I fs) I Alexander's I I Horlick's J m i ToQth i | D j er Kisg i \ Lung Healer / V Malted Milk, / _ . _ . _ _ \ Powder J \ Face Powder / fl i W RING LEADERS FOR SATURDAY I 1 Patent Rubber Toilet I V 5&C' J " \ Bitters, J \ Health / \ Powder J §9 I Medicines ,„ Articles I ■ Regular 75c Bulb Syringe 38* ————————— ■—■»>. x Snecial X. \ Regular SI.OO Bulb Syringe 58* . y' . . / %r, \ SI.OO Swift's Specific «>9* Regular 50c Atomizers 28* 50c Daggett & Ramsdell Cold Cream, .«>* / Special \ I frnv 'Tav 1 25c Beecham's Pills I «'<' / Special \ Regular 75c Atomizers .. 38* / Special \ 50c El Rado Hair Remover 29* / s q c \ ■ I r n r^,!.0 3X " I 50c Rheuma, for Rheumatism -We / 50c \ Regular $1.75 Combination Fountain / 15c \ 25c Woodbury's Facial Cream 17* I Pebeco B V Tablets J 75c Jad's Kidney Salts 47« I Sargol I Re Syr^ 8 2 5 Hot Water' Bottle 2 qtt.. I s™ ° UV * ) 25. Roger «0.11« Rice \ Tooth Paste, / g V 130 y 25c Tonsiline 1 « c V 2* 0 J R eg . $1.50 Hot Water Bottle, 2 qts., 78* \ -JP' / 50c Hinds Honey and Almond Cream V V 50c Williams' Pink Pills 34* >w / Reg $1 75 Hot Water Bottle, 2 qts., 98* ' ' J - 31 * 50c Cal. Syrup of Figs 29* Reg. $2 Hot Water Bottle, 2 qts., $1.28 25c Freeman's Face Powder 17* X X «* Sulfo-Sage Hair Color :>4e £*• SUO SSTS*VS*""" 7M «*> Fa.e Powd« 7»« / Special \ SI.OO Bromo-Seltzer •>•>* Reg. $1.75 Fountain Syringe .... $1.28 / . 50c Java Rice Powder -»* / X / " \ 25c Holmes' Frostilla I«>* f Soecial $1.50 Combination Fountain Syringe, 98* f 50c 4711 Face Powder <-«»* / _ \ B ■ Ic i u I 50c Resinol 37* / \ SLSO 2 -q uart Fountain Syringe ... 98* / special \ 2 5c Crown Rice Powder 17* I SML.UU I Eg I Sal Hepatica 1 50c Nux-ated Iron Tablets 34* / p: nUham ' s \ $3.00 Marvel Whirling Spray .... »2.50 / 1 lb. J. &J. \ 50c Derma Viva Powder 29* 1 Safety Razor, I V 2! ><* Jsoc Doan s Kidney Pills » Pmkham s goo fcnt Leak Water Bo„l. » .38 Absorbent 7S c 4711 Ean de Cologne 59* V ** X y f . .»« I ve s* I $2.00 Kant Leak Fountain Syringe, sl.. 18 1 Cotton / a »o* X ✓ V 50c Pape s Diapepsin i 9* \ Compoun d, J Combination Bed and Douche Pan, 79* \ °° ' / 50c Charles Face Powder ~*** N. 50c Dioxogen 29* / 25c Cuticura Soap lop SI.OO Enos Salts .>9* -|_ 25c Aubrey Sisters' Goods 17* S. 75c Hall's Catarrh Cure 48* JrV.GUIGIH Qfif 75c Mary Garden Talcum Powdcr •• X / Special \ 50c DeWitt's Kidney Pills 33* AVVmVUA MVX 15c Sanitol Face Cream 14* /^SDecial / SLOO \ SI.OO Steam's Wine Cod L. Oil 59* SI.OO Othine, Double Strength 67* / " \ ; WampoleV 1 SI.OO Pierce's Medicines .19* / \ We are never undersold. / c^; a l \ 25c Jess Talcum Powder 15* / r v:- K \ \ CoH T- I -c.r Wnini 4Q<- / Snecial \ We meet ail advertised prices. / Special \ jS C Mennen s Talcum Powder ... 11* I Ujer-JvISS I B| \ \ Oil, oJf J 50c Russian Mineral Oil ilc / \ ma jj or{ j e rs filled. I T a-Rlache I 25c Satin Skin Cream 16* \ J H N. SI.OO Sargol 59c I Mary Garden I N 0 goods delivered. I -p_„ r j„_ I 50c Palm Olive Shampoo 33* V Olive Oil lHe, .38*, 75* 70? J At X UOS6 ITriCCS 340 / 25c Sanitol Tooth Paste 15* I ( Fletcher's ] Remember the Place I (Qufnme a p,iis J and Number J\CilllNlliiJ I w Market St. f MdSn. ) \ | \;*o t J The Only Original Cut-Rate Patent Medicine Store In Harrisburg ACCIDENT TO CHILD Special to The Telegraph Lewistown, Pa., Oct. 22.—Lucille! Breininger, a small daughter of John ! Breininger of Highland avenue, while playing near her home, fell over an < iron hoop and broke her left arm. j ' MILLION STOMACH i SUFFERERS EAT BIG MEALS NOW i No fear of indigestion, gas, sourness, heartburn or acidity. "Pape's Diapepsin" is quickest, surest stomach regulator known. Every year regularly more than a million stomach sufferers in the United States. England and Canada take Pape's Diapepsin and realize not onlv immediate but lasting relief. This harmless preparation will di gest anything you eat and overcome a sour, gassy or out-of-order stomach five minutes afterwards. If your meals don't tit comfortably, or what you eat lays like, a lump of lead in your stomach, or if you have heartburn, that is a sign of indiges tion. Get from your pharmacist a 50-cent rase of Pape's Diapepsin and eat a few of these candy-like tablets just as soon as you can. There will he no sour risings, no belching of undigest ed food mixed with acid, no stomach gas or heartburn, no fullness or heavy feeling In the stomach, no nausea, debilitating headaches, dizziness or in testinal griping. This will all go. and besides, there will be no sour food left over In the stomach to poison your breath with nauseous odors. Pape's Diapepsin promptly regulates out-of-order stomachs, because it neu tralizes the acids in the stomach and digests your food just the same as if i'our stomach wasn't there. Relief in five minutes from all stom fcch misery is waiting for you at any tlrug store. These large 50-cent cases contain more than sufficient to thoroughly aver come any case of dyspepsia, In digestion or any other stomach dis nrder. —Advertisement. SCHMIDTS Saturday SPECIAL AQ _ CUT EXHIBITION i Qn Dozen DAHLIAS OOZN C SCHMIDT THREE-THIRTEEN FLORIST MARKET STREET FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 22, 1915. CLEMENT TALKS j "STRAIGHTSTUFF'- Head of the National Guard | Declares That There Are No Hyphens in State Soldiery That the "hyphen" type of Amer- J icanism is not to be found in the | National Guard of Pennsylvania was | the emphatic statement made last | night by General C. M. Clement, com- I mander of the Third Brigade, at a j testimonial dinner given to Brigadier j General C. T. O'Neil by his comrades \ at the Manufacturers' Club in Phila | delphia. The occasion was in honor jof General O'Nell's promotion from colonel to the commander of the : Fourth Brigade. ■ "The National Guard is for Amer ; ica heart and soul." said General j Clement in the opening speech of the j evening. "There is no hyphen about I the organization at all. We were t organized with a single purpose and L i we will carry that out. develop what [ ' may, and notwithstanding what has , | developed abroad." • | Captain J. B. Kemper, an instructor jin the United States Army and the . j only professional soldier gueet. in his L 1 address declared the National Guard, , in case there was war, would be a j very important factor as an actual : fighting force. He congratulated the r members of the Guard on the work , j they had done and said that there was .I no doubt among the army men that lit would be a very effective body if 11 this country should ever engage in ( I actual war. 3 ; The other speakers werfe Brigadier j General and Chief of Staff Thomas A. . I Stewart, Colonel Thomas Biddle Ellis, 11 Colonel Edward C. Shannon, Major , j Mathew Taggart and Major Cleon Ber , I theizel. Those who attended were all -' intimate friends of General O'Neil 1 ! and came from all parts of the State 1 i to pay tribute to their comrade. r | ARTHUR GREAVES RURIEU s Special to Tht Telegraph - New York, Oct. 22. Funeral ser i vices for Arthur Greaves, city editor f of the New York Tlnaes, who died at his home, 220 West One Hundred and Seventh street, Tuesday morning, were ' held yesterday in St. Stephen's Protest ' ant Episcopal Church in Sixty-ninth street, between Broadway and Colum -1 bus avenue. f Prior to the church services the Rev. Dr. John C. Green, of the First Congregational Church. Far Rocka away, a friend of Mr. Greaves, deliv erd a prayer at the home. Serbians Will Not Be Crushed, Officers Say By Associated Press . Saloniki. Greece, Oct. 20. via Paris, 22, 9.55 A. M.—Officers of the French and British expeditionary force in the Balkans who returned , to-day to Saloniki from the Serbian front assert that, notwithstanding the odds against which they are fighting, the Serbians are not discouraged. "I would not advise you to bet ten cents that Serbia will be crushed," said one of these officers. "Last Thurs day we were north of Ralia, in the section where the Austrians and Ger mans are rtiaking their principal at tack. It took them nine days to gain eight miles on that front. "We saw long lines of Prussian and Austrian prisoners going to the rear. The Serbian line is absolutely un broken. The Serbians are fighting every inch of the way. SAFE MAJORITY FOR BOTHA By Associated Press Cape Town, Union of South Africa, Oct. 22, via London—lo.ss A. M.—The followers of the premier, General Louis Botha, and the Unionists who are supporting the premier, are as sured of a safe majority in the House of Assembly of the Union of South Africa. The Nationalists who oppose the i military operations against German Southwest Africa and are attempting to defeat the plan to dispatch a con tingent of Union forces to Europe thus far have obtained only twenty-one seats, mostly in the Free State. HEROIC WOMEN HOXORKD By Associated Press I Paris. Oct. 22.—The military cross, i with commendation in army orders, \ has been conferred on a long list of j heroic women who, as nurses, stayed |at thpir posts at Compaigne, Senlis ipnd Villers-Cotterets, some during the I German occupation and all under fire. I Among them arc two women belong | ing to the French aristocracy, Ba jionfss Fain and Countess Pillet-Will.' CALLED BAD DIPLOMACY By Associated Press j London. Oct. 22.—Great Britain's 1 reported offer to cede the isla'.d of | ryprus to Greece to induce the latter country to join the entente allies is ! opposed by ihe Morning Post, which | editorially characterizes the offer as had diplomacy. "When the British empire is reduced to selling part of itself for the military support of I Greece, things might be considered as J ir a bad way," the Post says. HOLDS BREATH TEX MINUTES Special to The Telegraph Berkeley. Cal.. Oct. 22. What is said to be a new record for voluntary suspension of respiration has been made by Warren D. Horner, a Univer sity of California student. In an ex periment conducted by Saton Temple Pope. Instructor In surgery. Dr. Pope caused Horner to hold his breath ten minutes and ten second yesterday. SWOBODA RELEASED By Associated Press Paris. Oct. 22.—Raymond Swoboda has been discharged from prison, the charge of espionage on which he was 1 eld having been dropped recently. He has been detained by the prefec ture, however, pending the settlement of the riuestion of his nationality. SIR ANDRKW NOBLE DIES By Associated Priss London, Oct. 22, 11.44 A. M. —The death is announced of Sir Andrew Noble. Sir Andrew Noble was an authority on artillery and explosives. Germans Shoot Belgian Priest; Three Others Dead Fy Associated Press Amsterdam?" via London. Oct. 22. I The Echo iie Beige states that the new) German order for the immediate sur render of all enemy soldiers hidden in Belgium is being carried out with the utmost severity. A Belgian priest, Father Toulon, of Staden, Flanders, sasy the paper, while in his cellar with several inhabitants received a sum mons to deliver French soldiers who were alleged to have taken refuge there. Before the priest could reply, the article continues, eGrmans fired a, volley, killing the priest and threej ! others. BOY FIRST TO KILL BEAR Trout Run Lad Brings Dovii Bruin Weighing: 225 Pounds William sport, Pa., Oct. 22. —Dorset i Ringler, 17 years old, of Trout Run, is the first Lycoming county hunter this ! season with a bear to his credit. Rlng ■ ler and Floyd Bowen, another Trout I Run lad. were returning from an un -1 successful coon hunt at 1 o'clock this i morning when they heard something | crashing through the brush and a mo ! ment later a large black bear passed 20 feet In front of them and started to climb an oak tree. Bower was the first to fire and missed. At the report of the gun the bear started down the tree, as It touched the ground Ringler sent a i bullet into its heart, killing it in stantly. EXECUTION IS SUBJECT OF CON DEM N AT< »RY E DITORI AI.S By Associated Press Amsterdam, via London, 22. —The execution of Miss Edith Cavell Is the suhejet of condemnatory editorials in the Dutch newspapers to-day. The Nieuw Van Den Dag says it trusts that "a vigorous protest in the name of humanity" will be made from all sides, and adds: "What poor psychologists the Ger man officials are. From their first re quest to Belgium for free passage, down through the Lusitania case and the visits of Zeppelins to open towns and finally incidents of the Cavell sort, the Germans have shown everywhere a lack of the most elementary concep tion of psychology." WILL ABANDON NEUTRALITY By Associated Press Petrograd, Oct. 21, via London, Oct. 22.—The Novoe Vremya prints an in terview with the Rumanian envoy who has arrived here on a mission from the Rumanian foreign office. The en voy Is quoted as stating that the Ru manian army and the nation are whol ly on the side o fthe entente allies and that he is convinced that Rumania will soon abandon neutrality. MAKE FINAL SETTLEMENT By Associated Press Washington. Oct. 22.— The British Board of Trade has arranged to make final settlements for all seized Amer ican cotton, and which is not cov ered by sales contracts. The price to be paid will be the market value at the port of shipment on the date of shipment. EMPEROR VISITS COAST London, Oct. 22. A dispatch to the Exchange Telegraph Company from Amsterdam says: "Emperor William visited Ostend and the Belgian coast defenses last week, accompanied by Prince Eitel Frledrich and General Von Falkenhayn. The party spent one night in Brussels and also visited the Duke of Wurtemburg'g headquarters at Ghent." Whitlock Made Effort to Save Woman's Life London, Oct. 22.—The full report of the circumstances of the condemna tion and execution of Miss Edith Ca vell, an Englishwoman and head of a training school in' Brussels. for helping English, French and Belgian soldier to escape from Belgium, made by Brand Whitlock, the American Minis ter at Brussels, to Walter H. Page, the American ambassador at London, was [ issued by the British government last I evening. Minister Whitlock telegraphed to Ambassador Page on the 12th: "Miss Cavell sentenced yesterday and executed at 2 o'clock this morning, despite our best efforts continued until the last moment." Mr. Whitlock's final appeal was in the form of a noe sent by a messenger late on the night o fthe llth to Gov ernor von der Lancken, reading as fol lows: "My Dear Baron—l am too sick to present my request myself, but I ap peal to your generosity of heart to support it and save, from death this I unhappy woman. Have pity on her! Yours truly. "BRAND WHITLOCK." Mr. Whitlock also stated that Miss Cavell had nursed German soldiers. INDIAN'S I'l AY AT HOME Special' to The Telegraph Philadelphia, Oct. 22.—The Buck nel! University-Carlisle Indian game on Indian Field at Carlisle at 2 o'clock to-morrow afternoon will be the final game for Coach Kelley's men on their home field this year. Although the Indian team has not been going as well as was expected earlier in the season, the excellent showing made against Lehigh and the greater distance gained in the game against Harvard at Cambridge indi cate that the Indians' usually spec tacular work can be expected In the game against the Bucknell team. OFFER MADE LAST SUNDAY By Associated Press London, Oct. 22. The offer of Cyprus to Greece w'as made last Sun day, according to the Times and is a partial revelation of the proposals which had been under consideration for some time. \ Special Saturday Royal Dutch Chocolates 39c GOR6AS' DRUG STORE 16 N. Third Street Penn'a Station REPORTS ARE FABRICATIONS By Associated Press London, Oct. 22. The Salonlkt correspondent o fthe "Daily Mail" as serts that many of the reports current concerning Bulgarian successes are j pure fabrications. OUCH! LAME BACK RUB LUMBAGO OR BACKACHE AWAY Rub pain right out with small j trial bottle of old "St. Jacob's Oil." Kidneys cause Backache? No! ' They have no nerves, therefore can | not cause pain. Listen! Your back-1 |ache is caused by lumbago, sciatica or ia strain, and the quickest relief is [soothing, penetrating "St. Jacobs Oil." | Rub it right on your painful back, i and instantly the soreness, stiffness and lameness disappears. Don't stay crippled! Get a small trial bottle of "St. Jacobs OH" from your druggist and limber up. A moment after It is applied you'll wonder what became of the backache or lumbago pain. Rub old, honest "St. Jacobs Oil" whenever you have sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism or sprains, as it is abso lutely harmless and doesn't burn the skin.—Advertisement. AMUSEMENTS Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Drew In a 5-part Blue Klhhon feature. "Playiig Dead" Latent. PAT HE NEWS 11 A. M. to 11 P. M. sc-10c I Mr. Herman V raver at the pipe | organ afternoon* and evening*. ( \ ! KKSi viS MADAM MELBA| ! CHOICE SEATS AT AM. PRICES STILL AVAILABLE. Mat., 2.30—10 c, 18a. Eve., 7.30 to 10.30—10 c, 15c and 25c. PULLMAN ORTER ' MAIDS LOVGHI.IVS DOGS CLEGO KOl.ll A HARLAND MARJORIE FAIRBANKS * CO. R2H2T To-day only—Oilvcr-Moronco pre ncuti MYHTLE STEDMAS and FORREST STAMJEV In "THE WILD 01.1VE," a fa*clnntln« love atory.— Paramount. To-inorrow, one day only JACKIE SAUNDERS in the thrllllne political drama; "REAPING THE WHIRLWIJiD." Professor Wallace, the eminent Dllnd organist plays from 2 'till 4.30 ind from 7 'till 11 p. m. Miss Mer chant from 10.30 'till 2 and from 4.30 'till 7 p. m. —> ORPHEUM THEATER MONDAY EVENING MELBA Elrat F100r—92.00 and 32.110. Second F100r—31.50, 32.00 and 32.A0. Third Floor—3l.oo and 314 M. Bos Seata—33.oo and 38.50. BOX OFFICE SALE OPENED THIS MORNING. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers