4 TEUTONS SLAY CHILDREN; HOPE TO FORCE PEACE Red Cross Chairman Tells of Offensive of Terror by Huns Xew York, May ,17. —A German of fensive of terror against the civilian population of France and Italy was described yesterday by Henry P. Da vison on his return from a 12,000- ivssinol will usually stop itching instantly Only those v.-ho have' themselves suffered with eczema or similar itching, •burning skin-trouble can appreciate the relief that the first touch of Resinol Ointment usually brings. The suffer • ing stops at once, the skin becomes cool and comfortable, and the trouble soon disappears. From the very first you can feci that it is going to get well! Resin rl Ointment contains nothing that could irritate the tenderest skin. For sale by all Hrirg- Ifista. For trial free, write Dept. 2-S, Resinol, Baltimorr. Md. A Dead Stomach Of What Use Is It? Thousands? yes hundreds of thou sands of people throughout America are takingT the slow death treatment daily. They are murdering their own stomach, the best friend they have, and in their sublime ignorance they think they are putting aside the laws of nature. This is no sensational statement: It is a startling fact, the truth of which any honorable physician will not deny. These thousands of people are swallowing daily hnge quantities of pepsin and other strong digesters, made especially to digest the food in the stomach without any aid at all from the digestive membrane of the stomach. Mi-o-na stomach tablets relieve distressed stomach in Ave minutes; they do more. Taken regularly for a few weeks they build up the run down stomach and make it strong enough to digest its own food. Then indigestion, belching, sour stomach and headache will go. Mi-o-na stomach tablets are sold by druggists everywhere and by H. C. Kennedy, who guarantees them. Ifetmu 1 SptriiM Snnait is, - "jnjkm And When You Come to Select It You Will Have a Large Assortment A of the Best Styles That Are Shown This Season For Dressy Men y [ V'l 1% Thousands of men and young men in this sec- yy \V I tion can look hack with satisfaction upon the clotliing purchases they made here. Jfi 0I © \ v We have always tried to give our customers \ |\\ \ the best there is to be had—and this rule is in ||\\ force now stronger than ever. f ( -l 1 War conditions have had their effect upon the 1 clothing industry so that we are most mightv I&j4fr careful to get what we can recommend as being jfvfA JpsSn Ml up to the high standard which we have set for this W LI Tlie stylish man wants to be thrifty to-day. He _ can practice economy by getting his clothes here. /JS]U Jfl I|||Y Most attractive prices prevail. y \ Gately and Fitzgerald Supply Co. 77ie Different Kind of a Credit Store 29-31-33-35 South Second Street FRIDAY EVENING, mile tour of inspection of Red Cross work abroad. He is chairman of the Red Cross war council and comes back to inaugurate the drive for 1100,000,000. "The outstanding feature of Ger man methods at the present time." he said, "is the effort to terrorize women, children and old men at home. While the German troops are making their drive on the front, air planes are bombing, nearly every night, towns behind the lines. "The purpose of the fight behind the lines is to break down the mor ale of the civilian population to such a point that they will impoVtune their governments for. peace. It is the most dastardly, unrighteous, cruel, devilish plan which would b'e conceived. "It is .based upon the theory that the killing of four' children out of five will induce the mother to im plore her government to have the war stopped that her fifth child may live. It is carried on from the Knglish channel to the Swiss border and from the Swiss border to the Adri atic and has resulted in the maim ing of thousands of women and chil dren and the driving .f. hundreds of thousands of terror-stricken from their homes to whenever they might seek refuge. "All of this is accompanied by the most active possible propaganda, es pecially in Italy, designed to deceive the people and to strike down their morale." >lr. Davison dencribel the attempt to uphold civilian morale us "one of the great missions of the Red Cross." Mr. Davison had personal experi ence with German ♦s'-rorizing of ci vilians from the air at night. lie was in a town in France when thir ty-seven people were killed and houses demolished by a German air plane which had stolen through a barrage and flew as low as 300 feet. American ambulance men busied themselves at rescue work and the airplane returned and bombed them. He regards the bombing of Paris by big Bins as part of the offensive of terror. TEXAX CHURCH MODERATOR Columbus, 0., May 17. —The Rev. Dr. J. Frank Smith, of Dallas, Tex., was elected moderator of the Gen eral Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of America at its one hun dred and thirtieth annual session here yesterday. Pin Your Faith on Dixon's The lubricants that have proved their superiority in actual \fse and scientific demonstration. Don't be content with a camouflage coating that squeezes out quickly and leaves bearing surfaces at friction's mercy. Rely on p|XOfy'§ GRAPHITE Automobile LUBRICANTS they stay put —lave wear, time and money. Ask your dealer for the Dixon Lubricatinc Chart JOSEPH DIXON CRUCIBLE CO. JjOAV' Jersey City, New Jarser Established 1827 Ohev Sholom Temple to Observe Wheatless Week The week beginning May 20 will be "wheatless week" to the mem bers of Ohev Sholom Temple, in gratitude to the government for al lowing the Jewish people to have wheat meal during the Feast of the Passover. At the special meeting in the Temple last night a service flag containing eleven stars was un furled. The presentation was by Mrs. Samuel Fried r-an, and tfie ac ceptance by David Kaufman. The service Hag was unfurled ni honor of the following men: Gordon Adler, Stanley Adler, Harold Ast rieli, Joseph Piaster, Charles Good man, Cy Heckert, Henry Levy, Isaiah Moyer, William Miller, Kdgar Stern and Josef Hutzler Strouse. 45 Bible Students Will Graduate This Evening F#rty-Hve pupils In the Correspond ing Bible Classes of the local P. R. R. Y. M. C. A., taught by Ira P. Dean, will be graduated this evening at 7.45 o'clock in the Association Building. , These students, most of them coming from Pennsylvania, include In addi tion students from New Jersey, New York and Illinois. Classes to be graduated this even ing include those instructed in the 1 Acts of the Apostles, Gospel of St. John, Kpistles of St. John, and Gospel of Mark. A special program has been prepared for the occasion. The fea ture will be an illustrated lecture by the instructor, Ira P. Dean, on "Why \Vi' Study the New Testament." Spe • cial vocal music will be a feature. Only students and- their relatives and' immediate friends will attend. Belgium Is Starving, Hoover Tells President Washington, May 17. Belgium . now is starving and some of 'he ships supplying: the allies must be 1 diverted to carry relief. President ! Wilson was told yesterday by Food Administrator Hoover. Under the present plan of pooling the ships and the food supplies, Mr. Hoover said \ other countries are getting the food | and Belgium is being neglected. 500,000 MEN OVERSEAS, U. S. IS SANGUINE [Continued from First Page.] should definitely pledge itself to i deliver a specific number of men within a time limit. Many factors are involved in making such a cal culation months m advance. Secretary Baker would make no comment on the statement. Many weeks ago he told the Senate mili tary committee, however, that the go\ernment then had hdpes of get ting 1,50S,000 to the front during i the year. Since then his estimate j that 500,000 men would reach • France early in the year has been i fulfilled, and since then, also the German drive has changed the whole course of events and broughti about a speeding up of American! participation, which has already | shown results. The French article indicates thatl under the program a total of 2,000,-' 000 American troops'would reach' ; France during the year, 1,500,000j jot' which would be lighting units.i Whether that result can be obtained! depends on the shipping • situation. The men and the essential equip-' ment fqr them can be ready. Under the authority sought by! s President Wilson to organize as large j an Army as it is found possible to : train, equip and transport, it is known that officials expect at least 3,000,000 men to be under arms dur ing the next twelve months. Many believe that even a larger force, can be handled, as it now quite probable that a total of 4,000,000 during the year will be nearer the i mark. BAItRISIStmG SdHife TELEQK3CPH Bolt Talk Stirs Up ' Capitol Hill Folks Capitol Hill was discussing w.lth a good bit of interest to-day reports that in event of Joseph F. Guffey be ing nominated for the Democratic nomination for Governor that Judge Eugene C. Bonniwell would bolt and run Independently. The Judge's friends denied it, while Howard O. Holstein, running for Lieutenant- Governor, said that he intended to support the Democratic ticket as far as he felt just at this stage of the game. There has been a feeling on Capitol Hill that if the vote for the Repub lican nomination is close and Mr. O'Neil is defeated that he will run independently. Mr. O'Neil has re fused time and again to make any definite statement on the question. What is stirring up the Hill is what will be the attitude of the State Ad ministration in such an event and also what will happen to some of the Capitol people who have been per niciously active in behalf of O'Neil campaign funds and in "lining up" people for the Commissioner against personal preferences in event that Sproul is elected Governor. This has been an unhappy year for many people who are interested in politics at the Capitol and accounts in part for the activity of many of them in going home as soon as pos sible to get the lay of their districts. Harrisburg Soldier, Gassed in France, Home to Rest Gassed when the Germans at | tacked the base hospital to which he I was attached and suffering as well from shell shock, received while con fined in a dug-out for almost twenty four hours, during the same Hun 'attack, Arthur M. Eckert, the first j Harrisburg boy to be sent to the I United States to recuperate, is at the home of his Barents, Mr. and Mrs. j A. I. Eckert, 36 Balm street. I After the Hun attack in which he I sustained his injuries, Eckert spent 1 several weeks in a Paris hospital. I Then he was sent to the United j States to recuperate at the military I hospital at Lnkewood, N. J. In ad dition to he effects from the gas [attack and shell shock Young Eckert is also afflicted with a mild case of trench feet, suffered while in the first line trenches along the French battlefront. Youny Tckert, who is only nine teen years old, enlisted in Evacua tion Hospital No. 2, early last Sep tember. He was sent to Columbus Barracks, 0., for training, after which he was sent to Fort Benjamin Harrison, In A 19 styles SZUU Drop Stitch Silk Hose in Black, Extra Heavy Silk Hose, full Bronze and White 7R fashioned, Black at .* '5 1•I 'O and White at,. f O 1 Week-End Co ELASTIC TOP CORSETS—in Pink and . H White fine French Coutil—elastic inserts at back O P* /V S —6 hose supporters —for medium and full figures Ih,| —sizes 19 to 32—special at □ i 1 'Special Offering In S J Vijvjk ® ur 1 Women's fine White Canvas - - &,M Oxfords and pumps—military and JK nil covered Louis heels—long slender "m* vamps white turn soles all widths and sizes—special at MAY 17, 1918. dollars. It will be for the manu facture of 16-inch howitzers. The location is not given. ARIIKSiKD AS IMROI.L; RRCAIiER Albert Moore, who has been wanted for more than a year on the charge of breaking parole from the Eastern Penitentiary, was arrested yesterday by-Roundsman James McCann. i IWim Baici so Young §Rub Dandruff and Itching with Cuticura Ointment Shampoo Wth Catievra Stir