RtGIIIJIE YOUR BOWELS AND STOP HEADACHES. COEDS. SOUR STOMACH Cascarets make you feel bully; they and poison from the bowels. A Cascaret immediately cleanse and sweeten the to-night straightens you out by morn stomach, remove the sour, undigested {■«—' * 10ce °t hox from any drugg.st , , . ... keeps your Stomach regulated. Head and fermenting food and foul gases; ( ~e ar an{ , Uyei and Bowe , B in flae con . take the excess bile from the liver and dition for months. Don't forget the carry off the constipated waste matter children. 10 C^NT^J \s|^PTaSCAßets work while you sleer NEWS OF CEDAR CANOE IS STOLEN ! IDE OWNER RAS NO CLUE f Fire damaged t house at Second and I Highland streets last evening to* the E. 0. Hendrickson, Member of Steel ton | amo unt of about SIOO before it was un- Canoe Club, Is Latest Victim of der control. The blaze is alleged to x,. mi.. *.„:'iave started in a waste basket in a Biver Front Tweves, wno Are a foreign barbei shop on the first floor Again Becoming Active j and to have made his way through the | partition to the sleeping rooms on the sectffid floor, which was occupied by the The annual breaking open of boat boarders of Frank Matavic. houses along the river shore in the vi- One of Matavic's boarders sustained cinity of Francis street, which are a lacerated wrist wnen he broke the owned by members of the Steelton Ca- plate glass window of the barber shop, noe Club, has again commenced, tho which had been locked for the night. latest sufferer being Edward O. Hend- rickson, a clerk employed in the freight in,,,.,,™,,,,, „ A „ uixununo office of the Pennsylvania railroad at Rt( 111 TIOIN M)R MEMBERS this place. ! Some time between Sunday morning Centenary U. B. Church Was Crowded and Tuesday riiorning his new Morris j Last Evening cedar canoe, 16 feet in length, was The reception tendered 132 new (stolen and he can find no trace of it. members admitted to Centenary United Jii this instance no other thing ot val'le ' Brethren church during the first half was taken, but last year many houses ; 0 f the present conference vear, held in were broken open and nearly all things tj lo Sunday school room of that church ot value were either removed or de- ] ast evening, was a pleasing social stroked, fhe matter has been retej-red eV ent and attracted a crowded house, to the borough police, but no clues have xhe I)r0f , ralll consisted of a variety yet been obtained. ■ S p ee ial music a.id an address bv tho J Kev. John Morrison, of Lebanon V»ilov HOIA \\ EEK SERVICES I College. Refreshments were served Dy j a committee of voung ladies. Services Appropriate to the Occasion in t Many Churches [' STEELTON NOTES Elaborate plans are being made by I T _ ~ the borough churches for the observ- John 1 entie settled a case of ma ance of Holv Week, which will be ush- 'ieious mischief at the office of Squire ered in with Palm Sunday, March 27. I Wfkinson yesterday, which had been At. St. John's Lutheran,' St. Mark's P rcferred ' b . v Adam D - Herman, South Lutheran and Centenarv United Breth- ' Second street, and was discharged, ren churches services will be conducted 1 Milan Vorkupic was arraigned be each evening, except Saturday. At the i fore Squire Gardner last evening First Presbyterian and the - Fi»st Re- with larceny of a stove by formed churches services will be held I Elmer iFiese. In default of bail Milan Wednesday, Thursdav and Friday even- I was committed for court, ings only." ' j At to-night's meeting of Steelton i>antern slides illustrating the Pas- j Council 184, I. O. O. F., candidates sion of Christ will be used at the serv- 1 for the grand lodge of the order will ices in the First Reformed church. At he voted upon. The third degree will the other churches there will be special-j also .be conferred upon a class of lv interesting sermons delivered by the ! candidates at this meeting, officiating pastors and special music I Prizes at euchre in the rooms of wilf feature the services in all the Steelton Lodge Knights of Pythias churches. j were won last night by Herbert Fries, ' Robert, White, Professor Stouffer and I Paul Foust. The euchre was held , a'fter the meeting of the lodge. , i ' -* n d e f au 't of bail Zeva Jukan, who *- i'PfilYOn £ Onitf DisniHV 1 was arrested Wednesday bv Detec . leuiiun a VIII 7 Efispjtlj tive D urn bawgh for I tea ting Damina r I Jovanovic, a West Slide woman, was j 1 last night committed to jail in de- T q TTfO fault of bail by Squire Gardner to -L/«l JT I allLc | await his appearance before the court. __ _ ___ The last of the series of Lenten || T M i services for women will be held in St. 3 1 I 1%/j John's Lutheran church to-morrow A. JL tJL JL afternoon at 3 o'clock. Mrs. George ! X. Lauffer will speak on "God's 6u . For Ladies' Sp " u " . 1 PERSONAL j Mrs. L. M. Glattaker, Lincoln jr j? J : street, is the guest of her parents-at // yS J I law, at Maytown. /J. Dewees, left the borough Tues- B \ Cly, York county, to engage iu farming. ' A. Simpson, of the West Side, moved his family and household goods to _ - , Lynchburg, Va., Wednesday. We are agents for tins famous Thp Rpv . Willis Seidere, Philadel line of foot gear and the phia, is visiting his parents. Mr. and S * _ i_ _ T „ Mrs. Morris Seiders, Locust street. | Y John Watson, conveyor of the U. S. ; mails from the Pennsylvania railroad t* » k i to and from the local nostoffice, is For Men L, (First Easter Showing) ' REWARD Baker Boot Shoo RE A SON ABIJE REWARD tor lnforma ! tlon leading to arrest party who Steelton's New Store i st ° le . P ll ' Mot's make cedar canoe. ! painted rod; name "Okey, * from boat 41 North Front Street 1 ? t - rc x ? t ' /t te , ( ', lton - , K - O. HENiDRICKSON, -o North Front St., D. P. Baker, Proprietor. j Steelton, Pa. H. Lee McNeal. Manager. i i 0,16 ° f the bCSt SIIOWS ° f the We6k at t?le . —... _ - I Standard Theatre To-night REAX, ESTATF TOR ppijir She Stoops to Conquer. Featuring Miss REAL ESTATE FOB RENT. Beulah Pointer. Four reels. FOR RENT—Houses with all inmprove- Blown Int ° Custody. One reel. ments, on S. Fourth St., steelton. No, Broncho Billy's Vengeance. One "reel, m. 'llioT ?e°. month.- 00 Ap& 3 The Death Train Featuring Miss Fourth St., Steelton. Helen Holmes. One reel. ANNOUNCEMENT MILLINERY OPENING SATURDAY. MARCH 27ih Mrs. H. Mars x 38 South Front Street Stcelton, Pa. HARRISBURG STAB-INDEPENDENT, FRIDAY EVENING, MARCH 26, 1913. ' In default of bail Zeva Jukan. who was arrested Wednesday by Detec tive Durnbnii'gh for lveating Damina Jovano'vic, a West Sjde woman, was last night committed to jail in de fault of bail by Squire Gardner to await his appearance before the court. The last of the series of Lenten services for women will be held in St. John's Lutheran church to-morrow afternoon at 3 o'clock. Mrs. George X. Lauffer will speak on "God's Su preme Gift." Special music. PERSONAL Mrs. L. M. Glattaker, Lincoln street, is the guest of her parents-at law, at Maytown. J. Dewees, left the borough Tues day for Cly, York county, to engage in farming. A. Simpson, of the West Side, moved his family and household goods to Lynchburg, Va., Wednesday. The Rev. Willis Seiders, Philadel phia, is visiting his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Morris Seiders, Locust street. John Watson, conveyor of the U. S. mailn from the Pennsylvania railroad to and from the local postoffice, is REWARD REASOXABIjE REIWARD for Informa tion leading to arrest of party who stole my Morris make <*edar canoe, painted red; name "Okey," from bo&1 house, near Francis street, Steelton. E. O. HEXDRICK.SON, 25 North Front St., Steelton, Pa. One of the best shows of the week at the Standard Theatre To-night She Stoops to Conquer. Featuring Miss Beulah Pointer. Four reels. Blown Into Custody. One reel. Broncho Billy's Vengeance. One "reel. The Death Train. Featuring Miss Helen Holmes. One reel. convalescing from an injury sustained about ten days ago when he fell off a mail train at the local station. Entertained Engineering Class M. B. Litch, borough chemist at the local filtration plant, entertained 1 thirty students of the SenioT class in civil en gineering at Stat3 College, who came to the borough to inspect the workings of the local plant. The students were chaperoned by Professor Harold Shat tuck and, after inspecting the Bteelton plant, visited the filter plant of the Riverton Consolidated Water Company at New Cumberland. Died of Paralysis Mrs. Sarah Rebecca Brunner, aged 72 years, died at 5 o'clock this morning at her home at Bressler of paralysis. Funeral services will be held Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock at her late homo and interment will be made, in the Bald win cemetery Miss Marie Wiseman, tho visiting nurse employed by the Steelton Civic Club, will be" in her offices from 8 a. m. to 9 a. m.. from 12.30 p. m. to 1.30 The Death Train An episode of the Hazards of Helen railroad series. The discovery the de tectives are on their trail, causes Doyle, Broden and Etzer, counterfeiters, to pack their paraphanalia into a trunk and express it to Lone Point. Upon its arrival (it that station, -a corner of tho trunk is smashed. Helen thus learns of its contents. The telegrapher immediately wires to Savage, a railroad detective. How Helen traps the counterfeiters and gets herself into great peril is graphically told in motion pictures at the Standard Theatre to-night.—< Adv.* HUSTLING WORK ON BRIDGE Pennsylvania Steel Company Using Monster Derrick to Lay Girders on Mulberry Street Subways One of the largest self-propelled derricks in the world —as large as the ones used in the construction of tfie I Panama canal —is being used by the J Pennsylvania Steel Company in the j work on the Front anVl Second streets subways at Mulberry street in order to hurry the placing of the steel in order to make way for the concrete contrac tors, who will construct the Cumber land Valley bridge across the river. In all 400 tons of the steel girders will be used' in the two bridges over the streets. Two of the largest girders, which weight 28 tons each, are already placed on the Front street bridge. Smaller connecting pieces were placed to-day. The derrick has a capacity of 200,- 000 pounds. The work it is now en gaged on taxes it to a little over one third of its capacity. The derrick weighs 90,900 pounds. The steel will all be placed in about two weeks and most of the expert steel men now en gage 1 in this work wiil be sent to Memphis, Tenn., where the Pennsylva nia Steel Company is engaged in build ing approaches to the monster steel bridge there. j VASSAH (ilßliS OX 101' DLTY Force Organized to Enforce the "Keep Off the Grass" Warning Poughkeepsie, March-'6.—Headed by I Miss Lilitha Manila Folks, of Yonkers, |as their chief, the students at Vassar College have formed a police squad to enforce the order to "keep off the grass" on the college campus. Provided with i police whistles and wearing big glitter j ing badges designating them as special j officers the girls are protecting 4he young grass. The girl police force will try to pre vent the girls from taking short cuts across the now soft turf of the campus. A girl cop is stationed on each walk and whenever a fellow student attempts to cut across she is halted by u shrill blast from a police whistle. Thus re minded, the offending student is ex pected to hurry back to the nearest concrete walk. Miss Folks, who is one of tho leaders in the Students Association, is a daugh ter of Homer Folks, secretary of the New York Charities Aid Associa tion. I'ROW I.KR AT POWDER I'LANT j Guard Shcots at Man Near Du Pont j Works Paterson, N. J., March 26. —Harry D. Pipher, a guard at the du Pont Pow der plant at Haskell, N. J., fired at a man who was prowling near a big pow der magazine before dawn this morning when the man refused a command to halt. The prowler dashed at Pipher and in the struggle ensuing Pipher shot him self in the left wrist and dropped to the ground. Other guards hastened to the i pot, but the man had escaped. Since the war began the dn Pont Powder Company has been working a day and night shift and has employed a special guard of 150 men. Three weeks ago a 100,000 pound powder magazine was exploded and five men were killed. Superintendent O. W. Bier with thinks the magazine was exploded by a spy. WINS SIO,OOO FROM WIDOW Common Law Wife Successful in Alienation Suit Mineola, I;. 1., March 26. Mrs. Sarah Murdoch, of Rockville (.'enter, was awarded SIO,OOO datnnges by the jury which heard her suit for $75,000 against Mrs. Matilda Avery, a widow of lilue Point. Robert S. Pelletreau, counsel for Mrs. Avery, at once moved to set aside the verdict and argument will be heard later. Mrs. Murdoch admitted there had never been a religious or civil ceremony between herself and Charles Murdock, but said their common law marriage had existed for twenty years prior to li(13, when, the plaintiff claimed, Mrs. Avery alienated the affections of Mur dock. MENTAL HEALING GAINS POINT Assembly Committee Favors Christian Science Bill Albany, March 26.—The Assembly Judiciary Committee ajjain reported fa vorably a bill designed to legalize the practice of Christian Science in this Stato. The new bill, an amendment to the State health law, reads: "Nothing in this act shall be con strued to affect the practice of Chris tian Science for the relief of the sick and suffering provided no drugs of other material remedies are employed, and provided further that no quarantine or sanitary regulations are violated." A Live Store fit For Live Men ■ • This is the store for the wide- * awake get ahead sort of man who ( 4^i||l|| looks upon Good Clothes as a business V®\ asset —who appreciates good quality, 4 good value and good service. ISa I S HUNDREDS UPON hundreds j|| of new Spring Suits—all the best efforts v of America's best makers —are carefully \fe |lil hung in our dust-proof, crystalglass I cases, making inspection easy and se- r NO MAN can buy a poor suit \|||| [ here and no man can over-pay for the \|||| wl J value he gets. Our bigger spot-cash buy- |||| TOlf ing, and determination to sell as low as |||l || we can for cash, instead of seeing how |||| , vfcj I] much we can get for our merchandise ' Jmrn » t H and "charge it/' make this store beyond _ ft ?1 all question of doubt —the greatest val- % u ue-giving institution in Central Penn- Mp sylvania. copyright <*ib -i ' THEHOUSEOFkUPPENHEIMEf; | I Spring Suits From the I I. HOUSE OF KUPPENHEIMER 1 I I HERE are countless, rare and stimulating styles from these excel- f lent makers. These are the clothes that 'look better on a man's back j than they do in the show window, and further, they hold their good 1 looks to their very last day of wear. The patterns are plentiful J enough to suit any taste. Every thread of fabric is pure wool and every stitch of tail- I • oring is well done. Come look them over and try them on to your heart's content. The Special DOUTRICH prices start at $15.00 and range up. ; sls, S2O, $25 | Doutrich Special Shirts Doutrich Kravats Crocheted Scarfs I These shirts bought and sold These ties are hand made p ure dve silk hand in such tremendous quantities that t , „ „ - u u " c M 1K ' nan u we make them a leader at $1 00 . ( ySI and Bates-Street Shirts $1.50 up feet in length-the wonders of ' * edtner Doutrich Special Gloves, ...SI.OO the trade. New and exclusive effects and new cross-bar Extra fine Mocha Gloves, ..$1.50 patterns, designs. Special at SI.OO & 304 Market Street Harrisburg, Penna. RAILROADS CREWJOARD HAKRISBUKG SIDE Philadelphia Division —llß crow to /£o first after 3.30 p. m.: 10'7, 106, 116, 115, 119, 129, 109, 105, 117, 104, 127. Engineer for 105. Firemeu for 115, 119, 127. Conductors for 107, 117, 104. Flagmen for 106, 117. Brakemen for 129, 109, 104. Engineers up: Dennison, Wnnbaugh, Wolfe, McCauley, Burg, Streeper, Pow ell, Earhart, Smith, Madenford, Hubor, Oeesey, Sellers, Welsh, Resinger, Fos tor, Gable, First, Sober, Hindman, Cresswell, Davis, v Bissinger, Seitz, Kautz, Manley, Tennant, Goodwin, Grass, Ix>ng. Firemen up: Whichello, Moffitt, Mc- Neal, Chronister, McCnrdy, Dunlevy, Yentzer, Packer, Ijentz, Everhart, Penwell, Btmhey, Horstdck, Khoads, Bleich, Gilberg, Myers, Copeland, Farm er, Cover, Mulholui, Shaffer, Balsbaugh, Grove, Shive. Conductor up: Miller. = Flagmen up: Banks, Harvey, Dono hoe, Clark. Brakemen up: Arment, Frock, Jack son, Koehenouer, Shultzenbergei*, Grif fie, MeGinnis, Stehman, Knupp, Burk, Busser, Coleman, Hivner, Felker, Dear olf, Wdland, Baltozer, Mumma. 0 Middle Division —lß crew to go J' first after 1.30 p. m.: 217. > Preference: 2, 9. Enid off: 20, 115, 24, 117, 110. Engineers up: Mumma, Kugltv, Ha vens, Webster, Wissler, . Simonton, Smith. Firemen up: Cox, Potteiger, Fritz, Gross, Arnold, Zeiders, Sheesly, Ross, ' Eiebau, Karstetter. Conductor uj>: Patrick. [ Flagmen up: Bodley, Miller, Dill, Jaaobs, Frank. ' Brakemen up: Fritz, Bell, Kane, Baker, Strouser, Wenrick, Troy, Ris ' singer, Roller. ENOLA SIDE , Philadelphia Division —23 4 crew to , go first after 3.45 p. in.: 228, 224, , 207, 239. Engineers for 228, 224. , Fireman for 207. Conductors for 235, 259. Flagman for 239. Brakemen for 225, 227, 239. Conductors up: Gundle, Dewees. Flagmen up: Reitzel, Ford. Brakemen up: Campbell, Werts, Vandling, Waltman, Kone, Ooudy, Lutz, Myers, Summy, Saffner, Wolfe, Shuler, Musser, Fair. Middle Division—llß crew to go first after 3 p. m.: 215, 114, 248, 243, 244. Slow freight movement westbound to continue over Sunday, March 21; no shut down. Conductor for 114. Flagman for 114. Brakeman for 114. Yard (Jrevs—Engineers up: Beck, Ilarter, Biever, Blosser, Stahl, Swab, Crist, Harvey, Saltsinan, Kuhn, Pelton, Shaver, Liandis. Firemen up: Schiefer, Rauch, Wei gle, Lac key, Cookerly, Maeyer, Sholter, Snell, Bartolet, Getty, Barkey, Sheets, Bair, Eyde, Crow, Revie. Kngineers for 306, 130, 1820. Firemen for 1171, 1816, 130, 1270, 90. THE READING P., H. & P.—After 2.45 p. m.: 19, 18, 16, 23, 2. Eastbound After 2.15 p. m.: 70, 56, 61, 57, 54, 63. Conductors up: Sipes, Kline. Engineers up: Tipton, Wood, iMor , rison, Middaugh, Glass, Fetrow, Martin, , Kettner, Wyre, Baruhart, Sweeley. , Firemen up: Carl, Rumbaugh, Ohronister, Anders, Doll) ins, Boyer, Bowers, King, Anspach, Fulton. ) Brakemen up: Ware, Ay res, Shear , er, Grimes, Page, Paintfcr, Slentz, Gard ener, Hinkle, Motter, ITaines, Kapp Holbert, Hoover, Yoder, Mcllenry, ) Hartz. , <> Gold Crowns & : Sets of i >!» Bridge Work Teeth j ;| $a $4, $5 $5 r ' We alwny* make teeth that At. J '<> Come In the morning, get your 3