To-morrow Morning Brings to the Thrifty, the Greatest Saving Opportunity This City Has Hp joyed in Many Vears We are going out of the Men's and Young Men's clothing business. We need our second floor for our immense stock of Ladies' Ready-to-Wear Garments. This '3l £mm * s t * le wa y we are g° in S to Men's Clothes from to-morrow on. Men's Suits and Overcoats, values $lO to S3O, for $3.90 to $9.90. Men's $1.50 to $6.00 Pants, for O*** 50£ t0.52.50. Men's 50c to SI.OO Shirts, for Ali Oar Ladies' Suits and Coats at 25% 50c and 75c KNEE PANTS, J and a Great Many Instances 40% Sizes sto 17 Years .... JgT t jA SB.OO and SIO.OO Dresses $2.75 Ladies' Waists $7.00 Silk Poplin Dresses, all col- 1 $3.00 Corduroy Skirts; to-morrow T1 $490 $l9B Brown and Green Mixture Suits, j * T- ~~~ T _ c . rrV7~" rrr Ladies' Extra Size Suits for stout all sizes for y° un g women—street \ J $3.50 All Wool Serge Blue and ya j to-morrow oa s ' rea women. Sizes 41 to 50; values S2O; wear, fur trimmed; values $18.50; \ Black Skirts; to-morrow to-morrow to-morrow \ M.98 Jll* ~ MI.M SUJ) Jl "" — ™ — ™ """"~"™" ———— , , „ ii., , . ————..——__^ c „1„ „-ii K i , .i ~. . ' $1.50 Kimonos; all sizes; all colors $3.50 extra size, blue or black, pure Sale will be going on every day whether you read it in the news- jnHBPSP|| OA all -» o °' s "B' Skins. TAo»ANT. v ( "N }5**XeCK AND „ v OftLKJC - WHV - CB . Ht*SGRT - f I I THE Sv-*. r- TKCRE i N Vou KNOV | »r*> veiVf ■VweLL. | WAITER- CA&^°nj MrS ( 1 I V ** Tt k I A ->( 0O-v<>ee HUH It*. I TOO have to Li 1 CCi . OF Tntr I n r*i 'com © B er —' I «*«! Tl. \ »• tN therei J«T jfe ■■■''• ■■ Z WEDNESDAY EVENING, (stock, unc man. for example, bought ".000 shares at 27Vj two years ago. To-day his stock is worth about sl,- i 050,000 —and he is still holding it. ' There is a man in Detroit who has I made $400,000, dealing in General Motors. A minor official in another motor company was given a few shares i in the company for which he worked. |He traded them for 175 shares of I General Motors, then regarded as nearly worthless. To-dav he is worth ! 1130.000. 11l the Factories A glimpse into one of the Detroit ! auto factories in full blast inspires in the belief that Europe will get all the cars it wants. Tou walk through ma chine shops acres in extent, where working parts are being turned out by the thousand. In another shop hun dreds of great machines are stamping the part of the chassis out of sheet I metal. Then you come upon a long procession of skeleton cars moving steadily down a long room on a sort | of moving track. At one point, front and roar axles are joined together; at] another, wheels descend from the ceil-1 ing and are attached: an engine comes! bouncing down an inclined plane and is fixed in place in a jiffy, while a I gasoline tank perches precariously! amidships. The car scarcely pauses. Each workman seems to hit it about] one rap as It goes by. According to a current story, a workman dropped his; wrench one day. and as a result of his carelessness the next shipment to Lon don was eight cars short. When the machine reaches the end of the sliding track, gasoline is squirted i into it. a boy perches upon the tank ; and the car goes shooting across the | yard under its own power. It stops l under a high shed. A great crane! pwoops down and deposits a complete ] chassis upon it. and one more car is j ready for Europe. The motor makers do not seem to i anticipate any trouble from cranks or! spies. At the great steel and powder j mills farther East, there, are guards! and detectives everywhere. You have i to pass a regular examination in order ' to gain admittance of employment, I while visitors are tabooed. Here one \ company, at least, is taking hundreds; of visitors through its plant every i day. And the only question asked is, , "What make of car do you own?"; Thi6 company has increased its assets by more than $27,000,000 in the last ten months. Whatever the ultimate effect of the war boom may be, Detroit manufac turers will at least have demonstrat ed their product and established a market in Europe. American light point i I M "From a daylight ■ factory" I j —there *re six more in Sterling Gum The 7"- point m HARRIS BURG TELEGRAPH oars have proved so superior for hos pital work that they are being sent to the front in large numbers. Light Cars Superior Tops are made from the crates in ! which they came, and they are put to ( work transporting the wounded from ! the field dressing stations to the hos ! pitals. They are reported to be vastly | more efficient Rt getting oyer rough j ground and muddy roads than the heavy European cars. American ma | chines worth a few hundred dollars | are making gopd along the front ! where European cars worth a few j thousands are found ditched or mired i! to the hubs. 1 Motor companies are not the only ones in Detroit that have profited by the war. This is also a center for the manufacture of drugs ami medicines. | and the demand for these lias, of j course, increased by leaps and bounds. iThe stock of one big drug making con- I cern has recently risen ten points. But there are two sides to the drug ! situation. Since Ep.rope has been in : the slaughtering business she has neg j lected to raise her ustial crops of | medicinal herbs. American manufac ■ turers have always depended upon i Europe for about 75 per cent, of their, i raw material. They now have a mar- j j ket for all that they can possibly pro-1 duce, but the prices of raw drugs are: soaring to altitudes they have never I before reached in the memory of the ■ oldest pharmacist. So the drug makers face the trying i situation of an unprecedented demand i together with a serious dearth of ma- | terial. They prophesy a drug famine in this country within a few weeks unless there is a change in Europe. Despite their professional pessimism, however, they are following the ex j ample of the manufacturers of motor i cars in making hay while the sun ' shines. Bachelors to Get the Preference in Some Manufacturing Plants Some manufacturers in this city and vicinity, it is understood, are fostering a sentiment which will give a severe jolt to the custom of giving married men a preference over single persons when they apply for positions. The change of sentiment is caused by the workmen's compensation law which becomes effective January 1, providing compensation to wives and children. C. Beetem, of the firm of E. C. Beet em and Son, carpet manufacturers in Carlisle, said last night in the Board of Trade at a meeting of manufactur ers, that in all probability he em ploy only single men whenever possi ble after the act goes into effect. Sev eral of the manufacturers did not agree with Mr. Beetem. however, claiming that it was a selfish move and would arouse too strong a sentiment against the manufacturer who adopted this plan. Speakers last night were Harry J. Shoemaker, secretary of the Pennsylvania Manufacturers Associa tion of Doylestown; John Fisher of j Philadelphia; Robert Biddle, Pliiladel phia; Joseph K. Grundy, Bristol, and Charles Bunting. Philadelphia. Firemen Want One-Way Traffic in Four Streets Members of the Firemen's I'nion at a meeting held last night in the Royal Fire house, drew up a resolution call ing for one-way traffic on four streets in the central part of the city. It will be sent to the City Council as soon as the new members take office. The streets on which the firemen, ask for one-way traffic are Walnut and Chestnut, from Front to Fourth, and Third and Fourth, from Walnut to Chestnut streets. Letters from four physicians were read offering first aid to injured fire men and volunteering to respond to a.l fires. The physicians are Drs. John Good and John Christ, resident physi cians at the Harrisburg hospital, and Drs. C. E. L. Keene and A. L. Shearer. ! A vote of thanks was given to the doc tors and resolutions asking the city commissioners to purchase badges for them were drawn up. A letter of thanks was received for the work done at the fire which partly destroyed the Sylvan Heights Orphanage. President jH. C. Demming will send a reply to i Bishop J. W. Shanahan. | A denial from E. L. McColgin. sec ! retary of the Chamber of Commerce, Iwas read, in which he stated that the Chamber had taken no action in urg ing a paid fire department in the city. Another Sensational Report at Croil Keller's Drug Store The Health Teacher Continues To Show Startling Results James V. Leavan and Mrs. C. Cropper Tell Interesting Things Indeed Tf you have not yet called on the Health Teacher at Troll Keller's drug store. No. 405 Market street, you should not delay doing so a moment longer, especially if you are an unfor tunate sufferer of rheumatism, catarrh' or stomach troubles. The results being continually reported by people who have already received marvelous bene fits from the use of the wonderful Quaker remedies certainly are con vincing proofs of the curative power they possess. The case of Mrs. Svttte kind. complete particulars of which appeared in this paper yesterday, has created a tremendous sensation. For over three years she suffered agonies from stomach complaint—she tried all kinds of medicines and treatments without getting relief—but the aston ishing results she received from the Quaker remedies were fully described. She is now well and these results were obtained in less than four weeks. No wonder she is now happy. Yesterday James V. Leavan, age 44, collector and solicitor, said: "My home is at Lancaster, but my business brings me to this city every NOVEMBER 10. 191?. J 80,000 Die of Cancer in Year, Expert Declares Dallas, Texas, Nov. 10.—Cancer campaign, is the principal subject dis cussed at the public health section of the Southern Medical Association's an -1 mini convention here. An increase in cancer deaths during the past year was , recorded in a paper from Dr. Curtis Yes; S. S. S. Is Purely Vegetable Nature's Safe Blood Treatment Known for 50 Years As the Best Remedy tor Illu-umatisin, Catarrh, i Scrofula, Skill Diseases. < Scientists have discovered that the i forest and the Held, are abundantly f supplied' with vegetation of various i kinds, that furnish the ingredients I for making a remedy, for practically 1 every ill and ailment of mankind, t Medicines made from roots, herbs, and i barks which Nature has placed at the i disposal of man. are better than i strong mineral mixtures and concoct tions. Mineral medicines work dan- < gerously on the delicate parts of the i system, especially the stomach and i bowels, by eating out the lining mem- 1 i brane, producing chronic dyspepsia j and often entirely ruining the health. S Monday. A few weeks ago I was at tracted by the promises made by the health teacher and I called on him to learn what the Quaker remedies might do for me. I had a kidney and blad der complaint, lumbago and I was wretchedly constipated. He recom mended Quaker Extract, Quaker Kid ney Pills and Oil of Balm and assured me while taking the treatment I could continue with my daily work. I took the treatment and promised to report results. I now keep my promise and can report that I honestly think I am completely cured because I now feel as woll as I ever felt In my life. To show iny gratefulness and appreciation I cheerfully allow my testimonial to be published with the hopes that other sufferers will do as I have done, take the Quaker remedies." Mrs. C. Cropper, Steelton. said: "When the health teacher was here a few years ago, he sent me some Quaker Extract for a severe case of In flammatory rheumatism from which 1 suffered at the titne. This remedy cured me, but everybody I knew seem- |E. I.akeman,' executive secretary for i the American Society for Control of | Cancer, of New York City. "The estimate of 75,000 deaths a year from cancer in the United' States," Doctor I.akoinan wrote, "which was current on good authority last year, must now be raised to 80,- 000. The public must learn that there i is hope for cure in early treatment i and how rapidly hope fades' with de -1 lay." S. 8. S. is guaranteed to be a purely vegetable remedy. It is made entirely of gentle-acting, healing, pu rifying roots, herbs and barks, pos sessing properties that build up all parts of the system, in addition to re moving all impurities and poisons from the blood. S. S. S. is a sate treatment for Rheumatism, Catarrh,- Scrofula, Sores auci Ulcers. Skin Dis eases, Contagious Elood Poison, and all disorders of the blood. It cleanses the entire system and it's permanent. Get S: 8. 8. at any drug store. S. S. S. is a standard remedy recog nized everywhere as the greatest: blood antidote ever discovered. If yours is a peculiar casw write to S. S. S. Co.. Atlanta. Ga. Ed to think that my relief was only temporary and.that in a. short time I would be as bad as ever. Thank heav-' en, these people were aJI mistaken, as 1 have not had even a mild attack of rheumatism since. 1 Just learned that the health teacher wns again in the city and I call to agafcn thank him for recommending the wonderful Quaker remedies to me." Are these proofs not convincing? Are they not encouraging? If you wish to know anything 'further about tlio remedies do not hesitate calling on tho health teacher, but come soon. Me can be seen every day at Croll Keller's drug store, No 405 Market street.' You need not buy the remedies unless you • wish to, and there is absolutely no charge for a talk. So come with con fidence. To prove what these reme dies will do results must be obtained from all parts of the city—from young and old—men, women and children and in order to get these results quick ly special terms are now being offered. Call to-day if you can. Quaker Extract will remove a tapo worm in less than three' hours.—Adv. 7