TARDIEU GLOWS WITH PRAISE OF YANKEETROOPS Sharp. American Ambassador, Points to Example Set by the French Parts, July 30.—American soldiers j in the fighting on the Marne salient I showed themselves equal to the best j TRAFFIC OFFICER RECOVERS HEALTH i Now Ha Voracious Appetite and Is Full of Energy "Tanlac is certainly the finest remedy on the market for stomach j trouble." says Harry J. Winower, the traffic officer, stationed at Queen and Chestnut streets. Lancaster. Pa., "for it pulled me back to health when I was in mighty bad shape and it did, it quick too. "My stomach was In terrible shape. "I hadn't eaten any breakfast in years. I slept poorly too. ".Vow I am hungry for breakfast' v hen I get up. I can eat and enjoy my meals. I sleep fine and wake up fresh and rested and full of energy and ambition. "Tanlac has done wonders for me and I shall recommend it at every opportunity." Tanlac is now being introduced! here at Gorgas' drug store. —Adv. r The New Store WM. STROUSE G^/^cex6a^ Winds Week Wm. Strouse Clothes are so well known for their high quality and smart styles that there isn't need for emphasizing those points now. You need all the sav ings you can get in good clothes and here is the sale that will help you. Buy for the present and buy for the future—NOW. These reductions end this week. Entire Stock of Men's and Young Men's Suits Involved f 20.00 Suits —►17.75 30,00 Suits —►25.75 jOQS"'" , 91 75a oos "'" ,30 75 Entire Stock af Boys' Suits Reduced £°° Suits 7 qpc i£i± *.5.95 Suits ov ' £"? "^T?!s , 'W-rarTV v .:ima The Specialty Store For Men and Boys, 310 Market St. TUESDAY EVENING, French troops, declared Andre Tar dieu, French high commissioner to the United States, at a dinner In his honor last night at the. American ; University union. Prof. George Net jtleton, of Yale University, presided i ,nd representatives of many Ameri j can universities and colleges were | present. i The dark days are over, but there i ire hard months ahead. Captain iTardieu said: | "The first great battle in which ; your own troops have participated I extensively has been a great victory. The part taken by your soldiers is well known in France. Every one |at the front, including the enemy. , knows well what the American j Army is worth and what new power ! will be let loose in the course of the j next few weeks under the folds of i the Star Spangled Banner. Hard Months Ahead "The war is not over yet. Hard I months are ahead of us, but we al- I ready have taken the initiative. As far as numbers go the critical times I are over with us. Under the strong leadership of a chief who is worthy iof France—Premier Clemenceau— .we have held our ground. To-day. ' after some time on the defensive, the time for a victorious attack has come and the dark days are over., "While greeting the completion of i the first million American troops in France we have greeted the first success. In common with you Amer -1 icans we and our gallant allies are standing ready for the supreme effort ; The faith which is inspiring us will ! not falter." Will Help to the End William G. Sharp, the American Ambassador, in response said: "American soldiers could not help being brave after such examples of magnificent courage as displayed by the French troops. The first million its here. Another million will follow with as many millions more as are necessary to bring the cause of democracy to victorious peace." Major Perkins. European Com missioner for the American Red Cross, and Prof. Paul Van Dyke, of Princeton, spoke of the determina tion of the United States to carry on the war until victory. MANY ARE SEEKING HOTEL RESERVATIONS [Continued from First Page ] hotel. "But the hotel's not opened yet," reiterated Louis A. Sholtes, as sistant construction manager, who happened to answer the telephone. "He said he intended to stop at the Penn-Harris. He always does what he says, so I know he's there." The last brick in the walls will be laid late this afternoon, it is pre dicted by R. E. Hawes. general con struction superintendent. The only brickwork to be done after this will be the building of chimneys and of the huge bake oven. This Is to he fourteen feet square and is being built under the supervision of an ex pert baker. Here the toothsome delicacies for the epicureans who eat at the Penn-Harris will be prepared. Three floors are practically fin ished and are watting for doors. Doors for the structure were shipped last week and it is expected that they will reach Harrishurg by to morrow. Plasters are hard at work and are now plastering the dining room. In everp department of the work rapid progress is being made and men In charge predict that the big building will be ready for opening in October. BAJUUSBURG fftfcfla TELEGRAPH ALLIES AND FOE ARE LOCKED IN TERRIFIC FIGHT [Continue*! FVom Pace I,] valley, along the easterly side of the front, towards the village of Aubilly. A certain amount of ground likewise has been gained near the center in the neighborhood of Villers-Agron-Aiguizv. French Win Ground at Grand Rozoy I he main advance on the westerly side of the front seems to have been at lirand Rozoy, about five miles northwest of Fere-en- Tardenois. The French here are progressing north onto the crest of the plateau between the Yesle and Ourcq. [here has been heavy,lighting near Buzancy, five miles south of Soissons. and also in Plessier wood about five miles further south. In this latter locality, 4."' prisoners were taken belonging to three divisions of the enemy now engaged in the Marne salient. I here are seventy-one such divisions, of which ten belong to the northern army of Crown Prince Rupprecht, of Bavaria. 1 he enemy s withdrawal is reported still orderly and military, opinion in London discounts the possibility of any rounding up of Germans in the salient MILLION MEN THROWN INTO GREAT BATTLE [Continued from First Page.] began on July 15. The increase in the number of divisions engaged in the battle would appear to indicate ho had since that time drawn heav ily on other army groups. It also would seem that this action on his part reflects the importance of this battle in the eyes of the German high command. Yankees Driven Back Through the German counter blow the Americans were driven ba'k from Clerges. southeast of Fere-en- Tardenois, while to the northwest of Fere, the Americans also have been forced out of Beugneux, into which they had penetrated pas-ing through grand Rozoy. • Buzancy, situated on the west side of the Crise river, above five miles south of Soissons. also has been the scene of heavy fighting, and the bat tle appears to have been general along the line south of that point, notably in Plessier wood, near where the front turns abruptly to the east. \ On the other end of the battle Une there have been sharp engagements, but reports credit the allies with making an advance at Aubilly in the, Ardre Valley, west of Rheims. They also forged ahead farther down to-1 ward the bottom of the pocket, at I Villers-Agron-Aiguizy. Blow of Great Violence While these counter blows against the allied lines are general and of great violence, it is not believed in j London that the enemy intends to make a real stand south of the Vesle river. Paris, on the other hand, seems to believe the Germans may have fixed upon the present lo cation t>f their armies as the field up-' on which they will turn at bay. There have been patrol operations along the British front but nothing significant has occurred there. Little has been reported to amplify the Copenhagen dispatch to the ef fect that Turkey and Germany had broken off relations. Amsterdam advices, however, indicate Turkey intends to pursue an aggressive policy in the Caucasus region, the field supposedly set aside for Ger man exploitation. This may carry a measure of confirmation for the rumor that the quadruple alliance has broken over the division of spoils subsequent to the peace treaties with Russia and Rumania. Lighting Kills Boy and Horse ETiMton, Wvo.— The death from a lightning bolt of Frank Koontz, eleven, son of Edward Koontz. a ranchman of the Bridgar district, is the fourth from this cause in Wyo ming in ten days. The Koontz bov was working with his father and a horse, snaking logs out of the timber when the bolt struck. Recovering conscienceness a few minutes later, the elder Koontz found the horse dead and his son dying, the lad expiring before the father could summon aid. Fortunes of War Lead to Retirement of Well- Known Passenger Head The merging railroad facilities at Hagerstown has resulted in the removal of the general freight and passenger departments of the Cum berland Valley from Chambersburg and the retirement of H. A. Riddle, for many years general agent of the Cumberland Valley. Perhaps there is no other railroad man so widely known as Mr. Riddle. He had grown up with the passenger department of the Cumberland Valley and was at the front in its passenger traffic when the building of the business was In its infancy. Not only in the railroad word is Mr. Riddle well known. There scarcely has been a single Presbyterian gathering in this section in which he was not active in his capacity as one of the elders of the historic Falling Spring Pres byterian Church, of which the Rev. Dr. John Grier Hibben. now presi- I dent of Princeton 1 Theological Sem inary, was once pastor. Not only has Mr. Riddle been earnest in church work, but Mrs. Riddle and daughter. Miss Elizabeth Riddle, as well, the latter being actively Identified with mission work within Carlisle Pres bytery and a delegate to gatherings in Harrisburg frequently, the last time war activities were the themes tim ewar activities were the themes of discussion and sacrifice, Aiibition Pills For Nervous People The great nerve tonic—the famoui Wendell's Ambition Pills—* hat will put vigor, vim and vitality Into ner vous. tired out. all in. Respondent people In a few daya In many In stances. Anyone can buy a box for only SO cents, and H. C. Kennedy la author ized by the maker to refund the pur chase price If anyone Is dissatlsfld with the first box purchased. Thousands praise them for gen eral debility, nervous prostration, mental depression .*\nd unstrung nerves caused by over-indulgence in alcohol, tobacco, or overwork of anr kind. * For an> affllctlan of the nervous system Wendell's Ambition PUls are unsurpassed, while for hysteria, trembling and neuralgia they ar simply splendid. Fifty cent* at H. C. Kennedy's and dealers everywhere. —Advertisement TURKEY OPENS ITS ARMS TO CAUCASUS [Continued from First l*age>.] by the treaty, what was more natura! for us than to take Into consideration the necessities of this new situation created on our important eastern front. Could we close our ears to the appeal of the government of a people largely of the same race and same creed as ourselves? "We are awar e of the action, and its present progress, to place under uerman control Tillis and Baku. That is a logical consequence of the dupli cation of the Brest-Litovsk treaty. How could this treaty be taken into consideration in the afTairs o'f the Caucasus, seeing that the Bolshevik government has not even been ab! to return to us, in accordance with the treaty, our eastern frontier and that in the Caucasus influences en tirely independent of the Bolsheviki government have arisen. This reported attitude on the part of Turkey may account in part foi the report received through Copen hagen that Turkey and Germany hac severed relations. Washington. July 30.—N0 official advices of the reported break in re lations between Turkey and Ger many have reached Washington hut the government would not be sur prised if Turkey has been driven to .in open rupture, as there is a well founded background for the report. It has been known for snmn months that a deep and growing feel ing of dissatisfaction has existed in Turkey o\er the treatment by the. Germans. Reports that a Turkish mission recently has been trying in Switzerland to cultivate friendship with some of the allied government'' have been received here. It would be natural, officials said, for the Turkish government to endeavor to find some new friends among the powers before breaking with its old associates. Utah Is Passing Up Sports For Farming Salt Lake Clty.-Outdoor sports in Utah to-day include only such pas times as planting, hoeing and other farm work, according to a sporting authority who has made a canvass of sport activities throughout the state. Baseball in Salt Lake City, is the only game that has managed to sur vive the ravage of war on sportdom. There are occasional games between semi-o . V'YVO I vV" I N is for Nuthatch— This one's named Lizzie, She's a great worker Forever busy. • Dr* from one to two and so on to tt VALOR ALONE IS NOT ENOUGH TO WIN THE WAR Chamber of Commerce Hears! That Economic Conditions at j Home Aid Victory or Defeat j "This war will be ended on an eco- t nomic basis." So declared Dr. Clar- I ence J. Owens, Wasntngton, manag- | ing director of the Southern Com- i i mercial Congress, in his address at j to-day's membership luncheon of the j Chamber of Commerce, held in the J Board of Trade Building. His sub- j Ject was "The Importance of the ; Chamber of Commerce to the Winning of the War." Wars have never been ended by I \alor, by courage, nor by sacrifices alone, he said. *"Every conquered j nation has fought valorously, cour- j ageously and made sacrifices, but they j have been settled by the breadlines, i And breadlines will settle this war." i he added. The Chamber of Commerce in Har-| risburg and in the whole United i States, he believes, must be organized to prevent the institution of bread lines in the United States. Their or ganization with various departments devoted to various sources of ac tivity, will do much to establish such an economic basis that breadlines will never form in the United States to bring with them military disaster, ] he maintains. The Chamber of Commerce can aid , in winning the war by helping the countryman, too. he said. It should be so organized that it may co-oper ate closely with the countrymen so that their efficiency may be placed upon as high a plane as possible. The farmer as an asset to the world and as a person to be aided by the Chamber of Commerce, he em phasized by telling the story of the farmer, who, after the doctor, the lawyer, the banker, the merchant and others told what they had done and were doing, said: "And I feed the whole durned crowd." "And its almost true," Dr. Owens ] commented. Speaking on the Federal Farm Loan, in which he was instrumental jin having passed, he said: "Some day that trade follows the flag, but trade follows the loan." High tribute to the Yankee soldiers was paid by Dr. Owens. The Yankees, he firmly declared, are to be the weight that will swing the balance ' in this might conflict. "Joffre stopped the Germans at the Marne, the Italians stopped them at the Piave, but the boys in khaki have ; stopped them at the Marne", have crossed it too. and are driving the Huns on and on, he said. "They are going to continue to drive them on towards the capitals of the Central Powers in Europe Tintil the conflict ends." he maintains. ] This mighty war will be of bene ] fit to America, he contends, for it is a war of ideals. In our great his tory of 142 years there have been five great wars, he mentioned. It is resulting in new ideals of in terdependesce In Dr. Owens' mind. "It is teaching- that we must Inter nationalize the co-operative efforts of nations and communities of the earth," the lunchers were told. Two great Revolutions have been ended by the united efforts of the na tions against the Hun. The first rev olution was ended some months ago, he said, when, as the boys in khaki from the north and from the south, marching side by side, were proudly saluted by President Wilson on the reviewer's stand. I Another Revolution was brought to | an end. Dr. Owens told his audience, | "when the boys in khaki from every I sectios of the United States, in Lon ; don. passed in review and were sa | luted by King George at Buckingham | Castle. I Previous to introducing the speaker of the occasion. President Andrew J. I Patterson, of the Chamber of Com i merce, announced that preliminary * plans were belsg laid for a Chamber I of Commeice plcnia This picnic, President Patterson said, will be in charge of a commit tee which includes Mercer B. Tate, chairman; Boyd M. Oglesby, H. H. Bowman, J, C. Thompson, " and H. I'loyd Hopkins. The picnic, Chairman Tate announced, will be held at the cabin of John W, Reiiy, near Rock ville, on Thursday, August 15. Mem bers will be charged for themselves and each of their guests at the rate of 11.50 each. During the luncheon the first num ber of the new but bright bulletin of the "Harrisburg," the official bul letin of the Harrisburg Chamber of Commerce, was distributed among the lunchers. WITH FINGERS! CORNS LIFT OUT Freezone is magic! Corns and calluses lift right off without pain A few cents buys a tiny bottle of the magic Freezone at any druK Btore. Apply a few drops of Freez one upon a tender, aching corn or a callus. Instantly that troublesome corn or callus stops hurting, then shortly you lift it out, root and all, without any pain, soreness or Irri tation. These little bottles of Freez one contain Just enough, to rid the feet of every hard corn, soft corn, corn between the toes and the cal luses on bottom of feet. So easy: So simple. Why wait? No humbug! JULY 30, 1918. War Is to Raise Tax on Amusement Patrons By Associated Press Washington, July 30. Doubling of the war taxes on admissions to places of amusement and on club dues was decided upon to-day by the House ways and means committee 1 This Event Takes Place 1 i Tomorrow, Wednesday, In i i Kaufman's A | i BEDS: SPRINGS: MATTRESSES | Starts Tomorrow, Wednesday bi S| People who have been thinking about furnishing a bed tJS yj room will be more than surprised with the unexpected big nl S| savings put into their hands by this most important event, jigi hi Ol'T. THIS MKANS vol' Alt 10 OBI.lGKl) TO BCY . >Sj |IU KAHI.V IF Vor CARE TO tiK.T Till". BENEHTS 1 Exactly 87 White Enamel Beds 1 To Go Into Harrisburg Homes |j at About Half b j liy Slightly soiled but in practically good condition || j|j White Enamel Beds, 3-ft. or cot g> size, heavy white tubing. A Q[J IE =jfj || August Sale, each VITTTITTi White Enamel Beds, _ 2|j I hFr.is.9s 1 White Enamel Steel Beds -?4 or 4-ft. gj| jIS size, 20 good styles to select from. Q C inj August Sale Price *P & jv] 1 White Enamel Beds, full size, 4 ft. 6 in., in many I Hill' attractive stvles. August (J* h j j|i Sale Pillows, filled with gfc !U art ticking. August r/\ i clean crushed feath- F Sale. VD/.DU ers and covered hi A A A with striped blue iSI U $14.00 $8.95 August Sale h B | sa I *>.95 $2.95 I n iytw. Brass Beds in Our August Sale JJ yi| j j J | h Genuine Brass Beds, \vu!l mailt' and extro IM h { 'I I 111 strong. Ml l | H II M !| II All double bed sie, in velvet and fjjl UH polet finished. Special, ||U ? $16.95, $18.95, 1 I M $24.95 ""$29.50 g ONE DAY SALE 1 Tomorrow, Wednesday, Disposing of L All Accumulated Groups and |j Broken Lines in ll Printed Turkish Cotton Flaxons Towels Foulards 25c neat Printed Hemmed bleach- ; 4!>c Cotton Fou- Flaxons, extra good i e< i Turkish Bath lards, 30-ln. wide, flljl for Summer dresses ' Towels, good size. | good all-over pat- 11U One day, Wednes- i ° ne da >' Wednes- , terns. One day, gf| Gas Hot O'Cedar Cedar Mop Plates Mops and Oil $1.98 two-burn- ~ sc O'Cedar Mor Big Wonder Ce- I[U er Gas Hot Plates handle, tri- j dar Oil Mop and gij for light cookini;. | angle shape. f>no bottle oil. Ono h i One day, 1 J_Q 'iay. day ' Pit* LM Wednesd ■•-'* Wednesday, Sf Mason Fruit Jar Gums Jar Caps li§ nil Tars ! 8c a flozen Jar ' Porcelain lined Ml W Fruit Jars for | ® he I J ar Caps, for Ma canning. D y J '• . n j son Jars. One k| 1-pint size, 0c Wednes- dayi Wednes a dozen. i 6c day ' 25C Kil 1 -quart size. 75c dozen dozen " 3C jjj] i " w°T' Do i White Goods Porch Gates ffi Water Pails Fine quamtesi .tmr.tr [jj 10-quart Tin sheer White Dress ft ' Po ' rch *S Pails, ex ! and Waist Materi S tra heavy tin and i als. 28 inches ; . i;i| LSI 3trong handle. One wide. One day, j ' y ' JJSC llv day, off Wednesday. 1 *7 Wednesday. g P Wednesday | yard 1 Bed S.ieets J§j Huck Towels Pillow Cases E xtra quality S IJJ Border Huck Hemmed Pillow Muslin Bed Sheets. Towels, hemmed i Cases, 42x36-in 81x90 inches. 3-in. IS fll ready for use. One size. One day, hem. One day, lil4 day. 10 1_ Wednesday, OC. Wednes- > ICQ 111 Wednesday* Z 2C : each OC 1 day. considering: the new eight bflUoti dollar war revenue bill. Majority sentiment of the committee wu tald to favor more than doubling th I present taxes on tobacco but final decision was deferred until addi tional information could be had from the Treasury Department, which had recommended only twice the presenl tax. 5