4 YANKS FIRE LAST SHOT AND THEN GO CALMLYTO LUNCH Scenes of Rejoicing Along the American Front When the Cease Firing Word Comes With the American Army on the Sedan Front. Nov. 12.—After the final salvos at 11 o'clock yesterday from thousands of guns along the French front, the Americans went calmly to lunch. The Germans hurled a few shells into Verdun just before 11 o'clock. On the entire American front from the Moselle to-the region of Sedan there was artillery activity in the morning, all the batteries preparing for the final salvos. At many batteries the artillerists joined hands, forming a long line as the lanyard of the final shot. There were a few seconds of silence as the shells shot through the heavy mist. Then the gunners cheered. Flags Are liaised American flags were raised by the soldiers over their dugouts and guns and at the various headquarters. Northeast of Verdun the Ameri can Infantry besart to advance at 9 o'clock after artillery preparation in the direction of Ornes. The German artillery responded 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 ugly-looking, people will surely take you to be many years older. When your hair becomes faded, dry, streaked and scraggly. when it falls out badly and new hair cannot grow, the roots should be immedi ately vitalized and properly nour ished. To do this quickly, safely 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 drug and toilet counters. It's guaranteed to abolish dan druff—stop scalp itch and falling hair and promote a new growth or money refunded. It's in great de-; mand by discriminating women be cause it makes the hair so soft, lus 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 fumed —an antiseptic liquid free from dangerous ingredients and guaranteed not to color the hair or 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 GRANDMATABOUT VEGETABLE TEA FOR CONSTIPATION Diver and Bowel remedies come arid go t>ut Dr. Carter's K. and B. Tea, which vour grandmother knew all about, is now more popular than ever. Many families have used this tea for years, 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 It's a splendid drink for constipa tion. acts surfciy 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 al! who drink Dr. Carter's K. and B. Tea. and don't forget that it's simply fine for children. j T▼TT Te ▼ T> T ~V ■VTTTT*-vv-V-V~ I ► Julius Scott and Ernest Giusti j r * • i i ► announce < I' . Mi *■ that they have again taken < over the management of the ► AT \T A Hotel and ; )► a* A-rf Vl\ Restaurant 1 i I I► 4 I ► Our friends will recall that we formerly had ! | ► charge of the Alva, but during the past six months < j ! y were located at the Court Dairy Lunch. < ! ► < ! * Now, however, we have permanently lpcated < * again at the old stand—THE ALVA—where we < K will be pleased to welcome our many friends. < u Julius Scott and Ernest Giusti ;j !► A The ■■■■■■l T lIWIIM Taylor | | HOTEL MARTINIQUE L t Broadway, 32d St., New York One Block from Pennaylvania Station Equally Convenient for Amaaomonta, Shopping or Busineaa 157 Pleaaant Rooma, with Private Bath, $2.50 PER DaY 237 Excellent Rooma, with Private Bath, facing atreet, southern expoaure $3.00 PER DAY Also Attractive Rooma from SI.BO Tie Raatauraat Price. Are Moat Moderate SPECIALISTS IX EACH DEPARTMENT SCHOOL OF COMMERCE! Harrisburg's Leading and Accredited Business College I TROUP nun.DIXG 15 S. MARKET SQUARE ■ Bell 485 Day and Night School Dial 4393 Wrttc, Phone or Call Send for Catalog TUESDAY EVENING. frosty, but the maehlne-giui resist ance was stubborn. Nevertheless the Amorlcnns made progress. The Atuerlcuns had received orders to hold the posts reached by 11 o'clock and to those points they begun to : dig In. marking tho ndvunced posi tions of the American line when hos , tilltles ceased. Along tho American front the elev • enth hour was like awaiting the ar rival of a new year. The gunners 'continued to Are, counting.the shells as the time ap proached. The Infantry were ad vancing. glancing at their watches. Tho men hdlding at other places organised their positions to make themselves more secure. Then the individual groups un ] furled the Stars and Stripes, shook ! hands and cheered. Soon afterward 1 they were preparing for luncheon. All the boyg w?re hungry, as they had breakfastedVarly in anticipation of what they considered the greatest day in American history. Cotton Prices Drop $lO a Bale; Traders Unable to Understand Recession By Associated Press Now York. Nov. 12.—Cotton drop i ped ten 'dollars a tale m the market here to-day. Traders seemed tin ! able to interpret the tJeace situation i in its relation to the .staple. The re ' cession of 200 points for the Janu ; ary option was the maximum move ment permitted by a rule adopted on October 5 by the board of managers of the Cotton Exchange designed to prevent excessive fluctuations dur j ing any one day's trading. Riverside Water System to Be Taken by City Commissioner S. F. Hassler was ' authorized by Council to-day to negoliate w'ith the Dauphin Con solidated Water Company to arrange for the purchase of the system in the Fourteenth ward, which is at pres -1 ent controlled by that organiza tion. > Commissioner Hassler reported to the other members of Council that lie had received a proposal from of ficials of the company who had I agreed to sell the mains, tire hy drants and other equipment in the ward for J 15.000. He did not com ment on the price other than to announce that it was ouch lower than the first estimate submitted by j the company. Minister Asks Court to Reintate Him in Charge Claiming that he had been dis missed as pastor of the Saint Xich ' olas Servian Orthodox Church, Steel ton. without being giv*n proper no tice and hearing as provided in the rules of the church. Rev. George Pop ovlch has asked the court to grant an injunction against the trustees to compel them to reinstate hint and dismiss the successor elected as pas tor. The case will be heard Satur day. The Rev. Dusan Trhubovic was elected as the successor of the Rev. Mr. Popovich. he asserts. Fat That Shows Soon Disappears Prominent fat that domes and stays I where it is not needed is a burden; a hindrance to activity, a curb upon pleasure. T oil can take ofT inc lai I whre it shows by taking after eaca meal and at bedtime, one Marniola ! Prescription Tablet. These little tab ! lets are as effective and harmless as I tho famous prescription front which they take their name. Buy and try a ca=e to-dav. Your druggist sells them at 75 cents or if you prefer you may write direct to the Marmola Co.. Woodward Ave.. Detroit. Mi n. 4 You can thus say good-bye to dieting. f*rci6e and fat.—Advertisement. WAR-TORN LANDS NEED FOOD, SAYS CALL Russia Faces Starvation; Ylil lions Must Be Fed From American Fields Washington, Nov. 2.—The nation's obligatio nand opportunity to serve stricken humanity in war torn Europe by" helping to provide sus tenance until the next harvest will demand , further sacrifice® of the American people. Food Administra tor Hoover declared to-day in an address at a conference here of state food administrators. Russia Faces Starvation Conditions of famine exist in Europe. Mr. Hoover said, that will be "belond our powers to remedy" even with the carrying out of the I plan to ship from America twenty million tons of foodstuffs during the next year. In northern Russia alone he declared, there are forty million people who have but little chance of obtaining food this winter. Mil lions of others throughout Europe, he said, who can be reached must be fed. "This being the new world situa tion. created by the collapse of the war," Mr. Hoover continued, "the prime changes in our polcies on to day's outlook can be summarized: Conservation Must Continue "That we may now advantageous ly abandon the use of substitutes In our wheat bread; that we will still require economy and elimnation of waste in its consumption; that for the present we need onservation in butter and condensed milk; that ulti mately we must extend this to all the fats. "We can contemplate, at the most, maintaining fully three pounds per month of sugar per person of house hold sugar and on the present out look and we can by the availability of Java sugars to Europe begin at once to relax more restraints on sugar pending some change in Eu ropean policies. Spectre of Famine Haunts "There is one policy which cannot change, and that is the vital neces realize that the spectre of famine abroad now haunts the abundance of our table at home. "We have now to consider a new world situation in food. We have to frankly to survey Europe. A Eu rope of which a large part is either in ruins or in social conflagration; a Europe with degenerated soils and depleted herds; a Europe with the whole of its population on rations or varying degrees of starvation and large numbers who have been un der the German heel actually starv ing." BOLSHEVIK RULE HARMS RUSSIA [Continued from First I'agc.] authority of government in the face of such a desperate winter as now approaches; a winter that 100,000,- 000. people face with little food and starvation at their elbow." No Traitors The Russian people were not traitors to the Allied cause, XJr. Col ton said. They began the war with all but two of their ports of entry closed and means of transportation from the outside limited to fcvo sin gle-track railroads, one from Arch angle, closed six months in the j'ear, and another 6,000 miles long from Vladivostok. Three men to one rifle was the proportion of arms to the soldiers, he said, and 5,000,000 is the manpower low to Russia as the re sult of the war. The Bolshevtki rob blind men and cripples, said Mr. Colton. He cited one case of a blind man who lives off the proceeds of a small piece of. land he owned who was called be fore the Bolshevik council and de prived of his little acreage which went to some covetous citiien for nothing, because he could work it. Nobody may own any land unless he can work it. Faetrles and all man ner of industries were turned over to the workmen with the result that nobody was in charge, nobody was able to buy raw material, nobody had money for wages, there "was no market for the few goods that were turned out. The workmen were far worse off than they were before and they soon left the factories, thou sands of which are idle or in ruins aU over the land, and the people are starving, not only for lack of money to buy food, but because each peas ant, being unable to sell his wheat, raised only enough for his own im mediate family. "The majority of the people are densely ignorant: 85 per cent, can't reafl or write; they are intensely de sirous of freedom, but they don't know how to exercise it." 'They look to America as their guiding star and hope we will do something to place their government on a par with ours. The Bolshevik government Is I not the government of the masses, and it is nearing its end. Mr. Colton brought out of Russia a letter to the wife of a Bolshevik leader who bade her good-by, saying that they had staked all on a desperate* idea re pugnant to the masses of the people, that their failure is in sight and that when they go down all the leaders will lose their lives. Mr. Colton said that America must go to the aid of Russia. American troops in Russia must soon be in creased. he said, becaluse the Rus sians want American soldiers to ac company those of other nations com ing in for the reason that from the Americans they are always sure of a "square deal." •"** Edward W. Bolt Speaks Edward W. Bok, editor of the Ladies' Home Journal, who has been on the French front, opened his dis course with an anecdote concerning the passage overseas of an im mense American armada of Ameri can troops, starting from . .ew York. "In front of us," he said, "rose a great ball of Are, on the right were rows of destroyers on the left were rows of destroyers. In front was a battleship and behind was a battle ship. Between were three large col umns of transports. Those men on those transports, he said, were Jews, Protqptapts and Catholics, to the folks back home. But to us on board they were ull Americans—set out to prove to the world the power of right over might. Speaking of the unity of all creeds overseas, he told how in a Y hut one day the secretary asked the Catholic priest to referee a bout. The priest thought that as one of the boxers was a Catholic he would be preju diced, so he went outside and got a referee. He was the Rabbi, and a better referee never refereed a bout," said Mr. Bok. Mr. Bok declared that as chairman of the United War Work campaign, he is a Jaw, a Catholic and a Prot estant. "I am even a Salvation Army lassie," he said. He declared that the only func HXRfUBBURG fiWWV TELEGKXPH tion Is a "beautiful rivalry." The K. of C.. the V. M. C. A., the Jew ish Welfare Board—all arc trying to do their utmost for tho boys. President Patterson Presides President Andrew 8., Patterson presided and introduced the speak ers. At the head of the table wero officers of the chamber and large numbers of those engaged In the United War Work campaign. POST-WAR NEWS OFF THE WIRES l.eadoM —The population of Mons yesterday paraded the streets cheer ing madly their British deliverers. With the British Army la Belgian —At 11 o'clock yesterday morning the last big gun crashed its challenge and a great ooerpowerlng quiet fol lowed. With the American Army on the Meuse and Moselle —Flags have ap peared like magic over the shell-torn buildings of Verdun. French and American colors fly side by side. Panama —President I'orras, in an address last nlghL emphasised the magnanimity of the Allied nations In preparing to feed the people of Ger many. He said the common victory means more to Latin-America, per haps, than to even those who took a more active part in the struggle. Philadelphia ln a resolution adopted by the Methodist Board of Home Missions to-day, President Wil son Is called upon to appoint a spe cial day of prayer and thanksgiving. Under a plan endorsed by the board of bishops the church will expend 36.000,000 on reconstruction during 1913. Part of Spnla, Trinidad. The American steamer William H. Murphy, of 932 tons gross, while dis charging a cargo of lumber from Texas, took Are last night. The ves sel and the major portion of the cargo was destroyed. The origin of the tire apparently was accidental. 6 * fjf|l V ... and at the Medical Officers' .X. f| : I- ''" ' • i • • ' ' .... " ' 1 111 ' ' ' - 1 MEN MORE THAN 37 ARE EXEMPT [Continued from First Pago.] their 'questionnaires as they receive them, without filling them out. It will not be flecessary to file them, the blank questionnaire only Is to be re turned. The legal advisory board, holding daily sessions in the county courthouse to advise the men how to make out question naires, instead are instructing them of the new order to return them un signed. and blank. It is the clos ng chapter in the draft machinery so fur as men more than 35 years old are concerned. Local boards, however, been Instructed to finish as quickly as possible the work of cassifying ans assigning order numbers of the lit to 37-year-old classes. Local officers did not comment on what this action portends. The eighteen-year-old class also will receve questionnaires and be classified as expeditiously as the local boards can do It, according to orders received* this morning. Or ders affecting the men now nine teen, but who were eighteen when they registered September 12, are pending. Major W. D. Murdoek, state draft chief, in a telegram to local boards this morning complimented the members on their efficient and pa triotic work of handling the state's draft machinery. XO MORE OFFICERS NEEDED By Associated Press Wn>lihigton. Nov. 12. Orders went out to-day to tha heads of all mllltury departments to discontinue at once -the acceptance of applica tions for admission to the central officers' training camps. ODDS AND ENDS IN DAY'S NEWS Zurich- —Peace demonstrations were held In Btrmsaburg Saturday night. France was cheered and banners were carried with the Inscription "We want to be re-attached to our mother country." Alsatian sol diers Joined In the demonstration. Philadelphia—Despite the armistice signing, munition makers have re ceived no cancellation of orders. Op eration of plants for many months yet Is expected by officials before a complete letup is ordered. Large contracts given the War Depart ment several weeks ago will be put through. Reluctance to throw thou sands out of work Is responsible for continuing work. Paris —Scenes of wild 1 excltemont existed in the Chamber of Deputies when Premier Clemenceau read the conditions of the German armistice. Soldiers and women were among tho cheering throng. | Jersey City—Robert Simpson, of I the Army Signal Corps, clithbed a | live-story building and a flagpole and | atop the latter lost his hold and plunged to the street. He fell on J the cloth top of a moving automo ' bile which took him to a hospital ! slightly Injured. Ocean City—The alxty-flve foot whale that came ashore here recently Is being taken away by being cut Into small pieces and burled. Washington —Hungary wants an understanding with the Allies say official advices. Philadelphia —An arch of triumph at the Parkway entrance to Fair mount Park is proposed as a perma nent memorial to the heros and hero ines of the war. The plan meets NOVEMBER 12, 1918. widespread approval. Washington —Washing cups In tho cookhouse is the job assigned to Henry Waller, youngest son of Major General Littleton T. Waller, United States Marine Coxps. \ "For six years we have used Dr. Caldwell's ■ . \ Syrup Pepsin in our family and feel we M \ could not possibly do without it, especially j \ for the children." (From a letter to Dr. ■T""""' \ Caldwell written by Mrs. Earl Cowell, Ce- ■ \ mcnt City, Mich.) W ~ I ' Children become constipated as readily as do their elders, and the result is equally dis tressing. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is ideal for children because of its pleasant taste, posi tive, yet gentle, action, and its freedom from opiates and narcotic drugs. DR. CALDWELL'S . j Syrup Pepsin The Perfect Laxative Sold by Druggists Everywhere ' 50 as. (&) SI.OO A TRIAL BOTTLE CAN BE OBTAINED. FREE OF CHARGE. BY WRITING TO DR. W. B. CALDWELL. 459 WASHINGTON STREET. HONTICCLLO, ILLINOIS ■ Washington—Pence will have n Immediate effect on the government's Internal tinnnclul program. Another war loan In the spring and collection of billions of dollars next June through the pending revonue bill are other things promised.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers