jßj j Our Helpful Service J ■jm is the result of constant endeavor on the part of |j| Im our officers and employees to render pa- \»\ tron the greatest possible assistance in the ; W ■I : v handling of his financial business. Without departing in the least from our con- g 5l servative policies, we extend all possible accom- £ ■fos modations to our patrons, whether the account :jg carried is large «r small. AMUSEMENTS # ll . V To-day. MARGUERITE CLARK, in a very unusual romance, "HELENE | or THE NORTH." Paramount. Monday and Tuesday Jesse L. Lasky presents CHAHLOTT E WALKER in "OUT OF DARRXESS." Paramount. Professor Wallace, the blind or ganist, plays from 2 'till -1.30 and from 7 'till 11 p. rn., and Miss Mer- 1 chant from 10.3u 'till 2 and from 1.30 'till 7 p. m. V '* K ' " \ TO-DAY OM.T CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG "MARRING MONEY" MONDAY ROBERT WARWICK IS PRESENTED IN "THE FLASH OF AN EMERALD" A Story of the Modern Society Vul ture tbut tiillls and grliiN, —ICV ' .. Chestnut St. Auditorium Harrisbure. Pa.. Friday Evening, November 11th New York Symphony Orchestra of 75 pieces: Walter Damrosch, Conductor With MISCHA ELMAN The World's Greatest Violinist Popular prices, 75c to 92.50. Seats now on sale at Sigler's Music Store, No. 30 No. 2nd St., Harris- i bnrg, Pa. Mail and Telephone or ders received: make checks pay- ! able to C. M. Sigler. p r j an( j Sat., Nov. 12-13 j SEAT SALE WEDNESDAY ___ ii Popular Price Saturday Matinee Oliver Morosco, producer of "Bird of Paradise," "Peg o' My Heart" Important anc * "The Unchastened- Woman," r now the current success at the The first, pres- 39th Street Theater, New York, entation of this Presents new farce is a A ROMANTIC FARCE theatrical event d V of unusual LjL I 1 I portance and -A. -i. offers Harris- burg playgoers I | j\/ L an opportunity Jf yi | j of seeing this great cast and By Avery Hopwood production be- Author Seven Days fore it opens at With MARJORIE RAMBEAU, the Gaiety the- Pedro de Cordoba ater New York A Typical MorOSCO CftSt Prices Nights, 25c to $1.50 ——— Saturday Matinee, 25c to SI.OO Lehigh Valley Coal Sales Co s. LEHIGH COAL HIGHEST IN QUALITY AND IN PREPARATION n,°. a 't that chcers and satisfies, gives comfort and brings content- GET IT FROM YOUR DEALER—THE COAL WE SHIP. Mind you! There isn't anything "just as good," D. W. Cox & Co., Shippers, Harrisburg, Pa. Also shippers of Standard WUkes-Barre, Schuylkill and SliamoUln coals Bituminous. s ■■■ ' Try Telegraph Want Ads Try Telegraph Want Ads SATURDAY EVENING, j AMUSEMENTS ! f A To-night The Law of the Land WITH ADELAIDE Wt FRENCH ij* PRICES—S.'ic to I'll. oo. WEDNESDAY—NIGHT ONLY NOVEMBER 10 DAVID BISPHAM —AS— Beethoven IN THE MUSICAL DRAMA, "ADELAIDE" Preceded by the Mittcellnneou* Concert, "THE REHEARSAL." PRICES—2Sc to $1.50. j 1 ' Grand Theater 1426 Derry St. MONDAY The New Governor a 8100,000 photoplay in 5 acts, fea turing William Fariium; also "The Dragon's Claw," in 3 -acts, featuring Marion Leonard and Walter Hamp den. Admission, and 10<* «■ A BRYAN'S ATTACK CAUSES BREAK [Continued From First I'afje.] among the people who might influence j their Congressmen before leaving for the national capital. In promptly tak l Ins up the liattle an>l challenging the President. Mr. Bryan likewise serves notice upon his followers both in and out of Congress what he as the leader of one wing of the party and the championer of peace-at-any-price ex : pects of them. Struggle Now On The struggle between President Wil son. representing the largest and the conservative element in his party, and Mr. Bryan, the apostle of radicalism and peace, is now on by the action of Mr. Bryan. It promises to engage the country mildly during the next few weeks, and increase in intensity and bitterness until Congress assem bles. The end can only be dividing of the party into two uncompromising camps, which undoubtedly will be as hostile to each other ns in the days when Mr. Wilson, preceding the 1908 cam paign, declared that "Bryan ought to be knocked Into a cocked hat." Republicans say that Bryan is re turning the blow upon the present leader of Democracy which the con- j j servative Democrats in 1908, among I them Mr. Wilson, then president or i j Princeton University, administered to ' Mr. Bryan. I j Democrats had hoped that Mr. ! Bryan, for the sake of the party, would j j refrain from an open attack upon the i i administration and would not press | ] his pacific- policy in a way that would i ; destroy the party organization. Ever BIG EATERS GET KIDNEY TROUBLE SAYS AUTHORITY Take a tablespoonful of Salts to flush Kidneys if Back hurts. Omit all meat from diet if you feel Rheumatic or Bladder bothers. The American men and women must guard constantly against kidney trouble, hecause we eat too much and all our food is rich. Our blood is filled with uric acid, which the kidneys strive to filter out, they weaken from overwork, become sluggish; the elimi nalive tissues clog and the result is kidney trouble, bladder weakness and a general decline in health. When your kidneys feel like lumps of lead; your back hurts or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment or you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night; if you suffer with sick headache or dizzy, nervous spells, acid stomach, or you have rheu matism when the weather is bad, get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoon ful in a glass of water before break fast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with llthia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate clogged kidneys; to neu tralize the acids in the urine so it, no longer is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder disorders. ' Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in jure, makes a delightful effervescent - lithia-water beverage, and belongs in every home, because nobody can make k a mistake by having a good kidney I flushing any time.—Advertisement. jßHanmHß^nnanH M lOc CIGARS Made by John C. Herman & Co. AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS iTo-Night—J n b d e B H ? ne y t G j h rl \ f © And a Big Supporting Show£ j ALL NEXT WEEK 1 | A headliner so big we are keeping it the entire week. i A Mile a Minute 1 i 1 1 j I Late feature of "The Honeymoon Express" at the New York ! , jr* V/intergarden. , | ? 1 One of the greatest effects ever produced on any stage, show- , i ?mg an Automobile and an Express Train in a thrilling race. I} i | \ Wood Bros, j Mack Gordon I Ismed j le l Marvelous J and and I Oriental f► ! j J Athletes j Sangster White | Pianist 1k j i HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH RAY'S RECORD OA? RECENT ROAD RVN 4 1 " # ; | .. v . . ...... •• .• - -. ; '~' ; '-3H .., , : '■/"■'•■ *■.-. ■« l * —-■ ■■" ' — i—* Kay McNamarn and the stock Maxwell touring car which lowered all rec ords for rapid transit between the automobile metropolis and the Hoosier Capital. MrNamara made the round trip, down town to down town—a distance of G22 miles—in twenty hours, one minute, including his only stop, made at Indianapolis for supplies-. On the southbound trip he whizzed the 31 iniles in 5.56. beating the fastest railroad schedule by one hour, twenty-seven minutes. McNamara traveled through part of three States, virtually the whole mileage being over average unimproved country road. The trip was authentically checked bv W. D. Edenburn, Detroit representatives of the American Automo bile Association. since Mr. Bryan resigned from the Cabinet, friends have been at work in an effort to heal the wounds caused by the attitude of the President In the days when the Eusitania notes were written. Secretary Daniels and Postmaster General Burleson, as well as Comp troller of the Currency Williams, ranked as devout Bryan men, have been zealous in their efforts to reeon ciliate. It was only last nisht that Secretary Daniels Rave a party to Mr. Bryan, to which the Cabinet was in vited. There were several absentees, notably among them being Secretary Garrison and Secretary McAdoo. Ijong-desired Kxctise Appears In taking the President's speech as an excuse long desired, Mr. Bryan se lected a means of accentuating in a most forcible way his opposition to the country prepuring for the nation's de fense., With the rejoinder to the President the issue is now squarely drawn between the two foremost men in the Democratic party. This is the parting of the ways between the Presi dent and the "Commoner," the man who forced Mr. Wilson's nomination at Baltimore. T.AFT AGAINST BIG ARMY Former President, In Speech, Attacks National Defense Program Special to The Telegraph Boston, Mass., Nov. 6.—Professor William H. Taft, ex-President of the United States, declined to make a speech on national defense prepara tions yesterday afternoon at the luncheon given in ills honor at the City Club, but did say he does not fa vor a large standing army, as lie be lieved it would result in conscription, and made it plain that he opposes the policy as announced by President Wilson. "We are not justified in rushing Into militarism," he declared. "The spirit of the people is certainly at variance with the spirit of militarism. The financial condition of the government will not permit the raising of a large army. The navy is not a militaristic instrument for aggression. We are having all we can do to-day to raise I the 80,000 men In our own army." WAR SUPPLY MEN BACK OF PROGRAM [Continued From First Page.] as the airship "which with their thun derbolts out of the sky kill the unsus pecting." the submarine, poisonous gas, liquid fire and so on; and in! speaking of the effect on neutrals de clared that when this war is over, in ternational law must be reconstructed so that nations at war must be made to respect the interests and rights of those not at war. Pooli-Poohs National Defense Then Mr. Bryan sailed into the question of national preparedness as a means ot : preser\ ing peace and pooh poohed the whole idea jusl as he did yesterday in his public statement for the press in which he assailed the de fense program suggested by PreFident Wilson. He said "preparing for war as a means of preserving peace has been the European policy for a gener ation and look what it has brought the nations of that distressed continent!" He reiterated much of his state ment of yesterday, declaring again that Wilson's program "would mark the change of a long established Amer ican policy, a departure from our tra ditions, a menace to peace and safety : and a challenge to the spirit of Chris tianity which teaches us to influence others by example rather than by ex citing fear by force. Shoula Be "Above" War He said that this nation should hold itseit so much above running to war :at every annoyance ana insuit as did the congressman from (Georgia who said in answer to a challenge to a auel, "i have a wile ana family to , support ana an immortal soul to save. I .Since you have neitner, 1 teei that we would not light on equal grounds." I lie declared just so tile United States I should "refuse to wallow m the mire |of blood" with sote cnip-on-the (shoulder «natioa that mignt want to start something. ;\ir. Bryan saia this I nation shouiu reply like tne Georgia I statesman that "we have a liunured I million souls whose interests we must I look after and high ideals of right to j maintain" and retuse to be drawn into i war. He slapped the jingo editors who are always finding some war talk pretext. Mains Hyphenated Press The former secretary declared that the neutrality ot this nation has been violateu by me ellorta oi the pro-all.) anu the pro-liei man press and said that both were wrong since the nation lias sunered since mo outbreak ox nos ulites at the bands ot both tne allies and the Teutons. in speamng ot tho cause of the war, Mr. Bryan said that the coniuct lias an grown oui ot the talse philosophy that Aiignt AiaKes Kignt and the laiiurc oi tnc European nations to remember the liiree commandments "Thou Shalt i>ot Covet"—"'iliou Shalt iMot steal Thou Shalt J\'Ol Kill. The lecture was lined with Biblical references and tile orator ciiuciied many or ins best points by reference to iioly Writ, He pointed out that tiiis is not a race war as the races are an mixed up in the coniuct, Slav lighting hand in hand with Latin, and Germans allied with iurK. He said it is not a religious war because itoman Italy, Protestant England and Greek Catnolio Russia are lined up against .Protestant Ger many, Human catholic Austria and Moslem Turkey. He insisted that it is not a "family scrap" since all the Xieads of tne nations of warfare are of tne same royal family and close ot Kin. He mentioned the fact that just a lew weeks before tne outbreak ot hostilities the \arious rulers were sumptuously entertaining each other. He insisted that the whole light has grown out ot the false "Alight Makes Right" policy. He said thai no ruler will take the responsibility for start ing the war and that this marks at least one step forward in civilization since no governmental head is willing to adnnt ne either wanted or began the titanic struggle. Scoffs at Cry of War Danger Mr. Bryan scoffed at the cry of the propagandists for preparedness that tills nation is in danger of attack. He said that as a result of the loss of life ana money among the European nations this country is in less danger of attack than any time in the last fifty years. He also lapgh;d at the idea that we could not meet an enemy in case one attacked us. He pointed to the unlimited resources, credit and millions of men who would be at hand in case of any real necessity. Speaking of the fate of Belgium the orator could not refrain at a chuckle at those who liken the United States to this unfortunate country. He de clared that Belgium is a nation about a hundredth as powerful as the United States and separated from her enemies by Imaginary boundry lines while the United States is separated from any possible foes by tne Atlantic and the Pacific Ocean. He spoke of the billons of money which will be wasted In preparing for war when there is no danger of war and said that this money should be spent for national developments such as road building. In speaking of the way to perma nent peace Mr. Bryan urged treaties which will make long deliberation necessary before plunging into strife with any other country. To Form Peace Branch On the platform with Mr. Bryan was Mayor Royal, Dr. John J. Mullow ney, William S. Esslck and William M. Robison. Mayor Royal introduced the former Secretary of State follow ing a short address by Dr. Mullowney. Following the lecture Dr. Mullowney called for the names of people who will assist in the organization of a local branch of the Pennsylvania Peace and Arbitration Society. Meaning of Symbols on Cadillac Coat of Arms Since the Cadillac Eight has appear ed with the coat of arms of Antolne de La Mothe Cadillac on Its radiator as a distinguishing mark, many people have inquired as to the meaning of the escutcheon. While this device does not appear in the available works on heraldry, the NOVEMBER 6, 1915. | . You Don't Have to Wait for i 1 #5 Your Pass-Book I You do not need to leave your sjj »5( pass-book (your only receipt for & 321 deposits) with this bank and wait >; The President j lL i - * 2fll gj a day or more at the laA of every C month in order to find out how B jwitt(>««•/rt» your account stands. g =53 Instead, a neatly-printed, mach- p ine-figured statement of your S 0? checks and deposits, and the bal- pi 2 f) ance of your account is ready for This improved service is made possible by the Burroughs Book- fc: keeping Machine which is used in {S The Bookkeeper our accoun ting department. "GRTAT ITUFF! N. The machine keeps every depos- 2a dk 'Z" idl Tl"''u' f itor's account figured right up to 2 2ZXM- date all the time. If you ever £ 55! want a statement in a hurry, we Sfc 53 can give it to you inside of five minutes. mt fp-a Moreover it is absolutely accurate, as the S I J machine never makes a mistake in fig- S y&k' Dauphin Deposit fi I T ™. Company | § =?.»£ 213 Market Street | 0S?, my cancelled checks f~ Capital $300,000 Ihil h Jba/ R--ni Surplus $300,000 £■ ■sc Strvitt —has the pail Detroit Public Library has gathered ' considerable information concerning ■ it and has arrived at its general im port. In the upper left and lower right quarters appear six fowls. These are cygnets, or young swans. They sym bolize purity of descent. The. crest above the shield is the crown of a vicomte— or viscount in English—in- ; dicatlng the rank of Cadillac's nobil ity. Dictionaries of heraldry define the black bars across the quarters contain ing the swans as "barrulets" and say they symbolize 'one who sets the liar of conscience and religion and honor against angry passions and evil temp tations." The blue as seen in the em blem on the radiator of the car de notes loyalty and truth; the gold, gen erosity and elevation of mind, and the red still other virtues. The ancient coat of arms was n gen eral symbol of the ideals of the family to which it belonged, and Jts whole meant considerably more than a mere aggregate of its parts. To the old leaders like Cadillac, the family es cutcheon was a sacred thing, and its degradation WHS to be avoided or pre vented at all costs, even if that meant giving up one's life. Stand the Pullman five passenger at the curb beside any car in its class or out of it and it retains its own air of snap j and distinction. It is heavy enough to hug the road at any speed—light enough to save tires and gas. The roomy luxury of the Pullman sets a new standard for cars at anything like | the price. * Two, Three and Five-Passenger Models SPECIFICATIONS: 114-inch wheel base, 32 H. P. four-cylinder mo tor, 3% by 4V4 non-skid tires all four wheels, cantilever rear springs, independent electric starting and lighting system, separate high ten sion magneto, Mayo radiator, one-nian top. full floating rear axle, extra large body to accommodate seven passengers If desired. ANDREW REDMOND, T B H cJ?g , A T N S D BEXTZ-LASBIS AITO CO., DISTRIBUTORS fACarForl Everybody i Anything from a big, roomy, seven passenger six-cylinder touring | & car down to a good small car for S3OO or S4OO, can be had at 413 i a S. Cameron St. It looks as if we were going into the used car K business. But it all belongs to the business of giving the public I . \ Bight Cylinder Cadillacs at the rate of five a week in this locality. I \ If you cannot afford the luxury of a Cadillac "Eight," you can | M have a mighty good car that some one has sacrificed. | W Our used Cadillacs, as well as other used cars, are relintshed to k look like new in our own paint shop before sold. I # It will pay you to call on us. f Crispen Motor Car Co. ) J 413-417 S. CAM 7 1916 National Highway "6" Just received. On exhibition at our show rooms, 5 Grace Avenue, near Fourth and Market. If you are buying a car anywhere from SI,OOO to $2,000, we say, don't do it until you itive yourself the advantage of seeing the above oar. You surely stand to losf it' you do not sec It. Von will be welcome and we will be pleased to show the model, even If you are not a buyer. Penna. Auto Sales Co. Dodge Brothers Cars as Desert Stages Out in the Imperial Valley of Cali fornia a fleet of IS Dodge Brothers motor cars are used as stages. They are known as the "Pickwick Stages,," because of their starting at the Pick wick Theater, San Diego. Their route lies across a portion of the California Desert and each car averages about 1,000 miles per week. Various makes of motor cars were tried out by the Pickwick Stage Com pany, which operates the line. About six months ago the first Dodge Brothers car was purchased and sub jected to many tests on the route. The success was so striking that sev eral more were bought and this num ber has been added to, until there are now 18 in use, and more are to be bought within a short time. According to Mr. Hayes, one of the proprietors of the company, the up keep on these cars has been remark ably light, and within a year he ex pects to operate Dodge Brothers cars only. 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers