18 PENNSY MEN PLAN DRIVE FOR NO ACCIDENTS Program Mapped Chit at Rail road Conference Here Today Division committees representing lines east on the Pennsylvania Rail road, met here to-day to complete plans for the nation-wide No Acci dent Drive, starting October 18 and ending October 31. Sessions were held this morning and afternoon at the P. R. R. Y. M. C. A., and were attended by 300 delegates. A total o> 12 divisions were represented, THIN BLOOD LIKELY 10 BE 'FLO' VICTIMS 'J'hiii Blond I.neks White Corpuscles (culled fighters) That Keep Germ Diseases Out of the System— Weak, Rundown People Should Begin at Once to Revital ise Itlood. People who arc weakly, pale, dell cute and worn out and with a small amount of thin, watery blood will ex perience difficulty in overcoming the "Flu" unless they revitalize and re new their blood. Noted physicians say "Wnite -. puscles of the blood are our protecc tors against germ diseases. The thin impoverished hlood of thousands of weak, run down people lacks white corpuscles and such people should strengthen their blood with a good blood food to light oil the influenza germs. Novo San. recommended highly and used by physicians to rebuild and enrich impoverished hlood is the blood food to use. Nova San (meaning new blood) has an eminent feature of quickly adding white corpuscles to the blood of delicate people, giving them new force, new blood and strength in as little as twelve days lime in most cases, it's a pure and efficient blood builder that should give you abounding good health and reserve vitality, just what weak, thin-blooded folks will need when the "flu" germ comes upon us again. Don't take any chance when there i.-; a possibility of prevention. Go to ii. C. Kennedy or Geo. A. Gorgas or any good drug store today and get an inexpensive package of Novo San tablets. You'll surely be glad you did should influenza again ravage the country. Advertisement. Splendid Way To Reduce Your Weight There is perhaps no one thing that so plainly shows the passing of our youth as the horrible tendency to put on too much weight after we have reached the age of 25 or 30 years. However young our faces may appear, the sagging, liabfiy figure and forty inch waist "gives us away." Tile cause of this over stoutness is that our stomachs convert the food we eat into fat because there is not enough oxygen in the blood to pro duce a proper combustion to destroy the excess fatty tissue. Eat people will be pleased to learn of a simple home method that is wonderfully ef ficient in reducing weight, quickly and easily without a starving diet, \ iolent massage or strenuous exer cise. Go to any drug store and get a box of Ehynola; take live grains after each meal and at bed time. This treatment will often give quick re lief from overburdening fat. i'hy nota taken at ineul time assists tile stomach in giving you the benefit of the food you eat. at the same time dissolves the fatty tissue from any pal t of the body where there is exces sive fat. By this method many have l educed their weight a pound a day and there is no fiabbiness left. Gorgas, ttie druggist, Keller's Drug Store George's Drug Store, .1. Nelson Clark or at y druggist can supply you with the genuine Ehynola at a small cost. Wlien you puff up 011 a 1 King Oscar Cigar You're getting a darn good smoke for the money. Care, brains, experience and the de sire to do the right tiling takes care of that. 7c at All Dealers % John C. Herman & Co. Harrisburg, Pa. i ii FRIDAY" EVENING, along: with every working branch of the railroad. The meeting was pre sided over by William Elmer, super intendent of the Philadelphia Di v ision. Speakers it this morning's session were, N. W. Smith, general superin tendent of the Easte"n Pennsylvania Division; E. G. Otto, safety inspector at Altoona; Arthur Kirkendall, re gional supervisor of safety, Alle gheny Kegion United States Railroad Administration; T. H. Carrow, su pervisor 01' sut'ety, Pennsylvania Railroad, Philadelphia; E. M. Saus scr, chief clerk to superintendent of Tyrone Division; A. S. Dellinger, as sistant trainmaster, Philadelphia Di vision; W. A. Chafey, chief clerk to superintendent of the Schuylkill Di vision, at Reading; S. A. Hamilton, safety agent, Middle Division, and W. U. Barr, assistant trainmaster, Philadelphia end Reading Railway, fiom the general superintendent's of fice at Reading. Plan Vigorous Drive Plans for a vigorous drive were outlined by Arthur Kirkendall. He tcld of the good work in previous crmpaigus and how employes on the various divisions were working to make the coming drive a success. Timely suggestions were given by T. H. Carrow, who also made an inter esting address on the value of a no accident drive. The posting of bulletins at all shops, stations, and offices will ho one of the features of this drive. Literature telling of the work on other lines, and showing the benefits oi a no accident drive will be given wide distribution, it is the purpose tj reach every employe and to be in close touch daily with every depart ment, not only during the drive, but ten days prior to the campaign. There will be many interesting fea tures in connection wtli this effort. Rubber stamps will he used on time cards, letter heads, and all of ficial matter sent out, calling atten tion to the necessity for keeping ill nond the work that is to be carried out between October IS and 31, and for every employe to put forth special efforts to prevent accidents. Signs will be placed throughout the yards, enginehouses and shops, or. bridges and about stations. The churches, schools, Y M. C. A.s will b" asked to co-operate with the rail roads in this drive. Friday, October I.' will be observed as Safety First Day in schools. Prominent speakers will be assigned to the various schools to tell about the big move ment. Tlie newspapers are invited to help along the good work. General denning t p I There will be a general cleaning up before the drive starts, along with duily talks on accidents, at j shops, offices and stations. Safety committees will co-operate in this work and will have special meetings for the discussion of subjects. They v ill be asked to start ten days ahead ti. bring about a concerted movement for the success of the plans. On the days previous to the opening of the drive there will be short meeting-*. Celluloid buttons properly inscribed will be worn by railroad employes, i This afternoon the delegates rep resent ng their respective divisions met separately and outlined plans. This evening there will be a moving j picture exhibition on 'The House I that Jack Built," at the local P. R. it. Y. M. C. \., to which all railroad I men and th-ir families are invited. Small Boy Dies From Injuries Received When Struck by Automobile — - Carlisle. Pa., Sept. 26.—William I Calaman, a small son of Raymond ' Calaman, was run down about 8 j o'clock last evening near his home ! on the Walnut Bottom road, about ! two miles west of Carlisle, ijy an I automobile driven by Mrs. Samuel ! Kitzmiller, of Shippensburg. The boy was playing in the road near a barn and the car swerved and hit him. After the boy was struck, Airs. Kitzmiller is believed (o have become unnerved and ran the car into a telegraph pole. She ; then tried to bring the boy to Car i lisle, but owing to damage to (he 1 car she could not do so. E. E. ; Barnitz, a well-known lawyer of , Harrisburg and Carlisle, came along . in a car and hurried the lad to the 1 Carlisle Hospital. There it was found that he had sustained a frae j tnred skull and internal injuries. I Ho died in the hospital about twenty j minutes after reaching there. Mrs. j Kitzmiller is the wife of Samuel I Kitzmiller, the well-known head of a local trolley company. The cor oner is investigating the tragedy. | "BAYER CROSS" ON | GENUINE ASPIRIN /TT\ teAVOtm "Bayer 'lauicu ui sptrin" to be ' genuine must be marked with the I safety "Buyer Cross." Always buy jan unbroken Bayer package which j contains proper directions to safely relieve Headache, Toothache, Ear ache, Neuralgia, Colds and pain. | Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost I bu, a few cents at drug stores — ' larger packages also. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. SOW IN FALL FOR THE BEST LAWN Makes Greensward Healthy and Abundant From Early Spring to Late Fall Washington, Sept. 12.—1f you de sire a greensward that is sightly, at tractive, healthy and capable of pro ducing an abundant growth giom early spring until late fall without developing unsightly bare spots or brown, seared turf, sow your grass seed in the fall and sow it early enough, so that the grass plot will make sufficient growth to weather the winter in a rugged, robust con dition. This information is intend ed particularly for lawnmakers in Pennsylvania, Virginia, Maryland, Ohio and Tennessee. and other states in the same latitude where the common but unsatisfactory method of spring seeding dominates. Mr. Lawn Maker, if anyone urged you to sow oxeye daisies, sheep sor rel, broom edge or other objection able weed in your lawn you doubt less would characterize him as crazy. Vet, if you sow your grass seed in the spring this is exactly what you are doing, as spring seed ing really means stirring up a good seed bed for crab grass. Invariably this weedy grass, in the middle and south Atlantic section gets the jump and gains supremacy over other grasses whicli are adapted to these states. ftood lawns are difficult to estab lish and maintain in the territory mentioned. Two ot the subtropical Brasses, crab grass and Bermuda grass, are extremely troublesome as weeds. This is particularly true of crab grass, which during the sum mer invades most luwns and kills out other grasses in large patches. Although crab grass is a fair lawn grass during the summer. it suc cumbs to the first heavy frost with the consequence that the greensward during the following winter and spring is decidedly unsatisfactory. Bermuda grass behaves similarly but is perennial and difficult to eradi cate. There is only one way to control Bermuda and that Is to kill it out by careful digging. Crab grass once established can be eliminated only by hand weeding, a method not advised except where one Is willing to devote considerable cash and labor to battling the weeds. Despite the widespread abundance of crab grass in the middle states of the country, lawns have to be made and management has to be followed which, as far as possible, will elimi nate the pestiferous crab grass. By seeding in the early fall between September 1 and 15 a desirable turf May be established relatively free of crab grass. The soil should be well mulched with the under surface firm and compact, and some such seeding mixture as 16 pounds qf Ken tucky blue grass, 4 pounds of red top, 1 pound of white clover and 20 pounds of Italian rye grass, should be sown. Top dressing the lawn with a coating of one-half inch of fertile garden loam is valuable after the seed is sown. The Italian rye grass is used as a sort of carry-over cover, because of its vigorous growth during the late fall, winter and early spring when the other grasses grow more slowly. It will practically dis appear the following summer when its associate grasses in the mixture are at their best. Cleaning: Out Infested I .awns Even lawns which are thoroughly infested with crab grass, if properly treated early in September of each year, can be reformed and made to jielda fairly good sod. It is essen tial that this rehabilitation work be done early, as otherwise the crab grass will so dominate the lawn that it will be bare and spotted during the seasons when crab grass is dead and inactive. In September each year the lawn should be clipped very closely and afterwards as much as possible of the crab gras should be raked out by the roots. This elimi nation of crab grass should be con ducted vigorously, as thorough rak ing will exert little or no injury on the other desirable turf grasses in the lawn. Thereafter the soil should be scratched thoroughly with rake sand loosened to the depth of half an inch or more, when the lawn mixture previously mentioned should be sowed. To improve an old lawn is fre quently more difficult than to make a new one, and hence it is usually impracticable to attempt turf refor mation where the soil is very poor and where the existent greensward is especially sorry. This rejuvena tion work during the fall season is usually- neglected in the middle and south Atlantic section, because at that time the lawns look satisfactory and owners are not as enthusiastic about ornamentation around their homes as they are in the spring. Vsing Seeder oil Thin Turf Reseeding of old lawns is difficult and good results generally are ac complished only where the lawn is patchy rather than being uniformly thin. If the turf is thin over large areas, seeding can best be accom plished by means of a seeder which t'uts into the turf and deposits the seed. If such a seeder is not avail able, some implement that will loosen the soil but not tear the turf badly should be used. As previously suggested, an application of loam or compost should be applied after re seeding, if possible, when the area should be lightly rolled. Care should be exercised when mowing or water ing the newly seeded plot to avoid washing out the seed. During the winter season lawns may be improved by top dressing with fine manure or compost. This material should be of such nature that there will be nothing left to rake off the following spring. Lawns on clay soils will be benefited by sanding, which consists of applying a layer of about one-eighth of an inch of sand uniformly over the grass. The lawn should also be drained, if necessary, in order to prevent water standing on the grass, this being accomplished by digging small, open trenches so that water will run away from the low parts. The winter is the proper season for applying bone meal which is slowly soluble and is stored in the soil available as grass food during the subsequent spring. BETHLEHEM STRIKE HANGS IN BALANCE [Continued from First Page.] Shipping Unions, claiming to repre sent 18,000 seamen, engineers and men of allied trades, met to decide whether their organizations would declare a sympr/.ietlc strike. Such a strike already has been author ized by the international unions. Usual Conflicting Claims In the meantime the usual con flicting claims were made by the opposing generals in the pivotal bat tlegrounds of Pittsburgh and Chi cago, but all definite news indicated no important change in conditions. At Pittsburgh two additional small plants closed and an attempt to re open a third was reported by the police to have failed. The corpo ration officials made the customary I claim that strikers continued to re- fiXRRISBTTRG TELEGRAPH Senator Who Started Steel Strike Inquiry r; s P. • ' ' ' - •■**- 1. . . „ . ; rnSVn*' vri* in.. SENATOR WILLIAM S. KENYON The committee on Education and Labor is now investigating the steel i strike, following the introduction of a resolution by Senator William S. I Kenyon of lowa. Senator Kenyon j said the object of the investigation I would be to remedy industrial condi tions by legislation, if that were possible. turn to work at various points. The management of the Illinois Steel Company at Chicago announced that they had 4,000 men at work most of whom they asserted were re turned strikers. On the other hand the strike leaders offered figures as proof that the strike was 100 per cent, effective at several points, 90 per cent, at Hammond, 95 at Gary land 98 at Indiana Harbor. i Foster Cannot Say That Gary's Refusal Will Mean Strike Pittsburgh, Sept. 26.—The question of whether there will be a strike of the Bethlehem steel workers early to-day hangs in the balance. Following the refusal last night of President Grace, of the Bethlehem Steel Company, to meet with the steel workers' national committee, Secretary Foster, of the committee, said that he could not say positively that the refusal means the calling of a strike. The situation affects the company's plants at Steelton, Lebanon, South Bethlehem, Titusville and Reading, in this State and Sparrows Point, Md. The text of Mr. Grace's reply to the union committee was withheld by Secretary Foster, who said that he was "not at liberty to make it public." "The committee will meet before next Monday and take whatever ac tion that it deems advisable," Fos ter added. "A strike however is quite probable, but I cannot say whether it will be next Monday or when. As the matter is still in a process of negotiation there is also a possibility that the Bethlehem Company will be given another op portunity to meet the union's re quest." Shipbuilders Stay on Job Mr. Foster at the close of the ad visory committee's meeting began getting in touch with members of the national committee asking them to report to Pittsburgh at once. He said that in all probability the com mittee would be in position to con sider the reply of Mr. Grace on Sat urday. a strike be called in the Bethlehem works, Mr. Foster said, the shipbuilding plants would not be affected as they are working under a union agreement. The Bethlehem Steel Company is the largest independent steel cor poration in the United States, em ploying between 40,000 and 50,000 men, Mr. Foster explained. He said the workers in the Bethlehem plants are among the best organized in the country. Mr. Foster announced that the advisory committee had made an immediate reply to Mr. Grace stat ing that the matter would be taken up at once by the national commit tee. He added also that the Bethle hem workers through their officials had been notified by telephone of the company's refusal to grant a con ference. According to Mr. Foster the pres ent system of collective bargaining referred to by Mr. Grace is a "make shift company union affair" which was inaugurated during the war. Get Grace's Reply Allentown, Pa., Sept. 26. Labor leaders here were given a summary of the contents of President E. G. Grace's reply by letter to the na tional committee for organizing iron and steel workers. In replying he caustically referred to the fact that had come to his at tention that the national committee had gone to the extent of prepar ing literature declaring a strike which had already been placed in the hands of some of the employes of the Bethlehem Steel Company. He defended the system of col lective bargaining instituted by the company with the men and said that under it the men had an op portunity to take up grievances at any time with the officials of the company and adjust them. He also pointed out that the men have a means whereby the plans of the sys tem of collective bargaining can be changed. If unsatisfactory. For this reason the Bethlehem Steel Company deems a conference with the national committee unnecessary. May Postpone Strike Following receipt of the telephone message a meeting of representatives of the trades in Bethlehem was held. Optimists expressed the belief that the national committee might decide to postpone a strike, called for next Monday, because the relations of the American Federation of Labor with Bethlehem Steel In its shipyards are very satisfactory. Some of the na tional leaders, It is said, feel that arrangements may yet be made to settle the matter without strike. The representatives of the trades declared however, that they fear they cannot now hold the men if the national committee orders postponement. Local leaders, replying to Mr. Grace's contentions, state that the Bethlehem system of collective bar gaining Is one-sided and that their request that the United States secre tary of abor be arbitrator of dis putes has been refused by the com pany. MAY CLOSE Mia, COMPANY SAYS | [Continued from hirst Page.] . impossible. I appreciate the rise in | the cost of living. To give the men J more money means that we must sell our steel at increased rates. We | cannot do that." Mention was also made by the I men in their twelve points of griev- j ances against a number of depart- , ment heads which are common in | every -shop, Mr. Hildrup says. About 300 of the 700 employes of the establishment have gone out on strike, officials of the company believe. More are leaving gradually, i they admit, as work on furnaces is j being completed. All Will Close The strike will mean, officials I say, that all departments will be j forced to close, whether the work men in them go out or not. There I are several shops which are not I unionized, but which will be forced ! to close as soon as their supply of | steel is exhausted. This is a matter i of a few days only, it is generally I understood. The strike was called about noon i yesterday by Capital Lodge, No. 103, | Amalgamated Association of Iron, j Steel and Tin Workers. The first ; of the men left about 1.30 o'clock j and after that gradually throughout j the afternoon and night. Everything ! was conducted in a peaceful manner. "Unfairness to organized labor on the part of the employers," was yes terday assigned by the strike leaders as the reason for their action. A statement of members of the committee is to the effect that on Monday they presented a petition of twelve points to officials of the com pany. Yesterday, the answer from the company came, ignoring the re quests of the workmen. It was not hoped to have the officials accede to all of the points, some of which were not especially favored by the greater mass of the workmen, the committee says, but that the com pany would grant at least some of them. Force Greatly Reduced For some time last winter, after the war orders had been tilled, there was talk of closing the plant, but the management sent W. P. Starkey to Europe in an effort to line up orders and for a time prospects were bright for a continuance of work on a large scale. Cards were sent out to the several thousand employes who had drifted away from the works with the close of the war, to apply for their old positions if they ! so desired, but the big orders failed j to materialize and the working force gradually fell away to about 700 men. many of whom have been with the company for years. For some time there has been talk of closing the mills but the obligation of the company to its men and to the com munity has been a factor in keeping the organization together, it was said by company officials to-ddy, in the hope of better business condi tions ahead. The statement of Mr. Hildrup did not come as a surprise to men who had known the condi tion of the company. Strikers Confident The strike committee, on the other hand, was in a very hopeful mood. More men had gone out than was at first anticipated and they expressed the belief that the whole mill will be tied up almost as rapidly as the men finish the heats on which they are now working. Workmen said that there would be no disorder at the works, their visit to the police station having been made in goo d faith. All was quiet in the vicinity of the plant this morning and there was little sign of disturbance. The strike comnyttee is making its headquarters at the offices of the Pennsylvania Federation of Labor. The leaders were in good temper and there appeared to be no personal antagonisms on either side. Four of the twelve points pre sented by the committee to the of ficials of the company were of little concern to the men, and they were not especially anxious to have them accepted. The remaining eight points were to-day brieliy summarized by a member of the strike committee as follows: 1. Recognition of the union. 2. An eight-hour day. 3. Collective bargaining. 4. A standard wage to meet the American standard of liv ing. 5. Time and half-time for all overtime and double time for Sun day and holiday work. 6. One day's rest in seven. 7. Sliding wage scale feature. 8. Seniority rights to ap ply to all increases and decreases in working forces. Leaders of the strikers in reply to a question said that this amount ed to asking for wages twenty per cent, more than they are now re ceiving for a twelve-hour day for the eight hours which they seek. They are confident that they will be able to conduct the strike to a successful conclusion. Of the men employed at the plant, they say that approximately 400 men are enrolled in Capital and they are of the opinion that the number of men included on the payroll is not in ex cess of COO. Practically every worker who is a member of the lodge is now out on strike, according to the leaders. Many other nonunion men, they say, have gone out in sympathy. In prac tically every department, operation is carried on with badl depleted forces, according to the leaders, and all, they believe, are on the verge of closing. It is a matter of only a few days, they say, until the entire plant is compelled to close. It was stated this afternoon by an official that all departments of the plant were in operation except the open hearth and that a number of the men who had been forced to quit work owing to the absence of some of their fellows had expressed their willingness to return as soon as they were notified. There was no excite ment about the plant to-day and both the management and the men have expressed a desire to avoid any disagreeable conflict. A committee of strikers yesterday afternoon conferred with Mayor Keister and Chief of Police Wetzel, in reference to picketing regula tions. They promised to conduct the strike peacefully. EXCESSIVE ACIDITY is at the bottom of most digestive ills. Ki-HOIDS FOR INDIGESTION afford pleasing and prompt relief from the distress of acid dyspepsia. MADE IT SCOTT ft BOWNE MAKERS OP SCOTT'S EMULSION Natives Shave Heads to Let the Heat Out Though the Phlllipines have made marked strides in culture, in dustry and civilization in recent years, as set forth in their recent pleas for independence, some na tives of the islands, as do a few Indian tribes in the United States, still present striking subjects for study by ethnologists, according to a bulletin from the National Geo graphic Society. "The Negritos are generally con sidered to be the true aborigines of the Philippines and are racially numerous tribes of the islands," says the bulletin, which is based On a communication to the society from Dean C. Worcester. "They are of low, sometimes l even dwarfish, stature, with very j dark brown or black skins. Their ] heads are covered with closely curi- I ing hair and many of them have | abundant wooly beards. They often | have so-called 'pepper-corn' hairs | distributed very abundantly over ' their bodies. Their noses are broad ] and flat, their lips thick, their arms | disproportionately long. "They do not tattoo their bodies,' but ornament them with scar pat-1 terns, produced by cutting through I the skin with sharp pieces of b'am ! boo and rubbing dirt into the wounds thus formed in order to in fect them and make good big scars. "The men wear small clouts and the women short skirts reaching \ from the waist to the knee. They j are very fond of brightly colored ] cloth, scarlet being preferred, but individuals who cannot get cloth, and there are many such, use in stead the so-called 'bark cloth' so widely employed by inhabitants of the islands on the Pacific. Men fre quently shave the crowns of their | heads 'in order to get the heat | out.' "Throughout the year they sub sist chiefly on vegetable products, i which they obain from the virgin | forest, and on fish and game. They lare wonderful woodsmen and dis- I play great skill in taking fish and game and in still-hunting their enemies; but here their oificiency ends. They are good at nothing else, and their intelligence is of an exceptionally low order. "Many of the Negritos point their front teeth, but not by filing them, as is commonly supposed. A chip of wood is held behind the tooth to be operated upon: the point of a holo is placed in such a position as to slant across the corner of tooth to be removed and a sharp blow on the bolo chips a piece from the tooth. The opposite corner is similarly operated upon and an ar tistic point is thus produced. "The music and dancing of the Negritos are espeeialy interesting. Many of them know how to make and to play both the bamboo nose j flute and a kitid of Jews' harp j made from bamboo. Some of them use crude stringed instruments fashioned from s'ngle joints of j bamboo, the strings being cut from the outer layer of wood, to which their ends remain attached, and be ing raised up by means of 'bridges.' The distribution of the several kinds of musical instruments above mentioned is more or less local, Mag Rhu TABLETS Stop Stomach Trouble Guaranteed to relieve acid stomach, nervous indigestion. constipation, stomach pains. Sold by Croll Keller, the druggist, and the Kennedy Drug Co., and all other druggists or send fl.oo to Mag lthu Co.. Pittsburgh, Pa. and a box will be sent postpaid. Cut Cost of Living Do you know you can dine in a clean restful room, full of sunlight and fresh air, where the food is prepared under the direction of an expert; in a sanitary kitchen. Every thing properly seasoned in the good old home way and where each item served, in cluding Fruits, Pastry, Salads, Meats and Vegetables are tastefully displayed in hot or cold tables for inspection before order ing. Where the best of coffee with real cream is served for five cents a cup and all other dishes at tiventy to forty per cent, lower than other cafes, not counting the no tip feature and the time served? The Cafeteria system of dining does all this. Try it and be convinced. For ladies and gentlemen. 11 to 2 P. M. 5 to 8 P. M. The Cafeteria 3rd and Walnut HOTEL COLUMBUS SEPTEMBER 26, 1919. but the bronze tom-tom or 'ganga' is in universal use, although some Negritos play it with a drum stick, which others beat it with their hands. Many of their dances are pantomimic. Their singing is often weird in the extreme. "There are many stories current to the effect that Negritos are often to be met with wandering through the forest in a state of absolute nudity, and that they indulge in various obscene dances. X am sat- Perfect Health Is Yours If the Blood Is Kept Pure Almost Every Human Ailment Is Due to Blood Impurities You cannot overestimate the im portance of keeping the blood free of impurities. When you realize that the heart is constantly pumping this vital fluid to all parts of the body, you can easily see that any impurity in the blood Will cause serious com plications. Any slight disorder or impurity that creeps into the blood is a source of danger, for every vital organ of the body depends upon tho blood supply to properly perform its functions. Many painful and dangerous dis eases are the direct result of a bad DEALERS NOTICE! M YOU can share in the unprecedented sale created by our reduction of standard-make tires which are selling thousands of automobilists throughout our territory, if you will address a note inquiring for prices and particulars. Selling Tires by the Carload at '/zPRICE Size Plain Non-Skid Tube 30 x 3 $7.74 $ 8.65 $1.65 30 x 3V 2 10.08 11.22 1.95 32 x 3*4.... 1168 13.11 2.22 31 x 4 15.39 17.52 2.64 32 x 4 15.72 17.82 2.73 33 x 4 ....16.44 18.72 2.85 34 x 4 16.86 19.11 2.97 35 x 4*/ 2 23.73 26.82 3.68 You are invited to share in this growing and continuing demand for standard-make tires of many kinds, which are selling at prices lower than have been enjoyed since before the war. NOTE TO CONSUMERS AND DEALERS: Extra apecial prices now available on our OMAR and LIBERTY I ires, guaranteed for 3500 to 4000 miles. Pennsylvania Tire Stores Company Harrisburg Store, 25 S. Third Street Allen town Store Philadelphia Storo 610 Lliulen St. 1202 Arch St. Scranton Store Lancaster Store 236 Adams Ave. 120 N. Duke St. VVllkes-BaiTc Store 80 ir. Main St. (Write to us at any of the above addresses to find tK. agent in your territory.) isfied that the former series of tales are without foundation in fact. Ob jectionable dances are very rait among the wild peoples of the Philippines, athough they are some times indulged in by the Moros, and are common among the Manobos of Mindanao. "The head-cutting peoples of the Philippines are apparently limited to northern Luzon. None of the warlike hill tribes inhabiting other parts of the archipelago are known to take the heads of their victims.' condition of the blood. Among the most serious are Rheumatism, with its torturing pains: Catarrh, often a forerunner of dread consumption: Eczema, Tetter, Erysipelas and other disfiguring skin diseases; Malaria, which makes the strongest men help less, and many other diseases are the direct result of impure blood. You can in a largo measure avoid liability to disease, by the use of S. S., the wonderful blood remedy that has been in constant use for more than fifty years. S. S. S. cleanses the blood thoroughly. It is sold by druggists everywhere. I<"or valuable literature and med ical advice absolutely free, write to day to the Medical Dept., Swift Specific Company, 256 Swift Labora tory. Atlanta, Ga.
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