Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, August 15, 1918, Page 5, Image 5

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    18 MORE GIRLS
NEEDED TO FILL
CITY'S QUOTA
Hospital Nurses' Drive Falls
Short of Mark Set by
Nation
If Harrisburg's drive for student
nurses is to be a success, eighteen
nurses must register before Saturday
evening. This is the present situa
tion in the nursing drive as explained
this morning by officials in charge of
the campaign. The campaign was
launched several weeks ago and is
• to secure enlistments for the United
States Students Nurse Reserve. The
object of securing the nurses is to
release graduate nurses for service
overseas.
Harrisburg's quota for the drive is
40 student nurses. Up to noon to-day
there were twenty-two applications
for enlistment received at the local
recruiting station at the Harrisburg
Hospital. Miss Frances M. Scott, chair
man. A single new application was
announced, being the application of
Martha Creswell, 211 Harris street.
.\ntlon-\Vldr Drive
The local campaign is in co-opera
tion with a nation-wide drive for
25,000 student nurses. The drive is
under the auspices of the Woman's
Committee of the Council of National
Defense. According to "Red Cross
Clippings," the official bulletin of the
Pennsy 1 vania-Delaware division of
the American Red Cross, the plea for
students is meeting with great suc
cess in other cities throughout the
entire country. Many Pennsylvania
cities have already passed their
quota and Red Cross officials have
expressed their desire that Harris
burg may pass its quota, too, in order
to uphold the eneviable reoord of be
ing an "over the top" city in other
drives.
"The requirements for enrollment
are very free," reads a recent staate
ment .of the National Council. "Ap
plicants can be between 19 and 35
years of age. Their education may
vary from sub-high school to college
graduation They must hold themselves
in readiness until April 1. 1919 for
their assignment to training school,
unless they have, in the meantime,
entered other government war ser
vice. They have been asked to en
roll without restriction as to school,
which may be either a civilian hos
pital or the Army Training School.
"If Boys Must Fall, Let
Faces Be Toward Front"
Washington, Aug. 15. ln support
of the assertion that America is united
in the war. Clarence Ousley assistant
secretary of agriculture, tells of an I
experience in a recent trip through
Texas. He was asked to speak at a
campmeeting on the agricultural pro
gram.
"When I reached the meeting the
congregation had just risen for
prayer," he said. "The minister pray
ed with great fervor and the air was
electric with spiritual rapture. He
praved for the soldiers and added.
'But, O Lord, if they must fall, let
them fall with their faces to the
front.' There was a sob and a chorus
of 'Amen.'
"When mothers and fathers in re
mote districts, away from the sound
of the fife and drum and the sight of
warships, airplanes and marching pa
rades. can say amen to the courage- I
ous death of their sons, we need have
no fear that the plain people of the I
United States will fail in the resolu- j
tion to sustain."
Toll of Shipping Reduced
in July to 270,000 Tons
Paris, Aug. 15. The allied and
neutral shipping sunk by German
submarines during July amounted to
270,000 compared with 534,839 tons
sunk in July, 1917. This radical de
crease in. losses is doubly significant
when the increase in merchant ma
rine navigation resulting from the I
American shipbuilding effort is con- j
sidered.
The Entente nations constructed j
during July a tonnage in excess of
280,000 over that destroyed during
the month by enemy operations.
The Entente tonnage sunk in 1918
was 50 per cent, less than that lost
in 1917.
"Gas Attack" Off Carolina
Coast Is Unconfirmed
By Associated Press
Washington, Aug. 15. —Although ,
final reports of the investigation into I
the "gas attack" on Smith's Island,
North Carolina, last Saturday, have
not yet reached the Navy Depart
ment, there were strong intimations
to-day that the "gas" was not from i
a German submarine as first re
ported. No explanation of the inci
dent, however, has been offered and
••"one probably will be until com
plete information is at hand.
Saving Wheat
_ Ay
Eating Corn
takes on a de
lightful meaning
when the corn is
in the form of
POST
TOASTIES
- *f ' f ' ■ ' ■ • '. ' '
THURSDAY EVENING, &ARBISBURG TELEGRAPH AUGUST 15, 1918.
THREE KILLED
BY LIGHTNING
IN BIG STORM
Workmen Struck After Tak
ing Shelter; Another
Is Stunned
! - : .'V
s ■ - JJSp
BENJAMIN GLASS
Two Harrisburg men were killed,
another was slightly injured, and a
Hummclstown man was killed, tn the
severe electrical storm which passed
over this section early last evening.
The dead are:
Harry Griffey, aged 53, 442 South
Fifteenth street.
Preston Frye, aged 25, 1953 Berry
hill street.
Paul Ickes, aged 32. Hummelstown.
Benjamin Glass. 555 South Front
street, was slightly injured at the
same time Griffey was killed.
Griffffey and Glass, both carpenters
for the Harrisburg Burial Case Com
pany, were working in the lumber
yard at the rear of the building when
the rain began, and to escape the de
luge, they took shelter under a lum
ber pile. A few minutes later the
lumber pile was struck by lightning.
Griffey was killed instantly. Glass
was badly stunned, but revived suffi
ciently to walk to his home.
Griffey is survived by a wife, two
: sons, Amos and Francis, and a daugh
ter Esther. His son has been called
for service in the army. The funeral
services will be held Saturday after
noon at 2 o'clock from the home,
with the Rev. R. L. Meisenhelder of
ficiating. Burial will be in Shoop's
church cemetery.
Ickes and Frye were killed when
the lightning struck a shanty located
opposite the Rutherford roundhouse,
where they had run to escape the
storm. Both men were employed as
brakemen on the Philadelphia and
Reading railroad. Both men were
killed almost instantly. The Harris
burg ambulance was rushed to the
scene but the doctor at once pro
nounced the men dead.
Huns Force Russians
Into Ranks of Army
By Associated Press
London, Aug. 15.—A dispatch to
the Daily News from Vladivostok,
dated Sunday, says the Germans al
ready are conscripting Russians on
a small scale.
"According to stories of prisoners
taken by the Czecho-Slovaks," says
the dispatch, "German flying col
umns are impressing males from 18
to 45 years of age and are bringing
those who disobey the mobilization
order before Germanized revolution
ary tribunals, which condemn them
to death.
"These conscripted units have Ger
man company and platoon com
manders and are stiffened by twenty
Germans or magyars to every sixty
Russians."
Two Harrisburg Printers
Chosen on Committees
Frank Sohmer and Oliver Osier,
Harrisburg delegates to the sixty
fourth annual convention of the In
ternational Typographical Union, now
in session at Scranton, were elected to
important committees. Sohmer was
chosen chairman of the label commit
tee and Osier will serve on the Fed
eration delegates committee.
SOVIET TROOPS
BEGIN LEAVING
RUSS CAPITAL
Loss of City Serious Blow to
Cause of Bolsheviki; Re
public In Danger
Amsterdam, Aug. 15. (British
Wireless Press). —Soviet troops have
begun to evacuate Moscow. The gold
reserves which had been in the base
ment of the Kremlin already have
been removed to an unknown place.
Dispatches received in London on
Monday reporting that Premier Len
ine and War Minister Trotzky had
fled to the naval base at Kronsvadt,
added that all the government de
partments would be removed there.
The flight of Lenine and Trotzky was
said to be due to threats by the So
cial Revolutionists of the Left that
they were about to begin a reign of
terror there. Whether the Soviet
troops were forced to depart from
Moscow is not clear, but the loss of
the city to the Soviet government un
doubtedly will be a serious blow to
their cause.
Moscow, the ancient capital of
Russia, was made the Soviet capital
in March. The Lenine government
fled there from -Petrograd toward
which the German troops were
marching. It has been reported with
in the past few days that the Ger
mans had renewed their march
to-ward Petrograd. Czecho-Slovak
troops have been reported in force
along the Volga, about 500 miles
east of Moscow.
London, Aug. 15. —The Soviet gov
ernment has issued a proclamation
declaring the Russian republic is in
danger, according to telegrams from
Helsingfors received in Stockholm
and quoted by the correspondent of
the Times there.
The Petrograd Soviet has removed
to Kronstadt owing to the insecurity
of the city. Bands of armed peasants
are reported marching on Petrograd
from surrounding districts. de
clare they are starving and that the
Red Guards have stolen all their
food. Dissatisfaction with the Soviets
is said to prevail everywhere in Rus
sia.
Reuter's Limited learns that Brit
ish troops on their way to join the
Czecho-Slovak troops on the Ussuri
front, were received by the Czechs
with the greatest enthusiasm at
Nicolak and elsewhere.
The Ussuri river joins the Amur
near Khabarovsk, north of Vladivo
stok. The Czechs have been engaged
with the Bolsheviki in this region
for several weeks.
I Washington, Aug. 15. —Official dis
patches from American Consul Gen
eral Poole, In Moscow, lifted the cur
! tifln for-a moment on what has been
i going on in Moscow and revealed an
amazing train of events.
Consul General Poole, after wit
nessing the violation of the French
and British consulates and the ar
rests of the consuls general and their
staffs, destroyed his code book and
papers and turned the affairs of the
American consulate over to the Swe
dish consul, at the same time de
manding safe conduct from the coun
try for himself and his associates.
French and British citizens have
been arrested and the Bolshevik have
announced they would hold them as
hostages because of the attack on
the Soviet government by British
and French troops at Archangel.
Members of the French and Br't
ish military missions stationed in
I Moscow were refused permission to
j leave the country in spite of a previ
i ous promise of safe conduct,
j It is possible that since the send-
I ing of Consul General Poole's tele-
I grams, which began on July 29 and
| continued until August 6, the situa
i tion may have changed, because it is
| reported that Lenine and Trotzky,
the Bolshevik leaders, have fled and
the Soviet government in Miscow
may have been overthrown. In that
event, Mr. Poole and the entente
missions may find themselves in a
better situation.
The story is told in sequence in
the State Department's official an
nouncement of its devices from Mr.
Poole. It follows:
"The Department of State has
now received several telegrams from
Consul General Poole, at Moscow,
concerning recent events in that city.
Following is a summary of them:
" 'One of the telegrams, similar in
character to a previous message re
ceived through other channels, states
that on July 29 Lenine declared re
peatedly before an official gathering
of the Soviets that a state of war
existed between the Russian republic
and the allied powers. Because of
this the diplomatic representatives in
Moscow of Great Britain and the
consular representatives of France,
Italy and the United States visited
the commissariat for foreign affairs
and inquired if Lenine's declaration
should not be considered a declara
tion of war, involving the rupture
of de facto relations and the depart
ure of the consul. Tchitcherin said
that it need not be so understood,
that it was a state of defense rather
than a state of war. and that the
government desired to continue its
relations with the entente as it did
with Germany, under analogous cir
cumstances.
"The consuls demanded that to be
acceptable the explanation must be
publicly made by the head of the
government himself. They also
pointed out that the question was
inseparable from that of the depar
i.ire of the members of the former
military mission. After having
agreed to facilitate the departure of
these persons, in accordance with in
ternational law, the government, they
said, had raised absolutely inadmis-;
sable objections. The foreign repre-,
sentatives alsc stated that they could,
pot see in this attitude anything butj
confirmation of Lenine's declaration |
of the existence of a state or give,
a reply within three days.
"On the night of August 2 a reply j
was received from Tchitcherin. lt|
stated that inasmuch as Lenine's lit-1
terances were made behind closed j
doors, public explanation could noti
be given about nonpublic utterances, j
As to the members of the military j
missions Tchitcherin said that nego-,
tiations had been begun with the!
German authorities to procure safe;
passage from Petrograd to Stock
holm for theie officers, passage
through Archangel being impossible
because British cruisers had already
begun the bombardment of the is
lands covering Archangel.
"A third report from Consul Gen
eral Poole refers to the arrests of
British and French citizens at Mos
cow."
SOLDIER ARRESTED FOR
BUYING BOTTLED LIQUOR
Stanley Hillen, stationed with the
Six Hundred and Thirty-fourth Avia
tion Detachment at Mjddletown, was
arrested by Patrolmen McCann.
Blair, Nalen and Romlck last night
on the charge of trying to secure
liquor at the Elscheid Hotel. It is
said he entered the hotel wearing
a civilian cap and purchased bottled
liquor. When Joseph Elscheid, pro
prietor, discovered the deception and
ordered h'm out, it is said he grew
abusive, . _ , „ .
34 MEN LEAVE
CITY FOR ARMY
TRAINING CAMPS
Men Inducted by Local Draft
Board to Study Auto
Mechanics
Thirty-four draft registrants from
the three city boards entrained at
the Pennsylvania station at 11.40 this
morning to go to the University of
Pittsburgh, where they will take a
special course of training as auto
mechanics.
Eight left at 7.55 for Lafayette
College. One went to Erie.
Among the men from city board
No. 1 was Theodore Albert Magnelll,
formerly a patrolman on the city po
lice force.
The men were accompanied to the
train by the usual crowd o.' relatives
and friends. There was little excite
ment, and the only demonstrations of
farewell were those enacted quietly
between each registrant and his
quota of friends and well-wishers.
City board No. 1 sent eight men ti
Pittsburgh. They are: Robert Ells
worth Spayd, 125 South Third; Ken-
STORE OPENS AT 8:30 A. M. CLOSES SP. M.
I Banner Value Day, Tomorrow, Friday, One Day Only!
fllsf 4 c i A One Day Event That Is An Iffrf io.. _j 1
S-' 1 - Anniversary Occasion for jjl
\°£. KaURAANS Same KM ofaDayWe Had a Year Ago \ J I
♦ cotton, black or white.? J > f shoulders. Well •made? jSI
| KAMMFP TITE HAVE gone through our stocks with a fine-tooth comb j and K, e^ r !
JynlulLlU VV j or s ale and have selected lots of various items for the jfj
7 /° sale. There are small quantities in all of these things, but the * n^
IMI Y| Y| ? VALUE small prices make up for that. We have disregarded value and J ICWITWAMS "[ m*
4 4 ' cost and former selling price—all for the reason that we want J f* 2 Kjl
•' * * ~ T\ A \r ** this day to be all the name implies—BANNEß VALUE DAY. 'J l
each for i I IM/ each for • jj|j
| I af t; pg ' p.,--.. ! ds\Jr Come and look through the items. None will be sent C. O. D., ?, ,• ♦IT • _ C..U#4 Us
r Lacfies furses j SB None on approval, and none exchanged or returnable. Out jLadies Union buittj |i
ia s^oed er coiors. the y go at these prices to the thrifty shoppers who come to the ? .shouider'^d^iace 1 trfm-t jig
? stJ 'cs. ? B Ijjnr Underselling Store on the Square where economies are to I med - Excellent value. ?
nil * Flrat Floor I ■ ~ , . ,v * First Floor i Kil
|U H6 hclCi till tllC tllTlC. MJ
y* d* * />/\ | jifomMijl I mrf I Three For | mat j djw A i S
1 .*?r*l.B9.i ,Fi 18ct |l3sc N iOr N 5c t ft 7.95 I
jjM for j yard for 2 pair for j XVPV* jpT each for j • for
jll ? Men's Khaki Pants i { Silk Ribbons j j Ladies' Silk Hose j { Handkerchiefs | j Handkerchiefs ; j Men's Summer Suit? j|L
S) ! 3 o 42 waist measure.? 1 500 yards of taffeta,? 4 Fiber silk, double sole,? I Ladies' hemstitched? 4 Ladies' hemstitched? 4 Beach *Neat
111 i Heavv cloth.. Belt loops.? ♦moire and warp prints, 41 ♦ high spliced heel. boot. ♦ cotton handkerchiefs at? ♦ handkerchiefs, one corner? * trines and checks and! nil
LM ♦ Extra special value. J , and 5 inches wide. J ♦ top, slightly imperfect. ? | this price one day only. I ♦ embroidered. Big variety ? f plain. 2 llii
| First Floor J First Floor J ? First Floor | First Floor j | First Floor . First Floor J
f'l.S #2steJ #s9c] # 89c] ; 'L59j iff'3.9s! 1
nl - 1 ' for ?. 4 for r . for 1 for | < for • y 1 for Imj
b|j I Men's Office Coats; ? Boys' Rompers ? ?Boys'Odd Pants? | Boys' Coveralls t I Boys' Wash Suits j | Men's Rain Coats 2Sj
Hi i Made of a good strong? j Ages 2. 4 and 6 years,? j cralh' 16 Full mit 18 Ages 2 \ Made of khaki cloth.f I mide crash°and y ala S -1 i Made of English water-? lU
gs I cloth in tan shades. A? • neat checks, full cut, well? i 7 8 13 14 15 16 17i | with sleeves, sizes 2to 8? 2 teaclot h ?forfolk mod 2 f Proof materials, tan col-t Isc
h]l I limited number. ? [made Worth double. | i years. ' I ? years. t cloth ' Norrollt mod-4 4 or, full cut. well made. ||)
1,, T T F,rMt F| oy r , , M t l Flrnt Floor I j ' Flrt Floor | Flrnt Floor I | First Floor I • Flmt Floor | ||U
Ilp '1.951 ftf 23c S"69c] Ss9cl S'69cj P '5J511
QJ . ' for i * for 4 for 4 tor 1 for 2 for |Ey
fel {Woman's Auto Coat; j Corset Covers? Voile* Bloomers? I White Skirts j Voile Waists j ] Gingham Dresses I Kj|
i* 2 n ,?to !y co°a n t!' was twenty? ? 1 About forty in the lot. I J Made of fine muslin or iln a very dne' assort-j j dl ™' 7 i 6 pl^
hi 2 dcu?ra twantyi 4 beading, embroidery i in-2 striped voile, flesh color. I ? nainsook and with em- e ment of the higher price? I fiRn' Anlvthrfk Were 2 (5*
iy ♦ dollars. t ? sertion 2 'Extraordinary value. 2 ? broidery flounces. 4 voile waists for one day.? J Jlb.oO. Only three. T m
*2 j Second Floor 4 | Second Floor I Second i Second Floor i First Floor 1 I J Second Floor } LSI
|jg|
I fl'2.oo| #'495 #'495! #'495; # '3.95 f # '495] I
K*| for for | I_ for for f i for } y f° r | bj|
g S Women's Wool Suits t Crepe de chine Dresses? 'White Dresses {White Dresses! j Women's Linene Suit 1 {Taffeta Dresses; |J
J • Only three In the lot— [ de T chine wifite2 fancv' vo'les and ! in. all. voile and or- ? Only one and it is size? ? 8 si taff eta dresses,? hi
I ?? e nr and tW ° b ' aCk ' : l' JSd 'lo"; werl ! ?."tST weVe ° r fA?Y to,! were ,6.95 t 36 in tan linene. It was | " Ze ' ; ?
Kl ♦l6 and 36. 1 ,22.50. I | ,22.50. Slightly soiled. ? $12.90; slightly soiled. J ,12.50. ? ? wortn up t0,15.00. j
|y j Second Floor | Second Floor j Second Floor n, Second Floor A Second Floor | j*, 9l , 9U9 Floor J^|
1#'5.95i #'3.891 #'49sl#"'L9s] #"'i9Si #'7.95(1
jjH f or f° r ? , for 1 for T" for j f° r ||W
(jy ? Silk Taffeta Suit Finest Waists ? j Spring Coats Sport Suits f Wash Dresses \ 2 Taffeta Coats j foj|
K?l I Only one suit. Size 36. These are Crepe det f All wool, mostly navy.|| Only 21 suits for worn- | t For women and misses.T | 3 black silk taffetaT
II f Was $22.50. Who will be Chine and Gdorgette thatl t pood styles and they 'en and misses with and f Choice of all. Voiles,l ♦?S S WT" BlJ L e ® 18 andT ill
liSt first for It? were $4.95 and $5.95. I t were formerly SIO.OO. | without sleeves. J lawns, ginghams, etc. T | 40 - ere $15.00. J
\ Second Floor Flrtt Floor j 1 Second Floor Second Floor Second Floor | i g ■ i j
1#'1.941.# 19c! #2scl#39c' #T9c'l 095c||
(w , * ,or " * for for I™ 1 "*" for yard for | tor
| Taffeta Waists ? Hand Dusters Bureau Scarfs {Shopping Baskets Wash Dress Voiles 2 Casseroles
1 T ,^f se , are , size T O'Cedar hand dusters, Medallion patterns, l Spanish shopping bask- Yard wide, neat pat-T ' Bz * e j Oil
nil I in sizes up to o-. I well made and strong, lace trimmed scarfs, very, lets with handles. A lim- ' terns, were 25c and 39cT P., e "' brown and lly
IJUj I One day only this price. | regular 25c size. fine. Big value. I lted lot at the price. values, all at this price. J white fillers.
|S J * | Basement Basement I Basement Basement J >,■>-■ > > ■■■ t , fiy
1 i:?Mji9] #'loc| #24c| i2sc'#*49? Pf '1.6911
iin Ui- "~T —C— J .
jlj|| T fbr ynrd for enoh for T yard for r for lor |^j
Si Coffee Percolators Crash Towling 2 Pillow Cases Pajama Checks Lawn Mowers Plates jfl
I U I Fine oualltv white pa- Two-burner gas hot |S<
JS Two-quart size, in alu- Blue border twill I Made of good muslin jama checks full yard Ba " bearing lawn plates. made extra, iS,
K1 mlnum, glass ton. This toweling, 16 inches wide, land hemmed ready to wide Worth much mowers, twelve-Inch size strong. Special One day! ||
J Is a wonderful \Wue. fine for hand towels. I use. size 42x36 Inches. more. ' self sharpening. only. IM
Basement Basement [ , Basement Basement Basement -. . . .„. ~ , S
||U clothed driers wen plain g
P ~. , A Basement ||
yS@g@gljljgjSi STORE OPENS'AT 8:30 A. M. CLOSES SP. M. igggSg@ggg|]
- '■ *
neth Meyers Rhoads. 712 Capital;
Harry Walter Smith, Third" and Herr;
Theodore A. Magnelll, 112 South Sec
ond; Charles Branzini, 1865 Zarker;
Ralph Luther Earley, 14 30 North
Third; Harry Morland Llddick, 1517
North Fifth; Robert Henry Geisel,
513 Race.
This board sent three men to
Lafayette College. They are: Robert
Earl Houser, 1115 Capital; Thomas
Joseph Lysett, 280 Briggs; James
Reuben Shimp, 818 Capital.
City board No. 2 sent ten men to
Pittsburgh. They are: Ross L. Har
man, William P. Strawhecker, Wil
liam T. Senseman, Jr., Calvin S.
Martz, L. L. Jones, Charles I. Reel,
Frank S. Sturm, John R. Parker,
William H. Riley, H. W. Speese.
This board sent five men to Lafay
ette. They are: J. H. Zitch, Clyde Mc-
Kelvey, Frank Miller, Herman Wo6d
row and Charles Brough.
City board No. 3 sent sixteen men
to Pittsburgh. They are:
J. F. Hippie, F. W. Olewine, H. C.
Pierce, J. E. Gray, Jr., Raymond W.
Filling, E. C. Shanaman, Robert L.
Blosser, Elmer Z. Yost, James Wil
liam Evans, Charles O. Wakefield, J.
O. Stamy, Clarence L. Soles, William
rf. Geiger, Moses A. Roth, Maxwell
D. Johnston, Harry S. Zeigler.
City board No. 1 in addition sent
Chester Charles Brasten, 308 North
street, to Erie for special training as
an electrician. Saturday the board
will send Arthur Russell Biddle,
Shippensburg, to Camp Meade as a
telegrapher in the Signal Corps.
City's New Traffic Law
Making Speed Limit 24
Miles Effective Tomorrow
When Harrisburg's new traffic or
dinance goes into effect to-morrow,
there will be only slight changes in
any of the rules issued from time to
time in the past by the city police
department.
The state law provides a twenty
four-miie-an-hour speed limit, except
in congested districts or along high
ways placarded with danger signs,
where fifteen miles an hour or less is
the limit. This has been written into
the new traffic measure for the city,
together with all other existing regu
lations of one-way streets, parking
near fire plugs and streets in which
parking is prohibited.
Another ordinance prohibiting park
ing in Second street, between Walnut
and Strawberry streets, has been in
troduced since the present traffic
measure was passed, and will prob
ably be presented for final passage
next week.
RUNS DOWN POLICE SIGNAL
Julius Levitan will have an answer
a tharge ot disorderly practice in po
lice court to-day. He was arrested
last night when it is said he speeded
down Front street and knocked over
and broke the "turn to the right"
sign at Front and Market. Patrol
man Newmeyer made the arrest.
Use McNeil's Pain Exterminator —Ad
I—w1 —wM —1
Nux^SP^PN
"To help make MlroiiK, \ . .(uurt* tw 'mlii
| keen, red - blooded Anierl- \ J.W'lT.i /H'rfCV ? or ot '•"•I
| can. there la nothing In my \
| experience which I have Senator Rich.
I found an valuable aa or- ard Rolland
Kuule Iron—\uxated Iron." aaya Dr. KrnneJ . of Delaware, at present MaJ-
Jaimn Francis Sullivan, formerly phy- . ' _ . _ . - .
I slclnn of Hellevue Hospital <Outdoor or ° r 'n* l - s Army; General John L
| Dept.), New York, ami the Westches- Clem (Ketlred), the drummer boy of
Iter County Honpltal. Nuxated Iron shlloh, who wan sergeant In the U.
I often Incrennen the ntreiiKth and en- . .
I durunce of weuk, nervous, run-down s ; Arinyen only 1- yearn of agei
! people in two weeks' time. It In now nl *° nlted Stutes Judge (*. W, At-
I being uned by over three million peo- kinson of the Court of Claims of
1 pie annually. Including such men an Washington and others. . . Xuxated
j Hon. l.enlle M. Shaw, formerly seore- I eon in dispensed by ull good drug
| tary of the Treasury aud ea-Gover- gists everywhere.
SB'Mh\ As Age Advances the Liver Requires
Ortd in hwjflffrSggsSr occasional slight stimulation. CARTER'S LTTTLE
* J'TTLE LIVER PILLS correct CONSTIPATION. .
Colorless or Pale Faces I"" '
5