16 Many Attend Services at Big Union Revival A record attendance was register ed last evening at the union revival of the Interdenominational Minis ters' conference, the Rev. A. I J. Greene, of the Second Baptist .Church, was chief speaker. The Revs. R. L. Briscoe and C. McCrea conducted the prayer meeting. To night the usual prayer meeting will begin at 7 o'clock, with the Revs. .Messrs. Tolver and Briscoe in c harge. There will be a song service •at 7.45 and the main service will be under the direction of the Rev. E. •Luther Cunningham. MRS. PHOEBE ANN MATSON Funeral services for Mrs. Phoebe •Ann Matson, aged 69, will be held at , L':3o o'clock to-morrow afternoon lroni her late residence, 630 Hamilton street. Mrs. Matson died Wednesday from a complication of diseases. She is survived by four children, three daughter, Mrs. Sally M. King, Pitts burgh; Mrs. Clara B. Jones, Pitts burgh, and Mrs. Margaret Dittling, Harrisburg, and a son. Miles Matson, of Altoona. Fourteen grandchildren and two great-prrandchildren also sur vive. She was a member of the Shep herds of Bethlehem Lodge, No. 30, and Camp No. 23, P. O. of A. Pure Blood Brings Beauty Pimples, Blackheads, Boils and Poor Complexion Vanish by Using Stuart's Calcium Wafers TIM \I, PACKAGE MAILED FRKE All your dreams of a beautiful, clear complexion can be made to come true. It makes no difference how M*otted and disfigured your face may be with pimples, blackheads, eczema or liver spots, you may reclaim your You'll Dance Hlth ,i> sop How Eu.x.v :IIKI <lui<<k Smart'* Calcium AVnfers Clear* Your Skin! heritage of good looks. There are thousands of people to-day whose fresh, clear faces are a living proof •that Stuart's Calcium Wafers do cure pimples and cure them to stay. In only a few days. Stuart's Calcium Wafers cure pim ples and similar eruptions by thor oughly cleansing the blood of all im purities. With a pure blood supply, it is simply impossible for a pitupb to remain on your face. And the In vigorated blood will replace your dead, sallow skin with the glowing colors of a perfect complexion. Your self-respect deuu. avail yourself of this remedy that thousands have proved before you. Det a 50c box of Stuart's Calcium Wafers of your druggist to-day. Make your dream of beauty come true. Also mail coupon to-day for irec trial package. Free Trial Coupon F. A. Sttinrt Co., 504 Stnart HIIIK.. Marshull Mlch.i Send me at once, by return mail, a free trial package of Stuart's Calcium Wafers. Nnnte Street fitv i State CROUP Spasmodic croup is usually relieved with fcjffk _ (fj one application of —■ /■r//4n^ \ fccxjy-Gqwrd twtbgr v y VicrsworijSl HAD PAINS IN MY RACK AND LIMBS Was Nervous, Had Headaches says Miss F. Roberson, 670 Calder street, Harrisburg. 1 was under the weather with stomach trouble and it rheumatic condition. \\ ould get sleepy after meals would belch and was distressed. Had pains in back, shoulders and limbs was very nervous, could not sleep at nif,ht and in the morning would get up with a nasty headache and felt stllT ami sore. My head and throat were In a <•< ngested condition most of the time 1 seemed to be getting weaker every day and did not know what to make of it, because nothing helped until 1 started to take Sanpan and it did ihe work. I am well and fit as ever now. Sanpan is being introduced at Kel ler's Drug Store, 405 Market street, Harrisburg.—Adv. couuTNoriHr BIT" ON LAND '•Scratch! Scratch," Was All He Could I)o Until Help Came . .::? cratc . h . ! Scratch!" was all that "William K Wheeler, a farmer of 31 ummelstown, near Harrisburg could do when what he wanted to do was "his bit" on his land. "Help came however," he said, "after I had despaired of ever get ting It. 1 had a bad case of eczema and was ail broke out. I thought it would plumb itch me to death I scratched and scratched all the lime and it got so bad that I couldn't do my work on my farm. I lost my appetite; my stomach went back on me and I got so nervous and restless 1 couldn't sleep. Mr. Hanlon told me to try Tanlac. I took his advice and now, thanks to the great medicine, my skin is entirely well. I now eat and sleep well and feel like a new man. X am making up for lost time in my work." Tanlac now is being specially In troduced and explained In Harris burg at the George Gorgas drug store. Tanlac Is also sold at the Gorgas Drug Store in the P. R. R. Station; in Carlisle at W. G. Stevens' Phar macy; Elizabethtown, Albert W. Cain; Greencastle, Charles B. Carl] Middletown, Colin S. Few's Phar f macy; Waynesboro, Clarence Croft's Pharmacy; Mechanlcsburg, H. F. k run house. —Adv, FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JANUARY 11, 1918. LYKENS VALLEY CUTS DISCOUNTS Upper End Electric Company Files Notice With Public Service; Governor Silent The Lykens Valley Light and Power Company, operating in the upper end of Dauphin county, to day filed notice with the Public Service Commission that it has with drawn its wholesale power schedule and withdrawal of all discounts for prompt payment. The company operating in Mercersburg and vicin ity filed a new schedule of minimum rates. The Hanover and McSherrys town Street Railway Company, oper ating in York and Adams counties, has canceled round trip fares and the Lackawanna Railroad has can celed all excursion rates between Scranton and Wilkes-Barre and a number of places. The East Pennsylvania Gas and Electric Company, operating at Bris tol, Morrisvllle and Yardley filed no tice of an increase of twenty per cent, on ail bills to be known as a "war surcharge" and to continue for one year and as long thereafter as the war last®. Jjongr Wants a Rule—Superintend ent of Public Printing and Binding D. E. Long and men connected with the state printing to-day held an extended conference in the Attor ney General's Department on the superintendent's request for a clas sification of state printing. What Mr. Long desires is a ruling where by printing will be scheduled and there shall be nothing classed as schedule one year and miscellaneous the next. Middletown Next —The complaint of the borough of Middletown against the Middletown and Swatara Water Company service will be heard by the Public Service Commis sion on Wednesday. Governor Silent—-Governor Brum baugh to-day declined to discuss in any way the remarks of Senator Penrose concerning him at Pitts burgh last night. Neither would the Governor discuss the gubernatorial nomination situation. Xeale Named—James B. Neale, coal operator of Foster township, Schuylkill county, was to-day ap pointed justice of the peace for that district. No election was held in the township to fill the vacancy. State Takes Title—The Adjutant General's Department to-day took title to ninety-two acres of land near Colebrook, which will be added to the state's permanent camp site. It is the tract known as the cavalry encampment and war. owned by the Hucher-Gingrich interests. The state has over 2,00 acres at Mount Gretna. Engineers Sent—Two engineers of tlie State Health Department were to-day detailed to make an investi gation into the outbreak of sickness in portions of Wilkes-Barre, King ston. Edwardsville and other places. Coal Complaint The Franklin Coal Mining Company, Brisbin, to day made claim on the Pennsylva nia Railroad for $6,000 damages in a complaint Hied with the Public Service Commission. The action grows out of a controversy over a siding and the claimants allege that the railroad tried to prevent the coal operators from doing business. FORMER TEACHER "HAD AT BUFFALO By Associated Press Williamsport, Pa., Jan. 11.—Ru dolph O. Welsling, aged 43. who'was superintendent. of Potter county schools for twelve years, died to-day in a Buffalo hospital of heart trouble after a long illness. WAI.LTAPBH l'f.t\T BURNED By Associated Press Wilmington, Del., Jan. 11.—The wallpaper manufacturing establish ment of the Jacob Thomas Company, one of the largest industrial plants in Newark, was destroyed by tire this morning, causing a loss of $250,000, largely covered by insurance. The plant, which was busy, gave employ ment to 110 persons. The fire started in the ash pit and quickly spread. All the employes escaped without injury. The Perfect Baby Of The Future A Simple Method That Hat a Wonderful Influence upon The Future Infant. I;g women for over half a century have used with regularity the time-honor ed oreparation, Mother's Friend. Here is a most wonderful applica tion for tlie abdomen and breasts. It penetrates the muscles, ligaments and tissues, rendering them pliant to readily yield to nature's demand for expansion. By its use the anxious weeks of pregnancy are made comfortable. The usual wrenching strain, bearing down and stretching pains are coun teracted. The system is prepared for the coming event, and its use brings rest, repose and happy anticipation. By the regular use of Mothjr's Friend during the period the muscles expand easier when baby arrives and naturally the pain and danger at the crisis is less. Mother's Friend is prepared after the formula of a noted family doctor by the Braddeld Regulator Co., A-88 Lamar Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. It is for external use only; is absolutely and entirely safe and wonderfully effec tive. Write them for their "instruc tive and interesting "Motherhood Book." There is a wealth of instruc tion and cemfort to be derived in reading this little book. It is plainly written just what every woman want* to know and will be a splendid little text book of guidance, not only for yourself but will make you helpful to others, and in the meantime obtain a bottle of Mother's Friend from the druggist, and thus fortify yourself against pain and discomfort.— Adver tisement. S Comfortable, Dependable GLASSES Clips for nose glasses and temples for spectacles, perfectly adjusted to assure comfort and satisfaction. Glasses correct in focus and fit— thoroughly dependable. You'll (t them here Eyesight Specialist 2 NORTH THIRD STREET SehleUaer Building • c' • '*'<£ Europe as Reconstructed on President Wilson's Peace Terms CH/tISTfANI/10 I " frj A : President Wilson, in his message to Congress, stating the Allies' terms of peace, laid it down that all the territory occupied by the central powers, including Belgium, part of France, Serbia, part of Roumania, BAKER RECITAL IS QUESTIONED [Continued from First Paget] the men ready for the fighting line were adequately equipped. Senators Wadsworth and Weeks, Republicans, and Senators Chamber lain and Hitchcock, Democrats, took the lead in cross-examining the Sec retary, and at times handled him without gloves. When Secretary Baker's examina tion was resumed to-day, Chairman Chamberlain said there were fears for powder production. "The situation is satisfactory and I think supplies are and will continue adequate," replied Secretary Baker. Asks Aliont Standards Senator Wadsworth asked about the board of labor standards which testi mony has said has pacifists and So cialists among its members and is requiring new specifications in army cloth contracts which will reduce pro duction. "I know their character and expert qualifications well," said Secretary Baker, in defense of the board. Turning to artillery. Senator Wads worth assailed the ordnance bureau for not continuing manufacture ot French 240-millimeter guns instead of proceeding with manufacture oT American 9.5 guns, none of which have been delivered and whose am munition is not interchangeable with the French. Was Not Certain Secretary Baker said ho thought, but was not sure, that the depart ment was making the French type and promised to give further infor mation. "There has been no explanation yet given the committee." said Senator Wadsworth, pounding the table with his fist. Senator Wadsworth asked whether in view of the shortage of artillery and machine guns, the Secretary's statement that there was sufficient supplies "substantially for rush need" was correct. "Yes, perfectly, as I understand It," said Mr. Baker. "Our rush needs are satisfied. "Senator Chamberlain asked Baker how he could say that when can tonments were short rifles and ma chine guns and artillery. Enough For Fmnee "I mean that we have sufficient for the men actually engaged In fight ing." "You mean then that there is enough for men in France," said Sen ator McKellar. "Yes," said the Secretary. CJlve Wrong Impression "Your statement that we have sub stantially enough gives a wrong im pression to the country, when we have only enough for men actually in the fighting and not for those in KIDNEYS NEVER CAUSE BACKACHE Rub pain, soreness and stiff ness right out with old "St. Jacobs Liniment" Kidneys cause backache? No! They have no nerves, therefore can not cause pain. Listen! Your back ache is caused by lumbago, sciatica or a strain, and the quickest relief is soothing, penetrating "St. Jacobs Liniment." Rub it right on the ache or tender spot, and instanUy the pain, soreness, stiffness and lameness dis appears. Don't stay crippled! Get a small trial bottle of "St. Jacobs Liniment" from your druggist and limber up. A moment after it is applied you'll wonder what became of the backache, sciatica or lumbago pain. "St. Jacob's Liniment" stops any pain at once. It Is harmless and doesn't burn or discolor the skin. It's the only application to rub on a weak, lame or painful back, or for lumbago, sciatica, neuralgia, rheuma- Usm, sprains or a strain. Montenegro, part of Albania, part of Greece, part of Russia,, and part of Italy should be restored. In addition he says the Irredenta Italia, that is, the territory about Trieste, and Istria on the Mediter ranean, and Trentino, south of Switz training," Senator Wadsworth inter jected. "I agree with Senator Wadsworth," said Chairman Chamberlain, "that your statement gives a wrong im pression to the country. It was not your purpose, but it is its effect." "What I meant to say and what 1 want the country to understand," said Baker replied earnestly, "Is that all the troops in France will be ade quately equipped with artillery and arms." "Prpbably," observed Senator Cham berlain. "I have assurance to that effect Mr. Baker insisted. Ordnance Needed Mr. Baker admitted ordnance was needed for training men in camp. Time needed to train men in France, he said, will give time to increase ordnance supplies. Senator Weeks cited the general ordnance shortage at Camp Bowie, Texas, testified to by. Major General Greble, commandant. "You have given the impression that very camp Ims enuogh rifles,' Senator Weeks observed. "How can you conform that to the statement that every camp has enough rifles," tillery?" "X didn't make that statement," said Mr. Baker. "You gave that impression." "I said 'initial rush needs' are filled." explained Mr. Baker. "But you ought to define your statement; it gives the country the impression that every need in the camps is supplied," said Mr. Weeks. (iuiiH in February Reverting to delays in machine gun deliveries. Senator Hitchcock deplored tardy contracts for Lewis guns and Mr. Baker rejoined that large produc tion of Browning guns would begin in February. This aroused Senator Hitchcock. "That isn't so," he retorted sharply, slapping his hands together at the Secretary. "We won't have a large quantity before 1919 in actual use. We haven't one now." "We have nine," Mr. Baker sug gested, smiling. Seriously, he added, that production was being speeded up and that his latest Information was that quantity production pf Browning guns would begin in February. • Secrearfr's Baker's formal state ment of yesterday regarding army preparedness, Senator Weeks de clared, would "unintentionally mis lead the country." "The country," said the Senator,, "should not be lulled to sleep by a general statement of facts that do not exist." Prisoner Tries to Escape After He Gets Dinner William Leech, aged 23, was to-day committed to the Huntingdon Re formatory from Berks county. Pa trolmen Hollands and lyowory, of this city, were big factors in the safe ar rival of Leech at Huntingdon. The prisoner tried to escape in this city to-day at noon, but evidently did not know that Harrisburg has some fleet footed coppers. Leech was in charge of a Deputy Sheriff. The latter was kind to his prisoner, treating the latter to a din ner and smokes at a hotel, near a restaurant. When the deputy was paying his bill, the young man "bolted through the front door and ran up Aberdeen street. The sheriff was not a good sprinter but he could yell. This attracted the attention of Pa trolman Lowery at Fourth and Mar ket streets, who signalled to Patrol-, man Hollands at Fourth - and Wal nut. When Leech arrived at Walnut street he went straight into the arms of patrolman Hollands. There was a tussel on the Icy pavement and both went down. In the meantime Patrolman Lowery arrived and the prisoner was overpowered and turn ed over to the Berks county deputy. I,EONA BLANCH BERRY Leona Blanch Berry, aged seven, died yesterday at the home of her pa rents, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Berry. 2109 Boas street. Funeral servives will be held Monday afternoon, at 3:30 o'clock, from her late residence, the Rev. E. A. G. Bossier, pastor of the State Street United Brethren Church, officiating. Rurial will be made In the Harrisburg Cemetery. SALESMEN TO MEET The Salesmanship Club of Harris burg will meet to.night In the Y. M. C. A., with President C. H. Hooker in the chair. The meeting will begin promptly at R o'clock and the even ing's topic will be discussed by W. R. Busch, of Elllott-Flsher Company. erland, taken from Italy by Austria, in years gone by, should be restored. He proposes, too, the creatim of the new kingdom of Poland wivh an outlet through Lithuania and Oour land in Russia to the Baltic. In regard to Alsace-Lorraine, he Martin Keet Accepts Place in Kansas City Martin Keet, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Keet, and a former member of the Harrisburg Telegraph staff, has been selected as director of the bureau of publicity and convention [of the Chamber of Commerce of Kansas City. He leaves Sunday morning to begin his new duties. For the past year Mr. Keet has been on the publicity staff of Town Development, Inc., of New York, the organization which conducted the reorganization of the Harrisburg Chamber of Commerce. During the past year he has han dled publicity campaigns in Lynn, Mass., Lynchburg, Va., Altoona, Wilkes-Barre, Dover, N. J., Dayton, 0., in Milwaukee, Chicago and Kan sas City. U. S. to Save Wool in New Style of Men's Suits In order to save on cloth, men's garb this year will be minus pock ets, belts, collars and plaits, if a sample exhibited at William Strouse's store is the criterion. The r.ew design was promoted by the National Council of Defense which is bent on saving wool. They esti mate that if the amount of woolen goods taken from each suit amounts only to an inch or two the saving will be very great. AWARDED COUPLE Public Service Hallway Company j lose* lane Philadelphia, Jan. 11.—A jury In the Caniden circuit court yesterday in the suit of William Bishop and his ! wife, of Watsontown, against the Public Service Railway Company, awarded Mrs. Bishop *6,000 and her husband J2,000. On July 4 last the couple were in an automobile which was struck by a car of the company near Clementon, N. J. The machine was wrecked. Bishop escaping In jury, but his wife sustained serious hurts. BREAKS A COLD IN AJIURRY "Pape's Cold Compound" is pleasant and affords Instant Relief. A dose taken every two hours untu three doses are taken will end grippe misery and break up a cold. It promptly opens clogged-up nos trila and air passages In the head, stops nasty discharge or nose run ning, relieves sick headache, dull ness. feverlahness, sore throat, sneez ing, soreness and stiffness. Don't stay stuffed up! Quit blow ing and snuffling! Ease your throb bing head! Nothing else In the world gives such prompt relief as "Pape's Cold Compound," which costs only a few cents at any drug store. It acts without assistance, tastes nice, causes no inconvenience. Be sure you get the genuine. Don't accept something else. —Adv, says the wrong done by Prussia to France in the war of 1870 "should be righted." The peoples of Austria-Hungary "should be accorded the freest op portunity of autonomous develop ment." HMPL*?IU,DONTBE People Notice It. Drive Them Off with Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets A pimply face will not embarrass you much longer if you get a package of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets. The skin ehould begin to clear after you have taken the tablets a few nights. Cleanse the blood, bowels and liver with Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the successful substitute for calomel; there's no sickness or pain after taking them. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do that which calomel does, and just as effec tively, but their action is gentle and safe instead of severe and irritating. No one who takes Olive Tablets is ever cursed with "a dark brown taste," a bad breath, a dull, listless, "no good" feeling, constipation, torpid liver, bad disposition or pimply face. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know them by their olive color. Dr. Edwards spent years among pa tients afflicted with iiver and bowel complaints, and Olive Tablets are the immensely effective result Take one or two nightly for a week. Sec how much betterjrou feel and loolc 10c and 25c per box. All drugged MtjoamatfZ HK.1.1, Ktftl—23so UNITED HARRISRURG, FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, 1018. FOUNDED 1871 The Season's One Bi{j Sale of Men's Manhattan Shirts —Every shirt of this superior brand to be sold at a reduced price. WZ J —To get the best choice you must buy quickly for it's only once in every six months that these famous shirts can be V I ,j| 'in \ sold at less than the regular prices. (4, |A \l 1(1'///r1 —To-morrow is a good time to act— V\oM vfLZJ ie shirts are all on display easy to choose a wealth of patterns in which every taste can be satisfied. w if, —You men know the Manhattan RTS Shirts—and to dwell upon their sterling • merit is quite unnecessary—in a word— Buy Liberally at These Reduced Prices sl. $1.85, $2.1!, 3 .15 ; $ 3 .85 ( $ 4 .85 BOWMAN'S—Main Floor. D. A. R. Gives Liberally to Restore Tilloloy By Associated Press Washington, Jan. 11. The "War Relief Service Committee, of the Daughters of the American Revolu tion, have subscribed $50,000 for the restoration of the French village at Tilloloy, in Piccardy,twenty-five miles south of Amiens, and will subscribe SIOO,OOO for the third issue of Liberty Bonds, the organization announced to-day. In answer to questionnaires, prac tically 100.000 women have signified their willingness to assist in al kinds of war service. RECOGNIZE .FINLAND Copenhagen, Jan. 10.—Denmark and Norway have officially recog nized the republic of Finland. DISSOLVE AND NEUTRALIZE THOSE RHEUMATIC AND URIC ACIDS THEN WASH THEM OUT Says sufferers must drink very strongly alkaline hot mineral water to get rid of their misery quickly and stay rid of it. Tells how to prepare this* mineral water at home with ingredients which any druggist can supply at slight cost. The iilkullne water l noon absorbed into the blood nnd thoroughly flu*he* the kidney* when belli* Altered out mid expelled. With It will Ko the ftcldn nnd pol*on* It ham absorbed while In the nlootf. TIIIN I* how the waiter* of expensive hot Mprlnvn hanltih rheumatism, ete. hut no one need trouble to visit them now. Chemical analysis and the micro- therapeutic value, and evenini the scope both prove beyond any possi- case of medicinal waters ac tuall y Inot bjlity of doubt that rheumatism, gout, tied at the springs, certain chemical sciatica, etc., are due to uric acid and reactions take place soon after tn . other impurities in blood and tissues, water issues from the earth, and sucn When the blood is rid of the impuri- changes in the composition often ren tics, the sufferer is rid of the rheu- der the effects extremely matlsm. If you are a doc- , s - The difficulty may easily tor or a chemist you know overcome however, _by this, also that a drop _obtaining i.f any strongly alka 1i n mineral ingredients in dry liquid will melt a urio acid powder form, dissolving or similar crystal, just as these in Jp'ain hot watei,/ hot water ,melts a sugar ~ and drinking Immediately^, crystal, or as heat melts a JsjfjSpi P y iwis' can supplyTV snow crystal. It naturally a Jf , cost, these same follows that when, the tiny. essential constituent sharp acid crystals in the i| cil ?al elements <is accu blood are dissolved or 7/ Jlj# rately ascertained by chem melted into liquid form, 1 ical analysis) already cora they cannot grind about in pounded art.iflclally in ex the veins, nor catch or col - Typical specimens of actly the light proportions lect in the minute blood uric add crywtala. and ready for immediate vessels of joints or tissues lilifhly nt.-iKnlfled. IMo use. The compound is where they so often cause wonder they hurt. well-known to druggists swelling, stiffness and acute agony. It and prescribed by doctors ax Is astonishing how few persona except- refined alkia Baltrateß (powa ing chemists and the medical profes- er form). By drinking this P'®a- - sion, understand that the water we ant-tasting and very strongly drink must reach the kidneys by first alkaline medicinal water at home the being absorbed into the blood, and heavy expense and great loss of t mo that if the water is strongly alkaline required to visit the natural spring it thoroughly flushes the kidneys can eas ly be avoided. ** h eufnatic an 1 when being expelled, taking with it uric acid sifWerßrs can easily prove the acids and impuriUes -it has ab- this without Bt ' r,ln f a „.?l"f' e . ri ? sorbed while in the blrfßd. This is the from their own homes Simply drlnk secret of the wonderful effects pro- before breakfast every morning, fot duced by such world-famous alkaline • week or two, a Kla.BEi of h< t mineral springs as Vichy. Contrexe- in which you have dissolved a level ville, Chatel Guyon, Evian, Vittel, teaspoonful of the r e fln ed alk'a sal Carlsbad. Wiesbaden. Marlenbad and trates compound. A ™ai d you others equally celebrated. All of these will not be ?'®, ' , t v? ev springs are very strongly alkaline tience with jheumatlc I f V: to)( , and in the waters will be found such continue to suffer afteiyi J 1 druc active constituents as magnesium, them about this Anjong localdiu* lithium, sodium, calcium, and other gists who J 1 „ a^ ® " I,^.olea compound recognized uric acid solvents, elimi- to carry the alkia s a't - u. 0 ?„ ( - nants and blood ouriflers. The reason in stock ar £ Keller s]lr g. , . why people travel thousands of miles A - t>orgfls, Kennedy a . ed to visit the natural springs is because, pany and H. C. Kennedy, so it will to be of real dependable value, the DroV e a shnple matter for anyone to medicinal waters must be fresh. Such f remarkably effective method things as soda-fountain artificial try 1,1,8 mineral waters have little or no of home treatment. Apples Valuable As Food THE United States Department of Agricul ture places apples at the head of all fresh fruits in comparative cost of total nutriments and energy. In fact there is as much energy in ten cents' worth of apples as there is in - ten cents' worth of lean meat. This makes apples an economical source of nutritive material. Our Famous Apples are without flaw or blemish. Each one a perfect apple from skin to core. There are no bruises, decayed spots, worm holes or other defects. For sale by first class grocers. United Ice & Coal Co. Foster and Cowden Sts. Shipping Commissioners Under Civil Service Lavtt; By Associated Press Washington, Jan. 11.—Shipping commissioners in New York, Boston, Seattle and New Orleans to-day were put under the civil service by Presi dent Wilson on recommendation of Secretary Rediieid. They were the only ones in the government service not in the classified list. V PASHA TRIAL FEB. I By Associated Press Paris, Jan. 11.-—Bolo Pasha, who is charged with having conducted German propaganda in Franco, will be tried by court martial, beginning February 4.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers