12 i Independent of price, you look ■ for, and expect here, furg of y Service and of unduplicated I Style. 0 Nor have we failed ever to suit the mot "articular and I the most exacting. >< I I I J . I Chestnut Street 1 Philadelphia j| Tk4 Hoou ot Bxeluaiv* Modeli JUEEX SENDS CONGRATULATIONS New Brunswick, N. J., Oct. 13. —By irder of Queen Wllhelmina, of the getherlands, Chevalier Van Reppard, utch minister to the United States, attended the celebration of the 150 th anniversary of the foundation of Rut fers College here to-day and In her lame besopoko congratulations. Rut ters was founded by Dutch colonists of New York and New Jersey under royal (harter from the King of England in 1766. GUARDSMEN DKS"RTING Jackson, Miss., Oct. 13.—Seventy |ve membe# of the First Regiment, ptssatisfied because they have been fcept in camp here when other guard ►rganizations have been sent to the border, have disappeared, officers said 10-day. Charges of desertion aro pending against twelve guardsmen. FOOD SOURING IN STOMACH CAUSES GAS, INDIGESTION "Pape's Diapepsin" neutralizes acids in stomach and starts digestion. Five minutes! No sourness, gas, heartburn, acidity or dyspepsia. If what you just ate is souring on your stomach or lies like a lump of lead, refusing to digest, or you belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food, or have a feeling of dizziness, heart burn, fullness, nausea, bad taste in mouth and stomach headache, you can Burely get relief in live minutes. Ask your pharmacist to show you the formula, plainly pruned on these fifty-cent cases of Pape's Diapepsin, then you will understand why dys peptic troubles of all kinds must go, *nd why it relieves sour, out-of-order i stomachs or indigestion in five min utes. "Pape's Diapepsin" is harmless; tastes like candy, though each dose Mil digest and prepare for assimila tion into the blood all the food you eat; besides, it makes you go to the table with a healthy appetite; but ivhat will please you most, is that you will feel that your stomach and intes tines are clean and fresh, and you will not need to resort to laxatives or liver pills for biliousness or constipation, i This city will have ninny "Pape's j Diapepsin" cranks, as some people will 1 jail them, but you will be enthusiastic a.bout this splendid stomach prepara tion, too, if you ever take it for indi gestion, gases, heartburn, sourness, dyspepsia, or any stomach misery. Get some now, this minute, and rid yourself of stomach misery and indi gestion in five minutes. "Pep" Ginger and Ambition for "Run Down" Men Weak, Nervous Women t A medicine that helps the weak, nervous, half-sick, nerve-starved men and women, can be boutrht of any live druggist by asking for three grain iCadomene Tablets in sealed tubes at one dollar per tube, or six tubes for five dollars— a full treatment. BEFORE TAKING You have headaches, backaches, shattered nerves. Your ambition is gone, extremities cold or numb, heart flutters, kidneys inactive, vitality low, confidence gone, life seems hopeless. Despondency attacks you your friends desert you, you're not interest ing, energetic, full of life and vitality. AFTER TAKINGS Your health improves, aches are banished; ambition returns; blood cir culates freely, powerfully; nervousness disappears, heart becomes normal, or ganic troubles corrected, vitality re- Dewed, confidence restored and life be comes brighter, your friends find you iof interest, admire your strength, your magnetism; which is another word for smiles and joy. Alt this comes because your nerves, blood and vital organs feel the benefi cent medicines in three grain Cado mene Tablets. YOUR SYMPTOMS tell you that you need a powerful, vitalizing tonic to regain all that you have lost. Try 'WfD Grvm V \Ca^Co7mau^\ I •• • Tab7eis •• • t They are guaranteed to help you of money refunded by the Blackburn Products Co., Dayton, Ohio. The "Best thing in the world" for "run down" men or weak, nervous women. Price SI.OO at all drutrgists. Six tubes ioi (£.OO is full treatment. i TRAIN URGED TO KEEP SCHEDULE Dauphin Man Complains About ! the Peculiarities of a Morn- j ing Flyer The Northern Central passenger | train scheduled to leave Dauphin at j' | 6.28 o'clock in the mornings for Har- ! rlsburg Is given a very bad reputation ;as a timekeeper by H. C. Forney, j superintendent of the Hummelstqwn, i Shoe company, in a letter to the Pub- 1 | lie Service Commission to-day. | Mr. Forney says that numerous ■ complaints have been made about the I vagaries of the time of this flyer on which many folks come to this 1 city for market and business. Some > time ago the commission got aftor it and found that it was an inter-State | caravan and that the State could only ask It politely to try to keep to its schedule. In his letter Mr. Forney! says the train has only been on time I [twice a month and that people have j to wait from fifteen to one hundred \ minutes to get to Harrisburg. • i The point is also made by Mr. For- I ney that if the company can not keep ! the schedule for this train it should make a new one and also that if that is not another train should j be put on and educated up to the j propriety of keeping a schedule. He ; also says that he was told by the presi- i dent of the Harrisburg Railways com pany that the trolley company would build to Dauphin if the Railroad com- j pany gave a right of way. Apparently Mr. Forney has only the jitneys to fall upon. He is reluctant i to hop frieghts because that is dan- I gerous and he is liable to be arrested; j he cannot induce the trolley company ' to build and the commission can only j pat the locomotive of the train on the smokestack and ask it to think how j nice it would be to keep to a schedule. | More Girders The Public Service Commission has j scheduled for Monday afternoon the application of the Philadelphia and j Reading Railway for the right to put I more girders on abutments at Ruth erford subway. John McSparran's complaint about! the charge for a three-minute tele- ! phone conversation In rural Lancaster I county will also be heard next week. The Gettysburg Furniture company has filed notice of increase of stock i from $50,000 to SIOO,OOO. Richard B. Ryan, Shamokin and ' W. P. Stoner, Hanover, were ap pointed notaries public to-day. Ex-Representative A. E. Keeport, I of Reading, was here to-day. No Cost to State The State of Pennsylvania is not ! to be obligated for any of the costs '' in the quo warranto proceedings to be instituted at Williamsport to deter- j mine the question of citizenship of Mayor Jonas Fischer, of that city, ac- i cording to a notice sent to the at- ! torneys in the case to-day. The at- j torney general to-day formally allow ed the writ. Judge J. Whitaker Thompson, of I Philadelphia, was to-day re-appoint ed a trustee of the Spring City State institution and Ex-Representative J. ; Milton Lutz, of Llanerch, was named ! to succeed Samuel R. Crothers, Ches- j ter, resigned. Herbert L. Pearsall was to-day sub- I stituted as Prohibition candidate for! the Legislature in the Potter county district after T. G. Gardner had filed a withdrawal as candidate on the ! Prohibition, Progressive, Washington and Socialist tickets in that district. I Jacob Soffel to-day withdrew as Pro-! hibition candidate for Congress in the ; 32nd district and H. N. Sherwood, as Democratic candidate in the 25th Sen atorial district. Deputy Attorney General Hargest to-day gave an opinion to Chief of Mines James E. Roderick in which he holds that county commissioners should not refuse to receive and file i certificates issued by miners' examin- > ing boards to candidates for the of- j fice of anthracite mine Inspector. The ' Northumberland county commission- j ers had refused to accept a certificate! claiming the mine inspectors are State '< officers and that certificates should be ! tiled with the secretary of the Com monwealth. Adjutant Geheral Stewart is in I Philadelphia looking after details of I the transfer of State property by the i regiments to be mustered out. Episcopalians May Ban All Divorce Marriages St. Louis, Oct. 13. A report rec- | ommending a new church law pro-! liibiting Episcopal clergymen from I performing the marriage ceremony for ' persons divorced for causes arising! after matrimony, regardless of the I cause, was presented to the general convention of the Protestant Episropal I church. | The report was presented in the House of Deputies by the Rev. Charles 1 J. Rigley, of Brooklyn, and caused a spirited discussion. The law recom mended in the report of the joint commission on legislation on matters relating to holy matrimony. The commission recommended, however, that where it is claimed a divorce has been granted for causes arising before marriage and satisfac tory evidence is presented, sjich a de cree, "being in fact a decree of an nulment,' is no bar to the marriage of either party. The present canon of the church permits a minister to perform the ceremony in the case of the marriage of the innocent party to a divorce granted on statutory grounds, pro- clergyman has received the consent of his bishop. In its report the commission pointed out that the whole subject of mar riage. "with its responsibilities and obligations, should be made a matter for careful instruction by the clergy much more frequently than is now common." Advocates More Care For Superannuated Ministers Des Moines. lowa, Oct. 13.—More i attention should be paid to care of superannuated ministers, whose lives have been spent in active ministry. In the opinion of W. H. Bock, of Colum bUH. Ohio, expressed in an address to day before the annual international convention of the Churches of Christ, In session here. To-day's sessions were given over to the Rilile school section and discussion of relief for superannuated pastors. Speakers included C. R. Stauffer, Cincinnati, Ohio; C. M. Filtnore, In dianapolis; C. L. Goodnight, Penn sylvania, and P. I. Mose, Mississippi. Sessions this afternoon and to-night were to be devoted to the men and millions movement. MEADE V.'. C. T. V. MEETING A meeting of the Meade W. C. T. U. was held this afternoon et 2 o'clock in the Park Street Evangelical Church with the president, Mrs. John M. Bo lan presiding. A talk on "Scientific Instruction in the Public Schools" was given by Mrs. John Peregoy after rou tine business and music. PR. WOODS IS DEAD Philadelphia, Pa., Oct. 13. Dr. Matthew Woods, one of the best | known specialists on epilepsy in the world, and a publicist, art collector land traveler died to-day following an. onAratl/tB. me Saturday Tells the Story of the BIG- FACTORY DISPOSAL SALE—Every Piano, Player Piano and Organ Included Without Reserve. The End Is in Sight—Saturday Night ati 10 P. M. Every Piano in This Store Should Be Sold. BE HERE SATURDAY WITHOUT FAIL yi - m■ QQ gy . The prices we have placed on this stock the lust few davs will move this I ll|R a IB RW nl - raU , v stock faster than ever. The greatest of all the great bargains are still here ■■■W ■V w W 0W S Vsf. U uwi| Wl i|&7 ft; W and the price reductions are greater than ever. We are making concessions Ha gjj| in prices never before heard of in Piano selling. We have cut the terms down __ |&jjjra eg' Rg: SB P- us( to the lowest possible figure. Come here Saturday. R lolill IflßlW §HIPI WE WANT AS MUCH CASH AS POSSIBLE " " ' ' " " B ' Therefore to those who cannot pay all cash but who can arrange to pay TIIIS PIaVPT-PlftflA fillt tft ; $25 or SSO or SIOO in cash we will make prices that will fa'rly dumbfound. ,HW '"J* 1 1 la,lw UUI ,w '•rassssqffifrflg;jprFF.^jawisS3Er**. We need cash—we can use it in our every-dav business and we are making _ .. - price reductions to get Cash that have positively established this sale as the 9 FffICTIAII Af IfC greatest of any kind or character since the introduction of the Piano into i IHVIIUII Ml 119 America. Come here Saturday anytime until 10 P. M.. select any Piano, B ■■ ■ igPStKJgJQ| KsßSaSi f ,h... . biSy we^nfaciepVS praposition is aiiywhere within the boiuid ° f p roba " Actual Vaiue for g|3K^!r^S®|sa I TIME PIANO BUYERS Quick Sale ; = This is the most -extraordinary Piano advertisement ever placed before the This Player will be the first Player public for 86\ prjl reasons. Chief of which is the low prices we are actuallv * i . i . * I selling these Pianos for. Secondly the terms Tow fa can t0 g0 on sa,P Sa,ur,,a - V and actually nlTord to own one of these Fine Pianos. Last but not least we consider the A rst buyer that comes here Satur this the greatest opportunity of our entire business history to make hundreds dav wil i buv the _. ftte , t p lav „ Pißno |gßa&'' of friends amongst the buying public. Come here at once. IN ANY EVENT „ y y greatest I layer Piano IMEB& li i l CTTm3Tmrn?^aHl^Si BE HEKE BEFORE THE STORE CLOSES SATURDAY NIGHT. Bargain ever offered in the entiro his- fcjKllabMtggffijjHi^ • ■ t°ry of Piano selling. Look at the A BRAND NEW PIANO FOR SATURDAY^ pneo * rJ Price PAY $lO D own; AAH $2 PER WEEK =— 'if P Every Piano and Player Piano in the entire store is included in this great final windup—Pianos that Bm Eg ap high as SOSO, Player Pianos that sell as high as ijSOOO are all going into this great bargain festival for the last days of this great sale. "Winter," "Eudolph," "Cambridge," "Wessel," "Enterprise," "El m dridge," "Kimball," "Chickering," "Sterling," in fact every brand new Piano Player, Piano and Organ in the store will have to go. Also the used, exchanged and shop-worn instruments. W $2 Down, $1 Weekly DOWN DOWN DOWN l I ere is a Player Pia. io, 88-note, Per Week ' >FR WEEK ' Weekly !K!|j* iion ; fully guaraiil ed. __________ mßmar ~ _ JBBKI* $7 .50 Down, Tlien *2.50 Weekly CASH AND TIME PIANO BUYERS! TO THE PUBLIC! Come here Saturday. Come early. Do not wait until afternoon—the sooner you get The vaat majority of the Pianos offered at this sale are Brand New Pianos, direct hf>rp flip Wtpr Rrin.r oi™ , n,,,, o.„n„. f f „..cV, iii i . from the factories. And we take full responsibility for any transaction. Some few ot the ... . .. .®. fe a , K y amount of cash. AN 0 will make terms to suit. Wo Pianos have been rebuilt in our shop. But everything goes into this sale and prices and will give discounts that will amaze you for cash. Get here early Saturday morning. Do not terms are not an issue. Come here Saturday. Do not delay. The best values are grouped let this great final wind-up go by. for Saturday, po not miss this wind-up. STORE OPEN SATURDAY UNTIL 10 P. M. We A P ;;^t tto Howard M. Eldridge, Jr. Pennsylvania Successor to Winter Piano Co. Out-of-Town Buyers 23 N. Fourth St. Harrisburg, Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers