4 Richard Crane May Be First Minister at Cxecho-Slovakia April M.—BMterd Crane, yrlwn secretary to Secre tary Lamhtg and son of Charles R- Crane, of Chicago, Is understood to have been selected to become the first American minister to the new republic of Czecho-Slovakia. An nouncement of his appointment is expected from Paris shortly. —————__ Herpicide 'Go.* "J" ACt'd Trt-t-4 rats P**<rih os Xtr rrrPt c'** -dL* Zf.L Bfrww - T IVINGSTON'C 7 and 9 S. Market Square Pre-Easter Bargain Carnival JUST 1 MORE DAY OF REAL BARGAINS-SATURDAY, THE LAST DAY OF THIS GREAT EVENT 1000 Women's and Misses' Women's and Capes, Dolmans & Coats Misses' ip-rH At Prices That Will Astonish You OEI I T / I \ Materials are Serge, Gabardine, Vel- II I I / I \\ Vfl) oun, Silvertone, Poiret Twill, Poplin, j] w y etC " in every Co,or and Style ' At Spedsd Reductions Dorinff l/I 'I VW $14.00 Cape, Dolman $22.50 Cape, Dolman our PRE-EASTER BAR- W| \\j"J or Coat, or Coat, GAIN CARNIVAL \\ V) $8.98 $15.98 Serge, Gabardine, Velonr, STS;OO Cape, Dolman $25.00 Cape, Dolman Tricotine, PopHn and others i I 7 or Coat, or Coat, in the newest colors, designs VJn $9.98 $17.98 •****>*>■ size op to 58. / $10.50 Cape, Dolman $30.00 Cape, Dolman m $11.98 $21.98 fpTf SIB.OO Cape, Dolman $37.50 Cape, Dolman $22.50 Suits ,$16.98 rsi C\ or Coat, or Coat, * " ' $13.98 $27.98 $25.85 Suits 518.98 Just Received Hundreds of $30.00 Suits .$21.50 SPRING DRESSES 50 ° Suits t24 - 98 for women and misses, Taffeta, Satin, Crepe \ v cr\ c rot n o de Chine, Serge, Georgette, Tricotine, Silk 1 po/.oU oUItS . )c7.98 Poplin, etc., in every desired color and style. AMMv /jKEf, $40.00 Suits .$29.98 $8.98 $15.98 iff™ $14.85 Dresses, $25.00 Dresses, / jj|f| Js® These are all sample gar d*Q qq -a /* qq I ments, one or two of a kind, Vioa7O V wil'Ll lf|\ and you can expect real sav sl6.so Dresses, $30.00 Dresses, Hi Ml (vi\s 00 of these Suits > $10.98 $19.98 IbWff $18.85 Dresses, $35.00 Dresses, =J|=r[ll Ij Tlmi'd' Mice $11.98 $24.98 H| S™ doi?SsSrKS CO QQ Pre-Easter Bar- J? gain Carnival Women's & Misses' . c Checlre ? Skir,i B n> a " d QKTHTQ //Mw P es 0 a " kinds; others in dIV-Ilv 1S /ukfljY S \gW 1 J |ivl\ V plain shades in every material. At very low prices during our /l/j&WJI | ] \\ \\ Pre-Easter Bargain Carnival. /'WSjOJ J B ilk\ *\ $8.50 $12.50 $4.50 $5.85 / fWL I 1 SKIRTS SKIRTS SM s3*9B m,\\ 111 *5-3* $7.98 $6.75 $7.89 \l"' LflJ / SIO.OO sls 00 SKIRTS SKIRTS \ / SKIRTS SKIRTS $4.49 S4M S6M $9.98 Girls' and Misses' New Spring Dresses, Capes, Coats and Hats fA Special Reduction During Our Pre-Easter Bargain Carnival GIRLS' DRESSES White and Colors. Ages 2to 15 Years, $1.50 DRESSES 98* $30)0 DRESSES $1 98 $2.00 DRESSES $1.49 $3.50 DRESSES 229 $2.50 DRESSES $1.69 $3.75 DRESSES <l2 49 $2.75 DRESSES $1.79 $4.00 DRESSES i 52*69 $5.00 DRESSES $2.98 Children's and Girls' Coats and Capes At Real Redactions—Sizes 4 to 14 Years. Serge, Poplin, Gabardine Taffetas, Satin, Silk, etc. Every Color and Style $6.50 COAT OR CAPE $3 00 $7.50 COAT OR CAPE " *S4 98 $8.85 COAT OR CAPE "ok'SQ $10.75 COAT OR CAPE.. $12.50 COAT OR CAPE .'.57!98 Children's and Girls' Easter Hats Just Received $1.50 HATS $2.00 HATS $1.49 $5.00 HATS $2 98 $3.00 HATS $1.98 $6.00 HATS $3.98 FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBTTRG TELEGRAPH- " APRIL 18, 1919 PRESIDENT AND AIIIED PREMIERS TOGIVE TREATY Time Will Be Allowed Ger man Delegates to Make Inquiries Parts, April 18.—The procedure on the arrival of the German pleni potentiaries at Versailles has virtu ally been concluded. It will be President Wilson and the premiers who will hold the first meeting and deliver the treaty, as it is not deemed feasible to have all the Al lied Powers attend this initial ses sion. The actual arrival of the Germans at Versailles, it Is stated, will occur on Friday night. April 25; but the meeting with the President and premiers will not be held until Sat urday, and may even go over until Monday. After the treaty Is actually dellv- ered, It is intended to allow ade quate time for the Germans to make Inquiries concerning the details be fore returning to Weimar. This is expected to take about two days, the first day being devoted by the Ger mans to familiarizing themselves with the terms, and the second day to the answering of such queries as they may make. No Discussion There Is no purpose to have this assume the character of a discus sion, but merely the elucidation of any points which may assist in securing prompt and favorable ac tion when the plenipotentiaries re turn to Weimar. It is believed that the stay of the plenipotentiaries at Weimar will cover a week, thus bringing them back to Versailles about May 8 to 10. This, however, is conjec tural, for It Is dependent upon the rapidity of the decisions reached at Weimar. Premier Lloyd George's declara tion in the British Parliament that j France had been given full guaran tees against a renewal of German at i tacks is the first authoritative j statement that such guarantees have I been given and arouses the keenest j discussion regarding the nature of ' the guarantees so affecting the GET AND USE COLLATERAL Every man who expects to make headway in the world should understand the valtie of collateral. He buys securities that are safe and that pay a rea sonable rate of interest. Then If, In emergencies, he needs money, he doesn't have to mortgage his home or ask a neighbor to go his security. He walks into his bank, puts up his collateral and gets his money. When he can, he pays off the loan and gets his collat eral back. And it has been earn ing Interest all the time. There Is no better collateral In the wortd than Liberty Bonds. Any bank will lend you ninety per cent, of their face any time. There is no better Investment, no better collateral, nothing that gives such evidence of your patriotism. Subscribe to Yonr Limit In the VICTORY LIBERTY IX)AN United States and Great Britain. The French reports are that the guarantees amount to an alliance, and the semiofficial Temps says: France Gets Guarantee "Premier Lloyd George's language admits of only one meaning. This is that Great Britain and the United States engage to sustain France in cast) she is again attacked by Ger many. Such an alliance is legiti mate and necessary. Mr. Lloyd George would not pronounce such words lightly, and his announce ment Is singularly Instructive." The Council of I our, which framed the guarantees as part of the Rhine settlement, has thus far maintained a rigid silence, except for the general declaration of Mr. Lloyd George. A plenary session < f tie Peace Conference will bo held two days next week, on Wednesday and Thursday, for the purpose of pass ing upon a large number of remain ing details before the meeting with the Germans. Cardinal Gibbons Praises Salvation Army Work By Associated Press New York, April 18.—Cardinal Gibbons praises the work of the Sal vation Army here and abroad, in a letter made public by former Governor Charles S. Witman, of New York, chair man of the National Committee of the Salvation Army Home Service fund. "I rejoice In the splendid service which the Salvation Army rendered our soldier and sailor boys during the war, said the cardinal. "Every returning trooper Is a willing witness to efficient and generous worker of the Salvation Army, both on the front and in the camps at home. I am also the more happy to commend this because it is free from sectarian bias. The man in need of help Is the object of their efforts, with never a question of his creed or color." WARTIME EXPERIENCES MARUED FACES OF WOMEN Boston. —A woman sculptor, when asked if she thought the experiences of the war hae left any permanent mark on the faces of women, replied: "There are women whoso faces are masks. No artist can penetrate to their souls and record in paint or marble qualities which he divines rather than sees, by the exercise of his Imaginative gifts. These wom en will not show the marks which the last four years may have Im printed on their souls. "Then there are the supremely frivolous women, who would dance as lightly over a battlefield as they do in a ballroom. These women have not won a line of suffering in the last few years. There is no record on their faces of supreme moments to map for the artist their sorrows and emotions. "But, ns regards the generality of Englishwomen. I notice a greater spirituality In the facea of my sisters when I compare them with the wo men who came to me before the war. Plain faces are no longer plain. They are Interesting, the faces of women who have forgotten themselves In spending themselves for others. And, strangely enough, I have the impres sion that I see more quietly happy faces than I used to. "In the eyes of many of the women I study In the streets and public places I trace sorrow and past grief, but not so ofton present unhapplness. Late Developments in European Situation As it is evident that the ques tion of the possession of Fiume and the Dalmatian coast has not yet been dellnitely settled, the Italian delegates are working earnestly to secure a decision be fore the Italian Chamber of Depu ties meets on April 24. It is the intention of the aero nautical commission of the Peace Conference to form a permanent international commission on aerial navigation, to act as a kind of clearing house on all questions of air navigation between the re- ! spective states. That the internal political and labor troubles in Germany are not to be permitted to encroach upon the occupied zone anywhere is indicated by an order of the British commander on the Rhine. Northern Italy is experiencing a spoil of labor trouble, the work men at Milan, Bologna, Turin and Genoa, the principal manufac turing cities, having gone on a twenty-four hour strike. Labor troubles also are brew ing in the department of the Seine, France, of which Paris is the capital. A one-day strike has been called for May 1 by the Gen eral Federation of Labor to put forward the federation's program, which calls for an eight-hour day, political amnesty, nonintervention in Russia, lifting of the state of siege and the censorship and the return of constitutional guar antees. Disorders or such magnitude are reported from both European and Asiatic Turkey as to give rise to the fear that there will be great outbreaks at various points and new massacres of Armenians. An investigation by the Belgian Central Industrial Committee of the damages suffered by Belgium as a result of the war shows that these aggregate 35,000,000 francs. The items include damages to state property, Belgian industry, private homes and war expenses. A Russian Bolshevik wireless communication announces that the Bolsheviki at various points on the western Russian front from the Black Sea to the Baltic have been victorious in fighting against various groups. SCHOOL BASIS OF RECONSTRUCTION Brumbaugh, at Juniata Event, Says Education Is Founda tion For New World Huntingdon, Pa., April 18. Tile regular meeting of the trustees of Juniata College was held yesterday, as this date is also founders' day. A special program has been arranged, including musical features, and addresses and the exhibition of plans for the development of the college grounds and buildings. These plans and drawings were made by G. Edwin Brumbaugh, an architect of Philadel phia and a son of ex-Governor M. G. Brumbaugh, who made the principal address of the tevening. Dr. Brumbaugh received a most cordial welcome by the students and friends at the chapel exercises this morning at which time he made a short address. His theme this even ing was "Problems of Education In the Post-Bellum Days." "The aim of education is to con struct. the aim of war is to destroy," said the ex-GoYernor. "The one is a blessing to society, the other is a curse to society. The one builds up, the other tears down. The school Is the agency pre-eminent that the na tion must use to build anew the fabric of national life out of the wreck and ruin of war. In the soil of sorrow and blood the teacher must sow the seeds of the nation to be. "The war has made manifest at least three things; one, education, must be made a vastly more moral agency than heretofore. It must con sciously and constructively teach morals. It must insist that the code of conduct for nations is the same as the code of conduct for individuals; a treaty is not to be a scrap of paper, but a sacred thing to be kept invio late. The essence of international law and the necessity for a League of Nations lie in this fact. "Two, the schools must widen its sphere of service, all emigrants and native horn must be taught to use the tools of democracy. Intelligence is the basis and the strength of democ racy. These tools should be taught in the England language." American Cotton May Go to Finland, Bohemia and Poland Washington, April 18.—Exporta tion of American cotton to Bohemia and | possibly to Finland and Poland may begin iu the near future. This was in dicated in a cablegram received by Charles J. Brand, chief of the Bureau of Markets, from Bernard Baruch, American member of the Inter-Allied Economic Council, saying that arrange ments for such exportation were be igg made. "Arrangements are being made," Mr. Baruch cabled, "the result of which I think will be the getting of cotton into Bohemia. Am aiding in Finland and Poland and wherever possible. No amounts of any siz as yet. The open ing up of trade is considered of the most importance." TRY MESA FOR STOMACH TROUBLE It Ncntrnltses Stomach Acidity, Ire ien( Food Fermentation, Sour, Gassy Stomach and Acid indigestion- Doubtless if you are a sufferer from indigestion, you have already tried pepsin, bismuth, soda, charcoal, drugs and various digestlvo aids and you know these things will not euro your trouble —in some cases do not even give relief. But before giving up hope and de ciding you are a chronic dyspeptic Just try the effect of a little bisurat ed magnesia—not the ordinary com mercial carbonate, citrate, oxide or milk, but the pure bisurated mag nesia which you can obtain from practically any druggist In either powdered or tablet form. Take a teaspoonful of the powder or two compressed tablets with a little water after your next meal, and see what a difference this makes. It will instantly neutralize the dan gerous, harmful acid in the stomach which now causes your food to fer ment and sour, making gas, wind, flatulence, heartburn and the bloat ed or heavy, lumpy feeling that seems to follow most everything you eat. You will And that provided you take a little bisurated magnesia im mediately after a meal, you can eat almost anything and enjoy it with out any danger of pain or discom fort to follow and moreover, the con tinued use of the bisurated magnesia cannot injure the stomach in any way so long as there are any symptoms of acid indigestion. G. A. Gorgas. fit /' ££ \\ V*- oo \ \ Nmated Iron Increase* strength and endurance of delicate, ncrvouß, run-down people in two weeks' time in many in stance*. It baa been used and endorsed by such men as former United Statee Senator and Vleo-Prealdential Nominee, Charles A. Towns 5 U. S. Commissioner of Immigration Hon. AnthonyCaminctti; also United States Judge G.W. Atkinson of the Court of Claims of Washington, and others. Aek your doctor or druggist about it. she joy of Motherhood ToM Woman Tall How They Made Event One of Grant Happiness. In every part of the land there are worn cs JT h .°. how, through the application of Mother sb rlond, they entirely avoided the suffering usually Incident to motherhood, rhey relate in no uncertain term* bow from •t u i°. da y were made bright and cheerful nnd the nights calm and restful, how the crisis was paseed without the usual nufferlnr experienced when nature la unaid ed, and how they preserved their health and strength to devote it to the rearing of tbelr children and to tbe things life bold* for them. Mother's Friend Is a most penetrating remedy, prepared especially fbr expectant mothers from a formula of s noted physi cian. Strain upon the ligaments Is avoided, and instead or a period of discomfort and constairt dresd It Is a season of calm ro- Pf's' The hours at the crisis are less, and Mother s Friend enables the mother tor re tain her natural grace, and ber skin la not cracked and does not become hard or dis figured. Bredfleld Regulator Company, settle of Mother's Friend fiEmTthe dra£tet Kiel Canal Is About Sixty Miles Long Berlin.—The Kiel canal, built by Germany and enlarged primarily for naval operations, waa closed with the outbreak of war In 1914. The British fleet kept close watch lest German warships emerge Into the North sea until it was realized that the Kaiser's much-vaunted fleet had no intention to come out to fight either by the Kiel or Skagerrack routes. The Kiel presented no such en gineering difficulties as the construc tion of the Panama canal, the two are comparable In some dimensions. The Kiel canal is about sixty miles long, that at Panama a fraction more than forty. Kiel's width, after Its reconstruction, completed in 1914, was 335 feet at the surface and 144 feet at the bottom, with a depth of thirty-six feet. The Panama canal has a minimum bottom width of 300 feet, an average of 49 feet, and a minimum depth of forty-one feet. Locks are used principally to neutralize the tides. When the re building was completed, doubling the bottom width and increasing the canal's depth by six feet, new locks gave a length of 1,082 feet longer than those of the Panama canal. But intermediate gates wore pro vided to afford chambers of about a third that length. Passage thru I the canal takes a steamer eight or nine hours. Its entire length is I electric lighted. I After eight years' work and the expenditure of $39,000,000 the canal was first opened in 1895. Its re construction, begun in 1907, cost $55,000,000 more. The added width and depth per mitted the biggest of the Kaiser's warships to pass thru. TO BE REPAID "We received twenty-two wedding presents." "You're a lucky man." "Lucky nothing! All but two of them came from friends who are en gaged to marry." Boston Tran -1 script. iEk Efc & Ck Bfc &. && & E. &Br B. I&.&.&t^.Et 4 I s. w STORES IN PENNSYLVANIA. OHIO AND W. VIRGINIA f jjj t n . — S i E 7iT Conrt House g EI Until , _ n. _- i . n . . Harnsburg, y 4 \ io Ociock 217 —Market Street —217 [ J p J Ladies'! Your Easter Pumps/ T {Zdf* At Three Very Special Prices ;$t , j' * L/ before—just the styles possessing that daintiness / / \ M . necessary to complete your Easter attire. Include / *a JgL gj every new pump model—all the wanted leathers and / lj a colors—high Louis and Cuban heels. All sizes. jjl) n a Ladies? White Pumps 71 itjit ~ V Just the styles for Easter. jfcSaEl&Bmßf f ::=sS !' /. y A Superior grade white canvas. mF' Efi . Several chic mod- QC ~~ JP' *' & els. A $4.00 value ▼ jgjf Ladies' New Spring Oxfords F Equal in Style and Qualitu F \ $ to most $6 and $7 Grades, $ *9O F J O" Safe Saturday at p jf The new ,ace oxford style for Spring—long, E3 r * tapering vamp modelc in tan, brown, black and * patent. high Louis and lower military - <4 T.niMTl ftil filJitf fffi 11 IMl'Pl i Oxford* High f orris A dainty tp. l"J l.ouia (covered to Spring style—laco Sf a *l4MW®raltin < match) and leath- styles, long slen -f ~ s, C"'.'-._ ® r he '- AH sixes, der vamps; high TP Vjl vali? RnU t n * t® - "® an< * medium heels. Jr' csJ Open Saturday * Ali|\7* ,' , <££ Qfl tfO QK Evening Until 10 o'clock. **UW *pt/..7U p£*St) r I. ■ - ? .I.' ■l■ i. '■ i ■ ■ ■ - ■■■ . . . r T1 Classy Shoes for Men Ladies' Spring Boots L i Men, these high-grade Spring Shoes are Seven charming models, ac- r y 1 r , poslUvely $e and $7 styles and quaUty. tually worth $6 a pair, at I* /C I jf* A Tan. brown and black Book's Special Price of I rj rrf] leather narrow English ( Hieh lace in _ II / I IIP and fuller toe lasts. Solid U.J Ma Hign lace in m Iff/ / V A leather sewed solea All tj'f 1 chocolate, ,b /■ .Mil jr. V\l Li I m~i £ Si.cs Book's Price, jffl I t a rray _ VY [/ / $Pv 00 \ ktd e ?nd white. Long vamp, / I V sVV Jk -high and medium heels. AT , J ' ~ A Perfec£ makes. All sizes. Vj] [ //' \ \ i i ■ White Shoes j)[* V//.' \ u>'7 white canvas. Sev- _7*> 11 £p ' eral heel T- TW- r Men's fS Shses llea's Work Shoes— aii* *r r**# s" JT -P '—'Ol r /jdif f-A Black oalf leather— Of stout Rip Proof Made to seli C ftWl A English and blucher leather—tan and black. at 4_ Spe . // Slkntsy /JT W —, styles. All slzea Spe- Solid soles. Blucher ciat ....... yy t3l clal for Saturday. models; 15.50 value, Jy v. J s3£ 2 S 2;S p A Girls' Spring Dress Shoes Girls' Lace Oxfords TfeTy Sirls* White Shoes fA sxujo' .k _ A popular style so hard to get VWWJfiHtI Neat, excellent A V * 1 ad nC Smart, narrow toes—winged tips $ 1 si mw to. modeu- —°br°wn black. All sixes Eaeter-flne wear- jP I U high lacs. Come In to I. 11.10 values n * white canvas. w A ft •H ten. brown and #fh <jr IC'I.'VQ High lnce and but- fp. %•-'] £ Jim black kid; •!* ♦ ■ ton models. All §r^ 1 nt W " 4 * t % i w J! ° ,r "' WhUe *■""—7\o £3 "■ made of white IV .'Vj|T Boys' Black Calf Girls' White Top Shoes f* J! s° d rixm Patent vamps—white Boys' Brown and Black Calf rp styles. Durable stout solea Sixes kM and MnTU ' iWjo oham W to 8%. A good $3.00 T .— __a e-w qc Dress onoes w A vxJua at hntton. is BO I*? Flno wearing solid leather—tiar- WP EI a/> js* , *2.60 row English and blucher lasts. New f a S*l 45 Tahl * Spring stylea Real /7> "ft —. y /llr tS.OOvalues, at J.n Child's Play Shoes a 1 ' " '"v Soft elkekln leather—tan g-n \|— Double sewed V| • ,4 leather soles. ■=. u KA *2 Sixes to 2 j* Yi * Book's Shoes—-217 Market St.—Book's Shoes p a. a. ik. a. &. tk.&.i^.k.i^i^cLi^.i^.i^.i^cki^ck.i^.aJ gjiiiiiimiiitiimiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiitimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiitiiiiimmiimiim. FREE I EASTER SOUVENIR I I ROTOGRAVURE MAGAZINE I WITH THE | Sunday Press, April 20th f The most wonderful pictures you ever saw, telling the sublime E story of the Old Testament aa you're never heard nor seen it told E E before. These pictures are photographs of the original clay models E 5 of Stories of the Old Testament by the famous Italian sculptor, E E Mastroienni. He has portrayed all the characters you know and E E love best; his 'sculptures are marvels of art. They are graphic, E E realistic, historic conceptions of the powerful dramas of the Old E E Testament. And the photographs beautifully and clearly reproduce E E every detail of his marvelous work, making this EASTER E E SOUVENIR NUMBER of the ROTOGRAVURE MAGAZINE a = =• veritable art treasure, to be enjoyed by every member of the family. E Be sure that your order gets to your newsdealer or paper E = carrier in time, so that you won't fail to get your copy of the £ I Easter Souvenir Rotogravure Magazine I FREE I with THE PRESS on I I SUNDAY, APRIL 20th I rniiiMiimiuiimiiiimimiimmimiiiiiiiii!iimmiimiiiiiiiimiimmmiiniiiim£
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers