NEWBERRY TRIAL IN FRAUD CASE BEGINS JAN. 27 Date Is Agreed Upon Follow ing Completion of All Arrangements Grand Rapids, Mich., Dec. 9. Trial of Truman H. Newberry, of Detroit, United States Senator from and 134 others indicted on charges of fraud and corruption in connection with Mr. Newberry's elec tion in 1918, will begin before Dis trict Judge Clarence W. Sessions, in Federal Court here, January 27. The date was agreed upon immedi ately after completion of arraign ments yesterday, when the Senator and 24 of his principal campaign leaders stood mute and pleas of not guilty were directed by the Court. The purpose of the defense to en ter demurrers was indicated by At torney James O. Murfin, who, in ex plaining that no plea would be entered by the defendants, declared "there are grave fundamental ques tions whiih we desire to present challenging the validity of the in dictments." j IF SKIN BREAKS OUT AND ITCHES APPLY SULPHUR Just the moment you apply Mentho-Sulphur to an itching, burning or broken out skin, the itch ing stops and healing begins, says a noted skin specialist. This sulphur preparation, made into a pleasant cold cream, gives such quick relief, even to fiery eczema, that nothing has ever been found to take its place. Because of its germ-destroying properties, it quickly subdues the itching, cools the irritation and heals the eczema right up, leaving a clear, smooth skin irt place of ugly eruptions, rash, pimples or roughness. You do not have to wait for Im provement. It quickly shows. You can get about two ounces of Sulphur for a few cents at any drug store. SORENESS, PAIN, ACHING JOINTS Don't suffer! Relief comes the moment you rub with old "St. Jacobs Liniment" Don't stay store, stiff and lame! Limber up! Rub soothing, pene trating "St. Jacobs Liniment" right in your aching muscles, joints and painful nerves. It's the quickest, surest pain relief on earth. It is absolutely harmless and doesn't burn the skin. "St. Jacobs Liniment" conquers pain. It instantly takes away any ache, soreness and stiffness in the head, neck, shoulders, back, legs, arms, fingers or any part <9f the body nothing like it. You simply pour a little in your hand and rub "where it hurts," and relief comes instantly. Don't stay crippled! Get a small trial bottle now from any drug storei It never disappoints—six gold medal awards. RHEUMATISM Munyon's 8X Rheumatism Rem edy relieves sharp, shooting pains in the arms, legs, side, back or breast, or soreness in any part of the body, almost immediately. For lameness, stiff and swelling Joints, stiff back and 'all pains inr the hips and loins it gives relief so quickly that it as tonishes all who try it. Munyon's 3X Rheumatism Rem edy is especially recommended for chronic rheumatism, sciatica and lumbago. It seldom fails to give re lief after a few doses and often cures before one bottle has been used. It contains no salicylic acid, no morphine, no cocaine, no dope or harmful drugs. For sale by all druggists. $1.20 a bottle. For constipation use Munyon's Paw Paw Laxative Pills. 30c at all druggists. Free diet aftd care charts sent upon application to Munyon's H. H. Remedy Company, 54th and Colum bia Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Vigorous Men and Women Are in Demand If your ambition has left you, your happiness is gone forever, unless you take advantage of your drug gist's magnificent offer to refund your money on the first box pur chased if Wendell's Ambition Pills do not put your entire system In fine condition and give you the energy and vigor you have lost. Be ambitious, be strong, be vigor ous. Bring tne ruddy glow of health to your cheeks and the right sparkle that denotes perfect manhood and womanhood to your eyes. Wendell's Ambition Pills, the great, nerve tonic, are splendid for that tired feeling, nervous troubles, poor blood, headaches, neuralgia, restless ness, trembling, nervous prostration, mental depression, loss of appetite, and kidney or liver complaints; you take them with this understanding that: In two days you will feel better. In a week you will feel fine, and after taking one box you will have your old-time confidence and ambi tion or the druggist will refund the price of the box. Be sure and get a 60-cent box to day and get out,of the rut. Remem ber. dealers everywhere are author ized to guarantee them. TUESDAY EVENING. NEW ORGAN AN D WAR TABLET DEDICATED Gift of William P. Starkey Is Unveiled Before Large Metho dist Congregation; Secretary Daniels Tells of Part America Played in the War Service men and women of Grace Methodist Church were appropri ately honored last evening at serv ices in the church in connection with the week of reopening evpnts, when the new commemorative pipeorgan and bronze memorial tablet were of ficially presented to the church by William P. Starkey, the donor. Sec retary of the Navy Daniels was the principal speaker. The new organ appears at the head of the church auditorium with a large picture of the "Birth of Christ," by Crouse, directly behind it. The new bronze memorial tab let appears on the wall, to the left of the pulpit, and includes the names of the two dead service men, the fifty-six men who served in the Army, seven who served in the Navy, and six in the Y. M. C. A. service. The tablet was unveiled by Samuel Starkey, youngest son of Mr. Starkey. Harry C. Ross, president of the board of trustees, accepted the organ and tablet from Mr. Star key in behalf of the church. The demobilization of the church service flag was an interesting fea ture of the evening's service. A squad of Grace church men, com manded by Major L. V. Rausch, had charge of this ceremony, after which Major Rausch presented the flag to the church and Mr. Ross again accepted it. Service Men Honored Secretary of the Navy Daniels in his speech emphasized the Courage and bravery of the American soldiers as he had witnessed them. He made the assertion that, if ,in the midst of vic assertion that if, in the midst of vic a suffering world, God will not for give us. / "These boys fought and died," he continued, "that the world might be freed from all wars, and I for one will leave no stone unturned that they shall not have- died in vain. They fought to carry the privilege of liberty to the smaller nations of the earth and we must sacrifice that the free world will never again be imperiled by war. "We have met to-night to do honor to youth—to courageous, dauntless, audacious, deathless young manhood. Much as we ewe to the ripeness and prudence and wisdom of men of ma ture years, and gladly as we render tbem praise for their noble part in mobilizing the sturdy character and generous contributions in the great struggle through which we have passed, all of every age and station recognized that youth was the real defender and savior of mankind. "It was the boy out of the home of rich and <>oor alike who made an offering incomparably greater than that of the wisest servant of richest captain of industry. Each one of them gave freely and gladly, and seriously, not only all he had, but all he hoped to be. throwing into the balance his fresh vigor, his steady purpose, his clear vision, his quick action, his ability in resources and skill, which made his going into bat tle the assurance of victory. I'ralse For Home Workers "Our tribute is also given to those who offered their all and who re main to carry on the consecration to humanity they made in the days of war. Our duty to htose spared to us, the men and the women, is recog nized. How well we discharge it will be the measure of our continued de votion to the cause which won our consecration two years ago. "It was in April, 1917, that we first fully comprehend the stuff of which HE DARKENED HIS GRAY HAIR Tells How 11c Did It Mr. J. A. McCrea, a well known resident of San Francisco, who was called Daddy and Grandpa on ac count of his white hair, and who darkened it with a simple home made mixture, recently made the fol lowing statement: "Anyone can prepare a simple mixture at home, at very little cost, that will darken gray hair ifiid make it soft and glossy. To a half pint of water add 1 ounce of bay rum, a small box of Barbo Compound and ounce of glycerine. These ingre dients can be bought at any drug store at very little cost. Apply to the hair twice a week until the. de sired shade is obtained. This will make a gray-haired person look twenty years younger. It does not i color the scalp, is not sticky or greasy and does not rub off. My friends now call me 'Kid.' " STOP 1 Pains and Aches of RHEUMATISM i Swollen Joints, Neuralgia, Sciatica, J Lumbago and Neuritis, as well as j sore throat, stiff neck, colds, catarrh a rod other disorders due to inflam mation. Don't drug yourself. Use I Cell-O-San, the marvelous new dis j covery. Cell-O-San is not a drug, I not a salve, not a plaster, not ff lini- I ment. Docs not blister —does not | burn. Often gives astonishing re sults in a single night. Success or j money back. I Ask Your Druggist Today For (SllOSan SCIENTIFIC TBEATMEir^^ For sale by G. A. Gorgas' 3 Stores, Kennedy Medicine Store, J. Nelson Clark, and Croll Keller. THELOST PLEASANT WAY TO TAKE IRON Force, vigor, energy, the kind that simply overflows with rich red blood is produced by the special compound ing of iron and quinine Into the Famous Make-Man Tablets. Make- Man Tablets create new, pulsating, disease-resisting red corpuscles, strengthening the tissues that have become weakened by long overwork or sickness.- Easy and pleasant to take and con tain no injurious drugs or habit forming chemicals. Nothing' but Iron and quinine. Increase your weight. Watch the scales from the day you start taking Make-Man Tab lets. Make-Man Tablets ar6 sold at all reliable drug stores. Price 60 cents a box. Only genuine if our mono gram—M-M-T appears on each box. Distributed by Ashland Supply House, 326 W. Madison St., Chicago, ill.—Advertisement. American youths are made. Until then we had leaned on the President, I that perfection of patriotism, who had sought by every means with re gard to duty end honor, to keep this I Kepublic in the paths of peace. We depended upon other wise men, and we thought out of the fullness of ex perience and the judgment born of years, they would preserve us from the tragedy of war. "We did not put our faith in vain in leader and statesman. They were wise guides of a free people, and their deliberation and their foresight brought us through divisions and doubts into the clear united realiza tion of our national duty. But when the Congress declared that a state of war existed between this country and the Imperial German government to what strength of granite and intre pidity of courage did we turn? It was not to men in high places, serving however as well, but to the boys all about us who suddenly emerged as the very rock of our trust. "They had, as we must all recog nize, now, mainly left to older heads the course their country was to take but as destiny was crystalizing they knew it was their young feet that must tread the pathway through fire and death if the decision spelled war. "Who does not remember in those tense days, the quiet spirit of the boys and young men, and young wo men, too! They were, most of them, under the spell of the call they had resolved to answer. Sometimes their righteous indignation flamed up as a consuming Are. Some of them early hurried across the seas to tight in Canadian regiments. "These were the exceptions, the noble few. As a rule the men who were to compose the main fighting forces of America hurried nothing and evaded no duty. When the hour came—the hour of decision—they had already decided. They had set their house in order and it remained only foi the machinery of government to be set in motion and assign them the place of danger, and with a look in their eye which not even their moth ers had seen before, these lads of our 3 sailed across the seas, singing that they would not come back until it was 'over, over there.' Tribute to Dend "There was, too, the glint of steel in their eyes, out of which it re quired all their stoutness of heart t > keep back the tears as they stiffen ed the hearts of their womenfolk. 'How light hearted and Joyous they are," was the expression often heard as with purposeful look, fearing noth ing, they marched to the train or took passage on the transport. And that was what they planned for the home folks to feel. However, un derneath the happy exterior, let no body ever doubt that these youths went as seriously as they smiled blithely to the grim duty they em braced. "I sometimes wonder if those who did not and could not go with the boys will ever get over the disap pointment and regret, the longing which was in us all, no matter how hard we worked nor how much we gave ourselves at home,, to go with those who were offering the greatest sacrifice of all, and yet, here, now, lies before us the opportunity and duty of giving ourselves in the spir itual problems which the world faces to-day, even as they gave. It was theirs to die for their country. It is ours to live for it. "Short were their days. They com passed into a few years a rich, full life and went quickly to the heaven of the brave. Our duties, calling for no such military courage as they possessed, are not less worthy or less important if we catch the heavenly vision of service and are not disobe dient to it. It is our privilege and duty, even as we erect monuments and set up memorials in our sacred houses of worship in memory of those who gave their lives, to erect in our hearts the white cross of their memory, symbolic as it is of that cross on Calvary—the cross of sac- I "f^ < G "Shortly after the signing of the armistice it was my privilege to visit the battlefields of France where 2,- 000,000 Americans battled glori ously as crusaders of right. How men could go forward in the bursting fury of Argonne aud like bloody ground is beyond understanding. Those who survived seek to forget the blackness of the night. "The outstanding memory of a visit to the sacred places in France where brave men loved to die—made sacred by their death—is not the devastated villages, the ruined cities, the ground converted into billowy seas of de struction, though the photograph of these scenes of desolation mirrored on the eye can never fade. It is the uplifted white cross marking the graves of our best beloved who sleep in that loved soil. No majestic or enduring monuments mark their resting places No tablet tells their deeds. For them 'no storied urns or animated busts.' "If they could speak to us they would tell us they wish no epitaphs on their graves other than the im mortal words: 'We who rest here die content.' Officer and private lie side by side in the demtjpracy of death. Each grave of the 50,000 is marked by a simple white cross, symbol of truth that they gave their lives in the spirit of the Christ, and evermore the rows has a new and blessed personal meaning and uplift to us, teaching that those are the greatest among us, who following in His train find death in the place of duty. "We speak to-day of the heroes of the World War as if they were dead but ought we not rather to feel that they live and live foreever, always by their sacrifices stimulating us to pa triotic achievement? There is no death to those who do not face it. "These men, we lovingly call them boys of this church, whose passing leaves the world poorer are not dead. They can never die because they will never be forgotten." Eagle Boat Aground; Wires For Assistance New York. Dec, 9.—The U. S. S. Eagle, No. 14, aground between Lit tle Egg Inlet and Abeccon Inlet, has sent out a wireless message asking assistance from all vessels which may be near. The little war craft left New York yesterday. The Eagle boat has lost her pro peller and is now anchored in 12 feet of water. She drove nine feet. The sea is rough and it is raining hard. Coast guards from Little Egg Har bor went to the aid of the Eagle boat in a power launch and with their assistance the officers and crew of the disabled craft were able to put out anchors. The coast guards re ported on their return that the Eagle boat was in no immediate danger and the torpedo boat Winslow was on her way to Little Egg Harbor from the Brooklyn navy yard and would take the submarine chaser in tow to-day. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JAP-MEXICAN PACT WAS URGED, FALL LEARNED Germany Also Promised Fi nancial Aid in the Plot Against U. S. Washington, Dec. 9. —Among the information secured by Senator Fall's committee in leaking an investiga tion of the Mexican conditions, and which the committee regards as re liable, indicates treaty negotiations between Mexico and Japan. The document in possession of the com mittee states that one high official of Mexico would communicate to an other big official "the treaty with Japan is coming along" and that the writer is convinced of the "great advantages it would bring Mexico for its national integrity." Reference is contained in another document to the support the Mexi can government proposes to give German commercial initiative in Mexico Senator Fall's comment on the plan of revolution t disclosed in the minutes of the todge meeting is that it would appear "preposterous, ridic ulous and so fanastic as of itself to deserve little attention were it not first, for the fact, that it is similar in all essentials to the plan of San Diego, which the only judicial trib unal passing upon the question de clared to have been backed or sup ported by armed forceg, through a state of war by V. Carranza in 1915; and second, were it not for the ,fact that the plan of San Diego itself ante dating, and this present plan follow ing, were and are in exact line with the note of June 19, 1917, from Zim mermann to Von Eckhart, then am bassador from Germany to Mexico." Promised Mexico Report The Zimmerman note contained the paragraph: "We (Germany) shall give general financial support (to Mexico) and it is understood that Mexico is to reconquer the lost territor in New Mexico, Texas and Arizona." In this connection the memorandum called attention to the suggestion in the Zimmerman note that Mexico communicate with Japan suggesting adherence to the plan and offer her mediation be tween Japan and Germany. The evidence in possession of the committee, Senator Fall informed the President yesterday, indicates that conditions now along the bor der are "rapidly taking on the same character which had been assumed in our relations with Mexico prior and subsequent to' the date fixed for the uprisings under "the plan of San Diego. The New Mexico Senator support ed his recent charges that radical literature advocating the Soviet form of government was being distributed by the Mexican embassy and the consulates of Mexico in the United States by an account of the manner in which the information was se curred. A copy of the booklet was procured from the embassy by mail ing a request to the embassy, the Senator said, adding that admission by the author, Arthur Thomson, that the Mexican government was aiding him in the distribution of his article and that it had secured from him several thousand copies, is contained in a letter written in reply to one signed by a German name. Secures "Blue Book" The committee, the memorandum said, has obtained possession to what President Carranza calls his "blue book." At various places in this book attention is called to "the op pressive policy" of the United States towards Mexico and stress is laid upon the assertion that President Carranza has resisted every such en croaohment and in every instance "from the first proposed Niagara conference down to and including the American protests as to nation alization of lands and other proper ties," that he has been successful by "refusing absolutely to yield in any respect to the demands" of this Gov ernment. The memorandum also contained a copy of a letter said to have been written by Carranza to Miss Hermila Galindo, who had written a book en titled "The Carranza Doctrine." The Mexican president's note to her con cerned a second book which he said he wished her to write and with this in view he was sending her a copy of the "blue book," which he said would justify the attitude of his govern ment in its "systematic hostility to wards foreign speculators, especially Americans and English." "Do not forget my injunction," Carranza wrote, "to describe in lively colors the tortuosity of the Ameri can policy with relatibn to our coun try, causing the figure of Wilson to stand well out as the director of that policy." Oil Company Charged With Unjust Prices in Selling Its Product Pittsburgh, Dec. 9.—District rep resentatives of the United States Government filed in Federal court here a suit against the Transconti nental Oil Company of Pittsburgh, in which the allegation was made that the concern had charged unjust and unreasonable prices for fuel oil. Five officials of the company are named as defendants The suit charged that the com pany and the officials named sold 15,000 barrel of fuel oil for $3.50 a barrel to an Ohio concern, which sale, it was said, was "contrary to the form of the act of Congress in such case provided." Several other sales of fuel oil by the company, held in violation of the law by Fed eral authorities, were cited in the suit. Julian Alden Weir, Noted Artist, Dies New York, Dec. 9.—Julian Alden Weir, noted artist and president of the National Academy, died in his home here yesterday after a long illness caused by heart trouble. Mr. Weir was the son of Robert Weir, one of the foremost painters of his day. He studied under Gerome at Paris and won honorable men tion in the Paris salon in 1881. His work showed a wide catholicity of taste, although many of his best known pictures are portraits. Paint ings by Mr. .Weir are to be found in many of "the public galleries of art in the United States and in some foreign countries. AUTOIST KSOAPKS A*TKH STRIKING MAN Striking David A. Lutz, 66 years old. of near Camp Hill, while the lat ter was walking along a road near his home, an unidenti.ted automobil ist, sped away wit) out offering as sistance. Lutz suffered a fractured leg and a probable fracture of the hand. He is at the Harrisburg Hos (ltal. CHO-CHO GETS WARM WELCOME IN SCHOOL Laughing Youngsters Learn Health Hints From the Famous Clown's Pantomine; Christmas Seal Sales Are Growing Steadily Before fwo groups of cheering, laughing children, Cho-Cho, the health clown and a "one-man cir cus," entertained more than 2,500 boys and girls of the Allison Hill school buildings in the Edison High School auditorium yesterday after noon. But he not only entertained tbem, he taught them some valuable health hints and taught them in such a way that the children are not likely to forget them soon. Who ever heard of a child forgetting a clown and his pranks? In true clown fashion Cho-Cho made his appearance yesterday aft ernoon. He paraded down the aisle making faces, and turned the audi torium into an uproar of merriment. Then he climbed on the stage after many unsuccessfu attempts. Seatin ghimself on a table with his basket of fruits, vegetables and a bottle of milk, Cho-Cho told the youngsters that all the teachers had been excused and could take a holi day. "I'm going to be teacher or I won't play," Cho-Cho said and the children howled their approval. Combining his talk to them with plenty of comic antics, Cho-Cho be gan his lesson by telling the chil dren to drink plenty of milk and water. He asked them how many had milk for breakfast, told that group he was glad they had, and then asked how many had tea or coffee, and warned them that these drinks had no food value and were injurious to children. From his basket he took the va riety of vegetables one at a time, and held them before the children. He told them which ones should be eaten and which should not. Cu cumbers and peppers came under Cho-Cho's ban, and he also told them that raw cabbage was not good for them. The frying pan and the coffee pot. "BILLY" DANSEY MAY HAVE BEEN SHOT FOR DOG Woman's Testimony at In quest Leads to New Ar rests in Mystery Hanunoiitoii. N. J., Dec. 9.—Thej action of the authorities yesterday j in the arrest of Charles S. White J for the murder of "Billy" Dansey, i and Miss Edith Jones, housekeeper for Councilman Edward H. White, j father of Charles White, follows j reports in circulation about a week ago that the dectectives in the case were following a clue which de veloped during the inquest. The prisoners are to-day in jail at Mays Landing. During the inquest testimony was submitted by Mrs. White, wife of the prisoner, to the effect that "Billy's" dog "Jack" had been shot in the legs a few days before the disappearance of the child. The j matter was quickly passed over by j the prosecutor, apparently to avoid ! arousing suspicious of suspects. The reports in regard to this fea- ■ ture of the mystery were to the ef fect that the presence of "Billy" and his dog, inseparable companions, was objectionable to a worker in a dahlia field near the Dansey home and that the dog had been shot by that individual. The detective, it is reported, came to the conclusion that the person who shot the dog possessed knowledge of the boy's I fate. It was believed that he might i ! have shot at or kicked at the dog; i and struck "Billy" instead, inflicting j a wound that caused the child's j i death. The body of three-year-old "Billy" | Dansey was found by a hunter in a swamp near here on November 21. The little boy had disappeared from his home several weeks previ ously and a nation-wide search had been conducted for him on the th.e- \ ory that kidnappers were responsible for his vanishing. • White is the owner of the "Dahlia farm," adjoining the Dansey farm. He is 29 years old and the father of "Charlie" White, the child playmate of Billy Dansey. The elder White told the investigators g.t the time of Billy's disappearance that he had ; seen the child in his dahlia fields. When the body was discovered by | Dr. Louis R. Souder, the county j physician, who examined it, said that there was no evidence of foul play but that the vital organs and ail j parts of the body which would have aided in disclosing how the boy died had disappeared. Edmund C. Gaskill, county prose cutor, declared to-night that he had sufficient evidence to show that the boy was murdered and to clear up the mystery surrounding his death. He refused, however, to give any information as to the grounds on which the warrants were secured against White and Miss Jones. WM. WALSH, LITERARY FIGURE, IS DEAD Philadelphia. Dec. 9. William Shepard Walsh, a literury figure of Philadelphia and New York for 40 years, died at the home of his sister here yesterday. He was 65 years old. Mr. Walsh's career included the DON'T BE WITHOUT SLOAN'SLINIMENT Keep it bandy—lt knows no equal in relieving pains and aches SLOAN'S LINIMENT has been sold for 38 years. Today, it is more popular than ever. There can be but one answer—it produces results. Applied without rubbing, It pene trates to the afflicted part, bringing relief from rheumatic twinges, sci atica, sore, stiff, strained muscles,' lume back, and other exterior pains and sprains and the result of ex posure. It leaves no mussiness, stain, clogged pores. Get a large bottle for greater economy. Keep it hamly for use When needed. Your druggist has It. Three sises—35c., 70c., $1.40. I Sloan's Li n i mcnt | /iff/) it tuiiirfv Cho-Cho declared, are two things which do more harm to children than anything else he could tell about. He warned against eating doughnuts or anything else made in a frying pan. When he lied up a bar of sweet chocolate every boy and girl cried out that they ate candy. "That's right," Cho-Cho told them, and the youngsters cheered and applauded him. - . "But always eat candy and choc olate after a meal. Take it to the table with you; don't eat it be tween meals. That is when it takes away your appetite and then a few hours later when you should eat a hearty meal you are not hungry," the clown advised. He told them how to sleep at night, said they should take at least two baths a week, brush their teeth from one to three times a day, sleep with the windows open and plenty of other important health hints. Cho-Cho came to Harrisburg for the Anti-Tuberculosis Society of Dauphin County, to conduct health meetings for the children at the same time that the Red Cross Christ mas Seal campaign was being held here. Reports received by D. D. Ham melbaugh, chairman of the Seal committee, indicate a record sajp of seals this year. In many of the schools in the city and county the children are selling the seals quick ly and orders for more are being received by Mr. Hammelbaugh through the teachers. To-morrow afternoon Cho-Cho will appear at the Camp Curtin Ju nior High School auditorium when the school children in the uptown dis trict will hear him. Friday after noon he will be at the Chestnut Street auditorium and the pupils in the buildings of the central dis trict will go to see him. authorship of seven books, the edi torship of Lippincott's Magazine for 15 years prior to 1886. He was also at one time literary editor of the New York Herald. tonution SAVS He ran l si "I have regained a firm grip on health," said James McNally, 302 Belgrade St., Phila., a P. R. T. con ductor. "Catarrh of the stomach caused me a lot of suffering before Tanlac relieved me. My stomach became inflamed, food would not digest but would form gas and poi sons. I now have a keen appetite my food digests right I sleep ele gantly and get up with a clear head and throat. I actually feel 100 per cent, better —thanks to THnlac." Catarrh is usually detected by sueh common symptoms as droppings in the throat, frequent sneezing, bad breath, coughing of mucus, head aches, watery eyes, imperfect diges tion, gastritis, sniffling and fullness in the head. Tanlac was designed to combat catarrh and to bring about an astonishing change in the spirits and general condition' of the victims. Tanlac is sold here by all leading druggists. The Acme of Perfection Graupner's Select The following analysis should convince you of the high grade quality of our beverage ANALYSIS Specific gravity 1.01994 Apparent extract : 4.98% Real Extract 5.11% Extract of original wort 5.70% Acidity as Lactic Acid 0.09% Sugar 2.61% Sugar degree 70.94% Ash 0.10%- Alcohol, by weight 0.28% Alcohol, by volume 0.35% The above results indicate, contrary to prejudicial opinion, that our beverage has a perfectly normal composition. It is pro duced from an infusion of pure MALT and Hops." Owing to the nature of its constituents, such as sugar proteids and mineral phosphates, the beverage offers a food of considerable nutritive value. \ It's slight contents of alcohol and lactic acid make it a bever age of distinct stimulating properties and of high digestibility. The value of this beverage, from a dietetic standpoint, is due to its adoption of a special pure cultivation process and the most careful hygienic methods during finishing. Ask For Graupner's Select A trial order will convince Robert H. Graupner Brewery DECEMBER 9. 1919 GETTYSBURG COLLEGE TO RAISE IIA'LF MILLION The board of trustees of Pennsyl vania College, Gettysburg, at a meet ing in Zion Lutheran Church, yes-1 j==a The Welcome Cjift Surprise your wife, mother or |H| ! m daughter this Christmas by presenting i|| eee her with the electric washer she has so §|| much desired. Nothing will bring her more happiness or lighten the home I|] SEE work so much as the practical gift of an ||| ■ A'&C i I Super Flecffic g| ===■ America's Leading Wishing Machine E~ It is the electric washer she would m E= buy because it is the only full cabinet == machine having the revolving'reversing EE = cylinder principle of washing, and is eas* EE == iest for her to understand and operate. = We will gladly demonstrate it to your |= satisfaction, and arrange for its purchase |= on easy payment plan if desired. E— Come in or telephone about the ~ A-B-C Xmas Gift Certificate c== U Harrisburg Electric Supply H == Company H Electrical Supplies === EE: 24-26 South Market Square EE ~ HARRISBURG, PA. H terday decided to launch a cam paign for an additional $500,000 fol endowment purposes. Details will be arranged during the coming yeai by a committee appointed yesterday, ' Decision was also made to raise th I salaries of members of the faculty.' 15
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers