10 LYS CROSSED BY GEN. HAIG'S MEN (Continued From First Page) overhead, he played the "Marseil laise." Paris. Oct. 16.—French forces last night captured the village of Acy-Romance, within a mile of the important railway junction of Rethel In the Champagne, the war office an nounced to-day. The French made further progress north of Sissonne, while between Sls sonne and Rethel they repulsed a violent enemy counterattack near St. Germainmont. Paris, Oct. 16.—Fighting in Prague is reported as being in progress. Meetings called by tho Czecho-Slo- X-feiSMSU Ho * water IC WA Sure Relief BIJ" Get the Habit of Drinking Hot Water Before Breakfast Says we can't look or feel right with the system full of poisons. Millions of folks bathe internally now instead of loading their system with drugs. "What's an inside bath?" you say. Well, it is guaran teed to perform miracles If you could believe these hot water enthusiasts. Theer are vast numbers of men and women who. immediately upon arising in the morning, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it. This is a very excellent health measure. It is intended to flush the stomach, liver, kidneys and the thirty feet of intestines of the previous day's waste, sour bile and indigestible ma terial left over in the body, which, if not eliminated every day, become food for the millions of bacteria which infest the bowels, the quick result is poisons and toxins which are then absorbed into the blood, causing headache, bilious attacks, foul breath, bad taste, colds, stom ach trouble, kidney misery, sleep lessness, impure blood and all sorts of ailments. People who feel good one day and badly the next, but who simply can not get feeling right are urged to obtain a quarter pound of limestone phosphate at the drug store. This will cost very little but is sufficient to make anyone a real crank on the subject of internal sanitation. Just as soap and hot water act on the skin, cleansing, sweetening und freshening, so limestone phos phate and hot water act on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. vastly more important to bathe on the inside than on the outside, because the skin pares do not absorb impurities into the blood, while the bowel pores do. HOME SHOE POLISH * %h i N I ,>** M VNE SAME P Npjllf' 1 IS f\S v J I ARGE quantities of SHINOIA are pur chased by the Government to be sold to the Soldiers and Sailors. We aim to make SHINOLA cost the men serving their country and the public back of the men, as little as possible. War conditions turn men's heads to profit making. We believe friends and users are more valuable than the profit of the moment. That is why you can buy SHINOIA at the same price as always. BLACK - TAN - WHITE - RED - BROWN • WEDNESDAY EVENING#* taAHJRISBURG THLEGRAPii ' OCTOBER 16, 191& I vuks at Prague to protest against tho exportation of foodstuffs from Bohemlu have resulted irl a general c(rlko which Is developing Into ft re- I volt, according to dlepatehes to to day's nowspopers. Martial law has been proclaimed throughout tho country and German and Hungarian troops are occupying Prague, Pllson, Plsek and Tabos. The dispatches report that the re volt has spread to Moravia and that there has beon fighting at Brunn, the capital, Olmuti and Bkoda, the j latter the scut of the big Austrian j gun plant, where work is said to I have been suspended. Machine guns, it is added, have been posted in the principal streets of Prague and artillery has been put into position likewise. The popula tion, it Is declared, Is in no wise In timidated, however, and there Is reason to believe the people have arms. STORES TO CLOSE SATURDAY NIGHT ; glass removed in case no other satis- I factory way is tound to keep pas ' sengers from closing them." Sixteen more deaths have been reported until noon to-day to health > officials, of which four were caused by pneumonia and the other twelve indirectly resulting from pneumonia, j Only six physicians reported a total [ of sixty-nine new cases to-day. ' Many in Hospital Yesterday eighteen deaths were | reported and the same number on [ Monday, a total of thirty-six for two I days. Forty patients are now being [ treated at the Emergency Hospital, : Fifth and Seneca streets. Five were j admitted to-day and two discharged, j Miss Mary Pass, a registered nurse, has volunteered her services, and others who are helping at the insti | tution include Mrs. Hopple and Mrs. ! Sholl. A number of osteopathic physi j cians have offered their services, Dr. i Raunick said, and arrangements are j being made to have them make visits I with the first-aid workers in order to ; determine which persons are in a ' serious condition and should be re i moved to the hospital. Extra Fire Drivers Fire Chief John C. Kindler re ported that four of the fire depart ment drivers were ill. suffering from the disease, ljut their places have been filled temporarily by the extra ; drivers in the employ of the depart | ment. A day or two ago the Mount Pleasant apparatus did not respond i to an alarm in the Allison Hill dis -1 trict because of the illness of the i driver. Both the driver and tiller man of the Mount Vernon Ladder truck are ill, and also one of the j drivers of the Good Will Company. 1 There is no cause for alarm, how \ ever, Chief Kindler said. It was reported to-lay that a few i grocery stores in the city were not , open for business yesterday because i the proprietors and members of the ' family were suffering from influenza. ' As all city schools are closed and , the officials cannot send the monthly i salary checks for teachers to the j various buildings, they have re- I quested the instructors to call at the i office for their pay. ) The Red Cross has appealed for broths, junkets, jellies and sickroom ! delicacies which can be used for the | sufferers from influenza. People who i can make these articles are asked to communicate with Mrs; R E. Her man, Bell phone BIS. 300,000 Cases of Influenza Reported to Health Deph Health Department authorities i helleve there are in Pennsylvania at i this time fully 806,060 cases of Span- ; Ish lnfiuensa, Forty counties yester- j day reported 7,000 new cases and ' there Is that number alone in Lu- | zerne county, Tho grout need Is for nurses and the Pennsylvania contingent was In- | crousod to-day by Volunteers from ; Now York, which also sent physl- ] clans to work In tho anthracite re gions. Camp Crane, Allentown, has I contributed a number of army sur geons. George Wharton Pepper, chairman of the Pennsylvania Coun cil of National Defense, has usked for War Department assistance In the coal and Industrial centers and has requested that several Banltary detachments from military encamp ments be sent. The anthracite coal companies offer to open hospitals and I bear all expenses if the state can J provide nurses. The Reserve Mlli- I tia has provided ten orderlies for ! duty at Steelton and emergency hos | pital equipment has been sent to j Girardville, . Williamstown and j Coatesville. Ten Deaths at Hospital; 82 Patients Under Treatment 1 The influenza death rate took an alarming leap at the Harrisburg Hos pital last night, where eighty-two patients now are under treatment. Since yesterday afternoon, ten pa tients have died at the hospital. Twenty-nine new patients were ad mitted, and Ave sent to the conva lescent hospital at Fifth and Seneca streets for treatment. Several more patients were sent to the convales cent hospital to-day. The deaths which occurred last night are: Marlin Mohn, aged 27, of Lemoyne, died at 7.03 last night. ! Emmanuel Bollinger, aged 45, 611 Oxford street, died at 6.45 last night. Michael Bolta, aged 25, 527 Race street, died at 7.57 last night. Sajnuel Olsen, aged 36, 226 Liberty street, died at 9.57 last night. ; Mrs. David Martin, aged 35, New Cumberland, died early last night. Harry Loeser, aged 31, of Brook ville, formerly of this city. Zopeta Franchi, 134 Hanna street, I died at 11.10 last night. Mrs. Samuel Garonzllt, aged 26, 331 South Front street, Steelton, died at 12.30 last night. Mrs. Katharine Milleisen, aged 60, 1312 State street, died at 4.30 this morning. Mrs. Elmer Brown, aged 20, 413 Chambers street, Steelton, died at 2.40 this morning. Admitted to the hospital last even ing suffering from Spanish influenza j was: Mrs. Violet Saul, wife of Michael ■ Saul, who is with the American Ex peditionary Forces in France, her two-year-old son and one-day-old baby. They live at Clark's Ferry | and were without assistance until j Harrisburg Red Cross officials learn- I ed of their plight and took them to j the hospital. Burian Had Hopes of Peace in German Reply Amsterdam, Oct. 16.—Baron Burian, the Austro-Hungarian foreign minis ter speaking to the foreign affairs committee of the Hungarian delega tion (presumably before President Wilson sent his second reply to Ger many), said: "The peace note sent by the Cen tral Powers to President Wilson opens the prospect that at no far distant date we shall reach a cessation of hostilities and enter into negotiations for the conclusion of a general last ing and just peace." to hide skm trouble Resinol aids poor complexions If your complexion is rough, red, or pimply, don't try to cover up the de fects with cosmetics which do not con ccal, but usually attract attention to the reason for their use. Begin today tc clear your skin with Resinol Ointmen and Resinol Soap. This treatment not only cleanses th< skin and enables it to breathe, bi. usually removes blotches, redness ant roughness. Ask your dealer for.Resinol Soap and Ointment HOW TO FIGHT OFF THE GRIP Commonsense Rules Every body Should Follow to Avoid Danger From Great Epidemic To. keep well —keep clean. Avoid the person who sneezes. Warmth is necessary—be well clothed. Sleep well, eat well, play well. Avoid over-exertion. Do not let yourself get run-down. Those who are weak and run down are the easiest victims. - Remember that Father John's Medicine makes fighting strength to ward off the attacks of the grip germ. Keep away from houses where there are cases of influenza. A neglected cold leads to grip or pneumonia. Take Father John's Medicine at the first sign of a cold. It has had more than sixty years' of success treating colds and coughs. Do not take medicine containing narcotic drugs, derivatives of opium or other poisons. You are safe when you take Father John's Medicine be cause It is guaranteed free front al cohol or dangerous drugs. CAPT. ROBERTS MENTIONED FOR WORK IN BATTLE Former Commander of Gov | ernor'i Troop Distinguishes Himself in Artillery * CAPTAIN ROBERTS Among the Pennsylvanians who have distinguished themselves In ac tion is Captain George W. H. Roberts, who left this city witli the Governor's Troop as its commander last summer when that company was sent to Camp Hancock, Ga. Captain Roberts, according to un official reports, has been cited for bravery at the front. He had been a member of the Governor's Troop for seventeen years before it was dis banded. He saw service as a first lieutenant on the Mexican border. On returning from the border he suc ceeded Captain Jack as captain of the troop. Captain Roberts is about 37 years old. He formerly was foreman at the Harrisburg Boiler and Manufac turing Company. Captain Roberts is only one of many Pennsylvanians who have been front. The Pennsylvania artillery, including a regiment of "heavies" from Philadelphia and two regiments of "lights" containing batteries from Pittsburgh, Williamsport Phoenix ville, Wilkes-Barre, Pittston, Hazle ton and Nanticoke, has been mention jed by Raymond G. Carroll, special correspondent for the Public Ledger, for special activity at the front. Since August 1, it has blazed a path before the Pennsylvania infantry with its accurate fire, reaching over two German lines to smother Ger man batteries and pour a withering fire upon the enemy at cross roads. Reichstag Meeting Goes Over; New Chancellor to Remain at His Post Basel, Switzerland, Oct. 16. —Ad- vices from Berlin say that the presi dent of the Reichstag has postponed the sitting of the Reichstag which was to have begun to-day, reserving to himself th eright to summon the legislative body at a later date. According to Berlin dispatches re ceived here, the German Socialists have decided, in view of the general political situation, not to oppose Prince Maximilian of Baden retain ing his post of imperial chancellor. Eight More Ships For War in Week of Oct. 11 Washington, Oct. 16.—Eight ships of 42,350 dead weight tons were de livered to the Shipping Board for the week ending October 11, the board announced to-day. Five ships were steel and three wood. The deliveries included the first contract steel ship from the Atlantic shipyard since the government began new war construc tion. It was turned out by the Fed eral Shipbuilding Company of Kear ney, N. J. Poole Promoted in U. S. Consular Service in Russia NYaxhington, Oct. 16.—Dewitt C. Poole, former American consul gen- 1 eral at Moscow has been sent to Arch angel with the rank of counselor to assist Ambassador Francis. This promotion was given Mr. Poole as a reward for the excellent work he did in spite of difficulties and dangers before he was ordered by the State Department to leave Moscow. REFUGEES FLEE BELGIUM Washington, Oct. 16.—A quarter of a million refugees are making their way from Lille, Roubaix and other Belgian towns near the front lines to the Dutch frontier in an endeavor to escape into Holland. Messages re ceived yesterday by Chairman Hoover, of the commission for relief in Bel glum, said arrangements had been made for food, clothing and shelter j upon their arrival at the frontier. PASSENGER SERVICE PhllnUelphln Division Engineers up: Gilliums, Hall, Kennedy. Osmond. Firemen up: Shaffner, Copeland. Middle Division Engineers up: Cruni, Miller, Graham, Keane, Riley, j Crane. Firemen up: Fletcher, Snyder, Ben der, Ross. Kerber, Mellinger, Hoffman, Swab, Colyer, Schoffstall, Steele, Hum mer, Kuntz, Simmons, Stephens, Stauf fer. EAT SALT ON GRAPE FRUIT AND SAVE SUGAR FOR WAR; OYSTERS ARE CLIMBING HIGH Two husky, russet-faced oyster openers at the Russ Market plied their art to-day with uncommon zest while hungry customers ogled the fat luscious bivalves as they plumped from hand to tub. "You mean to say there are plenty ) of oysters!" cried one old-timer who used to wallow in the briny sweets. 'Sure, Mike," grinned the head i opener. "Oysters better an' bigger this year than ever; we get all ours from Marsh Run down in Jersey, i See there; ain't he a beauty?" "Crimes of th' Hun," groaned the hungry one. "Why can't they sell 'em cheaper?" * "Can't get labor," cheerily inform- ' ed the other. "Oysters are plenty; say, boy, isn't this a lalapaioosa; weighs half a pound! So the ship pers won't take orders; that's the story." The restaurant man these days must pay 75 cents more for a gallon of oysters than last year, and where as they used to be 50 cents a quart To Prevent Grip nnd Influenza RAX ATI VK BROMO QUININE Tablets taken in time will Prevent Grip and Influenza. E. W. GROVE'S signature on box. 30c. WAR TO THE END BACK OF GREAT MILITARY BILL Leaders Say Measure Will Be Passed by the House Tomorrow Washington, Oct, 18.—Immediate consideration was given by the House to-day tf the military defi ciency bill carrying $6,346,756,000, reported by the appropriation com mittee to provide for the enlarged war program during the coming nine months. Leaders said the measure would be passed to-morrow. Ceaseless prosecution of the war, said Chairman Shirley in presenting the committee's report. Is the under lying thought back of the bill. "This Is a measure providing for the prosecution of the war with the utmost vigar and dispatch," he add ed. "In Its preparation no consider ation was given to recent peace events. No money has been denied that Is believed necessary to carry on the war." John P. Morgan, Jr., Dies at Fort Oglethorpe .Private John P. Morgan, Jr., aged 22 years, son of ex-City Detective John P. Morgan, 116 Calder street, this city, died of pneumonia yesterday in United States General Hospital No. 14, at Fort Oglethorpe, Ga„ where he was taken previously to developing pneumonia. Young Morgan was a graduate of the Harrisburg Technical High school, class of 1915. Prior to tak | ing up military training at Fort | Oglethorpe he was employed as as ! sistant foreman at the Hickok ma ! chine shop, this city. With him at j the time of his death was his wife, ; who, before her marriage, a year ; ago, was Miss Rachel Lightner, also jof Harrisburg. Mr. Morgan's father j is seriously ill at his home. MIIS. CARRIK MARTIN Mrs. Carrie Martin died yesterday I morning of influenza and pneumonia jat her home, 1633 North Third I street. She is survived by her hus band. Philip J., and the following I children, all of this city: Paul und Claude Martin and Mrs. R. W. Bald win. The funeral will be held Fri day mrning at 10 o'clock, with bur ial in the East Harrisburg Ceme tery, and the Rev. Dr. Smucker in I charge of the services. MRS. LEON ORE RHEEM Mm Leonore Rheem, aged 28 years, died at her home, 1629 North | Fifth street, to-day from pneumo j nia. Funeral services will be held Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock, the j Rev. Father Daley, of St. Mary's | Catholic Church, officiating. Mrs. | Rheem is survived by his husband, I Harry C. Rheem, her father, three I brothers and three sisters. ■ WILSON H. lIHOWN DIES Philadelphia, Oct. 16.—Wilson H. Brown, former sheriff, reformer and a prominent yarn manufacturer, died iat his home here early to-day fol lowing an illness of eight weeks. MRS. SARAH E. SWAN'GER Mrsc. Sarah E. Swanger, aged 73 years, died to-day of old age at the i home of her son, 2010 Wood street, j this city. Funeral services fo'r the | deceased will be held at the above ad dress Friday morning, at 10 o'clock, I the Rev. Harvey B. Klaer, pastor of (the Covenant Presbyterian Church, of- I ficiating. Burial will take place in j the East Harrisburg Cemetery. MRS. ELVA 1.. RIFE Mrsc. Elva Lotta Rife, aged 28 years, wife' of Ulysses S. Rife, of 1944 I Green street, this city, succumbed to | pneumonia to-day at her late home. The deceased was formerly Miss Elva | Meff, of Harrisburg. ' Funeral ser r vices for Mrs. Rife will take place I next Friday afternoon, at 3 o'clock, at the Green street residence. The | Rev. Dr. Joseph Doughtrty, pastor of the First United Brethren Church, will officiate. Interment will occur in Paxtang Cemetery. Standing of the Crews HARRISBURG SIDE Philadelphia Division The 113 crew first to go after 3.30 o'clock: 126, 105, 116. 109, 108, 107, 129, 114, 117, 106. Engineer for 109. Fireman for 06. Conductor for 113. Brakemen for 126, 116, 107, 114, 117 (2). Engineers up: Frickman. Dalby. Firemen up: Anderson, Novak. Brakemen up: Funk, Wills, Shel ley, Killan, Steffy, Dorsett, Long. Burns. Middle Division —The 30 crew first to go after 1 o'clock: 21, 303, 305, 226, 251, 33. 34. 301. 22, 17, 214, 221, 308, 32. Engineers for 30, 34. Firemen for 33, 34, 214, 22, 32. Conductor for 17. Flagmen for 33, 17, 32. Brakemen for. 30, 21, 33, 34, 305, 308, 32. Engineers up: Richards, Stone, Fisher, Hummer. Firemen up: Shellenberger, Bell, Over, Hubart, Bqok. Conductors up:. Hoffnagle, Ross. Brakemen up: Stewart, Wright, Myers, Baker. Yard Board —Engineers for 3-7, 4-7, 5-7, 2-14, 2-15, 5-15, 26, 29, 32. Firemen for 1-7, 11, 14. 5-15, 6-15, 16, 18. 28, 29. Engineers up: Boyer, Hamilton, Miller, R. B. Miller, Hall, Mayer, Mc- Cartney. Firemen up: Garber, Boyer, Cordes, Hoslck, Burns, Chubb, Hoffman, Gal bralth, Bolan. I they now demand 70. Small chance of any change; thanks to the Beast of Berlin. And oranges! Good night! Bates and Company are doing the best they can to keep down the price of Call ! fornia oranges, for yesterday in New i York a box of this fruit demanded $l9 while the Harrisburg merchants ■i asked only $8.50 a box. This firm as serts that it profits but 50 cents on a box. The opinion among dealers, I however, is that many retailers are ; profiteering on the precious fruit. ; "They ought to be able to sell a ! dozen, medium sized, for from $1 !to $1.25" was the estimate. For the j big (fellows, they said, $1.75 per 'dozen is legitimate, but not for the ; medium sized. The head of Bates and Company : asked to have the public informed i that the Jamaica orange, although i ! it has green skin, is very palatable; just as good as the California Valen ; cia, and much cheaper. Also he dis covered over in Gotham yesterday that the very elite now eat salt on " grapefruit instead of sugar." It beats sugar all to pieces." affirmed I the Bates dfflcial; "counteracts the , acid, and adds fifty per cent, to the " relish." < ' GERMAN FAILURE IN WAR HASTENS PLEA FOR PEACE Buriar\ Says Central Powers Are Defeated) Further Bloodshed Useless By /luoclatfit Brem Basel, Switzerland, Oct. 16.—The Central Powers found themselves no longer able to hope for a military decision In their favor, and Bulgar ia's demand for peace only hastened Ithe presentation of their peace prop ositions. Baron Burlan, tho Austro- I Hungarian foreign minister declar jed In a recent statoment to the for eign affairs committee of the Hun garian delegation at Vienna. I "Although the Central Powers 'have been able to face the new mlll itary situation," the foreign minister |said, "it must be stated that we can |not hope any longer for a decisive i success by arms, while our adver saries are not sure of their power to crush our resistance. Hence further bloodshed is useless." ] Baron Burlan said that a sentl iment of pure humanity always per vaded President Wilson's Ideas on the solution of world problems, "even when he joined our adversar ies and laid down certain principles directed against us. His declarations, therefore, never remained without influence amongst us and were never i rejected by us in principle." Luxemburg Now Begs Wilson For Protection j Amsterdam, Oct. 16.—According to the Bremen Weser Zeitung, the Lux emburg, chamber of deputies haa unanimously adopted an order of the protect Luxemburg's rights. The order demanded that the gov ernment should obtain the evacuation of the country and the liberation of all nationals of Luxemburg condem -1 ned by the German military courts. The statement says the government associates itself with the order. LIEUTENANT TYSON DIES New York, Oct. 16.—Lieutenant j Charles Tyson, of Knoxville, Tenn., i an officer in the American 'naval air j force, has been drowned off the coast of France in the fall of an airplane, according to word received here last | night by his wife. Lieutenant Tyson, I was a son of Brigadier General Law- I rence D. Tyson, U. S. A., now in 1 France, and was born in Knoxville i in 1889. i | Dyspepsia Spoils Beauty Makes the Dark Rings Around Eyes, Caves in the Cheeks and Ruins the Complexion. How to Get Rid of Dyspepsia "Take my advice and use Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets if you want a pretty skin' Digestive troubles ruin the com plexion. The sour, fermented, gassy contents poison the blood, draw the corners of the mouth, rob you of j sleep, give the face that hungry, hag ] gard, mournful expression in the morning and you are tired all day. It is not what you eat but the fault of digestion that hurts. Eat any thing you like and let. Stuart's Dys pepsia Tablets digest your food, tone your stomach, supply your blood with nourishment, then good looks, a healthy appearance and bright eyes will soon return. Get a 50 cent box of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets at any drug store. They are real health makers. MOTS NERVES WE SMC By Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. Winona, Minn.—"l suffered fori more than a year from nervousness, i lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH and was so bad: UIM * could not rest I lie awake and | JJ get so nervous 1 would have to! ' WBm U gct up and walk j around and In! the niornlngi --'llf /'■■"U tired out. I readj about Lydia E.I Pinkham's Vege table Compound! and thought Ij I would try it. My nervousness soon left me. I sleep j well and feel line In the morning, and able to do my work. I gladly I recommend Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to make weak nerves strong." Mrs. ALBERT SULTZE, 603 Olmstead St., Winona,' Minn. How often do we hear the ex pression among women, "I am so nervous, I cannot sleep," or "it | seems as though I should fly." Such j women should profit by Mrs. Sultze's I experience and give this famous root j and herb remedy, Lydia E. Plnk j ham's Vegetable Compound, a trial. For forty years it has been over ] coming such serious conditions as displacements, inflammation, ulcer j alion, irregularities, periodic pains, I backache, dizziness, and nervous prostration of women, and is now considered the standard remedy for euch ailments. For Baby Rash Itching, chafing, scalding, all irrita tions and soreness, nothing heals like Sykes Comfort Powder Its extraordinary healing and soothing . power is noticeable on first application. at the Vlnol and other drug etoree The Comfort Powder Co., Boston, Mass. Use McNeil's Cold Tablets, Adv. MEN BEYOND 37 TO BE CALLED (Continued From First Page) ed men between 18 and 4 5 will be called before July 1, und or that number more than two million will be physically fit fighting men. The call for general service will be divid ed as follows' October, 345,000; November, 204,- OOOi December, 197,500; January, 147,500, February, 244,000; March, April, May and June, each month. These men will seipply both the army and thenavy and marine corps. In addition. 20,000 men for limit ed service will be called each month. General Crowder said the work of classifying new registrants should be completed by January 1. STOMACH UPSET? Get at the Real Cause—Take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets That's what thousands of stomach sufferers are doing now. Instead of taking or trying to patch up a poor digestion, they are attacking the real cause of the ailment—clogged liver and disordered bowels. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets arouse the liver in a soothing, healing way. When the liver and bowels are per forming their natural functions, away goes indigestion and stomach troubles. If you have a bad taste in your mouth, tongue coated, appetite poor, I lazy, don't-care feeling, no ambition or energy, troubled with undigested foods, you should take Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil. You will know them by their olive color. They do the work without griping, cramps or pain. Take one or two at bedtime for quick relief, so you can eat what you like. At 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. TAKE A BLOOD TONIC BEFORE WINTER Revitalize your blood and put your system in condition to resist the hardships of winter It is the strong-blooded men and women who are vigorous and healthy in winter, and who are not inconvenienced by the cold, wet days. Wet feet don't bother them, sudden changes cause no inconvenience, and even when a cold is "caught," because of contact, in a close, stuffy room, with some one al ready infected, the trouble sel dom lasts over a day or two. This highly desired state of health is brought about by hav ing rich, pure blood, uncontam inated by impurities of any kind. You may possibly think your blood is all right—you are not troubled by outward signs. Yet you have felt tired and languid, you have lost some sleep or had some minor ailments at times, but you regard yourself as in "fairly good condition physical ly." This may be true, but you should take nothing for granted, you should not "guess" that you are all right The thing to do is to make yourself right by taking a good blood tonic and invigora tor such as S. S. S. It is the best known blood tonic on the market to-day. There is hardly a man, woman or child in Amer- Let The Types Help You THERE is no need to worry about next month's business if you call in the services of the printer. Get your facts together the things you want to say to the public—and have them printed in a folder or booklet. Facts well told in good printing have saved many a businessman worry about the future, for they carry your thoughts, your prices, your location, the bargains you may want the people to know about, to the public that has the money. The rest is easy. The types simply can't help bringing business to you. We'll help you all we can to make good printing carry your message. The Telegraph Printing Binding Photo Engraving Designing—Die Stamping—Plate Printing 216 Federal Square j , HARRISBURG, PA. DEAD ON YOUR FEET Feeling dull, tired, worn.run-down? Shake up that lazy li ver<with Schenck's Mandrake Pills to-night and mark their magic effect. One dose will ?rove their efficacy and make you eel like a new being. Constipation, biliousness, bilious I headache, etc., readily yield to ! Schenck's Mandrake Pills. 25c per box —un coated or sugar coated Dr. J. H. Schenck & Son, Philadelphia THE ARTISTIC I CHARACTER of our monuments will recom mend them to those desiring a fitting tribute to the memory of those gone before. We shall be glad to submit designs with an estimate of cost. No obligation is incurred in the inspection. I. B. DICKINSON Granite, Marble and Tile 505-13 North Thirteenth St. Harrisburg. l'a. *■ ica who has not heard of it. 11 has helped to restore many peo ple to health. It has broughl relief in thousands of cases o) Mood disorders during the pasi fifty years. S. S. S. is a standard treat ment for all blood troubles. Il is a true blood tonic, that puri fies and brings new vigor <|nc! new life to the blood stream. Il is guaranteed to be purely vege table, to contain no mercury 01 other mineral drugs, but to be made from herbs and roots care fully selected for their known medicinal properties. For chronic sores, ulcers, catarrh, rheumatism, eczema, psoriasis, salt rheum, tetter, acne and other such diseases as are due to infected blood, S. S. S. acts quickly and satisfactorily. It counteracts the germs and poi sons, cleanses thp system of un healthy accumulations, literally washes all foreign matter lrom tfie blood and renews its life giving properties. Be sure to take S. S. S. this Winter. The renewal of vigor that it will give you will be well worth while. One thing you can be sure of, and that is if you take S. S. S. you will be benefit ed. Get it to-day at your drug store refuse any substitute. For medical advice, address Swift Specific C 0.,, 416 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers