6 WOMEN WHO ARE ALWAYS TIRED May Find Help in This Letter. SWM Creek, Mich. " I cannot speak too highly of your medicine. When a through neglect or overwork I get run down and my appe tite is poor end I have that weak, lan feeling, I get a bot ham's Vegetable Compound, and it builds me up, gives me strength, and re stores me to perfect health again. It is truly a great bless ing to women, and I cannot speak too liighly of it. I take pleasure in recom mending it to others."—Mrs. ANNIB CAHERON, R.F.D., No. 1, Swan Creek, Michigan. Another Sufferer Relieved. Hebron, Me. —"Before taking your remedies I was all run down, discour aged and had female weakness. I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound and used the Sanative Wash, and find today that I am an entirely new Woman, ready and willing to do my liousework now, where before taking your medicine it was a dread. I try to Impress upon the minds of all ailing women I meet the benefits they can derive from your medicines." Mrs. CHARLES EOWE, R. F. D., No. 1, Hebron, Maine. If you want special advice write to Lydla E. Pinkham Med icine Co., (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter wil be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence, " Symptoms Are Warn- j ings to Wise Men 11 The publication of the presurip- J tion of a famed physician would t prove fruitless to hundreds of I men if unable to recognize the ♦ necessity for its use. It is not f the intention or desire of the ? writer to mislead or frighten by • painting the horrors suffered by T the prematurely aged, but rather i is it the desire to state plain ? facts. The peculiar affliction i which destroys ambition, organic ? strength, energy and hope Is ac- f companied by some of the fol- ? lowing symptoms?, if not by all: •• Dull, sunken eyes; thinness (or J abnormal fatness), cold extremi- > ties, backache, weakness in the • spine, twitching, spots before the I eyes, pains in back of head, head- l , ache, trembling, fatigue, shrink- ' , lng of the sktn, flabby flesh, Am- 1 paired memory, sleeplessness, I , loss of appetite, constipation, I kidney derangements and a gen- I eral unpreparedness for emerg- I encies of all aorts. I The right kind of medical I treatment will effectually over- I come such warning symptoms i and / restore normal conditions if I persistently used for a few short I weeks. ■ Any one can buy the lngredi- I ents and mix the medicines of I this prescription at homo as It I contains no poisonous opiates I t whatever. I The Instructions for mixing at i homo secretly so that no embar- i rsssment may be felt, are as fol- I lows: First get three ounces of I syrup sarsaparilla compound and I ■ one ounce compound fluid balm- i wort: nfl* and let stand two » hours. Then add one ounce com- I pound essence cardiol and one ♦ ounce tincture cadomene com- * 1 pound (not cardamom), and mix i all together. The directions are | to take one teaspoonful after ♦ each meal and one when retiring i »until bounding health and full' * 1 strength are restored. Even a * few weeks will witness most I wonderful results. Advertise- i ment. j A SIMPLE WAV 10 REMOVE DANDRUFF Prevent Falling Hair and End Itching Scalp There Is one sure way thai has never failed to remove dandruff at once, and that is to dissolve it. then vou de etroy it entirely. To do tills, just Ket about four ounces of plain, com mon liquid arvon from any drug store (this is all you will need) ap ply it at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub It in gently with the finger tips. By morning, most if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dissolve, and entirely destrov, every Single sign and trace of it, no mat ter how much dandruff you may have. Tou will find all itching and digging of the scalp will stop instantly and jour hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy •ilky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. Tf you value your hair, you should net rid of dandruff at once, for noth ing destroys the hair so quickly. It not only starves the hair and makes It fall out, but it makes It stringv •traggly, dull, dry, brittle and lifeless' and everybody notices At.—Advertise ment. IMPORTANT best evar prescribed for building up the «yatem. Not a patent medicine. IIXDKRTAKBRI RUDOLPH K. SPICER~ Funeral Director and Embalmer •IS Walnut St. Bell Ph«a* , THURSDAY EVENING, Excellent Payers Here With "Romance" on Monday MEW Bag IHUK t y wW^f-» Charles Dillingham Is sending a i j 15rst-class company to play "Romance" I at the Majestic Monday, with a bar- i 1 gain matinee, when Edward H. Shel- ! ! don's famous play of love will have j ; its first iierformance j n t | lia | The principal masculine part, that | of the handsome young rector of St. ; Giles' fashionable parish, will be acted Iby Edgar Kent, an actor who first came to the X'nited States as a mem- j ber of Mrs. Patrick Campbell's com- ' ; pany. He was in the famous cast that : i acted "Pomander Walk" through Its | | notable New York City and Chicago ' j runs. He acted last season with the great French star, Madame Simone, i and this season had been playing one i | of the chief parts in Arnold Bennett's! play of "The Great Adventure,'' a dramatization of that writer's "P.uried Alive." Rupert Lumley is another member jof Mr. Dillingham's "Romance" cast! | who comes from the London stage, j where he acted important parts in im-' COWDEriGOESWALRUH MJHITY COUNTIES ONE BETTER ON NAMES SEND 111 PETITIONS [Continued from First Page.] Public Improvements W. H. Lynch ; will put in the ordinance. ! In many instances Mr. Cowden picked the names from among the j abutting property holders, especially . where one of the smaller highways i was named. The calendar, the ap ; proach of Spring college catalogs, I some manufacturing pamphlets, girls, and frieuts and flowers, and the | weather, as mentioned before, —they j were evidently much in mind when j the choice was made. Many, many I were called to mind, certainly; here i are the few that were chosen: , | New Names Elm, Kitter, Thompson, Fairfax, • Sullivan. Bedford, Moorehead, Beck ! ley, High, Benfer, Bowman, Floyd, ! Heagy, David, Lerew, Parsons, Spotz, ; Spencer, Darlington, Holly, Kelley, ! Birchfteld, Nelson, Carlisle, Delancey, , j Crabapple, Chayne, Davis, Girard, | Benton, Shellis, Pearl, Hetrick, Ice, ' I Cream, Fair, Hocker, Filson, Good l year, Karper, McCleaster, Central, j Beaver. Mercer, Knox, Ludwig, Elder, Reading, Kensington. Rudy, Brook, i Haehnlen, Geary, Hildrup, Oxford, | Ross, Sassafras, Shrub, Miller, Violet, ] Apricot, Brady, Center, Elliott, Pot ter, Sheik, Elk, Fayette, McKean, ; Berks. Blair, Erie, Putnam, Lowell, ; Wayne and Cambria. | Some names had been suggested to | the Engineer, too; and among those j that were added to the list were Yale, I Syndicate, Snow, Ice and Cream i streets. Perhaps it was close to even | lng when Mr. Cowden finished and he j had but one more street to name. Whether he should write in a name or ! let it go until the morrow probably ! was a problem that occupied the of | ficlal's mind. But the main idea at | the time finally suggested the name of the last street. So. If the ordinance beeomfeH a law, Harrisburg's city official map will con j tain a street called "Home." REBEL SYMPATHIZERS CONCERNED OVER FATE [Continued from First Page.] officers of the fact that communi cation ceased after the attack on Gomez Palacio began, while it had come freely during Villa's triumphant southward march. Rebels Again Repulsed According to Report By Associated Press Washington, D. C., March 20. —This message, sent from Mexico City last night, was received at the embassy here to-day: "Rebels once more routed and re pulsed at Gomez Palacio with heavy losses while trying to approach Tor reon." The State Department had only a report from El Paso saying that up to yesterday afternoon results were "still undetermined." Other dispatches reported there was absolutely no foundation for stories that danger threatened five Americans ' I in the Tlahuallllo district of Coahuila. j Consular representatives report all 'I foreigners within territory under Con | stltutionalist control being protected. Consul Garrett, at Xuevo ljaredo, ! .lust over the Rio Grande, reported to- I dav that an American boy in Laredo, I Texas, was wounded In the cheek by a. shot tired from the Mexican side. i '&iM I portant companies. He supported i there both Sir John Hare and the late Sir Henry Irving. Winthrop Ames brought him from London last Sep j tember to play one of the chief parts in "The Great Adventure." 1 Miss Gertrude Morrisini, who Will ; liave the chief feminine role, that of > Rita Cavallini, is an American girl of part-Italian descent who has had her stage-experience both here and In Eu rope. She was last season and the : season before a member of David Bel -1 asco's forces. She took three years ! of European experience In the Italian theaters. In the belief that the day I was coming when the higher aspects j of Italian character would be a matter ! of interest to American playgoers. Miss P'erika Boros, who plays an other important part In ''Romance,'' is actress and playwright. She has adapted a number of Hungarian plays | for the American stage, Including Franz Molnar's "The Devil."—Adver ' tisement. j [Continued from First Page.] ting signers praying for his nomlna | tlon. Among those whose names ap pear are: W. S. Shade, J. M. Flick inger, E. M. Noll, C. C. Brandt, W. W. , Manning, merchants, and Dr. Lewis | Carl. From Schuylkill ' The Schuylkill petition was sent by John Jenkins, a Kunkel volunteer in , Shenandoah, who says that unques tionably Judge Kunkel will carry that | county. A large number of the" sign ers are mine workers. It appears that I members of the mine workers' union I have closely observed the fair and [ impartial manner in which Judge ! Kunkel has decided all the labor cases j that have come before him on the Dauphin county bench and were par ticularly impressed with his action in upholding the constitutionality of the Full Crew Law, In which he was fully sustained by the State Supreme Court. Kunkel Stronghold Montour county is going to be a Kun kel stronghold, according to James Dalton, of Danville, who this morning sent in a petition signed by more than 100 voters of that town and county. Among the signatures ap pearing thereon are those of: Thomas C. Welsh, attorney; C. P. Murray, merchant; John D. Wake, sheriff; William L. Sidler, register and re corder; O. F. Young, merchant; the Rev. J. H. Musselman and the Rev. J. B. Grier. FORMER UNIVERSITY LECTURER ARRESTED [Continued from First Page.] and independent means, it is expected to bring the whole situation regarding Hindus to a focus unclouded by any other issues. He Is a high caste Brah min, descended according to scientists, from the Aryan conquerors of India. He has an Independent income, is highly educated and has circled the world in his travels. The arrest as tounded a considerable circle of uni versity men and writers among whom Dyal is known as an apostle of abstin ence. He lectuved at Stanford without salary and resigned over a year ago. There was some dissatisfaction among individual members of the teaching force there over doctrines which were said to emanate unofficially from him regarding the present economic sys tem. Since then he has lived at Ber keley, Cal., the seat of the University of California. Labor Circles Opposed | The position of the local Immigra tion authorities regarding Hindus in general as outlined ,by Samuel W. Backus, commissioner of Immigration, is that they are to be deported be cause In the opinion of the authori ties they are not assimilable, and be cause they are likely to become pub lic charges, even If they have money when they land. Labor circles on the coast oppose their entrance on the ground that they will work for what Is not a living wage for an American. MASONS READY FOR ANNIVER SARY About 250 guests, In and out of town, are expected to participate in the forty-fourth anniversary to-mor row evening of Robert Burns lodge. No. 4H4, Free and Accepted Masons. Among the guests will be many not able State officers. &ARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Making of €has. M. Stief f Pianos Controlled by Famous Baltimore Family For Almost a Quarter-Century From Modest Beginning in "Monumental City" Firm Has Grown to Maintenance of Representa tion in Twenty-three Leading American Cities—Orchestral Grand and Stieff P.ayer- Piano Find Universal Favor—Big Factory to Meet Demand. Baltimore, Md., March 19.—From a modest beginning almost three-quar- 1 ters of a century ago, the well-known tlrm of Chas. M. Stleff, of this city, haa ] grown to the stage of the maintenance of representation in twenty-three of ! the leading cities of the East, Middle West and South and in sixteen of these cities branch stores are operated and controlled directly by the home office in this city. The business at present is owned and controlled by Frederick P. Stleff, the son of the late Charles M. Stleff, founder of the house, who has with' him in business his two sons, George Waters Stieff and Frederick Philip Stieff, Jr. Other positions of Importance are held by the following: Charles J. Gross, as factory superintendent; S. P. Walker, as general manager, and J. G. Schnepfe, as general auditor. The lirm also owns and controls the Shaw piano, formerly made in Erie, Pa., and moved to Baltimore, by the present owner in lyOl, as well as the Bennett-T.retz piano, which was manufactured In Harrißburg, Pa., until bought out by the present makers. The big Stieff factory in Baltimore ia located on the block bounded by East Lafayette avenue and Aiken, Hope and Lanvale streets. The garage, dry kilns, stable .electric plant and repair annex are-connected through an under ground passage, and the lumber yards are located in the adjoining block. The firm carries one of the largest supplies of lumber in the city, having nearlv always between 1,500,000 and 2,000,000 feet of lumber on hand. The lumber is kept on hand for such a period of time, until it is thoroughly well-seasoned and dried, through a special hot air process. When the lumber is ready for use it has been so well treated and seasoned that there is practically no chance for contraction or expansion. This greatly aids in the durability and strength of the instrument. The factory consists of live floors, basement and tower, comprising more than 110,000 square feet of manufacturing floor space. The strictest system is adhered to throughout the plant, every department having its foreman. There is a superintendent over the entire plant. The electricity in use throughout the factories is generated on the place. The plant is equipped with its own up-to-date fire serviefc. in three minutes' time, 3 one-and-one-eighth Inch nozzle streams of water can be employed, with a capacity of seven hundred and fifty gallons per minute, drawn from a tank of twenty-five thousand gal lons on the roof and from an underground reservoir of one hundred and thirty thousand gallons. This is entirely Independent of the city firo department, several houses of which are located at a very short distance from the plant. All floors, ceilings and doors are asbestos lined. The doors separating the va rious sections of the plant are double doors, asbestos lined and metal cased. Two principles which the lirm of Charles M. Stleff endeavors to employ are the individuality and up-to-dateness of their instruments. The former is se cured, to a very large extent, by the length of time in which the majority of workmen in the plant have remained with the lirm. In looking over the pay roll, it is an easy matter to pick out a score of ,men who have been with the SOUNDING BOARD DEPARTMENT. CONFERENCE REPORT HOLD UP OPENING [Continued from First Page.] sides of the question and the fight promises to be the most spectacular j since the Democratic administration i came into power. While the opening skirmish was on I in the House, the first guns were be ing heard in the Senate, where Sen- | ator Owen delivered a speech sup porting the President's contention for ! a repeal. President Wilson conferred with' several Congressmen before the House | convened. Representatives Covington, j of Maryland, and Bell, of Georgia, j who arc helping to lino up the admin-I istration forces, told him there would j be a majority of at least fifty on I the passage of a special rule and of . about 7& or 100 on the adoption of| the repeal. Conference Report Then, just as both sides were pre- i pared for the beginning of the strug- | gle, and House galleries were packed j with an expectant crowd, another de- ' lay cropped up. Although the rivers ajid harbors bill was in direct line to be speedily finished to make a place for the tolls repeal bill, Representa tive Fitzgerald, one of the Demo crats fighting the repeal, brought up the conference report on the Urgent Deficiency bill. A conference report always is in order under the House rules, so that displaced the river and harbor bill which still had the right of way over the Panama bill. To add to the delay, the conference report contains a provision for paying for tho care of the Mexican refugees from OJinaga at Fort Bliss. That question, much disputed, precipitated a near filibuster and long debate. The parliamentary situation was such that the actual debate on the Panama bill was several hours off. Meanwhile leaders on both sides marked time, the supporters of the repeal chafing at the delay and the opponents losing none of the opportunities of the situa tion to spar for time. Letters Occupy Prominent Places in Tolls Debate •SpecHil to The Teli'giafli Washington, I). <\, March 2H.— In- 1 [tense feeling has been aroused by thej COPIED FROM NEW YORK MUSIC TRADES OF MARCH 21,1914. debate in Congress over the Presi dent's proposed repeal of the Panama Canal toll exemption clause in favor of American coastwise shippers. Among the letters read by United States Senator Chamberlain of Oregon, endorsing his light for free tolls, was the following from a Boston man: Senator: A Massachusetts Democrat wants to thank you for the able and courageous fight you are baking not only for the whole people | of the country but for the future of tho i American name. I see by the current newspaper reports that Mr. Wilson, in criticism of your attitude, said that you , were skating on thin ice. You stand, I Mr. Senator, not with our Executive, who has betrayed his party platform j and his personal word as announced i in his New Jersey speeches, but with j the great rank and file of the Amerl-! can people, whose eyes are on you in I the fight. Mr. Taft stood for toll ex jemption. Mr. Roosevelt and the Pro j gressive party stood for the same. The j Democratic platform declared for it at I Baltimore and the American peoplo .(formerly Including Mr. Wilson) have | indorsed the same. Wilson Warmly Attacked "it may bo skating on thin Ice to stand with the American people, Mr. Senator, but that charge comes in (poor form from the man who ropudi- I ates his party platform and violates I his campaign pledges. Mr. Wilson obtained by vote and that of millions! i like me by false pretenses. Mr. Sena- i tor, were there a referendum and re-1 call for Federal officials I would vote to have Mr. Wilson's future activities confined to the classic shades of Princeton and not to a wholesale auto cratic bribery and bulldozing of the regularly elected members of the United States Congress. "An accredited representative to the Court of St. James has made us the laughing stock among the nations. It seems a weakness In our republican institutions that until a presidential term expires there Is no method of calling our highest official to ac i count." Senator William Alden Smith, of Michigan, obtained permission from Senator Chamberlain to read what President Roosevelt had said of the provisions of the Hay-Pauneefote treaty and its effect on the exemption of tolls for American coastwise ves sels. He quoted from President Roosevelt's letter of acceptance of the nomination for the Presidency in part aa follows: "We have a perfect right to permit' our coastwise traffic (with which; there can be no competition by the! [merchant marine of any foreign na-i Hon, so that there is no discrimina tion against any foreign marine) to [pass through that canal or any terms MARCH 26, 1914. firm anywhere from twenty-five to forty years. Cine of thA employees In tho varnish department will huve been with the lirm tlfty y.ur\ this coming Au gust. Until recently, it was possible to find three generation! workintc side In side in the factory. V In this way it has been possible to hand down the indiviiVinlity from gen eration to generation, and to instruct the new comers into thiWays or the old. There is probably no manufacturing hoyse south or the MasiA nnd ljixon ltn«i which can boast of having as many men in their emplov foi\as lone a time as the firm of Charles M. Stieff. The home warerooms are located at No. fl North liberty st\t- t Baltimore where they have been located steadily for the last sixty-four \inJ-s, a record of which not many business houses can boast. After the Baltimore tire in 1904, the firm acquired the three upper floors of No. 7 North. Uk-U.y street 1 which together with No. it they are occupying at the present time. ' LATEST PRODUCT NEW ORCHESTRAL GRAND ; Among the most up-to-date products of the firm is the new Stiff orches tral grand—length 8 feet 11*4 inches; width, S feet Inches. IHis grant! , has been in use only for the last eighteen months, and took but a vrv short ; time to -win its way into the favor of those artists and musicians >ho have I come in contact with it. ■ During the last winter the Stieff piano has been used at man: of the il-riday afternoon recitals of the Peabody Conservatory of Music of BiHimore ! no te