GERMAN PEACE DELEGATES WILL ARRIVE LATE Will Not Roach Versailles Be fore May 1, Allies Arc Advised Paris, April 24.—The German gov ernment has officially advised the allied and associated governments that the German plenipotentiaries would not leave Berlin before April 28 and that they would reach Ver sailles May 1, at the earliest. Seven newspapermen will accom pany the plenipotentiaries, the des patch added. Ix)iidon. April 24.—A dispatch Drink liabit Surrenders to TESCUM Tescum Powders for breaking up the drink habit destroying all taste for whisky, ale, beer or other alco holic stimulants, as thousands of wives and mothers can testify. It is a simple home treatment that can be given secretly and is sold under a steel-bound money-refund guar antee by J. Nelson Clark and other druggists. Keeps fresh to the last slice— Gunzenhauser's no/A AID BREAD YOU never need to worry when you put GUNZENHAUS ER'S HO MAID bread into the bread box for fear of not having fresh bread on hand in case a friend "drops in" for lunch. Even if the family has eaten part of the loaf, you'll have fresh bread be cause it's GUNZENHA USER'S HOMAID. Wrapped at the Bakery Sold at all Grocers The Gunzenhauser Bakery ' 18th and Mulberry Streets Famo Stops Seborrhea and Grows Healthy Hair Wti ask you to put FAMO to the most exacting test. Have a member of your family mtamine your scalp before you •tart the use of FAMO. Apply FAMO daily for one month. Have your scalp examined again. If they do not report the growth of new hair, return the FAMO bottle to where you purchased it and you will receive your money back. FAMO DOES grow new hair luxuriantly. It makes the hair fluffy and soft. FAMO intensifies a natural ten dency to waviness and retards grayness. It contains no harmful alcohol to dry the scalp and pro duce gray hair. Every woman should use FAMO regularly. Its use is a daily habit you will In joy. But not only does FAMO beau tify the hair. FAMO Kills the deadly sebor rhea microbe which is the cause of dandruff. It stops all itching of the scalp ind nourishes and feeds the hair roots. It penetrates the scalp without massage and gives life and sheen to the hair. FAMO was evolved by scientists In one of the famous laboratories of Detroit THURSDAY EVENING, HAHMSBTJRG TELEGRAPH TVFRTT. 24, 1919, to the Exchange Telegraph from, Amsterdam asserts that the Ger man peace delegates have been in structed to propose at Versailles a plan -for a League of Nations to re place the plan adopted by the peace conferees in Paris. The dispatch adds that the German plan was drafted mainly by Count Von Bern storff, former ambassador to the United States, Matliias Erzberger, president of the German armistice commission, Professor Walther M. A. Schueeking, and Carl Kautsky, one of the Socialist leaders. Newspapermen Make Plans to "Cover" Peace Treaty Paris, April 24. —American news paper correspondents in Paris, at a meeting to-day to consider the plans prepared by the peace conference for the meetings of the allied and German delegates at Versailles as regards the press, appointed a com mittee with instructions to endeavor to obtain permission for newspaper men to be present at the negotia tions. The committee was also told to demand the right to' talk with the spokesman for the German dele gation. THE ONLY WAY Wifey—And knowing my senti ments on the subject, did that odious Mr. Binks insult you by offering yoti a drink? Hubby—That's what Mr. Binks did. Wifey—And how did you resent it? Hubby—l swallowed the' insult! — Edinburgh Scotsman. Three years were spent in per* fecting it before it was offered to the public. The ingredients in FAMO have never before been used on the head. But they have been well known to medical science for many years. They work differently from any other hair preparation. FAMO stands alone. If your hair is thin and lacks lustre and the dandruff scale causes constant irritation of the scalp, you should start the use of FAMO at once. It destroys the dandruff bacilli. FAMO is sold at all toilet goods counters in two sizes—3s cents and $l. The dollar bottle is extra large and contains four times as much as the smaller size. Applications of FAMO may be had at the better barber shops and hair dressing establishments. Seborrhea is the medical name lor a morbidly increased flow from the sebaceous glands of the scalp. The seborrhean ex cretion forms in scales and flakes and is commonly known as dandruff. Mfd. by The Famo Co., Detroit, Mich. Seborrhea is the medical name for a morbidly increased flow from the seba ceous glands of the scalp. The sebarr hean excretion forms in scales and flakes and is commonly known as dan druff. Mfd. by The Famo Co., Detroit, Mich. U. M. Forney Croll Keller Special JTajscm j RED CROSS AIDS | EXILED GREEKS! Thousands of Theni Were i Driven From Asia Minor j Early in War Snlonlkl, April 23.—High up on the I ! hills of this bustling Macedonian city' lis a picturesque settlement where 000 Greek refugees, driven from Asia I Minor by the massacres of 1914, make i their homes. Hundreds of other !Creeks who were interned by the Bul | gariatis in Dobrudjd during the war I have joined them recently. The (houses in this refugee camp wore con istrueled by the Greek government. A 'Brace equivalent to a large New York ! furnished room Is allotted to a family 'of from five to eight. I The settlement has been given the I pretentious name of "The Quarter of 'the Triumvirate" in honor of Greece's ■three groat modern patriots—Premier 'Venizelos, Admiral Kountouriotis and General Danglais who, repudiating King Constantino, espoused the cause, of the Allies when Germany sought to ( win over the Greek army. Many of | the people have been helped bv the American Red Cross and speak grate fully of the United States and its peo ple. Aided ISy Tied Cross As the Associated Press correspond ent was visiting the village, two ox-, carts loaded with Creek refugees who had l.ecn driven by the Turks from the villages along the Sea of Mar- ; mora in 1913 and 1914, and who dur ing the present war wore expelled from Macedonia by the Bulgars, made i their way slowly up the steep raoun- I itain road. The refugees had just I come fiom Dobrudja, to the south of I Rumania, where they were practical- i Ily exiled by the Bulgars. They had been nearly two months on the way. | nnd virtually all the food and aid j they got came from the American Red Cross, which had relief posts along the line leading from Bulgaria into Macedonia. Many were little tots from one to five years old. The won der was how these little ones, sick ly and undernourished, were abte to survive the long trip by train, motor truck and ox-cart. The faces of these returning refu gees wore an inexpressibly sad and j i harassed look. For five years they i were driven hither and yon by Turk j and Bulgar and had never known what it was during that time to have a roof end shelter. Under the Bul | gars they were forced to live in the jopen fields or in dugouts or stabipe. Eighteen hours a day at hard labor under constant intimidation, was tne lot of some of them. Three-fifths of a pound of black bread a day was the pitiful recompense they reccivw! from the Bulgars. Often those too weak to work were beaten by their ruthless masters. Many Starved to Death One refugee declared to the corre spondent that at one time there were more than sixty deaths a day among the refugee colony in Dobrudja frotn ] malnutrition, exhaustion and expos-j ure. In certain sections, he said, the ; Creeks were forced to live, largely on j the rinds of watermelons which the Bulgarian soldiers threw In the streets. The older residents of this refugee "suburb" of Saloniki, most of whom had fled from different parts of Asia. Minor during the wholesale massacres i fliere in 1914, have bitter experiences! to relate about their treatment by the . Turks. Some of these people lived in the city of Phocis, where the whole Christian population either had been driven out or were killed by the Turks. The women wept as fhey told about the outrages of the Moslems. The worst story was that told by an intelligent peasant woman, who de clared that in a butcher shop opposite ' her home in Phocis, she saw the ! Turks take a young girl who was con sidered the most attractive In town and rut her body into pieces. They hung the pieces on meat hooks and offered them for public sale, she said to show the Turks' contempt for Greek Christians. What most impresses the eye of the visitor in speaking with these unfor tunate people is their sad, wan and furrowed faces. They have been driven about by the Invading foe un til they have reached the point al most of despair and distraction. ————————r ' Middletown Mrs. Erastus Brubaker, Former Resident, Dies \ Mrs. Erastus Brubaker, nee Miss | I Edna Fleegar. who formerly resided j I in town, but had been living at Lo- , rain. Ohio, died at her home, Lorain, | !on Monday afternoon. She is sur- I j vived by her husband, mother, Mrs. | j Samuel Kavanaugh, one sister. Aliss Carrie Fleeger, and one stepbrother, Samuel Kavanaugh, Jr., of Ann street, ! town. The body arrived in town yes -1 terday and was taken to the home 1 of her mother, where funeral services were held this afternoon at 2 o'clock. | the Rev. T. C. McCarrell, pastor of i the Presbyterian church offloiatingg. ! Burial was made in the Middletown ! cemetery. | The funeral of Walter Best, who died at the Harrisburg Hospital on Tuesday morning will be held from the home of his grandmother, Mrs. I Rebecca Hill, Girard avenue, on Fri- I day afternoon, with services at 2 | o'clock. The Rev. T. C. McCarrell, j pastor of the Presbyterian Church will officiate. Burial will be made in the Middletown cemetery. The auto truck committee of the Rescue Hose Company, met on Tues day evening at the hose hduse and arranged for a demonstration of an American-La France, type 75, com bination pump and chemical truck by the Steelton Fire Department, under direction of Chief Malehorn, of Steel ton, in co-operation with the La France Motor Truck Company, of Elmira, N. V. Demonstrations will be made on Saturday afternoon, at the Old Grist mill near the county bridge and at Bauder's Greenhouse, and at Pike and Wood streets. A test alarm will lie sent in to designate j the arrival of the truck in Middle town. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Aueh, of North Catherine street, announce the birth | of a daughter, Tuesday. April 22. | William Boughter, of town, was arrested by Chief df Police Charles Houser, charged by his wife witli non-support and threateiling to kill her. He was placed in the lockup on Monday evening Nmd during the night got out by picking the lock and made his escape. Marko Yuvalok-, a foreigner, was charged with assault and surety of the peace by Frank Generalic. He was given a hearing before Squire C. K. Bowers, and the evidence, was sufficient to hold the defendant for court he furnished bail. Mrs. H. R. Saul, has sold her four frame dwellings on North Spring street to H. S. Roth, Sergeant Louis Eubank, who was a member of the Aviation Depot, was mustered out of service and left for his home at Otterville, Miss. Miss Yoe Houser has returned home from a several weeks' visit to rela tives at York. Mr. and Mrs. George Hoffman, who spent the past week in town as the guests of the latter's mother, Mrs. .William Borrel, High street, returned to their home at Perry county. The Homo and School Association of Lower Kwatara Township will hold a meeting at Coble's Bclioolhouse. this evening. Prof. W. R. Zimmerman, assistant county superintendent will be present, and give an illustrated lecture on "Our Boys in France." A tine moving picture show will be given in the Realty Theater next Monday afternoon and evening under the management of the local Victorv Loan Cbmmittee with the Genera'l Publicity Committee, of Harrisburg. The LacHes' Aid Society of the Church of God. will hold Its regular monthly meeting at the parsonage, North Spring street, this evening at 7.30 olclock. A meeting of the Victory Loan captains and lieutenants, has been called for this evening in the council chamber by Chairman E. G. Ger hAricvh at £ o'lUttdfc, RefHgeraioM Character Furniture v^lTZm „ At the Price of the Ordinary Kind BB """' ir ■ 11111' . IPII - Nothing but the best that money can buy enters into our j JS|'flli Stock. And the prices prevailing are possible only to such Tm 1 a Store as ours with tremendous VOLUME OF BUSINESS DlTModd d "cTtX" En- and LOWER RUNNING EXPENSES. TRYOURFURN- jjr a, " c '' ITURE SERVICE JUST ONCE AND YOU WILL UNDER- ® (£27 f) STAND. i "Burns Like Gas." ■ $27.00 to $69 "Sterling" f-V OOVED • Electric '"Z'T A FURNITURE CO. JLIL JttßfttSTl Washing 1415-19 N. Second St. 'The Largest Selection of Walnut Bedroom Furniture Between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh tjllli*' ' Solid Carloads Just Received at a Concession in Price $25.00 JffiEaS,, Which You Will Share ! $43.00 Axmiustcr (JiIJQ 010 Rugs, 9x12 J>D7.UU l| "f fIP ' ~ Genuine Reed diat docs % it j jj^ |*||- t Vac 1 his is but one of the many patterns. William 6c Mary Design. Figured White enamel, reversible body, i American Walnut. All dust-proof construction, patented drawer slides, etc. tery"'Spec^aV $32.00 No better quality made. Bow-end Bed, Vanity Dresser, Chest of Trays, Others, Dresser, Dressing Table, Bench, Chair, Rocker, Table, or any piece you may $27 SO tO $45 wish to complete your suite. ! * Suites Range From $150.00 Upwards K,tcbenCab,net j | $39.75 Genuine Porcelain Top. Roll C 1* 1 n/r 1 ci ■ r\. . o •. doors. Complete in every detail. A ooiid Mahogany Sheraton Dining Suite high grade cabinet. Guaranteed to be SOLID Mahogany. All dust-proof con- O* OO C f)f) BraSS Bed, Spring, ' struction. Mahogany trays and interiors. 9 Pieces %p £* £* %J •\J\J : . . and Mattress 3-Piece Parlor Combination Spanish Leather. Maliog- a l *..-.! " (£n C nrt v> Living oom Suite, consisting of 6-foot Davenport, Fireside Chair ancT 2 -inch Post Red, guaranteed J)t/0 .UU Rock er (all upholstered in Tapestry or Damask) 6-foot Dav- 0J OQ /J/J Spring and Felt Combination Mat enport 1 able with Bock Shelves, as illustrated * Ovvl/ trcsg i " :1'„ 7