10 WAR BONDS IN $5 DENOMINATIONS ! IS I . S. PLAN Smnll Investor Would Re Favored by Proposed Scheme Washington, Aug. 29.—Details of the proposed government issue of war savings certificates, a form of bond plan employed in England and France, and appealing to the poor man as an investment, follows: Total of issue, $2,000,000,000: in terest rate (probable) 6 per cent. Term —Not less than five years, but with bonds redeemable by the government at any time. Denomination—Undetermined, but $5 and $lO issues, possibly as low as sl, are favojjpd to draw out the savings of the poor man. Restrictions—Total purchases are limited to SI,OOO to keep the bonds from large investors. Sale —To to offered at all post, of fices and other agencies specified by the government, but to be rfeadily ob tainable. Details of distribution are left largely to Secretary McAdoo. Enactment —The bill authorizing Ihe issue'probably will be passed in dependently of all other war legis lation by Congress. He's 80, but Not Too Old to Help Conserve Country's Food Supply Washington, D. C.—"l am work ing vigorously every day In my large vegetable garden in spite of the fact that I am SO years young," declared Amos D. Curran, of Bristol, 111., to day in a letter to the National Emer gency Food Garden Commission. 210 Maryland building, which is giving $5,000 in prizes for the best canned vegetables grown in war gardens. Mr. Curran writes: "It was my privilege to serve three years in the great Civil War and I tried to do a "good bit" for my country. I still want to be of service to Uncle Sam." C. L. Pack, the president of the com mission. sent Curran fifty canning and drying manuals for distribution. 1 _ " r"| I 212 Locust St. IN CH Location Optometrists Opticians Eyes Examined (No Drops)/ If Bclsingcr Glasses as low as $2. g I—I—IB—I "I'"'!' 11 Hl' lIUMIWi AMUSEMENTS IT M. Thursday!!.": Aug. 30 THE HEAI. HI NI.RXII B SHOW THIS FAMOUS MONTE CARLO GIRLS' CO. With ARTHUR WANING Saturday EvE: Sept. 1 Sen IN To-morrow FAREWELI. TO UK OF THE COMEDY THAT HAS DELIGHTED MILLIONS I'OPll.All PIKIC'ESt >1 \Tm -."€• IID1 50c limX EVE., 2Bc to SI.OO rnzAßr) / * . -* Regent Theater TWO DAYS MOIIE To-<inv aid To-morrow GEH AX 1)1 N E FA It IIA It Supported ly Wallace Held and Theodore Roberts in MOAN, THE WOMAN" The MnrveloiiM Motion Picture. HOI IIS OF SHOWING: 11.30 A. M., 2.00. 4.30, 7.00, 0.30 P. M. ADMISSION— 15c find 25c Friday ninl Snlunlny .1 AUK I'M Kroitl) mid LOUISE 111 FF In "WHAT MOXEY CAN'T BUY" Extra Added Attraction Saturday, FATTY AHBt'CKLE la "HIS WEDDING NIGHT" (/Ollllltflt DOI'GIi %S F A 111 H \NKS In "DOWN TO KAKTII" NOTICE"" The chnnife of liour of the Nhon liiK of the iiitiln product lon nt tlic lteK*n' IM ns MATINEE—II.3O, 2.30, 5.00 Evening, 7.30, 9.30 To-day f ■jjraiVl ■ I M To-morrow GREATER VITAGRAPH PRESENTS ALICE JOYCE- am -HARRY MOREY "RICHARD THE RRAZEN" ATTRACTION Dangers•' 4 Bride ke c y omed? Coming Soon "WITHIN THE LAW" WEDNESDAY EVENING, WILSON IN BEHALF OF ALLIES REJECTS POPE'S PEACE PROPOSAL AS BLOW TO GERMAN AUTOCRACY War Must Go on Until Dem ocracy Has Made Safe Principles of Peace, Says President Wilson r j Washington, Aug. 29. —President ' j Wilson has rejected the peace pro ' I posals of Pope Benedict. Hi# letter ' I is a direct statement that the war ' | must go on until the purposes for | which civilization is now fighting 1 have been accomplished. Any other ! course would be merely to invite . j a repetition of the present horror .! when tho Teutonic powers have had a chance to recuperate. ; Stern facts, the president says, must alone bo considered, and these • facts, he makes it very clear, all point to the futility of suspending 1 hostilities until thtv German people, 1 not the present German government, can furnish such guarantees for the ' future as the other peoples of the world will be justified in accepting. Impossible Now 1 The President shows that it would . be impossible to accept guarantees from the present German govern . ment, whose violations of law, of treaties and every principle of ! humanity have proved that its word ;cannot be taken. • There could be no more effective ! denunciation of the German govern ! ment than that contained in the President's letter. It is mildly pre sented, but loses nothing in strength because of the manifest restraint the President imposed upon himself in presenting to the head of a gieat church the reasons that impel him to disagree absolutely with the pro posals submitted by so exalted and conscientious a j^ersonage. Can't Take liaisor'e Word "We cannot take the worn! of the | present German government for any thing that is to endure," the Presi- I dent says, and upon this circum- I stance all the arguments and the I pleas presented by the Pope go to • pieces, because, under the suggested, the guarantees of the German government are all the other people of the world could ask for. There is in the note a strong appeal to the German people to themselves supply the guarantees that the world can accept, and while 'the President does not, and could not, make any suggestions, It is quite patent that the necessary guar ! antee which the German people could furnish would be based upon a complete reorganization of the German government and the over throw of autocracy. The President's note is an abso lute declaration against all peace parleys which are not predicated upon the defeat of German auto- HEftMCHE STOPS, KIMA GONE tDr. James' Headache Powders give instant relief—Cost dime a package. 1 Nerve-racking, splitting or dull, I throbbing headaches yield in just a I few moments to Dr. James' Head | ache Powders which cost only 10 1 cents a package at any drug store. It's the quickest, surest headache re ' lief in the whole world Don't suffer! 'Relieve the agony and distress now! You can. Millions of men and wo |men have found that headache or [ neuralgia misery is needless. Get I what you ask for. AMUSEMENTS Paxtang Park Theater i PLAYING ONI.Y THE BEST OF VAt'PEVILLE FROS I N I V Vt'DKVII.I.K'S PREMIER ACCOUDIOMST — ERNEST DUPILLE NEW SONUS AND HUMOROUS STOKIES JUNO SALMO & CO. "THE DEVIL IN MID FAGG AND WHITE DABKTOWN COMICS Rose Schmettan & Bro. i THE CLASSIEST EQIII.IUItISTS I | IX VAUDEVILLE Grand Free Fireworks Display Thursday Evening Annual Bargain Day FRIDAY IV i ™ l """" mmm^ Majestic Theater HIGH-CLASS VAUDEVILLE j Mnl., 10 A 20e! Eve., 10, 20 & 30c I Your* l.tixt Clianee to See This Splendid Hill SOCIETY DIVING BEAUTIES IRWIN anil IIENnY In I "COMI.V riIItOUGH THE RYE" JACKSON anil WAHL In , -TOO LATE" IIOUSII nnil LAVELLE In ! "WHEN THE WORM TURNS" FAWN nnil PAWN The SenMon'n Newest Novelty ConilnK Wednesday KITTY FRANCIS A CO. In "MRS. MURPHY'S RECEPTION" Reply the I'ope President Wilson's message to the Pope in reply to the peace proposals from Rome signed by Secretary Lan ' sing follows: To His Holiness, Pope Benedlctus XV, Pope: In acknowledgement of the communication of Your Roliness to the belligerent peoples, dated August 1, 19i7, the President of the United States requests me to transmit the following reply: Every heart that has not been blinded and hardened by this ter rible war must be touched by this moving appeal of His Holiness the Pope, must feel the dignity and force of the humane and gen erous motives which prompted it, and must fervently wish that we might take the path of peace he so persuasively points out. But it would be folly to take it if it does not in fact lead to the goal . he proposes. Our response must be based upon the stern facts and upon nothing else. It is not a mere cessation of arms he desires; it is a stable and enduring peace. This agony must not be gone through with again and it must be a matter of very sober judgment what will insure us against It. His Holiness in substance pro poses that we return to the status quo ante bellum, and that then there be a general condonation, disarmament, and a concert of nations based upon an acceptance of the principle of arbitration; that by a similar concert freedom of the seas be established; and that the territorial claims of France and Italy, the perplexing problems of the Balkan States, and the restitution of Poland be left to such conciliatory adjust ments as may be possible in the new temper of such a peace, due regard being paid to the aspira tion of the peoples where political fortunes .and affiliations will be involved. HIIMIH For Status Quo Ante It is manifest that no part of this program can be successfully carried out unless the restitution of the status quo ante furnishes a firm and satisfactory basis ti it. The object of this war is to deliver the free peoples of the world from the menace and the actual power of a vast military establishment controlled by an irresponsible government which, having secretly planned to dom inate the world, proceeded to carry the plan out without refeard either to the sacred obligation? cracy and the doctrines which that autocracy has been striving to force upon the world with such monstrous cruelty and barbaric force. Door Not Shut It had been predicted that the President would not close the door to peace, and that the way would still be open for further suggestions and negotiations. These predictions are all shown to have been base less. There is only one road to peace, and that is through a victory of democratic principles and the estab lishment of democratic standards of right and liberty. If this victory can be achieved through the awakening of the German people to a sense of the horrors their present rulers have brought upon the world, so that they will themselves effect in the German state the transformation that is necessary to the safety of the world, such action would put an end to the war peaceably. But if no such awakening comes to Germany, or if the German people are determined to share the guilt of their rulers and to support the awful criminality which has char acterized the whole course of the German offensiva, then peace can be accomplished only by the overthrow of the German nation. Hair Often Ruined By Washing With Soap Soap should be used very care fully, if you want to keep your hah looking its best. Most soaps and pre pared shampoos contain too much alkali. This dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle ahd ruins it. The best thing for steady use is Just ordinary mulsified cocoanut oil (which is pure and greaseless), and is better than the most expensive soap or anything else you can use. One or two teaspoonfuls will cleanse the hair and scalp thorough ly. Simply moisten thef hair with water and rub it in. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, which rinses out easily, removing ev ery particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and excessive oil. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves the scalp soft, and the hair fine and silky, bright, lustrous, fluffy and easy to manage. You can get mulsified cocoanut oil at any pharmacy, It's very cheap, and a few ounces will supply every member of the family for months. — Adv. Willow Grove Excursions Sundays, August 26, September 2 and 9 SPECIAL EXCURSION' TRAIN I Spcc'l FROM FARE Lv.u.m. Ilarrisbtirg $2.50 6.00 Uumniclstowii . . . 2.50 6.18 SwuUira 2.50 6.24 llcrshcy ..... .. 2.50 6.27 Palmyru 2.50 6.35 Annvllle 2.50 6.45 Lebanon . 2.50 6.57 Myerstown ' 2.40 7.11 Ar. Willow Grove 10.15 Returning, Special Train will lodvc Willow Grove 9.00 P. M. for above stations. Tickets good only on date of excursion on above Special Train in each direction. Children be tween 5 and 12 years of ago half fare. Free Concert Afternoon and Evening SOUS A AND HIS BAND HARHISBURG TELEGRXFH! of treaty or the long-established practices and long-cherished prin ciples of international action and honor; which chose its own time for the war; delivered its blow fiercely and suddenly; stopped at no barrier either of law or oi mercy; swept a whole continent within the tide of blood—not tho blood of soldiers only but the blood of innocent women and children also, and of the helpless poor; and now stands balked but not defeated, the enemy of four-tlfths of the world. This power is not the German people. It is the ruthless master of, the German people. It is no business of ours how that great people came under the control or submitted with temporary zest to the domination of its purpose; but it is our >bus iness to see to it that the history of the rest of the world' is no longer left tp its handling. To deal with such a power by way of peace upon the plan pro posed by His Holiness the Pope would, so far as we ' can see, involve a recuperation of its stnength and a renewal of its pol icy. would make it necessary to create a permanent hostile com binatlonof nations against the Ge rman people, who are Its instru ments; and would result in aban doning the new-born Russia to the intrigue, the mantfold subtle in terference, and the certain coun ter-revolution which would be attempted by all the malign in fluences to which the German government has of late accus tomed the world. Can p<;ace be based upon a restitution of its power or upon any word of honor It could pledge in a treaty of set tlement and accommodation? St rollK MUNt Not Benefit Responsible statesmen must now everywhere see, if they never saw before, that no peace can rest securely upon political or economic restrictions meant to benefit some nations and cripple or embarrass upon vin dictive action of any sort, or any kind of revenge or deliberate injury. The American people have suffered intolerable wrongs at the hand of the Imperial German gov ernment, but they desire no re prisal upon the German peopl, who have themselves suffered all things in this war. which they did not choose. They believe that peace should rest upon the rights of peoples, not the rights of gov ernments —the rights of peoples great or small, weak or powerful —their equal right to freedom and security and self-government and ORPHEUM Thursday, matinee and night, August ifu—""the Monte Carlo Girls." tuur lesque). Saturday, matinee and night, Septem ber I—"Peg o' My Heart." " COLONIAL To-day and Thursday Alice Joyce and Harry Morey in "Ricnard, the Brazen." REGENT To-day and Thursday Geraldine Fai rar in "Joan, the Woman." Friday—Louise Huft and Jat-K Pick t'oru in "What Money Can't Buy." Saturday—Louise Huft and Jack Pick lord 111 "What Money Can't Buy." PAXTANG Vaudeville. Complying with a general demand from tne theatergoing public all over the United States, Oli "Pef£ o' ver Morosco has sent Sly Heart" out a special company in J. Hartley Manners' wonderfully successful comedy, "Peg o' My Heart." This play is known in all parts of the civilized world by reputation, at least, and will live for ever as a classic. In selecting the company which is presenting this pleasing and fascinat ing comeuy at tne Orplieum, Saturday, matinee. and night, Mr. Morosco has selected a cast of exceptional merit. The production is an elaborate one in every detail. The secret of the truly remarkable succaps of "Peg o' My Heart," will be round in .one of tne witty remarks of Peg. An important theatrical and musical event is the forthcoming appearance of Al. H. Wilson, AI. H. Wlliion America's great char und Company acter dialect couto dian-singer and his talented company at the Orpheuni, xuesday, mt-tinee and night, a new stirring comedy song-play, "The Irish Fifteenth," by Theodore Burt Sayre, presents this celebrated comedian with an opportunity to display his ability as an Irish character actor — tor the title conveys a romantic mili tary theme in the story and naturally the episodes breathe the atmosphere of the Emerald Isle. Five new songs, all very attractive and catchy, will De the prominent feature of the perform ance. They are called "My Mother's Wedding Ring," "Ireland Is Home, Sweet Home," "I Want You Then, Machree," "A Lily From Heaven," and "The Irish Will Be There." Surrounding the Five Society Div ing Beauties, whose daring aquatic feats are .winning them The new laurels each day they Mnjestlc are here, there is a good Ulll comedy show. One ot the big laughs of the bill is the skit that Irwin and Henry are pre senting called "Comin' Through the Rye." This clever couple keep up a rapidtlre of conversation that is line. Other attractions on the bill include: Fawn and Fawn, in an original equi libristic offering; Jackson and Walil, who put over some new songs and dances in "a delightful manner, and Housh and La Velle, in their laugh able ctfmcdy skit entitled "When the Worm Turns." The vaudeville show booked for the last'three days has as its big attraction a musical comedy entitled "Mrs. Murphy's Reception," presented by Miss Kitty Francis and a company of lifteen talented people. Grouped around this act are: Alex ander, O'Nell and Sexton, clever trio in a comedy song and dance offering called "From Virginia;" Lillette, tal ented violin player and singer; Mario and Duran, comedy gymnasts, and one other attraction. Thfe delightful modern drama, "Richard, the Brazen," In which Harry Morey is co-starred Alter Joyce nt Alice Jtoyce, is the the Colonial with the charming joint work of Dr. Cyrus Townsend Brady and Edward Peple, both famous authors and play wrights. This Greater Vitagraph Blue Ribbon feature is being shown at the Colonial to-day and to-morrow and contains a story of absorbing inter est. In this play Miss Joyce is seen in a role different from any she has portrayed recently, for she Is called upon to play a role dual In character, the'early stages bordering on light comedy, while in the latter part of the story she develops strong emo tional power. Friday only—winsome Bessie Love will star in a new Tri angle play, "The Sawdust Ring." It is a delightful story of circus life, showing how a little girl, the daugh ter of the proprietor of a three-ring outfit, and of a mother long separated from her husband through a misun derstanding. brings about their recon ciliation. In the world since history began to a participation upon fair terms in tiie economic opportunities of the world—the German people of course if they will ac cept equality and not seek dom ination. The test, therefore, of eveif plan of peace is this: Is it based upon the faith of all the peoples involved or merely upon the word of an ambitious and intriguing government, on the one hand, and of a group of free peoples, on the other? This is a test which goes to the root of the matter; and it is the test which must be applied. Known to World The purposes of the United States in this war are known to the world—to every people to whom the truth has been permit ted to come. They do not need to be stated again. We seek no material advantage of any kind. We believe that the intolerable wrongs done In this war by the furious and brutal power of the Imperial German government ought to be repaired, but not at the expense of the sovereignty of any people—rather a vindication of the sovereignty both of those that are weak and of those that are strong. Punitive damages, the dismemberment of empires, the establishment of selfish and ex clusive economic leagues, we deem inexpedient and in the end worse than futile, no proper basis for a peace of any kind, least of all, an enduring peace. That must be based upon justice and fairness and the common rights of man kind. We cannrft take the word of the present rulers of Germany as a guarantee of anything that Is to endure, unless explicitly support ed by such constructive evidencu of the will 1 and purpose of the German people themselves as the other peoples of tho world be justified in adopting. Without such guarantees treaties of settle ment, agreements for disarma ment, covenants to set up arbitra tion in the place of force, terri torial adjustments, reconstitutions of small nations, if made with the German government, no man. no nation could now depend on. We must await some new evidence of the purposes of the great peoples of the Central Powers. God grant it may be g! . en soon and in a way to restore the confidence of all peoples everywhere in the faith of nations and the possibility of a covenanted peace. ROBERT LANSING, Secretary of State of the United States of America. Joan of Arc stands supreme as the greatest woman (•ernldlne Fnrrar who ever lived, at the Regent Ignorant. unlet , tered, she .rose from a peasant's llearth until, within a short span of two years, she stood beside kings. At 17 years of age she was comnianuer-in-chief of the l'rench armies. At 1!> she was burn ed at the stake by the people she loved. They <1 id not understand, it is a story which has thrilled men, wo men and children through tile cen turies. Now it is told, beautifully, wonderfully, at the Regent Theater, I?? marvelous motion picture, Joan, the Woman." with Geraldine !• arrar as the immortal Maid of Or leans. Those who have seen this pro duction are loud in their praise of Miss Farrar s wonderful acting. The hero, as played by Wallace Reid, de serves a lot of credit. This production remains at the Re- Sent to-day and to-morrow, and those who have not taken an opportunity to see "Joan, the Woman," should not miss this rare treat. Friday and Saturday—Jack Pick ford and Louise Huff—the favorite co- M I"' 8 - su PP ov 'ted by Theodore Roberts. Win be presented in "What Money Can t Buy. In addition to the main Itature on Saturday, "Fatty" Arbuckle will be presented in his latest comedy, • His Wedding Ni&ht," a rip-roaring comedy. B .One Of the classiest vaudeville bills that Ilarrisburg has been favored TI. nui in a lon g TIME, ii lue Hill being presented at the at Puxtnng Paxtang Park Theater this week. Frosini. the most popular accordion player on the stage, is the feature attraction of the TESTIMONIALS FOR MEDICINES Ly3ia E. Pinkham Medicine Company Publishes Only Genuine Ones. The testimonials published by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Com pany come unsolicited. Before they are used the company takes great care to inform itself about the writer. Never knowingly, has It published an untruthful letter, never is a letter published without written consent signed by the writer. The reason that thousands of wo men from all parts of the country write such grateful letters is that Lydia E. Ptnkham's Vegetable Com pound has brought health and hap piness Into their lives, once burdened with pain and illness. It has relieved women from some of the worst forms of female ills, from displacements, inflammation, ulceration, irregularities, nervous ness, weakness, stomach troubles and from the blu<>s. It is impossible for any woman who is well and who has never fercd to realize ]])/jjr I\\ how these poor, W[ J|JO\\j\ suffering women J I feel when restored If |7jy TW || to health; and 11 VTF"* jL II their keen desirefj\ to help other wo -\\) [([ men who are fering as they did. ATLANTIC CITY EXCURSION SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 Tickets good going on all trains and good for return within sixteen days. Rate from A Harrisburg * o O vl High Water of the War Reached by President's Note, Which Seals Fate of German Junkerdom Washington, Aug. 29.—President Wilson's rejection of the Pope's peace proposals is regarded here as the nigh water mark of the war. Pur thermore, it is indicative of the vir tual selectipn of the president by the allias as their spokesman before the world. The note comes as a climax to the remarkable series of state documents in which President Wilson has argued the cause of the world democ racy against autocracy in the high court of public opinion, and accept '"ore and mor e >y the people of all the allied countries as expressing their ideals. ..- Tl V; r< ; appears to be no doubt that the United States was selected to make answer before the world, in advance of all the others. fonsidering the extraordinary character of the President's com munication, its immense importance in definitely terminating for the pres ent at least all efforts to Beach a compromise peace, and the assured fact that it represents the views of all of the entente allied powers join ed with America in the war against uermany, the time consumed in the preparation of the reply was re markably short. Cold Determination The feature that is certain to fix public attention is the cold determi nation not even to permit the sub ject of peace negotiations to be broached so long as the evil and dominating forces of autocracy and militarism control the central pow ers. It is not even necessary to read between the lines of the President's response to see clearly apparent the inflexible purpose. or this reason the President was Pi?'' ' n t° any discussion of the peace conditions detailed by Pope Benedict, though that field was made alluring by the pontiff's adop tion of some of the proposals laid down by President Wilson himself in early utterances. On the other hand, there was no effort to evade responsibility for an expression of view as to the basis of sound and enduring peace, for the President's response in its concluding paragraphs restates the purposes for which America entered the great war. The radical difference that appears to exist between the Pope and the President touches this very matter of ji stable and enduring peace. The park bill. Froslnl'a act is so well JJ? W *2. am <>ng the patrons of vaude ville that a description is unnecessary. At every performances he responds to numerous encores and plays many se lections at the request of his auditors. The other acts on the park bill are all high-class offerings, and serve to make the show an enjoyable enter tainment in every respect. To-morrow evening there will be a free fireworks display at Paxtang, and an elaborate pyrotechnical program is promised by the park management. One of the big events of the park sea son is the annual bargain day which is scheduled for Friday. On that day the leading park attractions are open to the public at half price. By buying a strip-ticket for ten cents, one gets a ride on the m&rry-go-round, a trip through the glgfeler, a ride on the roller coaster and an ice cream cone. This is the day to bring the young sters out to the park for a good time at little expense. Second Annual HECKERT Family Reunion The Second Annual lleunion of the Heckert t'amliy xv-il 1 be held at HO I XING GIIEK.V PARK, near Shamokin Dam, Thursday, Sept. 6, 1917 You and your family are most cordially invited to be present. (Basket Picnic). A suitable program will be rendered. Come, you will en- Joy the occasion. COMMIT! EE | Save $2.001 By Getting Your j 1 Gas Water Heater I I I BEFORE September Ist I ysSX'ii V IpP i J Gasas fuel is more desirable now than ever ''' •118 WQ 1, since coal is so high in price. II frsJi ! REMEMBER! I II | I |Jp j $2.00 Down I JUL* $1.50 a Month I g Puts One in Your Home Phone to us and our representative will call right away. I DO IT TO-DAY I ' J SS33SSSSSSSSSS3SSSSS33SSSS333S |i Harrisburg Gas Company I I Middletown Harrisburg Steeiton I V AUGUST 29, 1917. Boy Walks 9000 Miles To Win His Diploma Elmer Kraatz. one of the Bellaire High school . graduates, broke the Belmont county record for traveling the greatest distance to obtain his education. He walked six miles to school and then back each day, it being esti mated that he covered 9,000 miles in his four years of high school work. —New York American. pontiff looks to the restoration of conditions as they existed before the war; the President turns his back upon these, convinced that a return to the status quo bellum could never bring permanent peace, which can be secured only by agreement be tween free peoples on both sides. Doom of Kaiser As one official, commenting, ex pressed it, the President's response, reflecting as it doos the views of the entente allies, sounds the doom of Hohenzollernism* and military dom ination of peoples. That this can and should be accomplished without the destruction of the German people is one of the striking expressions in the President's note, when he expressly disclaims any intent to seek punitive \ damages and the dismemberment of empires, or even the punishment of the central powers after the war by gigantic economic combinations against them. This shaft is aimed straight over the heads of the army-controlled German foreign office at the under standings and appreciation of the Geririan people, already manifesting many signs of a determination to as sert their right to govern themselves by parliamentary methods. Jt is assumed here that there will follow a fierce outburst of denuncia tion against the attempt from the outside to dictate to the German people their form of government. But it is also believed that' as the hardships of war and misgovern ment bear with ever-increasing se verity upon the German people they must in the end throw off their mil itary masters and take in their own hands, through a representative gov ernment the conduct of negotiations looking to a fair and honorable and permanent peace. healed that Skin trouble When you think what a source of annoyance and sufferingthat cczemalias been to me in the past three years, do you wonder 1 am thankful that the doctor prescribed Resinol? The very first time I used it, the itching stopped for good, and the eruption began to disappear. ~i M | t j Resinol Soap should usually be used with Resinol Ointment to pre pare the skin to receive the Resinol I Kfigj medication. Resinol Soap ano Resinol Ointment arc sold by all / UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITER "The Machine You Will Eventually Buy." Temporarily located at 24 N. Third St. I Will occupy new perma nent location about Sept. , Ist. New Dauphin Build ing, Market Square. September the Great Clean-up Month Around the Country's Trees September Is the great month for pruning and every dead branch of importance should be attended to. Tree growers should not prune un necessarily. says the buftetln in the American Forestry Magazine, which says that as little of the live wood as possible should be pruned. Make all cuts close to the trunk or main limb and cover all wounds with coal tar. Remove and destroy egg masses of tussock moth and similar leaf-eating Insects. Mark for removal in winter, all hopelessly infested and dead trees. You can discern these trees with greater definiteness before the leaves drop, but you can cut them down to greatest advantage in winter. Plant evergreens during the last of August and early September. Move them with a ball of soil. The American .Forestry Associa tion will be glad to answer any In quiries from readers of this paper that touches upon the care of trees, plants or birds. Write to P. S.Rils dale, the secretary, at 210-2 20 Mary land building. SafeWlilfc Infants and Invalids HORLICK'S THE ORIG MALTED MILK Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form. For infants, invalids and growing children. Pure nutrition, upbuilding the whole body, invigorates nursing mothers ud the aged. More nutritious than tea, coffee, etc. Instantly prepared. Requires no cooking, Substitute* Coit YOU Same Prict | Dr.C.L.Wright !; I DENTIST :: J 23 N. THIRD ST. ;; I Over Hoover'* Jewelry Store , i EDUCATIONAL, School of Commerce AND Harrisburg Business College Troup Ilullillim, 15 So. Mnrket Sqnpri Thorough Training in Business ant stenography. Civil Service Course OUR OFFER—Right Training by Spe cialists and High Grade Positions You Take a Husiness Course Bu Once; the BEST is What You Want Fall Term begins, Day and Nigh School, Monday, September 3. Bell. 485 Dial, 439 The Office Training School Kauiman Bids. 4 S. Market Sc Training That Secures Salary Increasing Position In th? Office Call or send today for interests booklet. "Tlie Art ofTJJettliiK A lon In tlie World." Bell f ' The Philadelphia Dentist Is Now Located at • 1 N. Market Square Over Knisely's Cigar Store
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