LOCAL MEN TO ATTEND MEET Educators of City Will Speak at State Association Sessions Officials from State departments and educators of the city and vicin ity are listed among the speakers lor the seventieth annual meeting of the Pennsylvania State Educational AssociaUon to be held In Philadel phia, December 29, 30 and 1 ■< January 1. T-. r. F. D -3. r'-.y tendont, will speak on "T" "Crisis" at the general srrrisnr F" cember 30 in the Or*— 1 school auditorium in rjro- 1 Green streets. on T '" Thomas E. Finegan, State Superin tendent of Public Instruction, will speak at the general sessions. lie will also make an address at the meeting of county superintendents. De-ember 30, and at the meetius of the department of school patrons on Decern l er 29. Prof. William E. Harclerode, su pervisor of music, in this city will have charge of the musical program for the annual meeting. He is presi dent of tho department of music of the State association. Prof. L. E. McGlnnes, superin tendent of the Steelton school dis trict, will speak on "How to Secure a Better Preparation of the Teachers in the Fundamental Studies." at the meeting of city and borough super intendents December 31. H. E. Todd, supervisor of industrial educa tion in the city school district, will speak on "Manual Arts for the Jun ior High School," before the me chanic arts department, December 31. Mrs. Anna Green, Stale super visor of household aria, will speak on "Hints, He'pa and Guest ions" be fore the household arts department December 31. At the continuation school depart ment meeting December 31, Claire M. Snyder, supervisor of coiuii-uu lion schools ip Pennsylvania will speak on "The Growth of the Con tinuation Schools." Before the department of music Decemhber 30, Prof. Walter E. Sev erance, principal of the Harrisburg Central High School, will speak on "The Musical Training a High School Student Should Receive." and Dr. J. George Becht, first deputy The sedentary habits to which most girls and women were addicted before the war, with tight corsets, waistbands, and lack of exercise in the out-door air, brought about intestinal sluggishness. If a girl's apiiearance is pallid and eyes dull, movements languid, perhaps pimples on a sallow skin, dark circles under eyes and fetid breath —she should be advised to keep her system clean. Don't allow food to ferment in the intestines, thus giving the body a chance to absorb poisons! Anything from a headache to a most serious nervous breakdown may result from con stipation. If you can't sleep nights, if your head feels dull and thick, it may be due, and probably is, to auto-intoxication. This is the time to heed the warning and do not hesitate to take castor oil —or that well-known, tiny pellet, made up of May-apple, aloes and jalap, and sold by every druggist in the land as Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. An occasional dose of these veget able pellets —at least once a week will keep the bowels clean, the eyes bright, the skin clear, and you can sleep throughout the night. Next morning you feel fresh, strong and happy. jjjj^ WEDNESDAY EVENING, State Superintendent of Public In struction, will speak on "The Amount of Time That Should be De voted to the Child's Emotional Truln- Ing." . „ W. K. Krockston, of the State De partment of Health, will speak on "Physical Education Needs of Rural Communities," December 29 at a Joint meeting of the child hygiene round table and the Stale Physical Education Conference. Many prominent educators fiom all paits of the Nation will be pres ent at tho sessions to speak on pub lic Bcnoul topics. Prelimlnar:' pro grams of the meeting aro being sent to county teachers by Prof. Frank E. Shambaugh, county Bchool super intendent. Baseball Commissioners Discuss Series Money By Associated Press. New York, Nov. 19.—Failure of the National Basoball Commission to award third-place money in the last world series to the New York Amer icans was the subject of discussion at a special meeting of tho directors of tho American League here to day. Tho meeting was called by the ! majority directors —Jacob Ruppert, of New York; Harry Frazee, of Bos ton. and Charles Comiskey, of Chi cago. The New York club was officially awarded third place at a recent spe cial meeting of the directors and a resolution was adopted authorizing the National Commission to pay the Yankees their share of the series proceeds. Detroit, however, protest ed against the award, claiming that the games in which Carl Mays pitch ed should not be counted in New York's standing. |C. OF C. APPOINTS PUBLICITY COMMITTEE Seven members are Included on the publicity committee of the Har risburg Chamber of Commerce, j named for the ensuing year. C. L. i Sliepley is chairman. Other mem bers are V. H. Berghaus, Jr., W. H. Fetter, Gus M. Stelnmetz, Dean Hoffman, Harry Lowengard and Frederick E. Rowe. ADAMS LUTHERANS MEET Gettysburg, Pa., Nov. 19.—A mass meeting of the Lutheran men of Adams county was held in the St. James Lutheran Church of this place last evening. The Rev. Dr. Charles L. Fry, of Philadelphia, was the speaker. Sweet Sleep Blessed Sleep .Every Night IF YOU FOLLOW THIS ADVICE: Before an insurance company will take a risk on your life the examining physician will test the urine and report whether you are a good risk. When your kidneys get sluggish and clog, you suffer from backache, sick - headache, dizzy spells, or the twinges and pains of lumbago, rheumatism and gout. The urine is often cloudy, full of sediment; sleep is disturbed two or three times a night. This is the time you should consult some phy sician of wide experience—such as the specialists at Doctor Pierce's Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Insti tute, Buffalo, N. Y. Send 10 cents for sample package of the new discovery, "Anuric" (anti uric-acid). Write your symptoms and send a sample of urine foi test. Experience proves that "Anuric" is a most potent agent in dissolving uric acid, as hot coffee melts sugar; besides being abso lutely harmless it is endowed with other properties, for it preserves the kidneys in a healthy condition by thoroughly cleansing them 1 being many times more active than lithia. I Ask the druggist for "Anuric" I (anti-uric-acid) put up by Doctor I Pierce, in sixty-cent packages. MANY HEAR SCIENTIST TALK Largo Audience Listens to Paul Stark Seelcy, of Portland, Ore. Paul Stark Seeleyi of Portland, Ore., member of the Board of Lec tureship of the Mother Church, the First Church of Christ, Scientist, Ire Boston, lectured on the subject of Christian Science to a large audt ence last evening In the Technical High School Auditorium. Mr. Seeloy was Introduced by A. Carson Htamm, First Header of the local Christian Science Church. Mr. Seeley Bald In part Mortul Man Repudiated "Perhaps some of you wero taught as children that man was first made from the dust of the ground, others may believe Ire tho theory of ma terial evolution, man evolved from molecule and monkey up to his pres ent estate. If you have accepted either of these theories have you stopped to consider where wisdom, intelligence, kindness, charity and love come from? Though you may be satisfied with the theory of evo lution as an explanation of this mass of matter termed a body, that ex planation gives no satisfaction as to the orlglre of the things which even to-day the world honors the most, namely the mental and spiritual qualities of man. "Isaiah sought to turn the thought of his people away from this erron eous mortal concept of man with the admonition, 'Cease ye from man, whoso breath is in his nostrils: for wherein Is he to be accounted of?' (Tsaiali 2:22). In other words, stop thinking of the mortal, material sense of man as the true man, for there is absolutely no way to ac count for him as a creature of God. Reality and Unreality "Only that is regarded as real in Christian Science which can be at tributed to God, for since He is the only real cause there can be no real effect from any other cause. Judged from this standard one can see why it is that all evil, discord, sin, and disease are regarded by Christian Science to be unreal. They have no relation with God or His perfect creation. The effort of all mankind to be rid of evil shows that we in stinctively repudiate it in our thought as being unnatural and so in the last analysis unreal. Chris tian Science does not say that sin, sickness and discord are not very real to the material 3ense, but it does say that Judged in the light of tho spiritual sense of being which overrules and transcends material sense they are seen as false claims about true life and existence. Evil Is a False Belief "If, then, evil is not real, what Is it you may ask? It Is false belief. As for every fact you may suppose its opposite, the lie abotit it, so tho sun of evil is the lie about God, uni versal good. It is a bastard lie and ceases to have any recognition or place when the truth is realized. Jesus made this plain when he spoke of evil as a liar in which there is no truth and pointed tho way to man's liberation from it in the well-known statement, 'Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.' This brief statement summarizes the whole process of Christian Science practice and is the law that defines the line of march for all human progress. "Consider if you will the concept of autocracy as old as the human species. There is not much ques tion about that having been cast on the mental scrap heap, at least so fur as its aggressive political phases are concerned. "We have awakened to its un reality. So every one of us must mentally awaken to the unreality of every evil concept, all sin and dis ease, and cast it out of our con sciousness, and all for the very best of reasons. Not one of these con cepts is of God. Do you suppose that God is any more on the 6ide of a cancer or influenza or a sinful appetite than He is on the side of the liquor traffic or the rule of au tocracy? Men have discerned in some measure their right and ability to resist and overthrow the false claims of evil to rule them politi cally. They are beginning to see their greater right and ability vo re sist and overthrow the attempts of evil to rule them bodily and mentally. "Clara Barton, founder of the American Red Cross, wrote of Mary Baker Eddy, the Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science, with profound admiration. 'Love/ she says, 'permeates all the teachings of this great woman —so great, I be l'eve, that at this perspective we can scarcely realize how great—and looking into her life history we see nothing but self-sacrifice and selfish ness. Mrs. Eddy should have the respect, admiration and love of the whole Nation, for she is 11s greatest woman.' " Martens Protests Treatment at Hands of N. Y. Committee New York, Nov. 19.—Ludwig C. A. K. Martens, "Soviet ambassador to the United States," telegraphed to Secretary of State Lansing pro testing against his treatment at the hands of the New York state's legis lative committee investigating radi cal activities here. Martens complained that the rules of International courtesy had been broken in his arrest, and charged that "indecent" efforts to pervert his statements had been made. He denied that he was engaged in an attempt to bring about the over throw of the United States Govern ment. This followed declaration by Deputy ' Attorney General Berger earlier in the day that he believed Martens was "really disseminating propaganda here for the overthrow of organized government. wherever found." Receivership Plan For Operating Mines Remains in Doubt Pittsburgh, Kans., Nov. 19.—Un willingness to serve as receivers for Kansas coal mines taken over by the state under receivership orders is sued by the Kansas Supreme Court, was expressed yesterday by two of the three receivers appointed. That, coupled with the refusal during the day of August Dorchy, vice-president of the Kansas mine unions, to meet Governor Henry J. Allen and discuss the situation, left in doubt tho success or failure of the receivership plan by which state of ficials had hoped mining operations would be resumed immediately. Dorchy based his refusal to meet the Governor on the ground that he had no authority to discuss the re turn to work of the men. HAKRISBCrRG TELEGRAPH Glass May Take Up Senator December 1 Washington, Nov. 19.—The formal resignation of Carter Glass as Secre tary of the Treasury, together with a letter from President Wilson, urg ing him to accept the appointment as United States senator from Vir ginia was made public by the Treas ury. There was no Intimation as to when Mr. Glass would leave the Treasury, but It was understood he probably would not begin his duties as senator until the opening of the next session of Congress, Decem ber 1. In advising the President of the tender from Governor Davis, of Vir ginia, Mr. Glass said he regarded the appointment as a mark of confi dence but that he felt his first duties | were to the Administration. Church Guilty of Sin, Is Pastor's View • Kansas City, Kan., Nov. 19. —Can such a holy institution as the church commit a sin, was the question asked of his congregation by Dr. J. B. Robertson. He answered the question In the affirmative. "All sins are not those of commis sion," the Rev. Dr. Robertson con tinued, "and the church in the past has been guilty of many sins of omission in failing to meet the needs of mankind." German Navy League to Be Rechristened Berlin, Nov. 19.—The German Navy League is to be rechristened the 'German Sea League" and is to work "for the development of the German mercantile marine and the resumption of German maritime trade and shipping." The Power to Cure the Ills of the World I 9 $ . * Wi I This power is in the possession ' H jjj| of the Church! ■ '/?:' jflggSHH I 'W ' Why does she not use it more effectively? I " j Mass Meeting—Next Friday Evening, Ball-Room, Penn-Harris Hotel at 8 P. M. % * " - - * ! §1 '* 11 SPEAKERS /. t M ; . - The Rt. Rev. Henry St. George The Rev. William A. R. Good- Tucker, D. Z)., Bishop of win , D. D., Rector St. Paul's, Kyoto. Rochester , iV. K . N * < |g| All Are Welcome—Come! No Admission Charge NATION- WIDE CA MP AIGN FOR THE CHURCH'S MISSION j TO HELP MAKE THE WORLD DRY National W. C. T. U. Contrib utes $60,000 a Year For Five Years St. Ixiuis, Nov. 19.—Sixty thou sand dollars a year for the next five years was allotted by the National Women's Christian Temperance l Union in convention here to be used j for the purpose of world-wide pro- | hibition. An allotment of $33,50 of this $60,- 000 was to the work in South Amer ica. Eleven thousand dollars was allotted to work in India, $9,300 for China, SI,OOO for Mexico, SI,OOO for Ceylon, $875 for Japan and the re maining $3,325 remains to be ap- , portioned. ■ None of the $1,000,000 which was ! apportioned to-day was assigned to promotion of legislation looking to- i ward the prohibition of tobacco. According to Miss Hardynia K. | Norvllle, delegate of the World i Christian Temperance Union, with 1 headquarters at Buenos Aires, < scientific instruction in schools is the i I [ }! \ TARRHAL DEAFNESS J J AND HEAD NOISES] , If you have Catarrhal Deafness or ' are hard of hearing or have head : noises go to your druggist and get 1 ounce of Purmint (double strength). j and add to it '4 pint of hot water and 1 a little granulated sugar. Take one I tabiespoonful four times a day. This will ofter. bring quick relief | from the distressing head noises, . Clogged nostrils should open, breath ing become easy and the mucus stop ! dropping into the throat. It is easy to prepare, cost> little and is pleas- I ant to take. Anyone who has Ca- I tarrhal Deafness or head noises ; should give this prescription a trial. I method by which the Women's Chris- t J D-_|,. • tlan Temperance Union hopes to "(Mill JCiSCy DailKS 111 m -o c n s the ak A ohoJ -1 map''of the world Federal Reserve Board South America Is the blackest," said Miss Norvllle. "There are fewer re- New York, Nov. 18.—Two more strlctlons against the liquor trafllc New j er scy State banks, the Eliza there than In any other civilized part , , ' , , _ of the globe and now it is becom- bethport Banking Company of Lllza ing the. dumping ground for the 11- bethport, and the East Orange Bank quor- interests which have been of East Orange, have been ad driven out of the United States." miUed lnto the Fctlera , Heserve SHOOTS BARGE DUCK Board. Both banks increased their Marietta Pa Nov 19 ltonhen capital to become eligible. Ma net . ' Reuben „ That part Q( New Jersey which Fahringer, of Marietta, shot the j s j n Second Federal Reserve dis largest duck, a Canvasback, ever triet," a statement said, "now has seen in this section. It weighed more state bunk members as coin seven and one-half pounds dressed, pared with the total number eligible, - "Harrisburg's Dependable Store" YES-WE SELL GLOVES —AND OF COURSE THE BEST NOVEMBER 19, 1919. than any state in the Union xnpt two. Its percentage Is higher than that of any entire Federal reserrn district." Use McNeil's Cold Tablets. AdY. Constipation Biliousness-Headache Dr. Chase's Liver Tablet! tissgnsssßsegm 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers