CONTEMPT OF THE AGES FOR KAISER IN HISTORY )Vorld's Annals Likely to Mark Him Most-Detested Figure of All Chronicles For His Outrages of Land and Sea William the Second, King of Prussia and German emperor, de feated in his quarter-century scheme to Teutonize the world, will A have the distinction of going down W In history as the most thoroughly detested man that ever lived, with possible exception of Judas Iscariot. His career may be divided into the two aspects suggested here. Pre vious to 1914 his entire life centered around one idea. It possessed him. It became fixed. Memoirs of men and women who met him, portraits and speeches of him all gave evi dence that the thought of mili tary domination was the_ supreme motive of his existence. Since 1914 that idea grow or lessened with the degree of military success gained fcv his troops. And since 1914 with the first atrocities in Belgium, the execution of Edith Cavell, the sink ing of the Lusltania, the crucifixion of Canadian and other allied sol diers, the unspeakable crimes against the people of northern France, against the Red Cross, the warfare of gas and flame and bombing expeditions against unfort ified towns—for all of which the peoples of the rest of the world have held the Kaiser directly responsible —combined to make the German emperor an object of execration. In the early days of the war the Kaiser was referred to as the iuc •eessor of Attila the Hun, and the German troops became known as the Huns. But as the war pro gressed thinking people began to feel that this was doing grave in justice to the ancient warrior who ravaged Gaul and Italy. His Divine Partnership Obsession To appreciate properly and to un derstand thoroughly the life of Wil liam the Second one must seek the key in his proclamation to the Ger man army when he ascended the •throne in 1888: "A firm invincible devotion to the "War Lord is the inheritance of the army, descending front father to son from generation to generation. Thus we are bound together I and my army. We were born for one another and we will hold inseparably to gether, whether God sends us days of peace or strife." In this statement the Kaiser fore shadowed every action of his for the next thirty years. Every speech ho made, every quotation from his pen or tongue contained any one or all of these elements: "I," "Gott" and the army. Seven years later on the anniver sary of Sedan, he spoke as follows: "The more people fall back on catchwords and petty considerations, the more firmly and surely do I reckon on the fact that my army— be it at home or abroad—will stand ready to obey my wishes and my signal." Later came the dream of a great navy, another instrument for "con quering the world. What the Ger man navy, as he conceived it, has done in this war, aside from raids on defenseless towns tn the north of England, has been unimportant. What the German submarines did is another story, a - story that reached its climax when the United States entered the war partly because of these very submarines. McgloinaiUn His Characteristic • These are the chief characteris Millions Use It For Colds Because "Pape's Cold Compound" relieves cold or grippe misery in a few hours—Really wonderful! Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing and snuffing! A dose of "Pape's Cold Compound" taken every two hours until three doses are taken will end grippe misery and break up a severe cold either in the head, chest, body or limbs. li promptly opens clogged-up nos. trils and air passages; stops nasty discharge or nose running; relieves Perfect Health Is Yours If the Blood Is Kept Pure Almost Every Human Ailment Is Directly Traceable to Im purities in the Blood. You cannot overestimate the im portance of keeping the blood free of impurities. When you realize that the heart is constantly pumping this vifal fluid to all parts of the body, you can easily see that any impurity in the blood will cause serious com. plications. Any slight disorder or Impurity thnt creeps into tho blood is a source of danger, for every vital organ of the body depends upon the blood supply to properly perform Its functions. Many painful and dangerous dis eases are the direct result of a bad condition of the blood. Among the NOW FREE FROM RHEUMATISM BLISS NATIVE HERB TABLETS HEARTILY RECOMMENDED Don't neglect the care of your system, and good health will add many happy hours to your exist 'ence. Banish headaches, Indi gestion, constipation and rheu matism by the regular use of 31iss Native Herb Tablets. They are wonderfully efficient in purifying the blood, cleansing the kidneys and toning up the system. For thirty years they have been recognized as the standard herb remedy. They contain nothing of a harmful na ture, 'consisting only of herbs, roots and barks. Bliss Native Herb Tablets are tlio favorite household remedy In thousands of homes and have maintained their supremacy by the filial Ity of the ingredients Used. Mrs. S. C. Walker, Hay's, N. C., suffered many years as a re sult - of stomach catarrh and MONDAY EVENING, tics of the Kaiser to serve as a back ground: his egotism, his "me" and "Gott" theology, his professed love for his army and navy. Concerning his early life, little need be said. He was born January 27, 1859, in Berlin. When his father Frederick, died, William II ascended the throne June 15, 1888. One of the first acts of the new emperor was to demand the resigna tion of Chancellor Bismarck and so free himself from the man who had dominated the reign of the first Wil liam. The Iron Chancellor never was replaced, except by a succession of figureheads. The Kaiser thence forth was the ruler, and the chan cellors and the Reichstag were pup pets. When William accepted the resignation of his grandfather's pilot, he intimated that the llohenzollcrns weer ordained of God. Thus came the creation of that startling ana chronism of the twentieth century, the "divine right of kings," which most of the rest of the world had discarded a century before. Turned Children to War Prior to 1914 his reign will be remembered chiefly for his encour agement of education, his attempts to solve the labor problem, and the establishment of a socialized autocracy. In the first of these he was successful in imposing on the fising generation his ideus of mili tary domination. In the second he was unsuccessful, for despite his helping the workmen he turned them into Socialists who clamored for reforms, particulary in represen tation in the Reichstag, and the free people of the world doomed the third. But it is with the Kaiser's career since 1914 that the world is inter ested especially. In the first few months of the war he was quite in conspicuous. He made a few speeches to his army, made prepa rations for his hoped-for triumphal entry into Paris but. aside from these kept to the rear. With his six sons he was shielded from harm. When every household in the German em pire had one or more of its members killed or wounded, the imperial fam ily suffered nothing. To Americans especially, who re membered the gracious sympathy of Lincoln as evidenced in the Bixby letter, the attitude of the kaiser to ward the bereaved German families always came as a shock. One ex ample will suffice. "Consolation" of Bombast When the Count von Boon, a Ger man nobleman, had lost his fifth son in the war the kaiser sent the fol lowing telegram to him: "I think of the deep sorrow that had previously fallen on you by the death of your wife and also of your four sons fallen in battle, and ex press my warmest sympathy in this new loss to you and your son's wid ow. May your pain be soothed by the certainty that the German peo ple are proud of the fathers and sons who, to the honor of their ra mous names, willingly sacrifice their lives for the fatherland. May God stand by you with His consolation." Contrasted with this are the words of Lincoln in the familiar letter that a critic has likened to a calm monu ment of grief. In Lincoln's words of condolence were genuine sorrow: in the kaiser's, the-expression of grati- sick headache, dullness, feverishness, sore throat, sneezing, soreness and stiffness "Pape's Cold Compound" is the uvickest. surest relief known and cost>- only a few cents at drug stores. It acts without assistance, tastes nice, and causes no Inconvenience. Don't accept a substitute. Insist on "Pape's"—nothing else. most serious are Rheumatism, with its torturing pains; Catarrh, often a forerunner of dread consumption; Scrofula, Eczema. Tetter, Erysipelas and other disfiguring skin diseases: Malaria, which makes the strongest men helpless, and many other dis eases are the direct result of impure blood. You can easily avoid all of these diseases, and rid the system of them, by the use of S. S. S., the wonderful blood remedy that has been in con stant use for mote than fifty years. S. S. S. cleanses the blood thor oughly, and routs every vestige of Impurity. It is sold by druggists everywhere. Kor valuable literature and med ical advice absolutely free, write to. day to the Medical Dept., Swift Specific Company, 437 Swift Labora tory. Atlanta. Ga. rheumatism. She started taking Bliss Native Herb Tablets. She writes that she is now "free from rheumatism and the dis tressing stomach catarrh that not only impaicrd my health, but created a bad breath. I can not say enough in favor of Bliss Native Herb Tablets and I heart ily recommend theni to all who suffer as I have done." Bliss Native Herb are put up in a yellow box containing 200 tablets, enough for six months. The genuine have the photograph of Alonzo O. Bliss stamped with the trade mark. Price, sl. In any f/R) ense where Bliss Native xS' Herb Tablets fail to fulfill all that Is claimed for them, (money will be promptly refunded, l.ook for our money-back guarantee on every box. Sold by leading druggists and agents everywhere. DON'T FAIL THEM Our fighters haven't failed you. Don't fall them! When peace comes, more than ever they will need the entertainment) nnd edu cational work of these- seven or ganizations. A. H. Dinsmore act! Ij cam paign director of the sixCi Penn sylvania district to-day issued the following statement. "In this supreme moment of human history, when we are praising God for leading Allied forces on to righteous victory, I am thinking of two brothers who haye been fighting for democracy. They have fought well, as have all of our brave soldiers. God knows that we at home ahe longing for their safe return, but they will not be home to-morrow. It may tnke two years for demobilization. The work of the seven welfare organizations co-operating in United War Work Campaign will be more than necessary for the boys between this day of glory and that happy day of home coming. Let us urge the good people of our district to give double their quotas in this cam paign. Let us make it a thank offering to Almighty God and an expression of gratitude to Ameri can soldiers here and over ther" tudc to those who gave their lives for his personal ambition. But, although the kaiser was not conspicuous in the field and the more prominent German personages were the Crown Prince, Hindenburg and Ludendorff, the kaiser always was thought of as the instigator of unspeakable atrocities. In the pop ular mind he was the incarnation of an evil spirit, a spirit as withered as his arm and as difficult to conceal from the world. A word from him would have ended the blood lust of his Von Bissings and their troops. After a long series of reported atrocities, the crimes of the German soldiers in Belgium reached a high point with the execution of Miss Cavell, who was accused of aiding Allied soldiers to escape. Ddspite the efforts of the American minister. Brand Whitlock, in her behalf, she was put to death. Hun Viciousncss Unprintable All the details of the terrible outr rages in that country, whose neutral ity the kaiser violated in the first week of the war, never can be print ed. The Bryce Commission summar ized some of them: The deliberate and systematic massacres of the civil population: the murder of innocent men, women and children; the out raging of women; degenerate mutilations of living and dead; the looting of . private property, arson, befoulment, insensate vandalism and the employment of women and chil dren as shields for advancing Ger man military forces. For these the people held the kaiser responsible. To Americans the sinking of the ' Lusituniu was the crowning, blood- I chilling event of the war. This oc- I curred, if anything may be said to | have "occurred" that was so deliber ately intended, May 7, 1915. That I day 1,198 persons, of whom 124 were Americans, were murdered by the German sea monsters. The events that followed that massacre, the sinking of countless neutrals, the killing of passengers and crews flee ing in the lifeboats, culminating Anally in the declaration of a state of war with Germany, are known too well to need repetition now. For these the kaiser was held responsible for he was Jhe_ only responsible member of the German government. The bombing of London, the sub marine raids even on the Atlantic coast, futile but actuated by the same small malice thut caused the sinking of the Lusituniu, were add ed counts in the indictment against William the Murderer. l*ro|Higanda Increased Contempt There came revelations, too, of propaganda activities in the United States, the blowing up of munitions factories in many parts of the tcoun try, the work of Boy-Kd and his co- [ conspirators, and even of Von Bern storff, ambassador. All these had their effect in arousing resentment against the kaiser. With it all, however, the German emperor kept up his outward show of bravado. His speeches in the last few months were just as bombastic : as ever. In September he spoke to his "dear friends," the workers at Krupp's and, with characteristic hypocrisy, maintained thut every one in the remotest corner of the Ger man empire knew that he had left no stone unturned to shorten the war as far as possible. The kaiser con fessed, however, that he had found murmurings of dissatisfaction here and there. This was a remarkable statement —for him. But the old tire, the enthusiasm of the coronation proclamation of 1888 flashed through a statement for the ! army and navy in October. He Was Proud of Belgium's Slackers "The eyes of those at home rest with pride and admiration," William wrote, "on the deeds of the army and navy. I express to you the thanks of myself and the fatherland. • • The hour is grave, but, trusting in your strength and in God's gracious help, we feel ourselves to be strong enough to defend our beloved fath erland." The time for a just estimate of the kaiser will not come for many a year, in the belief of historians to day. A great deal of sorrow and an guish will have to be forgotten. But the verdict of the future is not like ly to be much kinder than that of the present. People to-day will look on the kaiser as a man who threw away the lives of his subjects to sat isfy a personal ambition. To Plan For United War Work at Open Meeting A public meeting has been called for this evening at 8 o'clock in the Pennsylvania Railroad Y. M. C. A. by D. W. Horning, chairman of the community council of the United War Work campaign, at which a committee will be selected to manage the drive for this district. Announce ment was made yesterday by Carl Dean, charman of the West Shore towns drive, that Cumberland county had severed connections with the West Shore towns. The latter are in the Harrisburg district. POLICE HOLD MEETING A good, old "hang-together" monthly meeting, postponed because of the influenza ban, was held last night by the Fraternal Order of Po lice in the Cumeron building, which had for its keynote aims of greater co-operation for the better efficiency of the entire department and in- I stallation of a system looking to ward an adjustment of all differ ences arising between officials and patrolmen. ALLEN WALKER JOINS STAFF OF GUARANTY TRUST CO. Allen Walker, who has been the New York manager for the United Stntes Chamber of Commerce since j the organization of that body in 1913, has Joined the Guaranty Trust I Company of New York, and will have | charge of the foreign trade service. HARMSBT7HO tdSffe TELEGRAPH MANY BUSINESS MEN TO ATTEND CHAMBER LUNCH Noted War Workers to Tell of War Conditions in Europe A large number of the Harrisburg , Chamber of Commerce members I have expressed their intention of at -1 tending the luncheon meeting of the j Chamber in the Hoard of Trade at | noon to-morrow, when Edward W. j Bok, editor of the Ladies' Home j Journal, and Ethan T. Colton, inter national secretary in Russia for the ! Young Men's Christian Association, j make their scheduled addresses. . Mr. Bok has just returned from | the western front, where he went on i an official mission. He spent several | months in the actual theater of war, I and has a big live story to tell of the | American activities "over there." | Ho is widely known as editor-in i chief of the Ladies' Home Journal. | His reputation is known to many In ! Harrisburg, and Warren R. Jackson, secretary of the Chamber of Com merce. is certain that he will prove a big drawing card. Good Speakers Mr. Colton served for two years as international secretary of the Y. M. C. A. in Russia. He has just returned from the war and anarchy-torn country, where he had complete charge of tfce Y. M. C. A. during the Bosheviki uprising and overthrow of the Romonoff dynasty. As director in charge of more than one hundred secretaries stationed in all parts of Russia, ho had an unusual oppor tunity to secure intimate, first hand knowledge of the real internal con dition. The Russian situation pre sents orie of the most difficult prob lems resulting from the world war and no mqn in the United States to day is better qualified to discuss this subject with authority, Mr. Jackson says. The speeches of Mr. Bok and Mr. Colton will have a particular signi ficance at this time, as they are thor oughly conversant with the work of the seven war relief organizations for which SIBO,OOO is being raised by the United War Work Committee in Harrisburg this week. They were furnished as speakers for the Cham ber of Commerce luncheon through the courtesy of the campaign com mittee of the United War Work Fund. Only as many covers aro laid as | there are phone reservations before 11 o'clock to-morrow morning, and the members and their friends have been urged to get their reservations in as early as possible. Find Body of Painter Hanging to Water Pipe Eldridge E. Dean, a painter, living at 1528 Walnut street, killed him self by hanging in the cellar of his home Saturday night. His body was found suspended from a water pipe by a member of the family. When cut down, life was not yet extinct, but Dean died while on his way to the Harrisburg Hospital in an am bulance. The family could give no reason for the suicide. Dean had a wife, one' son and a daughter. Coroner Eckinger, nfter his inquest into Dean's death yesterday attributed it to hanging. Despondency is said to have been the motive for the deed. KEEP LOOKING YOUNG It's Easy—lf You Know Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets The secret of keeping young is to feel young—to do this you must watch your | liver and bowels—there'snoneedof hav ing a sallow complexion dark rings under your eyes pimples a bilious look in your face—dull eyes with no sparkle. Your doctorwill tell you ninety percent of all sickness comes from in* active bowels and liver. • Dr. Edwards, a well-known physician in Ohio, perfected a vegetable com- j pound mixed with olive oil to act on the liver and bowels, which he gave to his patients for years. , Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the sub- Etitute for calomel, are gentle in their action yet always effective. They bring about that exuberance of spirit, that natural buoyancy which should be en- 1 joyed byeveryone,bytoning up the liver I and clearing the system of impurities. ] You will know Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets by their olive color. 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. THE SORE THROAT OF SPANISH INFLUENZA One of the frequent complica tions of Spanish Influenza is sore throat. It is important the sore throat be given prompt attention and relieved. The throat is the gateway to the body. The air we breathe, the food we eat and the water we drink all pass through it. It is the great breeding ground for germs and this is especially true when it Is sore or, inflamed. If it is kept clean, dis ease germs have small chance to propagate and do their deadly work. Authorities agree Spanish Influ enza is a germ disease and that pre ventive measures should be taken. They advise the use of an effective gargle to keep the throat clean and healthy. For this purpose Tonsiline, The National Sore Throat Remedy, is ideal. It is also used as a spray and taken pure. The wonderful Increase ln the sale of Tonsiline during the last few weeks shows that many thousands of families are making extra use of Tonsiline during this epidemic to quickly relieve the often accom panying sore throat and as a pre? ventive measure. Don't wait until Jou have influ enza and sore throats in the house but get yo"r bottle of Tonsiline from your druggist now for use as a pre ventive gargle and also to be ready to relieve sore throat upon Its fiut appearance. For more than 25 years the sale of Tonsiline has stcndlly and rap- Idly Increased. The favor shown It by American people gives it the right to the title, The National Sore Throat Remedy. Look For The GIRAFFE Happy Crowd Follows Commonwealth Band in I Impromptu Walk-Around One of the happiest crowds in the city gathered with the Common-1 wealth Band and paraded over the I OPENS AT 9 A. M.—CLOSES AT 5:30 P. I More Specials To The Front Tomorrow, Tuesday | II Hundreds of wonderful special items that we didn't! JJ have room to advertise on the opening day of the sale last week will W be brought forward tomorrow, Tuesday, and priced at irresistible prices. Read [M j|| this list as examples but come to the store and see the counters full of other big specials. I $Eh ! 3600 Prs. Hosieryl^l Til I f T-k • O I rp 1 White eiderdown and corduroy hi i lln a Bis Sale 1 uesaay Kj | bound and silk cord. hi / / YwA i Accumulated during the past four months from shipments iinnfmau' second Floor |jy v v I P urc^ way back, months ago, at less than the present n Tuesdav ONLY JSj 8 mar ket values. 8 , 41 fijl I ul wl I At Largest Savings! £ mSi" Gowns 1= i IIS! •iJf I \VI I B Muslin Gowns, extra quality of Ist f/rf f{Y\ 8 _ 1 I Z~I I muslin, high neck, long sleeves, Kl| m fjj j) NX | Lot No. 1 Lot No. 4 I , ft dered trlmmcd - ln Bizes 16 11 J/ fta U M ■ • • i I Kiinfmnn'H Second Floor j^l Iffl Give generously to the I | Tuesday ONLY Sj njl United War Fund, 8 Black Cotton Hose double Ladles' Black Cotton 8 Lot Of Ladies' At Q W LF* because the boys Will B sole and heel, slight im- Hosiery, with slight itnper- B _ . K)1 jf| need more care and | perfections fections. In the sale at | Brassieres N|| g home comforts than g 2Pr 25c I mSSft. SSEStJSZ ! p|]| ever! Seven drives in j] ■■■ 1 | 36 to 40. A wonderful special [[ljJ lij one. Give as much as 1 | Va ' U Knuf...n..-s First Floor 0 s e °para"° U drivis- to ar,d I Lot No. 2 Lot No. 5 | Tuesday ONLY If 1 o£er Ha The Top! I Hosiery Hosiery cZici'L, B9c| l!g B Black Burson Hose, seam Ladies Black Silk thread Ladies' Coutil Corsets, well ?§£ t A/ - less, white feet, double sole Hose, double sole and heel, H boned, low bust, four supporters, I'kll IM Y*)s\ . s-/ S/II and heel. garter top. B a ll sizes 19 to 30. >l ""j | v 1 O t H I Kaufman'. First Floor 1 8 -► OOC <- - I.AO <*- J I Tuesday QNLY M HI Tuesday ONLY K ; —z 7 ~ I One Lot Of QQ_ L b One Lot Of 9.95 I Lot No. 3 Lot No. 6 I Silk Gloves 9oC fq M Infants' Coats *• = £ 44n QItIOSWrV I | 1 " -d c T , | noswry 11 y i 1 ffissi.isssst.bis'ai.J" 1 " I k.,..,.-is. .anwreiwii I hj S* Kaufmna'n Second Floor B black and white, double length, lisle top in black I '■, \/ c-rr-flv |f| 1 sole and heel. Not all sizes white and colors. ■ I liesday VJINL.I |Sj 1 Tuesday ONLY | I 7 /> ■*— -*>- 74c 1 Laii "' Silk AQ _ S 1 One Lot 01 t)Q r | *"< - ' || windßor Ties 4oC | W laßMßFtfWC.jroEigfcrt* ,MVUb oils l * Crepe de Chine Windsor Ties. I I Tuesday ONLY | Caps ' J TUESDAY SPECIALS MEAN BIG SAVINGS & ( M , , v,V ?ik Cans and C Fleeced Materials for Night Dresses % Organdie Collars, large range fill t"t Xxtrn nuality Bo J Outing Finn- 30 - In. Wide Flannelettes, White Shaker J styles. All new and nifty in [[J white corduroy extra qua K nels. all colors. Heavy Outing in all colors, Flannel, extra K a wide variety of styles. Buy s§i Jill sure w..nri vioor flights and Flannel, extra beautiful pat- good these at this low price. fitil fU Ki.ntn.nn m Se. and loor. K a 21 Jn g oo d stripe terns for ki- At the small# Knufn.an'a First Floor 111 . , wide. Yard, patterns. Yd., inonos. Yd., prices of, yd.. B ■——— M Tuesday ONLY J 42 c 42c 29c, ?9c 17c, 33cC Tuesday ONLY m Ladies' Flannelette 4 ) .69 # Curtains and Curtain Material Specials £ Wnmen'* Cnttnn f 1Q nil UT* • A % Eeru Curtain . White, Ecru |Co hired Fancy i Scrim Cur- " UntKli 8 LUUUII L•1 v/ 111 St / aiamas / Scrim. SB In. and Cream Scrim, for tains. In White# I T 1 M jfjl , Flannelette %wi de; good Strln, for overdrapes and and ecru. Pair, ft UllCierWear Si H Pajamas in and blue stripes 1 I *' nS ' | Cotton Ribbed Vests and Pants. HJ Si V neck. Sizes 38 to 18. A remark- B low price, tel., aooiwa>s. ia., iaia | $2 .03 nnd \ fleece lined, high neck, long §3 111 able value. J jyr ZOC I 4oC $3.1)3 M sleeves, ankle length. RSI ' M Knuiman*N Second Floor r I-———--——--——-——— | Room-Size Rag Rugs, in Good, Heavy Quality Rj (Gpf* Tuesday ONLY C 6x9 size Bxlosize 9x12 size One Lot Of HQ I e - 95 u Notions and ju Children's Children 8 Sweaters, colors aro m & . white, cardinal, brown and Cop- a r3PS. I A p-nod list of tHe most rill enhagen; sizes 2to 6 years. . * 18x36-lnch 24x48-lnch 27x54-lnch i 30x60-inch i 32x72-lnch ®- KT 11 1 Iviiufniim'K Second Floor m size; each, .size; each, size; each, | size; size; each, W needed articles at INOVem- J n\n V % 48c 98c $1.19 I $1.39 I $1.69 I ber Underselling Demon- I™l m- Tuesday ONLY f Cocoa Door Mats i I f ation P rices tor Tues ' 1 Mi ccat' Cnttnn $"7 € Cocoa Door Mats. In two | Linoleums for the kitchen. W a Y' . Ijl ,t . q"?. n M/C F good sizes: well made and , a^^xceXtlon' i MftSOll's Shoe Polish 9c Si Union Suits I extra SpeciaL I ffi i $1.49 and $1.75 69c, 98c pf "h B an jb j| fr* - ■ assorted sizes. I Advance Notice For Eve | i Uur Great Blanket bale s |U ———— Pins, 2 Packs, 5c & • iS, W W -m- Steel Pins, regular size. [||| K 1 g g 11/ f . g Special, 2 packs for 5e on Si; 1 btarts on Wednesday 1 ' T ____________________ > Safety Pins, assorted sizes. IS] • Special, 3 cards for J3c. 3000 Pairs of High Grade Blankets Nail Brushes, 5c b lj Gathered together for this Tremendous Sale s P X H ,ai. U I Bought A Year Ago and Just Recently Arrived . D D^"I r?Dr\ e s!^feid 1 s. 0 in | Purchased at Prices way under Today's Market Knitting Yarn, 95c *1 Will Be Sold at 50 to 75 per cent Savings For You I i mki' 8t color;" regular-sized I ij Comprising More Blankets Than Ever Went Into One Sale s oa p, 6 Cakes, 27c | In One Single Department Event In Harrisburg 6 c H „ a k rd b t lfc. Boap .- Bpeclal | bi The Values Will Create a Furore —Read Tomorrow's Paper Silk, Spool, 5c ' Beldtng's Spool Silk, assort- III! b Wednesday Is The Day!— Wednesday—Blankets!— Values! ji i streets during the morning. The band I was out of its own accord to cele- j I brate and the leader said that the | j whole demonstration was being given by the men to show their patriotic spirit. Thousands fell in line back of the band, costumed in khaki uni forms. Practically everyone carried I a flag and joined in patriotic songs I and cheers. The band stopped for a NOVEMBER 11', 1918. few minutes ln front of the Tele graph building and then played the "Star Spangled Banner" in the pres ence of a throng of nlmost two thou sand. At the close of the song long cheers were given and then the crowds resumed s their Impromptu pa rade. followed by automobiles and i trucks filled with scores of persons, .' all cheering wildly. dSgk Gray Hair A preparation for restoring natural color to irajftr faded hair, for removing dandruff and as ilno la not a dye. Generous sized bottles at all lealers. ready to uso. Phllo Hay Co.. Newark. N. J. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers