4 & Bargain Day £ I \/ a \ Umbrellas All our Fine Laces, Embroideries, Dress Trimmings, Men's or 'Women's Guaranteed tO-morroW, at 1-3 and: of OUr USUaI low Fast Blaek American Taffeta prices. Taped Er Tvnrv lots of solicl and m USS- MARKED DOWN < Washable lan or ivory , N#rWwrar Cnllarc: Cn at Plain or stripe Angora Wool, Cape Gloves; pair .. $1.50 „ Neckwear, Collars, Coat plain or plaid fleece; also fur _ , Sets, etc.; were 25c to 59c; trimmed; row Chamoisette or Cashmere Saturday> 250, 390, 590, Gloves; wh iteor gray, pair, 100 and 50 980, $1.39 Set Children's Lined or Un lined Cape Gloves \ pair, Tf COKShIS Infants' Wool Mittens. Sale Price; pair 50 R. & G., WB, Warner's and other makes; all sizes; PERFECT STOCKINGS all nCW models ' each SI.OO, .$1.25, $1.50 Women's Deep Boot Silk New Model Corsets; rustless 590 and 790 Stockings; black or white; Ferris Bros# > Wa i sts f or girls; Saturday 590 Saturday, pair 25? y _ _ Boys' Heavy Stockings; r < \ fast black; to-morrow, pair, j SALE Handbags, Knit Underwear, Mus- | 13y 2 q ! lin Underwear, Notions, Hair Switches, etc. GASTRIC H'Ss PRUSSIAN DIET AIMS CRITICISM [Continued From First Page] use of submarines, was far more mod erate than on earlier occasions and was not characterized by attacks on the United States. Paul Breltenbach, minister of pub lic works, and the chancellor's second in the Prussian cabinet, said, in a care fully worded declaration in behalf of the government: "This grave and difficult epoch re quires ever-renewed discussion of what ways and means are to be adopted." He added, however, that he considered any expression of the government's views at present to be undesirable. Responsibility for deci sions. he said, rested on the chancel lor and he appealed to the patriotism of the House to support this difficult task by refraining from criticism of his policy—an appeal which the pro ceedings showed to be unnecessary. It was commented that even Dr. Women's Sufferings Often Due to Lack of Knowledge Thousands of women can testify to tlie astonishing power of Iron to re store strength and vitality even in the most complicated conditions. The real and true cause of their troubles was nothing more or leas than weakened conditions brought on by lack of Iron in the blood causing anemia or blood lessncst. To overcome this condition the blood supply needs recharging and it is here that Iron, which is best taken in the form of Liquid Irondoc, possesses such wonderful power. Being a blood builder Liquid Irondoc secures a wealth of new rich, reo Mood which charges the whole s.v:-.te.n with new Vitality and new life, bringing the roses back to the cheeas and a sparkle to the eyes. Iron In the form of Liquid Irondoc does not slain the teeth and being in Liquid form, is at once absorbed by the blood. Make no misake—start taking Liquid Irondoc to-day. Your druggist can supply you.—Advertise ment. TRUSSES A truss is something that you do not buy unless it is abso lutely required; but when a truss is required, you should have the best the market af fords, regardless of what it costs. We sell all the best trusses, in all sizes, for all purposes and for all ages. Special fitting from stock, or trusses made to order. FOR NEV'S DRUG STORE Second Street, Near Walnut V i i Two Carloads of Pea Coal Thereby hangs a tale! Coal is so scare that they are paying a premium for it in some quarters. We placed an order for 30 carloads of Pea Coal. In or dinary times this order would be filled in a jiffy. Not so to-day. For instance in 6 weeks' time 2 of the 30 carloads ar rived. There are no cars to haul it. Is coal scarce? * Are you prepared for real cold weather? You'd better get busy with your coal order. EL M. Kelley & Co. Office, 1 \or Hi Third Yards, Tenth and -State FLORIDA "BY SEA" Baltimore to JACKSONVILLE (Calling at Savannah) Delightful Sail File Steamer*. Lan Fares. Hrnt Service. Plan Your Trip to Include "Finest ( oastwise Trips In the World" Illustrated Booklet on Itequeat. MKRCIIAJVTS * MINERS TKANS. CO. W, P. VUUMBIi, G. P. A. Ualto.. Ud. FRIDAY EVENING, Von Heydebrand in advocating unre | strlcted submarine warfare demanded iit only at such time as the Em- I peror and Field Marshal Von Hinden burg found it to be advisable. He said: "If we are to win a victory it is ab solutely imperative to use the weapons which give us the possibility of win ning a victory against the toughest and strongest adversary, England. * * " If our military authorities, the higher command and the Em peror find It suitable and timely to make the necessary use of unlimited submarine warfare the German and Prussian peopJe will be prepared to bear the consequences." Drastic U-Boat War and Increased Activity, Demanded in Diet London, Jan. 19. At yesterday's sitting of tlie Prussian Diet, says neu ter's Amsterdam correspondent, a number of speeches were delivered and great enthusiasm was shown in favor of the vigorous prosecution of the war and increased submarine ac tivity. Paul Breitenbach, Prussian minister of public works, said the rejection of German's peace offer had evoked a feeling that it was now a battle to the utmost for the Fatherland, adding that perhaps the heaviest fight was that of "truth against enemy lies." He demanded that neutral interests shall not be allowed to interfere with Germany's struggle for victory and said: "We must expect from every neutral that they do not lay stress on his own interests where for us it is a fight for existence. Such interests must not prevent us from gaining a peace that will satisfy German aspirations and safeguard the world from new and similar catastrophes." Dr. Von Heydebrand. the Conserv- EATING THEM OUT OF HOUSE AND HOME Walter Uoyson Has l'ound llis Lost Appetite and Is Gaining Weight WAS ALL RUN DOWN "I was all in," says Walter Boyson, a genial young businessman, who lives at 2338 Logan St., Harrisburg, Pa., "I had no pep, no ambition, I was just j tired out and I couldn't seem to get rested. "I had no appetite, just didn't want to eat and I was losing weight fast. Wasn't sick, you know just didn't have any 'go' left in me. "So I got to looking around for , some sort of a medicine that would put me back in the running and be lieve me I found it when I found Tanlac. "It sure has fixed me up in great shape and I feel better to-day than I have felt in I don't know when. My appetite has come back a-whoop ing and I'm eating the family out of house and home. I'm getting back my lost weight fast and I feel as happy as if somebody had left mo a million dollars. "Tanlac is grSat stuff, all right, and don't let 'em tell you different. Believe me, I know." Tanlac, the famous reconstructive lonic, is now being introduced here at Gorgas' Drug Store, whore the Tanlac man is meeting the peopjfe and '•xplaining the merits of this master medicine. Tanlac is ~ai)ld also at the Gorgas Drug Store in the I'. It. R. Station. | H— N Stands For Hypo-Nuclane (TABLETS) A Tonic Blood Builder and Flesh Producing Food Medicine. Bloodless people! Thin, anaemic feople! People with colorless lips. 'eople with pale cheeks and all who are under weight for their height; those who have poor appetite and those who cat a plenty but get no strength or flesh, will rejoice to see the effect of three-grain Hypo- Nuclane Tablets on their health and weight. Happiness, health and in creased weight come to those who take with their meals these powerful tittle tablets, composed of a salient extract from yolk of eggs, hypo phosphites, iron, and simple vegetable medicines of great tonic , powers. They aid digestion, increase nutrition and force new blood and'tissue build ing materials into the nutritive chan nels. One or two packages proves it —if you weigh before beginning. Sold by druggists at 00 cts. per tube or direct from the laboratories of The Blackburn Products Co., Dayton, .Ohitf ative lender, and Dr. Herold, Centrist, in loudly applauded speeches, advo vated that complete freedom be ac corded the naval authorities to carry on unrestricted submarine warfare, de claring that the German people were ready to bear the consequences, for the entire Prussian people were now Solidly behind the King to follow where he leads in the battle for vic tory. "We demand," Von Heydebrand said, and is quoted as having said, "the restoration of our people's life to what it was before this terrible and lightly started war, and guarantees for the future which our enemies now demand from us." Herr Von Kardorff, Free Conserva tive, referring to Poland, said the key to the ejitire question was to arrive at an understanding with the Roman Catholic Church as to its wishes con cerning religious education. Sharpening of Submarine Warfare Not Expected to Extend to Ruthless Methods Berlin, Jan. IS, vial London, Jan. 19. —The Bundesrat committee on for eign which met here Tuesday under the presidency of the Bavarian premier, had a conference to-day with Reichstag party leaders and the chan cellor which was concerned largely with the, rejection of Germany's peace overtures by the entente. A decision apparently has not yet been taken concerning a sharper sub marine campaign. As this increase in the underwater warfare is discussed in usually >vej| informed quarters here the sharpening is not expected to ex tend to the "ruthless" methods and a breaking away from the understand ing with the United States regarding due warning and adequate precautions for the safety of the crews for recog nized merchantmen, but various meth ods for intensifying submarine prac tices are under consideration. The uncompromising nature of the entente answers 1Q the German peace over | tures is largely responsible for this i shift in public opinion. The same desire to overcome com plications with the United States and to arrive at peace on reasonable terms | still prevails with a great majority of I the people. Peace, Food and Galician ! Affair ss Discussed at Meeting ! London, Jan. 19.—Premier Clam j Martinic, of Austria, and General Holer, head of the Austrian war feed ing department, have had a confer ence on the food problem with Chan cellor von liellunann-Hollweg, Foreign Secretary Zimmerman and Adolf Ba | tocki, German food controller, accord ing to a Hague dispatch to the Ex change Telegraph Company. The con ference was mainly concerned with ! economic questions, including the dis tribution of the food captured in Ru mania. It is understood, however, that peace and Galician affairs were dis cussed exhaustively. The German press, according to the dispatch, treat- I ed the conference with marked cool ! ncss. TWO EPIDEMICS BREAK 1916 DISEASE RECORD [Continued From First Page] of typhoid fever occurred during a period of about two months. The epidemic was due almost entirely health authorities claim, to eontami nated ice cream. The death toll was I much higher during this epidemic, 50 I deaths resulting. I Big improvements were shown in contagious records for all other dis eases. Barring the totals of the two I epidemics only 990 cases were report ed, far below records for previous years. | Cases of various diseases reported from January 1 to December .11, 1916 j follow: Typhoid. 402; scarlet fever! 'l7; smallpox, 0; chlckenpox; 192; j diptheria, 124; measles, 2,530; Ger | man measles, 14; whooping cough i2B8; pneumonia, 44; erysipelas, 32" i mumps, 48; ophthalmia, 14; scabies 5; impetigo, 8; tetanus, 5; infantile j paralysis, 6; tuberculosis, 219; total. Totals for 1915 follow: Typhoid, 93- scarlet tever, 38; smallpox, 1; chicken pox, 243; diphtheria, 139; measles, 28; German measles, 10; whooping cough, 335; pneumonia, 34; ervsipelas 42; mumps, 229; opthalrnia, 16; scabies, 5; impetigo, 10; tetanus, 0? infantile paralysis, 0; tuberculosis, 199; total, 1,425. SCUMJY FINALLY SEATED Trenton, N. J., Jan. 19. The Court of Errors and Appeals to-day by a vote of 7 to 7 affirmed the Supreme Court decision that a recount in the Third Congressional district was legal This mokes final the re-election or Congressman Thomas J. Scully, Demo crat, from that district. On the first count Robert Carson, Republican, had an apparent majority. HONOR MEMORY OF LEE Richmond, Va., Jan. 19. Robert E. Lee's memory was honored to-day throughout the South. The one hun dred and tenth anniversary of his birth was observed as a holiday in all Southern States and memorial exer cises were held in many cities and towns. Y' •'N . - ' < HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH SCOUR OCEAN FOR ELUSIVE RAIDER [Continued From First Page] pot supply ship Adamant. It Is said that two other cruisers, yet uniden tified, are rushing south to join the searchers. The cruisers are at intervals send ing out warnings to allied ships, giving the last two locations of the raider and advising entente merchantmen to avoid the known routes in the South Atlantic. Ships are also urged to send out warnings upon sighting any strange craft, giving their location and the direction in which the ship was pro ceeding when sighted. Raider Is Believed to Have Armed Captives; Creates Consternation New York. Jan. 19.—Notwithstand ing the known activity of Hritish war- I ships, eleven of .which are hurrying from many directions into South At lantic waters in search of the German commerce destroyer which sank the Voltaire, Georgic and other entente vessels, increased apprehension was felt in marine circles to-day owing to undented credence which the shipping world in general has placed on over night reports that the black raider, believed to be the famous Moewe, is not operating unassisted. According to these reports, this fugitive raider carried several sets of armament and has furnished guns to at least two of her captive ships, the St. Theodore and the Yarrowdale, which in turn became preying rovers. The Yarrowdale, British, is reported to have arrived at the Cape Verde Islands with the crews of eight of the ships which were sunk. Her early departure on a raiding mission would cause no surprise among shippers. Reports as yet unconfirmed place the present whereabouts of the Moewe a considerable distance north of the Ireland-Brazil sea lanes, where her liavoc was accomplished. Meanwhile the entente war vessels, aside from hunting down an active raiding squad ron, are keeping close watch on sev eral merchant vessels suspected of supplying the Moewe and her allies with food and of assisting them in other ways. As a precaution against an illegal ufce of Brazilian territory as a base of operations for the German ships a portion of the Brazilian navy is maneuvering off that country. Submarine Fires Fifty Shells at Steamer Which Later Makes Its Escape Portland, Maine, Jan. 19. —Officers of tlio British steamer Palm Branch, which arrived here yesterday from Cardiff via New York, reported to-dav that a submarine fired fiftv shots at the vessel while in the English Chan nel early in November. Ten of twelve shots took effect, they said, one passing entirely through the ship above the water line. The steamer escaped by suddenly changing her course. A boy was struck and slightly injured. The Palm Branch returned to Car diff for repairs and the officers said they learned that the submarine later was captured or sunk. No Americans So Far as Known Lost Lives Through Operations of Raider Rio Janeiro, Jan. 19. A division of the Brazilian navy left here to-dav for maneuvers in the neighborhood of the Rio Janeiro roadstead. It is re ported in well informed quarters that some of the warships will be detached to make a survey of the Brazilian coast as a precaution against Brazilian territory being used as a base for the ||!j V Aspirin is made by only one company. U $ "ij I Counterfeits and substitutes may be in .j |i effective, and even dangerous. i i- fiM|.* v-f | & I < . I#4 f*s i # 1' r y° ur P ro^ec " on be sure to ask Pocket Boxes of 12 ~ for and to see that you get only IH Bottles of 24 Bottles of ICO j Then only are you sure that you have the genuine Aspirin. Every package and every tablet is marked with 1 ' 1 | " The Bayer Cross Your Guarantee of Purity" J Th trade-mark "Aspirin" (Rag. U. S. Pat. Office) is a guarantee that th. monoaceticaclde.ter of aallcyllcacid in tb.s. ~ | tablets is of the reliable Bayer manufacture. = H. MARKS & SON 4th and Market Streets Reduction Sale Hart Schaffner & Marx Suits cilid and Society Brand | Overcoats At Bi£ Reductions —— Furs Reduced 15% to Fur Lined Overcoats Reduced *■ All Men's Furnishings at Reduced Prices SEE WINDOW DISPLAYS operations of the German raider. It is officially stated at. the American consulate that the following Ameri cans were among the crews of the ships sunk by the raider who have been landed at Pernambuco: Benja min Stevens, Frank Magee, David Johnson, Fred Smith, Harry Picot, Guy Van Doern, Royal Gregory and an unnamed negro. These men were members of the crew of the St. Theo dore which was captured on December 12, but not sunk. In addition to these another American, Charlie Jones, member of the crew of the steamer Minieh. captured on December 19, has arrived here. As far as is known no Americans lost their lives through the operations of the raider, but nothing has been learned in re gard to the ships captured before Jan uary 12. Yarrowdale Believed to Have 400 Survivors Aboard Is in Port Rio Janeiro, Jan. 18.—The British steamer Yarrowdale with the crews of eight ships sunk by the German raider in the Atlantic arrived January 16 at Sao Vicenti, Cape Verde Islands, ac cording to reliable information re ceived here. It has been stated in unofficial dis patches that the Yarrowdale had on board 400 men of the crews of sunken ships. DANE REPORTED SUNK London, Jan. 19. Lloyd's reports the sinking of the Danish steamship Dagmar. FEARED NORWEGIAN LOST London, Jan. 19.—Lloyds reports : v * ~ jgmnpir*". itwiii— JANUARY 19, 1917. that the Norwegian steamship Ber genhus is believed to have been sunk. Th Berg'enhus, 3,G06 tons gross, was last reported at Gibraltar on Decern-' ber 21 on her way from Genoa for Baltimore. STEAMER SUBMARINED Madrid, via Paris, Jan. 18.—The Spanish steamer Manuel, 2,419 tons, of Bilbao, has been sunk by a sub marine. The crew was rescued by the Swedish steamer Karl. HARD FIGHTING STILL RAGING IN RUMANIA [Continued From First Page] dications are not lacking, however, that the present comparatively pacific conditions are not likely to endure ! long, and in this connection the ex- I treme southern sector of the line is ; being closely watched, j Germans Concentrating in Alsace ' The French here occupy a consider able section of Alsace, the fighting line touching the Swiss border between Belfort and Basel. Concentration of masses of German troops across the line from Basel has recently been re ported in Swiss newspapers and a be lief is said to exist in Switzerland that the Germans contemplate an offensive with the object of freeing Alsace of the invaders. The Swiss Federal Council early this week, while expressing confidence that none of the powers contemplated a violation of Swiss neutrality, ordered the mobilization of additional troops as a measure of precaution. Both Germany and France assured Switzer land recently that they would continue to respect her neutrality. No Notable Change Neither Berlin nor Petrograd to- | WHY HAIR FALLS OUT i Dandruff causes a feverish Irritation of the scalp, the hair roots shrink, loosen and then the hair comes out fast. To stop falling hair at once and rid the scalp of every particle of dan druff, get a 25-cent bottle of Danderino at any drug store, pour a little in your hand and rub well into the scalp. After a few applications all dandrulT disappears and the hair stops coming out.—Adv. day reports any notable change as the result of the fighting in Rumania. The Germans, according to their report, re pulsed attacks north of Sucliitza val ley, on the Moldavian frontier. Ger man long-range guns, the Kussian statement announces, are bombarding Ocna, an important town on the later al railway behind the Russian front in Southwestern Moldavia, doubtless with the object of interfering with Russian transportation on this line. In Eastern Galacia the Germans took the offensive in the sector near Zborow, east of Lemberg, but accord ing to Petrograd were repulsed gfter they had succeeded in penetrating the Russian lines at one point. FIRST SHIP PASSES FLUSHING SINCE FALL OF ANTWERP London, Jan. 19. A Reutor dis patch from Flushing, Holland, to-day reports the German steamer Ursula Fiscker passing there from Zeebrutfge on her way to Antwerp. "This is Iho tirst German ship that has passed in this direction since the fall of Ant werp," the dispatch adds.