14 "REMEMBER THE TAMPA," SPURS IN LOAN DRIVE Woodmen of the World Sub scribe .$1,200,000 in Lib erty Bonds Washington, Oct. 10.—In answer to the Insistent question, how is the Fourth Liberty Loan really going, a comparison to-day of records during this campaign with those of the Third Loan showed these facts. The Fourth campaign of three weeks is half gone and 11,791,463,200 in subscriptions, or 30 per cent, of the six billions sought, have been re ported. When the third campaign was half over, 9 1.371.000,000 or 33 per cent, of the total finally reached, had been subscribed. This record in the Third Loan drive, 3420,000,000 less than at the corresponding stage of the present drive, was achieved in two weeks as compared with ten days which have passed in the cur rent campaign. These facts seem to show that pro gress in the Fourth loan is compar able to that of the Third, which was highly successful. • More than 313,000,000 has been sub- 1 scribed in the navy toward the Fourth Loan, Rear Admiral Cowie reported J to-day. DOCTORS URGE PEOPLE TO USE MORE IRON AND! PHOSPHATES They Come Out Strong for Phosphated Iron Leading doctors all over the country are rapidly learning that one of the preparations they can always depend on for all blood and nerve troubles is Phosphated Iron, they have found that it gives results and can be depended upon. Phosphated Iron has proved a real red blood and nerve-builder to so many who are all run down and dragged out. due to lack of fresh air. exercise, good food and clogged, poi soned blood. Scientists say Phosphat ed Iron builds up your body by build ing up your blood and nerves. Many physicians claim there would be few overworked men. nervous women, bloodless old people and pale children were the benefits of Phosphated Iron more widely known. There is no need of anyone going around tired out, all in. nerves on edge, suffering with poor blood and lack of energy when Phosphated Iron will make you feel like a live one, make you look 100 per cent, better, give you restful sleep, brace you up so you can work with ease and enjoy life once again. Get Phosphated Iron to-day and start in right, you owe it to yourself and friends to make Just this one effort to regain health, strength and happiness. To insure physicians and their pa tients getting the genuine Phosphated Tron we have put in capsules. Do not take pills or tablets. Insist on cap sules. G. A. Gorgas and leading drug gists everywhere. Why John Quit Drinking By John's Wife I'm the happiest little woman In all this little town; And my merry laugh and singing. Takes the place of sigh and frown. For JOHN HAS QUIT HIS DRINKING And is like himself once more. And the world is just a paradise With such happiness in store? One day I read some verses— "Mary's Miracle." the name. And I said, that's John exactly. And I'll send and get the same. So I sent for GOLDEN TREATMENT. (As sly as sly could bel And I put it in John's supper And I put it in his tea. And it didn't taste a little bit; Had no odor, so, you see— It was smoothest kind of sailing For little Doctor Me. And I watched and prayed and waited, (And cried some. too. I gtiess). And I didn't have the greatest faith, I'm ashamed now to confess. And John never thought a minute, He was being cured of drink. And soon he's as well as any one, It makes me cry to think! Just makes me cry for gladness, I'm so-proud to be his wife Since he is cured of drinking. And leads a nice, .new life. "Since John he quit a-drlnking!" I can't say it times enough! And hates and loathes a liquor As he would a poison stuff. And when I say my prayers at night As thankful as can he— I prav for John the most of all— Then GOLDEN TREATMENT. Home Treatment for Drunkards OdorlfM nnd TnntelfM—Any Lndy Cnn Give It Secretly nt Home In Ten, CoflTee or Food. Costs Nothing to Try If you have a husband, son, brother, father or friend who is a victim of liquor, all you have to do is to send your name and address on the coupon below. You must be thankful as long as you live that you did it. Free Trial Package Coupon Dr. J. IV, Haines Company, 83 Glenn Hide.. Cincinnati. Ohio Please send me, absolutely free, by return mall, In plain wrapper, so that no one can know what It contains, a trial package of Golden Treatment to prove that what you claim for it is true in every re spect. Name Street City I s ""° THURSDAY EVENING* SdVeCbal "Clean the Furnace " Day FZ/P7(OIZIM///<?