' Declares Italy Ready to Step in if D'Annunzio Had Not Taken Step i ■ By Associated Press. Paris, Sept. 24.—"As a nation we I consider the Fiume matter settled, i because we have actual possession," ; said General Giuseppe (Peppino) t Garibaldi to an Associated Press representative here this morning. Garibaldi had just reached Paris troni Home, coming on what he said to be an important mission from j which he would go to meet Ga- | briele D'Annunzio. the insurgent i 2,000 to 3,000 delicate parts They were unnecessary that maze of keys, springs, levers, etc., found on compli cated machines. The Sundstrand has only 10 keys —all at finger tips. You add, multiply, subtract, divide, with greater ease, speed and accuracy. Any one can mem orize this simple key hoard in 30 seconds. Ask for practical demonstration in your office on your own work. George P. Tillotson 203 I.OCVST sr.. lIA It It ISB VRG Opp. Orphenm Theater •loth Phone* ADPrVO MACHINE. Sales offices and service stations in principal citim The Best Coal Mined In Pennsylvania It will not be long before furnace fires will be neces sary to keep our homes comfortable. Those who have their coal bins filled for Winter are fortunate, indeed. Those who have their bins filled with Kelley's "Blue Ribbon" anthracite are doubly so. For this coal is the high est in heat-giving quality mined. There is less waste to it by actual test. And, with fuel as high as it is this Winter, coal home keepers owe it to them selves to get the best. If you need coal, by all means order it now. H. M. KELLEY & CO. 1 N. 3rd St. 10th & State Sts. * i i i i ■" ■■ _____ The beaten path— is the best path to follow if it leads to Satisfac- PBjjjM| tion. You'll find Satisfaction at the end of IHSlSlfl t^ie we^"worn path that leads to this store. llHHill™ Easy to get to, but hard to leave—a pleasant place to buy phonographs or records, where your comfort receives careful attention. Victrola—Edison Vocation—Sonora Payments by the w—r „ iL , A stock broad enough to meet every requirement—prices w CCK or Month to ? ? aa <■ , . . range from $25 to $3OO, and you 11 be surprised to learn how Suit You. easy it is to own your choice if you get it here. Today's the day! J. H. Troup Music House Troup Building "* 15 S. Market Sq. 4 WEDNESDAY EVENING, | Italian leader in possession of | Fiume. "Had D'Annunzio not .gone in," contined Garibaldi, "wo would have ! done it within fifteen days." I "If President Wilson were moved ! by the right spirit." he added, "he : would permit the whole question to | be decided by France. England and ! Italy. In that case, we are satis i tied that our rights would be recog ' nized, as they already are recognized ;by the majority of Americuns. in ! whom Italians have absolute confl ■ dence." PI'IMI.S TO DECIDE ! Cards have been issued to the 43S boys and girls in the central part of the city in the seventh and eight!' grades so that they can select the courses they prefer at the junior high schools. Dr. F. E. Downes will receive these cards to-morrow and give them to the principals of the two schools. Arrangements are ben ing made for the transfer of the ten teachers who are affected by the r.ew plan. TO Illll.!) FOl'R HOUSES A .E. Brough secured a building permit yesterday afternoon to erect four three-story brick houses on the northside of Bellevue road, 200 feet east of Twentieth street. The dwell ings will cost 512.000; W. E. Bushey, contractor for the Wilmer, Vincent Theater Company, took out a permit to remodel 219 Market street, at a cost of $1,500. Don't Spoil Your Hair By Washing It When you wash your hair, be j careful what you use. Most soaps ! and prepared shampoos contain too j much alkali, which is very injurious. I as it dries the scalp and makes the ; hair brittle. The best thing to use is Mulsified i eoooanut oil shampoo, for this is i pure and entirely greaseless. It's 1 very cheap and beats anything else | all to pieces. You can get this at ; any drug store, and a few ounces I will last the whole family for | months. 1 Simply moisten the hair with ! water and rub it in, about a tea t spoonful is all that is required. It I makes an aboundance of rich, I creamy lather, cleanses thoroughly and rinses out easily. The hair dries I quickly and evenly, and is soft, | fresh-looking, bright, fluffy, wavy j and eusy to handle. Besides, it I loosens and takes out every particle j of dust, dirt and dandruff. WEAK,SICKLY PEOPLE WILLNEEDSTRENGTH TO AVOID INFLUENZA .Strong, Physically Constituted People Hun I.ittle Chance of 111 Effects from "Flu"' People With Thin Weak lllood Should Kegaln Strength People with good red blood should ! withstand germ diseases like the I "Flu." Because good, pure blood has | a generous amount of white cor | puscles (called fighters), whose sole duty in the blood is to fight oft germs and waste matter and carry them out ! of the system. I It's the advice of a noted physician I that people who are pale and have no I energy and who feel despondent over their lack of strength and good red blood should begin at once to revital ize their impoverished blood. Renewed blood, strength and force will be their J greatest fortification against the "Flu." | Tli in. weak blood can best be I strengthened by an effective blood i food such as Novo San (meaning new 1 blood). Novo San is not a stimulant j that gives you immense strength I magically but is a pure and efficient I blood builder made of elements that gain almost immediate access to the I blood. It is particularly strong as I a blood builder because of its power to add white corpuscles to the blood | —just the element in the blood, weak ; rundown people will need to fight off "Flu" germs. I White corpuscles being the health I protectors of our system and as Novo San is recommended to add white corpuscles to impoverished blood you can do nothing better for yourself than to go to-day to any good drug ' gist like H. C. Kennedy or George A. Gorgas and get a package of Novo i ttan tablets. In twelve days you I should feel new strength and force.— ' Advertisement. YOONG TREE IN CITY NURSERY AWAITING TRANSPLANTING - '1 CITY'S DESIRE FOR TREES COMMENDED j [Continued from First Pago.] j called to the effort to better the i street tree conditions in Ilarrisburg. j The tree conditions of this city are j lamentably bad. There is little use | in expecting the people to do the j things which ought to be done in order to produce the best effect, j Such work must be accomplished j by direct city authority and under the immediate supervision of com-' | petent persons. "Under the law the Park Com i mission is clothed with these duties i provided a suitable ordinance to j this effect is passed. "Whether your | ordinance at the present time covers ; the situation I am unable to say. j I would like to urge upon you. i | therefore, the necessity of doing the | things which ougnt to be done in j order to remedy the street tree sit uation. If Harrisburg is to be a city beautiful and a model to the rest of the State, there is nothing which will produce results quite so | quickly and be noticeable quite so soon as correct street tpee effort. ! "This department is prepared to ' co-operate with the City Park Com- I mission to the full in ordder to as- j sist in the above work. Will you give us a chance? The trees which j are now in the city nursery on the | island are suitable for street tree j planting. All that is necessary is Hair Removed 3je3lliraefe This method for removing n -pe.fltiena I- llr Is totally different from nil others beeause It attacks hnlr under the , tin n* well ■■ on the skin. It aoes this by absorp tion. Only genuine DeMlrsele has a money-back guarantee In each package. At toilet counters In UOc, $1 and 92 alira or by mnll from as Is plain wrapper oa re ceipt of price. FREE l,ou k with testimonials of highest authorities, ex plains what casaea hair on face, neck and arms, why It Increases and how DeMlrnele devltnllzes It, ■nnlied In plain aenled envelope or request. DeMlrnele, Park Ave. and 12!) th St., New York. BARFUBBURG TECEGRXFtf CITY TO "DRESS" FOR JUBILEE An appeal to every Harrisburg-* er to decorate his home, place ot business and automobile with the American colors, in honor of the veterans, nurses and welfare workers of the Harrisburg dis trict, during the welcome home celebration-, next Sunday and Monday, was made to-day by Frank C. Sites, chairman of the committee on decorations. "Let's dress Harrisburg up more beautifully than ever be fore," urged Mr, Sites. "Every building and thoroughfare in town should be gay with the na tional colors, and every automo bile should fly the flag, in honor of the brave boys we will honor next Sunday and Monday." that the proper authority over the trees in the streets be assumed. "I note that the City Forester has revised a scheme for the planting of streets with various species. We re gret to see that he has apparently overdone the thing in the matter of the Norway maple. While Nor way maple is a good -street tree, yet you can have too much of it. Why not have a greater variety of species? A number of good trees have been overlooked and in the case of others so few streets have been designated for them that the preponderance of Norway maple stands out in great prominence. "We are not writing this letter in a spirit of criticism or captiousness, but there is such a concerted effort being made now between the city and the state to make Harrisburg what it ought to be, .that we feel we must let you know* of our will ingness to contribute what little part wc can. However, without the friendly co-operation of the Park Board we will not be able to get far. * "I respectfully commend to your earnest consideration the foregoing in the friendly spirit in which it is suggested." Heavy Cordon of Police Guards Plant Where Riots Occurred By Associated Press. RufTaio, N. Y., Sept. 24. With the plants of the Lackawanna Steel Company, Rogers Brown and Com pany and the Donner Steel Com pany closed and additional deputies and state police patrolling the streets of Lackawanna to-day, there appeared to be little likelihood of a recurrence of the trouble which led to the killing of one man and the wounding of several others last night. Chief Gilson, of Lackawanna, who was in the crowd trying to dis-- perse it when the guards opened fire, was inclined to censure the guards for over-hasty action, although he said the pro vocation was great. With the ar rival of fifty state police to-day, he said, the special guards would be asked to keep within the grounds of the steel plant. Union leaders announced that their attention would be directed to day toward the plants of the Wick wire Steel Company and Ferguson Steel and Iron Company which heretofore have been unaffected by the strike. The dead man is Casimer Mazu rek, 24 years old, shot through the head. He died in an ambulance on the way to a hospital. Mazurek was a striker. He had been working at the steel plant for about two months since his return from France, where he served th'rough dut the war with the Second Division. Maciez Buezkowski, another striker, was shot through the right temple and surgeons at the hospital to-night despaired of saving his life. Qf the other injured, tw Trumbull Steel Company, of Warren, were the last to capitulate. Both companies announced that they had closed late yesterday. Together they employ 20,000. Throughout the valley, the same peacofulness which marked the walk out of the first men Monday morning continues. Two surprises of yesterday were the closing of the Trumbull Steel Company of Warren and the A. M. Byers Company, of Girard. The skilled men of these companies be long to the Amagamated Association of Sheel, Steel and Tin Workers and I have agreements with the com-| panies. RAILROAD MEN UNDER GREAT STRAIN Reports from various sections of the country show that railroad men who are exposed to the elements of the changing weather and all sorts if storms are frequent victims of colds and pneumonia. It is found also that Father John's Medicine is used by many railroad . en as their s: * guard against these dangers to which they are exposed. They real ize that the pure food elements of which Father John's Medicine Is composed give them new strength with which to fight off colds and coughs and help them to build new flesh and strength. Because Father John's Medicine is guaranteed free from, alcohol and dangerous drugs in any form, many railroad men use it in their homes a sa safe medicine in their homes as ar safe medicine for all the family DELAYS DEBATE | ON AMENDMENTS 1 i Senate Postpones For Week, Consideration of New Provisions Washington, Sept. 24.—T1i0 first i test In the fight now being waged about the Peace Treaty with Ita ! League of Nations Covenant, came late yesterday'on a motion by Chair man Lodge,, of the Foreign Rela- ■ tione Committee, to postpone for one week consideration of some forty amendments which would re- I lieve the United States from service ' on commissions created under the Treaty. The formal motion, with a fixed date, was put before the Sen ate after the Vice-President had ' sustained a point of order by Sen- 1 ator Hitchcock, leader of the ad- i ministration forces for ratification, against a motion for indefinite con sideration, and it was adopted, 43 to 40. ! The motion, not of itself lmpor- j taut, was accepted to-day by oppo nentfl of the League as the lie# pos- Bible index of the feeling and atti- i tude of the Senate toward the 1 Treaty and the Covenant. . Demo cratic leaders declared it meant ! nothing. Except in three instances the vote, ! on which the ayes and nays were demanded by Senator Hitchcock, followed party lines. Senator Jones, of Washington, and Senator Mc- Cumber, of North Dakota, both Re publicans, voted against the motion, and Senator Reed, Democrat, of Missouri, voted for it. Ten Senators were paired, and Okltlh oma; King, Utah, and Shields, Tennessee—absent ami not voting, were not paired. The little flurry over the Lodge motion was the only excitement dur ing the two-hour consideration of the Treaty, which was not taken up until 3 o'clock because of a parlia mentary wrangle. Silk Goods Worth $5,000 Stolen From Store in Scranton Scrunton. Sept. 24—For the third j time in as many weeks burglars made ! a good haul in this city of silk gar ments and piece goods to the value i NOTEO RESIDENTS PUBLICLY TESTIFYi * One million Pennsylvanians are now I taking Tanlac and testifying to its ' merits as a superior tonic, combatant I invigorant and stomachic. Tanlac is distinctly the "Master Medicine" of millions, as it is now more uni versally used and recommended than any other proprietary medicine in America. Captain M. Neilson. head of Salva tion Army, I-larrisburg. Mayor T. H. Freeman, Northum berland. °A. S ' Ro dman Street Baptist Church, Pittsburgh Hon. Thos. Pickerell, banker Reading:. Rev. Noah Smith, Wilken-Barre. S * # A Vr Clemen ts, Shamokin, mother of Hon. Nobel Clement*, j Assemblyman. *\ J ' Conne ry. New Castle Fire Department. Anthony KorU, Reading, financial secretary. Amalgamated Ass n. Jron. fcteel and Tin Workers, and thou sands of others testify likewise to j the corrective and reconstructive ' powers of Tanlac, which is now sold ' here by all leading druggists. See the Stuffing and Manufacture <>? this Mattress In Our Window A Demonstration by The United States Mattress Co., Harrisburg, Pa., What's inside a mattress is of vital im- You'll appreciate the careful manufacture portance. And how it's put there, too, j n the ]ength of Hf e a nd the comfort, is just as important. And so for your Stud the manufacture of this mattre benefit we have arranged to have made • „ , . so you can see it, a special mattress which W1 " a " or( i y° u an excelleut chance is madfe specially for us. to compare it wit,Ji others not as good, The demonstration is being held in our offered at the same, very often higher • window. This mattress of all cotton pi ices. felted is scientifically made and tufted, The demonstration will continue all covered with best grade art ticking. week. Special During • Demonstration ■ JL 1 SEPTEMBER 24, 1919. of $5,000 Mofiday night from the store of J. R. Shoucalr. This makes $20,000 worth of goods of this character stolen here within a short time. The thieves showed an expert knowledge of slllt goods, selecting only the best in the stock. ]^^Kl heals itching skin troubles j Resinol Ointment usually stops itch ing at oncc. It quickly and easily heals most cases of eczema, rash or similar distressing skin eruption, not due to serious internal conditions. Physicians i prescribe Resinol Ointment regularly ' so you need not hesitate to try it. Resinr.l Soap should usually be used with Resinol Ointment to P re P ftrc ihe skin to receive the tifll Resinol medication. Resinol | H Soap and Resinol Ointment are by druggists. Resinol Warner's Safe Remedies A CONSTANT BOON TO INVALIDS SINCE 187" Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy. jjgg|i Warner's Safe Diabetes Remedy. Warner's Safe Rheumatic Remedy. Warner's Safe Asthma Remedy. Warner's Safe Nervine. |ap Warner's Safe Pills, (Constipation and Biliousness) T JI K RELIABLE FAMILY MEDICINES Sold by leading druggists everywhere. Sample sent on receipt of 10c. WARNEH'S SAFE REMEDIES CO., Dept. 266. ROCHESTER, N. Y. NOTICE ON ACCOUNT OF FIRE Walter V. Anderson SUCCESSOR TO J. F. FASNACHT STUDIO Announces that he will be ready to receive frame orders and will be located at Bolton Bros., 900 MARKET STREET—a few doors away. All orders left in old store will be framed and people notified about October 1. This will in no way interfere with Bolton; Bros.* business. Your patronage solicited. Mr. WAI.TER V. ANDERSON was owner of the old establishment and will take on Mr. Fasnacht's son in the new firm of The Capital City Photo No velty Shop 900 MARKET STREET h neaith Jtfuiider For Weakened Lnoga Where a continued cough VL-** hreatene the lunga, Kckmaaa Altara- Ive will help to atop the mtmgk. trengthen the lungs and Motor* alth. 80c Ad $1.60 bottleo M h ' **s. or from TMAN ToABORATORY. Philadelphia, Monumental Magnificence and Majesty repose in the of our workmen. The selection of the stone with care enables us to dart with i sure foundation for the skilled work of our artisans. Artistic designs approved by our patrons afford another basis for successful results. And .the sculpturing itself is highly pert. • Cemetery lettering I. B. DICKINSON (iriinite. Marble. Tile nnil llronse V THIRTEENTH ST., lliirrlabnrg, I'n. 7