' CHILD DISFIGURED FDD MEJjIMS Pimples Spread All Over Face. 1 Itching and Burning Intense. Could Not Sleep. One Cake Cuti cura Soap and One Box Cuticura u , Ointment Healed Her. f Water St., Maj-ville, N. Y.—"When my little tiaughter wu three y«ara old I noticed m hard dry scale on her forehead. Her face broke out In ptanples. It //.nV7\ spread all over her face, * M'lV y \ dtaHforlng her for three monthn. It caused the !% , , | skin to crack opea and bleed. I had to hold her hands or f she voutd scratch her face till h would bleed, the ttch - tag and btmilng were so interna. It would itch and bare so she could not sleep. "She was under treaunaat for a year but It didnt help her. Then 1 used Cuticura Soap and Ointment and she fooiid relief right away. It took one cake of Cutictir* Soap and one boa of Catk-ura Ointment to heal her." (Signed' Mrs. E. L. Adams, June 13. 19114. Sample Each Free by Mall With 33-p. Skta Book on request. Ad dress post-card t'.uricwn. Dept. T. Bos ton." Sold throughout the world. AID SOUGHT BY RUMANIA FROM U. S. DIPLOMATS London, .lan. B.—A dispatch to the "Morning Post" from Paris says that it is teamed from a private source, but ''one worthy of credence, that arrange ments by which the interests of Ru mania at Berlin and Vienna will be at tended to by the I'nited States, have been definitely made. This can mean but one thing. According to n\em Paris, Jan. 8. 3.10 A. M.—A Ma Sdrid dispatch to " L'lnfornuation" •«»tate« that the German auxiliary cruiser • Otavi has been interned at Lac Pal- Jmas, Canary Islands. ■ m The German steamer Otavi arrival Jet Las Palmas on January 5. She was •previously reported on December 3, as Sbeing at Peraambuco. There has been JJno mention heretofore that the Otavi nhad been converted into an auxiliary £ cruiser but it is likeilv that she was JJused by the German cruiser Karlsruhe ttiie a supply ship. m • Two More Relief Ships Off Baltimore, Jan. S. —Bearing a cargo JJof supplies for Belgium, valued at •-$4 50,000, the Maryland relief ship •John Hardie sailed from here late yes- Sterday. 5 Boston, Jan. S.—The Belgian relief Jslup Harpalyce. bearing on her sides J large canvas signs with the inscription < 'oomiission Belgium Relief, Rotter 2, on informa tion furnished by Shearer's children. The Harrisburg Hospital is open 1 daily except Sunday, between 1 and 2 i o'clock p. nu for dispensing medieal advice and prescription to those un- I able to pay for them. OF INTEREST TO WOMEN THE SMART SEPARATE WAIST AND SHIRT Braid and Buttons Favored Trimmings for Dree»— aad Salts—The Little OU'i Hair New Yortt, Jan. 8. The separate waist is an established custom. Not necessarily the plain or tailored waist, but the dainty, dress af fair of net, lace, chiffon, silk, batiste, fine linen or voile. These waists are made in varions ways, from the simple waist af all one fabric to the one de veloped in two or more. A Simple Evening Frock of Chiffon and Taffeta One fascinating French waist of white crepe de chine trimmed in black was made with :i vest in the front of finely hand-tucked white chiffon. The sleeves, although set in to the armhole very plainly, seemed a little fuller through the arm than the sleeves we hove had recently. A deep cuff finished the bottom of the sleeves. A rouud collar, which was wired to stand up in In Covert Oloth Comes a Short Jumper- Waist and Full Skirt the back anil came to a alight V in the neck, was used on the waist. The only trimming was a border of black crepe de chine cut in a Grecian square i>at tern and applied by hand to the collar. You—Or lb Om fitn enonto bsbaid. V—iilUiiMwlmlwfH luiii ihfiii*aliuihllin RairTantc in our opinion is the bcatjmir tonreon ! Uimiiwifal, BoldomJ^ijyufr^SDtacnto. Gaorge A. Gorgaa. Free-peeKn*, seedless, firm and tender— Ke*llhiulyr m food for every day. jr • **• Use Sunldst Lemons » s'"*^ Order Sunkist Lemons, too. Use Sankist Lemons taste best and look/ ,M - * their juice for salads and in other dishes best on the table. Serve sliced or >* M»IIM mi. «*■(*» »»«»•»«! that usually ctOl for vinegar. quartered with fish, meats or tea,yr ™TS. {SSk."h«J[S^S^ u 3 Lemon juice is more healthful-more £/T £ of it should be use^ifubT»»ti™r. year. Note the added delicacy of flavor, beautiful silver premiums, jt s»m Swt roapM for /Vtmhrni Litt thowing this jT AMrtu ~ W« rMMntw thi* Sifomr. W* rmfmnJ thm triflm X>" *ayt»gH it it mot tatUfaciory in m—ryiomy. cuffs, and down the outer edge of the vest. Although the waists with the small armhole seem to be very popular there are to be seen waists with the raglau armhole, and very handsome waists they are. One made with these raglan sleeves and a surplice front was de veloped in finely tucked not. Accompanying the separate waist is the separate skirt, usually a suit skirt. It is made in various ways, usually to correspond with the jacket it is to go with. With the advent of wider skirts, they are made, as a rule, circular or gored. The yoked skirts have also been having quite a vogue—the yokes cut straight around and in points on the hips or in the front, giving a wide variety in the development of skirts and helpful suggestions for the making over of skirts. Although made up in the same mate rial, the model used for the second il lustration shows a smart model for the separate waist and skirt. The waist is called the Elsie Poiret waist, because introduced by Poiret's sister. It is often made in silk and worn with skirts of a different material and color. The skirt shows the close-fitting line with the attached circular flounce, which gives width and flare to the lower edge of the skirt. The model in one material is de veloped in covert cloth, which is by far the most popular material now on the market. It is shown developed into one-piece dresses, suits and coats. Aside from fur, braid is the most popular of the winter's trimmings. Nar row Hercules is used to bind edges, and the wide Hercules for banding on the bottom of tunics, skirts and jackets. The most practical and popular of the braids, however, are the narrow sou tache braids. These are used for braid iug designs on coats, jackets, skirts and dresses. Several rows of it are used for banding in place of the wide Her cules braid. Buttons are also used to a great ex tent as trimming. The round bone but tons are very good, as well as the cloth covered buttons, to match the dress or suit they are worn upon. Many of the covert cloth suits and dresses are trimmed with ball buttons covered with the covert. The buttonholes arc bound BASEBALL EVANGELIST AROUSING PHILADELPHIA BY UNIQUE PULPIT ORATORY AND PEPPERY SERMONS f^ N :, mi VJ^ "Billy" Sunday, twentieth ceatory evangeliat, one-time star baee rawer and ceatre fielder of "Pop" Anoon'i old White Sox. has the staid city of Philadelphia eating out of his band. The kind of gospel the Reverend "Billy" la handing to Philadelphia le something quite new to that town, and probably to any other east of the Rocky Mountains, except tboee which he has already awakened and which have witnessed earlier what he calla "The Chautauqua salute to God," with which be opens his extraodinary re vival services. The huge tabernacle, which was built for the occasion, holds sixty thousand persona, and it it crowded to its capacity at every service. Hero are a few samples of "Billy's" palpit oratory that is arouta| Philadelphia's religions fervor: — "The Clay and Webster .and Calhoun and Douglas and Lincoln type of American cltisen has been supplanted by tke good for nothing, God forsaken, lick spittle, peanut headed, weasel eyed, whiskey soaked,, ram gnisHag giu gutzling politicians of onr day. "Down here the deril has forced the lame, bat the devil would have cold feet and pneumonia In twenty-few hours if we'd get busy and ltve the first twenty versos of the Sermon on the Mount "Some woukt-be Christians are so stingy that they woald steal rtlos from a blind spider. There are otheca m mean that they sing through their noeea to save wear and tear oa their false teeth." / instead of buttonholed with matching si JK . In the first illustration is an evening frock of delightfully simple lines. The bodice is partly of chiffon and partly of taffeta. The upper or yoke portion of the skirt is of taffeta, while the skirt is of bordered chiffon. Developed in shell-pink or apricot color the dress is charming, as well as in white, light green or canary color. The dress might be developed attractively in charmeuse, with the bodice partly of charmeuse and partly of lace or net. Children's clothes are following some what the ontline of their mothers' and elder sisters'. The skirts are being made fuller and instead of being cut straight up and down are cut with a little flare. The waistline is creeping up and in some dresses has reached the Empire line, which is coming in for mother as well. Simplicity in fabric is the order of the day for the younger generation. Fancy little party dresses are sometimes made of silk or cliiffon, but usually of fine batiste, linen or net. The trim ming on the finest of dresses is usually hand-embroidery and a very little fine lace. Irish crochet and filet lace are both used a great deal for children's lressee, especially when combined with hand-embroidery. In children's outdoor apparel there is 1 110 smarter way of clothing a child than with coat made in some simple but stylish manner, and hat made from the same material. Old rose broadcloth was used for a stunning child's coat. It was made Empire, with cuffs and high collar of fox. The hat was made of the old rose broadcloth, with a band of the fur around the crown and a bunch of silk balls in harmonizing shades of old rose on one side. The elastic which held the hat on was run through narrow ribbon the same shade as the broadcloth. To po with these little suits are cun ning little muffs made of the same fab rk as the coat and hat, aud trimmed with the same fur used upon the other garments. These are a very stylish addition to the little coat suits and one which is usually enthusiastically wel comed by the small girl. The modes of dressing a little girl's hair depend greatly upon the hair it self. If 1 it is curly it is comparatively easy to find some becoming way to diess it. At present curly haiv is tied at the back of the top of the head, the curls falling down the Wok: Tlie bobbed hair is. .not as fashionable. .as it was, but there is no prettier way of fixing the hair of the small girl who has straight hair, especially if there is not enough of it to form a nice braid. However, many mothers with straight-haired lit tle girls are tying the hair in the same way as the child with curly hair, the only difference being that extra pains is taken in brushing the hair thoroughly each time the little girl is dressed. NO OFFERS FOR OOOIN Ex-Manager of Phillies Seems to Be Harked Man Philadelphia, Jan. B.—lt begins to look as though baseball club owners 'have made up their minds to give ex- Manager Dooin, of the Phillies, plenty df time to attend to his own affairs he fore signing up for next season. This Charley is doing to the 'best of his ability, and as a result toe mav have a bungalow of his own at Oak bane (before the robins come again. Dooin's preferences are for the East, but he says lie will go West if the salary is right. So far as he knows, however, there is notlhing doing in the reported Cincinnati deal, or, for that matter, any other deal. Even tJhe Federal T