8 CAMP MEADE TO SEND MEN ABROAD Engineers to Go Soon; Dau phin Men Get a Press Agent Camp Meade, Md., Oct. 20. —The first movement of troops from this camp for foreign sli&res probably will be made within the next few weeks. A volunteer organization of several 'hundred engineers, including a num ber of Pennsylvanlans, has been in structed to hold Itself in readiness for orders to be sent away. None of the men in this body was selected in the draft. It is believed thoy will be sent to Prance, to be made a part >. incomplete engineer regiments there. Dauphin county lads, together with their comrades from Adams county, ■who are in the 316 th Infantry, are going to fight this war right and along high-grade, modern, scientific lines. They are going to have a press agent. Fact. He is "Joe" Boss, who covered many newspaper assign ments, as well as doing odd jobs about the newspapers during the time when the solons were absent from Capitol Hill. "By the way," said the new P. A. "I haven't seen anything in your pa per about the doughty lads from Dauphin, zenith county of an unfet tered state. Why?" "Because it wasn't your turn yet," was suggested. "Now that you are a press agent proceed." So here is the first press agent story from Meade. "While Company A of the 316 th In fantry of the National Army feels a particular pride in all its members, its especial stars are two of the best | athletes in camp. No person conver sant with football need to be told as to the identity of Patrick J. Reagan. For years at football and basketball lie helped Yillanova to uphold its reputation on gridiron and in cage. "Not a whit less famous in the an nals of the sport is Henry Shellen berger, of Middletown. A basketball player unknown to no fan in the cen tral part of Pennsylvania, he brings to his activities as a soldier every facility that he showed as an athlete. "P. S. I'll have another soon. "J. P. B." MRS. MARY MILLER DIES Elizahethville, Pa., Oct. 20.\ —j Mrs. Mary Miller died at the home of her brotherr, Isaac P. Miller, near Dietrich, on Thursday evening. She was 77 years old and is survived by one brother. Funeral* services will be held on Monday morning with burial at Straw's Church. • fiGHT FOR YOUR LIFE Duty Demands Robust Health Fight to get it and keep it Fight—fight day in and day out to prevent being overtaken by Ills and nils. Keep wrinkles from marring the cheek and the body from losing Its youthful appearance and buoy ancy. Fight when 111-health is com ing with its pallor and pains, defects and declining powers. Fight to stay Its course and drive it off. But fight intelligently. Don't fight without weapons that can win the day, for without the intelligent use of effective weapons the pallor spreads and weakness grows and a seemingly strong man or woman oft times becomes a prey to Ills after all. You will not find this class of per- i sons in the hypoferrin ranks. No | unhealthy, dull, Craggy, droopy per- j t-ons in that line. It is a hale, hearty, j robust aggregation of quick-steppers who view life in a joyous frame of | mind and are mentally and physically | equal to any emergency. Hypoferrin stands for sound body and sound mind—it is the invigorating tonic of j the times —powerful and unsurpassed j as a health restorer, vitalizer and; health preserver. Fight to hold the , vigor of a sound body with hypo ferrin or to stay the process of decay and restore health and strength—you win. This tonic of amazing, wonder working properties -has been ap proved by physicians as a restorer and safeguard of health. It is a thoroughly scientific preparation of the very elementa necessary to tone up the stomach and nerves, to build strong, vital tissue, make pure blood, firm flesh and solid, active, tireless muscles. . Hypoferrin contains those mighty •strength-producing agents, leclthln and-iron peptonate, in a form best adnpted to benefit the body and its organs. Its ingredients are absolute ly necessary to the blood. In nine cases out of ten a run-down condi tion, sallow, pale complexions that "all in" feeling and frail bodies are due to lack of lecithin-and-lron pep tonate in the system. Your mental and physical strength and endurance defends upon a lecithin-an-iron peptonate laden blood; steady, dependable nerves and a healthv stomach. With these you can meet life at any angle. This wonder tonic. hypoferrin. which is as perfect as science can get to nature, meets every essential demand of the human organism. It Is safe and sure and a boon to run down. worn-out men and women. Hypoferrin means nature's own way of bringing color to the cheeks, strength to the body and keeping the vigor and buoyancy of youth. The powd'r and paint way of effecting beauty is not needed by hypoferrin women and girls. Their blood, filled with nature's beautv stores, creates conditions that give firmness and grace to the body and the glow of health to the cheeks. No need of going through life sick ly and always feeling miserable In this age of medical science. Join the. hypoferrin ranks. It puts into you the springy snap and vigor you ought to have and puts life Into your body and mind that Inspires the con fidence that you confront the world on an equal footing with anyone. Hypoferrin may be had at your druggist's or direct from us for |I.OO per package. It is well worth the price. The Sentanel RemedlM Co., Cincinnati. Ohio- Gohl, Rinkenbach & Rouse OPTOMETRISTS AND OPTICIANS 22 N. Fourth Street WHERE GLASSES ARE MADE RIGHT AT A REASONABLE PRICE SATURDAY EVENING, AT THE CENTER OF LIFE, AN ALTAR The International Sunday School Lesson For Oc tober 21 is "The Temple Rebuilt and Dedicated." —Ezra, 3:8-13-6:14-18 By WILLIAM T. ELLIS I had been watching the Jews at the Wailing Place in Jerusalem ono Friday afternoon. Some of the devo tion seemed mechanical, as when some old Spanish Jews in gabardines went up to the wall and read for a space, then, after perfunctorily touch ing the stones with their lips, stepped off to one side and chatted and laughed. I was informed that these men were hired to say prayers at the Wailing Place for Jews in distant lands. Then, as I was about, to leave. 1 saw a woman of perhaps thirty years draw near. She had been piaying at the otlr end of the wall. As she approached, I perceived that she bore such a face as might have been Ra chel's—strong, melancholy, spiritual, queenly. She was manifestly oblivi ous to,the motley company about her, of Jews from many nations; her soul was in her rapt face, turning toward the great blocks of yellowish stone, stili standing from the foundation ot Solomon's Temple. Her hands were clasped to her bosom, and her lips moved in prayer. She was seeing with great lustrous eyes, not those monolith covered with Hebrew names and prayers, but the glory of the House of Jehovah, and of the king dom of her fathers. All that had been and now is not. and that a de vout child of Abraham hopes that yet may be. was symbolized for this wor shiper by these stones. She kissqd them again and again, as the woman kisses the lover who she fears she may nevermore see; and as she moved away, she looked back over her shoul der, with unutterable longing in her eyes. That incident gave me a new con ception of the ardor and intensity with which a Jew may love even the very stones of the temple. There I saw embodied the passion of the re turning exiles for the House of Je hovah. The spirit of her people, at their highest and deepest moods, was personified in that one devotee. It was a new light upon this entire story of the rebuilding of the temple, which the Sunday schools to-day study. ••The Eaat Is the Ka*t" Nobody will ever understand the I Jew until it Is remembered that he is an Oriental. The deep-flowing, re ligious spirit of this people who were chosen to be custodians of humanity's loftiest religious truth is partially explained by the Oriental's supreme interest in religion. The Occidental is not so. To this clay the people of i all the East, but especially of the j region called the Near East, whence J sprang the Jews, put religion first. | All sorts of religions thrive there; an i irreligious man there is unthinkable, < The villagers of the hills of Lebanon, the shepherds in the fields of Pales- I tine, the Bedouins of the desert in I their tents, the diverse peoples in the Tigris-Euphrates Valley, talk ove historic and do'ctrlnal religious ques tions, just as a group of Americans discuss politics or baseball. At the present time the region where the Bible story was enacted Is prostrate beneath the cruel heel of a i war in which it was embroiled by the unscrupulous appeal to the religious motive of a European monarch. A million Christians have perished. Jews by the thousands have died of starvation. Armies are encamped in Jerusalem and Hebron and Damas cus. Over the district of the exile, old Babylonia, a series of dreadful battles have been waged, and British prisoners have been driven, in abject misery, over the route of the return- j ing Hebrew patriots. The Chief Knot About Man The Jewish exiles who centered their first thought upon the spiritual side of the return from captivity were true to the fundamental aspiration of humanity. As Carlyle says, "In every sense a man's religion is the chief fact with regard to him. If you tell me what this is, you tell me to a very great extent what the man is, what kind of things lie will do." The flippant youth, or the immature man, who "has no time for religion," and who is not interested in the church, and feels too big for a Bible class, has all the history of the human race, and the testimony of all the great thinkers, arrayed squarely against him. One hour's honest re search upon the subject will start any man toward a realization of the truth that religion is the theme that has most deeply engrossed the best thought of mankind from the dawn cf history to the present hour. The shallow materialism of the West is no improvement upon the inbred re ligiousness of the East. The Altar at the Center The huge task of the returned ex iles was to build a .nation. Their existence as a country had been prac tically ended; they were only a scattered host of captives, their land was laid waste at its capital, and elsewhere occupied by hybrid aliens. The work ahead of them as they trav ersed the dreary road from Babylon back home was even harder than thf first organization of a state. Rebuild ing is in some ways more difficult than building. The person who has made a wreck of life finds it a greater undertaking to remake than it was to build in youth. China is in a sorer plight to-day than ever In her past. Vision was needed to see the new Jerusalem in these heaps of debris, these piled-up pillars, these obliter ated streets. A few years ago, when I walked over the smoking acres of rubbish that had once been San Fran cisco. I marveled at the courage and imagination of the citizens who from the first saw a new and fairer city rising from these ruins. So it takes the vision that has been spirit-anoint ed to see in every wreck of hu manity the man that may yet be; and in the weaknesses and offenses of the present social order a new and per fect state of society. The faith which these old Jews possessed, to behold a second and greater temple in the stead of this desolation, is needed by all spiritual builders to-day. Out of the desolation of the world war must surely rise a better civilization and a safer, sweeter life for all mankind. Despite their mixed emotions, their 1 mingled tears and psalms, the return [ ing exiles had the wisdom to per ceive the proper first -fetep. Without waiting for a building, they set up an altar. That was an act of faith and fealty. It proclaimed their trust in ttod and their allegiance to Him. And it showed that they realized, what Christians needed always to remem ber, that it is the worship that makes the temple, and not the temple ths worship. The spirit is more than the house. Whoever erects an altar in his heart, in his home, in his life, shows a sense of proportion: he puts first things first. And in the rebuild ing of the world that now confronts us. religion must be kept in her proper, foremost place. What t/'nc In the Church This whole episode—it was more than an episode; It was an event in Jewish history—raises the present day application of the place of the church in national life. The Jewish nation was built above the temple. America was founded upon religious convictions. The cornerstone of this new type of life, which is essentially the same on both sides of the Cana dian line, is a sense of the. supremacy of spiritual things. Canada has taught the whole world a lesson by her zeal in planting the church in every one of her frontier communi ties: wherever the nation advances, there advances the church also. The most thoughtful people of the Domin ion have a conviction that Christian ity is Indispensable: the church stee ple is the first and highest of the frontier landmarks. A new sense of the proper func tions of the church in a community Is taking hold of our day. Not only for preaching and worship, but as centers of the social life of the neigh borhood, the churches have a use. Whatever Is of general Interest, whatever makes for real neighborll ness, whatever promotes intellectual uplift, whatever ministers to patriot ism and social betterment, is proper for the church. A return of the old fashioned lyceum, a revival of the oft-derided church supper (not for money-making, but for good fellow ship), the maintenance of a local Chautauqua—all these are proper for the church, which are placed in the midst of the people to minister to all the needs of their spirit. In the promotion of world-brotherhood, what agency so appropriate and effective as the church? This western world is dead opposed to any alliance of church and state. This is a discarded notion, even in the thinking of progressive Euro peans. But the church in the state— interpreting all its intellectual, social, commercial and industrial processes —is most proper and necessary. That is tin. modern fulfillment of the Ideal of the Jewish exiles. The lltiKilild Synngogue Later we shall study the difficulties of these builders, and the opposition they meet. To-day let us rejoice with them. The laying of the foundations of the new temple was made the oc casion of a great festival, a thanks giving service. The idea seems as incongruous as that of the first Amer isan Thanksgiving Day which the Pilgrims kept. All around was the desolation wrought by Nebuchadnez zar's forces. Only the eye of faith could see any result of the return and the reconstruction. Yet when the foundation stones were laid a feast of praise and rejoicing was held, with music and shouting and the antiphonal Tefrain "Oh, give thanks unto Jehovah: for He is good; For His loving kindness endureth for ever." The fountain of tears lies very close to the springs of joy. This noise of those who shouted for joy, great jubilation was a time of weep- j ing as well as a time of song; the ; noise of those who shouted for joy. i and of those who wept for remem-1 brance, mingled together. The old looked backward: the young looked fcrward. The whole made a sym phony of praise. Apparently the weepers were build ers also. Lamentation that is hand less and footless honors nothing. The bettering of the present is the best tribute to the past. The Jews who still dwell in the land of the exile have their headquarters at Bagdad, with a school of the law, where aged rabbis are in study and conference I have been in council with them, but in all their discussion of the past there kept rising before my mind the imaga of the chief Bagdad synagogue, a building of Immemorial antiquity, but dirty, unkept and miserable be yond belief. The zeal of the rabbis for the past—and this is the lesson— would better be shown by activity for the present improvement. I do not think much of the orthodoxy, whether it be Moslem, Jewish or Christian, which is so engrossed in idle worus that it has no thought for activity right here and now. So long as men are builders, it matters little whether they sing or sob. To Discuss Establishment < of Mental Clinic Here A meeting of those 'nterested in the establishment of a mental clinic here will be held at the Civic Club building next Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock. Kenneth L. Pray, secretary of the Public Charities Association, will speak. Representatives of all civic and social organizations are in vited to attend. PWHAT THEN' Here's a doc tor says you shouldn't cat. when you're But suppose you are con tinually worried for fear you won't be able to get anything WHY / \ / COULDN'T HE. / I Writer's Wife \ —Oh, Harold! I wish you could | write like jpHHKJfljk, ifj/lj | Shakespeare. I j saw the loveliest | / | bonnet today fop fWf\ 1 j twenty dollars. If I HARHISBtTRG llfljlflW TELEGRAPH VELIE NEW SPORT MODE L ••'■': y' The new Velie sport model will command a second look when it appears in the street. The exhaust manifold extends through the engine hood and to the rear with a long, graceful sweep. A two-way valve per mits the use of a silencing muffler, or give free vent to the exhaust gases as preferred. The car ts hung very low, with low body and deep seats for four passengers. ALL SHOULD JOIN HUNT FOR CHARM Beatrice Fairfax Tells How "Gift" May Be Se- . cured On with the search for charm.' We nil want it; the consciousness that we don't possess it makes each and every nonfascinator miserable. The other day X attended a tea where were gathered together sev eral celebrities, masculine and femi nine, a few ordinary folks and one or two pretty little moving-picture j actresses. Into the gathering came J one of America's foremost women writers. She was dressed in a suit] that belonged to the past spring— not to the coming winter —her hat was of straw instead of velvet. And the woman herself was thoroughly dowdy and unattractive looking. She! was so conscious of her work-a-day clothes and her lack of physical at tractiveness, in contrast with the youth and beauty llowering all around her that she was miserable, awkward and utterly dull. Her really brilliant and charming mind got all clouded over by terri fied self-consciousness: and the self consciousness was based on the date of her clothes and the dusti ness and general lack of freshness that distorted her from head to foot. "Oh, I didn't know there were going to be a lot of people here! I've come straight fron* work with out brushing or washing, or getting ready for all these folks. I just thought you and I were going to be alone, dear!" she cried to the hostess. And if she reads this article and feels a little hurt at me for writing it—that won't hurt her a bit! Why should any one of us go to a friend we love in dusty, unbrushed clothes or looking so shabby and unattract ive that we cannot be gracious to the people we meet in her home? Clothes do play an' important part j In transforming a stvipid, unattrac tive girl into a beautiful one. Please notice exactly what the fairy god-| mother did for Cinderella. I am not advocating vanity or conceit —both interfere with charm.! I am just advocating the careful grooming, the sensible selection of I clothes, the attractive arrangement] of your personal background and atmosphere that cannot be man- j aged in public. Then when you! come out in public you know that | your liajrpins are in place and your j I collar is clean and you don't have j to spend your whole evening think-' ing about yourself. Who hasn't pitted the self-eon-i scious, unhappy looking man whose; brown oxfords and blue serge busi ness suit and green tie stood out in a dinner-coated assembly. If the gentleman of the oxfords and tiiel green tie Is ninety-nine per cent.! charming he may rise above his I clothes; but the chances are that they will swamp him. "The unlit lamp, the ungirt loin," are Browning's symbol of unprepar edness. Well, you have to be ready for happiness when it comes—ready and waiting—or it will pass you by. Charm Is partly physical, partly spiritual and partly mental. It is to some extent a gift of the fairies-, and, in a degree, a thing you actu ally go out and get— -A thing you make to order. I-iife has a way of slipping by the, folks who are colorless, unattrac- j "RED PRINCESS" AND J. W. W. HEADS ARRESTED | ' : * y ' r.i,:?. a3xth f&y>w. /uwufto G xctsi rti. Elisabeth Gurley Flynn, sometimes called "Princess of the Reds;" Ar turo Giovannattl and Carlo Tresca, I. W. W. chiefs, arrested In New Tork charged with conspiracy to obstruct the operation of the draft law. The trio were arrested on warrants issued in Chicago. A CENTRAL TOWER AND SPIRE; OR, SEVERAL SPIRES? A Question of Great Moment to the Sky Line of New York The Cathedral of St. John the Divine, which is rising from one of the most elevated spots on Manhat tan Island, is very naturally a sub ject of considerable anxiety to the art-lovers of New York. Years will pass before it is finished, but it is of great moment that in outline and mass it shall justify the enor mous sums of money spent on it and the prominence of its site, which , causes it to Vie seen from a large part of Greater New York. In the October number of The Art AVorld one of the architects who took part in the original com petition for the plans—Mr. Huss — takes bold issue with the change in , design that took place when the win -1 ners of the competition, Messrs. , I Heins and La Farge, were set aside | and a new firm of architects put in their place. Nobody seems to know ! what influences were at work to ] cause such a radical change in the ! plans long after the choir had been erected. The original plans called for a cathedral in the Romanesque style of architecture. After crypt and choir were built the design was abruptly changed to Gothic. Mr. Huss maintains that the change from the broad and lofty central 1 tower of the design that was ac cepted to that proposed by Messrs. i Cram and Ferguson, the new archi ii tects, will hurt the appearance of the I building. Says air. Huss: "Not only do they substitute two . | spires for one .thus weakening the 1' total effect, but they suggest build ing a sort of decapitated tower over the foundation in place of the single spire suggested by Messrs. Heirs and La Farge and Messrs. Huss and Ruck. Thus they 'cut up' a dominant, sin gle mass into a conglomerate of | tive, stupid, boresome, or so restless and incapable of staying "put" that when opportunity rings the doorbell they are never home to hear the summons. Most of us have a stupid way of thinking that life owes us our de sires, so we trot around looking so unattractive that life mistakes us for flotsam and jetsam instead of for real ships, capable of carrying a cargo. If we don't err in that i direction we may make the blunder i of sitting with folded hands, walt | ii'g for the tide to carry rich cargo right up into the little backwater ' where we have anchored. It won't. The man or woman who makes up ! his or her mind what he or she wants and then goes after it gets it. I Given someofie a strong soul wants 1 to attract, he or she doesn't talk the beloved to death, doesn't dls j play his or her nature as restless. ! pleasure-seeking and spendthrift of | energy, vitality and all the big I qualities which ought to be turned i to real use. I The tragedy of many a man or j woman is that he or she gives false I impressions. The really fine, deep woman thinks she has to chatter and giggle and fluff herself up like ' the little, empty-headed eighteen - ' year-old, who is forgiven because of I her youth and prettiness. The gentle, charming, quiet man I imagines that he must bluster and : swagger like the cave man. He is ! completely startled when people don't like his poor imitations of i something that would not be com pletely attractive, • even if it were i natural. ! The point is to find out in what qualities you are attractive and then to cultivate them. Being a poor im ; itation of Helen of Troy or Elizabeth Browning or Mme. de Stael isn't half | as love-compelling as being an hon est, earnest, friendly, warmhearted, I generous and well-groomed little ■ Mary Smith. smaller masses, reducing as It were a mountain to a forest. That this is a serious mistake is proved by the fact that it is positively questioned, not only by some of the strongest men in the profession of architecture both here and abroad, but also by in telligent laymen and members of the other artistic professions. Many believe that if this matter were sub mitted to a large jury composed of leading architects, sculptors, painters and critics of Europe land America, they would reject the suggestion of Messrs. Cram and Ferguson and re turn at once to the original plan as shown on the final and accepted design of Messrs. Heins and l<a Farge because they feel that the carrying out of the original design of the latter would result in a more sublime cathedral. Therefore, those who ordered the departure from that plan have assumed a responsibility for which they will no doubt be severely criticized by posterity un less a return to the original design is made. "The error of departing from this Romanesque design and switching over to a Gothic is emphasized by the fact that New York already has a Gothic is emphasized by the fact that New York already has a Gothic cathedral in St. Patrick's and that also has two spires which will com pete with St. John the Divine; but if the latter were built in the Roman esque style with only one tre mendous spire the result would be individuality to both cathedrals and variety to the architecture of New Y'ork. For the building of another cathedral with two west spires would establish a perpetual comparison be tween the two edifices and lessen the individuality of both. William E. Jones Is Ordained a Minister of the Baptist Church Impressive ordination services were held in the Shiloh Baptist Church, York, on Thursday, when William E. Jones, of Harrisburg, Recently called to the pastorate of that church was publicly ordained to the gospel min istry. Churches of the Pennsylvania Bap tist State Convention on the invita tion of the Shiloh Church organized for the examination of the candidate, with the Rev. Dr. E. Luther Cunning ham. of St. Paul's Baptist Church, moderator, and J. Edward Jenkins, clerk. After passing a satisfactory examination the council advised the church to proceed with the public ordination of Mr. Jones. The follow ing was the order: Ordination sermon, the Rev. Dr. Warner Brown, Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Seelton; ordination prayer with laying on of hands, by the Rev. Dr. L. L. Taylor, Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Altoona; presentation of Bible and Hand of Fellowship, the Rev. Dr. E. Luther Cunningham, St. Paul's Baptist Church, Harris burg; charge to the candidate, the Rev. O. P. Goodwin, First Baptist Church, Steelton; chargo to the church, the Rev. W. H.. Roosezell, Baptist City Missionary, Harrlsburg; benediction, the Rev. W. "E. Jones, pastor of Shiloh Baptist Church, York. f n\ —*-• ivwl. -tr ONE IMPROVEMENT. 1 am not wise, I know. And so confess. But as I older grow I show oft lea*. The .\ \ Federal ! Machine Shop Court and Cranberry Sts. ! We have )uat opened a General ! I Repair and Machine Shop at 1 the above address. We are ape dally equipped to do grinding. ! bicycle, automobile and general | i machine repairing. Your Patronage Solicited OCTOBER 20, 1917. An Appeal to Men and Women in the Harrisburg District The executive committee In charge of the Liberty Loan campaign in tlie Harrisburg district to-day Issued the following appeal to the men and women of Dauphin, Perry, Juniata an.d Cumberland counties: On the ove of the campaign through which our district proposes io place Liberty l Bonds to the value of 57,500,000 in the possession of people of Dauphin, Perry, Juniata and Cumberland counties the executive committee asks that patriotic citizens consider this prop osition seriously. It Is urged that other interests be secondary until after the Liberty Loan campaign Is over. President Wilson in a letter to Food Conservator Herbert Hoover I asked that the lattor's conservation campaign be interrupted until after the Liberty Loan campaign. It The Fire Bent But Did Not Break Us \ The day after we had established j temporary quarters in our Kelker St. Market House property. / Through the kindness of the firms whose products we handle the Reo, Duplex and Huriburf Companies we now have on hand every type of their production and are ready to make immediate delivery. On Monday morning we will start building our new Garage on Kelker street above Market house, it will be 210x100 feet and we expect to make it one of the most modern garages in the automobile industry. Come and see us, we need your business. Harrisburg Automobile Company Fourth and Kelker Streets Now Is the Time to Buy Your Choice Winter Apples AT •. Wicker sham's Young Orchard VARIETIES—Winter Banana, Grime's Golden, Jonathan, King David Stayman's Wine Sap, Mammoth Black Twig, R. I. Greening, York Im perials, Baldwins, Delicious, Wine Sap, Gam, Streistown Pippin, etc. Come in auto, by wag-on or in trolley. Trolley cars stop at WICKER SHAM'S NURSERIES AND ORCHARD located one-half mile east oi Mechanicsburg. • R. A. WICKERSHAM Prettily Printed j Place Cards | j* *DD to the attractiveness of any /\ social function. Especially desir are these in wedding or bit th day anniversaries, at dinner parties rtSk or any one of the hundred social galher v ings in progress almost every day. We print place cards and every other kind. Let us print yours The Telegraph Printing Company Printing, Binding, Designing, , Photo Engraving, Die Stamping, Plate Printing • 216 Federal Square Harrisburg, Pa. would seem to the committee that ii tlie Harrisburg district next week i would be fitting were everything t give way to the serious business o making it more possible to win tli war. This com m I tee urges the people o j tlie district to talk over the proposi tion at home; to make up thel minds NOW as to the number an' j amount of bonds they will buy; t j be ready for the hundreds of sollci | tors who next week will call upo: i them. if there are bond owners who put I chased bonds of the first issue u I the instalment plan who are sti paying for them and do not feel tha they can assume further responsi bilities, it is urged that they us their influence with their friends, s that the friends may* also aid th United States. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers