4 PLAN SUPPER AT "V" Kenneth Williams, chairman of the committee on arrangements, is planning an Older Fellows Reunion supper opening Y. M. C. A. gym nasium activities for the year, to be held next Tuesday evening at 6.30 o'clock in the "Y" assembly room. Plans for the winter gymnastic pro gram will be announced and "Mag gie" Phillips has promised a good feed for the hungry hordes. The committee in charge of the affair includes: Kenneth Williams. | chairman: "BUI" Fortna, "Bob" ♦Leiby, "Art" Hfcbler. Stomach Dead Man Still Lives People who suffer from sour stom ach, fermentation of food, distress after eating and indigestion, and seek relief in large chunks of artificial di gesters. are killing their stomachs by inaction just as surely as the victim of morphine is deadening and injur ing beyond repair every nerve in his body. What the stomach of evesrv sufferer from indigestion needs is a good pre scription that will build up his stom ach. put strength, energy and elas ticity into it. and make it sturdy enough to digest a hearty meal with out artificial aid. The beet prescription for Indiges tion ever written is sold by druggists everywhere and by H. C. Kennedy and is rigidly guaranteed to build up the : stomach' and cure indigestion or money back. This prescription is named Mi-o-na. and is sold in small tablet form in iarge boxes, for only a few cents. Re member the name. Mi-o-na stomach tablets. They never fail.—Advertise ment. BANISH CATARRH Ureal he H vomef For Two Minutes and Stuffed Up Hend Will Get Relief If you want to get relief from ca tarrh. cold in the head or from afi ir ritating cougli in the shortest time 1 breathe Hyomei. It will clean out your head in two | minutes and allow you to breathe freely. Hyomei will end a cold in one day. it will relieve you of disgusting snqf fies. hawking, spitting and offensive i breath in a week. Hyomei is made chiefly from a soothing, healing, germ kilting anti- j septic, that comes from the eucalyp-1 tus forests of inland Australia where I catarrh, asthma and consumption • were never known to exist. Hyomei is pleasant and easy to i breathe. Just pour a few drops into 1 the hard rubber inhaler, use as direct ed and relief is almost certain. A complete Hyomei outfit, including I inhaler and one bottle of Hyomei. costs but little at druggists every- ; where and at H. C. Kennedy. If you t already own an inhaler you can get t an extra bottle of Hyomei at drug- i gists.—Advertisement. 4 217 Market St. Opposite Harrisburs Courthouse Ml CHfIF MAKFDC IL JK Opposite Harrisburg Courthouse FALL SHOES AT WELCOME LOW PRICES An extraordinary shoe sale for Thrift in shoe buying really men, women and children, en- W~l- / possible at Book's. Our im abling a saving of 25 to 33 per Hi: / W mense buying power for our 22 cent on your Fall Footwear. / | fjS tf \ C down S Buy 0 here* a"d A welcome sale to-morrow of Ladies' stunning new Fall Boots, priced $1 to $3 lower than their actual wort h. Be sure to see what we offer. **- BVi HIGH GRADE FALL BOOTS: SEW FALL ARRIVALS of " \*~- * . I SflKrfefeX \\ anrt'wvcJS Ladl ' Dress Shoes', made in X W • / two-color patterns: **•* brown and duU S graceful. Opt • L 'B 1 /I ^rk; ***** SOLID LEATHER DRESS SHOES— wear; a real (1 eft ' ■ siZCB, S!) lo Slw va ! ucs ' Narrow English and high toe lasts; tan S3 value at ... - , an(l "lack; all sizes; SI.OO RIP PROOF (7 ftfi SO values QC of Boy's & Girls' Dress & School Shoes LITTLE BOYS' SHOES— An excellent school shoe; of strong wearing dull leather; sizes 8% to 13%; d>T QC 82.50 values P 1.J70 GENTS PLAY SHOES— For everyday wear; strong black satin calf; blucher style; sizes to 13%. A $2.00 value at... 1 * ov/ INFANTS' SHOES of soft dongola kidskin, button style, leather soles; sizes to 6; a SI.OO value at... CHILDREN'S SHOES Dressy styles; patent and dull vamps, with plam and colored tops; sizes to ; * ▲ ▲ ▲ ▲ ▲ FRIDAY EVENING, AMERICAN ARMY ON WAR FRONT WORRIES EjVEMY Von Paver Ssys Germany Might Restore Belgium Without Indemnities Copenhagen. Sept. 13.—That Ger many might restore Belgium without conditions or indemnities in case no other country would be better situ ated as regards Belgium than Ger-, many. was the belief expressed yes terday by Friedrieh von Payer, the Imperial Vice-Chancellor of Ger many, in a speech delivered at Stutt gart. Herr von Payer was speaking on the depression felt in Germany and allied countries which he attributed not to recent military events, but to the prospect of a fifth war winter. "If we could be sure that no other country would be better situated as regards Belgium than ourselves," said Herr von Payer, "I believe I could venture to say that Belgium could be restored without conditions and without indemnities." With regard to the appearance of the American troops in the war, the Vice Chancellor said: , Nobody will deny that the co operation of the American troops on the front means a heavy and ever increasing burden for' us. Our ene r~" " \ A Different Kind of Used Car House We mark our cars in plain fig ures we guarantee satisfaction —we don't misrepresent we give you the lowest prices possible to get we give service and satis faction to ail our customers. 1000 Used Autos, $250 Up We have every known make auto and truck in 1918-17-16 mod els Just tell us what you want and we'll show it to you. Auto Catalogue No. 110 Free Our new catalogue just off press. Send for it. ROMAN AUTO CO. World's l argest Auto Dealers 203 N. Broad Street Philadelphia, Pa. BOYS DRESS >fISSES ' doll English I V'V N. Narrow Eng and hl-toe / J7/ | J \ \ "nl and broad style*; lace j | / ( g" 7 \ \ toe' abape*. and button; I;/ I r I %/l * n brown, gray sewed oak lea- —i l / / I V and black; lea ther soles; | |e- / / \ || J\ ther and cloth $4.50 and 95.00 $ t li a t° $3.45 $3.45 t N , BOAS STRONG SHOES for MISSES' AND CHILDREN'S school and dress; brown and SHOES; stout makes ill tan, dull black; narrow and fuller toes: a,,lor.o 5Z.45 ton ' sizes to 2; a $n AC value; special real $3.00 value at... *^.45 '■ V———.__ mles, however, forget that if the Americans now appear by of thousands at the front we have alreudv put millions of Russians, Serbians and Rumanians out of ac tion. And the Entente will not suc ceed In winning them back for their own purposes." The postponement of peace pros pects against the likelihod of a fifth war winter weigh equally on all belligerents and not on Germany alonb. in the opinion of von Payer. "Our state debt," the vice chan cellor said, "are everywhere reach ing fantastic heights and everywhere we struggle against the encroach ments on our personal liberty. Lt. G. C. Smith Decorated For His Work in the Air Many Harrisburgers will be inter ested in the bestowaT of the French war cross upon Lieutenant Gerald C. Smith, of Baltfmore. for con spicuous bravery in action. He is a first lieutenant in the Royal Brit ish Flying Squadron and is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. C. Smith, his mother having been Miss Anna M. Eppley, formerly of Harrisljurg, a daughter of the late Daniel Eppley and. sister of Mrs. W. H. Lyter, 1006 Nosth Second street. A St. John's College graduate. Smith- entered the newspaper field about ten years ago. He took up the work in New York about five years ago. In May of 19lt lie entered the training camp at Plattsburg and in August of the same year received a commission as second lieutenant. I-ast March he went to France and a short time later was promoted to first lieutenant and attached to a British unit. In his letter to his parents. Smith said, with his comrades of the squad ron. he has been raiding large cities in Germany. Recently he visited Cologne. Heidelberg and other cities, where he dropped bombs, which, he said, caused considerable damage to factories and munition plants. URGES DAMPER CONTROL TO SAVE WINTER FEEL Declaring that in th e average home twenty-five per cent, of the coal can be saved by proper damper control, Ross A. Hickok. county fuel administrator, last night issued a statement on methods to conserve coal during the comiag winter. He emphasized the necessity of con trolling the flow of air through the coal. The necessity of cleanliness he also emphasized, saying that it is necessary to keep the chimney and stove free of soot. He urged that the head of each house care for his furnace and stove himself. HJLRRISBTJTtG TELEGRAPH KEYSTONE STATE SOLDIERS BRAVE IN BATTLE LINE Sergeant Gilliam Casts Off Gas Mask to Save Wounded Comrades in No- Man's Land; Was Gettysburg Col lege Student; State Boys Capture Machine Guns Philadelphia, Seept. 13.—When Sergeant Lester S. Gilham, of Schuyl kill Haven, heard the cries of wound ed comrades out in No Man's Land, he left a sheltered rrench to rescue them. His gas mask interfered with his efforts to help the wounded boys, so he took it off. He brought the wound ed safely back to the lines, but Ser geant Gilham was gassed. This is one of many thrilling stores of action concerning Pennsylvania beys affiliated with ambulance units and medical detachments which are reaching their homes here, through lette It from their comrades. Iron Di vision heroes are loud in their praise of their medical men. Sergeant Gilham. a former Gettys-j burg College student, writes of hisi experience as follows: tW'e were out in a wood and the' Germans started to bombard us at j dawn. They caught some of the boys and I heard their cries. It was hard to get out or my dugout, but I just sent up a silent prayer and crawled out "Sheils burst all around another lad and me. Wo could not work and do the wounded boys much good with our gas masks on. so we pulled them off and we got gassed. "The kaiser's manpower is giving out. I know this to be true, for I dressed the wounds of a lad of 18 and saw a prisoner 56 years old. Our boys captured a German priest and several solders. The first thing they did was feed them. In good Kn.\lish, the priest, holding a piece of Ameri can bread in one hand and a cup of coffee in the other, said: " 'Gentlemen. I hope my eyes do not deceive me. This is the first piece of white bread I have seen in three fears and the first coffee in two years.' He ate the bread like cake and sipped the coffee like a French man does,his wine. When told he had to return becasue of being a noncbrn batant. he was very sorry and bpgged to be left on this side." How Pennsylvania boys captured German machine guns and turned them on the enemy, is described in a letter from Elmer F. Heisler, of GIRLS' EVERYDAY SHOES; a serviceable shoe for everyday wear; mailc of Vtrong* gunmetal; i Cft on sale at *OU CHILDREN'S SKLITFR SHOES; strong tan and black elk tops; sewed leath er soles; u comfortable shoe for youngsters; -1 QJ sizes to 8 CHILE'S FANCY SHOES; champagne. gray, brown and Latent with clo'S. n>. I leather t It, toe room Y5 CHILD'S rEAY SHOES; • • > soles; shoe; sizes $1.50 Tamaqua. with Company B, 112 th Infantry. "You should have seen the Ger mans drop." he writes, "just like leaves from a tree on a windy day. We chased them out of town, but they made counterattack and wei again opened fire on them with their machine guns. Out of the 100 or so that had managed to get across the river. only five got back." Lieutenant Fred Flick, of Hazle ton. has been wounded. .He was a student at the University of Michi gan when he entered an officers training camp, and went overseas j with the Rainbow division. Lieuten-| ant Cecil Bell, of Freeland, is in a| hospital with both ankles crushed with a shell. Harry Dunkelberger. of Pottsville, ■ had a leg broken by shrapnel. He Is 1 only_ 17 years old. James M. I.each, of New Germantown, and Frank ■ Morejand. of near Marysville, both : i with the 112 th Infantry, have been s wounded. 1 Joseph Gallagher, of West Consho : hocken. who was drafted last April, I has been killed in action. Sergeant Richard G. Bechtel. of Lebanon, with • Company D. 109 th Machine Gun I Battalion, of Bethlehem, has been 1; wounded. 11' After Private Martin Cover, of I Lancaster, with Company D, 151 st Machine Gun Battalion, was killed in I' action, his comrade. Private Joe My. < | ers, also of Lancaster, killed eight - Germans in revenge. Myers himself I j was wounded. ,'l In a letter from their sons, George , | and John G.#>pfert, who are with the .j First Engineers in France, Mr. and [ Mrs. Lawrence Goepfert. of Maha | noy City, received the information 31 that the boys captured several pris -3 oners with considerable German money on them and- valuable gems, j They stated they also found a Ger -3 man soldier moaning among the dead . on the battlefield and took him to a I hospital. The Boche was stunned at . the treatment and said a German ih 1 such a case would have hacked his wounded adversary to death. I Frederick E. Duffee, of Franklin, 1j an ambulance driver, describes a 1 duel he witnessed between two [: wounded soldiers, French and Ger man. j Duel Between Wounded Men "The German wounded soldier, as we passed, shot at a wounded I Frenchmart who was lying some twenty yards away frorh him. Upon seeing this, a Frenchman near us shot and killed the Boche. "One night, I will never forget. A I i German machine gun emplacement 1 had been stormed, the Germans be j ing killed while the gun was in ac tion—the gunner with his hands in ' the handles, a couple of others with | the roll of cartridges all ready and the gun itself, a Maxim, with a half -1 empty roll in it." Wendelin Pflueger and wife, of Pottsville, who had received word that their son, Valentine Pflueger. was dead in action, to-day were ! overjoyed when they were notified j by the government that the young • man is in a German prison camp, j The parents were notified that cer tain goods could be sent to the pris -1 one*. I ThomasG Giles, a nineteen-year-old I youth, of Mahanoy City, with Com pany E, 112 th United States infan j try. is in a hospital in a serious con ; dition, having been gassed bj- the j Boche. He was in the act of going ! over the top for the third time when ; overcome. His companion, Clarence, 1 Belyz, shared Giles' experience. ' Harry G. Robinson,"of Chester, re ; ceived a letter in regard to the death ! of his son, who was killed in K ac- I tion some days ago, as follows: i "The officers and men of Company B, First Engineers, join me in .ex tending to you their deepest sym pathy in the loss of thpir comrade. Private Harry G. Robinson, who was killed by enemy shell fire on July 20, 1918, near Soissons, France. "Private Robinson always per formed .his duties as a soldier in a cheerful and willing manner. "He made the supreme sacrifice as onty a brave and courageous soldier can on the field of battle. Wounded Marysville Boy Nursed by Home Town Girl Marysville, Pa., Sept. 13.—Wound- I ed in action in France, a former | Marysville boy is being nursed by a j Marysville Red Cross nurse. Her -1 man P. Lightner, serving with Com : pany G. Machinekiun Battalion. 12th I Regiment, of Dunrannon, is the wounded lad and Miss Jennie Gault, of Marysville, the nurse who is car j ing fo rhis needs. Ydung Lightner's mother, Mrs. Mary Lightner, has re ceived word that he was wounded in 1 both hips on August 10 and Is at Base Hospital No. 34. Frank Ivlinepeter. son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Klinepeter, of Duncan non, is another Perry county lad to be hurt in the recent Yank advances, i He was severely gassed and badly i wounded and was sent to a base hos ! pital. RIXYION AT PITTSBURGH I Marysville, Pa., Sept. 13.—The an | nual Pittsburgh-Perry county le ■ union will be held to-morrow in Rhododendron Grove. Highland [Park. Pittsburgh. W. S. Newcomer, 2105 Perrysville avenue. N. S., Pitts burgh, is the president, and J. L. Kochenderfer. also of Pittsburgh, is i the secretary of the association. Fndla, Pa., Sept. 13. —Six hundred and sixteen "men between the ages of 18 and 15 registered under the se lective draft law in Enola and East Penpsboro township. This total would have been much larger hat it not been for the fact that a number of persons living in the district registered at the indus trial plants where they are employed. The number of registrants was dis tributed -is follows: Enola, upper precinct, 346; lower precinct, Mid way, 126; Washington Heights, 144. At Washington Heights, sixteen of the registranth were Mexicans. The work of enrolling the men for the selective service was handled by the following persons: Upper Enola, George H. Horning, Bankes E. Shull, Horace H. Way and Roy H. Holmes: lower Enola, Paul L. Bender and Jacob Bordlemay; Washington Heights, Harry Stonebraker, C. E. Rennaker and Miss Margaret Stone braker. BOY DIES FROM LOCKJAW Enola, Pa., Sept. 13.—George W. Peek, aged 7 years, died yesterday afternoon in the Harrisburg Hospital from lockjaw. He was only admit ted to the institution a few hours before he died. He is survived by £jU Pa^ mS ' r ' and Mr Samuel Peek, three sisters and four broth uncomplete- 511 arran * me P tß are sU " ALL SAVE SEVEN OF PLATOON DROP I ON BATTLEFIELD Men Follow Officer Through Machine Gun Nests to the End Philadelphia, Sept. 13.—"1 took my platoon through and, God bless them, they stuck to me to the last man. I finished with only seven." An epic of the war to be added to the achievements of the 110 th infantry, of the Keystone Division, is em raced in this brief paragraph warn H writtcn by Lieutenant William Edward Myers, in a hospital near Bordeaux. r,o fi? IT s a action on July 30, when 118 men—the first and rr on ,1„P'" t00n8 of D Company, of the HOth—attacked a strongly en trenched German machine gun neat in ji woods fifteen miles north of Chateau-Thierry. Lieutenant Wilbur Small, a Phila delphian. and the fifty-eight men In the first platoon, were caught in the open under a withering fire and, lit ©rally, were wiped out. One wounded sergeant alone returned. Lieutenant Myers and the second platoon defiled around the stricken nrst platoon and stormed the woods. Thy carried it at the point of the [bayonet. hqn the action ended, the USSISTORE OPENS AT 8:30 A. M.—CLOSES SATURDAY 9 P, MWMJM I Thousands of Men and 1 Yound Men Will Buy Their Fall 1 and Winter Suits at K JJKL Men are beginning to use their heads when j| they buy clothing. The (\ ( > conditions have wrought || ( \ /1/ \ L\\ a great change in the cloth- is / A 'v lr\ \ ' ® ng mar ket. Now that ft LJh ( ° mm ] if] \\ ilf for clothes must reap the b| i w fullest'for him he is going || !sj \ t l( to realize what Kaufman's ft WZ&lffl A I Underselling Prices mean. bj ,VJ Yes, clothing prices are B b jp Wm 11 I II /1 higher than last year, but ft ft ft: * fnjj I I \ I 1 I don't run away with the ft tS'' / / . 17 J | idea that you can't get a S |j| ' I V I good suit at a moderate ft lb l l price for you most cer- ft] || | . | tainly can get one here and S |I hfiA itLht 1 a goo d one, all the way g 10 IK-# mm wMk through. We are satisfied ' I ft jjfl J. I lljH with little profits and we're ftl - I*l J&w going to maintain our b] j| • ■ Underselling Prices every ft b day. And what's more you fij i have large stocks and fine assortments from which to select. hj If you want to learn something you hadn't known before II come and see for yourself what fine tailored, excellent ft b material, smart style, new fall suits we are showing at J| 14- 16- 18- 1 S & Largest Boys' A ■ | I Store in Town • j ft Come along with the great \J ft throngs of other parents, who \ nS/j \\ ft buy their boys' clothing at Kaufman's. \ f .rjMN ' I Here you will see the largest stocks of S 1 boys' suits in Harrisburg and you'll [j—| ffy (sJ 8 pay the very lowest prices, because our s j I IV I \ |j famous underselling prices bring you r — [l] the cream of the market. See our fine I I / \ [ new fall suits for boys at 5" Sr" 7- IL I „ 1 • I STQRE OPENS AT B:3Q A. M.—CLOSES SATURDAY 9 P. M SEPTEMBER 13, 1918. ' lieutenant checked up his losses and found, as his letter to his wife said, "1 finished with only seven." "When the history of the war is finally written," the lieutenant told his wife in one recent letter, "the 110 th will be especially mentioned for the capture of a machine gun nest of forty-seven machine guns; a capture effected while absolutely un protected by a barrage." ■ The 110 th Infantry is composed of the old Third (Philadelphia) Regi ment of the National Guard, and the old "Fighting Tenth" of the western part of the state. Enjoys Army Life at Fort Bliss, Texas nm sure " ke SMBw army life. It would make a man out of anyone," writes Howard Bliss, Texas. k. v: for the Pennsyl- — vania Railroad. TO HOI,I> PATRIOTIC PAGEANT I An Interesting program has been arranged for the big patriotic pa- I geant of the Red Cross which will be held this evening in Boiling Springs. Mrs. E. J. Hockenberry. reader, and Miss Estelle "butler, contralto soloist, of this city, have been secured to assist in the rendition of the pro gram. skin ibleabb(y Resinol It improves a poor complexion and preserves a good one, so that you need no artificial means to enhance your at tractiveness. At the first sign of skin irritation, of a blotch apply Kesinol Ointment, and see if it doesn't bring prompt relief. It con tains harmless, soothing balsams, and is so nearly flesh colored that it may be used on exposed surfaces without at tracting undue attention. Your dealer sella it