MAORI TROOPS WELCOMED HOME Battalion of Aborigines Is Greeted With Feast and 1 War Dances By Associated Press. Auckland, New Zealand, June 12. —The battalion of Maorie, New Zea land's aborigines, who fought in the Gallipoli campaign and afterward In France, has been welcomed home with a great feast, hakas (war dances) and tangi, or lament for those who fell in battle. I rno Acting Prime Minister, Sir James Allen, told them: "You Maoris hold a proud position. You have not one conscript" From the time of Its formation early In -the war the Maori battalion was main tained at a strength of 1,200 entire ly by voluntary enlistmenL Great quantities of mutton, beef. Why Arc You Nervous? Why Are You Weak? rll Ffl-hepa jroa tlrv *lly—hav lsat flesh or nervouo you fU ff r from Rlllouvnesa end Indigestion, JfOW Strain oeuelng weakness. Headache, Backache, Inaom c nla and Nervouanaaa are usually caused by some C-auaea functional disorder. Get rid of this disorder at TP* (ownaH Run- ones. wN n„_ No matter what the eause, VITOLTk WILL •ft tH> _ HELP YOU, because VITOiYN stimulates the J. I ggt Condi- stomach. Liver and Kidneys and helps them f\ inn do their work In datura's own way. As a result 1 T . vou wilt dlgeet your food thorough!* sad got \ I alTthe strength and nourishment out of It, s*-\ 1 , - II VIXOLYSf Is Natuie'a own Remedy, made from x /J N ■ 'IX Nature's own Herbs,' Roots, Fruit end Seeds, r Ijf J jt contains no Iron, Narcotic, Alcohol or any I l\ / / /\ harmful drug. I Am y / \ Wo ere so confident that VTTOT.YN win help yog - 1 you may aak your own family Doctor aa to Its \ /HKy J value to the Run-Down Condition, Nerves and >WI/wV T--' \ 1 Digestive Systems. fIV I Our Open Formula /1 V I Licorice Root Valerian Root Dandelion Roots If \\ 1 ' Juniper Berrien Cinchona Bnrk Ceylon Mo so ft x Ginger Root Rhmharb Cascans Bagrnda Gentian Root FUseerd Vegetable Cardasnoa Seeds Culver Root Charconl ' In Tablet Form Insuring accuracy (ViTdLYNI Nature's Tonic Of Herbs STEVENS MEDICINE CO., Incv, #4B Vnndcfbtlt AT., Brooklyn, New York "I ONLY ATE TO KEEP ALIVE," SAID MRS. BYERS,OF HERR ST. "I suffered from stomach trouble and nervousness for several years and since having the "flu" last fall my condition has been much worse than usual because I have not had strength enough to throw off the after-effects of the dreadful epidem ic," said Mrs. Malinda Byers, of 2727 Herr street, Harrisburg. "After eating I would become bloated and gas would press around my heart and cause terrible pains, even in my chest and arms. There were many things that I did not dare eat at all, and nothing that I ate tasted good. I just ate to keep alive. I was unable to sleep, and most of the time it felt as though I had a weight right in the pit of my stom ach. f "I read about this new Nature medicine, Natonex, and what peo ple here are saying about it and how it has relieved them, and I sent my daughter to got a box so th-t I might see if it would build me up as so many people say. "It was wonderful what a short time it took before I could see that Natonex was helping me. I told i.y daughter that after takipg Natonex just 'he first day that I was relieved frorr, gas after eating. lUEW YORK THE GREAT METROPOLIS LOW RATE EXCURSION ts" Sec Broadway; l*"nnylvanla JJ| M I ■ ■ ■ Station; Central Park; Klvrrnide l|l § V/ Vr Drive; Grants Toinb; Metropoli tan Art Gallery; Fifth Avenue; ROUND ■ Brooklyn Bridge* and get a TIIIP gllmpne of the greateat city on War Tax the American Continent. 24 Cent* | Additional Sunday, June IS SPECIAL THROUGH TRAIN Direct to Pennsylvania Station, 7th Avenue and 32(1 Street Lvs. Harrisburg .... 6.00 A.M. Lvs. Klizabethtown ... 6.29 A. M. " Steelton 6.06 " *' Florin 6.35 " " Mlddletown .... 6.15 " •* Mt. Joy 6.39 " " Conewago 6.23 " Returning, leave* New York 6.40 P. M. See Flyers Consult Ticket Agents PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD '■■ ■ ▼ ▼ T T T ▼ T T.TT V V T~T~ T V ▼ ▼ V V~V ► • /• ; PROTECT YOUR SHIPMENTS .. .i , ■ ..... ► K Mark your packages distinctly and prevent non-deliveries and misshipments. Save time, ► money and annoyance. Let us prepare a distinctive label or tag suit „ able for your needs. y Phone, write or visit i I SALES DEPARTMENT The Telegraph Printing Co. (Printing, Designing, Photo-Engraving, Plate Printing HARRISBURG, PA. THURSDAY EVENING, - irraMtawrrra riWTPfr a w * A ' JUNE 12, 1919. pork and other food had been baked in earthen ovens for the occasion. About 1,000 Maoris In all shared In this feast. There wore several pol (a native delicacy) dances. The tangl was a scene- of much emotion. The soldiers eat by tribes, encircled by sorrowing natives. Led by their chiefs, the mourners grieved with low, walling chants for those of their race • who will never return. All the treasured heirlooms of the tribes had been brought from their safekeeping for the wel come. There weresjade ornaments, mats, chieftains' headdresses and beautiful kilts. The chiefs of the various tribes delivered speeches of welcome couched In florid South Sea language, after which there was a haka by the famous Arawa tribe and the speech, of welcome by Sir James Allen. ' 375,000 troops to Come Home This Month Paris, June 12.—General Pershing has advised that he proposes to transport 375,000 men homeward during the month of June. This breaks all previous records for mov ing troops overseas and exceeds the number Great Britain moved across the channel in any month. "And gradually Natonex has worked right through my system and reached all the organs. I can eat anything and —why, Just this afternoon I lay down on the couch and slept so restfully for two hours, a thing I have not been able tj do for two years. I always sleep all right now. "I think Natonex is wonderful, because I can truthfully say that I haven't an ache or a pain, and I think that is something wonderful after all the suffering I have gone through. lam now on my second box of Natonex, and I have recom mended it to my two sons, who are now taking it." Yon can learn how the 12 famous Nature remedies In Natonex are de signed to cleanse, purify and build the whole system just by calling on the Natonex representative at the Oorgas drug store, 16 North Third street. You can even test Natonex albsolutely free there. Natonex is sold by leading drug gists in every town. If your drug gist can't supply you, don't wait; address Gorgas Drug Co., Harris burg. RULINGS MADE IN RETIREMENTS Deputy Attorney General Col lins Decides About Su perannuation passing upon a X\\ Inumber of points vWVAraised In connec- tlon with the ad rtcTjfljiFlrvT ministration of the teacheVs' lvJfl999>3L- retirement sys -11 JfflnVwiVnr tcm - 4t ' a beld by iav* \ General Emerson Collins that it is not lawful to re tire a teacher or school employe for superannuation with a retirement allowance who has had less than ten years of service. This establishes the principle in the retirement system that retire ment for superannuation requires ten years service. The disability retirement provision says that the person must have had "ten or more school years of school service," but there is no such express provision in regard to retirement for super annuation. He says: "There must be a service of that duration to per mit an allowance In case of retire ment for superannuation for the! reason that it is essential in com- j putlng what the retirement allow-' nnco shall consist of." Destroy the Nests—Officers of the I State Game Commission have asked | that tho Boy Scouts and others who go Into the woods should help in | the movement to get rid of crows 1 by reporting discovery of nests of | the crows to game wardens no that they may be destroyed. Crows have j done an immense amount of damage | to crops and' on farms in Pennsyl- f vania recently and as this is thol season of the year when the crows I are hatching, the State officers say I that the number can be thinned out. | Already within short distances ofl Harrißburg Scouts have located' crows' nests, which have been j wrecked and tho eggs destroyed. Merger Approved —Tho Public Service Commission has approved tho mergor of tho'Ponn Public Ser vice and Penn Electric Service and Citizens' Light, Heat and Power Companies Into the Penn Electric Service Corporation of Johnstown. Tho companies oporato in Central Pennsylvania. Tho Commission has also issued an ordor apportioning costs of improvements over rallrcad trucks at Freeport. Attended Camp—Adjutant Gener al Frank P. Boary visited tho camp of Instruction at Mt. Gretna and Is highly pleased with the work done. Guests of Mt. Blitz—Senator Pen- j rose and State Chairman Crow are guests of State Fire Marshal H. E. Butz at tho Spruce Creek Bod and Gun Club at Franklinvllle, Hunting don county. Board Adjourns—Tho State Com pensation Board adjourned its Har risburg sitting lust night and will meet nevt week in Philadelphia. Northumberland Cases The Northumberland county grade cross ing cases were heard by the Public Service Commission yesterday. Ob jections were made by the railroads to the suggestions for abolition. Decisions will be given later. Mr. Pomeroy Here—A. Nevin Pomeroy, former superintendent of public printing and binding, was here yesterday for a visit to the departments. Going West To-Day Governor Sproul left to-day for Pittsburgh to attend various college exercises. He stops this afternoon at Birming ham. National Guard Bill—the $1,250,- 000 appropriation bill for the Na tional Guard includes $700,000 for the reorganization and equipment and pay of the Guard; $50,000 for the work at Mt. Gretna, and $500,- 000 for the emergency fund. Dauphin County Students at Shippensburg Normal Sliippensburg, Pa., June- 12. Among the students from Harris burg and Dauphin county In attend ance at the Cumberland Valley State Normal School, at Shippensburg, arc the following: Seniors—Marian E. Browne, 269 Briggs street, Harrisburg; Mildred It. Eshenauer, 1827 Regina street, Harrisburg; Gene B. Griffiths, Wil liamstown; Maud F. Murphy, 2100 State street, Harrisburg; Gladys A. Shearer, Hershey; Florence P. Ort, Highspire; Sylvia M. Steigieman, Htghspire. Lower Classmen Miriam E. Meredith, Highspire; Gladys V. Wolf, Penbrook; Harry S. Wolf, Penbrook; A. Daisy Reed, 609 North Front street, Harrisburg. Commencement exercises will be held June 22 to 25. The baccalau reate sermon will be delivered by the Rev. Dr. William L. Mudge, of Chambersburg, on Sunday, June 22, and the address to Ihe graduates by Professor S. S. Shearer, June 23. At the commencement exercises on Wednesday, June 25, the address will be made by Dr. Ezra Lehman, principal of the school, on "New Ideals For Old Ideas." Wilson Promises Aid on Jnsh Question Tari-s, June 12.—President Wilson told representatives of Irish societies in America that he would do what he could unofficially to bring the Irish question to the attention of the other peace commissioners. Announcement to this effect was made by Frank P. Walsh and Ed- i ward F. Dunne, the representatives of the Irish Americans, after they had had a thirty-minute conference with the President. Tho promise made by tho President was in re ply to a question from Messrs. Walsh and Dunne as to what the President intended doing In view of the resolution adopted by the Sen ate urging that the American dele gation take steps to have represent atives of Ireland heard by the Peace Conference. Messrs. Walsh and Dunne said that they went over the situation in Ireland generally ii\ their talk with the President. BEAUTIFUL FRENCH SOUVENIRS Grecncastlc, Pa., June 12. Many and varied have been the souvenirs brought or sent home by the soldiers who have been at the front, but Mrs. Ralph Ziegler and Mrs. William K. Davison have re ceived rather an unusual one from their nephew, Duffleld Varden. Cor poral Varden sent to them a section of one of the leaded glass windows of the destroyed cathedral at Rheims. The glass Is of such ex quisite coloring and perfection that It can be readily made into pins or other Jewelry. Use McNeil's Pain Exterinlnator—Ad ■ ■ ■ British, Worried by American Prices, Urge Import Restrictions New Yorfc', June 12.—The news of the cut of $4.25 in American prices " The Live Store" "Always Reliable"' '■ i / ■ . * ■# "Be Bare of Four Store" No Other Store Offers All-~These-~ Advantages Every store offers the public SOME advantage, either "real" or "imaginary," in order to i^jlllPjlP^ gain patronage. But no store that we have ever heard of offers the clothing buyers so many distinct and worth-while advan- • tages, or has developed them to such a high degree as this "Live WC no *" enumer ate some of the more prominent Merchandise of known quality, rang ing from the worthy medium grade to the very ■' j|b^. choicest the market affords, so that any man who wants "de- ,• pendable" merchandise can always find it here—This is an I W / A "Always Reliable''store, where styles are correct for the col- | M .. |r# wA lege and school men and young men, business men; elderly men j M I 1 *||l§( h^° 8^m ' ° r *k or ' men or men of every description /JF I | Hart Schaffner & M arx VTWT Kuppenheimer & \1 I Society Brand Clothes mW JJfei Then our, unexcelled choice range— Vssa m^ Greater values are yours at this "Live Store," due to our enormous purchasing power and tremendous volume of JflflL „ lflhOr / business—superior service. Our courteous salespeople con- \j\ r'ffel sider it a privilege to wait on you, for this is a public service in- fyfy w\ stitution where the customers' interest is always considered ( ¥ i w first. That's why we have grown so large and have such a Copyright 1212. Hart, Schaffner ft- Try This Dependable Service That Everybody Is Talking About \ | $25, S3O and $35 Suits I We can't refrain from telling you something about the i { "big rush" we have had for these excellent suits —Our business this week is marvel | ous—The people who come to Doutrichs for the "first time" are surprised at the values they find here. [ i They wonder how we can offer such advantages, but those who are acquainted with our methods of I • \ doing business already know why we excel—We are ambitious to become the largest men's clothing , 1 i store in the world—We're going to do it, working on a small margin of profit and by selling only mer- 9 * I , chandise we can fully guarantee and doing the things our customers want us to do. : 1 |jV—^yy -flf — W"' T/vi y>-i y> - i-i tjv-I t/v yr t/v T/v pv-i , . - . y? I teaSSSBnFii 1 1~~ 304 ■ bb ■ |al Harrisburg, Market St. Pa* for pig iron and of sl2 on finished steel has caused anxiety to steel manufacturers in England. At the : evlsed prtees. four-Inch billets brought $38.50 per gross ton In America, while the British figure was around $55, practically half as much again. According to reports received by the National Foreign Trade Coun -011, ' British steel manufacturers see their overseas trade threatened and even their domestic markets preju diced by this discrepancy In prices. They have reason to be distunbed, because probably only the heavy freights are averting an immediate flow of American raw steel into British works, and a further cut in freight rates might bring American steel, freight and all, into the Brit ish market at lees than the British price. To protect the home markets, leading British steel manufacturers are advocating further prohibition of, foreign imports of steel. This is deemed necessary to place Brit ish industry once more on Ite feet. Even with such artificial encour- agement, it is doubtful if Engiant will be able to resume the position formerly held in the export trads With freight to be paid in additioi to her already higher pa-ices. End land cannot hope to put steel on th< Canadian market at a price whicl will compete with the American The same is true of other foreigi markets. J 13