THINK BLAND CAN TELL ABOUT REDS'ACTIVITIES Police Believe Notorious Fu gitive Is the Man Who Killed Grimm Centralia, Wash., Nov. 19. It is A Stately Shaft or a massive mausoleum can be ordered here with entire confidence that the work will he artistic and impressive. Our sculptors are real artists and give their best ef forts to each order. We are ready to show you a wealth of designs. Cemetery I.ettrrinK I. B. Dickinson Granite. Marble, Tile ami Bronze 505-13 X. THIRTEENTH ST., Harrisbnrg. la. { SPECIAL RUG SALE i Listed below are some attractive Rug Specials which we offer for the 4 > I remainder of the week. These Rugs are of the best quality and are offered | i at substantial savings over the present market price. I * j | RAG RUGS BRUSSELS RUGS ,> (Plain colored Rag Rugs in blue, pink. Tapestry Brussels Rug in floral and f borders n small desi S ns: 8 6xll *24.50 I 9x12 $18.50 Seamless ten-wire Brussels in Persian 6x 9 9.85 two-tone and all over effects . $12.50 i 4x 7 6.55 • I 36x72 2.85 Whittall Body Brussels Rug, 9x12, I 30x60 1.98 875.00 " ► 1' 9 24x48 !!!!!!!!!;!!!*.!!!!!!!!!." 1!39 Wool Tapestry Rug, 27x54 ..$2.25 1 ' 24x36 1.00 Velvet Rugs, 27x54 $2.98 1 > FLOOR LAMPS HOVQR J I Nothing you can add to your living room will give so A much "tone" as a Floor 'l"he mellow light they W lispilfcw g ? I produce gives a touch that makes the room the Teal popular T *"'*"**■• I , place of the house. A Floor Lamp will make an ideal I Our assortment is extremely wide, including various AlltOlßobllc j ( sizes, and a multi-colored assortment of shades, both in j t design and color. In both electric and gas. RobcS I An unconditionally j: j I k guaranteed Auto Robe A jluj kfl of real warmth. A great ? < | |M| assortment of designs I * I and patterns. For all 1 fjil I outdoor uses, partic- S ( , jjt' N ularly sleeping porches.*"* I $22.00 to $85.00 JgL | J l Complete with shades. JM|Bglf| | ■ 1 PORTABLE LAMPS ppSjp J Gas or Electric. i 58.50 up t Metal and wood bases —glass or glass and metal shades and silk shades in extremely large and varied assortments. J SWEEPER SPECIAL fl f Mahogany finished, metal case Sweeper; full size; I wy Special $2.98 j 1 Regular selling price, $3.75 4 Complete T j 312 MARKET STREET ) WEDNESDAY EVENING, ; believed here to-day that Bert; Bland, notorious 1. \V. W. fugitive, j taken yesterday without a tit;lit by 1 Sheriff John Berry and u company i of deputies, has some considerable valuable knowledge regarding the,' armistice day shooting which re-, suited in the death of four former ] service men. Eight guards were placed at the 1 [county jail at Chehalia immediately , after Bland's arrival, lie is suspect ■ ed of being the slayer of 1-ieutenant ' Warren O. Qritnnt, one of the parad ers, who met death at the hands of anarchists. According to Sheriff Barry,' Bland was found in a cabin 12 miles north west of Independence and is sup [ posed to have taken refuge there .Monday. He was armed and had considerable ammunition, but sur- j i rendered without resistance after the ; | shack had been surrounded by a j ! posse. NOT VKHY CATCHING [From the Baltimore American] i "I hear theie is a great deal of: | vacillation in your family, .Mrs.. . Gumjj j "So there is. but most of it didn't SPEAKS 10 WOMEN 1 RIGHT FROM HEART Mrs. Clara Kong. 238 X. Preston st., Phila., says: "I got so nervous that ordinary noises would set me ■ a'l in a quiver. Friends Mold me' | about Tanlac. 1 hardly started' .taking Tanlac before 1 began to sleep soundly. I soon recovered my , I appetite. Tanlac proved a medicine! ! of real virtue and merit." Do you have dull, throbbing, headaches, dizzy spells, weak back I and lack energy? If you do. you! need something to restore your poor.! debilitated organs to normal. That 1 something is Tanlac, the new tonic. I ; appetizer and invigorant, which is! now sold here by ail leading drug gists. ALLIES' DEMANDS , FOR HOUSING ARE! GERMAN PROBLEM "Will Spin! Chief Commission to Berlin and Ten Other Places Berlin, Nov. 19.——Germany Is fair- 1 : ly dazed by the demands and ve-. quirements of the Entente" military; [and naval commissions for the hous ing of their supervisional forces, [ which, according to the Peace Treaty. • may have their headquarters at the .seaf of the German government, and place subcom missions at any desired point in Germany, j The Entente has given notice that • it will scud a chief commission to : Berlin. • and ten subconimisslons to: other points. It demands, from I Berlin, hotel accommodations com prising 500 rooms, housing for 390 • noncommissioned officers and men,; and garage facilities tor 00 automo biles. These are the requirements] for the army and naval forces. Needs <>t Air Forces i For the air forces the Entente 1 • wants 200 rooms in a hotel, 100 j j office rooms, housing for 450 persons; and garage space for t>o automobiles.' The figures look large to Germans! ] for guests at a,ll the big hotels even i ' now are happy to be able to creep ! t into a bathroom and snatch some: ' sleep. 1 The i "ouneil of Slates has decide! that the money agreed Upon to fur ] nisi, quarters for ttie Entente mis-' ; sions. 5,000.000 marks, was not 'enough. It is. however, rooms, ho-1 iels, dwellings, more than money, which is worrying the government. ' HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH T WORKERS TO GET MEDALS FOR BRAVERY IN WAR Presentations to He Made He lore Audience of Five Thousand Delegates J. Detroit, Nov. 1!. —Medals for (bravery and devotion on the war | fields of France or elsewhere wilt tie | presented to eight Young Men's .Christian Association workers in the i fortieth international Y. M. A. (convention, which opened here to day. Award of these medals was made some time ago. The presenta tion will be made before an audience •Of 3,000 delegates from Canada, the (United States and its island poses ! sions. The golden cross of officer of the | Royal Order of the Redeemer will j lie presented to Klwood S. Brown, head of the Y. M. C. A. athletic work iin France; and Wilbur A. Reynolds, 'of Detroit, athletic worker with th> | "dlt and 6th marines, part of the 2nil division of the United States Army. I These crosses were conferred on I tlieni by King Alexander of Greece, iin recognition of their work with the I Allied Armies. French \t ar Crosses French war crosses awarded by I 1 Marshal Retain for courage and gal-, j lantrv tinder fire will be presented; to Richard G. Shreve, Rochester. N. j t Y.; Carl D. I.ytle. North Brooklield, I Mass.: Rev. .1. Mandeville Barker, (Uniontown. Pa.: Thomas W. \\ ilber,, j New Britain, Conn.: .R. barmor. j I Pittsburgh, Pa.; and Rev. Mercer R.. Johnson, Baltimore, Md. I headers in industry, education atnl the church will participate in the I convention. Mow to make the V j !M. C. A. an agency for keeping | [young men in country districts where j they can help to produce the food of the Nation and the world is one ' of the important questions tot con-j sidet ation. This will he discussed j by Colonel Clarence l>. Ousley. j- s - ; sislant secretary of agriculture, who I will endeavor to explain how to make country life attractive. Other questions to tie considered j include old aße pensions for paid workers of the association, for which ; It is proposed to raise $3.7-10.000, extension of the association to other - lands, possibility of employing worn- i en secretaries, stabilization of tl'.ej men in industry, stamping out 80l- I shevlsm, assimilation of the men of j the armies into civilian life, and | similar problems. The work of; Americanization in industrial centers,! including the use of moving pictures in the plan, also will he given at-j tention. The convention is to close the eve-1 tiing of November 23 with 50 evau- i gelistic meetings in churuhes of i Detroit. BACTERIA PRODUCES IRON | [From the Columbus Dispatch] j iron ore is the product of a bug or bacteria, according to the latest j scientific information upon the sub- j ject. Millions of the bugs work for i millions of years, and lo and behold j a little lump of iron ore is the re sult. Billions of them working for billions of years, and there is your iron mine, or great deposit of iron ore. Prof. E. I". Harder is the scien tist who gives us the information. ] There is no occasion for doubting the statement. It is no stranger | than that the great coral reefs and ; glorious islands in the sea are only j the dead bodies of. other bugs, ntie- j roscopicully small and piled on top! of each other to form the foundation ! for even eontinents. Bacteria is now a name to charm | with. Our blessings and our woes | are in the hands of these tirty bugs | are in the hands of these tiny bugs if - they have hands. We now know that I the water which we drink is their | abode. They account for the fer- | mentation that takes place in the j world, for the life and growth of j plants, for the supply of food in the soil, for the rendering harmless of i our surroundings. But now we may look at our great ' steel bridges and at the whirling j wheels in our factories and remem- j ber that the metal is the product j of this same bacteria—an interest- i ing contemplation, but borrowing an < expression from a cartoonist, it j doesn't mean anything. No one will ! ever be able to capture the iron- j making bacteria and set them to j work upon his farm, with the hope I of some day having an iron mine. HIGH BRED HORSE IX DEMAND [Prom Christian Science Monitor! ! From a Tulsa. Okla., authority on I the saddle and driving horse indus try comes the prediction that these | animals are once more coming into their rightful place. While he ac-1 knowledges that the automobile has | to a great extent been the means of | giving this industry a setback, yet the war has added great impetus to the breeding of fine stock. The registered saddle and harness horses from the United States fur nished an excellence of service over seas not to be surpassed. There is no denying the fact that to-day there is little demand for the aver age horse .but for the highly bred galted saddle horse or the high step per in either single or double liar-1 ness, Interest is being greatly re-1 vlved. The writer considers, too, that the | state and county fairs are an lmpor- j tant factor in creating greater in terest in pedigreed saddlers and I drivers. And to all true lovers of pure bred horses it is welcome news I to learn that in the southwestern | part of the United States, at least, 1 there is a hopeful Immediate future, j THE NECESSARY WARNING [Journal of the American Medical Association] An advertisement in the Berlin Meggendorfer Blaetter reads: "Canary bird escaped. Return to Darbarossa Strasse 5 and receive reasonable reward. (Not edible)." And this story also conies from Berlin, where profiles become ex ceedingly narrow: J 1 ish and potatoes were served at the restaurant, both in the singu lar number and the pprtion miser ably small. "Nevertheless, my neighbor got a bone in his throat and attracted general attention with his coughing and groaning. Sofne persons came to his help, suggesting that he swal low several pieces of dry bread or a few potatoes. "The waiter ran out and brought four big potatoes. The patient swallowed them one after another, poured In his glass of beer to keep them down, and then he felt better. "When he was about to leave I asked how he felt. " 'Oh, It's nothing, thank you,' was the answer, 'after pulling off the same trick in the next restaurant. I shall get enough.' " APPROPRIATE [ From - Cartoons Magazine] Nancy Duck—Does Miss Porker use artificial makeup? Miss Pigen—Yes, some kind of pigment. BERNSTORFFIS HAPPY OVER THE ATTACK ON HIM Satisfied He Was Treated as Scapegoat by Army and Navv Leaders - Herlltt. Nov. 19. t'ount Von Berti f tor IT. the former Gorman ambassador to the United States, seemed like the huppieat man In Berlin to-day in rnn senmnet >f the attack made mi him yesterday before the subcommittee t ,f the National Assembly by Field Mar sha'l Von Ifindenbuig and General Liu'' nHorff. Ho said: "It showed more than anything else could have done that the German em bassy at Washington was unpopular , with the naval and military leade**-*. • who would not believe our represen tations inspecting America." Friends crowded around Von Bern . storff and congratulated hint on the "insult." since, in their estimation, it showed that contradictory' sentiments ' were held by him and the army and ! navy leaders and that he was treated as a scapegoat. Forcenat I . s. I'.aVct in Wnr IJ r. Heinrich K.. Albert. German 1111- of secretary of state, and formerly j eomniei ~ini attach**, in the dorinun i ( mbnssv at Washington predicted in jIMI 6 with unerring accuracy the de cisive effect America's entry into the ■ war would have. • \ report whi only lars, all the most delightful neck effects and in (Main Floor) |L 111 • TiiPst -d i\ sizes AND 0F FURTHER IMPORTANCE Vxucsi 111 THEY COME IN THE WANTED SUIT Aluminum Si fq Towels .. SHADES AND IN WHITE AND FLESH. Aluminum 29 fi ivi Roasters. I ===== 1 U towels', slightly imperfect; More Particulars in Thursday * ■ H .-ellent kitchen cloths. • a Evening and Friday Morning roaster; large enough for |M limited number only, so ' chicken: Relling Thursday Hg Nl come early; while they A dperS at less than replacement h ry last price. Very special at |H gj (Bargain Basement) (Bargain Basement) PEST OF BEGGARS OVKIUU'NS VIENNA Vienna. Nov. lit. This place suffering; from a daily Increas ing pest of beggars. While a few are crippled soldiers by far tno greater part of the swarms that haunt the thoroughfares are civilians, men, women and chil dren of all ages, from tiny hare footed ragged lots to old men and women. Women with hubtes in arms and others clutching at their skirts, little girls and little boys of school age and old per sons paiude the sidewalks in the hotel and cafe districts and pass in steady streams through Ihe rest an rants and cafes. Some are licensed, hut they are Tew. Th" Viennese beggar while presistont is never abusive when refused. ■ . in case America's participation, "neu tral nations would side with America the psychologies 1 effect would !><• fell at once; it would be national rnisfer tune, i.nd Germany would be defeat Didn't Want War I'ie-d Marsnai Von Hindenburg de clared before the subcommittee: "I know with absolute certainty , that neither the people, the kaiser nor the government desired war. for the government knew better than others 1 Germany's tremendous 1 }* difficult po sition in a wa** against the Kntente." "if there had been solid, united co operation between army and home land we lould have attained victory," crntlnned Von Hindenburg. In his testimony Genera I laidendortT said that the High Command .Imt re ' trainee* from beginning th* t'-boat campaign because the chancellor at ! that time (eared an attack by Holland • and Henrnark. owing to the pressure of Great HrlYain. and there were then no trocpe to meet new enemies. I The High Command was skeptical I regard'ng President Wilson's peace move hut expressed apvroval of this. NOVEMBER 19, 1919. and also approved Germany's paucc. move, and endeavored not to thwart polltiial peace steps, lie had always regarded Count Von Bornstorff's a- f hat a pity she doesrit know esinol Soap would improve her complexion Ken arks like the aboveare passed about many girls whose appearance would be most attractive were it not for a poor skin. RKSINOI. SOAP is just what such girls need to help in overcoming their complexion difficulties. It does more than re move din—it gets right after those clogged pores, and excessive oil ioess, and it benefits the skin cells. When a little Resinol Ointment is used in connection with Resinol Soap, relief is hastened; and unless u k$ Ksfsßp R KSIXOI. SHAVING STICK is very popufas / BK WIT with men who like the way the Resinol in it soothes the face. r" J liesinol products at all druggists. 5 .tlvltles as unsympathetic. He believed that Von BernatorfT had not furnished th ehi r.eellor with correct informa- I t : on.