AMAZING DRUG FIEND GORES ARE ANNOUNCED BY CITY SCIENTISTS ! Philadelphia Proves to Rest of World "Dope" Slaves i-.v ; :;. . Curse Z5U Lose Habit in General Hospital. Philadelphia, the medical centre of tha &nUHi has proved to the rest of the rias jurely as light can dlsslpato darkneflti. Philadelphia General Hospital today, bacnea uy '" " -v ..o.u ,. Uu olclon thni the drug; cure Is an expert Ji,.f. It Klves hope, say physicians, to 'i. hitherto hopeless. It means salvn- i(n for' the army of victims enrolled tunder the enslaVhB banners of opium, f lne. morphine, heroin and laudanum, ?ninn and red blood, devising and ex perimenting with methods of combating W evil, were ready for the supreme test I '.when tho Harrison act wont Into effect. ,'i gnd gUrCCBDO lium mo iiiBiiniimo,u uiu8- nff was oiiereu lu an mo pmuuio cren- tares WnO ciamoreu lor uruga wnicn ma . ..! inlfAn rnm 4li,m. m was announce! at the hospital today "that physicians in the narcotic ward have tM&Mfully treated 250 drug fiends. tn- K'.iMinir 80 Women, since March 1. From fi'alves ahd dens they came, from odlco -V.'iMii,m from factories and Workshops. -from' the homes where ho man thinks 'trie danger lurks. A special department ' tho hospital was created for the (Treatment of, their cases, and by the f wholesale the craving for the drug was I .tiki-lcud. crushed and broken'. T'dGYery patient was discharged as cured Eaad 0' that.n.umbcr almost all are now fre of tne naoit, xnoso wno were 100 ; ik to throw oft their evil associations g (eUagaln, rio doubt, but their cases are noi. nopoioD.. ..-...-.. .-....... i another process of "giving' them a back bone" will take them further away from (Krfr habit, until they" aro no longer weak. faltering victims, but' resolute men and ;t women. VICTIMS TAKE HOPE. jSTEyiyq uebgeb--phti;abbl'phia sattjbday, junb SOLID SHEET OP FALLING WATER PROTECTS BIG BUILDING FROM FIRE 26, 1915; ''ti'n "air of optimism today pervaded the Rward whero will' power Is built up In the i'Vfikened. syBt'ems. Dull-eyed men grow pdfeerful, read the papers, chat and even I Joke- -as they (eel tne Bnacxies supping from them. Now patients enter, anxious 3.nitvinat rtftnfitrlnir. nnd leave, buoyant mi determined, feeling fit to battle with ( lhnlr enemy .on equal torms. Kj-,'"The habit can be cured! that Is a 'lelan today, as he glanced over a batch Sfof '"Histories" records of patients who h&Ve been discharged. "Tne process is s'one of giving the victim a backbone. 'But right hero Is tho crux of tho whole 1 waiter If a man doesn't want to be mred ho can't bo cured. i .'"Thero are several Important systems It.'nf. treatment, of which the Lambcrt- gLTowries method Is tho best It Is, In Kan'ort, a rapid withdrawal of the drug. JDUUQing up 01 tne system ana mo una sit sedatives. The craving Is relieved In s&five-aays or a. woeK. xne craving 01 mo l&'lju4i, innilaj with tnvlna tnr frrtoh Hlin piles of tho drug, Is generally so strong and Insistent that It requires weeks or perhaps .months, and In some cases a rvear. before the poisonous products can mi ejected entirely. The. ordinary case screaulres about four or five weeks, depend- wlng on the patient's power of resistance. 1 symptoms 01 a euro appear wnen me '.victim sleeps well, takes an active ln- fcierestln what Is going on, becomes cheer- MM and this In Important doesn't seem yto be anxious to leave. Wo have about St. now, In various stages of Improvement." s Ttur i. wr,-n irt xrtr r nai?o to. A story of reclamation is told between (tine, lines of the typewritten histories. whlch, .are securely locked In the chler iretldent's office a story of men and worn- Ken piqued by curiosity and seeking new i,enaatlonB, of men and women surrounded hv evil nn.ini-tn.tpfl. In China. In Phtladcl- fhla's Chinatown, In the West Indies, Staking the first "dose," Beeklng relief pfrom naln." advised by a doctor or a P, misguided friend. Old and young, man until, with weakened vitality and nerves .broken and seelmr terrors In their sleep, fithey applied for relief and secured It, :- .Most of the patients are youths ana Lyoung men, but thero are a few of ma- ?turer years, case A, a man of sedentary habits and 42 years old. became addicted I'to morphine tWoscore years ago. He used ni to alleviate pain and the drug turned on him, as it surely must, and made a wreeit of him. He left tho hospital wun a.- new-born will nower and apparently "has succeeded In conquering. the drug. 'We B, a men nearly W years old, con tracted the morphine habit in Porto Rico slh IMS. He used 60 grains a day; now iae uses none. In Case C. a 23-year-old iman smoked opium for four years In IChlnatown until It became too expensive, fwnen he began "snlfflng" heroin, inree Wears, later, when the Harrison act came be appealed to the hospital for help, and jwas helped. Case D, a young salesman, iwia cured after1 three years of the heroin Iha'blt To read the record Is to ba con- aced that the end of drug slavery Is Rear. BROTHERS CONFESS IXOLD-UPS lrrested After Fight, Police Say They Admjt Highway Robberies. 93-fk battle with a pojlcemanln a pawn op, at Bth and yine streets, at noon Ii9day, preceded the arrest of two broth rs, Who," the police say, have confessed BR .many recent "hold-uos." KThey described themselves as Albert Wsy a yeara old, and Paul May, l years U, but refused to tell where, they lived. KWhlle Llautcnnnt Hamilton and 10 police- Btotn In citizens' clothes were trying last plant 4a catch the highwaymen who for fo.wetk have been terrorising the north Past.rn section of the city, Ave hold-ups per committed In that territory, i-llamllton early this morning sent to Kwnshops a description of stolen Jewelry. iipo two ajays entered xne pawn-EhoD- at Sth and Vina streets and at- pempted to pledge one of ,the stolen S&Khes. The pawnbroker engaged tne Ilferwd to the 4th and Vine streets police KMon. KPo'jceman Ferris responded- As he en- P,red the pawnshop, Albert May drew a toiver and ordered the policeman m open the d.oor that he might escape. gwrU knocked him down with a black- and dlsarmed-hlra. He then arrestea other man. Albert May's revolver W loaded with blank cartridges, t'aui fty had secreted In his vest a dagger. FIRE DESTROYS HOTEL pse Thought to Have Been Caused by Incendiaries. ROUDsnirrm. Pa.. June St-Wlth a Hlfir I a . oihlnh flUIUnt Irwvthlns before It and put the guts mnai, nre, or propaoiy inceuoir destroyed the Casino Hotel, near .nil lau. i.ii ft. rim uinm dls- '"-"-. u.,1 Kill,,,.. w Er.t .).., o.ca .i.ifl.l. In 1.a lannilpv. eor apparatus could reaeh the "a oeairoyad tne wnoie buuuiu. 1 ts of las.ooo. Only yestsrday the He.? nABK iH. . r rp tJlffhrln. fr' ,il "V'etor, to Thomas t'adow. UMKioUdig t' ana Earl Bruch, of 9 r 1-Oi-t---sy-ia-ia-ia-B i t V v IiImIHwSsR - - mm 1 tMh ZmTZ&mM f. ) 'K r 'wnV rm asm !!f--BKk ? LP"1 I I I'M 1 t .lisiBllllllll-. IS! - , " -. T ;t'!Tv iil I "8 MWSM" IIB1 Sill 9KLs&EsSSBnm 1MmM fl 'lc'?? Ilfl 8l H i- jjjJgv--aa3RE. Jin!3RF2a---seR--iss f fit J fit . r TiT i f (. 13 ?" ' ABSS ? i . El.BliW I - fBII : Hft 1 I f i : I IIP? f It r!H Tests of the "water blanket," which can bo released instantly in case of a threatening blaze, were hold toaay at tne uurtis uuiidinp, on Independence Square. Tho picture here shows how tho water falls in a great curtain down tho Sansom street side of tho 10-story structure. The demonstration was held under the direction of Fire Marshal John J. Barnum, whoso permanent station is at tho Curtis Building. His portrait appears in tho circle KILLS WIFE AND HIMSELF Sons See Quarrelsomo Husband Send Bullet Through His Heart. Alfred Cantncr, JO years old, shot nnd killed his wlfo at their home, 3410 Tampa ftreet, and then, before the eyes of his three sons, turned the revolver upon him self and sent a bullet Into his own heart last night. He died instantly. The couplo had been quarreling all tho evening, according to neighbors, and this Is given as the cause of the shooting. Their three sons, Ira, Ilaymond and Ed ward, were asleep upstairs when they were awakened by the first shot. They rushed to the kitchen to prevent a further tragedy, and arrived there Just in time to see their father Kill himself. Tho would-be rescuer of a 4-year-old 'child explored a smoke-Ailed house last night while the child nnd Us parents were enjoying a movie show. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gordon.'. 426 Mifflin street, and their daughter, Tetta, went to the Empire Theatre, the first "2-ccnt movie," at 7th and McClellan streets, last night. Before leaving home they lighted candles In the kitchen, according to a Jewish custom. The candles set fire to curtains. 'William Klrschner, 423 Mifflin street, a . neighbor, saw smoke pouring from the upper windows and. thinking the child was In danger, rushed into tho house. He groped his way through tho rooms and finally reached tho kitchen, whero tho curtains wero burning. A fire company responded to an alarm and extinguished the blaze. Tho "Tenderloin" never really cares what time It Is. It knows only two hours of the 21 and It calls them day and night. It was In Ignorance of this fact that Harry Stearns, when nsked at 3 o'clock this morning what time It was by two men near 10th and Arch streetB, courte ously drew forth his gold watch. The two men grabbed the watch and ran. Acting Detectives Stocker and Barron arrested two men later, and Stearns, who lives at 3015 Brandywlne street. Identified them. They said they were Edward Duffy nnd "William Blddle. They were held In J1000 ball each for a further hear ing charged with highway robbery. Efforts to recover a rubber ball for his 10-ycar-old sister last night resulted In 8-ycar-old Robert Davidson, of 2021 Pop. lar street, receiving Injuries that may ne cessitate the amputation of ono of his legM. Ho was Btruck by a freight train whllo trying to find the ball, which had rolled under the Philadelphia and Head ing Railway bridge at 32d and Poplar streets. Physicians and nurses In the Garretson Hospital were entertained by conversa tion which a patient continued while 20 stitches were put In a wound In his arm last night. The man with, the unusual nervo was AVIlllam Whitehead. 24 years old. 1R02 South 22d street. He' was In jured while riding his blcyclo at 2Sth street nnd Pennsylvania avenuo by col liding with a ventilator grating under the bridge of the Philadelphia and Heading Hallway. John McArthur, 63 years old. of ES4S Helskell street, was overcome by heat as he stood at Germantown avenue and Col lum street late last night. He fell'to the sidewalk, striking his head against the curb. He was treated at the Germantown Hospital. New trials wero refused to Edward Murphy and William E. Griffin and each was sentenced to six months In the county prison by Judgo Walling, of Erlo, Pa., substituting in Qunrter Sessions Court today, for forgery and falsifying the registration books In the 10th Division of tho lOlh Ward, In October, 1012. A man who gave the name of H. M. Merethew, of Long Beach, Cal., commit ted suicide this morning by Inhaling Illu minating' gas In the rooming houso of Mrs. Jtuth Kobnson, 2423 Columbia ave nue. By fragments of notes he left the police believe that ho was Insane and had recently escaped or had been discharged from an asylum. At a table where the notes were placed was n shot gun Merethew had recently purchased, the police say, to use In ending his life.' jF & C t S Vers F a 1 lacie FACT is a real state of things. FALLACY isan appar ently genuine but really illogical statement or-argument, FHMj Iwj US n S COMMON Sense always comes into its own. From the beginning of Time there have been, hysterical out bursts on this, that or the other question but eventually good old Common Sense rules. And rio people in the world have so much of this saving quality as the American. FOR years FALLACIES were.exploited by Prohibition ists. Untrustworthy statements, unprovable statistics and hysteria marked their utterances. Being uncombated their statements passed for truth. But when FACTS were brought forth to disprove these FALLACIES a marked change in public opinion was shown. For this series of watts versus FALLACIES was beeun to erive the same publicity to jfAtio as tne ironiDiuoniBia naa-10 iv LACIES. rpHEN, good,. solid Common Sense camcto.the fore as. X hysteria was pushed to the background. Thinking, men agree that intemperance of thought,. of speech and of', action are more to be feared than intemperance caused by drink that the liqtior business, instead of being .un lawful, was fostered, licensed and regulated by law.. Nor js it true that a man is good only because he. is a'Prb-" hibitionist; or that all. men are bad if they use alcoholic . stimulants, even temperately. ' LD-FASHIONED, solid Common Sense has oyer- .! come hysteria, and has done qunc - WteZJ? f &vCbe adde-d? itoTSSK rTnnrts received to date, that this series of articles appealing every y v , 5jberai angie on a question cod KaSS5d but one side. Philadelphia Lager Beer Brewers' Association (TA mt -rcfcfo wlllPPr WdnJy, Jumh) ffi Jill 0 1 F I 13 MjL '" ' mmmrt! ' wwnnifl FIRE TEST AT CURTIS PLANT A BIG SUCCESS Department Chiefs Impressed by the Adequacy of Preven tive Equipment. '. .. , Two thousand rhlladelphlans were treated to at least a near-ftfe scene today, when Deputy Chief Ross n, Davis In his automobile. Engine Company No. 32 from 7th and Locust streets, th hlgh.presaure machine from Cherry street and scores of other fire officials and firemen w eponded to the Invitation of the Curtis Publishing Company to witness and as sist in the annual test of the fire-prevention equipment of the Curtis Publishing Company's Building, Independence Square. Indeed, those who lined the streets .' -"" ..vu.tu iu u. welcome cool Jii.ll wnt" whlcn Puid from the .,... Dnnom streets sides of the great building for more than a half hour In Instant ranlv in 4h irl,n kl.nl fu than 2300 gallons a minute wero showered on those two sides from the many tanks containing 183,500 gallons, which are lo cated on the ninth floor. At first, a test was made by the high pressure system of the Fire Department. Then came the test of the system of the building Itself, Both wero highly satis factory, according to Chief Davis. "The Curtis Building is as well equip ped as. If not better equipped than, In tha flre-nghtlng line, any building In the city." Chief Davla said. Both testa were highly satisfactory. This Is tho first opportunity we have had to show how tho flro de partment could help In keeping fire from rcuiimiR mo uurus uuuamg ny using tne tanks of the building Itself. I wish we had more buildings like It In some of tho more dangerous sections of town." Accompanying Chief Davis wero Bat talion Chief George W, Moodle, Chief William Murphy, Captain Edward Don ahue, of ripe Lino Company No. "I, and Captain George T. Martin, acting bat talion chief. Officiate of the Curtis Company ex plained that the test made today was one of the systems Installed In the building to prevent fire reaching It from the out side. That Is, In case buildings on San som or 7th street In the vicinity should catch flro. One of the busiest men during today's test was Fire Marshal John J. Barnum, of the Curtis Building, who has the work ing order of Its flre-flghtlng forco at his fingers' ends. Chief Marshal E. Huhn, Jr., of the Curtis Company, was In charge. This afternoon nearly 100 employes of tho company took part In a fire drill on tho roof. Many of the SliOO or more other employes missed today's test, ns the Curtis Publishing Company closed at John Henry "Honus" Wagner tells fans of a rare one next Sunday "A Triple Play on a Pitch Out." Second of the Wag ner stories now running in the Public Ledger's SPORTS MAGAZINE UWVEIl SAYS NUHSiS WHO SUES "TKAVELKD WITH NAVY MEN" Declares She Ceased Demands When Detectives Followed Her, A story that sleuths shadowed the fair complainant added a now thrill today to the $K.0O0 breach of promise suit of Miss Mary Campbell against Frederick t. Newberry, a wealthy Invalid, of the Bart ram Apartments. Miss Campbell lives at 215 South llth street Sho says Newberry broke off his engagement to her because hla mother objected. The case has how developed Into a bat tie of documents between attorneys for the opposing sides, Henry M. Dubbn. counsel for Miss Campbell, opened with - - --"""- '"-. tutu n Idler BOIU VJi U Newberry demanding more of "" Bnipacii m iresseq ror Ills locket Harry Fox, attorney for Newberry, re turned the fire with tho following! "She also threatened to make 'interest ing reading' unless my client sent her funds. He became suspicious and en gaged private detectives to shadow her. .ftooui mat time ner demands ceased and the detectives found she was traveling With flAVornl nfTIPMra trn Ttnlta.1 at, battleships then at the Philadelphia Navy Yard." "Wo have these letters," added Mr. Fox, "and end produce them In court to show tho woman's motive." Royal Arcanum nt Willow Grovo An outing at Willow Grove will mark the 36th anniversary of Pennsylvania Council, No. 313. Hoyal Arcanum today. A feature will bo a banquet, at which Colonel Alexander F. Nicholas will pro-aide. T1"' tlwl "' iWftHjtifoitfaiirTfiftn 'mTTtawMWbaw ...n .ii..,... t, amwmirii.MHn ., w.. , woman mwm m mm BKotoiiT irtM mm emmm Prisoner Maintains Suitor Gavft iW the Money. Mrs. Catharine Wood, of tfctt PalfcH AVenue, who was arrested In CMeaSs its. CS"?.L t,,n li from Charles !, of StlX Market street, was brought fraett to thla city for a hearing at the Central station today. Bhe wa held In WW.batJ for court after she had reluctantly r turned 27. all she had. ' Mrs. Wood was af rested whlltt hit way to the fair In California. Halt charge that hi trave Mrs. Wnn.1 th r, J. keep for him until they er married. She said It was given Unconditional!- -"" Mrs. Wood told Detective sdiiaer, who brought her back, that she h a haie doxen witnesses to prove that Hall gay her the money Unconditionally. She said that Hall wanted to marry her, but that aa his breath was always perfumed with Honor whn h iamfc .mt, (, !.. persistently refused him. She told Souder that Hajt called bit her Mendav. Ha had hti firlnttfti T,t !. still had IMS left He handed her l!i money saying. "Here, little girl, Is j present for you." She said that she thanked Hall knb within a few hours waa on her way to the fair, where she expected to open a rooming house. Murdered Man Found in Barrel ; UTICA, N. T., June ie-The body of, man believed to be Giuseppe Pasquale was found In a barrel on Broad street In thin city by a night watchman about U M. today. The man had been stabbed to death and his legs, cut off. The bo4y Wn crowded into the barrel and tied in. .. ' mlF PRICE COMPIXTS t' . . r HHSsB F.O.B. 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