2 TIMELY NEWS OF CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA AND CITY'S SUBURBS CARLISLE BUYS $12,000 TRUCK Council Authorizes Purchase of New Motor Apparatus For Empire Company Carlisle. Pa.. Feb. 19. —At a spe cial meeting held last evening the Carlisle council voted for the pur chase of a new Seagraves aerial hook and ladder truck for tha Empire Hook and Ladder Company a 1 cost of about 512,000, to be financed by the sale of bonds authorized last fall. This completes the motoriza tion of the local department at .i coot of approximately $50,000. The purchase of the truck, which is to be delivered next summer, was held up by a misunderstanding with the' state over the amount of the town's] debt. The new truck will be a Seagraves make, costing $12,000, with a 65- l'oot aerial extension ladder, which is raised by springs; 4-cylinder mo tor. self-starter and electric lights, with a powerful searchlight, twelve other ladders ranging from eighteen to forty feet and u life-saving net. SALVATION* ARMY CAMPAIGN Carlisle. Pa., Feb. 19.—With sev-! oral days yet to go, the Salvation Army campaign here has passed the S6OO quota set and it is expected that by Friday th eamount will be '•lose to 40 per cent, above what was desired. The drive took the form of a purely voluntary receipt of sub scriptions and local churches aided by special contributions. Adjutant .Mars, of the Carlisle branch, is :n j charge. To Remove Dandruff Get a small bottle of Danderine at any drug store for a few cents, pour a little into your hand and rub well into the scalp with the linger tips. By morning most, if not all, of this 1 ■ >wful scurf will have disappeared. Two or three applications will, de stroy every bit of dandruff; stop scalp itching and falling hair.—Adv.! Give them Vinol The Well-known Cod Liver and Iron Tonic, Without Oil TOMAKETHEM STRONG Delicate Children. Rapidly-growing chil dren need more vitality and more nutriment than adults, but the appetite often becomes fitful; over-study, restless nights, and mal assimilation of food soon make them weak, delicate and sickly. LITTLE BOY MADE STRONG "My little boy was in a delicate, weak, emaciated condition and had a cough so we had to keep him out of school for a year. Nothing seemed to help him until Vinol was recommended, and the change it made in him was remarkable. It has built him up and made him strong so his cough is almost entirely gone. We can not recommend Vinol too highly." Mrs. E. N. Hanlon, Newaygo, Mich. YOUR MONEY WILL BE RETURNED if Vinol fails to benefit you George A- Gorgas. rrruggist; Kennedy's Medi cine Store, 321 Market St; C. F. Kramer, Third and Broad Sts.; Kitzmiller's Pharmacy, 1323 Derry St., Harrisburg, and all leading Drug Stores Everywhere. ijaofoi Absolutely j My latest laprani appll ■oßKf ancea, tarluritng ■■ ozeysca- (■ A <*ed air apparatus, makes gj? exlraetlag and all deatal - py work positively painless V* W and la perfectly barm- • AT, eN lesa. (Ac* PBII set •( EXAMINATION /.rP FREE "I' 0 7 M? WT r erarras and \ y MBld ero*B, fS.OO llrditerti aA Office open dally S.U l.radaata • P- Manday, Wed- V ... \/ aaaday aad 8. lord. 7, till Aaalataata AJ Jr | B . BELL PHONE 5822-IL j# 0 EAST TERMS OF PAYMENTS mMRH \f / 320 Market SI (Over tfce Bak) HARRISBURG, PA. It dlda't kart a kit TUESDAY EVENING. * HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY IV, iyis BIG FOOD-SAVING ; CAMPAIGN OPEN Cumberland Safety Commit tee and Women's Defense I "nit Arrange Features Carlisle, Pa.. Feb. 19.—The Pub lic Safety Committee and Cumber land county unit of the Women's Defense Committee has arranged special features in connection with the campaign to show the need of drastic conservation of the food sup ply to win the war. To-night a big meeting will be held here when the need will be brought home. The speakers will be Miss Susanne Sllvercruze, a Bel gian. who will tell of tin conditions in her home country: Lieutenant Sutton, of the English army, a vet eran of the Gallipoli and Flanders campaigns, and Charles J. Hepburn, a Philadelphia lawyer, head of the legal department of the state food administration. Special trains and cars from all narts of the valley will bring a larg* crowd here. The new Community Chorus will appear for the first time to-night The women's body has arranged for a series of demonstrations ot wartime cooking which opened here to-day. The domestic science department the Carlisle Indian School was in charge to-day preparing and serving meals along the conservation line.? Carlisle High School girls will al ternate with them. The Carlisle In-1 dian orchestra furnished music dur ing the afternoon. FIRE DESTROYS DWELLING Blain, Pa., Feb. 19.—The house of, Martin Robinson in Jackson town-, ship, near Bull Run schoolhouse. was, destroyed b vfire on Friday after- j noon. The fire was discovered by j Mrs. Robinson, who whs sitting in the room sewing, but had gained too i much headway to put out. ftr. Rob- ! inson was away from home at* the time. Most everything was burned, except the canned fruit and pota toes in the cellar which was saved by: neighbors in throwing snow and ice on the burning floors. Well-Known Miller Dies From Results of Injuries JOSEPH B! STRKTCH Meclianicsburg. Pa„ Feb. 19.—Jo seph B. Stretch died last evening at his home, 2;!1 East Main street, after an illness resulting from a fall sus- J tained the latter part of August. ; when he broke his hip while at work, j He was an employe of the Hotter & , Garninn mill at Harrisburg until in | capacitated for work. Mr. Stretch I was 76 years old and a member of j the First United Brethren Church and I Integrity Council, No. 197, American ! Mechanics. He was born at Hall, ! York county, but lived here forty ' eight years in his late home. Ills 'wife and two children survive, as | follows: William G. Stretch, of Ilar i risburg. and Mrs. J. H. Brenneman. of Shlremanstown. The funeral serv ice will be 'held on Thursday after ' noon at 1 o'clock at the home, con j ducted by the Rev. E. C. B. Castle. I Burial will be made in the Median - j :csburg cemetery. Harper Corner in Carlisle Bought For Apartments Carlisle. Pa., Feb. 19.—An nouncement was made to-day by Dr. : Guy Carleton Lee, head of the Car lisle Chamber of Commerce, of ar rangements for the biggest real es tate change her© in years. Dr. Lee has purchased the old Harper cor- I ner here, near the center of the i town, and will add to it adjoining properties, the whole to be a big : apartment building, to consist of j twenty-seven aparments of from five jto eight rooms. Work has begun• jon the changes. F. G. Fahnestock Jr.. of Harrisburg, is the architect in charge. MRS. ANNIE >l. SHEARER DIES Carlisle. Pa., Feb. 19.—After a ! short illness Mrs. Annie M. Shearer,] aged SS, widow oi the late S. B.! Shearer, for many years head of the j county schools and later city super-1 mtendent in Carlisle, died nere on: Sunday of heart trouble, aggravated ! ;by pneumonia. Mrs. Shearer was] i active in affairs of the First i,u- J theran Church and Sunday School | ■ and was prominently identified with | 1 the campaign for a new hospital in i Carlisle. One son. Dr. William R. \ Shearer, a local druggist, survives. | MOTORMAN DISCOVERS FlltK Shireman3town. Pa., Feb. 19. —! About 10.30 o'clock Saturday night j the chimney at the residence of Mr. j j and Mrs. S. K. Morgret in East Main j j street caught fire from the overheat- i |ed stove. The blaze was discovered | by a motorman on a streetcar, after which the Shlremanstown fire com ! pany responded and extinguished the blaze, which burned the chimney corner, doors and a mantle. Consid erable damage was done by the wa fer. This was the second occasion to 1 use the new firetruck. MISS MAGGIE THOMAS DIES Hummelstown, Pa., Maggie C. Thomas, daughter of Con i stable and Mrs. Jacob Thomas, died t at her home in West Second Street ! on Sunday morning of dropsy and ; heart disease, aged 35 years. She j is survived by her parents, two sis : ters, Mrs. Isaac Levengood, of Hum melstown, and Mrs. Lesley Book, of , Highspir%, and one brother, Harry Thomas. Funeral services will be held from the home morning at 9.30, the Rev. A. S. Leh man officiating. Burial in Hum-; meltown Cemetery. BOYER MEMORIAL DAY Halifax, Pa., Feb. 19.—Monday, February 25, has been set aside by borough council for the people of Halifax to pay tribute to their bene factor and friend, the late Wllliarp Harris Boyer, whose liberal gift of $30,000 made possible the erection of the beautiful public school build ing. The public schools are pre paring a suitable program to be given in the auditorium on Friday evening, February 22. I Why Piles P A Free Trial of Pyramid File Treat* ment Will Answer the Question Emphatically. "i • ..Your case is no worse than were the cases or many who did try this j remarkable Pyramid Pile Treatment i and who have since written us let ■ J rs bubbling over with joy and j thankfulness. ' i ♦k T S B , t U at our ex Pense by mailing , the below coupon, or Ret a 60c box from 1 y° ur druggist now. Take no substitute. FREE SAMPLE COUPON 7 PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY 668 Pyramid Building., Marshall. Mich. .Kindly send me a Free sample of Pynmld Pile Treatment. In plain wrapper. Name Street tv State ' Fair Food The following statement, revised to February 19. regarding fair priees for food necessities, was issued to-day by the local Federtfl Food Administration. Consumer prices are figured on a quotation "cash-and-carry" basis. Credit and delivery prices may be higher. The Federal Food Adminis tration has no authority to llx prices. It may, however, determine what are fair prices, based on reason able profits to the wholesaler and re tailer. If your retailer charges more on a "cash-and-carry" basis than the prices named below, report him by letter to the Federal Food Ad ministration, Chamber of Commerce. Retaile'r Consumer pays should pay BEANS Navy (pea), lt> 15Va to 18c 19 to 20c Gray (marrow), lb 9 to 11c 12c Lima. !t> 16 to 17c IS to 20c White (marrow), 1b....t 17 Vic 19 to 20c BUTTER Ci-eamery, lb : 53 to f>7c 54 to 60c Creamery. 1 lb. prints. n> 51 L . 54 to 56c Fresh Print. Ib 54c Tub, storage, lb 49c 54 to soc CORNMEAL Package of 2>s lbs., pkg 17c IS to 20c Bulk, lb 6Vsc 6>i to 8c City Market, lb. " 7c EGGS Fresh, doz 55 to 60c 60 ttf 65c City Market, doz. ..... •'.... 50 to 55c Storage, doz 55c FLOUR Winter. 24-tb. bags $1.33 ?1.40 to $1.48 Spring. 24-lb. bags $1.55 to sl.6d $1.70 to $1.&0 LARD * Lard, lb IS to 31Vjc 33 to 35c Compond (substitute) 23 to 24c "So POTATOES Pennsylvania, No. 1. bushel $1.50 to $1.60 $1.75 to $1.90* City Market, bushel $1.35 to $1.50 SUGAR Granulated, ewt $7.55 lb. 9 to 9He Complaint has reached the lgcal Food Administration that flour and like commodities sold in bags and marked to contain certain quantles has not been- holding out as net weights. We suggest that consumers experiencing this trouble get in touch with their local Weight and Meas ure Bureau. Women Who Register Must Disclose Their Age By Associated Press Albany. >N. Y., Feb. 19. Women who "registor this year for special elections, including local option elec tions, must tell their ages. This was decided by the Senate to-day after Majority Leader Brown, long a con sistent opponent of equal suffrage, had made a futile attempt to relieve "as a matter of gallantry" women over j 30 years old of the necessity of re- j cording their ages on registration 1 lists. EIGHT IVM RED niRI.XG PRACTICE By Associated Press Washington, Feb. 19.—Eight men have been injured in an explosion of a cartridge case during target prac tice on the cruiser Montana. A brief report to the Navy Department to day carried no details of the acci- j dent and did not give the names of | the men hurt. SKNATOR CHAMBERLAIN TO I'NDEHGO AN OPERATION By Associated Press Washington. Feb. 19. Senator! Chamberlain, of Oregon, chairman of j the Military Committee, is to be op-! erated upon at once for appendi- j citis. TO ENTERTAIN AT PLANT The big establishment of the Moor- j head Knitting Company will be thrown open to-morrow evening to all merchants ofHarrisburg who sell hosiery, to their families and friends, and likewise to all members of the Kiwanis Club. It is to be an even ing of inspection and pleasure, the guests being given an opportunity to see the operation of manufacturing stockings from 7.30 to 8.30. After that will follow dancing and re freshments for all who care to re-j main. Suburban Notes LIVERPOOL John Deckard made a trip to. Harrisburg on Friday. Herman Williamson visited r.t Harrisburg and New Bloomfield this week. H. E. Bair made a trip to Harris burg on Thursday. J. D. Snyder spent a day at Dun cannon. Frank Potter spent Friday at | Harrisburg. Archdeacon Dorwart, of Newport, food commissioner of Perry county, was in town on Friday arranging for food conservation meetings. Nevin Wagner was a recent visitor at Harrisburg and New Bloomfield. Prof. Paul Charles spent the week end at his home at Roseglen. Game Warden Shuler spent a day 1 at Harrisburg and Newport. BAINBRIDGE Mr. and Mrs. Frank Groff. Jr., an- j nounce the birth of a daughter. Al-I meda May Groff, February 10. 1918. Miss Blanche Good and Palmer) McNelly visited in Lancaster. Mrs. Marie Moore, of Harrisburg, who was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. O. Damey, has returned home. Mrs. J. Bear and children, Mar garet and Jacob, visited at Harrls bur *- . . Mrs. Curtis Smith and son Lloyd visited at Harrisburg. Mrs. Marris Wagner spent several days at Harrisburg. Mrs. Peter Stauffer, of Augusta, Ga.. is visiting her sister, Mrs. Har ry Bachman. Mr. and Mrs. I. Kuntzelman and Mrs. J. C. Steever visited at Lan caster several days. Isaac Erb, of Camp Hancock, Au gusta, Ga., is home on furlough j visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. 1 Jacob Erb. Mrs. Charles Baker and Christina Romax. visited at Harrisburg. Paul Smith and Ben Myers spent I Thursday, at Lancaster. ! Mrs. Herbert Smith visited at Mid dletown recently. Lenard Robinson, Wilber Garber, Clifford Adams and Jacob Frey spent 1 a day at Rowenia. Ray Good, a clerk at Pennsylva nia Railroad depot here, is confined] to his home with inflammatory rheu matism. Ben Reno, who underwent an op eration at Harrisburg, has not Im proved and another operation will .be necessary. , Norman Witte has returned from ! a visit to his father at Cook's Mills. : Bedford county, and to his brother, I Noah Witte, at Manheim, W. Va. I Scott Longenecker and daughters. I Esther and Reba Longenecker, of. j Manheim, are visiting friends in ; town. Mr. and Mrs. Willis Smith, of Mid dletown, visited the former's parents, 1 Mr. and Mrs. John F. Smith, over the weekend. Miss Sylvia Burkholder. who was a patient at the General Hospital, Lancaster, has been brought home very much Improved. Word has reached here that Law rence Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith, who was a private at Camp Meade, Md., has been trans ferred to Camp Greene, Charlotte, N. C. Miss Beulah Shaeffer, of Potts town. visited Miss Ethel Erb, over the weekend. George Hill and Ralph Ashton,; of Wrightsville, visited Mr. and Mr 3. Wesley Ashton. Colored Society Petitions Wilson to Extend Leniency By Associated Press Washington, Feb. 19. President Wilson was urged to-day by a com- 1 mittec from the New York branch of j the National Association for the Ad- j vancement of Colored People to ex- j tend clemency to the five negro sol- 1 diers of the Twenty-fourth United | States Infantry, sentenced to be i hanged for the part they played in the rl&ts at Houston, Texas, in August ] last. A review of the cases of forty-one j other negro soldiers, sentenced to j life imprisonment as a result of the ! rioting, was also requested. CHANGES IN WATER PUMP PLANNED BY HASSL/EK j Slight changes will be made in thej mechanism on the 12,000,000-gallon| pump before it is put fn operation; permanently again Commissioner! I-lassle'r said to-day. During the last few days test runs have been made; to determine whether all the partsl are in good working order. By using the two old pumps and the electric i machine installed recently plenty of| water is kept in the reservoir. All | the parts for the permanent connec-1 tion for the electric pump, with the exception of the 16-inch pipe, have; been received. PLAN TO OPEN NEW OFFICES IN EAST AND WEST, William C. Alexander, sales-mana- j ger of the MoorheaeJ Knitting Com- j l>any, has juat returned from a 4,600- mile trip of inspection of branch of- ] flees and conferences with the rep- j resentatives of the Moorhead Knit- j ting Company in the following cities: | Washington, D. C.; S. C.: j Savannah, Ga.: Atlanta, Ga.: Jackson- I ville, Fla.; Birmingham, Ala.; New! Orleans, La.: Houston, Texas; Dal- 1 las, Texas; Kansas City, Mo.", Des I Moines, Iowa: Chicago. 111.; Indian-) apolis, Ind.; Detroit, Mich., and To-' ledo, Ohio. The plans of the company include new offices shortly in New York City, Minneapolis and Chicago. STOLE TWO TYPEWRITERS Police are looking for the thieves who broke into the American Rag and Metal Company, at 628 Briggs street, and the sheetmetal works of Samuel B. Weidman, at 800 North Seventh street, and stole a typewrit er from each place, last Friday r.iglit. The thieves broke into Weidman's place through a wooden sash to the shop, where they re moved the glass In the door con necting the office with the shop. They ransacked the office and took the typewriter. Then they lett the Weidman typ'ewrlter on the ro\t of a shed at the American Bag and Metal Company, and stole a typewrit er from that office. Detective Hyde Speese is working on the case. FALLS FROM SCAFFOLD Albert Sharp, 331 Susquehanna street, fell ' from a scaffold while working at the new Susquehanna school building. He was taken to the Harrisburg Hospital where it was found that he had sustained a com pound fracture of the left leg. MILL RUNS DAY AND NIGHT Halifax, Pa.. Feb. 19.—The A. N. Leo flour mill in South Front street ; is running day and night to meet the 1 demand for flour. Mr. Leo and his ! son on Saturday shipped 100 bar | rels of flour to the Shamokin Mill ing Company. CAUGHT A COLD AND IT HUNG ON Couldn't Seem to Shake It But -Tan lac Quickly Chased It Harry Buxton, the well-known barber at the Boyal Shop, 12 Nortn Third street, Harrisburg, Pa., caught a cold, "I dosed myself in the usual way but old Mr. Cold he hung right on j and refused to budge. "I did everything I could to chase ] him, but nothing doing, he stayed I right on the job, morning, noon and | night, and he got me worried. I I was feeling pretty mean and just a bit worried. "Then I happened to hear about Tanlac, and, thinks I, I'll give it a trial maybo It wdll do the trick. And believe me_lt did. And it did r.yj-e than rid me of this cold, for it i has made me feel about 100 per cent, better than I usually feel. I'm in great shape, wonderful appetite, sleep fine and feel energetic all day long. Tanlac Is sure great stuff." Tanlac is now being introduced here at Gorgas' Drug Store. Tanlac is also sold at the Gorgas Drug Store In the P. R. R. Station; In Carlisle at W. G. Stephens' Phar macy; Ellzabethtown, Albert W. Cain; Greencastle, Charles B. Carl; I.llddletown, Colin S. Few's Phar macy; Waynesboro, Clarence Croft's Pharmacy; Mechanicsburg, H. F. Brunhouse.—Ave. j Hun Press Furnishes Reading Public With Stories Devoid of Truth By .Associated Press | New York, Feb. 19. The German | reading public is being fed upon such ! reports about the American troops in j France a.s the following, which is cir i culated as a Geneva dispatch by a {leading German news agency: | % "In consequence of the increasing 1 number of excesses by American sol ; diers in France, and particularly in j l'aris, the American Government has I stationed in France a large number |of policemen in plain clothes, who I beat up with rubber clubs, loaded I with lead, all disorderly American ! soldiers. Paris papers report that this I measure has caused many incidents i of the public taking the side of sol- I diers handled with such bestial biu j tality." STUDENT IX HOSPITAL Waynesboro, Pa., Feb. 19.—Mr. | and Mrs. DanielGarver have received a telegram from a Pittsburgh hos pital stating that their son, Harry i Garver, was very ill with blood j poisoning and it would be necessary j for them to come ,at once. Young i Garver at the time he was taken ill ; was a student at the Carnegie Tech nical school. I PORTRAIT OF FIRST CASHIER Halifax, Pa., Feb. 19.—Directors ! of the Halifax National Bank are ! having reproduced a portrait of the • late Charles W. Ryan, cashier of the | bank. It will be framed and hung |in the bank building. Mr. Ryan j was shot to death in the Halifax I bank robbery of March 14. 1901. KILLED BIG HOGS Halifax, Pa., Feb. 19.—Arthur Rl- land, of Halifax twonship, killed a hog on Friday that weighed 601 pounds dressed and got five cans of lard. George Baker, of near town, killed a hog 011 Monday that weighed 567 pounds dressed and got four and one-half cans of lard. FEEDING GAME BIRDS Blain, Pa., Feb. 19. Sportsmen and others in this vicinity who were disposed to care for the game dur ing the rough ' weather and deep snows, received buckwheat for feed ing purposes from Game Warden] Daniel W. Sheaffer, of Blain, which was shipped to him by the State Game Preserve Association. A lot of game has been saved in this way. Whole oovies of quail have perish ed in the snow. Several flocks of tur keys have been seen lately which sur vived the blizzards. The deer seem ed to rejoice in having the deep snow to wade in. People living along the mountainsides have seen many of them out frisking about. VALEXTIXE PARTY Bainbridge, Pa., Feb. 19.—A Val entine party was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Eby. Games were played and music enjoyed dur ing the evening. Refreshments were served to: Henrietta "and Glendora Snyder, May, Charlotte, Elva and Robert Ashton, Ethel and Howard Lighty, John Camp. Katie Silas, Catherine and Anna Bryans, Verna, Mildred, Florence, Ethel, May and Gertrude and Samuel Eby. MARRIED AT WEST POINT Liverpool, Pa., Feb. I.9.—Mrs. Jes sie Zellers has received word of the marriage of her son. Sergeant Ralph Williamson, to Lena Kimmenmeau, at West Point, N. Y., on Saturday, February 9. Sergeant Williamson is well known in Liverpool, being an j alumnus of the High school and since! his graduation thirteen years ago has been engaged in clerical work at West Point Military Academy. j Getting* into the stride • * When a young fellow first run he's got plenty to starts out in life he gets his learn. "bumps." Every once in a while a severe jolt fairly His first bumps seem takes him off his feet. like big ones to him and sometimes are greatly The older he gets and magnified when he looks at the bigger he grows the hl , mself throu e h the eyes more his requirements and of a P assen S er - - greater his obstacles. r, i But as time goes on and he "gets on to the ropes''of If his path were a bed wor k he becomes pro of roses from the start it s ficient and renders valu a question whether he d able service to the public, make much of himself. CO mpany and himself. His difficulties reap for The war is constantly him great profit—which he calling more men to the turns to good account by colors and takes our ex preparing to overcome his perienced men. future stumbling blocks. KT " , . New men are being con * . , rii - L- stantly put on the cars and n lme he rails into his ta k eg time.to train them, stride. A considerate passenger When a Conductor or will help them immeasur-" Motorman starts out on his ably to get into their stride. HARRISBURG RAILWAYS COMPANY HEROIC MOTHER SAVES CHILDREN Twins Crawl Under Hug to Escape Flames in Their Home Waynesboro, Pa., Feb. 19.—Fire on Saturday afternoon destroyed the double concrete dwelling house at Rouzerville, near Pon-Mar, belong ing to Calvin E. Brown, a merchant, and occupied by Crawford Bum baugh, entailing a loss of SI,OOO to Mr. Brown, and SBOO to Mr. Bum baugh. The fire occurred whllo Airs. Buntbaugh was at a neighbor's after a bucket of water. Before going she hud left her three small children — twins, Crawford and May—and a baby one year old. When she re turned she discovered smoke issuing from the kitchen wherein she hud left the children, and beit}g unable to get the kitchen door open she ran to the front of the house and smashed in a window with her hand, badly lacerating it. She succeeded in taking out the baby from a gocart, and upon her return found the twins gasping for breath and unconscious. The children had crawled into a corner and had pulled a rug over "their faces In an attempt to pro tect themselves from the smoke. A physician was summoned who. after some time, revived them. Mr. Bum- I baugh lost all his furniture - and [ clothing. MRS. SARAH ARNOLD BURIED Blain, Pa., Feb. 19. —Funeral serv ices of Mrs. Clara Arnold, aged 59 years, who died at her home at Pine Grove, were held to-day. Burial was made in St. Paul's Cemetery beside the grave of her husband, James Ar nold. The Rev. W. E. Smith, of Elliottsburg. officiated, services being held in the United Evangelical Church at Stony Point. The pall bearers were William C. Smith, Da vidson V. Hench, Charles R. Hench, Isaac Holletlbaugh. William C. Gar ber and John Trostle. Dandruff Soon Ruins The Hair Girls —If you want plenty of thick, beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all means get rid of dandruff, for it will starve your hair and ruin it if you don't. I', doesn't do much good 10 try TO I.tusli or wash it out. The only sure way to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this get abour. four ounces- of ordinary- liquid urvoil; apply 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 lour more application* will completely dissolve and entirely dc sttoy every single sign aid trace of it. You V'ill find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop, and your hair will look a-id foci a hundred times' better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store It is inexpensive and four ounces i* all you will need, no matter how much dandruff you have. This, simple remedy never fails. J ENTJCRTAINS BIM-WAO Liverpool, Pa., Feb. 19. The Bim-Wac Club was royally enter tained at the home of Captain Susan Hitter on Friday night. A profitable program was rendered after which refreshments were served to the fol lowing: .Hazel Zaring, Matilda Har per, Bertha Marie Deck aid, Clar etta peekard, Viola Coffman, Ada Kiser. Evelyn Grubb, Puttie Linn and Cecilia Barnes. OLD TIME COLD CURE—DRINK TEA! Get a small package of Hamburg Breast Tea at any pharmacy. Take a tablespoonful of this Hamburg tea. put a cup of boiling water upon it, pour through a sieve and drink a tea cupful at any time. It is the most ef fective way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores, relieving congestion. Also loosens the bowels, thus breaking a cold at opce. It is inexpensive and entirely vege table, therefore harmless. CHAHI.R* It. BKCKLF.V ('crtlllcntfd (irrmc Tfarhfr Mnnhrr KUHtrrn CoimnrrrlAl Teachers* Anaoriation I'rinclpnl of Beckley's Business College Civil Service School le more thorough by taking; nn W& intensive (raining eoiirMe in Gregg Shorthand, Type writing, Bookkeeping, Ac ■u countancy, English, etc., by Individual Instruction At HARRISBURG'S SELECT BUSINESS gg COLLEGE 0 North Market Nqaare I|4 Call 8688-J "Best By Comparison" PuntUona Hunrnntecd
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers