10 FARMERS' WEEK IN THE CAPITAL I Big Meetings Will Be Held Here Throughout the Pres ent Week For Discussion Annual meetings to be held hero this 'week by the State Board of Agriculture and half a dozen allied organizations will bring expression of the farmers of Pennsylvania re garding the labor and other condi tions brought about by the great war and an exhibition will also be given of tractors to demonstrate how ma chinery may take the place In the fields of the men drafted into the National Army. A dozen or more men prominent In governmental and agricultural affairs are scheduled to apeak at general meetings at which men attending the various conven tions will unite Tuesday and Wed nesday nights. Thursday all fruit and corn and other products In the mid-winter farm products show will be auctioned for the benefit of the Red Cross. The meetings, which have been held this week in Harrisburg for al most a score of years, will have a distinctly war reference. Addresses will deal with the increase in pro ducUon of foodstuffs, conditions brought about by the war and ab normal weather, the shortage of la bor due to the draft and the move ment of men to cities because of high wages in industries, fuel and | transportation conditions as relating to the maintenance of farming and live stock. Tho latter subject will be exhaustively treated by the State Veterinary Medical Association, which is to meet here this week. The State Board will meet Tues day morning and probably outline a legislative program the following j day. The State Horticultural, Dairy men's and Breeders', Poultry, Pota to Growers. Sheep and Wool and Veterinary Medical Associations will begin Tuesday and continue until Thursday. Over 100 boys representing corn clubs from various parts of the state and selected under auspices of the state vocational authorities will be here to judge the corn exhibits. Over twenty varieties of farm prod ucts. Including fleeces, in which a big interest is being manifested, will be shown, the exhibition being under state supervision. In addition, mov ing pictures of farm life will be shown. American and British Army officers will attend some of the meetings and the national and oth er state governments and the Penn sylvania Public Safety Committee will be represented. The meetings will he held in five different places. The State Board Will meet in Chestnut Street Hall; the Poultry Association, in the Sen ate caucus room; the Veterinarians, in Cameron hall. Second and Walnut streets; the State Horticultural, Dairymen, Breeders, Potato Grow ers. Sheep Raisers and Vegetable Growers in the Board of Trade. Joint meetings will be held at the Board of Trade Tuesday and Wed nesday niffhts, the speakers beinß the Governor, Gifford Pinchot. John A. McSparran, Lindley H. Dennis and others. "The exhibition of food products iind tractors and movies will be at the Kmerson-Brantingham building. Ninth and Market streets. Catarrh Sufferer Relieved at Last Fairly Eaten Up \{"lth the Disease. Says Clendenin TAN I.AC Kit ADICATED IT "I was fairly eaten up with ca tarrh, of the head and stomach," says Jacob Clendenin, a well-known farmer, of Camp Hill, near Harris burg. Pa. "Finally I was persuaded to give Tanlac a trial and I am now free to say that it is really a wonder work ( er, for it certainly fixed me up in fine shape. "Now I can eat anything with relish and enjoyment. I sleep like a top and wake up refreshed and rested and I do not suffer from headaches as I used to." Tanlac is now being introduced at Gorgas' Drug Store. Tanlac is also sold at the Gorgas Drug Store in the P. R. R. Station; in Carlisle at W. G. Stephens' Phar macy; Elizabethtown, Albert W. Ca.ln; Greencastle, Charles B. Carl, Mlddletown, Colin S. Few's Phar macy; Waynesboro, Clarence Croft's Pharmacy; Mechanicsburg, 11. P. Brunhouse.—Adv. SAVING LIVES | 1 Father John's Medicine For Dangerous, Obstinate Colds. No Injurious Drugs , Never wait for a cold to wear \ off —it wears away the lungs in \ stead. Neglected colds often lead to pneumonia. Father John's Medicine gives prompt relief from colds and throat troubles. Ciliiai'uiitecil free from alcohol anil nerve-destroying drugs upon which many medicines depend for their temporary effect, and which arc dangerous, because ihcy weaken the body and allow the disease to get n deeper hold MONDAY EVENING,- H33IRISBUTIG iSKSj TELEGRAPH JANUARY 21', 19IR Newport Belle Returns From War Work in Franc gS]HHp> . v JHB 1 I * ♦ "v, ,•'*/ -\ ! ! I I 4 i i I MISS ELBIE STEVENS Miss Elsie Stevens, of Newport, one of the belles of that famous re-j sort, has returned from a year spent in war work in France. For months] she was in the war zone and was I within range of the enemy's guns. LOYAL TEACHERS NEEDED, SAYS T. R. [Continued from First Page.] 1 Army and navy, and among civil ians by judges. The men and wom en who train the citizenship of the next generation are engaged in a task as important as that of the soldier on whose trained valor the safety of the present generation de pends or as that of the judge to whom we especially look for the safeguarding of the highest stand ard of civic integrity. • "Peculiar honor is due judge, sol dier and teacher who do well their vitally important work; and in each of the three professions those who do well form the great majority. But as a corollary to this we should show a special insistence upon this good behavior, in each case, and we should visit upon those of each pro fession who go wrong a severer con demnation than upon ordinary citi zens. Applies Standard of Patriotism "Soldier, judge and school teacher should be held to the same standard of patriotism and of fealty to the na tion and the flag; and patriotism means devotion to this nation and this flag, and to the orderly liberty our Government expresses. "That species of internationalism which insists upon loving other coun tries as much as our own stands on a level with that species of conjugal affection which finds expression in loving another woman as well as one's own wife; each is a crime; the first is treason and the second is bigamy: and in the present stage of world development one crime is no more defensible than the other. Treason in the concrete is not off set by a mushy sentimentality about humanity in the abstract. The teacher should no more be permitted to preach treason than the Army officer. If either complains that this infringes his liberty of speech he can at once regain that liberty by leaving the public service. ''Even outside the service in time of war there are certain limitations which must be put upon speech—in fact, as I need hardly say to a body of scholars and students and schol arly people, while civilization means a steady increase of that liberty which implies .mmunity from wrong, it also of necessity means a steady diminution in that kind of liberty which implies the doing of wrong to one's neighbor or the doing of wrong to the body politic as a whole. "We do not require Army and Navy officers and school teachers to swear allegiance to international mankind: their allegiance is to this nation; they must, of course, show a generous desire to do justice and show mercy to all men and women: but their loyalty must be to this flag in peace and war. "Foolish or disloyal creatures tell us not to agitate at this time the question of permanent preparedness, because even the pacifists are now backing the war, and we ought to think of nothing but winning it. 1 insist, and have always insisted, that our first object should be at all costs to win the war and that it would be infamous to accept any peace except the peace of over whelming victory. But to introduce universal military training for our young men under 21 now will be a most efficient step for winning tho war; and if we wait until peace comes all the professional pacifists, being gentry of inconceivably short memories, will at once raise their old-time shrill clamor against pre paredness. "Remember that for two and a half years after the world war broke out we as a nation acted on the the ory of these pacifists that if we kept unprepared and submitted with hum ble cheerfulness to insult and mur der we would be able to keep out of war. Well, we tried the experiment. We kept unprepared. Pacifist Policy Failed "We not merely turned the other cheek, but meekly presented our en tire person to (ierman brutality. And we did not keep out 'of war. We merely made ourselves helpless ly unable to amount to anything for a year after we were dragged into the war. Our pacifists kept this country unable to fight and yet put It where it had to fight syid did light. "The real crime of pacifists is not that they don't fight, but that they keep themselves and the nation ut terly unlit to fight effectively. In the end pacifists generally fight; but, as they never began to prepare until the end has come, they never fight effectively. Of 100 pacifists who clamor against war ninety can in the end be kicked into war. But it is too late to prepare effectively when this has happened. Pacifists don't avert war. They merely avert pre paredness for war—or rather pre paredness against war, for, while preparedness does not make peace certain, it. is the one method of making it probable. "We as a nation have been guilty of ignominious folly because we fol lowed the advice of the American pacifists and did not prepare for this war; these American pacifists there by proved themselves the efficient tools of the Germart militarists; and now, having got us unprepared into this war they seek to prevent us from preparing our strength so ns to {ninimlze the chance of another war and to ensure us against disaster if another war should unhappily come." ' WHOLE NATION IS I GETTING BACK OF TOBACCO FUND | Soldiers in France to Benefit By Drive Throughout Country j Announcement was made this week from the headquarters in New | York of "Our Boys in France To i Imcco Fund" that plans have been successfully laid whereby the week of Monday, February 18 of the new jcar litis been designated as "Wash ington's Birthday Smoke Week." During the seven days which em brace the. celebration of the birth day of George Washington, a con centrated drive in which every city in the country will participate, will be made in the interests of the To bacco Fund. Not only will the var ious newspapers and magazines which are now receiving contribu tions for the Bending of tobacco to our boys across the seas give wide spread publicity and assistance to make "Smoke Week" a success, but negotiations are now under way whereby a chain of large tobacco stores stretching from coast to i coast will donate a certain percent ! age of their receipts to help swell the already large fund. The plans for an extensive campaign during this period also embrace an agree ment between the Fund and one of the leading theatrical circuits of the United States which carries with it a promise on the part of the various theater managers to give a special "Tobacco Fund Matinee." In order to properly impress the minds of the public with the impor tance of "Smoke Week" during the week of February 18th, a series of appropriate posters will be display ed in railroad stations, street cars and on various bill-boards through out the country. These litographs will be striking in design and exe cuted by a leading magazine artist. It is deemed especially appropri ate that the seven days in which the Celebration of the birthday of the country's first president, George Washington, occurs, should be se lected as the time for a vigorous campaign to secure contributions for our present-day fighters now enduring the discomforts and dan gers of the trenches "over there," in order that we may have security and peace. The various celebra tions. meetings, and entertainments which will be given not only on Washington's birthday, but also on tho day before, will participate in the effort to secure liberal contribu tions toward "Our Boys in France Tobacco Fund" and it is expected that the "big push" will result in supplying many thousands of Amer ican boys now in France with the tobacco they crave above "ill else. The easiest way to get tobacco where it is most needed, the lads in France, is to send a contribu tion to the Harrisburg Telegraph's Tobacco Fund. A quarter will send a package retailing at 45 cents di rect to the men with Pershing where American smokes are unobtainable. The following contributions have been received: Tobacco Fund Previously acknowledged .. $913.65 Mrs. Anna M. Wiley, 132 Locust St 1.00 Chas. H. Delafant, Windsor Hotel, Middlctown, Pa. 1.00 $915.65 Ex-Premier of Russia Slain B 1 . ■ TSCrPREMJKR, SOIWJTfKW, I. Goremykln, twice premier of Russia, his wife and brother-in-law have been murdered by robbers, ac cording to a report from Petrograd. Geremykin was largely instrumental in the overthrow of Nicholas Ro manoff, the former Czar. It was he who obtained the Czar's signature terminating the session of the Duma. This alone was greatly responsible for the revolution which ended in the overthrow of the Czar's government. That Cold CASCARAfe* QUININE Tta ctandard cold cure far lOjcm in table* form—nfa, rare, no opiate* -cm cold m 14 hour* crip in I dav*. Money hack if it fail*. Gcttbc ■Baanot box wit* Sad top and Mr. HilTa nhXiae on it. 24 Tabic*, far 2ScI AtAnyDraiStor. DR. CHASE'S BloodartNerve Tablets Weigh Yourself Before Taking. Prl W Onti, Bp*dal 90 Cent*. ,Ds Ckuc. 224 North Tenth St Philadelphia, Pi BAKER YIELDING ON WAR CABINET [Continued from First Page.] the measure provides for the estab lishment of a war cabinet, that name having been substituted at the elev enth hour for "war council," of three men, distinguished in business, ex ecutive, administration and public affairs and not members of the Pres ident's cabinet. It specifically states that the Sec retaries of War and Navy shall not be ex-offlcio members. The war cab inet members would receive salaries of $ 12,000 a year, the same as those of the President's cabinet, but would rank above the executive cabinet in power for control of war policies. Tho Senate will begin to-day the consideration of legislation looking to. more effective prosecution of the war and Washington officials await with the deepest interest the turn of events. There are signs abundant that be fore the Senate completes its task to bring about greater co-ordination in the war program clashes of a very serious nature between Congress and the administration are not at all im probable. The Senate Military Affairs Com mittee, voicing the views of a very considerable element of the American WE BOUGHT THE STOCK OF SILVERWARE, JEWELRY, CLOCKS, ETC. FROM KOHNER'S, 400 MARKET ST. AND WILL PLACE THESE RICH STOCKS ON SALE WITH OUR OWN STOCKS AT OUR STORE, 18 N. 4th ST. TUESDAY MORNING AT 9 O'CLOCK SHARP * 2T AT HALF PRICE AND LESS THAN HALF Everybody knows that KOHNER carried very high-grade stocks, carrying only quality Silverware, Jewelry, Clocks, etc. It was but a new store, hence the stocks were brand new and every article handled was of the latest and most up-to-date design. The temptation was too great to pass up this truly wonderful purchase of beautiful Silverware, Jewelry, Clocks, etc., at Half and Less Than Half, and weare going to place this big purchase on sale and give 3 r ou the benefit of this unusual purchase. i are on ever y article and we will place these rich stocks on sale at one half and less than half of KOHNER S prices. WJT COME! DON'T MISS IT! BY ALL MEANS COME! HERE ARE A FEW OF THE UNUSUAL VALUES Exbfe Special CLOCKS J SILVERWARE I Extra Special One lot of $ 1.00 One Lot of WATPHPQ 68 Clocks of All Descriptions Genuine English Sheffield, American FINE LOCKETS b F ine Brush Brass Clocks. Kohner's *"* °' K ° h " e £ PHce $2 " 50 50c rri $2 '® to $5 - Wl " ' to $5.00. Our Sale ——- Our Sale Price SI.OO Kohner, ,T., lEST 75c Extra Specia' Kohner's Price $4.00; Sale Price #2.00 ______ ' ———— Kohner's Price $6.50; Sale Price Pvfi*sa One Lot of SI.OO Fine Small Mahogany Clocks KohncV Price $8.50; sale Price s-1.a.-j Kremen f z2 s c ALARM CLOCKS Kohner's Price $3.50 to sß.oo. Sterling Silver Oread Trays Collar Buttons _ P* Our Sale CA fn (t A A A Kohner's Price S2O; Sale Price #IO.OO 2®" t>UC Price splsU Jp4.UU Kohner's Price $18; Sale Price -#O.OO £>C Sandwich Trays Extra Special Extra Special Very Fine Mahogany Parlor Clocks Kohner's Price $5.00; Sale Price #3.50 One Lot of Jewelry 0 , c .. . , „ , . . Kohner's Price $5.50; Sale Price Consisting of Beauty 50c'Hold-On'Clutch $- 50*0 5 ° C< soiners " cc Kohner's Price $6.50; Sale Trice $3.23 I Pins Lingerie The best protection Our Sale do to $lO CA One Lot Fine Shaving Sets Clasps, Earrings, . ■ Price.. 3)0.75 3)1 Z. 50 Kohner's Price $9.00 to (Q C A Brooches etc. for your scarf pin . SI4OO . Gur Salc Price JJ>,J .5U Kohner s Prices 50c -g /\ rr to $1.50. Our Sale JL\/C3 One Lot of Mahogany Candlesticks One Lot of DOn Bon Dishes Price Choice at Extra Special 7.X' Silver Vases Extra Special One Lot of Kohner's Price SB.OO to 4 A flfl One Lot of Fine , , o 1 . 1 $0.50; Our Sale Price -VU Brooches, Gold Front Khp slll ° ne Big Lot of Roger ' 8 and Tea Sets, 4 and 5 Pieces B T a v^i e ?° b8 * Kohner s Price $1.25 Community Flatware con- Kohner'. Price $26 $52; Sale Price Lavalhere. to $2.50. Our Sale sisting of Knives, Forks, La- $ 13.00 TO $26.00 $i .oTto 8 $3 n oT ce dies, Orange Spoons, etc., all n 0 , Our Sale Price— , . Coffee Sets Choice at at tremendous savings. Kohner 's Price SB.OO to Cl/i AA I CTfk.*-* U. _ J $9.50; Our Sale Price $4.00 *>UC WW DON'T FORGET OUR ADDRESS MAXREITER & C0.,18N. 4th St. people will Insist tlnu something be (lone to remedy tlio errors of omis sion and <lOlll mission which thus far have marked the preparations to enter the war on a scale commen surate with the prestige of the Unit ed States. Business "Behind the I.lnes" A crystallized public Bentlment will decide the issue, with the Presi dent expecting universal support of his administration's conduct and Senators believing the people are behind them in their demand for a greater utilization of the commer cial genius of the countrv for busi ness efficiency in the material ele ments of essential "behind the lines." Senators will leave to the Presi dent and Secretary Baker the ques tion of whether the contemplated steps shall hinge about Mr. Baker's management of the War Department They asserted that the proposed war cabinet and ministry of muniutus are not to be considered personal reflections upon Mr. Baker, unless the President expressly elects that such be tho issue. If lie does they are willing to accept the cliallcngc and tfglit it out before the country. As a further complication, the ad vocates of universal military training are determined to press that issue along with the other war legislation. The assertions in New York yester day of Senator Chamberlain, of Ore gon, chairman of the Senate Military Affairs Committee, and Representa tive Julius Kahn, of California, rank ing Republican member of tha House Military Affairs Committee, left no doubt of that. Use McNeil's Cold Tablets. Adv Pennsylvanians Named to Offices by Palmer Washington, Jan. 21.—A reorgani zation of the law bureau of his de partment was announced last night by A. Mitchell Palmer, ths alien property custodian. Three Pennsyl vanians were selected for posts. They are Ralpn J. Baker, of Philadelphia; E. C. Higbee. of Connellsvllle, and J. E. MacOloskey, Jr., general counsel of tho Harbison-Walker Refractories Company, of Pittsburgh. All are made assistant counsel, along with Mansfield Ferry. Lee C. Bradley, Birmingham, Ala., is appointed general counsel. Bradley Palmer, Boston, and Morgan M. Mann, New York, have been ap pointed associate counsel. Herbert S. Daniels. Omaha, Neb., is appointed chief of the division of individual property. Lawrence McGuire, presi dent of the United States Realty Company, New York, is appointed manager of the real estate depart ment. Earl I. McClintock is appointed chief of the division- of neutral countries. DOCTOR CALIiKD TO OOI.ORS Carlisle, Pa., Jan. 21.—Cumber land county draft board No. 2 will work shorthanded this week, follow ing the ordering into active service of Dr. J. Bruce McCreary, of Ship pensburg, who was recently commis sioned as major in the medical corps. He goes to Camp Dix, N. J. He is the second county physician called to the colors in a week. General Strike On in Austria; Peace the Aim London, Jan. 21.—A general strike is on throughout Austria, according to an exchange Telegraph dispatch from Paris yesterday, which reports 100,000 men quitting work in Vienna and Neustadt (thirteen miles south of Vienpa), closing down all the war factories. The strikers are described as openly anti-German and the movement as both political and eco nomical, and especially aimed at se curing peace. Public demonstrations. It Is addd, have been held In many places, at which hostility was voiced toward Berlin for trying to force the Aus trians to continue the war. The latest German reports which have come through Amsterdam, to which city they were forwarded by the semiofficial Wolff Bureau, flatly assert that the military party has gained the victory in the territorial policy of Germany, and show what face that country proposes to put on annexations in the east. The guise in which taese are presented is that the peoples of these countries already have determined their future status through existing representative bodies and that this determination Is Irrevocable. DISTILLER GIVES UP BUSINESS IX DISGUST St. Louis, Jan. 21.—After spending $350,000 in a futile effort to prevent prohibition, Sigmund J. Lang, a whiskey manufacturer, has quit the business in disgust after forty-fivcl rears and 'will spend the remainder ! of his life In some other Industry, He finds' after casting tip aecounts, | he says that he has paid $1,880.00" 1 in revenue taxes and $&60,006 t anti-prohibition campaigns and to< solicitors tor charity, "I am quitting the liquor business 1 In .disgust,'' Lang says, "but with a clear conscience as to my business methods and the knowledge that X have never stooped to employ the tactics that some advocates of pro hibition and morality used to lay hands on our money. I did business in ten states in the West and South, and the first shock came three years* ago, when Arkansas went dry and wiped out a huge business overnight. Then lowa, another of my good states, took the same course." L>ang sold his distillery for forty cents on the dollar. jgBjHHLA 111 K
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers