6 Tobacco Chewers n ~ said one of the greatest thinkers this country ever produced. Says the Doctor: tfj&f '' After a trying day visiting my patients, a chew of PICNIC i TWIST soothes my nerves and 7 A VK calms and fits me for the morrow. * « * s t^ie s °ft> of " PICNIC TWIST that is so satisfy • ing. It does not possess the de pressing ' after effect' of dark ' heavy' tobaccos. There's the same difference between PICNIC TWIST and ' heavy * > tobacco as between a good cup of just right coffee and one that is muddy and JnOfc overstrong." The sweetness of PICNIC TWlST—its long lasting chew appeals to the men who know GOOD chewing tobacco. MMwraft CHEWING TOBACCO Miml "The Thinners of the Country Are the Tobacco Cheicers" You can also get PICNIC TWIST in freshness • preserving drums of 11 twists for 50c. la?SI ISaflf.'iiil'tr~ I BLjt T 615! BEIimFUL. CIURMING Hklß, NO DASDRUFF—2S GENT DIIUDERINE Try Doubles beauty of your hair and stops it falling out Tour hair becomes llcht, wavy, fluffy, abundant anil appears as soft, lustrous and beautiful as a young girl's after a "Danderlne hair cleanse." Just try this—moisten a cloth with a little Danderine and carefully draw it through the hair, taking one small strand at a time. This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil | A Good Dictionary Settles Disputes "In case of doubt concerning the 1 meaning of a word the dictionary is the court of appeal to which the aver- I ape individual must resort. When Dr. Johnson compiled his celebrated dic tionary, offered to the public in 1755, it represented a movement initiated by Swift, Addison. Pope and other j noted English writers of that period; to compose a dictionary that would j lix forever and unalterably the Eng lish language in one perfect „ form. But the lapse of years has demon strated that fashions in words change .GlenwoocL I <( The Range that n T I "Makes Cooking Easy" iJk 'Geo. C. Fager & Sons, ] TUESDAY EVENING, 'and In just a few moments you have I doubled the beauty of your hair. Besides beautifying the hair at once Danderine dissolves every particle of dandruff; cleanses, purifies and invig orates the scalp, forever stopping itch ing and falling hair. But what will please you most will ! }"3 a'ter a few weeks' use when you! will actually see new hair—line nnd downy at first—yes—but really new hair growing all over the scalp. If you care for pretty, soft hair and lots of it surely get a 25 cent bottle of Knowl ton's Danderine from any druggist or toilet counter, and just try it.—Ad- I vertisemcnt. with the times and that a dictionary ! to be authoritative and accurate must j be np to data. j ■ A popular demand for such a work | has been answered by the offer this paper Is making to its readers of the New Universities Dictionary in which I thousands of words not found in any other dictionary are frtllv defined. Many Of these words have been brought into general and proper, use by the great strides made in science, | business, religion and the various arts. ! Specialized activitl.es such as aviation, i golf, baseball arid other forms of sports have also given currency to ! many new terms and definitions of which will be found in one or the other | of the twenty-five supplementary dic tionaries that have been Incorporated ! in the New Universities Dictionary. LEGISLATIVE NEWS DM TEACHER PETITION OFFERED Mr. Niuley Presents Long Paper Asking For Enactment of the , State Retirement The big petition of Dauphin county teachers asking; for passage of the re tirement bill was presented to the House last night by Mr. Nlsale.v. It will go to the education committee. Mr. Wildman and Mr. Kltts presided for .1 time in the House last night- During the session an effort was made to get the hall of the House for a hearing next week, but the Speaker ended it by saying the House was go ing to get down to work. The Senate bill creating a bureau for licensure of optometrists was passed in the House by a vote of 172 to 13 after a spirited debate. Messrs. Dunn, Kitts anil Cromer advocated the bill and Messrs. McNichol, Steedle and Palmer favored the plan in the House bill, which puts optometrists under the State bureau. The House also passed the bill to permit pay patients in hospitals receiv ing State aid to have their own phy sicians and nurses. These bills passed finally: Providing uniform methods in ad ministration or mothers' pensions. Providing that counties shall pro vide medical treatment for dependent children. Amending first class city laws to per mit deposit of manure on piers for shipment out of city. Validating elections held under act of 187 4 to increase debt of munici palities. Jitney Bill Revived 1 The House placed upon the calendar notwithstanding negative action by committee the bill to regulate motor bus lines, which requires owners to give bonds and to pay ten per cent, of gross receipts to municipalities. By a vote of 76 to st> the House re fused to put on the calendar the gar nishee bill negatived last week. The State civil service bill prepared by the Civil Service Reform Associa tion was affirmatively reported to the House, together with the bills to make the wild honeysuckle the State flower and to erect Huntingdon county Into a separate judicial district. > • State Highway Repair Work Is Booming Close to 5.000 men arc. at work on the State highways to-day, carrying out the instructions given by Governor Brumbaugh to Acting Highway Com missioner Joseph \V. Hunter on Friday that maintenance work should be re sumed at once. Had it not been for the Easter blizzard which swept across the eastern end of the State on Sat urday many more men would have been put to work yesterday. Gtorge H. Biles, maintenance engi neer. expects to have nearly 10,000 men laboring on the highways before many days have passed. When Gov ernor Brumbaugh gave the word to Deputy Commissioner Hunter on Fri day he at once got in touch with Engi neer Bites and word was sent to all of the engineers in charge of districts throughout the State to overhaul their equlpmpnt and be ready to start Mon day. As this was the word that the subordinates of the State Highway De partment have been waiting for, the response was prompt, anQ when the engineers got in touch with the main office here they were told to notify all of their men to be on the job. Although Friday was a holiday and Saturday a half day, the office force of I the maintenance division worked steadily through both days and far into the nights issuing authorizations and honoring requisitions so that there might be no delay in getting started. Efforts are being made to-day mainly toward clearing away obstructions on the roads and cleaning out gutters and ditches. The more important work of resurfacing and rebuilding worn-out highways will come later. HXRRISBURG IS&SG, TELEGRAPH HMD DEFENDS ' NEWSPAPER DILL Musters 103 Votes in Attempt to Pass It Over the Governor's Veto Representative R. P. Habgood, of McKean county, took to the warpath last night over the Governor's veto of the bill appropriating; $46,800 to pay the deficiency in the cost of adver tising the constitutional amendments and in the course of his remarks toma hawked Auditor General Powell and criticised the Governor. He then called on the House to pass the bill over the Governor's veto and suc ceeded in mustering 103 votes. He needed 138 votes to pass,the bill over the veto and for a time there was a lot Of suppressed excitement about the House. Eighty-three men voted to sustain the veto. It was the first at tempt to pass a bill notwithstanding executive objections and it attracted much attention. Many members who were supporters of the Governor de cided to stand by the editors back home and voted with Habgood. In the course of his remarks Mr. Habgood said: "This House voted into this bill pro visions calling for the payment of those bills for 1912, 1913 and 1914 by a vote of 146 to 45, after vigorous opposition by the gentleman from South Philadelphia, who fought the proposition as hard as he could in behalf of the Auditor General. We now listen to the communication from the Governor, also taking the part of the Auditor General in that he uses the words which the Auditor General uses. 1 wish to call the attention, Mr. Speaker, of the gentlemen of this House to a few facts in connection with this bill upon which we have just received a communication from the Governor this evening. I assure you that there is nothing in my mind or heart at this time containing a senti ment of resentment or any feeling of animus whatever, but I do want to make plain to the members of this House and I wish to make clear some of the facts which will speak for them selves and to which I will ask vour kind consideration in the hope "that you will pay attention to it. On Feb ruary 1. over two months ago, the chairman of the appropriations com mittee of this House asked the Auditor General, the official auditor of this Commonwealth, to give him a state ment in his official capacitv of the amount of money required to pav the bills for 1912, 1913 and 1914 for the advertising of the constitution amend ments. • X have here in my hand a certified I copy of the statement, furnished to I ine by the chairman of the appro priations committee, the gentleman from Allegheny. Mr. Woodward, and in this statement it particularly speci • •AO 4 1m the j l9 '2 bills as rendered are 5-0,1.000 and the amount appropriated on the account of the deficiency ap propriation for 1913 was $152,000. • rVISS ? ba ' ance In the treasury of Jul.ooo for 1912. It then appropriated for the 1913 bills as rendered the amount of that account, leaving a bal fund of *35,000. With the . ... bills as rendered, the amount left or leaves the whole proposition ror the three years the amount which lias been paid and the amount which Is still in the treasury then given the official information that it will require these bi'ls. as rendered, $146,- 040.89. One hundred thousand dollars of that was passed in the deficiency appropriation bill and approved by the Governor and t ne $46,000 was in this bill which tne Governor has ve toed. This bill provided $46,000 as an additional appropriation to nay the expenses of publishing the aniend n,'jnls.,for tJlese three years and pro vided that this expense for these three years should be paid on the following basis and gave the basis upon which it was to be paid, and that was not on the basis of bills rendered, as this statement shows, but on the basis that Is paid for any state in advertising by the present Auditor General and the two previous Auditors General This was on February 1. and accord ing to the proposition as it ippears in tins bill as it is vetoed to-night the Auditor General says that that state ment is wrong. He took $91,000 in stead of $46,000. "Tou can see very plainly that this House and this Senate and the chair man of the appropriations committee and that these newspapers, from two to five in every county in this state which you represent, and from two to five in every one of your counties, were done before they commenced. If that is the relation which we are to take in this matter, that the Auditor General will make a statement to the chairman of the appropriations com mittee which he says two months aft ei ward is false, therefore we were done before we commenced. This House, this Senate and these news papers were then done. Should Have Notified "Now, gentlemen, I wish also to call your attention to this fact: as you well know, there have been from twelve to twenty bills withdrawn from the desk of the Governor, and if it was a propo sition of where the Auditor General had sent the wrong statement, as he admits to the chairman of the appro priations-committee of this House, or, as he claims, and he did not discover it for over two months after that, he should have notified the chairman of the appropriations committee that his office had made such a blunder. When this bill was In the hands of the Gov ernor on Tuesday two weeks ago to morrow a party of three of us waited on the Governor and we asked him to give us the pen whereby he would sign this bill, and he said he would take it up the following week and would see lis the first of the week. We did not see him and we did not have an op portunity to consider this question until after the Senate had adjourned, and the House adjourned while we were having our conference. Now, gentlemen of this House, there have been a score of bills withdrawn from the Governor for the purpose of i amendment, and I submit to you ! whether it is fair and just to'keep this i bill in such shape whereby it cannot be withdrawn for amendment and then veto It because it only has half enough money in it to pay what it purports to pay, and I wish to say, gentlemen, further than that, that it Is not a ques tion in this proposition of the moun tain laurel, that it is not a question In this bill of sentiment; it is a question, gentlemen, of bread and butter for from three hundred to three hundred and fifty newspapers in this State, and I appeal to you as members of the House, representing three to five of those newspapers in everv one of your counties, to stand upon the basis upon which you stood for the payment of this advertising. "Gentlemen of the House. If the op ponent of our present Governor had been elected to the governorship or this State we would exnect to have a condition -s we have It to-day with re gard to the Auditor General.and his leadership in this "latter. Now. then. 99 per cent, of tlie men who have .Tsi-«d that these bills bo ptld not i withstanding the Auditor General's on w cent- of the men who WRIGLEYS means the ,best in chewing gum —it means the Perfect Gum in the Perfect Package sealed air-tight. It means the largest, most up-to-date and most sanitary chewing gum factories in the world. • It means a wholesome, beneficial and eco nomical confection, good for everybody. With Sharing Coupons around each package it means a rapid accumulation of these valuable and popular merchan dise certificates. Write for your free copy of "Wrigley's Mother Goose" in which the Wrigley 10U SUr BUNOH Spearmen have acted all the old "N TOR SPEEDIN ! J familiar "scenes" to the "tune" of the YX new Wrigley jingles! M* WRIGLEYSJ& I IfEEEEZZaiH 1 \ KU PERFECT GUM J|/ I 1 i W/ '/A TJJ* I WHERE WE 1 [CLASSIFIED SECTION,)! NIX.WE'REJL QUIT PUT E'R IN ) THROTTLE' 1 HEADING FOR | I OUESS.JEBRY. TO HIKING FOR YOUR HIGH, STEVE, WIDE OPEN 5-FLPDLNGJ wanted our present Governor for Gov ernor and who did not want Vance McCormick for Governor, they came jind they asked this House, and this House passed the bill on that basis, and it went to the Senate and the Sen ate passed the bill on that basis, and it went to the Governor's table and he said that because there is only half enough appropriated he will veto it, and he sends it back to this House with the proposition that we submit our bills to the Board of Public Ac counts to pay them and that they may be adjusted. Why, gentlemer, do you know who the Board of Pui>lle Ac counts is V 1 will tell you. There are three members on the board, uud two of them consist of the Auditor Gen eral and the State Treasurer. I think that any lawyer woudl move for a change of venue under those circum stances." Derry St Boys Guests of Men at Big "Feed"! One hundred and forty boys of the Derry Street United Brethren Sunday | school were the guests of the big j men's Bible class at the semiannual "Boys' Night" held in the assembly room of the church, corner of Fif teenth and Derry streets, last evening. The boys' committee of the class, head ed by L. It. Hibshman. had charge of the entertainment. The music was furnished by the class orchestra un der direction of Earlo E. Itenn. T. B. I_.yter and his boosters made the room ring with their songs after which O. P. Beckley gave the boys an illustrated lecture on "A Trip Through Florida." Short talks by the pastor, the Rev. J. A. Lyter; J. E. Glpple, superinten dent of the school, and D. I>. Carl, teacher of the men's class, were fol lowed by the main stunt of the even ing, the "feed." J. E. Dare and his social commit tee served the boys in the social hall, and Mr. Dare says the boys lived up to their reputation of being poor eat ers by cleaning up seven gallons of ice cream, six gallons of orangeade, fifteen large homemade cakes and a barrel of New York State apples. Pocket mirrors were given the boys as souvenirs. SPECULATORS He'd nothing but his little Job And she her rosy cheek. But love still lives on bread and cheese And kisses twice a week; And so the speculators went To get the license out— And what's the use to try to preach When the wind of love's about! He'd nothing but his manly will And she her gentle grace; But. oh. the world and all to him Was In her glowing face; And so these speculators took The problem all must fight— And what's the use to fret and scold When all comes out so right! He'd nothing but his youth and gleam And she her laughing eyes; But they were in the vale of dreams Beneath the singing skies; And so these speculators chose Their nest as others do— And what's the use to raise a fuss When they only did like yon! —Baltimore Sun. APRIL 6, 1915. BUTTERINE FOR BELGIUM Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., April 6.—A train of thirty-eight cars each loaded with twenty-four tons of butterinc, passed through Rupert over the Reading railroad for Philadelphia. Trainmen said it was going to Belgium. ROLLING HORSESHOE IRON Special to The Telegraph Columbia, Pa., April 6.—The Colum bia Rolling Mill was put into partial operation yesterday, rolling horseshoe iron. DT THE TRENCHES.] f London, England. It takes a (braver man to lie and wait in the trench than to charge the enemy. It is the long wait when limbs are leold and one is damp and chilled, | felt ' *fjjg Copyright by Underwood & Underwood. N. Y. that calls on the nerves and heroism ef the fighter. "It tightens your ehest and you hold your breath." Napoleon understood, as do modern | REPAIRING STATE ROADS Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., April 6.—Thirty fore men in the employ of the State High way Department started work yester day repairing roads in Northumber land, Columbia and Union counties. 'IXI OPEN NEW BANK Special to The Telegraph Northumberland, Pa.. April 6.—At a meeting of the subscribers to the Farmers and Mechanics Bunk it was decided to open the new Institution for business on May 1 In the Wenck build ing. A meeting for organization will be held on April.2l. generals, that "an army move® on it* stomach." Feed the stomach on good food, the food that will nourish the blood, and the blood will feed the nerves. It takes good fresh blood to make a fighter, a good business man, a good farmer or a good workman, i Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery rectifies stomach troubles. It is a tonic which puts new strength into the muscles and nerves by purifying the blood. As a body builder ana nerve tonic it 's unexcelled because it is a temperance remedy and nature supplies the curative force. Made from roots and herbs of American medicinal plants and extracted by using pare glycerine instead of alcohol. Strength is made from food properly digested and assimilated, and no man is stronger than his stomach, because when the stomach is diseased digestion and assimilation are imperfect. Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Dis co-very cares diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nu trition. It enables the perfect diges tion and assimilation of food so that the body is nourished into perfect health and strength. In place of the imparities, the arteries and veins gradually get fresh vitalized blood and the action of this good blood on the skin means that pimples, boils, carbuncles, eczema, d rash, acne and all skin blemirfiea will " disappear. Hun you must remember that when the blood is right, the liver, stomach, bowels and kidneys become healthy, active and vigorous and you will have no more trouble with indi gestion, backache, headache and oon- Btipation. Get Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery to-day from any medicine dealer; it is a powerful blood purifier, that carries the pofioas oat of the system. It is not a secret remedy for Us in gredients are printed on wrapper. For free advice or free booklet on blood, write Doctor V. M. Pierce, Buf falo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser is sent free on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Bend - three dimes, or stamps, for the doth bonnd volume. Address Dr. Pierce, Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y.—Adv.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers