HEADACHE Little Talks on Health and Hygiene By Samuel G. Dixon, M. D, LL D., Commissioner of Health Headache is one of the most com mon ailments. Almost everyone, even people in comparatively good health, are subject from time to time to this malady. Because it manifests itself in more or less the same form and gen eral locality, the majority of people are wont to believe that the source of the difficulty is located in the cranium itself. This is rarely the case. The causes of headache are numerous and cannot be removed by the use of smelling salts, ice bags, cold towels and headache powders. Headache may com» from defective teeth or eyes, from acute digestive disturbances, from a sluggish action of the liver and in testinal canal, long continued irritation of the nasal cavities, high blood pres sure or other causes as widely varied as those mentioned. Constantly recurring headaches may also be manifestations of profound sys temic disturbances of some other part of the bodv which demands medical at tention. the cause, more serious than the headache itself, should be found and cured. Often the immediate cause of headache is the over stimulation of the heart. Undue heart stimulation accompanies a number of organic disturbances and results in abnormally high blood pres sure in the brain; the majority of the headache remedies which are offered for >ale contain some powerful heart de pressant which brings temporary re lief. There is always danger, however, in the use by a layman of any drug which is sufficiently strong to have this result when there is some weakness of the heart. These hesJaehe cures which are indiscriminately offered do not correct the real cause of the dis turbance. Serious or even fatal results may come from constant use and they can not effect a cure. Anyone subject to recurring headaches should consult a physician that the cause may be deter mined before any treatment is given. FLOWER SHOW MAY BE FATAL Physician's Auto Overturned and Wife's Skull Fractured Pittsburgh, 0. —Dr. J. E. Bren ner suffered severe braises and his wife was injured probably fatally in an auto mobile accident yesterday afternoon in Schenlev Park The Easter flower show drew hundreds of machines to the Phipps conservatory, near which Dr. and Mrs. Brenner were driving when their car was struck by another and overturned, pinning the occupants un der it. Spectators released them. MTS. Brenner reeedved a fractured skull and both arms were broken. She was taken to the West Penn hospital, of which her husband is a staff physi cian. FIVE HURLED INTO OREEK Auto Brake Refused to Work and Ma chine Backed Off Bridge Williamsport, Pa., April 6.—While out automobiling yesterday afternoon, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Spotts, their 5- vear-old son Emerson, Mrs. Spotts' mother and Mrs. Jacob Bachman and daughter, Emma, were thrown over a thirty-foot embankment into Loyal sock creek at the Montoursville bridge. The car was 'being backed, and as IMT. Sports tried to stop it the foot brake refused to work and the car crashed through the railing and fell into five feet of water. Spotts was caught under the car. but managed to get loose and saved Mrs. Bachman, 65 years old, from drowning. The others got ashore unaided. READY FOR FULL TIME Reading Railway Has Plenty of Cars to Switch Into Collieries Pottsville, Pa.. April 0. —The larg est number of empty coal cars seen in This region for a long time have been gathered by the Reading railway in preparation for full time at the mines, beginning Tuesday. The company has over a thousand oars ready to be shunted into colliery sidings, not counting the empty cars already at the collieries. WATERS GIVE UP MISSING MAN Wife Went Insane During Six Weeks' Search for Him York. Pa.. April s.—The body of Harry P. Golden, an iron moulder, who mysteriously disappeared while on a fishing trip six weeks ago, was found yesterday in Codorus creek at the Phila delphia street bridge. It is believed that he slipped off a steep bank at the ork Athletic grounds and tumbled into ■the creek. Since his disappearance his wife has been committed to the insane ward of tiie almshouse, worry over the absence of her husband having, it is said, un balanced her mind. CHURCH'S SESQUI-CENTENNIAL St. John's Lutheran at Maytown Began Celebration Yesterday Marietta, April 5. —St. John's Lu t.ieran church at M&ytown yesterday began the celebration "of its i3oth an niversary by an early celebration at 6 o'clock of the Holy urkin and her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Edward Durkin, were struggling with the third wom an in the street in front of their home after they found her ransacking a room in the Durkin house. Artistic Printing at Star-Independent. HARKISBURfI STAR-INDEPENDENT, MONDAY EVENING. APRIL 5. 1915. ► Visit The Display Of Porch First arrival of aw g Stripes, in I j| 1 ~ .. T J,. * T „ 1 M WWM^WWM M remnnnf lengths suitablo for small J ► Furniture JII The Large Per- awnings; 25c quality, at, yd., ] ► sola—fifth floor. tawc ,nd 17c 4 ► - Call 1991—Any Phone Founded 1871 """ ' ''' j I Attention Is Now Directed To 1 ► '< The Home and Its Spring Needs ► < I The season of house cleaning and "brightening-up" the home " ~ ] ► is now on in earnest. C ' ' [ Our Home Furnishing Departments—Carpets, Rugs, Draperies, Furniture, Wall v < Papers—are completely ready to meet every requirement that will beautify the home or > J,, < | add to its attractiveness. r < ► This can be done most economically since every price must be the lowest that is prac- < ► tical, on new stock. , V |||j j ) i ► Extensive Showing of Room Size f< ► Best makes are represented, and the newness and beauty of the patterns will delight c < you. We mention but a few here. [? '*' / i ► Bigelow Electra Rugs—extra fine C'JJ. CA Alexander Smith's Kerman Rugs—ll.) flfl I T7" _JTTT' J r\ 1 i ► quality; size !>xl2, at sen ms—all in one piece, at Jb24.UU Wlu6 R&g CfIJTpCtS ' Wiltone Rugs, beautiful effects, mostly (tlO 00 i R^ s ~ , ' xll ' all< - av . v ' lew Very near to the home-made kinds. Attractive col- < ► in plain colors; size 9x12. at JOZ.UU greens and browns : 9x12 at $8.25, 8.3 x orin(fß in wool gtri 59 «jr 1 . y tion and can never "wear off." even with unusually hard wear. We have V "* | pi < a Vvl pk 1 a large variety of patterns, one of which is here illustrated. Prices are J IVvllH-UIC y liulit j ► 51.15, 91.25, 51.30 sq. yd. Splendid quality, well made opaque oil shades, *4 "New Process" Linoleum—constructed and printed under a new process; mounted on Hartshorn rollers; 37x72 inches at 50*, most serviceable of all (excepting inlaids). A good quality, at 39 4 B|V[| (bw I The Draperies Department Was : Never So Admirably Equipped j ► | |[W i'l To do its P ar t in beautifying the home. Light, airy hangings will replace the < ► TM J heavy winter kinds; furniture to be recovered, and in many other ways the following < ► A' 1 - '* ® items will suggest helpfulness. " apar j"™ A Armures, 50* to $3.00 y —also tapes- | Novelty Net Curtains, $1.25 to $5.75 pr.—white 1 tries, velours and plushes; 27 to 50 inches wide. and beize; 214 yards long; with hem and fancy braid I f Ofi" j| BpSW _ . trimmings: Cluny insertions and lace edges. * \ < . j . A- Denim and Burlap, to 25* yd.—in < brown, blue, green and natural; 36 and 50 Nottingham Lace Curtains, 50* to $5.00 pr.— 2555555555552E5555S m m inches wide. white and ecru; 2% and 3 yards long. ► ====== VM? Monks Cloth, 50* yd.-in green only; 48 t . A ™ ure Remnants, 33* yd.-value 65c; lengths ] y Y I inches wide from y 2 yard to 2% yards. I 1 " collapsible Bolster Rolls, $1.25 -1,. white, Cushions 50* to $1.50-in repp, ] ► Curtain Materials, 18* to 50* yd.—Scrim, voile blue, pink and yellow, with space for pillows. onne, >ur ap an a< a. 4 ► and marquisette, in white, cream and beize, with , a . ao «♦n«iß«.o(.»iti, Cushion Slips, 25* to 85* —in cretonne, burlap fancy borders. White Swiss Bed Sets, $2.25 to $4.89 set; with and taffeta ► ' and without ruffle, colored borders; trimmed with 4 Sunfast Materials, 40* to $1.25 yd.—in plain insertion Matting Covered Boxes, $2.25 to SB.O0 —with j and figured designs, in green, rose, brown, blue and ' t b&mboo trimmings, feet, castors and handles. r red; 31 and 50 inches wide. Curtains, at 79* to $3.50 pr.—Swiss, Scrim, „ , o _ f ru-