Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, November 17, 1919, Page 8, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    8
RED CROSS FINDS
THIS MAN'S WIFE
Separated by War, Woman
Will Soon Be Restored
to Her Husband
Podgoritza, Montenegro. Nov. 17.
—lsolated for four years in the fast
nesses of the Montenegrin moun
tains through the fortunes of war,
Mrs. Rose M. Struger, formerly Miss
Rose Webb, of Tacoma, Washington,
will soon be restored to her hus
band in St. Paul, Minnesota. Lost
to her world since the Austrian
hordes swept over the country and
her husband marched away with the
NAME "BAYER" ON
GENUINE ASPIRIN
Prescribed by physicians for over eighteen years
The "Bayer Cross" marked on tab
lets means you are getting the genu
ine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,"
proved safe by millions of people.
In the Bayer package are proper
directions for Colds, Headache,
Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia,
J What the Newspaper
"Want Columns Reveal?"
Look Over the Want Ads in Any of
the Daily Papers and you will
Often See Plenty Like the follow
ing:
////,; / \ p
vXX/ X^W
x \ w
N. '/ ORPHAN YOUNG M.UN of 15. de- X. /
sirous of going to school wants
good place to work, morning
and evening, for board and /
/ A clothes. Address Dispatch 1612. / <N , \
<S¥K xw>
XVd W'oX / /
\ AA\ X-fVvV* /
V /'aVoA A v / /
x||x
Some Man is to Blame
ML )<] He intended, no doubt, to have an ade
\M/sySJ quate amount of LIFE INSURANCE v
—but he put it off until too late.
Do you want your widow to have to
™i.hTr. bl ™ Vh' e nt >" seek emplovment a few weeks after
l\r. a un^Hera n wk 0 o your death?
huHe. lcd Mand. I r°d. Lf Don't make the mistake he did; see the
Life Iniarance prae- . • - r 1
tiee. representative ot some Legal Reserve
Life Insurancwcompany, who will show
you that you are Saving, instead or
spending, when you take that policy of
Life or Endowment Insurance.
CONNECTICUT GENERA!, LIKE INSURANCE METROPOLITAN LIKE INSURANCE COMPANY
COMPANY John Hcatheote, Superintendent.
J. D. Reckord. General Agent. V. 1 ?". 1 ". 1 '"" L £ et,cr - Deputy Superintendent.
H.J. Anderaon. w "*•. Bottgrnbueh. Deputy SuperlntendenL
Perry L. Heck, Deputy Superintendent.
CONNECTICUT MUTUAL LIKE INSURANCE
COMPANY NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL LIKE INSURANCE
V. W. Kenney, General Agent. COMPANY
A. R. Long. A. A. Wert. Manager.
M. H. King. C. L. Shepley.
EQUITABLE LIKE INSURANCE COMPANY PENN MUTUAL LIKE INSURANCE COMPANY
OI IOWA E. H. Kekenrode, General Agent.
P. B. Rlee and J. A. Tyson, General Agents. R. T. Kekenrode.
E. J. llnum. L. E. Guurin.
C. L. Robeson. H. I. Whiteside.
Jesse Garverleh. Isaac Miller.
EQUITABLE LIKE ASSURANCE SOCIETY PHOENIX MUTUAL LIKE INSURANCE COMPANY
NEW CORK j. Ralph Morrison, General Agent.
E. K. Espenshade, Acting Supervisor.
J. R. Rote. PROVIDENT LIKE A TRUST COMPANY
FIDELITY MUTUAL LIKE INSURANCE COMPANY £" R""! 0 "' G '" crnl A *" nt -
E. H. ShnefTrr, General Agent. H. E. King.
H. E. Kough. R. L. Cron nshleld.
|| JOHN HANCOCK MUTUAL LIKE INSURANCE PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE COMPANY
COMPANY OK AMERICA
Wm. S. Essick, Manager. S. E. I.ong, Superintendent. i
A. A. Yost Assistant Superintendent
MASSACHUSETTS MUTUAL LIKE INSURANCE H. M. Clark, Assistant Superintendent.
COMPANV J. M. Vance, Assistant Superintendent.
W. H. Cordiy, General Agent.
J. N. Klnnard. ROYAL UNION MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE
Walter E. Dietrich. COMPANY
W. F. Hoy. H. P. Michael, General Agent.
MONDAY EVENING,
Montenegrin troops, she and her I
little son have suffered all the an
guish of complete isolation from
family and friends besides the
physical discomforts of wartime liv
ing in a war-wrecked country.
Five years ago Marco Struger
brought his wife and baby son from
the United States to visit his parents
at Ceßlin. Montenegro, a village
higli up in the mountains. While
on their visit the war began and the
husband shouldered his rifle to help
stay the onrush of the Austrian arm
ies. and hurried to army headquar
ters at Podgoritza. He was captured
by the Austrians, but escaped and
returned to the United States where
he sought Red Cross aid to find hie
wife in Montenegro.
When an American Red Cross
Commission arrived in Montenegro
after the armistice. Mrs. Struger
wrote asking for assistance for the
refugees in her little mountain vil
lage. Her appeal reached the Com-
Rheumatism, Lumbago, Sciatica,
Neuritis and for Pain generally.
Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost
only a few cents. Druggists also
sell larger Bayer packages. Aspirin
is the trade mark of Bayer Manu
facture of Monoaceticacidester of
Salicyllcacld.
| mission n few days after an inquiry
from Washington asking the Com
mission to locate Mrs. Struger had
been received. The supplies were
sent to the mountain town in re
sponse to Mrs. Struger's appeal. She
took entire charge of the relief
work in her district and made sev
eral convoy trips between her vil
lage and Podgoritza.
She proved to be a tall, good-look
i ing woman, bronzed by the sun and
I winds of Montenegro. In her years
with the mountaineers she had ac
quired a perfect speaking knowledge
iof their language. Mrs. Struger was
j put into communication with her
I husband and soon will join him in
j America.
Dressmakers Will.
Meet at Seashore
New York. Nov. 17.—What are
, the underlying causes for the high
j prices of women's apparel?
This will form one of the chief
■topics of discussion at the con\en-
Ition of the dress manufacturers of
| the United States, who will assemble
l in Atlantic City on December .. 3.
and 4. participating in the first con
vention that the women's garment
manufacturers have ever held.
The \ssooiated Dress Industrie-,
in calling the manufacturers to
gether has done so primarily to put
the women's garment industry on a
better business basis, as well as to
discuss other phases of the industry
from the time the raw material
leaves the looms until the finished
product reaches the consumer b>
the retail store.
Socialists Gain in
Belgian Elections
By Associated Press.
Brussels. Nov. 17.—The returns in
; the general elections up to a late
I hour last night show a Socialist gnin
I of eight seats, of which the -Catho
i lies lost six and the Liberals two.
I Thc-re are indications of Socialist
' progress everywhere. It seems cer
j tain that the Catholics will lose their
! majority in the chamber.
801/IVIA RATIFIES TREATY
I.a Paz, Bolivia. Nov. 17.
I Bolivia has ratified the peace treaty
of Versailles.
HAHRISBTJRO <#B££|o. TELEGKAPS
ENGLAND GOING
FOR PROFITEERS
Sixteen Hundred Tribunals
Have Presented Total of
7,350 Offenders
London, Nov. 17.—Great Britain's
stupendous effort to grapple with
profiteering is just disclosed by the
work of 1,600 tribunals which have
prosecuted 7,350 offenders and se
cured 1,320 convictions, with fines
(aggregating 33 5,000.
Besides setting up these local tri-
Jbunals to which complaints against
dealers are submitted, appeal tri
j bunals have been established in
specified areas of England, Scotland
land Wales. In adition, central com
mittees also have been formed to in
vestigate supposed trusts or monopo
lies which may be manipulating
wholesale prices. This has been
done under the profiteering act.
Apart fro mthe prosecution of
complaints, the Board of Trade,
which is charged with the adminis
tration of the anti-profiteering law,
is independently investigating prices,
costs and profits of a large number
of articles in common use. It has
formed a costings committee, com
posed of distinguished accountants,
which is assisting the central com
mittee in its task. A subcommittee
on trusts has been empowered to ob
tain whatever technical and expert
assistance may be required.
In scope, the act applies to "any
article or class of articles which is
one of a kind in common use by the
public" or to any "material, ma
chinery or accessories used in the
production of such articles." The
act dies not apply to "controlled"
articles, such as butter, sugar, beer,
flour, liquors—commodities for which
maximum prices were fixed by war
time legislation.
Old Estates Will
Soon Be Put on
Market For Sale
Txnulon, Nov. IT.—Several fine old
estates possessing Interesting his
torical association will come on the
market soon. The most notable of
the new lot announced for sale is
Dalswinton in Dumfrieshire. Scot
land, which at one time formed a
part of the lands held by John
("The Red") Comyn, a competitor
of Robert Bruce for the thro.ne of
Scotland.
Comyn's castle stood on or near
the site of the present mansion
houses. After his death the castle
was destroyed with the exception of
a portion which still remains. The
estate came into the possession of
the late William Macalpine Leng
exactly a hundred years ago. Leng's
trustees are selling it.
Killeen Castle and the lands at
tached, the property of the Earl of
Fingall, whose family have been in
undisputed possession of this County
Meath estate for centuries past, is
also to be offered for sale.
The Earl of Plymouth has dis
posed of a large portion of the
Hewell estate in Worcestershire,
Declining Birthrate
in England Attracts
Much Attention
Leicester, Eng., Nov. 17.—The de
clining birthrate in England is at
tracting the attention of many
thoughtful men. The Bishop of
Birmingham declared at a recent
church congress here that "it was
the duty of the church to encourage
child-bearing, for the need of the
nation was nowhere greater than for
the increased production of healthy
children."
Chief of Basutos
to Visit King George
London, Nov. 17.—Chief Griffith,
the paramount chief of the Basutos,
a tall, stout person and a typical
specimen of the class of natives of
v hich he is the head, has arrived
here from Basutoland with several
of his councillors to pay homage to
King George to whom he will offer
a gift of two Basuto ponies. The
government program for the enter
tainment of the chief includes an
airplane flight at Hendon. But what
the party is most anxious to see is
a horse race.
On his arrival the chief found the
English climate very trying and one
night he was seen seated in a room
in front of a remarkably good fire
wearing an overcoat.
Date Set For Opening
of Smith College Drive
New York, Nov. 17.—The date for
tne opening of the campaign for a
$4,000,000 endowment fund for
Smith College, at Northampton,
Mass., the largest woman's college
in the world, has been set for the
middle part of January, according to
an announcement made jesterday
Hannah Dunlop Andrews,
04, chairman of the Smith College
Fund Committee. Among the needs
of the college is the provision for a
fifty per cent increase in the salar
ies of the teaching staff.
175 War Brides Land
With Nineteen Babies
New York, Nov. 17.—The last of
the 4,000 brides of American soldiers
are now in the United States. The
transport. President Grant, has ar
rived here from Brest with 175
brides and nineteen children, fifteen
of the latter babes in arms.
Fourteen of the children have
soldier fathers, and the remainder
are children of sailors.
120 Women Elected
to Borough Councils
London, Nov. 17.—0f over 3,000
candidates who have been nominated
for the London Borough Council
elections, more than 120 are women.
DISEASE, LIKE FLU,
KILLS MANY CATS
London, Nov. 17. —The out
break of a disease, which has
many symptoms common to in
fluenza, is causing the death of
cats by the hundred here.
The disease is not thought to
be communicable to human be
ings but distinguished surgeons
are unable to confirm the exact
nature. It spreads with amazing
rapidity and the symptoms are
said to resemble closely that of
poisoning except that death usu
ally takes place within two days.
| ,zzs- ' |
! j
| The originators of Fels-Naptha |
I have placed a new laundry §
I soap on the. market: I
1 1
Z TpMlWia K a fBSSREmaSHSBfI
FELSWHITE SOAP I
| I
\ Fels White is an unusu- P
| ally good white soap. |
i i
It is as good in its way &
0 as Fels-Naptha in its way Bp
| The housewife who prefers a white soap P
4 for all household purposes can trust the P
g recommendation of those who have been
making an unusually good soap for more A
P than a quarter of a century.
Fels White Soap invites a trial
today. Needn't wait for washday, %
because Fels White is an every-day jg
| soap for every household purpose. |
Your grocer has it or he can |
get it for you very easily p
Like
to use in your Aomo 99
NOVEMBER 17, 1919.