12 U.S. IS SENDING BIG VOLUME OF GOODS TO BRAZIL Total Imports Four Times Greater Than That of [ England Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Oct. 30. Imports into Brazil from the United States in the first six months of 1919 •were four times greater than those from Great Britain, the nearest com peting country, according to the American Chamber of Commerce for Brazil. Total Imports were 3168,746,750. Of this amount, 389,727,250 came from the United States and 322,983,250 from Great Britain. Brazil's exports for the same pe riod totaled 3271,304,000 of which the United States took products valued at 393,890.250. France was the next heaviest purchaser, with 377,161,250, while Great Britain was third, with 321.556,500. Coffee was by far the most import, ant product contributing to the fav orable trade balance of over 3100,- 000,000 as 7,425,000 bags valued at 3164.980,250 were exported. "Gets-It" Peels Your Corns Right Off Two Drops Will Do It Without Fuss or Trouble. Never Falls There's only one way to get rid of a corn, and that is to peel it off as you would a banana skin. There is only one corn remover in all the ""•orld that does it that way, and that Thera's No Corn "GcU-lt" Will Not 'Get.' Is "Gets-It." It is because of this fact that "Gets-lt" is today the big gest seller among corn-removers on this planet. It means the end of "corn-fiddling." For hard corns, soft corns, very old corns, young corns, corns between the toes and calluses, it means a quick certain finish. "Gcts-lt" is applied in 2 or 3 seconds. All you need is 2 or 3 drops. As easy to do as signing J your name. It does away forever with tape, plasters, bandages, kni'-es, corn-diggers, scissors, liles and blood-bringing razors. Ease your corn-pains, be corn-free at last. "Gets-It", the only sure, guaranteed, money-back corn-remover, costs but a trifle at any drug store. M'f'g by E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago, 111. Sold in Harrisburg and recom mended as the world's best corn remedy by Clark's Medicine Store, H. C. Kennedy, C. M. Forney, Golden Seal Drug Co. ' 8B YEA3S lOUKG," SAYS MRS. WOLFF "At eighty I feel just as spry and active as I did 15 years ago," said Mrs. M. J. Wolff, 1200 W. Montgom ery ave., Phila. "Until recently, however, I* was beginning to slow up, due to nervous debility ar.-d a run-down system. I lost my appe tite; food didn't taste right and I couldn't sleep peacefully. A neigh bor urged me to try Tanlac. My ap petite increased and my food digest ed the way it should. Tanlac also quieted my nerves." Tanlac is a boon to the aged. Debility, which is so common among old and young, wears the victim away as it gathers force and nourishes Itself upon your very life blood. Tanlac acts like magic when it brings back restful Bleep, sound digestion, more vitality, and drives away that detested, de spondent feelir/g so quickly that it actually astonishes you. The genu ine Tanlac is sold here by all leading druggists. OIKK RELIEF FROM CWSIPMN 1 Get Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets That is the joyful cry of thousands etnce Dr. Edwards produced Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards, a practicing physician lor 17 years and calomel's old-time enemy, discovered the formula for Olive Tablets while treating patients for chronic constipation and torpid livers. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do not contain calomel, but a healing, soothing vegetable laxative. J?° B"ping is the "keynote" of these little sugar-coated, olive-colored tab lets. They cause the bowels and liver to act normally. They never force them to unnatural action. If you have a "dark brown mouth"— bad breath—a dull, tired feeling—sick headache—torpid liver—constipation, you 11 find quick, sure and pleasant re sults from one or two of Dr. Edwards* Olive Tablets at bedtime. Thousands take them every night just to keep right. Try them. 10c and 25c. BETTER DEAD Life is a burden when the body is racked with pain. Everything worries and the victim becomes dsspondent and downhearted. To ! bring back the sunshine take ► COLD MEDAL The national remedy of Holland for ovor 200 years; It is an enemy of all pains re sulting from Iddney, liver and uric acid trouble*. All druggiets, three aizes. Leek fee every Ws THURSDAY EVENING, "DEEPER LOVE" LANDS WOMAN IN LAW'S GRIP But Jury of Own Sex, For Which She Asked, De cides Against Her Cleveland, Oct. 30.—Promptings of the heart are greater than the dic tates of the law, Mrs. Goldie Drossos told a Jury of women in police court when she pleaded that she and John C. Buttery had become enmeshed in law's entanglements by "the deeper love." It was "the deeper lover." she said, that caused her to leave her husband in Columbus" and come here with her three young children to live with Buttery. Upon her plea that "only a woman could understand," the court appointed a jury of women —the first, of its kind in the city's history—to act in an advisory ca pacity. Mrs. Drossos testified that her hus band had failed to properly provide for herself and children; was cruel, and threatened her life. Love died. "I had to sell my babies' toys in order to buy a pair of shoes for one of them," she declared. "John was kind and gave me money." Despite the woman's plea the jury asked that she be punished for sin ning against "society." The judge then fined Buttery and the woman 3200 each and sentenced them to three months in the workhouse. The children were sent to the father in Columbus, Ohio. Bonus For Idle Germans Is Heavy Drainjm Treasury Berlin —The "wrokless support bo nus that thousands upon thousands of men and women now are drawing in Berlin and all of Germany is prov ing a heavy drain on the treasury. It is charged that the bonus is so high that many men who in peace times were unskilled workmen now receive more pay for idleness than if they went back to their labor. Begun under the stress of the rev olution and with the intention of temporarily alleviating distress, com plaint is made that this bonus sys tem has become a deeply imbedded cancer that sucks millions from the government that can ill afford it. The number of persons idle in Ber lin during August was nearly a mil lion. It is estimated that 750,000 of the m do not want work because they are being supported by the state and are free to carry on the illegitimate pursuits of the unlicensed street dealer, the fly-by-night gambler, the soap and cigaret vender. Plot to Kill City Officials Revealed inv Cleveland Arrests Cleveland, Ohio, Oct. 30. —A plot to assassinate Chief of Police Frank W. Smith and another high city offi cial of Cleveland is revealed by the police, following the roundup of seven men and one woman, alleged to be directly involved in a con spiracy to spread terror throughout the country by another series of bomb explosions. Chief Smith ad mitted receiving a telegraphic warn ing from a point in the east He would not divulge the identity of the other city official. Chief Smith declared that evidence which police already have obtained reveals a plot for a country-wide anarchistic uprising during the win ter and early spring. Proof has been obtained, he said, that arms and ammunition were ordered from vari ous makers and that home-made weapons were being prepared in large quantities. Lower Food Prices Will Follow Big Surplus Now Accumulating, Hoover Says Washington, Oct. 30. Lower food prices must come within the next few months because of a large surplus of supplies now accumulating, Herbert Hoover, America's food expert, pre dicted before the House war depart ment expenditures committee yester day. The result of this year's harvests will be a surplus of from 16,000,000 tr, 20,000,000 tons of food, the former food administrator said. This accu mulating surplus already has been re. fleeted in the lowering of wholesale prices, he said, although no appreci able decrease has been shown in the retail figures. While Hoover was discussing food and prices the House gave final ap proval to a bill giving the depart ment of justice a fund for its price campaign. Four Bodies From Wrecked Barge Are Found Washed Ashore Sottas, N. Y., Oct. 30.—Four bod ies from the wreck of the steam coal barge Homer Warren, of Toronto which foundered off Pultneyville in the heavy gale of Tuesday, washed ashore here yesterday. A receipt for welding made out in the name of Alex Talbert was found on one of the bodies. No means of identi fication for any of the others have been found. The barge, which left Oswego yes terday for Toronto, its home port was in charge of Captain William Stalker. Other members of the crew whose names are knpwn and who are believed to have been lost, are George Stalkar, Joseph Kerr, George Kerr, Stanley Foster and A. Howe. Three deckhands whose names are unknown shipped at Oswego. More Bodies From Lake Ship Wreck Are Recovered By Associated Press Muskegon, Mich., Oct. 30.—Search of the wreckage ot the lake steamer Muskegon, which pounded to pieces in a gale and sank in Muskegon har bor on Tuesday, and Investigation by Crosby Line officials has brought the probable death list to 24. Fourteen are known to have lost their lives and six bodies have been recovered. PERSHING TO FACE CONGRESS COMMITTEES NEXT FRIDAY Washington, Oct. 80. General Pershing will appear next Friday at a joint meeting of the Senate and House Military Committees to give the views on permanent military leg islation and to review the record of the American expeditionary force. Tentative plans for the hearing were made by Chairmen Wadaworth and Kahn of the two committees. The general's statement is expected to oc cupy eral Whirled Around Shaft at Waynesboro Tool Plant j Waynesboro, Pa.. Oct. 30. —Murray E. Fisher, foreman of the grinding department of the Landls Toot Com pany, had a narrow escape from fatal injuries in the machine shop. While j£ ~ j: STT ST ")T (HT* o**os/re MA*#rr sqiMne A A pmvtrrtXiAM CMVCM "jTT VT l I' ; J. MlroEpMiisicioiiis®. ' |: Phone—Bell 403 Phone—Dial 2497 Directly Opposite Market Square Presbyterian Church I " Presents a Very Remarkable Opportunity to Buy ; i UPRIGHT P'ANOS-PLAYER PIANOS f , I For Immediate or Holiday Delivery 1 Large Money Saving—Easy Payments 1 There is no better evidence of the far-reaching influences which the J. H. Troup Store has in the piano world than these offer ings of high-grade musical instruments at prices that baffle the market. How we can do these things when everywhere there is the cry of low stocks and nigh prices is one of the surprises of the business world. Come and see. Remember, directly opposite 1 Market Square Presbyterian Church. | | New and Used Player Pianos New and Used Upright Pianos | FT Free (£ 3A C 11 Free Free 7 7 C If Free Tuning S Music Rofls IpjOO lip Tuning Stool & Scarf 7i O 11P and DeUvery IUI , Bench & Scarf Qn p ayments and Delivery On Easy Payments i The Player-Pianos in this sale are Bacon, Davenport & Tracey and ri , all modern 88-note instruments of others. nowned makes: Chickering, Sohmer, ! I famous and standard makes only— This is the Player-Piano oppor- Mehlin, Haines Bros., Estey, Kim- acc °" sa e °" r en * ,rc stock ot including such names as the An- tunity you have been waiting for. Shoninger, Bush & Lane, Gran lanos, including Chicker-v " gelus, Estey, Kimball, Shoninger, Prices will certainly be higher next Marshall & Wendell, Foster, Faber, mgs, Sohmers, Mehlins Brambachs. ' " Haines Bros., Marshall & Wendell, year. Take advantage now while C 1 Fnces range from $650 up. Any- j J ~, s A riano tor every purpose, every one wishing a fine Grand should see Foster & Co., I* aber, Frances stocks are full. home and every purse. these at once. | The Distribution of Our Holiday Allotment of Victrolas, ! ; Edisons, Vocations and Sonoras Is Now in Progress I , i Never has the demand for these famous Phonographs Come in now at your first opportunity. Qet the exact 1 been so great and the visible supply so limited. At the rate make and style and finish of victrola . Edison, Vocalion or , . MlßlMlli lIM Sonora you prefer. Pay only a very small sum down, have ! . are now selling and reserving for Christmas delivery, MBBBPSBIMnII'WHfIBI , ~ . ... A P llfl BSfflflMi instrument delivered at once or held free until Christ- g our holiday allotment will be entirely sold long before we mas; pay the balance in weekly or monthly amounts most i | |j Right now is the time to get your Victrola, Edison, And remember > we wiU include records of y° r j ISPB' fljj I selection, to half the amounts of your cash payment, all on ft '' 11 ' " n< "' l 101 ' ninie diate use oi as a holiday gift. jflilfff S same con * r act. Today, Friday and Saturday, will be m You may be disappointed if you delay longer. As the holi- i the opportune days for those who want to take best ad- x I j i vantage of the remarkable values offered in Pianos, Player days grow nearer, the demand grows greater and deliveries & lir B , * 3 3j w 111 Pianos and Phonographs. Be among the fortunate ones. ' 1 become more difficult. You cannot come too soon. H Come in NOW. ! 1 Used Plwnograp ie iy, C olumbia, Empire, Pathe, Rishell. Prices, SBS, S9O, SIOO | Uyl 4=f J. H. Troup Music House 4?" Troup Building 15 South Market Square 36 N. Hanover St., Carlisle—3B King St., Lancaster BUWIBBURO TELEGRXPB working back of one of the big ma chines a projecting: set screw In a pulley caught the tall of a long coat Fisher was wearing. In an instant his clothing was wound around the revolving shaft and he was whirled around and around until the powr ; was shut off. Fisher's clothing was 1 literally torn from his body down to • the waist line, and he was severely hurt about the face, neck and side. GETTYSBURG HOTEL SOLD Gettysburg, Oct. 30.—The Eagle Hotel, Gettysburg's largest hostelry, passed Into new hands yesterday through the purchase of the good will and fixtures by Kenderson S. Lynch and George W. Lynch, formerly of Philadelphia. Use McNeil's Pain Exterminator —Ad I SPURNED WOMAN KILLS SELF Mnhunoy City, Pa.. Oct. 30.— Miss Nellie Itakenosky. aged 23, died at the Fountain Springs State Hospital from drinking sulphuric acid with suicidal j intent, after she had been spurned by | her sweetheart. She refused to dl- Ivulge his name. OCTOBER 30, 1919. PACKERS' SALES IN SOME GROCERIES RISE 399 P. C. Chicago, Oct. 30.—Packer sales of nonperishable groceries have in creased from 15 to 399 per cent in l four years, the Interstate Commerce Commission was informed here yes terday. ' The figures were presented by C. E Schelber, rate expert of the consin railway commission YORK MAN TO SPEAK < j Captain E. H. Ellis, in charge of i the Salvation Army at York, wil.* • conduct a special service at V&4 local hall, 456 Verbeke stret, 11 . evening, starting at 8 o'clock. '