8 MANY SONS OF ITALY RETURNING About 80,000 Immigrants Have Returned to Their Native Land Naples, Nov. 29.—About 80.000 Immigrants have returned to Italy from the United States through the port of Naples since January 1. The f number is increasing month by month, and with the recent release | of ships hitherto requisitioned by i the Allies, it is estimated that 10,- , 000 Italians will greet Vesuivius again every month. The fortunes brought by the re ; turning Italians are gladly welcomed by their relatives, made needy by the war. The prosperous appear ance of the passengers is generally commented on, being probably the result of five years of savings at •wartime wages in America, and their well-made clothes and substantial baggage form a striking contrast to the bags and rags in evidence when emigrants leave for America. Emigration of Italians to the Unit ed States byway of Naples, the most i important embarkation points of emigrants in Southern Europe, is still very far from pre-war levels. Data from the Italian emigration of fice in this city indicate that, aside from returning reservists, 3,217 Ital i ians sailed to the United States from j Naples during the first eight and a \ half months of 1919. The great ma jority of these were wives, children I and other near relatives of Italians 1 already in the United States, who have hitherto been prevented from ' joining their families because of condiUons incident to the World Waar. The number of actual emi grants as the word is ordinarily used, is practically negligible. In contrast with this condition, it may be noted that in 1913, the last 1 year before the war, 198,664 emi grants left Naples for the United 1 States. The difference between the two totals is ascribed to the results | of the operation of the literary law of 19917, dearth of ships and ab normally high passenger rates, and the continuance of American pass port restrictions. Expressmen Held in Robbery Conspiracy Trenton, N. J., Nov. 29.—Philip and Samuel Shein, who conduct the Shein Brothers Express here, are held under SIO,OOO bail each, fol lowing their arrest by Government detectives charged with being im plicated in an alleged railroad and express robbery conspiracy carried on by a gang of thieves operating in New York, Philadelphia and Trenton. The Shein brothers are accused of "having done most of the hauling in this city for the gang. !Vse McNeil's Pain Exterminator—Ad "Center Shots atBolshevisni" Two sermons delivered by Dr. Charles R. Bowers, pastor of Zlon Lutheran Church, Sunbury, Pa., entitled, "Sunbury's Reign of Terror" and "Oar Nation's Deadliest Perils," have been published In pamphlet form and are now ready for delivery. These messages a scathing denunciation of the "Ex-Corset Fitter" of Ber wick, Pa., and Jim Maurer, president of the State Federation of Labor. These are messages straight from the shoulder and hitting hard the diabolical paid labor agitator and anarchistic adherents of the red flag. These sermons will be mailed anywhere In the United States for 25 cents in currency. Do not send stamps. Address DR. CHARLES R. BOWERS 29 S. FIFTH STREET SUNBURY, PA. TAKE A FLIGHT IN THE AIR on our Canadian Curtlss Airplane. Sensational and health fuL One flight in onr Airplane gives as much Joy and hnppiness as a six months' vacation. We are flying daily. Competent flyer. In cose you desire taking a special trip, call Bell 4931. LEARN A TRADE' construction, automobile mechanism! wireless and radio telephone. Write for particulars. ALTO A AEHOI'LAVK MECHANICAL SCHOOL, Bell 4031 Harris bora Aerodrome Dial 3000 Office: 25 N. Cameron St., Harrlsbnrg, Pa. What Lumber Buyers Should Know < ALL LUMBER looks good when fresh. The real test comes with time. Will it '"check" and "split" when exposed to the weather? LONGUFE LUMBER \\ as selected with a view to time service. We've made a study of Wood. When you build, it is necessary to get something that does not shrink, swell, crack, split, twist, warp or rot. We want you to know that our lumber business is conducted with a view of giving one hundred cents worth of value for every dollar spent with us. We're reliable. United Ice & Coal Co. Lumbar Department Forster and Cowden Sts. SATURDAY EVENING. Furbush Named New Health Officer in Philadelphia l'lUladclphia. Nov. 29. Mayor elect J. Hampton Moore announces that he ha# selected Colonel C. coin Furbush, widely known P h y®|" cian and sanitation expert, to be di rector of the Department of Public Health in the new city administra tion which comes into office in Jan uary. Dr. Furbush served as a f*jn|ta' tion officer in Cuba and the Philip pines. was thief sanitary offlcer of Havana in 1902, special assistant to Ambassador Gerard in Berlin in 1916; assistant to Surgeon General Gorgas, of the .United States Army during the World War, and was a member of the yellow fever comm s" sion of the Rockefeller Foundation to Central America. Last week the Prince of Wales invested him with the Order of St. Michael and St. George on behalf of the King of England. Christ Church in Rio to Celebrate Itio De Janeiro, Nov. 29.—Christ Church, of this city, which soon will celebrate its centenary' is said to have been the first Protestant Church to be built in South Amer ica. It was erected to provide a place of worship for the English community here. Two restrictions were placed on the church, the ex terior was to resemble a dwelling house and not a temple, and no bells were alloyed. Out of this concession grew the religions liberty which ex ists now in Brazil. To-day there are two Anglican dio#>ses and forty churches in South AiTierica. One diocese includes Argentina and Brnzil, with a bish opric in Buenos Aires; the other in cludes the Falkland Islands and the west coast countries. In addition to the Anglicna churches, there are many other Protestant churches scattered throughout South Amer ica. Investigate Cause of Baltimore Blaze; $700,000 Damage Baltimore, Nov. 29.—Revised esti mates of the loss caused by the fire which early yesterday wrecked three of the group of buildings in the cen ter of the city, formerly occupied by- Johns Hopkins University, and dam aged about a score of residences and stores In the vicinity, places the amount at approximately $700,000. The loss to the university alone may reach $500,000, but it is covered by insurance. Investigation is under way to de termine the origin of the blaze, which broke out in McCoy Hall, one of the units of the Hopkins group. Sev eral explosions were heard in the building a few minutes after the fire started, and, as no explosives were stored there, fire officials are at a loss to explain what caused them. DISCUSS PLANS TO RUN MINES Volunteer Workers Will Be Sent to the Missouri Fields Monday Kansas City, Mo.. Nov. 29.—Plans for manning the strip pit mines of the Kansas coal fields with volunteer workers next week were discussed at a conference last night between Governor Allen, of Kansas, and Major General Leonard Wood, com mander of the central department of the army. Governor Allen and Adjutant Gen eral Charles I. Martin, of Kansas, outlined to General Wood and his adjutant. Colonel Ralph Harrison, the plan by which several thousand tvolunter workers would be sent into the strip pit coal fields of the state. Governor Allen said the principal matter taken up was that of getting supplies to the coal fields for the volunteer workers. He said he could not discuss other features of the conference. The first contingent of volunteer miners will be sent to the coal fields Monday, Governor Allen said. As rapidly as they can be taken care of others will be rushed to the fields until several thousand men are at work. The Governor said he ex pected the number of volunteers would reach 5,000. Viscount Ishii Says Secret Alliance Rumors Have Injured Japan Toklo, Nov. 29.—Viscount Ishii, for merly Japanese Ambassador to Wash ington, asserts in a magazine article, published here that the reports which liava been circulated in some other countries of an alleged secret alliance between Japan and Germany are di rectly traceable to the interpellations which were made in the Japanese Diet in the winter of 1916. These Inquiries were In relation to the Lon don compact between the Allies to make no separate peace with Ger many. It will be recalled that this was formed in the early stages of the war. Viscount Ishii says the rumor has caused serious harm to Japan's war time diplomacy and has injured Japan's Interests in her post-bellum diplomacy. He points out that in the inter pellations prominent members of the Diet contended that Japan had shouldered a grave responsibility of no separate peace.at a time when the issue of the great war forbade any forecasts. The Viscount, who was Foreign Minister when the London pact was signed, says the Japanese Cabinet answered these criticisms by declaring that the government had no intention whatsoever of conclud ing a separate peace with Germany. Adherence to the pact, ministers pointed out, was in consonance with article two of the Anglo-Japanese alliance. Gibbons Confirms Reports of Kinsman Received Into Church Baltimore, Nov. 29. Cardinal Gibbons announced that Bishop Frederick J. Kinsman, former head of the Protestant Episcopal diocese of Delaware, was received into the Catholic Church last Sunday at the cathedral. The Cardinal made the announce ment on being shown a dispatch from Wilmington in which Bishop Kinsman was quoted in a letter as making the announcement. The Cardinal said he himself received the Bishop into the Catholic Church. Torch Explodes in Troop Ship; One Man Killed, Another Hurt Boston, Nov. 29. —One man was killed and another severely injured late yesterday when an acetylene torch exploded in the engine room of the steamer President Grant, bound from New York to Brest with United States troops aboard. The dead man is L. G. Telligrine, first assistant engineer, and the injured is W. T. O'Connor, Jr., third assistant engineer. The steamer suffered no material damage. It was 365 miles east of New York at the time. New Ministry For Brazil Is Planned 1110 De Janeiro, Nov. 29.—Brazil will have a new Ministry of Education and Public Health if the Brazilian Con gress adopts a proposal made by President Pessoa, which now has been approved by the Public Health Com mission of the Chamber of Deputies. It is generally expected that the measure will receive prompt and favorable action by the Chamber. It is proposed to constitute a Coun cil of Health with consultative func tions, to be presided over by the new minister. The body would be composed of directors of public health, of hygiene, and sanitary en gineering, the president of the Academy of Medicine, the president of the Institute of Advocates, the Attorney General and two medical men. Text of German Treaty in Demand London. Nov. 29.—The edition of texts of, the German Peace Treaty, printed by a private concern as a commercial enterprise, has been ex hausted. The demand for the terms on which peace was negotiated has led the printing concern to issue a reprint brought up to date with all added protocols and embellished with maps and indexes designed to make the "book" popularly Intel ligible. Queen Mary Will Establish Home With Wedding Gifts London, Nov. 29. —Queen Mary has signified her intention of devoting the funds sent to her as a silver wedding gift to the establishment of an institution to be called Queen Mary's Maternity Home, which will be situated adjoining Hempstead Heath. There will be accommodation for from 16 to 20 mothers and the home is to be used for the benefit of the wives and children of men who are or have been serving with his Majesty's forces. Lord Leverhulme, the soap magnate, has placed at the Queen's disposal the aita for the home. RUMANIAN CROPS BEST IN HISTORY Bncharest, Nov. 29.—The crops this ? r ear in Romania are among the best n ita history. The country no longer Is in need of outside assistance. The cereal yield is ao great that millions of bushels will be exported. There is still a scarcity of clothing, shoes and fabrics, however, which It will take some time to overcome. The health and well-being of the population Is exceedingly good. 1 HARRISBURG fcSfiAg TELEGRAPH BIGGEST MINES IN MARYLAND CLOSE Georges Creek Company Will Pay All Its Men Off v on Monday Cumberland, Md., Nov. 29.—Tho Georges Creek Coal Company, the largest coal operators in Allegany county, has issued this order: "In view of the fact that the em ployes of this company quit work without notice, the mines will ho closed indefinitely. Former em ployes will remove their tools by to-day or Monday and call at the office on Monday afternoon to bo paid off." With thousands of miners from District No. 16, which embraces the Georges Creek and Upper Potomac regions, already out from Frostburg, Md., to Piedmont, W. Va., and from Westernport, Md., to Thomas, W. Va„ the miners' union leaders de clared that by to-day 8,000 men will be out. This action followed a meet ing held by the miners to protest against the offer of 14 per cent in crease in wages. Would Apply Teaching of Jesus to Industrial Unrest Problems Today New York, Nov. 29.—Ninety-six hundred Presbyterian churches in the United States were advised to day that the teachings of Jesus Christ would solve the whole indus trial problem. These churches were urged by Dr. John McDowell, direc tor of the social service division of the Presbyterian New Era move ment to apply the teachings of Jesus to the solution of industrial questions. Dr. Mcpowell declared that the 15th verse of the 18th chapter of Matthew constituted "the law of brotherhood, conciliation and arbi tration," and he urged its applica tion to present day industrial moves. The Bible reference reads: "Moreover, if thy brother x shall trespass against thee, go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone: if he shall hear the,,.thou hast gained thy brother." , Dr. McDowell urged the church members and pastors to get in touch with outstanding groups of their communities, such as employ ers and employes, boards of educa tion and teachers, political, recrea tional, press, health, official, social and disturbing groups, learn tlieir points ot' view and side with them when right. ERECT MARBLE TABLET FOR CHOPIN, COMPOSER Pnrbi, Nov. 29.—0n the occasion of rhe 70th anniversary of the death of Chopin, a marble tablet was placed on the wall of the house in the Square d'Orleans in which the composer oc cupied two rooms from 1842 to 1849. DELCOIIGHT "Stootricity Jar o The Delco-Light engine ia the valve-in-the-head Dclco-Light long ago passed the experimental type—used in the best and most powerful airplane stage and has gone through the refining influence >igines and in hundreds of thousands of automo- of three and one-naif years of production and of jjiles. usage by 75,000 customers, It i® You will find plants in the homes of yourcom , runs on kerosene in any climate munity, Just ask your neighbor about his Delco -has only one place to oil and has a simple mix- T icrht Q „. ing valve in place of carburetor. "" ;[ p .* / 4 . . , . , , . . • Delco-Light makes happy homes; it saves time rhe storage battery is exclusively designed and and labor, taking away lots of hard, unpleasant built for Delco-Light with thick plates, wood and tasks. It "Pays for Itself" by the work it does and rubber separators and many improvements that the time it saves. insure long life. . of ' the mo re than 75,000 Satisfied Users of Delco- Light, the first are among the most enthusiastic— proof that the simplicity and durability of Delco- Light meets the requirements of its customers. *" forearms, country homes, schools, churches,* Lv,,... I*l s h stores and small towns. p ——— - 1 —-- ■ Shell and Shrapnel Still a Menace in Devastated France laum, France, Nov. 29. —Residents | of the devastated districts of France , uro still fleeing from bursts of shell j and shrapnel. The new menace' is caused by the small grass and swamp tires which frequently set oil the shells that have been piled up to be hauled away and exploded in some safe place. Major H. C. Greene, of Boston, Males., had a thrilling ride and nar rowly escaped a hail of shrapnel on his wqy from St. Quentin to Luon as a result of one of these tires. A French woman working in a lleld near Bouconville was gassed and considerable damage has been (bone. In the vast, desolate fields, thou sands of unexploded shells hate been picked up by German prison ers and though there are details hauling them away and exploding them in remote valleys every day, there are still long ranks of them everywhere. Sparks from locomo tives and from small''ft res where battlefield rubbish is being bui\ned, occasionally set fire to patches of dry weeds and the accidental bursts are numerous. Roads passing places where shells are being set off are guarded, but it is from the accidental blasts tnat the danger comes. Fre.ich Troops Occupy Aleppo District Towns Constantinople, Wednesday, Nov. 26.—French occupational troops 1 have entered Hhrasli, Aintab and Curfa, the principle centers of the Aleppo district. It is reported that there has been a clash between French soldiers and pillagers In the neighborhood of Aintab. —CONSTIPATION^ Is the big trouble in every serious sickness causing depression of spirits, irritability, nervousness, imperfect vision, loss of memory, poor sleep, loss of appetite, etc.—stop it with * regular course of SCHENCKS | MANDRAKEI PILLS j They act promptly and freely, but fi gently, thoroughly cleansing tho I bowels, comforting the stomach, stimu- I lating the liver—(Ac tprciflc for indi- I gestion. headache, biliousness, heart- B burn, flatulency. l'urety vegetable. Platn or Snjnr C*atsd. B 80 YEARS' CONTINUOUS SALS I PROVES THEIR MERIT. Dr. J. H. Schenck & Son, Philadelphia B American to Wed Niece of Lady Harris 'l.omlon, Nov. 29. The engage ment has just been announced of Miss Ivy Jervis, only daughter of 1..0 id St. Vincent, to Major W. L. Whittemore, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Whittemore, of Evunston, 111., and Asatku, Ontario. Miss Ivy Jer- The Lesson of John Mitchell's Deathbed Will' XT PON the death, a few KMitcheU'o Will , \ U ZS-Zf&Jfc yl Void; Labor man \ United Mine Workers of Amer /, Left $244,296.65 / ica, it was found that he had ? \ accumulated a fortune of about \u All bul $16,396.65* Uin j $250,000. )„ Slocks nnO Bonds, < Bu( h( . had negkcted making (a J£d W Not Witnewed j a will until just before undergo / u *>lu i in g t^e which did not r „ T q.nt. 80^ —Jobn save his life. / v. I \S SUM JSSfS \ Thls Wl1 ! w>s declared invalid Vk at \ because it had not been pro yn )'" tfrs C oVidmm!ration! dUicgd°m the \ ? Mr. Mitchell's property can j? \ dist y ib ? ted exactly as / S 3 he had wished. / f | yj* agoing \ C v * Your safest plan is to go to your D"*' la-wyer now and have him draw your will naming the Dauphin Deposit Trust Company as your executor. Then you may rest assured that your will cannot be set aside and that your wishes.touching your property and your heirs will be carried out faithfully. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM MBafaMwisgißii. NOVEMBER 29, 1919. vis la also niece of Lady Harris, wife ' of the well known cricketer. The engagement has created much I-.. qq,„ Ot Vincent title irlglnated with ,>dmlral Sir John ....... .-..0. ..1 iwi at Cape bl. Vincent. He was made an earl; but he hud no sons and the earldom be came extinct, the> viscountcy de scending to a nephew named Rtok etts, who assumed the name of Jer vis. J Lord St. Vincent's seat Is in But I ton Derwent. He also has a resi dence ut Shanklin, Isle of Wight. il O X E Y M OON SORROWS RB YEALEI) by charming young bridt of well known New York multi mlllior.-alre in noxt Sunday's NEV YORK AMERICAN. Largest cic culation in America. —Adv.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers