Pimples Are Signals ot Distress And By Using Stuart's Calcium Wafers They May Be Removed Quickly, Surely and Harmlessly. Before the blood becomes entirely teipoverisheil it tells man of Its eon flltion. It warns him repeatedly. These messages are conveyed by pimples, blotches, liver spots, eczema, tetter, fash, etc. If one disregards these iymptoms one runs the risk of perma nently diseasing the blood beyond of cure. mushh^h Jl M v - 'iHB M A Fnc«» iMlde ftadluut After I'triug | JStuart'n I ulctuiii Wafer* Is «t Hrautlfiii Slight." Don't worry ami give up hope, l'ou' ofcu secure easily, quickly, hurnilepsly the very hope you desire if you really wish to remove pimples, blotches, skin j Ulhcol orations, blackheads, rash, tetter, J etc. No matter upon what part of the< body the blemishes occur Stuart's Cal-1 ciutn Wafers will rosily tint your skln.j give you better, purer, stronger blood,; and thus rebuild your entire body, for blood i» the secret of all health. " j Calcium Sulphide contained in these pleasant little wafers is the strongest) blood purifier known. It abolishes pim ples, etc., in just a few days, while inj ti week rso the change in your com-! plexion will actually astound yc. The beauty that conies after using these wafers Is so extremely gratifying to women that they cannot speak" too highly of their changed appearance, and hence it is that Stuart's Calcium Wafers enjoy the greatest patronage of any remedy sold. Building and purifying the blood Viuilds up all that women so much de sire—face, skin, nerves and body tone. Thus it is that when one.uses Stuart's Calcium Wafers the entire system Is glad, and responds in a manner that is quickly felt and speedily seen by others. Go to your druggist, no matter where ho may be located, and obtain a box of Stuart's Cftlciui Wafers. Price 50 cents.—Advertisement. Electrically Baked Bread Just as Good as Mother Made, Too [From the Electrical World.] Through the use of electric power, Che largest business in the Rocky mountain region has been built up by : one baking firm. Flour is hauled di- ! rectly from the miljs ujnl handled by | two electric elevators. Electric motors are used to drive] gravity mixers and sifters as well as | to (Jrive the pumps used for taking water from artesian wells. Every morn ing at 2 o'clock two electric mixers arc used to tear up the dough. Batches of 1,000 pounds each are mixed for twenty or thirty minutes, after which yeast, sugar and starch are added. When these are assimilated the machine tilts automatically emptying the dough in a trough where it is kept at a tempera- 1 ture of eighty degrees, Falir., and al lowed to raise for about eight hours. It is then deposited in a hopper from which It drops by gravity to two motor driven dividers. The dough in each machine Is forced in by a weight, four plungers simultaneously producing four loaves at the rate of 3,800 loaves an hour. The pans containing the loaves are I then placed in racks and taken to the cooling room to permit the loaves to form their crusts. When the crust is 1 formed, sufficiently, each loaf is auto matically wrapped in wax paper and sealed by a motor-driven wrapping machine. The 75,000 loaves are delivered to railroad stations, hotels, restaurants, etc., by electrically driven vehicles. Franklin County Boosts Candidacy of Kunkei Another lengthy petition endorsing the nomination of President Judge George ICunkel as a candidate for Jus tice of the Supreme Court of Penn sylvania was received by the campaign committee to-day. The petition is from Franklin coun ty and contains the names of 112 prominent citizens of that county—all the names the petition will hold. Adams county, it is understood, is busy with another big petition, and this Is being rapidly filled. Portland, Ore., Swept By $1,000,000 Fire By Associated Press Portland, Ore., March 12. Fire to day swept all that section of the Port land water front on the east side from the upper to the lower Alblna Ferries, destroying Columbia dock No. 2, and Montgomery docks No. 1, th* steam ships Cricket and (llenroy nnd much other property, entailing a loss estimat- i cd at |1,000,00u. Tile aiea burned cov ered six blocks. The steamship Cricket was rut loo«p to permit her to lloat down the river so liremerr could betier combat the flames on the dock, but the big ship, In stead of going to the center of the stream, floated along the docks, spread- , ing the fire. Suffragist Greeted by Hoots at the Colonial Suffragists of this city were loud to day in their expressions of indigna tion at the treatment accorded Miss' "THEY WOHK FOII YIIV AI,L Sl'JlJIEll" PALM LEAF FANS TlTlHifflfk n,al{e an acceptable Rift, and with vour advertl.se n>ent - printed from engraved plates, vou are *s- '""ed distinctive advertising and 100 per cent, dIs ■SMWhTJIwiI ' nl ribution. No waste. We ln >Port SATIN FINISH PALM LEAF FANS 11 "»ormous Quantities direct from ('Ulna in three <'""dard sizes, therefore can quote you on I an* of Mazliiioiii Quality at Minimum I'rlcr*. These fans come packed to th<- case and lie are booking orders now for June Ist delivery Let us know the number of cases in which you m »re interested and we shall be glad to qi*,te you m prices. \ NATIONAL MANUFACTURING CO. \ Nothing hut Advertising Novelties. \ Palmyra, Pa. IjraiK'li oiliee, :!07 Patriot Hiillding, llarrMmrg. THURSDAY EVENING, I "BILLY" SUNDAY SHAKES UP NEW | | YORK IN TRUE SUNDA Y FASHION I [From the New York Sun.] New York does not lack preachers who strive for sensational effects 111 their pulpit oratory, or gladly resort to rhetorical violence in their efforts to arouse their auditors to good works and godly lives. Yet we do not re member that even the most daring of these ministers Of the gospel has ever turned away 5,000 woula-be hearefa after 3,000 had been packed into the auditorium in which his message was to be delivered. 'i' His is the tiling that Billy Sunday did 011 Monday nignt at Carnegie Hall. Mr. Sunday's methods are not novel. 'He is, indeed, old-fashioned to a de gree. His doctrine is of the simplest. He preaches heaven and hull, God and the devil, in the familiar manner of the campmeeting evangelist. His ap peals are crude and rough. He does not seek to -.vili his converts With honey, but belabors them with threats. He uses copiously tne slang 01 tile street. There is no refinement of dic tion, no careful balancing of phrases, no effort to soften his denunciations, to excuse sinners, to make the path of the righteous seem easy. Harsh, blunt, uncompromising, how does he achieve results that ha*'e put him in a unique position in this country to-day'.* The churches wonder and complain at their empty petvs. "Keligion I? dead" moans the despairing Christian: it has been killed by golf, by Sunday baseball, by socialism, by indifference, by a cheap sophistication that springs l'roni a petty bit of half education, swallowed but not digested. And mean while Billy Sunday achieves such tri umphs at the sinners' bench as recall the noble days of old, and give life to a gallery of worthies at whose activi ties the knowing poke mild fun. "Billy Sunday will do in the Middle ; West, in the rural environment," say ! ROOSEVELT'S FIANCEE PRESENTED AT COURT •> hBE js§l m I -«Sli MISS BELLE WILLAKD London, March 12.—Miss Belle Willard, daughter of Joseph E. Willard, I nited States Ambassador to Spain, was easily the most beautiful girl pre sented to Kin# George and Queen Mary at the second court of the season. Aliss \V illard's engagement to Kermit Roosevelt, son of Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, was recently announced. The gown worn by the American bud in making her initial bow before English royalty was unusual in that it departed from tlio simple white and silver effects usually consideree do rigour for debutantes at court in favor of a more elaborate display ol color. !t was of mauve silver tissue embroidered in pearls and diamante, having a draped skirt, slit In front to show an underskirt of lace, embroidered in parts. A mauve tulle drapery added a chic touch to the back, forming a pointed apron effect. The bodice of draped mauve tulle was cut rather low in front and back, and the short sleeves were edged with pearls. Mrs. Clarence Moore, of Washington, and her daughter, Miss France! Moore, were also presented at the second court. Mary K. Bakev.cll, of Pittsburgh, when she attempted to deliver a suff rage speech last night in the Colonial theater and was greeted by hoots and yells from a certain group in the audi ence. Miss Bakewell declares only a small crowd of "stupid hoodlums" were re sponsible for the noise and uproar. She says she intends corning back to this city to speak when she will be assured of a courteous audience. The executive board of the State Suffrage party was in session late this atternoon at suffrage headquarters in the Arcade building. the wise men. Thereupon Billy Sun : j day betakes himself to the towns and 1 : cities that rejoice to call themselves ' urban, and turns thein upside down, ' . repeating with their smug populations 1 1 Ills successes with the supposedly less ; 1 alert ruralists. He comes to the capl ; j tal of supercilious provincialism, self satisfied, conceited New York, and the [ | belated police are put to It to handle ' the crowd lie draws. 1 That Billy Sunday, In his own language, has "the punch" Is plain; but ! that does not explain everything. Other men not less sincere, not less de voted than Billy Sunday fail where !he brings prosperity to his cause. Is it j that he has the gift, the mysterious ; call, which marks one man out of thou sands to do the particular kind of work ■ In which lie engages? ' Over the value of the results ob- J tained by evangelical work of the sort | done by Billy Sunday there Is still , dispute. The campmeeting and the I revival have been subjected to the stat- I Istlclan's impartial examination and condemned 111 tabular siateinents. The backsliders are notorious; yet there are some who do not backslide, some I brands plucked from the burning, some [ repentant ones who amend their ways. 1 Perhaps the statistician cannot tell the I whole story in his carefully revised ' columns. I One thing Billy Sunday does prove. , The talk of a decline in religious in -1 terest is without substantial basis. The I hopes and fears of immortality possess | the human heart. Perhaps the institu- I tional church, with its subtle invitation ! to faith through shower baths, gym nasiums, moving picture shows, and dance halls, may not draw thein out to j expression, but when the master chord iis touched they r«veal themselves In j these days as the} - did in the times ot lour fathers. Hot From the Wire Iliy Associated Prtss Sacramento, Cal.—Detectives and i sheriff's deputies of Sacramento •cbunty are searching today for a , camera box containing dynamite said to have been sent from San Francisco to one of the leaders of the "army" of unemployed, camped ! across the river, which it was said, jwas to be used in blowing up one of I Sacramento's Are engine houses. ] .Newport News, Va. —All ready for 'light or frolic the giant superdread naught. Texas, the most powerful battleship afloat In the world to-day, left the yards of her builders here! the Newport News Shipbuilding Company for the Norfolk Navy vard, there to be turned over to the navy. St. Petersburg. —The extraordi nary military estimates Just submlt i led to the Russian Duma amount to over $00,000,000, showing an in j crease of thirty per cent, as com pared with 1913. Milwaukee, Wis.—Differences over , the selection of a referee, which at one time threatened to cause a post ponement of to-uight's ten round bout between Willie Ritchie, lighl ( weight champion, air' Ad Wolgast, I were settled to-da.v by ilk« appoint |ment of Harry Stout, of this city. &ABRISBURG TELEGRAPH CODED ACTION ON DIVISION ST. SUBWAY Improvement League and Munici pal Bodies to Request Railroad Co. to Open Street Concerted effort to obtain the open • ing of the division street crossing of I the Pennsylvania Railroad Company will likely be taken Monday evening |at a meeting of the subcommittees of the West End Improvement I.eague, the Chamber of Commerce, the River side residents, former Park Board, the Municipal I-ieague, the Motor Club of Harrisburg and the City Commission. _ Karl Steward, chairman of the West End League's committee, said to day that the invitation to the other organ , Izatlons had been extended and that I the gathering will probably be held in the Board of Trade. | The program for the meeting lias ! not been definitely mapped out, but , it is understood that a resolution will |be adopted by joint action requesting j the Pennsylvania Railroad to open the street. Whether or not a subway | or a bridge will be erected across the j tracks is a matter that will be threshed | out later; the concerted action of the I committees Monday evening merely being the initial step toward placing the problem definitely before the rail road company. ATTEMPT TO HOLD I P TRAIN San Jose, Cal., March 12.—A sheriff's posse, the city police and detectives of the Southern Pacific Cdmpany are investigating to-day what appears to have been an at tempt to hold up the Southern Paci fic coast line limited, known as the Lark in this city last niglit, Michael Geurin, a special railroad policeman, drove the supposed robbers awav after a pistol battle. Geurin was wounded in the right leg. HEARING SET FOR APRIL 6 By Associated Press Washington, March 12.—The Fed- | eral Industrial Relations Commission' to-day set Monday, April 6. for begin- j ning its public hearings In Washing- I ton Into methods of adjusting differ ences between employer and employe such as collective bargaining, concilia tion and arbitration. Witnesses will include corporation olHcials and trades union leaders who have negotiated and maintained trade agreements in live of tlio largest Industries of the country. WILL OBSERVE CI.EVEL.VN I>\S BIRTH Caldwell, X. J.. March 12. Exer cises in commemoration of the birth day of Grover Cleveland will be held under the auspices or the Grover! Cleveland Birthplace and Memorial ] Association here on March 15. A parti of the ceremony will be the dedication' as a permanent memorial of the house in which Cleveland was born. I WILL STUDY AIR CURRENTS By Associated Press New York, March 12.—Efforts will be made, it was learned to-day, to ob tain from the government at Wash-1 ington and from the Canadian authori ties the assistance of meteorlogists in making observations from an aero plane which will be flown off the coast of New Foundland during the coming summer. The purpose is to determine the force.and direction of air currents at various altitudes. STATE IX CHARGE OP BANK Columbus, 0., March 12. Emery Lattanner, state superintendent of banks, announced hero this morning that the State had taken charge of the Miners and Mechanics Bank at Xelson ville, Ohio after state examiners re ported at midnight that the liabilities of the bank are $45,000 in excess of the assets. State examiners were placed in charge of the institution as liqui dating agents. WEBBING DATE FIXED New York, March 12.—The wedding of Miss Helen Dinsmore Huntington and Vincent Astor will occur on April I 30, it was announced by friends of | the family. The ceremony will prob ably take place In the church of St. | Margaret in Staatsburg, N. Y. CHILD RE IV SKE SHOW Through the courtesy of a number of contributors, fifty children from the I Children's Industrial Home enjoyed tin, 1 performance of "The Fire Brigade" at I the Majestic Theater this afternoon. 1 hey were brought to the theater and taken home in a special car. The little J folks enjoyed the performance. STOLE POOL BALLS, CHARGE George J. Metz, aged 23 years, 331 Dauphin street, was arrested this i morning by Detective George Shuler, j charged with the larceny of a num- | ber of billiard balls from various pool i and billiard rooms. TO ATTEND CONFERENCE An important meeting on home and kindred charities, of the Grand Lodge, I. O. O. F., of Pennsylvania, will bo held in Philadelphia on Saturday George A. Hollinger, of this city, will attend the conference. MUSTEROLE A Magic Ointment For N uraMa I Ease that throbbing pain, that split ting headache, in a twinkling with a little MUSTEROLE. Try this clean, white ointment' J (made with oil of mustard) to-day. l Millions have found It a marvelous relief. Millions use It now instead of the old-time mustard plaster. For they know MUSTEROLK does not blister as old-time mustard plasters did. Best for Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Croup, Stiff Neck, Asthinu, Neuralgia. Congestion, Pleurisy, Rheumatism, Lumbago, all Pains and Aches of the Back or Joints, Sprains, Sore Muscles, Bruises. Chilblains, Frosted Feet, Colds of the Chest (it prevents Pneumonia). At your druggist's, in 25c and 50c jars, and a special large hospital size for *2.50. Accept no substitute. If your drug- I gist cannot supply you, send 25c or 50c to the MUSTEROLE Company, I Cleveland. Ohio, and we will mall you j a Jar, postage prepaid. RUSH A. WEBSTER. 794 E. 165 th St ! New York City, says: "1 can highly recommend Musterole I to any one suffering from Neuralgia or cold In the head." (gg) | EMS : | Evangelist Stough Gives Fathers Some Hot Shot Tells Tlieni How They Fnll to Be Boys' Heroes Mt. Camel, Pa., March 12. —Be- fore an audience of more than 4,000 In the Tabernacle last night the Rev. Dr. Henry Stough, the Illinois evan gelist, delivered "Homo Makers and Home Breakers." He said: "God intended that father and mother should be all supreme over their children," and added that tlio example of good parents was lacking In many homes. 'The boy's father is bis hero," he said. "His daddy is the biggest man jthe little knows anything ! about. Are you the head of your i family? Are you your boy's hero? | Then how did you act at home? Did | you get up last. Sunday morning and | run about the house in a pair of old ! carpet slippers and an old hickorv | shirt? Perhaps you did not eves shave until dinner time. But you got on your hat and coat and started J for the nearest cigar store and ! bought your devil's bible. Some of you people are ashamed to be seen on the street carrying our old Oxford Bible, but you load up with a lot of Sunday papers with a lot oT lurid pictures. This is what some of you have to do on Sundays. It beats all what amuses some of you heroes." With stinging sarcasm the evan gelist said that since the wives of these men did not have kodaks to show them how they looked, he Avould do it himself. He affected a reclining position in a chair, adding bitingly that the only danger of the position lay in the possibility of the brains running to the feet. "In the meantime." said the evan gelist, "mother would be in the back room tying up little pigtails and get ting the children ready for Sunday school. The children are rebellious and your wife asks you to speak to theui. You growl out something about minding their mother and slide a little farther down in the chair, with your corncob pipe hang ing out of your mouth. "Little Johnny comes in sullen. He has combed his hair in front. He has spit on the blacking brush and given his shoes one or two swipes. He is saying under his breath, "When I get big I won't go to Sunday school, but stay at hoiuo like daddy does and read the papers.' And he means it. It is all because his father is his hero." The evangelist said that unless the mother is the stronger character of the two, in nine cases out of ten the boy would follow his father and, he continued, "The most pathetic hour that comes to a boy is when he finds that his father is not as good as he thought he was—not his hero." GAS WELL PROVES SUCCESS Special to The Telegraph Ridgway; Pa., March 12.—A gas well which was drilled on the P. R. Smith farm, three miles from here, has attained a capacity of 1,000,000 feet. The depth of the well is 2,414 feet and drilling will continue for 100 more feet, until the bottom of the sand is reached. INSIDE COMMITTEE The executive committee of the Democratic State committee is meet ing at the Market Square windmill this afternoon to consider changes to rules as suggested on the typewritten draft, and may also frame up the rest of the slate for May. BUTTORFF & CO. New Cumberland Our Spring Display of Furniture, Car* pets, Rugs and House Furnishings Is Ready For Your Inspection You will find a large and varied collection of new and distinctive styles of first class quality at prices which effect a real saving. Parlor, Library, Bed Room, Dining Room, hail and Kitchen Furniture, together with Rugs, Carpets, Draperies, Linoleums and - Window Shades, Which Will Completely Furnish Your Home. We invite you to look over our two floors, abundant' in goods that denote a first-class furniture store. 3rd & Bridge ButtOrff & CO. Open Streets The L^e s,ore Less ,he Lar^e Prices ' Evenings New C u mberl an d^Pa^^^^^^/ MARCH 12.1014. HTKAMSniI'B STIOA MSB IPS . ARCADIAN to EUROPE 1 k TWIN SCREW, 9,000 tort# Reg. 14,120 Oi»p,(Fbr NORWAY]| Hk Suite# dt Luxe with Privfcta BUHi.Swininii\|| SummtrCruiMi Jl Gymnasium. Orch«»tr* »n« Other Features. A V . WONDERFUL RATES J&Ji wz -A NEW YORK HAY C V jflmmUH iv Jlj f % BERMUDA A MOT to AI II If ll || M "THE BALMY SOUTHERN ROUTE" Jl I HIIH H I , The Royal Mail Steam Packet Company nil N || || 11| H |W K SANDERSON * SON, ti.nrrnl AirrntM, 22 HWtr Mil || || || ||| H r St.. Xnv York, or any local Steiiiunhlp Ticket nl II II ll 111 I Deaths and Funerals Mrs. Berry Dead ; Mrs. Anna Elizabeth .Berry, 65 ; years old, wife of Theodore P. Ber ry, died this morning shortly after 7 o'clock at her home, 1245 Swatara I street. She Is survived by her hus ! band and seven children, including I! Levi, John, Hoy and Clyde, and Airs. , Frank Relsser, Mrs. John Schuffer and Mrs. William Wharton, all of this city; and two brothers, John Funk and Frank Funk. Funeral ser vices will be held Monday afternoon 1 at a o'clock with the ltev. Dr. Claton ! Albert Smuckef, pastor of the Ste vens Memorial Methodist Episcopal church officiating. Burial will be made in the East Harrisburg ceme j tery. 111.0 l till Ft'XEHAL ' Funeral services for Charles Homer Blough were held tills morning: from his homo, 1583 Vernon street. The Rev. | Francis H. Laird pastor of the Olivet Presbyterian Church, assisted by the I Rev. Dr. J. A. Lyter, pastor of the Derry Street United Brethren Church, officiated. The body was taken to I Annvllle for burial. EINERAI. OF MRS. McOORMELI, i Funeral services for Airs. Elizabeth ! MCQortnell, need 83, who died yesterday i morning, will be. held Saturday after l noon at 1 o'clock from the home of her i son, William S. McGormell, at Dauphin. I The Rev. J. AV. Slioop, formerly pastor of the Steelton United Evangelical Church, assisted by the Rev. H. C. | Lutz will officiate. Burial will be made j in the Pleasant View Cemetery. t uii.n OIKS I Josephine It. Thompson, aged 4 years, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Thompson, died yesterday at the home of the parents at Eberly Mills. Funer- I a I services will be held to-morrow af ! ternoon at 1 o'clock. Burial will be j innde in tiie Harrisburg Cemetery. AFTF.It THE PRESIDENT - Mayor Jolm K. Royal headed a ! committee of the Central Democratic I Club and the West End Democratic [ Association on the trail to Washing ; toll to invite the President to make a speech at the Jefferson-Jackson din ner, but willing to take a cabinet ot- I fleer if they could not do better. WILL Rl'N AGAIN ! Nomination papers were tiled this afternoon by three candidates for the I House of Representatives on the Dem j ocratlc ticket from the Second district of Berks county. They are B. Morris Strauss, Howard W. Body, Daniel A. i Rothenberger. Karluk May Drift in Ice Across North Pole By Associated Press Seattle, Wash., March 12. —A news dispatch from Dawson, Yukon Terri tory, says R. 8. Ironsides, collector of customs at Dawson, has received a let ter written at Mcpherson by a friend who interviewed Villijalmur Stefans son, commander-in-chief of the Can adian Arctic exploration expedition, who was there last month. The letter says Stefansson has gone back to Her sclicl Island off the mouth of Mac kenzie river and intends to start out Immediately over the Arctic. Continuing, the letter says: "Stefansson thinks that the explor ing ship Karluk, which was blown from the vicinity of Point Barrow, Alaska, into the Arctic Ice field during I a blizzard last September, leaving Stefansson and three other scientists ashore, may forestall Captain Roald Amundsen in ills coming attempt to drift across the pole. The Karluk Is provisioned for live years and Stefans son seems to be of the opinion that she will be carried across the pole by the ice and come out north of Green land, if she escapes being crushed." INQUIRY IS RESUMED By Associated Press Washington, D. C., March 12.—Thfe Senate lobby investigating committee resumed activity to-day, which Clar ence W. DeKniglit of this city, was called to explain his connection with certain army and navy contracts, lie was also interrogated concerning Pan ama canal legislation in which ho is said to have been interested. LOCAL DRUGGIST SAYS: "TAKE ONLY ONE DOSE" We want to tell those in Harrisburg ' suffering from stomach or bowel trouble that we are agents for the simple mixture of buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., known as AUler-i-ka, the remedy which became famous by curing appendicitis. This is the most thorough bowel cleanser known and JUST ONE DOSE relieves sour stom ach, gas on the stomach and consti pation almost IMMEDIATELY. You Will be surprised at the QUICK action of Adler-i-ka. Geo. A. Gorgas, Drug gist.- Advertisement. UNDERTAKERS RUDOLPH K. SPICER i Funeral Director and Embalmer SIS Walnut St. Bell Pbona 7