TEACHER PRAISES *STAR PUPIL WHO TOOK JERUSALEM Denver—Tho pride of a teacher in his star pupil Is the pride of Major Charles H. Tye, a retired British offi cer, In the success of General Sir E. H. H. Allenby, K. C. 8., the con queror of Jerusalem. Major Tye is in Denver living with his daughter, Mrs. Barbara M. Mac Lure, of No. 1027 Steele street Back in 1882, when Major Tye was captain and adjutant of the Sixth (Inniskilling) dragoons, sta tioned at Natal, South Africa, he taught young Allenby the rudiments of military science. "Allenby was a likely lad and a smart officer," said his old instruc tor. "He paid strict attention to business and gave early promise of becoming a distinguished leader. "In fact, it is a remarkable coin cidence that so many of the British high commanders are cavalrymen. Besides Allenby we see the names of French, Halg, Byng, Robertson and Remington—all belonging to the mounted branch of the service and all of them were former adjutants of their regiments. "The officers of the Inniskilling Dragoons were a lively crowd. One Sunday morning the adjutant of our regiment reported to the Colonel that the minister was ill and could not perform the service, and asked that he, the Adjutant, read it. The Adjutants always reads out courts martial, general orders and similar pronounoem ents. "The Colonel, who was known as 'Old Damme,' because he prefaced nearly all his remarks with that >word, said, 'Ah, damme, no; It is my duty. I'll read it." "During the time that he was reading the prayers some of the men began fidgeting about. 'What is that noise about?' shouted the Colonel. 'Damme, listen to the gos pel.' " AMMtt/JON ■ "V RuddyCheeks—SparklingEyes —Most Women Can Have Says Dr. Edwards, a Well-Known Ohio Physician Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17years treated scores of women for liver and bowel ail-1 rncnts. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well-known vegetable ingredients ! mixed with olive oil, naming them 1 Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets. You will know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a normal fiction, carrying off the waste 1 and poisonous matter in one's system, j If you have a pale face, sallow look, ! dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, head aches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets nightly for J a time and note the pleasing results, Thousands of women as well as men I take Dr. Edward's Olive Tablets—the Buccessful substitute for calomel—now and then just tokeepin thepink of condi tion. 10c and 25c per box. All druggist "I HAD LIVER TROUBLE Nerves Were Bad- Had Headaches," Says E. Robinson 1325, William St., Harrisburg. "I had a torpid liver and a bad stomach, and this left me weak and I drudged along hardly able to do my work, I felt miser able. "My appetite was gone, had to force myself to eat, I had cramps, and the pain would get around my heart, and I was worried, my head ached, my nerves were bad and I was discouraged because I could not get relief. "I noticed these Sanpan testi monials and began to think that it would help me, so I started to take it, and it restored my liver and stom ach, settled my nerves and I feel new." Sanpan is being Introduced at Keller's Drug Store, 405 Market St., Harrisburg. Carter's Little Liver Pills You Cannot be A Remedy That Constipated Makes Life and Happy jjwrw!l T J£ Worth Living Small PiU I PILLS Genuine bear* alrnatur* Small Dom - AS c pARTER'S IRON PILLS many colorless faces but will greatly help most pale-faced people We make them to measure —An Extra X ItijiiiillJ 11 Pair of Pants, value $6.00 and $7.00, and | jfi ) ; give them to you Free—Absolutely without J jjt/ cost with every suit or overcoat order. QBSHBIII Our usual STRICT GUARANTEE goes with every garment. I W if -W Remember we do not only aim to please you, but we Mi l make every effort to KEEP YOU PLEASED. | II = \\\ y J'||L| jn Hanisburg's Oldest and Largest Popular Priced Tailors I 1/ I ]Sp^ Standard Woolen Go. \ | J&3 Branch of the World'* Greatest Tailors 1 ET" 103 North Second St. 1 Two Doors Above Walnut Street, Harrisbnrg, Pa. I jC.I ALEXANDER AGAR, Manager > I Open Evenings TTntU BP. M. Open Saturday Pntll 10 P. M. I ] ffW'tfl FRIDAY EVENING, STEELTON AND NEARBY MEN WHO WILL SWIM ICY WATERS TO RESCUE CROSS In the above picture reading left to right are: Steve Yovcheff, 4 S6 Main street; Nacho Nenoff, 431 Vfaln street; Dimko StephanofT, Main and Francis street. These men will brave the Icy waters of the Susque lanna river to-morrow morning; to rescue a wooden cross. This event is in keeping with the celebration ol Epiphany. First Methodist Church Elects 1918 Officers At the annual meeting of the First Methodist .Episcopal Sunday school board Wednesday evening officers were elected as follows: General su perintendent, H. E. Gallagher; assist ant superintendents, John Bethel and Miss Carlene Barrett; secretary. Miss Ruth Stahler; treasurer, George O. Ivilmore; chorister, J. Elmer George; pianist. Miss Marion George; assist ant pianist, Miss Ellen Marks; super intendent primary department. Mrs. B. F. Shellenberger: assistants, pri mary department. Miss Mary Brandt and Mrs. M. B. Litch; chorister, pri mary department, Mrs. G. Fulmer Champan; superintendent home de partment, Mrs. J. R. Johnson; assist ants, home department, Mrs. G. O. Kilmore and Mrs. George W. Crump; superintendent cradle roll depart ment, Mrs. George W. Wailey. CHrnCHKS EAGER TO SAVE COAI, As a move to conserve fuel, begin ning January 20 all services of the First Presbyterian Church, including the Sunday school, will be held in the Hain Audieorium. The lecture room together with the primary room and the church parlor, will not be heated until further notice. The choir will meet for rehearsal at the manse. 229 Walnut street, at 7.30 o'clock this evening. This is the third church in*the bor ough to make plans for holding meetings in an effort to save coal. The First Methodist Church and the St. John's Lutheran Church have taken tlin step. SHIPMENTS OF TILE HOLD IT WORK OX BOROVQH SEWERS Shipments of tile enroute to the borough for three months has held up work on the intercepting sewer for sometime, according to a state ment of G. W. Ensign, of the cor poration in charge of the work. Only a few men have been working for several days on account of the tile shortage. SORENESS, PAIN, ACHING JOINTS Don't suffer! Relief comes the moment you rub with old "St. Jacobs Liniment." Don't stay sore, stiff and lame! Limber up! Rub soothing, penetrat ing "St. Jacobs Liniment" right In your aching muscles, joints and pain ful nerves. It's the quickest, surest pain relief on earth. It is absolutely harmless and doesn't burn the skin. "St. Jacobs Liniment" conquers pain. It instantly takes away any ache, soreness and stiffness in the head, neck, shoulders, back, legs, arms, fingers or any part of the body —nothing like it. You simply pour a little in your hand and rub "where it hurts," and relief comes Instantly. Don't stay crippled! Get a small trial bottle now from any drug store. It never disappoints—six gold medai awards.—^Adv. BULGARSTOSEEK CROSS IN RIVER Epiphany to Be Celebrated With Elaborate Cere monies Tomorrow Bulgarians in the borough will celebrate Epiphany, the festival com memorating the baptism of Christ in the River Jordan, with elaborate ceremonies to-morrow. This celebra tion, which is the eighth consecutive one since the. organization of the local church, is expected to be the largest ever. Acommittee from the church mem bers yesterday were successful in lo cating a section along the river bank at the foot of Francis street where the water is not frozen. This section church members claim is large enough for the cross hurling serv ices. The celebration will include the usuai ceremony of hurling a wooden cross far into the icy waters of the Susquehanna and its subsequent res cue by sturdy sons of the Balkans, a long street parade and services in the Bulgarian Othodox Church, Front and Franklin streets. Two Hours' Services The. services in the church will he held at 7.30 o'clock. After two hours ' of worship the line of parade will be headed by the Bulgarian Balkan band and will move down Franklin street to Main, down Main to Francis and out Francis to the river, where further ceremonies will be held. The Rev. Father David Nakoff, rector of the local church, will have charge of the services at the church and at the river bank. Epiphany is celebrated by the Bulgarians thirteen days later than in the Roman church because the Bulgarian church clings to the old Julian claendar. Immediately after the celebration the Bulgarian Balkan band will go to Mt. Union with the Rev. Father Nakoff, 'Where they will assist in * similar celebration there. Heroic French Priest Tells of Work on Battlefield FAThH.R. • j Father Giles Benjamin Cabanel, who for three years administered TT> 'OP Augustine Victoria, consort of the dethroned monarch of Portugal, Kng Manuel, has bcon barred from visiting various war hospitals in England. She is a Hohenzollern by birth, her father, Prince William of Hohenzollern, particularly distinguished himself by expressions of hatred of everything British. Her brother was an officer on the Ger man raider Emden and is now a prisoner in an English camp. The photo is a recent one of ex-King Manuel and the ex-Queen Augustine Victoria. Will Germany Yield To America's Peace Aims? "The key to the Temple of World Peace is in the hand of President Wilson," said J Harden recently to an American correspondent in Germany and many people throughout the world think that the key was fitted in the lock when the President restated America's war aims to Congress on January Bth. n Taken together, remarks the Chicago Tribune, the statements of war aims by Lloyd George and President Wilson are "an unescapable challenge to the Governments of the Central Powers and what perhaps is much more important to the consciences of their peoples." The New Yorker Staats- Zeitung says that "Germany's spokesmen have been insistent that their opponents in the war state definitely and concretely what they are fighting for. It is now the Central Powers' move and they should be equally willing to restate their war aims as unequivocally as the United States and Great Britain have stated theirs." Throughout the length and breadth of America, the President's speech has" been warmly ap plauded and endorsed. In the capitals of the countries allied with America in the war its reception has been no less cordial, as shown in the leading article in THE LITERARY DIGEST for January 19th. This article covers four pages and gives the result of a searching examination of the newspaper press of the world, includ ing Germany, upon America's war aims as outlined in the President's message. Incidentally, the war terms of America, Britain, and Russia are shown in three parallel columns, so that the reader can at once balance them. Among other interesting articles in this number of the "Digest" are: The Woman Suffrage Victory in House of Representatives How the Result Upon By Editors Throughout the United States The War on the War Department More Murders in U. S. Than Ever Before The German- Bolsheviki Tiff The Vatican and the Allies Do Drunkards Deserve Death? Germany Urges Sweden to Rob Russia v The Staveless Barrel Junking 1,300 Miles of Railroad What Bolsheviki "Freedom" Means Making Millions Out of Bubbles Civilization and Insanity The Shop-Girl Up-To-Date Corn —Our National Food Financing the War (Prepared by U. S. Food Administration) (Prepared by U. S. Bureau of Education) How the German Destroys and Collects Art England's "New Hope" Found in War Poetry Germany Reconsiders Rodin Secrets of the Dramatic Critics' Prison-House The New Alinement of Religions Protestant Soldiers at Mass The New Vision of the War s News of Finance and Industry Many Striking Illustrations, Including the Best Cartoons of the Week How "The Digest" Helps Fight America's Battles It is imperatively necessary that the American public, by day, from Cape Cod to the Golden Gate, is absolutely every man, woman, and child, in their several stations, essential. THE LITERARY DIGEST (< this week and co-operate to the limit of their power in helping along every week, tells you exactly this, without exaggerating the great work to which this country has dedicated itself successes or minimizing failures, and shows you how —the high task of making the world safe for democracy. YOU can. help, where your part lies in the general plan To do this a clear understanding of our aims and pur- of coordinating the nation's resources. Read it to-day, poses and an intelligent grasp of what is being done, day as a patriotic duty. - January 19th Number on Sale Today—All News-dealers—lo Cents ® literary Dfeest II JlsGfc*- / t 1 XSERVE^/ FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary), NEW YORK JANUARY 18, tm. " FIRST WHITE BOY WITH COLUMBUS At Helm While Superiors Slept, Youngster Was Blamed For Wreck Many phases of th® life of Co lumbus offer mysteries that the his torians have never been able to clear away, and one student of the life of the great explorer has come across incidental mystery that has an appealing interest. It relates to a boy who accompanied the expedi tion of 1492 —the only boy among its members, and consequently the first white boy to set foot in Ameri ca. The contemporary accounts of A the first' expedition of Columbus mention the boy in question only once and that briefly. They indi cate that he was the only boy in the expedition and they place on his young shoulders the blame for the great catastrophe that befell when the Santa Maria was wrecked on the coast of Hayti. To be sure the story of the wreck shows that the boy was less to blame than his elders, but it was easy enough to make him the scapegoat. It was the night before Christmas, 1492, ten weeks after the discovery of the land, and Colum bus was pushing his search for gold among the West Indies. The flag ship, the Santa Maria, was skirting the coast of Hayti, and late at night, as the wind was light and the ship barely moving, Columbus went to his cabin for rest. lie passed the helm over to the captain. He, too, soon felt the need of sleep and went below. His successor at the tiller was a sailor and he shortly follow ed the example of the admiral and the master. Before he went he awakened the lad jfr question and told him to mind tne helm. The boy did not go to sleep. He was doubtless a live lad and he felt the importance of being trusted to steer the ship. But he was in strange waters and the currents were treach erous near that coast, says an ex change. The ship struck a reef. The admiral and crew rushed on deck in terror. Of course they blamed the boy. That was the way of the world before 14 92 and the fashion has never changed. That was the end of the Santa Maria. The crew nMhtd th* sbarJ In safety and made a fort from Ux' timbers of the wreck. In that which they called La Navidad tuj honor of the day, about forty of tbm crew remained while their eompaivl ions went home to Spain on tha Pinta and the Nina. One historian! mentions a tradition that th boy! remained with this number, but It £•' only a tradition. The fate of th, forty is a mystery, for when the second expedition of Columbn< reached that Island a year later theral were only a few eharred timbers' and bones to be found. Perhaps th® boy perished there. His name has not even come down to us, but the' brief glimpse that we have of him is a fascinating one. There is some thing to stimulate the'imagination In that fleeting picture of the boy whoJ stuck to his post while his riors slept. THIS WEAK, NERVOUS MOTHER Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham's. Vegetable Qompound Restored Her Health. |IW Philadelphia, Pa. —"I wits very weak, always tired, my back ached, )11n1111niImnlii11 an< * * felt "'ok- PUUUUN ly most of th* time. I went to a doctor and he said I hA/l W' nervous lndlges '•tid tion, which add r ed to my w ' dli i ~ "jfl condition kept mw worrying most of . jßw.- 4 the time—and ho ' said if X could not, ":y" stop that, I could v not get well. I heard so much, about Lydia K. Pinkhnm's Vegetable Compound my husband wanted me to try it. I took it for a week and felt a little better. I kept it up for three months, and I feel fine and can eat anything now without distress or nervousness."— Mrs. J. Worthline, 2842 North Taylor St., Philadelphia, Pa. The majority of mothers nowa-j days overdo, there are 6o many de-j mands upon their time and.! strength; the result is Invariably aj weakened, run-down, nervous condi-4 tion with headaches, backache, ir—■' rltability and depression—and sooi more serious ailments develop. ItJ is at such periods in life that Lydlaj E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound* will restore a normal healthy condM tion. A3 it did to Mrs. Worthline. For Sldn Soreness of infants and children you can find nothing that heals like Sykes Comfort Powder Leading physicians and nurses have used and endorsed it for more than 25 years. 25c at the Vlnol and other drug stores | T* Comfort Powder Co., Boston. Mass. 15