~ THE OLD RELIABLE ROYAL BAKING POWDER Absolutely Pure SfSABE FROM CREAM OF TARTAR FATE OF ARMIES NOW IN BALANCE [Continued From First Page] for the safety of tho Rumanian forces that have been operating in the Os sova region, on the western Rumanian frontier, now that the main line rail road has boon out at Craiova. Also'lt seeras virtually all of Western Wal laclila has been won by the armies of the central powers. Bulgarians Make Stand A new battle has opened on the Macedonian front, where the Bul garians and Germans who evacuated Monastir are making a stand against the pursuing Serbians and French. Paris reports the Teutonic allies mak ing: a stubborn resistance, and a heavy fog also holding up the advance. The battle line is at its nearest point to Monastir immediately north of the city of Snegovo and runs thence almost directly eastward across the country within the bend of the Cerna river. In pushing the German-Bulgarian forces back to this line the entente troops have made important captures of men and material. To-day's French statement reports the taking of 500 additional prisoners. Comparative quiet continues to pre vail on th'j Franco-Belprian front. In --don announcing nothing more impor- Dyspepsia Gone Forever The Simple, Safe, Sure Use of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets Will Bring Joy to Any Stomach Sufferer. How many quiet, afraid-to-make-a noise, unhappy homes there are due to cross, irritable, miserable, close-that kitchen-door kind of dyspepsia suffer ers. Such men and women cannot help their peevishness, for they suffer ter ribly and should be pitied. Dyspepsia, bad breath, gastritis, ca tarrh of the stomach, pains in bowels, Bervousness. heartburn. belching, bloating. ete„ come from wrongful con ditions of digestive juices. When the system exhausts its juices, when the liver, when the pancreas, the stomach become thereby unfit to fur nish the proper digestive fluids, one cannot expect this same system, with out aid. to do anything else than keep on making their improper digestive products. There is relief in Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets that means a restoration to noriral health and a building up of cor rect digestive juices. Go to your druggist to-day and ob tain a box of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tab lets. price 50 cents, or mail below cou pon for free trial. Free Trial Coupon K. A. Stuart Co.. 237 Stunrt Build ing. Marshall. Mleh., send me at once a free trial package of Stuart's Dys pepsia Tablets. Name Street MTTEFIRON increases strength of delicate, nervous, run- Bjfif T|]|] down people 200 per U ■■■ I [' 4 * ten days in ■l■l IgW many Instances. SIOO if as farge article soon to in this paper. druggist about it. Croll Keller. G. A. Gorgas always carry it in stock. AUTO STORAGE— First class, fireproof garaga, open day and night. Rate* reasonable. Auto Trans. Garage A plate without a root which 4on aot Intarfar* with taate or (peach. swm & _ P LATC^Srel^ Plate* repaired while you wait. Caai* la the laornlas, have rou teeth Biade the eaiae day. Murine DENTAL IrIHLIX 0 OFFICES, •10 MARKET STHEET Opea Kvenlaca I Bet. sth Ave. & Broadway. ( | Fireproof—Modern—Central. . 300 ROOMS WITH BATHS. || I Attili: TiMt d'Holi lid ■li lute 1 WRITE FOB ROOKI.KT. n. P. BITI-HKY. I'HOP. I WEDNESDAY EVENING, I tan* than artillery and r>atrol notlvltv. Sinking of the British hospital ship Britannic by a mine or torpedo in the Aegean sea is officially announced by London. It is understood that this i steamer was the White Star liner Britannic, a great vessel of nearly 50,- 000 tons, the largest of the White Star fleet, which has been in use by the ! British Government as a hospital ship. About fifty lives were lost in the sink ing, regarding which no details have been received. There were 1,106 sur vivors of whom twenty-eight were in jured. French Occupy Villages in Greek Neutral Zone i London, Nov. 22.—Reuter's Salonikl j correspondent telegraphing under Tues • day's date quotes the following issued i by the press bureau of the provisional 1 government: I "French detachments yesterday occu ■ pied villages in the neutral zone re ] cently established between the territory jof the Athens goverment and that of ; the provisional goverment. The royal-; i ist troops did not withdraw asserting ! that they had not received the neces sary orders from Athens. They were noti ! fled they must leave the neutral zone by j this evening. I The establishment by General Sarrail. commander of the entente forces in Macedonia, of a neutral zone along the frontier of old Greece, was reported in a press dispatch from Athens on No vember 17. MANY PAPERS MUST SUSPEND [Continued Front First l'age] I the news print manufacturers. Due to pressure from the govern- ! j ment, Canadian newspaper publishers will probably get their 191" white paper supply at 2 H cents, at the mill. ; I instead of 3 cents, which it was pro- ' posed to charge. The difference, ac- j cording to a well-known authority, i will be added to the cost of exported | news print, the bulk of which is sent i to American publishers, who must pay | the greatly increased price. On account of a lack of news print, the Daily Ledger, of Newark, N. J., has been compelled to suspend its i week-day editions, continuing the Sun ! day issue. Resumption of the daily will take place just as soon as an ade- I quate supply of white paper can be ! purchased. J. J. Clark, representative of the | Western Newspaper Union, is the au i thority for a statement made at a re cent meeting of the Bluegrass Publish ers and Printing Association that, ! within a few days previous, two news papers had canceled orders for paper, ■ saving they would have to suspend j operation until the price was reduced, iHe also predicted that news print I would reach 10 cents a pound before j the end of February. 1917. He felt j that a number of newspapers through | out the States would suspend within a ! few months because of the news print | situation. MESSAGE OF CONDOLENCE Washington ,Nov. 22.—Messages of condolence on the death of Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria - Hungary j were prepared at the Slate Depart | ment ot-day in expectation of im mediate otticial announcement from ; the American ambassador at Vienna or the Austrian charge. President Wilson will send messages both to the ; royal family and to the Austrian charge here, while Secretary Lansing ; will send messages to the charge here ■ and to the minister of foreign a'ftairs ' in Vienna. Congratulations to the new monarch will not be sent until later wiien his ascension to the throne is I officially reported. j The German embassy, basing its \ views upon an intimate knowledge of conditions in the dual monarchy, is certain that the death of Emperor | Francis Joseph and the ascension of i Charles Francis Joseph will result in renewed military acUvity of a most energetic character. Count von Bernstorff, the German I ambassador, feels that from an in ternal political viewpoint the death of Austrian emperor will not have the j slightest effect on the war. THEY WERE RUNDOWN j Hoyr often we hear it said of a man or woman that "they were rundown in health" which accountsfortheir present sickness. For that reason it is impor tant that when you find you tire easily, 1 when your nerves are troublesome or your work is irksome, you should strengthen your system immediately with the blood-enriching, tissue-build ing food in Scott's Emulsion which contains pure Norwegian cod liver , oil and is free from alcohol. Seott a Bowce. Blootnflekl. N. J. 16-2S Severe Bronchial Cold Yields To Delicious Vinol Philadelphia. Pa.—"Last Fall I was troubled with a very severe bronchial cold, headaches, backache, and sick ' to my stomach. I was so bad I be j came alarmed and tried several medi cines, also a doctor, but did not get any relief. A friend asked me to try I Vlnol and it brought the relief which 1 craved, so now I am enjoying per fect health." —Jack C. Singleton. We guarantee Vlnol, which contains beef and cod liver peptones, iron and manganese peptonates and glycero phosphates. for chronic coughs, colds and bronchitis. George A. Gorgas, Druggist; Ken ! nedy's Medicine Store. 321 Market street; C. F. Kramer, Third and Broad streets; Kltzmlller's • Pharmacy, 1325 Derry street. Harrlsburg. Also at the leading drug stores la all Pennsylvania towns. FOUST WARNS OF FOOD SITUATION Commissioner Says Prospects Can Be Verified by Use of Mathematics Holes of loud wli Dairy and FooJ Commlss lone r JamcsFoust Is com mencing to hear from the folks about his proposed em bargo on foodstuffs for export. Tho com missioner suggested that in order to pre vent further ad vances in the prices of Important ar- ilch nro now taking ship for Europe in enormous quan tities the government inaugurate steps to forbid their export except in cer tain amounts ami at stated times. "My idea was based upon a study of re ports," said the commissioner to-day. "I have been examining into the quan tity of food in storage in Pennsylva nia to-day and we have a pretty fair line on what we can get. We lia\e 5,000.000 people in the Ktystone State and if the food keeps on going out we are going to be short this winter. It is not too much to say that in sixty days we will be feeling the plncli. We have taken pains to safeguard our food's purity and now it strikes me that we have to act to avoid living on a limited supply. My reports show that there have been big reductions in stocks of canned and prepared foods. Europe is taking quantities which are hard to realize and right here in a part of Pennsylvania famous for its product iveness we are paying prices which if anyone would have predicted them a few years ago he would have been hooted. The problem is one which i'alls for speedy action to safeguard the supply. Figures will show what is going on and demonstrate what is go ing to happen." Prmul of State Fund.—Officials of the State Workmen's Insurance Fund are rather chesty to-day over the bouqets thrown at the State Insurance Fund at the industrial welfare con ference. Representative James H. Maurer said in his speech that it had not fallen down once and praised its methods of handling compensation claims. Mr. Dotrieh Here,—A. Nevin Detrich. of Chambersburg, former chairman of the Washington party state committee, was at the Capitol yesterday and called upon the Attorney General and other officials. Attending Conference.— Among those attending the welfare conference is Roger Dever, Wilkes-Barre lawyer and one of the attorneys for the mine workers. ■ Heading's Big I*ayment. —The Phila delphia and Heading Railway yester day afternoon paid the State Treasury I $691,000 as State tax. Senator Elect Here. —Senator-elect T. L. Eyre, of West Chester, was among visitors at the Capitol. 1-1 inn Spent Little. —William Flinn, E. D. Smith, E. M. Rine and J. Van Busklrk, Republican electors, to-day tiled statements that they spent less than SSO in the recent campaign. John J. Shigo, Democratic elector, certified to spending SIOO and William Repp, Prohibition candidate for Auditor General, contributed $125 to his party's war chest. F. L. Morton, Pro hibition candidate for Congress-at- Large. did not spend anything. Oliver McKnight, Single Tax candidate for Congress-at-Large, received S6O in contributions and paid it to the State committee of his party. Death Warrants. Death warrants were signed by the Governor to-day as follows: John Nelson, Wyoming; onas Brobst, Lehigh, week of January 8; Patrick Callery, Northampton, January 15; Henry Ward Mottern, Ernest Haines, Jefferson, January 22. Appointments To-day. Governor Brumbaugh to-day appointed John Jordan alderman of the 2nd ward, Pittston, and Cornelius Kunkle, Hazle ton, member of the board of trustees of the Hazleton State Hospital. Jus tices of the peace were named as fol lows: Furman T. Fov, Jenkintown; Frank B. Wentworth, Newtown; Geo. C. McClellan, East Bethlehem; Stan ley W. Fenner, Ashley. Xew Railway. The charter of the Denver and Ephrata Railway was ap proved to-day. The road will be 4.7 miles long and the company's capital is $130,000. H. S. Dissler, Denver, is president. All Are Welcome. Attorney Gen eral Brown to-day announced that all persons interested in prevention of stream pollution could attend the con ference on ways and means to keep the streams pure to be held in the hall of the House of Representatives next Wednesday afternoon. The De partments of Health. Fisheries, Water Supply. Public Service and others will co-operate and men interested in manufacturing, sportsmen, farmers e.nd others will be asked to present views. Capitol Visitors. Among visitors to the Capitol were Senator J. F. Graff. Armstrong: Representatives Cox and Walter and Ex-Senator J. T. Murphy. Reappointed. Samuel D. Town send. of Hughesville, was to-day re appointed a trustee of the State Hos pital at Danville. Mr. Relff Seriously Hurt. William Reiff. of the State Department, was seriously hurt yesterday by falling into an unprotected eellarway in Mar ket street. To-day he was reported as suffering very much. Dnupliin Districts Paid. Among the Dauphin county districts sent checks for school appropriations yes terday were Hummelstown which re ceived $2,030.03; Jackson township, (1,401.54; Londonderry township, SI.SS6.S2; Lykens borough, $3,170.99; Lykens township. $1,587.21. O'N'eil in West. lnsurance Com missioners O'Xeil left last night for Pittsburgh where he will investigate matters pertaining to the Pension Mut ual Life Insurance Company's matters. IjCßislator Here.—Representative M. B. Rich, of Clinton county, was here to-day. Kaiser Slaps Those Who Denounce Von Hollweg Berlin, Nov. 22.—Emperor William has declared publicly his support of Chancellor von Bethmann - Hollweg against attacks upon him by his op ponents at home. Prominent persons in Karlsruhe and vicinity having recently sent the chan cellor a letter condemning the cam paign of his opponents against him and the present methods of conduct ing the war and having sent a copy of this document to the emperor, the latter replied that he observed with lively satisfaction this demonstration from Karlsruhe. SUNDAY MOVIES ILLEGAL, Albany, N. Y„ Nov. 22.—Sunday mov ing picture performances are illegal, the Appellate division of the Supreme Court ruled to-day. The decision was handed down in the case of the proprietor of a motion picture house in this city who was arrested for keeping his play house open on Sunday in violation of the law. _ tr sjßa HARRIBBURG TELEGRAPH S7ZZZ7WMWS SCHWAB TELLS OF HIS PLANS Bethlehem Steel After War Will Go After Commer cial Supremacy Baltimore, Md„ Nov. 22. "At the present time 5.500 men are employed at Sparrows Point; our plans contem plate the ultimate employment there of from 15,000 to 20,000 men, with an annual payroll Jn Baltimore of some 20,000,000. "Our progrnn calls for an expendi ture hero in plant and equipment of about $50,000,000. We will have an annual capacity here of about 1,250,- 000 tons of steel; and we will pay out In freight rates to transportation com panies entering: Baltimore some $20,- 000,000 a year," declared Charles M. Schwab, chairman of the board of di rectors of the Bethlehem Steel Com pany. last night at the Belvedere ho tel at the conclusion of a most elabor ate banquet, a banquet of welcome by Baltimore, arid in the presence of i 6 t 111 ost distinguished gathering which has, perhaps, ever assembled in Baltimore. These ambitious plans for Baltimore brought forth a round of applause by those business men upon whose ears they fell, the men who make the wheels of Baltimore go around,and thunderous and sirene was the applause, for Baltimore was real izing the dream of a lifetime, the in dustrial development which belongs to the city by right of location, by nat ural advantages and shipping facili- Ues. "These are but parts of a much larger program covering the devel opment of the Bethlehem Steel Cor poration as a whole," continued Mr. Schwab. Our work at Baltimore will be In building ships and producing the heavier grades of steel products. We have another large program of im provement under way at Harrisburg, and an even more extensive program under way at Bethlehem. "Our facilitias here, when com pleted, will embrace four new blast furnaces, with the appropriate power, ore handling equipment and other auxiliaries: four plate mills, equipped with every modern improvement to manufacture complete lines of com mercial steel products; three modern merchant bar mills; 2-1 tinplate and sheet mills; one wire rod mill and suffi cient open hearth and Bessemer, blooming, slabbing and toughing mills to supply the needs of all the forego ing. To Erect Lnrpe Drydock In addition, we shall develop suffi cient byyiroduct coke oven capacity to supply all coke requirements for the entire plant: we shall make substantial extensions to our shipbuilding facili ties, including the building of a new drydock as large as any on the Atlan tic coast and adequate to accommo date the largest dreadnaught. To serve this shipyard, we have now already started to dredge a 35-foot channel to connect our plant with the main chan nel in Chesapeake Bay. The largest ships afloat will be able to come into or leave our enclosure. "In a word, we plan to develop at bparrows Point a steel plant as large as any plant in the United States. We plan to develop here shipbuilding facilities as extensive as any in the United States. "We shall continue to concentrate at Bethlehem our production of high grade finished steels and ordnance products. Bethlehem Is our mother town, and while we shall be loyal to Baltimore, we must never forget that it has been our success at Bethlehem which makes possible our development at Baltimore, Harrisburg and else where. 'The building and construction program for our company as a whole will Involve the expenditure of fullv $100,000,000. It constitutes. I believe, the largest single construction under taking ever entered upon by a single industrial corporation. "Bethlehem Steel activities up to now have been mainly in the produc tion of ordnance products and muni tions. But. when our plan of Improve ments is completed, the 25 component parts of Bethlehem Steel will consist of only one part ordnance-making; four parts will be shipbuilding and 20 parts the manufacture of steel for commercial purposes. Bethlehem will have ceased to be primarily an ord nance-making corporation. "When the war is over there will of necessity be a reduction in the de mand for ammunition steel, and there will be some recession in steel prices generally. But the domestic demands for steel rails, for building, and for numerous other purposes only await a more normal condition of trade to press forward for prompt satisfaction. Those domestic demands alone will absorb our steel capacity for many years. Two Colored Thieves Held For Court on Two Charges At a hearing before Justice of the Peace Stees last evening Grantville Davis and James Fisher, both colored, who, local authorities believe, are re sponsible for a series of petty thefts and holdups In the borough for the last year, were held for the action of the grand jury on charges of assault and battery and robbery. This is the second time the pair appeared before the local squire. At the hearing last evening charges against the pair were made by Basil Johnson, who alleges that tliey at tacked him In Adams street recently and took $lB from his pockets. Both prisoners acknowledged they took part in the holdijp. They were committed to jail some time ago on a charge of larceny. It is alleged the pair stole a bag of money from a meat delivery wagon of the Steelton Store Company. Detective Durnbaugh was successful In capturing them after a year's search. Steelton Snapshots Hirtli Announcement. —Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey Baughman announce the birth of a daughter, Lillian Elizabeth, November 13, 1916. Takes Another Position.—Frederick Will, who resigned as superintendent of No. 2 forge at the steel plant, has accepted a position with the Trumbull Iron and Steel Company, at Warden, i Ohio. He will be chief engineer at | his new position and will leave De | cember 1. Lutheran Church Notes.—Tile senior Christian Endeavor Society of St. John's Church will hold a "trip around the world" to-morrow evening. The first automobile to take the trip will leave the church at 7 o'clock. Members of the church will be entertained at the home of Mrs. James Dayhoff, 33 South Third street, to-morrow evening. The Sunday school class taught by Mrs. H. F. Lupfer will hold a social Friday evening at the home of Miss Rose Bellows. Pine street. ' Start Tree Trimming. - A force of lijSnog SKBMIV m\\ noA puni ai|i •MJPE4O puispjuj ioj viuoxsvo I __ _ £ . Tfef ST I EPF PIANO BE USED AT MAJESTIC TMCATREBYA The Stieff Choice at the Majestic Theater Five Stieff Uprights will be on the Majestic stage during the last half of the week. Every one of them will be used in a single act by Will Ward and Girls The Genuine Test of a Genuine Piano Possibly no work is more severe on a piano than stage work. Temperature and tempera ment are the two phases to be contended with, and both of them are extremely severe. For these reasons—and TONE The Stieff Is the Majestic's Choice No matter how well a piano is constructed if tone is not there, the piano becomes only an ornament. Tone is the expressive voice of a piano, but in the Stieff, tone combines with those things which make a piano stand up well under the severest strain. Let Your Piano Be a Stieff Stieff Piano House 24 N. Second Street men from the Berryhill Nursery Com panv, Harrisburg. started tree trim ming in the borough this morning. The shade tree commission awarded the contract yesterday. The work will take several weeks. To Visit Ixxlgc.—David S. enrick, J. J. Bloor, B. F. Kelsey and Jacob Levin, of the local Moose, will attend a meeting of Keystone Lodge. No. 410, at Middletown to-night. To Declare l>ivldend. —The annual dividend will be declared by the Me chanics and Helpers-Relief Associa tion at a meeting in G. A. R. Hall to night. Officers will be elected. IN HONOR OK BIRTHDAY Friends of Mrs. M. C. Watson ten dered her a party on her birthday. Monday evening, at her home, 34 3 Lincoln street. Included in the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Naugle, Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Hoch and daugh- ( ters. Marion and Catherine, and son Leslie, Mr. and Mrs. Charles >"hood and daughters. Sarah and The'ma, Mrs. John Shugart. Mrs. Max R?ider. Miss Ruth Ickes, Mrs. Samuel Hoff man and daughter. Marle. Mrs Ed ward Hershey, Mrs. William Nlcke> ] and sons, Lester and Harold, and daughter, Dorothy. Mr. and Mrs. Harry C Watson and daughters, Ethel and T eona Mrs. Cordelia Mentzer, Mrs. Edward Mentzer and Miss Lucille Staufer, of Harrisburg. ORDINANCE MAY BE WRONG Burgess Wigfield last night after hearing evidence in the case of F. E. Gotshall and J. T. Theal, employes of the Harrisburg Railways Company, charged with violating the traffic regu lations. decided to allow traction com pany attorneys to consult wit" the borough solicitor regarding an alleged defect in the ordinance covering the offense. A fine of $25 was imposed by the burgess pending the outcome ( of the solicitor's pplnion. DE FRANK-PRAYER WEDDING Anthony De Frank. 726 South Sec ond street, and Miss Eunice Edith Prayer, were married in St. Ann s Catholic Church this afternoon at 4 o'clock. A ball will be held In Croa tion hall. Second and Washington streets to-night, in honor of the new lyweds. PLAN DEER HUNT Arrangements for holding the an nual deer hunt were made by members of the Steelton club In session at the office of Justice of the Peace Stees to day. It has been an annual custom for some time to maintain a camp near Fayetteville, but thla year the camp will be located near Pine Grove Fur nace. The party will leave Thanksgiv ing Day. About eighteen members will go. BUSINESS MEN MEET Past, present and future activities of Steelton's Business Men's Associa- I tlon were discussed at a meeting ofthe association in the Y. M. H. A. hall, North Front street, last evening, r ol lowing the business session a social hour was enjoyed. SOLDIER RETURNS HOME Corporal Henry Blaker, at the bor der since July, has returned. Blaker was a private in the Governor's Troop of Harrisburg. Later he was promot ed to be corporal. I'MIDDLETOW/1* * • I Richcreek, of Royalton, Held on Murder Charge At a hearing held yesterday after noon before Alderman Hoverter, Har risburg, Fred Richcreek. of Royalton, charged with the murder of Ephraim SUberman. a peddler, found dead on November 4, was held for the action of the grand jury. At the time of the •irrest of Richcreek he stated that he had been hunting and shot SUberman instead of a partridge. • Testimony given by Dr. H. H. NOVEMBER 22, 1916. Rhoads, upheld by Dr. H. W. George, both of Middletown, who examined the body, was that the peddler had been shot at a range of a little more 1 than six feet. Dr. Rhoads stated that the entire charge ol No. 7 shot from the pun had entered the man's head through the right eye and lodged in the back of the brain. The tragedy took place about 2 o'clock in the after noon on the towpath near the first lock below Middletown. HIGHSPIRE PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Bamberger, of New Cumberland, after spending sev eral days last week with their son, E. D. Bamberger, and family. Jury street, returned to their home Satur day. Mrs. E. S. Urich spent Thursday in Steelton with Mrs. Charles Emery, Lincoln street. Mrs. George Rhoads, of Harrisburg, and Mrs. Annie Wilder, of New Cum berland. spent Wednesday at E. D. Bamberger's, Jury street. Bruce Lehman and brother, Merl I>hman, spent Institute week in Marysville. Miss Olive Bowman spent the week end in Steelton with her cousin, Miss Sara Large. E. D. Bamberger and son. Earl Bamberger, motored to Fairfield, Adams county, last week on an ex tended hunting trip. Mrs. Bartram Shelley and daughter, Maggie Shelley, of Goldsboro, spent the week-end with Mrs. Shelley's daughter, Mrs. Albert Ehrhart, and family. Race street. The Daisy Chain of the United Brethren Church met at the home of Miss Anita Wetzel, Jury street, Mon day evening. The local W. C. T. U. will meet at the home of Miss Anna Hoch, East End. this evening. HOTEL MEN MEETING New York, Nov. 22.—More than ten thousand hotel men from nearly every state In the country are here to-day la connection with the National Hotel men's Exposition at the Grand Central Palace. The exposition is in con- Junction with the Congress of Hotel Association!! and under the combined auspices of the New York State Hotel Association and the Hotel Association of New York City. To-day is "western day"; to-morrow, "Pennsylvania day"; Friday, "New England day," and Sat urday, "New York day". BAILEY, BANKS SBIDDLE© Philadelphia JEWELRY.SILVERWAEE.PEARLS.DIAMONDS PPECIOUSSTONES\\AICHES.(I<XKS.OIMA GLASS STATIONERY THEHANDBOOK 1917 (now ready for illustrates about hundred articles suitable lor Biithdg^s. Anniversaries or Christmas Gift* , fcrwarded upon request Correspondcrcc invited COUNT FIFTY! NO RHEUMATIC PAIN Don't suffer! Instant relief follows a rubbing with "St. Jacobs Oil." Stop "dosing" rheumatism. It's pain only; not one case in fifty requires Internal treatment. Rub soothing, penetrating "St. Jacobs OU" right on the "tender spot," and by the time you say Jack Robinson—out comes the rheumatic pain and distress. "St. Jacobs Oil" conquers pain! It Is a harmless rheumatism liniment which never disappoints and doesn't burn the skin. It takes pain, soreness and stiff ness from aching Joints, muscles and bones; stops sciatica, lumbago, back ache, neuralgia and reduces swelling. Limber up! Get a small trial bottle of old-time, honest "St. Jacobs Oil" from any drug store, and In a moment you'll be free from pains, aches and stiffness. Don't suffer! Rub rheuma tism away.—Advertisement. Farmers Blame Living Cost on Middle Man Washington, D. C., Nov. 22.—The National Grange has named a commit tee to prepare a brief freeing the farmer of blame for the high cost of living. The commitee, appointed after a discussion of charges that farmers are growing rich at the expense of the consumer, was directed to set forth that the farmer's own purchases cost twice as much as a few years ago and that profits on farm products have re mained nearly at a standstill. Two-dollar wheat, speakers declared, will not enrich any farmer as long as the cost of labor and machinery con tinues to rise. Distribution methods In a large measure will be held respon sible by the committee for the high cost of food to the consumer. 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers