8 • BRITISH MA YORS AS ONE VOICE AGAINST PEACE WITH TEUTON All Manifest Same Spirit; No Com promise With Brutal Foe; Let Em pire Surrender at Bar of World's Justice and Receive Sentence London. Oct. 22. —As proof of the futility of German attempts to weaken the will of the British peo ple by peace talk, the Daily Tele graph publishes a series of messages from the mayors of more than fifty English and other towns, represent ing every phase of municipal life. They all breathe but one spirit, namely, that there must be no com promise with the foe. The follow ing are messages from a few of the principal towns: BIRMINGHAM —"Germany must be required to accept the terms im posed by the Allies, and stern jus tice must be meted out." "BRADFORD —"After what Ger many has done, there must be no compromise. It is absolutely essen tial that there should be British su premacy of the seas." Compromise Fatal CARDIFF "Any compromise with Germany would be fatal. The German navy must be handed over." HULL—"The Allied troops should occupy Essen and march to Berlin." BLACKBURN—"To bargain with Dr. Howard nlwaja recommended OxidazeForCoughs, Colds, Br. Asthma Years of itady and obaerTatlon COB vlnced him it would safely, quickly nnd surely atop a bad conffh aud STITe 1 nntnnt relief in Dronchlnl Asthma. Money back If It fatla. tsuuranteed harmless. At all drug gift!. G. A. borgat. I' ' r i ; Easy to Make This t I Pine Cough Remedy j f * i ? Thousands of families sin imr by Its ? prompt results. InexpeneU e, J j aud saves about SZ. You know that pine is used in ail prescriptions and remedies for coughs. The reason is that pine contains several peculiar elements that have a remarkable e.Tect in soothing and healing the membranes of tie throat and chest. Pine cough syrups arts combinations of pine and svrup. The "syrup"' part is usually plain sugar syrup. To make the best pine cough remedy that money can buv. put 2 1 -. ounces of Pinex in a pint bottle, and fill up with home-made sugar syrup. Or you can use clarified molasses, honey," or corn syrup, instead of sugar svrup. Either way, you make a full pint— _tore than you can buy ready-made for three times the money. It is pure, good and very pleasant—children like it. You can feel_ this take hold of a couch or cold in a way that means business. The cough mav be dry, hoarse and thrht, or mav be persist ently loose from the formation of palegm. The cause is the same—in flamed membranes—and this Pinex and Svrup combination will stop it— usually in 24 hours or less. Splendid, too, for bronchial asthma, hoarseness, or any ordinary throat ailment. Pinex is a higblv concentrated com pound of genuine Norway pine extract, and is famous the world over for its i prompt effect upon coughs. Beware of substitutes. Ask your druggist for "S'A ounces of Pinex" with directions, and don't accept any thing else. Guaranteed to give abso lute satisfaction or money refunded. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. BACKACHE, LUMBAGO AND RHEUMATIC PAINS VANISH OVERNIGHT 20th Century I.iniment Alwayn Ready. Jut Rub It On. Guaranteed. "You can have your money back." | says your druggist, "if 20th Century Liniment doesn t drive that soreness, stiffness, lameness and pain from ; your tired, aching back and limbs." I 20th Century Liniment never disap points and will neither burn nor blister. It brings quick relief from Neuralgia. Rheumatic Pains and Twinges. Sprains and all soreness of nerves and muscles. uon't think that because 20th Cen tury Liniment d -can't smart, burn and blister it isn't doing good. It brings comforting, soothing relief with the first rub. Try it to-night and see if you don't feel fit as a fiddle ■ in the morning. If it doesn't do all I and more than we claim for it, take the bottle back to your druggist and he will return you your monev with- I out question. CONSTIPATION is best treated by a vegetable remedv , that gently drives out the poisonous raste that lodges in the lower bowel. Celery King ■ Is sure and acts without discomfort. Use it for sick headache, colds and 'everlsh condition. Same old remedy .n the same old box. memm § GLASSES Quickly Repaired Our repair department is a big factor in our establishment. We have the skill, the experience, and are at your service always. Prices commensurate with good work. Bring yonr broken glosses here Eyesight Specialist 26 NORTH THIRD STREET Sehlelsner Uutiding TUESDAY EVENING the Germans is unthinkable after the past four years." BLACKPOOL "The Germans asked for a good hiding and deserve to get it." CANTERBURY—"In no circum stances must we make peace until every man and woman in Germany who has been brutal to our prisoners has been punished and reparation given for all the damage." Let Huns Face Sentence EXETER—"Let Germany sur render at the bar of the world's I justice and receive just sentence for ! her crimes and give guarantees for her future good conduct. The Allies ■ will be Just, but dare not be gener ' ous." HYTHE—"In this town 'no com- I promise' is nailed to our mast." Two Enemy-Owned Concerns Are Seized Washington. Oct. 22.—Seizure of two enemy-owned concerns, the sl,- 000.000 paint manufacturing firm of Gerstendorfer Brothers, Inc., and the International Insurance Com pany, both of New York, and the ! liquidation of the affairs of a third, were announced yesterday by Alien Property Custodian Palmer. Direc tors for the seized concerns have been -named and Mr. Palmer has taken 'over the $500,000 assets of the Ham | burg Company. , Thrift Stamp Race Drawing Much Closer 1 The race among Harrisburg post men for the William M. Donaldson prizes to be given the man selling the most War Savings Stamps grows hotter each day. Below is the list of postmen, for the period ending Oc tober 19, who have sold SIO,OOO and upwards of the stamps: R. K. Fortna. $20,447; G. A. Hol linger, 120.356; J A. Geiger. $18,289; E. R. Gault, $14,290; C. W. Cless, $13,722; G. L. Ebersole. $11,728: T. J. Carpenter. $10,931; C. A. Fortna, $10,618; C. E. Rea, $10,578. Hungary Bars Wheat Exports, Famine Near Berne. Oct. 22. The Augsburger j Abend Zeitjng says: ' "Germany and Austria are on the i eve of a famine. Hungary has stopped I the export of wheat. I "Bohemia refuses to raise wheat, | and Poland is cutting down its ship ! ments." | KAISER SEEKS HARMONV ' Copenhagen, Oct. 22. lt is evi ' dent that every effort has been made ] in Berlin to get all parties behind the 'answer to President Wilson. Accord ing to the Vossiche. the War Cabinet worked at it all Friday and Saturday, committees from the Reichstag and I Bundesrat being in constant consulta tion until an early hour Sunday morn ing. The text of the note was shown the leaders of all the Reichstag par ties —the Conservative, the German i party and the Social Democrats. MARINE NEEDS 2.000 FIREMEN Washington, Oct. 22.—A call for 2,000 men to work as firemen on the j American merchant marine, to make | good a deficiency in the normal sup ! ply of volunteers caused by the in ' flu'enza epidemic, was issued yester- ■ jdav by the shipping hoard. Men from 18 to 35 years, inclusive, weighing - at least 140 pounds, are wanted. | ) How Old Are You By Your Hair? You may be thirty in years, but if you are bald-headed, gray, or your hair is dry, brittle, scraggly and I ugly-looking, people will surely take j you to be many years older. When your hair becomes faded, 1 dry, streaked and scraggly, when it j i falls out badly and new hair cannot j : grow, the roots should be immedi- j i ately vitalized and properly nour- i i ished. To do this quickly, safely j ; and at little expense, there is noth-; ing so effective as Parisian sage, (liquid form) which you can get at Kennedy's Drug Store and all good 1 I drug and toilet counters. It's guaranteed to abolish dan-1 druff—stop scalp itch and falling' hair and promote a new growth or i money refunded. It's in great de- i mand" by discriminating women be-1 ) cause it makes the hair so soft, lus-1 trous, easy to arrange attractively and appear heavier than it really is. A massage with Parisian sage is a real delight—easy to use, not; sticky or greasy, and delicately per- j fumed —an antiseptic liquid free' from dangerous ingredients and; guaranteed not to color the hair or I scalp. If you want good looking | : hair and plenty of it, by all means use Parisian sage—a little attention , now insures beautiful hair for years' | to come.—adv. ) ASK GRANDMA~ABOUT VEGETABLE TEA FOR CONSTIPATION Liver and Bowel remedies come afid go. but Dr. Carter's K. and B. Tea, which your grandmother knew all , about, is now more popular than ever. ! Many families have used this tea for vears. brewing it at home, and find 'it the best and least expensive remedy they can get. Your pharmacist will sell you a small package, which will last a long ; time. It's a splendid drink for constipa tion. acts surely and gently, and for a sluggish liver, sick headache, sallow skin and dizziness, many thousands of women use it. Speedy and bliss , ful relief is guaranteed to all who drink Dr. Carter's K. and B. Tea, and I don't forget that It's simply fine for children. j _ A plate without a roof wbleh doesl not Interfere with taste or speech. !*SQ Plates Repaired While Yen Walt MAMTQ cental mHvH w OFFICES I 316 MARKET STHEET PEACE BROUGHT j NO NEARER BY NOTE, TAFT SAYS Ex-President Mercilessly Dis sects Berlin's Reply; Time to Write "Finis" By William H. Taft * | Washington. Oct. 22. Another) . German peace note has come, but j we are no nearer peace. The German government, denat- . uralized for the purpose of seeking l a negotiated peace, consents that the armistice may be referred to the military authorities, but with the' | reservation that it shall be recon-1 j ciled with "German honor." That "honor" prompts the de nial of German official wanton de , vastation in France and Belgium and official looting, though every man in the Allied armies at the front can verify it. That "honor" denies the sinking of lifeboats with passengers eseap i ing from torpedoed liners, when the ( evidence is indisputable. But wljy make so much of this. ; | when the sinking of passenger boats 1 iby submarines is admitted? Mur-; ; der in the first degree is the same : crime, whether the killing is by one i blow or is long drawn out. These denials will only strengthen the already unanimous demand by i j the American people for an uncon- ' ; ditional surrender. The German i mind cannot understand their out raged feelings. If it could, no at- I tempt at such denials would have I been made. What is the armistice for? To agree upon peace? What peace? I That outlined in the message of i January 8 and subsequent ad- j ; dresses? The Austrian note showed ! how unsatisfactory such a basis was. j The armistice requested is for a negotiated peace. German acceptance of the fourteen points commits her to Joining in a dsicus sion of what they mean. But that j is all. The differences that could arise after an armistice as to their exact intendment are legion. Germany has become a popular i government voerntght as it were. But where are the Hohenzollerns? ! i Have they given up? What con- j trols the army? Who the navy? It is difficult to be patient with such a > j travesty. This time, we hope, an ; answer will be sent closing the chap- i ter - Girl Seriously Hurt in Collision of Automobiles I Sustaining a fractured jaw, a prob- I able fracture of the skull and severe lacerations of the scalp, as a result of an automobile accident last night at Front and Cumberland streets. Mildred Esterline, 14, 1612 Logan street, lies in the Harrisburg Hospital in a serious condition to-day. A United States mail truck and a Buick passenger automobile containing three young men besides Miss Estbr line, figured in the accident. Eyewitnesses of the affair declare that the automobile in attempting to pass the mail truck as it came down Front street and turned up Cumber land street, ran onto the pavement and crashed into the house at 1129 i North Front street in order to avoid j running into the latter. As the truck I turned, witnesses say, its driver ex tended his hand to signal the on coming car but the youth driving the Buick either did not "see the signal or was going at too fast a speed to permit his stopping. People of Ostend Carried King Albert on Shoulders London. Oct. 22. The men, wo- ' 1 men and children of Ostend were so 1 overjoyed when the king and queen |of Belgium landed there Thursday. 1 that many of them heartily kissed the rulers of the liberated town. King Albert and Vice Admiral ' Keyes. of the British Navy, were car- j ried to the town hall on the shoulders [ of men in the large crowd which j greeted the king and queen at the I landing. Private S. F. Calvert Is Wounded in France Word reached Mrs. Sarah Calvert, i of West Fairview yesterday from the Adjutant General's office in Wash- j ington that her son. Private Silas Franklin Calvert, had been wounded | in France. August 24. the extent 6f j his injuries not being known. Cal- j vert is 31 years of age and is at tached to the 112 th Infantry. NEW HIGH SPIRE STOPS "Atticks and George alley in the borough of Highspire are stopping i places no longer for trolley cars of I the Harrisburg Railways Company, 1 these stops being discontinued by the j company at the request of the bor- j ough council. Stops hereafter, be- ! tween Ann and Hanover streets, will ! be made only at Hamaker and Frank- ! lin streets. The old stops were dis continued because neither crossing or street lights prevailed at those two points. The other points have both. HEI.P FOR •QUAKE VICTIMS An Atlantic Port, Oct. 22. Two ' hundred refugees from the earth quake in Porto Rico arrived yesterday I on a steamship and will be placed in war industries by the government, j which arranged their transportation, j Many of them were impoverished and stepped ashore with all their belong- I ings in bundles. Rheumatism Goes Torturing Pains ami Swollen Joints; Vanish When Hlieumu Is Used At last a real remedy for rheuma- j tisin! And a good one it must be j when Kennedy's Drug Store and > good druggists everywhere sell it on 1 the no-cure no-pay basis. Rheumatics should hail the news | with great rejoicing, for it is surely ! a remarkable remedy and has a rec- I ord of almost unbelievable cures. ' Read what J. F. Oliver, of Albany, Ca„ says about it: "I had sciatic rheumatism for j two years, and tried every medicine 1 offered for rheumatism. Tried man:' i doctors, was treated at one of the best southern sanatorlums. and if I improved any I did not realize it. I am a conductor on the Central of Georgia Railroad, and had secured a pass to Hot Springs, Ark., to take t treatment. About that time I saw ' Rheuma advertised and concluded to try it. I abandoned my trip, took three bottles, and now feel as well as ever. I am going to make every body I see who haa rheumatism try It. I would not take a hundred thou sand dollars for what Rheuma has done for me. I would rather be dead than live as I was before the use of. Rheuma." If you have rheumatism In any form, don't delay—try Rheuma to day. A large bottle, sufficient for two weeks' treatment, is not expen sive, and your money back if It does j not ?lve you quick and joyful relief. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH! LETTERS FROM FRANCE Lieut. Wallower Tells of Fleeing Boches, Who Couldn't Run Fast Enough to Escape the Pursuing Yanks; Repatriated French Over joyed to Meet Rescuers. Although he "missed out on the Chateau Thierry push," Herbert ; Wallower. attached to the Sound | Ranging Service, Twenty-Ninth En \ gineers, serving in France, witness- I ed the 'Hur.s on the run," as well as j different and more pathetic sights, such as hysterical. Joyous and grate i ful old men. women and children, re j patriated by the Yankees, giving j i thanks on their knees to their de- , I liverers from Hun misrule. The let- i I ter from Wallower, who p:\rticipat- j ed in the American First Army' 1 drive which wiped out the St. Mi- 1 i hlei salient September 12, to his I father, E. Z. Wallower, of 2101 North j Front street, dated September 22, j tells of these and other interesting | things about that part of the war in | which he is engaged. The letter ! | follows: "September 22, IPIS. "Dear Family: "I am sending the last copy of the i | 'Stars and Stripes' to father, which I i can be passed around so that e\ cry ] | ore can see just how our 'great lit-j tie push' was carried out and have ; | an idea of the thrilling and inter- j estlng ten days which we have Just ' gone through. 1 missed out on the ' Chateau Thierry push, but I have; : quite made it up to my satisfaction 1 for tbe fun I have Just had in seeing ■ ' the Hun on the run," actually, for j 1 saw the Boche garrison of a small j town drop guns and everything and j beat it as fast as they could. But, to their sorrow, they could rot run as fast as our Immortal doughboys, who rounded them up like sheen and started them back toward our lines. : several hundred of them with an es | cort of only two Americans, ore at the front and the other at the rear I of the column, and the boy at tn front marching along with n sm l '. j on his face and a dent in his tin hat, : and the proudest and happiest ' youngster in the world. I met sev eral bunches of Boehes coming back i with no escort at all, and if they 1 had been guaranteed a safe return ;to their lines they wouldn't have | considered the proposition. The war ' was over for them and they were 1 jolly well glad of It. too. especially ~when they saw fresh meat and white bread for the first time, probably, in j years. A great many of •hem gave I themselyes up without a struggle, j but there were many faces whit h I gave gruesome evidence of hard , ! fighting and stubborn resistance, and the dead Boches always outnumber ed the Americans. Several days aft r er the show began at one of our for ward posts close to the new front line we had the unpleasant job of j , putting under the sod several Boches < ; who were making their presence particularly objectionable, and even : yet there are some lying out in front who have not yet been picked up by . patrols at night. "The events of the past ten days have seemed like a kaleidoscope I swiftly passing, and the day crowd ed with scenes and experiences I will never forget. Interesting stor ies I can tell by the dozen, a great ' many of which are so ably related j in 'Stars and Stripes.' better than I could attempt to tell them, and all j perfectly true. "It seems quite impossible that I . am sitting over here in Boche land, : ' where we have been gazing in an ticipation for months and which has almost seemed like the coveted but forbidden promised land. It was such a peculiar sensation to stroll | brazenly over cres's of hills and ride | over roads disused for years, where formerly it would have been worth ! your life to expose yourself. It has , been very interesting to see the em- ; placements of old Boche batteries j we had located and see the results , of our counter-battery fire, wh'ch 1 we had directed. One old position which used to shell us got all that was coming to it, and we gloated over it. "It was a pathetic sight and one which made our efforts seem well > worth while, to see the inhabitants, old men. women and children, of the captured villages, falling on their knees, in thanks, that they had been at last repatriated, and welcoming the Americans with smiles and tears, who had freed them after four years of German rule. I think this has made the deepest impression [ upon me than anything I have seen so far in this sorrow-stricken coun try. Can you imagine what it meant • to those poor souls, after thinking j everything had been lost, to sudden- , ly find themselves rejoined to coun try and family and friends'.' They had been told that France was beat en, and nothing at all about the ; Americans, and so were perfectly | astonished to learn the real state of affairs. "Of course, we had known for j quite a while that a push was ex pected. so were more or less pre- i pared: but we were even amazed at the number of guns of all sizes that were massed for the attack, and when the artillery preparation com- i menccd it was like the gradually- j swelling roar of a mighty inferno. When zero hour approached and the drum fire of the barrage, under, which the infantry went over the top, joined with the roar of the heavies, the ground fairly trembled, the low-lying clouds reflecting the i gun flashes, glowed and scintillated, and at certain intervals, when guns happened to fire in sequence, the lights played back and forth like I sheet lightning along the front line, rockets of every description, star shells and Incendiary shells were adding their contribution to the dis- J play. At zero hour the crescendo reached its highest pitch, and it j seemed as though hell itself had ' broken loose. I was standing on top of a high hill, from which I could • see the front for miles, and it was the most awe-inspiring sight I have ever seen. If man can let loose such mighty powers of death and destruc tion. what fear of God in His wrath should we have were it directed on us! The barrage lifted and our in fantry swept across No Man's Land and the enemy first line, which was almost obliterated by our shell fire. How anything living could have survived that torrent of steel is more than I can understand. Our boys went forward so swiftly and irresist ibly that they carried everything be fore them, taking thousands of piis oners with no resistance whatever. By the end of the day they had car ried most of their objectives, pene trating to a depth of fifteen miles in places, slowed up in others by stiff fighting; but by the end of the next day all objectives had been reached and the line consolidated, the salient nipped off. catching thousands o> prisoners in it. "The whole affair was carried out so audaciously and surely, the prep- i arations made so quietly and swiftly, that the Boche was simply taken by surprise and overwhelmed. Who i said the first American Army did not | know this war game? I heard that the French were rather dubious about the result, but now tbey think there is nothing we can't do. Cer- i tainly the Boche has learned to fear i the sting of the despised A. E. F. "As soon almost as ihe infantry went across, our hard work began, first in transporting our instruments and wire across the almost impass able No Man's Land and over the shell-torn roads, but we succeeded in following fairly closely behind the I infantry, and as soon as the new j line was stabilized we started back j into action, establishing our central j in spacious Boche dugouts und set ting out our observation posts, from 1 which I can almost look into Fritz's | eyes: hut the hardest work was in i laying our lines and maintaining ! them under shell tire. Wse would I no sooner get one fixed than out she i would go again, cut in a dozen dif | ferent * places; but we' succeeded in ! turning in valuable information, in | spite of our many difficulties. For j over a week 1 hardly ever went to ; bed, and . had my clothes off only , once, a few minutes' nap in a cor- I ner of a dugout was precious, und i 1 don't believe anything looked so • utterably desirable as a good, soft ! bed and twenty-four hours to try ; it out. "We are still terribly busy, for , our lines are continually being cut ! by shell fire; besides having to at ; tend to a thousand other details, i Our little old "peace" front woke up with a bang, and she hasn't been i giving us very much peace since. "Everything alflng the line is I working wonderfully. Poor old Jerry doesn't know where he is go ing to get kicked next, and he will get his knockout pretty soon if he doesn't look out. He knows he is losing out. so, just like him. he is beginning to cry about it already, ! but we won't stop until we really j give him something to cr^ - about. "We are now digging ourselves in for the winter, so to speak, and try ! ing to make ourselves as comfort ! able as possible. We found a tine ! dugout to live in, with one disad -1 vantage, for it faces the wrong way j and the entrance is exposed, but we i can fix that up pretty quickly with sand bags. The Boche officers left | ail kinds of loot behind, just dropped everything and ran. Boche souve nirs cease to become so, they are so common. Practically everything we use is Boche, but we haven't found a bed with springs in it yet. j "It's great sport being over here, quite u change of environment, which is good for the health, some times, though it is getting beastly cold and we have no doubt that win ter is almost here, and 1 do dread looking forward to it. However, un der the circumstances, 1 have very j little kick coming, plenty of good ! food, a safe place to sleep, when 1 get the chance; plenty of things to keep me busy, and I am feeling fine and happy. All 1 want to do now is l to lick Fritz and come home tout de • suite. "HERBERT." 1 Northcliffe Sees Hint of Hun Collapse in Note l.onilon, Oct. 22.—Lord Northcliffe. commenting on Germany's latest peace proposal, to-night said: "A hasty' perusal of the German note reveals that, with truly Prus sian selfishness, no mention is made of Austria-Hungary or Turkey. It seems to me that the document may be read either as a means to gain time or as- a confession of a state of affairs militarily and economically worse than we know." "The least satisfactory feature of ' the reply is the shameless prevarica tion with regard to German outrages on land and sea. and the suggestion that this be dealt with by a neutral commission is a mere subterfuge. The arguments employed to prove that a reform of the German constitu tion has been accomplished are un worthy of serious consideration, i "The President, who dealt so firm ,ly and shrewdly with the previous German attempts to entangle him in wordy discussions, may be trusted to compel the German government to show whether it really intends un conditional surrender, which alone can satisfy the demands of the mili , tary and naval authorities of the i Allies, or whether it simply is play- I ing for time." , I GERMANS STONE OFFICERS At Ith the Allied Armies In France onil Belgium, Oct. 22.—A typical let ter of what is" happening in Germany is among the documents captured by the Allies. It was written a few days • ago by a German private to his . brother-in-law on the battlefront and describes a scene at a railway sta tion on the arrival of a troop train from Russia. Officers were stoned and maltreated and attempts were made to shoot them because the men were required to entrain for the west front. MME. DE A'AI.I.ETTK KILLED ! I'nrls. Oct. 22- Mademoiselle De ' Vallette. head of the American sec tion of the press department of the Foreign Office, was killed instantly Saturday when a hand grenade which , she picked up in reoccupied territory near the front exploded. She had been : conducting a party of American wo men on a visit to the reoccupied ter i ritory. J Don't Suffer From Piles Sample Package of the Faaou Pyramid Pile Treatment Now 1 Offered Free to I'tore AVhat It Will Do for Yon. Pvramld Pile Treatment gives quick relief, stops Itching, bleed ing or protruding piles, hemorrhoid# Pyramid (a Cartaiolr and Works Suck Wonders So Quickly. and such rectal troubles, In the pri vacy of your home. 60 cents a box at all druggists. Take no substi tute. A single box often is suf ficient. Free sample for Trial with booklet mailed free in plain wrap per, if you send coupon below. FREE SAMPLE COUPON ! PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY. 604 Pyramid Bldf., Marshall, Mich. Kindly send me a Free sample of Pyramid Plla Treatmaet, in plain wrappar. Name Street City.... State., 'WAR WORKERS TO iBOW FOR MINUTE !IN DAILY PRAYER Women of Red Cross to Pray For thhe Solders and Sailors Beginning Wednesday. October 23 a minute of silence will reign in every Red Cross workroom through the United States at the hour of noon daily, while thoughts arc con centrated on und pn\ers breathed for the sons of America who are facing the enemies of liberty in for eign lands and on the high Seas. Such is the announcement conveyed In the Red Cross Bulletin, the offi cial publication of the American Red Cross to its various chapters. In accordance with rtiis resolu tion, the Harrisburg workers will likely fall in line with the Rotary Club plan of observing a War Ange lus at 11 o'clock every morning, ob serving this in place of the general 12 o'clock ruling, officials said this morning. The impressive silent moment has been observed by women of Eng land for several months. It was inaugurated at national headquar ters of the American Red Cross in Washington on October 3, following the reading by Mrs. August Belmont, assistant to the War Council, of this preamble and resolution. The steady flow of Red Cross supplies to our own people and , to our Allies is an evidence of the loyalty, devotion and service of our Red Cross workers. The assistance given is to a great degree material, hut a spirit per meates each gift which im measurably transcends the value of the gift itself. We desire to preserve this spirit as the inspiration of our service. We hope as the work of our fighting force increases that now more than ever Red Cross workers will make appar ent our kinship of thought as well as kinship of effort, even through the rush and stress of active work. Therefore, at a meeting of the War Council, held on Wednes day, October 2, it was Resolved. That every day at the hour of noon, in every work room of the American Red Cross, throughout the whole of these United States, upon a given signal, all work shall cease for a period of one minute. During this time, in silence, we will solemnly concentrate our minds upon our beloved soldiers and sailors overseas who are so nobly offering their all, even unto their lives, for us. We will think as one, hope as one, for their definite victory and their individual well being; consecrating anew to our coun try and to those who fight, labor and suffer for her, becoming one with them in service. May this united prayer, gathering power from our love and faith, mount to heaven itself, descending thence in the midst of our dear ones wherever they may be. fall upop them as a bene diction, to be at all times their tomfort and their strength, The movement in Harrisburg gained prominence through the sug gestion of the local Rotary Ciub. David H. Witmer was appointed to head the local committee and through his untiring work and the assistance of his associates, the plan was officially recognized by Mayor Keister. It is now observed through out the entire city. IsYour Blood Starving for Want of Iron? Modern Methods of Cooking and Living Have Made an Alarming In crease in Iron Deficiency in Blood of American Men and Women WHY NUXATED IRON SO QUICKLY BUILDS UP WEAK, NERVOUS, RUN-DOWN FOLKS— Over 3,000,000 People Annually Taking It In This Country Alone To Increase Their Strength, Power, energy and Endurance. "Is your blood, starving for mant of iron? Iron is red blood food. If you were to go without eating until you became weak, thin and emaciated, you could not do a more serious harm to vourself than when you let your blood iitetallv starve for want of iron— iron that gives it strength and power to change food into living tissue," savs I)r. James Francis Sullivan, form eriy physician of Bellevue Hospital (Outdoor Dept.) New York and the Westchester County Hospital. "Modern methods of cooking and the rapid pace at which people of this country live has made such an alarm ing increase in iron deficiency in the blood of American men and women that I have often marveled at tHe large number of people who lack iron in the blood, and who never suspect the cause of their weak, nervous, run down state. Hack of iron in the blood not only makes a man a physical and mental weakling, nervous, irritable, easilv fatigued, but it utterly robs him of that virile force, that stamina and strength of will which are so i necessary to success and power in everv walk of life. It may also trans form a beautiful, sweet-tempered wo man into one who Is cross, nervous and irritable. I have strongly em phasized the great necessity of phy sicians making blood examinations of their weak, anaemic, run-down patients. Thousands of persons go on vear after year suffering from physical weakness and a highly ner vous condition due to lack of suffi cient iron in their red blood corpus cles without, ever realizing the real and true cause of their trouble. With out iron in your blood your food merely passes through the body, something like corn through an old mill with rollers so wide apart that the mill can't grind. "For want of iron you may he an old man at thirty, dull of intellect, poor in memory, nervous, irritable and all 'run-down,' while at fiO or 60 with plenty of iron in your blood you mav still be young In feeling, full of life, your whole being brimming over with vim and energy. "As proof of this take the case of Former United States Senator and Vice Presidential nominee Charles A. Towne. who at past 58 is still a veri table mountain of tireless energy. Senator Towne says: 'I have found Nuxated Iron of the greatest benefit as a tonic and regulative. Henceforth I shall not be without it. I am in a position to testify for the benefit of others to the remarkablo and Imme diate helpfulness of this remedy, and I unhesitatingly recommend N'uxated Iron to those who feel the need of renewed energy and the regularity of bodily functions.' "But in my opinion vou can't make strong, keen , forceful men and healthy rosy-cheeked women by feed ing them on metallic iron. The old forms of metallc Iron must go thru a digestive process to transform them Into organic Iron Nuxated Iron before they are ready to be taken up and assimilated by the hu man system. Notwithstanding all that has bfen said and written on this subject by well-known physicians, thousands of people still insist In dos ing themselves with metallic iron simply, T suppose, because It costs a few cents less. I strongly advise readers in all cases to get a physic ian's prescription for organic Iron— OCTOBER 22, 1913. GERMAN GUNS NO LONGER FIRE ON CITY OF DUNKIRK Allies Capture Big Cannon in King's Drive on Bel gian Coast London,. Oct. 22.—Allied forces which have swept the Germans out of Belgian Klandera, captured the big 12-inch cannon with which the Ger mans have been bombarding Dun kirk during the past year. The gun was undamaged, according to an of ficial statement issued at the war office. The statement reads: "The group of armies command ed by the King of Belgium has main tained its pressure along the whole front. In their hurried retreat be fore the Belgian army the Germans were forced to abandon all their coast defense guns of whioft a num ber were intact. The big 38-centl meter gun at Heagenboom which was fired up to the last minute on the city of Dunkirk, was also,cap tured undamaged. | ' "French detachments which cross ed the Lys have repulsed a violent enemy counterattack and succeeded in improving their bridgeheads cast of the river. "The second British army is on the bank of the Escaut from Ball leul to Helchin. In spite of enemy re sistance it has advanced more than : 1.600 meters between the Escaut and | the I.ys," SNIPER KILLS GENERAL London, Oct. 22.—-Major-General L. [ J. Lipsett, C. 8.. C. M. G.. recently commander of the Canadian Division j and a General Staff officer, has been killed He was shot by a German sniper while inspecting positions at 1 the front. The |_™ — HM "Zl'J | HOTEL MARTINIQUE I t Broadway, 32d St., New York One Block from Pennsylvania Station Equally Convenient for Amusements, Shopping or Buaineaa IS' Pleiaant Rooms, with Private Bath. $2.50 PER DaY _ „ *->7 Excellent Rooms, with Prints Dsth, facing street, southern exposure $3.00 PER DAY Also Attractive Rooms from SI.BO The Restaurant Prices Are Most Moderate ~ i NOTICE | I I Owing to the Influenza Epidemic The Board of Re- # ! vision of Taxes and Appeals have decided to postpone the J hearing of property owners from assessments made by the C City Assessor for the year 1919 until the following dates: ff 3rd and 4th Wards, Monday, November 11th. 1918. g sth and 6th Wards, Tuesday, November 12th, 1918. & 7th and Bth Wards, Wednesday, November 13th, 1918. 9th Ward, Thursday, November 14th, 1918. 9 10th Ward, Friday, November 15th, 1918. W 11th and 12th Wards, Monday, November 18th, 1918. g I ( 13th and 14th Wards, Tuesday, November 19th, 1918. By Order or Board of Revision of Taxes and Appeals, K | I DANIEL, U KEISTER, g ! i Office of the City Clerk, Harrlsburg. Pa.. October 16th? B 1918.'" & Nuxated Iron or if you don't want to go to this trouble, then purchase on ly Nuxated Iron in its or iginal packages and see that this particular name (Nuxated Iron) appears ■ on the package. If you have taken preparations such as Nux and Iron and other similar iron pro ducts and failed to get re sults, remember that such products are an entirely different thing from Nux ated Iron." In comment ing upon the value of Nuxated Iron as a means for creating red blood, strength and endurance, I>r. Ferdinand King, a New York Physician and Medical Author says: "Scarcely a - day goes by THK TIRED but that I NERVOUS see women HOUSE WIFE Whose on rp-I worn faces. dragging steps and generally weak, tired appearance show un mistakable Higns of that anaemic, run-down condi tion usually brought on by lack of iron in the blood. "There can be no strong, healthy. beautiful women without iron and inasmuch as refining process and mod ern cooking methods remove the Iron of Mother Earth from so many of our moat common foods this Iron deficiency should he sup plied by using some form of organic iron just as we use salt when our food has not enough salt. "Iron is ab -8 o 1 u t e 1 y necessary to enable your blood ' to cha nge food Into liv ing tis sue . Without It no mattfr how much or ______ ~ what THK EXHAUSTED >' ou eat Bt'SI.VKSS MAX I your food merely, passes through you without doing you good, and as a conse quence you become weak, pale and sickly-looking just like a plant try ing to grow In a soil deficient in iron. Pallor means anaemia. The skin of an anaemic woman Is pale, the flesh flabby. The memory fails, and often they become weak, nervous. Irrit able, despondent and melancholy. Give such a woman a short course of Nuxated Iron and she often quickly becomes an entirely different Indi vidual strong, healthy and rosy IRK IGNESEA STOMACH TROUBLE It Neutralises Stomach Acidity, Pre sents Food Fermentation, Sour, Gunny Stoiuacli and Acid Indigestion. Doubtless If you are a sufferer from ' indigestion, you have already tried pepsin, bismuth, soda, charcoal, drugs and various digestive aids and you know these things will not cure your trouble—in some cases do not even give relief. nut before giving up hope apd de ciding you are a chronic dyspept;.- just try the effect of a little bisura. Ed magnesia—not the ordinary conv mercinl carbonate, citrate, oxide off milk, but the pure bisurated mag nesia which you can obtain front practically any druggist in either powdered or tablet form. Take a teaspoonful of the powder or two compressed tablets with a little water after your next meal, and see what a difference this makes. It will instantly neutralize the dan gerous; harmful acid in the stomach which now causes your food to fer ment and sour, making gas, wind, flatulence, heartburn and the bloat ed or heavy, lumpy feeling that seems to follow most everything you eat. You will find that provided you take a little bisurated magnesia im mediately after a meal, you can eat almost anything and enjoy it with out any danger of pain or discom fort to follow and moreover, the con tinued use of the bisurated magnesia cannot injure the stomach in any way so long as there are any symptoms of acid indigestion. G. A. Gorgas. VH>LDS GG Head or chest— are best treated "externally"— /"£ Ajtw "T" v Vour Bod.vrfvra.rdL? wail NEW PRICES—3Oc. 60c. $1.20 cheeked. I have used Nuxat ed Iron widely In my own practice In inoat severe as gravated conditions and with unfailing results. I have In duced many other physicians to give It a trial, all of whom have given me most aurprlS- a Ing reports In regard to Its great power as a health and strength builder." Mnnnfneturers .Voter Nux ~' ated Iron which Is used by Ur. Sullivan and others with such surprising results, and which is pre scribed and recommended above br physicians, is not a secret remedy but one which is well known to druia gists every-whers. Unlike the oldet inorganic Iron products, it Is easilv assimilated, doss not injurs the tssth, make them black, nor upset the stomach. The manufacturers guar antee successful and entirely satis factory results to every purchaser or they will refund your money. It Is dispensed in this city by Croll Kel ler, G. A. Gorgas, J. Nelson Clark. Clark's Medicine Store and other druggists.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers