18 Overnight Relief For Constipation When the bowels become clogged with a mass of poisonous stomach waste, sick headache with all its attendant misery, belching of sour stomach gases, bloat and general discomfort are sure to follow. A mild, pleasant laxative-tonic that will carry off the congested mass without upsetting the stom ach or griping the bowels, is the I combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin sold In drug stores under the name«of Dr. Cald well's Syrup Pepsin. A dose taken just before retiring will afford grateful relief next morning, with out unpleasantness or discomfort. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is the Ideal family remedy, especially for the women and children and old folks. A free trial botUe can bo obtained by writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 452 Washington St., Monticello, Ills. Mother's Love For Child Greater Than For Riches Willtamsport, Pa., May 7.—''We wouldn't think of parting with her for any amount of money, no matter how great." said Mrs. Howard Gray, of Roaring Branch, to-day, as she kissed ' and hugged her 2-year-old daughter, A'ivian Jane Lieb Gray, for whom she had been offered SIOO,OOO by John Mock, of West Philadelphia. He want ed to adopt the child. "I don't think Mr. Mock realized what it would have meant to us to j have given him our baby, our only i child, but I felt sorry for him when he | •went away. He seemed almost heart broken. He is a good man and meant all right, but, of course, we couldn't sell our child. No real mother or father would." "Mr. Mock's offer was a surprise to us." said Airs. Gray. "He came here on a visit to relatives. When he met Vivian he seemed to become captivated with her and she with him. They were together frequently during the week he was in the village and he became greatly attached to her. PROTESTS AG ATX ST "FURY OK DEGENERATE NATIONALISM" Rome, May 7.—Asserting that the j hour Is near at hand for momentous . by Italy, the Osservatore | Roman, the Vatican organ, deprecates I in the strongest terms the war it be- j lieves probable. The paper protests I against "the fury of degenerate na tionalism. which desires war for war's sake, hiding from the majority of the nation the dangers of participating in the cruel conflict which is shaking Kurope like an earthquake, which lightly accepts war for war's sake without asking its justice, necessity or opportuneness." To Engage Expert to Report on Location of Isle of Safety Initial steps toward obtaining data i on the practicability of locating the , aisle of safety in Market Square, ac- | rording to the plans originally nrepar- ; ••d by Albert Kelsey, were taken this afternoon at a meeting of the executive "mmittee. of th» Municipal league, "■hen it decided to engage Rion J. Ar nold. Chicago, one of the leading trac tion and terminal experts In the coun- 1 try. The executive committee also decid- . ed to endeavor to arrange a conference ! between the city and the Harrisburg ' Light and Power Company officials 1 witn a view to reaching a mutuallv satisfactory agreement on the building I plans for the island coal wharf. BOWMAN'S NEW BT II DI\«; WII.I, COST ABOUT 925,000 Bowman and Comnany to-dav took i out a permit to build its proposed six- I story brick and steel building at 314-! 216 Market street. The building will ■ cost approximately $25.1f>0 C. M. Her- | shey got a permit to build two two- j story frames in Mulberrv near Nine teenth. They will cost $5,200. ■ . TO DEVELOP THE BUST It is no wonder that a woman with a j well developed bust and pretty neck i and shoulders is always the center of admiration when the great majority of i ladies these days are so thin, flat chest- ' ed and scrawny. It Is silly for a wo man to allow false pride to keep her from enjoying to the full the charms of prefect womanhood when it mav so easily be obtained by a process that I will positively be of benefit to the gen eral health. It does not matter how ! thin or flat chested a woman may be if I she is over lt> years of age. or under I 50, she can have a bust that will be the envy of all her sex. All that is ; necessary for her to do is to drink plenty of fresh water and get from anv good druggist a little Salitone in tablet form and take one tablet after each meal and one before retiring at night This is the simplest, surest, safest and I most reliable method known to science It acts quickly, gives a natural develop ment and makes the bust firm and beautiful, also gives even the most scraggy woman a pretty and attractive neck and shoulders. It is a fine tonic, too. and will do wonders for anvone I who is rundown or undeveloped—Ad vertisement. KING OSCAR 5c CIGARS "If a man can write a better book, preach a better sermon or make a better mousetrap than world will make abeaten path to his door." For 24 years the regu m* lar quality of King Oscar 5c Cigars has monopolized the pat ronage of particular smokers. FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH MAT 7, 1915, LIBOR MEN 1 HEIR HOIK TORT COPS President of Pa. Labor Federation Urges Violence to Combat Police in Strikes 300 DELEGATES TO MEET HERE Four-day Session of 600 Organiza tions to Be Held Next Week Three hundred delegates represent ing the six hundred labor organiza tions affiliated with the Pennsylvania Federation of Labor will hold a four day meeting here next week, during which James H. Maurer, president, will broach a plan for acquainting la boring men with military tactics, so that they will be capable of protect ing themselves during strikes. Mr. Maurer Is a Socialist member of the Legislature. Before the United States Commis sion on Industrial Relations yesterday during an investigation of the Penn sylvania railroad shopmen's strike, Representative Maurer said: "I have on previous occasions urged that trade union men learn how to shoot and to : protect themselves. We are tired of i having our defenseless people shot | down and beaten by officers of the State, and if it is going to continue it is necessary that labor men be pre pared to protect themselves." "At the State federation of Labor convention next week I am going to advocate that union men learn the military arts in order to protect them selves against these agents of the Commonwealth, who are used against them." Sessions of the convention will be held in Board of Trade Hall. They will open Tuesday morning and will conclude Friday evenin* or Satur day morning. The work of the Legis lature will be discussed and other important business introduced. I A debate between representatives of ithe Woman's Suffrage Association and I the "antis" is expected to prove an | interesting feature of the convention. IC. F. Quinn, secretary of the Federa i tlon, has sent Invitations to each or ! ganization and both have accepted. Man With World's Largest Name Here I New York, May 7.—With one of his j wives, sixty pieces of baggage, his golf ] sticks and the longest name in cap- I tivity, his highness the Maharaja of ! Kapurthalia has arrived in this coun ! try for an indefinite tour. The maha rajah's full name, which for obvious ; reasons he does not intend to use in full in this country, is Jaga-Jit Singh j BadapurNaharajah Kepurthalaia. Fart ! nadi-i-Dribund Pasiknu Iti-kad-Davo lat-1-Inglisha-Rajah - Rajagan Rata Japa-Jit-Singh-Badahur. He is the ruler over 590 square miles and 252,617 people in India. : His wife, the maharanee. is the I youngest of his highness' four wives She is 23 years old and of Spanish birth. TWO INJURED WHQII ! JIUTO TRUCK PLI6ES OIIEB EMBMKMEKT Highway Dept. Supt. Badly In jured ; Driver Is Hurt When Road Gives Way LANDS IN BED OF OLD CANAL Pull to Side to Allow Horse to Pass; Wall Crumbles, Hurling Occupants From Machine George A. Barclay, 48 years old, of Pittsburgh, superintendent of road signs in the State Highway Depart ment, was seriously injured this morn ing when Truck No. 8, belonging to the State Highway Department, fell over the euge of a twenty-fool em bankment on the Harrisburg-Sunbury road just below Mountain Spring hotel. 28 miles from Harrisburg. Mr. Barclay sustained a fracture of the left leg and o fthe right arm. with pos sible internal injuries. Dr. George B. Kunkel. of Harrisburg, accompanied the representatives of the State High way Department to the scene of the accident and had Mr. Barclay brought to the Harrisburg hotel. Charles W. Hepford, chauffeur, was thrown from the auto it fell and sustained a lacerated scalp and cuts and contu sions of the head and body. J. R. Ross, of Gettysburg, the third mem ber o fthe party jumped as the truck fell and escaped Injury. - .ie party, which had been out plac ing road signs along the State high ways .left Liverpool where they spent the night, shortly after 5 o'clock this morning, for Harrisburg. Just after passing the Mountain Spring hotel at about 7.30, Hepford saw the driver of a skittish horse signaling to him to stop. The driver pulled to the left of the road along the hillside, and Hepford steered the truck out to the right, bringing it to a stop with the two left hand wheels resting on a re taining wall built alongside the road. Just as the machine came to a stop the retaining wall gave way carrying about four feet of the bank with it and plunging the truck down the twenty toot embankment to the bed of the old Pennsylvania Canal which paral lels the road at this point. Tht* truck turned ovr on the way down and lit in the canal bed, standing in the same position as when on the road. Aid was summoned from Mountain Spring hotel and Dr. W. G. Morris, of Liverpool, was called on the tele phone. Xt was seen that Barclay was the most seriously injured and he was carried tothe hotel where Mrs. Samuel F. Seal, wife of the proprietor, made him comfortable until the arrival of the doctor. Dr. Morris set bor frac tures temporarily, so that when Dr. Kunkel arrived no time was lost in transferring the patient on a stretcher to the automobile and bringing his to the Harrisburg Hospital. CREIGHTON ANSWERS CHARGES OF HOYER [Continued from First Page.] Railroad Trainmen urged organization of the Altoona shopmen. Two Did Not Agree "Unfortunately. Mr. Hoyer and my self. although we usually agreed on public affairs, did not agree as to how this strike should be handled. Through out the trouble it was absolutely neces sary that we knew in advance what the labor leaders were going to do about it. "Incident to failure to get proper protection from the city, we would appeal to the county, and from the county we got fifty detectives. Our plants and yards constantly were in vaded. Strikers threw missiles at our trains and there was actual violence toward us constantly." Creighton. referring to Hoyer's tes timony on an assault by Constable Luther upon Gallagher, a labor or ganizer. declared the attack had noth ing to do with the strike. Luther, he said, attacked Gallagher because Mrs. Luther said he had insulted her. "Did you know that Gallagher died shortly after that assault?" asked Commissioner O'Connell. "T did not." "Well, he did. If the Pennsylvania company was not interested in that case, why did the master mechanic of ycur shop go to the mayor to appeal for Luther, statins; that the Judge, dis trict attorney and everybody and the mayor had been fixed?" "I called Mr. Redding (the master mechanic) on the long distance tele phone last night," said Creighton, "and he declared that he never said any thing of the kind to Hoyer. I think the mayor's use of the word 'fixed' was an unfortunate one. 1 don't think he meant it just that way." "Do you think the mayor would ac cuse an officer of your company that way If nothing of the kind happened? Did Mr. Redding indicate that he didn't appeal at all to Mayor Hover in Luther's case?" "Mr. Redding told me that the charge was unqualifiedly false," -"id Creighton. Chairman Walsh asked Creighton to get an affidavit from Redding. At the time of the Altoona strike, Creighton said, arms were secured from the purchasing agent at Phila delphia. who kept revolvers on hand in times of peace. "Ordinary policemen's clubs are turned out in our factories whenever there is trouble." said he. The questioning turned to conditions in Altoona. "Altoona is dominated by the Penn sylvania In a certain way." said he, "because the people are all affilia*-d with the company and would be with us if left to their own devices. There was absolutely no trouble there until these organizers tried to stir up trouble in order to win a strike at Pitcairn." Commissioner Aishton asked Creigh ton about Mayor Hoyer's charge that he was trying to incite trouble in urg ing him to arrest strikers. "The streets were filled with threat ening mobs and T thought we ought to eet action from him," said Mr. Creighton. "It was clearly a case of his failure to appreciate the danger of an upris ing." That the labor unions should here after instruct their members In mili tary methods in order that thev might repel attacks made by such bodies as the Pennsylvania State Constabulary was the sensational statement made hv Representative Maurer, member of th'e Pennsylvania -State legislature and nresident of the Pennsvlvania State Federation of Labor, before the Com mission on Industrial Relations last evening. He said that labor men should he instructed in military tactics. They should, he asserted deliberately, meet force with force. Apparently the fact that the constabulary was established to enforce the law and put down riots and disorders did not concern the wit ness. No more sensational testimony has been sriven hefnre tlr* commission. It was the first time that siu-h a tilan suggesting civic warfare, had ever been advanced publicly. NEW SONG WITH A VERY QUAINT IDEA (>