Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, December 12, 1919, Page 13, Image 13

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    OXFORD ASKS FOR
AID FROM STATE
Cambridge, Too, in Need of
Money; Big Change in
Old British Schools
London, Dec. 12. —Oxford and
Cambridge universities have ap
plied for financial assistance from
the state. The government has re
sponded by appointing a commis
sion to inquire into the matter.
The chairman of the commission is
the former Premier Herbert H.
Asquith.
There is no doubt in the public
mind that both the famous univer
sities are hard up but so also is
the state and the present is not con
sidered the most suitable time for
obtaining any considerable grant
from it.
Meanwhile many of the under
graduates are finding it difficult to
make both ends meet owing to the
Buy a Primrose Cream Separator
IT WILL PAY YOU
You can figure out
bearing and quiet gear
ship and materials,
close skimming and
durable qualities, are
cow farmers use them
The PRIMROSE is the onjy cream separator that automatically
dratns out the used oil from the gear case when new oil is added.
Come in and let us demonstrate this ami other points.
If it is not convenient for you to call, phone us and we will bring
a PRIMROSE Separator out to you.
POTTS MANUFACTURING CO.
Mechanicsburg, Pa.
Qua/z7i/
Does She Own a
Bracelet Watch?
Perhaps that is the solution to your most puzzling Gift problem.
If she doesn't own a wrist watch, of either Bracelet, or Ribbon
pattern—then your problem is solved!
There's no more extensive selection of fine Bracelet and Wrist
Watches in the city than is shown in this-big Gift Store. Every
one of the more popular designs of the world's most prominent
watch-makers are here In gorgeous assortment.
And what is more, there's a model here to fit every Gift need, at a
price perhaps lower than you expected to pay.
Good substantial timekeepers they are, of most dainty design in
all the conventional shapes and sizes. Many are Diamond mount
cd, most beautifully chased. Prices range in easy stages from
$lO, sls, S2O, S3O, SSO, SIOO, and up to S6OO
/
Beautiful Strap Watches
For Gifts
Your choice of either Elgin or Waltham movements
will be found in this big assortment of Strap Watches.
Every shape is represented among these beautiful
little time-keepers, in nickel, silver and gold-filled, in
cluding the popular Cushion, Tonneau and Round
models. Prices are from
$5 to $35
Jacob Tausig Sons
Diamond Merchants & Jewelers
420 Market St. Opposite Depot Entrance
FRIDAY EVENING,
inflated cost of living. Efforts are
being made by invoking the profi
teering act to enable them to pro
cure necessities at less cost.
Before the war it was possible for
an unusually gifted youth to win
scholarships which almost if not
quite maintained him. Now when
the minimum sum on which he can
support himself while at either of
the universities amounts to from
?1,300 to 11,500 a year he cannot
live on scholarships. The very nar
row bridge by which the poor man
might pass into the old universities
has broken down. It is alleged
that an education at Oxford or
Cambridge has become again the
exclusive* privilege of the well-to-do.
HAI.I. CAINE'S TITLE
Sir Ilall Caine has written to a
Manx paper which had familiarly ad
dressed him as "Sir Thomas." "there
by going back to the name by which
1 was known among my kin folk when
I was a hoy."
He wishes to hall-mark his name,
which stands for forty years of
friendship and success "which have
been sweet, and perhaps for some
failures that have left no sting."
So he adds: "Please let it be Hall
Caine, with or without the prefix."
Finds His Eyesight
Fails While Painting
Edith Cayell Picture
London, Dec. 12. —While engaged
on a large picture dealing with the
fate of Edith X. Cavell, Mr. Van
Ruith, a veteran painter, discovered
that his eyesight was failing.
Oculists predicted that the paint
er, who is 80 years of age, would
lose his sight .in a few months.
Neverthless he persevered and add
ed the last touches to his work on
the anniversary of the armistice.
Says Prohibition Has
No Chance in Britain
London, Dec. 12.—State purchase
of Great Britain's liquor trade would
1 j involve an outlay of % 1,500,000,000,
I according to the committee which
| has been preparing for the Labor
j party campaign for the nationaliza
tion of the business. Prohibition,
the committee asserts, does not
stand a chance, but the British pub
lic wants an improvement in the
standard of public houses.
Hearings on Merchant
Marine Begin January 12
I Washington, Dec. 12. Hearings
:on permanent legislation affecting
the American merchant marine will
I begin before the Senate Commerce
Committee January 12. The commit
tee also decided to hold hearings
January 8 on measures to adjust
claims of shipbuilders given war
contracts for wooden vessels.
Camden, N. J., to Save
Daylight; Bill Prepared
j Camden, Dec. 12. Camden is
I going to adopt daylight saving, de
| spite the action of Congress in re-
I pealing the National daylight sav-
I ing law. At a meeting of Camden
city- council yesterday afternoon
City Solicitor E. G. C. Bleakley was
instructed to draw up the neces
sary ordinance.
NO HEADACHE OR
NEURALGIA PAIN
Get a 10-Cent Package of Dr.
James' Headache Powders
and Don't Suffer
When your head aches you simply
must have relief or you will go wild,
i It's needles* to suffer when you can
| take a remedy like Dr. James' Head
j ache Powders and relieve the pain
: and neuralgia at once. Send some-
J one to the drug store now for a dime
'package, of Dr. James' Headache
| Powders. Don't suffer. 11l a few
[moments you will feel fine—head
'ache gone—no more neuralgia lain.
HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH
CHURCH TO GIVE
WAR PAGEANT
Holy Cross Congregation to
Present Costumed Event
Next Week
The Church of The Holy Cross,
is arranging for a huge entertain
ment "The World-War Pageant,"
to bo given in the Chestnut street
auditorium, commencing at 7.50 p.
in. Quite a number of the leading
colored people of the city and vi
cinity are taking part on the pro
gram, and the affair promises great
success. A good deal of interest is
being manifested by ,lf\embers of
i other denominations, as well as by
| those of "The Church of The Holy
Cross." All are determined to
make this the largest and most suc
cessful entertainment ever given in
Harrisburg for church work.
The nations that were engaged in
the recent Great World-War will
be represented on the stage in the
order in which they entered the
war, dressed in their respective na
tional costume.
_ A prize will be given to the best
National Representative, according
to the opinion of the judges; and
another prize will be given to the
person who sells the greatest num
ber of tickets for the event. Tick
ets are now on sale, and may be
bad from the church workers and
at "The Holy Cross Rectory," corner
of Forster and Cowden streets.
A band will furnish music.
Court Refuses Wife,
Aged 19, Alimony From
Husband Who Is 17
New York, Dec. 12.—"Girls who
marry husbands under age, then
have a spat with them, need not ex
pect alimony," said Justice Green
baum of the Supreme Court, yester
day, denying the motion of 19-year
old Mrs. Jennie Siegel asking that
her 17-year-old husband, Samuel
Siegel, Brooklyn, be required to pay
her alimony and counsel fees pend
ing the determination of the action
against him for seperation.
Booze Leaks Through
the Canadian Border
Watertown, N. Y„ Dec. 12.—Tales
of border running that rival the
most thrilling yarns of olden days
develop almost daily in northern
New York since prohibition made
importation of liquor from Canada
a profitable business for those will
ing to take a chance. Barely a night,
or day enther, that does not pro
duce its episode of strange and pow
erful motor cars #r mysWrious craft
speeding through the channels of the
Thousand Islands.
Voluntary Training
if Universal Fails
Washington, Dec. 12.—Voluntary
military training may be agreed
upon by Congress as a compromise
in event universal training is re
jected, according to Senators of the
Military Committee.
."If we find that Congress will not
enact universal training, we might
as a compromise authorize voluntary
training and get 150,000 to 200,000
volunteers out of the class of 1919,"
Senator Frelinghuysen, New Jersev,
said.
Counterfeiters Are
Busy in Mexico City
[ Mexico City, Dec. 12.—Following
close upon a shortage of - small
change in the capital, counterfeiters
turned out large quantities of spuri
ous coins, mostly 50-cent pieces,
which were so cleverly made that
they virtually defied detection. The
Secretary of the Treasury issued a
warning against them.
Actresses Wash and
Iron Their Own Clothes
London, Dec. 12. Flat irons and
saucepans are replacing the Pekin
gese pup and lunch basket of the
touring acress now-a-days.
This change has been brought
about by the scarcity of coal and
gas In provincial towns and by ex
cessive charges for laundry work.
Actresses have to warm their food
over the gas jet after a night per
formance and during the day use
the saucepan to heat water for wash
ing clothes. Then the flat irons are
brought into use.
Rogues Gallery Lost
by Fire in Buffalo
Bpffalo. Dec. 12. The police
headquarters was destroyed by a
fire yesterday and the Bertilion rec
ord and rogues gallery, which were
on the third floor, were lost. This
collection was considered one of the
best in the country.
TOO LONG TIME TO WAIT
TO SRTTLK KOU DIIINKS
One hot day in summer a grave
digger wns very busy, so he sent his
half-witted son to the "puh" for some
refreshments and told him to tell the
publican that he would pay him when
he got finished.
When the boy came back he was
emnty handed.
The father asked him why he did
not get the refreshments;
The boy said: "Because he chased
me when I told him that you would
pay him when you came out of the
grave."
DANGER AT BUNKER HILL
Washington, Dec. 12.—During a
discussion in the House of Represen
tatives yesterday Representative
James J. Brennan asserted that
Bunker Hill monument at Boston
was insecure in many places. He
said that there were many places
where there was no cement between
the stones.
DISAPPROVES "BLUE LAWS"
Baltimore, Dec. 12.—A jury in the
criminal court has voted its disap
proval of the enforcement of the
so-called "blue laws" when a ver
dict of acquittal was returned in
favor of Benjamin I. Jaffee, confec
tioner, who was indicted for selling
cigars and soda water on Sunday.
DR. ISAAC SHARPLESS ILL
Philadelphia, Dec. 12.—Dr. Isaac
Sharpless, president-emeritus of
Haverford College, is seriously ill at
his home in Haverford. Doctor
Sharpless hus been ill since Thanks
giving with heart trouble.
MANY MIXES IN NORTH SEA
Berlin, Dec. 12.-—German naval
authorities have been backward in
removing mines from German
wnters, according to a Hamburg dis
patch to the Vossische Zeltung.
'use McNeil's Pain Exterminator—Ad
Pastor Takes Job in
Shop to Gain Living
Pouglikecpsle, N. Y.— There is a
merry row in the First Baptist
Church in Beacon street, because the
pastor, the Rev. Howard J. Kingdon,
whose salary as pastor is SI,OOO a
year, has taken a Job in a local fac
tory The pastor explained that he
was no longer able to live on SI,OOO
a year, over in Bencon, and that thj
high cost of living has driven him to
take up hat making as a side line.
lhe protests against the pastor's ac
tion is led by a score of members of
the church who went on strike at the
hat factory a few months ago. The
strike is still on. Pastor Kingdon is
characterized by his enemies as a
strikebreaker.
CUT THIS OUT
Ot,n ENGLISH RECIPE FOR CA
TARRH, CATARRH *l. DEAENESS
AND HEAD NOISES
If you know of some one who Is
troubled with Catarrhal Deafness,
bead noises or ordinary catarrh cut
out this formula and hand it to them
and you may have been the means of
saving some poor sufferer perhaps
from total deafness. In England sci
entists for a long time past have
recognized that catarrh is a consti
tutional disease and necessarily re
quires constitutional treatment.
Sprays, inhalers and nose douches
are liable to irritate the delicate air
passages and force the disease Into
the middle ear which frequently
means total deafness, or else the dis
ease may be driven down the air
passages towards the lungs which is
equally as dangerous. The following
formula which is used extensively In
the damp English climate is a con
stitutional treatment and should
prove, especially efficacious to suffer
ers here who live under more fa
vorable climate conditions.
Secure from your druggist 1 ounce
of Parmint (Double strength). Take
this home and add to It <4 pint of hot
water and a little granulated sugar;
stir until dissolved. Take one table
spoonful four times a day. This will
often bring quick relief from dis
tressing head noises. Clogged nos
trils should open, breathing become
easy and hearing improve as the in
flammation In the eustachian tubes is
reduced. Parmint used in this wav
acts directly upon the blood tand
mucus surfaces of the svstem and
has a tonic action that helps to ob
tain the desired results. The prepar
ation is easy to make, costs little and
Is pleasant to take. Every person
who has catarrh or head noises or Is
hard of hearing should give this treat
ment a trial.
I j I.
1 WhkJ^Pfwrwgwpi^WiUYou^^L
i Have For Christmas? B
SH W hen yoi*go to buy your Christinas phonograph, judge its quality by
its artistic excellence, the richness and body of its tone. Any phonograph
may have a beautiful case and a pleasing tone when seen and heard alone,
81 but remember this, phonographs are like twins, you can best tell them apart
when you see and hear them together. Do you want a fair, honest and com-
H plete comparison of the four leading makes? • IB'
8 Edison— Vocation—Sonora I
*
■ We will help you make it. No need to Do you sec what the Turntable gives you?
shop around. Here in our store we have in- „It puts each instrument squarely up against
stalled the famous Turntable comparison— the best its rival can do. It gives you musi
where you hear each instrument under the cal facts, and enables you to detect the slight- ■■
■ same conditions at the same time. First, one est difference in sound, volume and tone
instrument faces you and plays, then a rival quality. Hear this Turntable comparison,
instrument faces you and plays the same tomorrow then you'll know, beyond all
selection, then a third and a fourth. guess-work, which is the best phonograph.
I Come Tomorrow ■
Decide which phonograph you want for Christmas—have us set it aside
f0r il } b° U 'd' r ma^ C im " lediate de bvery. Prices are about equal and settlement
ijjjlßl
I J. H. Troup Music House B
I Troup Building 15 So. Market Sq, B
J (Directly Opposite Market Sq. Presbyterian Church)
Mr. Kingdon claims that he can be
a factory worßer and preacher at the
same time if the members of his
church will let him. In additton to
his salary as pastor, Mr. Kingdon has
the free use of the church paronage.
As a hat maker he can double his
Income. He says he will not resign
hit pastorate unless forced to do so.
I FREE SATURDAY FREE j
Buster Brown Xmas Story Book and £
1 Lb. Baking Powder For 55c *
! GRAND UNION TEA STORE §
208 North Second Street * |j
DECEMBER 12, 1919.
BOCYT-MKNDING AT HOME
The calllng-up of the village boot
maker or "cobbler" has seriously af
fected domestic convenience in many
rural districts.
His importance is suddenly recognized,
and his loss has, in several Isolated Mid-
land hamlets, given a relnarkable stim
ulus to boot-memdlng at home.
Technical classes in soling, heeltap
and patching have been arranged, and
country women are rapidly acquiring
the art of cobbling. L-ady Petre de
clares that It should be as natural to do
this at home as to darn stotSklngs.
13