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2 CENTRAL PENNSYLVAN THIRD FIRE AT POWDER WORKS Barrel House at Mt. Union Ex plosives Plant Destroyed Last Night Special to the Telegraph Mt. Union. Pa., Jan. 17. The third tire within seven days is causing considerable discussion among citizens of town. The third fire occurred last night when the "Screen Barrel" house at the Aetna Explosives plant burned, causing considerable damage and probably necessitating a number of] men being out of employment forj some time. This was the only build ing of its kind at the powder plant i and was at the head of the "Powder i Line." The cause given by the authorities | is that it was started by a spark from a steel file. Friday night there was a lire and :he cause given for it was a defective belt and the first fire, which caused probably SIOO,OOO damage, by letting the pipes in the Recovery building be come too hot. Some people seem to take a skeptical view because of the fact' that the fires have occurred within one ; week's time and all along the "Pow- , der Line" where a fire would cause | most damage and throw most men out i of employment. The authorities claim the fires ar£ all accidental, but they are taking: every precaution as to guards and careless workmen. youi* skin stand this test? The bright lights of an evening i gathering show up mercilessly the defects of a poor complexion. But the regular use of Resinol Soap makes it as easy to have a natur ally beautiful skin as to cover up a poor one with cosmetics. It lessens the tendency to pimples, redness And roughness, and in a very short time the complexion usually be comes clear, fresh and velvety. In severe or stubborn cases. Resinol Soap ahould be aided by a little Resinol Ointment. • All druggists sell them. For trial free, write to Dept. 21-P, Resinol, Baltimore, Md. A CLEAR COMPLEXION Ruddy Cheeks Sparkling Eyes —Most Women Can Have Soys Dr. F.dnnrd*. a Well-Known Ohio I'byniclan Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17 years treat ed scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well-known vegetable ingredi ents mixed with olive oil. nsming tbem Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, you will know them by thoir olive iolor. These tablets arc wonder-worker' on the liver and bowel#, which cause a normal action, carrying off the waste nnd poisonous matter that one's system collects. If you have a pale face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongu», head aches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets nightly for a time and note the pleas ing results. Thousand* of women as well as men. take Dr. Kfiwards' Olive Tablets now and then just to keep in the pink of condition. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the suc cessful substitute for calomel—loc and 25c per box. All druggists. The Olive Tablet Company, Colum bus. O. When Coal Clinkers It's not always the fault of the coal—more often it's the lack of understanding your furnace or range drafts and using the wrong grades or sizes of fuel. KELLEY'S COAL will help remedy such faults be cause Kellcy will assist you in de termining the kind of coal you should burn to get best results and serve you the coal that will produce them. H. M. Kelley & Co. 1 Xortli Third Street Tenth nnd State Streets TELEGRAPH WANT AD WUL SE.LL THAT AUTO MONDAY EVENING, Brass Valves and Spigots Stolen From Pumping Station Special to the Telegraph Waynesboro. Pa.. Jan. 17. —Thieves broke Into the pumping 1 house of the Western Maryland Railroad Company at Glen Afton Springs, 'near Pen Mar, last, week and carried off a lot of brass valves and spigots. which were broken off the machinery. and also paid a visit to the 'Washington Cliff Hotel at Pen Mar, owned by Mrs. Ella Finch, of Baltimore, and carried off a lot of brass spigots. George Pryor, a resi dent of Pen Alar, was apprehended with a basket tilled with brass valves and spigots a short time after the rob bery by Chief of Police Staley, of this place, and placed in the Chambers burg jail. Pryor will be served with a warrant by an officer from Hagers town, as the brass was stolen in Mary land. $150,000 Arcade Building to Be Erected at Waynesboro Special to the Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., Jan. 17.—The ar cade building for Waynesboro is to be even more of an architectural adorn ; ment and improvement to the borough I than was contemplated recently. At a meeting of the stockholders on Sat urday it was decided to ijnakc the building a four-story instead of a three-story structure. This will give a number of apartments on both the third and fourth floors and business places on the first and second floors. The theater to be erected in the rear of the arcade building will be built along with the front and both are ex pected to be completed at the same time. The cost of the arcade building will be about $150,000. ADDRESS BY BISHOP HOWARD Special to the Telegraph Annville, Pa., Jan. 17. —The Rev. Dr. A. T. Howard of Dayton. Ohio, bishop of the Mission District of the United Brethren' in Christ Church, spoke at the United Brethren Church last night. Yesterday afternoon Bishop Howard gave a special lecture in the Hershey Auditorium at that place. CUTTING 10-INCH ICE Special to the Telegraph Annville, Pa., Jan. 17. —C. G. Gol lam, ice dealer in East Main street, has a number of men cutting ice on the waterwork's dam that measures 10 i inches. WHEAT CROP INJURED Special to the Telegraph Lewistown. Pa., Jan. 17. —Farmers In this Section say that next season's wheat crop will be short, owing to! the changeable weather this winter j —rain, sleet and hard freezes with no snow on the ground to protect the wheat. The wheat fields show great patches of bare ground where the grain has been frozen out. BOROUGH SALARIES FIXED Special to the Telegraph Hummelstown, Pa., Jan. 17. —At the meeting of the borough council the salary of the high constable was fixed at S2O per month and he is required to furnish a bond to the amount of S3OO. The wages of borough employes remain the same as before. ENTERTAINED AT RUTHERFORD Special to the Telegraph Hummelstown. Pa., Jan. 17.—Ruth erford Y. M. C. A., composed of Hum- I melstown and Harrtsburg Philadelphia ! and Reading Railway men, will give a i special entertainment and social even ing at the annual meeting on Thurs day eveing, January 20, in the asso ciation hall. W. C. T. U. TO MEET Special to the Telegraph Hummelstown, Pa., Jan. 17. The W. C. T. U. will meet at the home or Mrs. Katharine Ilummel on Tuesday afternoon, January 18, at 1.30 o'clock. 1 SURPRISE HOUSEWARMING Special to the Telegraph Hummelstown. Pa . Jan. 17.—Friends of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph House to the number of twenty-eight gave them a surprise housewarmlng in their new home in Poplar avenue last week. Mr. and Mrs. House were married a few weeks ago and have recently gone to housekeeping. WARFKL-I.UTTMAX WKDIMXG Special to the Telegraph Columbia, Pa., Jan. 17. George Warfel and Miss Mabel I.uttman were marritd yesterday at the parsonage of Salome United Brethren Church. The Rev. P. 11. Balshnugh. pßstor, performed the ceremony. The couple will reside in Columbia. ADDRESS TO HIBI.K ri, ASS Special to the telegraph ' olumbia, Pa., Jan. 17. George Mailman, a prominent businessman of J ork, delivered an address in Cookman Methodist Episcopal Church here, at a lneetlng held under the auspices of the i H. S. Graybill Men's Bible Class. For Mental and Physical Efficiency there must be efficiency in digestion—but first, and more important, the food must possess sound nour ishment. In this respect no food supplies in more splendid proportion, all the nutritive elements of the field grains and is at the same time so fully processed for easy, quick digestion as Grape-N uts ✓ This famous pure food, made of whole wheat and malted barley, retains the vital mineral salts of the grains—so lacking in many foods—but all-important in building brain, nerve and muscle. There's a wonderful return of mental and phys ical vigor for the small tax upon the stomach in the digestion of Grape-Nuts. "There's a Reason" Sold by Grocers everywhere. FREIGHT TRAIN WRECKS WAGON Farmer Levi Lantz Has Nar row Escape From Death at Williams Grove Special to the Telegraph Mechanicsburg, Pa.. Jan. 17. A narrow escape from death was made by Levi Lantz, a farmer, living several miles south of town on Saturday morning, when he went to the Wil liams Grove warehouse with a load of corn, drawn by two mules. While he was busy unloading the grain, a freight train steamed into the sta tion and frightened the animals, which started to run. Before Mr. Lantz could pick up the lines, the mules dashed across the track, right in front of the incoming engine. They clear ed the track, but the wagon was struck, hurled oft to the sideband turned completely over. Mr. I.antz, who was buried under tin avalanche of corn, was dug out and taken to Dillsburg on the engine for treat ment. It is thought he escaped serious injury. Nothing was left of the wagon but one wheel and corn was strewn everywhere. Union Meeting of C. E. Societies at Mechanicsburg Special to the Telegraph , Mechanicsburg, Pa.. Jan. 17. One of the most successful efforts toward unity in the churches was the union meeting of the various Christian En deavor societies held last evening in the Methodist Episcopal church. Ad dresses from the following representa tives were made: D. L. Snavely, of the Methodist Episcopal: J. Wilt Brandt, Presbyterian: George H. Eckerd, Grace Evangelical: Miss Edith Fegley, St. Mark's Lutheran: James L. Young. Church of God, and Bruce Wister, St. Paul's Reformed. A spe cial feature was an electric cross which was switched on during the singing by a quartet composed of the Rev. L. M. Dice, Dr. J. A. Kilniore, M. B. Ibaeh and Charles Berkheimer. Mrs. George W. Hershman sang a solo, entitled "Some Day." About 350 people were present, who were en thusiastic over the success of the meeting. The subject was "How to Work Together." The music was un der the direction of Will Sigler, and a large orchestra assisted. GIRI.S' SEWING CLASSES Special to the Telegraph Mechanicsburg, Pa., Jan. 17. A sewing class for girls in the public schools was formed on Friday after noon under the auspices of the Wo man's Club, by M re. R. H. Thomas, Jr., chairman of the public interest committee, who instructs at the Arch street building and Mrs. George Ful ton. at the High School building. The classes meet regularly every Friday afternoon, and the greatest interest is shown by the pupils. Prizes are pre sented at the close of school, when public exercises are given and the work exhibited. Other members of the committee are Miss Ree Zug, ' Miss Manilva Zug, Mrs. Robert A. De ! Frehn and Mrs. S. J. Zuyall. The i classes started with the enrollment of | 125 pupils. SMOKEHOUSE BURNED Special to the Telegraph Dillsburg. Pa., Jan. 17. On Fri day afternoon a small building at the home of Harry Strayer in Carrol township, used to smoke meats, was destroyed by lire. Together with the building the meat of live hogs was burned, causing a loss of more than one hundred dollars. DAUGHTERS INSTALL OFFICERS Special to the Telegraph Annville, Pa., Jan. 17.—Frances E. Willard Council, No. 54, Daughters of America, installed the following ofll cers. Councilor, Mrs. Belle Horst; as sistant vice-councilor, Mrs. Diamond: secretary, Miss Fannie Zearfoss: treas urer. Miss Edna Berry; linanciai sec retary. Miss Ella Ault: outside senti nel, Mrs. Emma Sload; inside senti nel. Mrs. Elizabeth Kreider: warden, Mins Dora Zearfoss; guard. Mrs. Ilerr man Spangler; pianist, Miss Katlierine jSpangler. FIRE AT ANNVILLE Special to the Telegraph . Annville, Pa., Jan. 17. —An out building belonging to A. Sheffy, hide dealer, located south of Main street, .was partially destroyed by fire on Sat urday afternoon. The loss will amount to about. SSOO. H ARRJSBURG §3s TELEGRAPH (r — FOODS THEY BUILD OR DESTROY Amazing but Rarely Suspected Truths About the Things You Eat. I (Copyright, HIS, by Alfred W. McCann.) CHAPTER 7 Condemned prisoners fed on adulterated food were stricken with disease, but recovered when natural food was restored to them. Animals, human or dumb brutes, die when their food is wrong. We see what happens when some one kills another's chickens with bad food, but when a hundred food frauds take away the darling of the home to whom will the grieving father and mother go for redress? The very number of food frauds makes It impossible for any one to say to the grand jury: "This particular food killed ray little boy or girl." ' For months, perhaps for years, one j juggled food product brought sub stances to the child's diet of which her body could make no use. Her vitality was sapped by nature's ef forts to get rid of this excess bag gage. She was not poisoned by any particular food. An inadequate com bination of foods simply caused her vitality to lose Its tone. Another food, from another source, had been "processed" in a way that removed some of its most indispens able elements. In its debased state it robbed her little frame of the very materials which she required for growth. Slowly, month by month, the artifi cial combination of loaded, drugged or artificial foods wormed its • cruel way to the dinner table and all the forces of nature were called in to battle with the unseen enemy of health and life. Commercial expediency and a blind, heartless hunger for big gain sat by and looked on as the fight was waged in the child's body; but nature ; had been supplied with poor lighting l materials. The child's resistance was j broken at lust by the combined at- > tack of unnatural and unsuspected | forces—buckled, caved in. and she was gone. There is no pathologist, no lawyer, no district attorney who can accuse '■ the food faker of her death. Let this be fully understood at the begin ning. Before we can correct a single food j fraud by law we must bring the body [ of a dead child into the courtroom and say and prove to the jury: "This child was destroyed 'bv this particular juggled l'ood." Scientists will be on hand to testify the other way. The food fakers have been paying scientists for twenty-five years to testify in their behalf before judge and jury. I have listened to their testimony and_have seen it fail, bu the facts have rarely been reported to the pub lic. Fear of advertising losses has closed the columns of the press and the uplift magazine against them. Judges, confused by conflicting expert evidence, in numerous instances have | imposed fines of $3 upon wretchesi who have deliberately preserved milk I with formaldehyde. Not a word of! the heinous crime and the travesty of justice has leaked out to the pub lic. Cases in which deadly wood alcohol formed the base of vanilla, lemon, and other flavoring extracts have been dismissed with a suspended sen tence and not a soul ever heard an echo of the facts outside the court room. Confectioners who have used an arsenical preparation in the glaze with which their penny candies are coated have been let off with trifling rebukes and the public has been none the wiser. Foods that kill mice, rabbits, and —t Recent Deaths in Central Pennsylvania Special to the Telegraph Kcaiustnwn. Mrs. Malinda Zell, aged 75, one of the pioneer residents of this place, died Saturday after a short illness. Hall'vtllr. .Vbram W. Mellinger, aged 72, died Saturday from pneumo nia, after a short illness. He was one of th. most prominent residents of this section. His wife is critically ill with the same disease and does not know of her husband's death. Four sons survive besides the wife. WOMAN'S AXKI/K BROKEN Special lo the Telegraph Enders, Pa., .Tan. 17. - Mrs. Moses Enders, aged 75 years, fell while step ping from the rear door at her home on Friday and fractured her ankle. ADDITION TO TANNERY Special to the Telegraph Middleburg, Pa., Jan. 17. —The Mid dleburg Tannery has nearly completed the building of a large addition to the main building. This thriving indus try is growing and the 100 employes are at work. BRICK COMPANY THRIVING Special to the Telegraph Middieburg, Pa., Jan. 17.—The Pax ton Brick Company, located at Pax tonville, about two miles west of Mid dleburg. is fast forging to the front. The plant was recently enlarged, and at this time cannot fill its orders. PII'GORG.tN DEDICATED Special to the Telegraph Marietta, Pa.. Jan. 17. Memorial Presbvterian Church, of Lancaster, yes terday dedicated their handsome new Moller plpeorgan. The services were in charge of the pastor, the Rev. Dr. H. H. Harlng. MILL SUPERINTENDENT DIES Special to the Telegraph Columbia, Pa., Jan. 17.—Harvey 11. Overdeer. superintendent of the welding department in the pipe mill of the Sus quehanna Iron Company, died in the Columbia Hospital after a few weeks' Illness from pneumonia, superinduced In- a cold, which he contracted on Christmas night, when he was caught in a rainstorm while on his way home from church. He was "9 years old and a former resident of Mlddletown. His wife and five children survive. MOCCASIN FACTORY AT HALIFAX Special to the Telegraph Halifax, Pa.. Jan. 17. This week J. C. Marsh will begin the manufacture of moccasins and aoft-soled shoes In a building in Becond street. The ma chinery has been installed and at the outset there will be six machines. Charles E. Motter, who lias had wide experience in the manufacture of shoes, has been engaged as superintendent. It will be possible to manufacture 500 pairs daily with the present equipment. FIREMEN INSTALL OFFICERS Special to the Telegraph Halifax. Pa., Jan. 17. At a regular meeting of the Halifax Fire Company, held in the old school building on Sat urday evening, the following officers were Installed: President. A. w. liunkle; vice-president, H. S. Potter; secretary, John C. Miller; treasurer, V. P. Fctter lioff; financial secretary. S. W. Koppen haver; foreman, W. J. Jury; assistant foreman, H. E. Matter. SKI LL FRACTURED BV KICK Special to the Telegraph Marietta. Pa.. Jan. 17. Richard Alt house, son of Wayne Altliouse. of Hrhoenck, was badly injured while watering a horse and may not recover. The animal kicked him In the face, ren dering him unconscious and fracturing i his skull. guinea-pigs are not "harmful" to the child In the law's eyes, because no body is willing to feed a child on a steady diet of such things until It dies in order to produce the dead body in court as evidence of the truth. The law Is not the remedy. Educa tion alone will end the hideous as saults of greed and ignorance upon the health of our children. Those 3,000 chickens are going to be help ful to us in our consideration of the facts. Fortunately for us, when it is sug gested that chickens are not human beings and that, therefore, any de ductions based on barnyard pheno mena are unwarranted when applied to humanity, we are not confined to the barnyard for our facts. The same facts have been established hundreds of times, as you will soon learn, upon human beings. In Billibid prison, Philippine Islands, 1912, twenty-nine prisoners, under sentence of death, were fed ex clusively on certain refined and dena tured foods of a kind exclusively con sumed In America for the purpose of determining what, if any, effect such diet would produce upon them. They quickly became anemic and developed serious diseases which will be described to you later on. Commenting on these experiments. R. P. Strong and R. C. Crowell stated: "These diseases developed owing to the absence of some substance or substances in the diet necessary for the normal physiological processes of the body. Without a supply of auch substances in the food sickness re sults." Although the prisoners fed on the denatured diet mingled freely with the other prisoners, there was no tendency of the sickness to spread outside of the group fed on the dena tured food. When the denatured food was re moved from the diet of the con demned men and natural, unrefined food restored to them they recovered promptly. These are the brief outlines of facts of which you will learn much In pic turesque detail before we have pro ceeded far. They are cited here only for the purpose of anticipating the question which you may have already asked: "What does chicken feeding demonstrate with respect to the health of the human animal?" Some day. depending entirely upon the rapidity with which the fads to be set down here are spread abroad, it will not be so difficult to bring the body of a dead child into a courtroom and say with evidence to the jury: "This child was destroyed by this particular juggled food." Allceckl PLASTERS /If Tht World's Grialtst \ Extirnal Rtmtdy. Backaohe, I * h ®t"™atlsm, I \<cf,\ \ Lumbago, f K r-n \ -An y Local I r ' l % ) Paln * I I f- ' I J Insist on *l 4 'i'K' *£**s**s* it t t Clear, Peachy Skin | ! Awaits Anyone Who ! ii Drinks Hot Water I I ! *•* Says an inside bath, before break * fast helps us look and feel T clean, sweet, fresh. ♦ «$» x i Sparkling and vivacious—merry, bright, alert—a good, clear skin and a natural, rosy, healthy complexion are assured only by pure blood. If only every man and woman could be Induced to adopt the morning inside bath, what a gratifying change would take place. Instead of the thousands of sickly, anaemic-looking men, wo men and girls, with pasty or muddy complexions; instead of the multi tudes of "nerve wrecks," "rundowns," "brain fags" and pessimists we should see a virile, optimistic throng of rosy cheeked people everywhere. An inside bath is had by drinking each morning, before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a tea spoonful of limestone phosphate in it to wash from the stomach, liver, kid neys and ten yards of bo-./els the pre vious day's indigestible waste, sour fermentations and poisons, thus cleansing, sweetening and freshening the entire alimentary canal before put ting more food into the stomach. Those subject to sick headache, bil iousness, nasty breath, rheumatism, colds; and particularly those who have a pallid, sallow complexion and who are constipated very often, are urged to obtain a quarter pound of limestone phosphate at the drug store which will cost but a trifle, but is suffi cient to demonstrate the quick and re markable change in both health and appearance, awaiting those who prac tice internal sanitation. We must re member that inside cleanliness is more important than outside, because the skin does not absorb impurities to con taminate the blood while the pores In the thirty feet of bowels do.-—Adver tisement. |f Make Skin Smooth j There is one safe, dependable treat | nient that relieves itching torture in stantly and that cleanses and soothes the skin. I Ask any druggist for a 25c bottle of zeino and apply it as directed. Soon you will find that pimples, black heads, eczema, ringwi rm and similar skin | troubles will dl lappear. A little zemo. the penetrating, satis fying liquid, is all that is needed, for it banishes all skin eruptions and makes the skin soft, smooth and healthy. Zemo, Cleveland. —Advertisement. STOP COUCHING ■!! DEPTONQIv | MADE IN A HEALTH RESORT. AT DRUG STORES=SI-ooPcrBOTTLE THE PEPTONOL CO ATLANTIC CITY M.Ot. E. 2. UKUSb. 119 Market St., J llarrisburg, Fa. _ JANUARY 17, 1916. Thankful For Relief Remedy Says Fruitola and Traxo Pos sesses All the Merit That Jraß Is Claimed For It. After completing' tho necessary iDLkj) §K|9|fth). treatment. Mis. S. S. Cole, Lampasas, / Jlll« Texas, was so well pleased with the i ! 'i' y results that she wrote the Pinus lab- I &b» v iMlr il I lll'J oratories as follows: "Krultola nnd I mIM ifjiii'! l'ill I'll Traxo are nil you claim. It removed I Il!. Il| i%i : ■ ,i|!j|.jjih!|j-1 ji„ a quantity of gall-stones and I feel II I |l lp 'II I |■ j sure It saved my life. lam well !|| |||l|||||||||ll ' now and thankful to you for the great ' |jl||!p: :<£S good your medicine luts done me \ '' P' F rultola Is a powerful lubricant for the intestinal organs and one dose is 0 : i ij£'- "** ■' usually sufficient to clearly demon- StS. ; ,<N .L 8 efrlcac y- It softens the (■ AX _. consested masses, disintegrates the U^Y hardened partides that occasion so YTTTAyS <&■ <D much suffering and expels the aecum- \l\ 1 By BRou, R ( t» ~ tCd M aß,e to the K re «t relief of 1 H PR O\Vx, HI Fo l'°Wlng a dose of U v - ■**—'' U onrt Jii»' should be taken three or four times a day in order to rebuild «i»ni i system that has become weakened and run down from con beneflclally iS a sp,en< " fl tonic, acting on the liver and stomach most Til l r " U , o,a an<i Traxo ore prepared in the Pinus laboratories at Monticello, . arran Kejnents liave been made to supply them through representative SH 1 ' } n Harrisburg they can be obtained at Gorgas, the I}rug<rist, lfi isorth Third street. P. R. R. Station. FUNERAL OF MRS. WILLIAMS . Special to the Telegraph Dillsburg, Pa., Jan. 17. Funeral services for Mrs. John Williams, the oldest resident of the upper end of York county who died on Wednesday at the age of 92 years was held on Saturday afternoon. Services were conducted at the home by the Rev. J. H. Wolf, pastor of the Monaghan Presbyterian church. SWINEFORD BANK OFFICERS Special to the Telegraph Middleburg, Pa„ Jan. 17.—Swine ford National Bank has elected the following officers . and directors: President, G. M. Shindel; cashier, J. R. Kreegor: assistant cashiers, Lee, G. Winey and Harry Hummel. M. K. Sclioch, James Magee, J. R. Kraeger, G. M. Shindel, A. H. Ulsh, B. W. Yo der and Wilson Winey were elected directors. The bank declared an 8 per cent, dividend and added SIO,OOO to their surplus. BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it. 25c at all druggists. Try Telegraph Want Ads Ventilate Your Rooms Don't expect to have warm and comfortable rooms when you do not open the windows to let in fresh air. The heat from your furnace cannot circulate through a room filled with stagnant air. Even in the coldest weather the rooms should be thrown open every morning for at least 10 minutes. Instead of your house getting cooler with the fresh air, you will find it will heat much more quickly than without the ventilation. United Ice & Coal Co. , , Forster it CoTvaen \ \ I / / Mulberry 4 Hummel Also Steelton, Pa. The Name —despite the fact that it is a good one—did not make King Oscar the famous nickel smoke it is to-day. IT WAS THE UNVARYING QUAL ITY OF THE TOBACCO USED, YEAR AFTER YEAR, THAT MADE THE NAME FAMOUS. Why, as soon as a man feels the desire for a good nickel smoke he unconsciously thinks of King Oscar 5c Cigars When a man's thirsty—he thinks of water. When he's hungry—he eats, When he wants a smoke—he thinks of King Oscar 5c Cigars. Regularly Good For 24 Years J 1 CLIP THIS COUPON FOR ( , The American Government < L AND The Panama Canal 1 ► ! ' By FRESDEniC J. HA SKIN. ! j I The Books That Show Uncle Sam at Work. The Harrisburg Telegraph f HOW TO GET THESE TWO BOOKS FOR 98.CENTS Cut < ► ] this coupon from this paper, present It at our office with 98 > , cents, to cover the cost of production and distribution, and the ' < I set Is yours. Klfteer. cents extra by mall. ' SOME PACTS ABOUT THESE BOOKS Both ore the same - | size and bound exactly alike In heavy cloth. Each has about * > , 400 pages printed on fine book paper. Both are profusely Illus trated with official etchings, drawings and maps. I , 1 TO OUR READERS Wo are distributing these patrlotlo 9 books solely because of thulr great educational marlt and our belief that tliey should be In every Ainericun home. ( I | SUNDAY SCHOOL OFFICERS I Halifax. Pa., Jan. 17. Bethel Union Sunday school of Matamoras elected the following officers for the year: Superintendent, C. I. Glace: assistant superintendent, Lewis Frank; secretary, Marlin Bowman: assistant secretary, Martin Kieter; treasurer, Caroline Chubb; organist. Miss Ivy Hoffman: assistant, organist, Miss Susan Wagner; librarians, Paul ine Sweigard and Esther Wagner: janitor, Martin Keiter. ■ ASK FOR and GET HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Cheap substitutes cost YOU same price. FLORIDA TOUR Personally Conducted From Baltimore, Friday. February IS, 7 P. M„ 8-day trip, Including necessarv expenses SSO. Meals and room oil steamer, hotels; auto trips, etc. ijrand opportunity to visit "Land of Stfniihfne and Flowers." Regular saltings to Savannah and Jacksonville every Tues day and Friday. Send for Itinerary and particulars. MKKOIANTS AM) MINIMIS TRANS. CO. W. I*. Turner, fi. I*. .1., Baltimore. Mil. Connult any tleket or touring niieut.