LUTHERAN WOMEN WILL MEET IN CITY Two Hundred Delegates to Attend Fortieth Annual Convention Delegates numbering 200 are com ing to Harrlsburg to-morrow to at- | tend the foreieth annual convention | of the Women's Missionary Society, j Blast Pennsylvania Synod, Lutheran Church. Sessions will be held at Messiah Lutheran Church, Sixth and 1 streets, starting at 1 p. m. , to-morrow, and will continue up to and including Friday morning at 9 o'clock. Following a meeting of the Execu tive Committee and enrollment of delegates, Mrs. George Greiss will conduct devotional services. Mrs. ; - THERE is a difference in price between a good used car and a poor one, but that difference is your protection I Cadillac-Hinton Co. 315 S. Cameron St. Harrisburg, Pa. One 1919 New Haines Seven Passenger—Excellent Value PHONE 3392 I ' I ''•y- V" - - ' * - 1 . 1 GOOD LADIES, If You are Interested in the Purchase of a 1 ■ Suit, coat or dress and want style, quality and good tailoring with jjS out the highest price, you will be interested in what we have to ||j m of happy homes. We have clothed millions of of families stylishly !and comfortably. If you want a stylish Coatof Silvertip Bolivia, Broadcloth, F: Broadtail Cloth, Anamole, Velour de Laine, Plain and Plaid Sil vertone, Peco Plush, Beaver Cloth and Lustrola, and save $5 to S2O from other stores' prices, we can save you. We can supply a Coat for $25 or one for $225 —any price b'e- tween. I Ladies'and Misses' Suits in Tricotine, Serge, Velour, Chameleon, i I Cypress Cloth, etc.—529.75 and up and you save from $5 to S2O i When you compare our values with other stores in High Price District they will tell you we are a cheap credit store. Our prices are lower but our QUALITY and Style just as high. Our opera- S ting expense is less; fifty years have proved it. Ask one of our gl "satisfied customers" and you will be one too. Don t pass this Store by if you are a cash purchaser as ONE,- ig THIRD of our business is CASH from people that are shrewd and have made comparison and "found out." i Special Prices on Warm Blankets and Comforts S I Gately & Fitzgerald Supply Co. I HOME econ< l Street FAMILY ■ FURNISHERS The different Kind Of A Credit Store CLOTHIERS | 7 TUESDAY EVENING. 1 f C. L. Fleck, of Iteigelsville, presi dent of the Synod Missionary So- I ciety will organize the convention. , The credential committee will report *'and rollcall will follow. First Speaker Mrs. C. P. Wiles will be the speaker of the afternoon, her sub- , i ject to be, The Yesterday and To- ; day of Our Work." Reports will | be presented on the Junior Mission- j jury Society of Messiah, Harrisburg, j I ;and the lnterehurch World Move- | i meat. The presentation of visitors j I will follow and convention commit tees named by the president. The closing feature will be greet ings from the Synod, in which the I I pastor of the Messiah Lutheran Church, the Rev. Dr. H. W. A. Han i son, will be one of the speakers. At j the close of, the first session the ; delegates will be taken on an auto j ride over Harrisburg. In the evening at 7.45, the pro- j gram will be divided into two sec-j tions. The first part will be a I Young Women's Rally, with Miss t Clara B. Freck, presiding. The Rev. It. L. Meisenhelder will open the service. Mrs. B. V. Sease will speak on "Called to Serve." She is the Young People's Secretary of the Women's Missionary Society of the United States, of the Lutheran Church. Welcome to Delegates i Following an offering Mrs. J. G. j Traver, of Hartwick Seminary', ] New York, president of the Women's ! Missionary Society of the United j Lutheran Church, will make an ad ; dress. | Mrs. E. H. Bell will preside over i the JVomen's session. The open serv | ice will be in charge of the Rev. H. W. A. Hanson, D. D. and Mrs. J. G. Traver will make an address. At the Thursday morning session reports of officers and committees will he presented. Miss Rebecca ! Gordon will speak on "Our Publi | cations." In the afternoon Mrs. A. ;V. Pohlman will read a paper on | "Reconstruction Work." In the (evening the speaker will be Miss Annie E. Stanford, missionary to India. The session will close Fri day morning with election and instal ; lation of officers, reports of conven tion committees and appointment of standing committees. Says Super-Hen Will Cut the Cost of Living j Cleveland, Oct. 14.—Super-chick j ens and eggs, two or three times their present size at a cost not much greater than present prices, was predicted to-day by Alton E. Briggs, of Boston, president of the National Poultry, Egg and Butter Association, in an address to the one thousand delegates attending the opening ses sion of the thirteenth annual con vention yesterday. Mr. Briggs said a new type of : super-hen is being bred, and in the ; near future would reach the public, ! thus doing much to lower the cost of living. DON'T DESPAIR If you are troubled with pains or aches; feel tired; have headache, indigestion, insomnia; painful pass ge of urine, you will find relief in COLD MEDAL The world's standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles and National Remedy of Holland since 1696. Three sizes, all druggists. Guarenteed. Look for the name Cold Medal on every boa aad accept DO imitation lOAimiSBTTRG *rEEEGRAI*tf TECHNICAL TALKS! I TO OPTOMETRISTS i State Convention Closes To night With Big Banquet at the Penn-Harris I Efl DR. CHARLES SHEARD One of the outstanding features | of to-day's program for the conven- j tion of the Pennsylvania State Op- j tical Association was the lecture j given this morning by Dr. Charles | Sheard, formerly professor of Ap- ' | plied Optics at Ohia State Univers i ity, and now physiological opticist j lor the American Optical Company of Southbridge, Mass. Dr. Sheard's lecture was on the subject of "The Correlation of Accommodation and Convergence." Dr. Sheard is recog nized as being the foremost author ity on optics relating to the theory and practice of ocular refraction and of the field of physiological optics. He has written a textbook on the subject, the first one to appear in the English language. He Jias written a number of books on var ious phases of eye practice and is the originator of many new methods of practice. His time is now largely devoted to research work in his chosen field, and is directly con nected with the American Optical Company, the largest concern of its kind, and most popularly known be causes of its' manufacture of Sir William Crooke's lenses. Another lecture scheduled for to-day's session is that of Elmer Robinson of the Kirstein Co., whose subject will be "Advertising." Last night's session was an in formal one. An excellent motion picture was shown. The picture, j "Through Life's Window," was an j educational one in the practice of I optics. Immediately following this | picture, Dr. E. J. Deane gave a lec j ture on the subject of "Toxic Aml - blyopia." This was in turn followed by a formal welcome being extended to the delegates by J. S. Belsinger, chairman of the entertainment com | mittee. The meeting then became a smoker at which there were many I talks of fifteen minutes each for the ; good of optometry. Much of the I time was given to the promotion to | Pennsylvania's College of Optometry ! which is located in Philadelphia. I This college is a new project, having been promoted first at the last an ! nual convention at York. Since that time a great deal has been done, and to-day the college is in oper- I ation. Last night many new mem | bers were secured, for this college lis owned, managed and taught by ! optometrists. It is to-day the ful j fillment of a promise made a year I ago. To-night the convention comes to ja close with the annual banquet at which it is expected that fully 200 ' will attend. The banquet will bring ; to a close what is claimed as being | without exception the best State op- I tical convention which has ever !been held. From every standpoint T one hears most favorable comment : about the manner in which the Har j risburg Optometrists Society handled j the convention, and the success which attended their efforts in se j curing speakers of such high caliber, and such a goodly number of ex i hibits. The following officers were elect | ed: i President, John H. Flanagan, I Philadelphia; secretary, H. H. Ros-] I ser, York; treasurer, Leopold Gold- I | stein, Philadelphia; first vice-presi i dent, Silas H. Twining, Scranton; j second vice-president, Albert! Mc j Connell, Pittsburgh; third vice ! president, William Updegrave, Johnstown; fourth vice-president, E. L. Egolf, Harrisburg. Executive committee, W. J. Bon | Essen, Pittsburgh; R. D. Pratt, Har | risburg; J. C. Strauss, Allontown; F. W. Hays, WilHamsport. i Optical fund, Lnura Archer, Alice Henry, H. Herschfeld. Fur Robbers Wound Policeman and Civilian in Big Gun Fight Philadelphia, Oct. 14. A 3 series of daring crimes of the last few months reached a high point yes terday, in a revolver battle between police and thieves, in which one policeman and a civilian were badly injured and two of the bandits cap tured. The gunplay occurred at Twenty-first street and Columbia avenue, following a robbery of furs two blocks away. Aroused by the robberies of fur stores, jewelry places and other stores which have netted thieves tens of thousands of dollars, busi ness organizations in all parts of the city are urging extra precautions against the depredations and at spe cial meetings wiU call on the police for adequate protection. Staff Officers See No Menace to U. S. Washington, Oct. 13. Officers of the general staff of the Army were questioned by the House Military Committee relative to whether there was any menace to the nation's peace not generally known which required the large standing army recommend ed by Secretary of War Baker and General March. They said they knew of none, but that their superiors might have information which had not been disclosed to tbem. "The fact that the United States was able to transport 350,000 men overseas in a single month, a num ber undreamed of before the war, makes It necessary tor us to have available sufficient troops to resist a hostile force of similar size in ad dition to protecting our frontiers," Colonel Peter Murray said. MEMORIAL PARK ADDITION The Suburb Unparalleled.—Adv. French Child Pianiste to Give Recital Here Harrisburg is to be favored by the i appearance of the gifted child plan- j ; iste of France, Mile. Brard, who will : be the soloist in this city with the J New York Symphony Orchestra at ; Chestnut street auditorium on the J afternoon of November 1. This lit- | tie daughter of France will be an in- , spiration and stimulus to all Ameri- | can children and students of music. | Magdeleine Brard is now just 16 \ .vears of age, having had her first: appearance with the Paris orchestral iat the early age of 14, when she • played Beethoven's "C Major Con- j certo." This was the beginning of a j series of triumphant appearances in | her own country, after which she j toured Spain where she was greeted | everywhere by most enthusiastic I audiences. Mile. Brard was heard in this country last year in few of the larger cities, and in New York she aroused a furore by her brilliant playing and great interest in her un usual career. Through the cpurtesy of the French-American Association for Musical Art, and as the special rep lesentative of the French govern ment in things musical, Mile. Brard comes to America. With such an unusual soloist add ing much interest to the superb pro gram as arranged by Walter Dara l-osch, the conductor of the New York Symphony Orchestra, all pat rons of good music should grasp this opportunity to honor soloist and or chestra alike before they leave this country for a tour of Europe as the first representative America orches tra to play in Euuropean countries. A special feature of the program will be the rendition of Mr. Dam rosch's own arrangement of the well-known and also well-loved "Largo" by Handel in response to re quests of Harrisburg music lovers. A request was also received for the famous "Concerto in G. Minor" by Saint-Saens, which has also been granted, and will be played by Mile. Brard with the orchestra. Because of the demand for tickets from neighboring towns and the lo cal demand, the management has decided to open the seat sale at once to furnish satisfactory service. A large number of student tickets are now available, and can be sup plied to the local teachers of music. Blocks of seats will be reserved for schools and colleges as orders are placed. Mail orders should be ac companied by check made payable to Salome Sanders, manager, care of C. M. Sigler, inc., 30 North Second street, Harrisburg, Pa. These orders will be filled in the order received. Shantung Award to Japan Prop to Paganism, Is Opinion of Norris Washington, Oct. 14. Another three-hour attack on the Shantung provision by Senator Norris, Repub lican, of Nebraska, and a ten-minute speech of the same character by Senator Borah, Republican, of Idaho, constituted the sum of the Senate's program yesterday in consideration of the Peace Treaty. Quoting from the reports of mis sionaries in regard to conditions in Korea, Senator Norris said it was the purpose of the Japanese Gov ernment to drive Christianity out of Asia and" that the United States would be aiding in that attempt if it acquiesced in the Treaty proposal to extend Japanese rule over Shan tung. MEMORIAL PARK ADDITION The Suburb Unparalleled.—Adv. (KEEP IT SWEET I Keep your stomach sweet today and ward off the indigestion of tomorrow—try Ki'KQiDS the new aid to diges tion —as pleasant and as safe to take as candy. MADE BY SCOTT ft-BOWNE MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMULSION CAUSE OF STOMACH SICKNESS How to Relieve Stomnrh Distress in n Fen Minutes. Money Hack If Trentll<*nt DOCK Xot (Ivrreome Any Form of liftdlffcst ion If you feel as though there was a lump of lead at the pit of the stom ach, take a couple of Mi-o-na stomach tablets and in tlve minutes you should see that all stomach distress has vanished. If yoti belch' gas, have heartburn or sour stomach, you need Mi-o-na If your stomach feels up-set the morning after the night before, take two Mi-o-na tablets and see how quickly you get relief. If you have shortness of breath, ] pain in the gtomacK waterbrash or foul breath, you need Mi-o-nu and the sooner you get it, the sooner your I stomach should perform its duties properly. If you use a box of Mi-o-na tablets and feel that it has not overcome your indigestion or stomach trouble, take the empty box to your dealer and he will refund your money. For sale by H. C. Kennedy and all lead ing druggists. Ambition Pills For Nervous People The groat nerve tonic the fam ous Wendell's Ambition Pills that will put vigor, vim and vitality Into nervous tired out, all in, despondent people In a few days In many in sto rices. Anyone can buy a box for only 50 cents, and your druggist Is au thorized by the maker to refund the purchase prieo if anyone is ijisaails tied with the tlrst box purchased. Thousands praiso them lor gen era) debility, nervous prostration, mental depression and Unstrung nerves caused oy c\er-indulgence i;-, alcohol, tobacco or overwork of any kind. For any affliction of the nervous system, Wendell's Ambition Pills are unsurpassed, while for hysteria, trembling and neuralgia they are simply splendid. Fifty cents at your druggist and dealers every where. Americanize Them, Say Senators on Return From Pittsburgh Investigation Washington, Oct. 14.—The visit of the Senate Committee on Education jand Labor to th# Pittsburgh indus trial district bids fair to have a more I far reaching effect than the mere in vestigation of the steel strike. Upou the return of the committee to Wash ington a movement at once was start ed to put through' legislation for the J Americanization of foreigners in the United States. | In the mill districts about Pitts ; burgh the committee had found that j the strike order had to he printed In I many foreign languages, that thou i sands of employes of the steel mills could not speak English, and that I they had no proper conception of | American institutions. To cure this ; condition the committer* returned {unanimously resolved to support some of the Americanization measures now .pending before Congress. I It is probable that not only educa- Ition. hut naturalization and immigra tion will be involved in the move ment. Mill owners who were asked their opinion as to the advisability of cutting off immigration for a period, replied that if this was done the mills would have to close down, but in spite of that there is a strong sentiment in favor of putting up the bars tem porarily. When the Senate committee will be able to submit a report on {he steel strike is a matter of speculation. Sen ator Kenvon. the chairman, yesterday stated that it is hoped an opportunity will be had to visit Gary and oth?r Western mill districts where the strike is reported to be more general tliar. about Pittsburgh, though no plans have yet been made. Magazine Foils Printers on Strike by Photographic Process of Reproduction ' Now York, •ct. 14.—Elimination of typesetting, one of the costliest operations of magazine production, by the use of plates made by photo- To Reduce Y our W eight Quickly and Easily If you are too fat, or If your figure has become flabby and you are carrying around a burden of annoy ing unhealthy flesh, the cause is. ten chances to one, lack of oxygen carrying power of the Dtoud and faulty assimilation of the food. Too little of the food is being made into good hard tissue and muscle and too much into little globules of fat. Every man and woman reader of this paper who is too fat, whose flesh is soft and flabby should try the new preparation, Phynola, a simple, but remarkably efficient formula put up for convenient home use. Go to Gorgas, the druggist, stores, 16 N. 3rd St.. 3rd and Walnut streets and Pennsylvania R. R. station, Georges' Drug Store, or C. Keller's Drug Store, today and get a box of these wonderful Phynola tablets; take one after each meal and one at bed time. They are pleasant to take, entirely safe and give splen did results quickly and easily. No dieting, strenuous exercising, drastic massaging or appliances. Just a simple Phynola tablet four times a day and in a short time your weight is reduced on all parts of the body to what it should be. I • *• 5 C a package before the war t • 4 5 C a package during the war and 5c a package NOW THE FLAVOR LASTS SO DOES THE PRICE! ~~ OCTOBER 14, 1919. ~~ graphing tlic original typewritten copy,' lias been accomplished in the October 18 issue of the Literary Di best, consisting of eighty pages. This radical innovation, which was brought about by the printers' strike in this city, leads the publishers to suggest that "it is possible in this age of marvels that the whole fu ture of mugaztne production may be revolutionized by the elimination of typesetting." The make-up of the magazine Is in no way changed, the only differ ence being that the style of the type is that used on typewriters and is uniform in all the reading matter throughout the number. The right HAVE YOU SEEN "THE HOODLUM" When last seen she was sliding down a coal shute a l| TheMVuUucwt 1 TOASTED HH ' §3 WPI i ffl |1 i r5 I rrvli£lurv4 II iSSntf, r* i hand side of each column is Irregu i lar as in ordinary typewritten copy* ! Each page is in effect a photo j graphic copy of the original article I as written on the typewriter. NEURALGIA or Headache— Rub the forehead and temples with imflL VlCßs\^OßuMf | ""QUI? BODYGUARD" - 30f. 60MT30 A STITCH IN TIME SAVES MANY $5,000 for accidental death. $25 a week for disability i froth accident. S2O weekly for Illness. Double for accidents of travel. A YEAR'S PROTEC TION FOR $lO The Notional Accident Society of New l ork t Est. 1886) Bruce (irccn, Hon Merit Agent 1814 Urccn St., Bell 410 I M 9
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