10 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Established itsi ms=. t . . : PUBLISHED BY TUB TIIJEGRAPH PRINTING CO. X. J. STACK POLE President and Editor in-ClUef T. n. OYSTER Secretary CUS M. STEINMETZ Managing Editor Published every evening (except Sun day) at the Telegraph Building, 211 Federal Square. Both phones. Member American Newspaper Publish ers' Association. Audit Bureau of Circulation and Pennsylvania Associ ated Dallies. Eastern Office, Fifth Avenue Building, New YOik City, Ha?brook, Story £ Brooks. Western Office, Advertising Building, Chicago. 111., Allen &. Ward. Delivered by carriers st <BJptK<fc33Jtl> six rents a week. Mailed to subscribers at SS.OO a year In advance. Entered at the Post Office In Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. Snorn dally nvrrnge for the three ★ months ending ,1au.31,1V15. 21,757 Tf Average for the year 1914—23,213 Average for the year 1U15—11,577 Average for the year 1912—21,175 Average for the year 1011—18,851 Average for the year 191 C »-17,495 FRIDAY EVENING, I'EB. 5. A MUNICIPAL HOSPITAL MEMBERS of the Dauphin County Medical Society have appointed a committee to investigate the need of a new municipal hos pital in Harrisburg. The object is a very worthy one, but the physicians might have admitted at once the need for such a building and directed the efforts of their committee to devising ways and means for its construction. There is no doubt in the mind of any body familiar with the situation that the old so-called "sanitary" hospital in the vicinity of the county almshouse has long since outlived its usefulness. The city compels all people within its borders who are found to be suffer ing with certain types of contagious diseases to undergo quarantine and treatment at this hospital. It should be, therefore, the duty of the city gov ernment to provide modern and ade quate facilities for the accommodation of its enforced patients. Doubtless the Health Board and Councilmen themselves arc fully cognizant of these facts and in all likelihood some pro \ ision will be made in the near future for stich a structure as is needed. However, the investigation of the Medical Society's committee may be j beneficial in hastening tho improve ment. UP-TO-THE-MINUTE HARRISBURG MANUFACTURERS are not cast down because of the war in Europe and disturbances at home. Many of them are cour ageously facing the future and some of them are about to broaden the Held of their operations by inquiring into the possibilities of foreign trade. Among these is to be noted the Mor ton Motor Truck and Tractor Com pany, of Harrisburg, which is sending its representative, Robert L. Morton, to Europe with the object of selling its product to the English market. The local concern will be in big com pany, Mr. Morton's sailing partner be ing no less a personage than a repre sentative of one of the very largest automobile manufactories in the country. This is the kind of enterprise that makes for the growth of the city from an Industrial standpoint. The man with the vision is the man who suc ceeds. The business firm that looks beyond its immediate horizon is al most sure to expand, in many cases far beyond the expectations of its founders. Those Harrisburg concerns that are casting their eyes abroad have a very proper conception of the place that American products are to hold in the world markets of the future and they are preparing to take advantage of the turn of the tide that now seems to be setting in. It is just such a spirit that has < nabled Charles M. Schwab to bring home from Europe orders that justify a 123,000,000 extension to his Beth lehem plant. He didn't wait for trade to come to him. He went out to look for it. JEWS IN THE W'Alt ONE of the most peculiar features of the war in Europe is that members of the Jewish race are to be found in every one of tho conflicting armies. As illustrating this point one Harrisburg family has cous ins in tho French, the German, the Austrian and the English ranks, and still another cousin an officer in the Swiss National Guard that has been mobilized to protect the borders of of that little country against the pos sibility of invasion. It is doubtful if similar conditions ever before ex isted in the history of the world. During our own Civil War there tterc instances of brother fighting against brother and the present con flict in Mexico has brought to light in stances of fathers opposed to sons, but nothing approaching this breaking up of family and racial tics in Europe ever has been set down in print. It becomes very apparent that not only is the Jew a Jew wherever found, but he is also a loyal citizen of what ever country he may have adopted in his centuries of wandering throughout the world. After this display of self-sacrifice and devotion it is hard to see how the ( Czar and his allies on the one hand ( nnd Germans and tho Austrians on the other will evtr dare in the future to heap on this long persecuted race any of the indignities and wrongs that . have marked their course- throughout tho history of Europe, both ancient anil modern. The Russian Jews in particular have heavily and voluntarily of FRIDAY EVENING, HAHMSBURO t#36& TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 5, 1915. their wealth to the government's war fund, for the support of the Red Cross, the maintenance of hospitals and for every other purpose for which Russia has asked aid. More than that, they are sacrificing t'.ieir young men at the front and not a few He brews have so distinguished them selves as to win the commendation of their officers and promotion for dis tinguished service on the battlefield, ifhey have redeemed their promises "that the Jewish people will do their duty to the end," and when tho war is over it will go hard with the Russian government if it does not fulfill with equal good faith and generosity its pledges of future fair play. The same may be said with almost equal force of all the other contesting nations. SCHOIiASTTC BASEBALL STUDENTS of the Technical High School have voted almost unani mously for the reintroduction of baseball as one of the sports to bo fostered by the School Athletic As sociation. It is difficult to understand why baseball was ever dropped by students of either high school. It is good, clean sport, with much more to commend and much less to condemn than either football or somo of the more strenuous forms of Held and track athletics. It Is to be hoped that the team to be developed and the patronage of the student body will be such during the coming season as to make baseball a permanent feature of the Technical High school during the years to come. I'ILIJNG A GREAT NEED MELiVIN TROTTER, a rescue home promoter of national reputation, ought not to have any great difficulty in placing the rescue home in Harrisburg on its feet and endowing it for a year with an income sufficient to meet its needs. The generosity of Harrisburg people is proverbial when the needs of any local institution or proposed institution are brought properly to their atten tion. as witness tho money that is be ing constantly poured out in the erec tion of the Young Men's Christian As sociation and Young Women's Chris tina Association buildings and their maintenance. There can be no question of the needs of a rescue home such as is pro posed in this city. The town is con stantly growing: it is a central point of transportations and naturally draws to It many men, hundreds of them worthy, who for one reason or iin other find themselves on our streets temporarily out of work, moneyless, helpless and with 110 means of better ing their condition. True, we open for such on cold nights the hole un der the Courthouse known as the "lockup" and the police do for these outcasts whatever in their limited means they find able, but no sys tematic effort whatever is made to put these wanderers back upon their feet. They are turned forth in the morning, if indeed they are fortunate enough to find any shelter over night, and literally cast into the gutter without even resort to a breadline for their breakfast. An effort will be made shortly by the local sponsors of the rescue liome movement to build the total contri butions up to $3,000 and it is esti mated that this amount will run the mission for one year. The superin tendent is willing to work for the modest salary of SSO a month and the only items of expense incident to the operation of the home will be small sums given to worthy persons to help them to food or a night's lodg ing. Ever}' police station application for lodging will be sent to the mission and upon receipt of a card from the superintendent will be entitled to bed and breakfast at the expense of the police department. The whole influence of the insti tution, if carried out along the lines proposed, cannot but be helpful and beneficial. It ought at least to be given full opportunity to demonstrate what it can do for the period of one year for which contributions are now being solicited. GETTING OUT THE TOOLS JUST as the ardent trout angler a month before the opening of the fishing season begins to fondle his tackle and burnish up his equip ment, so does the enthusiastic amateur gardener commence now to polish his tools and lay his plans for that season immediately following the traditional reign of his honor, the Ground Hog. The real enthusiast sce3 in every patch of lawn where tho snow lias melted some signs of coming Spring. Tie sees green grass where another less observing notes only the brown and withered stalk 3of last year'a growth. In every southern breeze that blows he feels the tonic of awakening life as keenly as does the perennial in the warmth of the bed along the southern exposure of his garden. Be fore him rise visions of well-kept rows of thriving vegetables, the fragrance of flowers and the harvest ready for tho garnering. Only the man who loves to delve in the soil knows the pleasures of grow ing things. As some one lias said, "mere money cannot buy what love must do in the garden." Better a hand breadth tilled with loving care and thorough understanding than an acre neglected and grown with weeds. Now by the fireside must the plana be made, but only by the sweat and labor of coming Spring and summer may the man who has a garden in his mind realize the full fruition of his dreams and expectations. By all means plan a garden for yourself, no matter how small the spaco may be, but don't expect bumper crops without putting labor as well as seeds Into the ground. AX EVENING THOUGHT Better a dinner of herbs where love is, than a stalled ox and i hatred therewith. Proverbs 13: i 17. . ' ' I EVENING CHAT I It Is probable that steps will be taken by municipal officers In the third class cities of the State to pro vide that tire chiefs and heads of fire companies shall be given information about the construction and the lay-out of business buildings, especially stores, factories, hotels and other establish ments so that they may be in posses sion of data to enable them to fight fires with greater security than they havo enjoyed. The details of tho plan have not yet worked out but a number of men who arc officials in the smaller cities of the State and legisla tors have been talking over the scheme and have found that it has worked very well in the large cities and that some of the smaller ones have tried it with success. According to men who have given the subject attention the scheme is to have the building inspector supply the Are chief with drawing's showing the construc tion of all new buildings and for the inspector and other officers having to do with structures in uso to make In spections of buildings with the fire department officials. A plan followed in one city is for men connected with each fire company to make tours of the business buildings of the city and also to familiarize themselves with big building's in their home neighborhoods so that when a fire breaks out they will know the lay of the floors and be able to place their hose lines at stra tegic points. Most of the trouble some fires in this city lately have been in places where there are elevator shafts and large cellars. "Harrisburg tiremen have had their share of big fires this winter and have handled theni very well considering the size of the blazes. The llres have been kept down to comparatively small areas, as indeed most of the llres in this city have been for years. Such a thing as a lire spreading over a block is unknown here and the bulk of the trouble has come from old buildings and old style construction. Henry Hornbostle, the architect of the Pennsylvania building at the San Francisco exposition, and well-known to many Harrlsburgers, has been chosen as the architect of the new building of the Bureau of Mines at Pittsburgh. There was keen com petition for this building's plans and the exposition architect won because of designs of unusual character. The saddest exhibition of lack of care for an animal was given yesterday afternoon in Market street, when a horse was driven along without the usual winter precaution of being rough shod. The horse slipped almost every yard and the driver was told to go sec a blacksmith by a number of people along the street, illustrating how people feel about such lack of care. A policeman took the man's name and told him if he came on the street again with a horse which had to go so slow because of smooth shoes he would be arrested for blocking traffic. Among visitors to the city yesterday was W. H. Schwartz, editor of the Altoona Tribune and one of the most prominent newspapermen in Central Pennsylvania. Mr. Schwartz is one ,of the trustees of the Pennsylvania State Hospital and comes here to attend meetings and occasionally to see how the legislative mills are working. In the days of yore, cold weather as a rule put an effective stop to all manner of public improvements, es pecially such work as required exca vation to any extent; successful meth ods of overcoming conditions brought about by unsatisfactory weather in the last few years, however, have been followed with excellent results in Har risburg's big jobs but it is doubtful if so much progress has been made on any particular work as on the railroad improvements in the lower end of the city. In the coldest weather, even with snow a few inches deep, the big steam shovels have steadily scooped away the earth for the "Pennsy" freight station site: here and there on the new Cumberland Valley bridge job little schemes have been adopted for overcoming the temperature difficul ties. For instance, early in the Kali a great pile of clay and sand had been heaped on the river front wall under the bridge for use in the pier founda tion construction. When the frost hardened this pile, the contractors didn't quit and discharge the men be cause the material couldn't be work ed in—they just scooped out a space beneath the pile, built a fire under it and as soon as the ground was suffi ciently thawed the operation of tho wheel-barrow lines was continued. 1 WELL KNOWN PEOPLE 1 —Charles M. Prince, Philadelphian, active in banking, is taking a southern trip. —Congressman W. S. Vare has gone to Florida to spend a couple of weeks. —Colonel W. \V. liartz, U. S. A., well-known to many Pennsylvanlans, has been made superintendent of the State. War* and Navy Department buildings In Washington. —George F. Buss, of Wilkes-Barre, who was here this week, Is county treasurer of Luzerne. —Dr. F. W. Meyer, the engineer who fortified Tsing Tau, has become a resident of Pittsburgh. —•W. J. Stewart, Pittsburgh, has been elected president of the retired Pennsylvania railroad employes asso ciation. r— bfl VOU KN6W—I Tliat Ilarrt>burg is a center for the grain traffic or thlb part of the State? Which Win# Mr. Manufacturer? Manufacturer JTo. 1 says: "After 1 sell the dealer It'* up to him to sell the goods. They are his not mine." Manufacturer \o. 2 says: "The more I can help the dealer sell my goods the more he will buy from me." This latter chap follows his salo to the dealers with news paper advertising in their cities. He believes in keeping his goods moving. Naturally the local dealers work with him. Thev push these newspaper advertised goods be cause they are easier to sell. It is not very hard to figure out which of these two types of manufacturers is going to make the most money in the long run. Manufacturers anxious to get dealer co-operation are invited to address the Ilureau of Advertis ing, American Newspaper Pub lishers Association, world Build ing, New York. LAME DUCKS LAND IN POWELL'S DEPT. Kreider and Lenker, Who Went Down in the Rout of Novem ber, on State Payroll KREIDER'S SECOND JOB Governor Brumbaugh Victim of Quadrennial Story About Turnovers on the Hill Dr. J. H. Kreider, of Harrisburg, and W. W. Lenker, of Wllll&mstown, two of the lame ducks of the Progres sive party's last rout, are on the pay roll of the Auditor General's Depart ment for the present at least. Just how long they will stay has not been announced at the Capitol. Dr. Kreider was chairman of the Washington party county committee In the rear guard action of 1912 and was rewarded by a job said to pay $2,400 a year in the Auditor General's Department. Last year he became obsessed with the idea that he could be elected to Congress and he had to resign from the department in order to prosecute his campaign of discovery that he was not in it as a Progressive candidate when compared to the vet eran Colonel H. C. Demming, who ran in 1912 and whose vote is supposed to have inspired the doctor to try and do i better. Yesterday It was announced that the doctor was back on the pay roll of the State, although Auditor General Powell did not state to what position or at what salary the leader of the 1914 disaster in this district had been named. —The other lame duck to be taken care of by Mr. Powell is ex-Represen tattve W. W. Lenker, of Williamstown, who has been doing some clerical work, classed as temporary, in the Auditor General's Department. Lenk er was also routed last Fall when he sought to be elected to the legisla ture on his own merits and with no Roosevelt wave to carry him for ward. —Mr. Powell has been very kind to thege two erstwhile progressive lead ers. —•State civil service to include everyone connected ■with the State gov ernment except elective officers, those appointed by the Governor with the consent of the Senate and labor with a possible clause permitting counties and third class cities to have local op tion if they desire it, is proposed in a bill which representatives of the State Civil Service Reform Association will submit to Governor Brumbaugh next week. The bill will embody some of the ideas of civil service bills of the past with a commission of three, the chairman to get 55,000 a year with two others and a chief examiner at $3,000 each. The bill would affect about 4,- 500 persons If It included all medical inspectors and employes of the State Highway Department. • —Governor Brumbaugh has been studying the report of the Economy and Efficiency Commission which gives the nume, position and salary of every person connected with the State government and has been having heads of one or more departments meet with him every day or so. This has given rise to the quadrennial story that a "probe" and a "shaketip" and "clcanouts" of departments are un der way. This story appeared when William A. Stone took office after the Hastings administration and has ap peared every four years since. —The Philadelphia Record of to-day says: "Governor Brumbaugh is ex pected to go unusually slow in mak ing appointments to ofllcc under his administration, and it is doubted if there will be any serious shakeup on Capitol Hill until the Legislature is well under way. The Governor has clearly indicated that he is far more interested in legislation than in jobs, for the present at least, and is giv ing chief consideration to the passage of his pet measures. Close friends of the Executive declare that far from being 'a woolly lamb,' as he was term ed by Colonel Roosevelt during the campaign, the Governor is demon strating that he is sufficiently familiar with the political game to realize the value of patronage and to postpone all rewards and punishments of office until the Legislature has acted." —Ex-State Senator William Flinn, head of the Bull Moose movement in Pennsylvania, was in Philadelphia yesterday on his way to Florida. He said he was not there to confer on politics or to discuss with local Wash ington party men the selection of a new party name to be used by the Bull Moose followers in the next ma yoralty campaign. Flinn inquired as to the likelihood of friction between Gov ernor Brumbaugh and the Republican leaders in the General Assembly over promised legislation. "1 have never met Brumbaugh," said Flinn, "and would not know him if he came in here and I would not like to venture a guess as to whether the Governor will stand up for his views to the point of fighting the Republican or ganization." —Congressman A. Mitchell Palmer, it will be noted, voted against the President in the immigration bill bat tle at Washington. Palmer's term as congressman is drawing to a close and It might be added that so is his term as Democratic leader. —Congressman John J. Casey, of Wilkes-Barre, who has bucked the Democratic machine in the matter of appointments for his home county, has been selected to take the place of Palmer on the ways and means com mittee of the House at Washington. Casey has never been one of the crowd to gather around Ihe windmill here. —Up to date nothing has been ar ranged hy the financiers of the Cen tral Democratic CUib for a Jefferson day banquet and some are wondering if the national administration has no cabinet officers to spare for Harris btirg Democrats this year. , —And now Senator Sprotil is bsing trotted out by the Democrats as a candidate for United States senator to succeed Senator Oliver. Inasmuch as Senator Penrose lives in the next coun ty to Senator Sproul the item has an importance from a geographical stand point if nothing else. who are languid, sleepless and physically run-down get im> mediate relief and lasting bene fits from the regular use of Scott's Emulsion after meals. Its chief eonstitsent is nature's greatest bodj-bwMiii( fores to 1 1 strengthen the organs and 1 nerve centers, train by » J grain, to rebuild physical y*, jj\ and mesial energy. No alcohol or opiate in SCOTT S. tUfaam Sabmtitutet. JF/'J 1 I I OUR DAILY LAUGH ) PAPA'S OUESB. What Is an "es- Guess It's a tablec ' oth > r There ' s usually a "JV. y iB JS}\ blot on it I know. QUTTE DIF- ft.]); FERENT. W I fear I must .Mki4| seem Uke a Sa- ■ hara of dullness Ml fc) , this evening, Miss '.va? Oh, no, Frank, jMlijuf you are not at all like a desert, a jl \Jl , ftW : ~~^~ desert has sand. 97 ™ V • SHE AS I ujgß' V, 'y lt! H#: 1 * ot up T3381» . wAj feeling: like a .lArf i * lark this mora le ifl lnr. ) j- "-v rV She: Then you \jJJ weren't out on 3^ l °ne last night. MY GOODNKSS By n ilia Dinner This morning, when I came downstairs, I grabbed The Patriot, And as t glanced the headlines o'er A nervous chill I got. 1 wasn't sure I was alive When my two eyes caught sight Of its admittance that Boyer, Director, was quit© right. Oh gee, oh gee, oh. hully gee, This man 'gainst whom it's fought Is now O. K„ according to The daily Patriot. I'll wager when the news was seen First by the well-known rat In the composing room, he said: "What do you think of that?" r— v STORY RITEN' By the Messenger Boy I have a stummick-ake and grip from too much work and can't make up a story about anything that liap pincd so I'll tell some histry about myself to fill up, although I know it aint modest to talk so much about you rself. I was born in the year 1901 A. D., in October, up in the country near Dauphin and was half-way taught in the schools there until my father mov ed to this city. I started to go hero in the fifth grade and I had several scraps with teachers so I got tired goin and started to play hookey. Then my father sent me back to my uncle's farm to work because I wouldn't go to school, but he said I was no good for ans'thing and then I came back to Harrisburg last summer and jist loaf ed around and wouldn't start to school again. I took up a extensive course in readin. makin a specialty of deteck tive stories where I learned lots of new words and inkreased my vokabl lary, with which I can now rite these tales. I am Irish linage with a sprinkel of Pennsilvany Dutch, which is a mix ter to be proud of, says my father— he is part Scotch and part Irish, too. My bad spellin is doo partly to my cut-off kareer at school and part to my big brother who never spelled a word korrectly when I would ast him how. My job with the Webster's Union is owin to the mayor, Mister John Royal, who told me to go to work or he might pinch me. This is how it happened. I had went into a dary lunch with some bad companyons down the alley and bought a nickels worth donuts and coffee, and as I went out, I took too many blocks of sugar out the sugar bowl. which made the prop, mad and ho called a cop who took me to Kernel Hutchison, and he stroked his big mistache and said I'd have to go be fore the mayer. Mister Royal studied kind of hard and puffed like an engine on a big worm-eaten cigar and played with his pensil and told me I ought to be have better. He was awful nice and said he wouldn't do anything this time if I promised to get a job inside five days, and then come to him and tell him: which I done, and now I am a messenger boy from Websters Un ion. and I am hopin to be a reporter some time. HAVE YOU HAD the GRIP? The debility and depression follow ing an attack of the grip is not a fan cied disorder. "Post-grippal neuras thenia" is the medical name for this condition and its seriousness is recog nized by all medical writers. One authority says: "Broadly speaking, every victim of the grip will suffer from post-grippal neurasthenia also. Lowering of nervous tone, with increased irritability is the most striking effect of the disease, with lan guor of mind, and body, disturbed sleep and vague pains in the head and elsewhere." Every sufferer will recognize tho symptoms. What is the remedy? After the fever has passed and the influenza has subsided the diet should be more liberal but be limited to ar ticles easily digested: rest a'hd suffi cient sleep are essential and Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills are the only medicine required in most cases. This treat ment should be continued until the patient is completely restored to nor mal health and spirits. It. is a spe cific treatment and rarely ir ever fails. Send to-day for the booklet "Build ing Up the Blood." It is free if you mention this paper. Address the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, X. Y. Your own druggist sells Dr. Williams Pink Pills.—Advertisement. Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE in Effect May 14, llli TRAINS leave Harrisburg— For Winchester and Martlasburg at 1:03, *7:60 a. no.. *3:40 p. m. For Hagerstown, Chambersburg. Car* lisle, Mechanlcsburg and intermediate stations at S:O3, *7:50, *11:63 a. ml •3:40, 5:32. *7:10. *11:00 p. m. Additional trains (or Carlisle ant Mechanics burg at 9:48 a. m.. 8:18, 8:17. 8:80, 8:30 a. m. ' For Dlllsburg at 8:03. *7:68 and *11:88 a. m.. 1:18, *3:40. 8:81 and P 'Dally. All other trains dally except Sunday. H. A RIDDLE, * J. H. TONGB. OTP. A. Qnick Relief tor Coughs. Colds and Hoarseness. Clear the Voice—Fine for Speakers and Singers. 25c. i - DRUG STORES | Try Telegraph Want Ads. | Care in the making— : plus finest materials— : mean quality in m Our Sales Agents in Harrisburg are * J. H. Boher F. J. Althouse Cunningham's ' Huyler's Cocoa, like Huyler's Candy, is supreme i [From the Telegraph, Feb. 5, 1865] Sherman Mobilizing Washington, Feb. 4.—Sherman is advancing on Augusta. His forces are now concentrated near Charleston. Joe Gorge Breaks Cairo, Feb. 4.-»-The ice gorge near here on the Mississippi broke this morning. Several lives were lost and a few boats with large cargoes. I Major General on Visit St. Louis, Feb. 4.—Major General Pope arrived here to-day. I*o VIS'S LA BO It I had all that love could do. But t spared some love for you. And I go forth in the morning With the ringing song of life Leading on to life's adorning As I bear amid the strife s All the naked love that's beating In my heart and soul for men— And though I had all love could do, I turned to love again. Mighty Hercules strove seven Times in labor to complete Kor the world the tasks that heaven Hurled in thunder at his feet. But the labor that love enters In this world of aching need Casts the mighty hero's labors In the shadow oft indeed; For love that hath all love can do Still finds love again for you. All day long and through the night I with love strove main and might, Every hour and every moment Kult of love's immortal foment. To and fro and hour by hour Kept I moving in love's power. Having all that love could do. Yet through golden gates of morning, Sweet with dewy fresh adorning. I still brought some love for you, I have spared some love for you. —Baltimore Sun. ! DRINK HOT TEA FOR A BAD COLD) i : Get a small package of Hamburg Breast Tea, or as the German folks call It, "Hamburger Brust Thee," at any pharmacy. Take a tablespoonful of the tea, put a cup of boiling water upon it, pour through a sieve and drink a teacup full at any time. It is the most effective way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores, relieving congestion. Also loos ens the bowels, thus breaking a cold at once. It is inexpensive and entirely vege table, therefore harmless.—Advertise ment. e 3(<u-nj ©itroujo Insurance Agent 1617 N. Second St. —————d Merchants & Miners Transportation Co. FLORIDA TRIPS "BY SEA" BALTIMORE TO JACKSONVILLE retur* *33.89 SAVANNAH anil return 920.00 Including meals and stateroom ac commodations. Through tickets to all points. Fine ■teamers. Best •frvice. Staterooms do luxe. Baths. Wireless telegraph. Automobiles carried. Steam er Tuesday and Friday. Send for book let. W. V. TURNER, G. P. A., Baltimore, MA, MOOSE BAZAAR Big Ladies' Meeting Sunday Afternoon, Feb. 7, 1915 ARMORY HALL Diamond ring given away Free to some lady attending this meeting. We want 100 ladies to assist us in making our coming bazaar a grand success. Each member should have at least one lady at this meet- L. O. O. M. BAZAAR Latest Euorpean War Map Given by THE TELEGRAPH T* rrtrr reader presenting this COUPON and lfl rente to cove* promotion expenses. BT TUT ATT.. —in ottir or outside, for lie. fHampi, eash or mosey order. Thla 1« the BIGGEST VALUE EVER OFFERED. Latest 1»14 European Official Map (5 colora) —Portrait* of II European Rulers: all statistics and war data—Army .Navy and Aerial Strength. Populations, Area. Capitals, Distances between ClUes, Histories of Natlone Involved, Previous Decisive Battles, History Haru* Peaoe Conference, National TJ»bts, Coin Values. EXTRA J-color CHARTS of Five Involved European Capitals and Strategic Naval Location*. Folded, with handsome oover to lit the pooket. IN HARRISBURG FIFTY YEARS AGO TO-DAY [From the Telegraph, Feb. 5, IS65] Mormon to Speak The Kev. J. Milton, a Mormon, will preach in the markethouse Sunday. Will Leettire Artemus Ward will be here next Monday and Tuesday to lecture. Soldiers May Vote The Governor has signed the act allowing soldiers to vote at municipal elections in this city. ORRINE FOR DRINK HABIT TRY IT AT OUR EXPENSE We are in earnest when we ask you to give ORRINE a trial. You have nothing to risk and everything to gain, for your money will be returned if alter a trial you fail to get results from ORRINE. This offer gives the wives and mothers of those who drink to excess an opportunity to try the ORRTNE treatment. It is a very slm pl • treatment, can be given in the home without publicity or loss or time from business, and at a small price. ORRINE is prepared in two forms; No. 1, secret treatment, a powder; Oli- HINE No. 2, in pill form, for those who desire to take voluntary treat ment. Costs only $1.00.a box. Come in and talk over the matter with us. Ask for booklet. George A. Gorgas, Iti North Third street; Join. A. Mc- Curdy, Steclton, Pa.; H. F. Li-un house, Meehanicsburg, Pa.—Advertise ment. For Tight Colds For Colds that are deep seated, I hard to loosen and which have a I firm hold on the system, there is no better remedy than our Tar, Tolu and White Pine Its loosening and soothing power is soon noticed. 25c per bottle Made and guaranteed by FORNEY'S DRUG STORE 426 Market St.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers