ALL BELGIUM BACK TO WORK Brussels Factories, Damaged by Germans, Being Bc- Equipped Brussels, Oct. 29.—A1l Belgium is returning to work and the country is recovering rapidly from the war. In Brussels factories which were damaged during the German occu pation are being fitted with ma chinery, and some of them already are turning out their accustomed products to within a few per cent of the pre-war capacity. Production* of sugar exceeds the pre-war tonnage. Glass factories are reopening. In the iron and steel mills many plants have resumed operations, particularly in the district where some of the mills were completely demolished and others so badly damaged that entire furnaces had to he rebuilt. \tfithin a year, it is believed, the most important of these plants will be operating to capacity. ' The cotton trade of Ghent also^ GIRLS! A MASS OF WAVY, GLEAMY BEAUTIFUL HAIR Let "Danderine" save and glorify your hair In a few moments you can trans form your plain, dull, flat liuir. You can have it abundant, soft, glossy and full of life. Just get at any drug or toilet counter a small bottle of "Danderine" for a few cents. Then moisten a soft cloth with the Dar.-derine and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. Instantly, yes, Immedi ately, you have doubled the beauty of your hair. It will be a mass, so soft, lustrous, fluffy and so easy to do up. All dust, dirt and excessive oil is removed, Det Danderine put more life, col or, vigor and brightness in your hair. This stimulating tonic will freshen your scalp, check dandruff and fall ing hair, and help your hair to grow lon-g, thick, strong and beau tiful. ctg Lot ot Hay Fever Jokes Sat Kentucky Man Say*— "People Who Belong to Hay Fever Colony ara Kidding Themselves." Wouldn't Be Any Rose o. Hay Fever if Simple Home Kenn edy Was Given a Chance. "Yes, there's a real MNTY-N'INE per cent effective remedy for hay or rose fever," frankly states a drug gist in a prosperous Kentucky city. "But I don't ixpect anyone to be lieve me, becuuse the treatment is so easy and the cost not worth mention ing." "The annual crop of hay-fever jokes would be mighty scarce If people would get an ounce of Menthollzed Arclne and by just adding water that has been boiled make a pint of Liquid that will prove a real help to all who ■uffer." "Many of my hay-fever friends tell ■e that by starting to gargle and ■null or spray the nostrils a few times ■ day the expected severe attack often (alls to appear and In cases whore It floes show up Is very mild and does not annoy." "The Better Class of Pharmacists" who dispense Mentholized Arclne say It will greatly modify any attack even when taken three or four days after hostilities begin. Go to a real live druggist when yon yet ready to make a pint. 7 A DAY FOR 7 DAYS If Your Nerves Are Shaky Because of Over-indulgence in Tobacco or Alcohol or by Excess of Any Kind, 810-Feren Is What You Need Right Away. • Don't grow old before your time, don't let nervousness wreck your hap piness 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 pntttng your blood and nerves In first class shape with mighty 810-Feren, a pew discovery, inexpensive and effi cient Men and women who get np so' tired tir the morning that they have to drag themselves to their dally labor will la Just a few days arise with clear mind, definite purpose and loads of ambition. All you have to do is to take two ■Blo-Feren tablets after each meal and One at bedtime—7 a day for 7 days— then reduce to one after each meal iTOtil all are gone. { Then If your energy and endurance (haven't doubled. If your mind isn't keener and eyes brighter, if you don't feel twice as ambitious as before, any druggist anywhere will return the pur chase price—gladly and freely. 810-Feren Is without doubt the grandest remedy for nervous, run down, weak, anaemic men and women ever offered and Is not at all expen-j alve. All druggists In this city and vicinity have a supply on hand— sell ./ WEDNESDAY EVENING, i has resumed, and steamers loaded with cotton are arriving almost I daily. During the German occupa tion, all copper fittings were remov ed from the machines in the spin ning factories, and some of these have not yet been replaced. The linen* industry also has taken on new life, and additional workers are being employed every week. The export trade in linen is grow ing just as rapidly as the factories can turn out the finished product. It is in the country districts, however, where one sees the Belgian at his best. In the vast garden Icour/try which stretches from Brus jsels to the sea scarcely a square ! foot of ground is left uncultivated. ! so anxious are the people to produce | their own food, and they are work ling from early morn until late at ! night to attain that end. I Apparently there is no scarcity 'of food in Belgium. It is costly in towns and cities, but in* the country the people have now gathered their first harvest since the war, and are iu need of nothing. Even butter is being served in the hotels, and in every house there is no longer the fear of starvation which for so many years made life a burden. Many persons are convinced that this time next year will see the country very well fixed on the way to recovery. Charges Smuggling Is Rampant in the Occupied Areas Dussoldorf, Oct. 29. —It is a won der that the Cologne Cathedral has not been sold in the channels of il licit trade, sarcastically remarks a writer in the Berlin Zeitung Am Mittag, who has just made a trip through the occupied districts and asserts he has seen at first hand the smuggling and tax evasion that go on daily. He estimates that every train into Germany from Frankfort and other Rhineland cities carries several hundred thousand marks worth of untaxed goods, ranging from tobacco and chocolate to au tomobile tires. Some of the illicit traders, he as serts, spend six nights a week on the trains, at great personal discom fort, in order to smuggle through supplies such as soap, chocolate, to bacco, shoes and automobile tires which, though untaxed, are sold in Berlin and other inland German cit ies at tremendous profit. Polish Envoy to U. S. Arrives in States on Army Transport New York, Oct. 29.—Casimir Lu bomiraski, first Polish Minister to the United States, accompanied by his wife, three sons and daughter, and the new Polish legation staff arrived to-day on the army trans port America from Brest, France. Francis Pulaski, first counselor of the new legation and a direct de scendant of the famous Polish gen eral who fought with Washington in the Continental Army and who was one of the Polish representatives at the Peace Conference, accompanied the new minister. Poland's new representative in the United States was welcomed at the pier by leaders of the Polish-Ameri can societies in the United States. Major General Shanks, Brigadier General Peter Davidson and Rear Admiral Casey Morgan, of the Port of Embarkation, also extended their welcome to the new diplomat. Woman With 21 Children Asks Aid of French Fund Paris, Oct. 29.—1f the flood of let ters which is daily reaching the trustees of the 50,000,000-franc fund given by M. Cognac, to be distributed in lots of 25,000 francs to families consisting of more than nine children, is to be taken as a criterion, then depopula tion in France is not as bad as it lias been reported. Among the candi dates to the fund is a mother who boasts of twenty-one children, born of the same wedlock. More than two thousand letters from parents claiming a progeny of more than nine children have been received. N Carries Medical Supplies on Roof of Box Car Crnlova, Rumania, Oct. 29.—Riding on the roof of a box car through 150 miles of Rumanian mountains. Miss Georgia Watts, of Lexington, Kv„ carried a consignment of much needed medicines and surgical sup plies from Bucharest to the Ameri can Red Cross hospital here. The outbreak of a sudden epidemic of typhus demanded the immediate receipt of certain supplies which could only be obtained from the American warehouses in Bucharest. Miss Watts offered to make the trip. There was not. an inch of space left in any one of the freight cars. Miss Watts, who hod carefully packed her supplies in small cases with an eye to some such contingency, obtained the consent of the stationmaster, the crates of medicines were tied to the roof of a box car and Miss Watts mounted to a place beside them, when she clung as the train climbed tor tuously up a crooked mountain trail, across many brides and through numerous tunnels. She arrived safe and sound at her destination with her precious freight. 2d Pioneer Infantry Due in N. Y. Friday WashingUm. Oct. 29. The 2d Pioneer Infantry will arrive in New York next Friday aboard the steam ship Pocatliontas, which sailed from Brest, October 21, the War Depart ment announces. The 2d Pioneer Infantry was or ganized out of surplus New York National Guard troops at Camp Wadsworth and was attached to the Army of Occupation shortly after the armistice. American General on Baltic Mission Paris, Oct. 29.—The Peace Con ference has appointed a commission of allied officers to supervise Ger many evacuation of the Baltic region. The commission includes General Cheney, America; General Turner, Great Britain; General Nissel, France; General Mariettl, Italy, and Major Takeda, Japan. German Delegates Due Here on Sunday Washington, Oct. 29. German delegates to the International Labor Conference, scheduled to open here to-day, will land in the United States on Sunday. Austrian delegates are on the way and will arrive soon after the Germans. GERMANS BUILD MIGHTY ARMY Colossal War Machine Again in Preparation; Treaty Clause Evaded I'IITIH, Oct. 29.—Inquiries into the actual condition and strength of the present German army set on foot by semi-official agencies of to French government have revealed the start ling fact that Germany's most recent, military activities are as intense and disquieting in their nature as were preparations that preceded the out break of the wnr in 1914. Experienced observers report that a new colossal war machine is in the muking across the Kliine anil that its strength and potentiality is not in the least dependent upon the application of the treaty of Versailles, since the Germans have found a way of get ting around strict interpretation of the strict military clauses. The re organization of the German army has been taken step by step from the day of the so-called "disaster" on November 11, 1918. At the present time it represents one of the most complete und besj equipped armies in Europe, numbering more than 800,- 000 men, according to the observers. Organization of Force The new military force is centered around the 200,000 men permitted by the treaty. Grouped about this center are numerous bodies of military dis guised as local militia, civic guards, student organizations and demobil ized officers' clubs, besides a host of former officers employed in civil serv ice, who are under obligations to do military duty when called upon. The total active land forces are thus said to reach nearly 400,000, not including, of course, the notorious Courland army at present camouflaged as Rus sians. Germany having made a plea for a reserve force, plans were immedi ately set on foot for the organiza tion of one. Three-fqurths of the mobilized classes serving under the colors last autumn were found avail able as reserve material, in other words, about 800,000 men. These were divided into two categories—limited time volunteers (Die Freiwilliga) and the army of inhabitants (Elnwohner wehr). The inhabitants' army is a good ex ample of the camouflage methods ap plied to the new German army. It is an open secret that the Einwohner- XLARRISBURG TEIJEGRItPH wehr are intended for ir.fcjrporo-1 tions into the Keiehwehr in times 1 of necessity. Special Police in Mexico City to Cope With Thieving Problem Mexico City, Oct. 29.—An epi demic of thieving, robbery and ; murders in Mexico City with which the local police apparently were un able to cope has caused the federal government to establish patrols of Soldiers 6ver the city from 10 p. m. until 6a. m. Infractions of the law immediately began to decrease. 2,000 Families in the Bronx Face Eviction New York, Oct. 29.—With not a reasonably priced apartment in the borough to rent, more than 2,000 families in The Bronx face eviction on November 1, it was estimated to day by the clerks of The Bronx mu nicipal courts. In addition, 1,500 new eviction cases are on the court calendar for hearing. Approximate ly 500 families have already been made homeless within the Inst month by disposses proceedings. Parrot Saves Woman From Robber's Grip Paris, Oct. 29. —The widow Gi raud's parrot saved her from rob bery and perhaps death yesterday morning. A burly young man, who entered the shop to rob it seized Mrs. Giraud by the throat and was choking her to death when cries of "help, help" were heard from the kitchen in the rear of the store. Terrified, the robber released his hold on the widow's throat and fled. The alarm had been given by the parrot. Prohibit Communists From Legal Advice lliitlapcMt. Oct. 29.—The Hungarian Chamber of Advocates has passed a resolution forbidding any lawyer to defend persons charged with partici pation 4n communist activities. Packard Trucks For All-Winter Transportation No More Guess and Gamble in Trucking Costs— Packard Figures Based Upon Severest Service M J? HAT does it mean when thirty cities Many, of these trucks did not lose a trip or a \A j report demands for more housing con- minute's time during the winter. ▼ V struction and increased industrial building? What does it mean when members of Gasoline and oil consumption and repairs run the National Association of Builder's Exchanges a * same low average that Packard owners promise to "attempt to carry on building all winter expect to find regardless of weather conditions"? Average loads were hauled( even where tbey It means that if demands and plans are carried consisted of cement or gravel or other materials out, motor trucks must do their bit. whose weight and bulk increased where wet or And motor truck users must know how big a frozen. bit they can do when cold is extreme and going , ... . .. ~ is hard. railers and special dumping and loading equip- U -j; ment were kept in use according to schedule. Winter building has always been more or less a gamble with the contractor. A man cannot *rucks necessardy 8° together. work a system when the weather deals the cards. For it is the extra margin of strength and stam- In winters gone by, transportation has fallen ina that the Packard to meet the emer down first. Materials were delivered behind gency when it comes. schedule or not at all-expensive workmen were And it is that same margin-that extra factor forced to slow down-costs were increased ao of safety-which has kept Packard trucks in con cor mg y. tinuous service, some of them over ten years. We Replacement of horses by motor trucks helped have yet to hear of a Packard truck going out to an extent. But reliable figures on winter motor of active service, truck performance have been hard to obtain. IS is IS Consistent figures have been even harder. .... ' , Now the gamble is being taken out of winter able be i p in solving truck transportation problems hauling by Packard transportation figures. by calUng upon tbe Freight Transportation De- Records of Packard trucks during last winter partment of the Packard organization in city. and the winter before are available. Its services 'are without charge. "Ask *The Man Who Owns One 99 PACKARD MOTOR CAR CO. of Philadelphia Front & Market Streets, Harrisburg, Pa. BELL PHONE 2694 Your Country is Improving its Highways, Can You Say the Same for Your State? You have as much to say about the conduct of one as of the other. Come out for an issue of road bonds—atwf buy them! Many Seals Being Ordered by Various County Committees One million Christmas Red Cross Seals have been ordered from State Headquarters here by the Dauphin jCounty Seal Committee and will be ' sold at one cent in the drive be ginning December 10 in the coun- I ty. The sule will provide 110,000 J for the fight against the white plague. Sever.*t hundred and fifty thou- I sand seals have been ordered by the j l.neaster county committee and one million .and fifty thousand have I beefl ordered by the Schuylkill |committee. I The Bale of this large quota will 'provide $10,500 for the enlargement jof-the light against the white plague iin Schuylkill county by the Anti j tuberculosis Society of Schuylkill leounty. The Schuylkill committee [increased its original order for f.00,- 000 seals to 1,050,000. Cigaret Smoking Among London Women Common l.omlon. Oct. 29. —West Knd Tobac conists assert that Englishmen gen erally not only do not disapprove of H HOSES Apply Zemo, Clean, Penetrat ing, Antiseptic Liquid It Is unnecessary for you to suffer with eczema, blotches, ringworm, rashes and similar skin troubles. Zemo. ; obtained at any drug store for 35c or SI.OO forextra large bottle, and prompt ly applied will usually give instant relief from itching torture. It cleanses and soothes the skin and heals quickly and effectively most skin diseases. Zemo is a wonderful, penetrating, disappearing liquid and is soothing to the most delicate skin. It 13 not greasy, is easily applied and costs little. Get it today and save all further distress. TkeE. W.Rose Co.. Cleveland, O. women smoking; but encourage their ; tvlves in the practice. "We sell almost as many .cigarcts I to women as to men,' said one. "Fre- j ouently men customers, after buying cigars and tobacco for themselves, ask for cigarets for their wives. 1 . \ We Have Just Opened a New Department In Our Store The Kenilworth Gift Shop HERE you will find the latest gift merchandise collected in beautiful, comprehensive assortments. There are table articles of all descriptions in Glassware, Mahogany and Hand-Painted China. You are invited to come in and inspect this new department. Here you will find attractive gifts for the man who smokes or little articles for the home, anniversary present, or little remembrances for the housewife. Come in and let us show you our KENILWORTH GIFT SHOP. GOLDSMITH'S Central Pennsylvania 9 s Best Furniture Store NORTH MARKET SQUARE OCTOBKR' 29, 1919. i Clergymen who do not themselves | smoke come in and ask for a liun- I drod Turkish eignreta for their j womenfolk. Cigaret smoking has not yet be come fasliionuble uinong working class women, hut in the middle and upper classes I Imagine that the baa band who quarrels with his wife be cause she smokes must be a rare bird.' Use McNeil s Cold Tablets. Adv. 6
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers