For Ckrotmu Ripe, Juicy, Sunklat Orange*. Buy m box tolaitallvreek. Serva tham every day. Phone your dealer now. Sunkist Uniformly Good Oranges California Fruit Grow an Exchange LA 64 PROF. SHAMBAUGH IS GIVEN PRAISE j Slate Bulletin Quotes What He Says About the Rural Teacher's Home The State Board of Education has incorporated In a bulletin extracts from the report of County School Su perintendent T. C. Shambaugh. The board gives special attention to Ilia recommendations for proper homes for teachers in rural districts. The extracts say: "We have experienced considerable difficulty in filling some schools this year because of the fact that the teachers were unable to get suitable boarding places near the school. The situation should be made the subject of thought on the part of directors during the coming year. Every rural teacher should board in the commun ity and become identified with the ■work of the community. Many teachers are obliged to live under con ditions which preclude them from doing the best work. Every teacher should be provided with a warm room apart from the confusion of the com mon living room. The lack of a boarding place together with the low salaries Is responsible for the exodus of many of our best teachers from the rural schools Into the town where living conditions are more congenial. In many cases teachers in rural schokls are obliged to board in some nearby town, coming to the commun ity in the morning and leaving in the evening. Thus it often happens that the influence of a good teacher is lost to the community." , Superintendent Shambaugh recog nizes, too, that "A natural corollary of good schools is good roads. The suc cessful teacher's interest will lie far beyond the four walls of the school room. Any movement that will make ,#e community better and happier de mands the earnest teacher's support. Wc have learned that the isolation of a community increased directly as the roads are poor. If we lay aside the usual dry-as-dust textbooks in civics and give the pupils some real live les sons in the way of creating a better citizenship we shall speedily discover that this topic will afford unlimited opportunities in this direction. The subject can be most successfully cor related with language, arithmetic, geography and history. Appoint a road patrol who shall report on the condition of the roads, teach them to make small models of the different kinds of roads and have a cross sec tion to show the construction of the same. Arithmetic problems can bo based on the cost of transportation on good roads as compared with the same on poor roads." PLAY POLO IX MEXICO Field Headquarters Punitive Expe dition, Mexico, Dec. 17 (By Army Radio to Columbus, N. M.) —A polo tournament, said to be the first ever played in Mexico, ended here to-day when the division headquarters team won ffrom the Thirteenth cavalry, 7 Koals to SJ/4. Those on the winning team were: Lieutenant Martin C. Sl'.allenberger; James L. Collins, cap tain of the team: George S. Patton and R. E. Anderson. Each of the four will receive a silver trophy cup. Teams that played in the tourna ment represented the Seventh, Tenth, Eleventh and Thirteenth cavalry regi ments and the division headquarters team. —————————— Overworked, His Nerves Gave Way Too Busy Mnking Money to Take Care of His Health, He Says INVIGORATED BY TAXT.AC "We were so busy out at the works that we were working double shifts," says Walter Reid, an expert steel maker, of Steelton, Pa., "and I was so busy making money that I didn't take care of my health and first thing I knew I was on the verge of a corn plate nervous breakdown." "I didn't get enough rest to let my body build itself up after the tre mendous strain and I got so that I couldn't sleep more than an hour or two a night and I had to force myself to keep up the pace." "My appetite all went to pot and I ' igan to feel fagged out, always tired and miserable: I was melancholy and didn't feel that life was worth living. "Then I read about Tanlac in the papers and I saw where so many llar rlsburg folks were praising it so I got a bottle and started in on it." "Say, it put me on my feet again In just about two shakes of a lamb's tail. Fixed me right up so that I feel as good as I ever felt in my life. I got back on the job quick and before very long I'll be driving away double shift again." Tanlac, the famous reconstructive lonic is now being specially Introduc ed here at Gorgas* Drug Store where the Tanlac man is meeting inquiries and explaining the merits of this master medicine. "CELLO"—Metal Hot Water Bottles GORGAS 16 N. Third St. I'eiuiH, Station MONDAY EVENING, PERRY INSTITUTE STARTS THIS WEEK Big Plans Made by the State Department of Agriculture For Sessions The annual series of Farmers' In stitutes to be held In Perry county un der the auspices of the State Depart ment of Agriculture will be held at I.*tndisburg on December 20 and 21. and at Blain on December 22 and 23. These meetings are held for the spe cial benefit of the farmers and their families and the addresses and in struction are confined strictly to ad vanced agricultural lines. The speak ers are practical farmers who have made a success of the lines on which they spealc and farmers are urged to attend these meetings and discuss their farm problems with ttie State experts who arc always willing to help with the smallest detail to advance the possibilities of the men and women on the farm. County Chairman C. M. Bower, of Blain, has arranged attractive pro grams for the meetings at and Blain. and subjects vital to the agricultural interests of Perry county will be discussed by the State experts who have been assigned. Youth of Wealthy Family Taken to Ellis Island When His Father Is Stricken New York. Dee. 18. Cortes Valdez Alvarez, the 14-year-old son of Manuel Valdez Alvarez, a leading dry goods merchant with a string of stores throughout Spain, was taken to Ellis Island to-day from the Spanish liner Buenos Aires in port from Cadiz. Young Alvarez's father was carried ashore on a stretcher helpless from apoplexy and taken to a hotel. The United States immigration law per mits no aliens under 16 years of age to land unless accompanied by the par ents or legal guardian and the immi gration inspector stated that under the circumstances he had no other course to pursue than to send the boy to Ellis Island. Representatives of various New York dry goods concerns tendered any bond that might be required by, the government, but the offer was of no avail. According to the representa tives of local firms. Alvarez has a cre dit of $500,000 in New York and owns fifty dry goods stores in Barcelona. Madrid, Cadiz, Malaga, Seville and other places in Spain. lie was on his annual visit to his store in Havana | when stricken. UNITED HOTELS CO. MANAGE BIG HOSTELRIES fContinued From First Pago] United Hotels Company which will operate the hotel under a thirty-year lease and on terms favorable alike to the stockholders and tne operating company—particularly in view of the fact that there liad been some doubt expressed here and there as to the ability of the local interests to secure experienced management. Under # the agreement with the operating company the stockholders I will receive upon their investment a minimum of four per cent, and six per cent, annually for the first five years, if earned, and seven per cent, thereafter without any condition. In addition the hotel company stock holders will participate in the earn ings of the operating company to the extent of practically one-half. Upon the preferred stock of $50,000 the operating company will receive six per cent, and upon the amount of $150,000, which covers the furniture and furnishings, the stock holders of the Harrisburg Hotel Com pany will receive three per cent, an nually for the first three years, four per cent, for the succeeding two years I and five per cent, thereafter. The United Hotels Company will pay all taxes and other expenses, including replacement of furniture and equip- | ment. As to the common stock of the 1 operating company l'orty-nine per cent of the earnings will go to the stockholders of the hotel company and fifty-one per cent, to the United Hotels Company. These are regarded as equitable and reasonable provisions and eminently satisfactory to the local investors insuring more than an ordi nary rate of interest. The deed for the Opera House cor ner, first payment on which was made some weeks ago, will be transferred to Uie Harrisburg Hotel Company on the 15th of January. It is expected that soon thereafter the architects, William Lee Stoddart of New York and Esenwein & Johnson of Buffalo, who are collaborating in the making of plans, will be ready for the esti mates of builders. If all goes well, the new building should be opened for the holidays of 1917. Modern and Comfortable Owing to the large experience of the United Hotels Company no doubt is felt anywhere that the Penn-Harris will be one of the most modern and comfortable hotels in the United States. Every provision will be made for the pleasure and comfort of guests, including a grille room in Walnut street; a lounging room with a front age of 36 feet in Walnut street and 84 feet in Third street, which will be| a part of the main lobby, but over looking the same as a mezzanine lloor. It is expected that the main dining room 42x60 feet will be on the samel level as the lounging room and ac cessible from the lobby level by a wide I marble stairway. There will also be private dining rooms and a banquet j hall and provision for a large assembly ! hall or ball room. There will be a number of store rooms in Third street and entrances! on both Walnut and Third streets' livhich will lead to the hotel lobby and ! grille room. Arrangement of the main lobby on the first floor is similar to that of the Blackstone Hotel of Chi cago and Is located at a level of about five feet above Walnut street and reached by broad flights of marble' stairs from both the Walnut and Third i street entrances. The main lobby facing Walnut I street is 36x84 feet in tlie clear with i the office and check room convenient- ! ly located nearest the Third street j entrance and also with direct com-! munication to the service portion of the building. Two passenger eleva-1 tors will be conveniently located be tween the main entrances and by pro viding an elevator corridor and lobby, congestion and interference with the comfort of the guests In the main lobby and lounging rooms is prevent ed. Provision has been made for in creasing the size of the main dining room by arrangement of a partition between it and the lounging room as a decorative movable screen. The rear wing of the property on the main floor la arranged for direct kitchen service to the main dining room grille on tlie ground floor and also wide stairs to pantry on the second floor for service required by private dining room and lounging hall. Bath and shower toilet rooms are connected with every bedroom and every bedroom as designed in the pre liminary sketch will have outside light. The corridors are lighted and "The Live Store" "Always Reliable" *\ I Tonight Tonight V| . £. 3 K fc Old Santa's Been Telling You! I About this "Real Christmas I W Store" and now the SECRET IS OUT I m A you already know it's the store §m\W\v\ ' Vl\ with the Double-deck Windows— , ~,, |Pjj6l "DOI 1 It s a £unny thing nobody thought of 1 this idea before— (I mean the double deck Windows) have you seen them? . I . . They are real windows— filled with Christmas suggestions —look at the picture above —these windows first attracted my attention —and then I went inside l'm telling you 1 haven't seen such a wonderful store as this in the State of Pennsylvania. It takes a long time for some stores to grow but they tell me "Doutrichs" seemed to grow over night. I told you 1 was going to start I think lam going to bring most buying in earnest on Saturday—and I did. I of the little boys and girls one of those was in "DOUTRICHS" all day and still have "Santa Claus Suits" I saw there, they look so enough money left for my purchases this nice and warm, a sweater cap leggings week—they seem to have everything there and mits in plain white, brown, tan, gray, and greater values. pink, Copenhagen and red. | For the Men and Boys I've Been, j I Thinking Bath Robes I Pajamas, Union Underwear, Neckwear, Silk Hosiery, a Mackinaw Coat Gloves or Sweater but there are dozens of other good presents there perhaps you would like a good SUIT OR OVERCOAT I They Have Thousands o I I ■ rfj Harrisburg, I I • Penna - I ventilated with windows at the ends.; While the materials to be used