<?; < CLEAN FURNACE WILL SAVE COAL [Continued from First Page.] committee wants the heads of Har risburg households to turn into "Cellar Patriots" over night, and get up to-morrow morning with the firm determination to spend enough time in the cellar, tinkering with the furnace, to put it into shape for efficient work this winter. The following editorial from the Saturday Evening Post, was quoted by the fuel administrator as an ex ample of tlie patriotic necessity for saving coal. "In about thirty days, as to a great part of the United States, you will be lighting the furnace. There will be no time to clean the flues, the pipe and the chimney; or to re place the warped grate that lets a hatful of half-burned coal fall into the ash box every time the furnace is shaken; or to fix that /.efectlve damper on the door that is a bit sprung so it lets in draft when you want all drafts shut off. There will be no time then to look the appa ratus over yourself and see whether it is in proper condition. And If you start the season without a sim ple, Inexpensive contrivance for sifting the ashes—as you started last season and many others—probably you will go on without such a con trivance. And probably about New Year's you will be blaming the fuel administration. "Look to the furnace right now. "One day last spring we passed a public building whose faeado was being decorated with some big, handsome flags of our Allies. From the chimney of the powerhouse which supplied the building poured a dense, pitchy volume of smoke, showing defective combustion and p waste of coal. For more than a year Italy has been half-paralyzed by lack of coal. It costs sixty dol lars and more a ton there. The na j tion can barely keep the most nec essary Industries going. Out in front I of the building a crowd was cheer | lng the Italian flag—while the pow j erhouse wasted coal that Italy is ! famished for. Do not take it out in ; cheering." Courthouse Victims Show Signs of Improvement Henry F. Holler. Deputy prothon ! otary, who is confined to his home !in Hummelst'own suffering with j Spanish influenza, is still quite ill. j No improvement was noted in his | eonditon to-day. Recorder James E. Lentz return ed to his dsk this morning, having almost recovered from a severe cold \\'hich confined him to his home in Elizabethville for five days. Miss Stlla Shupp, one . of the transcribers in the Recorder's office, is ill at her Steelton home and threatened with Spanish influenza. An improvement was observed to day in the condition of Register Roy C. Danner, who is ill with influenza at his home. 185 J. North street. Mrs. Elizabeth B. DeWalt Is Dead of Pneumonia Mr Elizabeth B. DeWalt, wife of Hcg-s* E. DeWalt, vice-president and genera! manager of the United Ice and Coal Company, died of pneumonia at her home, 120 Calder street, at the age of 48 years, this morning. Mrs. DeWalt had been ill only a few days. The funeral services will be held Friday afternoon at 3.30 o'clock, at the home. The services will be pri vate. The Rev. M. S. Hershey, pastor of the Green Street Church of God, will conduct the services. Mrs. De- Walt was a member of the Green Street Church. Interment will be in the Harrisburg Cemetery. Mrs. DeWalt is survived by her husband, a son, Charles E. DeWalt. and two daughters, Mabel and Helen DeWalt. REMOVED TO HOSPITAL The Dauphin county court made an order to-day directing that Thom as (Country) Smith be removed from the Dauphin county jail to the State Lunatic Hospital. A committee decided Smith is insane. He was con victed in court here several months ago on a charge of highway robbery and given an eight-month jail term. DIES AT CAMP GRANT James Moore, a Harrisburg sol dier. died at Camp Grant, Rock ford. Illinois, from influenza, accord ing to word received here. The body is being brought to Harrisburg and funeral arrangements will be announced later. Colds Cause Grip and Influenza LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove the cause. There is only one "Bromo Quinine." E. W. GROVE'S signature on box. 30c. BRITISH TROOP SWEEP FOE BACK [Continued from IT ret Page.] ering a screen of German machine! gunners as they went. Canadian and British troops met | in the center of .Cambrai, which was entered from both north and south and quickly mopped up. Many Ger- j mans had escaped, but many hun dreds who had been held there to j launch a counterattack were either killed or captured. Some of the en emy troops are in deep cellars two stories underground and in the tun nels the Germans dug during theil occupation of the city. These are being routed out and sent back to the cages. Although many fires were started by the Germans, the town was found not to ba as badly damaged as had been feared. Villages Fall to Allies South of the city the Third and Fourth armies rapidly overcame en emy opposition. The Germans start ed fleeing soon after the attack began. The front line for twenty miles began moving rapidly east ward. Then came reports from air planes that Wambaix had been taken. Soon the capture of Har eourt was reported. From that on tidings came in rapid succession of villages falling before the Allied ad vance. Selvigny, Caultery, Ligny, Mon tigny and Maretz were quickly reached and passed, and soon the Allies were closing in on Caudry and P.ertry. Simultaneously, from the north it was reported that Escau doeuvres. east of Cambrai, had been taken and that Inchy was being ap proached. The Cambrai-Le Cateau road was crossed and then the railway be tween St. Quentin and Bertry was cut. Seboncourt then was in sight and Fontaine Notre Dame, farther south, had been reached by the French. By that time it was clear the enemy was badly smashed and that the British and Americans stood on the /threshold of the wide-open country. It was at that time that the cav alry, which had been waiting, poured through the wide breach in the now shattered Hindenburg system out into the country beyond. Fast "whippet" tanks and armored cars also pursued the Germans, killing many and rounding up a large num ber of prisoners. Cavalry forces now arc apparently well east of the towns reported cap tured. The Allies having thus broken through, the Germans north and south for many miles are en dangered, for their lines are being turned. Retreats on even a broader scale than that now in progress may, therefore, be looked for. Officers directing the attack were distinctly satisfied as the news came back in reports from airplanes and by runners, but finally one came back that showed better than any thing else how completely the enemy had been defeated. This was a re port from an air patrol that British infantry had been seen marching as if on parade in a column of fours into and through the town of Bertry. The men were swinging along en tirely unmolested by the enemy. Another patrol brought word of the Germans fleeing in the greatest disorder as far east as Le Cateau. Eenmy troops and transports, it ,was said, were streaming along the roads and over the fields trying to mak their escape. British cannon had been on the move eastward all day. In many cases batteries would gallop over the rolling .plains of Artois. They would stop, wheel about and fire for a while, then dash on and repeat the performance. British Steadily Advance British troops are steadily advanc ing eastward astride the road from Cambrai to Le Cateau. The Escaut Canal, north of Cambrai, has been passed virtually along its entire length, and left far behind. In the fighting south of Cambrai the Brit ish have cleared the enemy from the last line of the Hindenburg system, which in this locality was extraor dinarily strong. Many French civilians have been rescued from recaptured towns. Five hundred were brought back to free dom one town alone. It was soon after the Germans broke and ran that fires began to break out in the whole district be hind them and the ground rocked with terrific explosions as stores of ammunition were destroyed. Every thing combustible in the area around Caudry. Inchy. Le Cateau, St. Benin, St. Souplet, Vaux-Andigny and Bo bain was fired, and since then towns and farms farther east have started burning. The enemy apparently has spread his carnival of destructlpn both north and south. Airmen have re ported "explosions are occurring all over the place one after another." Latest reports sa*r the advance continues rapidly. gSSSi TELECHAPH 15 Soldiers on Way to Camp Are Fed "Fifteen hungry and weary soldiers struck Harrisburg last night en route from a camp to another. They had no more rations and had missed the last train for their camp. Ap pealing to the Y. M. C. A. authori ties at the Central Association build nig for aid they were quickly accom modated. The canteen department of the Harrisburg Chapter. American Red Cross prepared a hot supper for the soldiers and cots were provided without charge by the "Y" authori ties. After an enjoyable night they hoarded a train this morning for their camp. Serbs Pursue Broken Austrian Ninth Army London, Oct. 10.—Serbian troops pursuing the defeated Ninth Aus trian division on Monday entered Leskovats, twenty-two miles south of Nish. and Vlasotintze, according to an official Serbian statement is sued to-day. The Serbians took several hum dred prisoners and captured a large quantity of material. "BLUE DEVIL" ASKS CLIPPINGS Captain Henry M. Stine received a letter to-day from a French lieuten ant who was here with the famous |"Blue Devils." The Lieutenant asked j Dr. Stine to send him newspaper clippings, photographs and other I souvenirs in circulation in the city j while the "Blue Devils" were here. * ' ati j If you find yourself tired, weak or losing flesh this warning should !be heeded promptly. You are in real I and very great danger because the | germ of this epidemic is specially | contagious and in your weakened [condition should you come in con i tact with it you would fall an easy | victim. I The eommoiisensc preventive is i to begin taking Father John's Medi- I cine at once ltecause the pure food I elements of which this old-fnshioncd, | wholesome body-builder Is made are easily taken up by the system ! und turned Into vital, resisting ener gy; giving you fighting' strength to ward off the influenza germ. The gentle luxntlve effect of Father John's Medicine drives out impuri tics. ilemember. Father John's Medi cine is not a stimulant. It is guaran teed free from alcohol or danger ous driJSs. YANKEE TROOPS MAKE BRILLIANT DRIVE ON HUNS Push Through Wood Alive With Machine Guns on Kriemhild Line By Attoeialtd Prtts With the American Army Northwest of Verdun, Oct. 10.—American lorces operating west of the Meuse river returned to the attack against rhe formidable Kriemhild line yesterday. This assault was mado south of lto magne and a brilliant, speedy ad vance forced the Germans back. The Americans pushed through Cunt; wood which was bristling with machine guns. This success made it easier to storm the Mamelle t-onch of the KrlemhNd-Steelung line. Paris, Oct. 10.—r-rench troops, ad vancing east of the St. Quentln-Le Cateau railroad have captured leaves wood and Bocquiaux village and fai ther south have taken Marcy and reached Fontaln Notre Dame, .is well as Fonsommes, it is officially an nounced. Revolt Against Huns Breaks in Belgium Amsterdam, Oct. 10. —A revolt has broken out in Bruges, Belgium, the populace having risen against the attempts of the Germans to deport the civilians, according to Les Nou velles. German troops used guns and killed or woQnded numerous Bel gians. MEETING IS NOT HEM) The meeting of the Queen's j Daughters of the Sylvan Heights Home is not being held to-day be cause of the Health Department ruling. It was announced. COME ON 1 \v Harrisburgers! On two of the draft calls Harrisburg was not called upon to furnish any men. Enough Harrisburg boys had already volunteered to more than fill her quota. That is characteristic of Harrisburg spirit when our country needs help. We can take pattern from the boys who volunteered for war duty. The influenza epidemic has handicapped the work of the Fourth Liberty Loan campaign. Get-together meetings are prohibited. It's Time To Voiumteer. Our boys didn't need brass bands and get-together meetings to induce them to enter the army. They went down and quietly enlisted of their own accord. Do your duty in the Fourth Liberty Loan as they clid theirs. Go to your bank —at once —give your subscription— and just to make Harrisburg's quota sure—double % the amount you had originally intended to buy. If you've already bought Bonds-BUY MORE. The situation demands it —let's beat this obstacle as our boys are helping to beat the Hun. VOLUNTEER! We will be glad to receive your subscription. Harrisburg Trust Company Harrisburg National Bank - No. 16 South Market Square \ . VIENNA HEARS NATIONS MOVE INU.S. PLAN Reported Ministerial Council Decides on Autonomy For Austria-Hungary By Astocialtd Pratt London, Oct. 10.—It Is reported from Vienna that the Austro-Hun garian ministerial council has de cided to Introduce national autonomy "in order to make President Wil son's stipulation an accomplished fact," says an Ex°change Telegraph dispatch from Copenhagen to-day. The Czech party did not take part In the deliberations, the advices add. It 1B holding an Important meeting to-ntght. A movement favoring a proclama tion separating Hungary and Aus tria Is making extremely rapid prog ress among the public in dual mon archy, according to an Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Zurich. Secretary Reeves Is Seriously 111; Y. M. C. A. Leader Has Pneumonia The condition of Robert B. Reeves, general secretary of the Central Y. M. Q. A. and district manager of the United War Work Compaign, is not greatly improved, it was learned this morning. Mr. Reeves is seri ously ill with an attack of pneumo nia. He was improving last week when he attended an open-air con ference and suffered a relapse. He is widely known here. LEGISLATIVE CLERK DIES Word reached the city to-day of the death at Freeland of Salvatore DiPerrio, assistant journal clerk of the House in the last half dozen sessions. He had served In every Legislature since 1901 and was'well known by hundreds of men promi | nent in Pennsylvania politics, as a ' competent and obliging official. OCTOBER 10, 1918. Boy to Get Reward For Finding Himself Lincoln, 111, Marshall Turley, agefl 17, will himself collect a S2OO reward offered by his father for In formation of his whereabouts. Tur ley disappeared about, a year ago. His fathec advertised In vain for the boy, A few days ago he received a let ter from France. It was from his son The boy explained he tried to enlist before he left home, but was reject ed on account of his age. He then decamped to the Canadian army. Overseas service followed Shortly afterward. His father is so pleased at his son's patriotism he declared the boy shall receive the reward. Ludendorff in Berlin For War Conference Basel, Swltz., Oct. 10. —General Ludendorff has arrived at Berlin from the German grand 'headquar ters to take part In conferences to bo held at the German capital, ac cording to information received here to-day. Washington, Oct. 10.—From one of the European neutral countries to-day a report reached the State Department that General Ludqu dorff has suffered a physical col lapse and relinquished command of the German army. BUILDING PERMITS Building permits issued during the last few days Included the fol lowing: E. L. Rlnkenbach estate, remodeling store front at 1215 North Third stret, $200; John W. Gluss, addition to three-story frame house. 1418 Liberty street, $75; George F. Fetterhoff, erection of one-story garage at the rear of 622 Camp street, SSO; Samuel R. Ream, ad dition to 1821 North Fourth street, SI,OOO, and Daniel J. Kremer, erec tion of one-story garage at the rear of 430 South Fourteenth street, $250. There were nineteen permits issued during September for impro 'e ments costing $38,200. During the same month of 1917 nine permits were issued for improvements cost ing $204,255. Use McNeil's Cold Tablets. Adv. Disease Is on Wane in Philadelphia Philadelphia, Oct. 10.—Influenza. Is on the wane In Philadelphia, ac cording to reports received at noon to-day by the health authorities. The death rate, however, remains high. In tweny-four hours there were 363 deaths from influenza and 151 from pneumonia. In the same period 3.351 new cases of influenza were reported, a decrease of nearly 700 cases as , compared with tho same period yesterday. WINS SHOULDER STRAPS G. B. Schuyler, Harrlsburg, is named In the list of appointments made public by the War. Depart ment to-day, aa being commissioned in the rank of second lieutenant in the Engineers Corps. Lieutenant Schuyler was anenlisted .man. A Clean Cool Scalp. Parisian Sage Stops Itching, Keeps the Scalp Cool—Prevents Dandruff Almost everybody nowadays knows that Parisian Sage, the invigorating hair restorer, is guaranteed to re move every trace of dandruff, stop falling hair and itching scalp, or the cost, small as It is, will be re funded. But you should know ihore about this marvelous hair grower. You ought to know that it immediately destroys all odors that are bound to come from the excretions of the scalp, and in live minutes after an application, no matter how hot the weather, your head will feel cool and comfortable. Everyone should have a bottle of Parisian sage handy because it Is such a pleasant and exhilarating hair treatment. Ladies use it be cause they know it is delicately per fumed, not sticky or greasy, and surely does make the hair beautiful, silky and abundant. Here's what a New York woman writes: "I have used Parisian sage two weeks only, yet in that time find my hair has wonderfully Increased in beauty, thickness and luxuriance, but what surprised me most was the disap pearance of all dandruff." A large bottle of Parisian sage can be obtained from Kennedy's Drug Store or at any good drug or toilet counter —it's not expensive.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers