YANKEE HEROES, PERSHING'S MEN, IN U.S. HOSPITAL Twenty-three Are Sick and Weary, but Anxious to Get Back Philadelphia, May B.—Grimly de termined and anxious* to get back, twenty-three of General Pershing's fighting men. all bearing evidence of their encounters with the Huns, passed through Philadelphia yester day afternoon on the way to the Army Hospital at Lakewood. "Yankee Devils" is the name ap plied by the Germans to the daunt less American warriors and batter ed heroes from "over there," offered mute testimony substantiating the reported wish of the Teutonic bar barians to be sent against any save American troops. Two of the veterans are tem- HE DARK HAIF AND LOOK YOUNG Nobody can Tell when you Darken Gray, Faded Hair with Sage Tea. Grandmother kept her hair beauti fully durkened, glossy and attractive with a brew of Sago Tea and Sul phur. Whenever her hair took on that dull, faded or streaked appear ance, this simple mixture was ap plied with wonderful effect. By ask ing at any drug store tor "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," you will get a large bottle of this old time recipe, improved by the addi tion of other ingredients, all ready to use, at very little cost. This sim ple mixture can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair. A well-known downtown druggist says everybody uses Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound now because it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been ap plied—it's so easy to use, too. You simply dampen a comb or soft brush and draw it through your hair, tak ing one strand at a time. By morn ing the gray hair disappears; after another application or two, it is re stored to its natural color and looks j glossy, soft and beautiful. This prepa- | ration is a delightful toilet requisite, j It is not intended for the cure, mlti- , gation or prevention of disease. Perfect Health Is Yours If the Blood Is Kept Pure Almost Every Human Ailment Is Directly Traceable to Im purities in the Blood. You cannot overestimate the Im portance of keeping the blood free of impurities. When you realize that the heart is constantly pumping this vital fluid to all parts of the body, you can easily see that any impurity in the blood will cause serious com plications. Any slight disorder or impurity that creeps into the blood is a source of danger, for every vital organ of the body depends upon the blood supply to properly perform its functions. Many painful and dangerous dis uses are the direct result of a bad •ondition of the blood. Among the FIRST CLASS TRAVEL OVER ANY ROAD Cross Country travel has no frontier for the Packard Twin Six. Distance brings out the best there is in it — its range is a continent. The quality that is built into the Packard meets the demands of hard and continuous service. There is economy in its long life and low cost of upkeep. The Packard Twin Six will take you in i safety and comfort where you want to go — and as fast as you care to travel. The man who owns a Packard owns the road. I If Ask the Man who owns one PACKARD MOTOR CAR CO. of PHILADELPHIA 101 MAR ROT STREET, HARKISBURG, PA. II If BELL PHOTK 28M j I If WEDNESDAY EVENING, porarily deranged as a result of shock and gas poisoning and all are more or less incapacitated from these causes. Three haye serious bayonet wounds, one a saber wound, another a shell wound in the back, and still another wears a silver plate in his head, which was laid open by a shell fragment. The contingent is in charge of Lieutenant H. F. Sutton, of the United States Hospital, at Camp Stewart, Va. The intrepid band of unconquered Sammies originally numbered 200 wounded, but all save the twenty-three who passed through here have been quartered in hospitals in Washington and Bal timore. Have Not Lost Spirit Although sick and weary, the men have not lost their spirit and all fondly cherished the hope that op portunity will be afforded them to return to France to "get the Hun" that caused their withdrawal from active service. All bring a glorified and wonderful message to the peo ple of the United States of hope and courage from the blood-stained trenches. To see these plucky boys, maimed by bayonet and cruelly torn by shell, and to listen to their mod est recital of their experiences abroad, explains why the panic stricken Potsdam clique see the handwriting on the wall. A casual glance at Private Mar tin R. Tackaberry, of Tampa, Fla., would identify him merely as an average American youth, unassum ing and gentle. Tackaberry was run through the left shoulder and bru tally clubbed with a rifle. "But I Got My Boche!" "But I got my Boche—darn him," he said, with eyes ablaze, "with the bayonet sticking clean through my shoulder, I gave him five chambers of my automatic and blew his face away." Edward Olson, a giant Swedish- American from New York, is eager to get back, although his body has been terribly battered in battle. There is a lump on his forehead, where the frontal bone was con caved by a shell fragment. In the top of his head is a silver plate as big as an individual butter dish. He has a bullet wound in his left leg, and a bayonet wound in his right shoulder. He proudly exhibit ed the helmet, chevrons and boots of a German lieutenant whom he said, he killed in a hand-to-hand struggle. "I got him," he said. "He was pumping his automatic at me. when r jumped and caught him around the neck. I knocked him down and stuck him. "That was five days before I got mine. They ordered us over the top, and I was over in god shape when I was caught in the Germans' coun ter barrage. After the shells had ripped me up a big Boche stuck me with his bayonet. Saved l>y Women "The last thing I remember, a Red Cross woman, and a Salvation Army girl were dragging me oft to a field hospital. I would not be here now if it hadn't been for those brave women." most serious are Rheumatism, with its torturing pains; Catarrh, often a forerunner of dread consumption: Scrofula, Eczema, Tetter, Erysipelas and other disfiguring skin diseases; Malaria, which makes the /strongest men helpless, and many other dis eases are the direct result of impure blood. You can easily avoid all of these diseases, and rid the systenv of them, by the use of S. S. S.. the ivonderful blood remedy that has been in con stant use for more than fifty years. S. S. S. cleanses the blood thor oughly, and routs every vestige of impurity. It is sold by druggists everywhere. For valuable literature and med ical advice absolutely free, write to day to the Medical Dept., Swift Specific Company, 437 Swift Labora tory, Atlanta, Ga. HEALTH DEPT. IS AWAY OVER TOP Bond Subscriptions Made in Offices and at Sanitoria Are Over $70,000 Liberty Loan has ''pen report ed from employes Heal th depart tion offices and the sanatoria, but not the rifle officers, covering more than 3,000 individuals, many of whom served on loan committees in their home communities. The employes of the central of fice subscribed $10,550; the employ es of the Mont Alto Sanatorium, SIB,OOO, winning a "two star" flag; the Cresson Sanatorium, 116,450, and those at the Hamburg Sanatorium $13,850. The employes of the Phil adelphia office subscribed $4,150 and of the laboratory, $1,850. A list of subscriptions on Capitol Hill is being made up and it is ex pected that it will go away over SIOO,OOO. The placing of names of commu nities on the "Pennsylvania Honor Roll" tei front of tho Capitol will be started as soon as reports on all counties and municipal ties are re ceived by Commissioner of Banking Lafean. Must Comply—The State Highway department has announced that In making up tha payments to coun ties for cash road tax bonus for sec ond class townships it will adhere strictly to the requirements which include road construction, masonry, drainage work, lieadwalls, culverts and bridges, grading, siding or permanently improving dirt roads and similar work in accord with the rules of the Township Highway Bu reau as provided by the act. The amounts are now being certified to the State Treasurer. The departmant has just asked for bids for construction of roads in Bucks, Montgomery, Chester, Frank lin, blair, Washington, Greene, Mer cer, Clarion and McKean counties, aggregating over 100,000 feet. Thirty thousand feet will be built in Franklin county. A Real Birthday—Many Capitol Hill people rang up James C. Dein inger, executive clerk to Governor Brumbaugh yesterday, to ask if it was true that he had a birthday. Mr. Deininger is very modest, but everyone was so insistent that he had to admit it. He received many congratulations, but declined to give specifications on age. Hoards Busy—The state financial boards are busy this week, the fiscal officers having returned to the Capi tol. Details of closing up Liberty Loan subscriptions are being han dled. Hoard to Meet. —The State Work men's Compensation Board has an nounced a meeting for Wilkes-Barre City Hall on May 15 and at the of fices of the Department of Labor and Industry in Scranton on May IG. Party at Ferry.—Governor Brum baugh and a party of heads of de partments and commissioners of the state government left here to-day for McCaU's Ferry where the May luncheon and meeting of the Penn sylvania State Society will be held after an automobile ride and inspec tion of the big dam and power plant. (■odcluirlee Sure —Frederic A. God charles, deputy secretary of the com monwealth, who had a "run in" yesterday with Senator Edwin H. Vare over his testimony in the Woodward senatorial nominating petition case, declined to make any comment about the talk he had with the senator except to say that Mr. Vare had abruptly terminated it. "What I said was the fact in the case and on that X am content HAJFLRISBURG ta&jtg&l TELEGRAPH to stand. That's all. If I can al ways tell the truth the way I did in that case I am sure of the pearly gates," said he. Many Hearings On —The Public Service Commission had a dozen hearings to-day, including the New ville water and West Penn Power cases. Late to-day there was sched uled the contract between the city of Philadelphia and the Philadel phia Railways Company relative to the maintenance of streets for a fixed sum to be paid into the city treas ury. Philadelphia Pays—The city of Philadelphia has paid over half a million dollars into the State Treas ury in the last two days. Register of wills Sheehan paid in $300,000 as collateral inheritance tax and $49,- 000' as direct inheritance tax for April and City Treasurer Shoyer, $248,000 for mercantile licenses. New Lieutenant—Frederick K. Lundy, of Willlamsport, was to-day appointed a second lieutenant in the Reserve Militia and assigned to Com pany H, Second Regiment. Kx-niembers Hero—Ex-Represent atives Prank Gray, Philadelphia, and W. K. Swetland, of Coudersport, were at the capitol. MISS HEItUAN IS HOSTESS KOIt OTTKIt HKIN GIII.IJ The regular monthly meeting of the Otterbein Guild of the Penbrook United Brethren Church, was held at the home of Miss Mary Herman, last evening. After a business session refreshments were served to the fol lowing: Mrs. Wiida. Bowman, Miss Emma Nisley, Miss Belle Spangler, Miss Ruth Nisley, Miss Jane Kline, Miss Ksther Packer, Miss Mary Her man. Miss Sara Swartz, Miss Florence Whistler, Miss Miriam Stoner, Miss Anna Booser, Miss Mary Good. Miss Helen Aungst, Miss Irene Hoerner, Miss Kathryn Heinly, Miss Mary Hoofnagle, Miss Anna Enders, Miss Ora Kline, Mrs. Herman, Miss Emma Herman, Miss Lorene Whistler, Miss Ruth Eisenberger. CITY IS TO BACK MEN WITH MONEY [ConUntied from First Page.] • v < " 1 ' . \* ♦ v V •>' *~V.< 5 - I W. T. HTLDRUP calls for monetary aid that would be forthcoming—the drives for the sale of Liberty Bonds, Red Cross memberships, Y. M. C. A., Knights of Columbus and Jewish camp funds and recreation huts, Red Cross con tributions and a score of minor re liefs —it was the opinion of many that the people would not respond. " 'lt can't be done!' a well known citizen said to me the latter part of May, 1917. "But it has been done! "Furthermore, the oftener these campaigns come along the easier it becomes to get the aAswer. That is easily explained. The people of Har risburg are absolutely awake. The first Liberty Loan campaign was the | hardest of the three. The third was the easiest. The fourth, to use the street boy's expression, will be 'a cinch.' "But we really deserve little credit for what we have done in the Lib erty Bond campaigns. "Does a man deserve world-wide commendation for simply taking care of his own interests? In buy-, ing Liberty Bonds we put our money j away for ourselves. We loaned it to the government, it is true—but we are the government. Time to Measure Up "The second Red Cross campaign for $100,000,000 will give all the people of the United States a sec ond opportunity to prove that they are willing to shoulder some of the burden of this war. Harrisburg is asked to give the National Red Cross not less than $150,000. My personal idea is that the total will be nearer $200,000. "When we bought Liberty Bonds w*6 aided the government in its war preparations. But when we give to the Rod Cross we ourselves say to the men of Harrisburg and sur rounding territory: " 'You fellows are going across to fight for us; and we know it! We folks at home can't all follow you, although thousands of us will be with you after awhile. Some of us are too old, and some of us must pursue useful occupations, and some of us are physically unfit. But all of us on this side are with you over there —in spirit; and to prove that we are we're giving our money to the Red Cross. And, boys, every time —over there—that you see the insignia oj the Rod Cross just recall that the people back home are back of you, doing everything they can for you'." Announcement was made to-day that two of the half hundred Per shing veterans, who were sent home several weeks ago to talk for the Liberty Loan will be in Harrisburg to talk for the Red Cross. The Pershing veterans will address, a mass meeting to be held in Chest nut Street Auditorium the night of May 14. Another speaker that evening will be Miss Kathleen Burke, nationally known Red Cross worker. Miss Burke is going to tell of what she encountered in Belgium from August of 1014 until the Belgians were com pelled to evacuate Antwerp. Dur ing that period, and in the months that followed, Miss Burke saw many incidents of German atrocities that have burned themselves into her memory. Political Crisis Calls Kaiser to Potsdam j By Associated Prtss Berne. Switzerland, May S.— I Emperor William has returned to I Potsdam owing to the crisis resulting from the rejection of the suffrage reform bv the Prussian Diet. Count Von Hert- ' ling, the imperial chancellor, j has been summoned to Potsdam | to report on the situation. 1 "The Live Store" "Always Reliable" I | Look Your Best 1 There's every good reason why Cil(l|S i young men should be particular about styles; ISlr • it's one of the ways to look young That explains why' iL H so many of the older men like the young models. h I Hart Schaffner & Marx § I Kuppenheimer Clothes I I Are stylish clothes, that's why we ™TEB 1 have them that's why young men think of this & IBf Hll Live Store" as style headquarters The young fellows really "make" the new style ideas; and when a new style [Km 11 is launched, the young men come HERE because they [JR iKI know we have what they want We study the tastes i. ft MK of these critical buyers of clothes You'll find the best models here as well as get better service and the most f B satisfactory guarantee possible for any store to give you —that of complete satisfaction with every purchase or mUL' Hoqm el Kuppnhtlmi I Try This Dependable Doutrich Service | I Manhattan Shirts | I jS|||S The largest stock of Manhattans to 1 an ywhere Fast colors all fully guaran- W * dependable fabrics that will stand the wear, neck bands I n °* B^r^ I | c 52.00 to $8.85 I I " The Aviator," the Soft Silk " I Hundreds of Patterns to Choose From 35c; 3 for SI.OO I i and Boys Caps Underwear I I | "-w- w- I i: outdoor sports— wear in every style and quality ;t I 50c, SI.OO to $2.00 | Sheer fabrics that will keep you cool, jj 11 1 Your Straw Hat Is Waiting For You Here I ■ 304 Market Street Harrisburg, Pa. I MAY 8, 1918. 9