SONS WILL LOSE FORTUNE UNLESS THEY GAIN TITLE Indian Merchant Would Leave Estate to the British Government London, July s.—Under the will of the late C. W. Wallace, an Indian merchant, $1,250,000 is left to the British government in the event of his sons failing to acquire a baronet cy or superior title." The testator's only surviving sen, Captain W. W. Wallace, has not re ceived a baronetcy and the executors are seeking to set aside the clause iu the will on the ground that it is opposed to public policy. Such wills, they contend embarrass offi cers of the crown in the distribution of honors and induce other persons to adopt improper means to obtain titles. Mr. Wallace explained his condi tional gift by saying in his will: "I do this because I hold the view iiat, subject to the testator's right no make ample provision for his ehil '-en, all possessions, great or small. If acquired from or through the peo ple, as mine were, should return to the people. I am not acting fully up to this view in the case of my children, because the law does not enforce it upon all others." HOY SCOUT'S IN CA Ml* Columbia, Pa., July 5. Boy Scouts have opened an encampment at Kempfleld, near here, and they are erecting frame barricks which will he occupied during the summer by different troops. 7ADfIYFOR7DfIYS If Yonr Nerves Are Shaky Because of Over-indulgence in Tobacco or Alcohol or by Excess of Any Kind, Bio-Fcren is What Yon Need Bight Away. Don't grow old before your time, don't let nervousness wreck your happiness or chances in life. The man with strong, steady nerves is full of vigor, energy, ambition and confidence. You can have nerves of steel, firm step, new courage and keen mind by putting your blood and nerves in first-class shape with mighty Bio-Feren, a new discov ery, inexpensive and ellicient. Men and women who get up so tired in the morning that they have to drag themselves to their daily labor will in just a few days arise with clear mind, definite purpose and loads .of ambition. All you have to do is to take two Bio-Feren tablets after each meal and one at bedtime—7 a day for 7 days—then reduce to one after each meal until all are gone. Then if your energy and endur ance haven't doubled, if your mind isn't keener and eyes brighter, if you don't feel twice as ambitious as before, any drug gist anywhere will return the purchase price—gladly and freely. Bio-Feren is without doubt the grandest remedy for nervous, run down, weak, anaemic men and women ever offered and is not at all expensive. All druggists in this city and vicinity have a supply on hand—sell many pack ages. FASCINATING TEETH How Every Woman Can Quick ly Charm Her Friends With Lovely Teeth, Clean, White and Brilliant If you want the cleanest of white teeth and healthy gums free from disease, an easy and quick way to get both is to use a tooth paste so effective and per fect that astonishing results usu ally come in a week's time. And the cost is so little. Just go to any drug or department arid get a large tube of SENRECO TOOTH PASTE foe 35 cents. Not only will it make your ! teeth clean and white, but it will at once remove any filmy coating, help io check the ravages of Pyorrhea and banish acidity in the mouth. It is used by thousands of i dentists and its sale has been re markable. When you visit your : dentist, which you should do at ! a year, ask him about SENRECO. It's a most delightful and refreshing Another Advance in Coal Prices Coal has advanced 30c, and before Winter another advance of at least 20c will go into effect, with still ad ditional advances possible. No one can tell how much higher coal will go. The thing to do, if your bins are still empty, is to get your order for Winter fuel in at once. Delay will not only cost you more but deprive you of the high quality of coal that is avail able now. H. M. Kelley & Co. 1 N. 3rd St. 10th & State Sts. SATURDAY EVENING, JAP "NARIKIN" LOSE FORTUNES Peace Brings End to the Ship Industry in the Far East Toklo, July 5.—A number of Ja panese "narikin" or men who have ; woo great wealth In building or sell j nig steamers during the war. hive lost their fortunes owing to the ad vent of peace. Some, even, have in curred debts and are in serious dif ficulties. Another group of "narikin," how j ever, is anticipated. It depends*en | tirely upon Germany's resources™ If I Germany can meet the Allies' claims I for shipping indemnity some of the Japanese shipping magnets will re ceive reparation for vessels they lost in the war. Thirty-one Japanese vessels, total ing 128,417 tons, ere sunk by Ger man submarines during the war, ar d for this loss an indemnity of $125,- 000,000 has been demanded from Germany. Saving Certificates in Denominations of $lOO and $l,OOO Are Issued Philadelphia, July 5. Insistent demand for a Government security combining the safety and profits of the Savings Stamp with additional convenience in handling and regis tration has resulted in the issuance of new Savings Certificates in denom inations of $lOO and $l,OOO. Director Watters, of the Third Federal Re serve District has been notified l.y the Savings Division of the Treasury I Department that the Savings Certi i ficates will be ready for purchase and i investment to-day. I War Savings Stamps in the denomi [ nation of $5 are convertible into these I securities which bear the same rate j of interest as the Savings Stamps. ! 4 per cent compounded quarterly. ; Savings and investment in the $5 i stamps has been widespread ihrough- I out the country. The new securities provide a ined ■ ium for the investment of funds in l convenient form of special interest to j fraternal societies, labor unions, and | other civic social and religious cr -1 ganizations. There has been a de ' mand from such quarters for an in : vestment in larger form similar to I the Savings Stamps. i The $lOO Certificates are convertible i into $l,OOO -Certificates. The limit cf investment of $l,OOO for each indi | vidual which is a feature of the Sav j ings Stamp issue has been retained. Blame Yaqui Indians For All Depredations Along Mexican Border F.I I'n.so. Tex., July 5. —Yaqui In wdian depredations in iho Mexican border states are becoming more fre quent, but not all acts of banditry ! in the Yaqui country can be laid j at the doors of the Indians, according to advices reaching here from So -1 nora. "It is a case of giving a dog I a bad name and hanging him." an I American reported who is familiar i with the marauding activities of the I Yaquis. I It is the custom in Sonora. he said, ! for Mexicans to shout "Yaqui," when i ever a foreigner has been killed in isolated territory, or whenever a ; flagrant violation of Mexican law has I been committed anywhere in the sec tion where Yaquis may be found. This is supposed to impress the vis itor with the idea that real Mexican banditty exists largely in the imagi nations of outsiders. Hence, the la qui is blamed for violent acts whether i he was responsible or not, Yaqui and Mexican bandit bands arc both active and it is sail to he impossible to tell which is guilty .if various reported raids, robberies and murders. Germany Trying to Get Back Pre-war Trade From Italy Home, July 5. —Already German influence has been exercising itself n Italy in an endeavor to win back its pre-war trade, which annually amounted to nearly two hundred million dollars —exports and im ports. Interviews have recently been published in Italian papers which endeavor to establish the idea in the Italian mind that had Germany been consulted in the matter of Italian claims at the Peace Conference. Italy would have secured all that had been asked. This has been interpre ted by many prominent Italians as purely a subtle bid for Italian anti cipating the resuscitation of friendly commercial relations between Italy and Germany. Chief among the interviews ap pearing in Italy were those of Prince Von Buelow and Count Von Bern storff. The former was married to an Italian and maintains in Italy one of the most celebrated villas. Committee of Trusts Has Completed Report London, July 5. —The Committee on Trusts appointed by the British Minister of Reconstruction has now prepared its report on what action may be necessary to safeguard pub lic interest in view of the probable growth of trade organizations and combinations. The American Chamber of Com merce in London understands that the committee's recommendations are of a moderate character, being chiefly that the Board of Trade should establish tribunals for in vestigating the operations of mo nopolies. combines and trusts, rec ommendations then to be made to the government for action to rem edy any abuses. All members of the committee arc befnsved to have signed the report, but it is understood that three of the committee members have sub mitted an addendum expressing the view that the business world is no longer governed by free competition but that capitalist combination in fluences the price of practically every commodity sold to the public. Japs Land?ed Eleven Steamers in April Toklo, July s.—Eleven steamers of over 1,000 tons each, totaling 4 4,54 2 tons, were launched In Ja pan during April. The total launch ings this year up to the end of April number 45. totaling 1 85,271 tons. Shipbuilders plftn to launch n total of about 600,000 tons this year. Sardinia Living as in Biblical Times Romp, July s.—Relics of Biblical pastoral life, ploughing with wooden hooks drawn by oxen, reaping by the most primitive implements and other occupations of the nomadic peoples of antiquity remain the manner of living to-day in Sardinia, according to Dr. Alfred P. Dennis, commercial attache of the United States embassy here, who has just returned from the island after making an exhaustive study into the trade possibilities of it. "Sardinians present a living picture of the remote past which has been stereotyped and handed down from antiquity," said Dr. Dennis to The Associated Press correspondent. "Water-wheels with earthen buckets, wooden ploughs drawn by oxen, the scythe and the sickle still in use in reaping vast fields—nomadic oc cupations unchanged since the days of the Aryan dispersion , tribal costumes as gay and grotesque as the trappings of the medieval pageant— all reproduced in the veriest simili tude the archaic life of byegone ages." II Here It Is Again—Tuesday, Next I KAUFMAN'S CLEAN SWEEP SALE I You Know What That Means | 1 Starts Starts! | Tuesday , Tuesday | July 8 ca July Bjjj TtoT "ST-| Closed 3?; > f 0 "™ I *=l| B IK- „ KAUFMAN'S f V, I USHB ItY ?i Al c MA cf Ifcl* i N I IKCIfANSwFFPSAIfe&I EdSNSmSMMI | I cj\v UodeO"® I '' iX wear Ad" 5 '" 1 | I Knit VJndeCf h UL- - Apr„„ s , p | m I3T | Broom Neckweot p, Closed { g Cou P° n W 5 AI Da, I Iml* AW || "°i| | Our Biggest ***, Full Details in I ! Clean Sweep Sale ** Monday's Papers 1 i I I All Economy Roads Lead Direct to Kaufman's | STORE CLOSED ALL DAY MONDAY TO PREPARE FOR SALE I : 1 Sale Starts Tuesday Morning at 9 A. M. I See Broom Coupon in Monday's Papers | HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH First Issue of the American Legion New York, July s.—The American Legion, the national organization of American veterans of the great war, published to-duy the first number of its official magazine, "The Amer ican Legion Weekly." One of the features of this number is a cable gram from General John J. Per shing from France, in which he pre dicts for the Legion a most useful future of tremendous value in fos tering the ideals and purposes for which the American armies fought. The Legion's magazine will have an initial circulation of 100,000 copies. Reports from state branches indicate, however, that the organi zation of local posts by national ser vice men throughout the entire country is progressing so rapidly that half a million copies will be requir ed within a few weeks. Charters is sued to local posts represents every state in the union. Besides the message from General Pershing, Lord Northcliffe, ex-Pres ident William Howard Taft, and state governors have contributed articles endorsing the American Legion. The Weekly also contains cartoons by Briggs and J. Norman Lynd; a sports' review by Walter Camp: editorials, a page of humor, and reports from the state branches of the American Legion, showing the progress of organization cf local posts since the meetings of soldier, saiior and marine Relegates in Paris and St. Louis. Breazilian Husbands - Wear Wedding Rings Rio IJc Janeiro, July 5. —The wo men in Brazil have not equal suff rage but they have an equality with the men of their country which is not enjoyed by their North Amer ican sisters. All Brazilian husbands are ex pected to wear their wedding rings as conscientiously as their wives and generally they do so. The ring is a plain gold band, the same as that worn by the wives in the United States. The women in Brazil unanimous ly are of the opinion that this is about the las. word in equality and it is doubtful if they would exchange the custom for the right to go to the polls. English Women Are Warned of Coming High Fur Prices London, July 5. —English women are being warned by merchants that they will pay much more for their furs next season than even the high prices they have been paying in re cent years. The fur auctions, recently resumed after suspension because of the war, have developed very high prices for skins, fox selling up to $9O, musquash $4 and fisher $350. For mer prices were white fox $l, mus quash eight cents and fisher $5. These prices, the trade warns, are for the new skins, and will be con siderably increased after they have been made up into garments, be cause of the increased cost of skilled labor. NEW WIKKLKSS TO START Christiana, July s.—The Norwe gian trans-Atlantic wireless station at Seavanger, which has been ready for use over a year, will soon com mence service to the first American zone station by permission of the American government. JULY 5, 1919.' Declares America Prevented Rumania From Starving nurhnrrxt. July s.—King Ferdinand and Queen Marie of Rumania recently received members of the American I Red Cross Mission and congratulated j them on the. results of their work I among the poor and in the hospitals, j King Ferdinand told Colonel H. j Gideon Wells, of Chicago, chief of : the Mission, if it were not for help : received from the United States, the I people of Rumania would have starv- I ed. He said with living conditions I now so much improved, there is no 1 fear of Bolshevism in Rumania. Geneva Godmother to Children of Verdun Geneva, July s.—This city has become a godmother to the chil dren of Verdun, and invited them all to pass some weeks of the sum mer there. The first group of 250 children have arrived. Among the little guests are the children of of ficers and soldiers killed in defend- 5 ing the celebrated fort. Geneva will pay all expenses connected with the scheme. 100% Vitality for Weak, Nervous, Men If you suffer from loss of appetite; can't sleep; If your nerves arc jumpy ami you go about depressed by that "u 11 -lu feeling," try MAKE-MAN TABLETS THE SAFE IRON TONIC Thousands hare been restored to perfect health and vigor by this wonderful strength build-. It will rejuvenate YOt". Contains no in -I'irioiiH drugs. y&Mßmßßßtogg I f o-inNcrivKv kM JBe sure yon ■ i IRQN TON 1Q |Leo our Mono- WV \ !T. on the kL/ "IT, 4 "* f(i package bo ammmgr™ ~ | Price 50c Ashland Supply House I 325 \V. Madison St., Chicago, 111.