The Yukon I By William MacLcoil Haine l (Continued* / "I'm a law to myself, if that's what you mean. It is-my business I<> help hammer out an empire ih this Northland. No need for me to. I brag. What I have done speaks fori me as a guidepost to what I mean to do." "I know," the girl admitted with Ihe impetuous generosity of her race. "I hear it from everybody. You have built towns and railroads and developed mines and carried the twentieth century into new outposts. You have given work to thousands. But you go so fast I can't keep step with you. I am one of the little folks for whom laws were made." "Then I'll make a code for you." he said smiling. "Just do as I say and everything will come out right." Faintly her smile met his. "My; grandmother might have agreed toj that. But we live in a new world for women. They have to make} their own decisions. T suppose that, is a part of the penalty we pay for freedom." j , Diane came into the room andj Macdonald turned to her. "I have just been telling Shebai [\ that lam going to marry her —that! ■ there is no escape for her. She had better get used to the idea that I j intend to make her happy." The older cousin glanced at SheWa ] I and laughed with a touch of embar-i rassment. "Whether she wants to be happy or not, O Cave Man?" "I'm going to make her -vant to." J Sheba fled, but from the door she | flung back her challenge. "I don't i think so." * * * i • Macdonald kept his word toj Sheba. lie used his influence to getj Klliot released, and with a touch of; | cynicism quite characteristic went; | on the bond of his rival. An infor-j [ mation was liled against the field agent of the land department for highway robbery and attempted murder, but Gordon went about his business just as if he were not under I a cloud. k None the less, he walked the, F streets a marked man. Women end i | children looked at him curiously and! I whispered as he passed. The sullen, J I hostile eyes of miners measured him; ' silently. j Tn the states the light between' the coal claimants and their foes' < was growing more bitter. The) l' muck rakers were busy ajid the sen - timent outside had settled so defin-1 itely against granting the patents: that the national administration i might at any time jettison Macdon-| I aid and his backers as a sop to public opinion. I It was not hard for Gordon to guess how unpopular he was, but he AT ONCE! STOPS j STOMACH MISERY AND INDIGESTION - "Pape's Diapepsin" makes sick, sour, gassy Stomachs feel fine. Do some foods you eat hit back— taste good, but work badly; ferment 1 into acids and cause a sick, sour, gassy stomach? Now. Mr. or Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape's Diapepsin helps neutralize the ex cessive acids in the stomach so your food won't sour and upset you. There never was anything so safely quick, so certainly effective. No dif ference how badly your stomach is upset you usually get happy relief | in five minutes, but what pleases you j most is that it helps to regulate your stomach so you can eat your favorite foods without fear. Most remedies cive you relief, sometimes—they are slow, but not sure. "Pape's Diapepsin" is positive in neutralizing the acidity, so the misery won't come back very quickly. You feel different as soon as i "Pape's Diapepsin" comes in contact with the stomach —distress just van ishes—your stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belching, no eructations of undigested food, your head clears and you feel fine. Go now, make the best investment i you ever made, by getting a large tifty-cent case of Pape's* Diapepsin from any drug store. You realize in five 'minutes how needless it is to [ suffer from indigestion, dyspepsia or I any stomach disorder due to acid I fermentation. I > Why Rent? i OWN your home. Be your own land ( lord. I The surest, easiest and iest way to save money j.. i to buy your home. A 'renter" never feels i secure. At any moment 1 he is apt to be informed \ of the sale of the property c in which he lives. 1 Any Real Estate Man i irill gladly tell you how 1 to buy your home by pay- f ing an initial deposit. * Now is the time to build when money is t plentiful. < United Ice & Coal Co. ! I.umber Department j Forstcr & Cowdcn Sis. I ' > ' It ! I MONDAY EVENING, HAJRXUHBURG TEXEGRAPK JANUARY 14, 1918. Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1917, International News Service *■ * ** By McManus ™ f, , T £?° TO PA * A Uf> TAKE <T IF no -yam VH * T fl POUOf LIKE Tm-b- Yoo Bon'T INSURED AND VT WILL SMILE- ITS OOST LIKE VfMi a OOYOU thinkofit? I OIVE T _ EXPLAIN IT make HER HAPRV- WORTH IT: jfek A v,NVo did not let this interfere with his! •activities. lie moved to .nd fro] among the mining camps with ab-: solute disregard of the growing j hatred against him. Paget came to; him at last with a warning. "What's j i that I hear about you being almost ; killed up on Bonanza?" Peter; • wanted to know. "Down in the None Such mine, I ! you mean? It did seem to be rain-! ing hammers as I went down the! I shaft,'' admitted his friend. "Were the hammers dropped cn! ! purpose?" Gordon looked at him with a grim | j smile. "Your guess is just as good j <as mine, Peter. What do you I think?" Peter answered seriously. "I I think it isn't safe for you to take I the chances you do, Gordon. I find | a wrong impression about you pre-| | valent among the men. They are| I blaming you for stirring up all thisl 1 trouble on the outside, and they ! are worried for fear the mines may , close and they will lose their jobs. l| I tell you that they are in a dangerous! mood." "Sorry, but I can't help that." "You can stay around town andl : not go out alone nights." "I dare say I can, but I'm not! 1 going to." "I think you had better use a' ! little sense, Gordon. I dare say l| jam exaggerating the danger. But' j when you go around with that jaun-l ! ty devil-may-care way of yours, the j men think you are are looking for' trouble—and you're likely to get it."! "Am I?" "I know what I'm talking about' Nine out of ten of the men think i you tried to murder Macdonald after j you had robbed him and that your I nerve weakened on the job. This: seems to some of the most lawless) to give them a moral right tj put l you out of the way. Anyhow, it isi a kind of justification, according to j their point of view. I'm not defend ing it, of course. I'm telling you I so that you can appreciate your. danger." | "You have done your duty, then, I Peter." | "I'll tell you what I told you Inst I time when you warned me. I'm | going through with the job I've been hired to do, just as you would stick it out in my place. I don't think I'm |in much danger. Men in general j are law-abiding. They growl, but they don't go as far as murder." Deter gave him up. The next issue of the Kusiak Sun contained a bitter editorial attack upon Elliot. The occasion for it was' a press dispatch from Washington to ! the effect that the pressure of pub-) lie opinion had become so strong! that Winton, commissioner of the| general land office, might be forced I to resign his place. This was a blow' to the coal claimants, and the Sun j charged in vitriolic language that! the reports of Elliot were to blame. I He was, the newspaper claimed, an j enemy to all those who had come, to Alaska to earn an honest living; there. He was a snake in the grass,! and as such every decent man ought | to hold him in scorn , Elliot read this just as he was leaving for the Willow Creek camp. He thrust the paper impatiently into his coat pocket and swung to the! saddle. Why did they persecute! him? He had told nothing but the! truth, nothing not required of him by the simplest, elemental honesty. Yet he was treated as an outcast andl a criminal. The injustice of it was! beginning to rankle. He was temporamentally an. opti mist. but depression rode with him to the gold camp and did not lift from his spirits till he started back next day for Kusiak. The news had! been flashed by wire all over the i United States that he was a crook, i His friends and relatives could give: no adequate answer to the fact that! an indictment hung over his head. | In Alaska he was already convicted by public opinion. (To be Continued) j- THOUGHT OILS RUIN D SKIN Automobile .Man, However, I/earned I Other Causes Were Re sponsible Walter llanlon. of Hummelstown, Pa., near Harrisburg, thought the oils and greases with which lie worked in a garage there were the causes of the eczema and water pimples which afflicted him. "1 learned different though," he said. "I was all broke out on the : hands, arms and face and tried all 1 kinds of ointments to get relief, but nothing helped me. I hardly expect ed a real cure and would have been I satisfied with just a little ease from | the terrible itching. I saw a Tan- ; lac ad and in despair decided to try it. I'm not despairing now, though, for Tanlaj certainly reached what- i ever was the cause of my trouble ' and drove it out. Instead of heing i the oils and grease outside, as I j thought, it was inside, but it. didn't | stay long when Tanlac was sent after I it. Tanlac also built me up and made i me feel fine all over." j j Tanlac now is being specially in- | troduced and explained in Harris burg at the George Gorgas drug | at ore. Three West Shore Schools Forced to Close Because of Anthracite Shortage Doors of three West Shore schools j failed to open to-day because of a j lack of fuel. Camp Hill and West Fairview j sclioolliouses have been closed since | last Wednesday although the direc j tors hoped to resume sessions to : day. This was found impossible this j morning as none of the promised coal had arrived. Lemoyne officials also were forced to declare that j there could be no school this week. A shipment of coal for the Le | moyne schools has been enroute here since December 10. This car load I officials decided yesterday could be j put to a better use by supplying | families In the borough who are en tirely out of fuel. The car it is un- I derstood. will be turned over to C. S. Willis, a I.emoyne coal dealer, for distribution. Robert L. Myers, West Shore coal j administrator said to-day that some coal arrived but not enough to give I sufficient relief. lie said that the j situation is becoming acute. In j >rder to give relief to conditions, C. S. Willis, I.emoyne. although it was J Sunday, made deliveries with two ; wagons yesterday. The shipments j arrived yesterday. Government Valuation of Railroad Property Too Low, Is Claim of Executives By Associated Press Washington, Jan. 14.—1n support ! of the claim that the government in i taking over the railroads, assumed ] control of more valuable property | than it is preparing to make return j for. railroad executives to-day pre i sented figures to the House Inter j state Commerce Committee showing 1 added invest mi nts since 191*>, net operating income and the percentage of return for the last three years. The figures show the average prop erty investment for all roads from 1915 to 1917 approximately $16,- 000,000,000. The average net oper ating income was $868,000,000. Representative Lenroot, of Wis consin, Republican, declared in the House to-day that that portion of the President's proclamation taking over the railroads in which power is conferred on the director general to issue orders is without authority and cannot legally be carried out ! until authorized by Congress. That | Part of the proclamation, he said, i sets aside federal and state statutes, i orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission and orders of state com | missions. Major Gardner Reported Dying at Camp Wheeler By Associated Press | _ Macon, Ga., Jan. 14. Major A. P. I Gardner, former Congressman from i Massachusetts, who resigned when war was declared, to enter the Armv, is in a dying condition at • Camp | Wheeler today from pneumonia. ' DR. RI'SSEIX BEGINS LAST WEEK OF RIG REVIVAI. Dr. Walter Russell began his last j week of special services at Christ j Lutheran Church yesterday. The preacher's sermon in the eve- I ning was directed especially to the ! nonchristians. He said: "The un- 1 I saved are absolutely and hopelessly! bankrupt. The ungodly nations are I squatters and their kings are usurp- ; ers. The only living and ligitimate heir and king apparent is the Prince! of Peace who is some day to reign 1 over a ransomed world." COUNCIL HOPES TO PUT END TO SNARL [Continued from First Page.] stead of a political standpoint, a number of new names have been mentioned. None of the members of Council to-day would state whom they may nominate. Reappointment of City Solicitor John E. Fox and City Assessor James C. Thompson, probably by unanimous votes, was anticipated in official cir cles to-day. \\ ith only one bid for ash collec tions the tirm proposal to collect the waste for $7,000 a month it is likelvj Commissioner Massler will ask Coun cil for permission to readvertise for bids. At the rate asked in the bid it would cost the city $84,000 a year for ash collections plus $24,000 a year for garbage colleotions, or a to- I tal of SIOB,OOO for the removal of all wastes. Ex-Commissioner Morgen thaler estimated it would cost the city about $60,000 for municipal ash collections or $24,000 less than under the bid received on Saturday. Should Council decide to have; Commissioner Hassler ask for new bids it will be ten days before these | can be opened with the result that if a contract is awarded collections probably would not be resumed un-' til late in February or early in j March, while the present contract ends February 1. The regulations for garbage col-! lections were introduced last week at the same time that the ash col-| lection specifications were read. The 1 ordinance including the garbage j rules will be called for final pas- j siiiie. ; U. S. Abandons War, Is Startling Announcement of Berlin Newspaper The following astonishing cable gram. showing the limits to which even the German ofllcial press will go In efforts to deceive the people of the empire, was received by The As | sociated Press: Amsterdanf, Jan. 13.—The semioffi cial Norddeutsche Allgemeine Zei lung, of Berlin, publishes a report from Washington that the United States is sending 90,000,000 bushels o£ wheat to Europe, and adds: "This is a heavy blow to the en j tente cause. Shorn of rhetorical | flourish, it means that America has | decided not to appear on the Euro peon battlefield for an indefinite time, j What moved President Wilson to this j change of front, which is the most important development in American | war policy?" t | The newspaper attributes it partly j to the achievement of the German i submarines, partly to internal causes | and especially to growing pacifism \ and friction with Japan. It continues: j "The last hope of the entente has 1 gone. It will inevitably cause deep j depression in France, whose bread ra | tlon may be increased slightly, but for whose war-weary troops there is j now no hope of relief." Potter Opposed to Shutdown of Works to Help Coal Situation By Associated Press Philadelphia, Jan. 14. —The grav- | ity of the local situation was em- j phasized to-day by State Fuel Ad ministrator Potter at a conference of anthracite experts at the Univer sity Club. Representatives of the Pennsyl vania, Reading and Lehigh Valley | roads, officials of the United Mine | Workers of America and coal oper ators attended the conference. It is hoped this conference will result in getting more coal for Phil delphia," said Mr. Potter, opening the meeting. "The purpose of the conference is to obtain constructive recommendations from you gentle men, specialists in your respective lines." I One object of the conference was |to determine whether it would be I necessary to close all nonessential I industries in Philadelphia for a week or ten days. At a conference in New York Sat urday it was proposed that all in dustrial plants not engaged in war work be closed three days a week. ' | This plan is opposed by air. Potter. ! READING TRAIN BLOCKS TRAFFIC i By Associated Press | Philadelphia, Jan. 14.—Traffic : was blocked both ways for four I I New Yolk division of 1 I the Philadelphia and Rending Rail- i | way to-day when a freight loeomo- ! tive was derailed at Tabor Junction ! [near here. A tire, which broke on I a wheel of the engine, caused it to j leave the track and tear up the ! I roadway to such an extent that all i he \vroci i to r b0 swltcho <> around I the wreck before a wrecking crew could restore service. BULGARIAN NIAVSPAPi;RS APPROVE WILSON MESSAGE I By Associated Press Amsterdam, Jan. 14.—Press lis-! patches from Sotla say that the Bui garian newspapers of all nolitinal affiliations welcome President Wil son's address to Congress as a step towards peace. The Mir and the Na- J ol ;t o,ia flml !l resemblance be tween the President's terms and those of the Bolshevik!. The Demo m w.,° rKa " Prc P° rel * appeals to Mr. Wilson to settle the Balkan nues •m,? ! ms ', s '.' f nationalities and histoilc tendencies, and to give Serbia an outlet, to the Adriatic. 15 PER CENT. OF MEN ARE IN FIRST CLASS fContinued from First Page.] seventy-five were sent up. A big ma jority of these lay claim to exemp tion on the grounds of industrial necessity. However, It is expected that i. will not take long to dispose of these ror the men of class No 1 must be off very shortly for service. Court room No. 1, was not avail able to-day for registrants and the corps of lawyers who have done such efficient work in helping (ill out the questionnaires had no one spot to gather in. There was a rush of late comers who showed greatest anxiety to be accommodated and they were sent to various attorneys who ami ably took care of them. At noon the last man in llarrlsburg to enlist was notified from Washington that ie had finally been accepted. 110 had put in his application last August and not getting any satisfaction he persisted until the government took notice. Although the dav for enlist ment had passed, he was accepted and will start this afternoon for the Rock Island Arsenal in the ordnance department. About the only chance class 1 men will have of ibeing exempted is on physical short comings when the registrants comes before an Army board. • Members of the local boards now are sending out cards notifying reg istered men Of the class Into which they hare been placed. Appeals may be made from this cation. Boy With Seven Uncles j in Kaiser's Army Knits Scarf For U. S. Soldier A 14-year-oldl boy in Harrisburg, I has it all over the other Red Cross I workers here. This boy, with seven j uncles in the Germany army, has fin ished a beautifully knitted scarf, and has turned it over to the local Red cross. Among the efficient and untiring workers at lied Cross headquarters, are a number of typists from the Bell Telephone offices, who have volun teered to give their evenings and Sat urday afternoon to the work of typ i ing names of new members secured in the Red Cross Christmas drive. An afghan, made by the children of the second and third grades of the Vernon School building, was present ed to the Red Cross this, morning.' Massachusetts Starts Business Day at 9 A. M., Closes Shop at 5 P. M. j Boston, Jan. 14.—Massachusetts I started to-day on its new regime of beginning its business day at 9 a. m. and ceasing its evening activities at 10 o'clock. Under the rules promul ; gated by the state fuel administration stores may be open only from it a. m. to 5 p. in., except that food may be ! sold as early as 7 a. m. and on Sat | urday evenings and certain stores I which have been in the habit of j keeping open evenings will be per j mitted to continue the practice. Tom Lee, Mayor of New York's Chintown, Is Buried With Splendor By Associated Press New York. Jan. 14. Tom Leo, mayor of Chinatown, in the trouble some fued days before the fading of I that picturesque quarter of New | York's East Side, was buried to-day | with all the pomp and splendor of Celestial .rites. In the coffin were | placed a bottle of rice, wine, several ! coins and a pack of playing cards. Following the Oriental custom, roast pig, chickens, cakes and other foods were placed on the grave. In other days these foods were left at. the grave, but to-day. lest they be con ! sumed by irreverant Occidentals, they [ were carried back to Chinatown. Real War Bread to Make Appearance Here Soon | Set your teeth for real war bread, I and don't look downcast. The clever ! est of hygiene experts in the land i say that for the first time in its his | lory America will now have a chance !to get intimately acquainted with : wheat. Heretofore we have only j known this precious grain from its j flour. But tile war regulations which ! will be established nation-wide with l in a few days will give a flour which t Is a wheat flour, a flour not derived I from wheat but consisting 'Of wheat, j "It ought to improve the teeth ot , the natio'n," declares one scientiist, I "and the dash of coVn or barley flour i ! in it will be beneficial to health." j One last word came to-day from i Howard Heini!, food administrator for | Pennsylvania, before the war bread i reaches here, telling the necessity ot ! the order. "It is a well-known fact," 1 he says, "that the average condition of the public health in Germany is , j worse than ever, the average weight I of tile people is less, because of a i scarcity of food fats. We are greatly I ahead of Germany in our food re j sources, but it will, nevertheless, be necessary to inaugurate a vigorous campaign in America for the con servation of wheat, sugar and meat." Total Eclipse of Sun Will Make Day Night A total eclipso of the sun will be visible along the Union Pacific Rail way's entire route on June 8 next. The path of totality will cross Colo ! rado, Wyoming, Utah, Idaho, Oregon i and Washington. | There will be a partial eclipse visible throughout the United States and a considerable portion of Canada. Tlie visibility will range from 68 per cent, in New York City to 74 per cent, in Los Angeles, and from 09 per cent, in Tallahassee, to 98 per cent, in Se attle. Court Sustains Two-Cent Fare in New York St^te Washington. Jan. 14. The Illi nois Central Railroad' and twenty eight other roads, by an opinion of the Supreme Court to-day lost their fight to have the Illinois two.cent passenger fare law set aside. CARGO OF OATS FOR FRANCE An Atlantic Port, Jan. 14.—Plans were announced yesterday for send ing 400,000 bushels of oats from this port to France in a short time. The steamship which will carry the con signment will be the first to leave this port with a full cargo of grain in many months. KNIGHTS OVERREACH GOAL Columbia. Pa., Jan. 14.—Columbia members of the Knights of Colum bus attached to Lancaster Council have completed the War Fund drive and overreached their goal by S2OO, : raising 1 twelve instead of ten hun dred dollars in one week. Chair man Frank V. Kasel sent the con tribution to headquarters at Lancas. ter a few hours after the work was jCiAished. Class 1 Men Will Be Next to Go Into Army I The next call for drafted men, ac cording to announcement from Wash ington, will be made from men of Class 1 as outlined on the question naires just tiled with the registra tion boards. The Class 1 men in clude the following: Single men without dependent rela tives. Married man, with or without chil dren, or father of motherless chil dren, who has habitually failed to support his family. Married man dependent on wife for support. Married man, with or without chil dren, or father of motherless chil dren; man not usefully engaged, fam ily supported by income independent of his labor. Unskilled farm laborer. I Unskilled industrial laborer! | Registrant by or in respect of I whom no deferred classification is ! claimed or made. Registrant who fails to submit I questionnaire and in respect of whom no deferred classification is claimed 1 or made. All registrants not Included in any other division in this schedule. N lAYSPAPKRMAN RESIGNS Columbia, Pa., Jan. 12.