10 Eat Like a Boy Let Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets Assist Your Stomach When ever It Needs Help. They Are Safe and Sure. A TRIAL PACKAGE FREE TO ALL If you really want your old-time boy appetite to return to you once more, form the practice of eating a Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet after each meal. Results will astound you. / "Good Old Miner Pie Like Mother / Made." The reason a Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet is powerful enough to digest your next meal is because it Is com posed of those things which a weak ened digestive system lacks. If all the stomach sufferers who have been relieved of their misery by Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets could be (fathered together Into one column, they would make a tremendous and Jiappy army. Join this army now by getting a 50c box from any druggist or by sending below coupon. j FREE TRIAL COUPON ' F. A. Stuart Co.. 2<M Stuart Build ing. Marshall. Mich., send me at once a free trial package of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets. : Name Street City State llDlli AND LOOK YOUNG Nobody can Tell "when you Darken Gray, Faded Hair with Sage Tea. Grandmother kept her hair beauti fully darkened, glossy and abundant with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Whenever her hair fell out or took on that dull, faded or streaked appear ance, this simple mixture was applied with wonderful effect. By asking at any drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound." you will get a large bottle of this old-time recipe, ready to use. for about 50 cents. This simple mixture can be depended up on to restore natural color and beauty to the hair and is splendid for dan druff. dry, itchy scalp and falling hair. A well-known downtown druggist says everybody uses Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur, because it darkens so natu rally and evenly that nobody can tell It has been applied—it's so easy to use, too. You simply dampen a comb or soft brush and draw it through your hair, taking one strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears; after another application or two. It is restored to its natural color and looks glossy, soft and abundant. Adver tisement. No Lumber Order Too Small for our careful attention. Your order for a few pieces will be given the same consideration that we give to orders for sev eral carloads. Don't hesitate to call us up no matter how much you may desire to buy. United Ice & Coal Co. Forster 4 Cowden St*. (T \ t Union Suits That Please We fit all sizes and shapes. Ask to see them. F % 3rd Near orry s Wa | nut St ,. THE Office Training School Kaafmaa Bid*;.. 4 ». Market Sq. NOW IN SESSION Day School aad Mght School Call or send for 32-page booklet- Bell phone 694-R. THE 1 Office Training School Kaufman Bids.. 4 S. Market NOW IN SESSION Day School and Mcht School I Call or send for 32-page booklet—- Bell phone 694-R. WEDNESDAY EVENING, GOVERNOR'S TOUR IS ON WAY EAST [Continued From First Page.] from Altoona at 4 o'clock. Here they will be met by nearly a hundred Al toona motorists and triumphantly es corted intothe city. On the ingoing highway a large sign reading. "Blair County Welcomes Governor Brum baugh and Party." has been placed across the road. On the road out of the city another sign "Call Again, Gov ernor." has been placed. According to present arrangements the party will leave Altoona early to morrow morning for Huntingdon, where a banquet will be given by the Governor to the people of his home town. Many luncheons and other fea tures have been arranged for the Gov ernor during his stop. Velvet Retails Over roads of velvety smoothness between Bedford and Pittsburgh the tourists yesterday covered nearly 150 miles, in a real demonstration of why Pennsylvania is now getting good roads under the Cunningham admin istration in the highway department. The stretch of Lincoln highway through the great mountain regions of the State was the best example of what the new policy of road maintain - ence means for the good road move ment. The macadam, asphalt cap ped stretch of road which a year ago was going tc ruin through neglect, with deep holes and nerve-racking bumps was like a newly laid road. And the Governor's party saw in the pa trolmen working along the road, piles of stone chips and asphalt heating plants at frequent intervals, the rea sons for this resurrection of a ruined road. Poles Wli'tewa.-lied All along the Lincoln highway the telegraph poles are now whitewashed so as to enable drivers to follow the road at night. Advertising signs have disappeared, the gutters are cleared of weeds and the brush is cleared from the roadside. , The patrolmen passed yesterday were part of the IS7 of the new kind of road workers that the department has added to the good roads move ment. They will resurface and put into shape at least 700 miles of the 1900 miles of road built this road. Commissioner Cunningham thinks, and they will do It by this new system of patching at a cost one-fifth that of totally resurfacing all the roads. RESIGNATION OF CABINET ACCEPTED [Continued From First Page.] a statement of the causes of the dis agreement. He then announced the resignation of the entire cabinet. Sit tings of the chamber were suspended. Paris. Oct. 6.—ln consequence of the resignation of Premier Venizelos and the other members of the cabinet, the session of the Greek chamber has been adjourned, says a Havas dis patch from Athens. London. Oct. 6, 11:35 a. m. The position taken by King Constantine of Greece, in his interview with Premier Venizelos Is said by the Athens cor respondent of the Havas Agency to have been that he could not pursue to the end the policy of the Venizelos cabinet. Resignation Causes Big Surprise in Paris By Associated Press Paris. Oct. 6.—The reported breach between King Constantine of Greece and Premier Venizelos, resulting in the resignation of the prime minister, was totally unexpected in Paris and has caused painful surprise. French editorial writers have hard things to say of the king, whose German con nections always have made him the cbiect of some suspicion on the part of those who sought the aid of Greece for the allied cause. It is considered here that while he signed the mobil ization order and consented to the landing of French troops at Saloniki, he does not want to go to war with Bulgaria, Germany's ally. Statement Given Out After Cabinet Meeting By Associated Press Athens, Saturday, Oct. 2. Midnight, via Paris. Oct. 6. 11 A. M. (delayed by censori.—The following statement was issued officia'ly after a meeting of the cabinet to-night: "The French minister delivered the following note to Premier Venizelos: " 'By order of my government. I have the honor to announce to your excellency the arrival at Saloniki of the first detachment of French troops and to declare at the same time thai France and England, allied to Serbia, send their troops to help the latter, as well as to maintain their communi cations with her. and that the two powers count upon Greece, who al teady has given them so many proofs of friendship, not to oppose measures taken in the interests of Serbia, of whom she also is the ally.' "Premier Venizelos replied: " 'By your letter of to-day you have been so good as to inform me of the arrival at Saloniki of the foreign de tachment of French troops and of the decision of France and England to send their troops to help Serbia, their ally, adding that the two powers count on Greece not to oppose measures taken in the interests of Serbia, where of she also is the ally. ! " 'ln answer to your letter I have the honor to declare to your excellency that, being neutral in the European war, the royal government could not possibly authorize the proceeding in question, for it constitutes a breach of Greece's neutrality, the more manifest since It comes from two great bel ligerent powers. It is therefore the duty of the royal government to pro test against the passage of foreign troops across Greek territory'." Speaker Clark Again Saves Negro From Mob Bowling Green. Mo., Oct. 6.—Speaker I Clark and his son were In a posse that dispersed a mob of twenty men which I yesterday attempted to lynch Harrison Rose, a negro charged with murdering | 3 farmer. The members of the mob attacked I the jail, broke the outer doors and ! were pounding with sledge hammers i on the inner door when the sheriff ap j peared with his posse. j On September 2 Speaker Clark dis persed another mob which had deter mined to lynch Rose. The Speaker I pleaded with the band not to disgrace the state, and his eloquence caused the j raiders to abandon their attempt. CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears -S) - Bgnamre ot TO COMMEMORATE 1 HISTORICAL DATE Daughters of the 'American Revolution Hold Meeting Followed bv Tea Autumn flowers and foliage with the National colors decorated the As sembly hill of the Y. M. C. A. this afternoon for the first Fall meeting of Harrisburg chapter; Daughters of the American Revolution. The his torical date commemorated was the taking of Ports Clinton and Mont gomery, October 6, 1777. The new Regent, Miss Cora Lee Snyder pre sided, and after singing "America," and repeating a D. A. R. collect, the minutes of the last meeting and the governing board were read and ap proved. Miss Sara Lemer, accompanied by Meetch Stroup played a "Minuet" by Mozart on her violin, followed by "By The Brook." an exquisite number by Rene de Boisdoffre. During routine 'business the Regent appointed Mrs. Kdward Gross. Mrs. Charles U. Fager, Jr., and Mrs. Harry C. Ross on the membership committee and the following as members of State Com mittees: Mrs. James I. Chamberlin; Mrs. Robert H. Irons, Mrs. A. J. Herr. Mrs. Frederick L. Morgenthaler, Mrs. S. J. M. McCarrell, Mrs. Guert W. ; Ensign. Mrs. John M. Raunlck, Mrs. William R. Denehey, Mrs. A. Boyd Hamilton. Miss Mary Harris Pearson Mrs. Mabel Cronise Jones. Various officers made reports and the State Conference was announced for October 25-27 at Pittsburgh. The Regent is a delegate by virtue of her office and Mrs. Joseph Thompson of Paxtang was elected as a delegate. Miss Caroline Pearson, for the first ten years historian of Harrisburg chapter, gave a paper on "Twenty-five Years of D. A. R. Work." telling of the organization of this chapter with the following charter members: Mrs Francis Jordan. Miss Ellen Williams Hall. Mrs. Hugh Hamilton. Mrs. Levi B. Alricks. Mrs. Frances Wyeth, Miss Caroline Pearson. Mrs. M W. lie- Alarney. Mrs. Caleb Carlton. Mrs. George Wolf Buehler. Miss Martha W. Ruehler. Mrs. John C. Kunkel and Mrs. Jacob S. Haldeman. But six of these ladies are living. The chapter has had 170 names on the roll, but by death, transfers and resignations there is now a membership of 100. The chapter is proud of its memorial work —the fine gateway at Paxton church yard where soldiers of the Revolution, heroes of Frontier defense and soldiers of the French and Indian War are burled, was erected by the chapter in 1906. In connection with the Cum berland County Chapter. D. A. R.. and the Keystone Chapter U. S. Daughters of ISI2 a memorial gateway was erected in 1914 at the entrance to the Silver Spring churchyard. Historical papers written by members of the chapter were gathered by Miss Pear son and bound, she presenting a book to every member on her retirement as historian. The chapter is interested in patriotic education and gives prizes in gold annually on Pennsvlvanla Dav to senior girls of the Central High school. Calls for assistance in war re lief have been met and girls of Revolutionary ancestors supported in settlement schools in Kentucky and Georgia. The entire amount of money contributed by the chapter and In dividual members to various causes, including Continental Memorial hall in Washington, since its organization 21 years ago is $2,702.56. Miss Helen Bruce Wallace, chair man of the prize committee called at tention to Pennsylvania Day at the Central High school, on October 29. and urged a goodly attendance of members to see the three prizes from the chapter presented to the success ful contestants In "Stories of Old Har risburg." Mrs. Charles W. .Hunter played sev eral piano selections to the delight of the audience and Mrs. Charles J. Wood. Jr.. the chapter Historian pre sented D. A. R. current events. Mrs. Henry F. Hershey played the chapter song. "Tour Flag and My Flag" in such an inspiring manner that every one just had to sing whether they could or not. The new officers of the chapter, Miss Snyder, Mrs. Robert A. Lamberton, Mrs. George Douglass Ramsay, Mrs. Charles B. Fager, Miss Mary Jen nings. Mrs. William H. Bishop, Mrs. Mary B. McCrea and Mrs. Wood were hostesses at tea after the business ses sion. entertaining the members and their guests in delightful manner. Miss Jennings presided at the tea table graced with a cloth used early in the century at a dinner party given to General Lafayette by Mrs. Wood's greatgrandmother; Mrs. Worley of Leesburg, Va. The candelbra were also among Mrs. Worley's family heir looms. NEW HIGH SCHOOL WILL BE BOOSTED [Continued From First Page.] the schools in their respective dis tricts and endeavor to arouse more in terest in public aducation In Harris burg. President Bacon, in the letter read to the club by Vice President George Mumma, who presided, spoke rigor ously in favor of a loan for High school purposes, asking "how long is the Harrisburg Rotary club going to remain inactive on this burning question?" Hotel Needs Brought Out President Bacon also drew the at tention of the members again to the hotel needs of the city and suggested that a hotel committee get in touch with promoters who have made good in the establishment of hotels else where in Pennsylvania. He assigned Messrs. Steward. Essick, Bratton. Youngel and Whittaker to this task. Mr. Bacon paid a high tribute to the Chamber of Commerce for its work during the celebration and during the year just ended. He recommended that all Roterians become members of the Chamber, saying that their inter ests not only did not conflict but that they are working in perfect harmony for the good of the city. Big Time Coming George Bogar, chairman of the en tertainment committee, announced that a big public reception will be held in the hall of the Technical High school on the evening of November IS at which members will be privileged to invite their friends. Ezra Hershey, secretary of the Hershey Chocolate Company, a member of the club, will give a moving picture demonstration of the manner in which the big plant at Hershey is and other members will have part in a trades dis play. An Interesting program Is be ing arranged for the event, which is designed to show the public at large a session of the Rotary club In action and the kind of thing the organiza tion stands for In the community. A communication was read from the Galveston Rotary Club deploring the exaggerated reoorts tljal have been circulated about the damage done that city by the recent storm and asklne tha tthe false Impression thus created he corrected. In the past 15 years Galveston has expended $4,783,138.54 in sea. wall and flood ureventlon work HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH The World's Lowest Priced Knight-Motored Car announces without titled family in Europe The Willys-Knight has 1 doubt, the greatest owns one or more Knight the same advantages and achievement in the history motored cars. is just as efficient as those of the automobile business. costly European Knight A „ or The Knight Motor is ac- cars .' r ci m- h motored car knowledged to be the most tor $1,090. highly developed automo- Vet it costs but $1,095. The Knight is the auto- bile motor on the market. As we more mobile motor that revolu- _ c ;r,o-i« ,„ 00 u tionized the entire motor 1 his motor differs from j Furnnean minnfartnrprc car industry of Europe. other motors in that where , ...manufacturers ' P all others deteriorate with ! build "» a who !f. y ear we It is the motor that is use, this improves; to all are f to utll, f e every used by practically all the others carbon is harmful, modern manufacturing leading motor car manu- here it is beneficial; size economy, facturers. for size it has more power. That is why our price is The Daimier of England, It has no noisy poppet so niuch le ss. MercedM of (Wmam-' the ; ■ n ° "°! Sy Ca '"? ; 110 The Willys-Knight in our , „ ' uncertain valve springs: opinion lias the least vi- Alinerva ot Belgium are no troublesome valves to bration, and is the smooth- motor" ThlTe ? rind: Poetically no wear- est, quietest and the most mous rvnignt motor, lnese no-mrf« • i j i,-„ +!-,« ~ 4.\ 4. » pans. economical car made, are the motor cars that cost from $4,000 to SB,OOO It is the ideal automobile Have your demonstra each, practically every || motor. tion at once. Immediate Deliveries The Overland-Harrisburg Co. I Distributors for Central Pennsylvania Showroom: 212 North Second Street Service Station: 127-9 Cranberry Street Bell Phone 3883 and during the recent storm the water was never nearer than five feet below the level of the wall. Whittaker Was Host John F. Whittaker was the host of the evening and he and other mem bers of the firm told of the history of the business. It is now located in a handsome four story plant right in the heart of the wholesale district, a building built especially for the uses of the company. Handsome souvenirs were presented and refreshments were served, Mr. Whittaker and his col leagues were given a rising vote of thanks for their pleasant entertain ment. The firm does business in plumbing, heating apparatus, etc., in a big way all over the east. TRICE & TEEPLE PLAYERS Piano furnished with the Price & Teeple automatic tracker tone sustain in*.' device with movable tracker bar allowing for transposing into five or more different keys. Every part ac cessible without breaking a single MOTHER OF SCHOOL GIRL Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound Re stored Her Daugh ter's Health. Plover, lowa. —"From a small child my 13 year old daughter had female ivv " ■!.'.p|| weakness. I spoke • ''to three doctors about it and they did not help her any. •Lydia E. Pinkham'a 'W r— Vegetable Com ll' Jlslv P° un( * had been of I —ft ~ great benefit to me, I WM SO I decided to have i AWW \«&rV: *s\ her B ive it a trial. VIV She has taken five j I PA) bottles of the Vege l ■ table Compound ac -1 cording to directions on the bottle and Bhe is cured of this trouble. She was all run down when she started taking the Compound and her periods did not come right. She was BO poorly and weak that I often had to help her dress herself, but now she is regular and is growing strong and healthy." Mrs. MARTIN HELVIG, Plover, lowa. Hundreds of such letters expressing gratitude for the good Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound has accom plished are constantly being received, proving the reliability of this grand old remedy. If you are ill do not drag along and continue to suffer day in and day out but •t once take Lyiia E. Pinkham'a Vege table Compound, a woman's remedy for woman's ills. If yon want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confi dential) Ljnn, Mass. Yonr letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held ia strict coulldence. packed joint. Come in and hear it. Sold on convenient terms. Yohn Bros.. 8 North Market Square.—Adv. DROWXED WHILE FISHING Special to The Telegraph Gettysburg, Pa., Oct. 6. Stricken with apoplexy while he was seining for bait fish in the Conewago creek some time on Monday evening, Henry Baker, a well-known resident of Hamilton township, was drowned; Amos Baker and son-in-law, Charles Eisenliart, found the body near Koon's Fording about a mile trom East Ber lin on Tuesday morning after a short search. The first new models of 4 and 6 cylinder REO'S that the factory has turned out for 1916 came in to-day by EXPRESS and will be exhibited at the YORK FAIR, Qet. 4-9 th They Are Worth Going to See Harrisburg Auto Co. OCTOBER 6, 1915. MRS. AMELIA BEALL DIES Special to The Telegraph Carlisle, Pa., Oct. 6. Mrs. Amelia Given Beall, widow of Walter Beall. and last surviving member of the not ed Given family, which waa active in the early affairs of Southern Pennsyl vania, died at her home here yester day after an extended illness. Mrs. Beall, who was one of the richest wo men in this section, was a noted char ity worker and was the donor of the Amelia S. Given Public Library \t Mt. Holly Springs. VAIiE TO TRAIN GCXNERS Artillery Battery Will be Quartered Near the Campus New Haven. Conn., Oct. 6.—A call for volunteers In a Yale artillery bat tery to be composed of 138 students in the graduate and undergraduate departments of the university will be issued this week, according to plans announced to-day. The university will contribute $30,000 for the construction of new barracks near the campus and until then drill will be held once a week In the Yale baseball cage.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers