skin torments! THE soothing, dealing medi cation in Rcsinol Ointment an-1 Resijioi Soap penetrates every tiny- pore of the skin, clears it of impurities, and stops itching instantly. Resinol speedily heals eczema, rashes, ringworm ar.dothcr eruptions ar.d clears awav disfigur ing pimples and black! icads, when otner treatments prove a waste of time and money. Reaicol is noi an experiment. It ia a doctor s prescription WH.ca proved BO wonderfully aucccutul for ekln troubles that it has beeu used by other doctors all over the country for the past nineteen years. Sold by all druggists, Kesicol Ointment, 50c and sl. Itesinol Sotp, 2Se. For trial free, write to Dept. 42-S, Resi nol, Baltimore, Mda Avoid imitations. ACLtARCtiMPLtXION Ruddy Cheeks—Sparkling Eyes —Most Women Can Have »aya Dr. Ed wo r«l«, n Well-Knonn Oblo riijalclan Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17 years treat ed scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well-known vegetable ingredi ents mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, you will know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a normal action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter that one's system collects. If you have a pale face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, head aches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets nightly for a time und note the pleas ing results. Thousands of women, as well as men. take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets now taid then just to keep in the pink of condition. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the suc cessful substitute for calomel—loc and "5c per box. The Olive Tablet Co., Co lumbus, Ohio. At all druggists.—Ad vertisement. f PEOPLE-:- | \ OF ALL AGES :! E < h [ <« , X <Tonie ta X». rWlllpa far #rat-£aee daota; ■ . I wTrk »c.«« my aa. p.. M . tk in tb* (root rank. *7 •** ' > 1 oarlene* ba» enabled mt ta adopt the , > 2 moml tboroeffa tod ptlnkea methods o/ < > I Jlrforwlni dental operstlona. n Day »» "J practtca baa iaeraaaad ? tba direct auparrlatai of myaalf. , , X PVTIL 1 bad »• employ ttarea fraduata , , k «««Ut*ot» "bo are of auparlor aMlitr. , Y Tt will par Too to baY. oa do your work. , , X _____—— —————— " > i Don't worry about paysaaota. ar 1 ' A rangaaasta caaba made u> nil 1 1 © pat tenia. " 9 Plata*. H and up. J ) 9 Crowa and Brldca Wart. UH. IS. , , 0 HUiofa iu all*ar alloy, raamel. Sue op. } Oohl. (1.00 up. ; 6 Era'. Work, Baal Katartal, Lowaat Prloaa. ' ! p Written goaraiitaa wltb By work. 1 1 DR. PHILLIPS i| I 320 Market Street ! ? Otic* Haari Daily, I.M A. M. tat! ! f P. lL: Studaya, to ta 1 £ C. V. TTI.tPHOK! SMY & LADY AITSKDAJfT t* Tba largaat and mi tUaraochly ' C> rc-alppod oraca ts city. * 1 & gk&k&k iroxza. < i > Branch Ottcaa—&«adl£( aad Pkiladatpkia. < I Upholstering jj |! DECOKATIXG of all kind* !| II AWM.NGS made to order i> !> CARPETS sewed and laid l| <[ tall upon or plione j| JOS. COPLINKY ji ][ SowMsor to H. A. Yolluier, j| 12081/2 N. Third St jj Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In .November Jv. I Sit. IHAINs leavt; H»rrisburg— I-'or Winchester and .vlart'.baburg at ft.Uv. *7 .62 a. m.. *3:40 p m. I'or Ua.erstuWD, car Halts, Mechanics.<urg tin' 1 nterniedliaia itallulia at 5.03. *7.52. *11:53 a. m 'i.iu, *7 4ii. *11:16 p iu. Additional trains for Carliala and ai a'u ta. ***., i:ls. 1:37, t:SU. »:3u a. m. For Diilsourg at &:OS, *7:62 uo *11:53 a. tu.. 3:lb >3:40. 6:32 and t:3u p. ui. 'Dally. All otaer trains dailv except fcunday. H. A. KIDDLE, J. H. TONGE. U. P. K bupt. f CHAS. H. MAUK SI UNDERTAKER Sixth and Kalker Striata Larjeat eatabliahment. Beat facilitiea. Near to you at your phone. Wiil *o anywhere at your call. Motor aervicc. No funeral too amalt. Nune too cxpenaiTe. Cbapela. rooma, vault, etc., uaed wilfe- But charge. * ■ ' BGHSEHDEE Non-greasy Toilet Cream keeps the skin »oft and velvety In rough weather. An exquisite toilet prep aration, 26c. GOKUAS DRUG STOKES 10 N. Tblrd St- and P. K. K. Station Try Telegraph Want Ads, MONDAY EVENING, MANY PERSONS ARE DEADJND HURT [Continued from First Page.] St. Louis; killed In jump from sixth floor. JOHN' MARTIN RICKEY. 40. of St. Paul, JAMES 111 LEV, 55, a guest at the ! flub. j Among the mining are: j AI. LEX HANCOCK, typewriter I salesman. I WILLIAM E. DECKER, president jof paint eomiwtn)'. ; .ICHN' RETZ, president of plumbing j j company. WILLIAM J. KINSER, president 1 eonstrnetion coiu|>any. TWOMAS SHYNE. manager type writer cxcliHiige. • WILLIAM SHIELDS, president dye company. tiEOliliE OOEHVER, president commission company. DAXIEL WEATHERLY, salesman u liolesale dry sixxis eoni|>any. THOMAS WRIGHT, secretary of Apollo Clulj. WILLIAM ERl>. real estate dealer, ; East St. Louis, 111. j The property damage is estimated lat more than J1,000,000. In the vaults of the bank covered by the ruins are more than $1,000,000 in currency and $27,000 in coin. Jump From Windows At daylight only part of the front and rear walls remained. The roof ! had caved in, carrying several floors I with it and the sidewalks had col lapsed from the roof to the ground floor, which is occupied bv the bank. When the firemen arrived a few minutes after the blaze was discov ered the flames were shooting out of the roof and all the windows above the second floor. Men were Jumping from windows, others were climbing down ropes made of bed clothes. More than a dozen jumped several stories to roofs of adjoining buildings and suffered broken legs or less ser ious injuries. Those who escaped un hurt ran about the streets in bath robes or night clothes apparently frenzied, until they were forcibly car ried into neighboring hotels. Heroism bordering on the super human was exhibited both by firemen and guests at the club. The fire fight ers time and again dodged one fall ing wall only to find themselves un der another tottering mass of granite and brick. Theodore Levy, of Louisville. Ky., clung to a window sill until both his hands were scorched almost black. Just as he was about to let go a fireman grasped him about the waist and carried him down a ladder. At the City hospital Levy later said two RUB BACKACHE AWAY W THOLD_TIME OIL The Moment You Rub Your Sore, Lame Back All Pain Goes OLD TIME ST. JACOBS OIL Get a Small Trial Bottle and Put An End to Lumbago and Backache at Once When your back is sore and lame! or lumbago, sciatica or rheumatism has you stiffened up, don't suffer! ■ Get a small trial bottle of old, honest "St. Jacobs OH" at any drug store, pour a little in your hand and rub it right into your back, and by the time j you county fifty, the soreness and i lameness is gone. Don't stay crippled! This soothing,' penetrating oil needs to be used only; once. It takes the ache and pain right out and ends the misery. It is magical, yet absolutely harmless and doesn't burn or discolor the skin. Nothing else stops lumbago, sciatica and lame back misery so promptly I and surely. It never disappoints! ' —Advertisement. afflgaagmTii; uitiaiwi-'" -"-""-j* Neuralgia if not attended to, may be- i come acute and weaken the system. Stop it promptly with the one remedy sure to soothe the nerves and kill the pain— SLOANS LINIMENT —deadly foe to toothach*, sciatica, and rhaumatism. Sir. li. W. Gillespie, of Denmark, Tenu., R. F. D. No. i. writes: "I liad been suffering with neuralgia for seme time. Sloan's Liniment was recom mended to me, and I uaed some of it, and it itopped the pain entirely." At ill dtalere. Price 25c., 50c. t SI.OO Dr. Eari S. Sloan, I no, Boston, Mats. CONVULSIONS AND BRIGHTS DISEASE An Established recovery in chronic Bright's Disease with albumen, dropsy, ! retinitis and convulsions should inter est physicians. O. W. Kirkpatrick, of the Globe Mill ing Company, 148 Laguna St., San Fran cisco, was in bed believed to be at the point of death for nearly nine weeks. Dr. Proctor told his wife he was liable to die at any moment. There was dropsy and eye symptom and he had reached the convulsion stage. In mak ing one of the tests, after boiling Dr Proctor dropped the tube. On picking It up he found the sample had not run out. it had solidified, showing almost ■olid albumen. The doctor administer ed Fulton's Renal Compound. This was In 1905. Patient's appearance at our office well and hearty In 1913 Is answer as to the results and their perma nence. The ability of Fulton's Renal Com pound to reduce albumen In many cases of Brlght's Disease is not a matter of opinion but a FACT IN PHYSICS, and we will mail formula for albumen test that will show the percentage of albu men from week to week. As the albu men declines improvement commonly follows, recoveries having been report ed in thousands of cases. Formula and literature mailed on request. John J Fulton Co., San Francisco. J. H. Boher! Druggist. 209 Market street, is local Agent. Ask for pamphlet.—Advertise ment. —— C. W. TOWSON'S Hitch Grade GOOD I,I'CK and DANDY BRAND BUTTERINE Good I.nek, 25c Ib.t 2 lba. lor 49c1 3 lbs. for 70ci S lba. for 91.15. I Dandy, 23c Ib.t 2 lba. for 45c | 0 lba. for SI.OO. The best grades for table, cooking and baking. We guarantee all goods we sell. Deliveries to all parts of the i city. Bell phone. MB MARKET STREET 1C SOLTU THIRTEENTH ST. I of the men who had b«en killed jumped from the window to which he had clung. Club Manager Aroused Robert C. Magill, manager of the club, and his wife were aroused by the smoke. They discovered the fire in the dlnlngroom on the third floor and before seeking their own safety rushed up and down the halls knock ing on doors and waking guests. Both were badly burned about the face* hands and feet. League Men Escape Among those who escaped was Wal ter Frisch, financial agent of the St. Louis Federal League baseball club. Mordecal Brown, manager of the team, arrived here from New York, last night and remained at the club until a few hours.before the fire was discovered. The telephone operator, a young boy, remained at his post on the i ground floor, even after the firemen • began pouring water Into the building. I Many of the guests credited their es- I cape to him. The flare of the lire brought thou- j sands of spectators to the scene, only j to hamper the work of the firemen 1 until driven back by the police. Be fore long hundreds of automobiles be- j longing to members who had been ap prised of the fire lined the downtown streets. Men and women, relatives and friends of victims who were known to have lived at the club rushed to the hotel, then to hospitals, then to the morgue seeking some news of men whom they sought. Judge Bishop Saved Judge C. Orrick Bishop, assistant circuit attorney, roomed on the sixth floor. "The sound of flames crackling like giant fire crackers awoke me," said Judge Bishop. "Thank God there was a fire escape in front of my window. I ran down the six flights. I saw several men Jump and bounce off the sidewalk like rubber balls. I was only slightly bruised coming down the escape." Thirteen men escaped from the fifth floor of the building by sliding down a rope made out of two sheets. The story of the escape was told by Lewis Gaylord, an advertising man of New York. Gaylord was in a room on the fifth floor. When he took the room he examined the fire escapes and no tices that the roof of the building oc cupied by a seed company was only fifteen feet below his window. Gaylord was awakened by screams. Throwing on a bath robe he ran into the corridor which then was filled with smoke and rushed to the stairway. The carpet on the stairs was ablaze and the elevator shaft was a furnace from top to bottom. He then started for a window opening on the roof of the seed store. In the corridor he heard some one cry: "I am blind. Don't leave me here to die." Gaylord made out in the smoke a man groping his way along | the wall. Gaylord led him to a room i occupied by Henry Baker. Blind Man Rescued In Baker's room Gaylord and the unidentified blind man were joined by nine others. A yaung man took command oi fthe situation and tying two sheets together fastened one end of the improvised rops to a radiator. The twelve men went down the rope hand over hand and all were rescued from the roof of the seed store. Meanwhile the smoke began pouring 1 into the room forcing the men still waiting to close the door and ceasing calling others to join them. J. R. Stephens was the last man to go down the improvised rope. As the men stood on the roof of the j seed store they saw about twenty men at the windows of the sixth and ! seventh floors of the athletic club. One jumped to the seed store roof and broke his leg. Gaylord and others went to the edge of the roof and shouted for help. Flrement raised a ladder through a; trap door, but whe nthe men on the roof drew up the ladder and sought to ' rescue those at the windows above the ladder proved too short. Another lad der was sent up and the Gaylord party descended without waiting to see whether the men on the upper floors were saved. They think, however, that all who crowded the windows were rescued. Three Men Fatally Burned and Two Hurt at Fire By Associated Press Clarksburg, W. Va„ March 9.—Three men were perhaps fatally injured and two others were seriously hurt in a firt here to-day which destroyed the Lowe building and damaged the ten- : story building of the Union National I Bank of Clarksburg with a loss of ! $140,000. Archie Wilson, Dallas! Swiger and Earl Brown Jumped from ' the third story of the Lowe building and were so badly hurt it is believed they cannot recover. Marsh Cannon, ' district manager of the Philadelphia Gas Company of Pittsburgh, and Rob ert Hughlll were cut off by flames while attempting to save valuable pa pers from their office and tried to I escape by means of a rope. They slipped and plunged to the street. Both were badly hurt, but may re cover. The cause of the fire has not been ascertained. WE WISH TO KNOW Of any dissatisfied customer owning a Spangler piano. Address Spangler Piano. Sixth above Mac-lay."— Adver tisement. To Cure a Cold in One Day Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets. Druggists refund money If it falls to cure. E. W. Grove's signa ture ia on each box. 25c.—Advertise ment. THE CRAFTINESS OF VIOLINISTS Thomas A. Edison, who has an ex- ( pert knowledge of every known musi cal instrument from the oboe to the Aeolian harp, was discussing the great violinists of the present age. He spoke with deep feeling. "I have to admit," he declared sadly, "that for a long time those fellows had me completely bewildered. I used to watch them in amazement. Every time one of them shot a finger half way down the neck of his fiddle and stopped It in exactly the right place for the sounding of a note, I gasped in astonishment. Every time. It seemed, he could stop that finger cor rectly within one-thousandth of an inch. That's what he had to do in or der to make the right note. And t concluded that he and his fellows were in some way superior to all other kinds of people in the matter of judg ing distances. "But I know better now. After long and careful observation, I have dis covered the truth. Those fellows shoot their fingers up and down with an air of great confidence, but they never know exactly where the fingers will stop. Like any other human being, they guess at It. Then, just as the note is begun by the scraping of the bow, their trained ears catch the de fect, and they readjust their fingers. Consequently, although the public doesn't know it, the great violin geniuses In the world fill their work with a lot of notes that start falsely." —The Popular Magazine. DREDGING ENGINEER DIES By Associated Press San Francisco, Cal., March 9. Cap tain Charles A. Morris, a well-known dredging engineer and who aided J. P. Holland In the construction of subma rines, died yesterday at Los Oatos, near here. Morris was a resident of Bloom- I field, N. J. He came to California for his health last December. J HARRJBBURG TELEGRAPH TEXANS DISSATISFIED. RECOVERED DODY tContinued First Pa<?e] body from Mexico but later this was denied. Captain Sanders was one of the men who "were informed" that the body could be found at a desig nated place. The other two were American Consul Garrett, of Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, and Deputy Sheriff Petty. They went to the scene osten sibly to secure further information on the Vergara case, but admitted later 'hat they had been told that the body had been returned. Who were their informants was one of numerous ques tions each official in turn refused to answer. They did say, however, that neither United States or State officials had any part in the actual trip into Mexico. Employes Suspected Later rumors said former employes of the Vergara ranch, chaffing at the delay in securing the body for proper interment by the family had taken natters into their own hands. Surmises that Mexican authorities might have taken this method of re turning Vergara's body to the United Stales were forestalled by a remark of Consul Garrett, who expressed the belief late lust night that they did not yet know of the body's removal. Mexican Leads Party Despite the mystery as to who was resp-nsible for the return of the body there seemed little doubt as to the actual facts of the reco\ ery of the body. There were only nine men in the party who gathered on the river bank late Saturday night near the •Joint where Vergara was alleged to have been seized February 13 by Cap tain Apolonce Rodriguez and three Federal soldiers. A Mexican who claimed to have witnessed both the execution and burial of Vergara led them across country toward Hidalgo and skirting the sleeping town, showed them a new grave in a fur corner of the cemetery which had caused com ment when Vergara's disappearance became known. The gave was shallow and no care had been exercised to pro tect the body from the covering earth. A rude pine box soon was lifted out and the workers evidently had known the ranchman, for they made certain they had the body they sought. The homeward journey began with the party still unchallenged. Once back on American soil they rested their burden for final identification.. This was made by the family and the bodv was consigned to the waiting officials. Xo Permission Granted The party had no permission from Mexican authorities to make the trip and secure the body and Consul Gar rett said last night he had never re quested permission from the Federals to have this done. What complica tions, if any, might result from the trip into foreign territory, apparently caused no uneasiness among Vergara's friends, who pointed out the peaceful character of the party. Texas Rangers Did Not Take Body of Vergara , By Associated Press Austin, Texas. March 9. Texas Rangers did not cross the Mexican border nor participate in the expedi tion by which Clemente Vergara's bodv was secretly exhumed from Hidalgo, Mexico, cemetery and deposited by persons as yet unidentified on the Texas side of the Rio Grande before daylight Sunday morning, according to the official version of the Vergara. incident from State Capitol sourttd to-day. It is claimed that this ver sion was borne out by dispatches from Laredo, Texas, the nearest point to Hidalgo where investigation could be made and transmitted by wire. Last night s statement that rangers recovered the body was based on the following telegram from Ranger Cap tain J. J. Sanders: "1 proceeded to Hidalgo, Mexico, obtained body of Veragara. Have it here." The telegram was dated Laredo, but the word "here" it referred to was the point above Laredo on the Rio Grande where Vergara made his home. State' officials accepted the telegram as meaning that Sanders actually entered Mexico. Governor Colquitt wired Sanders for details early to-day, and after talking to the ranger captain over the long distance telephone, gave out the following statement: "Captain Sanders, commanding Company B of the Texas Rangers, at Laredo, advised me by telegraph that he had recovered the bodv of Ver gara. I wired him for full particulars. He advises me that he did not go into Mexico, but was informed that the body of Vergara would be delivered on the Texas side of the river at a par ticular place named, at 3.30 o'clock Sunday morning, where he found It. As to who brought it across the river, he does not know. He had no assist ance in this transaction except from t'.ie family and relatives 6*f Vergara, who fully identified the body." Vergara Was Lured to Mexican Side and Shot By Associated Press Washington, D. C. t March 9.—Evi dence gathered by American Consul Garrett and Texas authorities to prove that Clemente Vergara, an American citizen, was lured into Mexico from his home in Texas and subsequently ex ecuted by troops of the Huerta gov ernment, injected another serious as pect Into the Mexican situation to-day. Senators had prepared to debate the conditions that had arisen for the protection of foreigners as a result of the recent execution by Mexican con stitutionalists at Juarez of William S. Benton, a British subject, and to-day's news, it was pointed out, served to emphasize that both factions in the Southern republic had been offenders in this respect. Wilson Expects Full Report From Colquitt By Associated Press Washington, D. C.. March 9.—Presi dent Wilson expects a full report from Governor Colquitt and American Con sul Garrett as to the manner in which the body of Clemente Vergara, an American citizen, killed in Mexico, was returned to American soil. After reading news dispatches, some Rich Red Blood la yours if you take HOOD'S i SARSAPARILLA, which makes the blood normal in red and white corpuscles; relieves pimples, boils, scrofula, salt rheum or eczema, catarrh, rheumatiam, dyspepsia, I nervousness, that tired feeling. I ANNOUNCEMENT 1 9 m Spring Style Standard Woolen Co. Branch of the World's Greatest Tailors 19 N. Third Street, Cor. Strawberry Ave. Harrisburg, Pa. /I/ex. Inspection Invited. No Obligation to Buy. SAMPLES GIVEN FREE. saying Texas Rangers had crossed into Mexico and hud availed themselves of permission by the Mexican federal au thorities to American Consul Garrett to recover the body, the President and Secretary Bryan conferred at length. The President pointed out that the Huerta government had supplied little information about Vergara, declaring simply that it would Investigate, but expressing the opinion that Vergara had joined the Constitutionalists. Con sul Garrett's dispatches have said Ver gara came to his death at the hands of Mexican federals. Senator Fall, of New Mexico, to-day received the following telegram from Governor Colquitt, dated Austin, Texas, March 8: "Am just in receipt of a telegram from Captain Sanders, of Texas Ran gers, saying he had returned from Hidalgo, Mexico, with Vergara's body, and now has it on American soil. (Signed) "O. B. COLQUITT, "Governor, Texas." MORE: EGGS FROM CHINA By Associated Press Vancouver. B. C., March 9. The Canadian Pacific steamship, Empress of Asia, arrived to-day with 3,500,000 Chinese eggs, consigned to places in the United States. • BAILEY BOY RELEASED By Associated Press Rochester, N. Y., March 9. —Ray- mond Bailey, aged 16, of Marysvllle, Pa., who was arrested Friday night in Rochester on a charge of burglary, was released late Saturday when he was claimed by his father. Mr. Bailey states that his son has been associat | ing with older boys and that they led him to committing at least three burg laries. He said that he would take care of the boy In the future and the youth was released from custody. Two Items In the same day's paper may or may not belong in iuxtaposi- I tlon. The first Is in the foreign news: I "Blight Descends on Fig Trees." The second is on the fashion page: "Women Will Wear Fewer Garments This Sum mer."—Cleveland Plain Dealer. i Ihe Cheap Rate Season Is at Hand. Railroad Tickets to the Far West and North west at Special Low Prices. I v ] Now is the time to inquire about | the low rate special tickets to the J West, Northwest and the Pacific Coast. | What part of the Western country I are you interested in? Write and tell I me. Let me post you about the cost I of a trip there, and how you can travel comfortably and quickly. I can send you some interesting ! folders, with maps and pictures of ! the country you may want to know about, and they won't cost you any thing. Remember I am here to help and to give you information about trains and rates. Call on me for It. White to -1 day if you can't stop in at the office. INo charge for my service. The rail- I road pays me. Wm. Austin, General Agent, Passen ger Dept., C. B. and Q. R. R. Co., 83G | Chestnut street, Philadelphia.—Adver i tisement. of Teeth, | I Come In the morning. Have your teeth made the same day. Plates repaired on short notice, MACK'S PAINLESS DENTISTS SlO Market Street. Open Days ana bveulogs, v.—■■■» STOMACH SUFFERERS! READ THIS So many stomach sufferers have been benefited by a simple prescrlp : tlon of vegetable oils which cured a Chicago druggist of chronic stomach, liver and Intestinal trouble of years' standing that we want you surely to try this remedy. It is known as Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy. One dose will convince you. It usually gives wonderful relief within 24 hours —even in the most stubborn cases. Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy Is sold here by all druggists.—Ad vertisement. Efe ■ ■ m an curable. AD ktada Ifl E ■ ■ n mean suffering enr B# | ■ Wm dancer. Th« CAUSE ■ B i« a]way* Infernal Kj 9 kliU Dr. Ltonhardt'i " , • HEM-ROID "J" 1 "* results by attacking the INTERNAL CAUSE. The pile* are dried up end permanently cured. 24 days' treatment, 11.00 DR. LEONHARDT CO.. Buffalo. N. Y. (free book Bold by Kennedy Medicine Store, HarrUbaia J A McCurdy Steelton. and dealers. AMUSEMENTS Victoria Theater Over Niagara fv jTJ/ Fella— 4 Acts VvV X]J// North of 53 \Y The Higher Aj j/L MARCH 9, 1914. J. SIMON _ JSipionJ PARIS | I The only preparation which removes absolutely j Chapping, Roughness and Redness, > } and protects the hands and face against the winter winds, i 1 \ SIMON'S Powtler I MaurloeLEVT, sole U.S..Agenl, ([ <3 Soap I 15-17, West 38til B', NEW-YORK Better Than Wealth is perfect health; but to enjoy good health it is necessary first to get rid of the minor ailments caused by defcct [ ive or irregular action of the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, —ailments which spoil life, dull pleasure, and make all sufferers feel tired or good for nothing. HlKBMrs pills (The Largest Sole of Any Medicine in the World) have proved themselves to be the best corrective or pre ventive of these troubles. They insure better feelings ; and those who rely upon them soon find themselves so brisk and' strong they are better able to work and enjoy life. For that reason alone. Beecham's Pills are The Favorite Family Medicine Sold everywhere. In boxes, :oc., 25* Directions >vith every bo*: 6 how the v,cy to £cou health. YOU can add a lot of pleasure to smoking if you Stick to the habit of ASKING for KING OSCAR 5c CIGARS I They are worth asking tor Another year added to their fame as the standard nickel quality smoke. i Regularly good for 23 years AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS V ia CPU irrnrpcnw THE FLYING VENUS JUJLI H JtrrtKoUN THE MYSTERIOUS EDNA P^::«N,^O V OK HARRY THRILLER ARTHUR GUY & CO. Empire 4 | 7 Bracks mm | 01J So'dier Fiddlers BHa ™ L. ■ MAJESTIC ThEAIER w,L " r "' v m" a APPE, ~ LU-IIIUNI W LU. AND NIGHT | NOW Edwin L. Relkln ! /> O* J /tf• if V pre»ent« George Sidney (Himself) ROSA KARPE IN THE NEW EDITION OF THE NND HURRICANE OF HILARITY DAVID LEVENSHON "RIIQV L77Y" Supported by tbe Lenox Theater M Compuf of Yiddish Players In With the Inimitable Comedienne, . . _ , . ( CARRIE WEBBER Notable Cast K nn .LL - II _ _ A of 50 Musical Comedy Farceurs A Mother s rleart jus/sbus? so - A Musical Comedy In 4 Acta. PRICESt Matinee, 25c, 60c; Etea- Prlcea 35c, 50c. 75c, *I.OO. Inga, 25c, 50c, 75c, *I.OO. . ,mf RETURN ENGAGEMENT— : MAJESTIC THEATER, TBURS or, U MARCH 12TH. Matinee and I The Great Sensational Fire Pay " THE FIRE BRIGADE " 50— PEOPLE—SO. Capt. Harry DeLong, director and manager. Under the nnapicea of the Flremen'a Union of Hnrrlsburg. A >troß| play por traying the thrilling; scenes and Incidents In tbe life of an American Fireman. See the Murder Scene—The Ennlnr House Scene—The Lynch ing Scene—The Great Fire Scene—The Thrilling Life Net Leap Horace i Fire Apparatns and Firemen In Action on the Stage. Reserved seats— 50c, 75c, *I.OO. Boxes, *IO.OO and *7.50. Seats now on sale at Theater llnx Office. Try Telegraph Want Ads. Try Telegraph Want Ads. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers