1,800 Camp Meade Men Sent to Camp Hancock Camp Meade, Md., Dee, 11,. —rWlth the thermometer far below the freez ing point, the lads of the National Army stationed here shivered and their tet-'h chattered yesterday as mighty blasts of wind swept across the open fields. There was some hesi tation on the part of many of the boys to leave their warm cots when reveille was sounded in the early morning hours. At that time the thermometer registered seven de grees above zero. However, after the lads had jumped around a bit and breakfasted, they went at the train ing work with a Vim. The Pennsylva nia boys showed up well in the cold, and some of them soon shed their outer coats, so strenuously did they 1 go at their work. The cold weather has played havoc with everything at the camp. The water supply has suffered the great est. all the pipes being frozen yes terday. It was even a difficult matter to get water for the horses. From now on the Red Cross will have the biggest job of all, that of distributing presents, The presents are beginning to come in already. Orders have just been received that will send 1,800 men from the camp here to Camp Hancock, at Au gusta. At least 1,500 of these will be Pennsylvanians.. The fact that they will move before Christmas is not liked by many, but they are inclined to believe the move an indication of early service in Prance. Most of the men who are to leave are fami liar with motor truck driving or con struction. The selection of men for the of ficers training camp which opens here January 5, is well under way and there is quite a bit of anxiety among the Pennsylvania men par ticularly, to know whether or not their names are on the lists of for tunate ones. The time limit for the selected men to make application to attend this camp has passed and the company and regimental command ers are now selecting the men. General Nicholson, in a few days will announce the officers who will compose the special board to review the names of those suggested for ap pointment to the camp. SIXTY HENS STOLEN Halifax, Pa., Dec. 11. —Byron Koppenheffer raised a lot of Ply mouth Ttock chickens the past sum mer and on Saturday night thieves entered his pen and setolc sixty hens. I I son a large and varied as '' instruments at prices ranging from $5.00 to $25.00 Cases, instructors and strings also carried in stock. P. M. Oyler "Music Store" 14 South Fourth St. When you feel a Cold coming on, think of Laxative Pronto Quinine Cures a Goisf in One Day racts as a tonic-laxative and removes the cause of colds and grip, quickly "relieves the feverish con ditions and headache which are usually associated with colds." It is used by every Civilized Nation and has a larger sale in the United States than the combined sales of all other cold and grip tablets. It has stood the test for of a Century. We are Keeping The Quality Up. Remember there is Only One "Bromo Quinine" Thai is Laxative gromo Quinine A Look tot* thlm s/g- Af JL/ /fm _ natuno on tho box Mr \ iKr ft, ' co3 ° Cm lO * S/ * Kills Pain in Half the Time \ IIIK Ont 11111 <>F Marvelous Muxliirlur IM WIIRI Kvery Home Slioulil liavr Lumbago, Backache, Toothache, I other well known destroyers of pain Neuralgia and All Aches and ttn 'J a 25c box does the work of fifty Pains Arc Banished in Hair niustard plasters. tlio Time It Takes Oilier hy suffer foY days using plasters tin linn it laKCs wtn< r or continuously rubbing on liniment Remedies One Appliea- when one application of Mustarine tion l>oes tlic Work will take out soreness in chest or any part of the body and will limber up Grandmother's old fashioned must- lle ' k or rusty joints It banishes ird plaster did the work alright. but backache, toothache headache in ten t blistered the skin and was a mighty minutes many times in Ave. inelean remedy. . ! >0 want to get rid of sore M . . , .. „ , . thtoat, neuralgia, neuritis, tonsilitis. Mustarine ill the original mustard pleurisy, inflammation in the feet or irescriptioji that has made Grand- rheumatic agony and swollen joints a<>thrr mustard plaster but a relic ru b on Mustarine right away—lts tile >! liygone days. quickest pain killer in the world—and It's ten times better, cleaner and the cheapest. Get true Mustarine in vill not blister; it is made of true, the yellow box at any drugstore. lonest yellow mustard combined with Advertisement. V. A Man's Gift From a Man's Store ,gf?' % fe Wm. Strouse ~ • TCTESDAY'EVENTKra HKBBIBBCRa HfUjftl 11 I I HI DECEMBER 11.1917. LEADERS IN GRE AT SUFFRAGE CONVENTION AT WASHINGTON C S ' •mm A>a -wj-iITE-HOXJiTEJ -MRB JAJTJCS LAID^AV, Some of the prominent suffragists who are taking a leading part in the forty-ninth annual convention of the National American Woman's Suffrage Association, Which opened at Washington yesterday. Mrs. Carrie Chap man Catt is national president of the organization and will preside at the sessions. Dr. Anna Howard Shaw is chairman of the Woman's Committee of the United States Council of National Defense and one of the lead ing suffragists of America. Eight of the ladies of President Wilson's Cabinet will, give a reception in honor of Jlrs. Catt and Dr. Shaw. Mrs. James Lees Laidlaw is Congressional chairman for New York. Miss Mary Garrett Hay has received much of the credit for the recent suffrage victory in New York State. Mrs. Norman De IS. Whitehouse is chairman of the New York state suffrage party, and like Miss Hay, was instrumental in bringing about the suffrage for women of the Empire State. WILT. SING "N VTIVITY" New Cumberland, Ta., Dec. 11.— The choir of DauKhman Memorial Methodist Church will sing a cantata, "Nativity," on Sunday evening. De cember 23. WEST SHORE HEWS Funeral Services of Man I Frozetk in Lane at Enola i Enola, Pa., Dec. 11.—Funeral scr-j vices for James Lowery, aged 24, whose body was? found early Sunday) morning frozen to death after he had | wandered away from his home in Shady lane will be held to-morrow afternoon at 1 o'clock at the home and later in the Zion Lutheran | Church, The Rev. M. S. Shoop, pas- j tor, will officiate. Burial will be j made in the local cemetery. He is i survived by his parents, two sisters | and one brother. Bowery was employed as an engine j hostler at the enginehouse in the j local yards, a member of the men's j Bible class of the Zion Lutheran j Sunday school and also a member; of the church. YICTROLA ( LI B BANQUET Enola. Pa., Dec. 11.—This even ing the December meeting and ban-j M D/,1 Miss Orpha Nieodemus at Altoona. Albert Hamilton, of Marysville, is visiting with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Frq, at Dellville. Mrs. W. 11. Fengfish and daughter Marion, of Mafysville, have returned home from Baltimore. Miss Ethel Hoover has returned to her home at West Fairview after visiting her unt ie and atint, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob S. Bitner, at Marysville. Lester Kennedy, of the United States Signal Corps, stationed at the! Wright Aviation Field, Dayton, Oliio, is spending a short furlough with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. John S. Kennedy, at Marysville. DR. VISHAI FK TO I.KCTIKK Shiremanstown. Pa., Dec. 11.—To morrow evening at 7 o'clock Dr. D. E. C. VishaufT, of Macedonia, Europe, will deliver an address in the lecture room of Keller Memorial Church. His subject will b e "Macedonia, My Na tive Country." He is not only a min ister of the Gospel but a graduate physician of Hahnemann College, Philadelphia. I'. O. S. OF A. Sl ItVK i: FLAG West Fairview, Pa., Dec. 10.— Members of the P. 0. S. of A., of West Fairview, are soliciting funds for purchasing a service llag, which they will unfurl, showing a star for each member who has enlisted in the war service .of whom there are forty two. The flag will be hung in the public square. TO CELEBRATE ANNIVERSARY New Cumberland, Dec. 10.—On Friday evening, New Cumberland Lodge No. 114 7. Independent Order of Odd Fellows, will celebrate its eleventh anniversary at their hall in Bridge street. The address of the evening will be made by Gabriel H. Moyer. of Palmyra. One of the fea tures of the occasion will be a service flag raising. Refreshments will be served. MASS MEETING PLANNED TO STIR U. S. RECRUITING Advantages of Enlistment to Be Shown to Registered Men Between 21 and 31 Young men between the age limits! I of the draft will be told the great | advantages of enlisting in a branch of the service that offers chances for advancement, at a great mass 1§ g j This Week Only-A Free Tube I j i This Offer on Pepsodent Ends Saturday Night i §j Present This Coupon Today .. | New Facts About Teeth 1 Which Supplant All Former Theories a By Wm. M. Ruthrauff, A. 8., A. M. j Approved by High Dental Authlorities jl | The Source of All Brushing Does Not | Tooth Troubles Remove It | • t|g p Is a Slimy, Albuminous Film Soapy Applications Harden It Now it is known that a film on the teeth is That film resists the tooth brush, and in f§ |g the basic cause of all tooth troubles. crevices escapes it. So ordinary brushing does |1 Jp That discovery has upset many former the- n °t clean the teeth. | hp ™ tion al^s^ onhasalka,iin!tAnd l You can feel the film with your tongue a 8 jg slimy film—even after brushing. But you can- . 1 hat 1S ™ h y our old methods proved ineffec- jj gl not see it, foi* the film, unless stained, is trans- tive. That is why tartar formed. That is why g§ parent. That is why teeth look clean. teeth discolored and decayed. That is why J W j It absorbs stains—nicotine stains in partic- they bred germs ' des P ite all our attention. ular. That is why teeth discolor. We brushed them, but did not dislodge all ' M That film is albuminous. Therefore it forms the film* A stain like iodine will prove this. ®P" f " i t !' ree f din S P' ace for " And S erms ' Three years ago a way was found to keep rid pg are a cause of pyorrhea. of this film by th 6 e aid digestant Five | ov ° H it clings to the teeth, grows thicker and ernments already have granted patents on it. SI firmer, and finally hardens into tartar. And „ , _ ' §§ tartar is another cause of pyorrhea. . wa y * s called Pepsodent. The basis is |ll It holds food particles which shortly fer- pepsin, the digestant of albumin. lg ment, forming lactic acid. And that's the cause But pepsin alone won't do it. It must be acti- §1 of tooth decay. vated by an acid. And the usual acid—hydro- M M . So that film causes all tooth troubles. chloric—is destructive to the teeth. §| ™ st common is tooth decay That is The solution was found in an acid salt—a caused by an acid which that film holds in con- neutralized acid which will activate pepsin it J m i^° teCt il 1 V We That discovery made Pepsodent possible And , I TV, reachedby neutralizing alkalies. • with it came this revolution in the use of denti- M M The most dreaded is pyorrhea. Thatisadis- frice. |§ ease caused by tartar and germs. Both are the „ , , . . m g result of that film. Pepsodent brings activated pepsin in contact p 1 Tartar is hardened film. Stains and discolor- with that film. The object is to digest and dis- j§ ments are in the film. solve it, so brushing can remove it. Two or ||p Thus clean teeth mean filmless teeth. three applications will show its amazing results. j Brush them as often as you will. Use any Y ou F t ? eth feel as though just cleaned by a g§ dentifrice you choose. While that film exists dentist s polisher. You will know that the film k your teeth remain unclean. They remain un- met a dentifrice which it can't resist. || safe. Germs are bound to breed around them. Exchange this coupon for a One-Week Tube jg Decay cannot be avoided. Teeth will not long to prove this. It is free. Use it, and let the clear M stay white.* New-day dentistry is founded on results argue for themselves. You will never go |g this fact. back to a dentifrice which leaves your teeth |§ j Feel your teeth now. That film is there, no coated with film. Please act today. Clean, P M matter whrfn you cleaned them. Your dentist white, filmless teeth are too important to delay. H will assure you that it must be kept away. Cut out the coupon now. . ] jin I pj If PAT. OFF J > | I rg£ 6ug|\l i ONE-WEEK TUBE FREE j j U ® ■■■■■■■■■■• a Present this coupon, with your name and address j The New-Day Dentifrice I filled in > to the druggist named. It ie good for a! 1 One-Week Tube of Pepsodent. Present Free-Tube Coupon to ! v „ ' I Your Name m GEO. A. GORGAS ! Address , JB|j If* ]\npi|i Thirrl *1 Out-of-town residents should mail this coupon to Thi ' H 1U l IlirCl kll. ■ Pepsodent Company, 1104 So. Wabash Avenue, Chicago. * M il I and th ® tUbe wiU be Bent mail - Telegraph, Hrr.b 0 r t || meeting to be held in the Chestnut street auditorium this evening at 8 o'clock. Charles E. Pass will preside. There will be speeches by Rev. Dr. George Edward llawes, by Capt. Dumb, head of the State Police and Sergeant John W. Blake. Enter tainment will be furnished by the Commonwealth Band, Miss Sara Lemer, violinist. Miss Helen B. Etter, whistler, and Abner W. Hart man, concert basso. The Red Cross will attend in a body and members of the Red Cross Motor Messengers will act as ushers The final effort in the great cam paign to recruit men hi the selective quota for the Dauphin County Aero Squadron is still going on, and it is hoped that by the time the unit leaves Harrisburg, 150 men will be recruited. Only two more days are left in which selective service elig- may enlist, and the recruiting officers want to get them into the service through the voluntary chan nel. * The aviation section Is the one mcstly preferred by men who are enlif.ting now. This section needs a great number of recruits now, as there are so many ground men needed to keep the airplanes in proper condition for flying. There is a corps of skilled mechanics needed on the ground for every man that flies. Men who enlist in the aviation section how, will never need to fly, unless at a later time they signify a desire to do so. The slight bar that has stood in the way of the married man has now been removed by the War De partment, and the married man may enlist as readily as the'single man. A fair allowance is made by the gov ernment to (he wife of the enlisted man. It is no longer necessary for a married man to secure his wife's consent to his enlistment, Jap Troops Guarding Vast Stores, U.S. Officials' View; Washington, Dec. 11.—Unconfirmed ed reports (hat Japanese troops ar<| In control of tlie great quantities 00 supplies piled up at Vladivostok for* the Itusskm government, created now surprise at the State Department) yesterday, where officials are undew the impression that a small numbejn of Japanese troops have been thei'oj for some time. It is said there are now piled up* at Vladivostok more supplies tliaixl the trans-Siberian railroad in itsj, present state could move in manyjj months. Before the Bolshevik! got into con*| trol, American railroad men liadl been dispatched to lake charge off the situation and move the much needed supplies to the Russian armyj The concern now is to see that the supplies do not fall into hostile hands. 9