MINERS FIRM IN REFUSAL OF RATES [Continued from First Page.l ■ to bo reduced but they lacked con firmation either from Walker D. Hines, Federal director general of railroads or regional directors. At Gallup, N. M., twenty-five strik ing miners to-day were under arrest. Military authorities ordered them taken into custody when they at tempted to hold a meeting without obtaining a permit. Three wagon loads of arms, ownership of which lias not been established, was seiz ed. Secretary of War Baker to-day had before him a request from Gov ernor Kobertson of Oklahoma, for troops to be sent into that state to protect miners who desired to re enter the mines. Omaha Schools Closed Omaha's schools were ordered closed for one week and street car service reduced 25 per cent. In Kansas City the local fuel ad ministrator has ordered motion pic ture theaters closed next week but has ruled that church services may iITOTHE^UR^nSiNGFEUOWI A plat* wit ho at n roof wblfh do** not intcrrcro with tail* or BpeMb, Plnfo* Repaired While You Wall DENTAL mftvft <3 OFFICES •10 HAHKR-r STIIEKT '1 was mere to luaUe a sketch of dreu's Hour like a feaST. For ti. her. Luncheon was just over, and tiny toddlers there is' a "varicx she was talking to a little knot of menu, sometimes Uneeda Biscuh women. The first words I heard, milk, sometimes Graham Crack I slid quietly into a nearby seat, werß-rs Oatmeal Crackers or Lunch Bis "National Biscuit," recalling pleasßcult. This is changed on specie; antly my own tasty Uneeda LunchWoccasions to Old Time Sugar Cook con. I liked her. and Newt oi n and, rarest of fortably as she spoke days when we had and ears busy. Bee cream and those "BetVcen seems babies. First I iS Then, when HPS i. HIV : hJ! to toddle, I Wr 0U& pie in fWRjSM Sff | Irl6° 110 The KSSSIM u to original Mi! r ' la m Uneeda Biscuit ;■ is due to the superior materials and methods ■> t M employed in the baking. The everlasting table- ml S B goodness of Uneeda Biscuit is due to security Mt {s flk of the In-er-seal trade mark package. • NATIONAL Btscurr were COMPANY enough "You sec, dainty, al-! wont on, "are much as' only National inals. They are most lovable ann Biscuit Products can be. During the most tractable after they've had years when my babies were growing something to oat. National Biscuit up we never missed the Chll dainties always begin our Cbil- dren's Hour with its tasty feast. Can't sleep! Can't eat! Can't even digest what little you do eat! . R A One 0/ two doses U!/W ARMY & NAVY JM DYSPEPSIA TABLETS will make you feel ten years younger. Best known remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach * and Dyspepsia. 25 cents a package at all Druggists, or sent to any address postpaid, by the U. S. ARMY & NAVY TABLET cb. 260 West Broadway, N.Y. iWwwtwwwMMwwwwwwwmwumntmtimMiiwmj — And PARK AND POLLARD'S || Fa ™ us "LAY OR BUST" DRY MASH il Still Continues to Be the Mash Used by Leading j Poultrymen Everywhere Lay or Bust Dry Mash Makes Hens Lay More Eggs Many have tried out the "just as good" kinds, but the eggs 1 ]> decreased instead of increasing. So now they are back feeding ] <[ "Lay or Bust"' and their hens are laying eggs abundantly. If your ] <' hens are not laying eggs your feed Is expensive. !! "LAY OK BUST" WILL MAKE YOUK HENS LAY MOKE EGGS ! j! Order It Now—Buy tt by the hundred and save money I Prices 100 lbs.. $1.50; 40 lb. bag, $2.25; 20 lb. bag, $1.20; | !> 10 lbs., 60 Cents. Walter S. Schell Quality Seeds J! POULTRY FEEDS AND EQUIPMENT j! ISotli Phonos. 1307-06 MARKET ST. Open Saturday Evening SATURDAY EVENING. be held where no fuel is used, and both public and private schools will be closed Indefinitely. Generally throughout much of the country, electric signs have been dis continued and the use of electric power for all purposes greatly re duced. In Indianapolis manufacturing plants are operating on a half-time On Shorter Hours A local board to prescribe fuel conservation was established to-day in Lincoln, Neb. Beginning Monday morning stores, restaurants, offices and banks will be open only during specified hours. Mrs. Rippin Talks to Scout Leaders The officers the Girl Scout of this city entertained at a at the Civic Club house yesterday in compliment to Mrs. Jane Deeter Rippin, national direc tor of the Girl Scouts of America. The most interesting feature of | the event was the presentation by : Mrs. Rippin of the Golden Eaglet | badge to Scout Helen Appleby, a I member of Dogwood Troop, No. 2. TMiss Appleby has been awarded I,nineteen badges for accomplish j ments along the work laid out by I the Girl Scout headquarters and is the only Golden Eaglet in the city, j At-the conclusion of the luncheon, j Mrs. Rippin spoke of the rapid .growth and development of the or ganisation and announced that a i'field worker would come here to in | struct the officers the early part of j January. Among the luncheon guests were: i Mrs. Freeman Frey, Mrs. George i Spangler, Miss Pearl Ebner, Miss [ Florence Smith, Miss Helen Smith, 1 Mrs. Charles Stroh, Miss Lorene | Shelley, Miss Grace I'.inards, Miss Martha Miller, Miss Helen Appleby, ! Mrs. Frank Hiller, Miss Mary Mc ! Kee and Miss Almeda Herman. DIVORCE GRANTED A divorce decree was signed 1o : day in the case of Lucy M. Wil i lits, this city, against James Benton | Willits, Omaha, Neb. The divorce was granted on the grounds of de ! sertion. RELIEVES^TIRED, ACHING MUSCLES Buy a bottle of Sloan's Liniment and keep it handy for emergency ,'(TF 1 only had some Sloan's Lini- I ment!" How often you've said -*• that! And then, when the rheu matic twinge subsided—after hours of suffering—you forgot it! Don't do it again—get a bottle to-day 'for ; possible use to-night! A sudden at tack may come on—sciatica, lum bago, sore muscles, stiff joints, neu ralgia, the pains and aches result ing from exposure. You'll soon re ! lieve it with Sloan's, the liniment (that penetrates without rubbing. 38 years' leadership. Clean, eco nomical. Three sizes—3sc, 70c, $1.40. Homeville Reformers Reforming Homeville WHVDONT/ JJJSS ,£ SHOCKING? \ S suo™ . ITtel1 Ttel THAT'S \ ouroj, J IJ^J THIS-WORLD ./ watch| *~- !i m lit COMING STAGE II ' Tjsggjg Qjj DOOR E| '"*' ■ ' . . From a Former Tagger [From Cartoons Magazine.] I AM the greatest veteran of them j all. I was through the first Red | Cross campaign ore the Main street sector, through the second i and third campaigns on the Chest- j nut avenue front, and in successive J campaigns in the union passenger j station region. I was in all important ! "V" campaigns, seeing service on-, every important corner in my'town; | I have shaken a wicked rolled-oats j box in front of every prominent citi- j zen, from the mayor down to the ; poundmaster, in the Salvation Army | drives on the doughnut sector, and j in behalf of the "Y. W." have been! ogLed by three preachers, four alder- j men, seven hundred soda-l'ountain ctcrks, and a few thousand proves- 1 sionul mashers. Other war ac>ivi ties included campaigning for the J Irish societies. I am the patriotic tagger. I have smiled upon the president of the first national bank ar/d hung a tag on his neat lapel, to receive for my j pains six cents —the extent of his pocket; I have, by sheer weight of logic and oratory, extracted from a ( shoe clerk the dollar that was to have been transformed that evening into roses for little Mamie, and from the porter at the station have sep arated the nickel tip he received from the traveling man from . Omaha. And—probably ir the aggregate J of eight times —I have had the entire , population of my town pass to the j U. S. Naval Commander in Adriatic Whose Fleet Patrols Troubled Coast . 'IK t yßpr /. * J ■I wai. Wt JH •' < i ■ *"•'-£ M vijß , \ a Af Wr 1 Ik ' - Jj| MMMMiH a,i ui i> ilia ion .r.ii| -| REAR ADMIRAL ANDREWS Reports that the D'Annunzio forces contemplated a raid on Spalato, the American naval base in the Adriatic where Rear Admiral Philip Andrews lias a Iteet of twelve craft, led to a conference in Ixjndon between Un der Secretary Frank L. Polk of the State Department. head of the American Peace delegation in Paris, I and Rear Admiral Harry S. Kuupp, commanding all American naval forces in European waters. Under an agreement reached tn Paris, Ad miral Andrews' ships were assigned to patrol a part of the Dalmatian coast. Whether new instructions were sent to the American com mander in the Adriatic was not an nounced. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH me to my plaint; I am associated in I the eyes of my entire town with tags. My presence at a dance is a signal for everybody to cross to the j other side of the room; I approach |on the street an old friend, and , she draws away from me and hur ries on, her gaze set dead ahead; at. I the card party I am that unengaged, i I am set to entertaining old Grandpa j Jdnes, whose only game is casino. ! In other words, the war is still ; going on, so far as I am concerned, S and X want some reader of Cartoons | Magazine to tell me how to de | mobilize myself in the mind of the I public. Tells Americans They Must Find a Substitute _ JFor the Saloon's Cheer HOMER L. FERGUSON That Americans must replace the punch of the highball with the punch of something far more worthy and that they must hurry to find a substitute for the saloon, was what Homer L,. Ferguson, president of the Newport News Shipbuilding Com pany, told delegates to the indus trial section of the international Y. M. C. A. convention. "Of course the saloon was a good thing to get rid of," he said, "but no matter what they say about the baneful inlluence of the saloon, it was a place where there was cheerfulness and where men were warmly welcomed. Most Popular Corn Flakes Always crisp f Always fresh Always flavoiy and Ready to Eat . POSTTOASTIES GERMANY SEES NEW HOPE IN U.S. TREATY REFUSAL Foreign Office Believes Situa tion Would Alter Her Obligations By Associated Press. Berlin, Nov. 29.—The German government will be confronted by an altered situation in respect to Its obligations under the Versailles Peace Treaty in the event the United States fails to ratify it, in an opin ion at the foreign office. It was declared that absence of active American participation under tire treaty in the adjustment of nu merous post-war issues would con stitute a condition which Germany had not contemplated when she af fixed hpr signature to the treaty. Concerning the extradition of Ger man officers and officials for trial, it was said that the German cabinet is unanimous that if extradition ac tually is insisted upon it will pro duce an internal reaction which the government will be in duty bound at all hazards to prevent. UtSIIUL 11 loss Daniel Hess, 51 years old, of 2" Brady street, died last evening at his heme. For many years he was a blacksmith in this city. He was a member of the Order of Maccabees. In addition to his wife, Mrs. Eliza beth Hess, he is survived by one brother, John £. Hess, of Hagerstown. and six sisters, Mrs. Charles Slon aker. of Baltimore; Mrs. James Elder, ol Emmitsburg. Md.; Mrs. George Schlegel, of Baltimore; Mrs. Claro Sweigart, of York; Mrs. Alice Ebach, of Baltimore, end Mrs. Martin Myers, of York. FuneraJ services will be held Tuesday morning at 11 o'clock. Burial will be In the Paxtang Cem etery. O JUVAV T OITAI.Y Ready to set sail for Italy, after having been arrested here yesterday on a larceny charge, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bartenzettl. late of Gallltrjn, Pa., are in New York City to-day, in exurberant spirits. They expect to board a ship for their native land before the sun sets this evening. The couple were arrested here arly yesterday morning, charged with attempting to steal $2,500 from a fel low countryman who had boarded with them. Stories told by their ac cusers, us relnt deby police who came to the city from Aitoona for them, however, were considered so improb able by Police Chief Wetzel and other members of th city force, that they were releasd. BELL 1091—2356 f NITED If ARRI9BUHG, MONDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1010. FOUNDED 18T1 •*- ' ' ■ Conforming to our policy of recent years, this store will not be open any evening before - Christmas. The advantages are i mutual —our salespeople enjoy shorter hours of labor, thus per- A mitting the rest and recreation | I necessary to give the best possi | ble daylight service to our cus- j 1 tomers. Only twenty-one shopping days until Christmas. Shop in \ the forenoons when possible. H KREISLER A Plays the Piano I Penn-Harris Tomorrow? THIS great'violinist is also a pianist who brings to the piano the same masterly touch and wealth of feeling that he does to the violin. He has played several of his own compositions for the S^AMPICO . r hi the You.may hear them during the Luncheon and Dinner hours tomorrow at the Penn-Harris, or you may hear them in your own home exactly as he played them. As a music lover you must hear the Chickering with the Ampico. The world's greatest pianists have recorded the masterpieces of music and you can hear them in your own home played with all the spirit and human touch of the original rendition. 4 ' You are invited to hear this re .; markaltle instrument at our store. J. H. Troup Music House Exclusive Representatives L \ • I si! Troup Building—ls South Market Square Directly Opposite Market Square Presbyterian Church * . v:' v' , ■' •/• 0 . | NOVEMBER 29, 1919. 3