12 Drunkards Saved Secretly Through a Wonderful Remedy Which Any Lady Can Use Secretly In Tea, Coffee or Food. Costs Nothing to Try. A Happy Home Since Papa Quit Drink. If you have a husband, son, brother, father or friend who is a victim of liquor, all you have to do is to send vour name and address on the coupon below. You may be thankful as long as you live that you did it. Free Trial Package Coupon Ilr, J. W, Ilnliit-* Cnttiitnny, <1224 Glenn llldg., Cincinnati, Ohio. Please send me, absolutely free, by return mail. In plain wrapper, so that no one can know what it con tains, a trial package of Golden Remedy to prove that what you claim for it is true in every respect. Name Street City " State New Daily Market Will Open in Harrisburg On Tuesday of next week a new daily market will open at 502-504 Market street to be kiown as the Sub way Market. Upwards of one hun dred stalls have been constructed. I These will be occupied by farmers, truckers, 'butchers, bakers, grocers, j fish dealers southern fruit and vege table dealers, egg and poultry dealers. End every line of goods usually found , at the city markets. Some of the larg-1 er cities of the Kast have these daily! markets, where the public may come at any hour of the day. and the man agers of the Subway Market feel that I Harrisburg Is now ready lor similar advantages. All the stalls are newly l constructed and every possible spnitaryj precaution is being taken to make the ! market house a desirable place in which to trade. VICTORIA THEATER Every motion picture patron has no doubt seen pictures of Russia and the Siberian prison, but "Escaped From ; Siberia," in five acts. Is the latest and best along this line. Other pictures arp "A Mohammedan Conspiracy," a two act Thanhauser feature, which is a great one: "Flnnegan's Bomb" is a Key stone. which means a hearty laugh.— Advertisement. HAVE YOB A CHILD? Many women long for children, but because of Borne curable physical derangement are deprived of this greatest of all happiness. The women whose names follow were restored to normal health by Lydia F.. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound. Write and ask them about it. i "I took your Com ||r» *jP '; pound and have a fine, ,/S .s / ' strong baby. " Mrs. '' JoHN MITCHELL, Mas sena, N. Y. "Lydia E. Pinkham'9 jpfsfc Vegetable Compound is a j wonderful medicine for jilf® expectant mothers." t Mrs. A - M. MYERS, Gor ' donville, Mo. fInU.M Myers "} highly recommend ! jj&ijsgfijri,' , Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg ''nbpßkj ' etable Compound before i'ii child-birth, It has done so i• r much for me -"~Mrs. E. Li.-, M. DOERR, R. R. l, Con 'pjfcshohocken, Pa. "■< "I took LydiaE. Pink- 1 JSr ham ' s Vegetable Com ;! pound to build up my j ®L ~ T ' system and have the ! J" W-^T 1 ' dearest baby girl in the world."—Mrs. MOSE BLAKELEY ' Im P erial ' Pa "l praise the Com (tf 1W: pound whenever I have a chance. It did so much •'jjr f° r 1116 before my little ''liTjul' Was orn -" Mrs. E. W. SANDERS, Rowles burg, W. Va. "I took your Com- H . ;i:j pound before baby was . ; : |B w ..7"Tf" : born and feel I owe my ' ' life toit- Mrs. WINNIE ■ TILLIS, Winter Haven, ** ttowWfil;*' Florida. PALACE THEATER 333 MARKET STREET J. Warren Kerrigan ...1N... sranK ® SIXTH P.VHT VNIVKHSAI, FEATURE ShoiviiiK Sum nun, liln birth, life nml / \ death: Ihr bero-eple of all literature: I Wn 4RH I the Sleirfrleil of the Old i'entaiiient I I W I the innti to whom i.oil nine enrte- I JLA- I blanche in avciiKliiK MM nrouicai liim 1 / he broke the llonw Jaw. *le« n thou*- *',/ HIHI I'lilllHtlne* on the fntnl llelil of \ i- . ' It nnint li-1 ,ehl and carried away the \ rt> '■ I hiiitc eaten to the city of (ia*a. on hln \ " „ / hack; hou the ntroiiKCMt of men wan \?' ■!,."£ ','y lured to liU dunnfiill h.v n henutlfnl woman, and. Hnall.v h«H hr n recked ~ ~ . £UAV •?. Warren Kerrigan the innKnlflcent temple of llasm upon t lif-O MADISON. hi mßr If and the head* of n multitude. /ffiX Admission 10 Cents THURSDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG {£££s TELEGRAPH MAY 21, 1914 Theater Manager Wants Cars Stopped ' and Electric Street Lamps Left Unlit Man on Stage at Colonial So Full of Electricity That Wires in Street Give Him Fits C. Floyd Hopkins, manager of the Colonial Theater, made an extremely modest request at the offices of the Harrisburg Light and Power Company to-day when he requested that all cur rent be cut off of the odwntown cir cuits twice each evening during the remainder of the week. He also re quested that the Harrisburg Railways Company cease the operation of cars in the vicinity of the Colonial Thea ter for a half hour at 7.30 and 9.50 p. m. between now and Saturday. The reason for this gentle request is the presence on the bill at the Co lonial Theater for the last half of the week, beginning to-day, of Dr. Mac- Donald. an electrical phenomenon, whose body is a human dynamo, and : continually so highly charged with electricity that a confusion of currents ; caused by charged wires within a block of him causes the doctor untold dis comfort. .Sparks shoot from this man's body i like lightning from the sky, and per- i sons who go on the stage to assist . him in his act experience some amus- 1 ing and also surprising shocks. If ] there are electric wires in the neigh- i borhood where the doctor is perform- < ing his act it is with difficulty that he i can keep the voltage within him down 11 to anything like what a man can stand 11 and live, so that is why the Colonial < HA DEIS HE IS WILLI TO RESIGN [Continued From first Page] to his retirement from the presidency. J An investigation is proceeding to fix ! responsibility L the error. Everything Is Working Smoothly, Says Bryan By Associated Press Washington. D. C., May 21.—"Every- j thing is working smoothly; there has! been no hitch whatever," was the | answer of Secretary of State Hrvan to-day to Inquiries about the prelimi nary mediation conferences over Mex ican difficulties at Niagara Falls, Can ada. after he had conferred for an hour with President Wilson and re viewed dispatches from American Commissioners Lamar and Uhmann. i Following Secretary Bryan's an nouncement unofficial but reliable in- i formation was reiterated in official! quarters that General Huerta had placed himself unreservedly in the ' hands of the three commissioners rep- j resenting his interests at Niagara ! Falls. It positively was declared that the Mexican commissioners' authoritv ! included the right to effect Huerta's | effacement as a condition of final set tlement. Women Took Prominent Part in Sunday Fighting By Associated Press Estancion Amargos. Mexico, May 19. —Via El Paso, Texas, May 21.) —The women who follow every Mexican army took a prominent part in the lighting at Zartuche Sunday. As the Federal soldiers swarmed from the cars, some of the woman dragged out and broke open boxes of ammunition, carrying the cartridges to the Federal soldiers in the face of the Constitu tionalists's fire. Others crouched on the iron roofs of the cars. t<-ok up the! rifles of the wounded and loaded and j fired with all the coolness and deter- ; initiation of veterans. A half dozen of the women made a I desperate effort to bring a rnchine gun I on one of the fiat cars to bear on the ' Constitutionalist troops, but before they could get it in position, the male soldiers had surrendered and the Con stitutionalists had swarmed over the edges of the cars. Wilson in Touch With American Commissioners j By Associated Press Washington, May 21.—President I Wilson and Secretary of State Bryan | were in direct communication early to-day with Mexican meditation neg- j otations at Niagara Falls, Ont. As soon as the President reached ! the executive offices after breakfast, ! Secretary Bryan hastened over from the State Department. The special telegraph wire connecting the WhTte House with headquarters of the Amer ican peace commissioners was work- j ing and several messages are said to i have been exchanged between the President and Commissioners Lamar and Lehmann. "Things at the mediation confer- i once are progressing smoothly," Mr. Bryan declared as he left he exec-u- | ~~~ I Epidemic of Smallpox Prevails in Vera Cruz Special to The Telegraph Washington, D. C., May 21.—Epi- i demies of smallpox and tropical dis- 1 eases prevail in Mexico, especially at ( Vera Cruz, according tr reports r/iade; by navy surgeons. The report by Sur- j geon Frederick A. Asherson, of the navy, says that the mast urtheaithful part of the year is approaching In Theater management calmly asks the lighting and transportation companies to shut off the Juice while the doctor is performing. "So far as the interruption in car service is concerned, the public won't mind it," said Mr. Hopkins. "Every body will be in the theater anyway, I and won't want cars until the show is out. As for the city lights, it will do lis good to go back into the gooi' old times of tallow dips for an evening." | Neither of the corporations felt that' they could conveniently grant the re quest made to them. "What will happen?" the manager I was asked. "The act will go on just the same," said Mr. Hopkins, "but it's an outrage ! that the current in the streets can't be 1 shut off a little while, for this man's ' body will bo filled with a thousand , volts. He will carry more electricity I than it took to put the four gunmen I to death in Sing Sing. Every time a! street car goes by Dr. Mac Donald will | jump with pain, and when the street | lights are turned on his eyes will shine j like arc lamps. But he says he can 1 stand it for three days, so we'll try it, ' even if the electric companies won't ; shut off the juice. But don't blame us i If the doctor proves so magnetic that | the street cars leave the track and dash into the Colonial lobby." Mexico, the rainy season starting with June. He says: "At present there is an epidemic of smallpox, the first case having been imported from the north. There have been about forty-five cases, with five deaths. There are still remaining eleven cases, seven of which are con valescing. The death rate for all dis eases and accidents is 50 per 100, or 2,000 deaths a year out of an esti mated population of 40,000. A cru sade against yellow fever, which, of course, included extermination of mos quitoes. was started in 1803, and the last case of yellow fever in Vera Cruz occurred in September, 1905." Constitutionalists Lose 400 in Taking Tepic By .Associated Press On Board United States Ship Cali fornia. Mazatlan, Mexico, .May 20 (via wireless to San Diego, Cal., May 21). — An army of 5,000 Constitutionalists has occupied Tepic with a loss of 400 killed and an unknown number of casualties among the federals and has begun its advance on Guadalajara. In advance of the moving troops a flving squadron of cavalry is working 'de struction to the Huerta lnes of com munication, its main object being the crippling of the railroad from Man zanillo to Guadalajara. "SAMSON" AT THE PALACE In "Samson" the big six-reel Uni versal feature which will be shown at the Palace Theater to-morrow and Saturday, the life of the biblical char acter by that name is vividly portrav ed. From the time that Manoah and his wife are blessed in answer to their prayers with a child whom thev name Samson, until the old blind," dying Samson totters and crawls over the ruins of the temple until he finds the form of Delilah, the faithless woman whom he loved, incident after incident in the life of this famous character is pictured effectively and interesting ly. Here may be seen the eventful trip of the young son with his parents to visit his bride, the meeting of the lion on the way. the nuptial feast at which the bethrothal of the Philistine maiden to Samson is announced. Then his riddle is propounded, for the ans wer to which he offers a prize. The threats of tl" Philistines unable to solve the riddle, against the life of Zorah unit ss she obtains from Sam son the answer thereto, the eventful day on which the answer is given, Samson's denunciation of the woman who betrayed him, his resulting an ger are all portrayed by efficient actors amid lavish settings. These and other incidents that take one through the scenes of his life in prison, the shearing of his locks, the loss of his sight aid the tragic end of his famous character when under his strength the supporting- pillars of the temple totter and fall, combine to make the picture one of the most elaborate, instructive and interesting productions of the moving picture worl(Jj —Advertisement. Becker May Know Fate Before Tomorrow Night By Associated Press New York, May 21—Both prose cution and defense in the ca'st <>f Charles Becker, on trial for the mur der of Herman Rosenthal, rested be fore noon to-day. The case will be in the hands of the jury before noon to morrow and Becker's fate may be de cided by night. After both sides rested court was adjourned until 2 o'clock this after noon when, it was announced, Martin F. Manton, Becker's chief counsel, would begin his address to the Jurv. At 8 o'clock to-night District Attorney Whitman will make his closing ad dress. He will conclude about 11 o'clock and court will be adjourned until 10.30 o'clock to-morrow morn ing. when Justice Seabury will deliver his charge. This will uccupv about an hour. The jury will then retire. Roosevelt Buys Clothes For His Son's Wedding By Associated Press New York, May 21.—Colonel I-toose velt arrived in town to-day to spend his first day in New York for seven months. This first day in the city he desired to be alone, the colonel said. Accordingly he would give out no in foi mation as to just how he would spend his time or where he would be, He did say, however, that he ex pected to spend a great part of the day buying clothes for his son's wed ding. When the task of "togging him self out" was finished he planned to see his publishers, meet a number of Progressive leaders and visit the American Museum of Natural History. Is Lee Coming or Not? Strike Question of Day With the announcement of a prob able visit from W. 0. Lee, president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen l-rldav night, strikers have become en thusiastic once more. On the other hand, railroad officials claim that the strikers are hoping against hope. They declare President LJOP will not come to Harrisburn. , HOOT ON TOl/US KKI'KAIi By Associated Press Wsshington. D. •'., May 21.—Sen ator Root, the leading figure in the fitiht to repeal the tolls exemption clause of the Panama canal act, spoke in the Senate to-day in replv to the views voiced by senators who opposed repeal. Astrich's Great Bargains-.- To p™2ay OW To-morrow, Friday, afternoon, promptly at 3 o'clock we place on sale 3,000 yards of A C* II fine Swiss Embroideries and Nainsook Corset Cover Embroidery. Beautiful flowery de- T J tl I I signs in Blind and Eyelet with scalloped Edges full 18 inches wide. Actual value, 25c 1 111 Vrv-wrl yard. (Greatest bargains this city has ever known). Sale price * V J CLTU See Fourth Street Window Display. These on Sale All Day To-morrow, Friday, As Long As They Last SHADOW FIjOI'NCINGS I EMBROIDERED SWISS I EMBROIDERED DEMI CTJOUNCE Here Is a lace value extraordinary—full 18- I 45-ineh Embroidered Flounoings, deep I ig.inrh fin M t Tri«i, irii»t Riinrt Pm inch Shadow Flouncing in ecru and white; I flounce of beautiful flowery design, scalloped I "-inch finest Baby Irish Filet and Blind Em actual worth 50c to 75c; special value oC I edges of soft, sheer fine material. Ac- I b ro l" ere d Exquisite designs actual 50c at, yard C | tual value 09c yard, at OI7C | value, while they last, yard «uC C * J_ f Pl/wr* C nfl .J _ I Full 16 Button Elbow Length, Heavy, Pure Silk, Double £A_ rnday S ureat ulove jpecial Finger Tipped, CW. Black of White, Value SI.OO, o"c FRIDAY . ___ FRIDAY 19c to 25cShadow A || fll / P 50c Corset Covers lOcyd. 0 2 g c PRESSING THIS SHAPE You can press shape into a gar ment, but you can't press the stay there into the shape. In other words, a shape-retaining garment must have worth sewn into it. Lack tailored suits for men retain their shape un til the garment is worn unfit for fur ther wear. Fred S. Lack, merchant t lor, 28-30 Dewberry street. BEST OX EARTH You never used a better creamery j butter in your life than our famous j brand, Jumetta butter, made by a but ter expert, and sold at 35 cents a pound. It has a quality that is well worth the trouble of phoning us. B. B. Drum. ISOI-1803 N. Sixth St. RUBBER TIRING for trucks and buggies is a specialty j with us. Every facility is here to as sure satisfactory work by men with years of training in this class of work. | Shaffer Wagon Works, 80-88 South Cameron street. THE KNACK OF DOING high-class laundering is a distinctive i feature of this laundry. Our work j pleases the careful dressers because it j is carefully executed and inspected be- ! fore it leaves the ironing room. Ar cade Laundry, D. E. Glazier, Logan ! and Granite streets. Both phones. j LADIES, PLEASE May we have the pleasure of show- I ing you this wonderful display of I handsome midsummer white hats, | which will be the popular head dress | worn with whitd gowns this season, i which we have greatiy reduced in! prices. You will find all our millinery reduced to prices that will fascinate you. Mary C. Glass, 1306 Market St. WE HAVE REDUCED The rates of all money loans to posi tively the lowest you will find in the city and we invite all honest people who are in financial distress, and with out hank credit, to take advantage of this interest reduction, which is lower than the lawful rates prescribed by the laws of 1913. Pennsylvania Invest ment Company, 132 Walnut street. Rebels Are Repulsed by Federal Soldiers by Associated Press Mexico City, May 21. General ! Blanquet, Minister of War. announced last night that a band of Constitu tionalists, which approached the sub-| urbs of San Luis Potos'i Tuesday night. j was repulsed bp the garrison. The Constitutionalists fled to the moun-! tains. Passengers from Tepic report that ! General Juan Solares, the Federal: commander who joined the Consti-1 tutionalists a few days ago, was killed by Constitutionalists near Acaponeta. > The Chamber of Deputies has ap-1 proved a proposal for a new tax on cultivated lands. Small land owners I are exempt from the tax. You'll Crow Over "BETS-1I" or Corns! It Will Startle You How "GETS IT" Gets Corns Every Time. "One. two. three!" That's about as long as it takes you to apply "GETS IT." the new-plan simplest, surest • • " ■ I'M ever seen. "This It No Place For a Crow. Her Conn Art All Gone. She Mml Have U«ed 'GETS-IT.'" Corn lussing is all over. Corns, corn pains and calluses are absolutely done for, from the minute you apply "UKTS-IT." Forget the bother of use less plasters, greasy salves that spread and make toes sore and raw, little doughnut cotton rings that press on eorns, forget knives, razors, scissors and the dangers of blood poison from drawing blood, and the contraptions and harnesses that simply make corns worse. "GETS-IT" never hurts the flesh, never fails. "GETS-IT" is sold by all druggists, 25c a bottle, or sent direct by E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago.—Advertise ment. r _ > COMING JxS* YOUR WAY RIGHT NOW! Telegraph WANT ( Al) lias a ten-room house ready for the man with ready casii —which means a saving worth while. See on Want Ad Page. Wertz Goes Wild But Wins His Game; Two Battles Today Special to The Telegraph Allentown, Pa., May 21. George] Cockill took a desperate chance when | he kept Young Wertz, the Newport boy, in the box in the ninth yesterday. Harrisburg won, score 8 to 7. Up to 'the ninth Wertz pitched a remarkable game. Harrisburg won. however, having scored eight runs In the opening frames. Up until the final inning but] twenty-five batsmen had faced Wertz, who hurled in rare form. The dam aging weakness of the Teutons was hit ting fly balls. Wertz was given splendid support | by his teammates before the disastrous) ninth. In this session Catcher Miller's! three-base overthrow upset Wertz and j brought about his abdication from the hillock. President Graham, of the Tri-State I League, announced yesterday that to-! day being Ascension Day and generally i observed in this section of the State, i the Allentown and Harrisburg teams would play two games, one in the morning and the other in the after noon. The morning game to be played Is the scheduled game of July 6 moved J up. The score of yesterday follows; HARRISBURG AB. R. H. O. A. E. McCarthy, 2b ... go i o 4 o [ Emerson. If 5 1 1 6 0 0 l Keyes. rf g 2 1 2 0 0 I Crist, cf 4 2 2 0 0 0 [ .Miller, c 4 2 3 4 0 1 I Whalen. ss 8 o 2 5 3 0 Cockill, lb 4 1 1 10 0 0 Byers, 3b 3 o 0 0 4 0 Wertz, p 4 0 0 0 1 1 O'Neill, p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 37 8 11 27 12 2 ALLENTOWN AB. R. H. O. A. E. Stutz, ss 3 0 0 2 3 0 Murray, cf 3 1 l 3 0 I Cannell. rf 3 1 0 1 0 0 Boyle, lb 4 1 0 7 0 0 D. McGeehan, 2b. 3 112 2 0 Castle, If 4 1 1 3 0 0 P. McGeehan, 3b. 4 110 2 1 I Mitchell, c 4 1 0 9 0 2 I Keltz, p 2 0 0 n 2 0 | Monroe, p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 30 7 4 27 9 4 Harrisburg 000501 02 0 8 [Allentown 00000000 7 7 First base on errors, Harrisburg, 2; Allentown, 3. Sacrice hits, Murray, Fackler's"Big Store on the Hill" Are Offering Some Very Special Attractions IN PORCH FURNITURE We'll save you money and give you the very newest and best quality obtainable at low price. Owing to the backward Spring and a combination of circumstances the market is over stocked with goods. We secured at a manufacturer's sacrifice a large stock of Porch Furni ture which we put on our floors at prices that will move them all out quickly. It is not often that you can get such values at the beginning of the season, but this wide awake store is always on the lookout for the benefit of our many customers. IWI Finn 3-piece Reed Suite, Cretonne upholstered, $50.00 value. Special price $35.00 1 WlSltOur JWUIUOWS 3-piece Reed Suite, genuine leather uphols- i " tered, $55.00 value. Special price. $40.00 looked like that Willow Chairs, $6.00 value. Special price. $4.00 1 * High'back Willow Chair and Rocker, maga- j zinc pockets, $12.50 value. Special price, $9.00 J 3-piece Porch Set, Split Reed Scats, $12.50 ___ C 1 1 value. Special price . .SIO.OO WindOWOMQeS 3-piece Porch Set, Cane Seats, $22.50 value. * Special price . . . k ............ SIB.OO Brenlin Window Shades are the best oil .-piece Poich set, «ll oak, 00 \alue. shades made. Let us measure your windows Snecial price $1 7.50. These are great values. , nd jve an estimatc , We can guarantec 3-oiece Porch Set, all oak Just the thing p erfe^t satisfaction, for the porch or lawn, $17..i0 value. Special price $15.00 REFRIGERATORS A large Reed Rocker, very comfortable, $2.00 We have th > best refrigerators oil the value. Special price only sl.4<. Better se- market, all guaranteed to give perfect satisfac cure one or more of these rockers as they arc faction. Prices are SIO.OO up to SOO.OO. great values. Come in and let us explain to you their merits. FACKLER'S, 1312 Derry St. Whalen, Crist, Monroe. Left on bases, Harrisburg, 5; Allentown, 1. Stolen bases, Cockill, Keyes. Two-base hits, Crist, Miller, P. McGeehan. Three base hit, Whalen. Home run, McGee !han. Double plays, Whalen to Cockili, I Stutz to Boyle. Struck out, by Wertz, 2; Keltz, 7. Time. 1.40. Umpire, Glatts. Harrisburg Giants Win First Contest In the first of a series of throe games for the championship of ool j ored teams, the Harrisburg Giants yesterday defeated the Pittsburgh Giants, score 8 to 7. The game was full of comedy, good playing and sensational fielding Har risburg played all around their oppo nents, but the Pittsburghers are a fast j bunch and when warmed up will show | a pace that must be considered. The score: PITTSBURGH R. 11. O. A. E. ' Desfrest, 3b . 1 2 3 4 0 ! Jackson, ss 0 2 2 1 0 Scott. If 1 o 3 0 0 Johnson, lb 0 110 1 3 Gatewood, c 1 1 4 1 1 Mecablahan, cf 1 1 0 0 o! Ford, rf 1 l I o 1 Clay, 2b 0 o 1 3 1 Martin, p 2 2 0 2 1 Totals 7 10 24 12 6 HARRISBURG R. H. O. A. E. Wallace, ss 0 1 1 l 2 Abraham, If 0 o 2 0 1 Bozile, of . . 2 1 1 0 1 Hall, lb 2 2 5 1 0 Pergin, 3b 2 2 4 0 1 Franklin, 2b 0 1 0 0 0 Carpenter, rf 0 2 0 0 0 H. Jordan, c 1 1 8 2 1 Forbs, p I o 0 7 o Totals 8 10 27 11 6 Pittsburgh ...,0001 201 3 o—7 Harrisburg ....10012103 x—B AN INDISPUTABLE PACT All arguments are coupled with "pros and cons," "for and a'gainst"; but the fact that Menger's Restaurant gives you the very best 35c meal in this city remains the same. Dining room is spacious, light and comfort able; the food is clean, properly cooked and tastes homelike. Try a meal at Menger's Restaurant, 110 N. Second St. [Other Sports on Page 11] Senators Win Morning Game at Allentown Special to The Telegraph Allentown. Pa., May 21.—Hits, fast fielding and good headwork by Pitcher O'Neill brought a morning victory for Harrisburg to-day, Allentown losing; score, 12 to 5. Errors by the local team were costly. The sore by in nings: R. H. E. Harrisburg . 22200020 4—12 17 0 Allentown . 00200200 1 — 5 11 3 BUSINESS LOCALS CELLARS DRAINED by the use of a Peuberthy Automatic Cellar Drainer. All parts above wa ter—compact. One-half the size of others. Costs less and does the work more quickly. Sold, installed and guaranteed by E. Mather Co., 204 Walnut St. MAKE YOUR HOME A PICTURE By making your house beautiful you not only make it attractive but you can give wider scope to your hospi tality and make your home a picture by having your walls papered by the Peerless Wall Paper Store. Papers, 5 cents and up. R. A. White, pro ] prietor, 41S North Third street. WOMEN WIN ADMIRATION of others when their apparel is at tractive. It costs but little of money and time for women to have their gowns and suits cleaned by us. Our dry cleaning process has no superior. Dyeing garments a specialty. Finkel stein, 1320 North Sixth street. Bell phone brings our messenger. Batteries; O'Neill and Miller; Flood, Monroe and Mitchell. Cured His RUPTURE T was badly ruptured while lifting a trunk several years ago. Doctors said my only hope of cure was an operation. Trusses did me no good. Finally I got hold of something that quickly and completely cured me. Years have pass ed and the rupture has never returned, although 1 am doing hard work as a carpenter. There was no operation, no lost time, no trouble. 1 have nothing to sell, but will give full information about how you may find a complete cure without operation, if you write to me, Eugene M. Pullen, Carpenter, 36:; Marcellus Avenue. Manasquan, N. J. Better out out this notice and show it to any others who are ruptured— you may save a life or at least stop the misery of rupture and the worry and danger of an operation. Adver tisement.