GIVES PRAISE TO GEN. DENIKINE English Admirer Says Head of the Russian Volunteer Army Is Good Man Ixiudon. April B.—General Deni kine. head of the Russian Volunteer Army, which is fighting Bolshevism to Southern Russia, is described by an English admirer from Odessa as w a man of about 50 years with regu lar features and the fine presence of the striking Russian type, lie cfives one the impression of being a broad-minded. high-thinking, deter mined. well-balanced man." The Associated Press correspondent met this Englishman, whose name ...ay not be disclosed at the British foreign Office. Denikine, he said, is guiding his army and his "Special Council" through dangerous shoals, but so far he has not encountered any reefs. The "Special Council." lie explained, is a legislative body which is laying the foundations of a "new all-Rus sian government." lie described its members as reformers, "all broad minded and determined to give Rus sia every possibility of gaining a place among the great free nations of Europe." The Volunteer Army now num bering 100 men and holding a belt reaching from tile Black Sea to the Caspian, lie described as tionpoliti cal. "It stands," according to tlie traveler, "for a united free Russia, for freedom of press and speech, and Constipated Children Gladly Take "California Syrup of Figs" For the Liver and Bowels Tell your druggist you want genuine "California Syrup of Figs." Full directions and dose for babies and children of all ages who are constipated, bilious, feverish, tongue coated, or full of cold, are plainly printed on the bottle. Look for the name "California" and accept no other "Fig Syrup." SAFE, GENTLE REMEDY BRINGS SURE RELIEF For 200 years GOLD MEDAL ITaar-1 lorn Oil line ••nabled suffering humnii- j icy to withstand attacks of kidney, | liver, bladder and stomach troubles J and all diseases connected with the j urinary organs, and to build up and restore to health orgaus weakened by disease. These most important organs must be watched, because they filter Hud purify the blood; unless they do their work you are doomed. Weariness, slceplcssucss, nervous ness. despoinleuCy. backache, stomach trouble, pains in the loitis and lower abdoineu. gravel, rheumatism, sciatica and lumbago all warn you of trouble with your kulncys GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules are the remedy Asserts Begy's Mustarine Gives Quickest Relief for Sore Throat and Chest Colds Sufferers From Neuralgia, Lumbago, Neuritis and Sciatica Use It Freely With Wonderful Results—Does Not Irritate the Nose and Eyes. The very best—the original im-| Movement on Grandmother's good old; r.ustard plaster, is Begy's Mustarine. It't better than any mustard plaster' tver made. Druggists know this, and that is! aby most of them freely recommend Bcgy'a Mustarine for all aches and pains, inflammation and congestion. I Don't fail to rub it on when you have a sore throat or a cold In "the ! Miest or bronchitis or pleurisy—the quick results will amaze you. For rheumatic pains and swellings, j gout, stiff and sore muscles, stiff neck) and inflamed feet it is better than! JBEfa Abwlately Ho Pain jf fIMsSgSmM *' latast laprml appU. WESOW aaeca, taaladlap aa aitrit*- jW A (flnlwn M air apparataa, aralaa X £P jfr WHBSmEg axtraeliap and all dor and died almost imme diately. He was 40 years old and leaves a wife and four children. you need. Take three or Tour every day. The healing oil soaks into the oells and lining of the kidneys and drives out the poisons. New life and health will surely follow. When your normal vigor has been restored continue treatment for a while to keep yourself in condi tion and prevent a return of the dis ease. Don't wait nntil you are incapable of fighting. Start taking GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules today. Your druggist will cheerfully refund your money if you are not satisfied "with results. Rut be sure to get the original imported GOLD MEDAL and accept no substitutes. In three sires. Sealed packages. At all drug stores. j plasters, poultices or liniments. Its the simplest and best remedy Known to stop headache, earache I toothache and backache in just a few I minutes, without any stomach dosing I Just rub it on—it's very penetrating ! and acts with greatest speed. Get 1 the original Begy's Mustarine—al i nays in the yellow box you'll never j sorry. INUstabTnP I 1 RUSS RAILROADS DISORGANIZED i Run-Down Equipment Great j Cause For Slowness of Transportation By Associated Press. | Omsk, Siberia. April 8— Before the war the trans-Siberian express | trains made the journey from Vlad ivostok to Paris in thirteen days, and ifrom Vladivostok, to Omsk, the seat lof the Atl-Russian government, in isix days. Recently special American Red Cross trains. Young Men's Chris j tian Association trains and troop j trains required from 20 to 25 days ; to cover the distance from Vladivos j tok to the temporary seat of the I provisional government. General disorganisation, lack of i locomotives and run-down passeng er and freight cars were the great j causes of this time-consuming trip. ] The slow traveling cars had. how jever, one advantage, among a long I list of inconveniences, discomforts and even some danger, and that was I that it afforded Americans an oppor tunity to glean some conception of the vastness of Siberia and learn something of the ways of the Rus !sian people. j In Russia "Sci tschass" (immedi ately) does not always mean immc jdiately. Very often it signifies to- I morrow, or the next day after that. ! The lack of steady and regular ap | plication of the Russian workmen in IMs labor and what is called the "si jlont resistance" to foreign ideas as to .how things should be done, is be lieved to be one of the chief difficul ties to be encountered in the reor ganization of the railroads as ar ranged for by an international com mission under the technical direction of the American Stevens commission. The popular way of explaining the vastness of Siberia is to say that it would contain all of Europe and the United States and then Germany over again. Siberia is equivalent to one-thirteenth of the continental sur face of the terrestial globe. It is two and one-half times bigger than European Kussia and twenty-five times as big as the recent German Empire. German Censorship Misled Public, Says Former Krupp Head Berlin, April B. (Correspondence of The Associated Press). —Rev,#- tions of the "stupidity and cunning" of German newspaper censorship, which for more than four years ob sessed 70,000,000 people with the hope of an impossible victory, hid from them the news of Prussian de feats and at last contributed to the downfall of the structure of pre tence it had raised, are brought out here in a remarkable pamphlet said to have been inspired by Dr. Wil helni Muehlon, formerly director of the Krupp Works, whose expose of Germany in 1918 as the real insti gator of the war. sent him into vol untary exile in Switzerland. The pamphlet, entitled "How We Were Lied To," is published osten sibly under the name of Kurt Mueli sam, a former Austro-German war correspondent. It is filled with in stances of military duplicity, show ing the efforts that were made to conceal from the German people everything of a discouraging nature that had to do with the war. Newspaper editors, occording to the document, were forbidden under dire penalties to discuss any subject relating to the war without the ap proval of hundreds of government censors operating through twenty one newspaper bureaus and various branches of the government. The Lusitania sinking and the submarine controversy with the United States were so skillfully maneuvered in the press that for many months the people were led to believe that the negotiations were taking "a course very favorable to us." William H. Earnest Is Elected President of the University Club Clans for a revival of activities to I even a greater extent than before the • war were discussed at the annual meeting of the University Club held last night. Lhiring the past vear the club s membership has increased from 13.. to 270, it was reported. William H. Earnest was elected president of the club to succeed Prof. H. R. Omwake. Capt. E. J. Stackpole. Jr., was elected as vice-president. New members elected on the board of directors are H. R. Omwake (rc !?i 'I - £• £ ice> Kred Kammerer ■and Robert T. Fox. Other members \'L S re William H. Earnest. ML ! ro " Keller, P. M. Hall. E B I i\ Dr - Arthur E. Brown, Dr. ,L H. Klrkpatrick Capt. E. J. Stackpole, Jr., and Mark T. Milnor. I Sixty-three members of the club are on its roll of honor, serving in ! 'ia"^- S °- L , ncle San i. Lieut. J. I ma m is the only member of- I service. repor,ed to have died in the heM Ket "'°Bicther picnic will be held this year in place of the annual banquet. Tentative plans are that this picnic will be held June 7 at the I shimmer home of Henderson Gilbert. Kiwanis Club Plans to Entertain Rotary Club "A good talker, a silent booster anc. an ultendance prize" are prom i ised by See:tary V. Hummel Brack en vidge as some of the attractions to i be pi teen ted at the weekly luncheon "t the Kiwanis Club of Harrisbu-g i to be l.cld to-morrow noon at the Hotel - The meeting | will he held to-morrow in place of Thursday because of the Rotary i Club conference which will be held ! on the latter date. ' Tic Rotary Club will be the guests rf the Kiwanlans at the next meeting to he held next Thursday. Pig and Poultry Clubs Are Being Reorganized All of the pig and poultry clubs in operation in Dauphin county last year havo been reorganized and will be active again this season. In ad dition, the recently organizer Hatnlyn and Crums' school com munity clubs will operate both pig and poultry clubs and another pig club has been organized at Enter line, Farm Agent H. G. N'iesley re ports. WILL TACKLE TALBEKT If. L. Talbert, billiard champion of Franklin county, will meet Wil liam S. Leonard, proprietor of the Leonard billiard and pool establish ment, on the Leonard tables Friday night. Leonard is former national champion, class B. Last week Leonard and Talbert met in Chamhersburg, and although Leonard won this match, the former national title holder claims Talbert to be one of the best cueists he has ever been matched with. The match will he 18.2 balkline and it will begin at 8 o'clock. No admission will be charged. , HJLRRISBTJRG &£§!£& TELEGRAPH [TO PUT GERMANY ON PROBATION To Become Member of League if She Lives Up to Provisions By Associated Press. London. April S.—"The difficulty of putting the text of the covenant of the League of Nations in the peace treaty that Germany is to sign, it Germany is not a party to the cove nant, which she by her signature ac cepts," says the Paris correspondent of the Westminster Gazette, has i been cleared up. By a skilful p'■ ec '.of draughtsmanship, the covenant, i as it will appear in the treaty, ts so I worded that while the existence and jurisdiction of the league will be . recognized by Germany that co - try will not be immediately received as a member. She will, however. | express her full accord in the co - 'stitution of such a body, and will agree to abide by its decisions. "Although there is at present no question of Germany being one ot the original signatory powers, it s contemplated that so soon as i . certain that that country will faith fully carry out the obligations of the league, it will come in. 1 his is !in a line which will be pursued in respect to other enemy states. 1 hc> will be invited to subscribe to the principles of the league, and in thai sense thev will be probationary mem bers without voice in the councils. "States without a stable govern ment are equally ineligible for mem bership, which presupposes the abil ity of a signatory power to fulhll tue pledged conditions. It is learned that numerous neutral powers, who have been consulted, are enthusiastic supporters of the idea, and there is no possible doubt as to their inclu sion at an early date. Their sugges tions have been carefully considered and. in some cases where practicable, inserted in the new draft of the cove nant. "The difficulty concerning the Monroe doctrine has been, it is be lieved, overcome. It should be re membered that, except for certain cases which arc clearly specified, unanimous decisions of the executive council, which will be provisionally composed of nine members, will be necessary. Therefore, as America will occupy one of these seats, no decision can possibly be arrived at that does not have her full consent." Many Colleges Will Plant Memorial Trees Commencement Day By Associated Press. Washington, April B.—Commence ment day at many colleges will have for part of the program this year the planting of memorial trees in honor of former students who gave their lives or offered their lives to their country in the World War. Arbor Day will be more widely marked this year than ever before, because of memorial tree planting. In Atlanta a memorial group plan is being worked out at "Pershing Point" where memorial trees will lie planted. Minneapolis will have a "Memorial Drive" miles long which will be part of a park system forty miles long. At St. Louis beau tiful Lindell Boulevard is to be plant ed with memorial trees. Camp Bowie in Texas, will be marked with a me morial boulevard, planted with me morial trees. There will be much planting of trees by schools, com munities, women's clubs and motor highway associations to honor those who died in the war, says the Amer ican Forestry Association. Women Munition Workers Trained in Housekeeping IAMUIOII. April B.—So many young girls have been employed in muni tion factories during the past four years of war and have been depriv ed of training for the household, that the I.ondon County Council has opened domestic science schools where they may be trained as ser vants or to look after their own houses after they are married. In one school, which has been opened at the "unemployed center" in Shepherd's Bush, the girls, who had just been freed from factory work, spent their time singing, whistling and throwing dishtowels across the room. They appeared at the school clad in their best tinery. with ringlets about their necks and trinkets hanging from their ears. Their neatly capped teachers, how ever. soon convinced them this was not the raiment for household work, and in a few days they were as neatly and as sensibly clad as she. LIFT OFF CORNS, MAGIC! NO PAIN Drop Freezone on a touchy corn then lift that corn off with fingers n fra V /, lOJJ J Tiny bottles cost £) only a few cents. 0 / Rrop a little Freezone on an ach ing corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then you life it right out. It doesn't pain one bit. Yes, magic! Why wait? Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of Freezone for a few cents, sufficient to rid your feet of every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and calluses, with out soreness or irritation. Freezone is the much talked of ether discovery of a Cincinnati genius. THE STORE THAT CLOSES SATURDAYS AT SIX BEI.I, 1001—23.-.0 I'MTEIJ The Grain of Wheat which is cast to the ground must perish before the new grain can exist. It must produce before production can begin anew, and if it receives but scant attention after the first planting then reproduction becomes uncertain, for cultivation means re-creation. I bis store sows the seeds of Production cautiously and afterward cultivates them diligently because reproduc tion means life a renewal of interest in the fruits of our labor for a widened confidence in our goods and prices. The "grains of wheat" we sow arc selected zealously and jealously so that they shall produce the best that you or we could expect from them. This is so from year's end to year's end. We arc cultivating con stantly here. We aim to select the most dependable merchandise so as to give satisfaction to our customers. We sell it at the most moderate prices possible. \\ e believe in giving our employes the shortest work ing hours possible, consistent with good service to the public. These seeds of good merchandising and fair dealing have produced a harvest of public confidence and a liberal share of patronage for which we are truly appreciative. Rummage Sale in Gilbert Building, opposite Courthouse, April 10th, 11th and 12th. Benefit Harrisburg Hospital. New Oxfords For Spring The prevailing styles in Black Satin, $9.50. Black Suede, $11.50. Get acquainted with our Children's Department. From Infants to growing girls. White Canvas Brown Kidskin • Genuine White Buckskin Black Kidskin Patent Leathers • Priced according to size. BOWMAN'S—Main Floor. Spring Showing of Plush and Velvet Coatees, Stoles and Capes In the newest shades, finest qualities and smartest styles. Panne Velvet Stoles, 52 in. length with fringe, lined with finest quality brocaded silk, $12.95. Plush Stoles, 52 in. length in Mole and Black, $10.95. Black Velvet Stoles with or without fringe, $8.95. Keramie Plush Coatees, belted models in Mole, Brown, and black, $19.50 to $22.50. New Fox and Wolf scarfs in black, taupe, brown and Elephant gray. BOWMAN'S—Third Floor. High Grade Turkish Bath Towels These towels are all of the best quality, made of good substantial Double Terry and will prove an economic purchase. Turkish Bath Towels, bleached snow white and hemmed; size about 18x38, 35c each. Turkish Bath Towels with pink and blue striped borders; size about 19x40, 40c each. Turkish Bath Towels, bleached and hemmed. Size about 22x46, 60c each. Size about 25x48, 75c each. BOWMAN'S—Second I^loor. f Tweed-O-Wool Outing Suits |j[\ in all the new Spring shades and mixtures. Some come in the \ \ long pleated models, others pleated or gathered from the yoke with the narrow belts. Skirts come in the right widths for walk ing and sport wear. All sizes, $25.00, $29.50, $32.50, $35.00 and Admirably Clever Stylish Dresses W in the most exquisite fabrics shown this Spring. The Georgettes KJWWI elaborately embroidered and beaded. The Taffetas and Crepe Meteors gracefully draped with smart bell sleeves. The Faille and Figured Georgette combinations with a style all their own; and the Street Dress of Faille Moire with the smart long tunic ''J||k ' All the leading shades are to be found in these up-to-the-min utc dresses, $35.00 to $89.50. BOWMAN'S —Third Floor HAnnisnvno, Tuesday, aimgi. h, ioio. APRIL 8. 1919. Mid-Week Sale Of Muslin and Sheeting Unbleached sheeting; 81 inches wide. Cut from the piece, smooth even thread; will wash easily, yard. Bleached Sheeting, 81 inches wide. Cut from the piece, 55c yard. Bleached muslin. 36 inches wide. Soft finish, free from dressing. Can be used instead of longcloth or nainsook, 22c yard. Unbleached muslin, 36 inches wide. Extra good qual ity, cut from the piece. Free from specks, 18c yard. Bleached pillow case muslin, 42-inchcs wide, 30c yard. 45-inches wide, 35c yard. BOWMAN'S—Second Floor. ______ Starting the Garden I rsmrrTlpjk / Every man and woman today feels the - /q*a_L£*Z_ urge to go forth and dig into the ground T and plant things that will grow. One of the 1 greatest satisfactions of life is the satis- L 3 KgN faction of raising things. The Bowman Garden Store is ready with Garden Spade, D handle, Potato Hooks, 85$ $1.25. Garden llocs, 45c. Garden Shovels, pointed Grass Shears, 15c to 50c. with long handle, $1.65. Transplanting Trowels, Spading Forks, D handle, ( - )C v _ ~ ~,