The star-independent. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1904-1917, January 21, 1915, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
MUCH ALDER-I-KA USED
IN HARRISBURG
It is reported by Geo. A. Gorgas,
druggist, tt> North Third street and
Pennsylvania Railroad Station, that
much Adler-i-k.» is sold iu llarrisburg.
People have found out that .ONE
SPOONFUL of this simple buckthorn
bark and glycerine mixture relieves
almost ANT CASE of constipation,
seor or gassy stomach. It is so power
ful that it is used successfully in ap
pcndioitis. ONE MINUTE aifter you
take it the gasses rumble and pass out.
It is perfectly safe to use and cannot
gripe. —Adv.
SPORTSMEN HOLD MEETING
Conference of Nimrods Maps Oat Plan
For Legislation
At tie conference of the Pennsylva
nia sportsmen last night, at which were
present representatives of the Wild Life
League, State Sportsman 's Association
and tihe United Sportsmen, a legislative
program was upon which in
cludes immediate appropriation of the
resident hunters' license fund to the
purpose for which it was established;
seasons for small pfsAe to open uni
formly on November 1, and close No
vember 30; deer season from Novem
ber 2t> and Hose December 10; bear
season from November 1 to December
10, with reductions on all bag limits
except the daiilv limit on grouse and
woodcock; pr in-ant ion of trapping of
bear; forbidding sale of squirrels and
rabbits killed within the State; increase
of State game protestors to 50; new
bounty law to prevent frauds and to
do away with necessity for paying
fees for affidavits; law permitting
game commission to establish propa
gating: centers on leased land; ex
tension of the act of 1913 to permit
residents of counties to establish b\*
petition, closed territory on game birds
for a period of years; "all lines and for
feitures for violations of cgQme laws to
go to game protection and game propa
gation; two year closed season on Hun
garian quail and Mongolian pheasants
end making raccoon season one month
later than at present.
Another conference will be held to
discuss fish and forestry laws.
HOW TO START A CANCER
Some Very Common Practices It Would
Be Well to Avoid
An English scientist, interested in
the attempts to conquer cancer, sug
gests the following methods by which
a cancer may be produced:
\'}[ ' 9 not easy to produce a cancer
artificially; nevertheless, if you trv
enough you will succeed sometimes.
Lncoirrage your patients to smoke elav
Tipes with the varnished end? broken
off or to retain sharp edged stumps of
teeth in their jaws, and you may fair
ly expect now and then to witness the
de novo production of cancer. The
same end may be attained with vet
more certainty should you have it' in
your power to select eases for the ex
periment in whidh there already exists
some local evidence of chronic irrita
tion. For instance, you may tell a pa
tient who has a little wart or an ir
ritable crack in his lip that he mav go
ou smoking ami amuse himself bv pick
iug off the crust whenever he has a
l.'ttlc spare time and come to you again
in six months. This is a very certain
method. In another instance you mav
assure a man with a little pimple near
the augle of the eye that it is of no
consequence, not worth an operation,
and advise him to apply cold cream.
In a year or two's time he will prob
ably be able to show you a very inter
i-ting example of rodent ulcer (a form
of so-called skin cancer).
It is obvious that the Englishman
who suggests these methods does not
offer them in the hope that they will be
followed, but quite the contrary. Hn
might have added that, although "it
is not easy to produce cancer artificial
ly. ' it is still less easy to cure it, arti
ficially or otherwise. Indeed, the titfht
against cancer has been one of the least
su'cessfu in the whole category of
medical battles. It is also one of the
oldest.—Los Angeles Times.
To ( »rf A Cold in One ?)»▼
T<k* LAX ATI VK RROMO QI'TNTNF,
Tablet*. l>rugrjn*t? refund money If it
fails to cure. i*. W. GROVE? signa
ture is on earh box. 25<\
INCENDIARY BLAMED FOE FIRE
Chester Plant of James Irving & Sons
Twice Afire
Chester, Pa.. Jau. 21.—The plant of
•lame.-. lr\;ug & Son, Ltd., uianutactur
ers of woolen aud worsted yarns, was
threatened with destruction by flames
early yesterday morning. Firemen
kept the flames confined to the drawing
in room. After this lire had been ex
tinguished a bla e started in the cor
lugated building used for wool sorting.
The authorities believe that ineen
diaries set tire to the plant, as the floor
iu the room where the first tire was
discovered was found to be oil-soaked.
Five Cents Proves It
A Generous Offer. Cut oat this ad.
enclose with a cents to Foley & Co.,
Chicago, 111., writing your name and
address plainly, aud reeeive a free trial
package containing Foley's Honey and
Tar Compound, for coughs, colds and
croup; Foley Kidney Pills, for kidney
and bladder complaints, backache,
pains iu joints, rheumatism; and Foley
Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and
thoroughly cleansing cathartic—try all
three for 5 cents, the cost of mailing.
Sold by Geo. A. Gouges, 16 North Third
6treet and P. K. H. Station.— Adv.
AUTOS WAR ON TROLLEY
Seventeen Compete With Street Cars at
Kansas City
Kansas City. Mo., Jan. 21.—Seven
teen motor cars, several of which were
driven by their owners, entered into
competition yesterday with street ears
in Kansas City, ,\lo., and Kansas City,
Kan., hauliug passengers for a five
cent fare.
The cars ran from all parts of the
city to a central station in the down
town district. The motor car owners
declare they are in the transportation
business to stay. Most of them report
ed a heavy day's business.
German On Secret Mission Arrested
Geneva, via Paris, Jtaa. '2l, 4.25 A.
M.—The newspaper "Stampa," of
Turin. Italy, announces that a British
warship has arrested on board the liner
Dm - D'Aosta from Genoa for New
York, Count Von Keller, n German of
ficer of high rank, who toad been sent I
to the United States on a secret mis
sion. The newspaper adds that the j
ewrnt has been landed at Gibraltar. I
CAKVASS OF CITY PLANNED
TO GET WAR RELIEF FUNDS
More Than a Thousand Oitiaens Will
Solicit Contributions From House to
House, Beginning Work Next
Monday
For the purpose of raising sufficient
funds to assure the coutinuance of the
double-working charity effected by the
Home and War Relief Committee, more
thau a thousand generous-spirited busi
ness men and women of the city will
begin a house-to-house canvass of tho
city next Monday.
To accomplish this result the city has
been divided into seven zones by tho
Ways and Means committee, in charge
of the canvass. In charge of each rone
will be what is known as a "Neigh
borhood Executive committee," which
in turn will sub-divide the work into
"Neighboring committees,'' which will
make the canvass.
Seven districts have been apportioned
as follows:
Neighborhood Executive Committees
Downtown District—Chestnut street
to southern city limits, from the river
to tho Pennsylvania railroad above
Paxton street and below Paxton street
from the river to Nineteenth street—
M. H. Taylor, C. M. Kaltwnsser and
George C. Young.
Commercial District—Railroad to
river. Chestnut to Walnut—•William
Jennings, J. W. Bowman and David
Kauffman.
Central District, Western Division —
Walnut to Roily, Fourth and Sixth
streets to river—A. D. Bacon, Robert.
W. Hoy and W. H. Musser.
Central District, Eastern Division—
Walnut to Reily, Fourth and Sixth
streets to Cameron st eet—E. Moeslein,
Frank C. Sites and W. E. Orth.
Uptown District, Western Division—
River to Third, Reilv to city limits—
Paul Johnston, Horace Whitman, J. P.
McCullough and B. F. Blough.
Uptown District, Eastern Division—
Third street eastward to cfty limits,
Reily street northward to city limits—
R. A. Enders, B. F. Umberger and
I Charles W. Burtne't.
IHill District —Covering entire Hill
east of Cameron street —A. K. Thomas,
George A. Shreiner and W. G. Rauch.
In dhargc of this work from head
quarters is the Ways and Means com
mittee, composed of W. M. Donaldson,
chairman; Bpencer C. Gilbert, the Right
Rev. M. M. Hassett, A. C. Stamm and
Beuiamin Strouse
The solicitors will have subscription
cards, to which contributors may pledge
stated amounts each week or month,
or get a receipt for » cash contribution.
No amount is too small.
All money contributed works a two
fold chaTitv; it is spent in part with
merchants in this city for supplies for
the making up of materials by local
workers. The remainder is used entire
ly to pay the needy women of the city
for their efforts in transforming the
materials into warm garments for the
war sufferers. It is a double-cliaritv
work, the greater portion of which ef
fects a relief of the conditions of the
people in want at home.
Rules German Railroads
liondon. Jan. 21. —Dispatches from
Copenhagen say that Albert Ballin,
re tor general of the Hamburg-Ameri
can Steamship Company, at the request
of Emperor William, hias taken ovnr the
management of the entire railroad sys
tem of Germany and the work of deliv
ering food supplies for the German
army.
Former Head Guinness Breweries Dies
By Associated Press.
l>ublin. via London, Jan. 21. 4.43
A. M. — The death is announced of Lord
Ardilami (Arthur F.dward Quinnessl
who was famous for his charitable and
philanthropic works and who at one
time was the head of the great Guinness
breweries, which he and his brother,
Edward, inherited. He was born in
1840.
Bishop Burke, 75, Dies at Albany
By Associated Press,
Albany. N. Y., Jan. 21.—The Rt.
Rev. T. M. A. Burke, fourth bishop of
Albany, died suddenly of heart disease
here last niglit. He celebrated his 7 sth
birthday on January 10 and last June
his golden jubilee as a priest.
Pleased With New Dreadnought
By Associated Press,
Buenos Aires, Jan. 21.—A dispatch
from Bahia Blanca says the Minister
of 'Marine, having inspected the new
Argentine dreadnought Rivadavia, has
advised President De Tja Plaz 'by wire
less of the excellent impression he has
formed of the vessel and congratulates
the executive upon the construction of
•both the Rivadavia and Moreno, which
were built in the United States.
Was Niece of Andrew G. Ourtin
Bellefonte, Jan. 21.—Mrs. Elian
Honora Allen Shehlon, widow of Henry
Sheldon, for years a lumberman of Phil
adelphia. died here yesterday nfter a
prolong**) illness. She was 62 years old
and a niece of Andrew G. Curtin, Penn
sylvania's war Governor! Her father
was Dr. William Henry A Hen, one time
president of State .College, and for
inanv years president of Girard College,
Philadelphia. She lenves one son, Allen
Sheldon, at Stamford, Mass., anil a sis
ter. Mrs. George Dallas Dixon, of Phil
adelphia.
Watch Your Children
Often children do not let parents know
they are constipated. They fear some
thing distasteful. They will like Rcxall
Orderlies —a mild laxative that tastes
like sugar. Sold only by us, 10 cents.
George A. Gorga*,
"Cbtip"
Lumber It Cully
There is no economy
in using "Cheap" i
lumber.
In a few years
' i Cheap"lumber costs
twice over the initial
price of good lumber.
We will be glad to
advise you just what
to use.
United Ice & Coal Co.
MAIN OmCE:
Forcter and Cowden Street*
HAKRISBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT. THURSDAY EVENING. JANUARY 21, 1915.
I Uneeda Biscuit Q
|| Nourishment—fine fl«- 8
ij vor—purity—crispnesu |
< —wholesomeness. All
for 5 cents, in the
moisture-proof package.
GRAHAM CRACKERS
A food for every day.
Crisp, delicious and
strengthening. Fresh
baked and fresh de
livered. xo cents.
SNAFAROON3
A delightful new bis
cuit, with a rich and
delicious cocoanut fla
vor. Crisp and always
N fresh, so cents.
Buy biscuit*bakod fry
NATIONAL BISCUIT
COMPANY
Ateflju look for that Name
V J)
C. V.NEWS
HOT AFTER HOTEL OWNERS
Remonstrances Filed With Fourteen
Liquor License Applications
Carlisle, Jan. 21.—Alleging'for tho
most part no necessity, remonstrances
against fourteen places where liquor is
sold have been or were filed to-day. Car
lisle, Xewville, Medianicsburg. Mount
Holly and several other towns present
ed petitions.
This "as the final day for the fil
ing of the papers and thev came in, with
a rush. Late yesterday afternoon a re
monstrance signed by several hundred
residents was presented from Newville
asking rhe Court to refuse license to
both hotels. It was claimed that in
view of possible inrlitx of working men
on railroad improvements who would
frequent the hostelry, license should be
refused to S. I). 'Mowerv who petitioned
to open the 'Big Spring hotel.
Catholic Club Formed
Gettysburg, Jan. 21.—Gettysburg
has added to its list of organizations
another society in the Xavier Catholic
Club which is establishing itself in com
forta'ble and attractive quarters. Offi
cers have been elected, a house commit
tee appointed and other steps taken to
conduct the new club along business
lines.
Frank Slonaker has been chosen head
of the organization which has about
twenty-five well-known young men of
town as its charter members. Martin
Breighner is vice president, and Ralph
Redding, secretary, while the Rev. W.
C. Boyle will act as treasurer.
Wife Deserter Is Caught
Waynesboro. Jan. 21. —Xiinrod Mel
lotte was arrested yesterday by Con
stable George Byers. on a warrant is
sued by Magistrate Potter, September
2 last. Mellott left here on the shop
men's excursion August 29 and did not
return.
Several days later Mrs. IMellotte
made information against him charging
him with deserting her anil failiug to
support her and her children.
Woman Charged With Arson
Hagerstown, Mil., Jan. 21.—'Mrs.
Mary Osiemyer, divorced wife of Jacob
tlchindel. north of Hagerstown, was ar
rested Tuesday night at the instance
of State Fire" Marshal G. Ed Myers,
and brought to jail to answer the charge
of burning the two barns and a dwell
ing upon the farms of Mr. Sehindel on
'November 7.
POSITION OF MONTENEGRINS
BOMBARDED BY AUSTRIAN'S
Paris, Jan. 21, 4.20 A. M.—The
Austriana at Cattaro, near the Monte
negrin frontier, have furiously bom
barded Mount Lovchen, a strong Mon
tenegrin position just across the fron
tier, without effect according to a
'Havas Agency dispatch from Cettinje,
Montenegro. The dispatch Bays:
"The guns of the Austrian fleet and
force at CattaTo furiously bombarded
Mount Lore-hen for several hours. A
great quantity of ammunition was ex
pended without damaging the Monte
negrin positions.
"dleavy fall of snow in the past few
days has stopped military operations on
aH front*."
BUILDER OF IABERNACLE
HITS THE SAWDUST TRAIL
Contractor Baum Among the Thirty-
Six Who Responded to the o*ll of
Evangelist Miller at Mechanics
burg Last Night
Meebanicsburg, Jan. 21.—Last even
ing there were reservations in the tab
ernacle for three visiting bodies, the
business girls of the town, tihe Men's
Bible class of the Church of Ood, end
a delegation from Kberly'e Mills. The
girls of the shirt factory presented
Evangelist Miller and his party with a
vase of carnations.
The opening prayer was offered by
the Rev. Mr. Huiggius. of Bberly's
Mills. By request the choir sang "Hail
Immanuel,'' and just before the ser
mon, with the taibernacle in darkness,
except for a spotlight thrown upon the
open Bible upon the pulpit, the choir
sang softly, "Lead Kindly Light."
Mr. Miller prenched on Revelation,
3:20: "Behold, 1 stand at the door and
knock, if any man hear my voice, 1
will come into him, and will suip with
him, and he with me." lie said in part:
"This text, the words of Jesus, indi
cates that there was a luck in tho
church then. There is the same Jack
in the church now. The church does not
lack numbers., or money, or social
standing, but is tilled with selfishness,
with Christ outside instead of inside,
Jesus wants to ha-ve a place, the chief
iplace, in your heart. You may say, 'I
have never heard Him knocking at my
heart; 'but there are many evidences of
His knocking. One is that you Hre here
to night. You long for Him; you can
not be happy without Him; only
heaven can satisfy you. It is the eas
iest thing in all the world to be a Chris
tian. Just step to the door, and say,
Hoene in,' and He'll come in and you'll
be a Christian. It would not be'cour
teous to just call 'come in' to the friend
who kno*4ts at the door of your home.
It is not courteous just to call to Him,
'come in' and make no move. Co and
open the door that's when you surren
der your will.
"He knocks at your heart in the in
stitutions of Christianity, in the power
of the word of God. Every time you
hear the church bell ring, every time
) on see your wife start to prayer meet
ing, every gospel song you hear sung,
every sermon you hear offered, is iHis
knock at the door of your heart. The
sight of this tabernacle springing up
was Jesus knocking at your hearts.
What more could God do'to break the
heart of the world and bring tihem
back, than give His Son/ Yet men
have been walking over the cross for
2,000 years. You're doing a worse
thing than piercing His heart with a
spear when you bar Him out of your
heart. The act of the soldier dying on
the battlefield, who roused himself to
shoot dead the enemy who had just
given him a drink of water from his
own canteen, was an act of nobility
compared with you, barring your heart
against Jesus Christ, who lias made
you what you are. This will be tho
last call for some one to-night. If
you refuse now to exercise the privi
lege of opening the door, your cry
through all eternity will be 'O, if I
only had! " He won't break into your
heart. If 1 knocked at your door over
and over again, aud yon would not
open. 1 would at last turn my back
and go, aud that's what He will do
some day. But to-night He is still
knocking. Won't you let Him in!''
During the singing of "There's a
Stranger at (he Door" and other invi
tation hymns thirty-six persons came
forward. Among the number were two
elderly men. a number of younger meu
and women ar.d some children. One of
the men was H. A. Bauiu, the con
tractor, who superintended the building
of the tabernacle. His Christian wife,
a member of the ehoir, came down aud
joined him. •
This afternoon was "Mothers'
Day" at the tabernacle. This evening
tihe G. A. R., the Woman's Relief
Corps and delegations from N'ew Kings
ton. Shiremanstown and West Pair
view will attend. Interesting and in
structive Bible readings are conducted
by 'Mrs. Bowman each afternoon in the
tabernacle.
Myerstown Votes For School Loan
Lebanon, Jan. 21.—8y a three to
one vote the taxjwvers of Mverstown
borough at special election held yes
terday gave the school board power to
m/ake an additional loan (Si $23,000 to
be added to the fund of ?47,000 for
the erection of the proposed new bor
ough High school building. Only one
half of the voters of the borough cast
ballots, the vote standing 156 for the
loan and 4 7 against.
DULL SPLITTING,
SICK HEADACHE
Dr. James' Headache
Powders Relieve at
Once—lo Cents a
Package
Yon take a Dr. James' Headache
Powder and in just a few moments your
head clears ami all neuralgia and pain
fades away. It's the quickest and
surest relief for headache, whether
dull, throbbing, splitting or nerve
racking. Send someone to the drug
store and get a dime packnge now.
Quit suffering—it's so needless. Be
sure you get Dr. James' Headache
Powders—theu there will be no disap
pointment.—Adv.
STEAMSHIPS.
T^drmuoa
Uotf, Tennis, Boating. Bathlas,
' and Cycling
Tours lac.. Hotels, Shore Excursion*,
l.oneat Rates.
Twin c "RFRMIinUN" 10 ' 5]S Tons
Screw 3. 3. DG&tnUVIAn displacement
Vastest, newest and only steamer land-
Ins passengers at the deck la Bermuda
without transfer by tender.
WEST INDIES
S. S. Guiana and other Steamers
every fortnight for St. Thomas, St.
Croix, St. Kitts, Antiqua, Guadeloupe,
Dominica. Martinique, St. Lucia, Bar
bados, and Demerara.
For (all Information apply to A. 15.
OIITERBRIUGE A CO., Aaeats Uuehee
a. S. Co., Ltd., 2U Broadway, Now York,
or any Ticket Aaeat.
IN FIVE MINUTES
NOSICK STOMACH,
INDIGESTION, GAS
"Pape's Diapepsin" Is
the Quickest and Sur
est Stomach Relief
If what you just ate is souring on
your dtomach or lios like a lump of
iead, refusing to digest, or you belch
gas and eructate sour, undigested food,
or have a feeling of dizziness, heart
burn, fullness, nausea, bad taste in
mouth and stomach headache, you can
surely get relief in five minutes.
Ask your pharmacist to show you
the formula, plainly printed on these
fifty-cent- cases of Pape's Diapepsin,
then you will understand why dys
peptic troubles of all kinds must go,
and why it relieves, sour, out-of-order
stomachs or indigestion in five min
utes. "Pape's Diapopsiu" is harmless;
tastes like candy, though each dose
will digest and prepare for assimila
tion into the blood all the food you
eat: besides, it makes you go to the
table w.ith a healthy appetite; but
what, will please you most, is that yon
will feel that your stomach and intes
tines are clean and fresh, and you will
not need to resort to laxatives or liver
pills for biliousness or constipation.
This city will hnvo many "Pape's
Diapepsin" cranks, as some people will
call them, but you will be enthusiastic
about this splendid stomach prepara
tion. too, if you ever take it for indi
gestion, gases, heartburn, sourness,
dyspepsia, or any stomach misery.
Get some now, this minute, and rid
yourself -of stomach misery and indi
gestion in five minutes.—Adv.
NOBRL PEACE PRIZE MONEY
WILL RETURN TO ROOSEVELT
Washington, Jan. 21.—Tho Nobel
Peace Prize of $40,000, awarded to
President Roosevelt in 1906 for his
services in bringing albout peace be
tween Russia and Japan and which he
turned over to a board of trustees, the
accrued income from the original fund
and such additions as might be made to
be applied in the promotion of indus
trial peace, is to be returned to Mr.
Roosevelt."
Senator Lodge lias the draft of a
bill framed by A. L. Tburman, solici
tor of the Department of Commerce,
providing for the dissolution of the
"Foundation for the Promotion of In
dustrial Peace and Other Purposes,"
which he will introduce immediately.
There have been no additions to the
fund and Mr. Roosevelt agrees that in
asmuch as "the talent has been hidden
in a napkin for eight years" thie sug
gestion to dissolve the foundation is en
tirely proper. Mr. Roosevelt accepts the
proposal that he administer the fund
himself.
In 1906 Congress authorized the cre
ation of a board of trustees, now com
posed of Chief Justice White, Seth L>ow,
.1 ohn Mitchell, Secretary Houston and
Marvin Hughitt, to administer the fund
and such additions as mighit l>e made
to it. No additions to the original fund
have come to the foundation and ac
crued income from the original fund
has been found wholly insufficient to
enable the Peace Committee to carry
out the purposes of the foundation. For
this reason the trustees declare that it
was best to have the foundation dis
solved and the money returned to Mr.
Koosevelt or disposed of with his ap
proval.
DROVE CAR IN FIRING ZONE
TAXI RIDDLED WITH BILLETS
Pari®. .Tan. 21.—Among the taxicabs
stationed on the boulevards is one
whose coach work is riddled with bullet
holes, which the driver, Julos Germain,
carefully refrains from patching. He
shows an extract from an official jour
nal, dated in September, where ho is
mentioned in dispatches for an act of
unusual courage.
When General Manourv determined
to summon reserves for the desperate
effort which finally broke Von Kluk's
army at the battle on the Ourcq he re
quisitioned 1,500 I'aris taxicabs, where
in .were transported all available re
serves from Versailles to the firing Vine.
Although Gorman was not in w*r serv
ice, owing to recent illness, his taxi was
among the number called, and he con
veyed as many as 11 soldiers on a sin
gle trip to points menaced.
After his last journey, on September
11, Germain was ordered to take to a
hospital wounded French soldiers lying
in an exposed position "between French
and German batteries. Amid a storm
of shell, fire and mitrailleuse bullets ho
drove his machine to the point indicat
ed, and assisted the wounded to enter.
Returning by a different route, he re
ceived the fire of French rifleman with
out injury to himself or his passengers.
BRITISH TOWNS WHICH SUFFERED FROM ZEPPELIN RAID
t J % Texe '/f Ueofo
tYNM ntta*r A \ \y\
Q 'HrWxJk - ' 11 *YARMOUTH R\
Ar.£* GXaND / n L """ h //
U " W ' Ct> HaariemZL^^ ll^^
i^iro^fe^ RWIC " Hooh "
a. *< V»,.»r-V S°_» jjfs/
TSH J?' I
° SO 100 200 300 MILES
V 111 ' TTTr ■ -"■■'■ —i t i. ,i
tOCATION,Of PtACES.WHfEE fcOM&S WERE DROPPED
BULLET IN HIS JAW KEEPS
EX-KHEDIVE OUT OF WAR
Geneva, via Paris, Jan. 21, 12 Mid
night.—Ex-Khedive .Vbibashilmi of
D#ypt, awarding to Vienna dispatches,
is going to Heme to coußult a special
ist regarding a bullet wound in the jaw
received, it wag stated in a recent at
tempt on his life in Constantinople.
The dispatch says that the wound has
not healed and that this makes it im
possible for him to head the army, with
which it is planned to invade Egypt,
at tho present time.
Another Zeppelin, after three days
of trials, left Priedrichshafen Wednes
day afternoon in a northwesterly direc
tion to reinforce the air fleet near
Ghent.
It is reported here that there is great
rejoicing at Priedrichshafen over the
Yarmouth aerial raid. The plan was
known in advance in certain quarters
in Switzerland, it is declared, and
warnings had even been sent to the
British authorities who are retported to
have stated that they attached little
importance to it.
The visit of the Prince of W.tles to
Belfort has led to reports hero that
British troops would shortly be sent
to Belfort to participate in any possible
vnnce trenches, according to reports re
cance trenches, according to reports re
ceived here are now only sixteen miles
from the Rhine.
Austrians Heady For New Fray
Vienna, via Amsterdam and London,
Jan. 21, 9.58 A. M.—Field Marshal
Suffer
From Piles
110 matter how long or how had—go
to ▼•inr druggist to day and get a 50
cent box of Pyramid Pile Remedy. It
will give quick relief, and a single box
ot'ten cures. A trial package mailed
free in plain wrapper if you send us
coupon below.
FREE SAMPLE COUPON
PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY.
518 Pyramid Bldg., Marshall. Mich.
Kindly send me a Free sample of
PyraJiiid Pile Remedy, in plain
wrapper.
Name
Street
City State
—Adv»
FROM THE BRITISH VIEWPOINT
AS BETWEEN FRIENDS.
7O*NBT- TOI ™ U3Ol "*»"** MAT. RAM. REFF Rfi HOT ra»
Wtf.l PUMCN
y
The Home Dtfafer
(Clip Out and Suvan^^^Bb
IIIMV To Cnrr llhciimafll^H
Here Is a presrrlption
tlsni (to be mixed at h
over the U. for muny \
to be the surest known
trulizes ucld in tlie Mood
results after first done.
Torls compound and one
of Sarxaparllla. Put these
iltenls In half pint of whiskey. I'se a
tablespoonful before each meal and at
bedtime." Get Ingredients at any drug
storo. Genuine Toris coitles In one ounce
sealed yellow pneknges.
Surrit for < oliß.hu mill Colds
Don't experiment on a bad cough or
cold. It Is very risky. Tin following
formula easily mixed at home makes
one of the surest and quickest cough
and cold remedies ohtalinivbie, often
curing the worst cough or cold in a
day. Pine as medicine is as old as the
Bible, but here is, best form: "Two
ounces of Glycerin* and half an ounce
of Globe Pine Compound (Concentrated
Pine); add tliwse to half pint of whis
key. I'se a tcaspoonful frequently as
required. (Smaller doses to children.)
Be sure to get the genuine Globe Pine
t'ompond (Concentrated Pine). It Is
put up only In halt' ounce bottles, each
enclosed In a surew-top can.
Frost lilies. Corns and Surf Keel
Don't endure foot agony. Here is a
remedy for quick results. It works
through the pores removing the cause,
"Two tablespiton fills of Caloclde com
pound in warm fool bath." Gives In
stant relief for aching and sweaty feet;
corns anil callouses can be peeled right
otT. Specially effective for sore bunions,
chilblains and I'rost bites. A large box
of Caloclde twenly-tlve cents at any
drug store.
The above recipes published by the
Medical Formula Laboratories, Dayton.
O. Adv.
Archduke Frederick, the cousin of Em
peror Francis .Joseph and commander
in-chief of the Austrian army, has just
returned from '« visit to the' troops of
the first army, he states that he found
conditions excellent and that the sol
diers impatient to begin a further of
fensive campaign.
Plan to Outlaw Absinthe •.
Paris, -lan. 21. —The License Com
mittee of the Chamber of Deputies has
decided to submit a report favoring tho
prohibition of the sale of absintlue. Tim
Commerce Commission of the Chamber
began yesterday, consideration of the
rehabilitation of industries ruined by
the war, methods of manufacturing pro
ducts formerly supplied by now hostile
countries, and the question of finding a
foreign markot. for the output.
To Visit the Kaiser
Amsterdam, Jan. 21.—A dispatch
from Vienna says that Archduke
Charles Francis, the heir ap|»arcnt to
the Austro Hungarian throne, left Vi
enna last night bo visit the Gorman Em
peror at the German headquarters.
Five Years For Carrying Letters
.Vmsterdain, via Tjondon, Jan. 21,
9.59 A. M.—A dispatch to the ''Telti
graaf," from iSluis, Holland, says that
an inhabitant of Bruijjws, Belgium, has
been sentenced to five yours imprison
ment for carrying letters from Holland
to Belgium.
War Ruiryj French Trade
Paris, Jan. 21.—France's foreign
commerce diminished $400,000,000 in
value in 10 months of 1914, compared
with the total of "a similar period in
19in, according to figures compiled by
the customs administration.