6 TYPHUS SWEEPS GALICIA, DECLARE LATEREPORTS Hundreds of People Stricken and Died Without Medi cal Attention l.rmbcrjr. Nov. 15.—Oalicia has been swept a few weeks by a new wave of typhus which reached greater pro portions than ever before at this time of the year, say Red Cross reports. Hundreds of people have been stricken and died without medical attenion in villages that could not be reached by doctors. After more than five years of con tinued warring, the country is almost without the element hospital neces sities. It has been the battleground If "A Different Kind of X A Jewelry Score" | Do Your ili | Xmas | in Shopping | Earlier I | This Year-1 I There is a scarcity in If good Jewelry just the same i l l ||| as in all other lines, so that (111 X it behooves you to do your ||!| holiday shopping at the ||| [[. earliest possible moment. X Send for Our | Gift Book I It's a beautifully illus- llli 111 trated catalog every ar- I'j X tide shown is in stock and jmj can be purchased at our I'll j v store in person or by mail. j ll'i Send for our GIFT Pi I X BOOK TODAY. [nl II!, , | The I*. 11. Cnpliin Co. llnrrfNbtirK, I'll. Please semi me your illus- X trated Gift Book. •• j ill Name |||| X Address f.,"! 11l 1 | I The P. H. Caplan Co. jj!| | 206 Market St. x 1' j; mis Ample, Healthful, Comfortable Heat OTl' ( | The Way r„ t OKIOISM-PATINTEO PiMkU* ruRHACt 1 When you need heat most, do you have it? Do you get up in the ;j morning and shiver around until you can get down to the kitchen stove? j; Does youf furnace heat your whole house, or do you live all winter in one j! or two poorly heated rooms? * ]> All that sort of thing is no longer n-ecessary. Methodist Church, Summerdale. Heat your home with a CaloriC—the only Klrst Baptist Church, Steelton. ,i furnace that s guaranteed as to results—and ]| be sure of ample, healthful and comfortable Mrs. M. May, Steelton. <[ heat the house over, even in the coldest Robert Broadus, Steelton. manufacturer to heat your home to a tempera- S j. Ripoher Middletown j! ture of 70 degrees in the coldest weather. s! B.' Leach Lemoyne <| More than 76,000 buildings throughout the Elmer S Mills Camn Hill , United States are now heated by the CaloriC, A H Hammer Penbrook <[_ and ever >' one ■* guaranteed. j.' H . Runkle, Penbrook. ' j! Your friends and neighbors are preparing Vu-in* n H it <[ y J. C. Strickner, Enola. , !; HARRISBURG, PA. J - Shumberger, Enola. j! , James F. Snyder. 925 Dunkle St. . ' 2 William W. Atkinson, 922 Norwood St. You may also have CaloriO comfort in your D. L.. M. Raker, School of Commerce. home this winter. A warm house all day J. John C. Grove, 321 S. Eighteenth St. long - a comfortable bedroom when you wish <[ John J. Hargest, 2203 N. Third St. to rct ' re and plenty of heat when you get up David Martin, 3213 N. Front St. ln the morning, j! Harrlsburg Boiler and Manufacturing Co., i: ""d"F Sts -' (2K And - beßt of an - y° u can *2 this on > o loude hel, 42<1 Hamilton St. coa i than you have been iising*to heat but a |[ OUT OP TOWN few of your rooms. Just call, phone or write <► rm. r* 'v. t , an <* we will be at your service. Remember. it Campbell summer home, Maple Shade, takes but a day to install a CaloriC—but !! * u t arrange for yours now, before cold weather is j; The Chris Meckley farm, Hummclstown. upon us. PRICES: CaloriC prices have been kept down as low as possible all !; summer and fall, but now, because of recent advances in cost, it is neces ;! sary to advance the prices. Fortunately, we still have a few plants on hand ;; that were purchased at the old prices, and as long as they last we will pass j; this saving along to those who purchase. Of course, these will not last long j; —so, have the CaloriC Man call to-day. The CaloriC Furnace Company SALES AND SERVICE Seventeen South Third Street i^"——-^' ( SATURDAY EVENING, of one army after another and the zone for*changing forces of occupa tion. Large areas are burned away. The best equipped hospitals have been completely ruined and pillaged. According to Lieutenant Colonel Halban, chief sanitarian of the Polish government for the Galiclan front, the typhus situation eclipses anything ever known in this land where typhus has always been more or less epidemic. With an unprec edented beginning in the simmer months, it is feared the winter will see It increase with even greater fury. The vermin which cause typhus incubate and multiply in the cold season. . . . The American Red Cross has estab lished a headquarters here, in re sponse to the appeals of the military and government authorities. Intense activity is already in progress for coping with the distressing condi tions. Requests for hospital supplies come into the temporary headquarters from all sides. Centers have been selected for vitally needed hospitals, but there is such an utter lack of material for equipping them that all efforts to cope with the situation have failed. The militarv and government authori ties are lending every possible aid in hastening the immediate distribution of the American medical supplies in an attempt to check the disease be fore it gains too much headway. Coalition Ministry Formed in Hungary, Headed by Wlascitz By Associated Press. Berlin. Nov. 15. —The formation of a coalition ministry in Hungary head ed by Count Julius Wlascitz. and in cluding former Premier Friedrloh, and with Count Czaky, as foreign minister, is reported in a wireless dis-. patch received here from Budapest. The ministry requires the sanction of the Entente to be effective. Yamburg Is Taken by the Bolsheviks, Says Moscow Report By Associated Press. I.onilon. Nov. 15.—The Bolsheviki captured Yamburg, 68 miles southwest of Petrograd, yesterday afternoon, according to a wireless dispatch re ceived here from Moscow. Labor Journal Attacks Maurer as a "Red" Pittsburgh, Nov. 15—The National T.abor Journal, official organ of the t Central Labor Union of Pittsburgh, is engaged in a bitter controversy to wrest control of the labor body here from the radicals. In a leading edi torial to-day it attacks the record of j James H. Maurer. president of the Pennsylvania Federation of I,abor, who presided at the convention of the State body here November 1 and 2, at which a resolution was adapt ed authorizing the executive council to call a State-wide strike "when in its* judgment it is necessary to compel respect for law and the res toration of liberty as guaranteed l.y the State of Pennsylvania." The editorial recites the history of j Maurer's activities during the "last i two years and accuses him of assist- I ing to finance the I. W. W. and of j participating In several councils and meetings during the war which had j for their principal purpose the op posing of America's participation in 1 the war and military service in gen- 1 eral. J|peV£biderful Stories/|OZ^i§ MM * was admiring one of her | handsomest heads—one with rich ("Chestnut hair, dreamy walnut eyes land a shapely hickorynut nose. She I was very glad to be relieved of her duties to the people of Ev, and the Queen graciously permitted her to retain her rooms and her cabinet 01 heads as long as she lived. ' Then the Queen took her eldest son out upon a balcony that over looked the crowd of subjects gather ed below, and said to them: "Here is your future ruler, King Evardo Fifteenth. He is fifteen years of age, has fifteen silver buckles on his jacket and is the ; fifteenth Evardo to rule the land of Ev." I The people shouted their approval I fifteen times, and even the Wheel- I ers, some of whom were present, I loudly promised to obey the new King. So the Queen placed a big crown of gold, set with rubies, upon Evar do's head, and threw an ermine robe over his shoulders and proclaimed him King and he bowed gratefully to all his subjects and then went j away to see if he could find any; cake in the royal pantry. Ozma of Oz and her people, as well as Dorothy, Tiktok and Billina, were splendidly entertained by the Queen mother, who owed all the to their kind officers; and that evening the yellow hen was publicly presented with a beautiful necklace of perals and sapphires, r.s a token of esteem from the new King. A Dorothy decided to accept Ozma s invitation to return with her to the Land of Oz. There was no greater chance of her getting home front Ev thun from ind the little girl A\a.s anxious to see once more the country where she had encountered such wonderfful adventures. By this time Uncle Henry would have reached Australia in his ship, and had prob ably given her up for lost; so he HARRIBBURG TELEGRAPH The King of Ev. "YOUR FUTURE RULER. KING EVARDO FIFTEENTH " j couldn't worry any more than he did i If she stayed away from him a while j longer. So she would go to Oz. | They bade good-bye to the people lof Ev, and the King promised Oz- I ma that he would ever be grateful |to her and render the Land of Oz any service that might lie within his power. And then they approached tine edge of the dangerous desert, and Uzmo threw down the magic carpet, which at once unrolled far enough ror all of them to wolk upon it with out being crowded. , clnlnii ng to be Dorothy's iaitnrui follower because he belong hcr. had been permitted to J party and before they start ed the Rirl wound up his machinery as far as possible and the copper man stepped off as briskly as any one of them. Ozma invited Billina to visit the ' ar \ of ond the yellow hen was glgd enough to go where new sights and scenes awaited her. began the trip across the , early , ln the morning, and as Rifnr, PP f only ,onff enbugh for Billina to lay her daily egg before SUn , Set thy espied the grfen slopes and wooded hills of the beautiful Land of Oz. They entered it in the Munehkin territory, and the King of the Munchkins met them at the border and welcomed Ozma with great respect, being very pleased bv her safe resturn. For Ozma of Oz ruled the King of the Munchkins, the King of the Winkles, the King Quadlings and the King of the Gillikins Just as those Kings ruled their own people; and this supreme ruler of the Land of Oz lived in a great town of her own. ' With Choir and Organist Among the musicians from this city who went to Lancaster on Thursday to hear Pietro A. Yon, the eminent Italian organ virtuoso, were members of St. Patrick's Cathedral choir and Joseph D. Brodeur, or ganist and choirmaster of St. Pat rick's. The singers especially were interested In the rendition by the choir of St. Mary's Church of sev eral of Yon's compositions. Horatio X. Connell, the Philadel phia baritone, is to be heurd at the Elks memorial service in this city the llrst Sunday of next month. The vested choir of St. Stephen's Epis copal Church also Is to sing. The musical program, It is said, will be the most elaborate ever given at an Elks service here. On Thanksgiving Day, under the direction of Joseph D. Brodeur, the combined Catholic choirs of Steel ton and Harrisburg parishes are to sing a mass in honor of the soldiers at St. James' Church, in Steelton. The four-manual organ being erected in Grace Methodist Epis copal Church os to opened with a recital by the organist and choirmaster, Bernard R. Mauscrt, on December 19. Prank A. McCarrell, organist and choirmaster of Pine Street Presby terian Church, has been chosen president of the Harrisburg Organ ists' Association, which recently held its annual meeting in St. Stephen's Episcopal parish house. One of the contemplated uddresses before the association is to be given shortly by Bernard R. Mausert, touching his impressions of study in Berlin. It was said to-day that Pietro A. Yon, who gave so brilliant a recital in St. Mary's Church, Lancaster, on Thursday evening, may play in one of the larger Harrisburg churches. The matter of enlarging the fine organ at Pine Street Presbyterian Church is being considered and it may be decided to make the in strument four manuals, adding an antiphonal organ. Messiah Lutheran Church choir, which is so ably directed by Abner' W. Hartman, has in rehearsal n Christmas cantata by Manney, which is to be given next month. One of the anthems to be sung at Stevens Memorial Church to-morrow under the direction of John W. Phillips, is Woodward's splendid "The Sun Shall Be No More Thy Light by Day." .Smart's, "The Lord Is My Shep- J I called the Emerald City, which was ■ in the exact center of the four king doms of the Land of Oz. A The Munchkin king entertaineir ■ them at his palace that night, and 1 in the morning they set out for the i Emerald City, traveling over a road i of yellow brick that led straight to the Jewel-studded gates. Every ! where the people turned out to greet their beloved Ozma, and to hail Joy , fully the Scarecrow, the Tin Wood i man and the Cowardly Lion, who were popular favorites. Doroary, too, remembered some of the people, i who had befriended her on the oc casion of her first visit to Oz, and they were well pleased to see the little Kansas girl again, and shower ed her with compliments and good wishes. At one place, where they stopped to refresh themselves, Ozma accept ed a bowl of milk from the hands of a pretty dairy maid. Then she looked at the girl more closely, and exclaimed: "Why, it's Jinjud—isn't it!" "Yes, your Highness," was the reply, as Jinjur dropped a low curtsy. And Dorothy looked wonderingly at this lively appearing person, who had once assembled an army of women and driven the Scarecrow from the throne of the Emerald City, and even fought a battle with the powerful army of Gltnda the Sorceress. "I've married a man who owns nine cows." said Jinjur to Ozma, "and now I am happy and contented and willing to lead a quiet life and mind my own business." "Where is your husband?" asked ; Ozma. "He is in the house, nursing a herd," one of the best anthems ever written, is to be sung by the choii of Reformed Salem Church at to morrow evening's service. In the morning Mrs. C. W- Myers, soprano, and Mrs. William H. Kelsley, con tralto, are to sing the duet, "I Waited For the Lord," from Men delssohn's "Hymn of Praise." Mrs. James G. Sanders, contralto soloist of Pine Street Presbyterian Church, will sing at to-morrow morning's service the ever-beauti ful and Impressive aria, "But the Lord Is Mindful of His Own," from the oratorio, "St. Paul." One seldom hears Dudley Buck's "Come, My Soul, Thou Must Be Waking," an anthem of unusual beauty, but the choir of Zion Lu theran Church, under the direction of Mrs. E. J. Decevee, will sing the number at to-morrow morning's service. William Zimmerman, tenor and a former member of St. Stephen's vested choir, lias .foined the choir of Calvary Presbyterian Church. Mrs. Frank Green, soprano soloist of the organization, will resume her place to-morrow after a brief vacation. Miss Belle P. Middaugh,-. whose splendid voice has been heart all too seldom in musical events of Har risburg, will sing as a solo at Mar ket Square Presbyterian Church, to morrow morning, Dvorak's "Sing Ye a Joyful Song." The musical program at Chestnut Street Auditorium to-morrow even ing, at which the combined Lu theran choirs of the city will sing, is to be of an unusual order. Mrs. William K. Bumbaugh, director of Bethlehem Lutheran choir, will give "McDormid's setting of the Ninety first Psalm, and the Zion Lu theran solo choir will sing Decevee's "O Come Let Us Sing Unto the Lord a New Song." A plate wltksat • Mf wfcUk |*ti at tatanpra trtth Cult ar apaaah. i Plataa **paia wan. MACK'S Mt MARKET ITHEBf black eye," replied J injur, calmly. "The foolish man would insist upon milking: the red cow when I wanted him to milk the white one; but he will know better next time, I am sure." Then the party moved on ugain, and after crossing a broad river on a ferry and passing many line laim houses thtyt were dome shaped and painted a pretty green color, they came in sight of a large building that, was covered with flags and bunting. "I don't remember that build.ng," said Dorothy. "What is it - '" "That is the College of Art and Athletic Perfection," replied Ozma. "I had it built quite recently, and the Woggle-Bug is Its president. Ii keeps him busy, and the young men who attend the college are no worse I [Off than they were before. You see,! in this country are a number of! youths who do not like to work, and i the college is an excellent place for them." ! And now they came in sight of the I Emerald City, and the people flocked i out to greet their lovely ruler. There i were several bands and many officers i and officials of the realm, and a i crowd of citizens in their holiday' attire. ! Thus the beautiful Ozma was es- | corted by a brilliant procession to her royal city, and so great was the cheering that she was obliged to constanUy bow to the right and her subjects CdSe ' he greetingß j That evening there was a grand! tended p '."i th ® r ° yal palacp . at-j sona mri ® m ° Bt important per- ' J ack Pumpkin head, i aetHe a e OVerr 'l> p but StiiE ?n ni '„ a ," address congratulat-i jug Ozma of Oz upon the success of! r generous mission to rescue tlie' 'do'm ly of a neighboring king- 1 w i he " magnificent gold medals set P