I 1 ARTICLES IN I LABOR DRAFT: | ionlVrcncc Will Meet at Seat! i of Hie League of Nations London, April 1. —The completed draft of the convention creating a permanent organization for tho pro- i motion of labor interests and the in ternational regulation of labor con ditions consists of forty-one articles. The first chapter deals with the gen eral outlines of the organization, which will consist of a general con ference of representatives and an international labor office. Meetings of the general conference will be held at least once yearly. The conference will include repre sentatives of the employers and workers. Each delegate may bo ac companied by two advisers, and, when women's riglils are involved, i at least one of tho advisers should be a women. The conference will meet at the I seat of the League of Nations, where! the international labor office will be! established as part of the League! organization. A governing body of twenty-four members will control | the labor office and will be composed J of twelve government representatives! and six members elected by the | delegates representing the working! people. The director of the labor] office will he appointed by the gov erning body. The labor office will | act as a general clearing house for] all labor information. S. RIFKIN CLOTHING, SHOES AND I FURNITURE 1101 GI IT \M> SOI.D HIGHEST CASH I'RICES PAID , 407 llroHtl SHeot, I lnrri*lnirK, Ph. ■toll Phone 3370-J Bs^'.Trucks j Continuous Service and Long Run • Economy il.f| Fs Give You Full Details; The Overland-Harrisburg Co. fa'2l2-211 North Second t aiTA33in2i::i!!:i:H!ii!rai;uisii;iiiiiHHi!!'>i!ss!iirt'i'iiH!unn3iai;iHjiiati(;i;iir . PROMINENT DOCTORS EXCITED AND AMAZED They Are Worked Up Over The Action of Phosphated Iron Making The Weak Strong Victims of weak nerves and ran down systems due to lack of pure blood will lie glad to know that there is, according 10 the best physicians a reliable remedy lor them. Many who were steadily going down kliiii to permanent Illness and nervous •breakdown have regained perfect health rhy taking Phosphated iron, the new blood and nerve food. One elderly woman said, "I was all In, looked and felt like the last run of shad, was clear discouraged without ambition or appetite. Now look at ntc. 3 have, the good health and bubbling spirits of a girl of eighteen, eat and sleep well. It made a new man of my husband too. And though we are well along in years we both face the future with confidence, knowing that as long as our blood is charged with good health-giving Iron and Phosphates we are safe. Again a bookkeeper who used It says; "If ever a man had a case of nerves it was me. I eouid not sleep at night, the j least sound made me jump, appetite gone, everything was up hill work and ( 3 felt myself slipping every day. My doctor said: 'Try Phosphated Iron, it is the exact remedy you require'. The ' Stewart Trucks Cost Less — —To Buy —To Run —To Maintain cost from $2OO to $3OO below the average price of trucks of equal capacity. Stewarts have 600 to 700 fewer parts. More than 90 per cent, of their power is deliver- 1 i ed to the rear wheels at all speeds and under all loads. Adjustments that invite tinkering and I tampering have been eliminated. They are fool-proof. L In the Stewart, the power is applied in such a way as to make the springs absorb starting, Br stopping and road shocks. They save tires and gasoline. Long life and continuous, uninter ■ rupted service is built into every Stewart. Stewarts are used in more than 200 different lines of business, in America and 24 foreign countries. Some firms operate fleets of from 5 to 50. There is a Stewart to meet every truck requirement. Let us show you the model that will solve your haulage problems. Cost Less To Buy Cost Less To Run Give Longer Service (Compure (be price* I (Auk Stewart Owners) On live yearn no Stewart ban worn out) #GOMERY-SCHWARTZ MOTOR CAR CO. !y,rr ° n .•. .o5.oo 1 Ton Chassis.. 1575.00 Mlesroom—ll6 Market St. ,r ° n Cassis.. 1975.00 Service Sltfcion—Court and Cranberry Aves. 2 Ton chassis.. 2575.00 K[ Harrisburg, Pa. 3 ' 4 Ton Cassis., 350*00 Bell Phone 2261 ■! Dial 3604 < r - • fUEsiAY EVENING, BOLSHEVISTS NOT 1 ACTIVE IN PENNA. I llaris R(|)oi'ls of Riots Are Ex ngerited; Only Minor Disturbances Philadelphia, April 1. AVhile j tl.ere have been a number of minor I disturbances, most of them as a re-! suit of strikes, and several bomb] explosions in this city and other sec-j tions of Eastern Pennsylvania in re-i cent months, nothing his been! brought out in the official investi-j gntions that would indicate the 801-j shovists were responsible. There, were half a dozen bomb ex-! plosions in this city last December,! two of them at the homes of State) land municipal judges. There wasj jso'iie talk of Bolshevism at the time, Ibo extensive investigations were j m de of all the explosions and noth jin was learned t > implicate the I Bi' .shev ists. according to the author iti's. Paris. April I. Another wireless | message pent by Tehitcherin, the | Russian Bolshevik foreign minister, ] to Bela Kurt. foreign minister in tlie I new Hungarian government, has | been intercepted l v the I'rencli, governn elt wireless operator*. Thel [message was sent last Saturday andj Ideals with the alleged spread of 801-i ahevlam. it says: ' The evolutionary movement cer-. tainly is gaining in America. Ameri-1 lean newspapers sav the states of I New York. Pennsylvania. Indiana. Illinois and Michigan are especially impregnated by Bolshevism. i i ' V riot; has taken place in Phila-] jdelphia. which certainly must be at-1 : tributed to Bolshevist influence." | Cincinnati Will Lost $lOO,OOO Annually ; When Prohibition Begins, < ineinaoM. <> April I.— Despite the: fail tha water may become a more pop ilai drink in Ohb after May 26 wli'-n the state goes dry, prohibition wll resudt In sale lot of more than $i(lu.OOO a year to the inclnnnti wa terworks, according t W. T\ Aon I Home, comptroller. He estimates that Cincinnati, brew- I eri >, distilleries, manufacturers of norcssoriea of intoxhunts and saloons annual!; consumed water for which i the; p d the f.ity ore than $1.00,* <>oo ind this income will be discon tin me that 1 rould almos; feel the Phosphates and iron feeding my weak watery b'ood and tired nerves. I now weigh 25 llis more than I ever did, Bnd much stronger". , A prominert physician to whom the above statements were submitted said: j ('Yes, Phosphated iron is easily the mos wonderful Iron prescription yet discovered, its ingredients are well known to all blood and nerve specialists and widely prescribed by them, t have used it very successfully in my nwr. practice and cured many patients where other physicians had failed. I can high ly recommend it for all cases of woai nerves and poor blood, as well as gen eral loss of tone, with absence of ap petite. It seldom fails me in this clas of cases. Special Notice: To insure doctors an. their patients getting the Genuine Phor phated Iron we have put in capsuie only, so do not allow dealers to sell yo ! pills or tablets. G...rge A. Gorges, the druggist, | aqd 1-ading druggists everywhere. MILLIONS FOR BETTER ROADS Counties Have Pledged Over $13,000,000 For the Sec ondary Highway System Over $13,000,000 in casli and in prospective bond issues is in sight for improvement of roads by count- ies of Pennsylvania and possibly $B,- j 000,000 more on the horizon accord- j ing to calculations made by State | Highway Department officials to- j night after an interview with the) authorities of Bradford county. The meeting was one of a series held in the last fortnight ut which dele-' gations assured Highway Commis-j sioner Lewis S. Sadler of their inten tion to co-operate in improvement I of the roads by undertaking the re- I construction of secondary highways. In a number of instances special: elections will be held very soon to [ secure the money, while in others! counties will use money standing to; their credit or issue bonds which] they may put out without having j to go to their people. Commissioner Sadler to-night! commended the spirit of these I counties and said that he hoped more would do likewise. Among counties which have as sured the State Highway depart ment of their co-operation in the construction of highways on the sec ondary system, with the amounts proposed in each county for con struction purposes, are the follow ing: Bradford, $1,000,000: Mercer, $400,000 available: bonds. $1,500,- 000: Bedford, $250,000; Schuylkill, $400,000; Northumberland, $150,- 000; Clarion, $250,000 available; bonds, $1,000,000; Elk. $75,000; Me- Kean, $750,000 (bonds alreadv au thorized); Erie, $1,300,000 (bonds already authorized); Jefferson, $250.- 000; bonds, $1,000,000; Clearfield, proposed bonds, $1,000,000; Luzerne, $223,000; Somerset, bonds proposed, $1,000,000; Cambria bonds proposed, $1,000,000: Reaver, $750,000; War ren. $750,000. Bradford county, its commission ers said to-day, proposes laying out an intra-county road system which will give a network going through all sections. The matter of a bond issue will then be put up to the voters. The borough of Say re and the j borough of Athens have completed I an agreement with the Department whereby tlje .State Will build a por tion of about three miles of high way through both boroughs, which are continuous. Commissioner Sad ler called attention to the ruling that -all piping and conduting must be placed before the State starts j work, and that no riping of streets will be permitted for five years. The borough authorities declared that their people were educated along this line and that an ordinance will pass forbidding riping for 13 years. Congressman MoFadden was" with to-day's county delegation. Tl' I county commissioners are .Tolin A. ' Buggies, Sayre: J. L. Ellsworth, WY-1 alusing; and C. L. Crandall. Alba. In the delegation from Sayre and Athens were George F. Corling. J. E. Umpleby and Charles E. Mills. Living Cost in England Doubled During the War l.ondon. Aoril I.—The eost of living for a workingman's family in Eng land was nearly doubled during the war. according to a statement issued by tlie Ministry of Food. The minis try bases its estimate upon that of a committee beaded by Lord Dumner which reported that in 1914 the aver age weekly expenditure for food for a working class family of six per sons was the equivalent of $0.12. The ministry estimates that the cost has now advanced to SII.SI a week. The ministry echoes the statement of Premier Lloyd George forecasting that the workingman's cost of living would be reduced about one dollar a week this summer. HAHRISBURG TELEGRAPH The Private Life of the Kaiser FROM THE PAPERS A\D DIARIES OK THE BARONESS VON LARISCH-REDDERN The KnUrr and Kalaerln's l.nte Major Domo, :hlrf of (he llojal llonnehold at Berlin nnd Popdnm. Ilnroneaa von Lnrivh-Reildern la tlir TRUE name of the Berlin Court I.nily who nave the story €>f the Knlaer to Henry Wllllnin l-'laher, I raula, lountraa von Kpplnglioveit liring n noin tie guerre, heretofore liaed to shield her. Thompson Feature 7i rvice, 1919, Copyright (Continued From Yesterday) i Ministers of state delivering rc j ports upon which hinged the fate j jof government measures, of peace ' jor war. or, perchance, the life of i some doomed man appealing to the j | king's grace, had to be prepared for interruptions: "Book at this ten |'ender " (meaning antlers with the! | given number of branches) —"the ! I prime stag among a battalion 1 ! mowed down at" some place or ] i other. Gun-cliarger Rieger had care of j these trophies, and had little time : for anything else. At great din j ners, when be stood behind the Kal ! ser's chair, this man was often cotl | suited about dates and incidents as j William told visitors of his killings lin time of peace. And the world I knows how lie kept up liis record as a butcher during more than four years. Instead of hares he mas sacred children: instead of deer he slew women and old men, nurses, priests and prisoners. He should worry! Kaiser Signs I'Jiotos, englishwomen Burn Tliem While the members of tbe Kai- ! ser's staff often asserted that he was never in better humor than after successfully playing some trick upon a friend, it shall not be denied that he was agreeable enough if lie li'ad half a mind to bo. lie loved a merry jest at a slag party, knew the art of making pleas ant conversation; sang, badly, it is true, but nevertheless entertainingly enough among friends; enjoyed what lie (considered "good" music, I and was a clever hand at any game j—billiards, skat, poker, and what i not? and, better still, be never al lowed the stakes to go above a quarter of a cent a point. If Diana smiled upon him, and I the host showed a lucky hand in j the selection of the menu, he usu- j ally ordered liis portfolio of photo graphs to be brought in after din- I net-, and, leaving everybody a choice |of pictures, inscribed his name, to gether with the date, and often some j (cheerful words of remembrance, on a dozen or half a hundred paste boards, as tlie case might be. Some of these signed photographs were given to American friends— I tlie Armours, Goulds, Vanderbilts, Morgans, etc. Whether they kept tliem after the invasion and desola tion of Belgium, 1 don't know, but I Uo know that at many English townliouses and eountryseats bon fires of Kaiser portraits Hared lip gaily after August 14, 1914. 1 re member calling upon the Manchion -1 ess of Londonderry some morning I in the last week of August of that | year, when her ladyship's secretary | came in to say that he "found 'em I all as listed." "Then into tlie kitchen range with 'em, frames and all," said the Mar chioness. "Had I better a tear 'em up first?" suggested tlie secretary, j "It would be a waste of time; no one wants pictures of that Ger man swine now"—this from her j ladyship, an amiable woman, noted for her polite accomplishments. | "Feeding the Boast" Was Ruling' the Kaiser At the time when tlie Kaiser's | hunting mania was at its height, the | late Eugene Rlchter made his great speech against William's hunting companions, who, he thundered, manipulated the Kaiser at will. "My African empire for a lettre do cachet that will send this pig-dog to Spundau! Would 1 not gladly forget all about him there!" shout ed the Kaiser at dinner, when the i report of the tirade reached him. "His African empire!" If it had ■ gone as cheaply as that, Mr. Wilson i | might have saved himself much anxiety. As to Iliehter, William's fellow- | ; PUf-trotlers certntnlj luul influence ; | with him, but to obtain the sway j j Kiehter imputed t'o them, they would i liavc had to go to school with Anna, I , the cook. she was the queen-bee i of the Schloss while tufkev was in i season, and, if fate had made her a j lady, instead of a poor country- | I wench, she might have had first i | place in the royal menage for the ! ! asking, with the proviso, however, j j that she never left off feeding the | , kaiser's gluttonous appetite for the i Thanksgiving bird. Kaiser a Stingy Host. I Whenever our court-marshal dis- I ; covered a new victim eager to place j ; his game at William's disposal, he i was careful to inform the noble | j gentleman that the regulation hunt i | dinner should consist of at least six j I courses. But when the Kaiser as- | ■ sembled his generous friends at his | : own fireside "simplicity" was | ! trumps, dinners being tabooed, and I j only breakfast, late luncheon, and | j suppers were offered, where cutlets' • and beefsteak took the place of t j roast, and fried apples formed the j dessert, with beer or light wines, I and punch as a substitute for chant- I pagne. So the imperial guests usually 1 made for the nearest restaurant as j soon as they returned to town. "They .come from dinner at j court," remarked the people, who | recognized the hunt uniform; "no; wonder they are famished. Prus- i sian provisioning makes lean ! horses." The Kaiser Imitated a Man-Hunt ing Indian Prince. 1 once heard the Kaiser say; "If j circumstances prevent the King ' front going to war—wliy, lie must j do the next best tiling—make war I !on I (casts. Hence, my devotion to j the chase. I want to become aeeus- | touted to bloodshed so i may face ' those most frightful massacres, j which The Bay—our world's war— will bring about without turning a liair." If you think this tin original, as i well as a wickedly criminal, atro j eious idea, you are mistaken. Mohammed Toghlak, an Asiatic tyrant, of bloody fame, at one time t [arranged a tigir hunt on a greater! Iscale of magnificence than lie had! lever before attempted: Hundreds of, war elephants, thousands of retain- I ers and beaters-up! But while proceeding to the | neighborhood selected, tlie Sultan j fell to thinking, and, after retlect j ing, suddenly changed his mind. I "1 am tired of running after | overgrown cats," lie told his people I—"such is unworthy of a great king, i We will hunt men this time." "But these are your majesty's faithful and peaceful subjects." | "Never mind—l crave the sport." ( i Then the tiger-liunters turned j ! man-hunters, one and all, and not , i until 25,000 men, women and cbil- ; dren— 23,000, count 'cm—were slain ■ i did Mohammed cry "halt." ' ! Twenty-five thousand was quite ' | a record two hundred or three hun jdred years ago. If the Kaiser in ' I the great war had had his own way, I lie would not have stopped even ' after 25,000,000 of men, women and ; children had been massacred. When the alienists get ready to ex > amine the mental status of William ' Holienzollern, they will study care fully his past mania for travel; his 5 weird restlessness, of pre-war times; ' liis desire to be moving 011 train or motor cars—symptoms of a disease ! that may or may not denote some deep-seated mental disturbance. He 1 did not care where be was going—as I long as he was on tbe move. On either of his fifty odd estates, William was always suffering with ennui. He could not bear to stay at home. This phase of the Kaiser's char acter will be considered in tbe next article. Copyright, 1919, by 150 Persons Put to Death For Looting in Budapest, Report Says Budapest. April 1. —One hundred | and fifty persons were executed by : tlie new Communist regime in I Budapest for looting during the political turmoil here last week. The town of Kaschau and several I other points in Southern Slovakia have been captured by Czechs who are fighting the Hungarian Com munists. German colonists in Western Hun- I gary and Transylvania are hostile to the Communists and are making an effort to gain their independ ence. Gives Germany Right to Trade With the i Neutral Countries Berlin. April I.—Marshal Foch 011 Friday telegraphed to General Nudant, his chief representative at Spa, saying that Gerfany was au thorized to trade with firms in neu tral counties, even if tbe firms are on the blacklist, provided that tlie Supreme Council and the blockade [ authorities approve. The Wolff i Bureau, the semi-official news j agency, protests against litis condt- ' tion and demands that trade he en tirely free. Again Promise Not to Lease Land to Japs I.os Angeles, Calif., April I.—TJie | owners of the California-Mexico . Land and Cattle Company's prop erty in Lower California still adhere | to a declaration made to the State j Department in 1917, that they will not "under any circumstances make I any lease of any kind to Japanese, j where colonization is probable, until we are first authoritatively informed ' that such an arrangement will be I entirely agreeable to (lie government | of our own country." . This was announced here by Harry ] Chandler, president of the company, j KILLED IN SEAPLANE CRASH Pcnsncoln. Fla., April I.—En- j signs Carl Wigel and L. A. Bobbins nnd Student Officer E. L. D. Trux ! were killed and Ensign Jesse Simp son was Injured in the collision of two seaplanes to-day at the naval ! air station here. The addresses of j 1 the mon were not announced. BONDS TO MEET RAILROAD NEEDS Will Mature in One Year Willi Interest at Rate of Five Per Cent. Washington. April I.—War Fin ance (Corporation bonds totalling $200,000,000 will be placed on sale Wednesday through Federal reserve banks and sub-agent bunks. The bonds, which will be tlie first to be issued under the War Finance t'or poiution act, will ue issued in de nominations of $l,OOO, will mature in one year with interest at five per cent., payable semi-annually, and will be practically free from taxes. Final details with reference to the issue were agreed upon yesterday in conferences between Attorney General Palmer and counsel for the Opens at 9A. M. Closes at SJO P. M.Z/H/H/H I Suits! Suits! Suits! Suits! 1 t| Hundreds More Stunning Suits Have Arrived | Specialized Valuesat|22.so, $25, $29.50 | J T seems as though we cannot get 1 dated liy the /of this conuiiunitv! We |\ price is very broad and embraces every wanted hjl S| j material, every fashionable color, and every Cy\JW\ 1 I 111 lis [AJ | Jff size. We pay a great deal more for these suits pill nj is ij SP|jPßgraiP TdX than other stores would pay lor them to sell *i Lm" in La ft ("lioose your Easter suit now at these special- ni Wl 'I season will lie on and then you will find some H\\ N; Ajji&jflßHE difficulty in procuring just tlie suit you want, so "ml \l I A you see it is mueli better to purchase your Easter tly /I . |jj| jjj WT At $22.50, $25 & $29.50 \ IJjJj D; H All Sizes for IP omen mul Misses ' ■—k.ini'.n.. , M Second Floor.; 1 - JJU ft Crepe Kimonos 1 Dressing Gingham Petticoats bij h Wednesday Sacques Wednesday UJJC J|j Jig Serpentine Crepe Kimonos: full IWednesdtlV Good quality: made in am at ftj | S)| or fitted styles in several prettily J tailored model with sectional lis" trimmed models shown in regular flounce; full cut; all lengths. Jiy and extra sizes, 26 to 52. f UP h ■■nnHiHSHnßMHsmaM Made of fine ft ity percales in hii St light anil dark pal- ... | Muslin Drawers JA. Envelope Chemise 1 JC W Si Wednesday 4"C ______ Wednesday 1.40 0 II Women's I 'awers, made of good <' r .*®| quulitv muslin, la. eor embroidery quality nainsook; flesli and white: Ifl trimmed: full cut; open or closed TI-lc' full cut, beautifully trlnnied will, styles; all sizes. UirlS embroidery or ribbon; sizes |S ftl Dresses vj Js Wednesday |\| Hi Children s Slips Qfip 95c Muslin Gowns 1 A C ftl N W, * aA y ■■■ U , Wednesday .... S |§! Children s Princess blips: made orfl stripes and y |y| of tine nainsook; trimmed with plaids: good styles' Muslin Gowns: slip-over and IM lace and embroidery insertion; foil well made full cut; V-neck styles; lace or embroidery gjj (ffls cut, perfectly made; sizes 6 to-14 neatly trimmed': trimmed; full cut; made of nain- 11.l years. sizes 6 to 12 years." sook and cambric; nil sizes. |IU | Wednesday's Bargain Basement Specials | I innlnni Bed Springs R, W Rag Rugs Telephone Stand Mber ll ' o\ a e\ l ed : Good atroiig woven fijj SS Size 18x36 inches. Spe- with good ticking. Spe- 1 v \ ,re , ®? r . with cial, j and chair, fumed oak. oial, j nsers * Special, kl QJ 48c | $9.95 $6.95 M Serving Trays Water Pitchers Cobbler Set uj njl Mahogany Serving Trays. Spe- Good quality glass water Pitch- Shoe repairing outfit, consisting LM cial glass top, strong QO - I ers, imitation cut glass, OC. of lasts, nails for half soles and I] gi handles I/OC | Special ,an other tools. Special, QO „ njl ! set I/OC k O'Cedar Mop Dish Pans Ironinv Board >! IjlJ O'Cedar mop and handle, good' Good strong 10-quart tin dish \ ® . Bl* IS ~i B 8ii!0 . gA ! pans. Spe- or. "trong Ironing Board W., || Special 59C : da, and stand complete. $| 43 Oil of Cedar Dinner Set Dishes Bath Stools !§; 1 quart bottle oil of cedar for 42-pieee Gold decorated dinner White enamel hath ,t nnl . HM fYI floors and furniture. 3Q C ! >""- S " $5.95 with rubber bU legs Qfit S [!M special c . la , set ■■■■. j s , Jec .j al I7OC UJ U Clothes Baskets Percolator Casserole 1) S* Good strong chip clothes lias- j 8-cup Coffee Percolator, made Nickel plated casserole, 7-inch Si lib kets, with handles. CQ r of Aluminum, glass top. 1 AC I size, brown and white 'no nil !g Special Special 1 I litter. Special "OC tM U Clothes Horse Mixing Bowls Alarm Clocks P njl Folding clothes liorse, well- White mixing bowls with blue j Nickel alarm clocks, good time Nil tU made. Spe- QQ band —set of four sizes, *7Q_ : keepers. Spe- no SJ cial • 5/OC for <%> C j c j n | 9oC k Bleached Muslin Lace Curtains Linoleum •dj [U Good grade Bleached Mus- Filet net lace curtains, white all good patterns. New Pro- [Jy §i lin, 36-Inch wide; fine quality. and ec-ru, 2 1 / s yards long; lace cess quality, 2 yards wide. Is® I ?E al : 19c e p d a f r °;. ; Speclal : $1.89 J Sp^ ial ;. Bquare 59c || 1 1 =. fn XI Bed Sheeting Carpet Sweepers Window Shades v! §l| Unbleached muslin slieeting, , .. . . Window shades, dark green,fflyj y |i| 2 % yards wide, extra good Nickel guards on ends good s(ze tfx3 fpe ,_ (n two g,. af j es; I SST 49q Sal"™"!': Sl.BB ™xw > ™. l '.™! th 9c " l " 1 89c |j APRIL 1, 1919. corporatioii. Receipts Irom the is sue will be used by (lie corporation | to provide funds for railroads and to meet other demands. The tax exemption features of the issue were set forth by the corpora j ,tion as follows; "Tlie bonds will be exempt from i state taxation and all local taxation ! and will lie exempt from taxation 1 by the United States with tile excep | tion that they will oe subject to es -1 tate or inheritance taxes, and to surtaxes and excess profits taxes now I or hereafter imposed by the United! • States upon the income or profits J of individuals or corporations. But • [another important tax exemption re-j Mating to these bonds is this: Thai \ ; tlie interest on $5,000 of these bonds ! owned by any person will lie entire- i j l.v exempt from all income taxes,! ! surtaxes, excess profits or war pro fits taxes." LEAGUE ENDOUSED Philadelphia, April 1. —"The mosr j hopeful outlook at present seems j to reside in a League ot Nations." In these words tlie Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of Friends, in ses- | sion hero yesterday, endorsed tlie 5 | course ol' the American dclegatioa at, the Peace Conference. Chest Colds and Sore Throats j Quick relief comes overnight | when you apply Musturine —the | original improvement on the i old-fashioned mustard plaster. ! Musturine contains true mus- J laril. It cannot blister and there ' are no disagreeable fumes to j irritate the nose and eyes, i It's good for so many ailments, ! removing congestion and reduc ! ing inflammations and swellings |so quickly that no home can I afford to do without it. One I small box proves it. Always j comes in yellow box. i'.e sure to j ask for JJegy's Mustarine.