tttlje &tar-3niirp*ntUiU (Hnal4%thfd in IMS) Published b • THE STAR PRINTING COMPANY. ' /*■ SUr.lndtpt'idMl Building. M 10-3 2 South Third Harrwburl, Pa., Evary Evoning Eic«pt Sunday Oftiitrt />i rtntrt. Bkmami* r. M stirs. J OBK L . l Kchn. President W* W Wallows*. Vtr» President M K M»te«s Wm K Miters. Secretary and Treasurer W>» W WALIOMS We H W arncr, V. Himmel Berghacs. JR. Sustotx Uantger fcditor. Alt roniinunica-ions *huuld be a«dre«se.l to Star iMUPENDEjrr, Ru»ine< . Editorial. ,'ob Priu'ln|c or Circulation Department according to the subiect matter Entered at tbe I'oit Oilica in Hai"ri»burj *■> second cl*sa matter Benjamin 4 Keti'.uor Company. New York ami Chicago Representatives New York OSee. Brunswick Building. 22i Fifth ATenue Chicago Office. People's <i»« Building. .Michigan ATenue. Delivered by carriers »• 6 cents a week. Mailed to subscriber: tor Three Dollars a /ear in advance THE STAR INDEPENDENT Tbe paper with !je largest Horn-. Circulation in Harrisourg ana ■earbr towns Circulation Eiamlneu by THE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN ADVERTIS3RS. TELEPHONES: BELL. Privato Branch K«chan»a. No. 3280 CUMBERLAND VALLEY Mfils Branch Eiclun«, • No. I*s-246 Friday, November t>, 1914. NOVEMBER Sun. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thur. Fri. S.it. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 MOON S PHASES— Full Moon, tind: Last Quarter, toth; New Moon, 17th: First Quarter. *J4tu. P WEATHER FORECASTS I Harrisburg and vicinity: Fair to jut and Saturday Nor mucn ■ laugo j it temperature. Eastern Pennsyivauia: Fair to night j and Saturdav. I.ight nortawest winds V 'J becoming southeast Hitlij. YESTERDAY'S TEMPERATURE IN HARRXSBURG 11 ~-hejt. "9: lowest, 4o: S a. m., 47; S p. m.. 4S. MISSOURI S VERDICT ON THE RAILROADS Whatever arguments may i>e advanced for or «git in st the full ivw law applied to railroads of various * a:e* of the country the overwhelming vote by which the people of Missouri rejected sueh i> law whic was pa».ed by the last legislature, signed by Governor Major ami submitted to the • lectors last Tuesday for referendum, may be taken . - an indication that the people of the whole nation ai> beginning to see the mistake of consantly in t-rt. tin/ the railroads' expense* through piling up legal restrictions. The full crew law may or may not be a good thing mi itself It has been contended that it makes travel safer for the public and provides work for more railroad men. On the other hand many rail road employes contend that the extra expense this law, and many others recently enacted, impose on the railroads, has so reduced the companies' earn ings as to have caused roads to cut employes' wages. But whatever the good or ad qualities of the full crew law, the question that was raised in Mis souri was the broader one of whether the people believe in piling up additional legislation to eat deeply into railroad profits and result in railroad "Wrcnchments both in the matter of wages and in the amount of money devoted to maintenance, pur chase of new equipment and the extension and im- lines. That was the i<sue in Missouri when the full crew law was submitted to the voters and the result of Tuesday's referendum vote in that state was awaited with keen expectancy by the industrial and financial interests throughout the United States. ~ The verdict of the Missouri voters. —an indicated majority of 100,000 against the full crew bill.— when interpreted merely as an expression of oppo sition to further financial handicapping of the rail roads, marks a turn in the tide of sentiment which for a number of years has ineliued to swat the railroads along with the tendency created by polit ical demagogues to harass big corporations indis criminately. whether or not they deserved it. The Missouri verdict indicates that the people are be ginning to come around to the view that many of the legislative handicaps that have been imposed on railroads have been unjust and that the railroad employes and the public in general will share in the bent'tits when it becomes generally recognized that inanimate corporations are just as much enti tled to a square deal as are individuals, and that when the railroads suffer from unnecessary finan cial burdens those burdens also must be borne by the people. DR. STOUGH AND LOCAL CHURCHES The good people of this city, many of them, think that Evangelist Stough is rather severe on the churches in his attacks from the tabernacle plat form. lie has certainly spoken plainly regarding what he believes to be the conditions in Harris burg's religious life. Whether what he says hits the actual conditions in this city no persons can know better than the members and the pastors of the churches themselves. It is for them to take heed if the shoes pinch, or to disregard the attacks if they are certain that they are on the safe side. The preacher who is in our midst for six weeks is sparing no pains to let local church members and pastors know just what he thinks of them, and thus far he has said nothing very complimentary. He does not make clear whether he considers Har risbnrg churches worse off than any others, but HARRISBCRG STAR-INDEPENDENT, FRIDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 6. 1914. presumably he does not. What he says about the lifelessness and uselessness of churches and church members he evidently means to apply to all churches in general, while at the same time making the application appear specific enough to bring his statements home forcefully to llarrisburg church members in particular. It has been very notice able that these particular persons have applauded him heartily in many of his criticisms of themselves, shouted at them from the platform in the taber "tu'le. It must be inferred from such manifesta tions of approval and endorsement that weaknesses which he condemns as existing in churches at large are not unknown to llarrisburg churchmen, and that in many instances he has, with his plain talk, hit certain obtrusive nails squarely on their heads. Dr. Slough's language has. of course, shocked many good people. He told them in the beginning that ii would. He does not say things to them as do sedate, decorous and altogether proper pastors. His preaching, he says, is effective because, like a cyclone, it is unexpected. His attacks on sham, vain show and surplus dignity in pulpits and in pews have come suddenly upon church members aud naturally sound strange in their ears. They have not been accustomed to that sort of thing. They have considered most matters that go with church services entirely right, and now they are told that some things about divine worship are wrong. Tiie members and pastors of the local churches must figure it out for themselves whether they are being criticised deservedly and act accordingly. The evangelist is making some sweeping assertions about qualities alleged to be wanting in them, and they must harken whether they like it or not. for there is no escape. K\angelical oh arches of Harrisburg. pan of them, have brought Dr. Stough here to revive their re ligion in au evangelistic manner. He makes his remarks about ehurehes from a platform where the co-operating ministers of this city and vicinity sit in apparent acquiescence. It would seem from an impartial point of view that the evangelist feels lie must tell the members and pastors of the co operating .-hurdles what he is telling them, at this stage of his strategie campaign, to prepare them 0 receive intb their churches new converts of Christianity which his preaching will shortly start to produce. The Ananias <~lub is vindicated. Kven President Wilson is "satisfied with the result." (.'barley Murphy is licked again, but will he stay licked? We a-e all for prosperity now,—even the 'Harrisburg Telegraph." The "Calamity Howl" has vanished now that election over. "Well, it is better so. The "Harrisburg Telegraph" can now shed its coat ot' pessisisra and root for a "Better and Greater Harrisburg" Without the danger of running in coutlict to the interests of its political friends. May b* that reduced dividend on the common stock of the United States Steel Corporation didn't have anything to do with the results of the •'elections throughout the country, and then again may be it did. The "Harrisburg Telegraph" admits now that the busi ness of the country i s not going to the dogs. Remarkably sudden conversion to that view on the day after election! And the Democratic tariff still is in force, toot x TOLD IN LIGHTER VEIN HOUSEHOLD BATTLE The battle at Short Jenks' home continues unabated. At 11 o'clock this morning Mrs. Jenks made the followiug official announcement: "With a brilliant charge about breakfast time I flanked my husband with my stalwart foot and he doubled up and then retreated in haste. It was almost a rout." At 1 o'clock this morning Mr. Jenks officially announced: "The situation remains uuehanged. There have been attacks and counter-attacks on both sides, with no decisive results. I'm now well entrenched and confident behind a tub in the cellar. I believe I will ultimately triumph. The enemy is making many claims and making those things is the easiest thing in the world to do. If she had a cannon that was as rapid as her mouth I would be compelled to admit that my position is serious. As it is, I concede I will conserve my strength and forces, with the view of getting out of the cellar and consulting a lawyer. I urge American newspapers to judge not until the real situ ation is known. History will vindicate me and declare that I did not start hostilities. My sister-in-law urged my wife to start them. My wife didn't need a great deal of urg ing."—Atchison Globe. MODESTY It must not be supposed that because tiie Kaiser quoted Shakespeare—"To be or not to be"—in his original mani festo His Majesty is a good Shakespearean. The contrary may be surmised from an incident which occurred at a lunch at once of the Berlin Embassies. An English diplomat was discussing some big affair of the moment with a lady. "As our immortal William has observed," the diplomat remarked, " 'There is a tide in the affairs of men that, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune.' " The Kaiser looked puzzled. "That is quite true," he is said to have acquiesced, "but 1 don't remember saying it."—London Tit-Bits. PUZZLE IN A PBOVEBB "lather, it says here. 'A man is known by the companv he keeps.' Is that so father!" "Yes, yes, yes." ell, father, if a good man keeps company with a bad man, is the good man bad because he keeps company with the bad man, or is the bad man good because he keeps company with the good man?"— Exchange. IT WAS ONLY A DREAM Mrs. Gabbeigh—"John, you were talking in your sleep." Husband—"That's funny, for I was dreaming of you." Mrs. G.—"What was funny about it?" Husband Why, I don t see how I got a chance to sav a word."—Boston Transcript. WOMAN'S WAY Mrs. Crawford— Why don t you as« your husband's advice?" Mrs. t. rabshaw "I intend to. my dear, just as soon as I've made up my mind what I'll do."—Judge. | Tongue-End Topics| | —^——^ General Hulings as a Fighter After March 4, next. General Willis j J. Hillings, Congressman, will be out of political office for the first time in many | years. General Hulings is one of the j best fighters, political and otherwise, in the State. He hae been successively j member of the Assembly, State Sen ator and Congressman, and lio is known ; to have declined nomination for state office wheu he could have been elected, j As a member of the National Guard he commanded the Fighting Sixteenth Pennsylvania regiment in the Spanish j American war and went with his regi ment to Porto Rico, where his command l fought the only battle with the Span iards on that island and decisively de | t'eated them and captured a stronghold, i with prisoners, guns and flags. Reeog ! nized as a very independent sort of a politician. Colonel Hulings asked fa- of nobody, but through sheer mer it won his rank as Brigadier General j and was commander of the Second Bri ! gade. National Guard. He was in liue , tor the Maior Generalship, but the fact i that he had reached the retiring age j was seized upon by the powers that be to deny him the highest honor in the National Guard. When the Washington party sprang into existence he accept ed a nomination for Congress from that party, and won hands down in his home district—one that was at the least con sidered doubtful. This year he was again a candidate, but the fortunes of political war caused his defeat and he retires to private life. Bat. wherever, he is, it is certain there will be some lighting going on. and he will be in the thick of it. • * Kline's Work in Cumberland One of the happiest employes on Capitol Hill is Joseph W. Kline, of Cumberland eo\inty, assistant cataloguer l in the State Library. When the for tunes of the Kepublican party in Cum berland countv were at low ebb a year ago the County Committee fixed on "Joe" to gather up the fragments and weld them into a fighting unit, and he was made County Chairman. He didn't sit quiet and let his political op ponents walk over him. but began to get his forces together, made an earnest appeal for everybody to help, did a great share of the work himself and wager a hot aggressive campaign until tbe polls closed. The result is that the majority for the Democratic candidate for Governor in Cumberland is about 300. Penrose has a small majority aud two Republican members of the Assem bly are elected. That is why Kline is stopped so often in the capitol to re ceive congratulations. McConnell One Who Comes Back Former Senator William McConnell, of Shamokiu, is coming back to the State Senate. Senator McConnell has many old friends and acquaintances in Harrisburf »ho will 1>» glad to hear of this. Two years ago he was defeated in the Buil Moose tidal wave that [swept over the Northumberland dis ! trict. and Senator Fisher was elected. Last spring, after a long illness. Sena tor Fisher died, and an election was necessary to chose a successor. Senator McConnell again faced the fight and has won out by a good majority. He has legislative experience that will be of value to hitn during the next ses sion. * * * Christy's Work in Allegheny Congratulations are being sent Wal ter J. Christy, political reporter of ttt2 Pittsburgh "Gazette-Times,'' for his handling of the Republican campaign in Allegheny as County Chairman. Mr. Christy is the present Governor of "the Pennsylvania .Legislative Correspon dents' Association, and has beefi a leg islative reporter for his paper for years. He was the best booked man on politics in Allegheny county and one of the hardest workers, consequentlv his selection as County Chairman was quite natural. Night and day he fcad been plugging away since the first week in .Tune, and the result of his work showed on Tuesday wheu a clean sweep of the county was madeJor the Repub lican State, Congressional, Senate and Assembly candidates. * * * Walnut and Scott Lacked T. Henry Walnut and Samuel B. Scott, members of the last Legislature from Philadelphia, will be missed when the House is called to order in Jan uary. They were Bull Moose rs and were in the thick of every fight on the floor of the House, and it was thought that they would surely be returned to the House on the Washington party ; ticket. Unfortunately for T. Henry and 1 "Sam" they were on the wrong side of the ballot and the way the voters i soaked them was a caution. Something Really Important "I wonder if you could find out ex actly how I stand with your father!" "What difference does it make!" re sponded the heiress. "I'll marry you whether he likes you or not." ' "I wasn't thinking of that, my love. He gave me a tip on the stock market i just now. Is it -afe to play it, or is it not!"— Pittsburgh Post. Marcclla—Mr. Beaubrougn won the prize at the Giddyga-ls' hop the other night for tango dancing. Waverly—No wonder; think of the practice he has had. Marcella—But he told me he never danced before this season. Waverly—Probably not, but at col lege he was a champion hurdle racer. —Youngstown Telegram. Miss Anglin says her husband is a poor actor, buf a good sweetheart, which must be consoling as so many husbands are good actors, but poor sweethearts. GLASS OF SALTS CLEANS KIDNEYS If Tour Back Is Aching or Bladder Bothers, Drink Lots of Water and Eat Less Meat — % When vour kidneys hurt and your back feel? sore, don't Ret scared and proceed to load your stomach with a lot of drugs that excite the kidneys and ir ritate the entire urinary tract. Keep your kidneys clean like you keep your bowels clean, by flushing them with a mild, harmless salts which removes the body's urinous waste and stimulates them to their normal activity. The function of the kidneys is to filter the blood. In 24 hours they strain from it 500 grains of acid and waste, so we can readily understand the vital im portance of keeping the kidneys active. Drink lots of water —you can't drink too much; also get from any pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts: take a tablespoouful in a glass of water before breakfast each morning for a few davs and your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com bined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate clo?«ed kidneys! also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer is a source of irritation, thus euding bladder weakness. .lad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in jure: makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep their kidneys clean and active. Try this, also keep up the water drinking, and no doubt you will wonder what became of your kidnev trouble and backache. ______ Adv. Discordant Thoughts In wandering through your mental pleasure grounds, whenever you come upon an ugly intruder of a thought which might bloom into some poison ous emotion, such as fear, envy, hate, worry, remorse, anger and the like, there is only one right way to treat it, writes Robert 11. Schauftler in the At lantic. Pull it up like a weed, drop it. upon the rubbish heap as promptly as if it were a stinging nettle and let some harmonious thought grow in its place. There is no more reckless con sumer of all kinds of exuberance than the discordant thought, and weeding it out saves such an astonishing amount of eau de vie wherewith to water the garden of joy that with it in hand eterv man may be his own Burbank. _ Better Than Nothing A Boston man tells how, at a rail way station, a number of wives were starting for the seashore and bidding their respective husbands adieu and ho heard one really charming young ma tron say as she kissed her hubby good-bye: "Au revoir, dearie. Don't forget to write." '"Oh. I'll write often," protested her husband. "Do dearie," continued the wife— "do—if it's only a check."—Kansas City Star-. Sudden Action Orville Wright, apropos of his new safety appliance for aeroplanes, said at a dinner in Dayton: "In a short time now there will be no more aeroplane accidents. In a short time there will be no more aero plane jokes, either. "I heard a new joke yesterday. A young woman rushed into an insur ance office and cried: " 'One I'fe policy, quick! My hus band's biplane's falling!'" Nothing Doing. A kittle four-year-old, a most attrac tive little fairy, suddenly lost interest in Sunday school. She had enjoyed so much learning about Moses that her mother could not understand the change of attitude. "Why don't you want to go, daugh terf' she asked. "Oh." was the astonishing reply, "I dont 'ike to go to Sunday school since Moses died."—Woman's Home Companion. A True Courtier I'pon iiis arrival at the court of Vi enna a former French Ambassador was .preseuted to the K:n ress, who was aware that the day before he had vis ited the beautiful Countess X. "Is it true," she asked, "that the Countess X. is the mo£t lovely wom-an in KuropeT" "I thought so yesterday, your maj esty."' replied the diplomat, wirii a graceful bow. A Real Flesh Builder For Thin People A New Discovery. Thin men and women—that big, hearty filling dinner you ate last night. What became of all the fat-producing nourishment it contained? You haven't gain in weight one ounce. That food passed from your body like unburued coal through an open grate. The ma terial was there, but your food doesn't work and stick, and the plain truth is you hardly get enough nourishment from your meals to pay for the cost of cooking. This is true of thin folks the world over. Your nutritive organs, your functions of assimilation, are sadly out of gear and need reconstruc tion. Cut out the foolish foods and funny sawdust diets. Omit the flesh cream rub-ons. Cut out everything but the meals you are eating no?/ and eat with every one of those a single Sargol tab let. In two weeks note the difference. Five to eight good, solid pounds of healthy, "stay there'' fat should be the net result. Sargol charges your weak, stagnant blood with millions of fresh, new red blood corpuscles— gives the blood the carrying power to deliver every ounce of fat-making ma terial in your food to every part of your body. Sargol, too, mixes with your food and prepares it for the blood in easily assimilated form. Thiu people gain all" the way from 10 to 25 pounds a month while taking Sargol. and the new flesh stays put. Sargol tablets are a scientific combination of six of the best flesh-producing elements known to chemistry. They come 40 tablets to a package, are pleasant, harmless and in expensive, and G. A. Gorgas, and all other druggists in Harriaburg ami vicinity sell them subject to an abso lute guarantee of weight increase or monev back. adv. HE IS MISQUOTED MAN. SAYS STOUGH Continued Krgm Kirat I'afr. nee red all over with h lot of churchittn ity. Hut there is a big difference be tween ehurehianity and Christianity. on are nearly killed with churcliiau ity. When you o«n get filled with Christianity you will soon bring about the miHenium." Every Man Worships a God ••We've been getting away from God s laws. There are only two of them in the Ten Commandments, and they have to do, tirst, with man's rela tion to God and, second, with man's re lation to man. We've brought forth the second and .smashed the tirst. I say it s impossible for a man to love his neighbor as himself if he doesn't love God. "There are only two classes of peo ple who have no god, idiots and inno cents idiots because they haven 't anv reason, and innocents because thev haven t arrived at the jige of responsi bility. Everybody else has a god. and there are only two gods in the world, scut Jesus, the true God and Mammon. -Mammon stands for the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes and the pride o? life. Every man is worshiping ei ther God in heaven or Mammon. Don't tell me a man's not a worshiper be i ause he doesn't belong to a church. He only has another god, that's all." Would Bather Take Hindu's Chauces The preacher then told the storv of the Hindu woman who feeds her baby to the crocodile to appease her god. Turning in contrast to America, "the land ol ringing church bells and open Bibles," he told how "college-bred, cul tured men and women, having all that c:\ilizatiou can give them, have turned their backs on the Cod of high heaven and are worshiping not the Christ, but the god of lust, of flesh, of the lust of money, of the lust of power, of the lust of property, of the Inst of appetite, of the lust of dress, of the lust of selfish ness, and of the lust of this, that anil everything else.'' "If there's a darker, deeper place in hell than any other," he said, "it is for the man anrl the woman who have turned their backs on God, in the light that they have 1 would rather take the chances in eternity of the Hindu women who murder their babies in their ignorance than of such people. What Churchmen Say They Do Enumerating the things church mem bers say they do which persons outside of the church do not do, the evangelist met every point with an argument in tended to show that ordinary church momfbers do nothing more than ot'hor people. To the statement. '*' lgo to cfourfh," he said that so do a lot of persons who make no pretentions of re ligion; to "I read my Bible." that so do skeptics and infidels, and a good deal more thoroughly; to " I prav," that so do persons who are afraid gcblius wil! get them when they g 0 to bed; to ''l give money to the church," that there is not a church in this city but what has a lot of money of people who have no religion; to "I 'have been continu ed." that many persons have been con tinued in the church and then gone straight out and been confirmed in the devil; to "I have been baptized," that there are pome ;>eople in hell who have been baptized, and to "I have par taken of the Lord's Supj*»r," that Paul says people wan take the sacrament un worthily. "Is that all you've got to show tliat you're a church member?" he shouted at the multitude, throwing his arms about in the air. " Yes, you belong to a church, but I want to tell you that there are churches in hell to-night for that matter. I have no doutbt that 'hell has well organized Presbyterian. Methodist. Episcopal and all other kinds of churches, wit'h bishops, presiding elders, deacons and everything else. If you have nothing more to show for your church membership than what I 'vc men tioned, you'll go to bell just as sure as a stone goes to the bottom of the sea." Man Could Find no Differences In the course of an illustration show ing how a non-church man could find uo difference between himself and his eh uivh-member wife, the preacher said that the man wrote down for his wife these points: "I do not use tobaceo in any way ami you do not. I do not use profane language and you do not. I am a tee totaller, you are a teetotaller. 1 play cards and you play cards. I go to the atres. you go to tjieatres. I attend church irregularly, you attend church irregularly. I pay money into the c'hurch and so do you. I dance and so do you. I associate with unbelievers, so do you. I read trashy novels, so do von. I do not go to devotional meet ings. neither do you. I do not read the Bible, neither d-o you. I do not pray, neither do you. Now then, what does your church membership add to your manner of living'' "If some men could see any radical difference," the evangelist said, pound ing his stand with his fist, "between church members and non-church mem bers, they would join the church. But there isn't any difference generally. You drink out of the same trough, von gulp down the same swill. Until you clean up in your churches I don't want any others to come in. To Skin Their Carcasses "You've been thinking I'm a fool ami a joke up here. I tell you I'll have you laughing on the other side of your cheeks till I'm through with you. I'll skin your old carcasses until there isn't an inch of hide left. You've been nothing but a lot of old hypocrits pa rading around. You've been finding a lot of fault with me; now I'm putting a few things to vou. "A lot of you churchmen <moke like chimneys and smell like gaifbage cans, because you can't let tobacco alone. You smell, alright, whether you admit it or not. I have found out why so few wives kiss their husbands. If anv of you married men have had trouble along that line, just buy a tooth brush." The preacher demonstrated by a lengthy illustration how little church members might, do for Jesus Christ, or how much. He found his time was growing short, and said he could talk all night, his audience was so inspir ing and looked so happy, (ilancing at the section enclosing the co-operating ministers, he said: Dr. Fox Looking Pleasant "Why, even Dr. Fox looks pleasant and happy this evening. Aren't you happy, hulif' lie announced in closing that he will preach to-night on "Home Makers and Home Breaker?, oi Why So Many Young People Go to Hell." This aft ernoon at 2.30 o'clock he spoke at the tabernacle to an enthusiastic audience. The sermon to-morrow afternoon will be the last day sermon this week. Hope is the dream you have when awake. /> .A Gorges Guarantees the Quality Gorgas Guarantees the Price Gorgas' Drugstores REXALL 16 N. Third St. and in the Penna. Station. Saturday Candy Special No. 1 Huvler's Molasses Candy, new and good. the package Saturday Candy Special No. 2 Chocolate Covered Pea nut Butter—A new and wholesome confection that you and your friends will enjoy. Keg ular value 50c—To-mor row, Saturday, 29c the lb. Saturday Cigar Special "La Marca" Cigars—A regular 10-cent. 3 for 25c value. Up to the highest standard for the price, and a mighty good smoke — 5 for Opaac The season for sudden colds is here and you arc interested in knowing the remedy that will give the surest and quickest relief. Opaac knocks a cold over night—Opaac is quick and reliable for grip. Small chocolate coated tablets, easy to take, 25c the box porgas Hot Water Bottle Ought to be in every home. It's a reliable and ever ready remedy in a host of ills that come on suddenly'. It gives relief in cramp, neuralgia, toothache, rheumatism, c h il I s, pains, aches, etc. Get one and be prepared for emergencies this winter. Harrisburg Stationery with "Harrisburg. Penn sylvania," neatly em bossed at the top of each sheet—superfine in tex ture and finish —elegant- ly boxed. An extra ordinary value, 35^ "Harrisburg" Corre spondence Cards the same high quality, Gorgas' Iron Quinine and Strychnine Warm days ami cool nights bring on Malaria. This is the season that it becomes prevalent. Fortify your system against contagion by taking Gorgas' Iron, Quinine and Strych nine. Iron for the Blood Quinine for the sys tem. Strychnine for the nerves. Builds up flesh, strength and health —a splendid tonic, 50<? and SI.OO Kodaks and Kodak Supplies This store handles Ko daks. Here you will find the size and the price you are looking for. We also handle Eastman films and supplies —the kinds you must have to get good results. There is this advantage in bearing Gorgas in mind: You can get films and supplies here any time as Gorgas is open all day and night. This has proved a great con venience to many. Per haps it may come in good for you. Let us do your developing and printing and you will be sure to get the best results. Thermos Bottles Keep hot things hot and cold thiugs cold for hours. Invaluable in the home—the nursery and for lunch baskets. Dif ferent sizes—different prices. PATENT MEDICINES AT COT RATES Goods Delivered Fr«e Anywhere in the City Phone Your Order It's the Easiest Wav Bell phone, 1141 United, 629
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