Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, March 03, 1916, Page 8, Image 8
8 IN TIMES LIKE THESE "THE WOMAN SHOP" SHOULD BE YOUR STORE | IJSljrNo Advance in Price Here B /' " " \ I We are pleased to announce THAT THERE WOIII BE NO AD VANCE IN PRICES AT "THE WOMAN SHOP," AS WE ARE PRO TECTED FOR THE ENTIRE SPRING AND SIMMER SEASON; having seen conditions lons ago we took advantage of- every oppor tunity and WIM; CONTINUE TO OFFER YOU VALUES, that have made "THE WOMAN SHOP" FAMOUS. Coine and let your eyes feast on the beautiful SUITS, COATS. DRESSES. SEPARATE DRESS SKIRTS, WAISTS, BLOUSES and PETTICOATS that will tie all Hie rant for the Incoming .sea,son; ALSO SEE HOW "THE WOMAN SHOP" HAS PREPARED FOR B YOU. Come and see liow wo liavo prepared for THE STYIJISH YOUNG H MISS, THE CONSERVATIVE WOMAN, THE DISCRIMINATING WOMAN, THE HARD-TO-FIT WOMAN, THE STOUT WOMAN. AS I WELL AS THE WOMAN WHO FOLLOWS THE FASHIONS. Never, no never, have we seen such a beautiful of I stunning garments so early In a season. NEVER CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONS E HI f | SMBBBBBMESRHiaEiKUSBMHbM WRlUm—lUHEgffiß f Instant Relief for Sore, Tired, Tender Feet; for Aching, Swollen, Calloused Feet and Corns ''Pill!. Johnny, Pulll You're t'ontMrk: Your feet feel tired, puffed up, chafed, aching, sweaty, and they need "Tiz." "Tiz" makes feet remarkably fresh and sore-proof. "Tiz" takes the pain and burn rieht out of corns, callouses and bunions. "Tiz" is the grandest foot-gladdener the world has ever WHY BTJAME IT OX THK GUUi? j "Everybody speaks of the girl 'al- j lowing' or 'permitting' liberties." snysi a ■writer In the March Woman's Home j Companion. "I have never heard It! said that, a man allows himself or I permits himself these things. The! PAINrUL KIDNEY AND BLADDER DI. ORDERS QUICKLY RELIEVED New Remedy Dissolves Impur ities That Clog Kidneys and Bladder.—Great Success. Your kidneys WANT to do their work properly. It is not their fault if they don't. An eminent authority j: has discovered that backache, rheuma- 1 ] tic pains and other forms of kidney j trouble come from the formation of!: ; mall acid crystals that cling to the i l hering membrane of the kidneys liUe barnacles on the bottom of an old ship. You can't strain water through a clogged-up sieve. The kid neys cannot filter the Impurities and waMe matter out of the blood if the membranes are clogged with impure matter. In eases of this kind a new treat- i munt that has already shown, remark- i able results lr. a number of cases is being wideiv used. It is called Solvax. tolvax is a powerful dissolving agent i that goes straight to the CAUSE of Additional Train Service Lebanon Valley Branch -K •' ;|((- ' rn ' n leaves Ilurrisburg, at 10.00 'unking nil principal stops and arriving at Reading, 11.50 P. M. EFFKCTIVE MARCH 3, 1910. An additional train will leave Read ing 5.00 A. M., stopping at all Stations, arriving at Harrisburg at 6.55 A. M. Traill No. 40 will hereafter carry milk and express only? Philadelphia & Reading Railway Workman's Compensation Act Blanks We are prepared to ship promptly any or all of the blanks made necessary by the Workmen's Compensation Act which took effect January 1. Let us hear from you promptly as the law re quires that you should now have these blanks in your possession. The Telegraph Printing Co. Printing— Rinding—Designing—Photo Eincraving JIAJRBIBBOHG, PA. FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG $£&&& TELEGRAPH MARCH 3, 1916, known. Got a 25-ccnt box of "Tiz" at any I drug: store and end foot torture for a whole year. Never have tired, aching sweaty, smelly feet: your slioeß will ! fit fine and you'll only wish you had i tried "Tiz" sooner. Accept no substi-1 tute. blame lies always with the jrlrl. .The man. tt seems, will be either what she requires or Inspires him to bo, or what she permits him to he. "Nine out of ten men, and nearly j all women will, I think, agree with j this point of view." the trouble. It works its way into ©very fold and crcvice of the filtering membranes and dissolves the clogging matter, passing It out of the kidneys in the urine. When Solvax starts work on the kidney walls a complete change is noticed almost at once. Backaches, lumbago, rheumatic twinges and other painful symptoms disappear. The sluggish blood starts pumping vigor ously through the system and the whole being brightens up as If by magic. The kidneys, freed of ail clogging impurities, can now go to work with a vim. If you suffer from any form of kid ney complaint, go at once to H. C. Kennedy or any other reliable drug gist, and get a new patent of Solvax and see the difference. It ia a safe inexpensive treatment and always sold under a guarantee of satisfaction or money back. You are cheating your self out of a big slice of life if you don't use Solvax at once. Rescue For Hosts of Armenians by Russian Victory in the East Principal Points of Concentration of the Refugees Reached by Christian Army RY THE RELIGIOUS KA3IBLEK The average person has only a hazy jknowledge of the geography of the Caucasus and of the location of Erze rmn, where the great Russian vic j tory has been gained—a victory that may mark the turning of the tide of war and the entrance upon the final stage of Iho conflict. When the Chris tian is reminded, however, that an other name for this region that has been figuring so largely in the dis patches is Armenia, lie picks up his ; ears, for the Armenian atrocities have for generations made a deep mark up i on the religious thought of the world, and never more so than in the case j latest and worst of these. The present military development has a direct and an immediate bear ing upon the condition of the persecut ed Armenians. At present the Rus sian army is within the confines of old Armenia, but steadily breaking out I toward the South and the East and the i West. Momentous events are taking place behind the battle line, but some results are apparent. 1 ho first effect of the Russian vlc : tory will |>e greater suffering for the i Armenian Christians who are still j within Turkish power. The news that the Turks massacred the Armenians at Erzerum ere they evacuated has al ready been published. It was to be expected that this defeat would turn j the Moslem population in renewed ! savagery upon the Christians and in tensify the religious issue. Besides, the | fact is generally known that there are | largo numbers of Armenian men who I had escaped across the border of Rus jsia and are fighting with the Czar's troops. Undoubtedly thousands or tens of thousands of Armenians will be slain as the result of the fall of Erze ruin; but' relatively this is negligible alongside of the emancipation that will be procured for hundreds of thou sands. The present renewal of mas sacres are apparently the last, out rages before the deliverance of the Armenians. Next will come the relief for the Armenian women and children who have been driven across the moun tains into the desert and into the cities which are now within the pres ent or prospective zono of the Rus sian operations. Urfa, Diarbektr, Bit lis, Harpoot, Sivas, Marsovan, Mardin, Mosul and Aleppo are all centers of concentration of the deported Armen ians. Practically the.whole remnant of the Armenian race that is left in Turkey, numbering something over a half million, is concentrated in and about these cities, and all of them are at present threatened by the Rus elan forces. A Christian "Army of Deliverance" By a curious reversal of program or omenclature, the Russians have be ome an "Army of Deliverance," hich was the term applied to the FOODS THEY BUILD OR DESTROY Amazing but Rarely Suspected Truths About the Things You Eat. (Copyright. 1916, by Alfred W. McCann.) CHAPTER 27 t : pon calcium tunny of life's pro cesses depend. Calcium is one of tlio "nsli" elements removed from refined 1 food. Tliat nature aliliors (his Inler ] fcrcncc \\ Itti lier lows becomes clear ! wlicn the work performed by calcium | In tlx- living bod> is disclosed. The history of life on this earth. in ' eluding thf history of mlcro-organ | Isms, or germs as they are popularly | called, is the history of food. We have seen that the bodies of men are built frr—V the building ma i terials found in food. The hodies of ! bacteria, about which we shall have much to say, n s also built from the j building materials found In their food. Bacteria may become violently ae -1 tive or feeble to the point of exhaus -1 tion, In accordance with the ltlnd of food offered them. Man Is affected by his food in ♦ >*. same way. The blushing maiden of sixteen and the trained «.tblete of thirty are physi cally but tbsj sum-total of the food they have assimilated. The old man, normally approaching the hour of dissolution, represents all that is left of the processes of assimi lation and elimination which, even prior to birth, were carried on only by virtue of the food energies which pre sented themselves to the embryo from which bo came. The now-born babe, In all the pink freshness of Its little sleepy life, rep resents only that fragment of the I food appropriated by its bones and ! tissues during its embryonic existence. The bacteria that convert milk, I eggs, meat, fish, and other foods into j poison, represent, according to their , activity, the ease with which tliey are oblo to find the kind of food nec <v sary to their rapid growth or the difficulty placed in the way of their ; normal nutrition and reproduction. Bacteria, with a significance worthy j of noting here, depend upon the mln j eral salts and colloids precisely in ; I he same mariner as that in which the I bodies of men depend upon them. As we go along we shall encounter I many interesting, not to say fasclnat- : J ing, proofs of this statement For the present we have learned I that a certain combination of some BEST TREATMENT FOR CATARRH S. S. S. Removes the Cause Specialists have agreed that Catarrh Is an infection of the blood. Once»you get your blood cleansed of the Catarr hal poisons you will be relieved of Ca tarrh—the dripping in the throat, hawking and .spitting, sores in the nos trils, and the disagreeable breath. It was caused, in the first place, because your impoverished blood *as easily in fected. Possibly a slight old or con tact with some one who had a cold. But the point Is—don't sutfer with Ca tarrh—it is not necessary The remedv S3. S. S. discovered over fifty years ago, tented, true and tried, Is always obtain able at any drug store. It has proven its value in thousands of cases. It will do so in your c;is». (>et S. S. £). at once aiid b<-gin treatment. If yours Is a long-standing case, be sure to write tho Swift Specific Co.. Atlanta, Ga„ for free medical advice, They will tell you how this purely vegetable blood tonic '•leanses the Impurities from tho blood by literally washing It clean.—Adver tisement. Turkish troops who were expected to attack Suez. Doubtless this Egyptian expedition will have to be abandoned because of the success of the Russians j in the rear. The Turkish lines of: communication to both Bagdad and ! Suez are threatened. Most of the cities mentioned above have already been i captured, or are likely to be in the near future. In the case of Aleppo | this will not come to pass without a j tremendous battle; possibly one of the greatest of the war. Victory lor the Russians, however, means deliverance for the Armenians. Even the fixing of the world's atten tion upon these cities of concentration for the refugees is likely to alleviate somewhat the plight of the Armen ian sufferers. Avengers Pursue Turks One may easily imagine the dra matic reunions that are taking place between the Armenians accompany ing the Russians, who had escaped across the border, and their kinfolk 1 [whom they find desolate in the cities j | captured* by the Christians. Let us | hope that some great writers are ac- j J companying the Russian columns; for here is the material for the most thril ! ling kind of literature. It is estimated that there are fifty thousand Armenians bearing arms with the Russians. These men are not naturally cowards and they have the fiercest motives to nerve their j i arms. They know the land in which I j the fighting is taking place, and they [ I have harried the fleeing Turks. Hus-j ' bands are avenging wives, sons' moth j ers and fathers' daughters. Terrible is the toll that Is being I taken of the Turks by these avenging j Armenians. They are Oriental Chris- j tians and feel themselves to be minis- 1 ters of retribution. They must be a* leaven of insatlableness in the Rus- j sian army. Channels For Relief Open The recent dramatic change in the | fortunes of war brings Russian relief j to the Armenian refugees in Persia | and upper Armenia, and is opening channels to all the other cities cap- j tured. Of course, the disorganization j following military operations intensl- [ ties the need, and this is peculiarly an | hour for Armenians to remember that the national Armenian relief commit-1 tee has been organized, with Charles P. Crane as treasurer; his office being j 70 Fifth avenue, New York. If Aleppo fulls to the Russians, then Alexandretta, Its port on the Medi terranean, will likewise be taken by the allies, and full, free channels for relief supplies will be opened into all of Armenia. Meantime, despite the sanguinary > aspects of the situation, the Chris tian world must, rejoice that an end is to be put to the Armenian atroci ties by the strong hand of war. THE RELIGIOUS RAMBLER. ! twelve mineral elements Is surrendered by our food for tlie building processes of our bodies. We invite disorder and j decny when we remove from our food | one or more of these building: mate rials. All foods contain sonic of these building materials; other foods con tain all of them. Man heedlessly removes many of them from the food which he manu factures and soils to his neighbor, thereby converting such food into in adequate building materials. } et the menu card, cataloguing the building laterials supplied by break fast. dinner and supper, Is only too frequently left to accident or to the whim of an ignorant kitchen drudge or to a food factory concerned chiefly in the profit of its products. . Many foods, for instance, contain calcium in the highly organised com binations which arc acceptable to the needs of the human body. Commer cial methods of manufacture remove this calcium from their products. Absurd methods of home cooking also remove them. That such calcium loss should not bo tolerated is dis closed by a study of the functions performed in the bodv bv calcium If we kill a frog, for 'instance, and place its still pulsating heart on a slab of marble, it will be noticed that the heart will not lose a single pulsa tion for some time. Eventually of course, it will collapse and appear lifeless, but if we wish to prolong Its pulsations we need only bring it into the presence of a solution of calcium lender the influence of this com monest of earths, usually confined In til- Imagination of the people to whitewash anil mortar, that dead heart will show many manifestations f f , ■, lts P l,lsat 'ons will be re-es tablished. Calcium assists the digestive fer ments to perform their duties When food is robbed of its calcium normal digestion does not progress. This in fluence on ferments Is not confined to the digestive tract. In the Übora tory and the food, factorv also we see it at work. Rennet for Instance, | S a ferment. It is used to make curd from milk Curd Is the first step i„ the„™nu facture of cheese, in order that the rennet r..ay perform its duties In the manner expected by the chVao maker it is necessary that the cat cium natural to all normal milk he perfectly soluble. To make sure of this solubility the cheese-, „aker adds hydrochloric add to the milk Til! knows that if the calcium is thrown out of sijlution the curd n™er become cheese. ° Oxalic acid would throw the cal cium out of solution. So would ster illzatlon at the boiling point. In any mixture of mlllc so treated the fer ment rennet, thus deprived of the In fluence of calcium, refuses to operate and the cheese-maker makes no cheese. If, while in a state of health, vou should cut vour finger, the soluble calcium in your blood Would cause it to coagulate at the surface of' the wound and you would not bleed to death, as you would if it were not the Interference of the calcium at the disposal ot nature. In certain diseases where the nor mal content of calcium is no longer present In the blood, the wound re fuses to lieal. One of the common™ symptoms of anaemia, acidosis n?rv ous prostration etc., Is the refusal of even the slightest wounds to heal promptly. Surgeons, realizing the importance of this function performed bv calcium frequently attempt to introduced Into, the blood before serious opera tions in the form of calcium lactate They do this in order to prevent hem- 1 Every Member of the Family $ Enjoys the Victrola §j ■ ' JSJO one complains about things being "slow" around § P the house where there is a Victrola. It provides |z M the best music in large enough variety to please M Kg everyone, and anyone can play it. M Why be longer without a Victrola? Stop in today f| P and choose the outfit you like best from these. gjj Six Very Attractive Victrola Club Offers fj |§ YOUR CHOICE DELIVERED TODAY jS m lections of music; music; your $4 monthly $4 monthly j | $79.50 $ lO6 *v flnlshi w it.li 12 s(?loc™ c • i i. % <,• I I as*- — 1 ~ flpgi MJ ~ g g-' ™hl.; monthly. I Sft oasli; $6 monthly. ORDER BY PHONE IF YOU CAN'T CALL '© ' V:j J. H. Troup Music House 1 % Troup Building 15 S. Market Square < orrhage following the use of the knife or scalpel. No hint of the function performed by calcium is ever found on a bill of fare in a restaurant or hotel. No placard hangs on the wall in the office of the food factory cau tioning the factory manager against the toleration of any process of re finement through which calcium or any of the other mineral elements ol' prepared food are removed and lost to the human family. Yet when we diminish the proper quantity of calcium in our blood we correspondingly lower our vitality and reduce our resistance to disease. We can interfere with the presence of the food calcium necessary to the health of the body by removing it from our food by mechanical pro cesses, or by interfering with the abil ity of our organs and glands to make use of it through eating food of a kind that systematically robs Ihe blood and tissues of their normal cal cium content. We shall soon see how such misfor tunes. for they are misfortunes, In deed, are commonly brought about. Old Veteran ol N. Y.'s River Front Goes Into the Discard The police boat Patrol, for almost 25 years the terror of pirates along the river front of New York, has been ordered sold by the Police Commis sioner and will i>e replaced by a new vessel which will be the most modern police boat in the United States. When the Patrol was built in 1803, there were few vessels engaged in depredations along the waterfront which she could not overhaul. Tiate each night she would leave her wharf at the Battery and stealing up the North or East river, lights out, fre quently interrupted thieves in the act of removing parts of cargoes from freight boats to their own craft. So greatly was the Patrol feared that fre quently sentries would be posted at the Mattery and when the Patrol would leave for her nightly tour of inspection the guard would telephone to his confederates the direction taken by the vessel. But her activities were not confined to this class of work alone. The records show that she frequently met returning excursion boats upon which tights had broken out and assisted in restoring order. There are also many instances whore she braved stormy seas outside of Sandv Hook to rescue disabled pleas ure and fishing boals. The new boat will be 100 feet in length, motor driven and built on the linos of a tor pedo boat destroyer, attaining a speed of 21 miles an hour. With such a craft it will be possible to reach the most remote points on the city water front in half an hour. THIS (IS A MEAN ONE "In heaven," said the sentimental maiden, "a man is never separated from his wife." "T beg your pardon." interrupted the misogynist, "but T think you are getting mixed in your geography."— Richmond Tim«s-I>lspatcli. DO T WANT TO BE WHITE? I This is what the Rev. William C. Jason, president of I lie State College for Colored Students, Dover, Delaware, says: "Do I frant to be white? Yea and no. No, if it appears that with patience and fidelity we can in time | work out our own destiny and witness the glory of achievement under sur i tp m I p_ — . J | J nicy, Swea j | Delicious j | Tender I | Healthful | I Seediests• J SI jf| jg I unkist i 0 'if©jf ||j Order a dozen or a box t«day. Strrt this health fiM fruit at every meal. 1 H All first-data dealer] now have n supply. I I S4">ro Sunkist tissue wrappers for beauuful silverware. g | CALIFORNIA FRUIT GROWERS EXCHANGE g pj | _.. . „ , 00-oper.an-Hm-proJt I SggJ passing difficulties. Tes, if we are to be perpetually reminded that a black skin is a badge of inferiority which no excellence of character or ability can make less odious to th* majority of our fellow citizens. If a white inan Is the only man who is to be given a man's chance even in our common country, then would God wa were white."—World Outlook.