4 YANKEES HELD CAPTIVE BY HUN TO COME HOME Thirtieth Division, Wthdrawn From Battle Zone, Soon to Return By Associated Press Tours, Nov. 29. An American liner will sail from a French port In a few days for Rotterdam, where it will take on board ninety-six American officers and 2.000 men who have been prisoners of war in Germany. They will be brought to France before being taken to Amer ica. Major General James G. Har bord, head of the supply service of the American expeditionary forces, fIF YOU HAO A NECK •LONG A 8 THIS FELLOW, AND HAD ORE THROAT I DOWN i INSJ LIKE IUIO OUICKIV RELIEVE IT. Ssc and tJOo. Hospital Size. 1. ALL DRUGGISTS. I r it ft.>■* t " >£,&>bk'" '" .if'" j —fil < ! 'THE real gift is the gift [y-l.'l. WE are better prepared * that lasts, that gives long service, fr iptjg£ W ** than we "have been for years, that adds beauty to the home, the room, r with gift articles. The tendency of the I *■ the environment of one's life. Furni- ISIL jrw j times t0 give furniture > has spurred us * !ture is useful. Furniture pleases any- on t0 bigger preparations for this, the jr body and everybody. Furniture not i greatest of all Christmases. Large ar- | only pleases the recipient of such a gift,, * *'*•" tides, small articles, for men and wo- J ' but it attracts the admiration of one's men, for the home beautiful, for gen- jl friends. eral and practical uses. | -7 Largest Assortment Cedar ■ - Chests To Be Found In j| I—' | | Harrisburg Ready Here lL|..I e | 9 100 Pairs of -1. / f or Q> i -——.7" I tHfiKI • n;n Martha | Candle Sticks. Crljt 1 Special $1 .15 pr Washington J ) rl Mr 1 A" rJSTSSX? °| Sewing Table IB have oniy a hundred pair to u Mtjjj kill a offer at this price. Solid mahog- ,J lvJr> A 0 - I 9H inehe. h.rt. ■ SpCCial $ J | _ . , j P /"Y*®" °' t ' le °' < ' est Sifts yet i vlllt rf ' S*UTT"' I . II always acceptable by the t • jfija j i f coming generation. This fine 1 /?c j i - c =sii_> % ■ useful article is of mahogany. For IV/fADE of genuine Tennessee red cedar *°od size, beautifully finished. y | IVI carefully and made into Cedar A | Chests of the best kind. From the sma'lest to the y ' * largest sizes are here and each one is a very special SmokCT S rw Man Cedar Chest value. : - 34 Inch Cedar Chest, special $lO Stand ft j Smoker s Stand Colonial Cedar Chest, special sl7 • Special Complete . IncliCedar Chest,specialslß.so (^l Special /CHOICE of mahogany or fumed rr i i rn /-? i _ vnri . /* _ CO 4 /"\N7JY a limited oak finish. Metal lined, com- ■*■ rii-11/l lOp S t, J Gf t) number. Mahog- • pleted appointed humidor, T any finish, equip two match holders and large ash sri T fl i • i rtOO . ped with heavy glass try, equipped with table-high ()0 lUCII LiC(lUr* Li/ieSt, SDeCIOI tOOO tray. stand. * ~ ■ ■ - ■ ■ Toys at the Lowest Prices in Harrisburg f | stand, I *|j get find gun and man. " | Table Lamps If it O • 1 rtc # b // hi ier and Passenger Coach, and ~ "^fe=r bpeCial f | 4! I Circular J rack. 55c > I A rtooVe'from f in Parlous 08 at- Poll Stroller, White Enamel. Special . „... $3.95 account of the extremely • tractive colors. Mahogany % )esk and Stool for Child. 5pecia1.,....... $2,00 II low price no toys will be finish base, neat, artistic designs. RiiHV Andv Trin Hnmnipr "Snecial •" sent C. O. D., delivered or large, pleated silk shade. Elec- USV Anajinp Hammer. Special -harged. tricaiiy equipped. Big Line of Games. Special at .! 30.—The Entente ' ! Allies have decided to demand that Holland surrender the for mer emperor of Germany to jus | tiee. according to the Daily Ex- < press. ; ~ | lias directed that sufficient rations and clothing he taken to Rotter-I 'dam and that the commissary do-1 | partment provide tobacco, canned | goods and other articles. Paris, Thursday, Nov. 2S. —An ' ; nouncement is made that the Thir- ' ; tieth division of American troops has 1 | been withdrawn from the battle j ! rone and will follow the Seventy-1 i sixth and Twenty-seventh divisions j ! to the United States. The Thirtieth division was. with ' the Twenty-seventh brigaded with j the British in the llchting near Cam- I brai when the Hindenburg line was < smashed. Eield Marshal Haig, com- I mander of the British armieS, paid' a glowing tribute to the work of j these two saying: "Brancourt, Premont, Busigny,> Vaux. Andigny and St. Souple.t tes- | tif.v to the dash and energy of your attack." The Thirtieth division is made up of troops from Tennessee. North Carolina. South Carolina and the District of Columbia. It was an nounced on November 27 by the War Department at Washington that this division was at that time at Qucrrieu, near Amiens. The divl- i sion is under the command of Major; General Edward H. Lewis. I FOUST ATTACKS EGG SUBSTITUTES Savs That Most of Those on Sale Throughout the State Are Open to Suspicion Two more prosecutions on so-called egg substitutes, both in Philadelphia, have been ordered by Dairy and | Food Commissioner Foust, based on ; the analysis of Prof. Charles H. I-n --j Wall. The one is called "Savaegg," i a d .he other "Agg-o-la-Powdcr." • > 'lie of tire claims for these alleged auds are, "Take the place of eggs in baking and cooking at less than ! ton cents a dozen;" "A great discov i ery to reduce the high cost of liv ! ing;" "Dollars saved to every family i by the use of 'Agg-o-la-Powder;' " j "With 'Agg-o-la-Powder' you have j no eggs to break, no spoiled eggs to j throw away," notwithstanding the Ifuct that the products consist of starch, coal tar dye. and in some in stances milk powder. Says the commissioner. "No egg I about them, no constituent of an egg, ! and ,nothing that will take the place i of an egg. There is no more repre j hensible way of making money than |to take a common everyday sub : stance, disguisd it, alter its appear- I ancc, make a lot of lying claims for j it. and" then sell it under a fancy I label at fifteen times its market ' value, extolling it. as a war saving ! economy. These egg substitutes not only have no .merit, but they are mere toll collectors, depending for their popularity upon deceit and ! camouflage." The commissioner adds that the i so-called egg substitutes are the HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH SERVING THjl NATION AT HOME AND ABROAD ■ n ~ \ v ||h i : ij ■ L . C. M. Shefter Jqcob Miller Lester Bender Sergeant Benner James Frank Clarence Henry Amos C. Kees T. Beckwtth worst frauds ever conceived by man dealing with .the subject of food and that he proposes to drive them out of Pennsylvania, and wherever the products are found on sale samples will be purchased and analyzed and criminal proceedings instituted. A number of additional prosecu tions will likely be ordered In the near future. - * 'I "I Earl Kelly Benjamin Miller In a letter written by Sergeant J Trvon ft. Benner, Company A, One , Hundred and Third Motor Supply Train, to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. 1 Arthur Benner, 1404 Derry street, he tells about his company being on ad- ; vanccd lines at Chateau Thierry shortly before the war ended. 'Sergeant Benner tells of his daily > duties and how each soldier must be on the alert. He states that after the roll call. 5.30, each morning, the boys get In line for breakfast. He con tinues: "After breakfast we get our orders for work. Arriving at our destination, we are loaded with ra tions and supplies for our division, whose number is very large, as you ; know. "On our way to the different sup ply dumps very often we must stop along th? road and ,put on our gas masks and seek the best dugout long the road or in a cellar. And ; when we hear the guard give the slg- j nal, "All clear," we then take a look i and again start on our way. After we deliver the daily wants, we re- | turn to our camp, fill up our trucks j with the necessary requirements, ! and are ready for another call." I Wounded in Service Reports have come to Mountville, ! the Lancaster county town with more : men in ihe service than any other town it size in the state, that two | more of its young men have been se- | verely wounded in action. Benjamin F. Miller, aged 28 years, left for j Camp Meade with the first drafted men in September, 1917. His j brother, .Jacob E. Miller, aged 26 ' years, left for the same camp In' May, 1918. Both young men, the] sons of Mr. and Mrs. B. K. Miller, ! sailed fos France in July, 1918, and, ! | although belonging to different I branches of the service, were able tp see each other often. | The brothers had been in active ' j service about two months. Jacob is I attached to the Three Hundred and . Fourth Engineer Train, and Benja- j I min is a member of Company I, j I Three Hundred and S'xteenth In- j | fantry. A singular thing Is that for some time neither brother knew of the other's injury, although only a ) short distance apart. Arrives Overseas Mrs. Lester Bender, 414 Second , street, West Fajrview, has received word of Ihe ?afe arrival overseas of her husband, Private Lester Bender, i Private Bender is a member of Com- j pany E, Twentieth Battalion, Infan- I r t>y- Promoted to Sergeant Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Shoffer, 220 Seneca street, have recently been in- ' formed of the promotion of their; son, Chester M. Shelter, to the rank : of sergeant. Sergeant Sheffer enlist- ' ed In June, 1917, In the United States Engineer Corps. Ho was for a ( time stationed at Washington, D. C., ' where he received his training for' overseas. In December, 1917, he sailed for France, and in March, j 1918, was fighting the Huns near! the Somme. He was later confined to a hospital j for five months In September he I was discharged from the hospital ] and transferred to the Transporta | tion Corps, where he Is at present i I serving as sergeant. Killed in Service * j After being on the firing line but l nine days, Amos C. Reese is reported to have been killed October 9. Pri- ' vate Reese was a member of Com- I pany K, One Hundred and Twenty- ' eighth Infantry, and formerly resid- ; pd ut 5 North Tenth street. Before j leaving for the service he was a conductor in the yards of the Bethle hem Steel Company. Private Reese received nis training at Camp McAr- . thur, Texas. Serves In' Navy Earl "Chubb" Kelly, son of Mr. ' and Mrs. Charles Kelly, 623 'lteily ' slreet, is stationed at Puget Sound Naval Training School. He enlisted in Juno and was called to the servlco j September 12, 1918. Returns Homo James Frank, of this 6ity, has re turned to his home from the Cen tral Officers' Truining School, Camp Lee, Virgiriia. After being on the training corps instructing replace- 1 ment troops, Mr. Frank was recom mended to the officers' school. He was included in the unit that was mustered out last Saturday. Wounded in Action Corporal Clarence Henry, of Com- J pany B, Three Hundred and Six- , tecnth Infantry, is another Middle- ' town soldier who has been roported In the casualties as wounded in ac tion overseas. He is a son of B. F. .Henry, of South Wood street, and I formerly resided at Cl\ambersburg. j Promoted to Corporal , Wprd has been received in Steel- I ton that Tronnor T. Beckwith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Beck- j with, 162 Rldgc street has been pro- j moted from a first-class private to 1 corporal. Corporal lleokWith is a j graduate t of the Steelton High School, class of 1902, and also of ( Howard University, Washington, D. ] C„ class of 1916. He was a mem her J of the football team at high school] and was popular. Corporal Beck-, | with enlisted with the Three Hun dred and Fifty-first Artillery andli sailed for France June 19 j] Bavaria Breaks With Berlin Government London, Nov. 29.—Bavaria has broken relations with the Berlin gov ernment, according to a Munich mes sage transmitted by the Central News correspondent at Copenhagen. mhbbbhbbbbbbb^BQßßßßSß W Your Now. Uncle Sam Requests It. A Rousing Big Saturday Sale Of| Men's Suits and Overcoats I sjgjso Proving Kaufman's Underselling Prices Mean Greater Savings g* jHIMH Suits for All Men I and Young Men J||k 1 The great feature about these values in that M. Is the assortments arc so broad that no matter Nil what price you pay, there is wide choice. No W- HU matter how hard you are to fit or how finicky nf| hj your taste, you will find a suit here to please Overcoats for Men i and Young Men l Here is the Overcoat Store of the town! Every good kind of overcoat is here and every """A3 k' fill • size. You can walk into this store with assur- _ II l!g ance that you will get the overcoat you want at II Q a money-saving price and you'll walk out com- || ffjl pletely satisfied. There are Single Breasted 11 IjM Overcoats, Double Breasted Overcoats, Big Col- II fill lar Overcoats, with or without Cuffs, Velvet or |l Self Collar, Black, Gray, Mixtures, Brown, p] 500 Pair Men's Trousers Special Saturday I In All Sizes From' 32 to 42 Waist Measure !!s Lot of Men's. d QC Lot of Men's <1?0 QC Lot of Men's AQ Bj Trousers *J) X o*/0 Trousers Trousers ispj Worsted pants, strongly made; Y fine rib drab shade Corduroy. Worsted, Cheviot and Cassi- 11| a good assortment. well made. , mere; handsomely made. Special Values in Boys' Suits & Overcoats i Bring the Boys' to Kaufman's For Great Big Savings M Boys' Suits, and • Boys' Suits and [|j Overcoats, Special Overcoats, Special Saturday $£.95 Saturday $Q.95 j| 2 x /i to 9-yekr Boys' Polo j J 69 1 \ll ® to years; the new |0 I model Overcoats; button to / 4 jjV'jJT Trench model; well made I the neck; the material of ,1 Jt •- v ly splendid new values; Iju I neat mixed cheviot; all lat- v/f many patterns; the very s§i | est material in. suits. I A'/ iff/ newest styles and models JjU Boys' Suits and I jlwjf n —Tin — . Ml Overcoats, Special \ i! Boys Suits and b* 3 to 10 years; they come iit every new shade; tan, I# ' \ |w \ H Bto 18 years; Trench Si brown and neat mixture; jW Ldb M' l\ models; belted back, dou- |iu trench model; every fash- fSJ i/Js ' } ' e k reast Pd, in the newest K|j ioriable suit for the growing Pv/w shades; wonderful assort- ||U boy. • ti/ ment of the newest in suits. k|l Boys' 7to 17 Year Size Mackinaws $6.95 0 7 to 17 years; a splendid heavy Mackinaw Coat, at just about wholesale cost. fy Men's Furni.hings Specials for Saturday! Men's Silk <£/1 AO Ladies' Slip-on (2 QQ Skirts Sweaters ..... 0.i70 j- | 4 Men's Tub Silk Shirts; all new Ladles' All-Wool Slip-on Sweaters jlilV: j ! I /.'/■' Ii J ,IL. lIU I Fail patterns; cut full; all sizes, in Nile, Navy, Black, Buff and ilfHI; . ; II ,'./ •I I LAV'' 1 11 t r , 17 American Beauty colors; all sizes, All3l ill ■ ,' • 01 !I: I ! llHm'' HI and'extra good vulue. A .* II • I •' / ■ flllUlHV IU $ 1.59 < 4 9g m iH/'Bi j Mens Dress Kid Gloves. In gray OWCOierS . . .*P • *W\dl ! Jiff •' / / ! ItGw ' a.id tan; Cape seam, all sizes. Men's Extra Heavy Rope Stitch lUiffli yf; I/; J • j UllllillV LM Sweaters, in Navy and Maroon; all ABRW ' WI II !I ; l U|Hl'l|f Men's New Sizes: regular $6 coat. Jw! ' ii ! ! IMW fO Neckwear o