I Scientists discover the cause of j bleeding gums The old idea that bleeding gums of Senreco Tooth Paste, and loose teeth (symptoms of Senreco contains the best cor- I 3 pyorrhea) are due to little pieces rective and preventive for pyor i of tartar or bone under the gums. kn oW n to dental science. f | has been exploded Scientists Used daily it will successfully pro- 1 | have made the astounding discov- t ect your teeth from this disease, f s ery that this disease is caused by a o I .. • .i . § germ which is found in etery ? enre f° a,SO C °" taU ? S thc be , st J I human mouth. harmless agent for keeping the * 1 This germ is the most active teeth clean and white. It has a | H and destructive enemy of your refreshing flavor and leaves a | 1 teeth. Are you protecting them wholesomely clean, cool and pleas- f g against it? You can ward off its ant taste in the mouth. I constant attack and escape the Start the Senreco treatment i | dread results of the disease by tonight—full details in the folder | | using the proper corrective <-•"* wrapped around every tube, c | and preventive treatment in J? Symptoms described. A | your daily toilet. vTli two oz. tube is sufficient | 1 To meet the need for this V** for six or eight weeks of the | i , treatment and to enable pyorrhea treatment. Get I everyone to take the neces- Senreco at your druggists | i .. • . V / \ today, or send 4c in stamps 1 c , precau ions against \ A of co j n f or sam p] e t u be and I g this disease, a prominent \ f o y er . Address The Sen- I 1 dtntl * has P ut his own V IV tanel Remedies Co.. 506 1 g prescription before the pub- Union Central Bldg., Cin | | lie in the convenient form Sample,/« cinnatl, Ohio. PPimiiiHWtJHiiiiiiiiiiniiHiMpiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinjjjiiiiiiiiiMiouijimiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiHMiiiiiiiMicSimiiiiiinicjiiiiiiMHiiciiiiiiililiiifiittmiiiiiirS oRi-iiia >i To-night "The Law of the Land," I with Adelaide French. A\ ednesday, evening only, November J 1" David Bispham and Company) _ in Music and Drama. Thursday, matinee and night. Novem- I tier 11—"Tile Tango yueens." "THK LAW OK Till: "The Law of tile Land," which comes to the Orpheum this evening, is a j melodrama in four acts, by George ! Broadhurst. The interest is gripping from tile initial to the llnal curtain, i The situations are plausible, the mo- I tives reasonable and soundly present-I ed. There is no dull moment and no ; false situations; tile emotional appeal] is true, the situations are so intensely ! dramatic, the issues so powerful, that' these normal processes stir the inter- j est of the audience to the utmost from ! ihe beginning to the end, and we can i readily see why "The Law of the I I.and* had a solid year's run at the ; Forty-eighth Street Theater, New York «'ily. It is certainly a great play. Advertisement. >IAJESTI< \ \l DK\ 11.1.K The Honey Girls at the Majestic | Theater have mode a hit and indicu- ! t ions point to the biggest Saturday the j Walnut street playhouse has had. Next week the feature unusual will lie the | biggest spectacle ever staged for a I vaudeville ael. It is entitle.! "A Mile n Minute." The following is what the I New York Sun said of this act in part: "The stirringly effective scene in the' f —_____ i i 4 I See Astrich's Advertisement on Page 2 | | mmmmmmmmrnmmm ■—* CHOIR LEADER STATES HE TOOK FATHER JOHN'S MEDICINE UPON ADVICE OF FR. JOHN HIMSELF Mtdiitne got its name) nrst took the medicine upon the advice of the pastor )IresiTilitinn! continual, V chanting the praises of thWd Father John's Medicine Was So Named By The People Father John's Medicine is a physician's prescription. nrnt BpTclttH S^ d |n 0r iBBS. J ° Un °' Br " ,n of Ix > well ' Mass., by an emi re('ominended this prescription to his parishioners and ft lends h nil In this way it became known a« Father John's Medicine. Wither John's Medlcin- is recommended for coughs. colds and thrnut I?coToro?r.s a o n „ d ouT«: ]\ ] Buy GooDCoai & LESS Coal 11 # The better the coal you buy—the less you have to buy—and the ' ' M tur >OU haVC l ° bUy ' thß lower becomos >'° ur aggregate coal expendi- I I % Since ail coal—good, better and best—coats the same per ton don't g you think it the part of wisdom to get the best for your monev and I % keop the total expenditure down? | M Buy Montgomery Coal—its quality has been known for year* 1 m there is none better. * , } J. B. MONTGOMERY J Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets 1 \ MR. BUSINESS MAN* Iloox y °ur business 1 uu<3lllbg.7 mMll < By Advertising With CALENDARS We Can Supply You. Call at Our Office or Phone Bell 1577R MYERS MANUFACTURING CO. 1125 North Third Street v ———— —— > SATURDAY EVENING, I ilrst »et. where one sees the headlights |of a motor car and the railway loco motive streaking along the mountain ! country in the dark distance, and grow . Ing larger and brighter every moment, | until their full glare is on the stage, , together with the huge engine, snort - I ing and rattling, and the enormous I touring car "pipping" and palpitating, | is the greatest thing in stage mechanics | ever seen in this country, and it stirred lsst night's audience into a veritable tempest of enthusiasm."—Advertise j ment. ! "HtHHVIMi MO\ KV" IT THK CO MI NI tl. I Owing to the immense popularity of ; tie recent showing of Clara Kimball ! Young in her splendid triumph, "Mar ! tying Money." this attraction will be returned to Harrtsburg to-day by spec ! ial request and will be exhibited at the Colonial Theater. This delightful I player, who was declared by Lillian I Utissell to be the most beautiful wo | man of the silent stage, is said to lie ! seen in one of her linest roles in this | particular play. Owing to the fact that | "The Raven," the Kssanay drama that ! was to appear at the Colonial for the | week-end, had not yet been viewed liv I the board of censors, its exhibition was j postponed until Friday and Saturday lo£ next week. On Monday anil Tuesday the attraction will be "The Flash of an Kmerald," a World Film starring Rob ert Warwick.—Advertisement. SCHOOL LOAN CAHHII'.S Special In The Telegraph Lewistown, Pa., Nov. G.—On Tu»s --! 'lay the proposition to increase tiie bonded indebtedness SIOO,OOO for the | purpose of erecting a new high school in Lewistown borough carried by a safe majority. \&2o(Y?en r^Unreftesi^ Why Woman Lie---When They Do By ELM WHEELER WILCOX (Copyright, 1915, by Star Company.) A seemingly intelligent man asks me the following question: Is there a woman in America tnat will not wilfully lie and de ceive? A businessman in Cleve land, 0., made the remark to me one day that he had been in busi ness twenty-eight years, and in that time he had never met a woman who would not lie for money or social effect; and 1 say, is it possible. Respectfully. HOMER F. When we come down to the real basis of things, it is pretty hard to And a man or womafi who is not guilty of some small prevarication each day. Almost every businessman is ob liged to be courteous and polite to callers who bore him unutterably and take up his precious time. When they say, "I fear X am trespassing on your patience" the poor slave of business is ohllged to say, "Not at all," while in his heart he is wishing himself upon a desert island a thousand leagues from bores. Again, he tinds himself obliged from social consideration to accept a dinner invitation, either Ht the home of an acquaintance, or at the club, yet he does not enjoy the occa sion, but is forced to say that he has had a charming time on taking leave ol' his host. In large financial transactions, the man who is absolutely truthful to-day would bring a salary in any museum. The little He in such situations Is called "business acumen" and "shrewdness," and "cunning." and "quick wit"—any name, indeed, save its own ugly one. In the hours devoted to gallantry and love-making, man prides him self upon his ability to tell sweet lies which women believe. As for woman's untruthfulness, it is a won der she knows how to speak the truth MAY IRWIN SEEN IN BEST COMEDY Washington Square a Rol licking Farce With Ex cellent Cast Orpheum goers lilst evening were gi> en a splendid performance of rollicking comedy in "33 Washington Square," which showed May Irwin famous comedienne, at her best. In this day and generation, when the theatrical managers, in the hallucina tion that they are meeting a demand, when In reality they are actually creating it, produce plays calculated to stir the stronger emotions of the theater-going public; in this day and generation. I repeat, it is a relief to lind oneself on solid footing and set tled down to an enjoyable evening of unharried enjoyment. It was a clean, wholesome performance and provided a perfect setting for the bubbling good nature and unlimited capabilities of May Irwin, who kept the audience in a constant state of chuckling and outbursts of merriment. Her com pany carried out very satisfactorily Ihe parts assigned to them, which of necessity, (ipso lacto), were sub ordinated to Miss Irwin. It Is re grettable that a larger audience did not take advantage of the opportunity offered, so that more plays of like nature might lind their way to Har risburg from time to time. The story of the complications at tendant upon a society leader's pitiful ) attempts to maintain her social posi tion ahead of her closest rival, with j out. having the necessary financial foundation, and her faithful maid's (Miss irwin) zealous efforts to care for her welfare and at the same time manage her own love affair with Wil liam, the butler, afforded the audience much quiet enjoyment. May Irwin's rendition in the first act of "Dan Me- Graw," who became famous for float ing down the old Green River, and "Araby," and several other attractive songs which, when sung by her, seem ed particularly apropos, liad much to do with putting the audience in the best of humor for the entire evening. To mention each member of the east were impossible, but Leonard Holl ister. as Tom Preston, alias Dr. Pye crofl. a notorious forger, deserves special mention. Mr. Molllster acted in an extremely creditable fashion the quickly shifting dual personality of liis own character and a psendo minister of the gospel, and was an ex cellent. if slightly overdrawn mimic of the effeminate type which has largely disappeared. Aldricli Bowker, as William the butler, made an Im posing appearance, a picturesque background and an ideal butler. All the others were likewise good. MAX ROBERTSON. First Agricultural Show at Musser Public School Cafiip i 111 I. l'a.. Nov. 6.—Through the efforts of Miss Martha Zimmer man, of Mechanicsburg, teacher of the school, and its patrons, (he first an nual agricultural exhibit was given in the Musser public school building In Church street. Just outside the bor ough line. Thursday evening.. The speakers included Professor J. K. Green, superintendent of public schools of Cumberland county; Professor Rice. assistant superintendent of Cum berland county schools; Professor Stonebraker, district superintendent; the Rev. E. D. Weigle, pastor of Trin ity Lutheran Church: the Rev. H. W. Ilartsock, pastor of the Methodist Church, and others. Prizes were given for best products. MARtiI'KRITK ("I.ARK, IN "IIEI,E\E OF TIIE NORTH," AT THE HE tJENT Marguerite Clark the dainty star, in 'Helene of the North," on the Para mount program, will be repeated to-day at the Regent. Monday and Tuesday Charlotte Walker, the celebrated theatrical star, makes her second appearance in a Paramount picture, before the plioto dramatlc audiences in the thrilling drama of lost identity, "Out of Dark ness," by Hector Turnbull. In "Out of Darkness," Miss Walker Is seen as "Helen Scott," wealthy young h< iress and owner of the famous Scott Canneries. Helen, however, is so inter ested in society that she leaves the handling of the business affairs to the canneries' various branches of her hard-fisted uncle The cast consists of Charlotte Walk er. Thomas Melghan, Margery Daw and Tom Forman.—Advertisement. THE PATRIOT A Belgian cripple stumped about Brussels declaring. "We gave those Germans a rare hiding before they got to Brussels." He was handed up be fore a stony-faced circle of German officers, who decreed, "You will lie shot—unless you become a German." The cripple thought it over and was sworn in as German there and then. The chief Gernnn officer took him by the hand, saying. "You are a German now." t As he left, the cripple muttered. "Those Belgians gave us a rare hid | ing before we got lo Brussels.''—Tit- Bits. H AJFLRISBURG TELEGRAPH at all, since man lias so encompassed | her with false conditions, and made . such unreasonable demands of her, , that she has never dared to be abao- | lutely honest and frank with him, or j even with herself. I often wonder just when he began to impress upon her mind that she' was a being so utterly unlike himself in her natural passions, her aims, her ! rights, her obligations. Surely in the | early, primitive races woman was not i forced to such deception as the civ-1 ilisted world has made necessary. ! Alan now makes it obligatory upon j woman to declare herself as emotion- j loss as a disembodied spirit, else he ! distrusts her purity. I once knew a wife who was unwise enough to tell! her husband that some years before j she met him a man had put his arm | about her waist during a promenade, j She had rebuked him and never saw ] the man afterward, yet the husband | became morbid and jealous and un- i kind after this incident was related to t him, and insulted his wife with sus- i picions of her respectability, declaring I that she must have caused him to act ] AF, he did by her indiscretions. So long as men demand much more of women than they give, women ' must be forced to lie and deceive, j On y when he is us willing to over look her errors and rollies as he ex pects her to be in considering his will she become truthful. Almost everything that woman is. ' man made her. She is often extrava- ! gant because he continually pavs at- I tenlion to the fashionably attired women even while he scorfs at fash ion. She fluently neglects the do mestic \ irtiies to more showv accom plishments because man passes the lerencc WOman by with Polite indif- It would be well for man to ask' m.'iklnf- n l he has done toward! CARING FOR THE BLIND J By Frederic I Continued from Editorial l'age.] ceived his long sentence blindness' cer.'m"r o ;! v xe > ,rison i*y-tei!Ss! ertihed that it had been developing' tor months, that the disease which produced was responsible for his l'all- Kul! m his work - and for the quarrel wh,ch caused the fatal tllo, oughly studied the! nB . l . lon /' tor lhe bllnd 'n tlie leading institutions of Europe, Mrs. , W l nt Ja P an tils summer and fi," t, , ,llffe,ent methods in use there. I nder the old form of "family : Koyernment which prevailed in Japan ,'' centl "'ies, all massage work had I been reserved entirely for the blind.! o seeing person was permitted to en-! gage in it. Recently, however, the! profession has been invaded by see li'.M , antl as 11 compensation the blind students in the schools are! being taught an operation which fori centuries has been known in Japan! as a marvelous means of relieving pain from rheumatism, neuralgia or other suffering due to diseased or ir ritated nerves. Acu-Puncture This operation is known as Hari or | Acu-puncture, and is performed with a silver instrument of hair-like fine ness. The operator first massages the P >. V 1 part until the surface is slightly benumbed, and then begins to insert the needle. He gently pushes it deep into the flesh until it reaches and punctures the diseased nerve. Re lief is instantaneous. On account of! the pliability of the needle, and the | dexterity of the blind operator, this! operation is accomplished without the slightest pain to the patient. The stu-1 dents In the school gain dexterity by practicing upon each other and upon the poori patients who come in for free treatment after the custom of clinics in this country. The Library for the Blind not only distributes books, but aids the afflicted M THE WORLDS GREATEST TRAVELER M J|§ In a Picturesque and Pertinent Picture-Tour— ■ Mi 'I ' T\T T T Trrt WILL VISIT Madeira. Spain, Southern Fiance, the shore lines jjt X\jXJ. J. of Italy. Palestine, Egypt and the Dardanelles—the narrow strip of p rhPtfnnf All/litAIMVIIYI WatPF fr ° nt ° f Consta,ltino J ,lp where Turk and Christian are UlvJillUl J|. rIUUIIUI iillTl engaged in one of the mightiest of world-battles. m MOTION 1 . PIC rURES: Champagne making in France; Mount Vesuvius in eruption; a trip about the pyra- I t|l inids of old Egypt and street scenes in Turkish cities. I l Monday Q \7" The Land of The B 1 Evg Y Midnight Sun / Mc unT^'s*'^ °'' rar p C ' lc ? rm an( ' beauty—lmposing Fjords Plunging Waterfalls Magnificent Ejjj \ Musical Program- C^V!^ Cl '' Jf ligjik Tuesday Evening— "California anil (lie lOxposl. M&W Each Evening, 7.30 to 8.15. .. Js^w WRk Wednesday Kvening—"Germany. JKSw MISS SARA LEMER, Violin. Saturday Kvei£(—"London and Paris." jffijjr CHARLES MACKEY, Piano. School .Matinee, Monday-''Germany and the ADMISSION with coupon on first page JaMr I 11/* „of the Telegraph. V SEAT IN RESERVE SECTION—2SS jfmr America's Premier Dancer Endorses NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE H77777?5 : T55 a *s? T sni: WKITKK AS FOLLOWS by acting as a depository for all kinds | of handicraft made by them. fcSpeci- ; mens of their work are attractively j displayed, and many orders arc se-! cured from the large number of j visitors who are continually coming to the library. This exhibit includes j embroideries, knitting, crocheting, | hand-woven rugs, brushes, brooms, i printed matter and many novelties in- . vented or designed by blind workers. The quality of each article makes it j quite worth the price asked for It. I aside from the satisfaction most per- | sons feel in aiding a worthy cause. Many of the unfortunate men who j have lost their sight in the European j War are now being cared for at the I Blind Soldiers' and Sailors' Hotel in i London. This worthy institution has j NOVEMBER 6, 1015. i been organized and chiefly financed by j (I. Arthur Plerson, a wealthy blind : man, who for years has been further- I ; ing the efforts made in England _ to I | educate the blind for self-support. • Blind soldiers will be received gratuit l ously at the hotel, taught to read by | the Braille system, and given thorough instruction in some definite trade or i occupation. All of the instructors are . Mind and the occupations at present i include carpentry, shoe repairing, mat ' and basket weaving, massage, type writing, telephone operating, and out j door work on a fifteen-acre farm' at [ tached. The scope of the out-door ! work includes market gardening and poultry raising. I A similar instution has been opened i for tho blind soldiers in Paris. The German government has already made | arrangements to have its blind sol diers attend massage schools free of j charge, while the Minister of Educa tion is formulating plans for a thou sand blind soldiers who are in ne'eil of some means of earning a livelihood. NO APPEAL, BY r>R. STOUGH Special to The Telegraph Eehanon, Pa., Nov. 6.—The Rev. Dr. Henry W. Stough, the evangelist, who was enjoined by Judge Henry from de livering a sermon on "Who Killed Cy Miller'.'" during his evangelistic stay in this city, has decided to accept the decision of tho local court. His counsel got the bill of costs, amount ing to $8.12, and It will be forwarded to the evangelist at. Buffalo for pay ment. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers