20 LARGEST SALE OF PICTURES WE'VE EVER HELD Opens To-morrow Morning At 9 O'clock. 500 Beautiful Framed Pictures All large sizes—smallest is ,15x20 inches, up to \ scenes, marine views, landscapes, historical places, 18x30 inches. Rich and handsome frames of oak, structures all at the same price $l.OO \v\. birch, walnut and gilt. All leading subjects and each. Copies of famous paintings that have brought \ J/WSL greatest in demand. Hardly two alike. We've never thousands of dollars and which have told the art b & d such a sale. You can buy pictures for every room VI ock—Satu rd ayra ° e 6 begins CALL 1991-ANY I CALLI99I-ANY -$r AMm&nX ,* JSjdi&m&rti yßr HAMUKUM'S POPULAR NMRTtIINT •TOM HABB1«»UW» POPULAR DMARTHIMT STOP! SUFFMGISTS ME IT DISCOURAGED B* LATEST DEFEAT Women Are Already Preparing to Renew Their Fight For Amendment ARRANGE BIG DEMONSTRATION Imports From Various Organizers Show Deep Interest Through out Country Washington, D. C., March 20.—Ad vocates of woman suffrage to-day de clared that they were not discouraged because they lost their fight In the United States Senate yesterday to se cure the adoption of an amendment to 1 he federal Constitution extending the l ight of suffrage to women. The Sen ate voted 35 for the amendment to 3 4 j gainst it, a twi-thirds affirmative vote ibeing necessary for passage. Suffrage leaders were pointing to-day to the majority of one vote in favor of the (imendment as proof that their cause had scored a triumph in defeat and ■was far stronger than its opponents had ever been willing to admit. They profess to see in the action of the fienate only a temporary setback in Ihelr fight and express the belief that "woman suffrage would eventually tome. They were hoping to-day that the Senate would reconsider its action before the close of the present session. Will Renew Piglit Despite their defeat, suffrage lead ers were prepared today to renew their light. It was announced to-day they ■would support the proposed amend ment of Senator Shafroth, of Colorado. iThe senator endeavored to offer his Amendment yesterday, and thouarh un successful, will introduce it later. This amendment would require each State to vote on the question of extending the right of suffrage to women upon (petition of 5 per cent, of its voters. The National American Woman Suf frage Association announced to-dav, through Mrs. Medill McCormick, chair man of its congressional committee, it Would support the new amend ment. "Suffrage sentiment in the Sen ate," said Mrs. McCormick, "is strong «nough to warrant us in renewing our •ffforts to secure national legislation find the amendment proposed by Sen ator Shafroth will meet many of the objections raised during the debate in the Senate and the cause of suffrage ■will be far advanced if we can secure favorable action on this resolution «3urlng the present session." Plan Big Demonstration Suffrage leaders were also going- for ward to-day with their plans for tho V>lg woman suffrage demonstration here May 9. They said to-day that 3 0,000 women would take part in the parade and that it promises to be the jnost beautiful and spectacular proces sion that has ever taken place. No effort Is being spared to make it an artistic affair. The Congressional Union for Woman ,■ Buffrage, under whose auspices a , nation-wide demonstration will be held I May 2, announced to-day that advices* - received from organizers in the field I ■ showed that the deepest interest is be- j J ing shown in the proposed demon stration. I -| SIIOrtCHAJiTS A miners TUAVS. CO. I "FLORIDA BY SEA" Direct Koute I f BALTIMORE nnd I'llll. AUEI.I'III \ -t.— Savannah and Jacksonville Through tickets to principal points ' Including meals ami stateroom accoui- N modatlons or s»e«tners Best route to Florida, Cuba and the South Fine i steamers. Best service. Low fares. 1 ' Marconi wireless. Automobiles carried 1 4 Rooms de Luxe. Baths. For booklet ! 5 call on local ticket agent or address. ! < Ity Ticket OfUce, 10.% S. lltli St., I'lilla.'t W. P. Turner, P. T. M., Baltimore, .>lO. , EDUCATIONAL ~ 1 i Day and Night School 1 STENOTYPY, SHORTHAVI) i BOOKKEEPING t SCHOOL OF COMMERCE r IS S. Mnrkct Square HARRISBURG. PA. Harrisburg Business College » Day and Night Business, j! Shorthand and Civil Service. In-'t dividual Instruction. 28th year. j 1 Market St. pn !< FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG *££&& TELEGRAPH MARCH 20, 1914. Carefully Pruned Guest List For A*tor Wedding •MISS HELEN DINSMORE HUNTINGTON. New York, March 20. —Since the announcement that August 30 had been set for the date of her wedding to Vincent Astor, Miss Helen Dins inore Huntington and her mother have been in town buying the many dainty articles that will go toward making her trousseau complete. The fact that St. Margaret's Episcopal Church at S taatsbur 6 , N. Y., where the wedding will bo solemnized, has a seating capacity of only 250 has caused Mrs. Hunt ington *o settle down to a rather deli cate task, that of cutting the "400" down to 250 invited quests. The situation has caused the postponement of the sending of invitation*. Brokers File Judgment Against Ex-ambassador Special ta The Telegraph New York, March 20. —A judgment I for $75,000 obtained against John G. ; A. Leishman, ex-ambassador to Ger. i many, by Raymond, Pynchon & Co., ! bankers and brokers, of New York, j was filed yesterday. The amount was due on a judgment j recovered in Allegheny county for ' money loaned and stocks bought and ; sold in New York city. According to the papers in the ac- ) tion, Leishman dealt in stocks with the j firm to tlie textn of $1,346,599 in a period &f thirty days and the claim ! was for a balance due in Settlement orf the account. A writ of foreign attachment was j issued against any and all funds and 1 credits of Leishman held by the Union j Trust Company and the. Mellon Na- ' tional Bank of Pittsburgh. It was alleged that Mr. Leishman. j as an ambassador, was in a position to j get advance information on inter national moves which exert a great in- j fiuence on the speculative price of 1 stocks. The brokerage firms asserted that their books showed large trans- i actions by .Mr. Leishman in securities! dealt in on the New York and London | Casualty Company Head Reduces His Own Salary Special to The Telegraph Baltimore, Md., March 20. —By vol untarily reducing his own salary from $36,000 to $30,000 a year, John T. Stone, president of the Maryland Cas ualty Company, caused somewhat of a sensation to-day when the facts in the case became known. The directors of the company voted a salary of $36,000 to Mr. Stone some time ago and his reduction was against the open protest of the board mem bers. It was recalTed to-day that the late General John Gill, president of the Mercantile Trust arid Deposit Com pany, reduced his own salary $lO,OOO because his concern in common with other financial institutions at the time experienced a period of monetary de pression. GO-TO-CHVRCH MOVEMENT [From the Bethany (Mo.) Democrat.] Say. boys, where were some of you fellows last Sunday at church hour? One fellow said he was hugging the stove, trying to keep warm. If that fellow keeps that up a little while lie will not have to hug a stove to keep warm. Ho is liable to gu to that place where thev heat n. fellow up without. WOMAN WHO TOOK. BICHLORIDE SAVED Harrisbarg Physicians Effect Re markable Cure* K She Swallow ed 68 Grains , That {ho remarkable recovery of Mrs. Mary Sweltzer.'the woman at the Harrisburg Hospital who will chai;ged to-morrow, saved from slow death*by bichloride of mercury poi soning, is unusual is shown by the experiences of physicians at the Epis copal Hospital, in Philadelphia, where a woman died WedneSHay thirty-seven days after taking five grains of the poison. . - Mrs. S\Veitzer's life was saved by the use of milk and eggs as a stomach wash. She had taken sixty-eight grains of the poison with suicidal Intent. At the hospital, after the usual treatment to remove poison had been used, .Dr. William E. Curtin thought of using milk. He was surprised to find that much of the poison had remained In the stomach after the first treatment. He followed up this treatment with the use of a stimulant which kept the kidneys from paralyzing. The woman will be discharged to-morrow with her strength restored. All traces of the poison and its effects have been re moved. In Philadelphia Miss Emily Bird, 30 years old, took a live-grain tablet of bichloride In mistake. She was re moved at once to the Episcopal Hos pital, but efforts to save her life were unavailing and she lingered along for thirty-seven days. Despite the efforts of physicians, headed by Dr. George Morris Piersol, the five-grain tablet taken by the woman in mistake for a headache tablet proved fatal. For the first three weeks the woman suffered untold agony, accentuated by the fact that she knew for a certainty that her end was near. Immediately after the poison was taken —on the night of February 9 Miss Bird ran from her bedroom shrieking: "Mother! I've taken poison, and I know I won't get better." Up to the time of her death Miss Bird maintained a stole calm, and al though she was aware that she had not long to live, she remained cheerful and tried to encourage her relatives, some of whom were continually at her bedside. Miss Bird read all of the dally pa pers with avidity and conversed and Joked with the physicians on current topics. The-night before she died the young woman asked for a copy of a leading magazine and read with evi dent Interest an article on the Panama Canal. "I know I am not going to live much longer," she said to her nurse one day last week, "but' keep up mother's spirits and tell Jack and La Verne not to worry. lam all right and I suffer practically no pain. All 1 desire is to know for a fact that the folks at home are convinced that I am not suffering." Secretary McAdoo Plans Better Mail Service Special to The Telegraph Washington, D. C., March 20. —Sec- retary McAdoo yesterday submitted to Congress an estimate for an appro priation of $150,000 for the installation of additional mull-handling devices in the new post office building in New York city, including a belt conveyor. It is estimated that this device will produce an annual saving of $50,160. Unless the mail belt conveyor Is in stalled It will require 63 porters of the mail service, 11 clerks and 18 porters of the Pennsylvania Railroad, besides 25 additional porters that would be necessary after the new building is occupied. It would also require the services of 70 trucks of the railway mail service, 69 trucks of the New York post office, 25 Pennsylvania Rail road trucks and 40 hampers. Yale Freshmen Plead Guilty to Disturbance Special to The Telegraph New Haven. Conn., March 20. When thirty members of the Yale freshmen clas appeared before a fac ulty committee yesterday and volun tarily acknowledged that they took part In the so-called "bottle night" dis turbance on Sunday night, the faculty suspended the probation sentence pre viously Impose upon 200 members of the class. The thirty freshmen, how ever. were placed on probation for an Indefinite time. Sovoral of those under probation are members of- thei class crow and base- CDNFERENCE PLANS . PROHIBITION FIGHT Preachers Adopt Resolutions After an Attack on the Liquor Traffic • By Associated Press Pottstown, Pa., Marcl -0. —The at titude of the Methodists of the Phila delphia annual conference, both preachers and laymen, on the liquor question, was shown in two ways to day at the third day's session of the one hundred and twenty-seventh meet ing of the conference and the annual meeting of the Laymen's Association. The preachers adopted resolutions demanding nation-wide prohibition, predicting early legislation to this ef fect and censuring license courts for apparent disregard of the wishes of the people in the communities af fected. The laymen raised nearly ?1,000 with which to carry on the prohibition fight. The preachers adopted their reso lutions after an attack had been di rected against the liquor truffle by a number of the clergymen. The Rev. Charles Roades, of Shen andoah, secretary of the Uennsylvania Sunday School Association, suggested tliat all the preachers in the confer ence set aside certain Sundays throughout the year for the preaching of temperance sermons and his sug gestion was heartily approved. The conference decided to forbid [any member of any church in the con ference from becoming bondsmen for I a liquor dealer or to sign a petition i for a license. New Tariff and Living Costs Prove Puzzling Special to The Telegraph New York, March 20.—There is a matter which is causing quite as much discussion just now as is the condi tion of the money market. That is the curious and unexpected record made of food prices since the new tar iff law was enacted. Nearly six months have elapsed since that law went into effect. If the test of six months can prove anything—and no body can say whether it does or not —then the accusation that the trusts which were favored by the old tariff law were responsible for high prices of food was unfounded. Since the first of October, accord ing to official statistics prepared in Washington, there came to the United States from other countries, princi pally Argentina, nearly 50,000,000 pounds of fresh beef. Yet the price of beef to consumers has not de creased, but Instead has increased. Statistics of this kind are spoken of by the experts in this city as very puzzling. No one can tell what the effect,, If any, of the new tariff law upon the cost of food commodities has been, or whether there has been any effect at all. The best opinion seems to be that it wll take at least a year, certainly several months after the harvesting of the crops next sum mer, before It will be possible to de termine, authoritatively, what the ef fect of the new tariff law upon the cost of foods to the American con sumer really is. Goethals Police Bills Are Killed by "System" _ Special to The Telegraph Albany, N. Y., March 20.—The po lice "system" has killed the Goethals I police bills and in consequence there is no hope of the canal builder being New York city's police commissioner. The "system" brought pressure to bear upon the city legislators, threat ening reprisals at the next primaries, and as a result the Mltchel measures are doomed. The mayor Is averse to amendments; the Senate will not bother with the measure unless the Assembly passes them, and so Mltchel has felt the sting of his first defeat. Fifty Passengers Perish in a Collision at Sea Venice, March 2 0. —An Italian tor pedoboat yesterday cut down a small passenger steamship which plies be tween Venice and Lido, a chain of sandy islands separating the lagoon of Venice from the Adriatic, and fifty persons were drowned. The sharp I prow of the torpedobout went through I the stern of the steamship, which sank OFFICERS FOR Ml ZONE MIOICED Goethals Named as Governor and Chief of Department of Opera tion and Maintenance By Associated Press Washington, D. C., March 20. —Of- ficers to have charge of the various departments of the Panama Canal were to-day announced as follows: Governor and Cheif of the Depart ment of Operation and Maintenance, Colonel George W. Goethals; Engineer of Malntehace, Calonel Harry . F. Hodges; army engineers; Superintend ent of Transportation, Saptain Hugh Rodman, U. S. N.; Electrical Engi neer, Captain W. H. Rose, army engi neers; Captains for the Terminal Ports, Commander D. E. Dismukes and Lieutenant-Commander Henry V. Butler, U. S. N.; Superintendent of Shops and Dry Docks, Naval Construc tor D. C.Nutting; General Purchasing Major F. C. Boggs, army en gineers. Chief Quartermaster, Captain D. E. Wood, United States Cavalry. Auditor, H. A. A. Smith; assistant, B. M. Harrah. Chief Health Officer, Lieutenafnt- Colonel Charles F. Mason, Medical Corps, U. S. A.; Superintendent of Hospitals, Lieutenant-Colonel George D. Deshong, Medical Corps, U. S. A.; Chief Oflicer of the Quarantine Di vision, passed Assistant Surgeon Mar shall C. Guthrie, United States Bu reau of Public Health. Executive Secretary, C. A. Mcll vaine. A large number of civil appoint ments will be made for mechanical operation of canal and to man war ships, dry docks, etc. There will be no places for new appointees, how ever, as the rule will be followed of reappointing to the permanent estab lishment employes now on tho isthmus. Oregon Governor Tells Governor War Is Coming Special to The Telegraph Salem, Ore., March 20. —"I am con fident that war with Mexico is com ing and I am going to advise the Na tional Guard of this State to be pre pared, for I am sure it can count on being called out before long," said Governor Oswald West here to-day. Governor West returned last night from the Mexican border, which he visited after spending several days in Washington, D. C While on the bor der, where he made a personal in quiry into conditions, Governor West crossed over into Juarez, Mexico. BIG FIRE IN ROCHESTER By Associated Press Rochester, N. Y., March 20.—Fire early to-day in East Rochester de stroyed the Eyer block, burning out a number of firms and causing a loss of $200,000. LADIES! SECRET TO DARKENGRAY HAIR Bring back color, gloss and thickness with Grandma's recipe of Sage and Sulphur Common garden sage brewed Into a heavy tea, with sulphur and alcohol added, will turn gray, streaked and faded hair beautifully dark and lux uriant; remove every bit of dandruff, stop scalp itching and falling hair. Mixing the Sage Tea and Sulphur re cipe at home, though, is troublesome. An easier way is to get the ready-to use-tonic, costing about 60 cents a large bottle, at drug stores, known as 'Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy," thus avoiding a lot of muss. While wispy, gray, faded hair is not sinful, we all desire to retain our youthful appearance and attractive ness. By darkening your hair with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur, no one can tell, because It does it so naturally, so evenly. You Just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morn ing all gray hairs have disappeared, i After another application or two your lialr becomes beautifully dark, I glossy, soft and luxuriant and you ap *' i 1 ■ "• ' ■ QUICKLY ENDS THE WORST BACKACHE Makes Kidney Troubles, Bladder Disorders, and Rheumatic Pains Vanish It is no longer necessary for any one to suffer with backachlng, kid ney trouble, have disagreeable blad der and urinary disorders to contend with, or be tortured with rheumatism, stiff joints, and its heart-wrenching pains, for the new discovery, Crox one, quickly and surely relieves all such troubles. Croxone is the most wonderful remedy yet devised for ridding tho system of uric acid and driving out all the poisonous impurities which cause such troubles. It is entirely dif ferent from all other remedies. It is not like anything else ever used fbr the purpose. It acts on the principle of cleaning out the poisons and re moving tho cause. It soaks right in through the walla, membranes and linings, like water in a sponge, neutralizes, dissolves, and makes the kidneys sift out and filter away, all the uric acid and poisons from the blood, and leaves the kid neys and urinary, organs clean, strong, healthy, and well. It matters not how long you have suffered, how old you are, or what: you have used, the very principle of Croxone is such, that it is practically impossible to take it into the humaii system without results. There is nothing else on earth like It. It starts to work the minute you take it and relieves you the first time you use It. If you suffer with pains in your back, and sides, or have any signs of kidney, bladder troubles, or rheuma tism, such as puffy swellings under the eyes or in the feet and ankles, if you ure nervous, tired and run down, or bothered with urinary disorders, Crox one will quickly relieve you of your misery. You can secure an original package of Croxone at trifling cosl. from any first class druggist. All druggists are authorized to personally return the purchase price if it falls in a single case.—Advertisement. DROPSY TREATED FREE By Dr. Miles, the Great Specialist, Willi Will Send a New Treatment Free Many Have Been Cored After Doetorn Failed At first no disease is apparently moro harmless than dropsy; a little swelling of the eyelids, hands, feet, ankles or ab domen. Finally there is great short ness of breath, cough, faint spells, sometimes nausea and vomiting, even bursting of the limbs and a lingering; and wretched death if the dropsy is not; removed. Dr. Miles has been known as a lead • ing specialist in these diseases for 80 years. His liberal oner of a $3.75 Treat, ment free to all sufferers, is certainly worthy of serious consideration. You may never have such an opportunity again The Grand Dropsy Treatment consists of four dropsy remedies In one, also Tonic Tablets and Pura-Laxa for re moving the water. This treatment is specially prepared for each patient and Is ten times as successful as that of most physicians. It usually relieve* the first day, and removes swelling In I six days in most cases. Delay Is dan i r ous. Mend for Remarkable Cnrea la Yoar State All afflicted readers may have Book, Examination Chart, Opinion, Advice, and a Two-Pound Treatment free, i Write at once. Describe your case. Ad dress 1 . Franklin Miles, Dect. Da, 52f> to 636 Ma»r Street, Elkhart. Ind. Ad • vertisement. y i BMftifct I mBI Quick Relief for Coughs, Colds and Hoarseness. Clear the Voice— Fine for Speakers and Singers. 26c. OORGAS' DRUG STORES 16 N. Third St. Penna. Station A Real Tonic is what you need this time of year. Mall us 26 cents and re ceive a regular 60-cent package of Sa-Mo Nerve Tonic Tablets. The remedy for lack of ambition and nerve vitality. The Sa-Mo Ce. * Uu\ US , liiirrisbury, I'u If 1 , m i i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers