Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, July 11, 1919, Page 18, Image 18

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    18
FINED $25 FOR
CAUSING DEATH
OF HIS WIFE
Korean Court Declares Ameri
can Minister Was Careless
With Auto
Seoul, Korea, July 1. —The Rev.
Eugene Bell, of Shelbvvllle, Ken
tucky, has appealed from the judg
ment rf the locul court whereby he
wt.t fined the cqi'valent ot' $25
criminal carelessness in accidentally
tansies the deati. of his wife and
a friend in an automobile accident.
Tqe judgment stipulated that in de
fault of payment Mr. Bell must
servt ten days' imprisonment.
It is understood that the friends
of .Mr. Bell, who ts engaged in mis
sionary work, urged him to tight ,
the case.
The accident occurred March 2 i
at an unguarded grade crossing
when the Seoul express ran down
the automobile which Mr. Bell was
driving. Mrs. Bell and the Rev. Paul
S. Crane, of Yazoo city, Mississippi,
were instantly killed and the Rev.
Robert Knox, of Galveston, Texas,
a third passenger, was injured,
finally losing an eye as a result.
Two Cakes Br'ng Concert
From Boys Brigade Band
Six touring, cars carrying Low's
Boys' Brigade Band, of Du Bois, ar
rived in Harrisburg last evening just
as Bowman's picnic crowd was re
turning from Good Hope Mill. Miss
Alice Musgrove said, "Here goes the
two cakes to the band boys."
The boys had not as yet crossed
the bridge to the Capitol City for
their supper, so the cakes served to
stave their hunger for the time be
ing. The leader gallantly offered to
come and serenade the girls the
next day. Several selections were
played in front of Bowman's store as
a result of this chance meeting and
songs by Clyde Allen.
In behalf of Bowman and Company.
Arthur Benson thanked them by say
ing that "Bread cast on the water
would return ten-fold and this, no
doubt applied to cake." Charles Tay
lor responded for the band boys al
ways take the cake wherever they
go.
The Boy Brigade Band is on a 700-
mile trip from Du Bois to Washing
ton, and are on their way home by
the way of Williamsport.
| Get the Printing |
I Habit and Watch It |
rzj la
Help You
bO Quite often we are 3
fij creatures of habit, not in- gj
Sj frequently to our disad-
S vantage. Good habits are jej
s to be treasured, bad habits rfJ
r|j spurned, says the moral- IS
(S Ist. One of the best busl- §
ines habits you can ac- ig
quire, says the business a
man. who has learned the {ja
lesson. Is the printing jo
habit. Let attractive. 3
earnest printing help you jr
add to your earnings. 17 '
has done this for others
and will get business for raj
[a you. The catalog, the y)
!g folder, the booklet, the •
B window card, the circular. M
S all these have been found £
E valuable auxiliaries to the g
g business man. We print r3
g them and print them ilj
r| right.
I THETELEGRAPH 1
I PRINTING CO. |
§ Printing Binding Design- S
g ing Photo-Engraving a
jjp Die Btamplng Plate Print- g
Hi ln *'
I] 216 Federal Square
Harrisburg, Pa.
. •*"? w ra r>c qp TBI rai r?ai?ora-.'fS cagj ,7c rg r?a foi rfa
Highlights in Speech
A League of Nations became a practical necessity.
All the peoples of the world demanded of the Confer
ence that it should create a continuing concert of free na
tions as would make wars of spoliation and aggression im
possible.
Xo old policy meant anything but force.
The monster that had resorted to arms must be put in
chains that could not be broken.
The League of Nations was not merely an instrument
to adjust and remedy old wrongs; it was the only hope for
mankind.
The Treaty, as a result, is not exactly what we would
have written. Compromises which were accepted as in
evitable nowhere cut to the heart of any principle.
Our participation in the war established our position
imong nations and nothing but our own mistaken action can
liter it.
