8 TICONDEROGA HIT BY ENEMY U-BOAT; LOSS LIKELY BIG Vessel Separated From Con voy Sinks After Attack by Enemy Submarine An Atlantic Port, Oct. 10. —News of the sinking by a submarine of a large American steamship, with the prob able loss of many of her crew, was brought here to-day by a British freighter. The British ship had aboard twenty survivors of the Amer ican vessel. The American steamship, said to have carried a large crew, was shell ed and then torpedoed, according to officers of the. rescue ship. The at tack was made five days ago. It was reported in marine circles that the U-'boat's victim was the Ticonderoga. formerly the German steamer Camilla' Ricktners, of 5,131) gross tons. The ship was interned at Manila at the beginning of the war. Washington, Oct. 10. Reports from an Atlantic port to-day of the sinking of an American steamer be lieved to have been the Ticonderoga developed the fact that the Navy De partment recently was notified that the Ticonderoga had been separated from her convoy at sea. Since then not+itng has been heard of the vessel. Augustus A. Heed, Pennsy Fireman, Dies Augustus A. Heed, aged 27 years, died yesterday at his home, 631 Fef fer street. Funeral services will be held in the parlors of the Hawkins Estate, undertakers, 1207 North Third street, Friday afternoon at 3.30 o'clock. The Rev. E. E. Curtis, pas tor of the Westminster Presbyterian Church, will officiate. Burial will be in the East Harrisburg cemetery. Mr. Heed was a fireman on the Middle Di vision of the Pennsylvania railroad. He is survived by his father, mother, two sisters brothers, all living in Lara, Sweden. Only One Corn Peeler, "Gets-It" Stop corn pains, see corn peel off It is just when a corn hurts that you want to feel surest about get ting rid of it. Why take chances of keeping the corn and having the pain grow worse? You'll use "Gets-It" The Only Peel IM Iff Wa f ll anyhow, sooner or later; might as well use it sooner. Then you are ab solutely sure that the corn will loos en from your toe so that you can peel the whole thing off painlessly with your fingers, in one complete piece— just like peeling a banana. It takes a second or two to apply "Gets-It." There's no fussing or puttering. Corn pains will vanish—that'll keep you sweet while the "Gets-It" does the rest. Nothing new for corns has been discovered since "Gets-It" was born. Follow the judgment of the millions; use "Gets-It" and be sure to be corn and pain free! You'll say it's magic. "Gets-It." the guaranteed, money back corn-remover, the only sure way, costs but a trifle at any drug store. M'f'd byy E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago, 111. Sold in Harrisburg and recommended as the world's best corn remedy by Clark's Drug Store. H. C. Kennedy, G. A. Gorgas, Keller's Drug Store, F. H. Kitzmiller. RHEUMATICS WON'T BE FOOLED They Stick to "Neutrone Prescrip tion 90" You have tried a lot of things for Rheumatism but still have it, it sure is discouraging. Now try the new, sure, quick, easy, no trouble way, the new "Prescrip tion 99" way. Watch it get that ur.'c acid out of your system, get rid of those sore, aching, inflamed joints and muscles and in a hurry too. ""Neutrone Pre scription 99" is as sure as time. No more flery salves and liniments that hurt you more than the Rheu matism, but a good clean internal remedy that eliminates all impuri ties of the blood, makes you like new, makes you feel like doing thlngß once again. You can distinctly feel your Rheumatism leaving you and oh! what a relief, your Rheumatic days are over. 60c and SI.OO the bottle. For sale in Harrisburg by Geo. A. Gorgas, 16 North Third St. and P. R. R. Station.—Adv. HMCMffIN Ruddy Cheeks —Sparkling Eyes —Most Women Can Have Says Or. Edwards, a WclJ-Known Ohio Physician DftF. M- Edwards for 17 years treated •cores of women for liver and bowel ail ments. During these years be gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well-known vegetable ingredients mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr. Edwards' Olive Tabldb. Yon will know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cau3c a normal action, carrying off the wo'ste and poisonous matter in one's system. If you have a pale face, sallow lock, dull eyea pimples, coated tongue, head aches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, Inactive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets nightly for a time and note the pleasing results. Thousands of women as well as men take Dr. Edward's Olive Tablets—the successful substitute for calomel—now and then just tokeepin the pink of condi tion. 10cand25cper boot. M druggists. THURSDAY EVENING TECH BOYS RUN TROLLEY CARS WHEN MEN GET ILL Youngsters Barred From Seho Making Hay Financially D There "was ' something unfamiliar about the jungle of the bell on a Valley Railway car this morning and passengers stole a glint at the conductor. "For the love o' Mike," exploded one amused passenger, "What are you doing over Here conducting?" It was a robust, sharp-eyed Te"ch boy who had been one of a number to be called 4nto aid service, for 23 out of 75 of the railroaders are "ilued" for the time. "A couple days' training and they're right on the job," cornpli- Alleged Insulting to Liberty Loan Leads to Assault on Steelworker Jacob Capella, a machinist in the employ of the Bethlehem Steel Com pany at Steelton, faced Aldermhn James B. DcShong yesterday on charges growing out of an alleged as sault made by' the former on James W. Miller, a fellow machinist at the same plant on October 3. Alderman DeShong set to-morrow evening at 8 o'clock for hearing the case. The alleged" assault, it is said, grew out of remarks said to have been made by Miller to Capella as the lat ter was soliciting subscriptions to the Liberty Loan among workers at the plant on the above date. Miller, bond at the hands of Sapella but later bought one from his foreman and fol lowed it up with asking Sapella "how much graft" there was in the latter choked the other machin ist In retaliation for the Insult. Offi cials at the works this morning; were reluctant to discuss the case leaving that to the men concern ed In the same. Neither of these, h'owever, had anything to say about the matter to-day. Police Recover Fourth Stolen Auto in Month; to Watch the "Joy Rider" Police thus far this month have broken all records for the recovery of stolen automobiles. A 1917 seven-passenger tquring car, valued at $2,400, stolen last night from in front of the home of Frank J. Althouse, 29 North Thirteenth street, where he parked it for a mo ment while ho went into his house to get a coat, was recovered by Captain Thompson this morning in Wilhlm ROad. east of Paxtang. It, is the fourth car reported stolen and recovered by the police this month. All were recovered in the neighborhood of Paxtang and police are going to keep a sharp watch for "joy-riders," who are thought to be stealing the cars for a ride and then abandoning them. Score of Registrants Ask Training Course Twenty registrants of the second city draft district have applied to their draft board for induction un der recent draft calls which direct that the board send an aggregate of ten men to the University of Pitts burgh, State College and the Carne gie Institute of Technology, Pitts burgh. The board has not yet chosen the ten men but probably will do so after volunteers are ex amined to-night. The Paxtang draft board of the second county district to-day an nouncd the names of nine volunteers who will be sent away under the college Jndiction orders. The vol unteers are: Christian H. Sliiss ler, Hummelstown, R. D.; John M. Strickler and Allen P. Swope, Hum melstown: Charles H. Kline, Pen brook; Harry E. Ruhl,< Penbrook; Raymond W. Lebo, Oberlin; Mat thew R. Rutherford, Paxtang: El mer R. Brown, Hershey and George W. Ludwig, Hummelstown. Newspaper Prices Rising; Increasing Costs New York, Oct. 10.—Owing to a further increase in the cost of print paper the newspapers are confronted with another advance in subscription and advertising rates. It is announced that the Paducah, (Kentucky) Evening Sun has in creased its subscription price from J. 12.5 per week to 15 cents; Halifax Evening Mall from two to three cents per copy, and other newspapers an nounce similar •increase. Yesterday the New York Times made this announcement: "It is fre quently necessary to exclude adver tisements from The New York Times, owing to the demand for space. To day 25 columns are omitted, yester day 32 columns. This condition forces upon The Times careful .discrimina tion in the assignment of space." Von Stein Is Out, Scheuch New Pruss War Minister Copenhagen, Oct. 10.—According to a semi-official report from Berlin the resignation of General Von Stein as Prussian war minister has been ac cepted. General Scheuch, it is said, has been appointed his successor. General Scheuch has been at the head of the Department of Munitions at Berlin since August 15. State Hospital Patient Wanders From Institution A patient from the State Hospital for the Insane, who wandered way from the grounds this morning, was noticed in Riverside Park by a pass ing motorist and taken to the police station. Her clothing was wet, as though she had waded through a stream on her way from the hispltal. 'IRS. MARY SHOEMAKER DIES Mrs. Mary Shoemaker, aged 64 years, died this morning at the home of her son, Harry Shoemaker, 1429H Swatara street. Funeral services will be held Saturday morning, at 10 o'clock. The Rev. J. A. Lyter, pastor of the Derry Street United Brethren Churclj, will officiate. Burial will be in East Harrisburg Cemetery. HARRY O. MILLER Harry O. Miller died yesterday at his late home, 1407 Vernon street. He was aged 36 years. Funeral services will be held Saturday afternoon, at 2 o'clock, the Rev. J. A. Lyter, pastor of Derry Street 'United Brethren Church, officiating. Burial will be made in Paxtang Cemetery. AGED MAN DIES Jacob Koons, aged S4 years, died this morning at his late home, 201 Hummel street. The. Rev. Thomas Relsch, pastor of Christ Lutheran Church, will officiate at the funeral services, to be held Monday after noon, at 1:30 o'clock. Burial will die made ln-the Hnolo Cemetery: 1 Uae McNeil's Pain Exterminator—Ad. >1 by Influenza Epidemic Arc iring Their Short Vacation mented the manager's office. Tech boys are also being taken on to the mail service, especially in the railway mail department. The ( Postmaster found himself to-'day with twenty letter carriers out of commission in a total of fifty-six. Some of them have had to work fourteen and sixteen hours. Post master Sites, therefore, issued or ders for only two general deliveries a day, one at 7.45 and the last at 2.30 instead of four o'clock. This gives the men a chance to get some rest. Foe Broken by Foch to Retreat [Continued from First Page.] fSTOCKHOLM HEARS KAISER ABDICATES Stockholm, Oct. 10 There Is a persistent rumor here that Em peror William has abdicated. in of German reserves. Not the least interesting develop ment of the American campaign is ( the work of the air which evidently have been assembled in such numbers that an American bombing expedition which dropped more than thirty tons of bombs on German aieas on Wednesday com prised no less than 350 machines. Crossing the St. Quentin-Le Cateau railroad, the French forces operat ing south of the Americans and Brit ish along the line where the Hin denburg system has been smashed, have captured Marcy and have reached Fontaine, Notre Dame and Fonsommes, well east of the rail road. They also have occupied Etaves wood and the village of Boc quiaux, farther north. Advance Cuts Railroad Marcy is approximately five miles east of St. Quentin and is directly south of the line on which the British and Americans were fight ing yesterday. This advance cuts the railroad by which the Germans north of St. Quentin could escape from the net being thrown about them, and marks a new step in the operation of outflanking the Laon salient. British and Yankees Triumph British and American forces have won a complete, victory southeast and east of Cambrai. Reports from the. front state that the Allies are marching eastward through burning towns in pursuit of the enemy. At some ' points . the German rear guards, lighting desperately, are I™- ing wiped out. Cambrai has fallen, and with that city collapses the German line along a front which probably will extend as far as Douai, or even farther southward There is nothing to in dicate that the Germans intend to make a stand anywhere in this re gion, airmen reporting that their columns have been seen far toward the Belgian frontier. Through flic bronk in the German lilies between St. Qiienlin und Cani bral llie Allies seem to be pouring like the sea through a shattered dike. All reports from the front re fleet a condition which may result in a general retreat of the enemy, with Ids troops near Laon rapidly being enveloped. Yankees Break German I.ines American fighting between the Meuse and the Argonne forest again have broken the Germart lines, reaching a point from which they can see level ground ahpad. This advance was made near Romagne, on the line west of the Meuse. East of the river, the Americans slow'.v are forcing the enemy back from his positions from which he has heavily shelled the American troops fighting northward against the' Krlemhild line. Savage Fighting In Champagne In the Champagne sector the Ger mans are fighting savagely to hold up the French pursuit of the enemy forces which are being with drawn toward the north. Along the Suippe, northeast of Rh'eims, the French have gained new footheKds on. the north side of the river, in spite of heavy German counter attacks. Turkey's Withdrawn! Near Advices received in allied coun tries are believed to indicate that Turkey will withdraw from the war very soOn. Twefik Pasha, under stood to be pro-Ally in his sym pahties, is said to have been chosen as the grand vizier in succession to Talaat Pasha. . Stockholm reports that there are persistent rumors there that Em peror William of Germany has abdicated. American Army Breaks Germany's Main Battle Line Washington, Oct. 10.—Penetration of the German line of resistance west of the Meuse by the Amricans, against fresh enemy divisions, is reported in General Pershing's communique for Wednesday. East of the Meuse further gains were made during the day, in spite of violent counterattacks, while in the Argonne forest the American forces captured important heights south of Marcq and joined with the French at Lancon. More than 2,000 additional prisoners are reported. The communique follows: "East of the Meuse our troops maintained their yesterday's advance in spite of violent and repeated coun terattacks and progressed to the southern outskirts of Sivry and into the Bois de Chaume. West of the Meuse against freshly engaged divi sions we have penetrated the enemy's main line of resistance between Cunel and Romagne-Sous-Montfaucon. In the Argonne forest ke have taken important heighjs south of Marcq have Joined hands with the French at Lancon. "Over 2,000 additional, prisoners have been taken." DAVIS DECLARED NOMINEE Pittsburgh, Oct. 10.— Albert J. Davis was yesterday declared the winner of the Republican nomina tion for state senator from, the Twenty-second Senatorial district, Lackawanna county, in an opinion handed down by Justice Edward J. Fox, of the Supreme Court. FUNERAL SATURDAY AFTERNOON Funeral services for Mrij. Cather ine A. Feeser, 1228 Bartlne street, who died suddenly, will be held Sat | urday ufternoon at 2 o'clock In the |.4uneiul parlors of the Hawkins "Es- I tale, undertakers, - 12(17 North- Third Istioet. Burlul will be hi the East Harrisburg cemetery. HARRISBTJRG TELEGRAPH Influenza Holds Back Work on Penn-Harris; Inside Is Being Decorated Spanish influenza has virtually demoralized work on the new Penn- Harris hotel. Many of the work men are down with the disease. De spite this handicap, work up to this time has been satisfactorily pro gressing, officials say. Fly screens are being installed and about half of the guide strips [to the wnidows have been fitted. Painters are up to the eight floor and plasterers have finished their work in the lounge, dining room, grill room and barbershop. Ornamental plaster work in the lobby is virtually complete. Ap proximately 65 per cent, of the woodwork in the dining room is fin ished. The parlor floor is complete, while the marble floor In the lobby is now under way. • Tile work above the second floor is very nearly completed. Ventilat ing fans are being installed and ele vators are in running order. Germans Place Blame of Torch at Douai on British Bombardment I By Associated Press Loudon, Oct. 10.—Indications that Germany is becoming anxious in con i sequence of the threats of reprisals • for the destruction of towns in France, are afforded by a telegram rrom the semi-official Wolff Bureau, ! received in Stockholm, saying that iDouai was burning as the result of | the continuous British bombard ment. \ Negro Preacher Has Dozen Sons in Service i | Rayville, La. —Twelve sons in ac tive service is the record of R. H. Winslow, a negro preacher of this pa rish. Eight sons enlisted before the en actment of the selective service law, and the other four are in the Na tional Army. Two of the soldiers are twins, the last three triplets. Because of the remarkable record plans are under way for a public demonstration for Mr. Winslow. He already has received a congratula tory letter from President Wilson. Mr. Winslow conducts a Red Cross auxiliary. HAS CURE FOR INFLUENZA " Woodbury Heights, N. J., Oct. 10. —This borough has been singularly free from the prevailing epidemic of influenza, and the fact is attribut ed to the untiring efforts of Mrs. E. W. Egar, who some years ago learn ed of an herb remedy for such af flictions from a pdiysician who at tended her family wu,. | little girl. WILL REPAIR CAMERON SHEET City Commissioner Lynch announc ed to-day that the street repair gang will finish repairing the whole of Cameron street, from one end of the city to the other, late to-day or to morrow morning. The street repair gang will continue working until freezing weather sets in, Lynch said. TWO BROTHERS DIE Waynesboro, Pa., Oct. 10.—Hoy ! Robinson, formerly an employe of ! the Waynesboro Trust Company, I died Sunday at the home of his I parents at Littlestown. He had been I ill about a week with influenza. Last Tuesday his brother, Homer Rob inson, died at Puget Sound, Wash ington, where he was serving in the Navy. ♦♦ ♦ ♦ '!■ ♦ ■ ♦♦♦ <• <• t <■ •!' 4■ | The Quick Way to | f Stop a Cough , I This home-made Tn,, „„„ I T work in a hurry. Easily pre- + X pared, and saves about $3. ■ M' H **+ *•) * ~ \°u micht be surprised to know ! that the best thing you can use for ■ a severe cough, is a remedy which : Is easily prepared at home' in just j a few moriLonts. It's cheap, but for ! prompt results it beats anything else ; you ever tried. Usually stops the ordi i narv cough or chest cold in 24 hours. Tastes pleasant, too—children like it —and it is pure and good. Pour 2 \(r ounces of Pinex in a ; pint bottle; then fill it up with plain granulated sugar syrup. Or use clari fied molasses, honey, or corn syrup, instead of sugar syrup, if desired, i Thus you make a full pint—a family supply—but costing no more than a. i small bottle of ready-made couch j syrup. * ] And as a cough medicine, there is jjpeally nothing better to be had at anv ! Pl ,ce - It goes right to the spot ancl gives quick, lasting relief. It promptly heals tha inflamed membranes that | line the throat and air passages, stops the annoying throat tickle, loosens the ' phlegm, and soon your cough stops on- I.tirely. Splendid for bronchitis, croup, whooping cough and bronchial asthma, Pinex is a highly concentrated com -1 pound 'of Norway pine extract, famous 1 '°r its healing effect on the membranes. To avoid disappointment ask your | amggist for "2Vj ounces of Pinex" with directions and don't accept any ! thing else. Guaranteed to give abs'o- I lute satisfaction or money refunded. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. SAGETEA DfiiDT 10 DARKEN HAIR It's Grandmother's Recipe to Bring Back Color and Lustre to Hair. You can turn gray, faded hair beautifully dark and lustrous almost over night if you'll get a 50c bot tle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound" at any drug store. Mil lions of bottles of this oid famous Sage Tea Tteclpe. Improved by the addition of other ingredients, ure sold-annually, says a well-known druggist here, because it darkens the hair so naturally and evenly thai no onepcan tell It has been applied. Those whose hair is turning gray or becoming faded have a surprise awaiting them, because after one or two applications the gray hair van ishes apd your locks become luxuri antly dark and beautiful. This Is the age of youth. Gray haired, unattractive folks aren't wanted around, so get busy with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com pound to-night and you'll be delight ed with your dark, handsome hair and your youthful appearance with in a few dajs. Tills preparation Is a toilet requi site and is hot intended for the cure, 1 mitigation or prevention.'aof disease. Six Lads Taken by Police in Effort to Make Alarms Genuine I Police arrested six boys this morning on the charge of turning in ! fulse alarms. The chief of police [ and fire chief said they would per- • sist in their efforts to break up the , practice among certain cliques of small bogs of turning in false fire alarms. Willmer Brown, 267 Briggs; Jo- I seph Pizano, 918 Brand, and Lamar' Bartell, 1125 State, will be given I hearings on the charge. The fine [ is SIOO, with six months in prison, i i police say. These are the soys said to ' have turned in the alarm from Box j 331 at Tenth and State streets about 8 o'clock last evening. George Jacobs, Oscar Itnier, and Meude Bufllngton, who are said to: have turned in the alarm from ' I wenticth and Swatara streets, yes- i terday when a small blaze in the dump at Swatara and Holly streets was discovered, were released with a reprimand. Senator Attacks Tax on Salaries For War; Says Feature Is Against Law By Associated Press Washington, Oct. 10.—Taxation of j salaries of state officials and of In comes derived from interest on state j und municipal bonds, as provided in j the House draft of the new $8,000,- 000,000 revenue bill, was attacked as ! unconstitutional to-day by Senator | Kellogg, of Minnesota, Republican. | SEKGE.WT MARTIN ARRIVES SAFELY ON OTIIEK SIDE Sergeant Eugene Martin, of Camp ! Hill, a member of Ambulance Com pany, No. 344, 311 th train, of the 86th division, has arrived safely in England, according to advices re ceived by his mother, Mrs. Alice Martin. Sergeant Martin enlisted in May, 1917. I New Store Hours 11 '- | 8K ZZ WM. Ol ROUSE Buy Liberty Bonds 1 I Very Recent Arrivals Your Fall Overcoat Min Fashionable Suits, eloquently expressing the is here now. Hundreds of exquisite patterns, ma- H latest tendencies of the season —in newer patterns terials and models from which you will be proud to a and modeling, being quarter silk lined, with silk say, "That one is mine!"—up-to-the-minute models, H yoke, silk sleeves and piped seams—in sizes to fit quarter satin lined, satin yoke, satin sleeves; also jg all, at 1 military effect. ' 1 $25 to SSO $16.50 to SSO I 24th Anniversary Specials in Men's Furnishings 1 Wool Union Suits Men's Silk Lisle Hose Men's Sweaters H| A real Fashionette Union Suit made A real English silk lisle hose, made A great big bargain for a man who is jjf| of wool worsted. A garment for fit extra' quality, a real bargain, in all out of doors and wants to keep warm H a nd comfort. sizes and colors. * while at work. In grey only. if 24th Anniversary s4.oo 24th Anniversary 3 for sl 24th Anniversary $1.50 jg I Oh Boys! SvUSSn'S" MEN! r n the most won d e rful The New . S Store,of Wm. Strouse has merchandise A IMeW Mat please all. Come in and inspect. Nt nn n . ~ ~ , „ V&J r at nn oll prlee. Mkli weight J HU Ylm ?? -s. 0,1,1 heavy weight, lined or un -1 Sorts and Overcoats "X™ „ W I J*' s3?"'" $6.50 to S2O IS? $4.00 jS Boys' 2-Piece Underwear, | I Boys' Blouse Waists & Shirts. QA j 1 Boys' Stockings. Special I- f\ *1 K fleece lined, all sizes, special JUL | assorted patterns and sizes... OZ/C || in black only; all sizes.. ..'. OUC | 1 T* The New Store of WM. STROUSE m - - NURSES WANTED Nurses are urgently needed Jit Red Cross headquarters to sue. cessfully wage the light against Spanish influenza. Ail nurses, whether undergraduate or 'grad uate, married or single, and all volunteers who can possibly do hospital service art; requested to Immediately register with the emergency committee of the Harrisburg eluipter, American Red Cross in the basement of the Hurrlsburg Public Library. London Supports U. S. Reply to Prince Max By Associated Press Ivondon, Wednesday, Oct. 9.—Pres ident Wilson's reply to Prince Max imilian found fullest support in this evening's newspapers. The West minster Gazette says: "It fulfills the hopes and expecta tions of the Allies in Europe," and adding that the immediate result is to "furnish the last opportunity to the Prussian at bay." The Pall Mall Gazette says the answer "will put to an effective test the sincerity of the German over tures." The Standard says the ques tions asked by President Wilson "go to the root of matters and in dicate very clearly . the insincerity, weakness and hollowness of the pro posals put forward by Prince Max imilian." Germans Burn Towns; Sky Alive With Planes By Associated Press With tlie American Annies Near St. QucntUi, Oct. 10.—The Germans yesterday were burning towns far east of the line on which they now are lighting. Moretz, between Clary and Bohain is in flames. The Ger mans were vainly trying to stem the onrushing British and Americans. As darkness fell on Tuesday night the sky was dotted with British air planes, dropping bombs on the enemy everywhere. OCTOBER 10, 1918. Two Army Officers Lose Lives in Fire in New Jersey Hospital Rnhwny, N. J., Oct. 10.—Two army officers were burned to death and six others were burned or in jured in a Are early to-day in the I officers' quarters of the United States j Army General Hospital No. 3. at Colonia, four miles from here. The dead officers were Captain Fred F, Cole, Army Medical Corps, of Ports mouth, N. H., and Captain Warren T. Walker, Army Quartermaster De partment, Syracuse, N. Y. The names of the men burned Or injured, all lieutenants, were with held by the authorities, who said they probably would recover. They were reported to be Lieutenants Walsh, King, Frazeer, Schlingerson, Scliamanslci and Spiegel. The hos pital authorities said the cause of the fire was unknown. PRICES MAY NOT RISE ON COFFEE PACKAGES The Dauphin county food admin istration announced this morning that a state food administration rul ing just received forbids the advance of the price of coffee in tin pack ages. A previous ruling allowing a rea sonable advance on bulk coffee re mains in effect. Grocers who use fiber or other packages to put up bulk coffee for the trade may con form with the regulation on bulk coffee, the ruling says, SOLDIERS TO VOTE IN CAMPS ..Washington, Oct. 10. —Regulations under which officers and men of the army stationed in home camps may vote in the primary or general elec tions were announced yesterday by Acting Secretary Crowell. Tha gen eral staff has arranged to permit election officials to establish camp headquarters for registering the j '.en and taking their ballots. DOCTOR SI'RS FOR BILL Dr. George B. Kunkel has filed a civil action in court against Valltunt K. Kenney, of Paxtang. He claims Kenney owes him a J250 doctor bill. The charge is made for treating Ken ney'! wife, son and daughter, fol lowing an accident in which they were injured. A Dead Stomach Of What Use Is It? * Thousands? yes hundri s of thou sands of people throughout America are taking the slow death treatment daily. They are murdering their own stomach, the best friend they have, and in their sublime ignorance they think they are putting aside the laws of nature. | This is no sensational statement; it is a startling fact, the truth of which any honprable physician will not deny. These thousands of people ere swal lowing daily huge quantities of pepsin and other strong digesters, made es pecially to digest the food in the stomach without any aid at all from the digestive membrane of the stom ach. Ml-o-na stomach tablets relieve dis tressed stomach in five minutes; they do more. Taken regularly for a few weeks they build up the run-down stomach and make it strong enough to digest its own food. Then indiges tion, belching, sour stomach and bead ache wifl go. Mi-o-na stomach tablets are sold by druggists everywhere and by H. C. Kennedy, who guarantees them.—Ad vertisement. Gray Hair A very meritorious preparation for restoring natural color to gray or faded hair, for removing dandruff and us a hair dressing. Is not a dye. Gen erous sized bottles at all dealers, ready to use when you get it. FHILO HAY CO.. Newark. N. J.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers