6 |EAST END BANK] S I H Our Christmas Savings | jj Society will close Satur- | H day noon, January 15. | I All persons wishing to | H join must do so by that t 1 time. 1 :: i ♦♦ r tt II 111 II ■II,, I s 1 113 th and Howard Streets I Hr xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxixxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxtxxxxxxtxxxxxxxxxxxx HASN'T LOST A GAME IN TEX YEARS Ia the "Interesting People" depart ment of the November AMERICAN MAGA ZINE appears an interesting sketch of Gilmour Dobie, a football coach who has never been defeated. In the fol lowing extract Mr. Dobie comments on football players: " 'A football player, above everything else, wants to be normal during the days of practice. Let him have good, wholesome, home-cooked food and his own home bed. Let him be with his own family, if he can be, and then you will have him in the best training quarters on earth. Let him live in the environment he is accustomed to. He is better with his mother than with a trainer and. in fact, his mother is the best trainer in the world. If he is ac customed to pie and likes pie and pie agrees with him, let him eat pie. And that also goes for pork. If a player is accustomed to smoke a pipe of tobacco between the dinner hour and the study hoar, let him smoke. Whisky? No. DRINK HABIT RELIABLE HOME TREATMENT 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 after 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 ORRINE treatment. It is a very simple treatment, can be given in the home without publicity or loss of time from business. Can be given secretly without pa tient's knowledge. ORRINE Is prepared in two forms: No. 1, secret treatment, a powder; ORRINE No. 2, in pill form, for those who desire to take voluntary treatment Costs only SI.OO a box. Ask for booklet. Geo. A. Gorgas, 16 N. Third St. and P. R. R. Station, Harrlsburg; John A. McCurdy, Steelton; H. F. Brunhouse, Mechanicsburg. CHOKE THE SNEEZE, PLEASE OR YOU WILL SPREAD GRIP! GRIP. I'NKI'MOMA, COVGHS. COI.DS, SORE THROAT AM) IM'I.I EV/.A AOAIX EPIDEMIC IX THIS VICINITY If when you come downtown to-day vou bear someone cough or sneeze look out for him. He probably has the grip. The best way to avoid contracting it vourself or to treat the disease if you do contract it is to follow a few simple rules of health as outlined by the Health Boards ami get from your drug gist a large bottle of Oxidaze (con taining ninety tablets) and every two hours nllow one of the tablets to slow ly melt in your mouth so that its pow erful healing juices, mixing with tlie saliva, will reach and heal the inflamed membranes, clear the throat of all langevous germ life, loosen a dry, hoarse or tight cough and by stopping the formation of phlegm in the throat and bronchial tubes quickly end the persistent "hang on." loose cough. This prescription is widely used in New England, for breaking up severe coughs and colds, catarrh, bronchitis, and therebv preventing Grip, Pneu monia or other serious and permanent lung trouble and as the tablets are pleasant and easy to take, are not at all expensive, contain no harmful or habit-forming drugs, and as G. A. Gor gas Drug Company and other leading Bringing Up father <<}) # $> # # # By McManus NOORE LI W O F°L K J CMll IN^DIrVTt s *' TT' PROMISE-1 ' >Jj f - - WITHIN AN r- bWANS AND I, ) > ———,* ' I 1 /T\ && MOORED A^N' RQw # OUt>T WANT ij I HOOfV. THE TIME JUiT y W •• f® I HETHOU4HT , | TO TAKE A Klftb*// I > r —— FLEW &-f - / '; \| V / HE M\<3HT WANT THURSDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JANUARY 13, 1916. Whisky is merely an appendix. .It can't possibly do any good and, besides, college boys, as a rule, are not accus tomed to whisky. I "'I have figured out and proved to my own satisfaction,' he continued, 'that if II can get the mothers tc look after my ' players, just as they have looked after | them from the days they were born. I i shall never need to worry about the physical condition of the team. But, I mind you, a perfect physical condition of the body, without the proper condi tion of the mind, renders the perfect condition of the body practically use less. " 'I want my players during the prac tice days to be good, healthy, normal American boys, but on the day of the game they must be something different. On the day of the game they must look upon the college as a patriot looks upon the flag during the period of his nation's peril. The college must stand for something worth while, and on the day of the game it must stand for the most precious thing in the world.' " RULES FOR FIGHTING' Grip and Pneumonia Avoid crowds, keep away from | ] people who cough and sneeze, i Don't ride in street cars when you have only a short distance to go— , walk. Sleep with windows open and breathe deeply. Avoid mouth breath- I , ing, avoid crowded theaters and . I movies, keep throat antiseptic with Oxidaze. IF YOU GET THE GRIP 1 Cover your face when coughing or ' • sneezing and don't expectorate in I ; public. Allow an Oxidaze tablet to dis- j '■ solve in mouth every hour or so. ( 1 druggists everywhere sell them on a , positive guarantee that they will stop k cough or the grip or money bac-k, no one who has a cough or cold or the : grip can lose by giving them a fair trial. Be sure to insist 011 Oxidaze and take nothing In its place. A single package taken now may easilv save ■ many dollars in doctors' bills in future THE CHIEF OAI'SE OF HUMAN TROUBLE Things wuzn't goin' right a-tall. An' I wuz feelln' blue, Although I didn't owe a cent, An' there wuz work to do; The home wuz jest the same old home, The wife an' kids wuz well. The stock wuz lookin' fat and slick And there wuz crops to sell. But ylt 1 wuzn't satisfied, Ner nothin' I could see, Er feel, er hear, er talk about Seemed like it used to be. I didn't like the things I et, My liver felt like clay, An' apple-pie might jest "as well Have been filled in with hay. Ef there wuz sunshine 011 the flowers An' bees wuz on the buzz, An' birds wuz singin' in the trees, I didn't know the.v wuz. Ef I had friends, they didn't seem To be like friends no more. An' I quit, goin' down to loaf At Grime's grocery store. Doc Simpson said he couldn't tell What ailed me, an' I tried So many things, the wonder is I hadn't up an' died; I ill Susan, she's my wife, one day, She said she couldn't see What ailed me everywhere like that Unless it must be me. That set me thinkin', an', by heck, I say it now with shame, 'Twuz Jest myself, my derned old self An' nothin' else to blame. —W. J. LAMPTO.V, In The Christian Herald. TRYING TO SAVE BABIES -J N I BBp MISS JULIA C. T,ATHROP No person in the United States Is more Interested in the care of babies than is Miss Lathrop, the chief of the Children s Bureau in Washington. Ever since she lias held her place she has been at work on the subject' and United'BUtel" a,,tllo, ">' " ve ' r the CUTLER SPEAKER AT BIG MEETING Tragic Sufferings of Thousands Will Be Subject of Sunday Talk j PLAN GREAT GATHERING i j Personal Letter of Appeal : Issued; People Coming From Surrounding Towns | Wit mm. HP* COLONEL IIARRT CUTLER The tragic story of the sufferings of the hundreds of thousands of Jews in the zones of the great world war will be vividly brought home to Jewish people of Harrlsburg and vicinity next Sunday afternoon, when Colonel Harry Cutler, of Providence, R. 1., addresses the big mass meeting to be held for the benefit of the Jewish war relief. The meeting, which will be unique of its kind in the history of Harris burg. will begin at 2.30 o'clock. Such a turnout of Jews of this city and sur rounding towns as has never been wit nessed will be the result. In all America none Is better quali fied to tell the story than Colonel Cut ler. A prominent businessman, presi dent of the National Retail Jewelers' Association, former State legislator, a colonel in the Rhode Island National Guard and a member of the Governor's I staff, ho is a typical example of the self-made Jew. His eloqsience as a speaker before the immigration com mittee of Congress several years ago won him nation-wide notice. Colonel Cutler, President Judge Kunkel and State Senator Heidleman will be among the speakers at Sun day's great meeting. Ail overflow session is confidently expected, al though the committee of arrangements has issued this personal appeal by let ter to every Jewish man. woman and child in the city and vicinity: "Dear Krienas: in the name of humanity we ask you to attend the mass meeting for the benefit of the Jewish War Relief Committee next Sunday afternoon at 2.30 o'clock in Technical high school. "This meeting is to follow the lead of the Carnegie Hall ineeting which was held in New York, December 21, 1915. when the whole world witnessed a remarkable demonstration of the working of the Jewish heart. What has been so well begun in New York must and will be started and tarried to a successful conclusion In every city and town where there are Jews. These i mass meetings are a campaign of the | Jews of the United States —rich and : poor—in the north, east, south and I west. Every place where there is a Jewish population of any kind mass meetings are being held. Each man. woman and child must bear their part. "Let the Jews of Harrisburg and vicinity—male and female—make it a point to attend this most important mass meeting. "Speakers have been secured for this j meeting among whom are President. Judge George Kunkel and State Sen ator Edward E. Beidleman, of this | city. The leading address, however, i will be delivered by Colonel Harry Cut- I ler. of Providence, R. T. He has been [assigned to Harrisburg's mass meeting I by the American Jewish AVar Relief [Commitee. He will tell such a story I of the true conditions abroad In a way that will no doubt arouse in every Jew the desire to act and help put Harrls burg on the honor roll of cities which. I recognizing their duty, perform it even jto the extent of making sacrifices, i Come, bring your friends, and let us all do what will give us just cause to be proud of Harrisburg Jewry In its important part in this great move ment. We want to see Technical high school filled to overflowing. "DAVID KAUFMAN, "Chairman of Committee." ISLAM'S WESTERNMOST OUT POST Tn Tangier Is a Protestant church, standing guard over the great market i place, and a Spanish Cathedral where the Bishop of Fessea presides. Span ish priests have pushed their way to all parts of the country. But the mosque-towers of Islam, watch-towers i they are in reality, still stand sentinel like. overlooking every village and | town. Many a patch ends at a little ! dazzling white shrine of some saint here not ulnar hccauar prlcea «rr Innrr. but hccanae qualHlra are 0 Wonderful Economies in Our 5 Big January Sales Now at Their Very Height A i' 1 V \ Embroidery Muslin Underwear Odd Lots Sale Sale C nmbrlc Druueri with ruffle and hfiimtHchlnKi Male Prlre . . 1«V 10c Curtain Scrlnn; Sale Price. One lot of \alnaook KHrcsj Sale Cambric Drawer* with trim- 10c r. , |r"*Frtrr" re embroM ''J& 12M.C brat quality Pcrcalca! Sale Onr lot of Cambric and swl«i Cambric and \aiaaook Dranera. I'rtcc Hv F.dicroi Sale PHrr Be extra line quality with lace 12V4 Flgrnrrd (repeal Sale Trier. and embroidery trlmmlngm Sale fle One lot of Convent F.d*eai Sale PHce 2S<- I#r < „ r de«l Serpentine Crepe. Price 5c Skirt, Circular, Knickerbocker Salr Prler 10c One lot or Cambric 10-Inch hrmatiteh?f|" TO l e i** Safe "prirr* 3fi-laeh Colorrd Silk Ponaccr SklrtlaK Ed ( n. Sale Prlre. 8c S!Be <_££" " d "'"endea, Sale Plain tlf(ht-flttluK Coraet Covera, Price 2,ic One lot of IS-tnch Skirting high and low necki Sale Price, 10c Dreaa GlnKhniiiN; Sale Price, I'idKen; Sale Price 12Hc Or «c On P. In* «r rn.v.t « n H nii..d pt ?} n ben L"\ l<r !\ e ? rnlfle Coraet aftc Belgian Suiting*; Sale Price. One lot or ( on\ent and Blind Covera; Sale Price 12He 7%e Kalmook Edgcii Sale Prlcea, 1.0 l of I,arc and Embroidery 10c and 13 Vic Trimmed Coraet Coverat Sale ITc Figured Kimono Crepe! Sale 10c and u'/»e Price .. IBe Price Sc One lot or Rahy Match Set Edgrii l-o« or Kxtra Fine Coraet Covera, JSe Novelty and Fancy Waali Snlr Prlcea. Sc. 10c and ISVic »" d embroidery trimmedi Fabrlea: Sale Price 8c One lot of Galloona and Galloon Special lot of lateat Hmbroidery Waali Sllkn at Sncclal Prlcea. IlcadlnK.i Sale Price*. *^ ce Trimmed Coraet 15c 30-Inch Bleached Shaker llto , * r,c «' - 5c Flannelai Sale Price 10c lOc and '-'*<• Children a bowaai Sale Price, 25c Boc Teddy Rear I rib Rlnnkelai One lot or Swlaa 18-Inch Flounc- «ownai Sale Male Price 2.V lag; Sale Price 19c - " , '' ' : 30c Imitation French Flannela; »'Ot or Special Uonm at Special Sale Price 12V 2 e Oae lot or Swlaa 27-Inch Flounc- Sale Prlcea. »1.50 l.ndlea' Silk ilata 48c li>K! sale Price 25c Lot or Long and Short Sklrta. #I.OO I.adlea' Silk Velvet, Velour One lot „r r._ h -.„ r„,ae» Cover L" C .° f/Vi "» b roldery trimmed; nnd French Felt Hat* ... 23c FmhiolrteHll!! sile PH., IBe s .. ■ 1 - 5c • 10 ° Chlldrea'a Trimmed lla'x: Enbrolderleil Sale I rice . . lot Special lot of I.adlea Km broidery Sale Price !25e One lot of Coraet Cover 1 rimmed Sklrta at Special 50c Chlldren'N Skating Ilata and Ktnbrolderlea; Sale Price, 10c r f?, ' , __ . , Conlnroy Ilata: Sale Price. 2!Sc C omblnatlon Sulta, lateat cuta, 50c. 75c aind SI.OO Trlmmlnga: One lot of Swlaa Coraet Cover neweat embroidery nnd lace Sale Price 100 Kmbrolderlea; Sale Price .. 25c trimmed, extra value at Special 25c nnd 30c Trim in In gut Sale One lot of Wide Cotton Clnny lad lea* hlnr <<,»•«■ _« #l . ? 1 * ■ ...... w-i- p.u. ™ 7, , or with aide 25c Drawnwork Sliamat Sale i.aceai sale I riee »e garter*. all alxcai Sale Price. Price 12y 2 e One lot of Cotton Torehon l.acenj . SOc Stamped Heady made Pillow Sale Price 3c „ . SaM «* r J r Sale Caaeat Snle Price, pnlr ... I!>e , rfß , • *;; to 25c 25<* Stamped Dreaaer Searfat One lot of Cotton Torclion l.aceat Children* Drawera, plain and Sale Price 10c Sale Price 5c hematltched, embroidery and 15c and 25c Stamped ' caahlon One lot or Val. lace., Sale Price. 10c IB?- . rI " C / S " 3c, 3 yard. r«r .. ! Be « One lot or Val. I.aceai Sale Price. Iln and knitted tabrlra; Sale 50c Stamped Rcadymadc Chll -5c s..„^,„T" l 10<-. 15c and 2Bc dren'a Gowaa: Sale Price. 25c Sticker**, Rralda. all color., «-yd. M " n ' PPU ÜB, " U ' rr, ": r pleceai plain trlmmln.a. Sale Price, 25c ym.de Che£ V ' 1 * *- ' « Household Goods Sale * White Cotton Fabric 10c Pillow Caaea; Sale Price. 8c W V " V " 12Pillow Caaeas Sale Price, 15c Pillow Caaeat Sale Price, C M | r\ 12 Vie OdlC 20c Pillow Caaeas Sale Price, 15c 23c Pillow Caaeas Sale Price. 18c RMdymade ' "»<"> Sa.c Price, Prlcea. 5V4c • l»c 20c aad 33c 10-4 and »-4 Sheet- 10c Kngllah l.ongcloth; Sale Price, , intci Sale Price 25c ' (Special discount on above In 12- 20c Wamantta 45-lnch Pillow c yard prlcea.) Tuhlnss Sale Price 10c 12',ic Rnarllali I.onKclothi Snle 25c \\ amautta 42-Inch Pillow BH „ ... 10c India I.loons Sale Price ... 7c 'l'liblnKt Sale Price 17c 30-lach I'nbleachcd Muallns Spe- 18c lOnßllali I.onKclotlis Sale Price. )u< " Hatlne Cloths Sale Price .. 10c clal Snle Prlcea .. sc. 0c and 8c ..... 30-Inch Rleachcd Mualln, aprclal / * c 12V4c I.adlea' I nderwenr Crepes valueas Sale Prlcea, oc. 7c and 8c lUc Kn||llah 1.0n K cluth; Sale Price, Sale Price Sc 15c I.onad.le Cambrics Sale Price, 1K 10c ,8c 18c I.adlea' Underwear, Crepes Sale 3Hc Heavy MercerUcd Oamaaks 2Bc Kndlah I.onKclothi Sal. Price, Price I'>«Ac Sale Price 25c . ' 71 Hemmed Merceiiaed \apklnas 8C 25c 30-Inch Fancy White (ioodas Sale Prlcea ...... sc, 7c and l(c (Special dlaconnt on aliove In Sole Price 15e Cotton Towel at Sale Price ... 3c . ... . Huck Towelat Sale Prlcea. pietea or \t yarda.l 3D,- 30-Inch White Gabardines Sale „ sc. 7c. 10c and 12»/ac 10c French Kalaaooks Sale Price, 8c Price 19». Bleached Tarklah Towelat Sale Prlcea, 10c, 12V.C, I7c and 25c 12'/4c I'rench .Valaaooks Sale Price, 25c 3<-lncli Shower Vollrat Snle Bleached Cotton Craahea; Sale lOc Price 15c H«Vy" Cotton Craahs Sale Price, ,Sc French Nalnaook; Sale Price, s*c N'ovelty White Gooda; Sale 5c 12Y 2 c Price 25c l.lnen Craahea. Sale y>V a c IHo French N'aluaook; Sale Price, 311 c 36-Inch White l.lnen Suiting. Glaaa Toweling; Sale Price .. 8c 15c Sale Price 25c SOUTTER'S I New Ready=to=wear| 1 cto2scDepartmentStore ?! in f r L, a ... WHERE EVERY DAY IS BARGAIN DAY. "!'"i VbCc , r.n7r„ck^ ,, "» l , o b r I .' oi r af I ■ Pi A g> .1 Lowcr-than-Elsewhere 215 Market St. Upp. Courthouse , where the passerby pauses a moment to do reverence; and every town of any size holds scores of these shrines. All Morocco still repeats its salat five times a day, facing the east and the sacred city. Most of its people still pause now and then in the day's work to say du'a or voluntary prayer. Mosques are still being reared, and saints' shrines multiply—but the trenches of Christianity are there, val iantly held by a handful of volun teers. Trench warfare is slow, but the Cross is moving forward.—THE CHRIS TIAN - HERALD. KILLING MOSQUITOES IX BAGDAD A 'round-the-world electrical engi neer tells this story: "We ran up to Bagdad to put over a little deal with the pasha, a former government official who had been prom inent in the days of Abdul Hamid. His palace was infested with mosqui toes and we had to plan to give him relief. He lived In the usual Moorish house with high walls, flat roof with parapets, few windows and open court. The old pasha looked exactly as If he had just stepped out of a Broadway musical comedy with his shining silk robes, turban and red shoes with upturned toes. "In the palace garden was a stream with a fall of about ten feet. It would develop about one-fourth horsepower. We built a water mill, equipped it with a dynamo, wired the palace and started up some gigantic electric fans. These fans cooled the air and also blew through the rooms a narcotic suffici ently powerful to cause the mosquitoes to fall in a coma. All that remained was for the servants to go around and sweep them up In piles to be destroyed. G. T. HADLET in World Outlook. WOMAN AND THE COMING MAN It is not because she lacks courage that the woman of to-day lends her strength toward establishing peace. It is because her vision has widened. She sees in works of construction, not destruction, the glory she longs to have her husband and her sons win. The anger, jealousy, cruelty, engendered by war, the ruthless sacrifice of noble life, the suffering of little children and the grief and anxiety of her sisters, fill with regret and horror the heart of every woman who has aught of the spirit of Christ, the Prince of Peace. To her. manly combat consists in overcoming evils that beset humanity and the human heart. She would have the knights of her home battle fo the finish against the spirit of greed, 'the love of lucre, the lust for power to accomplish ignoble ends. Living up to this vision, the woman of to-day will teach the coming man to be pure in heart, high in motive, lifted above race prejudices, positive in beliefs, and courageous enough to stand by them without wincing at worldly attack. With such character istics the men of to-morrow will not lack courage to defend their country against any enemy, moral or physical; but they will be a new race of men, men glorying in peace rather than war. Their armor will be THE CHRISTIAN HKBAI.D.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers