NARROW ESCAPES AS TROLLEY CAR OVERTURNS; ONE KILLED CT.ATTON' Wdl.ra MRS \V 11.MAM C. SHERMAN W "-"'iMMMi - £rß& <&,■ «tfepfe§*2#Usgs MISS GRACE RUPP That more persons wore not killed in the cross river trolley car acci dent of last night is considered miraculous. Above are seen passengers who came through the accident with injuries. Only one man, Clayton Wolfe of Shiremanstown, is in a dangerous con dition. His skull is fractured and little J 1 ope is entertained for his recovery. 01 111 KILLED Hi EIGHT INJUBEO [Continued l'rom First Pago.] man, the motorman, suddenly put on the airbrakes. The car shot straight ahead, tearinpr loose from the front trucks, turning on its side and sliding sixty feet across the road against a fence. Where Sorrow Dwells In the little homo near the old toll gate In Camp Hill, C. E.' Jones, the husband of the dead woman, confronts the problem of caring for a family of live small boys made orphans by the accident. The lads range in age from Billy, one year old, who hasn't learned to talk, to Clarence, 13 years old. The others are Robert. 10; Frank, 8, and Clinton, Jr., 6. The picture in the locket that Mrs. Jones was wearing was that of a twin to Robert, who died in infancy. A mere chance brought death into the Jones home. Mr. Jones said this morning that ho suddenly decided to go to Shiremanstown ten minutes be fore the fatal car was due. He told his wife he was going. She spid, "Take me along as I haven't been out to day." They Almost Missed the Car As they walked down to the cross ing to take the car, the locket fell to the sidewalk. Jhey had trouble in finding it and almost missed the car. As they were sitting in the car, Mrs. Jones was looking at the picture of her dead baby in the locket. She turned to her husband, showing him the va cant place in the locket. "When are you going to give me that picture of yourself for the locket?" she smiled. •Tones had a little picture in his . pouketbook, and was just handing the pocketbook to her when, with a crash, the car tore from the tracks, the lights went out. and an instant later the moaning of the injured and the crashing of glass was heard. The heavy car when It left the tracks ...turned on the left side. Mrs. Jones had been sitting on the right side. She ► was thrown across the ear, through a window and her head was crushed under a window frame as the car fell Frail Women •uffer discomfort—are languid, fretlul and nervous, because their blood is thin or insufficient, but if those so afflicted could folly realize the wonderful blood-mak ing properties of SCOTT'S EMULSION they would not deprive themselves •f it* benefits. Nourishment alone—not drugs or alcohol—makes biood—and Seotfs Emaliton is the essence of medical nourishment tree trom wines, alcohols or opiates. SCOTT'S EMULSION offer meals fills hollow cheeks, overcomes ml languor and makes tranquil (Pl|| nerves. Ituf Sab«tit«ln. •%j|K TUESDAY EVENING, i .. , asrton Wolfe, who may die, was nit by a falling Beat. Schlldt, whoso neck was gashed; was Injured hy fall ing through a window pane. The oth ers were cut by flying glass. i)!, a .' J r I'Viured From Wreckage physicians from Shiremanstown and lemoyne were called out by the rail way company as soon as the Lemoyne offices were notified. From the home oi Harry Straining at the curve help | came at once, and the injured were learned into the house until a special car was brought to take them to the city. Jones discovered that Mrs. Jones was dead as soon as the car had settled on Its side. With a match he searched around in the blood stained car until he found his wife with her head un derneath part of the car. He pulled the body out into the car and crawled out into the star-lit night. He was cared for at the Straining home. Wrecking Gangs Arrive The neighbors hurried to the scene of the accident, an<\ aided in caring *i e ' n j ure( '- The wrecking gangs or the traction company came next, and shortly alter 9 o'clock Coroner J. • Deardorf of Mechanicsburg* arriv ed. Meantime two of the injured bad been taken In a special car to the river and here the police ambulance from Harrlsburg met the car and took Wolfe and Schildt to the Harrlsburg hospital. The other injured were able to go to their homes. From Harrlsburg and ' Mechanics burg crowds of people began to gather as the news of what had happened spread They saw the long heavy car of the heaviest type In use on the road! lying on its side near the fence. The State i oad \\ here the wreck occurred was torn up in a wide swath eight inches deep. On the tracks the front trucks were standing turned at a tan gent to the tracks. In the floor of the I overturned car was a twisted bolt by which the trucks had been attached I to the car. This was broken off. Suddenly Shot on the Mr Sherm »". the motorman, is the oldest motorman in point of serv ice in the company's employe. He has been running cars for twenty-one years. He is a notary' public in Le moyne. At the Inquest he said the car was going a little more rapidly than he liked when it oame over the top of grade after crossing the Cum berland Valley railroad tracks. He was putting on the hand brakes, and thought ho had better apply tho air He shot It on suddenly, and tho next instant the car jumped straight ahead and turned over. C. E. Jones, the husband of tho dead woman. Is of the opinion that the I momentum of the car was too great to be stopped by the sudden appli cation of the brakes. He said: "it seemed to shoot straight ahead and the momentum didn't seem affected by the air application." John Dohoney, investigator for the Public Utilities Commission, started to look into the accident last night. He will make a thorough inquiry. The Valley Railway Company officials would make no statement to-day. (Jang Works All Night The car waß righted and taken to the car barns at Lemoyne at 4-30 o'clock this morning after the track gangs had worked all night at the wreck. The car is not much dam aged, and all tho repairs can be mada at the local shops. / The trucks were first righted on tho tracks and then the body of the car was put on the trucks. It was hauled down by other carß. Mrs. Jones is survived by her hus band and five children, her mother Mrs. Carrie Speck, of Hagerstown, who is visiting at the Jones homo now Bruce Speck, of Camp Hill; Fred Speck, of Big Pool, Md.; Mrs. Harry Gluck, Greencastle;-Mrs. David Wiles Waynesboro; Mrs. Hugh Cunningham' Hagerstown. RIVERSIDE MEETING A meeting of the citizens of Rlver slik will be held in the .Methodist 'Church this evening at 7.4& o'clock. COLUMBIA GRADE CROSSING CASES A Hearing Held at the Capitol To day on the Move For Aboli tion of Grades 4 The conditions X surrounding grade A crossings of rall- IHf roads in Columbia were the subject nt a hearing held at tho Public Sor -1 cMi 11 vice Commission LSjPS IrfflfWnr by John P. =* UUulm. Dohoney, the in-' B Iffi iS vestigator of accl- * f " vlste , d Vh the eL phice J®, 8 -"® & report to the commission. Officials of the railroads and borough appeared to-day for discussion of the mn tter. The commissioners began their ses sion for the week to-day and will be here until Saturday. It is likely that they will select an engineer and tlie name of F. Herbert Snow, chief engi neer of the Department of Health, is heard in gossip about the Capitol as a possible appointee. The commissioners, however, state that nothing has been determined upon. Good Reports Made.—Good reports about the interest at supervisors' con-* i £? ntlons are being received at the State Highway Department. The se | ries this week will/be next to the last and will include a number of central counties, among them Union, Snyder, Somerset, Cambria, Center and North umberland. Payment of Tax. —The Harrlsburg Light and Power Company to-day paid the State $1,903.13 as State tax on gross receipts. Counties Heard From. Reports showing the organization of mothers* pension boards in Beaver and West moreland counties were made from Westmoreland and Beaver counties to day, Justices Named. Governor Tener to-day appointed these justices of the peace for Schuylkill county: James Turley, Reilly township, and Frank J. Kerschltsky, Delano township. State Charters.— State charters were issued to-day as follows: Pannonia Beneficial Building and Loan Associa tion, Philadelphia, capital $1,000,000; Oxford Temperance Hotel Company, Oxford, capital $15,000; Spring Grove Ice and Ice Cream Company, Spring Grove, capital $5,000; A. E. Huston & Co., insurance. Philadelphia, capital $25,000; Frederal Knitting Co., Inc., Philadelphia, capital $20,000; National Real Estate Bureau, Philadelphia, capital $5,000; International Tooth Company, Philadelphia, capital $lO,- 000; Waynesboro Trust Company, Waynesboro, capital $125,000; Carbo -1 and Coal Company, Scranton, capital $20,000. , Twenty Arrests. —Twenty arrests of men for the sale of cold storage prod ucts and violation of pure food laws were ordered by Dairy and Food Com missioner Foust to-day, most of them being in Philadelphia. Capitol Visitors. Among the vis itors to the "Hill" to-day were Colonel A. B. Berger and Councilman E. B. Babcock, Pittsburgh; Senator Joseph H. Thompson, Beaver Falls; ex-Con gressman B. K. Focht. Lewisburg, and Major Levi G. • McCauley, former Auditor General, West Chester. Police Searching For Man Who Attempted to Hold Up New Haven Train By Associated Press Boston, Mass., March 17.—Police all over Massachusetts are searching to day for a masked man who last night attempted to hold up a passenger train on the New Haven Railroad near the Darby station. The train was moving slowly when the engineer noticed the would-bc robber, armed with two revolvers, standing on the track ahead and sig naling for a stop. The engineer put on full speed. The masked man stepped aside and pointed his guns to ward the coaches.' The passengers dodged under cover and no one was hurt. New Brain Room Is Cure For Paralysis By Associate J Press New York, March 17. A new op erative treatment for spastic paralysis or paralysis accompanied by spasms, which he declared had been success ful, was llustrated by Dr. Daniel Sharpe at a meeting of the Medical Association of Greater New York. A dozen little children once par alyzed on one or both sides, attended the meeting to show what Dr. Sharpe had done for tl em. The pride of the little ones as they showed how they were able to move once useless limbs brought smiles to the medical men. Dr. Sharpe's operation for the dis ease, which was a result of brain pressure due to cortical hemorrhage before, during or Just after birth, con sists in decompressing by direct opera tion on the skull with removal of enough bone to glvo new brain room. COMMERCIAL TRAVELERS ENTERTAIN THEIR LADIES The Commercial Travelers and their ladies met in Cameron hall at one of their regular social events. Five hun 'dred was the entertainment, con- I ducted in a unique way, prizes being offered to those bidding eight and nine. There was much rivalry and some plunging for high bids. •Refreshments were served and a !pleasant evening enjoyed by about 'forty members and friends. «rf. '* ,r ■ ■\ , j;i HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH O'fWH Miooc&rown £f)iabSPißfr{g BURGESS WOULD USE "DKUNKS" ON STREETS . i Wigfield Suggests That Men Conld Work Out Their Fine and Costs When Gerry Thompson was arrested 011 his forty-ninth birthday yesterday for being drunk and disorderly, ho made an excellent opportunity for Burgess Wigfield to start a reform ■movement which will save the borough 1 money in its street Improvements. | Thompson had never been arrested I in his forty-nine years before, and he , was sorry when he appeared before I the burgess. He wanted to work out Ills fine and this Btarted the burgess thinking about the evil that results frequently from Bonding a man to jail for the lirst offense. He put Gerry under a suspended sentence with the understanding that as soon as Gerry could get work he should pay the costs of the suit. Mean time he has started inquiries to learn if it is possible to have men arrested for being drunk and disorderly work out their fine and costs instead of go ing to jail. "The idea of present day adminis tration of the law is not to injure a man who has committed a crime, but rather to reform him," said the bur- I gess. "It certainly does not have that i effect to send a man to Jail where he : is confined doing nothing at the coun- I ty's expense. If it is possible it would I enable us to save these men from In-I Jury and at the same time enable the borough to get labor for its improve ment jobs." BAN ON THE "GROWLER" At a recent meeting of the local ho-, telkeepers It was mutually agreed to j stop selling to men with families who are In destitute circumstances. The | "growler," or small bucket of beerj that goes across the bar and out tO| the home of the drinkers, was also 1 placed under a ban. HELP CHARITY Three of the borough (Ire companies have joined in the movement started some time ago to raise $2,000 for charity work and have made liberal I contributions to the recently organized Associated Charities. At a meeting last evening contributions were receiv ed f jm the Citizens'. West Side and East End companies. GET RAIL ORDEK The local plant ot" the Pennsylvania Steel Company has- received an order for 1,200 tons of standard section steel 1 rails from the Ontario and Western railroad. WEDDED FIVE YEARS Mr. and Mrs. Leroy H. O'Donnell entertained a number of friends at their home, 237 Harrisburg street, last evening, in honor of their tilth wed ding anniversary. Games and music were followed with refreshments. Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Gross, Mrs. William Wilson and son Charles, Miss Mary Plsle, John Stein er, Mrs. John Knoble and Minnie Knoble, Mrs. Frank Arnold. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Gaul, Miss Pearl Selders, Lloyd Gladaclier, Miss Catherine Stoll, Thomas Reinhnrd, Mrs. A. C. O'Don nell and son Charles, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hurst and daughter Bernice, Mr. and Mrs. Franl; Kerns, Franklin and Mary Kerns, Dewald Reinhard, Mable Hyler, Robert Miller, Flora Hy ler, Clarence Glbb, Mary Buller, Wei mer Reinhard, Mr. and Mrs. Becker and daughter Ella, Mr. and Mrs. John P. Shelley, Miss Alice Downey, Mr. and Mrs. Leroy O'Donnell. WORK ON WATER MAIN Work on the laying of the new twelve-Inch water main in South Front street will be resumed Monday, it was announced to-day by Superinten dent O. P. Baskins, of the water de partment. STEELTON CHURCHES TO HOLD GREAT REVIVAL' Plans for a series of big union re vival services in the Protestant church es of the borough have been complet ed. The services will begin Monday, ..iarcli 23, and continue for two weeks. Union services will be held each even ing. The first meeting will be held In Centenary United Brethren Church, South Second street. The churches which will parti pate In the revival will be the Centenary United Brethren, St. John's Lutheran and the First Presbyterian. No out side evangelists will be secured and local ministers will alternate in pre siding over the meetings and In de livering the sermons. MHS. I'OGACIC BIHIED Funeral services for Mrs. Katie Poguclc, who died yesterday, were held this morning in St. James' Catholic Church. The Rev. Futher J. C. Thomp son officiated. Burial was made in Jit. Calvary Cemetery. MHS. ORTEXZI'S FUNERAL Funeral services- for Mrs. Giocomo Ortenisi, who died Sunday at her home, 349 South Fourth street, were held this morning In St. Ann's Catholic Church. The Ilev. B. Sama officiated, and burial was made in Mt. Calvary Cemetery. ANNOUNCE BIRTH Mr. and Mrs. B. M. Book, 224 Pine street, announce the birth of a son, March 15. FURNACE RESUMES After a suspension of several months the No. 1 blast furnace at the Penn sylvania Steel plant ~here, resumed op erations yesterday. CONFERS DEGREE Baldwin Commandery, Knights of Malta, conferred the golden degree up on a class of candidates last evening. WANTED FOR FORGERY Wanted in Frederick, Md., on charges of forgery, W. H. Coates, of Franklin street, was arrested yesterday and taken back to Maryland by Constable C. M. Hauvor. of Frederick. MEMBERS OF STEFANSSON PARTY IN UOOI) SPIRITS By Astociaitd Prut , Ottawa, Ont., March 17.—Mail Just received at Ottawa from the Royal Xorthwest mounted police stationed at Fort MacPherson transmitted let ters to the naval department from Vilhjalmur Stefansson, written last January. Stefansson reports that the mom bers of his party are all In good spirit* and are conducting valuable explora tion work in the Mackenzie Delta, which has never before been accurate ly mapped. He refers to his projected sled trip over the ice of the Arctic; ocean Into the unknown region t<> the] uorttiwMt of Herschel Island. SICK MEMS i: LEIVE BURNING HOTEL I Old Washington House in Middle town Destroyed by Early Morning Blaze A blaze discovered at 1:15 o'clock ■ this morning gutted the rear of the Washington House, the oldest hotel In Mlddletown, and for a short . time threatened the business section of the i borough. The loss, which has not yet . been estimated will run into thou sands. The building is insured. ■ j When the blaze was discovered tlio i fourteen guests In the place rushed I from their rooms to the street clad | only in flight clothes. C. C. Etnoyer, I the, proprietor of the place, has been I ill 'n bed since Thursday. Firemen carried him from the burning building to a place of safety. . While the exact cause of the blaze lis unknown, it is believed that it was started by rats gnawing at matches In | the wash room. The blaze was dis ' covered by Roy Balmer who told I. K. I j Deckurd. Mr. Deckurd turned in the ', alarm. ' ; The Washington House is situated directly opposite the old Young busl -1 ness block, In the midst of the busl j ness section. Close behind it is one ' 1 of the largest, department stores in ' | Mlddletown. That no greater damage j was done is due no doubt to the fact I that no wind was blowing at the time. DEBATE ON TOLL} QUESTION • Whether or not the Panama Canal toll exemption bill should be repealed will be the subject for debate at the meeting of the Mlddletown Debating Society this evening. Charles Prizer and S. J. Flanagan will attempt to prove that the United States should not charge tolls for American ships, , and Clem Leftwfch and J. B. Martin ■ will attempt to prove the contrary. ALUMNI TO MEET I A business meeting or the Middle- Itown High School Alumni Association II Will be held 111 the High School room , this evening. MIDDLETOWN PERSONALS A. L. Wagner is spending a week with relatives in Hanover. 1 M. W. Seiders spent Sunday with [ friends In Dauphin. Mrs. G. N. Selzer Is visiting relatives i in Pottstown. Mr. and Mrs. G. I. King were guests I | of friends in Lancaster. Sunday. ; Mrs. Adam Baker, of Altoona, was . the guest of relatives here, Sunday. BOYD GIVES 550.000 FOR PINE ST. CHURGH [Continued from First Page.] railroad commissioner's widow. Mrs. Eleanor Herr Boyd, to be held as long jas she lives. Upon her death the estate Is to he divided among the chil dren with a proviso that 110 distri bution or partition shall be made until the youngest child attains the age of 21 years. Will Dated 191;! The will is dated October 17, 1912, and In a codicil of the .same date it is stipulated that the $50,000 that is pro vided for each of the daughters is to be held in trust and invested by the | Girard Trust Company, of Phlladel- I phla, and the income given to the daughters. Should the daughters die without heirs the money is to revert to the Boyd estate, and in the event that there be children then the be quest is to be divided among their children. The-will authorizes the sale of prop erty and the reinvestment of the pro ceeds whenever the sale shall be ap proved by Mrs. Boyd. Mrs. Boyd is also made guardian of the minor chil dren and named as an executor, with her eons, James and Jackson Herr Boyd. The references to Mr. Boyd's boquest | to the Pine Street Presbyterian Church i were brief. ' "I give and bequeath to the Pres byterian Church in Harrisburg com monly as Pine Street Presby terian Church," reads the will, "the sum of $50,000 in trust for the pur chase of a site and the erection there on and the equipment of a building for tho carrying on of the institutional work of the church among men and i boys, the plans for said building to be ] approved by my executors." Provision for Maintenance Provision for the maintenance of the proposed working out of the edu cational and social center plan for men and boys is made as follows: "I give and bequeath the sum of $50,000 to tho Dauphin Deposit Trust Company of Harrisburg in trust to in vest, reinvest and keep Invested in the same, and to apply the net income thereof to the reimbursing from time to time of the said Pine Street Pres byterian Church for such salary or sal aries as may have to be paid to a worker or workers with such men and boys, this legacy and the preceding legacy to be clear of collateral in heritance tax, which I direct my ex ecutors to pay." QUEEN ESTHEII CIRCLE • PLEASANTLY ENTERTAINED The Queen Esther Circle of Ridge Avenue Methodist Church was enter tained last evening by the Misses Mary and Helen Neeter, 1427 North Sixth street, with a flower contest and pea nut hunt. Refreshments were served In St. Patrick's Day style to Mrs. Frank H Gregory, Mrs. Harry C. Jordan, Mrs. Percy Uupltic, Mrs. Don Manahan, Mrs. Cora Ewing Harr, Miss Annie Winter. Miss Catharine Helcher, Miss Maude Sites, Miss Mary Evans, Miss Verna Miller, Harry C. Jordan, Frank H. Gregory, Freeland Manahan, Ed- GUEST OF MISS LYONS HAVE HUNT FOR PEANUTS Guests of Miss Ethel Lyons, 1901 North Third street, had fun in a pea nut hunt, where prizes were won by Miss Myyrtle Barbour and Miss Helen Gotwalt. Music, dancing and singing followed a buffet supper. The guests were ethe Misses Jean Springer, Penle Donnelly, Helen Got walt, Elizabeth Parson, Alma Blough. Myrtle Barbour and Ethel Lyons; Em ery Dare, Maurice Taylor, Vincent Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Hutton, George Hutton, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Da vidson, Mr. and Mrs. William Lyons. BARBERS TO MEET James C. Shanessy, organizer of the International Journeymen Barbers' Association, will address a mass meet ing of local barbers at 6 South Fourth Btreet this evening. The meeting has been called by the local union und a i large turnout is expected. The meet ing Is to be held at the headquarters| of the local union. " J MARCH 17,1914. I I THE UPTOWN SHOPPING CENTER P « | • GET A TRANSFER I Robinson's 0- THIRD ANDBKOftO ' Bi A Special Sale of IJntrimmed Hats These Hats usually sell from $2.00 to $3.00. Plain hemp and chips, in blues and blacks—the season's Af newest shapes i 7 O C SIO.OO Coats, $7.98 sSsz As the illustration plainly shows 4^*3? this coat is one of the prettiest of v-r this season's styles. In Copen- ,-^Plahv hagen, navy and black; with lace / trimmed collar and $7 OQ / v \ cuffs IT PAYS TO BUY UPTOWN < | GIRLS! GIRLS! YOU MUST TRY THIS! DOUBLES BEAUTY OF YOUR HAIR For 25 cents you can make your| hair lustrous, fluffy and abundant Immediate ?—T es! Certain ?—that's the joj ? of it. Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluffy, abundant and ap pears as soft, lustrous and beautiful as a young girl's after a Danderine hair cleanse. Just try this—moisten a cloth with a little Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt or excessive oil, and in just a few ino- Six Armed Men Compel Girl to Accompany Them Chicago, March 17. —Six armed men early to-day went to a North Side hotel, knocked down the proprietor, and at the point of revolvers forced Miss Margaret Miller, 24, to accom pany them. D. Evanoff, proprietor of the hotel, told the police the men entered the hotel and demanded to see the girl. AVhen Evanoff refused to allow them I to go to her room, he said the men j knocked him down. At the point or their revolvers they awoke the young | woman and ordered her to dress. Then : they dragged her through a rear exit I into a waiting automobile, according j to Evanoff's story. Tko Joy Of Coming Motherhood A Wonderful Remedy That is a Natural Aid and Relieves the Tension. Mother's Friend, a famous external rem edr, is the only one known that Is able i reach all the different parts involved, it Is a applh^t Inn" aftvr the for mula of a noted family doctor, and lubri cates every muscle, nerve, tissue or tendon affected. It goes directly to the strained portions and gently but surely relieves all tendency to soreness or strain. \ By its dally use there will be no pain, no distress, no nausea, no danger of laceration or other accident, and the period will be ono of supreme comfort and Joyful anticipation. To all young women Mothers Friend is one of the greatest of all helpful influences, for It robß childbirth of all its agonies and dangers, dispel* nil the doubt and dread, all sens-; of fear, and thus enables the mind and body to await the greatest event in a woman's life with unlrnmmrled glndnes«. Mother's Friend Is a most cherished remedy in thousands of hoiaua, aud ia of •uch peculiar merit and value as to make It essentially one to be recommended by all women. You will find It on sale at all drnj store; at SI.OO a bottle, or the druggist will gladly get It for you If you Insist upon It. Mot!', cr's Friend is prepared only by the Brafl field Regulator Co., 137 Lamar Bldg., At lanta, (in.,, who will send you by mar sealed, a verv Instructive hook to cspectai mothers. Wr.U *«>r it to-day. " ~ ~ S On Saturday, March 21 STOPFER'S Will have i'or sale Country Ham, Cheese Products and a large line of Delicatessen and a more extensive line of HOME BAKING Stalls in Broad and Chestnut Street Markets Dally Market 110 Broad bt. v., . . I ments you have doubled the beauty of i your hair. A delightful surprise awaits those whose hair has been neglected or is scraggy, faded, ' dry, brittle or thin. Besides beautifying the hair, Danderine dissolves every particle of dandruff; cleanses purities and invigo rates the scalp, forever stopping itch ing and falling hair, but what will please you most will bo after a few week's use, when you see new hair— fine and downy at first—yes—but really new hair growing all over the scalp. If you care for pretty, soft hair, and lots of it, surely get a 2B cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine > from any drug store or toilet counter and just try it.—Advertisement. -NEW DRIVERS ON JOB Two new drivers took up their du ties in the fire department to-day. Charles C. Flamer was appointed to take charge of the Reilv Hose com pany horses and John Reade of the Paxton company team. DULL THROBBING OR VIOLENT HEADACHES . Dou r t Suffer! Get a 10-cent Package of Dr. James' Ileadacbe Powders Now You take a Dr. Jame& Headache Powder and in Just a few moments your head clears and all neuralgia and distress vanishes. It's tho quickest and surest relief for heada -he, whether dull, throbbing, splitting or nerve racking. Send someone to the drug ttore and get a dime package now. Quit suffering—it's so needless. Be sun you get Dr. James' Headache Powders —then there will bo no disap pointment.—Advertisement. j The v-£Sr—\ i Disinfectant A; Safety L <