A new role and a new responsibility have come to this
great Nation, which we would all wish to lift to high levels
of achievement.
We cannot turn back. We can only go forward with
lifted eye> and freshened spirits. America shall in truth
show the way.
SAVE the LEATHER \
LIQUIDS one/ PASTES '• For Black.White.Tanom/ |
Ox-Blood (dark brown) Shoes
KEEP YOUR.SHOES
SHOE POLBHK 1
PALLET COB POWAT IONS LTO. BUFFALO, N.Y.
FRIDAY EVENING,
Scene Taken at Annual Picnic Held Yesterday For Employes of the Bowman & Co. Dept. Store
Mary Pickford's Little
Niece Who Wants to Be
Like Her Famous Aunt
r tin i u ■■ tt "
■
I r TSSS- - lll—ii ,|r i-sr -wrsw-. ->"3J|
'PtcicfoT'J'jf niece.
When our Mary Pickford of to
j day has cast aside her gingham dress
i and little strands of come
; peeping through her yellow curls—
| if such can be imagined—she is go
ing to be able to go down' to the
i ••movie" house, pay her quarter and
see "Mary the Second" taking up
I her work where she herself left off.
1 That is, all this will come true if the
i dreams of her little niece Mary,
daughter of Miss Pickford's sister,
| Lottie, are anything like what regu
lar dreams ought to be. The young
' er Mary, seen at her famous aunt's
\ home at Fremont place, Los Angeles,
says she is just waiting to be as
i great an actress as Auntie Mary.
HE UK \NT UK 1.1,
He is proud of his ancestry, which
; descends in an unbroken line from
j the Tenns who bought the woods
i ,'rom the Indians. Family is every
thing with him.
He was perched on a chair in a
boot-black's stand, and gave warm
greeting to a passing friend.
Bootblack, lately from Greece: "You
knowa dat fella?"
"Yes, he is an old friend of mine;
I have known him for more than
[ twenty years."
| "Twenty years'. By gar, you know
him in the old country."—San Fran
| cisco Chronicle.
WILSON IS GIVING
DAYLIGHT SAVING
MUCH THOUGHT
Devotes Considerable Atten
tion to Rider; Two Billion in
Appropriations Before Him
By Associated Press.
\Va>liington. July 11. President
Wilson- still luid before him to-day
appropriation bills passed recently
by Congress and it seemed doubtful
whether any of them would be sign
ed this week. The President was
understood to feci that the measures,
carrying appropriations of more than
$2,000,000,000 deserved deliberate
consideration.
It was indicated at the White
House that the President was de
voting considerable attention to the
rider on the agricultural bill repeal
ing the daylight saving law. He has
before him many petitions, some
urging that he sign the bill and
others that he veto it. So far as
could be ascertained the President's
min-d still was open.
It was indicated that the President
had not yet begun preparation of
the address to be delivered to the
Senate, when he presents the treaty
with France by which the United
States would go to that republic's
aid in case of unprovoked attack by
Germany. The Treaty would be sub
mitted it was thought, before Mr.
Wilson started or? his tour of the
country.
PASS, FRIEND
A negro private had spent long,
tiresome months in a camp near New
York and wanted to get off on leßve.
He had a pass, but not the password
and whet? he came to the sentry the
sentry refused to let him go. The
negro pulled out his little pass and
offered It.
"That isn't enough," said the sen
try. "You must have the word."
"You mean that piece o' paper
j won't let me out?" demanded the
darky.
"Have you the word?"
J The negro reflected, then- he pull
ed out a razor and began stropping
it on his sleeve. "Man," he said im
pressively. "I gotta a father in hell,
, a mother in heaven an' a girl in
I Harlem, an-' Ise gwine to see one of
'em to-night."—Everybody's Maga-i
j zine.
DISAPPEARING LAKE
In Georgia near Viadosta, there Is
a lake which disappears every three
j or four years and then comes back
I again, no matter what the weather
I is like. The lake is three miles long
: and three-quarters of a mile wide,
| with an average depth of twelve
feet of water. There are natural sub
| terranear? passages beneath it,
I through which the water passes off.
j It takes two or three weeks to
! disappear, when a mammoth basin
j is left in its place, which furnishes
I a beautiful sandy beach. After a
i month or so the water begins to re
| turn, and then ir.> a couple of weeks
! it is the same magnificent stretch of
j water as it was before. Detroit
j News.
GARMENTS FOR SUFFERERS
Sixty-five tons of knitting varn,
origin-ally purchased hy the Ameri
can Red Cross for the making of
socks and sweaters for American
soldiers, has been manufactured into
78,000 yards of cloth and 33.000
shawls fifty inches square, and ship
ped abroad to help provide for the
destitute war sufferers of Europe,
i In addition, the American Red
Cross has. since the first of the year,
i sliiped 1.060.617 pounds of yarn and
; more than 22,500,000 yards of ma
terial for the making of garments
—textiles valued at $1 1,295,141, and 1
including dress goods, canton flannel,
! outing flannel, bath robing, etc.
t Red Cross Rulletin.
DOYLE'S DEDUCTION
[Boston Transcriptl
1 A woman who had read "Sherlock
Holmes" applied to Conan Doyle for
heln in a matter that puzzled her.
"My detective powers are quite at
your service, madam." said the nn-
I thor good naturedly. "What is the
j trouble?"
"Frequent arrfl mysterious thefts
have been occurring on our prem
ises for a long time. There disap
peared last week a motor horn, a
! box of golf balls, a left riding hoot,
| a dictionary and a half dozen tin
i plates."
"The case is perfectly clear." said
: Sir Arthur. "You keep a goat."
THE Oil) DAYS OF TOLL
[Washtr-zton Star]
! "You never hear of green goods
men any more."
"No," replied Farmer Corntossel;
"compared to tbe easv money-get
ters nowndava those old green goods
men worked mighty hard, besides
tukin' big chances."
GKOGR iPHIi \1,1,Y ANYWAY
Hobo—"Lady, will you help n aick
Invalid?"
Lady—"Why, you're not an Invalid
You look strong and healthy."
; Hobo—"Looks Is deceiving, mum
How else could I he when my father
wan born In Cripple Creek. Colorado,
and my mother In Palnaville, Ohio!
and I whh raised In Erysipllla, Indi
ana?"— Stray Shot*.
TO lllit.il KX ANIMATION
The Stare' Police Department will
hold a special examination at the
Capitol Tuesday fur Troop K, now be
ing organized at I-aneaster and to
he I orated here. There are fifteen
vacancies.
KNTIIKIt 4' ATM KM INK 111 111
Miss Father Catherine Ruth daugh
ter of Mr. and Mra. F. 1. Iltith. of
I lllspire, died In the Harrlshurg tin*.
uital v zterduy after a long illness.
I Funeral service* will beheld from tier
late hone on Sunday.
Ambassador Davis Highly
Honored by British Masons
mmsmtmmmss mmmiKKS
■—-s-twr vr. s/crj.'
John W. Davis, American amb&s-
I sador to Great Britain, was appoint
ed senior warden of the Grand Lodge
j of England, Freemasons, at a re
i cent session held in Albert Hall, ac-
I cording to a report from London.
( This honor, unique for a foreigner,
was conferred on Ambassador Davis
I by the Duke of Connaught, Grand
j Master of the lodge. Ten thousand
! persons attended the ceremony.
ATTEND CONVENTION
Alderman George A. Hoverter,
! president of the Pennsylvania State
I Magistrate's Association, returned
: to-day from York, where he pre
sided at the annual summer ses
sion of that organization. More
than 100 aldermen and justices of
the peace from all parts of the State
attended the meeting, which was
one of the largest held by the asso
ciation.
It was decided to hold the an
nual winter session in Lancaster
next January. Alderman S. Brady
Caveny, of the Second ward, this
city, attended the session.
MRS. MARY PARIAI.O
Funeral services were held in St.
j Patrick's Cathedral this morning for
Mrs. Mary Parialo, wife of Joseph
Parialo, notary public, 306 South Sec
ond street, who died on Tuesday
night.' Services were in charge of the
Rev. Benjamin Sama, of Steelton.
Burial was in Mt. Calvary cemetery.
Prominent Britishers Honored For Services Daring War
I ■
MB?
?(r Clem Clot Sxf
Kvjilociv- % Ertveif
Cook* \ Pa.rvo*v
6tr WiUianu
Three prominent Britishers who were rccentlv honored by King
Oeorgo for their service* to tho Government during the World Wur. Sir
William Bull, honorary secretary of the London Colonial M. P. 'a Asso
ciation and a member of parlianicn i from Hammersmith since 1900. Mr I
Ernest I'enrson. one of England's foremost cngincere. Two of his fore
most uchlevementii are tho construction of tho Malta Dry Docks and
breakwater mid the improvement of the harbor of Vulpaialao, for the'
Chilean Government. Sir ('lenient Kinloch-i 'ooltc noted editor and uu- j
thor, who is u power in the I'nionist faction in Parliament where he]
Is serving us representative from Davenport
Bain Did Not Interfere With
Field Events of Outing;
Many Prizes Awarded to
Winning Contestants; Fast
Time Made in Sprints For
Men and Girls
Despite the rain yesterday the an
nual outing for employes of the
Bowman & Co. store was a successful
event. The weather did not inter
fere with the sporting events. The
results follow:
Boys' 100-yard dash—First prize,
Charles Alexander: second prize, J.
A. By rem.
Men's 100-yard dash —First prize.
Charles Hooker: second prize, Edwin
Itodgers: third prize, Charles Kline.
Ladies' 50-yard race—First heat:
first. Klmn Senseman: second. Ruth
Powell: third, Mrs. Felton. Second
heat: first. Ruth Sutton: second,
Helen Etter: third, Florence Hart.
Finals: first. F.lma Senseman: second,
Ruth Sutton; third, Ruth Powell.
Shoe race for men—First. E. R.
Seidel: second, William Bowman;
third, Charles Hocker.
Shoe race for women—First, Helen
Etter. second, Cevelia Suter; third,
Mary Kline.
D|zzy Ishe race for women—r irst,
Helen Etter; second, Cecelia Suter;
third, Mary Kline.
Dizzy ishe for men—First, John
By rent": second, Curtis Dunlap; third,
Paul Weaver.
Egg race —First, Klnta Senseman:
second, Mildred Crone, third, Francis
Webster. „ ,
Boys' potato race—First, Charles
Krouse, second. Martin l'ishel: third,
Howard Pefiley.
Goat race—First, H. Iv Shull; sec
ond. Charles Hocker. third, James
Hoffman. ...
Ball throwing contest —first, Miss
P. C. Knowles: second, Ruth Powell',!
third, Catherine Holtz.
Baseball games—Bundle Tossers,
17; Counter Jumpers. 14.
Women's baseball —M eak Ankles,
5; Jelly Toes, 0.
Winners in water sports —Paul
Weaver, winner.
Boys' swimming race—James Hon
man.
Girls' swimming race Helen
Chandler. c „,
Other sports played were . few at
I tag. double tag. spinning the Hun,
relay race, stop obstacle race and
volley ball.
The sports were under the direc
! tion of Clarence W. Miller, Physical
I director of the Y. M. C. A.,
known as "Doc." The Judges were
J. F. Virgin and F. I'. I)ave " p . or i:„ r . t
A feature of the entertainment
i was an exhibition by the B °>'^ ou ?
I on signaling, first aid, knot tiemg and
i boxing the compass.
I.ADA' AND THE LUNKHEAD
Miss Simpkins was a lady of un
certain appearance and age, and
rather frightened De Vere, who was
1 a young assistant in a chemist s
shop, by her persisterrt demonstra
tion of friendship. "He flattered him
self that evcy girl and woman fell
madly in love with him. He felt sure
she meant to hook him. But chance
j threw them alone one day, and De
Vere felt that his hour had come.
"Mr. De Vere," she suid. "I can
' no longer bear this unspeakable an
| guish. I have at last plucked up
courage to ask you a question which
concerns my future happiness ar.d
comfort. Will—will you be —"
"My dear lady," gasped De Vere,
breaking out into a cold perspiration,
"it—it would break my heart to re
fuse. I have every regard and ro-
Ispect for—"
"Sir!" What do you mean?" gasp
ed Miss Simpkins. "Surely you can't
object to my asking what con? cure
you can recommend?" London
Opinion.
ADMITS HE WAS
NOT ROBBED
Conscience stricken, Roland
Whistler, 2215 Brookwood street,
to-day admitted to Chief of Po
lice Wetzel that he had not been
robbed of $96 2 on May 23, as he
had reported at that time. He
had made the report, he said,
so that an instalment house might
extend the time of making pay
ments on $750 worth of furni
ture that he had purchased.
He had had the money in a
• pocket of his trousers, he told
the police, having withdrawn it
from bank to make the furniture
payment and payments on other
accounts. The police were in
clined at the time to doubt the
story, since he is said to have re
ported that he had saved the
money while he was in the Army,
little more than a year ago.
BOOKS AND MAOAZINES~|
It is the literary flavor and the
artistry of style of "The Fledgling"
by Charles Bernard NordhofC
(Houghton MilTlin Company) which
makes it distinctive among war
books. Certain chapters of the book
were prirrted in the Atlantic while
Lieutenant Nordhoff was still in
France. At present he is with Cap
tain James Norman Hall at Martha's
Viireyard, where he is assisting in
the writing of one of the most im
portant books of the war, the offi
cial history of the "Lafayette Esca
driile."
After forty thousand miles of
travel in the eastern hemisphere,
and five years of war. Captain Louis
Keene, author of "Crumps" (Hougli
tor? MilTlin Company) has safely re
turned to this country.
The London Spectator says of
"Golden Days" by Romiily Fedden,
just announced by Houghton Mifflin
Company: "A very jolty book that
will delight anglers and many folks
who have never wet a line. Mr.
Fedden has as observant an eye for
human character as for a fii?e sun
set, or the under-water tactics of a
hooked Breton salmon."
In a letter to his publishers writ
ten from Hollywood, California,
Major lan Hay Beith writes. "I am
enjoying a much-needed holiday,
and spending most of my time in
and around the Lasky Studio, where
they are making a film of 'The Ad
mirable Cricliton.' My friend Cecil
deMille is producing it, and I am!
consulted as the expert on Er.-glish
customs. It is greut fun and easy
work. Next week we are going off
to an island in the Pacific to do the
shipwreck scene."
Of "The Gay-Dombeys," by Sir
Harry Johr.'-ton—,H. G. Wells says:
"Sir Harry has to tell of very curious
land intricate realities', he knows as
thoroughly as any living man can
i know, the intimacies of that queer
system ir? which court, foreign office,;
| colonial office, family influence, fln-|
ancial powers, shipping firms,
udventurcs, inspired journalists, ar.il
the encounters of the London diti-j
ner tallies and English week-end
parties, played their parts in the ex
pansion and administration of the
Empire of Queen Victoria. There isj
sheer fun for its owtv sake in thiSj
book, there are viewy passages and,
startling allusions to real people—
It grows together because it is a real
story built up of real experiences, |
and warm (and sometimes hot) with
I passionate feeling."
(The MacMillar? Company, Pub-,
lishers. New York. $1.75.)
"Prussianism and Pacifism": the
two Wilhelms between the Revolu
tions of 1848 and 1918. by Poultr.-cy
Bigclow, author of "History of the
German Struggle for Liberty 1806-
1848," "Prussian Memories," "Gen
seric," etc. G. P. Putnam's Sons,
New York, publishers. $1.30.
The author sketches the past
seventy years of Hohensollern glory
and shame—begtr.-ning with the
fliKht from Berlin of the first Wil
helm when Crown Prince (1848) and
closing' with an escape equally re
markable by liis grandson (1918) to
Ameronger-. Though the German
presses have issued endless material
in the Held the author covers, ho
says, "Experience leads me to think
that' much of interest has been wil
fully if not wholly sur
pressed through official Influence."
BATS ARE WELCOME
Sfw Orleans, La. —• "Malaria can
be eliminated. The mosquito alone
is responsible. The surest method
of ridding the earth of mosquitoes is
propagating the bat."
These are the words of r>r. Charles
A. ft. Campbell, mosquito extermina
tor and prstoetor of the bat. Hi Is
the originator of the only municipal
bat roost In the world, at San An
tonio, Texas, which will accommodate
250,000 bats, and already has about
35,000 guests.
Ihrough the efforts of Dr. Campbell
the rtty of Han Antonio passed, .Line
8. 1914, an ordinance prohibiting the
killing of bats, and on March 10, 1117,
Texas passed the first law in tlic
world which protects the but.
Hlnce the erection of the municipal
bat roost at San Antonio, and tho
original bat roust built by Dr. Camp
bell at Mitchell Lake, mmnrhi has
practically disappeared from tho ter
ritory.
K YEW THEY'D \ BHD DYE
There rushed Into the police sta
tion a youngster very much out of
breath, who gasped out to an officer:
"You're— wanted —down—down —in
our street—-an'-—an' bring an ambu
lance!"
"What's the trouble?" demanded the
policeman, "And why bring an am
bulance?"
"Because," the kiddle explained
when ho hud recovered his broith,
"mother'a found the lady that pinched
our doormat!"—tjyduey Bulletin.
Mrs. Crosman Visits Here
While on a Motor Trip
Mrs. J. Heron Crosman, Jr., of
Fassifern, Haverford, left home to
day on a motor trip to Harrisburg,
to be the guest of her aunt. Mrs. Ly
man Gilbert, at Fairfield her country
place. Mr. and Mrs. Crosman and j
their son, J. Heron Crosman, 3d, will j
leave July 19 on the yacht of Mr. I
and Mrs. F. B. Carney, of New York, j
for a cruise to Fisher's island, where !
they will remain several weeks. Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Crosman and their sons, |
J. Heron Crosman, 3d, and Alexander
C. Crosman, will spend August at
their place in the Blue Ridge Mount- '
tains of Virginia. Mr. and Mrs. Cros- '
man were former Harrisburg.
CAPTAIN NEILSON TO
GO TO TOW AN DA 1
I
Captain and Mrs. M. Nellson, who I
have been in charge of the local I
Salvation Army station for several I
MRS. POWELL EAGER TO HELP
SHE TELLS SUFFERERS HERE
"I am eager to tell my fine ex- j
perience with Natonex, for I think
every one should know how effec
tive it is. If they arc not sick them
selves, they have friends and rela
tives who are discouraged as I was.
I tried for years to get relief, and
spent lots cf money, but to no ad
vantage. Then through friend I
learned of Natonc x, and because of
the Bplend' ' results it gave, I am
glad to endorse it."
This was the statement of Mrs.
William Powell, of 160 Barney
Street, Wilkes-Barre. It is the
spirit that prompts men and wom
en everywhere to tell of the relief
that Natonex gives.
"My stomach had given me great
trouble." Mrs. Powell explained. "I
had no real desire for food and
suffered after meals with gas, bloat
ing and a burning sensation. I
would have a sinking feeling and
occasional fainting spells. I was
extremely nervous and slept poorly.
I had pains in the small of my
back.
"I happened to hear some of my
neighbors tell how they had bene
fitted from Natonex I had noticed
a great change for the better in the
appearance of one neighbor, and I
decided to see if Natonex would do
Xatoncx is specially explained in Harrisburg at tlie Gorgas Drug Store,
16 Xortli Third street. To meet the great demand, Xatoncx
is now sold by these lending Druggists: ,
j Everett—J. R. Fulton.
Greencastle —Charles B. Carl.
Hanover —H. C. Baughman.
Lewistown Muthersbough Phar
macy.
Marietta —Libhart Drug Co.
Mechanicsburg—E. C. Snyder.
Guy H. Lucas.
H. F. Brunhouse.
Mercersburg—Hai., B. Krebs.
Milton —E. L. Keiser.
Follmer Drug Co.
Mifflintown —Ohas. E. Walley.
I CAFE DANSANT f
jj COLUMBUS HOTEL ■
| 1 Dancing Every Evening i
;■ \ From 8.30 to Closing
Syncopated Orchestra *
Refreshments jo
|, > Ices, Fountain Drinks, Light Lunches
! (
FACILITY AND BBnpMmKO
PROMPTNESS
THE two are insepar
able In the print
ing business. First
of all you must have the
equipment—ln these days
none but the most mod
ern will avail —and then
you must execute your
orders promptly, withal
with care and skill.
Hundreds of people In
Central Pensylvanla will
bear witness to the com
pleteness of our plant
and the dispatch with
which we eerve them.
You can get the same
service. Put yourself in
, touch with ua. '
________
The Telegraph Printing
Company
—————— p r |„ti ng Binding, Designing.
Photo Engraving. Die
Stamping. Plate /
UIVB PS A TRIAL Printing ,
HI Federal equate
Itarrleburg, Pa.
i J<
years, were to-day notified to pro
ceed to Towunda, where they wilt
be put in- chartce of the station at
that place. They will leave the city
on Wednesday. Captain and Mrs*
Claude Boiling, of Chattanoßa, Tenn.*
will arrive here within a short tinia
to take charge of the local station.
FREE BAND
CONCERT
nv
Lowe's
Boys' Brigade Band
OF 50 PIECES
6.30 This Evening
j Paxtang Park Theater
as much for me. or would even re
lieve me at all.
"Now, after what Natonex has
done, I have no hesitancy in rec
ommendini! it as almost wonderful,
from the way I improved.
"I look forward to meal time
with enjoyment now. My stomae-h
is at ease. The soreness and burn
ing has gone, and I have no more
misery from the pain in my back
As my system has been cleansed
my nerves have yielded to the
treatment, and I get splendid rest
every night.
1 think that any one who knows
such a medicine as Natonex should
tell their experience for the benefit
of others."
To make Natonex, a chemist com
bined these 12 famous Nature rem
edies: Dandelion Hoot, Juniper Ber
ries, Gentian Root, Peruvian Bark
Valerian Root, Linseed, Jamaica
i Ginger Root, Cascara Sagrada Bark
Sarsaparilla Root, Rhubarb Root,
Prickly Ash Bark and Bicarbonate
of Soda.
Natonex is not secret, and your
common sense tells you that it is
harmless. Begin this Nature treat
ment today, for better digestion,
pure blood real nerve vigor and
bodily strength.
Mt. Joy—N. D. Chandler Co,
E. W. Garber.
Mt. Union—J. M. Minick.
New Cumberland —H. S. Butt.
Northumberland—J. E. Lloyd,
Port Royal—Adam B. Heckerman.
Red Lion—Chas. W. Moody.
Shippensburg—H. A. Raum.
Staver's Drug Store.
Steelton—John A. McCurdy.
W. K. Martz.
Tower City—G. W. Dreibelbis.
Waynesboro—C. I. Swartz.
Clarence Croft.