BUDGET CLUBS TO BE FORMED Campaign in This State Will Begin in Pittsburgh on November 2i Pittsburgh, Oct. IS.—The National Budget Committee's campaign in Pennsylvania will start November 24 when more than a score of Fort nightly Budget Club meetings will be held throughout Pittsburgh at the Hungry Club, the Women's Mon day Club. 12 branches of the Y. M. C. A. and at various settlement houses. Julian Kennedy, prominent engi neer and one of Pittsburgh's most intluentiai citizens; Miss Marie b>er mitt, secretary of the Civic Club of Allegheny county; James H. Gray and Frederick B. Shipp, general sec retary of Pittsburgh's Y. M. C. A., are among those who have consent ed to serve on the Pittsburgh com mittee. Sherman Conrad, secretary of the Co-operative Welfare Association and of the Social Workers Club, lias agreed to assemble a volunteer P. R. R. Employee Able to Work Full Time Now • Says the Man-Heil Kept Him On the ! •lob ami Gave Him More Relief • Than Anything Else lie Ever: Eouiul. W. F. McXaughton, SIS Main St., Steelton. Pa., says: "I have used the Man-Heil Inhaler two months for Hay Fever and tightness in the throat, having been a sufferer for. two years. The Inhaler is the only relief I have ever found, although I' have tried many remedies. I have been able to go to work every day during the extreme Hay Fever sea son. This I consider has paid for the Inhaler many times, as well as prevented much suffering. I was off from work in 19lS just II days suffering from Hay Fever: sat up ail night, could not lie down, was so short of breath. This year the In haler has allowed me to go on just like the rest of the family. I will always be glad that I read the ad vertisement of the Geo. A. Gorgas Drug Store and investigated the Mar.'-Hoil Automatic Inhaler. This letter can be" published, as I want to help others as I have been helped." The MAN-HEIL. AUTOMATIC INHALER is relieving thousands who have been unable to obtain any other relief. It is really the most logical and practical way of treating Catarrh. Asthma, Colds, Lung Trou ble and all other forms of disease lo cated in the Air Passages. It re- j lieves while you sleep. Is sold and guaranteed by the Geo. A. Gorgas, Drug Stores. For free booklet, write Frederick : Heilman Co.. Johnstowrr, Pa. 5 C a package before the war 5 s a package during the war and 5c a package NOW THE FLAVOR LASTS SO DOES THE PRICE! TUESDAY EVENING, speaking force. The group will in clude Dr. Francis Tyson, of the Uni versity of Pittsburgh; Gilbert Bar nes, of Carnegie Institute of Tech i nology, and B. F. Terry, superin | tendent of the Children's Bureau. I The meetings are a part of the National Budget Committee's cam paign to organize 10.000 Fortnightly Budget Clubs by the first of the year. The campaign is under the direc tion of Captain Stanley It. Howe, of New York. Captain Howe and Charles F. Ncsbit. of Washington, a director of the committee in charge of organization work, were busy here last week getting the drive un der way. From Pittsburgh the campaign will be extended throughout ,the State. A chairman from Allegheny county will shortly be named. Pittsburgh will be the second large city in east to organize budget clubs. Now York's drive started on October ! 15 when II meetings were held. Many Accidents Due to Mountain Climbing This Season Geneva, Oct. 28. Mountain climbing brought about an unusual ly heavy crop of accidents this season. One of the most sensational occurred on the Piz Col a few days ago when two women slipped and fell into a crevasse 100 feet deep. Their male companion, unable to help, rushed for guides and. after seven hours' imprisonment, the wom en were extracted, one dead and the I other unconscious. | On the same day three young ! couples had just reached the summit , of Luisin Peak, above Xalvan, when I j a girl 21 years old collapsed and I I tell 500 feet. After an all-nigjit : search guides found her body and j I carried it with great difficulty to thai village of Martigny. A climber named Durisch died at St. Moritz, after a fall on Mount j Rosatch. COUNT FIFTY! NO RHEUMATIC PAIN Don't Suffer! Instant Relief Follows a Rubbing With Old j "St. Jacobs Liniment" Stop "dosing" rheumatism. It's pain only: not one case in! fifty requires internal treatment. | Rub soothing, penetrating "St. Jacobs Liniment" right on the ! "tender spot." and by the time you j say Jack Robinson —out comes the j rheumatic pain and distress. "St. Jacobs Liniment" conquers pain. It i is a harmless rheumatism liniment i which never disappoints and doesn't j burn the skin. It takes pain, sore- i ness and stiffness from aching joints, j muscles and bones; stops sciatica, lumbago, backache, neuralgia and ! reduces swelling. Limber up! Get a small trial bot- \ tie of old-time, honest "St. Jacobs! iLiniment" from any drug store, and ! iin a moment you'll be free from; j pains, aches and stiffness. Don't ' suffer! Rub rheumatism away. I GIVE UP WOMEN FOR U. S. FLOUR Bolshevists Holding Wives of Polish Officers Sur render Them Warsaw. Oct. 18.—Captain Leo J. | McGulre, of the American Red [Cross returned to Warsaw from Odessa yesterday with 56 repatrit ted Polish families, having fulfilled his mission to repatriate wives and ichildren of Polish officers, left be !hind on the evacuation of the eitv jby General Zeligowslti and his j Polish troops in April last, j Early in September, the French Military Mission at Warsaw learned 'that the Bolshevist officials at Odessa \ver4 holding for ransom wives of Polish officers. The Bol shevists offered to give up the women for a ransom of one sack of American flour per woman, but stipulated that they would trade only with an officer of the Ameri can Red Cross. On the request of the Polish Government, the Red Cross Commander to Poland de tailed Captain MeGuire to make the trip. . Accompanied only by an inter- , pretor. Captain McGulre attached • his two box cars of ransom to a, military train leaving Warsaw for i Lemberg. From Lomberg, by dint: of bluff, bribery and the prestige of | the American uniform, he travelled i south through the Ukraine and Rumania to Galata. and thence to Odessa. General Denikine. the anti- j Bolshevik commander of the Cos- j sack army had captured the cify | before Captain MeGuire arrived. The captain found the Polish j women living in conditions much j resembling those of a town in I Northern France after an atnek proceeded by heavy artillery prepa ration. The Bolshevists had de stroyed whole blocks of houses, first rifling them with amazing • thoroughness. Terrorist Conimis- i sions had executed 5.000 persons ! during the two months of occupa- j tion. Eventually the American was j able to get his charges out of the ] city and back through Rumania . and the Ukraine. Captain MeGuire conies from j Tulsa. Oklahoma. A volunteer in . the French army, he enlisted iti the ' American army in France and was ; decorated with the Distinguished j Service Crops. He is twenty-two I years of age. Yeggs Isolate Town; • Rob Bank ot $50,000 Cincinnati, Oct. 28.—Safe blow- j ers escaped with loot estimated at ! $50,000 from the Bunk of Alexandra, j Alexandra, Ky., early yesterday. The robbers first located the town by cut ting all telephone wires. Use McNeil's Cold Tablets. Adv. TTAJRR.ISBURG TELEGRXPS BELGIAN KING PAYS HOMAGE TO ARMY [Continued from First Page.] the entire union and his sincerity in expressing the thanks of Belgium to Americans for their aid was plainly evident. Deeply .Moved "I salute," he said to the Senate, "not only the eminent men who re ceived nte here during the day, but 1 salute the memory of your great i predecessors who during 130 years j have sat in this place and given , to tlie whole world the example of ' highest civic virtues. This welcome 1 of the Senate seals that reception, so f warm and so spontaneous, 1 have ' received everywhere during my | ;ouincy across this magnificent coun | try. 1 am deeply moved by the ex i pressions of sympathy that the name ]of Belgium evokes from this noble American people. "Nothing could better character ize the reign of universal democracy i than that friendship which unites ! the great republic with its one hun ched and ten million citizens and the realm which 1 am the constitutional head, wKh its seven and a half mil lion inhabitants. If there is no equal ity of power and riches between them, there is equality in the love of liberty and in aspiration toward social progress. On both sides of the Atlantic the same ideals inspire us. Exchange of ideals, the commercial relations, the visits to Belgium of eminent American citizens, of whom many sit in this assembly, are so many means of tightening the bonds between the two nations. "I hope with all my heart that these relations which go back as far as memory, which have been forti fied during the war as well as by the admirable assistance which you rendered Belgium by feeding her people and by fraternity in arms, will never cease, to develop for llie great good of the two peoples." Addresses House The visit to the Senate of King Al oe t and the Prince lasted only half an hour and they went immediately to the House. In his address there, His -Majesty said: "I am happy to be able to bear to this chamber.- which embodies tlie living spirit of the American pap ple, the greetings of Belgium, a democratic and parliamentarian state created l*y a vote of the popular assembly of 1830, which proclaimed the independence of our provinces, it is a pleasure to re call that many of the provisions of our constitution were taken from your fundamental law, so that at the outset of her career Belgium was indebted to you. Sincere Homage "Our two peoples lave fought and triumphed together. The interven tion of the American Army was the decisive factor in determining the victory. I pay my respectful and sincere domage [o the officers, the soldiers and sailors, who fell for a great cause on the battlefields of Eu rope and in the defense of the seas. The hearts of Belgians wliome those heroes helped to liberate from the domination of the enemy go out in profound gratitude to the wound ed. In their name I address to the wounded of the great war assurance oi our affection and sympathv. I ex press the gratitude of Belgium to ttiose distinguished American citi zens who gave themselves with such a\ spirit of sacrifice to the task of lightening the sufferings of the Bel gian people. "In this noble assembly I solemn ly thank the members of the com mission for relief and the innumer able committees that helped it in its admirable efforts. I salute in par ticular the names, graven forever in our memories, of Herbert Hoover and Brand Whitlock. May this splendid American na tion, so richly endowed by nature, so magnificently served by its people, pursue in the serenity of its power, its work of accomplishment, of cul ture and of progress." SENATE DRYSARE HOPING FOR REPASS [Continued from First Page.] the President's veto meant that the sale of liquor would not be permit ted again in the life of this and many other generations. Message to Congress The reasons for vetoing the act were set forth by tlie President in the following message to Congress: "To the House of Representatives: "I am returning without my signa ture H. R. —. 6810, "an act to pro hibit intoxicating beverages, and to regulate the manufacture, produc tion. use and sale of high-proof spirits for other than beverage pur poses. and to insure an ample supply of alcohol and promote its use in scientific research and in the de velopment of fuel, dye, and other lawful industries. "The subject matter treated in this measure, deals with two distinct phases of the prohibition legislation. One part of the act under consider ation seeks to enforce war-time pro hibition. The other provides for the enforcement which was made neces sary by the adoption of the constitu tional amendment. X object to and cannot approve that part of this leg islation with reference to war-time prohibition. "It has to do with the enforce ment of an act which was passed by reason of the emergencies of the war and whose objects have been satisfied in the demobilization of the Army, and Navy and whose repeal I have already sought at the hands of Congress. Where the purposes of particular legislation arising out of war emergency have been satis fied, sound public policy makes clear the reason and necessity for repeal. "It will not be difficult for Con gress in considering this Important matter to separate these two ques tions and effectively to legislate re garding them; 'making the proper distinction between temporary causes which arose out of war-time emerg encies and those like the constitu tional amendment of prohibition which is now part of the funda mental law of the country. "In all matters having to do with the personal habits and customs of large numbers of our people, we must he certain that the established processes of legal change are fol lowed. In no other way can the salutary object sought to be accom plished by great reforms of this character be made satisfactory and permanent. "(Signed) "WOODROW WILSON, "The White House, "27 October, 1919." STEPS TAKENTCT OPEN NEW STREETS [Continued from First Page.] CO feet. This will be considered py tlie Planning Commission. With the exception of a small amount of damages which may result from open ing Green street to a width of 120 feet through Riverside there will be little ether expense which will be caused by changing the street lines. Mr. Cowden predicted. While none of the councllmen said they approved the plans It Is under- j' stood that they are heartily In favor of , the Improvements and will favor them alter they are familiar with all the de- j tails and the arrangements which are to be made ror developing the Italian park tract. At the regular session of Council. I Commissioner W. H. Lynch introduced ordinances providing for paving Harvey j alley, Chestnut 10 Zarker streets: plac-| Ing Peace alley, from Fifteenth to j Seventeenth, between Xaudain and j Catherine streets, on the city official j map; striking York street. Sixteenth \ to Seventeenth, from the official map: ' tind giving the Postal Telegraph Com- ; pany permission to lay ducts in Third ; street to connect with those from the ; State Capitol building. The ordinance authorising the paving of Nineteenth street. Ilerry to Swataru ' streets, was passed finally. Belgian Furnaces Handicapped by the Lack of R. R. Cars 1 nrussols, Oct. 28.—The Belgian | steel industry is greatly handicapped by lack of transportation. About 20 blast furnaces which have been re- j paired since the withdrawal of the | German forces could start work 1 within the next six weeks il" the I necessary coke could be obtained, j The taking over of 400 American., locomotives is being negotiated with j a view of retiring the situation. ! Belgium is supplying Rumania and Switzerland with coal in exchange for. food and is arranging with i Argentina for the shipment of 50-! 000 tons of coal to that country monthly against returns of v. heat cargoes. 4 #^ DON ' T ! M JYQBMc || H ait Until Real m Gold Weather® Have your last Winter's Overcoat, Coat ■ Producti Co., Cotumbui, Ohio, iMfc i I'igh Grade MargarineMaktri Since 1884. maltrj °f Nut Margarine.) "A. good cook i||§i® is a treasure"— And nine husbands out of tCn rea^ze to °" We commend "PURITY" |jP J Margarine to all good cooks. P|iigp Its fine flavor makes every- Sl|J thing taste better and its IgplJj economy reduces The High Cost of Living. Use it regularly and there will be more smiles around the dinner table. Your dealer has "PURITY" or will get it for you. llpfSfl TIIK CAPITAL C ITY PRODUCTS CO. BRANCH §j§j?a $3 10 S. Delaware Ave., Pliiiadelphia, Pa. I®?! H'll I'l.un,. I.oniliaril 1173 Slain 3NN | Ihc Pnies|iwidte da% Bread United States Marshal Power yes terday afternoon at the direction of United States District Attorney Ross, of Brooklyn, The arrest is the first made for alleged profiteering. I.envltt was arraigned before United States Commissioner Mo* Qoldrlck. He pleaded not guilty and was held in $5,000 hull for examina tion. 11