4 REMARKABLE NEW RHEUMATISM CURE Tennel Guaranteed to Stop Pains of Rheumatism in 48 Hours. • In 48 hours from the time you take Tennel, the new remedy for rheuma tism, your pains must stop completely. They must absolutely go. This is guar- Snteed. Yet this astonishing remedy oes not contain a drop of opiates of •ny kind, hablt-forinlng drugs, salicyllo 48 Is 48 Hoars by Your Clock, Tennel Will Banish lour Rhcmatlc Pains. acid, alcohol, or any ingredient which can affect the heart or tlio weakest stomach. It Is also an unfailing remedy for Gout, Lumbago, Sciatica and Neuralgia. The Tennel treatment Is a true uric acid solvent. It gives a hearty appe tite and is a strong tonic. If your pains do not leave you within 48 hours, your money will be refunded without question. The Tennel treatment, consisting of a bottle of Tennel at SI.OO, and a box of Tennel Capsules at 50c. Is sold under fuarantee by Edward Z Gross, C. M orney, Geo. C. Potts, Croil Keller. Advertisement. Blood Eruptions WON'T Return When You Give Your /Blood a Good Bath No case of poisoned blood Is ever cured until the last vestige of Irrita tion has been eliminated from the system. And the only remedy that Is safely assimilated in the tissues to stimulate cellular activity and over come harmful germs is the famous S. S. S. A few doses of this wonderful blood purifier will start such pronounced activities in the cellular tissues of the body as to soon show decided changes in the skin. The skin Is bat a tine network of tiny blood vessels, and the action of S. S. S. Is declared by emlnert authorities to be a pronounced stimulation of tho activity of these cells. Certain It la that In a surprisingly short time una the worst skin eruption showa a most remarkable change; It begins to dry up; the •kia peels off In tiny flecks, and soon a layer of clear, healthy and Urn tissue results. The reason for this Is In the peculiar stlm- Illation of S. 9. S. which enables the cells In tho skin to select from the blood the nutri ment It requires for regeneration. Not only this, but If from the presence of some disturbing polsoa there Is a local or - ■eneral interference of nutrition to cause bolls, ! carbuncles, abscesses and kindred troubles! 1 8. S. S. so directs the local cells that this poison la rejected and eliminated from their presence. This fact has been demonstrated In cases of se?ere skin eriptloa that had seemed to be Incurable. You can obtain S. S. S. at any well stocked drug store. If you Insist upon It, but be sure you are not talked into something else claimed to be "Just as good." S. S. 8. Is prepared bj The Swift Specific Co., SOS Swift Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. EDUCATIONAL Day and Night School STENOTYPY, SHORTHAND, BOOKKEEPING SCHOOL OF COMMERCE 15 S. Market Square HARRISBURG, PA. Harrisburg Business College Day and Night. Business, Shorthand and Civil Service. In dividual Instruction. 28th year. 329 Market St. Harrisburg, Pa. Land' M f -)f the Sky" 4 |ft v s Paradise of Sports Up the mountain side, out on the §5 courts or links and angling by the quiet, cool f brooks—there is all that mortal can ask for in = r pleasure and recreation. The climate is superb, == the scenery magnificent. You can reach this veritable Paradise of Sports in the "Land of the Sky 5 ' (Asheville, Plat Rock, Saluda, Tryon, Sr Hendersonville, Brevard, Lake Toxaway, Waynes- •==■• ville, Hot Springs, etc.) speedily, comfortably and ip= safely over the * J Southern Railway PREMIER CARRIER OF THE SOUTH Seven Trains Daily from Philadelphia /Direct through service to famous resorts of Augusta, Aiken, Columbia, Charleston, Summer , ville, Savannah, Brunswick, Jacksonville and --- / Florida Points. 'I The Most Direct Route A Xl iW| From New York and Philadelphia to Atlan- / !ta, Birmingham, Memphis, New Orleans; Jr , . also Texas, Mexico, California and JsL Panama. Handsome portfolio of views and descriptive literature sent free on request. 828 Chestnut St. Philadelphia jWtS | FRIDAY EVENING, , *HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 27 i 1914. Lawyer "Butts in" and I Averts Strike of 60,000 W p. W. O. THOMPSON i Chicago, 111., Feb. 27.—1t is not an easy task to prevent a strike of 60,000 ; who are bent on striking—especially workers of the Russian revolution ary type. Yet If the right man ar ; rives, with a definite plan and the de termination and ability to put it through, the task is not Impossible. W. O. Thompson, of Chicago, had such a plan, and after nine weeks of tireless working he has put It through. He has set In place the last cog in the new machinery of the "Protocol of Peace" in the cloak trade, by the introduction of J. E. Williams, of ll 'inois, as "Independent Chairman of the Committee of Immediate Action," which is to bring to quick adjustment of grievances in the trade. A month ago even the most optimistic friends of the protocol (which has prevented garment trade strikes for the last three years) had about given up hope that it could be saved. But Mr. Thompson came to the rescue. When asked why he bothered Mr. Thompson said: "Oh. I just butted in. It af | t'ects our Chicago protocol—lt affects | the entire national clothing indus | try." | Three Native Soldiers Put to Death by Posse Pago Pago, American Samoa, Feb. 13. — (Via San Francisco, Cal., Feb. 27.) —Three native soldiers of German Samoa were killed and another badly wounded in an all-day fight waged with a posse sent to arrest them, ac corded to steamer advices just re ceived from Apia. Dne white man of the attacking party was fatally wounded, dying soon after the encoun ter, and others were more or less seri ously hurt. The four Samoans had been sen tencer to three years' imprisonment for raiding, without authority, a Chi nese gamblinghouse and stealing the game stakes. They broke out of a guardhouse, entered the government < armory and made oq with rifles and ammunition. ■ i ■ lOLD-TIME COLD I 1 CURE—DRINK TEA !]' Get a small package of Hambun Breast Tea, or as the German folk call It, "Hamburger Brust Thee," at an> 1 pharmacy. Take a tabiespoonful ol the tea, put a cup of boiling water up- • on it, pour through a sieve and drin! 1 a teacup full at any time. It is tht most effective way to break up a cold i and cure grip, as it opens the pores i relieving congestion. Also loosens the < • 'wels, thus breaking a cold at once ' It is Inexpensive and entirely vege table, therefore harmless.—Advertise ment. UPTOWN PEOPLE TO HEAR DR. M'CUAIG Purity Lecturer Will Speak in Fifth Street Methodist Church on Sunday pMwwMMB Uptown church peo ple will have an op portunity to hear Dr. J. Aaplnall McCuaig, the "purity lecturer," who has been ln .* I. * structlng audiences of UM| men and women in • '■lt-, downtown churches •*1 yWBE lor the last few weeks. r * Mc Cuaig will fflftzlf " give a number of talks at Fifth Street Meth ■kJTmlßH odist Episcopal Church, giving his 1 , AoAJjI first one to women on 1" *» nrfV r t 1 Sunday afternoon at 3.30 o'clock. He will talk at the evening service Sunday and during the first three days of the week will lec ture at afternoon and evening meet ings. He will not speak Wednesday evening, his last lecture being given Thursday afternoon. ORGANIZE JEWISH SOCIETY Efforts are being made by two prominent. Rabbis, Babbi Levenberg, of Jersey City, manager of the Amer ican Society, and Habbi Glick, of New York city, to establish a local branch of the "Agudas Jisroel," a wide world organization of Jews, whose object is to solve Jewish problems. Meetings for the purpose of forming a local branch of the organization will be held next Saturday afternoon at 3 o'clock and Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock at the Kesher Israel Synago gue, Fourth and State streets. To Give Farce. —"Who is Who," a farce in one act, will be given by Class No. 9 of the Sunday school olr the Church of the Redeemer to-night in the Flatiron building. Nineteenth and Derry streets. Go-to-Church Day.—"Go-to-Church Sunday" will be observed at the First United Brethren Church on Sunday. Tho Rev. J. P. Spangler, pastor of tho church, will preach a special sermon and there will be special music. An effort is being made to have every member and friend of the church at tend the services of the day. Social at Derry St.—Comic songs by social committee, and the sale of a parody on "Old Black Joe," were the features of a social given by the Young Men's Bible class of Derry Street United Brethren church last night. More than 250 people were guests of the class. The first page of the program included a series of lan tern slides showing Washington and incidents in his life. The audience sang America, and the Rev. J. A. Yy ter, pastor of the church, offered prayer. O. P. Beckley made the ad dress of welcome, and Roy Mathias sang a song which was llustrated with lantern slides. The ladies' quartet of the church sang a song. Miss Phoebe Miller sang. The class song given by the social committee in full uniform of white coats prepared the way for th* eats. The church was decorated with polled plants. "Tlic New SouUi." —At the ut of the ordinary. Mayor Shannon reported the Stough t- bernacle cam paign, in Berwick, last December, in his professional capacity as a news paperman, and In the Mayors own language, when Dr. Siough preached Ills sermon on "Booze" the Mayor 'couldn't stand it any longer." He anil another reporter "hit the sawdust trail," together and announced their • ntentlons to live differently. With Mayor Shannon will be "Big Dick" Branston, of Berwick, a former pugilist, who was converted by Dr. Stough's evangelism. Branston is an English man, who left his home in Londor many years ago and hasn't been back since. BEWARE OK IMITATIONS With a so-called Behr Piano. Look for the trademark, viz., "A bear." Spangler's, Sixth above Maelay street. —Advertisement. Military Governor in China Assassinated by Poison, Is Belief By Associated Press Tien Tsin, China, Feb. 27. —Assassi- nation by poison is believed to have brought about the deatah here to-day of General Chao Ping-Chun, military governor of the province of Chi-Li, former premier under President Yuan Shi Kai. The Chinese statesman was ill only a few hours.] He was stricken last night and died this morning. General Chao Ping-Chun was a na tive of Ho-Nan and was one of the President's staunchest supporters. He was police prefect of Tien Tsin when he attracted the attention of Yuan Shi Kai, then viceroy of Chi-Li. Shortly afterward he was given a post in the ministry of the interior. After a pe riod of unemployment in 1909 and 1910, he was appointed minister of the interior by Yuan Shi Kai in 1911 Wnd this was confirmed by the national council at Uanking after the abdica tion of the Emperor. He was acting finance minister and acting premier early in 1912, and in September of that year became premier by election and held the office till July, 1913. FAR HORIZONS OF RAILWAY STA TIONS [From Collier's.] Ten years ago it was possible to dash madly up to a railway station in a cab —or a street car, though street cars de cline to ~o mad for anyone—and, hav ing reached the station, to leap through the door and out on to the platform with a few well-executed Jumps. To day, with faster street cars and taxi cabs which make the traveler three times as mad as the old kind and get him to places five times faster, we are farther away from our trains than ever, because when we get to the mod ern station door we are only halfway to our train. Rich or poor, athletic or bunloned, young or old and feeble and propped up with canes, we must all take the same pilgrimage on foot through the great million-dollar en trance arcade across the waiting room, so large that it has a horizon Instead of walls, across the grand concourse or north forty, as it used to be called be fore it was roofed over, down the ele vator, and on to the place where the train would have been had It been a patient and reasonable train. IT IS GOOD TO HAVE Player power. Our Players have six point motors. Spangler's, Sixth abo\e Maelay street. —Advertisement. IBM [T Extra Trousers With Every Suit .„d Overcoat E I Arj that iiiipßKM I ! SAV|NG I | s2s' SUITES a "d | k Urg Men Have Heard (" i I |b B H| \^lilv IV sensational price-saving figures this \\ y \ Efi among the hundreds of perfectly tal- loring. Perfect fit and perfect I SELL BROS. I 428 Market Street Wm BMt m m JMJ APFM EVERYEVENING 0 O'CLOCK. H| WT CIL SATURDAY NIGHT TILL 10 O'CLOCK. Important Revolutionary Movement in Progress in Portugal Says Dispatch By Associated Press Madrid, Spain, Feb. 27. —The Span- . ish government has received informa- ■ tion that an important revolutionary ■ movement is in progress in Portugal. According to an announcement made to-day by the Spanish under secretary • if state for the interior, a condition , of anarchy exists throughout Portugal. Every effort is being made by the mthorities here to obtain full par ticulars of the occurrences in Portugal, ■ but hiherto it has been impossible to , 'earn definitely what is taki g place, is all communication, including even wireless telegraphy, is interrupted. MY LITTLK BOY (Translated by H. W. Ettelson, from the Yiddish of Morris Rosenfeld.) I have a boy, a little boy, He is a youngster fine! Whenever I catch sight of him, I think the world is mlno! ' But of him, precious one, awake, I've seldom, seldom sight. Most times I find him fast asleep, Just see him in the night. The workshop calls me early out, ■— ■ mm ■—a m— !■ [CITRUSEXCHANO&)/yMi^^ In the orange and grapefruit groves owned by members of the Florida Citrus Exchange the pickers wear white gloves to protect the #■ fruit from bruises and contaminations. K ■ They clip —not pull—the fruit from the trees and carefully lay it in canvas K * lined baskets. The wagons in which the fruit is conveyed to the packing houses M have springs that prevent bruises on the way from the groves. m At the packing houses the oranges and grapefruit are washed by machinery and assorted m for size, wrapped in tissue paper ana carefully packed in boxes —all by white-gloved workers, M No child labor is employed in any packing house of the Exchange. fl No human hand touches the fruit from tree to the grocery or home in which the box is un- JK packed. This insures the consumer fruit handled in the most sanitary manner and the care taken fl with it means that it will keep well. You can safely buy it by the box. I Florida Oranges and Grapefruit Untouched by any 1 I Human Hands From the Tree To the Consumer 1 The Florida Citrus Exchange is a co-operat- Up-to-date grocers and fruit dealers in practi- H ive, non-profit making association of orange and cally every city and town have for sale Florida H grapefruit growers formed for the mutual pro- Citrus Exchange oranges and grapefruit. Your |H tection of consumers, dealers and producers. dealer probably will have the fruit in stock. H The mark of the Exchange in red on Tell him firmly that you want Exchange 0 boxes and wrappers means tree-ripened, fruit —that while other oranges and grapefruit S sweet, juicy, well-flavored fruit. No matter may be good; those with the red mark of the B what grade you Lay you will get more Exchange on the boxes and wrappers are sure K for your money if you insist on to be. Should you have any trouble in getting K Exchange fruit. this fruit, please write to K H.Moody, 2o7Trusteeßldg.,Harrisburg,Pa. District Manager, Florida Gtnu Exchange > - V- ••• - ••• ' *• . •: - . -■ .. -v...- ~ . _ av-,' v | And late I leave the place; Ah, strange to me my flesh and blood, , Ah, strange my own child's face. I come through pall of darkness home, Fagged out and in a daze. And my pale wife to cheer me, tells Of baby's cunning ways. How sweet he talks how cute he begs: "Please mamma, tell me. do. When is dear daddie going to come And bring me penny, too." And hearing this, I dart away, For so It needs must be. The father-love flames passionate: "My child must, shall see me." I stand beside his tiny crib, I see and ah, I hear. The little lips ask In a dream: "Where is my daddie dear?" I kiss his eyelids tenderly They open wide—sweet sight! They see me now, they see me now. But soon again shut tight: "Here's father now, my one, my own. A penny for you, there!" The little lips ask In a dream: "O where Is Papa, where?" I stand there stricken, deep-distressed, And speak in accents sore; "Sometime you'll wake my child, alas. And find me here no more!" —From the Survey . SOUR. UPSET STOMACHS FIXED IN FIVE MINUTES—PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN Best For Indigestion, Gas, Heart hum and Dyspepsia— It's Great! When your meals don't fit comfort ably, or what you eat lies like a lump of lead In your stomach, or If you have heartburn, that Is a sign of Indi gestion. Get from your pharmacist a fifty cent case of Pape's Dlapepsln and take a dose Just as soon as you can. There will be no sour risings, no belching of undigested food mixed with acid, no stomach gaa or heartburn, fullness or heavy feeling in the stomach, nausea. OPPOSE I/OAN" SHARKS By Associated Press New York, Feb. 27. —For the pur pose of combating the usurious loan evil and establishing loan and savings companies on the Morris plan throughout the United States and Can- debilitating headaches, dizziness or In testinal griping. This will all go, and besides, there will be no sour food left over In the stomach to poison your breath with nauseous odors. Pape's Dlapepsln Is a certain cur« for out-of-order stomachs, because It takes hold of your food and digests It Just the same as If your stomach wasn't there. Relief In five minutes from all stomach misery is waiting for you at any drug store. These large fifty-cent cases contain enough "Pape's Diapepsin" to keep the entire family free from stomach disorders and indigestion for many months. It belongs In your home.— Advertisement. Ada the industrial finance corporation was organized here yesterday. Among the backers of the movement are An drew Carnegie, Vincent Astor, Bishop David H. Greer. Dr. Elgin R. 1,. Gould, Arthur J. Morris, Nicholas Murray Butler and Theodore P. Shonts.