WIFE TOO ILL TO WORK IN BED MOST OF TIME Her Health Restored by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Indianapolis, Indiana. "My health Was BO poor and my constitution so run i down that I could not work. I was thin, pale and weak, ||p ' weighed but 100 pounds and was in 11 fjllf bed most of the I • 'iflll time. I began tak 3BSM * n E Lydia E. Pink- I If ham's Vegetable J Compound and five # / months later I .* weighed 133 pounds. s ■--- LJ I do all the house work and washing for eleven and I can truthfully say Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound has been a godsend to me for I would have been in my grave today but for it. I would tell all wo men suffering as I was to try your valu able remedy."—Mrs. WM. GREEN, 332 S. Addison Street, Indianapolis,lndiana. There is hardly a neighborhood in this country, wherein some woman has not found health by using this good old fashioned root and herb remedy. If there is anything about which you would like special advice, write to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co-, Lynn, Mass. Moat every -woman ■wants a nice, clear com- i plexion, and can have it at a trifling cost, j Constipation in women is increasing to an alarming extent, and this causes poor circulation which accounts for yellow, muddy, pimply complexions which so many women are trying to overcome. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets is the one dependable remedy for bad complexions. They act on the liver and bowels like calomel, yet have no dangerous after-effect. They assist nature to throw off the impurities that get into the blood.They will surely dear up. even the most distress ing condition quickly and tone up the entire system, giving a pure, fresh, ruddy skin. They are absolutely pure —easy to take and correct constipation. They act quick ly. cleanse and purify—and make you feel fine. Start treatment now. Get a box from any druggist—loc and 25c. AN OLD RECIPE 10 OAFKEN HAIR Sage Tea and Sulphur Turns Gray, Faded Hair Dark and Glossy. Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compound- Hi, brings back the natural color and luster to the hair when faded, streak ed or gray. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and trouble kome. Nowadays we simply ask at any drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sul phur Compound." ■ You will get a large bottle of this old time recipe im proved by the addition of other in gredients for about 50 cents. Every body uses this preparation now, be tausc no one can possibly tell that you Sarkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and evenly. You dampen t sponge or soft brush with it and Iraw this through your hair, taking ne small strand at a time; by morn ing the gray hair disappears, and after mother application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, thick and flossy and you look years younger. A'yeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound Is a delightful toilet requisite. It is ! Bot intended for the cure, mitigation j >r prevention of disease. > TO END CATARRHAL J : DEAFNESS AND HEAD \ : NOISES IJ ' If you have Catarrhal Deafness % ' or head nofses go to your drug- S 1 gist and get 1 ounce or" Parmint 5 1 i double strength i, and arid to it \ ' pint of hot water and 4 ounces % 1 of granulated sugar. Take i 5 1 taMespoonful four times a dav. 5 1 This will often bring quick re- % 1 lief from the distressing head j • noises. Clogged nostrils should 5 ' open, breathing become easy and % 1 the mucous stop dropping into 5 • the throat. It is easy to prepare V | costs little and is pleasant to N take. Any one who has Catar- 5 rhal Deafness or head noises % should give this prescription a '• i 1 r ' sl - S | Ivwswvww! HATED WON "JH||||Bnß increases strength of delicate, nervous, run !■ f■ T I lIHJ down people 200 per B I B I I t~Jcent. in ten days in ■ man instances. SIOO nWtfVMßflper full explanation in 3l]r433Mtt lar ff e article soon to appear in this paper, your doctor or Irugglst about It. < 'roll .Keller, G. A. Gorgas alwavs tarry It in stock. FOR THROAT LUNGS STUBBORN COUGHS AND COLDS ECKMAN'S ALTERATIVE l'"H BY ALT- LEADING DRUGGISTS Use Telegraph Want Ads x J,; —r— - ' nAV%r/t ¥/i*rtr* —*—^———— FOREIGN POLICIES ARE FAIR TARGETS Patriotism Does Not "Stop at Edge" if Partisan ship Does Washington, D. C.. Oct. 17. Efforts of Demoeratic politicians to silence dis cussion of President Wilson's conduct of foreign affairs in the present cam paign were sharply denounced in an of- I flcial statement issued by Chairman j Willcox, of the Republican national j j committee, In Washington. | Attention Is called to the slogan of i ] the Democrats that "politics end at the ! i water's edge." This attempt to prevent , I attacks upon the weak and vacillating foreign policy of the administration is 1 designated by Mr. Willcox as "the ! whining cry of Democratic leaders," ! and it is pointed out that the public itself has repudiated the plea for quar ter. Mr. Willcox's statement says: "The shallowest of partisan pleas, the , frankest confession of weakness im aginable, the cry has been raised in I the desperate hope of avoiding the I necessity of pleading to an indictment. Hut desperate as it has been, It has been a cunning pleas for all that, Americans Patriotic "If there be one thing to which an American responds more quickly than j another It Is the call of patriotism, j The attempt of Democratic spokesmen, from Woodrow Wilson down, to be cloud the Issues growing out of the j bungling of our foreign relations dur i ing the past three and a half years was I eoverel, like a quinine pill, by a coat ing of sugar. I "Fully realizing the weakness of | Democratic defenses on the issue of ; foreign blundering, Democratic man agers and spellbinders craftily endeav ored to distract the attention of the I people from the holes in the armor by ! seeking to make it appear that any | criticism of Wilsonism was criticism of , the Government—and, hence, criticism of the United States. "The fearlessness of Republican at tack upon this false and pernicious theory will stand out, when the hlstorv of the campaign of 1916 is written, as one of the most serviceable achieve ments in American political life. "It has been conducted with a thor oughness that has completely demol ished and exposed to contempt the de- j ceit of the Democratic argument, until now the enlightened voter understands that full and fearless criticism of an administration for its mishandling of our relations with other nations is ac tually obligatory upon all intelligent citizens and is the very essence of pa triotism. Lodge Well Posted "This has been demonstrated most clearly by Senator Dodge in his speech before the Republican State convention of Massachusetts. Ranking member of the foreign relations committee of the United States Senate, author of the Magdalena Bay resolution, the most im portant amendment to the Monroe Doc trine ever adopted, and one of the fore most authorities in the country on in ternational law, Senator Dodge is pe culiarly able to explain the relation of foreign affairs to the present campaign. He showed In his Boston speech that it was President Wilson who dragged the foreign affairs of the nation into parti san politics by pursuing a policy or con stant shifting designed to meet the po litical exigencies of the moment. " 'ln what 1 am about to say concern- j Ing foreign relations,' asid Senator Lodge, 'I do not criticise the President because he is a Democrat and I am a Republican, for in dealing with foreign relations I have at no time since I have i been in public life approached them in : a party spirit, and so long as I continue to hold the commission of Massachu setts I shall never do so. | " 'ln the many shifts and changes made by this administration in interna- i tional relations, it would have been im- j possible that at some point in their movement they should not have occu- i pied the right ground. The President, like Mrs. Witterly, "forms and ex- | presses an immense varietv of opinions on an Immense variety of subjects." He can hardly fail, under the circum stances. to be right occasionally, and when he has been right he has had my support.' "That sums up the Republican posi tion with regard to foreign affairs. When the President has been right Re- I publicans have supported him as the | head of the Government upholding the national prestige: when the President has been wronit Republicans have op posed him as the head of the Govern ment engaged in prostituting the Gov- | eminent and lowering the national prestige. Republicans have not sup- ! ported him 'through thick and tliln,' for while that would be loyaltv to Wilson j It were treason to America. Politics does end at the water's edge—patriot ism does not." Claims Bad Lands Are Rolled East in Rum Barrels Norwich, N. Y„ Oct. 27.—The Bad j Lands of this country are no longer ' located in the New West, but have j been rolled in liquor barrels to the Old Northwest, Ira Landrith, the Pro- | hibition vice-presidential nominee, told New York crowds yesterday when the "dry" special train again entered this state from Pennsylvania. "The very frontiers of civilization," I he said, "have been rolled in rum | barrels from the wild and woolly West, ! now dry and law-abiding, to the Dead- ! woods and Dodge Cities, the Lead villes ami Bnttes, the Cripple Creeks | and Bolses of Pennsylvania. Ohio, Itli- J ! tiois. New York, New Jersey and the ! land of the Pilgrim Fathers." Norwegian Steamer Is ! Reported Taken to Germany; London, Oct. 27. lt is now re ported that the Norwegian mall steamship from Bergen for New- Castle, which, according to advices received yesterday was stopped by a German warship, has been taken to a German port, although it has no cargo aboard. Several of the steamers have been searched but this is the first ac tual seizure. TIME V-T- W)UM) DEFI,r<Ton PROTT'.t TS ITV FROM FOG HORNS! At the Buffalo light station on | Erie a large deflector has been erected i behind the fog horns to protect the city I from the deep, penetrating sounds of | the powerful instruments -when thev are In service. The device is I | described in the November Popu lar Mechanics Magazine. It is • | about fourteen feet In diameter and ! shell having a four-inch packing of 1 mineral wool between it and a facing j of asbestos board. The device is at- I tached firmly to the roof of the build ing and forms a backing for the mega phones. The device is reported to have I proved efficient not only in minimizing the volume of sound spreading back across the city, but also in rendering the signals more distinct to navigators. , BULLET-PROOF JAC KETS LINED WITH STEEL I Tn many Instances the evolution of 1 modern military uniforms and arms has i been marked by a return to tvpes of ancient a.nd medieval days. Perhaps the steel helmet is the most striking ex- | ample of this tendency. Now a London 1 firm has patented and Is manufacturing f a steel-lined officer's jacket which sug gests the old coats of mail, though Tn I outward appearance It resembles an or- i dlnary close-fitting coat. It Is claimed i that the Jackets will resist a forty-flve caliber revolver bullet at twentv yards. —From the November Popular Mechan- I les Magazine. TIME lIKRLIN PAPER FAMIXE OVER I Berlin, Oct. 26. via London, Oct. 27. The threateneded paper famine which months ago caused cries of distress among the publishers, ap pears now to be a thing of the past. Claiming a shortage of labor and high wages, the manufacturers have sharp ly advanced prices since the outbreak of the war and the publishers several months ago reduced the number of pages to save expenses. "The Live Store" "Always Reliable" Careful Buying Conscientious Selling I These two short phrases sum JEgPF up the merchandising policy of the "Live" men's store of Harrishurg. I The carrying out of one depends on * the other and vice-versa. At some time f: [ or other, we have inspected practically the product of every reputable clothesmaker in the country. j I ' know resu lts they have inßpiif mm achieved, the quality of their merchandise ESyiv and the values they are in a position to offer at every price. WtT KUPPENHEIMER CLOTHES . *§J because we believe, that dollar for dollar, I" BOT they are the greatest values in the country —we believe § they not only excel in value, but in style, in tailoring and HI in fit We're proud to sell them and we feel sure you will be proud to wear them. We want you to see the results in mBSJL,, suits and overcoats we have at sls - S2O - $25 / That's all we wish—a visit from you to try on the clothes, inspect the fabrics and workmanship they'll sell themselves. I ' BOYS' SUITS AND OVERCOATS— 4 In the new Boys' Section we've put all the energy and care possible to make shopping comfort able. Come in and see for yourself the Best Boys' Department in Central Pennsylvania. BOYS' SUITS BOYS' OVERCOATS | Then the $15.00 Clothes $15.00 OVERCOATS I Never have we shown so many No sense in shivering these frosty FIFTEEN DOLLAR Suits as this season. nights and mornings when such a Never have we demanded as much from the MODERATE price will purchase such hand manufacturers in our FIFTEEN CLOTHES. some overcoats No other store in Harris- It may be that's why we're selling so very burg will give you so much value at many more than ever before, to look at the CD "1 fabrics, lining and workmanship you'd won- 3 # (J\J der how it was possible to offer such good ~U I . c . „. ~ . iL . clothes that are fully guaranteed to you at 25 . 18 ve p lB o rm & this season. This year more than ever we want to show the public that we are working right with * them. Don't Forget the Sweater Department Is a Very Busy Place These Days— It must be that we have what our customers want our prices are never questioned, because it's impossible to sell good merchandise for less. 304 Market I Harrisburg, Street M Pa. 15
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