Farewell Reception For E. F. Entwisle, WLo Has Been Made Plant Head E. F. Entwisle. former mechanical engineer at the local steel plant, who bs been made general superinten dent of the Don&ghmore (plant of the Bethlehem Steed Company, at Leba non, was given a farewell reception last night. Last evening at 6 o'clock some of th company officials gath ered around the machine shop office and presented the retiring engineer with a traveling bag and combination set to match. Entwisle responded with a short speech, thanking the men for their present. Last night a reception was held at the Elks Home in Harrisburg. F. E. Howells who succeeds Entwisle at the local plant. Introduced E. C. Hen derson as toastmaster. Those who gave toasts were: E. F_ Entwisle, P. A. Cuenot, G. R. Delamater. B. W. Winship, J. F. Cavanaugh. The tttttttttttttttttitxiixttttittiittxnttttttittttttttttttixtittttntinittutt | Low Prices Prevail While | | Remodeling Is in Progress 1 ♦♦ ♦♦ ♦♦ While workmen are busy installing our new and ♦♦ ♦♦ modern store front, this will be your one great chance ♦♦ H to save money on high grade clothing and furnishings XX 55 for men. ♦♦ S Remember that clothes are going higher in price. XX XX You have only to look up the wool market quotations XX ♦♦ to prove that. So take advantage of this opportunity. || H Note these specimen bargains. ♦+ g Hart ScHaffner and Marx H H and Society Brand Suits 8 | S I6S & 18S (tr) I XX Suits that Sold as high as $22.50, sizes mostly ♦♦ 35, 36, 38, at "$12.50 H XX $1.50 and $2.00 Shirts, sizes 14 to 18 at $1.15 ♦♦ ♦♦ $ 1.00 Athletic Union Suits 55c ♦♦ XX SI.OO Pure Silk Four-in-hand Ties . . . 55c XX ♦♦ $3.50 and $4.00 Silk Shirts . . . . $2.85 ♦♦ XX All Straw Hats . SI.OO ♦♦ | Soft Collars, All Sizes, 10c 8 I H. Marks & Son II XX 4th and Market Sts. ♦♦ Paintul Foot Tortures How Soldiers On Active Service In The French Trenches B Abrasions,etc. A novel way to quickly soothe and comfort sore, tired, tender, aching feet that burn, smart, itch, chafe, swell and perspire. Told by Corporal Jim Sulli van in an interesting interview accorded an American writer recently returned from Europe. Officers of the British Royal Army Medical Corps also explain why the same method is so successful at the Front. Many readers who suffer from pain ful foot afflictions will be interested to learn how medical officers of the English Army deal with and promptly stop the wrious form of foot misery inseparable from hard military serv ice. New recruits are often too lame .and footsore to walk after their first long "hike", and even the toughest and hardiest of the old campaigners frequently succumb to "trench feet" and the crippling rheumatic or other tortures so common in the wet, damp trenches. This antlcle explains how they put their feet in fine condition and kept them that way. Any reader can, of course, adopt the same meas ure, since the foot troubles which af flict soldiers in the trenches are usu ally far more se'- ous thar. ,iwhich civilians ever suffer and lokHars' op portune s for proper r -i med ical t.' itment ire. aaturmlly. few and far . h . .. Co 1 Jii: - lllvan, pri'abiy the hesi *-u a:. . most p . f resi K; O U K • KngUsh Army trainer®, id tn B. lti't' porting world in n s>ox C 111.* " - in* days, to the Writer:' "The rti.it requisite of a box*r or soldier is a g > sound pair of feet. .As a box- IT my eet were unusual!: cornv' calloused, tender and After numerous . z sensitive. lropc>tllsts an a n o end l?*D?tent ointments. liniments and powSfr, h.d oniyd'Hcrewe^my^.- a famous continental spa. and w foot b "hi in the medicinal water r4 prepared by rtis.olving a sma l handful cf common Rodell bath^sal water '"l 'followed his advice and have occasionally bathed my feet in the saltrated water ever since. From luZ* Av to this I have never known what It is to experience foot troubles of any kind whatsoever, and you may be sure I see to it that the soldiers in mv charge get their feet Into sal trated water the minute there is any complaint of foot fatigue, corns, blis ters aching. etc.. etc. We use the saltrates compound by the hundred weight around the camp here, and every time a draft leaves for the trenches many of the boys insist upon packing a few ounces of the saltrates powder away in their kit bags." At this point Pergt. C. S. Turner and Corp. T. S. Wilburn. both of the British Royal Army Medical Cor i. and Just then back in England on leave of absence. Joined us. When asked to tell about their experiences with foot troubles at the Front. Sergt. Turner replied: "In my opinion sal trated water offers the quickest, safest and most convenient way to get rid of them. Every one with trouble some feet should know about It. I discovered the effects years ago when the saltrates compound was not so widely used In the army as it is now. One da- I was advised to rest mv feet In saltrated water to obtain perma nent results in relieving rheumatic •ches, pains and stiffness, to aoothe a bothersome akin affection FRIDAY EVENING, guests Included P. E. Howells, P. A. Cuenot, H. R. Rupp. J. J. Donegan. F. D. Dornblasher, Edward Ruther ford, W. Reynolds, Arthur Halfpapp. Charles Aihby, Thomaa Crowley. E. R. Feehrer, R. G. Warren. A. W. Marks. Q. W. Daniels, J. W. Morrett, W. H. Staub, J. J. Cunningham, E. C. Hen derson. R. C. Westbrook, H. Marks, Charles Fetterholt, H. W. Hadley, H. I. Keim, H. Fries, Paul Handley, C. Hoffman, Frank Snell, Charles Baker. W. L. Guyer, O. R. Delamater, B. W. Wlnshlp, Alfonso Drayer, E. H. K. Halfpapp. H. Cover. R. L. Gordon. J. F. Cavanaugh, B. M. Book. James Canning, G. W, Creighton, L. L. Leach, F. A. Mills. W. J. Reagan, P, B. I>aylor, George R. Cover, John Relder, Jacob Capella, F. W. Carroll, J. W. Evans. T. Antoncich. MRS. ORIiADY RESIGNS Mrs. J. O. Miller, first vice-president of the Pennsylvania Woman Suffrage Association, has announced the resig nation of Mrs. George B. Orlady, of Huntingdon, President of the organ ization. The Equal Franchise Associa tion, allied with the Suffrage Associa tion, will issue a publication known as •'Publicity," which will be dis tributed on behalf of equal suffrage. "Foot troubles? There's no excuse for them. We don't put up with any around here," Corporal Jim Sullivan, former Middleweight Champion and now Instructor In Phyiitcal Training to the l.onilnn Scottish, one of the cruck Hrltloh ,:n K"" h m^'' **y tra I nln k camp^ Amerlean l(eglment will dubtles prepare *,•* ' OR ,RRV ' CE ■ " —J- £ that caused Intolerable Itching. The medicated water not onlv fixed my rheumatic und skin troubles in Jig time, but an old corn of years' stand ing softened and came out. root and all, after dangerous cutting and treatment with burning caustics had simply made it worse. Beter still, it never came back and a couple of thick.callouses on the bottom of my feet had also disappeared for good. Corporal Wilburn then Joined In the conversation, saying: "I took the trouble to have a sample of the sal trates compound analyzed and I found that it is practically a reproduction of many essential constituent ele ments found in the waters of such well-known medicated bathing springs as Ichy les Bains. Carlsbad and Aix ies Bains. It even contains ingredi ents which release a certain amount of free oxygen in the water, thus giv ing many of the refreshing benefits of an oxygen bath. In this wav it also resembles the natural spa water* to a marked extent and certainly the therapeutic effects appear to be quite similar In many cases that have come under by personal observation. Why do you know, one of the men In our company was laid up In bed for two weeks with 'trench feet' and a com plication of other foot troubles be sides. yet the soothing and antiseptic efTects of saltrated water weri the only form of treatment used and now he has as sound and healthy pair of feet as any one could possibly want." "Such painful alTlictlons as corns, callouses, etc.. etc.. are. after all. To Launch $3,000,000,000 Liberty Loan November 15 Washington, Aug. 3.—The second Liberty Loan—for $3,000,000,000 —will be launched November IS, Treasury officials said to-day. Before that time It is planned to issue nearly $1,000,000,000 In Treasury short-time certificates to meet Im mediate- needs. On the eve of the announcement of the second Liberty Loan, Treasury officials are at a >loss for a name to distinguish It from the first. To sell the second issue of bonds a campaign is being planned which will overshadow the organization and publicity which made the first bond issue so great a success. Much of the first organization will be used, conferences with district Liberty Loan committees and prominent bank erp from all parts of the country al ready having been held. simply Indications of injured tissues. I to which the feet are peculiarly sus ceptible. Being the farthest points the heart to which the blood forced, the feet are subject to manj aches, pains, corny growths. f e ?. u 'tlng directly from defectivo circulation in the extremities, great strain in supporting weight of tho body, and constant shoe pressure on sensitive, irritated nerves and delicate bloodvessels By treating the feet with hot saltrated water, which anv one can make with Rodell bath sa't trates we Immediately stimulate the blood circulation, dissolve out decom posing sebaceous matter from aloeired pores and render the skin Active healthy and fpee from offensive odor tion" ous <^ ects of ac 'd Perspira- The remarkably effective saltrated baths referred to in the aßove au thoritative article are prepared bv dissolving ordinary Rodell bath sal trates in plain hot water. Any druir gest can supply a half pound or so of the standard Rodell bath saltrates compound at slight cost, and about! a heaping tablespoonful is the qu'an- i tity usually employed to prepare a very strong foot bath. The following union* otlicr local druggists. wish to announee that tliey ! Hi ways keep the reiined Kodell hath j saltrntos m|H)tniXlAL.—"Peggy, the Will o' the Wisp." REGEXT—"Sacrifice." PAXTANG PARK—Vaudeville. |[w*v •; THE WILL O' THE WISP" A story of the Ireland of to-dav, "Peggy. the Will o' the Wisp," with Mabel Taliaferro in the leading role Is the Metro attraction at the Coloniai to-day and to-morrow. Verv few amusement lovers remember that it was Miss Taliaferro who was the first legitimate American star to go into the silent drama. Her debut was as the star In a three-act feature, "Cin derella." The reason for the lighting desire of the Irish peasant for homo rule is indicated clearly in this de lightful play. On Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday Clara Kimball Young In "The Easiest Way,"by Eugene Walter. This is a superb production in every way, and is prohablv the big gest screen event of tile year. There are seven acts, and included with this big program will be a Mack-Senntt Keystone comedy, featuring Ora C*rw in "Skidding Hearts." fH ttiege strenuous times the sub ject of war and international spying are uppermost in Mnricnret lllinKton the mind. "Sac at the r'lice." In whlcii Rfgent To-Onj- the celebrated stage star. Mar gnrent Tllington. makes b r picture debut, concerns this all-ab sorbing topic. It is the Paramount attraction at the Regent to-dav. Tiie story relate* the dramatic story of half sisters, one of whom is the 'iaUKhtet of a diplomat and the other is a cabaret dancer in the neighbor ing—and hostile—country. The girls become involved in the international spying systems of the countries and one of them Is called upon to make the supreme sacrifice for her country. Blanche Sweet will be presented in "The Silent Partner." a thrilling drama of business life, to-morrow. How would you like to hear your favorite piece of music played on the accordion by the best The Bill artist on that particular nt I'axlnnK instrument in the world? If this proposi tion meets with your approval, Just write Froiinl a note addressed to the Paxtang Park Theater, stating your selection and when you will be in the house to hear It. and Mr. Fro zini will be triad to play it for you. Froilnl has had several requests for special numbers during his engage ment at the park, and has complied with all of them, much to the delifcht of lu-liences The balance of the park show for thin *** K i" iredf . u . , llit■ |. class acts as Amanda Orav nnd her Southern singing bi>;-s; McPe.vltt and Kelly, grotesque dai.cers; Fisher and Saul, romcdv cvcli' ar.d the Flying Summers, aerial artists HONOR GIRL SPECIAL CLKRK Sunbury. Pa.. AUK. 3. —Miss Doro thy Bonnwitz, of Sunbury, who took second honors out of a class of sev enty-six In tlio Sunbury High school STORE OPEN UNTIL 9 P. M., TO-MORROW CSATURDAY) MBig RoimdUpSale w' T i S .f U^ Dre ,T 7 %n That $2.95 and Organdy Dresses That d*-l ffVZ IW Were $5, $6 and $7.50 Were $3.50 to $3.95 3>JLOU VS-J /**■/*&■. all sizes among them, but not all sizes in each . . , , . . . „ . '.£ l style. The best models of the season and finest splendid style, assortment and all sizes for • material. women and misses. — * r i|A Round-Up of Women's Patent Colt & Dull Kid Pumpsij Rou SKIRTS' 6 ° F i|The Greatest Shoe Value on Record;! sl - 49 i WOMEN'S UP TO $5.00 A I PATENT COLT AND \ JC Wash Skirts of Pique, pabar- I —— _ _ _ _ __ __ __ _ _ 3C wor th for .. I"C Only 100 Aprons on sale; Only 125 of these Dresses to r- 1 . 00 a L f. dieJ l Swiss Nibbed 100 Ladies' Swiss Ribbed made of fast color Percales; all sell; made of Lawn and Ging- sizes."3*B to 4 0 trtm med; all Vests, with Drawing String; all sizes ham; assorted sizes, 3 4 to 44. " * sizes. y / n / > j worth to 39c, for. . Wei | Ladies' Silk Hose QQq j A BIG ROUND-UP SALE OF 300 pair „< Ladies' Fl'br. SUk WOrth 55c, for. .. : TTT JTT • J Hose; White and colors; Mam.- 200 >air of Ladies ' Finc Silk VV II TO Pll C \hS OICT C faeturcrs' seconds; none ex- fu^Ue^' 6 t<>P WaCk ° n,y: " " W V¥ dlO lO > / v / Lawn Waists, IJQa Silk, worth to OQ worth to $1 for.. VtlC $2.50, for % 117 1 O £Zy\ Made of nice, lace and cm- SI.OO White Jap Silk Waist dovs W ash buits "•""* •" ££ s *'"" co " ari *" K 1 .'Si LAWN WAISTS, WORTH I I Than % to soc for., Z9C JL IICIII / JuSt 200 on Sale " Whlte Waists; Lace and Embroidery r trimmed, all sizes. Enough For All Day VjS i Tomorrow, Saturday il ci 1 round-up sale of $1.75, $2.00 and $2.50 QC n MEN'S SUITS I Boys' Wash Suits VOC j a wr\ p A TVrTQ Every new and desirable style; all colors two suits for the A 1 %-J X 1 price of one $1.75. $2.00, $2.50 Suits sc. l|; Men s Cool Clothd| MH A A /"" Boys' 75c Rompers 49c tT". J|J Bloomer 1 ants; 2, 3, I, 5 anil 6 jears. Included In this lot are those hand ■ Tj \ IvJSSS; !i! * >1; made "Miller Make Suits," the hand- JJ g somest and best made suit ever of- A. I\ }> —————————— I fered in this city. Your choice, no / '/g\ / /r\ !>' ROUND-UP SALE | Men , Flannd and t - e#n# | Sn t/ksaKMW*BmemenF 1 aS? 3 s R==Jf 111 ggg=saasi II v ' ' sls Values pf y| j|i 51.30 IRONING BOARDS —! /ib. I'.I.KtTRIC ;jl „ „ i n ~ „ . 'A\ k )|! well 'WJ IRONS Pelt Backs. Double Breasted and f SSSf 'Stt&r l Men's $1.75 Khi- 1 ftftfll A(f (j , | NEW RELTOX RUGS !;! The last lot of tho season. Tun- I I Enamel Ware 3sc white s,xe 2 4 X54 "'V' Deltox 98c i'i nel Loops and Cuff Bottoms. I I \ enamel ware; big assortments Ru eS' Special - t / J|! of kitdiPii nttnsils; IQ r Size 36x72-in. Deltox Ruks |i : _ ... !/ each, Spe- CQ \ i ciai an.oy ||| Men's $1.50 Straw 5 \ Luncheon Sets Blue and Sji!e 54x90.in. Deltox Hugs. Is Hats Wvl# 1 LjJ ) J ; white doilie set for table CQ r Spe- io on )2 St rT '!• 3 pieces, sot - 3>0.3!7 ll _ , „ ~ „ , . . I j~~[r UiJ j!; ' clal }. Cooii Ben.ri.tt raw. Ya'lit shape I Jtmitl ILA . , Curtulns—s9c Ruffled Muslin ize 6x9-foot DeltO* RugJ | s / QRj I f 39c ; ' al $4#9S I 300 PAIRS OF MEN'S I — Size Bxlo foot Deltox Hugs. " " Bnv g"\r* ll ST $5.95 I WORSTED RANTS $1 .95 ill y 0 ": 5 - 89 n,r "pLgr" 0 .'.. $9-95 I VALUES TO $3.00 _|_ = | Oil Mop 51.50 Wizard Oil 85c Wooden Wash Bench; SIZES 32 TO 44 WAIST Mop, combination mop-oil- folding; holds two tubs. _ fi; jj; duster and dust cloth 89c! Special each tJJC ■ ? j355555<55455435555555555555654555555545555555555555655^6555655^[ complete ADJUSTABLE PORCH GATES Garden Rocs — 59c good steel Like pie- - , SI.OO Step Laders; extra $7.50 Vacuum garden hoes with handle. 39c! lure. 5 ft. TH strong and well finished; CQ- Cleaners and // s>ec,il " Size J ftWOOOdOOOOQ i cach sweeper co m g?.." p pr"":' r "": 98c sl.s9Sn'' 19c $3.95 19c Figured Voiles; fine fig- I 25c Wash Fabrics; tine wash 39c Wash Fabrics; new wash 50c Bordered Voiles; 4 5 inches 111-ed voiles; all this season's fabrics; 38 Inches wide; big va- fabrics, 40 inches wide; beauti newest designs. Spe- 1 91/ 0 r rlety of patterns and IQ. ful colorings and designs. OQ. wide; four good patterns. OC cial, yard, ~ /a*- | (jualitles. Special, yard, A Special, yard Special, yard jj I $T this year, has been appointed a spe cial clerk In tho office of Treasurer ' Glass. She will assist In the work | of copying the mercantile and hunt ters' licenses lists and will be em ployed for several months. AUGUST 3| 1917 ISO ASK NATURALIZATION Sunbupy Pa. Aug. 3. —One hun dred and twenty persons of foreign birth have applied to the olflce of Edgar Summers clerk of tho North- I umberland county courts for nature* I lization. Court for hearing: them at j to their fitness will be held on Sep. | tembcr 13, when both Judges Cum* tilings and Judge Moser will sit. 5