jjjj^EK Soon Pays Clothesßill Instead of waiting weeks until you have laid enough cash aside to buy your new clothes for Fall, come to this store NOW, pay a DOLLAR i A WEEK, and enjoy the use of the new styles when everybody else is wearing them. Smart Styles in Men's and Women's CLOTHING FOR FALL AND WINTER Our stocks are now complete. Never have we shown such wonderful style, such splendid assortments and such remarkable values. These garments are direct from our own factory located in the heart of the fashion cen ter of the world —on Fifth avenue, New York. See these fashionable garments and your search for something unusual in style and value will be happily ended. Your Credit Is Unlimited Here COLLINS COMPANY Now in Our Big New Store at 34 NORTH SECOND ST. Capture of Combles, One of Most Picturesque Incidents of War, Observer Writes British Front in France, Sept. 26, via London, Sept. 28. The capture of Combies was one of the most pic turesque incidents in the whole course of the great Somme offensive. It narked the opening of to-day's for ward surge of the British and French forces which reached its climax in the capture of Cueudecourt and Thiepval. All night long bitter fighting had been in progress at various points on the front and with dawn the battle broadened to include the whole Brit ish left. Combies fell as the sun rose on a perfect summer day. Sitting in the midst of a heap of hills the town was isolated yesterday by the seizing of the high ground on either side by the French and British. In the early hours of the morning the British took an orchard in the northern outskirts Thin fcolks Who Would Be Fat Increase In WelKht Ten Pounds or More I'd certainly give most anything io be able to fat up a few pounds and stay that way," declares every excessively thin man or woman. Such a result is not impossible, despite past failures. Most thin people are victims of mal nutrition, a condition which prevents the fatty elements'of food from being taken up by the blood as they are, when the powers of nutrition are normal. In stead - getting into the blood, much of the fat and flesh producing elements stay In the intestines until they pass from the body as waste. To correct this condition and to pro duce a healthy, normal, amount of tat, the nutritive processes must be arti ficially supplied with the power which nature has denied them. This can proo ably best be accomplished by eating a Pargol tablet with every meal. Sargol is a careful combination of six splen did assimilative agents. Taken with meals they mix with the food to turn the sugars and starches of what you have eaten into rich, ripe nourishment for the tissues and blood and its rapid effect has been in many cases reported remarkable. Reported gains of from ten to twenty-five pounds in a single month are by no means infrequent. Yet its action is perfectly natural and ab solutely harmless. Sargol is sold by G A. Gorgas and other druggists every where and every package contains a guarantee of weight increase or money back. is reoommended only as a flesh builder and while excellent results in cases of nervous indigestion, etc., have been reported, care should be taken about using it unless a gain of weight is desired—Advertisement. If Too Fat Get More Fresh Air BE MODERATE IN YOUR DIET AND REDUCE YOUR WEIGHT. TAKE OIL OK KOREIN Lack of fresh .air it Is said weakens the oxygen carrying power of the blood, the liver becomes sluggish, fat accumulates and the action of many of the vital organs are hindered thereby. The heart action becomes weak, work is an effort and the beauty of the figure is destroyed. Fat put on by indoor life Is un healthy and if nature is not assisted in throwing it off a serious case of obesity may result. When you feel that you are getting to stout, take the matter in hand at once. Don't wait until your figure has become a joke and your health ruined through carrying around a burden of unsightly and unhealthy fat. Spend as much time as you possibly can in the open air; breathe deeply, and get from any druggist a box of oil of korein capsules; take one after each meal and one before retiring at night Weigh yourself every few days and keep up the treatment until you are down to normal. Oil of korein Is abso lutely harmless. Is pleasant to take helps the digestion and even a few days' treatment has been reported to show a noticeable reduction in weight —advertisement. THURSDAY EVENING, and then, after a heavy preliminary shelling, they charged the trenches on the edge of the village. The trenches I were empty when they reached them. At the same time the French, dash ing forward on the other side of the i village pushed Victoriously forward ! into the heart of the village. In the ! main street the soldiers of the two j nations met and Joyously shook hands, ! calling out to each otner "how d'ye i do?" Wounded Fill Cellars | Combles had a labyrinth of dugouts ] and well-fortified cellars but at the I last practically no defense was made. ! Those Germans who had not man i aged to escape when the town was hopelessly surrounded, were taken ; prisoners. One lot of Germans who j were endeavoring to find a way through the encircling allied infantry walked into the British skirmishing line. The cellars and dugouts of the 1 village were full of wounded who ; found security there from the furious fighting on the slopes and ridges. Having cleared Combles of any | stray Germans, the British and French moved on side by side to further at tacks. One of the most striking features of the fighting last night and to-day was the surprisingly slight resistance offered at Morval and Combles by the Germans, according to all reports made by the British officers. The Germans made the usual counter at tacks against the British new posi tions last night, but the reports of the allied officers to headquarters agree that they lacked spirit. Some German trenches taken yesterday were lightly occupied or not at all. In other instances the allied com manders stated that considerable bodies of Germans tfirew down their rifles promptly as soon as the attack ers approached their trenches al though it was known that they had orders to stand to the last. Batches of prisoners have coming in from all parts of the front through out the day. Whole Line In Dancer A blackish heap of dirt on the crest of a ridge is all that remains of Thiepval. On the top of that heap there sUll rise a few black sticks, tree trunks slivered and hewn bv shell fire, which have been downed by a direct hit. On July 1, the first dav of the great offensive, the British tried to take Thiepval and failed. On this height to the north the whole French movement pivots to the bank of the Somme. The British, in fierce little attacks now and then. have shuttled and sapped their way toward that previous high ground, t.he cap ture of which extends over the Ger man front and defense and endangers other German positions. Hand to hand, bomb to bomb, with every trick of the modern trade of war, the Brit ish have fought over these slopes as if the war itself was to be decided here. To-night, after another effort practically all of the village, the whole defense and siege of which cost more thousands of men than any in France, is in British possession. This success is a source of greater satisfaction to the average British soldier than the taking of Combies or any other vil lage or strong position in the nearly three months of continuous fighting. Gains Six Miles Deep Since tho offensive began the Brit ish have taken 19 villages and at some points their gains are now six miles in depth. Elation over to-day's and yesterday's work is greatest at the casualty clearing stations where the cost of victory is best measured. All surgeons report that the casualties have been surprisingly light. The weakening German resistance, which seems obvious to any spectator, Is variously Interpreted by the allied officers. Some believe that the Ger mans are merely making a rear guard defense of the lower gr-vina while their main forces fall back to another prepared line of trenches stretching from Bapaume; others insist that the unceasing hammer blows of the Brit ish and French are resulting In a de cided softening in the morale and fltrhtinir nower of their ooDonants. September 15 Greatest For British Arms Since Start of Drive; Use Armored Cars | British Front in France, Sept. 28. | via London.—Army officers univer | sally are speaking September 15 as the ; best day for the British arms since the ! offensive began on the Somme front, j With the exception of July 1, the attack I was the most extensive of any in the 1 ten weeks of the battle. For the first time new armored motorcars of in ! genious pattern, suitable for crossing I trenches and shell holes, competed 1 with the infantry as the British swept I down from the ridges to the lower ground toward Bapaume. At this writing the British are beyond the village of Flers which they took early In the morning and are established in Martlnpuich and Courcelette. The slow plodding work of recent weeks, which included the taking of Ginchy and Guillemont, had for its object control of all the high ground from the region of Thiepval to the junction with the French on the right. The Germans fought hard for every foot of it. Delville, or Devil's wood, High wood and the rib of earth which the windmill crowned beyond Po zieres have been steeped with blood of men fallen there in their long stand under the heaviest orgy of shell fire in the history of war. as experts agree, as German wrestled with Briton, not for a piece of farmland but for military and human mastery. Took Germans by Surprise The British push was largely down hill. Evidently the Germans did not expect tho attack, considering that the offensive was over and that the British would settle down for the winter in their new and advantageous positions. Never before probably, have more guns been playing over the same length of front than along the six miles where the British made their advance on July 1 and where they have continued their offensive with phlegmatic and dogged persist ence. The Germans kept on bringing up guns, until now they have 1,000 in this short sector. The Associated Press correspondent, moving over the region of the devastated villages and shell-torn earth, intersected by new roads, saw on Thursday how enor mously the British had Increased their own artillery. Sun-tanned and weather-beaten were the gunners, after their ten weeks of work. There were lines and clusters and parks of guns. Rows of batteries were firing with something of the regularity of mechanical work manship of the needles of a loom weaving cloth. Alongside each other were British and French batteries. The gunners of neither ally could speak the language of the other, yet both were going on with their parts ac cording to charted instructions. Guns Never Stop At midnight, tho correspondent again walked about among the guns, which were going on with their night shift of gunners, whose figures were Illuminated by flashes. Except for the guns, which know no rest, the army seemed silent and asleep for the most part. Everybody and everything was In place and ready, including those strange grotesque new armored cars which were to have their baptism of fire in the morning. "We keep on learning, we of the new army,' 1 said one of the young of ficers, "and with every show' do a lit tle better. Battle is the great teacher." And the guns never stopped their ear-racking noise from daylight to darkness and darkness to dawn. Now and then the keys of that strident piano were struck in a chord. When dawn came, all the keys began to bang at once. Wave Six Miles I.ong But before the general attack be gan, there had been a hellish little preliminary sideshow near Thiepval. The Germans had there a warren of deep dugouts and galleries vhich they called their "wunder work." Before daylight the British got in there, un der cover of their gunfire, bombed their way through galleries which be came catacombs, and made them selves master of the position after hours of ugly work. Then also before sun-up, only an hour before the time set for the Brit ish attack the Germans, who had no idea the British were coming on in another big push, made a small attack in the neighborhood of Mouquet farm. They took a section of trench and were holding it at the moment when that wave of British, six miles long, began to move. The British reserves in that area swept over the Germans and their own men who were strug gling with the Germans, op to the objective set for three days' work A chill Autumn morning mist, pre ceding a day of brilliant sunshine, hid the actual attack, which the British ?. !5, e^ s thlnk was the most skilful the Kritlsh army has ever m&de. The British were putting behind them not only the ridge but the old second line as well as the first line trenches which they struggled so hard to gain, and w re Kotng against the new line which the Germans had been building under unceasing British shell fire With the infantry went those new motorcars, across trenches and shell holes. So ludicrous are they in ap pearance that the British soldiers laughed at them in the midst of the charge. They cheered them as they played their streams of machine gun bullets. Like some prehistoric mon sters they must have seemed to the Germans, who had to seek dugouts or flight or else they surrendered Have Machine Gun Nest So far as reports indicate to-day. the of the npw y r G Balned Possession ot the new German trenches exeent opposite Ginchy. There the Germans clung with desperate courage and dog tenacity 10 remain in that bit of high ground in that piece-by.plece defense of his. There he still lfeeM up the at , Mt accounts eps Again in High wood he had kent a whirh t th' Uh R neßt of guns which the armored motorcars %n --™ach'nc to machine gun while the British infantry passed It as around a rock in a flood. v ea Among the prisoners are six coin nels. one of these had the honor of being captured by the newest wea pon, which has added plcturesqueness to present-day warfare. This armored motorcar, which crosses trencheT and holes, ran over the colonel's dugout £VHr render i. e<i t0 the cre w. which took him on board and after the fight Infantry. 1 " deltvered hlm o a guard of In one case 100 Germans surren dered in a body to one of the armored motors. Again an aeroplane reported that one of the motors was movlnr U v.n a ■ t TH? of the vi| la-sre of Klers foHowed it!" yeU ' nß BriUsh ln,antr^ Aeroplanes descended very low dur ing the battle and never were there more lights or more vicious ones than those of to-day while the new armored r n S r^ ere P A a^,c, Pating in the infantry charge. -Altogether the British brought down thrteen German plan£ Greece Decides to Join Allies, Giving Them Her Military Aid and Support London Sept. 28. _ The ccWtl of Greek Minister* has decided In agree ment with Kin* Constantine upon mili tary co-operation with the Entente Powers, says a Reuter dispatch from Athens, dated Wednesday. This makes war inevitable. A dispatch from Athens under date or \V ednesday says that 'on Wednesday morning- King: Constantine received an exhaustive report from General Mo schopoulos, chief of the general 'staff, detailing the chaos in the military or ganization of the country caused hy tho HARRISBURG igsm* TELEGRAPH K Flrt Floor, Center." |S f \oreOpensß Gel Closes 530 P.M. |Fa I^j^ardro special Friday Economies |L"= rowFi| I SSaSVS wa^ Mc " t a , Sq fof Women Who Wish to Dress Well Friday jpccials J 93.DV a f a Very Small Expense "j * i I " ''J Worth $4.50 Friday is a splendid day for the woman with a style and RARCAIN RASFMFNT 1 ■ I • •/ Tht economy problem to solve. We have just received another B/tlfu/lIiI dAjLIVILNI 9 if popularities; Ti " ow lot of * he smartest Dresses, Suits and Coats in Harris- rVTpTcPEriTF % I J lnohes high, imita- "Urg, and offer them to-morrow, Friday, at special low prices. CAI fl/i of LLiAL C / J tlon tip, perforated I Brief hints of them follow, but they must'be seen to be ap- I I fo-ITlOrroW Friday Onlv I J & \ f vamp; new long re- preciated. ' ' 4M \. \ cedlnß toe - L ce —s? Beautiful Silk Poplin and Serge Dresses |K \ * e " AU t sl * eß - Llm " /femf Women and Misses; Q[- Vl vIUIIIBS llallipCl f J iK\ l' tecl quantlty - MF^I4S^ Worth $ 7 .5°, for pD.C?D Good, big size; I % 2 \ a s&l! Stunning New Taffeta Silk Dresses for HtjjiSa , , ~ , J i V \ CO omen and Misses; (f 1 A f\f\ I||pifiS ma de of diamond £ J \ <P3. OV Worth to $12.50, for .. t&IU.UU Hgfg splint. With a i & Handsomely Stylish Combination Silk hinged lid; Friday ■ ■ Women's New Fall Riack Soft Dull and Serge Dresses for Women and fplHlf Only; One to a C ! l^crf li?i I i?i^ y That WUI C J2 $ 49 J£ sses; Worth to sl4 - 00 ' sl2 75 customer; j # Lace model. 9 inches high, in a Ws\ The Finest Silk and Combination Silk and I f clever new style. Spanish heel and Wool Dresses; Worth tf* ————*—^■_ # all sizes, A wonderful bi K value at ffwk to $20.00, for J) 1 D.UU Shelf Oil Cloth Apron 1 I C FIRST finnn .. JBMli Ulr Women's and Misses' Fall <£ C ftC 1° y , d ', oin B hlm |t N lilt€ ■'"-){ V\ Women's and Misses' Fall tf QAg "" *. 70 yd. C QpliAal B Coats; Worth $11.50, for .. PO-/D Pajama Checks ' t VJII IO k/vllUUl I 4 4 ; and Misses' Fall AA Worth 12V&C yd. Longcloth 1 Tinvccro Coats; Worth $12.50, for.. i U.UU KK 1 9 13 Xv Women's and Misses' Fall $1 O V Friday Special C ** JCoats; Worth $15.00, for.. 1Z• / O 7ZZZ Pc 2At Special Small Prices ill Women's and Misses' Fall -■ Toweling BedSpreads 3 V Suits; Worth to $16.50, for. XMu /O Worth 5c vd u> I I I S OM , EN 'f AND MISSES ' FALL SUITS; (t 1C AA Friday Special f and above all. remarkable small r , th to $20.00, for 3>lO*UU 2UO yd. Fr ' d V Special I J inexpensive prices. If parents want WOMEN S AND MISSES' FALL SUITS; S C3# , % the prettiest, best-wearing School Worth to $25.00, for tP A %/ / <D) Outing Flannel ' # Dresses shown in this city at a big WOMEN'S AND MISSES' FALL SUITS; tf O A *vr* Worth 10c yd. Table Damask I I ffiSP ,Wt Worth ,0 $35.00. for $24.75 Fr.d.y Spec... Worm jgyjj. 1 Girls' SCHOOL DRESSES; 7^yd - yd. If 2 dS r Fridaffor . Spc "9sc AiiotherNewLot of Lovely Pl^ h 2 T c U yl ns White Flax<ln 1 I wMr' Gfnghams'and TRIMMED / \ Fr Special )£**• , H color percales. Made in lots of dif- ■"■ A ** J-T* M-d M~W / \ 1 V( J Q/'. ~J W ferent styles and colors. All sizes, *■■■ • m r< / 1 * J I ii Girls' SCHOOL DRESSES; j ~ \ / 1 "? Cretonnes | j worth to $2.25, >| e Ready Tomorrow at V (f Mkv ***** I 'SX I for viTru \ // Jmrnw 1 "2y 2 <t yd. special 1 r „ In beautiful. crl3p. new GinKhams, L /I, ■ MM ■ WS Jmif \ff - yd. G % Reps, etc.; stripes, checks, plain col- a 1 ■ i Wj e a. u ni • i T • J or effects; 6to 14-year sizes. All k. \W B LW m W 'Hfl l f Scotch Plaid ... c M C new and all remarkably desirable S ' r i Napljtha Soap % v for school wear. mi. . • .. . • DTCSS LrOOCIS t*t il r , m £ „ These are the creations, the qualities, the beauties that has w „ rt , . o h „ s ® ca . k - ' 9 Serge SCHOOL DRESSES; made the Kaufman Millinery Store the busiest Millinery Friday Special 10 cakes°for f Worth to $4.00. Special Store*in all Harrisburg. Understand $4.90 spent for a hat vd 35$ ' J Friday Only (JQ Qg at Kaufman's means that you get value, style and quality v " / ' v £ for Vutt/O at $7.50 would not buy for you anywhere else. We are . C Handsome new serges, in the pret- proving it every day. See these lovely new styles to-morrow. EXTRA SPFPTAT a tiest new styles produced this sea- x orr,v,lAb ( fSF'big^arg^Tfo/'th 6 !'mone^° nder " EXTRA SPECIAL—One lot of Newest Velvet SAILOR Women's White Voile Waists; I scoߣs. op othbr saw srrge H A T |; Worth to $2.90 each. Special, To-°rao r . i 1 Qft worth SI.OO. To- C|- j SCHOOL DRESSES for Giria o to row, Friday, for X •J/Vf morrow, Friday only, , ( i^r; a v" rt ,^.." CO "" ° f . Al "°. Turba „" ,I " S t^o\^ l, Fl ,, O.! o ß^u a " W COlor ' Al.l—. Beautiful new models. Plain white. ) 5 All Mixes. Prices ranic from CO n- L ' * and attractive new striped effects M K OJ- ra- r r. ———————— ——jn contrasting colors. All sizes and for Dree -north V 5.00 ————— ___ ___ extremely new at this price. 3 Cl""* 0 * To-morrow, Friday, the Biggest and Best Boys' j School Suit Bargains |~'"S "'elcl! J Friday Only, for, -.a Ever Offered Parents; See These Tremendous H ..v y ,ibb.a >.<.>.> „•.,. J M Fair AT"!* Values and- Save Money To-morrow • roifco?iar nly ' wlth pookets and deo p C 1 sto^kVn^ av H T„: lbb i ed .,^!}°° l Boys' Newest Fall SCHOOL SUITS; L ' " F.r.t Fior. .. | # fui big value. Worth to $3.50. To- c\ r? A ' PI '' l " >or - morrow , Special at 3>Z.OU FJUDAY u.M.Y I i l*' <Br Made of neat mixtures and cassimeres: _ , -.tt. - 4 g t 7 nicely finished, in sizes 2'6 to 10 years. The Latest White Fox Fur sOn TnmnrrniAf A Zf f°y s ' Corduroy School SUITS; Neckpiece; Worth to $4.00./ C UII vfllv I vllfOrrOWa /\ Worth to $4.00. To- dJO OO To-morrow, Fri- {t* f\ A % S • j /% <m morrow, at <PO.UU day, at f tk H /1 Ci "XT I 1,1 I TT* /\ V* Can't be matched for less than $4.00. Made % f X ilud V • V/lIJ. V / V YAI of good corded corduroy in the newest Nor- All the rage this season; pure § E J 7 J \ v VA \ foil* styles with patch pockets. white, very chic and stylish. & ) v „ , „ „ ; J X. Wjh Boys' 2 Pair of Pants School Firt Floor J i Young Mens New Fall Suits; / f' SUITS; Worth to $5.00. Spe- /% Actual Values up to $12.00. / M cial Friday, OfV C -, n n . \l Special Friday A q at so*t/0 FRIDAY SALE OF t Onlv (DO. i,J [ . Made In the newest Norfolk styles If • . J n y I . i>v of best wool fabric. Two pair of Iwl nn Mnnfc I f /' trousers to match, full peg style; This seasons finest, new, up-to- ' I f.l slze3 G to 17 years. V the-minute Fall models, in ail sorts V il / •/ "/ Boys' Odd School Trousers; Men's STRONG 1 f\f\ C •sri"rz: k\| hi i r ,075c -S""' 3l PANTS 1 2 Sizes 33 to 36 chest. On sale to- J A 111-- Friday, at . Made extra strong. The material S morrow. Friday, only, at ,8.75 I (HI , Jut the right hard-wearing serv- - an d wor 3 te<l. ( Extra Stout Men's New Fall \w Wlrfi'H ch ° ol , wea r. and at 4c the biggest mpm'C pamt? a - - new i-dii w IV ■u>///<j bargain ever offered. Sizes 6to 17 MlilN o r'AXVJ 1S 1 Af\ SUITS. In a Special ' K \\\ ! / sutched. Sean,s u " taped and double For 1 #4i7 | Friday Sale TC? <?/(//!■ J* II V/' F ' loor ' R ' ar * Sold clurn-here to 9Z.RO. . a * tbJy. \ I L A 9;'. Boys' New School BLOUSES; Good worsted pants, made extra I JS* n jsJL2rs\'zs F^ ~or Corduro >'9 nn canßlmpra; In a big variety of .mart (WHrJi Mol!S° anV'hlMly''"lVlSSl. '"r?? P ANTS | new patterns. A splendid oppor- school wear; percales and madras; A *3.00 value. M tunlty for the extra largo man. if 1 n We ? t opcn cufts; h ' Bh collar styles. Mned throughout; sewed with C departure of so many officers to join the Anglo-French Allies, and advising the immediate decluratiori of ur uj Greece without awaiting either the as sistance or the insistence of the En tente Powers, as the only way to save the situation. Premier's Declaration Premier Kalogeropoulos, on depart ing from a conference with the King on Wednesday morning, made this declar ation.' "The Cabinet can only await the re ceipt of the Entente's demands. H would be futile to rearrange the consti tution of the Ministry without knowing that such alteration would prove satls fnctory. Wo are prepared, as we have always been, to meet any desires of the Entente in the most cordial spirit of co operation, but we can scarcely be ex pected to abide by the Entente's wishes." "The Greek Ministerial Council held In Athens yesterday evening," savs a wireless dispatch from the Greek capi tal, "will be followed by the resigna tion of the Kalogeropoulos Cabinet ana bv the issue or a proclamation from , KIUK Coustantlne to the great nationl. Immediately on his return from Tatol to Athens the King was summon ded to a secret council of the Gernian ophlles General Dausmanls. ex-chief of the Greek General Staff, and M. Strelt. Queen Sophia, sister of the German Emperor, was present at the confer ence." French Regard Capture of • Combles Brilliant Stroke Paris, Sept. 28. The capture' of Combles with Its great booty completes what Is regarded by military experts here as ono of the most brilliantly txecuted operations of tio summer campaign. The whole front of attack from Martlnpulch to the Soinrne has been pushed forward uniformly for more than a mile. Military observers declare that the fullness of success proves that the Allies are incontestably mnßters ot the situation. Since September 15 the Goroions SEPTEMBER 28, 1916. hadabrought up three fresh divisions against the French front and the same number against the British. On the 20th they made a desperate effort to retake Bouchavesnes. Not only did they fall, but five days later the Allies, resuming the offensive, hurled back their line despite the fact that consid , orable advantages of terrain were con sidered to bo with the Germans. The progress made by the French I beyond Bouchauvesnes Is regarded hero as one of the most surprising re sults of the operations. French officers declare that this success demonstrates the growing power of the French of fensive and the falling resistance of tho Germans. The hills which sur round this village were swept on three sides by all the German artillery. Neverthelees. they were stormed, and the capture of Hill 130 paves the way for a vigorous enveloping movement around Mont St. Quenten and Peronae. Samuel B. Coles, Editor of Lykens Standard, Diet Lykens, Pa., Sept. 28. Samuel B. Coles, veteran printer of the Lykens Standard, died at the home of hla son, Charles M. Coles on Tuesday eve ning from a general breakdown due to old age. Mr. Coles was the senior editor of tho Lykens Standard and was the first man to bring a printing press Into this valley. He was 83 years and 7 months old and was prt,- ceded In death by his wife about [three years ago. Funeral services will I tako place to-morrow afternoon at 3 o'clock. TWO CASES OF DIPHTHERIA Mlddleburg, Pa., Sept. 28.—Blanche six-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Predix, is seriously 111 with diphtheria. Mrs. Luther Predix Is also suffering with the disease. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers