6 GERMANY STOPS BUILDING U-BOATS Kaiser Either Has Enough or Expects War to End This Summer By Associated Press Boston, April 16. German sub marines in large number have been built in Norway, according to a letter received hero from Christlanla which adds that Germany has given no or ders to build submarines after May 1. The letter was written by O. C. Dahl, of Christiania. a shipbuilder, to his nephew. Dr. Andrew F. Christian, a physician in the Back Bay district. It was dated February 10. Mr. Dahl wrote: "Wo continue to build up to May 1 this year, but Germany has not given any orders to continue building sub marines after May 1. This means to us that either she has enough boats or that the war will terminate some time this coming summer." 1,000 A DAY By Associated Press Washington, April 16.—Recruiting for the navy is bringing in more than a thousand men a day under the press of war emergency. Officers of Ihe fleet are highly pleased with the char acter of the recruits. The record for Saturday's recruiting was a not gain of 1,124 men, bringing the enlisted force that much nearer the 100,000 mark Secretary Daniels expected to reach ; by May 12. FRIENDSHIP CLVU MEETING President William K. Drake, of the. Friendship . nd Co-Operative Club is anxious for a large turn out at the sppcial meeting to-night. The mem bers are requested to meet promptly in the social room No. 5 Grace street. . A inarshall will be selected for Satur day's parade and other important j business transacted. Countless Women find— that when suffering from nervousness, sick headache, dizzy spells and ailments peculiar to their sex— nothing affords such prompt j, and welcome relief, as will : follow a few doses of BEKHAM'S PILLS A proven women's remedy, which assists in regulating the organs, and re-establishing healthy conditions. Beecham's Pills contain no habit-forming drug —leave no disagreeable after-effects. They are— Nature's aid to better Health Dirt ctim Smml V*lu ta W*aw r* vKk mrr kaa. Said Tr,wktri. II box**, 10c, 25M. bullds NEWTISSUE i llow Father John's Medicine Nour- J isites Those Who Arc Pale ami Tliin Because it is made of pure and j wholesome food elements, which 1 strengthen and build new tissue, ! Father John's Medicine is the best | onic for those who are pale, thin j tnd run down. It is free from alco- i !iol and dangerous drugs in any | iorm. ||M u ]s\eb\ciTi6 v MrV .Makes new Flesh & Strength j No Alcohol or Dangerous Drug*./ Not a Bite of Breakfast Until You Drink Water Say* a glass of hot water and phosphate prevents illness and keeps us fit. Just as coal, when it burns, leaves j Dehind a certain amount of incom- i lustible material in the form of ashes, j 10 the food and drink taken day after 1 lay leaves in the alimentary canal a j :ertain amount of indigestible ma terial, which if not completely elim- ! mated from the system each day, be- ! !omes food for the,millions of bac orla which infest tno bowels./ From i this mass of left-over waste, toxins tnd ptomain-like poisons are formed ' tnd sucked into the blood. Men and women who can't get 'eeling right must begin to take in- j tide baths. Before eating breakfast' •ach morning drink a glass of real i (0t water with a teaspoonful of lime- I itone phosphate in it to wash out of | he thirty feet of bowels the previous lay's accumulation of poisons and [ oxlns and to keep the entire alimen ary canal clean, pure and fresh. Those who are subject to sick head iche, colds, biliousness, constipation, >thers who wake up with bad taste, !oul breath, backache, rheumatic itlffness, or have a sour, gassy stom ich after meals, are urged to get a luarter pound of limestone phosphate ,'rom the drugstore, and begin practlc ng internal sanitation. This will cost fery little, but is sufficient to make inyone an enthusiast on the subject. Remember Inside bathing is more mportant than outside bathing, be ;ause the skin pores do not absorb mpurities into the blood, causing poor lealth, while the bowel pores do. fust as soap and hot water cleanses, iweetens and freshens the skin, so lot water and ltmestone phosphate ict on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowl% MONDAY EVENING, EARNEST WORK OF THE CIVIC CLUB Reports at Annual Meeting This Afternoon Show Real Prog- ress in Many Lines With a membership of 512," an In crease of 208 during the past year, the 1 larrlsburg Civic Club, always alive to Its opportunities heard a won derful account of work both done anil planned for the future, given by the president, Mrs. William Henderson, at the annual meeting this afternoon. Firßt of all Sirs. Henderson men tioned the fact that the club is at last In Its own house, the wonderful Rift of Mrs. William R. Fleming, which has been adapted to fclub use by W. W. ohnson. architect. The arge con tributions by friends of the organiza tion as well as club members have made it possible to more than pay all expenses for remodeling and furnish ing. and its use by everyone is a de light to the club. The grounds will be put in shape for the summer under the direction of Miss Martha W. Buebler. While interested in getting the club house liveable, the club lessened none of its activities. The care of children In the Aut-Door schools, the fly swat ting contests, an outing for mother's and babies, and co-operation with the State Board of Health during the ty phoid epidemic of last slimmer, atl required helpers and the club mem bers were eager for work. Five bar rels of clothing were sent to the Mt. Alto camp In December and $25 worth of clothing, shoes and hoisery went to the Downey school in February. In this school a special lunch of crackers and milk were given to deficient' chil dren at 10 o'clock each day and It Is found that since this was inaugurated the pupils have increased in weight, are quieter, pay more attention to their work and have increased in men tal efficiency. Fifty dollars was given to the Penn-Community Club in which the Civic Club Is much Interested. Club Hoars Lectures Beginning with the social meetinr of the club last May at the Colonial Country Club, when Vance C. McCor- I mick spoke on "Know Our City—lts ; Good Points and Its Bad Ones," the club had a series of Interesting lec tures by distinguished speakers along lines of civic, travel and women's prob lems. The Reciprocity teas were found most enjoyable and the Civic Club had as its guest the College Club, Authors Club and Wednesday Club, serving tea after entertaining programs by the visitors. . In the two fly contests the commit tee of which Mrs. Robert H. Irons is chairman, reported 31 bushels of flies, brought in with a cost to the club of $120.35. The Municipal Department, headed by Miss Rachel Pollock, has finally secured the signals for the cur few law. passed by council a year ago and the chief of police Is aiding in the enforcement of other laws in which the club is interested especially. The Educational Department under Mrs. Harry G. Keffer and an efficient committee has carried on the League of Good Citizenship in many schools, the Open Air School at Fifth and Seneca streets, is under the care of this department. Miss Bueliler of the Out-Door Department reported that while the back yard gardens were dis continued some of the school gardens were finer than ever because of the earnest labor given to them by the children. Most of the vegetables aro used for school lunches and the rest taken home by the youngsters. This i department is putting up a birdbox for ' purple martins in the park near the Market street bridge. Believes in Co-Operation Always interested in what goes to j make a better and more beautiful city. I I the Harrisburg Civic Club has joined ; i hands with charitable and other city organizations on the garbage and ash questions, better housing conditions, ;the city vegetable gardens, the smoke | nuisance and moving picture censor ; ship. In closing Mrs. Henderson said: i | "Much is expected of the Cvic Club] |of Harrisburg. Have we sized up to lour opportunities? I do not know, i j but 1 am very sure of much earnest j j work in many directions. We are not j building for to-day. but trying to place j on a firm foundation a strong .active ; I Women's Club that is not just for our I I own time, but for future generations ■ I of Harrisburg women." Mrs. Edward F. Dunlap the club | j treasurer received dues for the year j after the close of the meeting. Red Cross Unit Formed at Moorhead Factory; to Hold Entertainment —~ The Moorhead Knitting Company will entertain its employes and their friends this evening at the factory, Cameron and Walnut streets. The doors will be open at 7;30 and the mill will be in full operation for a half , hour after which the guests will be | conducted to the large recreation hall I where the "Passion Play" in motion | pictures will be shown. At the con clusion of the pictures the Moorhead Choral Society will render the follow- I ing program: "Awake Up My Glory," Barnby, j Moorhead Choral Society; "How the I Gates Came Ajar," Winner, Miss j Lillian Goodyear: "The Day Which the Lord Hath Made," Lorenz, Moor head Choral Society; "Abide With | Me," Jerome, Misses Lillian and Maude i Goodyear; Three Easter carols, (a) i "Euster Bells," (b) "Easter Triumph,", :(ci "Christ! Thou Conqueror," Moor : head Choral Society; "Waiting For ! You," Sciaeca, Miss Mildred Rowe; ; "As It Began to Dawn," Lerman. i Moorhead Choral Society; "Forgotten,'i , Cowles, A. W. Hart man; "Jolly Wag ! goner," Rlx, Moorhead Choral So | ciety. Admission will be by ticket and the I silver offering to be taken at the door I will be used by the choruß in defray ' ing the expenses Incident to the pro posed Red Cross concert to be given lin the near future in the Technical I High School auditorium, the entire proceeds of which will be given to the Harrisburg Red Cross Society. To-day at noon the Moorhead Em poyosl organized a unit for assisting the local Red Cross Society in its work ' of preparing surgical supplies. Thurs ! day noon hour of each week has been I devoted to patriotic services for the i past several weeks. The entire Moor -1 head force will participate in Every i body's Parade Saturday afternoon. SKCOND LATIN 81'PPKR j The second of the Latin-American | suppers for the men of Market Square Presbyterian Church, will be held this evening at 7:30 o'clock. The speaker will be George 1.. Sollenbergor, en gineer of the State .Highway Depart ment, who will talk on '.'An En gineer's Experience In Brazil." Mr. Sollenberger spent three years In en gineering work In that country and will relate some of his experiences. INDIANS WIN AT LACROSSE Carlisle, Pa., April 16. —The Carlisle Indians lacrosse team, coached by the Indian center, Captain Edward Miller., opened its season here by administer ing an overwhelming defeat to the strong Maryland State College, the Redskins scoring nine liard-earnod points and blanking the visiting col legians. The game was clean and Carlisle opposed strong attack and defense to a fast attack but poor de fense from their opponents. START WORK ON NEW WAREHOUSE Three-Story Brick Structure to Be Built in North Seventh Street Construction of a three-story ware house for Max Cohen & Sons, junk dealers, in Seventh street, just north of Kelker street, will be started at once by Strayer and Eshelman, contractors. ! A building permit for the work was issued to-day. The total cost of the new building, which Is to be entirely of brick, will be ?13,000. The struc ture will be finished within four months, it is expected. The firm has been located at 678 Brlggs street for 'more than twelve years. A permit was issuod also to Strayer anil Kshelman„ for the erection of the four-story brick building to be built at 210 North Third street, hv Harry and Leon Lowongard, publishers of the I Sunday Courier. Work has been I started razing the present stricture. The new building will be used by the (Courier Publishing Company and will I cost more than $22,000. MAY ASK NEW TRIAL | A petition will probably bo made : | to-morrow by the State for time to file | reasons for a motion, for a new trial in 'the suit of George P. and Edward N. Cooper against the State. The Coopers were awarded *6'.,27$ by a Jurv, after appealing from the award of the Cap itol Park Extension Commission which was $36,000 for the property at Short and South streets. SALES BY BACKEXSTOSS BROS. Justus V. Iters hey, of 1420 Walnut street, to R. C. McQuate, consideration sl. J. Chrter XJavls, 644 Reily street, to Wolfe Rosenberg, consideration sl. Backenstoss Bros.. 1253 South Thir teenth street, to George W. and Beryl C. Fetrow, consideration It. John G. Johnson, Noted Lawyer, Frequent Visitor Here in Important Cases John G. Johnson, the famous Phil-; adclphta lawyer, who died Saturday, was not a stranger in Harrisburg. He i appeared before Dauphin county court j In important cases, and was a friend of many in official life. His opinion ! was sought in municipal loans and upon his approval the several Issues of! public improvement bonds were au- | thorlzed. As his paintings form one of the > few really great private collections in ! America, as he was himself one of the i country's few real .connoisseurs, John | G. Johnson was just two things where! most men ure a dozen; he was a law-j yer and he was a collector of pictures. And he knew paintings as thoroughly j as he knew corporation law. We knew I the history of every recognized master j piece, critics say, and he had many j times discovered priceless little paint ings that had gone unrecognized be- j fore. No dealer could impose uponi him. '•'he nurse said that after taking hlsi medicine at 2 o'clock Saturday morn- i ing ho turned to her with a smile and said: "Good night, I'm going to sleep j now." Those were his last words, for when the nurse return at 3 o'clock she: found Mr. Johnson dead. The funeral service will be held at 1 his late home, 510 South Broad street,: on Tuesday. llis private secretary,! Charles McDerniott, and his brother,; A. C. Johnson, will complete all ar- • langoment.s within a day or two. The, obsequies will be private, and the hour! of the funeral will be made public) later. No honorary pallbearers and i no service at the grave in Ivy Hill Cemetery have been decided upon. I General Edward deV. Morrell, a step ! son, will aid in the arrangements. The service will be marked bv Im-' ! rressive simplicity. There will be an ; j utter absence of formality, and as the I distinguished lawyer was not actively j connected with any church or any of; , the prominent fraternal organizations, I I there will be no ceremonial, j John Graver Johnson was horn in Germantown in J 841! His father was I a blacksmith and his mother a mill!- ! ner, who added to the family ex- \ chequer by her personal labors. I The boyhood of Mr. Johnson was] i passed between the father's forge and the mother's millinery establishment,' | whore the thrifty wife manufactured | I <uch hats as would please the taste of i her wealthy clients. It was no un common sight either in that section to see "Johnnie" Johnson, as he was , known, delivering the hats, when he! i was not in school. His devotion to; his mother was idyllic, and as long! as she lived he cared for her with a j filial tenderness and assiduity that' were remarkable. j Girard in the Philadelphia Ledger | says: I 'Hardly anybody remembered that ] this Philadelphia high school boy was a soldier in the Civil War, but he was. I Mr. Johnson was a member of that : famous Landis battery in whieh C. | Stuart Patterson was an officer and i such other notables as Richard Wat j son Gilder, "Hans Breitmann," the ! humorist, and Dr. A. C. Lambdin, the : editor, were privates. tt was when this battery was guarding the Susque hanna bridge at Hiirrisburg that Gil der, who was on picket duty, saw in the dim morning light a Confederate ( vidette. That was the furthest north any Confederate soldier got during the rebellion." T. H. OUTLINES PLAN Washington, April 16. Colonel Roosevelt ir. letters to-day to Senator Chamberlain and Bepresentative Dent, chairman of the Congressional Mili tary Committee, detailed his plans for raising and accompanying a volunteer expedition to join the allies on the western European battle front. He heartily approved the administration's compulsory service program for pro viding a war army, but insisted that volunteers could be put on the firing line in four months and that the Am erican flag should be there at the earliest possible moment. a KEEP YOUR 10; BLACK WHITE TAN 10; NFAT HH A"2 inl Shoe Polish" is made for every ' USC * Black J Blacky HH and liquid); for White Shoes^ AA m F. F. DALLEY CO. of New York, Inc. iSHOE HAKRffiBURO tS3s&TELEGRAPH MEDICAL RESERVE NEEDS OFFICERS Dauphin County Society Plans Campaign For More Volunteers To stimulate enlistment -in the medi cal officers reserve, the Dauphin Coun ty Medical Society will hold a mass meeting in Chestnut Street Auditorium Wednesday night, which will be ad dressed by Col. Jlenry Page, of the Medical Reserve Corps, U. S. A. Invitations have been sent out to the organizations of the druggists, den tists, Homeopathic Society, Medical Club, Nurses' Alumni Association, Red Cross Society, Civic Club, Rotary Club and the Chamber of Commerce to at tend the meeting, lantern slides of actual scenes In the trenches at the front in France and Serbia will be shown for the first time in this city. In a statement sent to physicians and dentists the Dauphin County Med | Ual Society emphasizes the Importance ■ of enlistment in this corps, j The statement urges physicians to ! enlist in the Medical Reserve Corps be j cause of the few medical luen now ; in tlist branch of the service and be ; cause the efficiency of the army and depends upon the efiU'lency'of its . medical corps. The statement set | forth three reasons why young men | who have few obligations and responsl j blltties should join the reserve corpe— j patriotism, opportunity for excellent ! medical and surgical training and good j pay. It states that the first of these is the most Important and should be considered before the others. It sets forth that the pay in either branch of the service amounts, with maintenance, to s2<fo per month, and that each medi cal volunteer can bo assured that his practice will be cared for in his ab sentee. All information relative to any ! medical branch of the service will lie 1 given by Surgeon it. W. Plummer. U. i S. N. at the mayor's office, City Hall, I Philadelphia, or by' any of the medical I officers at the Naval Hospital. Gray's I Ferry Road and Twenty-fourth street, ! Philadelphia. MAY WHEAT AT 92.30 fly Associated Press Chicago. April 16.—May wheat, al though handled in smal Mots only to-' day, sold up five cents to $2.30. I The Current Events Section I I THE SUNDAY RECORD I E is unique, interesting, enjoyable, educative and is brimful of nj E good reading in a variety to suit every taste. IS Sj No other newspaper publishes a Sunday feature like it or to S| equal it in the multiplicity of the interests that it covers. 3 S Fact stories about the big events of the day; articles on places, §ll B people and occurrences of more than passing interest; splendid ■ stories for young folks and grown-ups; brain testing puzzles 9j where every solver wins a prize; talks on the various arts and : sciences; pages devoted to the newest fashions; departments 9 ■ covering and helping with the various phases of housekeeping Eflj : and home-making; and much more besides, all very different from the hodge-podge that too often masquerades as "Sunday p9 : features." IB Just one of the many "Record" features that have put it in the 9 : front ranks as the choice of Philadelphia's worth-while homes. IS B • It is a newspaper in which you may place entire confidence. 7 ell your Newsdealer to serve it to you regularly br notify us [9 : and we will attend to it Jor you. 12 | THE PHILADELPHIA RECORD I RECORD BUILDING PHILADELPHIA i DEMOCRACY MUST BE GUARANTEED Dr. Bagncll in Stirring Patrio tic Sermon Sees Peace After Kaiser Is Banished The Rev. Dr. Robert Bagnell, new pastor of the Grace Methodist Church, stirred fifteen hundred persons to cheers and then to tears, last night at a patriotic meeting held in the Grace Church. The subject of his sermon was "The Meaning of War." the text Mr. Harrisburger The New Store of Wm. Strouse will be closed a great part of next Satur day to do its share in the Patriotic Demonstration. We request that you aid us, in so far as convenient to you, by doing your buying early in the week. Respectfully, Wm. Strouse & Co. APRIL 16, 1917. of which was taken from Ephesians 6:12. The meeting was attended by mem bers of the Grand Army of the Re public, Spanish War Veterans and National Guardsmen. At the opening of the service the congregation stood as these soldiers past, and present, filed to their seats in the front of the auditorium, marching to tbe strain of "The Star Spangled Banner," as it pealed from the organ. The uudltorium of the church was filled to its capacity long before the sermon started and hundreds were turned away. The church was decorated with Am erican tlags. Timo after time the audience applauded loudly as Dr. Bagnell gave utterance to his stirring address. At other times his hearers gave way to I ears as he described the horrors of the bitter conflict In Eu rope. "No lasting peace will be made that does not guaranteo democracy and liberty and not until, as I believe, uu | other St. Helena is occupied by x --j royalty," said Dr. Hagnell. This state ment brought cheers and applause from his hearers. The church was presented with a handsome American flag, by a mem ber .of the congregation who wished his name withheld and the presenta tion was made by Harry B. SausHu man. It was accepted by Dr. Dagnull, who stated that it would occupy a prominent place in the pulpit until the war is over. ATTACK MAN, ESCAPE The unknown men jvno last eve ning attacked J. Ely along tho Cam eron park extension are still at largy. four men evidently under the in fluence of liquor driving up and down tho parkway in an automobile, which is forbidden. When Ely toli |hem to stop they knocked him down, breaking his glasses.
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