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I Nature's First Law is order—regularity. Obey h in your own body. Keep your liver active and your bowels regu lar and natural. Good health is possible in no other way. One pill a day is the regular rule. Two — perhaps three now and then, if necessary. CARTERS • ITT LI BIVER Colorless faces often ahow the absence of Iron in the blood. Carter's Iron Pills H ■ will help this condition. I * J that protect* your teeth. Use I it twice daily. V I See your dentist I twice yearly and I keep your teeth £ in perfect '( rendition j Get a tube today, read I the folder about the most M E-r.-ral disuse In the ,j world. Start the Senreco I* treatment tonight. £t your druggist*. For •ample etvi 4c. stamps or coin, to The Sentanel R -medics Co.. Cincinnati. Ohio. \ —sJ DENTISTS FORMULA True Secret of Keeping Youthful Looking (The Beauty Seeker.) "The real secret of keeping young-looking and beautiful," says a well-known hygienist, to keep the liver and bowels normally active. Without these requiaites, poisonous waate producta remain in the system, pollut ing the blood and lodging in Yarious organs, tissues. joints. One becomes flabby, obeee. nervous, mentally sluggish, dull-eyed, wrinkled and sallow of face. "But to gt liver ar.d bowe!s working as they ought, without producing evil after-effects has been the problem. Fortunately, there is a prescription of unquestioned merit, which may now be had in convenient tablet form. Its value is due largely to an ingredient de rived from the humble May apple, or its root, which has been called 'vegetable calomel* be cause of its effectiveness—though, of course, it is not to be classed with the real calomel of mercurial origin. There ia no habit-forming constituent in /sentanel' tableta—that'a the name —and their useia not followed by weak* uess or exhaustion. On the contrary, these harmless vegetable tablets tend to impart tone and elasticity to the relaxed intestinal wall. Sentanel tablets, which may be procured from any druggist—a dime's worth will do —will prove a revelation to any constipated, liver troubled person." Sentanellablefc conquer constipation— liven up a lazy liver — banish biliousness— HEARTS TREATED FREE By Pr. Franklin Miles, the Great Spec ialist, Who .Vends a \m (2.50 Treatment, Free Heart disease is dangerous, hun dreds drop dead who could have been saved. Many have been cured after doctors failed. To prove the remark able efficacy of his new t'pecial Personal Treatment for heart disease, short breath, pain in side, shoulder or arm, oppression, irregular pulse, palpitation, (smothering, puffing of ankles or dropsy, also nerve, stomach and rheumatic symptoms, Dr. Miles will send to af- ] fllcted persons a $2.50 Free Treatment. Uad cases usually soon relieved. These treatments are the result of 30 I years' extensive research and remark- 1 ble auccess in treating various ail- I rnents of the heart, liver, stomach and I bowels, which often complicate each case. Send for Itemarkable Cures In Your State So wonderful are the results that he wishes every sick person to test this famous treatment at his expense. Af flicted persons should avail themselves of this liberal offer, as they may never! have such an opportunity again. Dolavs ' fire dangerous. No death comes more I suddenly than that from heart disease | Send at once for his new Rook and J-ree Trial Treatment. Describe vour disease. Address, Dr. Franklin Miles, Dept. HP., 525 to 035 Franklin St., Elk- 1 hart, ind. —Advertisement. r__ .. ■f| 1 1 ■ 111 SI S fiS ftoii-gieasy Toilet Cream Keeps I the Skin Soft and Velvety In Rough | Weather. An Exquisite Toilet Prep aration, 25c. GOKGAS' lIKL'G STOHES IS .V. Third St., and I'. 11. 11. Station * Use Telegraph Want Ads J FRIDAY EVENING. PENBROOK WILL GET ROAD TIPS F. W. Hock, Highway Expert, lo Tell Council of Cheap Means of Paving Street Frank \V. Hock, highway engineer of the Portland Cement association of New York city, will confer with the borough council of Penbrook and rep resentative citizens, Monday evening, February 5 on paving plans for the town. Mr. Hock is giving his advice to a great many boroughs in the Eastern United States in the interests of bet ter roads and proposes to have Pen brook get paving work under way soon. He has spent live years in the Canal zone, directing concrete work for the government and is regarded as an expert in his line. A stretch of concrete paving in Manheim, Lancaster county, laid un der the direction of the Portland Ce ment association, lias been found to up splendidly under heavy traf fic; 17,000 yards were placed there. Figures as furnished by the associa tion on the cost of work follow: Based on 8,000,000 square yards on which costs are available, the average cost of concrete for 1914 was found to be $1.27 per square yard or $12,- 776 per mile of 16-foot width. Bl tuminus macadam costs were found to average $1.50 per square yard. Tech High School Notes The weekly meeting and practice of the mandolin and guitar club was held yesterday afternoon in the school auditorium with thirty members pres ent. Professor Will H. Moyer directed the practice. Many new candidates were present and will become mem bers of the new organization. The complete roster of the club to date is as follows: Mandolins. Sidney Kay, Norman Todd, Robert Fager, Lester Zimmerman, Victor Snyder, Lloyd Reeves, Fred Boath, John Keller, Musser Miller. Michael Hecker, Joseph i Gastrock, Fred Fssig. Gustave Erd i man. Raymond Baxter. William Gard ner, Roy Nissley, Harold Cassell, Rus- I sel Hampton, Nathan Rosenberg and | Albert Michael; guitars. Kenneth ! Stark, George Ricedorf, Harry Nell nnd Rees Lloyd; banjos, "Pete" Moore, Fred Ramey, Foster Cocklin, Charles Snyder and Charles Johnson. Tech lads interested in wireless spend part of their lunch periods daily in catching the time signals that are sent out from Washington. Foster Cocklin, a member of the junior class, is a registered first class amateur wire less operator. He received the honor after taking an examination at Balti more some time ago. Members of the club are testing out the hot wire meter to ascertain the sending inten sity of the aerial. Another fire drill was held at 10.20 yesterday morning. The building was emptied of its 500-odd students in 75 seconds. This is 15 seconds better than was made last week. An effort will be made to empty the building in one minute flat without any undue crowding. John Yoder, a member of the 1915 class and also a member of the Tech quintet during his senior year, is again a member of the Merehanics Institute varsity team at Rochester, N. Y. An announcement has come to Dr. C. R. Fager stating that four scholar ships to Worcester Polytechnic Insti tute, each worth $l3O, will be open to be competed for by Tech graduates. Th* scholarships will be competitive and it is expected that several of the grads will take the examination. Joseph Garner, a member of sec tion 4 of the freshman class, has re ceived his reappointment as page in the House of Representatives. The fourth floor study hall will be used during: the spring as a practice room for the track athletes. The can didates will limber up their muscles around the edge of the room, while the jumpers will also get a turn. The Acadetn * basketball team will oppose the Tech tossers this evening on the Cathedral floor. The contest will begin at S o'clock. It will be the first meeting between the two schools for six years at the indoor sport. Tech and Academy were keen rivals this sport at that time, when Mid- dletown, Steelton, Academy and Cen tral played a twelve-game series. With the renewal of basketball activities between the two schools it is expected that there will also be a resumption of football sports on the gridiron next fall. The return engagement of the teams will be played at the Armory February 23. Endowment Fund For Phila. Orchestra Raised Philadelphia. Jan. 2<j ances that the Philadelphia Orches irn is to be placed on a sound financial basis, and that Leopold Stokowski will continue as conductor at least for an other five years, were realized last nipht, when the orchestra association announced that it had completed the aising of SIOO,OOO a year for ears as an endowment fund. Announcement was also made that efforts will be made to complete a total endowment of $1,000,000 for the orchestra at the earliest possible date. "Like Hell I'm Dead" Man Tells Morgue Attendants Bridgeport, Conn., Jan. 2fi. Just as the supposed corpse of George Hanks, of Pequenock street, this city, was being removed from the ambul ance into the Morgue yesterday after noon, the raan sat up suddenly and demanded to know where lie was. The startled attendants stared at him in amazement for a moment. "Why, you're dead," some one finally Raid.* "I.ike hell I'm dead," replied the disgusted Hanks. The ambulance re moved him to the hospital, where he is said to be getting along well. 89 Deer Are Captured For State Restocking Allentown, Pa., Jan'. 28. Under the direction of Dr. Kalbfus, State Game Commissioner, the second drive for deer for the State was made yes terday in Colonel Harry C. Trexier's game par!; at Schnecksville. As a re sult of this drive thirty deer were crated, which added to the fifty-nine caught on Monday, makes eighty-nine so far caught for distribution over the wilds of Pennsylvania. HYOME| ■ I (nm/NCa> HM-0-M£) I ENDS CATARRH, ASTHMA, Bronchitis, Croup. Cough* and Coldi, or tnooey bade. Sold and guaranteed by H. C. Kennedy HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A Second Important Message To The People of The United States Appearing Today In4ooof The Leading Papers WHY MASK THE TRUTH? Why Should The Public Be Kept In The Dark? Why Not OUT With The Facts So That Every Man and Woman May KNOW What Is Ahead And Prepare For That Which Is To Come? HERE ARE THE FACTS! Read Every Word That Follows and Act As Your Own Judgment Dictates. America is going begging for leather! The nations of No, these are NOT reduced prices, BUT THEY ARE LOW- Europe have gobbled it up until there is no more left to gobble! ER THAN PRESENT WHOLESALE PRICES. And before Dazzled by European gold—the tanners have sold, sold, sold the end of this year, unless conditions change very quickly, the until they not only have no more to sell, but have sold a good • shoes we are offering you TODAY at $2.95 will cost you $5.00 part of that which should have been kept for OURSELVES! per pair! The warring nations need food and clothing the same as You ask how can we sell you a shoe, for example, at $2.50 we do—and the only way we can keep any for OURSELVES is today, of the same high standard as we have been selling all over to pay American manufacturers as much as EUROPE is willing the United States for years, when the same article costs $3.50 to pay. And that's what we have been doing—and we will have at WHOLESALE? to CONTINUE doiDg f ° r 801116111116 even AFTE R war is Because WE had the foresight and the courage to go into B6tUe<l - the market BEFORE THE PRICE OF LEATHER WAS There you have the answer why everything is costing you KNOCKED INTO A COCKED HAT! In 1915 we contracted so dearly these days. for enough to last us until the middle of 1917.—ELEVEN MIL- Now, then—look what's happening in the SHOE industry. LION DOLLARS WORTH. The prices for leather have taken such enormous advances that . |\ 1S moment we have made up—and in process of manu shoe manufacturers have been obliged to raise prices higher NEARLY THREE MILLION PAIRS of NEWARK than they have ever been in the history of the United States! SHOES. Were we not as big as we are—and as powerful—and And they are predicting that Shoes that were $4 a pair in 1912 f° r esighted—we would be in the same boat with the rest, will cost EIGHT dollars a pair before the end of 1917! * * * ? ot *w T wit K 2 16 fact V nd You know that it requires no big advertising campaign to about it NOW so eve^ body may ha\ e se ll fl our a t $4 a barrel when there is an unlimited and unquench mJus riisM ?n " BEFORE FURTHER enor- ab l e demand for it at $lO a barrel. And by the same token, it mous raises in prices come. j sn >t necessary to spend money advertising Shoes at $2.50, worth You've ALREADY had a sample of what's coming. Cer- $4.00; or Shoes at $2.95., worth $4.50; or Shoes at $3.50, worth tain manufacturers and retailers are telling you in the news- $5.50 —for*we can sell every pair we've got and have more takers papers and magazines that shoes at $4 are a thing of the past; for them than we have shoes! that they are now going to cost you $6, $7 and SB.OO a pair! But this is how we look at it: We've got the Shoes, and And WE, who are paying for this nation-wide campaign of even though other manufacturers tell us we are fools to sell them enlightenment,—WE ALSO will have to charge you MORE in at these low prices, when we could get the ADVANCED prices the near future, the SAME AS OTHER BIG CONCERNS. But just as easily and STILL be under everybody else—WE ARE before we DO raise our prices, we are going to GIVE EVERY- NOT GOING TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE SITUATION. BODY A CHANCE TO BUY AT OUR PRESENT LOW We figure that by acting on the principle that "one good PRICES—the LOWEST, at this moment, in the country. There- turn deserves another," we will gain tremendously in the GOOD fore, while our supply holds out, you may buy: WILL OF THE PUBLIC—and that in the end our profit will . be the GREATER by having made thousands of NEW loyal cus- Ql. I*l < 1 Q* # f f~' tomer-friends by sticking to this policy. OmOcS wortn If % With a string of 257 NEWARK Shoe Stores in every prin <t a fiy x 1 " M a eipal city in the United States, you can see that it won't be long 3)4iUU TOI* ■■ • before the present available supply of these NEWARK Shoes at $2.50, $2.95 and $3.50 is absorbed. So we urge upon you NOT to put off your visit here a single day, but to come TOMORROW Shoes Worth I? W Vjl nd COme prcpared t0 buy a YEAR ' S supply if you possibly y| CZ A A If you can't afford to buy more than one pair tomorrow— TOP ■■ ~ we will gladly reserve as many extra pairs as you wish for delivery a week or so later. . -- - . And (J on't forget the BOY. You don't want to pay $2.50 Shoes Worth Hk J Ul 1 later on for Shoes that cost $1.75 now, or $3.50 for Shoes that vUO 1-1 1 UJ V 0 cost $2.50 now—do you? But that's what you'll have to DO IF CA f A|( Y ft Mm. YOU DON'T ACT NOW. TOP So come TOMORROW—and you'll never regret it. I JleuwtfSfoeSfone&Cv. I Operating 2ST Newark Shoe Store. In The United States—The Greatest Enterorise of its Kind in The W~ld. —HARRISBURG STORE:— 315 MARKET STREET, Near Dewberry Other Newark Stores Nearby: York, Reading, Altoona, Baltimore, Lancaster. Open Saturday nights until 10.30 o clock to accornmoda te our customers." When ordering by mail include 10c, parcel post charges. SNAPP WANTS TO HE KNAP P. HIT KNAPP SNAPS AT SNAPP Boston, Jan. 26. Raymond P. Knapj), a Beverly gasfitter, has tiled objections in the probate court to the oetltion of Charles F. Snapp. a plum ber, to change his name to Knapp on the ground that his children in school are taunted with such epithets as "snappy cheeses." Knapp sets forth that he is descend ed from William the Conqueror, and one of his progenitors was awarded the name of Sir Knapp by winning a tournament. The Snapps were origin ally Knopfs, of German descent, and Knapp objects to the name of his proud English line being defiled by any thing German. KANT ON* COMMITTEE At the meeting of the American In stitute of Architects held in Minne apolis in December a special commit tee on the standardization of school j building measurements was author ized. The chairman of the committee , is W. XI. Brainerd, of Boston, with D. j H. Perkins, of Chicago, and M. I. Kast, j ' of this city, us members. INDIANA PASSES DKY 1111,1. Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. 2G. By a vote ot seventy to twenty-eight, the lower branch of the State legislature j late yesterday passed the Wright bill j . ] prohibiting the sale, manufacture, dis-1 | tribution or advertisement of liquor! ■in the State after January 1, 1918. | The bill now goes to the Senate. NEW KANSAS ANTI-LIQUOR IMLI,j j Topeka, Kan., Jan. 26. —An antt- j I liquor bill presented to the Kansas 1 I I-legislature yesterday by the Temp- ■ erance Committee of the lower House ; would prohibit shipment of liquor into i the State except for medicinal pur-; poses and the sacrament. | SMASHES ANOTHER PRECEDENT Washington, Jan. 26. President' Wilson broke another precedent yes-1 ! terday when ho walked over to thej | treasury department from the White | House to see Secretary McAdoo in | his private office. It was said that| unimportant routine questions were discussed during the ten minutes' call. WHAT JAPAN PAYS FOR INDUS TRIALISM This move of the population from , the maple-clad hills and rice fields of i beautiful Japan to the crowded quar- J ters, low resorts, and inhuman fac | tories of the cities is lowering the j physical efficiency, the mental hori | zon, and the moral standards of the j people. Tuberculosis is taking its toll j from frenzied industrialism. A prom inent Y. M. C. A. worker, Mr. J. Merle Davis, whose study of the social! problems of an increasing urban pop ulation in Japan has been thorough,' says that an expert in factory condi- 1 tions makes the statement thut often! i one-half of the girls employed in cer-• tain mills become depraved within a! year after entering the mills. They i , lose their health soon after, so that! I the price of a broader commerce and a aun flag in every port la being paid I JANUARY 26, 1917. Iby weak womanhood and hollow-[ i chested men.— Maynard Owen Wil , liams in the Christian Herald. Boy, 5, Shoots Father Who Spanked Him Columbia, Tnd., Jan. 26. —Kecause ! John Todd. 40 years old. a fireman : at the Mooney tannery here, spanked his five-year-old son, Virgil, the son 1 procured a revolver that was in the 1 Some and shot his father. Todd's ' condition is critical. The bullet en-1 , tored his back ,Inst above the left hip. ' Todd was sitting in a chair when shot. lie was able to,gain Ills feet ; and take the revolver from I,ls son as, the boy held the weapon in both ; hands and tried io fire a second time. As he grasped the revolver. Todd was overcome and fell to the floor. | j Todd said he spanked his son be- i cause the boy was "cutting some i I capers." | OCR I TOPERS There are now several hundred lepers through seventeen States. The national government is appropriating about J 140,000 a year for the care of lepers, there being leper colonies at Carville, I„a.; Peni kese, Mass., and San Francisco, Cal. Missionary funds amounting to $33,- 000 annually are used to bring added care, comfort and consolation to these afflicted ones.— The Christian Herald. 9