New Jersey House • Kills Prohibition Bill By Associated Press. Trenton, X. J., March 19. The House of Representatives of New Jersey legislature yesterday passed a resolution rejecting ratification of the national prohibition amendment. The amendment had previously fail ed of action in the Senate. The House resolution was carried by a viva voce vote and there was no ebate. The introducer of the Sen ate resolution caused it to be laid over indefinitely two weeks ago when it was seen that there were not enough votes to pass it. Chances for ratification as far as the present leg islature is concerned are therefore considered killed. I'se McNeil's Fain Exterminator--Ad Constipation _ _ _ i SCMEMCfS the beginning ot £ =£s MANDRME Kid yourself ot con •tipal'on and you TB"W r /tU .ill U free l,=. .11 PIJ I K 'i'." sr ILL against infection. act freely, but gently and comfort ably, on the liver, stomach and bowels, cleansing, sweetening, toning, strengthening, so that a consti pated condition will become impossible. Ordinary constipation "cures" are only laxatives that must be taken regu larly, and that finally form a habit that is as dangerous as consti pation itself. Schenck's, Mandrake Tills are wholly vegetable; absolutely harmless, they form no habit. PLAIN OR SUGAR COATED PROVED FOR MERIT BY 80 YEARS' CONTINUOUS SALE DR. J. H. SCHENCK A SON, Philadelphia ■I NO BETTER CAR j| ■ I AT ANV PRICE 1 I I Be Sure to See The 1 I ' 1 Velie Six i I I AT THE AUTO SHOW I fif There is not another car on the American market which embodies so many standard and high-priced features at so low a price as the I| A review of the special Velie Furthermore, the Velie is more J| features is convincing proof of elegant than most cars. Its mir- BB the excellence of the car. Look , . _ . , . „ , H ft them over. Velie-Continental ror bod y fimsh ' lts llnes are lon S ■ motor; Timken Axles, front and and continuous, its smartly-tilting 9 jjj rear; Hotchkiss drive: dry plate windshield, gently rounded body W. multiple disc clutch and wonder- sides and plaited upholstery make M ful riding qualities due to the > it a car that YOU will be proud long three-quarter elliptic springs. to own. is THE VELIE IS THE CAR FOR YOU. | are assured that nowhere else will you find a value like that of I S Velie Prices 1 ■ Five-passenger Touring $••" Four-passenger Coupe n o*s fc Two-passenger Roadster 1405 ~ ■' - H Five-passenger Sedan 202& fPur-passcngcr Town Car 2500 jjj Three-passenger Cabriolet .... 1025 Four-passenger Sport Car .... 1975 F. O. B. FACTORY || I REX GARAGE & SUPPLY GO. 1 DISTRIBUTOR 1917 N. Third St. L. L. SHETTEL, Mgr. I" I WEDNESDAY EVENING - HARRISBtTRG TELEGRAPH ' MARCH 19, 1919 Declares Congress May End the War Without Treaty By Associated press. Washington, March 19.—1f Presi | dent Wilson does not negotiate a ] peace treaty satisfactory to the Sen , ate. Senator lajnroot, of Wisconsin. Republican, said in an address on j the League of Nations before the 1 Washington Commercial Club here last night. Congress may pass a joint j resolution summarily ending the war ' with Germany without a treaty, leav -1 ing American participation in the ; League of Nations to future dotermi ; nation. Senator Lcnroot declared lie fa- I vored the general plan of the league I as poposcd, but would not be eoerc j ed into voting for the constitution as ' now drawn without amendment. The Private Life of the Kaiser FROM TUB PAPERS AND DIARIES-OF THE BARONESS VON LARISCH-REDDERN Tke Kuifttr nnd lvniscrln'i Late Major Domo, Chief of the Royal m llouacholU nt L>r!ln und I*ot*dam. HaroncM von l.urivh-Keddfrn Is the TRITE name of the Berlin Court Lady who save the story of the Knlser to Henry William Fisher, Ursula, Countess von Eppliiffhoten behig 11 uom de fiuerre, hfirtofort used to shield her. Thompson Feature Seivicc, 1919, Copyright . 1 [Continued from Yesterday.] . j The number of seamstresses in the i; establishment was always largely increased in the spring, and 1 have j seen as many as forty wieldets of j needle and thread working under Frau von Haalte's nominal direction | after the Sultan's presents arrived. I AH heads of departments in the pal ! ace, it should be remembered, must be noble-born, and while the lady { of the bed chamber knows no more ; how to fit a waist or "hang" a skirt 1 than 1 do of . such things, or of the | mountains and canals on Mars for | that matter, she is excellently well ! qualified to find fault with low-born menials that do understand them. With talcs of royal worldiness on the one hand and of woe on tho other 1 .could till many pages of these memoirs, but there would lie ' little profit in such reading aside j from a tendency to emphasize the j fact that it is absurd to credit those ; born in the purple with a higher in j tellect, more finesse, more charity, I less "pettiness and less penury, than 1 ordinary mortals. However, I will | not close this chapter without re- I cording one signal triumph Iler j Majesty's much-abused women ex j-porienced in the course of years, I and at her cost too. Bad Tnstc in Dross When Auguste Victoria was en j bonne esperance for tho seventh ! time in twelve years, she selected for i the reception of the Queens of the ! Netherlands a particularly ugly toi j let—a blue satin dress with an ! orange front and trimmings. The ' latter, real masterpieces of the em i broiderer's art, were very difficult to sew on; but that notwithstanding, Iller Majesty ordered them removed Land differently placed three times, 5 reonipelling the seamstresses to work ! the \v hoje Sunday until late in the ; j night. [ | Of course, the girls were wroth, : and on that account not at ajl dls -1 | pleased to see that the costume, 1 ! which had given them so much • S trouble,was frightfully unbecoming " I to their mistress when at last she , I was arrayed in the glaring colors. To make matters still worse for the | royal lady, her complexion was in _ a sadly muddled stato just then. We . { Hofdumen felt deeply chagrined . about all this, I assure you. How ( j ever, the Empress had herself to I blame, as she selected the colors ! J against everybody's advice, insist -4 . ing upon their entire suitableness, f | We were just debating In our own , j circle whether it would he prudent I| to tell Her Majesty what an out v j rageous figure she cut, when a re , j mark by little Wllhelmlna, over -1 heard by one of the maids and in duty reported to Countess von Broekdorff, led to an instant deci -1 | sion and caused the obnoxious dress ■ to be removed without delay. - | Think of It! That royal enfant ■ | terrible said to her mother, on . reaching her apartments and prob j ably thinking herself out of earshot: j"lt strikes mo ma tante looks like 1 I one of those cockatoos our soldiers | bring from Sumatra" , The mot passed from mouth to * mouth in the palace, and its ap t propriateness was generally admit , ted. under the breath, of course. . But the cockatoo story did not re , main unknown to her, having come to the all-highest ears, the Empcr -1 or's, after much traveling, and Wil liam repeated it to "Dona" on the occasion of a domestic row. As this anecdote indicates, the Empress has little notion of the suitableness of colors. She wears all in rotation. Her Fondness For Millinery In the matter of hats, Augusto Vic toria was easily the best-dressed woman in Europe. As Princess Wil ! ham, Princess Imperial, and during i her early years as Empress, the Kai ; serin patronized Berlin milliners ex ! clusively, and the result was not en ; couraging. Here Is what the Princess of Mein ; ingen said when her mother, the l-.niprcss Frederick, engaged upon that tlangerous journpy to Paris: "If | you love Auguste dnd myself, bring lus hats, hats, hats, hats! They make j beautiful millinery ornaments in i litis town, but don't know how to I put them together. To me a Ger j man bonnet always looks like next jof kin to a recruit's fatigue-cap, I while Berlin hats, even the most elaborate, seent to be fashioned a la Pickelliaube.'* he same idea pervaded the un usually blunt speech of the Princess i Philip of Coburg, who had not yet j disgraced herself with her Colonel ] of Hussars, when, at the close of his j Vienna visit, the Kaiser, while tak- I ing leave of Her Royal Highness, in cidentally remarked that ho was un ! wife t0 deCide what to bring his \"o*t her some hats; she needs I them, poor thing," cried King Lco jpolds eldest daughter, who is cred ited with having inherited all his I wicked traits; "a mere private worn ian as I am, I would not exchange I my coronet for the German diadem j if at the same time I were compelled jto wear the monstrous head-gear | your Berliners turn out." The sally struck home, the more ; so as William has always entertained l a nigh opinion of this Princess, who, jit must not be forgotten, is the elder . sister bf Stephanie, widow of the late Crown Prince Rudolph. | Kaiser Sllgntiy Embarrassed I His Majesty," said Grandmaster Count Eulenburg, "reddened at lirst ■ and seemed inclined to answer sharply, but, after a little reflection confessed complete ignorance of the j subject, though all present knew that he made it his business to or der the Kaiserin about in matters of toilet as well as in other respects. 'Admitting, cousin, that you are eor j rect in what you say,' His Majesty j Anally remarked, 'what am I going to do about it? I have not the time to run around millinery shops at tlio | moment of leaving, and if I order a | number of bonnets to be sent to the' | Burg, the bills will be cf such niag | nitude as to break by treasurer's | heart, and perhaps my own, too." | . "We all laughed at this sugges ! tion," continued His Excellency, I Her Royal Highness fairly shook | with merriment as she exclaimed, j semt-traglcally: Tor the Lord's j sake, William, do not become to us j in Bienna what the Tecks are to the i Prince of Wales in London, or,' " j (this with fine sarcasm) " 'the I.ip ! pes to a certain King of Prussia! j To forestall such a calamity, let me offer tny humble services. Withj ' Your Majesty's permission, I will I drive with one pf your gentlemen'" i (here Her Royal Highness's eyes lit j upon the stalwart form of our' I friend Moltke) "'to mj'own purvey j ors, buy what is pretty and not too j extravagant in price, and bring my | finds in triumph to the station, : where we will meet an hour from •now in our waiting room. Is that a j bargain? "The Kaiser," Eulenburg wound [up his story, "sealcM the agreement by kissing Her Royal Highness's white hands and arms; but she took ' him by the head and applied three' right royal smacks upon his mouth, i those to reconcile to him for the ] osculations of stato tliat he would | have to give and endure later in the day, as Her Royal Highness put it." | What a time we had at the Neues j Palais, when the Kaiser arrived j with six bandboxes filled with "that j woman's" selections of finery! Par don: it is "that woman" no longer; we have discovered licr name, and | without consulting the Ahnanach de , Gotha, at that. Perish the memory ' of Stephaine's treachery: "Her Roy al Highness, the Princess Philip," of all women, has the sweetest taste and kindliest disposition! All-high st lips uttered these honeyed senti ments. and soon the whole Schloss, , metaphorically speaking, was at the j feet of the august Viennese, who, an I hour before, had been considered I 'oo frivole for even casual mention. | Reputations arc quickly made ami j lost at court. Play into their Mujes- i t ties' hands, contribute to their cliar- ' i itics. /awn upon their little weak-; ; nosses, and you ice persona grata in a jiffy: exhibit the slightest hit of originality conflicting: with the mad dening humdrum' of accepted no tions, seek solace from the dreary] occuiwiUons of the average Court life In hemispheres where gnldsticks ami bigwigs are not wanted, or, worse still, derided, and your name Is put upon thA Index whether It stands on thc first leaves of thc Continen tal, jieerago or not. But once more let me repeat whatever we may think about this vain woman, her love for William is pathetic. When he is away on his travels, she sleeps with his photo graph on the pillow where his . blonde head ought to rest, the full | length picture being stuck under the I quilt up to the chin. When ho is at home, she undergoes ,a thousand pains to make herself attractive ac cording to hi 3 ever-verying notions. [To Bo Continued To-morrow.] • Railroad Board Supplies Tugs to Move Troop Ships New York. March lA—The rail road administration yesterday eainc to the aid of the War and Navy De partments in handling troopships | here by supplying tugs to replac-e I th,ose chartered from private owners \ which were left unmanned Monday when their crews joined the ranks of striking marine workers because they were not receiving the in creased wages granted recently by thc Government to its own employes. Fourteen tugs were affected by this walkout. Yesterday the rail road administration loaned the Army and Navy authorities live craft, with the promise of live more today. In addition, ten boats, to bo manned by naval crews, were char tered from a private owner. Seaplane Carries Crowder to Cuba Havana, March* 19. —Major Gen eral Enoch H. Crowder, judge advo cate general of the American army, who had been invited to Cuba by the government to revise the elec tion Taws, arrived here from Key West yesterday afternoon by liydro airplane. After landing, General | Crowder went abroad the American cruiser Cincinnati. 30,000 MORE MEN ENROUTE By Associated I'rcss Washington, March 19.—Depar ture from France of approximately DANDRUFF GOES! HAIR GETS THICK, WAVY, BEAUTIFUL Saveyourhair! Doubleitsbeauty in a few moments. Try this! Hair stops coming out and every! particle of dandruff disappears. Try as you will, after an applica tion of Danderine, you can not find' a single trace of dandruff or falling hair, and your scalp will, not itch, but what will please you most, will be after a few weeks' use, when jou see new hair, fine and downy at first—yes—but really new hair— growing all over the scalp. A little Danderine immediately doubles tue beauty of your hair. No difterence how (lull, laded, brittle and scraggy. Just moisten a cloth with Danderine and carefully draw it through your lialr, taking one small strand at a time. The effect Is Immediate and amazing—your hair will be light, ilutty and wavy, ana have an uppearance of abund ance; an incomparable lustre, soft ness and luxuriance, the beauty and shimmer of true hair health. Get a email bottle of Knowlton's Danderine troni any drug store or toilet counter for u few cents, and prove that your hair Is as pretty and soft as any—that it has been neglect ed or injured by careless treatment that's all. Danderine is to the hair what fresh showers of rain and sunshine are to vegetation. it goes right to the roots, invigorates and strengthens them. Its exhilarating, stimulating and life-producing properties cause the hair to grow long, strong and beautiful. A Different Kind of Used Car House Wo mark our cars in plain figures—we guarantee satisfac tion —.we don't misrepresent—we give you the lowest prices pos sible to get—we give service and satisfaction to all our customers. 1000 Used Autos, $250 up We have every known make auto and truck in models. Just tell us what you lyant and we'll show it to you. Sciul today for our' Auto Cata logue No. 20 its free and full of valuable information for the man who is going to buy a ear. Come to Philadelphia for that used Car. Come to us, thc house of satis faction. ROMAN AUTO CO. World's Enrgcst Auto Dealers 203 X. BROAD STREET Philadelphia, Pa. a "I'm in the Movies Now" j Old Bill. I THE BETTER 'OLE 800 Nights in London 150 Nights in New York and i still running The stage* production costs $2.00 per seat SHOWING AT THE VICTORIA Monday Tuesday Wednesday Popular Prices 30,000 officers and men of the Amer ican Expeditionary Foces—the larg est Hingie homeward movement of troops since tho cessation of hostili ties—ls announced by the War De partment. Tho returning soldiers arc aboard two cruisers, the Montana and the Pueblo and fourteen trans ports. CAMBRIA STEEL ELECTS , By Associated Press. Philadelphia, March 19.—At the annual meeting of the Cambria Steel Company the following directors THAT the Nash Six with 1 jfll 3 ! 8 Perfected Valve-in-Head motor has proved itself unusually powerful, economi cal and quiet in the service of " / "* J yaM * Hmi M * hr owners throughout the country ~l vo . PafiScnKcr was generally conceded by Touring car. siino those forming the crowds l-'our - Passenger which visited our exhibit at the Monaster .... $1 too show yesterday. And after in- Scdan $225w specting this car and its fine lo \ ,r ■ motor, the reasons for this $22.0 good performance seemed to $lOlO be readily understood. PrlC e s ~ „. b . Kenosha Myers Motor Sales Company DISTRIBUTORS 1210 Penn Street Harrisburg, Pa. " ~ VnUJE CARS OT UOUJME PRICES 099 See the Famous in i in HI AT THE SHOW — r I I Ever since motor Cars have become popular as a means of convev , ance —"since 1900 to be exact —we have always handled, the most popular of cars. Lp through the early days of motordom, we strove to give Harrisburgers the best car value on the market. .And we did. Ihe car we sold was always in big demand—a large number of them always being on the streets. Our Booth is Today we arc offering the famous CHANDLER SIX. [ right alongside c k ,low an <l fully believe this car to represent all the Army Tank tliat can l^ ' n a popular motor car. It is the and Liberty essence of comfort, beauty and economy. It is the Motor You car of thc hour and has I)cen P rovcn so b y tbe fifty can't miss it thousand owners throughout the country. Compari son with any other car will prove these statements. The splendid opportunity at the Auto Show enables a comparison that will solve the question of purchasing your car. Look them all over, then see the CHANDLER. We feel that your unbiased opinion will be that the CHANDLER is the car you want. Our salesmen are more than willing to explain its many merits. Ask any question you desire. We have a special chassis on ex hibition that is specially designed for this purpose. There is not one single point of the CHANDLER that we will try to evade every point will and has stood the severest of tests. IF YOU ARE UNABLE TO ATTEND THE SHOW, PHONE OR WRITE FOR A DEMONSTRATION Andrew Redmond ! : I Bell 2133 Distributor Dial 4616 b Third and Reily Sts. Harrisburg, Penna. j h II WIHII I* I !!■ IWM 111 II HWBBBIMB—g—B——BMBS— . were elected: John C. Neale, Sam uel M. Vauclain and ,D. Brewer Gehly. MOTHERS Reduce your doctor's bills by keeping always on hand— fffiffL Vicß'sXlpoßuifif "YOUR BODYGUARD"-30f.60ML20 13 S. RIFKIN CLOTHING, SHOES AND FURNITURE (IOUGKT AND SOLD HIGHEST CASH THICKS PAID 407 Broad Street Harrisburg, Pa. Itrll I'bune 3370-J
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