II 'j i I ] II i : I i i i i ' I r I > i i i i [ I. I I , I , I, I, I I I I I I, I I , I 1 ) t I i i i t j i < HID ICR OR 3IUOUSNESS osts next to nothing, yet keeps bowels in fine order and ends constipation. The head of every family .hat val s its health should always have In e house a package of Dr. Carter's and B. Tea. Then when any member of the fam needs something for a sluggish er. sick headache, or to promptly gulate the bowels, simply brew a P and drink it just before bedtime. It's an old remedy, is Dr. Carter's K. d B. Tea, and has been used for ars by thousands of families, who t su excellent preventive, ft kills the rerm* At your drujcjrlats or by mail. 3 alaea—tVr or II per bottle. TINTTI lIK 81 EXTR WT gan Square, Philadelphia, I with tracks, was filed with the Public Service Commission to-day by Henry C. Dyer, of Philadelphia. Complaint was also filed with the commission by G. R. Hile, 11. D. Phil lips and J. R. Bucher, residents of Sunbury, against the cars and ser vice of the Northumberland Countv Railway, An opinion to the effect that the State Hoard of Dental Examiners is empowered to hold special examina tions for applicants tor certificates to practice dentistry was given to-day to the state board by Robert S. Gaw'-' throp, first deputy attorney general. Delegations from various points in the Juniata and Cumberland valleys to-day discussed improvement of main highways with Highway Com missioner Sadler, who stated that bids would be asked as soon as possible for the roads most traveled and which are most in need of rebuilding. Among roads discussed were from Chambers burg to Huntingdon and Mifllln. The model of the state's methods of highway construction which had been in the State Highway Department for several years .has had to be removed from the reception room because of the rush of visitors .and is now dis played in the office of the guides. The big Pittsburgh hearing of the Public Service Commission will be concluded to-day. Almost 100 cases and applications were disposed of In that city. 8. The United States could withdraw from the league at any time. Every Senator—Knox. Lodge, Rrandegee. McCumber. Hitchcock, to name a few who discussed the dinner yesterday—agreed that the President actual'y made these state ments or admissions. The Republi cans naturally were elated. The Democrats correspondingly down cast. Senator Lewis (111.) paced the Senate corridors muttering: "He made a great mistake; oh, 1 dear, I fear he has made a fearful error." What the American People Think of a League of Nations "Had the League been in existence in 1914, Europe would have escaped the bloodiest of all wars," declares the Birmingham Age-Herald. While the majority of the newspapers of America regard the experiment of a League of Nations as tremendously worth trying, some are as du bious as the New York Sun, which says: "If the present project means the elimination of the Monroe Doctrine; if it means the restriction of our independence; if it means we are tying our hands as concerns the independent action of a free people and a free nation; if it means that the United States shall carry the load and pay in large measure the bills of maintaining peace in all * the little countries of Europe and throughout the world —the little tribal nations and the big nations as well; if it means the hampering of this nation in its economic relations to and with the other nations of the world, is it good enough for this free people, this free nation—is it the thing we want?" Read THE LITERARY DIGEST this week for public opinion on the League of Nations. Other articles of immediate interest to all thoughtful readers are: Jews From America in the Bolshevik Oligarchy Jewish and non-Jewish Editorial Opinion Regarding the Testimony of Dr. George A. Simons Before the j Senate Committee That Is Investigating Bolshevism in the United States Meaning of the Western Strikes Lithuania 'No Beer, No Work" Skimming the Melting-Pot How Our Allies Regard the Peace- American Troops to Leave Russia League Plan German Intrigues to Split the Allies An Ex-German Colony for India "Seventeen-Year Locusts" Due in 1919 How the Hand Spreads Influenza English and Accidents $2,000,000 in "Saving the Pieces" Dubious Benefits of Science H A Fourteenth-Century Miracle on the The Doughboy's Shakespeare M East Side What Kind of a Memorial? Japan to Cast Out German "Kultur" A Village of Disabled Soldiers \\ Red-Cross Work After the War English Doubts of Prohibition Lax Justice in Belgium News of Finance and Commerce fi Best of the Current Poetry Personal Glimpses of Men and Events Many Striking Illustrations, Including Cartoons I Why The Literary Digest Is So Popular in the "Movies" The average audience in a first-class motion-picture DIGEST Topics of the Day are flashed on the house is typically representative of the American screen the .enthusiasm which greets this novel and spirit; while it is good-natured, it demands the best. attractive feature is unbounded. The audience rocks When thrilling dramas of love, war, and adventure with laughter and applause over each one in the series are unfolded before it, in which famous million- of punch paragraphs with their lively humor keen dollar stars perform prodigies of agility and valor, satire, and trenchant witticisms on" the social ooliti- i it is more than generous in the matter of applause. cal, and other foibles of the day. The "movies" When the "Pictorial Weeklies" transport it in a are but the mirror of the world and the popularity twinkling to the four corners of the earth it is. not of the Topics of the Day is but the echo of the ever at all backward about sounding its appreciation. increasing chorus of acclaim that greets each weeklv But when the scene changes and THE LITERARY reappearance of THE LITERARY DIGEST. March Ist Number on Sale To-day—All News-dealers—lo Cents j! (8) JfteraryDiapst ! FUNK ft WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishersjof the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary), NEW YORK BRIEFS FROM THE t; BIGNEWSEVENTS _ j By Attaemtrd Prut 'j Bridgeport, ('•■*. Ten alleged ; I. W. W. agitators, arrested here last night in n roundup by the police, \ were arraigned in the city court to- i day on the technical charge of ] breach of the peace. Putnam, Conn. Ernest M. Ar- 1 nold, who, once a village school teacher, became a financier and then went through bankruptcy with country-wide claims of about a mil lion dollars against him, died of heart falture to-day, 62 years old. l'lymoutk. Eng. The success of the Joint conference of the officers and navy men to consider the ques tion of navy pay has so impressed the admiralty that It has decided to make permanent arrangements on the same lines for bringing to its no tice matters affecting the wellbeing j of the men. WILL HOLD INSTITUTE I Teachers in the county districts south of Peter's mountain will at- I tend a local Institute to be held In the I Courthouse tomorrow. About 250 i will be present it Is believed. Im portant topics have been listed for the round-table discussions. Sate by Millions. - ' "Bayor f I Cross" f -dm \ nuy oßly Cross fgAjßnn "Bayer" on genuine B II _ , . , Jsblcts. ****B+ ASPIRIN For Colds Rheumatism Headache Neuralgia Grippe Lumbago Influenza Pain Adults can take one or two "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" with water. If necessary, take three times a day, after meals. •'Bayer Tablets of Aspirin." 20-cent package—'Larger sixes. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufae- I ture of MonoaccticicidcsUr of Salicylicacid ! Early | Sensation | of the | Very Latest in Styl ♦ i ! _ i \ *• 5 T F YOU have a few spare moments, just % come in and have a peek at our new X j Spring models. * * | We only do not boast of our styles and * qualities, but compare both the styles and I + qualities with our prices at any other g + ladies 9 store in town and you will come to ❖ t the decision that our styles, qualities and * prices are the most sensible that can be % had. ❖ ' t | In conclusion ice will state, don 9 t fail * t to see our Early Spring sensations. + * 17