—James G. IHinkle, a well-known newspaper re porter on the staff of the Daily Spy, has resigned, expecting to be called to the National Army. Mr. Hinkle is a popular violinist and vocalist and the leader of an orchestra. His place on the staff has been taken [ by Miss Katharine W. Swingler, who i is the pianist in the Opera House. THANKS TO RED CROSS | Columbia, Pa., Jan. 12. —Soldiers | from Columbia at Camps Hancock land Meade, to whom Columbia Chapter of the Red Cross had sent money for Christmas, have written to express their thanks and such as could not get away to spend Christmas at home ordered that the fund be expended for towels, candy and tobacco. CURL COASTER HURT Annville, Pa., Jan. 12.—Miss Hel i en Swanger, who was coasting with | a party in Chestnut street, sustained , severe injuries by being hit with j another sled. Miss Swanger, who lis employed at the , handkerchief | factory, will be unable to attend to ! her duties for the present. GREAT TASK IS NEARLY FINISHED [Continued from First Page.] ".Stqte the condition of your wife's health?" prompted the lawyer in charge. ' "She's poorly, very poorly." In Bntl Shape The lawyer looked his increclulence for the woman was robut and radi ant, in spite of a east of sorrow which deepened as she responded to her husband's "Elizabeth, take off your hat." With much manipulation the gaudy headpiece was removed and the hus band explained mournfully; "Dandruff she has; one of the worst cases you ever seen. Suffers awful." Pressing his jaws to keep from un due hilarity, tile lawyer made a note of it, but eould not promise that Uncle Sam would take it seriously. More and more it was impressed on the legal volunteers that this war may do great good in educating peo ple to thrift and system. It was quite nmaxing how little some appar entl- , Lelligent men knew about their ii .'ing expenses, "What does it cost you. to keep your wife and children?" puzzled a capable-looking chap. "All 1 make," was his vague an swer; "Just |IOO a month." "But what do you live on, you say you are home for only one meal a day?" Kvrry Cent "That's so," he stroked his brow in bewilderment. "Rut I give my wife Resinol Even in severe, well-established cases of eczema, ringworm or similar j affections, Resinol Ointment and Kes- j inol Soap usually relieve the itching at •' once and quickly overcome the trouble, j Physicians have prescribed this simple, efficient treatment for many years. All drufffists sell Resinol. Sample free. Dept. S-R, Resinol, Baltimore, Md. every cent. I don't know how I get along." Density of brain was so common that it ceased to entertain after a while. The question, "State whether you are married, single, widowed or | divorced" frequently brought the i stupid negative "no" and as time was short these went away with their status undetermined. In many instances the wife seemed j to be the better soldier or the two. I One rather llabby husband seemed to think that it was his wife and not himself who had been drafted. "She's got a bad stomach and flat feet," said lie with a glance of hope at his bet ter half. "I guess that'll keep her out," l.eann on Hl* Wife An even less masculine patron when asked whether he was dependent on his wife for support unbushingly and cheerfully said that lie was. The wife backed him up, too. There were a great many who could not read or write, and often the wife was a little learned, enough to help out in the questions. "I don't know how much I make," confessed a steel worker. "I'll have to ask her." The wife said that the wages went as high as $75 a month and never lower than S6B. i "How much do you save out of this?" was asked. "There's only two, you say." "Save," she exclaimed. "Why we never have a cent at the end of the month. It all goes for eats." One wife, somewhat proud of her superior learning, looked over her husband's shoulder and caught a glimpse of the different branches of Army service. "He'll take one o' them corpses," she decided. A colored registrant, when asked' "Are you a citizen of the United States?" hesitated and then mumbled something until the question was re peated, "Why, you are a citizen of the United States, aren't you? You were born in this country, weren't you?" To this he replied with much surprise, "Why, of cose; whar else is there?" Another colored lad said "No" to the question of citizenship and also OUCH! PAIN! RUB OUT RHEUMATISM I Stop suffering! Relief comes the moment you apply "St. Jacobs Liniment I Rheumatism is "pain only." Not one ease in iifty requires in i ternal treatment. Stop drugging! Hub the misery right away! Apply soothing, penetrating "St. Jacobs L.lninient" directly upon the "tender' spot." and relief comes instantly. "St. Jacobs Liniment" conquers pain. It is harmless rheumatism liniment which never disappoints and can not burn the skin. Limber up! Stop complaining! Get a small trial battle of "St. Jacobs Liniment" at any drug store, and in just a moment you'll be free from rheumatic pain, soreness and stiff ness. Don't suffer! Relief awaits you. "St. Jacobs Liniment" is just as good for sciatica, neuralgia, lum bago, backache, sprains and swell | ings. DR. CHASE'S Blood aiSiNerve Tablets! Weigh Yourself Before Taking:. Price *0 Cents, Special 90 Ctnto. Dr Chile. 224 North Tenth St Philadelphia, Pa. ] IWf^frWPIKI 1 Clear the Voiee *tolcfcl> relieve HoamacM, Coughs, Sore Throat, llronchllin and l.ar.vnffltin—plranant ly flavored touches—Mc the Dox. Gorgas Drug Stores UNDERTAKER 1745 j Chas. H. Mauk V>th SL PRIVATE AMBULANCE PHONES j EDUCATIONAL School of Commerce HARRISBURG BUSINESS COLLEGE Troup BulltllßK. 15 S, Market So. Hell phone 4S5| Ulal 4303 Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Steno- ' type. Typewriting. Civil Service. I OUR Ot'FKlt—HlitM Training by Specialist* and High Grade Positions. You take a Business Course but once. The Uet is what you want. Day and Night School. Enter any Monday. A I'ully Accredited College { —— 'J | The Office Training School Kanfmnn Bldg. 121 Market Street. 1 Training That Secures. Salary Increasing Positions In the Office. Call or send to-day for Interesting booklet, "The Art of Getting Alone la the World." Bell phone 694K, 7 denied that he was born in the United States. "Well, where were you born?' demanded the lawyer. "Ah was bo'a in Mobile, Alabama, boss." SIOO.OO REWARD i°. r o t RHEUMATISM gout, sciatica, lumbago, neuritis or other uric acid disorder, if anyone proves after using refined alkia sal trates that this is not the equal of any treatment ever perfected for quieklv eliminating the uric acid and any other impurities from tho system. Pushing out clogged kidneys or stimu lating a sluggish, 'congested liver. This standard compound, obtaina' In at little cost from any druggist, repro duces certain essential constituents found in the waters of famous natural medicinal springs, hence its wonder ful effectiveness even when numerous other treatments have failed. Get a trial supply to-day, dissolve a little in plain hot wafer, and notice the amazingly quick effects of what users term "Spa treatment at home." The refined alkia saltrates com pound referred to above i& always kept in stock locally by Keller's Drug Store, <. A. florgas. Clark's Medicine Store, H. C. Kennedy.—Advertisement. CROUP m Spasmodic croup is usually relieved with $ one application of— ITIIAw' Lrttl* Body-Gunrd in Tour Horn# y'[ King, I 1 and Mtiical ytuf w_ OrfERY WOMAN > EVERY MOTHER EVERY DAUGHTER N:E:E D S IR O N "at.tihes To" put'slrength into her~nerves and color. into_ her _cheeki.i corroded the f. King>M.D H I stomach an d V Lj f[ * did far moro — ™ * harm than pood. Today doctors pre tcrlbe organic Jron— Nutated Iron. This particular form, of Iron Is easily assimilated, does not blacken nor In jure the teeth nor up*?et the stomach. It trill Increase the strength and en durance of weak, nervous, irritable, careworn, haggard looking women JOO 1 per cent In two weeks' time In many instances. I have used It In my own practice with most surprising Vf-rdinnnd King, M. D.. S l VIOTE: NUXATED IRON 4, V \e by Dr. Ferdinand King can Jt l\ \ from any good druggist wllr Jtl I lie guarantee of success w/ My ft I rtfW Xl.. It Is dispensed In thl\y /by I j \ H good 1 -LADIES you will be more than plea3ed to own * copy of the Winifred Worth Crochet Book It contains 65 stunning designs. Yes, indeed, all new designs. Dan dy for u new beginner. Has full | mul complete Instructions HOW ■ TO CROCHET. THIS ''^RAC-nCAL BOOK MAILED TO AN* ADDRESS FOR 15 CEVXS Bend this coupon und 15 cents in stamps or silver to the lUiria burg Telegraph, and the book will be mailed to you from tho New York office of the publishers. Al low a week for Its arrival. Namo Address City or Town
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers