14 CITY GOES OVER THE TOP [Continued from First Page.] man. chairman, $93,600; Ramsey S. Black, $9,000; John F. Dapp, $42,- 250; C. H. Kinter. 5i6,350; Ed. Moes lein. $6,900; Andrew S. Patterson $6,350; Frank C*. Sites, $12,750. Division No. 3, Harry Leonard chairman. $122,750; O. F. Baker, +4,- 450; D. D. Dunlap, $3,050; George W. Fisher, $2,2.50; Henderson Gil bert, $41,750; David Kaufmun, $35,- 550: J. P. McCullough, $35,700. Division No. 4, John C. Herman, chairman, $896,100; C. W. Burtn?tt, $150,400; E. R. Eckenrodu, $69,750; L. M. Neifter. $24,150; B. Al. Oglesbv, $537,500; George S. Reinoehl, $54,- 800; Brook Trout, $32,500. Division No. 5, Charles E. Pass. I chairman, $160,350; Arthur D. con. $12,250; Harry A. Boyer, $12,- 900; A. L. Hollar, $87,200; Clayton G. Miller, $25,150; Walter S. Scliell. $11,850; R. Ross Seaman, SII,OOO. Division No. 6, John F. Sweeney., chairman, $129,950; R. E. Boswell, i $36,250; A. G. Eden, $12,400; John C. Johnson, $15,050; John T. Olmsted.. $12,900; William Pavor.l, $29,350:, Ray S. Shoemaker, $24,000. Division No. 7. Flavel L. Wright, chairman, $75,050; J. R. Morrison, $2,250: Walter I- Dietrich, $0,850; R. W. Dowdell. $5,100; Dr. C. E. L.; Keen. $19,700; T. W. Smallwood, $36,100; Dr. Guy G. Snyder, $4,950. ' Juniata County, 52K.700 Juniata county's report for t lie , third day of the big campaign is as ! follows: Mifflintown. $10,250; Mifflin, $6,000; Port Roval. $8,500; McAlis terville, $200; Richfield, $500; Thompsontown. $1,250. Perry County. £20.050 Perry county made the following ( report: Duncnnnon, $5,000; New Bloomtield, $11,000: Newport. $6,-! 000: Marysville, $1,650; Millcrstown, j $6,000, Cumberland County 583.7.10 Cumberland county's showing for the third day of the drive follows. To-duy's total reaches the amount ot $93,050, but due to an error in the total reported yesterday the i FLUSH KIDNEYS WITH SALTS IF 1 BACK ISJCHING Noted authority says we eat too much meat, which clogs Kidneys. Take glass of isalts when Kidneys hurt or Bladder bothers you. No man or woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by! flushing the kidneys ociVisionally, | t ays a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which excites the, kidneys, they become overworked! from the strain, get sluggish and | tail to filter the waste and poisons! from the blood, then we get sick. | Nearly all rheumatism, headaches,; l'vor trouble, nervousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and urinary disorders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts or If the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, stop eating meat and get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any phar macy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast and in a few days your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the; acid of grapes and lemon juice, com - 1 hined with iithia, and has been used for generations to Hush and stimu late the kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts Is inexpensive and can not Injure; makes a delightful effer-, vescent lithia-water drink which; everyone should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active I and the blood pure, thereby avoiding} serious kidney complications. ======== Last Year's j MThis Year's SIGHT Last year your eyes may have been splendid, perfect, faultless.; BUT—this year they may be blurry, distressing, defective. The remedy?—* Have us examine your eyes and furnish the glasses needed. We redone wTong nlKh* by farnlahln K right (claimra R. D. PRATT Eyesight Specialist 2 NORTH THIRD STHEET Schlelxnrr Muddlng I I ! • ♦ • i | Quality or Price It is our belief that the great number of men who smoke King Okar Cigars smoke them for their quality and flavor, i To maintain this quality it has been neces• 1 sary to advance the retail price to 6 cents, but the quality must be maintained. John C. Herman & Co. Makers THURSDAY EVENING, amount above should be used to ob tain a correct total for the two | days- Carlisle, $64,850; Newvllle, j $.1,000: Mechanlcsburg, $2,500, I Shlremanstown, $500; New Cumber- ! land, $7 500. Grantham, $800; Camp Hill, SI.- f I 100; Lemoyne, $1,500; Upper umlj Lower Allen and Monroe townships, ; $800; Hampton and Silver Springs township, $500; Ht. Holly Springs.' SIO,OOO. County. Xot Including City, $980,800 Dauphin, $3,350; Ellsabethville, $5,-. j 050; Gratis. $1,450: Halifax. $15,000: ; Hummelstown, $2,000; . Hershey.. $296,800; Lykens, $6,250; Middle-: town, $23,400; Millersburg, $13,950; j Penbrook, $7,100; Steelton, $576,450; ; ' Williamstown, $25,000; Lingiestown, ; $5,000. Members of teams subscribed ns ' follows, following the commltee's re- | j port this afternoon: John I)upp, Bow- j man and Company, David K. Tracy. | • 10. 55. Wallower, W. P. Starkey, WII- j liam Jennings. \V. T. Hlldrup Jr.. I ; J. L. 1,. Kuhn and Henderson Gilbert. I $10,000: David Kaufman $4,000; John I C. Herman, $5,000; employes of the j Harrisburg Pipe and Pipe Bending ' Company, $10,000: employes of the 1 Hickok Manufacturing Company, $5,- i 000; George W. Roily. $l.00(i; Miller I and Kades $1,000: Paul Johnston. sl,- UOO; James T. Houck, $1000; Flavel Wright $1,000: Pass and Collins, sl.- 000 and Thomas Small wood, SSOO. The salesmen were boisterous at j the meeting. William Jennings ofli- i ciated as orator and called out the j subscriptions as they were pledged. Afterward, when it was found the ; total was well above the $1,000,000' mark, the enthusiasm of the sales men broke all bounds and, rushing 1 from the hall, they secured the Tech- j nical High Sctyiol band and started a parade over the principle streets ot the city. In front of the Bed Cross headquar- > ters, Fp'encer Gilbert made an appro- j priate address. As a fitting conclusion to the big j drive, the Doxology was sung by the i men before leaving Chestnut Street : Auditorium. The Sunday school of Stevens Me morial Methodist Episcopal Church, j at a meeting last night, decided not i to treat the children to candy this j Christmas. Instead, the amount ot j the treat was invented in four SSO Liberty bonds, one for each deparl- | lvent. Al. K. Thomas is superin- j Undent. The total for Harrisburg and the allied towns for the first two days' of the drive was $;'..412,900. To-day the City of Harrisburg subscribed j $1,970,700. The allied towns jjlave ; subscriptions to-day amounting to j 51,120,000. The grand total for the i drive to this date, the figures not j being official, is $6,533,600. This does \ not include the amount subscribed i after the report closed this afternoon, ; Everybody Buy Governor Martin G. ilrur.ibaugh. | who presided at the Ids' meeting at- Chestnut Street Auditorium last j nifiht, aroused intense enthusiasm ; when he stated that any man or woman who does not resolve to sup- | port this government in every way possible is not tit to live here. Gov ernor Brumbaugh urged every citizen of Ilarrishurg to purchase bonds to-| day. Harrisburg is one of the five Penn sylvania cities in which the Wharton) School of the University of Pennsyl-, vania will try out u plan through : which students are expected to pur-■ J chase Liberty Loan Bonds valued at. thousands of dollars. Purchasers will pay for their bonds in twelve equal , monthly installments. Students who join the "syndicate" will be taught , to save, and will be richer by a bond | at the end of the year. ! During the address by Dr. Hill's, last night, scores of mothers and sis- • ters were knitting garments forj American boys in the trenches, as j they listened to the lurid description I of German atrocities. lied Men Purchase Warrior Eagle Tribe No. 340. 1m- ' proved Order Bed Men, last night! voted to purchase a SIOO Liberty Bond. | Edward Moeslein. a veteran of the Franco-Prussian War. is captn'n of one of the Second Liberty Loan teams in this city. Yesterduj Mr, Moeslein's division reported sales of $6,300. "The people of Harrisburg do , not know what they are tacing. Everybody should try to purchase . one or more bonds," declared the former German army tighter. , Buys His Second , George Eugene Yoleum, Jr.. has ( bought his Second Liberty Loan Bond, and seems to be proud of the fact He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. , George E. Yokun), 530 South Six- j tcenth street, and is seven months^ old. ii, ' At the E. C. Snyder planing mill. , Eighteenth and Holly streets, twenty ! Resorts • < AUGUSTA, (iA. THE PARTRIDGE ION AUGUSTA, GA. NOW OPEN Convenient to Camp Hancock f \ ; HRADQIIAIt'I'KMN pun SHIRTS |j SIDKS&SIDKS I! men are employed. This morning it I was announced that twenty men of the Snyder establishment pur j chased bonds of the Second Liberty ! Loan. There may bo pla.nts which have made a better record, but sales ' men haven't been able to discover ! them. Sinking Fund Invested Following publication of a letter in the Telegraph last evening, calling ! upon the municipalities of the state ' to invest in I,iberty Loan Bonds, J. | Herman Knisely, chief of the Bureau! of Municipalities in the Department of Labor and Industry, to-day recelv- I ed a reply from S. N. Kawel, chief burgess of Millersburg, to the effect i that as a result the borough council ' has Invested the $3,000 in its sinking ! funds in bonds. Burgeps Kawel thanks Mr. Knisely for the bureau's ' interest in the cause and hopes that ! other boroughs will follow Millers j burg's lead. Subscribes SSOO More To-day Chairman William Jen- ] nings received the following letter; ! from Captain Lumb, of the State Po | lice, who the committee j [that the State Police force in the j state has subscribed for a total of' j $20,350: October 25, 1917. ! William Jennings, Chairman, Liberty Loan Com., j Commonwealth Trust Co.. Harrisburg, Pa. Dear Sir: It Is evident that the men of l the county must carry the load of the other persons who parade j In masculine atlire. With this end in view 1 hereby subscribe ! for an additional SSOO of the Second Liberty Loan, but you j must send a Rotarian of your ! committee to get this subscrip- | tion. I watched them at work yesterday and want to be sure tlie.v land at least one subscrip- I tion when the sun Is shining ! after their gruelling drive in j yesterday's ruin. Very truly yours, GEO KG F F. LUMB. President. Harrisburg notary Club. I Allotted SIO,OOO Announcement was made by head-' quarters in this city to-day that of! the $5,000,000 Liberty bonds pur chased by the Bell Telephone Coin-1 pany $40,000 had been allotted to the! Harrisburg district. District Manager George S. Rein-' oehl told the team members at Chest-; j nut Street Auditorium at noon tliiit | the matter of credit for this sale had; given him food for serious thought, j but after mature deliberation he had, decided to give himself the benefit of | tWc doubt and take the credit for his team. Every Clerk Subscribes Two more office forces who have a! record for 100 per cent, efficiency in; purchasing Liberty bonds are the] clerks and stenographers employed j by County Recorder James E. Lentz and J. Parker Russell, of the Rusmll Indexing Company, now at work on, the records in Mt. Lentz's office.' There are twenty young women em- ; ployed in the two offices and this! morning when one of the solicitors j called to sell bonds each one sub-; scribed. The total subscription was $1,250. Some of them had pur-! chased bonds when the first Liberty Loan campaign was on. Five Billion Dollar Goal For Liberty Loan Near as Time Shortens By Associated I'rcss Washington, Oct. 25.—Treasury of- j ficials announced to-day their eonvie- I tion that Liberty Loan subscriptions ! had passed the $3.000.000,000 mark j and were well on the way to the $5.- 000,000.000 Koal. Indications at 11 o'clock were that. L'berty Day sales had carried the, total to approximately $3,500,000,000 if not beyond that sum. Subscriptions officially reported to the Federal Reserve Banks up to the ' ilose of business last night, with re ports from three banks missing, ap proximated $2,200,000,000. Sale n. Success The sale already is a success, it is j felt, tor the country has achieved the 1 minimum, but that is not enousrh. ; The purpose to sell $5,000,000,000 worth of bonds, born of n desire to ! show the world and particularly the 1 enemy of liherty. what America can] do. is asserting itself to-day in every | nook and corner of the United States. ' No section -of the country can be ! said longer to be asleep to the mean- I ing of the sale. Until yesterclay the [ Dallas and Atlanta districts and cer tain parts of the Middle West were j causing s;reut concern, more, in fact, j than any one other than those in di rect communication with the district, committees could realize. But tlie.v; came through with flying colors. To day they are moving swiftly along, intent on achieving their maximum, j State's Guardsmen Get Shoulders Behind Loan Camp Hancock, AtiKiista, Ga.. Oct. 1 25. Subscriptions to the Second ! Liberty Loan of the former National Guardsmen of Pennsylvania, com- I prising the Twenty-eipthth Army di- I vision, will reach $1,000,000 officers! predict. A total of $920,000 was reported late yesterday afternoon by Captain William F. Churchman. Philadel- ] phla. In charge of the canvass. Actress Who Wins Wealthy Chicago Broker ■ ' 1 <\ " "MUSS BET-VP, ASJF-rT,V>' , ' Miss Belle Ashlyn, once the wife of Hilly Gould, who is to weei Alannon | Kollunsbee, head of one of Chicago's leading brokerane firms. He is now ' at the officers school at Fort Sheri -1 dan. j Miss Ashlyn was a member of the Winter Garden show last reason. Jt | will be Mr. Kollansbee's second mar- I Huge, his llriit wife haviug divorced i him. fiULRRISBURG TELEGRAPH STEAMSHIP SHARES LEADING MARKET Steel and Other Active Industrials and Equipments Move Within Very Narrow Limits; Rails Uncertain By Associated l'rcss New York. Oct. 25. (Wall Street) —Steamship shares were the prom inent features at the irregular open ing of to-day's stock market, ad vancing 1 to 2 points. The inquiry I for those Issues was greater than jihat shown by any other branch of jthe stock list. I'nited States Steel |und other active industrials and I equipments moved within very nar | row limits and rails manifested all of their recent uncertainty. St. Paul I common and pfd. and I'nion Pacific i pfd. losing 1 to 2 points. Liberty , Bonds .1 'A:s were again transferred lin large blocks up to $650,000 at ;99.80 to 99.82. | The heaviness of I'nion Pacific and other trans-Continentals checked the i better tendencies for a time, but this | was ovcercome later. United States i .Steel rallied from 104% to 106'%, i Bethlehem Steel rose and ship : pings made further headway under ! the lead of Marine) Pfd. Tobacco manifested a revival of their recent [activity and strength and various 1 viiuipments and specialties advanced lone to two and one-half points. Gains I were almost wholly wiped out at i noon, however, on fresh selling of j Union Pacific and weakness of Cana ' dian Pacific. Liberty Bonds were firm i at 99.80 to 99.84. NEW YORK STOCKS ! Chandler Brothers and Company, members of New York and Phlladel i phia Stock Exchanges 3 North Mar ; ksi Square, Harrlsburg; 1338 Cheat ! nut street, Philadelphia: 34 Pine street. New York furnish the fol , lowing quotations: Open. 2 P.M. j Allis Chalmers 21 20% American Can 41% 421 American Car and Fdy.. 68 67 American Locomotive . . 59 59 Ameiican Smelting S6' 4 86 Anaconda 63 62% Atchison 9" 92% Baldwin Locomotive .... 61% 60% Baltimore and Ohio .... 56% 56',4 Bethlehem Steel (B) ... 83% 8414 Butte Copper 19 19 Canadian Pacific 149% 143% Central Leather 75% 74 Chesapeake and 0hi0... 50% 49% Chi., Mil. and St., Paul.. 46 16 Cliino Con. Copper 13 % 43 Corn Products 30% 30% Crucible Steel 66 66 Distilling Securities .... 39%, 39% Krie 18% 18% General Motors 95% 94% Goodrich. B. F 40 Vt 40 % Great Northern pfd . 99 99 Great Northern Ore subs 29 28% Hide and Leather 12% 12% Inspiration Coppef 44 % 45 Ke'nnecott Copper 33% 33% Lackawanna Steel 81 % 81 l.ehigli Valley 57% 57% Merc. Marine Ctfs 28% 26 Merc. Marine Ctfs. pfd.. 93% 91% Mexican Petroleum .... 8786% Miami Copper 30% 31% Midvale Steel 45% 45% New York Central 72% 71 N. Y„ N. If. and If 27% 25% N. Y., O. and \Y 20% 20% Norfolk and Western... 106% 106 Northern Pacific #6 Pacific Mail 25% 25% Pennsylvania K. K 50% Railway Steel Spring... 11% 42% Bay Con. Copper 2-% ;2% Beading Railway ' :! % ' - Republic Iron and Steel. 79% .9% Southern Pacific 88 Si'h Southern Railway '-" % 30®; Studebaker 40% 39fti Union Pacific 118% 117% U. S. 1. Alcohol 118 118',4 U. S. Rubber 9 59 U S. Steel 'OS 114"* U. S. Steel pfd 113% '13% Utah Copper 80 79% Westlnghouse Mfg 41% 41% Wlllys-Overlad 22% 22 '4 Western Maryland 16 16 Sunday School Workers Make Ready For Big Days At a meeting of one member from each church denomination in the city and county at tne Y. M. C. A. last evening, over which H. H. Hoy, of Millersburg, presided, plans were made to get out a large attendance at Sunday school on Sunday, November 4. "Go-to-Sunday School Day," and arrangements outlined for the ob servance of Sunday, November 11, preceding Father and Son Day, Thursday, November 13. A state-wide program lias been ar ranged for Father anil Son Day, to be observed in the Sunday schools, No vember 11, and at last evening's meeting one man from each denomi nation was named to constitute a central committee on arrangements. Each committee wil be responsible for the proper observance of the set program in each of the churches of his denomination,in the district. Odd Fellows From Here Are attending Millersburg Convention At least one bundled and fifty Odd Follows from Harrlsburg, Steelton and Middletown are attending: a joint meeting of the northern and southern districts of Dauphin county at Mil lersburg to-day. Grand Master Robert W. Montgom ery and Grand Secretary Usher A. Hall, of the State Grand Lodge, will be present. Deputy Grand Master Hoy D. Beman, of Harrisburg, will sptak to the assemblage. A special' session of the Grand of Penn sylvania will be held in the evening. DISCUSSING BY-LAWS Discussion of by-laws and routine business was the principal feature of to-day's session of the Ukranian Na tional Association, assembled in an nual convention In the Hoard of Trade Hall, officers will be elected to-niglit or to-morrow. POLISHES "EASY TO USE" JftJCw Give a quick lasting shine and preserve NEW YORK I PHII.AHKI.'MII.i I'liiiDrric Philadelphia, Oct. 25. Wheat Nominal; No. 1, red. ?2.27; No. 1, soft, red. $2.26; No. 2. red, 12.24; No. 2. soft, red. $2.22; No. S. red. 52.21; No. a, soft, red. s2.lit; No. 4. red. $2.j7; No. 4. soft, red. $2.16 Corn—Market unchanged; No. 2, yellow, $2.12@2.15; No. 3, No. 4. and No 6 yellow, nominal. Oats Market unchanged; No. 2, white, 66@6%c; No. 3, white, 64%4j> I 66c. I llran The market is Arm; soft winter, per ton, $38.r>0©39.00; spring winter, per ton, $38.00038.50; spring, per ton, $37.00@37.50. Refined Sugars Scarce and firm; powdered. 8.45 c; tine eranulated. 8.35 c; confectioners' A, 8.25 c. Butter The market is unchanged; western, creamery, extra, 44 V 4 4j>4sc, nearby prints, fancy, 48c. Eggs Steady; Pennsylvania and other nearby firsts, free cases, $12.60 per case; do., current receipts, free cases, $12.30 per case; western, extra firsts, free cases, $12.60 per do., firsts, free cases, $12.30 per .ase. Live Poultry—Steady; fowls, 20(ft 23c; roosters, 18@l!tc; spring chick ens, ID®23c; do., ducks, 22<ui23c; old ducks. 1!1@22e. Dressed Poultry The market is steady; fowls, fancy, 28® 29c; do., good to choice, 26@27c; do., small sizes, 22@26c; old roosters, 22c; broiling chickens, nearby, 28 <&>36e; do., western, 28®30c; roasting chickens, western, 22@26c; spring ducks, 26®26c; western ducks, 25® 26c; spring turkeys, 32@25c. Potatoes Market dull; East ern Shore, No. 1, per barrel. $4.00® 5.25; Eastern Shore. No. 2, per barrel, $1.50@3.00: Delaware and Maryland. No. 1. per barrel, $4.00®5.00; Pennsyl vania. fancy, per bushel, $1.65®1.80; New York, fancy, per bushel, $1.60® 1.75; New Jersey, fancy, per bushel, $l. r i0®1.65; New Jersey, No. 1, per basket. 90e@$1.10; do.. No. 2, per basket, 60®80e. Flour—Firm; winter straight, new, SI U. 25 0111.50; Kansas. clear. new. $10.00@10.35; do., patent, new, $10.75® II.40; do., fancy, patent, $11.25@11.50; spring first, clear, spot, $11.0®11.25; spring firsts, clear, new. mill ship ment, slo.oo® 10.50; spring patent, spot, $12.50® 12.75; spring patent, new mill shipment, $10.75® 11.40; spring fa vorite brands, $12.00® 12.25. Hay Firm with fair demand; timothy, according to location, No. 1, large bales. $26.50®27.00; No. 1, small bales, $26.50® 27.00; No. 2, $25.00 ®2G.50; No. 3, $22.00®23.00. Clover mixed hay. Light mixed. J25.00®25.50; No. 1. do., $23.50@24.00; No. 2. do., $21.00®23.00. CHICAGO DOAHI) OK TRADE Chicago, Oct. £s.—Board of Trade closing: Corn December, 1.19%; May, 1.13%. Oats —December, 59%; May, 60%. Pork October. 42.00; January, 39.45. Lard, — November, 24.05; January, 21.70. Ribs October, 27.50; January, 21.37. Millerstown Boy Is Now With Signal Corps || -v- : c JONATHAN BLACK In Millerstown there is one serv ice flag with a star. It is at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Black. Jona than Black, their son, is doing duty with the United States Signal Corps at Little Silver, N. J. This boy grad uated from Central High, class 1915. He was popular with his schoolmates and was a member of a number of school societies. He has been in training for several months and ex- I ects soon to go to France. ISpendYourWinter | In California Let an experienced rep- | resentative of the Chicago & I North Western Ry. plan your 11 m itinerary, arrange for your tickets 8 g and relieve you of all details. if I* Fast Daily Trains | —through from Chicago to California, S provided with modern travel conven- 8 §g tences, leave Chicago every evening— 8 IS Overland Limited San Francisco Limited Los Angeles Limited I —protected by the latest type of auto- 1 matic safety electric signals all the way, £ snd placing at your command the beat of | everything in railway transportation, m I Phone, call on or address for descrip- I live literature, train schedules, etc. — E Chicago A NorthWestern | I m - D,vit - *• I 6 I 111' liffy 1020Chettost St B 8 Tel. Walnut 356-357 I IST Philadelphia, Pa. I SMOKES NEEDED IN BATTLE LINE Officer Tells of Soothing Ef fects of Tobacco on His Men Lieutenant Peppier, of the Twenty second French Canadian Regiment, recently offered the following testi mony about the way the men abroad feel about pipes and cigarets. "During one of the early battles of the war, a dozen of us became The Truly UUima Built of Llanarch Quarry Stone—artistically planned and full of many unique innovations characteristic of C". L. Long homes Fronting on North Second Street at Seneca > (■£>_ x - y i|pgprf §v,j|p% races- ■' §lßll riiSßSil !:: <|f Three stories—9 rooms—sun parlor—built on terraced lots big enclosed porches l'l-cui'li doors large rooms with big closets tiled bat'i room with built-in tub and marble shower on second floor guest bath room on third floor real open stone lire-place electric lighting system with the latest attachments in rooms lor floor lamps, table lamps, and iMituloir lamps southern exposure lots 27x120 feet room at rear for garage. Will Be Sold on Favorable Terms Sample House Open For Inspection Representative on Ground at All Times. CI riNP Build er and Owner • * * Room 702 Kunkel Building Unlimited Money-Making Opportunities In Chester-For YOU! The Worth Bros, sold their steel plant at Coatesville for a sum said to be $23,000,000.00. They are now constructing a mammoth new plant at Claymont which will be one of the largest in the world. There is $25,000,000.00 back of th s new industry. Nearby, the Westinghouse Electric Company is building a vast plant vith an employment capacity of about 22,000 people. Standard Oil Company, Sun Shipbuilding Company, General Electric Company, General Chemical Company, Viscose Silk Mills and dozens of other vast manufacturing enterprises employing daily thousands and thousands of li'ghlv paid workmen have made the section in which I am operating a teeming bee-hive of industrial activity. In the immediate neighborhood of these mammoth plants are investment oppor tunities that will yield liberal profits. In all of my 20 years' experience in America's greatest investment fields never have I known such wonderful money-making opportunities as are right here. And I can PROVE IT! Small and Large Investors-Investigate Today! You are not asked to spend a dollar. All Fill out the Coupon below and send to I vtant is that you investigate. If I cannot me to-day. This is too important to lay PROVE to you conclusively the money- aside. Act Now! making certainty of my proposition, you TEAR OUT AND SEND are in no obligation whatever. Many in- f -i vestors have made money by acting on my _ _ REDDY advice. Learn about my proposition. Then ,>o ' Markct Chester, l*a. , , A * , , Without obligation to me, please 6end in use your own judgment. A moderate invest- formation concerning investment oppor ment may place you on "easy street.'' tunities. W. H. REDDY Chester, Pa. . •OCTOBER 25, 1917. punned in a trench by the Germans and were forced to go nearly three days without food or drink. Not once during those agonizing hours, did i man complain for food. The great w-nt was for a smoke. When aid die reach us. we were too dry to eot the bread the party brought, but we certainly did make use or the cigarets. After we had a smoke we ull agreed we could go more than forty-eight hours more without food if necoH.sary." Excessive Profits of Food Brokers to Be Cut Down by Federal Board By Associated Press Washington, Oct. 25. Elimination of excessive commissions to brokers, commission merchants and auction eers of food 1b provided by special regulation which will go Into effect November 1 under the Federal lU'en-t- Ing system to be operated ' v tbi Food Administration. licensees will not be permitted '.o charge directly or indirectly IT.'.- than ordinarily and customarily dur ing normal conditions in the particu lar locality and trade. Commission men. brokers and auc tioneers will also be prohibited from selling foods to themselves or pri sons connected with their own busi ness. The regulations, designed to protect the consumer and the producer shipping goods to market on consign ment. are for the guidance and sup port or the trade and to protect the maporlty of businessmen against the few who attempt to take advantage of war conditions. VISITING MUSKS I'.I.F.tT Officers ejected yesterday at the lirst full meeting of the Visiting Nurses' Association Aid Society, were: Eleanor Neal Clark, president: August llean. vice-president, and Miss Julia Stamm, secretary and treasurer.
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