Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, May 27, 1914, Page 11, Image 11

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    BUFFINBTONII
HEOERLIG RIMED
TECH HONOR MEN
Matter and Robert Hoff
man Winners of Third and
Fourth Places
ALL ABOVE 90 PER CENT.
Eight Others Listed on Roll; Best
Financially to Be Second
at Central
Technical high school honor stu
dents for 1914, including the boys who
Will speak at the commencement ex
ercises, were announced to-day by Dr.
Charles B. Fager, principal. Follow
ing is the honor roll::
Valedictory, or first honors,
Chester Hiilling-toii, soil of Mr. and
Mrs. John M. Hiillington, Oil) Pol'-
fcr street.
Salututory, or second honors,
Forrest JlclMTlig- .son of Mr. and
Mrs. George Z. Heberllg, 10 Kvcr
grcen street.
Third honors. Ijawson Matter,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey ().
Matter, 1933 N'ortli Seventh street.
Fourth honors, Robert Hoffman,
son of Mr. and Mrs. John Hoff
man, 1821 Susquehanna street.
All four boys reached a general
average in school work of more than
SO per cent, Bufflngt.on making 92.91,
Heberlig 91.44, Matter 90.95 and Hoff
man 90.04.
The eight boys who averaged less
than 90 per cent and who are enlisted
on the second honor roll are as fol
lows
Robert Henschen, 88.43, son of Pro
fessor G. N. C. Henschen, an instructor'
in the Central high school faculty;
John Gaugler, 88.12, son of Mr. and
Mrs. E. K. Gaugler, 8 Evergreen street;
Morton Kay, 87.14, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis W. Kay, 1802 Green street;
Basil Tittle, 85.17, son of Mr. and Mrs. !
E. Levi Tittle. 1906 North Third street;
Louis Scheaffer, 83.53, son of Mrs.
Rosnna Scheaffer, 1013 Green street;
Albert Hartwick, 83.08, son of Air.
and Mrs. Edward A. Hartwick. 27
South Fifteenth street; John Lloyd,
»2.77, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Lloyd,
83 North Seventeenth street; Lester
Nesbit, 81.44, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph B. Nesbit, 46 Balm street.
In addition to leading his class in
scholastic honors Bufflngton will be
awarded the alumni prize of $25.
Where It's Best to lie Second
Salutatory honors at Central high
He hoot this year will be more advan
tageous In a financial way than the
first honors, unless the graduates get
together and raise the $25 that the
alumni association has heretofore
awarded to the valedictorian.
The class of 1907 at graduation set
aside S3OO, the interest of which was
to he awarded to the second honor
student. This amounts to $ 15.
The sls award was decided upon for
the salutatorian because the valedic
*n gbt the $2 6 alumni prize. De
the fact that there are some 2,500
ral high school graduates in the
city, not enough interest in the annual
receptions was manifested to keep up
the association.
I>ast. year, however, a lot of grad
uates urged by. Austin Miller, .02, sec
retary of the alumni organization that
was, subscribed sufficient to make up
the $2 5 purse. Thus far this year,
however, there has been no effort to
raise the money.
' V I Continental Inxurain-e Fire Ins. Co. |,? §V |: ;
*} " |1 C "' "' '* ew York Pa. Uood Honda A»«(l'l :| 1 3ft|* IPf
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SittE 9BHI J Gallon Iron Co. Pennsylvania Water I IB tljjij gttiejk i"
M General Adjustment Supply Commission. if*
. S& ER bureau Milla. A K<-nillng Rvry
.»" * Ilarrlsburg Savings A Pennsylvania Rallrond 'J I •
<j l.nau AMU. CO. (Division Pnaaen- « tlfkfg ' ■ fßlfe
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j". « pondence School Plue Creek Lumber 4 •L' Sfi 'ißlHKfeafr. ~>■» •
ul i Insurance Co. of North Timber Co. Rj's : ;
, Amerlcn. Iloblnaon, W. M. U JH
il Johnston Harvester Co. State Board of Educa- g |g
- f Kell, .lolin F., Atty. Society for Prevention : * !p| I I
;' !j Liverpool & London <t of Cruelty to Animals «jcalWBMaSMMpaP^
InFi' i ' ■ Globe Insurance Co. Toledo Computing Scale i «$»;
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v '*ll London Assurance Cor- (Offices) || pfilMKIjgW.L,, -
r 1» poratlon. T"*—-sler. C. L.. Lumber j. IB
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■ ■ PH lurance Co. ' j y.erliy. William A. jMjH i
WEDNESDAY EVENING
WILL EXEMPT LABOR
FROM ANTI-TRUST HGT
Opposition of President and Demo
crats in House Collapses
During Debate
Washington, D. C., May 27.—Oppo
sition within the Democratic ranks to
demands of labor for amendments to
the omnibus Anti-Trust bill virtually
collapsed while the House was con
cluding general debate on the meas
ure. Conferences at the White House
and at the Capitol resulted in an un
derstanding that when the House re
sumes final consideration of the bill
Wednesday under the "five minute"
rule, Democratic members of the
Judiciary Committee will be solidly
behind amendments providing that.
Labor, fraternal, agricultural or
consumers' organizations shall not
be "held or construed to be illegal
combinations in restraint of trade
under the Anti-Trust laws."
None of the acts specified in
Section 18, forbidding injunctions
against peaceable strikes and
boycotts, shall "be construed or
held to be unlawful."
The labor leaders in the House, as
well as officials of the American Feder
ation of Labor, who were in the gal
lery throughout the afternoon, gave up
their fight for a specific declaration
that nothing in the Anti-Trust laws
should apply to labor unions. On the
other hand, as opposition to the
amendments as now proposed melted
.nvay. members of the committee con
■>•'l ih v in reality added little
or nothing to the bill.
The Anti-Trust bill will be disposed
of, according to present indications,
either Friday or the first part of next
week. The Railroad Stocks and Bonds
Control bill, the iast measure on the
anti-trust program, is expected by its
sponsors to occupy the rest of next
week. Then the three bills will be
finally disposed of and sent over to the
Senate.
Presbyterians Take
Radical Liquor Stand
Chicago, May 27.—Presbyterians
throughout the United States who be
long to clubs or other organizations
which sell or are licensed to sell in
toxicating liquors are strongly urged to
resign from such association in radi
cal resolutions approved by the 125 th
General Assembly of the Presbyterian
Church of the United States of Amer
ica yesterday.
The resolutions, which were pre
sented by the Rev. W. P. Calhoun, of
Knoxville, Tenn., chairman of the
committee on temperance, also urged
that all officers and member of local
churches should be forbidden to sign
liquor applications or to rent property
in which intoxicants are sold.
The clgaret habit was scathingly
denounced'jand a stand taken in favor
of nation-wide prohibition.
11 DIMES 10
PARADE SATURDAY
fContinued From First Page]
Thos. Numbers, Post 58, Charles Oy
ler, Camp 15, Sons of Veterans. Aids,
Post 58, Fin 1. Thomas, Charles Beav-
Bluejackets Enjoying Themselves Swimming From Warship at Vera Cruz
There Is just as much time for .play among the Jackies of the battleships off Vera Cruz as there is for fighting.
The burden of war does not hang so heavily on the sailors that they haven't time for a swim in the cool salt water.
This photograph shows a hundred or more of them swimming from one of the battleships, with the other ships
of the fleet in the distance.
er and A. J. Pugh, Po. 116, Robert
Dougherty, William H. Hertz and G.
L. Sellers, Post 520, David Stevens,
William Dixon, Camp 15, Sons of Vet
erans, J. A. Simpson, Ray Stewart, G.
A. Saltsman, Spanish American War
Veterans, Pau' Harm, American Vet
eran of Foreign Service, George F.
Lumb.
First Division
Following is the line of march: De
tachment of police, chief marshal and
chief of staff, assistant marshals, W.
R. Miller, John M. Major, Charles Oy
ler, aids Charles Beaver, Robert
Dougherty; band; Company D, Eighth
Regiment, N. G. P., Captain J. J. Hart
man; Company I, Eighth Regiment,
N. G. P.. Captain F. E. Ziegler; Gover
nor's Troop, N. G. P.. Captain George
C. Jack; Spanish American War Vet
erans, Captain ' Howard Newcomer;
Veterans of Foreign Service, Captain
George F. Lumb; City Grays, Captain
John T. Ensmlnger.
Second Division
Assistant Marshal, Thomas Num
bers; aids. Fin I. Thomas. A. J. Pugh.
William H. Hertz, George L. Sellers,
William Dixon, David Stevens, Ray
Stewart, George A. Saltsman, George
F. Lumb, Paul Harm; Camp 15, Sons
of Veterans; Spanish American War
Veterans; American Veterans Foreign
Service; City Grays; Commonwealth
Band; Post 58, G. A. R., Commander
E. B. Hoffman; W. F. Raysor's drunV
corps; Camp 15, Sons of Veterans fir
ing squad, Commander J. A. Simpson;
Post 116, G. A. R., Commander W. T.
Bishop; band; Post 520, G. A. R., Com
mander James M. Auter.
Services at Cemetery
Upon the head of the column arriv
ing at Thirteenth and Market streets,
they will halt, come to a front face.
The Sons of-Veterans, the Spanish
American War Veterans, American
Veterans of Foreign Service and the
G. A. R. will move out Thirteenth to
State, halt, come to a front face, when
Post 520 will move to the front and
proceed to the Lincoln Cemetery. The
organizations a'oove mentioned with
the G. A. R. following will enter the
Harrisburg Cemetery and proceed to
the speaker's stand, where the fol
lowing program will be observed:
Sounding the assembly, by Miss
HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH
Irene Wagner; dirge, by the band;
prayer, by the Rev. Silas C. Swallow;
oration, Philip S. Moyer; procession
to burial plot; music by the band;
prayer, Chaplain William Huggins,
Post 58; address, Commander WIN
Ham T. Bishop, Port 116; General Lo
gan's Order No. 11, N.A.Walmer, Post
58;; Lincoln's address, William H.
Moore, Post 116; memorial readings,
A. J. Pugh, Post 58; George L. Sel
lers, Post 116; William D. Rhoads,
Post 58; saluting the dead, by guards,
Post 58, Grand Army of the Republic,
and Camp 16, Sons of Veterans; bene
diction, the Rev. Silas C.
Taps, Miss Irene Wagner; strewing
the graves with flowers will follow.
One Minute for Memory
Believing that the five-minute period
in the middle of the day In accord
ance with the custom started a few
years ago of observing "Ave minutes
for memory" and carried out in this
city the past few Memorial days is so
long as to inconvenience traffic and
that there would be a more general
observance of the custom if the time
were reduced, the veterans this year
in an Informal discussion of the mat
ter decided to ask for the observance
of a period of one minute, beginning
at noon, "for memory," at which time
the usual tolling of bells and suspen
sion of traffic where practicable will
be carired out as heretofore.
Marking this Graves
A committee from the G. A. R. posts
in the city will Friday morning vistl
the graves in liarrisburg, East liarris
burg, Shoop's Church, Prospect and
Mount Calvary Cemeteries and place
bright fresh Hags over the graves of
comrades. These committees will also
carry markers to replace those gone
from graves or to marK any grave not
now inuicated witli the (J. A. it.
marker. In this connection the com
mittee wishes to request the families
of those who want tne graves of dead
veterans markeu to be on nand Fri
day morning at the cemeteries to indi
cate tne grave to be markeu to tne
committee. The committee will leave
tne city at 8 o'clock, groups arriving
at tne various cemeteries at aoout J
o'clock.
in this connection Francis H. Hoy,
chairman of the iUemorial Day com
mittee, said:
"V*e do not wish to miss one grave,
but cannot teil wnere an the comrades
rest unless their graves are located lot
us. We will be very glad to mark
them all. It remains for tne relatives
to assist us."
Considerable mystery attaches to the
disappearance of some of the markers.
Every year the committee carries a
supply of extra markers to replace
thobe mysteriously missing; the num
ber is not so many, but each year the
solution of what becomes of those
that are missing Is as tar otf as ever.
Exercises at School
Memorial Day exercises under the
auspices of tne G. A. R. on Friday
at the Forney building, Eighteenth
and Chestnut streets, will be held out
uoors. Arrangements have been made
for a platform in front of the school
building. The program will be an
nounced to-morrow. Veterans will
visit every school In the city Friday.
Commander Bishop has issued the
following orders as to the movements
of Post 116:
"All comrades ate requested to meet
at the postroom on Saturday morning,
May 30, at 8 o'clock, to proceed by
trolley to East Harrisburg Cemetery,
where memorial services will be held
Address by the Rev. H. M. Miller, of
the United Brethren Church; Sons of
\ eterans tiring squad, under command
of Captain J. A. Simpson, will salute
the dead.
"The comrades will assemble at the
post hall on Saturday afternoon, May
30, at 1.30 o'clock, to proceed to Its
position in line.
"The music, W. F. Raysor's Drum
Corps, will report to the post adjutant
on Memorial Day not later than 1.15
o'clock p. m. at post hall, 303-305
Broad street.
"Every comrade of Post 116 is ap
pealed to personally to show by his
presence hi interest in the post and
in the G. A. R. Cohirades, let us all
pay tribute to our fallen comrades".
THE REASON WHY! —By Heath
'■'fjrME
tpA LOOKED IN TftE NIGHT*
%pT Alll&l. ,I'
UN TELLING HIM REASON) WHY?
TELL GUESTS THEY
NEED NOT COME
Friendship Company Sends Let
ters to Fifty-two Cities
of State
Letters withdrawing an invitation
from the Frienshlp Fire Company, of
Harrisburg, to companies in flfty-two
different cities and towns to come to
Harrisburg next October, were mailed
this afternoon. The letter was prepared
by a committee named, and is as fol
lows:
"Some months ago we extended you
an invitation to be our guests during
the Thirty-flfth Annual Convention of
the Firemen's Association of the State
of Pennsylvania, to be held in this
city, October 6-9, 1914,
' The Harrlsburg Firemen's Union has
granted the York Fire Department the
right of line in the parade on October
8, a precedent unheard of anywhere in
the State, and we conclude our com
pany has been imposed upon m taking
away from It Its right to lead the pro
cession, an honor it has had for more
than one hundred years.
"Feeling that a gross imposition has
been done, this company has withdrawn
its delegates from the Firemen's Union
and we lmve emphatically decided not
to participate in the parade, nor will
we have anything whatever to do with
"Under these circumstances we are
compelled, although no fault of ours, to
withdraw the invitation extended vou.
'Regretting this matter, we trust you
will appreciate the position in which
we are placed."
The committee includes:
Daniel U Keister, president: Charles
S:., I l! secretary; Marlon Verbeke,
William H. Lynch, T. Harry Lentz.
Nursery Home Small
Folk in Need of Dresses
Down at the Nursery Home a whole
lot of little folks of a year to two
years of age are badly in need of cloth
ing, particularly dresses, and an urgent
appeal is being made by Mrs. Elsie
Middleton, secretary of the Children's
Aid Society, for aid from the people
of the city.
"Any kind of clothing that will do
for small folks," said Mrs. Middleton
to-day, "will be very acceptable, and
do urge the people of the city to con
tribute."
INTEREST IN MATCH
It is probable that sixteen men
each will comprise the teams of the
Country Club of Harrisburg and the
Reservoir Park Golf club in the fifth
annual match of the Boyd-Pavne cup
series, which is to be played at the
Country club on Saturday. Some of
the matches will be played in the
morning as Country club members
will also play baseball with the nine
of the Reading Country club in the
afternoon.
CONFERENCE ON DAIRY LAW
Representatives of the dairying and
creamery Interests of the state con
ferred; with State Veterinarian C. J.
Marshall and other officials of the
State Livestock Sanitary Board at the
Commonwealth Hotel to-dav on the
manner of enforcing the regulations
for shipping milk.
ATTENDING CONVENTION
Miss Alice R. Eaton, librarian of
the Harrlsbur* Public Library, and
Misses Comestock and Gough, 'of tho
Library staff are at Washington At
tending the National Library con
vention.
CLOSED ON SATURDAY
The Harrisburg Public Library
will be closed all day Saturday. The
usual Saturday features, including
the story telling hour will be canceled,
celed.
MAY 27, 1914.
CARDINAL GIBBONS
ENTERTAINS SIXTY
American Prelate Gives Dinner in
Rome to Members of Papal
College and Dignitaries
• Special to Tht Telegraph
Rome, May 27.—Cardinal Gibbons
(fßve a magnificent dinner of sixty cov
ers at the Procure St. Sulplce, where
he la staying. The tables and columns
of the dining room were decorated
with beautiful pink roses and carna
tions. When the Cardinal was here
for the Conclave he also gave a dinner
which was considered as remarkable,
he having gathered seven Cardinals.
Yesterday the Cardinals present
numbered eight. Including, besides
Cardinal Gibbons, Cardinals Farley,
O'Connell, Vincenzo, Vannutelli, Begin,
Falconlo, De Lai and Gasparrl. Among
those who excused themselves because
of former engagements wai Cardinal
Gasquet.
Father Hersog, Procurator General
of St. Sulplce, assisted in doing the
honor*. The other guests Included
Bishop Dennlß O'Connell, of Rich
mond; the Archbishops of Toronto,
Halifax and Ottawa; Bishop Hogan, of
Kansas City, and several Canadian and
Italian bishops and Monslgnors Sha
han, Edwars, Hayes and Spaline. At
the end of the dinner Cardinal Gib
bons toasted the Pope, and Cardinal
Vannutelli toasted the American
episcopacy amid indescribable enthu
siasm.
The Pope received In a private fare
well audience Cardinal O'Connell, who
Is leaving on Friday. The Pope was
most affectionate and embraced him,
expressing the deep satisfaction he felt
at seeing him and the consolation on
hearing such good news in his report
from Boston. He entrusted him to
take the apostolic benediction to his
faithful, and hoped he would see him
again shortly.
Cures Monkeys by
Osteopathic Means
Special to The Telegraph
Rochester, N. Y., May 27. That he
had cured seven monkeys of a disease
contracted in the tropics, which had
filled their kidneys with parasites; that
he had eradicated goiters from the
necks of dogs and, to prove that his
cure was not the result of nature alone,
had produced goiters In the necks of
normal canines by osteopathic treat
ments, were among claims In a lecture
given by Dr. J. A. Deason, of the A. T.
Still Research Institute, of Chicago, be
fore the Rochester District Society of
Osteopathy. ,
Monkeys, says Dr. Deason, are sus
ceptible to all diseases that affect man,
and for that reason the animals were
used In his experiments, ill the time
when the twenty-four monkeys were
under treatment three escaped, contract
ed pneumonia and died. Dr. Deason
said that while osteopaths could not ex
plain the change that they could pro
duce In the blood by rectifying the rela
tions of bodily organs and so making
the blood pure, they could by this
method drive out bacteria. No bacteria
could work harm in normal blood, he
asserted, because the "blood Is the
greatest known germicide."
In relating his experiments on dogs
Dr. Deason cited the fact that dogs In
the Great Lake region were especially
susceptible to goiter. Ten had been
treated for six months. Six in that
time had been cured anil the others re
lieved. It was his opinion that if more
time had been taken all would have
been cured. To prove that he had cured
these dogs Dr. Deason said he had
taken ten normal dogs and had produc
ed goiters in their necks, by creating
structural lesions. Lack of time pre
vented him, he said, from telling of the
progress that had been made in the
similar treatment of thirty common ail
ments.
Dr. Deason said that to-day, twenty
years from the time of the foundation
of the first school for the study of os
teopahy, the course offered in numerous
modern schools was as complete as that
in genedal medicine, going more deeply
into anatomy and physiology than the
latter. He said there are 6,000 prac
titioners, and 1,200 students of os
teopathy.
ROOSEVELT INTENDED
TO SEND TROOPS
[Continued From First Page]
nia I'd act, and I'd guarantee that
the people of the Eastern seaboard
would have coal and have It right
away. I told him that If he would
help me he could vote to impeach me
later if he wished. I asked Quay to
arrange to have Governor Stone, of
Pennsylvania, when I notified the gov
ernor, send word to me that he was
unable to control the situation, and
then I would send in the army.
Must Men to T. R.
"I planned to have General Schofield
go in and take charges with the troops
and act practically as a receiver for
the mines. I told the general it would
be equivalent to action taken in time
of war, and that he must pay no heed
to any other authority—no heed to a
writ from a judge or anything else ex
cept my commands. He said he would
do so."
Colonel Roosevelt said he kept his
plan secret, even from the members
of his Cabinet. The operators, he said,
persisted in their uncompromising
plan until finally a change came and
after many disputes about the mem
bership of the commission one was
appointed and the strike ended.
Wales Angers Teddy
Colonel Roosevelt was constantly
sparring with Mr. Wales who conduct
ed his own case, when under cross ex
amination. Mr. Wales frequently ang
ered him, and he bent forward shaking
his finger at the lawyer and scowling
at him. He said he had never seen
Mr. Wales before and knew nothing
o fany part which the plaintiff took
in settling the strike.
Mr. Wales tried to make Colonel
Roosevelt admit he was willing to
violate the laws, defy the courts and
disregard the constitution to settle the
strike.
"I wouldn't accept your Interpre
tation of the constitution," Colonel
Roosevelt retorted. "I proposed that
every action I took should be In ac
cordance with the constitution as Ab
raham Lincoln construed It."
"Would you have settled the strike
law or no laws?" persisted the plain
tiff.
"I'd have settled It," Colonel Roose
velt said. "I'd have found a law."
ELKS AT LEBANON
Harrlsburgr Elks were guests of
Lebanon Elks at a social held at Leba
non, last night. The Harrlsburg party
Included: V. Hummel Brackenrldge,
Charles Wolfe, J. Grant Schwarz, Sr., J.
Grant Schwarz, Jr., A. H. Kretdlcr, John
L. L. Kuhn, W. H. Warner, C. H. Slgler
and James Lut*.
' \
FOK fALB
FOR RENT
FURNISHED ROOMS
UNFURNISHED ROOMS
Cards neatly all attractively
prlntcdi caa be neoured at
THE TELEGRAPH BUSINESS
OFFICE
218 Federal Square
McCormick, Palmer and
Wilson Are Discussing
Situation in Penna.
Washington, D. C., May 27.—The
political situation In Pennsylvania was
discussed to-day at a conference be
tween President Wilson, Representa
tive A. Mitchell Palmer, the Demo
cratic nominee for United states Sen
ator, and Vance C. McCormick, Dem
ocratic nominee for Governor.
Home Mission Report
Adopted by Assembly
Chicago, 111., May 27.—Reorganiza
tion of the Board of Home Missions
of the Presbyterian Church in a man
ner to satisfy most of Its critics was
accomplished to-day when the report
of the standing committee on home
missions .presenting a plan of reor
ganization, was adopted by the Gen
eral Assembly.
The plan, specific details of which
remain lo be worked out, enlarges the
board from 24 to 30 members; takes
the management from a general secre
tary and places it In the hands of
four or more co-ordinate secretaries;
leaves general headquarters in New
York city, but gives the West the head
quarters of the church extension de
partment and allows synods and pres
byteries supervision over home mis
sions in their territory.
The use of nonalcoholic wine in
the sacrament of the Lord's Supper i
was ordered when a supplemental re
port from the committee on temper
ance was adopted by the assembly.
Business Locals
THE CHILDREN'S VACATION
In summer can be utilized to their
advantage by using a part of their
time for a musical education. Their
minds are free from other studies
and a few moments between play will
train their little fingers while young.
Get a piano for them now. $176 to
$450 on the easy payment plan at
Yohn Bros'., 8 North Market Suuare.
THE COST OF SUNSHINE
In the home and office is but a trifle,
when you consider that happiness and
good will may easily be promoted by
the gift of an occasional box or bou
quet of cut flowers. Try it once a week
and watch the effect. Schmidt, Flor
ist, 313 Market street.
FROM SUN TO SUN
Woman's work is never done. Women
can make the work a whole lot less if
they will but avail themselves of the
Troy Laundry methods. Cut out the
Monday wash and it will save prac
tically an entire day's labor and worry.
This time can then be put to more
agreeable pastime. Call Troy Laun
dry, either phone.
CAN'T GET AWAY FROM IT
Fine, journeyman tailoring stands
upon its merits. It meets and defeats
every argument for ready-made cloth
ing. When alte ed the ready-made Is
Just what its name Implies. It lacks
all that a custom-tailored suit pos
sesses—character, individuality, fit,
finish and staying qualities. For a per
fect fit try George F. Shope, the Hill
Tailor, 1241 Market street.
LIKE A RUBBER DOLLAR t
Your present one will stretch twice as
far as ordinarily if you bring it to
the Midway Clearence Sale of women's
Spring and Summer Suits at the Klein
Company store. Sweeping reductions
In this ten-day sale include our entire
stock of coats, suits, skirts and waists.
Klein Co., 9 North Market Square.
HEART TO HEART
Have a heart to heart .alk to your
prospective customers about your par
ticular line of merchandise by send
ing them by post a well written multi
graph letter. They are a direct appeal
to any list of patrons you wish to
reach direct and we get th- .a up in
artistic style at a small expense. Wea
ver Typewriting Company, 25 North
Third street.
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 bank credit, to take advantage of
this interest reduction, which is lower
than the lawful rates prescribed by
the laws of 1913. Pennsylvania In
vestment Company, 132 Walnut street
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,
B cents and up. R. A. White, pro
prietor, 418 North Thjrd street.
NATURE'S WARNING SIGNALS
Trust your health to your physi
cian. He has studied your physical
being with scientific knowledge do
signed to promote your health. Trust
us with the filling of your prescrip
tion. Every drug or chemical in our
stock is fresh and full of strength;
our clerks are competent and ex
perienced. E. Z. Gross, druggist and
apothecary, 119 Market street.
IF BACK HURTS
BEGIN ON SALTS
Flush your Kidneys occasionally
i if you eat meat
regularly i
No man or woman who eats meat
regularly can make a mistake by flush
ing the kidneys occasionally, says a
well-known authority. Meat forma
uric acid, which clogs the kidney pores
so they sluggishly filter or strain only
part of the waste and poisons from
the blood; then you get sick. Nearly
all rheumatism, headaches, liver
trouble, nervousness, constipation, diz
ziness, sleeplesness, bladder disorders
come from sluggish kidneys.
The moment you feel a dull ache In
the kidneys or your back hurts, or If
the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of
sediment, Irregular of passage or at
tended by a sensation of scalding, get
about four ounces of Jad Salts from
any reliable pharmacy and take a
tablespoonful in a glass of water be
fore breakfast for a few days and your
kidneys will then act fine. This famous
salts is made from the acid of grapes
and lemon Juice, combined with llthla
and has been used for generations to
flush clogged kidneys and stimulate
them to activity, also to neutralize the
acid In urine so it no longer causes
irritation, thus ending bladder dis
orders.
Jad Salts is Inexpensive and cannot
injure; makes a delightful effervescent
llthia-water drink which all regular
meat eaters should take now and then
to keep the kidneys clean and the
blood pure, thereby avoiding serious
Jtldney. complications.—Advertisement,
11