Mexico Considers Note Demanding Release of Jenkins; Not Answered By Associated Press. Washington, Nov. 24.—The Amer ican government's note demanding the immediate release of William G. Jenkins. American consular agent at Puebla, is understood to have been considered by the Mexican cabinet last Friday, the State Department announced to-day. Governor Ca brera, of Puebla, was present, but the department's advice did not say what action, if any, was taken. The department's statement fol lows: "The department has not yet re ceived the answer of the Mexican government to the American note calling for the immediate release of William O. Jenkins, the American consular agent at Puebla, Mexico, who was rearrested and put in the penitentiary shortly after his re lease by kidnapers near Puebla. It is understood that the Mexican cabinet had the note under consider ation Friday and that Governor Ca brera of Puebla was called in from Puebla for report." RESUME MOOSE HUNTING AFTER 4-YEAR I.AFSE By Associated Press. Bangor, Me.. Nov. 24. Moose hunting was resumed in Maine to day after a suspension of four years. Hundreds of sportsmen arrived from all parts of the country to avail themselves of the ten "open days." The large numbers of these ani mads killed in former years, when there was an open season annually, caused fear of their extermination and the legislature ordered the four years suspension of hunting. Of Utmost Importance Pure, emulsified cod-liver oil is not medicine as many are prone to think of medicine. SCOTT'S EMULSION is a form of growth-nourishment that is of utmost importance to many children. That most children relish and thrive on Scott's is a "truism" A. accepted the world over.** |a Give Scott's to the children Yuf and watch them grow strong 1 4jiL Scott & Bowne. Bloomfield. N. J. IHJ J A Beautiful Neck and Arms I 8 Don't impair their beauty. Remove V unsightly hair, f " \ | Empress Hair Remover | Unlike ordinary depilatories, leaves the , I skin smooth and white. A scientific com * pound of oils, harmless, antiseptic. No 1 i I mixing. No paste. Dissolves hair im- U mediately. Occasional use retards growth, | i gradually killing roots. Dealers or direct—soc. Liberal simple—loc U f Dept. 16. Empress Mfg.. <' \ 1 "• i West 20th St.. New York cit.< jl BAD BREATH . Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets Get at the Cause and Remove It Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the sub stitute for calomel, act gently on the bowels and positively do the work. People afflicted with bad breath find quick relief through Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets. The pleasant, sugar-coated tablets are taken for bad breath by all who know them. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets act ger tly but firmly on the bowels and 'iver, stimulating them to natural action, clearing the blood and gently purifying the entire system. They do that which dangerous calomel does without any of the bad after effects. All the benefits of nasty, sickening, griping cathartics are derived from Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablefc without griping, pain or any disagreeable effects. Dr. F. M. Edwards discovered the formula after seventeen years of prac tice among patients affl : cted with bowel and liver complaint, pith the attendant bad breath. Olive Tablets are purely a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know them by their olive color, one or two every night for a vek and note the effect 10c and 25c. g—————ijiijg To Prevent Grip Take "Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets Be sure you get the Genuine Look for this signature (o-^faSfro-irts on the box. 30c SATURDAY EVENING, j THANKSGIVING DAY OFFERINGS I To-morrow and Wednesday I the Harrisburg Hospital will col j lect the Thanksgiving donation bags which they distributed Sat ' urday and to-day. The Harrisburg Hospital wants to give its patients the best ! Thanksgiving dinner they ever ! had, and they say that it rests I with the people of Harrisburg i whether or not this plan can be carried out. Mrs. Meade D. Detweiler will I receive checks at her home, 23 ! South Front street, or food may i be sent staright from the grocers, 1 according to the hospital. Officials said to-day that the hospital cared for more people last week than at any other time ! in its history. They appeal for I good, wholesome Thanksgiving | food. I I Brotherhood Chiefs Conferring Today on Hines' New Proposal By Associated Press. Cleveland, 0., Nov. 24.—Approxi mately 500 general chairmen of the four railroad brotherhoods, En gineers, Firemen, Trainmen und Con ductors, are meeting here this morn ing in response to a call for the four chief executives of the organizations, to consider the offer of Walker D. llimes, Director General of Kail roads, granting time and one-half for overtime in slow freight service and a. standard rule for crews held away from home terminals beyond fi given period. No strike vote will be taken and the question of affiliation with a po litical labor party, or approving the dumb plan for handling the rail roads is not to be presented to the convention, the sole purpose of the meeting being the consideration of the answer to the Director General's offer, according to W. G. Lee, presi dent of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, who said the conference would probably last three days. Whatever action the convention i lakes on the Director General's offer of time and a half overtime in slow freight service will have no bearing on the brotherhood's request for a general wage increase, Mr. Lee said. MUST SIGN TERMS By Associated Press. Paris, Nov. 2 4. —The Supreme Council to-day decided o send the German delegation here a note in reply to the note submitted by the Germans informing the council of the departure for Berlin of the pleni potentiaries sent in connection with the protocol guaranteeing the carry ing out of the armistice terms, which Germany has been informed she will have to sign before the Peace Treaty is put into effect. ZEMBO TEMPLE TO MEET Wednesday, December 10th, at 8 o'clock in the evening the annual session of Zembo Temple, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, will be held at Chestnut street Hall. At this time the annual election of officers will take place. WILL NOT WORK Pittsburgh, Nov. 24. The union miners of the Pittsburgh district will not return to work until their leaders and the coal operators' committee have signed a new wage agreement in Washington was the opinion ex pressed at United Mine Workers' headquarters here to-day. MINERS QUIT WORK By Associated Press. Sheridan, Wyo., Nov. 24. Vir tually every coal mine in the Sheri dan field was shut down to-day when the miners failed to report for work. By Associated Press. Knoxville. Tenn., Nov. 24. Few of the 20,000 coal miners in the east ern Tennessee-Kentucky field went lo work to-day. T>istrict union offi cials said they were endeavoring to i get the men back at work, and would be succssfut "if the operators would keep hands off." Charleston, W. Va., Noy. 24. — 1 Eleven hundred miners failed to re port at Ward. W. Va., to-day and the mines of the Kelly's Creek Col liery Company were closed down. Two hundred miners at Plymouth also remained away from the pits to-day. X ATURALIZATIOX COURT A special session of Naturalization Court was held this afternoon at. the courthouse, a number of for eign-born residents being admitted to citizenship. AWARD CONTRACTS i Contract for printing school dis- j trict directories and annual reports j were awarded to-day to H. J. Kur zenknabe and the Telegraph Print-' ing Company, respectively. Soldier Training Is Help in Civil Life ! . Here is a striking example of how soldier training helps in civil life. It is the story of Private John Lar sen, One Hundred and Sixth lnfan try, Twenty-seventh Division (New York's Own), who prevented a dis aster by his cleverness and coolness, the results of army discipline. When Lursen got back from France he found a job with the Park County Creamery in Living ston, Mont. The ammonia plant at the factory suddenly got out of or der. A pipe blew up and in an in credibly short time the entire build ing was filled with deadly gas. Workmen lost their heads and ran about in circles, no one daring to approach anywhere near the am monia cylinders, which wero pour ing out their noxious fumes faster and faster. Larsen grasped the situation in a moment. Without a word he dashed from the factory and ran down the street to his home nearby. As he came back on the run his panic stricken fellow workers were aston ished to see him wearing a strange apparatus over his head. Waving back the group of onlookers who dared not approach any closer, he rushed bodily into the plant, shut off the ammonia and mended the pipe. A few minutes later the ex-dough hoy came out of the factory and whipped off his army gas mask smilingly. "Gee!" exclaimed Larsen. "I brought ihis thing home from France as a souvenior, because tt saved my life a half-dozen times while we were tackling the Hinden burg line. I never thought my gas mask would be any use in the Unit ed States except to hang on the wall." MEAN REMARK Hazel —The first time George pro posed T didn't accept him. Helen—l know it. dear. You ' weren't there.--Portland Express. | I Man Shoots at Steel Co. Head; Shattered Glass of Auto Cuts Ear By Associated Press. Wilmington. Del., Nov. 24.—An 1 attempt to assassinate Selden S. ( Deemer, president of the New Cas ! tie Steel Company, was made last ] night when a man fired a bullet j through the limousine which was • carrying Mr. Deemer and his wife I from the railroad station to their home in New Castle, Del. The alertness of Mrs. Deenter and the chauffeur, Frank Sheridan, saved Mr. Deemer from death. Mrs. | Deemer seeing the would-be assassin j with the gun pointed directly at her husband shouted a warning and 1 pulled her husbund down in the seat of the car. The chauffeur increased ,the speed of the car but not before j the man fired a shot. The bullet j crashed through the glass door and I lodged in the opposite side of the I limousine, the broken glass striking I Mr. Deemer in the face, lacerating his left ear. Towboat Engineers Granted $BO Raise New York, Nov. 24. A strike, of engineers on ocean and coastwise towboats called six weeks ago has been settled by the granting of in creased pay, it was announced here to-day at the office of the marine engineers beneficial association. Chief engineers, it was said, were granted $275 a month as against the former pay of $195 and assistant engineers $205 as against $165. Demands of the men for a second assistant en gineer were not granted. William Shaffer, Hurt in Plane Crash, Recovers "William Shaffer, of Dauphin, one of ihe two men who were injured in the fall of an airplane at Dauphin on Saturday, November 15, was dis charged from the Harrisburg Hos pital yesterday. Lieutenant Eugene C. Rowers, who was driving the plane at the time of its fall, was dis charged last week. A COLLEGE EDUCATION Hewitt —Do you believe that col lege training tits a boy for practical life ? Jewitt—Tt sure does. T have known a young fellow who made a record as a sprinter at college to become, one of the most successful | dodgers of creditors in the commun- j ity.—Houston Post. WOULDN'T IMPROVE HIS LOOKS Mrs. Styles—Don't you think this new hat improves my looks, dear? Mr. Styles—!• suppose so. 'But what makes you look so cross?" "I'm thinking of the bill for that hat. You can't expect that to im-1 prove my looks."—Yonkers States man. Dr. B. S. Behney, Dentist, has re sumed practice at 236 North Second street. Bell 1814.—Adv. [P^vS the best I home defense again?! 1 I ■ bronchial affections RUPIUKED PEUPLE Throw Away Your Truss Thonsanda of ruptnred people are finding belief from the torture or ruptare and the b * 9in * STUART'S scientific AD URSIb PLAPAO PADS. Make np yonr mind to be able to throw away yonr old truss. Do awav with steel or rubber bands that chafe and pinch. Let us send you % FREE Trial PLAPAO No charge for it now or ever. Let us Bend you a mass of evidence to prove what the PLAPAO-PADS are doing for others. Let us send you onr book on Rup ture, telling von many things about this distressing malady that you don't know. We have sworn statements on file from all over the country, positively proving that the PI.APAO-PADS have corrected, for all lime to come, the dangerous condition that is the cause cf the protrusion known as • rupture " DON'T WAIT, DON'T DELAY a minute. Send your name and address TO PAY. We will eend a FREE TRIAL PLAPAO OT retnrn mail, also book on ruptare. Address fLAI'AO CO., Block 6l, St, Louis, Mo. MRS. CRAIG TELLS SOUL 6000 NEWS Giving evidence of a real cheer fulness, Mrs. B. Craig, 0412 Lancas ter ave., Phila., says: "I suffered from catarrh of the stomach and was weak and run down. There were discharges from my throat and nose, and I had distress from the gas that formed from fermentation. 1 started to take Tanlac. It surely helped me wonderfully." Tanlac seems not only to relieve that hacking cough, sniffling, wat ery eyes, bad breath, sleeplessness, full head, and remove the catarrhal excretions, but it is blood-improv ing, appetite-giving, food-assimilat ing, nerve-quieting, strengthening and upbuilding. The genuine J. I. Gore Co. Tanlac is here sold by all leading druggists. SORETHROAT Colds, Cough*, Croup and Catarrh Often Relieved In Two Minute* 1* your throat sore? Breathe Hyomei. Have you catarrh? * Breathe Hyomei. Have you a cough? Breathe Hyomei. Have you a cold? Breathe Hyomei. Hyomei is the one treatment for nose, throat and lung troubles. It does not contain cocaine, morphine or other dangerous drug and does away with stomach dosing. Just breathe it through the llttfe pocket Inhaler that comes with each outfit. A complete outfit costs hut little at 11. C. Kennedy or any reliable drug gist and Uyomet * guiranteol to h in- Ish catarrh, croup, coughs, colds, sore throat and bronchitis or money hack A Hyomei inhaler insts a life time and extra bottles of Hyomei can he obtained from druggists fur u few MI-O-NA Ends indigestion It relieves stomach misery, sour stomach, belghing and all stomach dis ease or money b*rk. Ln~e box of tab lets CO cents. Druggists In all towns HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH QUEBEC FORESTS VALUABLE The value of the forests of the province of Quebec, not only In maintaining- home industries but in building up a great export business and thus rendering the balance of trade more "favorable for the Do minion of Canada as a whole, is be coming increasingly evident to statesmen and the public generally. The necessity for recuperative meas ures for the forests of the province is rapidly becoming obvious, and is at present receiving the earnest con sideration of the governmental agen cies concerned. In addition to the investigations of the Commission of Conservation and the Dominion For estry branch, the Provincial Forest Service has the whole situation un der very careful investigation. While the great bulk of the for ests are on crown lands and thus subject to such cutting as may be prescribed by the gov ernmental agencies concerned, the fact remains that only to a compar atively small extent do the existing Housewives— SAVE SUGAR Go to Your Grocer's and Buy a Can of v WHITE SYRUP - —use it in tea, coffee or cocoa, the same as sugar. —use it in place of sugar for baking and cooking. —use it in making candies, just the same as sugar. —use it as table syrup; as it is, or flavor to your taste. Hundreds of housewives have been using l Golden Crown White Syrup (red label) in their cooking, baking and candy making for many years, but to-day thousands upon thousands of women are using it in place of sugar to overcome the sugar shortage, because they realize that both a large proportion of Golden Crown White Syrup and Sugar come from the same sugar cane. Golden Crown White Syrup (red label) is clear, very sweet and heavy bodied, and, being practically neutral in flavor, it will not affect either the natural taste or appearance of any food or drink in which it is mixed. The richness, pui ity and quality of Golden Crown White Syrup make the addition of a foreign flavor unnecessary, but, if you so desire, it can readily be flavored to suit your individual taste by the mere addition of vanilla, lemon or any other household flavoring extract. ' \ Get a can or two TODAY—use it every way in which you have been accustomed to using sugar, but remember to always Look For the "Golden Crown" and the RED Label T When you want a Syrup chiefly for table use, rich golden in color and delicious in flavor | Get GOLDEN CROWN TABLE SYRUP (blue label) Served with pancakes, waffles, biscuits, etc., it's unequaled. Children love it on bread j Sold only in sanitary cans—lid easily removed and replaced— no cutter required STEUART, SON & CO., Cannera of Finest Quality Syrups and molasses, BALTIMORE, MD. cutting regulations provide to any thing like an adequate degree for the perpetuation of the forest on cut-over lands. Studies made by the Commission of Conservation show, for example, that in the pulp-wood forests of Eastern Canada, especi ally in the province of Quebec, the present methods of cutting are re sulting in the steady deterioration of the forests, and are rapidly ren dering great areas relatively pro ductive. The demands for export material are steadily increasing. Not only does the United States take about forty per cent of tlio pulp wood produced in all Canada, but there is an export business of wood pulp and paper to the United States, Great Britain, France and other countries aggregating over $26,000,- 000 In 1917 and probably around $35,000,000 in 1918. WHAT IT WAS One morning an old man was busy in the backyard with a saw and hatchet when the next door neigh bor came to inquire after the health of his wife. The wife, it seems, had taken a severe cold. "Good mornin", Mr. Smith," said the neighbor; "how is Mrs. Smith this mornin'?" "Just about the same," answered old Mr. Smith. "She didn't sleep very well last night." "Poor dear," said the neighbor, sympathetically, "I s'pose that's her coughin'. ain't it?" "No, it ain't her coffin," said Smith keeping his eyes on his work. "It's a new hen house."—London Tit-Bits. COST-OF-DIVING ITEM A prominent banker and commis sion house partner, in discussing the high cost of living yesterday said that for several years he had been giving investment advice to a friend who is in the egg business. Despite the fact that the egg merchant kept a god sized amount invested in se curities in the banker's ilrm, the latter presumed that amount to be about the extent of his wealth. A ' NOVEMBER 22, 1919 few weeks ago the egg merchant confided that he wanted to quit business, and was advised by tho banker to put his money into gov ernment bonds. "What will it total?" asked the banker. "Oh, about $1,500,000, I guess," was the nonehalunt reply. "Did you make all this on eggs?" lie was asked. "Yes, every dollar on eggs." "How did you do it?" "Simplest thing in the world," was the answer. "1 bought eggs when nobody wanted em', and when they were cheap, put them in cold stor age and waited until 1 got my price." —New York Sun. THE EXCLUSIVE PARTY The Communist party does not want dortor-lawyer-editor member ship, yet the average Communist will appeal to the doctor to bind up his wounds, hire a lawyer to keep him out of jail and beg the editor to keep the affair out of the newspaper.—Buffalo Enquirer. RAIXS CATS A.YD DOGS "Where do the Skye terriers com* from?" asked four-year-old Maggie. "Why, I should have though every one knew they came from the sky when It rains cats and doys," ex claimed five-year-old Bobby con* temptuously.—American Boy. At first signs of a cold or grip, take JANE'S COLD TABLETS j CUMMTItt 7