18 ITALY GIVES NOTICE OF ITS RETIREMENT [Continued from First Page.] cent reports have indicated that an amicable settlement of the conflict ing Italian-Jugo-Slav claims was possible. Just what has caused the Ital ian delegation to announce its de termination on the Fillnie question at this time has not been developed The Happiness of Pretty Complexions The Refining Influence of Stu art's Calcium Wafers and Why Pimples, Blackheads, Etc., Disappear. cnl for l-'roo Trial I'nrkagr The influence of Stuart's Calciutn Wafers is in the tissues or curtil ages for the greater activity it) the skin. This is because calcium ex erts a peculiar stimulus to skin re- Pimples, backbonds and other such evidence of localized skin slug gishness are replaced with new ma terial and soon the skin renews itself with firmer, healthier tissue. This makes the beautiful complexion so much admired. No use to hide pim ples with cold cream and lotions. They come from within and keep coming until such an influence as calcium is employed. You can try these wonderful waf ers free by sending the coupon he low. Stuart's Calcium Wafers are sold everywhere at 50 cents a box. He sure to trj; them for a beautiful com plexion. FREE TRIAL COUPON F. A. Mnnrt Co., sun Stmirt Hilt;.. Marshall. Midi. Send me at once, by return mail, a free trial package of Stuart's Calcium Waf ers. Name Street •• City State EXCESSIVE ACIDITY is at the bottom of most digestive ills. KFMOIDS FOR INDIGESTION afford pleasing and prompt relief from the distress of acid dyspepsia. MADE BY SCOTT & BOWNE MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMULSION KEMP'S BALSAM Will Slop fhat Cough GUARANTEED i S. RIFKIN CLOTHING, SHOES AND ; FURNITURE lIOI'UHT AM) SOU) !ll<;ili:ST CASH VIMiI.S PAID 4U7 llroad Street. llurri*lHirg, I*n. ! Hell I'hoiip Select Your Easter Outfit Now Our policy is to give our customers the highest grade and the most exclusive styles in ready-to-wear garments at large savings. We have been able to select from the most prominent New York manufacturers' stocks, strictly high-class garments which we can offer at special prices to begin the season. Dolmans, Coats, Capes and Suits You cannot duplicate these anywhere in the city. At our prices it will be worth your while to investigate our values. Special: 25 Dolmans in the most exclu sive styles, your choice $35. Special: Coats in silvertone, duvetyne, tricotine, serge and poplin. $22 to $28.50. Special: Fine suits in tricotine and serge as well as silvertone, $29.75 to $35. Special: Women's and Misses' suits in English tweeds, Tyrol wool and Jersey, $28.00 to $38.50. B. BLOOM Women's Ready-to-Wear Garments 1 9 N. Third Street. FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TET.EGRXPH MARCH 21, 1910 'in the Paris advices, it is known, however, that the question of terri ; torlal adjustments iias lieen .before ' the conferences of premiers tvhich j have been taking: place during the : past day or two. Frontier Issues Worry An Associated Press dispatch re ceived last night from Paris regard ing a conference held yesterday be tween President Wilson and Prem iers Clemeneoau and Lloyd George stated that there was every reason ; to believe that the frontier issues I were among the foremost obstacles Which the conferees were seeking to | remove front the path to a rapid I conclusion of the peace treaty. Fiunie before the war was the j chief seaport of the Hungarian kingdom. It lias several harbors | and its position and facilities made | it the seat of virtually the entire I shipping trade of Hungary. It had I an ante-bellum population of nearly ! 40,000. [German Peace Envoy Doesn't Believe linns Will Lose Colonies By Associated Press* Berne, March 21.—1n an interview printed in the New Gazette of Zurich, Prof. Walt her Schuecking, a member of the German peace delegation, de clares he does not believe that Pres ident Wilson's program can he in voked to deprive Germany of all her colonics. I "Mr. Wilson has promised a broad. I generous settlement to peoples like itlie Germans," he said. "Civilization J rests on the efforts of. all the great Child's Flesh Raw From Eczema ItcHlnol Stopped Itolilng and Healed the Sick Skin I ____ j Philadelphia, Pa., Get. 1 3. —"My i baby suffered terribly for three j months from eczema. It appeared ;on his face, head and hands, and head was a mass looked as ir he had been scalded. The itching was so intense I had time and could not sleep. 1 tried many remedies, jjy but nothing did hint any good. I heard of Resinol Ointment and flesinol Soap, and the fourth day after 1 began their use the itching stopped. Now one would not know he. had ever had any skin trouble. Two jars of the .Ointment cured him." (Signed) Mrs. Bessie Davis, 1012 South Thir teenth street. All druggists sell Resinol Oint ment and Resinol Soap. Expectant Mothers View Event Calmly Time Brings Knowledge That by Use ! of Penetrating Remedy Suffer ing Is Aroided. Thousands of women have found by ths application of Mother's Friend, the pens- ! trahng external remedy, prepared especially for expectant mothers, that pain nnd suffer ing at the crisis fs avoided nnd that In addi tion the months preceding the crisis are free from nervousness, nausea, stretching and bearing-down pains and general discomfort. Mother's Friend makes It possible for the expectant mother to herself actually aid nature in the glorious work to he performed, and no woman should neglect to give na ture a helping hand. It will mean Infinitely t less pain and the hours at the crisis will be less. The period Is one of calm repose and restful nights. By the use of Mother's Friend the skin 1 is kept soft and natural, and experienced mothers say that it Is much better to keep your health and good looks during the pe riod of expectancy than to try to regain them afterward. Write the Bradfleid Regulator Company, Dept. G. Lamar Building. Atlanta, Georgia. ' ; for their interesting Motherhood Book, and obtain a bottle of Mother's Friend and be -1 gin its use at once. nations. The question of indemnity • appears to have been settled in prin-, i ciple, all that remains being to tlx | the amount. As to the League of Na j tions, Germany is sincerely desirous lof collaborating in the organization land 1 hope the Paris covenant may I he sensibly modified." Professor Schuecking says he ! thinks the Swiss plan might prolit jably be consulted, as it is. in his opinion, quite remitrkablef both on a judicial and political viewpoint. He (says the teal function of the treaty jis to "bury imperialistic policies for Ithe benelit of the smaller nations." "I am astonished that the idea of : prosecuting former Emperor William jand his generals is seriously enter tained," he says. "Under internation al law there is no court competent to set up a tribunal, after the event, to try a ruler or general in contra * diction of an essential principle of criminal law—-J hat no penalty shall he imposed without a law authoriz ing it. 1 think the question of re sponsibility for the war is an inter national one and can only, lie fully elucidated if all the governments open their archives and an establish ed tribunal examines till interested I parties." Huns Explain Reason For Break in Peace Parley A semi-official German note ex plaining the reason for breaking off negotiations at Posen says it has been impossible to reach an agree ment. especially regarding the pres idency of the commission control ling the situation there. The Germans say they are consid ering the appointment of the presi dent by Pope Benedict, while the i Entente nations desire the pernia | nent Inter-Allied armistice conimis j sion to name the presiding officer. | The .Supreme C-ouncil will consider l the Posen situation to-day and will | take uii measures to l>e carried out i against, the Germans to bring about a cessation of hostilities in the prov ince of Poland. Creeks Want Epirus to Cintrantee Peace liy Associated Press Saloiiiki. March 21. Reports I reaching here from Paris with re jgard to the probable fate of North ern Epirus led Greek natives of I Northern and Southern Epirus, now I living here, to hold a meeting at I which a resolution was passed de- I daring tna tpeace in the Balkans ! would not be secured unless Xortli iern Epirus were united with Greece. The resolution aserted the confidence I of the gathering in the justice of 1 he Peace Conference in this connection. German-Austria Seeks I Place at Peace Board Hy Associated Press. i London, March 21.—German-Aus tria, according to advices received j here quoting Berlin newspapers has expressed p desire for independent | representation at the Peace t'onfer i enee. It desires also, the reports from I Vienna add, that the question of its I union with Germany bo postponed j until the conclusion of the confer ence. | DUNBAR'S SLAYER DIES IN IRONS [Con tin tied front First Page.] confinement in the old deathhouse, which is separated front the new I structure for condemned Jtien bv a | door which is & I whys lofflkecf? j The last thing that Ferraro shout | e<i in the old deathhouse with tits i into unconsciousness after they had I wrested ttie knife front his hands was: "1 won't die in the electric chair!" And to make sure ttiat the convict did not cheat the state lie was loek j ed in the old death house with his wrists manacled and tiiree special i guards continually watching him. | Everything that could possibly have | been used to hurt himself was taken from his cell, even buttons from his clothing. No visitors were allowed |to go within yards of him. He was allowed to eat nothing but fluids be | cause of the fear that lie might try ! to choke himself on solid foods. Late yesterday afternoon Ferraro I asked for the prison chaplain, the I Rev. Father William Cashin, who j went to the deathhouse and was with ; the convict durirf? his last hours of ! his life. During the last two or three | hours before his execution Ferraro prayed almost continually. | Besides the usual official wit ; nesses, Lieutenant Amos O. Squire, jU. S. N„ the prison surgeon, was in the death chamber with his assist ant, Dr. Alexander Kosseff. Lieuten ant Squire gave the signal to the electrician to turn on the electric current that killed Ferraro. HOTEL MEN TO KEEP BARS OPEN [Continued from First Page.] per cent, alcohol if we desired, but the question is, could we sell it? "Two and three-quarters per cent. I beer lias been tested and found non- I intoxicating. ' Therefore as a 'near j beer' it would be a product for legal j sale." Bars to Keep Open ! Neil Bonner, moving spirit of the I Retail Liquor Dealers' Association, further reveals the hand of the booze handlers. In his statement he suys |all the saloons in Philadelphia will |remain open after July 1 and adds: | "The progress of legal action by the liquor interests has not been per mitted to sleep. While I canot go at present into details, which are in the bands of counsel, I will state that the best legal talent of the country has been retained for the purpose of establishing the justice of our con tentions, and we are advised by them that we can proceed with busi- I ness and that means we intend to | do so." Anti-Saloon League men and others opposed to booze are confi dent that the next Congress will fix by law a percentage of alcohol which may be contained In beverages. Tills percentage will bo so low, it is said, that, there will be no chance of its being intoxicating. Thomas D. Beidleman Gets Back His Capitol Job Thomas D. Beidleman, for years connected with industries at Lochiel and later assistant foreman of grounds of the State Board of Public Grounds and Buildings, was today appointed general foreman by direc j Hon of Governor Sproul, chairman |of the Board. He at once entered j upon supervision of the Capitol Park and the extension. Mr. Beidleman, who is the father of the Lieutenant Governor, had charge of the grounds for several years until last spring when he was dismissed on orders from Governor Brumbaugh's office. This occurred at the start of the State campaign. and at the time Superintendent! George A. Shreiner said that no fault i] was to be iound with the manner in which Mr. Beidleman had taken care • of the state property, but that pres sure had come from "higher up." Mr. ! Beidleman was noted for the care that I he gave to the grounds and his fldel- j lty to duty. John Loban, the old foreman who ' had charge of the greenhouses for I years, will be retained as he will j shortly reach the retiring age under ! State laws. FTAAEOL Bell-ans 11 ITjtewcCT? I Hot water 1 bZZ W WA Sure Relief jRELL-ANS feifFOß INDIGESTION | Of Talking Machines, Pianos and Player-Pianos § if| On and after April Ist, 1919, we will occupy the || {Trustee Building, 8 N. Market Sq. i I SO NOW IS THE TIME—ACT QUICKLY | Ml Join the Big Empire Talking Machine Club now in full pp BSBSSSEBBSSBm swing at fegJ 317 CHESTNUT STREET < * v T-' M I |aPWwnwwonißßW'\wp&"t Hlv▼ ▼ ▼ S before it's too late. This Club plan Sale offers to The 1 l ifi 1 itltltfitltf H Public the convenience of securing a beautiful EMPIRE |||(§j fif la|l M IIP!! i R alk j ng machine That piays au >iakes ° f nisc p | |M| j 317 CHESTOUTSTREET | m a °d learn how you really can have one of these beautiful |gs !|g| . Cabinet Machines in your home for a small outlay. W I g| I JOIN NOW—TODAY T,u ' Machine That Plays Any ~m ... „ , . . The Machine That I'lays Any Disc Record DON'T put it off any longer—the Machines are here 1 )ise Record 51.50 Will Knroii You as a f nP vnur iinnrnvgl $1.50 Will Unroll You as a |S§f Member of the Club. lOr yOUr appiOVdl. Member of the Club. S We Will Accept Liberty Bonds at Their Face Value I mm, _■, i Free! Free! Free! r 6 Records, 12 Selections W Sapphire Point Ball—2oo Steel Needles •i. ■Mil SB :r| |j J Hundreds of new and up-to-date Records for you to 1 : -j- • I Just a word about the Beautiful Case Designs and fto I i I Finishes. They can be had in Mahogany, Golden Oak, 55$ (1 ■ Fumed Oak, and in fact they can be had in Finishes and Designs to Suit the Purchaser. |J i J You Are Invited jMpHrl W IBM Come to our store —bring your friends with you—let m * p 'ill us prove to you that the EMPIRE Talking Machine and 11 § Empire Records make an ideal combination for any home. H Hi Empire concerts are held daily. % j|| !f§| EMPIRE Slightly used talking machines of several different EMPIRE |p H n ° "UE SSW— *- makes "that can be bought at a low price. These are all K*" s Any H 'IS " * bargains, so eomeearly. *'•'ASiSr ™l!c o""" jf| Ij Yes! We Still Have a Number of Pianos and Player-Pianos 1 fp That will be sold at prices that you will have a hard time to duplicate. Come in and make com- pi •|| parisons—that's the way to tell. Don't fail to come in. || If DEMONSTRATIONS GLADLY GIVEN ff j|| To out-of-town buvers within a radius of 50 miles we will allow carfare on the purchase. j 1 TROUP BROS., Jt7 Chestaul St ( If Open Evenings —Out 01 High Rent District —Daily Concerts j |j| Martinsburg,W.Va. || Saturday Big Hat Day "DOUTRICHS" Headquarters for %... "Stetson Hats" The Store Everybody is Talking 'fljwA' ' About ' S
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers