20 U-BOAT BASE ADMIRAL OUT ATZEEBRUGGE Taken by Surprise in British Raid, Schroeder Gets Dis missal, Is Report Amsterdam, April 26.—Vice Admi ral Schroeder, the commander at Zeebrugge, according lo reports reaching here, will be deprived of his command for being taken by surprise by the British Tuesday. German newspapers In.comment ing on the raid at Zeebrugge, gen erally take the hint given In the of-; flcial reports of Berlin and represent the enterprise as having been a fail ure. Some, however, admit that the attack was made with great bold f" ess. "The cement-laden ships which wer sunk close to the coast will not hinder the exits and entrancej of the German naval forces," the Koel nische Zeltung says. Germans Admit Blockade The Lokal Anzeiger the raid ers succeeded Ift blocking the water way to a great extent but the U-boats still are able to leave their harbor as a narrow passage remains. The Weser Zeltung regard the British, version as a fantastic substitution of the wish for the deed and adds: 'lt is a success of which we Ger mans may boast." 'The Koelnlsche Volks Zeltung sees In the attack evidence that the exist ence of a submarine base at Zee brugge is making "life intolerable for England." Combing Won't Rid Hair Of Dandruff The only sure way to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retir ing; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger > tips. Do this to-night, and by morning, most, if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more ap plications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter tiow much dandruff you may have. You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop at once, and your hair will be flufl'y. lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive and never fails to do the work. Kills Pain in Half the Time A Bis 2Sc Box of Marvelous Mustarine Is What Every Home Should Have laqiibago, Buckachc, Toolhacha, Neuralgia and All Aches and Iains Are Banished in Hulf the Timo It Takes Other Bomedles—One Application Does the Work. Grandmother's old fashioned mus tard plaster did the work alright, but it blistered the skin and was a mighty unclean remedy. Mustarine is the original mustard prescription that has made Grand mother mustard plaster but a relic of bygone days. It's ten times better, cleaner and '■fcill not blister; it is nkade of true, honest yellow mustard combined with other well known destroyers of pain Sixth and __ Sixth and = GOLDSTEIN'S = Evenings < ' Evenings A Host of Unusual Price Savings Opportunities in Ladies' and Men's Footwear, and Men's and Young Men's Furnishings that Will Let You Apply What You Save Between What Others Charge and Our Prices, to the Purchase of a Third LIBERTY BOND TODAY AND SATURDAY ARE THE LAM DAYS OP THE LIBERTY IA)AN CAMPAIGN HAVE YOU BOUGHT YOURS? IP NOT, IK) IT QUICK SO YOU NEED NOT BE ASHAMED TO LOOK UNCI/E SAM IN THE EYE AND SAY YOU'VE DONE YOUR DUTY. Men's Black and Tan Boys' Black and Tan Ladies' Vici - Ladies' Mat Elk Scout 0O J Q Elk Scout | QQ Oxford, Low Kid Pumps, shoes, special wu&O Shoes vi.JfO Heel, $5.00 JQ Men's Dark Cocoa Little Gents' Black Elk c fai s2*os Also Pat* Brown English Shoes, Skin Scout, $2.50 value $5.00; QQ value; spe- £*Q Ladies' Hav. Ladies' Hav. VO.ifO cial sl.Oil Brown Brown Eng Size —^Heel, value $6 - 2to 6; rTlr „ Men's Heavy Tan English s .P e " f? QQ ipe * $7 dQ Shoes; $5.00 ©Q cl " =i.i Ml 8; value. Special wO.fli ST*"' & -——-—Av "Men's Vici Plain - Men's Spring Men's Dark Bloc "" " Hate. AH .shades Serge Trousers. Well and stylen. $3.50 made, with onff. $5 '"""•' t| s si ¥ 00 ... *3.49 Men's and BoyaC Men's Dress Shirts. .. ■■ XS / \l snappy Spring All sizes. Variety J Caps. A wide patterns. 69 C "j * Men's Silk Pront Dress - —-rMtui Man's Khaki Shirts. 93.50 AQ \\ \\ Y jff Trooaertf Well Special 51.49 \\\ UJH miMICL, with caff. —————— I i'l \lmlr 8 $1.49 Men's Blue Work Shirts. Pi/ *■*... Single and double fiQ ,. | \ \ f ——— pockets. Special . . OJ,C j || 1 Men's Cotton I II Worsted QQ. Men's 2>piece balbriggan I I Tronsers Underwear.* Short and long iw B ™* $1.49 , Spe -39c The Bargain Basement is Filled With Bargains FRTDAV EVENING ZEMBO TEMPLE INSPIRES $l,lOO FOR RED CROSS Harrisburg Opens Heart Anew at Celebration in Chest nut Street Hall Harrisburg got together last night at the Zombo celebration In Cheat nut Street Hall; whooped up things with mugniflcont spirit and clearel $l,lOO for the local lied Cross chap ter which was most ably represent ed bjr one of its hard workers and officials, Mrs. I.ew R. Palmer. She practically was the only speakef and she had a message. With two Har risburg boys killed at the front the .Capital City Is beginning to under stand something of actual war and Mrs. Palmer told the immense audi ence about the "front line packet." i You have not heard of the "packet?" Well, it is so consequen tial an Item that the German Em pire has promised to stop shelling the allies' hospitals if we eliminate this valuable aid to the injured:, But Uncle Sam cannot'entertain any such offer. The "packet" is a complete outfit used immediately on a wound ed man being brought to the rest hospital, right on the firing line. It is estimated that if )t can bo used within four hours after injury !0 per oont. of our boys can be saved. The Germans know this and dread its happy* effects. Mrs. Palmer to'd how Harrisburg has been cho?en as one of the few chapters, so evi dent as to be nation-wide famous] that It Is asked to provide G,500 of these "packets" a month. The funds taken In last night will be devoted ta this great, humane work. Zembo Temple. Mystic Shriners. forever ensconced itself in the hearts of Harrisburg with this demonstra tion. Discarding the familiar Turk ish raiment in which its members are wont to frisk, the ranks last night were garbed in uniforms of America and her allies. While the parade was turning the big hall rang with community singing, led by Mrs. Wilbur F. Harris, and an octette. So loists were Mrs. Arthur H. Hull, Gwilym Watkins, Douglas R. Dis mukes, whosp father is a high nota ble in the United States Navy, and Charles S. Jackson. The Zembo Pa trol and Band, under command of Captain Francis H. Hoy, Jr., march ing in had Its ovation with the chorus of "Keep the Home Fires Burning." The marshals leading the procession were, very properly, Mer cer B. Tate and Colonel Charles E. Covert. Captains Ira F. Myers and Charles Aldinger figured in t-he and a 25c box does the work of fifty mustard plasters. Why suffer for days using plasters or continuously rubbing on liniment when one application of Mustarine will take out soreness in chest or any part of the body and will limber up stiff neck or rusty joints. It banishes backache, toothache, headache in ten minutes—many times in five. If you want to get rid of sore throat, neuralgia, neuritis, tonsilitls. pleurisy, inflammation in the feet, or rheumatic agony and swollen Joints —rub on Mustarine right away—lt's the quickest pain killer world —and the cheapest. Get true Mus tarine in the yellow box at any drug store.—Advertisement. Zeebragge Mole, Blow nUp by British Under Admiral YyrWkatt ADMIRAL SIR etaiNAio Y TWWWTT. G v^° ? MtLES V ' I *~-v : :'-jroK*Jt SBA i/jillf TCKMiNur -1/1 Vi tysilj. llr OFBZUGK Ml \ )) Mll _, // M.u.s \\\\ Uj //> \ U \ \ \\\\- maneuvers of the variuniformed drillers. Members, of the women's com mittee of the Red Cross in charge of the affair sold ifce cream cones dur ing the evening:, the ice cream hav ing been donated. The committee comprised Mrs. C. W. Burtnett, Mrs. S. F. Dunkle, Mrs. W. P. Starkey, Mrs. A. 11. Bailey, Miss Anna Her shey, Mrs. G. W. Ensign, Mrs. Charles A. Alden. Credit for the affair goes to Potentate Charles E. Covert, who made it possible, and Captain Hoy, whose skill as a drillmaster made the patrol's part a great success. Man Who Slew Wife Escapes Electric Chair Ohamberaburg, Pa., April 26. — John H. Monn, who shot and killed his wife In Waynesboro on March 2, was convicted of _ voluntary man slaughter this morning after a two days' ty-ia. He will be sentenced Mon day. The jury did not have a vote vote for first degree nor one for ac quittal. •i . • HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH! BRITISH HAVE MUNITIONS FOR i SUMMER SIEGE j Winston Churchill Tells Com-j mons the Claim of German i Capture Is Grotesque London, April 26.—Winston Spen cer fchurchlll Introducing in the House of Commons yesterday the es timates for the Ministry of Muni tions, of which he la the head, said that during the Ave weeks since the | battle in France had opened they I had been passing through the great- j est strain regarding the supply of j war material that had occurred in the experience of the Ministry. Not only had the consumption and I destruction of munitions of all kinds ! been proceeding at the greatest J rate, but there also were very heavy ! losses by capture by the enemy. | "We lost," the Minister "said, | "nearly 1,000 guns by shellfire or i capture; between 4,000 and 5,000 machine guns have been lost or de- 1 stroyed, and the quantity of ammu-' nition, apart from that which has' been fired and that which has been lost in the dumps, amounted to I something between one and three weeks' total of manufacture." Gerninns' GrotcMqiip I-hamrrratlon Referring to the German War Min- ' ister s claim to the capture of more j than twice the number of guns than ! he had announced, Mr. Churchill said' that the German claim was a gro- i tesque exaggeration and untrue. I But if it had been true, he believed ! that he still have been able ! to say that the losses in guns had j been made good. Not only had the machine guns been replaced, but the Munitions Ministry had placed at' the disposal of the air and ground ! services more than twice the num- ! ber of guns lost or destroyed in bat- j tie in France. The supply of airplanes had been ■ for some time In advance of tha de- I velopment of squadrons and trained | pilots and this supply had enabled the Ministry to meet all the needs of | the great battle and the wastage resulting therefrom, and, in addi- ' tioh, to carry forward the program of expansion to which the govern ment was committed. The output or tanks had been so accelerated that | the Ministry was In a position to re place every tank lost by one of new ' and better pattern as fast as the army could take the delivery. I Il T MP KlM.ti SMALL BOY j Sliumokin, Pa.. April 26.—Running out of school, Samuel Grler, aged eight years, fell and bumped his! 3 head. The boy walked home and utel supper with the family. Jn the night j ho was taken violently ill, concussion of the brain developed and he died in! ten hours. .. J. D. Ryan, \ew Air Chief I B JOHN D. I^VAJT- John D. Ryan, of New s York, hag been appointed director of aircraft production for the Army. Mr. Ryan is a copper magnate and financier. He developed the Anaconda and oth er big properties. This mole, which juts out Into tlio j North Sea more than a mile and ai half from Zeebrugge, thus forming! the harbor for the town, because there Is no natural bay to receive ships, was the scene of the desperate battle between the British raiders under Admiral Sir R. Y. Tyrwhitt and Germans Monday night. The ad miral led his men in cruisers to the mole and boarded it. After a fight the Germans ran and much property was destroyed by the British. Two old submarines loaded with explo sives were sent against the, sides to blow up the mole. The map shows the* relation of Zeebrugge and Ostend, points on the Belgian coast, which the Germans have made their submarine bases, to the coast of England and the Eng lish channel. Both points were at tacked by the raiding force under Admiral Tyrwhitt. Neither town a harbor, so small vessels and par ticularly submarines have entered the canals for refuge and repairs. The admiral sank three old cruisers filled with cement at the mouth of the canal' leading from Zcebrugge to Bruges, so submarines will be bot tled up there, and those at sea will not be able to get in. He ran two more cruisers toward the mouth of the canal at Ostend, but there was some doubt if tliey reached its mouth. Why Germany Will Be Defeated The failure, so far, of Germany's fanatical onslaught to either cleave apart the French and British armies or to take the Channel ports ranks it as only another "bath of blood for German arms. For, as The Globe, New York, reminds us, "It is the destruction of armies, not the loss ot territory, that is vital in war." And the tremendous slaughter of men which Germany has sustained is " making her \veaker relatively as well as absolutely." "Even the General Staff," notes the New \ork World, can not continue indefinitely the policy of trading men for territory unless the territory means more than a further extension of their lines." Months may yet elapse before the decisive hour strikes and in those months tens and hundreds of thousands of Americans can be transported to France to turn the scale in our fa\or. Even the Vienna Arbeiter Zeitung assures its readers that-"the greatest victory by land can not impose a peace of force on America and England." ''s • Read THE LITERARY DIGEST this week for a,full Account of the war, showing the struggle on the Western Front in all its phases, as drawn from reliable reports in all quarters, and illustrated with a full-page colored map, indexed to aid into quickly finding every point of interest, and smaller maps. Other articles of importance are: Why Ireland Opposes Conscription All Phases'of This Acute Situation Are Shown In This Comprehensive Article Austrian Emperor's Peace Feelers Wheat Slackers and Wheat Patriots Why Allies Have the Whip-Hand . (Prepared by the U. S. Food Administration) The Backwash of Frightfulness Labor and War Russia's Golgotha ' (Prepared by U. S. Board of Education) Making Wages Keep Step with the Cost It Amiens Next? of Living The Paradox of Papa Joffre Promise and Performance' in the Air Books For German Soldiers World-Wide Interchangeability of Bishops on the Firing-Line Materials Mobilizing Women as Nurses Safety in Making Explosives ' Baring the Soldier's Soul An Indian Engineering Feat Live News of Finance and Commerce The Cost of Hiring and Firing Personal Glimpses of Famous Folk FULL-PAGE COLORED WAR MAP WITH COMPLETE INDEX Also Other Smaller Maps and a Striking Collection of Illustrations, Including tumorous Cartoons from the Press of the World . - Mothers of America—Listen: As the war pushes its way into your home, your kitchen, As you meet with other women, in your church, in your nursery, your cellar, and lays its heavy hand on social, or in war activites, THE Lll LRARY DIGEST the things vou need, THE LITERARY DIGEST comes l iel P s >'?" I to