14 The Private Life of the Kaiser FROM THE PAPERS AXD DIAIUES OF THE BARONESS VON LARISCH-REDDERN Tbe Kaiser and Knlaerln's I.ate Major Homo, Chief of the Iloyal Household at Berlin and Potadam. # Baronea* von l.arlarh-Reddern Is the TRCK name of the Berlin Conrt Lady who gave the story of the Kaiser to Henry Willlnin Fisher, I'rsula, Coaatrai von Epplnshovrn bring a no in de guerre, heretofore used to shield her. Thompson Feature Service, 1919, Copyright (Continued From Friday) The country residences of our Prussian grandees, you must know, were, as a general thing, quite inno cent of sanitary arrangements, and often several rooms had to be en tirely rebuilt and furnished with running water before His Majesty would set foot in the house. Now, an unsophisticated reader might think that to plead old-fash ionedness would scare away Wil liam, but that is a miscalculation. If he scented a full game-bag on any baronial domain, he would in vite himself and only when it was too late to raise objection did the Court-marshal put in the standing claims of his master. A bed-room similar in all respects as to size and appointments to the Kaiser's own chamber at home, brass bedstead, horse-hair mattress, an enormous wash-stand, windows and doors se cured by endless number of curtains and portieres, and—hero comes the rub- —a connecting-room with the latest paraphernalia of the bath. Mark Twain Saw the Humor "Mark Twain has written many funny things about the German and his tub, or the absence of the lat ter," said Court-marshal Count Eulenburg to me, after meeting the American humorist at a dinner givjn by the late General Verdy du Vernois; "but he could surpass him self if I were free to give him only part of the correspondence I have had with our nobility on the sub ject of providing bathing facilities for His Majesty. How they struggle and twist and squirm against the introduction of this novelty, which, they claim, would destroy the har monious appearance of rooms that for hundreds of years were un touched by the mode. One gentle man in the province of Prussia, tried to evade the obnoxious obligation by suggesting that he dared not of- A ilealth Builder For Weakened Lungs Where a continued cough or cold threatens the lungs, Eckman's Altera tive will help to stop the cough, strengthen the lungs and restore lealth. 8c and $1.50 bottles at drug \-tsts. or from 'VKMAN lOABCVRATORY, Philadelphia Munyon's Rheumatism Remedy, all druggists, 30c, Diet and Care Chart free. Address Munyon, Philadelphia, Pa. kChecK that cold at the start f Remember, an unchecked cold leads to Imore •crioui ailments. Prompt action is half the battle. Have ready a box of DILLS La Grippe and Cold Tablets Take them according to directions on the box, at the first sign of a cold, chills, head ache, feverish condition, or influenza. Made by the Dill Co., Norristown, Pa. Also manufacturers of the reliable Dill's Balm of Life Dill's Cough Syrup Dill's Little Liver Tills Dill's Kidney Pills Ask your druggist or dealer in medicine. 77>. hind mother alwaya kept r j \ A First Class Auto at a Very Low Price Our stock is now complete. Every auto has been marked \ at a big saving every car \ is in A-l condition. Roadsters. 'Touring Cars, Runabouts and j Trucks, every make known in 1918-1917-1915 Models from f $250 to $lOOO. No matter what car you want we have It, and right now can save you 33 1-3 per cent, and get immediate de livery, Send for otir Auto Catalog No. 20 It's Free and full of valuable informa tion for the man who expects ! to buy a car and who really wants to save money on his car this Spring. It will well pay you to come to Philadel phia and be sure to come to the Roman, the house of satis faction. ROMAN AUTO CO. World's Largest Aato Dealers 203 N. IIItOAD STREET Philadelphia, Pa. L r " CORNS M!X2XF BUNIONS CALLUSES GORGAS DRUG STORES U —* r CHDKBIAXEH 1743 Chas.H.Mauk "• Print* Amhnlsncs Phones MONDAY EVENING. I fer His Majesty a ljath after one I night's journey, as it involved the ■ I insinuation of dirtiness on his i guest's part. . I Besides his bath, Wilhelm insisted I upon most luxurious bedroom fur ! nisliings, the carpeting throughout jof country residences, a four-in ] band aid, a chef from some famous i Berlin or Paris restaurant or hotel. • I Likewise, some of his hosts had to j build a carriage road, a mile, or ! perchance, ten miles long lest the | invited guest cancel the arrange i ] ments at the last moment, j And those Potemkin villages! ' j That nothing might grate on the im- I perial feelings, the Baron or Prince | compelled his peasants to xvliite j wash and paint farmhouse and I hovel, while lie himself furnished j greens and Hags to decorate the j streets, engaged torch bearers to : light up the highway on the eve of the arrival and during the nights of the visit, and employed four hun dred to live hundred heaters, at the very least, a week or longer. Wiilielin A-tliir.st For Blood For the Kaiser was not content to | shoot the game on his friend's do j main; his host, if he loved his peace, would hire all the hare, deer, or roe j for a dozen German miles in the I neighborhood and let them be driven into his own preserves. Of course, I the dislodged game did not remain j voluntarily in its new environment, and had to be kept from running away by continuous beating up; | sometimes, too, much game was I trapped in other parts of the prov ince and carried to and kept in thickets on the spot selected for the chase, to be released when the great slaughter began. Besides Wilhelm seldom brought fewer than twenty gentlemen, and even more servants, all of whom must be lodged and fed and horsed, and a royal flunky in a strange house pretends to be almost as much as his master. Fed on scraps at home, he Impudently de mands the best of everything else where, and generally succeeds in obtaining it, as complaints on the 1 host's part would lay him open to suspicions of nearness. Gross Feeders, but Insults in Place of Thanks For the Kaiser himself and his titled friends, the caterers sent their ! choicest wares beforehand, all the I delicacies of the season, and the ' next to follow; under the load of j mighty barrels branded in many i languages, groaned the ancient cel j lar-beds of oaken beams, and mys terious bottles with dirty labels told of old vintages and lynx-eyed con noisseurs. And what said William to this splendid hospitality, this lavish ex penditure for his benefit? If everything went according to program, if game was plentiful, the weather tine, his bath and the cook ing better than at his own house, lie would remark, on leaving: "Be as- I sured Madame," or (naming the [ host without prefix of courtesy or title), "I have enjoyed myself; and I if one thing gave me more pleasure j than the other, it was t ie fact that ; you made no fuss, asked the Kaiser to take pot-luck with you. so to • speak. That is as it should be. I desire to he free to visit my people without causing them the least trou ble or expense." A Peevish Poltroon But if weather or wind, the ele ments allove or those below (in the icy compelled us to feign entliusi kitcheni, went against the imperial grain, if the populace's shouts of welcome did not seem hearty or loud enough, or if one of the other guests exhibited greater skill in bringing down game than himself, William simply ordered his carriage, drove back to the house, and went to bed. That happened in the course of years once or twice at each house visited, for there were yet some things completely oblivious to His Majesty's claims of omnipotence— game find guns. It seems incredible, but it's liter ally true that a shortage of a couple of hundred hare cost Count Botho the proudest oiliee under the Crown; that a single buck came near de priving the nation of the services of one of the ablest officers in the army; that for the sake of a few tongli rabbits the Kaiser insulted a Unsightly pimples and blemishes on the face are sure signs that the skin and blood need the purifying and strengthening action of BEECHAMS ! FILLS. Larseat Sale of Any Medicine in the World Sold everywhere. In loc.. 25c. MRS. CRAIG TELLS SOME GOOD NEWS \ T / JM | Giving evidence of a real cheer-) fulness, Mrs. B. Craig, 5412 Lancas er avenue, Philadelphia, tells of her experience with Tanlac. "I suffered from catarrh of the stomach and was weak and run down. There were discharges from my throat and nose, and I had distress from the gas that formed from fermentation. I started to take Tanlac after neigh bors where I live told me about it. It has helped me. I am much bet ter, and I hope this bottle does me as much good as the others I've used." The genuine Tanlac, which Is be ing Introduced at Gorgas' drug store, bears the name J. I. Gore Co. on outside carton.—Advertisement. venerable general of his grandfather in 11 manner that would have re sulted in u duel if rank did not made a crowned poltroon inviolable. One example of many: As long ago us the early nineties, the Kaiser tried to forestall the revo lution that at last materialized in November, 1918, ordering the then 1 President of the Prussian Ministry, ; Count Botho Eulenlnirg to railroad i through the Diet and House of | Lords an arbitrary anti-revolution j ary bill of AVilhelm's own making. ' which attempted nothing less than tile abolishment of the constitution | —such as it was. Botho, working i under the Kaiser's lash, acted like a bull in a china shop, the country was aroused, the politicians raised j Cain and Chancellor Caprivi, a thor ■ ough Prussian, seized the opportun- I ity to stab Botho in the back. As the noble Prussian nntion heartily | approved of the maneuver, William , promptly disavowed Botho and up ; held Caprivi. • Song and Dance—Business of State Can Wait At the same time he decided on ' a visit to Castle Liebenberg, the I country seat of his bosom . friend, the infamous Philip Eulenburg, who, at the time, had not yet made ' his appearance in the criminal ; court. Even at the height of his I success William never could face the discomforts of political defeat. Un ; less affairs of state went exactly as he wished, he would run away and, , ostrich like, hide his head far from the maddening crowd. Thus, when j the Zaerft affair was scandalizing ! the fatherland, William went ca ; rousing and fox hunting with Prince Furstenberg: cowardice or neglect ; of duty—which? The Kaiser at Dinner I At Philli's seat, the Kaiser found jail Eulenburgs except Botho: the > Ambassador: the Court-marshal; j the commander of the Body Uhlans, land Major Count Eulenburg. | The supper was of the tinest: roast l turkey, saddle of roc, stewed cher : rics and encumber salad, courses ] which the Emperor likes to eat j wholesale. Having chopped the ten- I der meat with his knife-fork, he I mixes it with the sweets, potatoes, ! and greens into a hotch-potch and I swallows with relish. "For dessert 1 we had biscuit pudding with choco | late sauce: is there anything better | in the wide, wide world?" he de- I mnnded. | The dinner was followed by the j usual noisy entertainment, at the conclusion of which Saltzmann, as j "lightning portraitist," caricatured I various members of the party pres | ent, winding up with a cartoon, ex- I liibiting the hasty evacuation of the I Reichstag at the entrance of Count I Botho armed with a mace, emblem I of imperial authority. I "Don't wipe that out!" cried the ' Kaiser when Saltzmann was about to apply the sponge; "I will tele graph Botho to attend us tomorrow, and in the evening we will spring this surprise on him and hear what I he has to say." ; The imperial weathercock had | veered again, this time showing a j smiling face to Botho—owing to the J good dinner, no doubt. The Disapiiointcd Butcher But on the morrow the two gun i chargers who stood behind the Kai j ser in the hunting field often re ' mained idle for three or four min : utes in succession—think of it!— [and the game was at no time thick enough to admit of a wholesale massacre, such as William delights ! in. go, when after three hours it was j reported that he had killed only one hundred and one hares, he sent for | his carriage and without further I ado drove back to Liebenberg, there | to seek the seclusion *bf his cham j her. from which he did not emerge I until next morning. Count Botho attempted to wait upon the Kaiser, as commanded, and was told to "get out of His Maj esty's way." The chase had been "amateurishly arranged;" there was "no discipline in those confounded beaters." and "one could have bet ter sport walking through the park jof Sans Souci than on such pre j serves." liaiscr Quarrels with Other Friends. The Kaiser's correspondence with i his wife during his frequent ab | sences from home consisted mainly ' of telegraphic reports of the number iof game he killed. We ladies, therc- I fore, took little interest, in these | messages, though etiquette and pol asm. But once, when the Kaiser was at Proeekelwltz there arrived a telegram that caused the liveliest ! concern, not to say excitement. "Just shot a buck which Kessel ! shot past. Wilhelm," read the i badly-constructed telegram, j Auguste Victoria laughed and | joked about it; but the rest of us ; saw in the triumphant tone of the I missive only the disturbing evidence lof a wrangle between two friends, tlie Kaiser and his efficient adju -1 tant-general who, by the way, was i a man of sense, exercising the best I influence over his erratic master. ! limiting Partner Calls Him Madman I In this case the breach in friend- I ship of long standing was allowed I to heal; but a similar incident cost | William the affection of one of the I royal family's stoutest supporters, i Count Lehndorff, who had been the j favorite adjutant-general of the old i Emperor. Out of compliment to Wilhelm, who regarded everybody who had j enjoyed his grandsire's friendship with a sort of veneration, the old general had bqen placed next to | the Kaiser at a chase in Xeugatters leben. As on that eventful occasion in ],iebenberf, the hare did not rush ! to the slaughter as fast as William | liked and at the iinish "only" i two hundred and ten leapers were i placed to his credit. His neighbor. | Count Lehndorff, brought down i forty. "Two hundred and ten plus forty I makes a round quarter of a thou- I sand—a royal number for a bad ■ day," exclaimed William, who was jin great ill-humor. "Confound the impudence of the fellow who shoots , game coming within range of my rifle and which properly belongs to me." At this insult, Lehndorffs right hand instinctively seized his hunt ing knife, but his temper got the better of him for a single moment only. "The fellow who handed William i the First the diploma that made him : German emperor may well consider ! himself above the charge of im- I pudence," he said, in his simple and I impressive style. And, turning to j his friends, continued. "I will not ! quarrel with the grandson of the ! king whom 1 attended in three vlc- I torious wars and at whose side I | courted death at Konigsgratz when ! all seemed lost." | A stiff bow, and the old General got into his trap. He ever after avoided William's company "as that of a madman's." The Kaiser as Indiscriminate Slayer And as a butcher exhibits his meat (and is proud of the display), so the Kaiser showed off the tro phies of his skill as a death-giver. The most prominent object in his study was a long table, covered with green cloth, containing the antlers of the roebucks killed .by him in the course of the year, while under the table, and all around on the floor, were the bigger antlers of slain deer. (To Be Continued To-morrow) KARRISBTTRG IL&fci&l TELEGRAPH CONGRESSMEN SEE PRESIDENT ON PARIS TRIP Party Will Visit Battle Fronts and Then Make Trip to Coblenz Paris, March 31. —Except for an hour of conversation with the Amer ican congressmen in Paris and a brief period for study. President Wilson rested Sunday. The Presi dent and Mrs. Wilson attended church in the forenoon and mo tored about the city during the af ternoon. The congressmen who called on President Wilson after luncheon yesterday were Tom Connally, Texas; Hatton W. Sumners, Texas; William A. Atshbrook, Ohio; William R. Green, Iowa; Addison T. Smith, Idaho; John E. Raker, California; Ladislas Lazaro, Louisiana; James P. Glynn, Connecticut; William W. Hastings, Oklahoma; Burton L. French, Idaho, and C. W. Itamsaycr, lowa. The conversations were general and it is said the congressmen as sured President Wilson of their be lief in his ability to effect an early adjustment of the situation. The congressmen are reported not to have displayed any spirit of antago nism against the stand of President Wilson. The war and its effects and the problems incident to arranging peace were freely discussed, it was stated, but President Wilson did not com mit himself on any point at issue between the United States and the allies. The President assured liis callers that it was his intention to get the American troops home quickly. He expressed ®n optimistic view con cerning the peace conference and the issue Surrounding the covenant of the League of Nations and the Monroe dictrine. The congressmen will visit the battle fronts, beginning at Chateau Thierry, and also will go to Co blenz. Activities of Commerce Chamber Brings in Many New Members to Body "The Harrisburg Chamber of Com merce has mapped out a program for the year in which the problems of readjustment occupy a large place." said a canvasser of the Membership Committee to-day, "and to accom plish the results made necessary by j those problems, the Chamber needs the co-operation of the progressive I citizens of the community. That is why we are bonding our energies to j include in the membership those ; prospects who have been listed as ! eligible." | The campaign for now members j will continue until noon Thursday, j when the results will be reported at I a luncheon meeting in the Harrisburg | Club. j "During the war," continued the I membership canvasser, "the Chamber lof Commerce acted as the clearing I iiouse for nearly all local war work, j During the period of reconstruction, ; it will have to assume similar re- I sponsibilitios. To do so, it requires the membership of the representa- I live members of the community." A large number of prospects who i have been listed by the Membership Committee were called upon last week, during the first days of the campaign, with encouraging results. It was said this monring that if all the workers make reports as satis factory as those which have been re ceived from a number of the canvass ers. there is no doubt as to the ulti mate success of the campaign. Colored Soldier to Lecture at Wesley Union A. M. E. Supply* Sergeant A. D. Bibb, of the Headquarters Co. of the Three Hundred Fifty-tirst Field Artillery, will lecture to-night at the Wesley Union A. M. E. Zion Church, Forster and Ash streets. Sergeant Bibb, who is a member of the local police force, was a telephone man with his regiment and, on account of these duties lie probably saw more of the front than any other member of his regiment. The subject chosen for to-night is "The Black Yank and His Hun Tamers." and will picture the activities along the front and the part the negro played in the war. Sergeant Bibb has a great collection of souvenirs which he will display. Dr. Crampton, one of our most prominent physicians, has kindly consented to act as master of cere monies. The entire proceeds will be devoted to the funds being used for dedicating the new church. ESTIMATES INDEMNITY Paris, March 31.—The Intransi geant prints the report that the in demnity which Germany must pay for the damages of the war has been fixed at a ligure between 150,000,- 000,000 and 250,000,000,000 francs. The yearly payments will increase as Germany's economic life revives. LgL i FAMO destroys the dandruff bacilli and stops seborrhea. Seborrhea is the cause of dan druff. Allowed to run unchecked it makes the hair die and fall out, JU i t A s .R ) "l"' l{a loosens the teeth! FAMO kills the seborrhea mi crobe and gives the hair new gloss and lustre and promotes new hair growth. It contains no harmful alcohol and retards grayness. Two sizes 35 cents, and an extra large bottle at $l. At all toilet goods counters. ' ('roll Keller C. M. Forney Special Famo Agcnte. FAMO Slope Seborrhea - Grows Healthy Hair CLERGYMEN AND LAYMEN TO HEAR OF WAR HORRORS Dauphin County Asked to Aid Relief of Armenians Syrians I Captain C. IC. Morse of the Forty ; fourth Canadian Regiment, who talks lin Fahnestoek Hall tonight to an I audience of clergymen and laymen, has made a personal study of condi tions as they exist to-day in Arme nia, "the Belgium of the East." Cap- I tain Morse has a story to tell of the I horrors existent in Armenia and j Syria which will give his hearers a ! graphic realization of the deplorable | state of affairs. j Tonight's meeting was called by | the committee in charge of the Dau ! pliin county campaign for the relief | of the Armenians and Syrians. | Dauphin county has been asked to j contribute $38,000. i Lancaster county has already ' passed the $70,000 mark. Lackawan i na county has passed the $50,000 to- I tal set for it. Lebanon city in one ; Sunday of activity rnised over $lO,- | 000. York county gave the Arme ■ nians $25,000 from its war chest, j Berks county and Reading have given I very liberally. Chairman C. W. Burtnett of the relief committee said to-day that no difficulty is anticipated in reaching the Dauphin county allotment. "This county has not been called upon for relief for any purpose for a number of months," said Mr. Burt nett. "We have had a good rest; and from what I can gather from the peo ple with whom I have come in con j tact Harrigburg and Dauphin coun i ty will do remarkably well in the j coming campaign," I The meeting at Fahnestoclc Hall to-night will begin at 7.45 o'clock. Every church in Dauphin county has been asked to send its pastor and two laymen. Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart Announcing A Special Offer On The Pronounced Vogue For Suits Relief Engraved Calling Cards Brings These Attractive Beginning tomorrow and continuing through the week New Styles our department ot social engraving will offer a special at- " traction in relief engraved cards. * . _____ eJS C , f ° flowing Ch ° ice ° f le ™ ri K/I OVi r e t : Witfl £aster onlv a few weeks away , Shaded Roman Black Old English .. „ . * , ; i tWI Shaded Old English Black French u ° mai ' " ho P lans to bu >" a sult Shaded French Script Plain Roman UI " n <tturally' want to make her selec -100 cards, plain $1.75 tion within the next twv? V'geks. njjlik 100 catds, paneled, $2.15 And our stocks are as complete as Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, street Floor. __.. i > . , _ , , . ' ; , 3\, I /*2C7 - vou coul( l expect to find them in the \i \\\/£&?-, ta i , • ( -r-r height of the season. vlk \i Demonstration of Human Handfomc suits at ?30 to ?(5 H.3,ir Goods Especially does the navy blue suit gg* | ' A representative of one of New York's best known hair find favor for the Spring months. De- jC/ goods importers opens a limited engagement in the store signers have evolved the most effective 18| i tomorrow. -The demonstration will be of particular interest of box fashions and the t vout tf u , JfMfV to women who use purrs, pompadours, transformations, , . , 3 switches and other hair parts! of straight vestees and round crisp 1C . . collars, so that everv woman will want Switches are priced at 51.95 to $17.00 ... _,•* • , , ... ..' So . bi> rn 10 naxc at least one suit 111 her ward- W 1 transformations $3.50 to $12.50 , ft , Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Street Floor. lone. 11 \\ ' . . Some of the suits are handsomely MI. Mothers Are Busy m the Intants ,tiered. some neatly braided ;# Section Providing New Gar- iS™S^. plain " ~eal mets For Easter Complete sizes for misses and And the display of infants fashions is more interesting U me " ° ! tvtl - b ' n '' b f? ure - • and more complete than any we have presented in any Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, second Floor, former season. Infants' lawn caps, prettily trimmed with tucks and finished with \ O 4- L TV, /"I * 1 briar stitching, lace or organdy embroidery insertion. Many styles XAiHOIICcUI xJrGSS V tIUQu rLTYI S to choose from at 75c, $l.OO, $1.50 to $3.50 t a a i Infants' lingerie hats, with tucks, cording, smocking or em- r A -r A rtT*l I TllCnlatr AA7MvfU rv broidery insertion trimming, some are finished with ribbon, some - LIA -Fxii 11 JL/IOUIdY VV Ui Lil Ot/ClilU with flowers and others with lace , $1.25 to $5.00 . . _ Silk cap linings, in white, pink and light blue 50c American Dress Ginghams, 32 inches wide are presented infants' long capes, with hood $3.05 to Sio.oo in a special early April showing beginning tomorrow There i Infants' long coats with capes $1.05 to $lO.OO ...._ "i;n . • At t- mere/ infants' short white coats in empire box or yoke styles, . tnan UU patterns 111 the display ot plain Colors,/ ss. (io to sii.oo stripes, checks, plaids and two-tone designs. Attractively Infants' sweaters in all white or with colored trimming, priced, yard <l9^ Easter Novelties For Infants ""' ' ' '* ' V m - Anderson Scotch Ginghams in plaids, checks and Rattles 25c to $2.00 stripes arc priced at and 79C Powder boxes 50c and 75c D. & J. Anderson ginghams in the finest patterns ever Brush and comb sets 50c to $1.50 tirnrhircfl vir-rl a-t oe- Dressed dolls $l.OO to $5.00 prouueeu, yara .. . •••••• $1.25 Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Second Floor. v oiles, Silk Poplin and Madras I'ancy foulard voiles promise to be more popular during tlie Spring and Summer month's than they have ever been KVaii A yiA heretofore, and the patterns just received arc so attractive _L \JkA m v kJlGllvlCi that every woman who sees them willl want to begin an /-\j* T"V active sewing campaign. ui r igure f es , r , anc , from • ■•/•"••• 69<^t0^1.39 <-J Half silk poplins, 36 inches wide, yard $l.OO j&p&jfcZQy Madras Shirting, yard 49£ to 75<^ ChOOSe A.B Dives ' Pom eroy & Stewart, Street Floor. American ff/ Pluin Bluck & stripe Georgette T „i v ft • Attractions XjCtU-J Fine quality georgette with stripe, yard $1.69 ] "V Plain black georgette, yard $1.35 The slender figure can be I T\ New middy tics, in red, navy and black are now on display , , , IN /\V J\ among the new neckwear at and should be so corseted as to \ r\ / f \ At fx, r . , l\K [ l\ fjy Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Street Floor, accentuate its natural charm. jV\( Aljffaf f /\ I •ri,e taii witiowy type of i wjffl HL'j I Appetizing Groceries - Satisfying woman needs support to give t j Wr'f \ j m o nr poise, 1 j K jfjl.| / j Teas & Coffee Slender figures of all types \\ * / II 4X Powdered Sugar for Easter eggs, lb., IORe ... \l "i'ifl / ,* I Baker's breakfast cocoa, lb •••• look their best in U, L'ljr! illJ j H Lean boiled ham, lb or'. V\ A f7l\ I JU Economy ginger snaps, lb 15^ * • T 1 W // i m LLiiMllnw/ Fancy table rice, pkg "iaizi. American Lady W-W Bacon. J i u b n , e Peas :. can :. £ Nesson's cooking oil, pt. can 35c GUI oCI/O laobster meat, can, !!!!.'! -15 c Hawaiian pineapple, can " 09,. Italian olive oill, pt., 75c; qt '.'. .'51.49 In our Corset Section you will find just the right model Refiner's table syrup, gallon sin for vnur fitnirc Steero beef buillion cubes, box 2So a T° ur ngure. Aunt Jemima's pancake flour, 2 pkgs 25 t . And an American Lady Corset at $2.00 or more will give Bumham's clam chowder, can lOe and 23c twice the senvice that a cheaper corset can give. Banquet coffee. Ib„ 35c and 40c 0 Formosa and Oolong tea, lb 39c Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Second Floor. Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, gascnient. BRIEFS FROM THE ] BIG NEWS EVENTS By Associated Press IntlinnnpollM—('apt. 'Wallace Foster, known throughout the United States as an exponent of patriotism in the public schools, died at his home here late last night, 82 years old. Death was due to heart disease. Santiago, Chile —The ministry or ] which Armando Quesado, is the head, and which resigned on March 20, has withdrawn its resignation. St. Johns, N. F, —The steamer Sa ble, the first of the seal tishing fleet to return from the hunting grounds, arrived here lust night with 2,000 pelts, about, one-tenth the normal catch. In the Ainerlettn llnttle Areas Four thousnnd men of the A. E. F. are now engaged in the registration of and search for the graves of Americans who died in battle. The work of seeking the resting places of American heroes is being under taken by the section of graves regis tration. New VorU —With more than 3.000 officers and men of the Ninet.v-tirst Division, the steamship Siboney ar rived from St. Na/.aire. I'eklng —A reopening of the Pence Conference between representatives of north and south China at Shanghai next week is indicated in official cir cles. HnliSix, N —Colonel Ray Colli sliaw, Canadian aviator, Bailed on the steamship Olympic forFF.ngland to day to bring back an "irplane with which to enter the trans-Atlantic contest. He will attempt his flight front New Foundland early in May. New York —The early reaction, ascribed partly to Paris cables, caus ed losses of one to two points in prominent steels, oils, tobaccos and specialties, but raPs showed little change. New York —Dr. Marie IC. Formad, of the Women's Hospital of Philadel phia. arrived here to-day from France, where she has spent the last year in relief work among the refu gee civilians. MARCH 31, 1919. WARNS AGAINST BOLSHEVIST EVIL SPREADING IN U.S. Chamber of Commerce to Hear Noted Canadian Ex plorer at Luncheon J... O. Armstrong, noted Canadian lecturer and explorer, will address a noon luncheon meeting of the Har risburg Chamber of Commerce Fri day in the Penn-Harris Hotel, on the subject "Democracy, Autocracy, and Bolshevism." Mr. Armstrong is touring the ! country under the auspices of the j Bureau of Public Instruction, Wash • ington. He originally was secured by tlie American Red Cross, to de liver a series of lectures during the war, but when the growing serious ness of the Bolshevik menace neces- I sitated a campaign of public educa j tion to offset its sinister influence, J Mr. Armstrong's services as a lectur er were secured by tlie Department of Public Instruction. Mr. Armstrong has had wide ex perience as a traveler and explorer, i and his career of laying out and ] planning towns and cities of Canada i have brought him into direct contact I with problems of social and political i unrest, lie saw the inception of Bol j sheviki ideas in the Western Conti ! nent, and has carefully studied the spread of the pernicious doctrine which is arraying itself against civilization. Chamber of Commerce officials feel that a discussion of the new doctrine of Bolshevism is vitally im portant at this time and therefore are co-operating with the Depart ment of Public Instruction in secur ing a lecturer to go into the subject exhaustively at the luncheon meet ing Friday. Use McNeil's Pain Exterminator—A Four Hun U-Boats on Wtfy From Harwich to U. 1 By Associated Press, | Harwich, England, March 31—Foj German submarines, convoyed by dj United States submarine tender BuJ nell. left here to-day for the Unfl States. Many more than the requi® number of officers are making ® trans-Atlantic trip on the craft. PROTEST VII,BAIN'S AC tit' ITT A Paris, March 31.—A resolution j protest against the acquittal of Rati Villain, who shot and killed the rj cialist leader Jaures in 1911. wfl adopted yesterday by the. Fed® Socialist Congress for the departing of the Seine. The Federation was <v rected to inquire into what actiu should be taken by that body. 1 NEW | HEATING SYSTEMS DESIGNS OLD HEATING SYSTEMS ' CORRECTE: MORE HEAT. I LESS FUEL'. NO NOIS^ Rob't Ross Jone, CONSULTING ENGINEER Harrisburg, Penna. RESORTS RALEIGH Atlantic City'* Papular Hotel. I American Plan, *4 A $5 per day Easter Holiday Extra
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers