CROSS AUXILIARY New Cumberland, Pa.. April 26. A meeting will be held next Wed nesday afternoon. May 2, at the home of Miss Marian Lelb. at "The Terraces." to make plans for start ing a Red Cross Auxiliary. All per sons interested in this work are re quested to be present. MAY DAY ENTERTAINMENT New Cumberland, Pa., April 26. A May Day entertainment will be held May first, at 2 o'clock, by Miss i Mildred Fogelsonger's school. The j features will be a May pole drill, j and the crowning of the May Queen. ENTERTAINED FRIEX l>S New Cumberland, Pa.. April 26. Mr. and Mrs. John Lantz, of Market j street, entertained a number of • friends at their home on Tuesday night. Games were played and music on the Victrola enlivened the evening. TO ENTERTAIN GUILD New Cumberland, Pa.. April 26. — ! The Endora Guild will be entertain ed at the home of Miss Ruth Gil- I more, in Reno street, to-morrow | evening. MEXICO TO SAVE !\RT Mexico City. April 26.—The taking j t'roni the country without govern ment authorization of objects of art i or archeological interest which have j leen in the churches has been strict ly prohibited on the ground that i such objects are the property of the nation. Copies or duplicates must be approved before they can be ex ported. Three carloads 'of alleged ] antiquities and objects of art recent ly shipped from here to the United States have been stopped at under the ruling. The shipment will be examined by an agent of the di rector of arts. NO OTHER GRAY HI RESTORER IS GUARANTEED 1 Don't Use Dyes—Let Q- Ban, a Simple, Safe, Sure Preparation, Bring Nat | ural Color. j Here is the one safe, cleanly, 1 healthful and certain way to restore the natural color to gray or faded, lifeless hair—the one method in per fect good taste and accepted by j America's foremost people. | Q-Ban Hair Color Restorer will bring all your hair back to its origi nal. even shade, and it will be rich, glossy, lustrous and soft. For women, ! Q-Ban means hair of real beauty. Kor ' men and women. Q-Ban means the i look of vitality, health and youth. Simply apply Q-Ban like a sham poo. Surely, wet your hair with Q- Ban Restorer. Your hair will gradu ally and evenly return to its natural, unform shade. Beware of imitations. Beware, too, of dangerous dyes and chemicals. Q-Ban is all ready to use. It is guaranteed to be as harmless as the pure air. It is sold under guarantee of "satisfaction, or money back." It is the only guaranteed preparation for the purpose. It costs only 50c for a large bottle, at Geo. A. Gorgas' and all good drug stores, or write Hessig- Ellis Drug Co.. Memphis, Tenn. Try Q-Ban Hair Tonic, Q-Ban Liquid Shampoo, Q-Ban Toilet Soap: also y-Ban Depilatory fodorless) for j removing superfluous hair. Send for free illustrated book of lectures, "Hair Culture." This tells how to take proper care of your hair. Write to | day. Advertisement. Quality GORGAS Service GORGAS' Fair Price Stores Usually the price at Gorgas' is as low if not lower than elsewhere, but Gorgas never sacrifices Quality to meet' competition. When you buy an article here you are sure it is right !n every way the price In cluded. The policy of the Gorgas' stores is to merit your con fidence by selling dependable drugs and to hold your pat- I ronase by giving you service that is satisfactory to the highest degree. GORGAS' DRUG STORES . 16 N. Third St. , and Penna. Station. „ * 1 1 ' FOnnW they build a OR DESTROY AMAZING, BUT RARELY SUSPECTED TRUTHS ABOUT THE THINGS YOU EAT o r% r, f bt Mcc.V„ b r By ALFRED W. McCANN - -j The American Indian, although long dead, continues to influence the diet of the United States—tlic sun dried apple, wldeli may yet return with all its blessings to tin* people. Is one of the Indian foods which we have lost—camas bread, with the flavor of cooked chestnuts, has be come extinct, never to he revived. In addition to tlsh and game, in cluding the turkey, together with corn, beans, wild rice and pumpkin, the North American Indian placed at the disposal of our forefathers many other foods—potatoes, turnips, pars nips, carrots, beets, radishes and sago. The "Digger Indians" received their name from the fact that they were specialists in cultivating and digging root plants and bulbs. They preserved great quantities of these foods for future use by drying them in the sun. Sun-dried apples, found now only in a few enterprising establishments in the country, such as the Providence Public Market, constitute another of the foods of the redman which we have allowed to get away from us. The sun-dried apple is not so showy a thing as the sulphur-bleach ed apple. But its flavor is infinitely superior, and its wholesomeness, un like that of the sulphured fruit, is unquestionable. The Indian turnip was dried, pounded to meal, and cooked with jerked bison, venison or bear and corn. The Sioux Indians were so fond of the turnip—"prairie root" —that it eventually found its way to Europe. E. D. Neill in 1858 wrote his "His tory of Minnesota." The turnip had played such an important part in the development of that territory that Neill was obliged to notice it. "This root has lately acquired a European reputation," he says. "La mar Picot has introduced it into his native country and the savants of Paris have given it the name of 'Pi cotiana.' It has been suggested that this dry prairie root might yet take an important place among the vege tables which are cultivated for the support of human life." The plains Indians from Canada to Texas had a dish called "kouse" which was probably the origin of our SPRING DRIVE FOR RED CROSS MEMBERSHIP AT DUNCAJINON Illustrated Lecture on Verdun Battlefield in France by Jack-* son Herr lioyd: Addresses by Prominent People; Work Committees Appointed Duncannon, Pa., April 26.—At ono . of the largest public meetings ever] held in the town, the first move in ' the spring drive for Red Cross mem- I bership proved in every way a great] success. The auditorium and Sunday | school room of the Presbyterian j Church was crowded. Mrs. William Jennings presided and Dr. George H. Johnston offered the invocation. An illustrated-lecture by Jackson Herr Boyd, showing the dead and dying on the famous Ver dun battlefield, put the already en thusitfetic audience in just the right mood to march to the front and place their names on the membership list. John Fox Weiss outlined the work that has been done the world over since the organization of the Red Cross movement. Mrs. George A. Matson explained the organization of auxiliary Red Cross chapters and Mrs. B. F. Beale sang "The Spirit of '76." The nominating committee con sisted of Miss Ruth Zimmerman, Mrs. F. C. McMorris and Arthur J. Rife. Officers elected are as follows: Chairman, Mrs. B. S. Duncan; vice-president, Mrs. B. F. Beale: secretary, Anna D. Wills; treasurer, R. Jones Rife. An executive committee was ap pointed as follows: P. F. Duncan, Edward Glass, George Pennell, Dr. |G. H. Johnston, W. W. Sholl, F. T. Koliler, George Boyer, William Jen nings, J. L. L. Bucke. The committee appointed to secure membership consists of: William Jennings, chairman; Dr. George H. TREAT "SOLDIERS' HEART" Dondon, April 26.—A report by the Army Medical Research Com mittee discusses at length the dis ease known as "soldier's heart," which has been very prevalent in the British army during the past two years. The report asserts that the ailment "is not true heart disease at all. but is often treated as such," and shows that about fifty per cent, of those affected have later returned to duty as the result of a system of physical training. The report states that "rest in bed is harmful for these cases, and should be avoided at all stages of treatment except in instances of severe heart pain, se vere headache or giddiness." The ordinary symptoms of "soldier's heart" are breathlessness, pain, ex haustion, giddiness and fainting, with palpitation, lassitude and irrita- I bility. Stomach Not Helped By Artificial Digestents Doctors \o Advl*e Mngnrila for Avid Indigestion Just how foolish It is to indiscrimi nately dose the stomach with drugs and medicines is often not realized until too late. It seems so simple to swallow a dose of some special mix ture or take pepsin tablets, or other artificial digestents after meals, and the folly of this drugging is not ap parent until, perhaps yoars afterward, when chronic dyspepsia his developed or gastric ulcers have almost or en- j tirely eaten their way through the stomach walls. Regrets are then un availing. It is in the early stages when indi gestion, dyspepsia, heartburn, flatu lence. etc., indicate excessive acidity of the stomach or fermentation .of fooil contents that precaution should be taken. In excessive acidity digestents are unsuitable and have little or no in fluence upon the harmful acid; that is why so many are discarding them und advising sufferers from indiges tion and stomach trouble to get rid of the dangerous acid and keep the food contents bland and sweet by tak ing a little pure blsurated magnesia instead. Bisurated Magnesia is a pleasant, harmless, antacid which can be read ily obtained from Geo. A. Gorgas or any drug store. It is practically tasteless and a teaspoonful taken in a little hot or cold water after meals, iwlll usually be found quite sufficient to instantly neutralize.excessive arid ity of the stomach and thus relieve the distress to which it is giving rise. —Advertisement. KARRISBURG TELEGRAPH modern Irish stew, lamb stew or beef stew. They dried and pounded the turnip made a porridge of this meal with whole corn, and in the porridge cooked fowl or game. You may imagine the thrill of sur prise which came to me when upon seeking the origin of the word "kouse" I learned that it was deriv ed from the Arabic Kaskysi. The word is to be found in the Encyclo pedia Britanica as "couscous," or "kous-kous," a dish common among the inhabitants of North Africa made of pounded flour rubbed together and steamed over a stew of mutton or fowl. Surely the North American Indian has had nothing in common with the North African. Yet. the Arabic word was known to them both and cur iously enough it meant the same thing. •Certainly for thousands of years there was no connection between these two peoples. Yet kouse per sisted on its way from some common point back in the unknown darkness up through the centuries, until the voyagerrs ami their kindred found it in Amer'ca and made use of it. Anothir root common among the Indians, .vhieh we no longer culti vate, was called "camas." This root they roasted and ground into a meal from which they made bread, the flavor of which was like that of cooked chestnuts. Tuckahoe. or tawke, was a root which the Swedish settlers in New Jersey borrowed from the Delaware Indians. Another root cultivated by the Seminoles of Florida was converted when pounded into a meal called "coonti." Coonti bread was used by the white population and also by the negroes of the south Atlantic states. Walter Hough in his "Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico," 1907, saya, "A demand among the whites for coonti flour has led to the establishment' of several mills in Florida." These foods, some of which are still to be found, but many of which were lost during the murdering and pillaging period of the settlement of America by the whites do not by any means complete the list. Others we are about to disclose. Johnston. W. W. Sholl, F. T. Kohler, I Thomas Winters, William Wills. P. j K. Duncan, Alcena Quigley, William Morris„.B. S. Duncan, Edward Glass, [ M. Irving Martin, George Boyer, Mrs. Leah Parsons, Mrs. B. F. Beale, j Mrs. F. C. McMorris, Miss Mary E. , Reutter. Miss Bessie Green, Saul j Perry, Harvey F. Arver, Lerov De-1 haven, Mary J. Wills, Mrs. George 1 Eukens, Benvenue; Mrs. Charles Zeigler, R. F. D., No. 1; George Boy er, Jr. Inspection committee: Mrs. Wil liam Jennings, Mrs. Hulda Knight, Mrs. William Wills, Miss Alma Rife, j Rooms committee: Mrs. William Pennell. Katharine Hart, Mrs. R. J. Rife, Mrs. W. W. Sholl, Miss Susan Rife, Mrs. J. L. E. Bucke, Miss Elizabeth Kline. Mrs. Irving Mar tin, Mrs. G. B. Noss, Mrs. Florence Mrs. George H. Johnston, Mrs. Jason Passmore, Mrs. Joseph Hess, Mrs. Karl B. Mosher, Mrs. James E. Wilson, Mrs. S. A. E. Rife, Mrs. N. H. Trout, Mrs. Daniel Zer fing, Mrs. James Rosborough, Jean S. Duncan, Mr. Harper. Supplies committee: Mrs. F. C. Mc- Morrie, chairman: Mrs. Arthur J. Rife, Mrs. Eane S. Hart, Mrs. P. F. Duncan, Mrs. F. H. Buckaloo, Mrs. H. B. Wilson, Mrs. C. R. Zimmer man, Miss Sue Stewart, Mrs. H. D. Reutler, Miss Sarah White. Messenger service: Irene, Kent, Ruth Johnston, Eouise Persons, Mary Duncan, Rudolph Beale, Al fred Jennings, Russell Noss, Grace Nickum. Publicity committee: R. M. Bar ton, William Brown and Miss Carrie Reutter. BARON ■ V 111 i LWW ■■ ■■ | a "iBAROH KOS&H. • Ir At was only two days ago ! that he drifted into the navy re cruiting office to offer himself to his country. "Whether its salorin' or soldierin' I told him at the recruiting office, ■ie same to me so long as I can serve me country. Anyways that a man can serve and do his duty in a toimc lolke this is the best way," j whs the gravely enunciated pliilo- j Bophy. t?o 1 enlisted as a fireman, the greatest branch of the service of the U. S. navy. "Whin a man has put in a few years on the job, there is somcthin' about the firebox of a engin that pulls you to it, nance you have fed the big, hungry mouths that are al ways open and roarin'. "And after a little hustle of feed in' the big babies, the job is done and ye can take yer ease while the byes above are dhrilling and the ship is .'ollln' easy-like in the cradle ov the sea. "Every man in his task, says I, and I'm a fireman by inclination and force of habit. And it is me duty to play fireman for Uncle Sam whin he needs me above all others. "Wance I stoked on a tramp steamer, and it was there I learned the power ov me callin'. "We wuz down where the heathens and the fever wuz thick as mud, an wan the sickness took hold ov the officers and crew until they wuz only a handful ov us lift to navigate the craft. What with the fever raging we had a powerful time. Wan | after anither the byes below fell down with sickness, and it wus thin I | the real trouble began. "It wuz the captain himself who j came down to talk to us. 'byes' he said, kin get along without me officers."but for the love of Hivin, me ship will perish if me firemen, deset me in this me hour ov need.' "That is why 1 say the power ov | | the navy is in me. Whin the coal j stops, the battleship stops, and the j : Inimy can take yer at his own time." j Across the slip between the Vir-1 ginia and the next dock, the sailor j I drill had spread out into an open j order exercise. They were the "men j [behind the guns," an integral part of 11he great fighting mechanism which i is soon to spread its influence world j wide in the mighty conflict facing j this nation. I looked sideways at the | man beside me. who represented the silent working force of the American battleships, but his gaze was lifted above the immediate animation of moving units. It rested in the smoke clouds coming from the huge stack of an adjoining vessel, v "The byes hev started work fer Uncle Sam," he observed with a touch of pride. And I knew that down in the cavernous recesses of that gray steel hull, other represen tatives of the "power ov the navy" were bending their backs to the end that the traditions of the American navy might be upheld and the hon or of the flag maintained upon the seas. The navy needs more firemen as .well as men in other branches of | the service. It needs thousands more ' patriots like Jack Dempsey. ! HEIIO USED REAL, I.EADi VILLAIN IX HOSPITAL j Wagner, S. D., April 27.—Because ; tlie hero in the home talent play that ' was scheduled to be presented here ac cidentally slipped a ball cartridge J among the blanks Jn the revolver with Which he was to shoot the vil lain, the villain is now in the hos | pita). j Ador Reiffel was the "villain." The i bullet pierced his right hand. The I heroine absolutely abandoned her at- I titude of contempt for the "villain" j when she saw the real blood follow I his realistic "ouch!" I Rut Heiffei says he's "off that vll ! lain stuff for life." i DELEGATES T<> CONVENTION Wain. Pa., April 26. Delegates i appointed to represent the Sunday i schools of the churches of Blain, at the forty-ninth annual County Sun day School Convention in the Re formed Church at Newport next Wednesday and Thursday are: Re formed, Miss Ida McKee; Lutheran, Miss Frankie B. Dimin, and Miss .Myrtle Wentz, and Methodist, Mrs. David P. Stokes and Miss Ruth Knox. "Kie-Yie-Yie! Get Me 'Gets-It' Quick!" 2 Drops Make Corn "Fall" Off! "I've Joined the Never-Again Club. Never again will I use anything for corns but 'Gets-It.' Put 2 drops of 'Gets-It' on, and from that second the corn begins to shrivel, instead of fJK] mm "Oh, Don't Touch Iti It'a So Sore!" t "GeU-It" Ud It Will Nerer Be Sore! swelling up like a little white sponge. Then It louser.s from your toe —and, glory hallelujah! the corn comeH off as though you'd take a glove off your hand!" Yes, "Gets-It" is the corn discovery of.the age. More "Gets-It" is sold by many times than any other corn rem edy In existence. Try It and vou'll know the reason why. It takes two seconds to apply it, and it dries at once. That's all. Don't e*periment —follow the experience of millions and use "Gets-It. "Gets-lt" is sold everywhere, 25c a hottle, or sent on receipt of price by E. Sold in Harrlsburg and recommend ed as the world s best corn reined v by Clark's Medicine Store.—Advertise ment. Brothers, Both Past Sixty Fight Duel With Pistol Corinth, Kliss., April 26.—Hiram Burrows shot and fatally wounded his brother, Banks Burrows, at the farmer's home, 18 miles southwest of Ctfrlnth. The shooting is said to have been the result of nard feeling exist. | ing between the two men for some [ time. I Banks Burrows lived on his broth i er's place, and the latter had asked him to move, it is said, which Is i bought to have been the origin of the difficulty. It appears that both men were armed when they met in Hiram Burrow's lot, and each was shot by the other. It is understood, I however, that Hiram Burrow's injury [ is not serious. Both men are past 60 years old, married and have families. They have been residing in this county for several years. Ohio Baby, 221 Pounds at Birth, a World's Record Alliance. Ohio, April 26. What Alliance physicians say is probably the biggest and heaviest baby ever born in this city or any other country arrived yesterday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank lucoholo. The newcomer is a boy, and a few minutes after his birth he weighed twenty-two and a half pounds. Dr. 1). Delline, ihe attending physician, says the child is normal in every re spect except size and weight. Mrs. lacobolo, whose life was in danger ifor a time, is recovering, and the | child will live, the doctor says. Women Turn Preachers in London Churches London, April 26. —A successful I experiment with women in the pul pit was made the other day, when I Miss Maude Hoyden, daughter of Sir! Thomas Hoyden, Bart., preached the regular Sunday sermon in the City Temple. So large was the crowd that came to hear the tirst woman to occupy that pulpit that police were required to regulate the throng. Several other churches, deprived of their pastors by the war, are ex pected to follow the example of the City Temple. TO TRAIN ARMY COOKS Chicago, April 16.—A permanent training school for army cooks will be established at Munc-ie, Ind., by the Hotel Association of Chicago. Sev eral acres have been purchased at Muncie by the National Hotel Men's Association and a building will be erected. rr- ' —— s\ Pimples Disappear " There is one remedy that seldom fails to clear away all pimples, blotches and other skin eruptions and that makes the skin soft, clear and healthy. Any druggist can supply you with zemo, which generally overcomes all skin diseases. Acne, eczema, itch, pim ples, rashes, black heads in most cases give way to zemo. Frequently, minor blemishes disappear overnight. Itching usually stops instantly. Zemo is a safe, antiseptic liquid, clean, easjr to use and dependable. It costs only 25c; an extra | large bottle, SI.OO. It will not stain, is i not greasy or sticky and is positively i safe for tender, sensitive skins, j The E. W. Rose Co., Cleveland. O. NOTHING^^^ I Comfort Powder 1 m TO HEAL THE SKIN M ■ of infants and children. Used ■ I after bathing, chafing, scalding, I A rashas, itching, and all akin sore- I nest disappear like magic. Beautifies Sr~Renders to the skin a delicately clear, \\ pearly white complexion. Brin jjs back the k 1 soft smooth appearance of youth. Results j k are instant and improvement constant* J Gouraud's $ Oriental Cream) Send 10c. for Triel Sue VFERD. T. HOPKINS & SON, New Yr,rt! wrw "> ■* .•>•• Seed Potatoes Onion Sets Seed Beans Peas, Sweet Corn We have what you need to make your garden a success. Best Quality Seeds Garden Tools Hand Cultivators Sprayers Spray Material Everything For the Garden WALTER S.SCHELL QUALITY SEEDS ISO7-ISO9 Market St. The New Suburb ESTHERTON River-Drive SALE May sth 1917 APRIL 26, 1917. PEPARTMKXT ABOL.IBHKD Mexico City, April 26.—The De partment of Justice, the secretary of which has heretofore been a mem ber of the cabinet, will cease to ex ist as a separate department May 1. In conformity with the provisions of the new Mexican constitution, the functions of this department on that date will be divided between the De partment of the Interior and the government of the federal district. Judicial procedure in the States and territories will be under direction of the Department of the Interior and the courts of the federal district un der that of the Governor of the dis trict. PARIS LIGHTED BY OIIj Paris, -April 2'i.—Owing to the scarcity of coal, preparations are be ing made to have the streets of Paris lit by oil lamps. Should the coal shortage become more acute, further restriction of the supply of gas and'electrlclty to private houses is expected. ... #it tl. fit i "THAT'STHE POL^j^ 1 SHOE POLISHES io -BLACK-WHITE-TAN- 10$ i Co^oTNw^brkint, ALA S K A The Giant of Romance! vKpjppf \ Uncle Sam's mightiest prodip; I h. \ sffr (f/ ers > forests, lakes;, set against snow - capped mountains and Totem Poles, Indian Villages Gold Mines, Romance, Furs aSSi'tt New wonders every step on the 1000 mile Northward journey through the sheltered "inside route" to the jKSrj Land of the Midnight Sun !IJ *j'j by the Trim, Splendidly Appointed fMij Canadian Pacific' Princess" Liners rfW includ ng the "' S. S. "Princess Charlotte" I ? '> For full particulars, call or writ* *about Tour No. 1 /• F. R. PERRY, Qin'i ABn< t Pa*s. Dspt. I '■ • fljust as you go to a friend when in trouble—when you're smoke-hungry go to good old tried and true KING OSCAR 5c CIGAR JOHN C. HERMAN & CO. Makers The President's War Proclamation C President Wilson's recent addrws to Congress on. the war situation will go down In history as a memorable State paper. A copy of It should be in every home In the United States. C Anticipating this, we have printed t\je address In pamphlet iorm and It is now ready for distribution. <5 The Booklet is attractively printed in antique book paper with a handsome vignetted half tone of President Wilson with facsimile signature. Sent anywhere in United States or Can ada on receipt of price. Single Copy, 2c The Telegraph Harrisbursi. Pa, UNEARTH AZTKC Mexico City. April 2i—Hecent ex cavatlons In Mexico