6 DR. DIXON WARNS AGAINST EXCESS Says That Alcohol Must Be Eschewed if One Would Avoid Dread Pneumonia Overeating and drinking are pro lific causes of pneumonia and not only people in civil life, but the young men who arc In military training should refrain from over indulgence during tho excitement of a new life, says Dr. Samuel G. Dixon, state commissioner of health in c. statement, issued to-day giving warning of dangers of pneumonia. Dr. Dixon addresses himself espe cially to the young men in the mili tary camps and calls upon citizens to assist the military authorities and at the sama time to keep them selves fit. Dr. Dixon says: "Getting the Kreat number of men together from ■various parts of the country to mili tary camps is a most difficult duty. The violent change of climate and the exchange, in many cases, to out door life from indoor life, without proper clothing and under unusual living accommodations, as well as the influx of new men, without iso lation camps where they might be kept under observation until any contagious disease has had time to develop, are sources of danger to the men who are already ii> the service. Unfortunately, the recruits, under the excitement of the new life, are tempted to indulgo in high jiving and alcohol, which condition i.s always bad, particularly in cases of pneumonia. Alcohol combusts in the human system and does so at the expense of other valuable food stuffs. and therefore, should not be considered a foodstuff .under the circumstances. It Interferes wifli treatment, using the patient's strength, when this strength is most .needed In resisting the disease. Overeating and drinking are bound to increase the death rate from pneumonia. It is the duty of each one to take good care of his health so as to enable him to fight against this serious, exhaustive disease pre valent in winter. '"During the last several months, not only In military, but in civil Itfe, wo have lost by death a large number of citizens by pneumonia and other diseases, where the pa tients' condition was due to the fact that they were overfed and. over p.lcoholed. "It is to be hoped that this word of warning will, particularly at this time when this terrible world's war calls for our best efforts, help us to restrain ourselves, and that our citizens in civil life will join in assisting the military authorities iif carrying out their discipline, by re training from furnishing alcohol to those who are in the service." NO SMALL TASK OF SAVING STAE MONEY [Continned from First Page.] •rs In the Franklin Building. He spent all his life huntng, fishing and studying nature up around the neigh borhood of Clearfield. Clary Is good for he smacks of the great forests, the cold mountain streams and pioneer days of our common wealth. Only one who has peeked Into Clary's room realises what an amount of game there Is In Penn sylvania. Sometimes the tables are piled high, though this year the snow lias partly stopped hunting, it being impossible to use the hounds. As the winter breaks up, however, there is bound to be a mighty out put, and Clary is prepared for it. The State Legislature finally woke, up after Dr. Joseph Kalbfus had conscientiously presented the depior- Gas, Gas, Indigestion, Sourness, Upset Stomach-Pape's Diapepsin Instant Relief! Neutralizes stomach acids, stopping dyspepsia, heartburn, belching, distress. Read! Time it! In five minutes your sour, acid stomach feels fine. No indiges tion, heartburn, or belching of gas, or eructations of undigested food, no dizziness, bloating, foul breath or headache. Pape's Diapepsin is noted for Its speed in sweetening upset stomachs. It is the surest quickest and most certain stomach antacid in the whole world and besides, it is harmless. Millions of men and women now eat their favorite foods without fear| —they know Pape's Diapepsin will save them from such misery. Please, for your sake, get a large fifty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin Open-Air Exercise and Carter's Little Liver Pills are two splendid things For Constipation If you can't get all the exercise you should have, its all , the more Important that you have the ff i t i other tried-and-true remedy for a tor- SaaiPrfea I \ pid Hirer and bowels which don't net freely and naturally. MITTIT T * ke onc piU erer y nfcfct; more only W IVER when yoo're sure Its necessary. CHALKY, COLORLESS COMPLEXIONS NEED CARTER'S IRON PILLS SKATES GROUND 111 Whil 1 Federal Machine Shop Cranberry Street Near Court ' MONDAY EVENING, ) HARRISBCRG TELEGSajBH ~ JANUARY 21, 191ff " ~~ Suffragists Who Lobbied For Passage of Amend f iS 1 -I j<2^4 > VvTE SSJ CA STnTHV^O^. II —-^^=—in xwms /jr^ s<>-~--_- * These four women, members of the National Woman's Party, were, with hundreds of other suffragists, besieging the offices of Congressmen, urging them to support the Federa 1 suffrage amendment which passed by a close margin. able facts of the cheating going on and did away with the justice of tho peace business although there is plenty of complaint now from the hunters who have to go through months of red tape to get their pay. What is needed, say the Game Com missioners, is a simple system to pay the hunter when he sends in his pelt. This will probably be achieved in the next session of the legisla ture. If you expect to get a bounty on any wild animal in these days you must bring, or ship, the hide, whole hide?, into Clary and he looks it over. He can tell whether the beast has a winter coat or a summer and he Knows a weasel from a tomcat. He lirst mutilates tho hido wl.th a gash through the nose and that prevents it ever being presented again as a new skin. It is infallible and was entirely Ignored under the old re gime. W r hen a peaoe Justice paid for a pelt he never nicked It. Con sequence was that many a shifty old Xlmrod kept on selling the same weasel until It wore out. By and large, over the whole state, the sum of $123,790 has been paid for bounties since the new regime began. It might be Interesting for the steam-heated citizen to know what is being killed by the varmint chasers out in the open. Well, the state paid bounty on 1,124 wildcats, 8,506 gray fox, 8,271 red fox, 10,036 mink, 72,856 weasel. The aromatic skunk makes excellent fur, but he Is not accused of destruction, so there is no bounty on him. The weasel is the demon beast of from any drug store and put your-! stomach right. Don't keep on being i miserable—life is too short —you are not here long, so make your stay agreeable. Eat what you like and enjoy it, without dread of acid fer mentation In the stomach. Pape's Diapepsin belongs in your i home anyway. Should one of the: family eat something which don't! agree with them, or in case of an I attack of indigestion, dyspepsia, gas-' tritis or stomach derangement due to | fermentation and acidity, at daytime | or during the night, it is handy toi give the quickest,- surest relief I knowp. this country. Clary told the re porter something he did not know, namely that a weasel is simply alias for ermine, that costly white fur you always see on actresses. Yes, a weasel, that is one-tenth of the tribe, turns white in the winter, all but the tip end of his tail and that ever remains black. The farmer pets $1.50 for a weasel hide and by the time the fur merchant gets through with it the actress has to dig deep for her neck warmer. A weasel is, by ail tokens, worse than a Ilun Kaiser in his thirst for blood and death. *CCow you take a wildcat," said Clary, and, by the way, he had two Ihere, five feet long. "A wildcat will eat one rabbit at night and be contented, lie down and sleep with a good conscience. But that weas el there," he pointed to a miserable thing, only one-sixth as long as 'the wildcat, "will kill twenty-flve rab bits Just for the fun of it and let them He In the snow. He treats chickens the nm way, o no one has much sympathy for a weasel." Mink Is about the most valuable pelt we have in this state. And yet the mink seems to be harmless; he only eats water snakes, which no one is fond of. and frogs. A good mink skin brings $6.50. He is plen tiful up In Crawford, Somerset and Wayne counties, where he toys away life In tho water and swamps. The red fox is also costly and hardest to capture. He thrives in the North Tier counties, while the gray is found plentifully in Perry, Wayne and Pike counties. The strictness with which game laws arc now administered is high ly satisfactory to every citizen who loves to feel that there Is still sonic primeval territory left in Pennsyl vania. Until recently it was com mon for hunters to poison grain and thus kill thousands of birds and animals. A number of these criminals have been convicted through the efforts of the present authorities. With the reforetation going on it is not unlikely that our forests will be populated more and more with game and thus preserve something of early days for coming generations. Deaths and Funerals MAGDAEINE GABLE ! Magdaline Gable, 86, died Satur day evening at her residence, 1733 North Fifth street, from pneumonia. ! She is survived by three daughters and two sons: Catherine Gable, Mrs. j Anna A. Cams, Mrs. Mary Brlcker, | William T. Gable and George Gable. Private funeral services will be held Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock, the Rev. Dr. Ellis N. Kremer, pastor of the Salem Reformed Church, of ficiating. Burial will be made in the East Harrisburg Cemetery. JERKY DEHAYEN Jerry DeHaven, 2237 North Thir teenth street, Philadelphia, died Sat urday morning at 3 o'clock of apo plexy. Jle was formerly a resident of this city and conducted a shoe store at 923 North Third street for many years. He made his home at Philadelphia for the past eighteen years. Funeral services will be held Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock from his residence, and burial will be made in Philadelphia. GEORGE C. MURRAY George C. Murray, 72, husband of Hannah Murray, died in Philadel phia Thursday. The body will be brought jhere to-morrow afternoon at 12.4 a o'clock by Undertaker George F. Sourbier, and burial will be made in Mount Calvary Ceme tery. Mr. Murray served on the po lice force when Dr. John Fritchey was Mayor. Ho is survived by his wife, a daughter and a son. STOPS HEADACHE, PAIN, NEURALGIA Don't suffer! Get a dime pack age of Dr. James* Headache Powders. You can clear your head and re lieve a dull, splitting: or violent throb bing headache In a moment with a Dr. James' Headache Powder. This old-time headache relief acta almost magically. Send some one to the drug store now for a dime package and a few moments after you take a powder you will wonder what be came of the headache, neuralgia and pain. Stop suffering—it's needless. Be sure you get what you ask for. PUBLICITY WILL BE EMPLOYED Game Commission Proposes to Get the Game Law Vio lators Before the People Publicity is to be enlisted us an aid to the State Game commission j in enforcing the state's same laws. The imposition of fines has hail j some effect, but at the last meet-' ing of the commission it was de cided that it would not bo a bad idea to give full publicity to the, name and circumstances surround ing every conviction. This will be ; u new departure in enforcement of the game laws, but It is believed I ■tliat it will be effective, as not only I dally newspapers, but sportsmen's Magazines will be informed of the' :i treats and convictions. The last year brought numerous violations of the state game laws, notably in the killing of does and j young bucks, which are not legal. ; The names of several hunters have been secured and evidence is be-i ing hunted with the idea that they will bo prosecuted. Their names will be given out when fines are collected. The state game wardens have got ten on the trail of a number of! foreigners who have been disre- j garding the game laws by shooting! out of season and on false papers. It wlii be expensive for them. Aid of the auditor general to get! returns from some counties which! have failed to make returns of the 1 J ovenues l'rom hunters' licenses, j There are half a dozen whose treas-j urers have not only failed to file! returns or to send in the cash, but; they will not even answer letters.' ST he hunters' license revenue thisj 'ear will be a liandsomo amount on j j which to undertake the work this : spring and summer. J Blanks are being -prepared for I i sending to couhtics whero men are! | urging the closing of counties tol | grouse shooting so that the birds! may increase. The commission has ] been endeavoring to get a general agreement on a two-year period which seems to be more or less favored. Dr. Joseph Kalbfus, sec retary of the commission, in speak ing about the matter, said that the i two-year closed season on turkeys of years ago worked very -well and j that he believed that two years 1 i would meet the requirements. It isj important to get in all of the coun- j ties, however, so that there will be! no raiding of grouse in any one county where shooting might not be i forbidden through failure to peti i tion. Dr. Kalbfus says that people are commencing to realize that there is a community interest in game and that there is little to the com plaints of some people that hunt , era who pay a license in a distant county leave no revenue in the coun i ty where they hunt. He says that the hunting counties are well taken ! care of in disbursements from the , hunters' license fund and by state , appropriations once any one sits down to work it out. It Is probable that this year some deer will be released from private preserves to help In stocking cer- tain districts. The state has ar ranged to .turn loose a number of deer which have been optioned In other states and some privately owned deer will be offered. Steps to complete the negotiations for state game preserves in Warren and Forest counties will be taken in about a month. / Bucks and Dau phin are also to get reserves if leases) can be arranged. The land in each of these four counties is well adapted. The State Game Commission offi- cers have been getting numerous letters complaining about tho scat tering of poisoned corn where crows will get it. Most of the writers do not appear to know that the corn will kill tho crows and quail and pheasants as well as wild turkeys and chickens not be harmed. The strychnine that it takes' to kill a crow is infinitesimal and it is get ting in its work. Seth E. Gordon, assistant secretary of the game com mission, says that the average'crow killed by the poisoned corn had seven grains in its stomach. These grains had less than one one-hun dredth of a grain of the drug which would not even have amused a chicken or quail. Two Turkish Cruisers Sunk by British Ships in Battle Liondon, Jan. 21. ln a naval action between British and Turkish forces at the entrance to the Darda nelles, the Turkish cruiser Midullu, formerly the German Breslau, was sunk and the Sulton Yawuz Selim, I'crmerly the German Goeben, was benched. This announcement was made by the Admiralty last night. The German cruisers Breslau and Goeben were In the Mediterranean sea at the outbreak of the war and fed into the Dardanelles, seeking safety from the British and French warships that sought their destruc tion. Since then they have been active in the Dardanelles, at the Black Sea entrance to the Hosphorus and in the Black Sea along the Turkish Asiatic, the Russian and the Ru manian coasts. Reaching Constantinople in the middle of August, 1914, the British government immediately protested against tho German warships be ing accorded refuge and Turkey promised that they would be intern ed, and placed out of commission until the end of the war. Later, how ever, It was announced that Turkey had purchased the cruisers and them tho new names of Midullu and Sultan Yawuz Sellm. Then followed frequent reports of the activity of the worships in the Black Sea, bombarding enemy land positions and engaging or being en raged by ships of the Russian Black Sea fleet. Although the Turkish and German war statements frequently announced victories for the re christened Germans, the Russian Admiralty on numerous occasions told of how Russian warships had sent scurrying from the Bkack Sea into the Bosphorus, damaged, cn fire and shojving the wounds the Russian shells had given them. Shortly afterward, however, the Midullu and her sister ship again would appear, and the game of hide and seek between them and the Russians would go on again until another battle took place, the Turks in the meantime having sunk cargo boats ranging from the smallest fishing craft to steamers. KM MA M. LOGKARD Funeral services for Emma Mary Lockard, aged 3, will bo held Wed nesday morning at 10 o'clock from the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William H. Lockard, 32G Clin ton street,' the Rev. Dr. Lewis S. 1 Mudge, pastor of the Pine Street Presbyterian Church, officiating. Burial will be made in the East Har rlsburg Cemetery. Miss Lockard died Friday afternoon of pneumonia. To Core H Cld In One limy Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets. Druggists refund money, if it fails to cure. E, W. GROVE'S sig nature is on (,'acli box. 30c. —Adver- tisement. The late Governor Penriypacker says, in his autobiography,—"Rudolph Blanken burg . . . was never able to think with clearness, but was impelled by worthy and philanthropic impulses." f> This remarkable document, penned as the impulse moved him by a remark able man, lets no acquaintance escape. Kings, bishops, lawyers, jurists, Pres idents, prize-fighters, politicians, states men, business men —all come in for the Pennypackerisms that made the late Governor a unique character. In the words of its editors, it is appearing daily in the EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER. "Let It Maim Important! < . Three ways in which to be absolutely certain of receiving your copy of the Evening Public Ledger: 1. Order your newsdealer to see that it is delivered to your home daily. 2. Reserve your Evening Public Ledger at your favorite news stand or with your newsboy. 3. Write direct to the Evening Public Ledger (Box 1526, Philadelphia), and enter a six • months' subscription to it now. Do not delay to act on one of these three methods of procuring the daily installments of the greatest life story ever written by the man who lived it. Already we are receiving complaints of friends who are confronted with "all sold out" at news stands. ' 1 1 i 1 Aliening public Sle&gcr CYRUS H. K. CURTIS, PUBLISHER