KRICANCOAL TRADE DEVELOPS Supplants Great Britain in Markets of South America and Europe London. Nov. 25. —Evidence that America is supplanting Great Britain In coal markets of South America and Europe is seen by the Shipping World. The paper attributes this to WHEN YOU SUFFER FROM RHEUMATISM Sloan's I.inimcnt slioiUtJ^be kept iiaiuly for ache*. a iul pains WH\ wap/for a se vere pain, an *£j!Sfa twinge following ex- a sore muscle, sciatica to leave naturally, 'when you should keep Sloan's Lini ment handy to help curb it and keep you active and fit? Without rubbing, for it penetrates, apply a bit to-day to the afflicted part. Note the gratifying, clean, Sirompt relief that follows. Sloan's .■iniment couldr/t keep its many housands of friends the world over f it didn't make good. That's worth emembering. All druggists—three Sizes—the largest for utmost econ omy. 35c, 70c. $1.40. — And PARK AND POLLARD'S Famous "lay OR BUST" DRY MASH Still Continues to Be the Mash Used by Leading Poultrymen Everywhere Lay or Bust Dry Mash Makes Hens Lay More Eggs Many have tried out the "just as good" kinds, but the eggs decreased instead of increasing. So now they are back feeding "Lay or Bust" and their hens are laying _gggs abundantly. If your hens are not laying eggs your food is expensive. "LAY OH 111/ ST" WILL MAKE YOUR HENS LAY MOflE EGGS Order It Now—Buy it by the hundred and save money Prlees 100 11MS., SLSO; 40 lb. bag, 52.25; 20 lb. hag, $1.20; 10 lbs., <lO Cents. Walter S. Schell Quality Seeds POULTRY FEEDS AND EQUIPMENT Ifcil, • Shriveled, j |||/ Shrunken I spongy, inflamed, moments of agony they have caused! Only a person whose mouth has taken on the look of hoary age, whose gums have receded and whose teeth have dropped from the mouth fully realizes the horror of Pyorrhea. And yet this destructive disease is preventable! TOOTH PASTE. 1 is a delicately flavored, though powerful germicide, which fore stalls Pyorrhea germs and overcomes other mouth infections. PYRODENTO has a Another exclusive feature smooth pure Olive Oil base of its formula is the introduc (not a soapy kese that washes tion of pure Albumen, which away quickly), which is insol- i s a i so present in the normal üble in the mouth juices, there- blood but absent in times of by holding the germ-destroy- infection. PYRODENTO ing properties on the gum tis- r m sues long enough to be thor- immediately supplies an excess . H effective. The Olive Albumen, which overcomes Oil nourishes the gums and an y deficiency and aids nature keeps them firm and healthy. in healing. It is a safe, pleasant, effective and economical dentifrice for everyone. F.n VSP. jjjj TUESDAY EVENING, restrictions Vmposed on shipping that otherwise might be available for carrying British conl. "The result is that traders abroad who want coal are getting it from other regions," it says. "The South American trade has fallen almost in evitably Into the hands of shipown ers from the United States; but more ominously still is the fact that ship ments from Virginia are coming almost daily to ports of Europe. Gothenburg, Dunkirk, Antwerp, Rot terdam, Lisbon. Genoa and other ports of Italy are receiving Ameri can coal at freight rates which only their urgent needs can justify. Even to Port Said American coal has been shipped. "The question arise**' whether this is merely a passing phase due to the present scarcity of tonnage, or whether these' American ships ore the' pioneef-s of a new form of en terprise of the Western continent which is destined to become a per- Tnahent feature of trade. It must not be assumed that, with the increase of British shipping that will assured ly come in a year or two, tho old lines of trade will so easily be re gained. The river plate trade may to a considerable extent bo written ofT. "The greater proximity of Eu ropean ports to the United Kingdom will be an advantage to British shipowners in their endeavor to re gain the continental trade, but it will be no easy task to break <he trade connections that American com petitors are now engaged in form ing." Democrats to Meet January 8 to Fix Convention Date Washington. Nov. 25. —The Demo cratic National Committee and the Woman's Associate Committee were called by National Chairman Cum mings to meet here January 8 to fix a time and place for the national convention next year. FAMOUS TREES WILL BE LISTED American Forestry Associa tion Will Establish a New "Hall of Fame" ' Washington. Nov. 25. —A "Hall of i Fame l'or Trees" has been inaugu rated by the American Forestry As- j soclation for the r eco y nlt '°" °l famous trees and the | the largest shade tree in the Unitt Cjtfl t AO " An' * elm at Huntington, Indiana, long has been regarded as the largest shade tree in the country. This claim of course excludes the Redwoods ot California. Now comes Dumont Kennedy, of Crawfordsville. ana, with a picture of a tree on his i property and the suggestion that it is larger than the tree at Hunting ton. This tree has a spread of .9 feet while the Huntington Elm has a spread of only 75 feet. A tree at Farmingham, Mass., also claims to being the largest. Charles Lathrop Pack, president of the American Forestry Association, says: "We want a complete list of fam ous trees now. There is the Liberty Tree on the campus of St. John's Col lege at Annapolis undo." which a treaty with the Indians was signed ,in 1662. The experts tell us this tree is close to 800 years qjd. We all | know of the William Penn Treaty I Tree beneath which Washington took command of the Continental | Army. At Oberlin, Ohio, is the elm |on the corner of the campus unde" | which was the first log house in ! which Oberlin College was founded. I The American Forestry Association j has listed many famous trees but it j wants the list complete. • If there |is a famous tree in your town the j association wants to know about it." David J. Smyth Is Named by Moore as New City Solicitor Philadelphia, Nov. 25. Mayor elect J. Hampton Moore has an nounced that he had selected David J. Smytfi to be city solicitor in the new administration which goes into office in January. Mr. Smyth was a member of the Legislature in 1901. served as an assistant city slicitor and was director of public safety under Mayor Weaver. He resigned the latter position during the gas lease fight in 1905 since which time he had been out of politics. ASK FOR and GET HorlSck's The Original Malted Milk |% For Infanta and Invalids Avoid luniatioaa MUJ subfltiluoa J!ARRSSBTTRG TELEGItAPEC WOMAN, IN IRON SOUP POT, BROUGHT TO RED CRQSS FOR THE TREATMENT OP FEVER American Physicians Doing Relief Work in Montenegro Tell of Curious Methods Employed by Inhabi tants of That Country Nlegusli, Montenegro, Nov. 25.—, American physicians doing relief work in Montenegro tell of some curious methods of treatment em- i ployed by the inhabitants.of this lit- j tie mountain country. When a 1 Montenegrin is wounded the first j thought of the natives is to apply ; chewing tobacco, horsehair, or a fresh rabbit-skin ith the hair facing inside. Common ink is considered a sovereign remedy for burns. To stop bleeding sores or wounds cob nebs are used. When a person is bitten by a dog, the favorite remedy is to pull off the ahimal's eur and i I rub the wound with it j The patron saint of Montenegro is j Saint Vascilla, whose shrine is situ- • i ated on the summit of a mountain ' i between Podgorit2a and Nlksic. j . Every week thousands of devout | Montenegrins, come to this moun- | I tain shrine seeking cure for their! j ills. | But since the arrival of the j I American physicians the pilgrim-; ( ages to the ancient shrine have not j I been so numerous. For the natives ' j have found that their ills can he I j cured much nearer home and with I | greater certainty at any of the nu- I DECLARES MOVIES STIMULATES VICE lxttulon. Nov. 25.—A protest against "artificial stimulation of vice" was delivered by Miss J. E. Higson, of the archbishop's Cen tral advisory council, at a meet ing of a purity association here. "How can you expect young people to retain their ideals when, at moving picture shows and at plays, they have stories, not of pure, faithful and true love, but of unfaithful wives and unmarried mothers?" she asked. Canon Frewer, of Brighton, said, "This is the day of Eng land's moral crisis." Burleson Approves to Cut Rates on the First-Class Postage Washington. Nov. 23.—Postmaster General Burleson nas approved pending bills to reduce the rate ot local first class letter postage to a pennv an ounce. A letter for deliv ery within the postal limits ol the office in which it is mailed would take a one-cent stamp instead of a two-cent stamp. _ Mr. Burleson has atlvised i on gressmen that the present two-cent charge on that class of mail ex ceeds the cost of handling and foat he recommends the reduction be cause he believes the postal service should not be conducted for profit The reduction of last July where > letters went back to the normal rate of two cents and postal cards to one cent, the Postmaster General says, resulted in a large increase in that class of mail and he believes one cent local letter delivery would not reduce the total postal revenue more than $14,000,000 a year. See Cash Dividends in Grasshoppers; Fargo. X. uHnov. 25.— Grass- j hoppers are beginning to j cash dividends in North Dakota through the medium of poultry, es- ( pecially in turkeys and guinea fowl., The experiment has been success- ; fully tried at the State Agricultural ( College and numerous farmers have, taken the cue. . I Wherever there are green fields, , there are grasshoppers and other, insects. G. R. GreaVes. of the Agri cultural College who has conducted, the experiments, says: ••It seems the inexorable law of j nature that wherever there Is some- | thing good to eat, there is something , to eat it and man's existence is a i continual struggle for supremacy j over the creatures that are deter-j mined to consume the food he re- During past years in North Da- j kota prairie chickens, sage hens and i grouse held the grasshoppers in j check, and their plumpness and the delicious quality of their meat at-1 tested to the superiority of their; (food ! Now the prairie chickens espec- j I ially are going the way of the buf- , falo and Mr. Greaves was assigned to find a substitute that would keep; down the insect pest 3 with u mini- | mum of trouble and expense to the i farmer. The answer is turkeys and , guineas. Mr. Greaves declares that nocks of turkeys and guineas consume mtl- I lions of grasshoppers and other in- j l sect posts, and naturally do their j own foraging. Early in the season .• ! the experimental flocks at the Agri- , cultural College have grown fat nnd 1 strong on the young Insects. Rater in the season they have re ceived the abundant exercise neees- I sarv for their proper market condi tioning by chasing the elusive hop pers, have saved the field crops and provided a new, big source of in- . come. "Three old turkeys kept through one w inter," says Mr. Greaves, "pro duced a flock of young turkeys the following season which kept the fields near their house clear of grasshoppers, and fulfilled their des tiny by gracing Thanksgiving tables." Myron Captain Rescued From Ship's Pilot House Port Arthur, Ont., Nov. 25.—After floating for 20 hours In top of the pilot house of the steamer Myron, I which foundere.d off Whitefish Point, Captain W. It. Neal, commander of the lost vessel, was rescued in an . exhausted condition by the steamer W. C. Franz which arrived here yes- , terday. Captain Seal, who is in a serious condition from exposure, de clared that another steamer named the Mcintosh had passed close to him before the Franz appeared and I had refused to pick him up, reply- ; ing to his appeal for help with a ' promise to send a tug. Captain Neal was rescued ofT Pari sian Island, 20 milesJrom the scene! of the foundering of the Myron. | Captain Jordan, commander of the Franz, at first believed the castawa.i 1 to be dead as he was unconscious, hut noticing a movement of his hand ! sent a boat to investigate. Captain ; iNeal could give no information as to i the fate of the members of his orew • , merous Red Cross dispensaries and clinics. The inhabitants come from i ; the remotest mountain regions. ' | They are carried in all sorts of con- I veyances, wheelbarrows, donkey 'carts, buffalo \\J. JUS, or on horse ! back. In one cuse, an old woman ; suffering with scarlet fever, was brought to the Red Cross hospital at : Niegosli, which is notable as the birthplace of King Nicholas, in an iron soup pot. It required four days to get her over the many mountain ranges. In another instance a farmer car- J rled his typhus-afflicted wife on his ' hack a distance of t>s miles and at | the end of the journey fell exhaust :ed on the steps of the Red Cross ! hospital. He was rewarded for his j labors, however, four weeks later by the complete recovery of his wife. In numerous instances persons | suffering from total blindness have ! been led over tedious mountain | roads to the Red Cross hospitals by ; sympathetic friends or sorrowing j relatives, only to find that nothing j can be done for them. There is a i great prevalence of cataract in the I country, caused by chronic malaria, land other diseases. Hate Propaganda Must Be Abolished, Says British Leader London. Nov. 25. Propaganda of hatred should not be permitted to in terfere with the reconciliation of na- i tlens now that the war is over, de- . clared Sir Inn Hamilton in unveiling! a wnr memorial at Chiselhurst the j other day. As the war had progress ed. he said, it had been necessary to ; harden the hearts of the soldiers for the job. l "If you wish for peace, away with hate propaganda," said Sir lan. "When, under the cloak of propagan da, professional lying takes place, then good-bye for ever to 'pence on enrth good will towards men.'" Jesse Kohler Is Pardoned by Wilson Los Angeles, Ca., Nov. 25. —A par- Son signed by President Wilson for Jesse Kohler. a Federal prisoner, has been received. When officials went to present it to Kohler at the county hospital where he had been taken because of illness, they learn ed lie had died 18 days ago. Kohler'was convicted in 1918 on a charge of using the mails to de fraud and was sentenced to 18 months in a Federal penitentiary. He had advertised for men to ac company him to Mexico to remove a treasure secreted by Villa and was charged with having diverted to per sonal use expense funds advanced by them. He maintained there had been no criminal intent In his act. Select Your Talking Machine Now Stocks Are Complete—Deliver ies Made When You Desire. Select Now For Christmas Join our club now. You caq have the machine you select held until Christmas. Delivery made any time you desire. Terms are liberal and with every machine we will charge 6 records at 85c. Every desired finish in Talking Machines, including Mahogany, Fumed Oak, Golden Oak and Walnut. • Rishell .Victrola Cheney Made over the principle of tlie old * IV 00 Tl,e Clioncy is the favorite pliono master's violin; in fact the sounding ? a lv • •• • graph with the home maker because Its ltox of the Itlslu'll is made of the same S *r. 1 \/| AOP f\r\ pnrt-'eular construction permits it to kind of wood thus producing a rich, S V ICtrOla VI .... J)3D.UU play all records. It is essentially a clear, bell tone. < ( ;■ imislenl instrument. Rishel No. 3. . . SBO.OO Victrok VIII. .. $50.00 ;j Cheney No. I ... $85.00 Rishel No. 12 .. . $85.00 Vichola IX. ... . $70.00 cheney No 2 $12 5.00 Rishel No. 13 . . .SIOO.OO Victrola X SIIO.OO * Cheney No. 3. . .$165.00 Rishel No. 14 .. $125.00 Victrola XI $130.00 Cheney No. 4 .. .$225.00 Rishel No. 16 .. . $190.00 | Victrola XIV .. . $200.00 Cheney No. 5. . . $275.00 6 Records—l 2 Selections With Each Machine Charged on Club Plan Come In and Hear the Victor Records Played In Our Talking Machine Booths. No Obligation to Purchase Complete fW ffg "T M BT fiFTT Complete Home H9me Furnishers - Furnishers 312 MARKET STREET Deplores Separation of Church and State by the German Government 0 .Munich, Nov. 25.—Archibald Faul habcr declared .at a meeting of Bavarian Catholics that the German government, by separating church and state, was undermining all state authority. He said amid great ap plause that every believer had the right to refuse to take the lax oath,, since by taking it believers wore be ing mulcted of their last cent while nonhellevers were not taking the i oath. Italian Parliament j Is Delayed by Tangles in Election Results ltomc, Nov. 25.—The reopening of i the Chamber of Deputies has been j postponed for a few days. This has ) been made necessary by delays con- I nected with the election formalities. I The work of ascertaining the official j results of the elections is so compli- I rated that it is feared it will not j be tinished before December 1. DUBLIN BANK STIt KM OHDURKD Dublin. Nov. 25—More than 3,000 ! bank employes here have decided to I strike for recognition of their union i and increased salaries, it is an nounced. Nine of the city's prin- j cipal banks are affected. Directors \ i of the banks have refused the em- I ployes' demands. Piles A Free Trial of Pyramid Pile Treat ment Is One of the Grnndest Event* You Ever Experienced. You are suffering dreadfully with itching, bleeding, protruding riles or hemorrhoids. Now. go over Yon Positively Cannot Afford to Ignore These Remarkable Pyramids. to any drug store and get a 60-cent box of Pyramid Pile Treatment. Re lief should come so quickly you will jump for Joy. If you are In doubt, send for a free trial package by mail. You will then be convinced. Don't delay. Talcs no substitute. FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY. 678 Pyramid Building., _ Marshall, Mich. Ivindly send me a Free sample of Pyramid Pile Treatment, in plain wrapper. Name Street fit' - State NOVEMBER 25, 1919. Cleveland-New York Flight Is Covered in 3 Hrs. and 56 Min. j New York, Nov. 25.—After a non- I | stop flight from Cleveland, the third j j of the new Martin mail planes ar- | I rived at Belmont Park with 840 I : pounds of mail at 4.12 p. m. yester i day. The machine was piloted by I ! Walter H. iltevcns. It covered the ! [ distance in S hours and 56 minutes. | i Stevens carried two passengers. DECORATE AIt. MA DOGS FOR SERVICE IN WAR I I Paris, Nov. 25.—Fifteen army dogs, all of which carried help to wounded soldiers in the war, have been deco -1 rated here with souvenir collars. NEW YORK . READING - - ' HARRIS BURG LANCASTER (Ultras (GaTl ■ Smartejt FashiorgShop • ~H|| PENN HARRIS HOTEL BUILDING ||T"~ Shop A tmosphere The Atmosphere of any shop is x made up of many little influence's. I Shop Atmosphere is not tangible. It has neither size, weight or color—and yet, it is that indefinable little "some thing" which either attracts or repels the clientele. The elements that go to make up the always pleasant Atmosphere of the Cloos Shop are:— The attitude of the salespeople, who serve in a spirit of willingness, not servility; striving to please—not to seii. ; Shop Atmosphere is in the arrange ment of the shop itself; the manner in which the wares are displayed. /But most of all, it is in the feeling that you arc being fairly dealt with— that you are being told the exact truth ; that the wares you buy are actually worth what you pay. ' The high type of clientele of the Cloos Shop is such that we could not possibly do otherwise than live up to the Atmosphere of exclusiveness and true worth. Cloos—Exclusive but not Expensive ' 1 ' ■ *"~M 1 _ "■ -- ■ - Society Ladies Adopt New Hair Curling Method I ———— Since the introduction of liquid sil inerlne in this country, it has become qultq "the prop- r thing" among so ciety women, who havo readily adopt ' ed it in plac of the destructive curl ing iron. The waves and curls ac quired by the new method are far more natural in appearance and the hair is of course glossier and prettier I than could be if the life were cooked i out of it. I The liquid is pleasant to use. being I neither greasy nor sticky. It is a simple thing to apply with a clean I tootli brush at night when the hair |is down. The "lovely wavy effect in evidence in the morning is all that one could wish for. It costs little to use liquid silinerine, as a few ounces from the druggist will keep the hair in curl for weeks.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers