10 MANY WILL GET . CERTIFICATES At* Results of State Medical Ex aminations Announced VC ,-yt Xr" ■ by the Rureau ' The Slate Bureau of Medical Edu- Licensure to-day an . horafe#94hat the following had pass- the stk,te examinations for cecLfi- j ;'J§£t*f hWi recently; „ V ■ Abrajtaiv. Bernstein. Sydney Geof- Btddlc, Henry Blumxweig. oT Make Only Halt Time on | f * Accjfeunt of Sickness. Since ; Taking Tonall, One Bottle, '■j : Time. -ieSr w I took Tonall I can eat j ' ;v woodchopper." suys John. ,'Autjy, Xorth Ninth street. Leb-1 "jijjto'n, &.. and employed at the: Steel Company. \> ."J %dffered from indigestion; j not eRt without pain; had to' use tablets to relieve i tried all kinds of medicine.: ieiut' Tonall is the only thing that 'ixed tfitt up. I have lost no time -work since taking one bottle. wliHe tjefora I lost half my time. I U do* not have to take tablets for j jiain nbw. I am 5a years old and, /narrted." Tht* testimonial was given Oct. . 19{8. £ is sold* at Gorgas' Drug , and all leading stores in Eastern Pennsylvania. j Chas. H. Mauk k n I I UKBEKTAKEiI 1745 | 1 ' Prinita ißkuiaaet *l. Oth St. | j */vT\' T X this our annual February Furniture Sale, we are in a position to I offer our many customers, as has always been our method, every thing at a substantial reduction. It will be to your_advantage to make your purchase early in the month. Dining Suite in American Walnut SlBB.OO February Sale Price $158.00. A number of other suites of like values. You surely can not helpvbut be pleased with the Styles, Quality and Price of these suites. * Three-Piece Tapestry Suites $160.00 Sale Price, $135.00 see the large spring arm and cushions, all spring construction. $225.00 Suites Sale Price $190.00. This is a great value. A large stock of easy chairs and rockers at prices that are sure to please. Worthy reduc tions in Bedroom Suites in all woods. By making a liberal deposit we will reserve purchases until April, Ist. These reductions are all strictly cash. ' ~ V . l Fackler's Furniture Store 1312 Derry Street Harrisburg Open From ' Saturday 8.00 A. M.'to 5.30 P. M. 8.00 A. M. to 9 P. M. Philadelphia; Jane Raymond Boud art, Chester: Richard James Burke, Wilkes-Barre: Guy Gibson Campbell, Petersburg; Donald Bruce * Coover, Philadelphia: Earle Rice Davis, Haddon Heights; Howfcrd Benjamin F. Davis, West Chester; Fayette Clin ton Eshelman, Franklin: Agnes Burns Ferguson. Pittsburgh: Albert Wellington Fisher, Mt. Carmel; Charles Leroy Fisher, Philadelphia; Framros Pestoujl Ghadiali, Jeddo; Anthony Angelo S. Giordano, Phila delphia; Harry Frantz Gockley, My erstown; Henry Elias Guth. Allen town; Cecilia Halberstadt, Philadel phia: T. Ruth Hartley. Philadelphia; Harry Kcspe Hobbs, Shenandoah; Walter Raleigh l.lvingston, Lans- Idqwne: William Horace Means. Lcb 'arion: Joseph M. Mirman, Hartford; i Walter Mui|Jv. Mineola, L. I„ (Camp |Mills); Phillipp'Moft'sesyan, Philadel i phia; Aloyslus Edward Murphy. Jer ! sey City. X. J.; Agha Buzurkkhan 1 Musa, Medina. X. Y.: Abraham I Maurice Ornsteen. Philadelphia; Jay Verne Rice, Pittsburgh; William I Erdman Seibert, Fannettsburg; Al fred Roman Seraphin. Philadelphia; Marion Shepard, Ashland; Sulvatore Carl P. Sunseri, Pittsburgh; Miriam Warner. New York City; Roland Ferdinand Wear, Williamsport: Abe Kipp Weaver. Tarentum; William Weiss. Philadelphia. Bedside Examination George Arthur Calhoun, Hopewell. Ya.: Edward Mayer French. Gibbs town. X. J.; Framroz Pestouji Ghad iali, Jeddo, Pa.; Harry W. Posey, York, Pa. Drugless Therapy Examination I-eonnrd Bowery Johnston. Phila delphia: John Arthur Seibert, Phila delphia; Susan Yerlyn Seibert. Phila delphia. Chiropody Examination Margaret Esther Gross. Lewis town. Massage ami Allied Branches Examination Victoria C. Antonson. Philadel phia; Lucy Dewar, Winnipeg. Can ada; Katherine B. Gage. Philadel phia: Marguerite Preston Willson. St. Davids. EPIGRAMS PLAYED GREAT PART IN j WINNINGTHEWARi "They Shall Not Pass" Was French Rallying Cry at the Marne j The war has developed many dra j matic phrases, slogans, terse epi , grams, or laconic statements. Look ' ing back over the perspective of i ; four years of flghting.it appears thnt | ! the majority of these grew out of > tense crises in battles, or marked | historic moments when the fate of nations hung in the balance. Take, for example, the slogan, "They shall nolt pass." During the tremendous fighting In front of Yer : dun. when the Germans made their great desperate drive to break through the French battle lines in 1916. this Saying passed from lip to lip among the French soldiers gath ered there in a long-drawn battle to check the terriftb onslaught of the j Germans. H ow originated is not | clear. Some have attributed it to i Marshal JofTre. others to Marshal ; Petaln. who was in command of the j French, fighting forces at Verdun. | Others believe the saying originat ed with men in the ranks. At any; rate they adopted it, and for months | while the Germans vainly threw j their battalions upon the stubborn- J ly-defended forts around the French | city, the saying "They shall not pass" ( became the watchword at Verdun. And they did not pass. "Lafayette. We Are Here." To Americans, the sententious ut terance of General Pershing when j he placed a breath on the tomb of i Lafayette In the Picpus Cemetery' in I Paris, conveyed a significance and . an inspiration. "Lafayette, we are here." was all he said, but to the American, as well as to the French man. it was better than oratory. It 1 meant to the American "We are here l for business, and our business is to I tight." It thrilled the hearts of General Pershing's people at homo, and the modesty of It filled them with a glow of satisfaction. Another dramatic phrase which 1 stirred the patriotism of the Ameri can people was that attributed to an American commander at Chateau- Tnlerry, when he responded to the advice of French commanders to re treat. by declaring: "The American flag has been compelled to retire. This Is unendurable. We are going to counter attack." These statements have been at tributed to Major General Robert L. Dullard and to Major General Omar Bundy. Some observers have re garded this incident as the turning point of the war. From that time the Americans advanced. The vic tory of Chateau-Thierry followed, and thereafter the German army re treated. Vice Admiral William S. Sims, commanding thV American naval forces In European waters, was ask ed when the first Yankee warships arrived in England early lr. May, 1917: "When will you be ready for business?" He replied: ',' We can start at once. We made our prepa rations on the way over." There was a dramatic moment, a great crisis in the world's history when General Pershing placed the American army under the command of General Foch who had Just been made commander of all the Allied forces, but none of the phrases that General Pershing used were widely quoted as epigramatlc. One of the words, "infantry, artillery, aviation, all that we have is yours. Dispose of it as you may desire." The retort of Major Charles Whit tlesay. commander of the "lost bat talion" of the American army in the Argonne forest when the Ger mans surrounded his isolated com mundand their commander demand ed its surrender, was 'one of the war's historic phrases, "Go to hell," he replied. The first great battle of the war, the battle that stopped the Germans at the Marne. elicited from the lips of Marshal Joffre the historic wordss, "The hour has come to advance at all costs; to die where you stand rather than to give way." Pctain's Great Command General, afterwards Marshal fe tain. inspired his weary troops at Verdun by an order of the day con cluding with the words, "courage, we will get them." General Foch commanding the French army in the first battle of the Marne had. been almost over whelmed by the onward sweep of the German forces. In a memorable message to Joffre he said. "My right is crushed. My left is in re treat. I am attacking with my cen ter." lie did attack and drove a wedge thiough the German lines that started their retreat to the Alsnc. The people of Paris were stupned by the rapidity with which tho Ger mans advanced in first rush toward the French <arital. The rail way stations were besieged, hut the great majority of the people knew thev must remain. In this tiAgic moment. General Gallieni .military commarder of the city, inspired con.lder.ee and cheered the faint hearted with his watchword, "To the very end." The populace took up the cry and Gallieni with his army played a signal part in hurling back tho legions of von Kluck at the Marne. No less inspiring but born of less tragic circumstances was the saying of General Gouraud who. upon en tering Strassburg after the libera tion of Alsace and Lorraine, declar ed, ' The day of glory has come." "Fight to the End." Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig, commander In chief of the British armies in France, gave utterance to an appeal'ln addressing his soldiers which stirred a responsive choid in the hearts of the Allied peoples through the world. For three weeks the enemy had battered the British line in a desperate effort to separate them from the French and drive through to the channel ports. Day after day the British had been driv en back." On April 13, 1918, Marshal Haig called upon his men for one last effort. "Every position must be held to the last man," he ordered. "There must be no retirement. With our backs to the wall and believing in the justice of our cause, everyone of us must fight to the end." When Vice Admiral Sir Rosslyn Wemyss went to tell the German commander of the naval terms of the armistice, one of the Teuton ad mirals said: "It is inadmissable that our fleet should be given up without having been beaten." "It had onlf to come out." was the laconic retort of Admiral We myss. • Later when the surrendering Ger man warships were escorted by the British fleet into British waters. Vice Admiral Beatty's historic signal after enemy fleet had been moored read: "The German flag is to be hauled down at 3.57 and is not to be hoisted again without permission." Premier Venizelos, spurning the German Ambassador's invitation to side with the Central Powers, when' Monastir and a part of Serbia was offered to Greece as a German bribe, replied: "Vcfu ask me to dishonor my signature, to dishonor my coun try and to violate its obligations towards Serbia and, as remuneration you offer me part of the corpse of that which I am expected to kill. My country, sir. is too little to com mit so great an infamy." Tells How Red Cross Aids Desperately Wounded Yanks A glowing tribute to the workers of the Red Cross for their kindness to the Yankees overseas is paid by Paul P. Ross, of Summerdale, who after serving with the Twenty-eighth division, has returned to his home. He was a member of the pioneer section, 112 th Regiment, and was gassed and wounded. He declared the boya would have often times been in hard straits if the Red Cross had not been Iheie to help. Telling of what the lted Cross did for him, lie said: "When I was wounded and brought to the hosplttfl 1 was unconscious for twenty-four hourß from the gas I received, and a machine gun wound in my right leg. When 1 came to my sense I was blind and had also lost my voice. There'l lay no sleep or sight, when a soft, warm hand pressed my brow and asked me to have a smoke. Well, live minutes after that I was pulling on a cigarette and listening to p story which the unseen friends was read ing for my comfort. When I -recov ered my sight I knew she was a Red Cross nurse. "So rememver when you donate the Red Cross you are putting a smile on some Yankee's face, through that wonderful and strug gling organization, the Red Cross." jQjL Wat. Slnwae *l^^ Jgf 15 DAY • _ Winter Clearance Sale STARTS TOMORROW Now is the time for every man to sit up and take notice of this opportunity. If you are a soldier or sailor returning to civilian clothes, this sale is just what you want. You can outfit yourself for a great deal less money than you had expected. Remember this every reduction here is genuine. Every suit, every overcoat, every shirt, or anything in our lines, is the high-grade merchandise for which this store is sponsor. No matter what you get here —sale or no sale—you are sure to get the best merchandise and at the lowest price. This sale starts tomorrow and ends on Saturday, February 15. Be on hand early in the day and choose from the complete assortments. Urn. g>tnmgr=r i 15 Day Clearance Sale Suits and Overcoats $25.00 Suits and Overcoats<jj jg Jjj $40.00 Suits and Overcoats JJQ $30.00 Suits and Overcoats <jJ24 50 Suits and Overcoats jjjg J EJQ $35.00 Suits and Overcoats <jJ2 J JJQ $50.00 Suits and Overcoats gQ k. The Balance of Those -%j- OVERCOATS at £ $14.75. ' K' fiu will be on sale Sat h rd ay. If you didn't > A I \f get one when the salc Started you have W ffll another chance tomorrow. They are Overcoats that we were selling up to Wzf&i' /iBiSI $30.00 but being broken size lots which x J 8/ we gathered together after inventory we placed them all in a one-price sale at $14.75. Better take advantage of the opportunity to get a good overcoat for a small price. This is the lowest price ever. Urn. 15 Day Clearance Sale of Men's Furnishings Our High-Class Shirts Go into This Sale $l.OO Shirts 79c $3.00 Shirts - ' $2.19 $6.50 Shirts $5.49 $1.50 Shirts $1.29 $3.50 Shirts $2.69 | $7.50 Shirts $6.49 $2.00 Shirts $1.49 $4.00 Shirts $3.19 $B.OO Shirts $6.89 $2.50 Shirts $1.89 $5.00 Shirts $4.19 $8.50 Shirts $7.49 Sweaters Underwear $2.50 Sweaters V \>T / $2.00 Underwear $3.50 Sweaters O fit 52.50 Underwear $5.00 Sweaters " $3.00 Underwear $6.50 Sweaters $3.50 Underwrar $7.50 Sweaters . $4.00 Underwear $B.OO Sweaters ' * > $5.00 Underwear $6.89 $4.19 f . Mm. i>trougg 15 Day Clearance Sale Boys' Suits & Overcoats $7.50 Suits and Overcoats £5 85 $8.50 Suits and Overcoats £g gg $lO.OO Suits and Overcoats gg ' $12.50 Suits and Overcoats gg $15.00 Suits and Overcoats£| Jgg ' JSllpP >*^o $lB.OO Suits and Jgg \ // ~Wm. Strouse Store —310 Market St. * ■*" >■ ' % ■ I M ' *4 -v* -w.f- v.n*. V - V - .J"
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers