The Workers of I the World with hand or brain, in doors or out doors, under all conditions and in all climes, will find in Shredded Wheat "the food that supplies all the material for building healthy tissue and good brain —a food that nourishes every organ of the body and keeps the bow els healthy and active — the one universal cereal food that appears on the breakfast i table of thousands of Ameri can homes every day in the 1 year. It is ready-cooked and ; ready-to-eat. For break- 1 fast with milk or cream, or I fruits. Made at Niagara 1 Falls, N. Y. Farmer Gets $5,000 For One Year's Toil Huntingdon, Pa., Jan-. 22. Jacob Fi Bronneman. who formerly farmed In tliis county, but six years ago pur chased the Levi and James Sparr homestead In Clovei 1 Creek com munity of Blair county, just has com pleted threshing and gathering In his crops for the year. Ho raised 800 bushels of ivheat, 775 bushels of oats, 2400 bushels of corn and about 63 tons of hay. These crops at present whole sale prices off the farm will total S4OOO. Besides, he has had a number of smaller crops and tHe natural increase of his animals, poultry, etc., which should bring the total value of his farm products to SSOOO for the year. Like a Foe in the Night Impurities Creep Into the Blood Important That the Life-Giving Blood Supply Be Kept in Per fect Condition. in this day of keen competition you cannot afford to overlook the slightest advantage. You must keep in perfect physical condition, and ever on the alert to tackle the day's problems. You cannot afford to permit any impairment of your health. Anything that affects your physical well-being is a handicap that will prove serious. The most important part of your phys ical makeup is the blood supply, tond upon its condition depends the proper action of every vital organ of the body. If the blood has become impoverished by impurities creeping in, if the cir Goes to February Ist, 1917 If you are planning to move, or desire your telephone directory listing changed, call the Bell Business Office at once. The Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania. \ E. W. GILPIN', Local Manager, ) Harrisburg, Pa. Start the Year Right MAKE your range and furnace a success by using "Sun-Glo" Coal. Sun-Glo Coal is our trade name for all coal sold by us. The best grades of Wilkes-Barre, Lehigh, Xanti coke, Shamokin, Mahanoy* Lykens Vallej", Brook side, Lincoln, etc., arc all sold by us under the name Sun-Glo Coal Sun-Glo Coal is your guarantee that you will get the product of the best mines in Pennsylvania. No inferior coal is sold by us under the name "Sun- Glo" Coal. It is our determination this new year of 1917 to give our customers better coal and better service than ever before. United Icc & Coal Co. Forster & Cowden Hummol & Mulberm Third & Boas 15 & Chestnut Six Also Steelton, Pa. * MONDA Y EV EN IN G, COULDN'T STAND FOR LOVE STUFF Husband Balks When Wife Says "You Don't Love Me!" to Another 1 "Vou don't love JJy )( 111 William Fleisher, haled into Dauphin i county court to-day ~ to answer charges of ftSStP' .fr nonsupport of his w-ife and small daughter. declared on the witness stand HTT WBWBBM that the reason he ,1 y C WHnrlffß left his wife was be 'fllft ff rlfflll llrrP cause as he stood in TBt j aBWHW the stairway of his home he heard her utter, these words to I I>. J. McFarland, who, with Mrs. Mc > Karland, was staying at the Fleisher home in Yeagertown, Mifflin county. The case, which was heard in Court- I room No. 1, was featured by charges and counter charges of scandal by Fleisher and his wife as each testified. It was brought out in court that Fleisher had left his home on the day before Chrismas. and since that time, his wife testitled, lias not contributed to her support. Both alleged on the stand that the cause of family difficul ties was because of Mr. and Mrs. Mc- Farland. Fleisher. after leaving home, came to Harrisburg and was employed at the j Harrisburg Pipe and Pipe Rending works. The Court finally ordered him ] o pay s.l a week toward the mainte i nance of his daughter, and continued I tile case of nonsupport of the wife to I the March sessions. In Courtroom No. 2. after their case had been heard. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Frantz left the court together. Frantz | had been ordered o pay his wife $7 a I week. The case against Amos Garver ich and his brothers and sisters for nonsupport of a parent, was continued i until the March sessions. I AMjueMsor ItesigiiN. Charles F. Still, I assessor in Halifax borough, resigned I to-day. The resignation was accepted | by the county commissioners, and David I (3. Sweigard was named as his suc cessor. Bar Itanquet. The annual banquet i of the Dauphin County Bar Association will e held on February 17 at the Har risburg Club. The committee of ar rangements includes: Charles C. Stroh, Charles H. Bergner and Frank B. Wick- I ersham. culation is poor and inadequate, the first effects are a general run-down and "good for nothing" feeling that renders you unfit for the performance of your ordinary tasks? This condition robs you of your use fulness. But worse than that, it ren ders the system unable to resist dis ease, and almost any serious sickness may prove fatal. Take no chances: keep the blood absolutely free from all impurities. S. S. S. is one blood remedy, guaranteed purely vegetable. It lias been on the market for more than fifty years, and its use will make the blood pure and rich. S. S. S. is sold by druggists everywhere. Write for booklets and free medical advice to Swift Specific Co., 33 Swift Lab oratory, Atlanta, Ga. BTH REGIMENT ORDERED HOME Companies D and 1 Will Reach City About Feb. 15; to Hold Reception The Eighth Regiment, Infantry, National Guard of Pennsylvania, now at the Mexican border, is part of troops included In an order to return home, Issued Saturday by the War De partment. Colonel Maurice E. Finney is in charge of this regiment, and Companies D and X are from Har risburg. While no official time has been fixed for the departure of the troops from El Paso, it is understood the Eighth Regiment will leave within the next three weeks. Orders fixing the time for departure from the bor der are expected by Friday. Rolling stock will have to be provided for the troops, numbering 25,000 soldiers. It will require two weeks to get ready to move, and at least five days to come from El Paso to Harrisburg. To llohl Reception As soon as it is definitely known regarding the time of departure of the Harrisburg companies, the Harris burg Chamber of Commerce commit tee and other local organizations will start activity in preparation for a re ception to the Harrisburg com panies and staff of the Eighth regi ment which has its headquarters in Harrisburg. An Associated dispatch from Washington, D. C., to-day says: "War Department officials explained to-day that some units of the 25,000 National Guardsmen whose return from border service has been ordered probably could start for home within a few days and that all will be re turned for muster out as rapidly as transportation facilities can be sup plied. General Funston selected the organizations which are to be with drawn according to a general plan of relieving those longest in border serv ice. Troops from 25 States and the District of Columbia are included in the order." The Pennsylvania guardsmen ordered home include the Second Field Artillery, Sixth Infantry, Eighth In fantry, Company C, Engineers, Third Brigade headquarters. The Pennsyl vania troops will return direct to their armories and will not go to the State mobilization camp. They will be mus tered out under directions from Major General Leonard Wood, commander of the Eastern Department of the Army. DR. CONWAY TO ADDRESS CITY'S REALTY MEN Fifty men interested in real estate will attend a noonday luncheon of the the Harrisburg Real Estate Board, to morrow at 12:30 o'clock. Dr. Thomas Conway, Jr., professor of real estate and finance. University of Pennsyl vania, will give a talk on "Some New Ideas in Real Estate," illustrated with stereopticon views. UNIFORM CONTRACT TO GLOBE The contract for the uniforms and full equipment of the recently organ ized police department of the Central Iron and Steel Company has just been awarded to The Globe. The uniforms will be the regulation police outfit and every requirement of a police officer will be furnished under this contract JAPAN NO PERir DECLARES AINEY Says the People of Mikado's Land Admire and Respect Americans Club nights at the University Club were given an impetus Saturday even ing when Chairman W. D. B. Alney, of the Public Service Commission, en tertained the members and their friends with an informal discourse on Japan and her attitude toward the United States. Mr. Ainey is a mem ber of the International Parliamen tary Union, an unofficial organization with representation in many govern ments in the interests of peace. Mr. Ainey deplored the careless free talk of the uninformed and the exag geration of the press in regard to the unworthiness of the Japanese to be trusted and the imminence or at least inevitableness of war. He regretted the discrimination of California legis lation against our friends of the Far East in the matter of land tenure, school privileges and immigration. "Unless America changes its present suspicious attitude that is offending the dignity of Japanese life, the very thing that we are trying in this coun try to avoid will be precipitated, and wholly through our own lack of per ception. That we in this country do not appreciate the feeling of the Japa nese, their attitude toward expansion in China and their innate and inherent admiration and respect for America is illustrated by the crude way we de pict the mikado in our cartoons," went on the speaker. "The reverence they have for their ruler amounts almost to worship and it is offensive to their national pride to make light of such a sacred thing. They are simply try ing to establish a Monroe Doctrine a doctrine of self-interest, for Japan and surely we cannot blame them for that." The "Yellow Peril'' Folly °1 a sur P' us population of some 00,000,000 there are only 100.000 Japanese in this country, and they own but a few paltry acres of land in Internal Bathing's Rapid Growth It is but natural to expect that a re lief from Constipation and the many ills which it causes which is so effec tual and so natural as Internal Bath mg should quickly make many con verts. But its general use has Increased so tremendously in the past few years as to suggest other reasons, and these are found in the statements of users that they feel as if "made over new" the morning after an Internal Bath The elimination of the pernicious and poisonous waste which is ever present in the Lower Intestine gives Nature a chance to work unhampered. And one arises in the morning clear-headed able, bright, confident and eager for the day's duties. Mr. F. E. Smith writes: "Dear 'Cascade' made a new man of me at the age of 40 I persuaded my wife to use the treat ment also and to-day she has better health than ever before. Since the use of the 'Cascade' she sleeps better I and can walk for hours without fa tigue. Fainting spells have become a condition of the past; can eat anything on the bill of fare and drink all bever ages. Do not take cold when exposed: hot weather does not cause oppression." The "J. B. L. Cascade." the most ef ficient device for Internal Bathing, Is being shown and explained in detail at I ('roll Keller's. 405 Market street, and George C. Potts' Drug Store, in Harris burg. Ask for free booklet. "Why Man of To-Day Is Only 50 Per Cent. Efflcl- " —Advertisement. HARRJSBURG TELEGRAPH i|p| l gWHi:<::'' The orincipal d rence EIroTOTO tween Murad and most 25 Cent f|j *This fact has given Murad a standing k^|:::::: * n Society, in Business, in Clubs, among !Connoisseurs, such as no cigarette ever had E'lli California. "Scarcely sufficient to con- ! stitute a Yellow Peril, Is it?" queried , the speaker. '"Japan has developed ! into a powerful nation and is In a i position with regard to China (a sleep ing giant of 400,000.000 population) I as would the United States he to Ilex- i ico if the latter had 800,000,000 people within its borders. She wants to keep her surplus population at home and she is not interested in getting posses sion of the Philippines," continued Mr. ! Ainey. The talk was in the nature of a ! virile defense of Japan and regret that I there should be so widespread an opinion abroad here that we are In im minent danger of war with the no longer little nation of the Far East. They are striving to adopt the prin ciple which holds in America of "The Fatherhood of God and the Urother hood of JJan." and it behooves Amer ica, in the estimation of the speaker, not to spoil the situation. Refreshments were served with Rutherford catering. Exploding Whisky Barrel Kills One, Maims Another Richmond. Texas. Jan. 22. While the two little children of Charles Mey er, of Needvllle, were playing at their home they pulled'the bung out of an empty ' Whisky barrel and threw a light ed match inside. Instantly there was a loud explosion and one of the children was instantly killed and othe other la so fatally injured that her life is de spaired of. The sister were playing in the yard where It seems the empty barrel had been placed, with the bunghole to the ground. Upon • turning It up. gns be gan escaping and the children applied H lighted matcn, causing the explosion. The dead girl is Helen, i years old, while the sister, who Is 7 yearn of a*e. 1 had fcer right hip broken. WHIPPLE GETTING READY FOR PROBE Busy Gaining Information on Stocksales Three Days Be- I , J lore Note Was Published _ New York, Jan. 22. Sherman L. Whipple, counsel for the House rules committee in its inquiry to determine | whether anybody profited by a "leak" when President Wilson's peace note was sent to the entente allies was busy in the financial district to-day getting ready for the opening of hearings here to-morrow, The members of the committee will not arrive until to night or to-morrow morning. The understanding in financial clr -1 j cles is that the inquiry probably will i not be extended to a complete investi gation of the New York Stock Ex , change. The present plan is to call . officers of the Stock Exchange among the first witnesses and question them 1 about the exact precedure in the sell • ing and buying of stocks. This infor ilmation. It is understood, will be used , | by the committee to guide their exain , j inations which will be made into all stock sales on the three days preceding the publication of the note. The pur pose in transferring the hearing to 1 this city was to enable the committee I to get the testimony of brokers and . Stock Exchange officials without de lay If occasion arose to question them. , It is expected that expert account- I" ants will be engaged to examine the ' I books which the committee hopes to \ I get hold of. TJiis phase of the inves- I titration will take several davs. JANUARY 22, 1917. 250,000 Belgian Pupils Given Extra Meal a Day by American Commission New York, Jan. 22. The giving I of an extra daily meal to 250,000 Bel- j : gian schoolchildren wan the greatest j j accomplishment of the American i | Commission for Relief in Belgium, in ! j the opinion of its chairman, Herbert! C. Hoover, who lias just arrived here j I from Liverpool. Mr. Hoover to-day | began with his colleagues to devise j i relief plans for another year, j The extra meal consists of only! | meat hash and bread, the conimls- j | sioner said, but it lias helped great- ; !ly to increase the attendance at; school. Many children previously bail i remained at home because their par- I ents feared they would go hungry if I FROM THE SISTERS OF SI. MARY Grateful Letter Tells of Good Results Obtained by Using Father John's Medicine For Colds and Coughs We have permission to quote from the following letter recently received i from the Sisters of St. Mary at Farn > ham. N. Y.: The sisters v ho have been taking Father John's Medicine are perfectly cured of their cough, after having tried several other kinds of cough medicine without the least beneficial effects. We are sincerely grateful and would like to recom mend Father John's Medicine to all for the most ntuhbom. couehs and [allowed lo go to school. Mr. Hoover said there are 5,500,000 destitute per sons in Belgium and 2,000,000 in France, and it will take approximately $150,000,000 to carry on the work of ! the commission another year. "The situation is far worse than it | has been at any time since the war j started," be declared. "It is a result | of a steady degeneration among the i people." KI.IHT IMHKCTOnS At the annual meeting to-day of the I stockholders of the State Capital Sav ! lugs and. I'Oan Association, two direc-> | tors were re-elected, K. 1!. Plurce and i John J'. Meliek. At a subsequent meet j ing of the board of directors, these of- I fleers were re-eleced: President, j George W. Srelghton; vice-president and general manager, K. It. Pierce; sec ond vice-president, Joseph Pavidge; sec retary, John P. Meliek; treasurer. 13.' I Gross; counsel, Joshua W. Swartz. \ colds. Gratefully yours, (Signed), Sisters of St. Mary, Furnham, N. Y. It is important to remember that Father John's Medicine Is so valuable in the treatment of colds because it is composed of nourishing food elements which give new strength and rebuild wasted tissue. Father John's Medi cine lias had over HO years' success. It is a doctor's prescription, not a pat ent medicine, and la free from alcohol or dangerous drugs in anv form 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers