OLDEST CATHOLIC PRIEST IN WORLD The Rev. Father Dandurand Was One Hundred Years Old March 22 Winnipeg. Man. —The Rev. Dara ase Dandurand, of the quaint old town of St. Boniface across Red river from Winnipeg, is the oldest Catholic priest in the world. He was 100 years old March 22. On March 25 at the centennial an niversary of the founding of St. Boniface, he celebrated mass in the cathedral at an altar before which Indian worshipers once bowed in old St Boniface mission, one of the pionepr outposts of the Catholic Church in Western Canada. His voice was clear and strong and car ried to the farthest corner of the edifice. After the service, he held a reception for the parishioners and visiting clergymen. "When 1 came into the west, said Father Dandurand, "it was wild prairie dotted with Indian villages aid covered with buffalo. I saw the first settlers come in behind their ox teams. I saw populous towns and cities arise on every hand. I saw Hie wilderness transformed as by recromancy into a smiling pic ture of farm prosperity, with cattle in a thousand pastures and wheat rolling to the horizon. The last vzest is still calling the homeseek ers from all over the world. The people are still pouring in to settle on the fertile land. I have seen Canada's yesterday and its to-day. if tilt dear <R>d should grant me one more decade of life, I should not he able to recognize the greater Canada of to-day in the greater na tion ct to-morrow." £t. Boniface, to which Father Danurand came in 1872, was the mission of which the poet Wliittier sing in "The Bells of St. Boni face.' Since its foundation in 1818 until now it has been the headquar ters of the Catholic Church in West ern Canada. A magnificent cathe dral now occupies the site of the old mission from whose "turrets twain ' the bells of St. Boniface pealed their mellow call "to the Sontinen on the river and the hunts men on the plain." thcr Dandurand was born at Da i' -. iinc. Quebec, March 22. 1819. He i n weak, delicate cltlld. Dr. Vrlson, the family physician, used t !. 01. at him sadly with shaking 1 -ail : r,i say: "One lung bad. I'm mi bo won't live long." He was c-i! liierl to the priesthood in 1841 j. I held important charges in East icc Canada before coming to St i,c< Mace. He was a missionary at licawa when it was known as By t ><vn and drew the plans for the fa ro- ua Basilica at the national cap ital Except that his eyes are weak and lie. is competed to wear glasses, ail the faculties cl the venerable priest remain unimpaired. He habitually takes pari ;n the services of the Oblate Order of which he is the dean of Western Canada. There is no doubt about his age. The parish record of his birth still preserves the clearly legible proof. (I\ THE victory liberty loan The Sixty-third Congress, in -ts second session, authorized $24,000.- 000.000 for a year's war expenses. A good part of this money will not now be spent. Between April. 1917. and December. 1918, we spent $24,500,- 000,000. Allowing $2,000,000,000 for the normal expenses of running the Government during the war period, there remained $22,000,000,000 as the cost of the war up to the end of last The American people sup plied this through subscription for Liberty Bonds, the purchase of Wa- Savings Stamps, and the payment of taxes, without upsetting the econo mic and financial structure of the Nation. Can they not be expected to supply the balance with as little dis turbance to business? —The World's : Lemons Do Whiten! | : Try This on Face, t • Neck, Arms, Hands i • 4 The lemon juice massage indulged in once or twice each day means a little time and trouble, girls, but what of the splendid results? A skin bleached beautifully white, a com plexion with the bloom of a peach, a softening of those lines of care; in fact, it skin eloquent of nature's purity and hands white, soft and full of charm. What girl or woman hasn't heard of lemon juice to remove complexion blemishes; to bleach t lie skin, and to bring out the roses, the freshness and the hidden beauty? But lemon juice alone is acid, therefore irritat ing, and should be mixed with orchard white this way: Strain through a fine cloth the juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle contain ing about three ounces of orchard white, then shake well and you have a whole quarter pint of skin and complexion lotion at about the cost one usually pays for a small jar of ordinary cold cream. Be sure to strain the lemon juice so no pulp gets into the bottle, then this lotion will remain pure and fresh for months. When massaged daily into the face, neck, arms and hands. It should naturally help to whitep, clear, smoothen and beautify the skin. Any druggist will supply three ounces of orchard white at very little cost and the grocer has the lemons. HAIR HINTS Helpful Advice for Care of the Half Worthy the Attention of Every one Who Would Avoid linndrulf, Itching Scalp, Falling Hair. If your hair Is getting thin or you Ire troubled with dandruff and itching icalp use Parisian sage daily for a n-eek and you will surely be surprised In see how quickly it stops your hair Irom falling out and removes even lign of dandruff and itching scalp. "liefore going to bed I rub a little t'arisian Sage into my scalp," says a tv oman whose luxurious soft and [lufty hair is greatly admired. "This keeps my hair from being dry, brittle (ir scraggly. helps it to retain its natural color and beauty, and to nake it easy to dress attractively." Beautiful, soft, fluffy, healthy hair Mid lots of it, is a simple matter for those who use Parisian sage. This Harmless, Inexpensive, delicately per fumed. and non-greasy invigorator is •old by Kennedy's Drug Store and at ill good drug and toilet counters, n. lure and get the genuine Parisian lage iGiroux'si as that lias the noney-back guarantee printed on •very package.—Adv. TUESDAY IvENING, War Veteran Is Y. W. C. A. Chauffeur Automobiles in Paris bear all kinds of lmpressi o markings these days and not tbe least of these among the limovsines bearing the 1 national emblem* of the allied I countries and carrying delegates to and from the Peace Conference, is the motor with the Blue Triangle iof the American Y. W. C. A. in ! bright blue paint on either door. ' Its driver is th<- only man em ployed by the Y. W. C. A. for that organization is the only American war organization staffed exclusively ; by women and working for women. And the chauffeur wears a string ' of citation ribbons that reach near ily across his chest His name is j Charles Wallbunk He is an Ox- I ford man, the son of well-to-do I parents in Condon and he wears the ; uniform of the British Army. When |he was demobilized he wanted i something to do that would keep I him busy every minute so he ap | plied to the Y. W. <'■ A. lie enlisted on August 4, 1914, and six days later was in France. He was in the tirst gas attack—be fore such a thing as a gas mask had been thought of. •'1 saw 8,000 men about me— as many of that number as one man could see—clutch suddenly at their chest and fail, writhing, face down | ward to the groin We didn't know what happen. " he said. Cater he was ga ed again. He lias a had cough tl ' will always stay with him, iron i(. After serving as an infantry man for some time he cr lered the air service and once ft ! 1.800 feet, landing in some tp tops. As a ifcsult his heart h.e ben perma ; nently weakened. Before tbe war be was an auto mobile racer and the isn't a. thing about automobiles he doesn't know, according to his frien *. The Y. W. C. A. i> putting that information to good use these busy days. War Visions and Psychology By Garret I'. Serviss ! The teeming subsoil of humanity has boen so deeply ploughed hy the great war that a host of ideas and fancies released from tlie depths now hovers over tlie fields of thought, to be. perhaps, transformed for future fenerations into !• ?ends as grandiose as the events that brought them forth. Some of these inklings and gimmer ingfl out of the unknown and t • tin* 1; miliar are of the nature of portents; others hint at vast expansion of human | Knowledge in directions that have hith -11 to seemed definitely barred. Among the portents are hattlevisions. Hatching that which Constantino be -1 id in the sky. and which transformed t'e stndard. and with ii the faith, of ii aerial Rome; or recalling the saintly P lantasms by which, eight hundred v ars ago, the Crusaders were spurred t< supereminent valor and sacrifice on the march of Jerusalem One of the most notable things about these modern visions is the preliminary fact that they should haw- appeared, or have been believed to appear in this scientific age at all. How strange to read, of clear-headed soldiers and offi cers from up-to-dae schools and sur roundings, .'armed with volvers. tna c) ine guns, and all the uisely mater ialistic and scientific app-"atus of mod ern warfare, seeing h t George. St. Michael, or Joan of A leading and encouraging the exhaust. English and French during the terrib • struggle that stopped the first mighty rush of lite German hordes toward T'mis The historian who lea. liese things out of his narrative of great war will do wrong- wrong < to science —for, however deceptive apparitions may have been, it is the ness of tlie cultivators of science to i s tin the de ception, to sho wwhy it <-• is and how and why the eye and the mind are misled. Unless you do that you can never dissuade anybody from believing that he has seen a ghost. Moreover, these modem instances of apparent supernaturalism. coming at a time when socielies for psychical re search flourish and Whet such phe nomena as telepathy are kt . king at the door and claiming the ruht to enter and he seriously investigated will not be thrown aside and fm ltten. We shall see them reappearin in various departments of literatur. s pegs on which to hang both' flctiot and philos ophical speculation. A striking, but not ine\ icable. fact is that so many simulta i ously rec ognized the same appatioi . For in stance. take a royal artilb nan's naive relation to an English irse. Miss Campbell. It was in a li d hospital, after the English had held up the Ger mans in one of the fier. G struggles before the first battle of the Marne. \nother wonded British soldier, who had been a Wesleyan minister, had sent for the nurse because h- noped that she might have an English tun or medal bearing the figure of St. forge, which he wished to compare v ' what he had seen in the battle. A te told his story the nurse betrayed s.nie incred ulity. whereupon the artilh ; man on an adjoining cot broke in: It's true, Sister; we all saw it. First, there was a sort' of yello ■■ mist risin' belore the Germans as the come on to the top of the hill—come on like a solid wall, they did —no end to om. 1 just give up. No more fighti: the whole German race, thinks I. Th. n xt minute comes this funny cloud of light, and wlun it clears off, there's i tall man witlt yellow hair, in golden armor, on a white horse, holdin' up his sword, and his mouth open like as if h< was sayin': "Come on, boys, I'll put tic Icybosh on the devils' —sort of 'this is icy picnic ex pression. Then, before you could say 'knife,' the Germans had turned, and we ifter 'em, fighting like ninety." Of course, plain common sense would begin by Inquiring whether there was not in that battle some yellow-haired English officer, riding a white horse, whose khaki uniform, seen through the smoke, and scintillant with medals and trappings, might have seemed tne golden armor of St. George to the eyes of men wl'.o obeyed the electric; impulse of his gesture. In such momentary impressions, when the brain is in a whirl, the fancies of the ntind sometimes transform the re ports of the eye, and make their yosess sor. for nP instant, as mad as Don Quixote, when he mistook the brass basin that the barber had clapped on his head, as he jogged on ids mule through the Spanish sunshine, for the golden helmet of Mambrino And yet. somehow, such an explana tion does not satisfy. It is too unsym pathetic toward the creative imagina tion, which the most humbly endowed of us possess in a degree seldom rea lized, and which fills our lives with pictures that often affect us more pow erfully thar. realities. The imaginative poy mounted on his roekinghorse is N'apoleon crossing the Alps, and that fancied transformation becomes, for the moment, absolutely real to him. Grown up. he will remember It like a fact when actual facts of his boyhood have faded. Jn a desperate battle the primal Im pulses may break all bonds, and the Im aginative man becomes as a Imy again, may once ipore substitute illusions for facts. Another phase of this subject, which there is no now to discuss, is rep resented by Ihe question that has been asked; Did] "psychologic force." con centrated by* the united "will to vic tory" of an jiroused world, play a part In the overtjrow of Imperial Germany, which psychology may some day scien tific ly account for? VAUDEVILLE ARTISTS HA VEMOST PA LA TIA L HOME IN ME RICA W ■ >l* V. - , ■ ' ; INTERIOR VIEW OF NEW CI.UB HOUSE New York, April 1. After two j years of preparation the National j Vaudeville Artists, inc., have for mally opened their new clubhouse : at 2119 West Forty-sixth street and reveales the best equipped, most mod ern, comfortable and artistic club in America. All branches of the theater were represented in the great gathering of stage notables. The theatrical clubs were represent ed by committees of members. Ab bott George M. Cohen of the Friars, Shepherd R. H. Burnside of the Lambs, Prompter Edwards Davis, of the Greenroom Club, President John Drew of the Players, President Ka chel Crothers of the State Women s War Relief, all headed delegations | from their respective clubs. I During the evening hundreds ot , artists, managers, composers, dra- j matiBts, and newspapermen visited the new club which was decorated I with palms and flowers. Edwards , Davis, promoter of the Greenroom | Club, delivered an eloquent address I of opening in the pretty theater in j which he dwelt upon the new spirit j of brotherhood and co-operation among the artists so wonderfully expressed by the new clubhouse. He : said that vaudeville hud been re- j constructed and was the pioneer in | showing the way to a better and . fairer relation between artists and . managers. He explained the aims of j the N. V. A. and declared that it bore out President Wilson s declara tion in his Manchester speech that | friendship must have a machinery, . the means of constant friendly inter- , course, the means of common watch- j fulness over common interests. The N. V. A. represents more than > twelve thousand artists with a di- j rect and powerful voice in the con- i duct of vaudeville and the right of collective bargaining. The N. V. A. ; is based upon the belief that the i artist who invests his life in the the- j ater is entitled to a voice in the con- | duct of the theater and authority , in making the terms and conditions , of his employment. The unrest that ■ once existed in vaudeville was sim ply one symptom of a condition that we now see is world-wide. E - /'• | Albee forseeing that the old rnles^j and ways were no longer adequate took counsel with the artists and the result was the organization of the | N. V. A. and the Vaudeville Man- : agers' Protective Association which work in harmony and have corrected all that heeded correction and bound | one another to fair and just deal- i ing. Mr. Albee accomplished a i great pioneering work in the eco- , nomic life of the theater when he j worked out his reconstruction of , vaudeville. The speaker remarked that it was significant of the trend l of the times when that great man of the theater, George M. Cohen, gave his portrait with a highly com mendatory inscription to Mr. Al bee for the sole picture in the beau tiful lounge and thereby expressed j his sympathy with tne N. V. A. and | its achievement in bringing artists | and managers together in a close j and fraternal bond. The New X. V. A. Clubhouse ! Most modern in decoration and equipment for comfort and enter tainment in New York the new club house of the National Vaudeville Ar tists stands six stories high on a | plot 72 by 110 feet at 229 West 461h street —an ideal location just west of Broadway in the heart of the theater district. Tne building faced with gray stone presents an impres sive appearance of solidity and ar chitectural grace. Passing under the ornate porte cochere one enters a roomy marble vestibule. On one side is a large coatroom just in front of the baser ment floor devoted to a grill, toll- j Hard room and barber shop. On j the left of the foyer a wide marble • stairway leads to the great lounge { flooded with sun in the daytime and ; at night lit by especially designed j blue and gold chandeliers an lamps I of exquisite artistry. The lounge is j two stories high, the second leyel • being a messanine used for a writing room. The lounge is heavily paneled ! with rich Italian marble which is | used in profusion throughout the j lower floors. The matching is : perfect, a great quantity of marble ! having been bought in order to en- j sure harmony and balance in the velning. The lounge is furnished ' with luxurious English club furniture covered with fine figured mohairs i and striped tapestries copying fa- | mous handmade designs of the past. . The walls are covered with a delight ful shade of blue not to be seen else where in this country and the furni ture coverings and hangings, the lamps and the fixtures are all in har mony. This key of blue prevails throughout. The floor is white mar ble with Alps blue marble border. In the center there lies a magnifi cent Burgundy rug made for the club. The ornamental center table is a beautiful old Italian design in keeping with the beautiful hand carved mantle over the Italian fire place. Palms in Chinese porcelain cases are freely used. Off the right hand corner of the j lounge on the street front is the ladies' room —the most artistic fca- j ture of the club. This is exquisitely | done in the late Georgian type. The furniture is painted in blue with ! yellow stripes and decorated with lit- ! tie Wedgewood figures. The walls j are covered with gold silk brocade of striking beauty and the hang- . Ings are all of the daintiest taffeta. '. The floor is covered with . a black HAJUUSBTTRG TELEGRAPH velvet carpel. Back of tbe lounge j there opens through arches framed I with magnificent hangings the splen- j did ballroom and theater. This is ! exceedingly rich and lovely in the j Adam type itt ivory tints and an tin- j usual shade of gold. The brocaded j rose hangings are a master touch of loveliness in a most impressive room. ' The stage is ample for entertain- j meiits and productions being com- < pletely equipped. Bimps, chande- j licrs, fixtures, are all in complete | harmony, the ensemble being so sue- I eessful in its appeal to the eye that j decorators are instancing the N. V. A. lounge Indies' room and ballroom I I Spring Find You Tired r.- fff S&M and Achy? T TAS winter left you dull, tired and V * ach y a " over ~back ache as if it I ° u t;" feel as'if you just can't keep I y°ur kidneys dizzy, irritable and "blue." You may have kidney irregularities, too. Don't wait! Help the weakened kidneys before serious kidney trouble takes hold. Use Doan's Kidney Pills , the remedy that has helped so many Harrisburg people. Read These Harrisburg Cases: I North Sixth Street North Front Street Melrose Street Charles U. Pyc, 2004 North Sixth street, says: Mrs. Cora Sellers, 1119 North Front street, says: William Mars, 908 Melrose street, says: "I ean "l have had my share of kidney trouble. 1 was in .. Last Summer y waa troubled with my kidneys. My not sa >' to ° m V th ln P r f ise of . D ® al }' H Kidney PUIS bad condition about live years ago. Every muscle . . after my pleasing experience with them. I was all in my back was sore and lame, and sharp, cutting back ached from one end of the day to the other out shape with kidney trouble some two years pains would dart up and down my hack. The kid- and I felt depressed, run-down and miserable. ago. Every time I stooped over, sharp pains would ney secretions were scanty and irregular in pas- When I stooped over a quick, sharp pain would- dart up and down my back. I had to get. up often sage and were also highly colored. I had to get dart up and down my back and X would get dizzy. at night to pass the kidney secretions, and their up often at night on this account. Frequently mil- My kidneys did not act right and it showed that appearance showed that my kidneys were con lions of colored specks would float before my eyes, they were the cause of this trouble. As I had gested and sluggish and needed a good cleansing blurring my sight, and I would get so dizzy 1 would used Doan's Kidney Pills years ago with good re- out. If 1 stood in one position any length of time hardly be able to stand. I began the use of Doan's suits, 1 again took some, procuring them at Krani- I would get so stiff und lame I could hardly get. Kidney Pills and it was not long before they or's drug store and three boxes of Doan's complete- around. Doan's Kidney Pills soon had me feeling helped me. Two boxes of Doan's gave mo com- [y relieved me and made me feel like a different better and only a few boxes gave me complete and plete and lasting cure." person." lusting cure." South Seventeenth Street West Hamilton Street Peffer Street —. Mrs. Ada CI. Smith, 307 South Seventeenth R. A. Gemperling, 204 West Hamilton street, Mrs. Harry Rollin, 642 Peffer street, says: "I , : street, says: "A couple of years' ago T began to savs . ... few ~ . with was troubled with my back and kidneys. There have trouble with my kidneys. By back ached and P was a constant ache through the small of my back a i > i ♦i, . vi u r kidney trouble. The muscles of mv back were sore and it was weak and sore. In the morning I could sharp pains would catch me in my back when I ' * hardly ma nage to get around. I was in constant did any work, such as dusting; or sweeping. The un d stiff and sharp, digging, knife-like pains would misery and my kidneys were irregular in action, pains in my back were causing me to be tired and often catch me in the small of my back. My kid- I felt tired and languid, too. A doctor reeommend languid, and I was also annoyed by the irregular neys acted irregularly and the secretions were ed Doans Kidney P"ls to me and it wasnot long „ . * . . ~, . , , . , , before I was cured of the attack." (Statement action of my kidneys. 1 would have frequent scanty and highly colored. 1 was lame and sore given February 28, 1916). dizzy spells and headaches and felt generally run all over, too. Upon the advice of a friend, I took On February 22, 1919, Mrs. Rollin-added: "I ' I down. I knew my kidneys needed attention, so I Doan's Kidney Pills and they helped ie immedi- I never in my life found a kidney medicine to equal I began taking Doan's Kidney Pills, getting them at inn.- r Doan's Kidney Pills. I renew all I ever said in Potts' drug store. Doan's brought me relief at , in good shape pra j Be D f this medicine. Whenever I had occa < once, and it was not long before my trouble was an< * entirely rid of kidney trouble. Since then I sion to use Doan's they never failed to remove completely ended." have used Doan's occasionally as a preventive." any signs of the trouble." Doan's Kidney Pills Every Druggist has Doan's, 60c a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Manufacturing Chemists, Buffalo, N. Y. lus standards of the best modern taste. The office at the head of the I stairs is a smart marble arrange- I rnent fitting perfectly into the most 1 convenient position without being | obtrusive. The rest of the club j house corresponds. TO HONOR WOODWARD j —A number of the legist uors will igo 1o McKeesport on Thursday to j attend a dinner to be g'"en in the I Elks club in honor of James F. j Woodward, secretary of internal af fairs elect. Mr. Woodward will Isume office in May. Corp. Earle Hahn Returns From Service in France ;f Mrs. E. H. Loy, HVm, 418 South Srx- tecnth street, re- v' ceived word that |j£j her son. Corporal ''® ijf'' 5 an< * waa sent to Camp Merritt. He exports to be sent to Camp Dix in a few days to be d'scharged. Corporal Hahn enlisted in the old Eighth Regiment when the local companies were in camp at Island Park. He was wounded in action in July and since then has been in a base hospital. He was formerly era ployed by the Harrisburg Pipe and Pipe Bending Company. Victory Stamp May Join Class Sought by Collection The United States is the lirst of the allied nations to issue a special postage stamp commemorative Of victory. It has just meen put on sale in the various Post Offices, and as it is not likely to remain in use for any great length of time, it may ultimately become one of the rare issues for collectors. The stamp is of the three-cent variety, lavender in color, similar to the regular three-cent letter stamp and of the same size, but the design is oblong in shape. It depicts the Ooddess of Victory with tlie flags of the al lied nations. Prance, Great Britain, Belgium and Italy, in the back ground, the United States flag be ; ing in the center. The Goddess of I Victory holds a sword in her right I hand and the scales of Justice, up lifted in her left hand. It has been ten years since the | Post Office Department has issued a special memorial stamp. In 1909 j there were three issues of that kind, ' the first being the lancoln stamp j commemorating the centennial an ! niversary of Abraham I.incoln's | birth on February 12, 1809. This was soon followed by the Alaska- Yukon commemocrative stamp and later appeared the Hudson-Fulton stamp in honor of the celebration of Robert Fulton's successful steam- I boat trip up the Hudson river in I'lBo7. These were all two cent stamps and were used for only a short time. The first memorial stamps issued APRIL 1, 1919. by the United States were the Co lumbus stamps, which canie out in 1893, marking the four-hundredth anniversary of the discovery of America. There were sixteen varie ties, ranging in value from 1 cent to $5, each stamp depicting a different scene in the life of Columbus. Deal ers date the stamp-collectiug fever which has grown enormously in later years to the appearance of these stamps. Thousands of school- I boys started collecting by buying I the lower values of the Columbus stamps, and dealers, anticipating high values in future, laid in large stocks; in fact, such large stocks that the market value of the stamps even including the high dollar val ues, have shown but little advance j to-day. In 1898 the trans-Mississippi me morial issue came out. It embraced nine stamps, from 1 cent to $2. The $1 and $2 values of this issue are much scarcer than the correspond ing values of the Columbus stamps. The centenary of the purchase of the territory of Louisiana was com memorated in 1904 by five special stamps—l, 2, 3 and 5 cents—and for the Jamestown Exposition in 1907, celebrating the three hun dredth anniversary of the settlement there, the first English settlement in the United States, a special issue of three stamps appeared. The 1- cent value had a portruit of Cap tain John Smith, the 2-cent one a view of Jamestown, and the 5-cent stamp a portrait of Pocahontas. Then came the three single issues of 1909. I.EARN lIOW TO IVVEST VOI II MONEY! The first thing for investors to decide is the amount of risk they can afford to take with their funds. This will depend on the purpose which they had in mind when the funds were accumulated and on the investment. If one is laying up savings to take care of himself in his old age, is he not really a trustee of those savings for the old person he is to be? If he is saving for his family, is it not the same? But if the money is being accumu lated with the view of taking ad vantage of a business opportunity, it is different. Or if one is in close touch with conditions in a certain business, he might be justified in taking risks in that field which would be improper for one ignorant of conditions to take. The degree of risk that one is justified in taking must be largely decided by the in vestor himself, although others of more experience or training might I help him. It is the first point that I should be decided. —The World's I Work for April. MEMORIAL FOR EDITH CAVELI Canadian Railways to Spcn< Huge Sinn This Year Edmonton, Alttt.—Patriotic scnti mcnt and grateful homage to i noble sacrifice will cause the expen diture of a large sum of money thu year by the Canadian National Hail ways, according to an announcemen just made. This will be for the constructioi of track extension and improve ment of the trail leading to Mouni Edith Cavell, paralleling Gavel creek and Cavell lake to the bast of the mountain in Jasper Nationa Park, Canadian Rockies. Rising 11.033 feet above sea level this magnificent monument rearec by nature has been designated bj Canada as a perpetual memoria to the heroic English girl who per ished before a Hun firing squad ii i Belgium. I From the gently rolling park lands at the base of the crown of th [ glistening snow-clad peak, it is a mountai nof striking beauty. whos< sinmle magnificence is considered a tittin corollary to the character ot the l.umble nurse who saw her duty an., nobly performed it. ' Rising from the slope is a won I derful glacier with arms extended in ■ the form of a cross, while at the base a profusion of rosy hued heather, bespeaks the blood bravely | shed by Edith Cavell for the sake [ of civilization. ! Many millions will be expended ■ by the Canadian National system in construction "throughout the Domin- I ion this year, and this task, which ! has only awaited the end of the war, [ will be one of the first to receive attention. Arrest Anarchists For Distribution of Russian Literature ! Pittsburgh, April I.—Charged with ! distributing Russian anarchistic lit - | erature, live men were arrested in the Pittsburgh district yesterday, I two in this city, two in Monessen 1 and one in Bentlcyvillc. The pris | oners, taken into custody by State 1 and local police, were turned over ito the Department of Justice, to gether with a mass of literature which Jthe officers seized. 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers