$2.00 Just To Set 'Em Talking— Say what you may—a pleased patron IS the best advertisement. We've found it so, but we want still more people to say good things about Bel singer Eye Service—and to make it worth your while to pass on the good word to your friends we'll make this special O-dav• optical offer, with just the understanding that you'll tell your friends. And here is our offer: I—Our Expert Eye Examination 2—Guaranteed 10-year gold-filled SHUR-ON mounting or frame 3—Correctly fitted TORIC Lenses 4—Your name in gold stamped on glass case. Complete For TWO DOLLARS This Offer Expires May 6th 205 Locust St. Opp. Orpheum Theater ■■■ * i ———————— FXAMTN-INC. PRF^IFnON OPTOMETRISTS DROPS) Agent For Rryptok Invisible Bifocals and Sliur-Ons JERKM PAINT is Good PAINT IS MADE IN MANY GRADES, in many ways, by many processes, by many manufac turers, from many materials. THERE'S A LOT OF SHINANIGAN, a lot of humbug, a lot of perfectly innocent fallacy, a lot of mistaken ideas, in paint. RIGHT NOW hundreds of persons are planning on painting. They will be laying down their good money for paint within the next month. V/E FEEL OBLIGATED to spend a few dollars to print some interesting facts for the benefit of the buying public. We've spent much time and effort in collecting these facts, and you may accept them as authoritative. Watch for them. They will save you money. 'PERHAPS, AFTER WE GET THROUGH with this instructive advertising campaign, a few of our readers will have a hankering to daub their fingers on "bargain paint"—just as some folks do in seeing whether a "wet paint" sign is true. But we hope they'll afterwards remember our humble efforts in trying to warn them off. Henry Gilbert & Son 219 Market Street Jpßl|fiums shrinking? K Danger ahead! / ff.viffif! Go now to a mirror and examine your / \"" mouth? Do your gums look "rinsed out," / 'jp* shrunken ?Do you see a jagged appearance /u I' so » see y our dentist. He will tell you V that you have pyorrhta, and that to save your Set your dmtht twice vearty. teeth you will have to fight this dread disease Uu Senreco tvict daily. at once. From pyorrhea come by far the Hut Stnrteo does msre. It cleanses greater part of all tooth troubles, the teeth delightfully. It gives them * Unless treated and checked, it will a whiteness distinctive of Senreco result not only in the shrinking and alone. Its flavor is entirely pleasing, malformation of your gums and of and it leaves in the mouth a won ihe bony structure into which your derful sense of coolness and whole teeth are set, but in the loss of the someness. teeth themselves. Start the Senreco treatment A specific tor pyorrhea h* b~» J*? discovered recently by dental set- every tube. A two-ounce tube |T I ence, and is now offered for daily for 25c is sufficient for 6 weeks' I treatment in Senreco Tooth Paste. d ? !,y tr " ,rrfnt ; . Get Senreco VjH c , , . . of your druggist today; or send Mr /j benreco combats the germ of the 4c in stamps or coin/or sample disease. Its regular use insures your tu be and folder. Address The \ teeth against the attack or further foT^Union Building* progress of pyorrhea. Cincinnati, Ohio. 1 WEDNESDAY EVENING, WINDOWBOXES TO GO UP ON MARKET SQUARE FRONTS Harrisburg Gas Company and Harrisburg Feed Company Make Decision Today The Harrisburg Gas Company and the Harrisburg Feed Company, occu pying the same building on Market Square, have joined the Telegraph's porch and window box contest. The building will be decorated with boxes in which plants and vines will grow find bloom all through the summer months. This is a move in the right direc tion. The gas company, as a public I utility, is setting the pace for other business enterprises having their homes on Market Square, and L., C. ! \villiams, of that company, and James I «. Barker, of the feed company, are co-operating heartily in the project. Other business men on the Square are seriously considering the placing of window boxes and it is believed that the example set by those who put up boxes this year will in time result in the decoration of every building in the heart of the business district, just as the stores and office buildings in the cities of Germany are beautified with flowers during the summer months. Among those who joined the move ment to-day are: Mrs. Charles C. Hoffman, 2134 North Second street. Mrs. Brooke Trout, 2143 North Sec ond street. Mrs. J. K. Smith. 2115 North Second street. Mrs. A. Wesley Lutas, 2141 North Second street. Mrs. William W. Stewart, 1604 State street. Mrs. George Wirt. 1620 State street. Mrs. Howard C. Bratton, 1618 State street. DECLAREMARTIAL RULE IN DUBLIN [Continued From First Page] Troops have arrived at Dublin from Belfast and England. Will Arrest Rioters Steps to arrest all those concerned In the movement, Mr. Asquith said, were being taken. The following telegram was received in London to-day from Baron Wim borne, lord lieutenant for Ireland, dated Dublin: "The situation is satisfactory. Ste phens Green has been occupied. Eleven insurgents have been killed. The pro vincial news is reassuring." Premier Asquith told the house of commons that drastic action to sup press the movement in Ireland was be ing taken. Had No Machine Guns Outside of Dublin, he said, the coun try was tranquil. The premier added that steps were being taken to ac quaint neutral countries of the real significance of "this most recent Ger man campaign." Premier Asquith this afternoon read a telegram in the house of commons stating the situation in Dublin was satisfactory. It was not the. case, the message stated, that the rebels had machine guns. Routes May Be Closed At the opening of the House of Commons to-day Augustine Birrell, hiief secretary for Ireland, said it was difficult to say whether any routes to Ireland were open or closed. lie add ed ihat he was going there if he could make arrangements. Irish Leader Who Planned Revolt May Be Beheaded I.ondon, April 26. Sir Roger Casement, leader of the Separatist faction in Ireland, who was captured while attempting to land arms from Get many, on the Irish coast, was conveyed across Ireland Saturday by a strong armed escort who knew the prisoner only by two initials. He ar rived in 1-ondon without incident and immediately was lodged in the Metro i polttan Prison. The fart that Sir Roger Casement has been brought to England to stand trial and Is detained in military cus tody lends to the assumption that he, will be tried on the charge of high treason. This charge has been preferred less than half a dozen times in England the last hundred years. The last in stance was during the Boer war, re-" suiting in the conviction of Arthur Lynch in 1903. Mr. Lynch, who is now a member of the House of Com mons. was sentenced to.death but the sentence was commuted and a year later a pardon was granted. The Express suggests the possibility that Sir Roger, if convicted of high treason, may be beheaded, as under the existing law a person found guilty of this offense may, by crown warrant, be given the penalty of beheading in stead of hanging- Denounces Uprising as Act of Folly by Political Lunatics and Sinn Feiners By Associated Frets London. April 26. An act of folly by political lunatics—old disgruntled cranks and young Sinn Feiners." is the. Orthodox view of the Irish Nationalists on the uprising in Ireland as expressed by Matthew Keating, a member of Parliament from South Kilkenny. Mr. Keating has been ac tive in the Nationalist group for six years. "The utter lack of real political significance in what has .tus! taken place in Dublin can lie understood when I explain that those concerned could not possible represent more thar one per cent, of the population of the country." said Mr, Keating. "To Illustrate, not more than twenty i live of this brand of crunks can be HKRRIBBURGF tfijßk TELEGRAPH! ■ V* A phonograph has no brains. But it can be made to shout pretty-sound ing adjectives. ■ We'd rather simply say: Try I Favorites. They're as good as good W tobacco can make them. I ■ Hi Then — you'll supply the super la- ■' I tives. JUST BECAUSE THEY'RE S-0 G-O-O-D! GctccoChr. 9 jli It isn't strange that men ,fO INSlSTongetting Favorites nothing but Favorites. YonU understand once you K taste the natural, all-purs |H fi tobacco in Favorites. 18 FAVORJTE I CIGARETTES I 10 for sc. Also packed 20 for 10c. 1 found In my constituency of 7,000. | Many of them originally joined the Trish volunteer movement when Sir Edward Carson organized Ulster. "Some time after we started the Irish volunteer movement to offset the Ulster organization there arose a division between the Irish Nationalist volunteers, those following Redmond and those following the old revolu tionary movement. The latter, com posed as stated adopted the name of Irish Volunteers and continued to talk nonsense and drill after the beginning of the war. It is quite evident that these kept in touch with Sir Roger Casement and arranged an onslaught to coincide with the ill-fated gun running exploit of Thursday." Papers Say They Could Have Prevented Riots if Allowed to Print News Py Associated Prr.it London, April 26. "The revolt in Ireland is the natural result of the government's policy in Ireland," says the Daily Mail. "Augustine Birrell, chief secretary for Ireland, and Premier Asquitli sat still and allowed a rebel force to be enrolled and armed. They did not move hand or foot against it. On March 17, l.tiOO Irish Volunteers paraded, mostly armed with rifles, and nobody stopped or challenged them. j "Mr. Birrell never asked why the volunteers existed. He knew It was Trot —to —serve against the enemy —btt ir | rather to obstruct the imperial forces. | On December 10, he declared 'evidence of their disloyalty is voluminous,' yet he did nothing. 1 "If he had any policy other than merely drifting, it was to turn a blind eye to the disloyal movement. The government persuaded itself that the treason could be overcome resolutely : looking the other way. The govern ment's wait-and-see policy was com plicated by a hlde-the-truth policy. Would Have Been Roused "If the newspapers had been per ' mitted to publish information in their hands Sunday night these things j could not have happened. The Irish authorities would have, been aroused I from their sleeping sickness by pub lication of news that something very 1 exceptional was occurring. They j might have taken ordinary precau , tions, but the press was muzzled. It ! is proof of the grossest negligence and | obtuseness when four or live parts of I a great city can be seized by com ' paratively a small number of armed j men. Colossal Blunder | "This colossal blunder follows upon and surpasses all other blunders of I the war. How much longer is the na | tlon prepared to drift under the domination of leaders who refuse to ! lead?" i The Daily Express says that Augus tine Birrell's strange hesitation in in- I forming the House of Commons of the j Irish revolt makes It natural to 1 Imagine the situation is worse than ofli< iallv reported. ] The Daily Chronicle says: I "What Is most dreaded now is that i even the order speedily restored may be at the cost of bloodshed which may j rankle for generations. One cannot help fearing reaction against the pros pects of constitutional home rule." The Times says: "The whole miserable business is a | sorry comment upon the complete ; failure of Mr. Birrell to maintain respect for law and order during the : nine years of his weak, callous ad ministration. Such are the fruits of truckling to sedition and making light of contempt for law." PRY TO BMIW I.KUATtWX By Associated Press Athens. Greece, April 26. A bomb ! thrown to-<la.v. with the supposed in tention of blowing up thr Bulgarian Legation, struck the grating of a cel lar window anil rebounded into the court yard, where it exploded. No one I was iniurcil. SHOULD ARGUE "HARDSCRABBLE" BEFORE VIEWERS Dauphin Court So Intiniales in Hearing Properly Owners' Objections Harrisburg officially explained its' legal position in the "Hardsctabble" ; problem to the Dauphin county courts when City Solicitor D. S. Seitz this afternoon argued the municipality's answer to the exceptions and appeals to the condemnation viewers' award. Mr. Seitz represented the city alone although the various objecting prop erty owners are represented by an array of counsel that includes James Scarlet. Senator E. E. Beidleman, W. L, Loeser, John C. Nissley, B. Frank Nead and George R. Barnett. Twenty-seven exceptions to the re port of the viewers, all of them sup ported by what the protesting at torneys declare are legal foundations, and half a dozen appeals from the amounts allowed, constitute the basis of the objections. Argument began yesterday a/ter noon when Mr. Nissley and Mr. Nead had the floor and ended to-day with Mr. Barnett's talk. Messrs Scarlet and Beidleman, It is understood will discuss only the question of appeal— | that is, whether or not the property I owners have been allowed sufficient 'compensation. In the absence of Mr. Beidleman, Arthur H. Hull may assist Mr. Scarlet. During the argument of Mr. Bar nett to-day both President Judge Kunkel and Additional Daw Judge McCarrell intimated pretty plainly ithat all of the questions could have i been as readily brought up before the j condemnation proceedings heard by j the board of viewers. The Viewers* Hearing Mr. Harnett not only attacked the legality of the city's method of open ing Front street, but he protested against the constitutionality of the act of 1871 under which the proceed- USING UP VITALITY The struggle for success uses up vitality in America at a greater rate than any other thing. Fighting to keep away from the poor-house we shorten the distance to the grave. Especially in middle age, at forty or thereabouts, do we become impressed with the necessity of laying up a com petence and with that feeling in time comes worry, nervous breakdown, neu rasthenia. The entire system feels the result of the nervous strain. Thediges tion resents things that it accepted De fore, tne heart palpitates on slight ex ertion, the muscles of the back ache after a day's worK. Your blood is thinner and not so bright a red. When these things occur, whether you are fourteen or forty, you need a tonic. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills suit most people's need because they are non-alcoholic and they really build up the blood and strengthen the nerves. They are useful for growing children and for men and women whose nervous energy has been overtaxed. Your druggist sells Dr. Williams' Pink Pills or they will lie sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of price, 60 cents per box, six boxes $2.50 by the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. Write today for free booklet* I oa the blood and nervea. 'APRIL 26, 1916. ings were instituted, raised the ques tion of the viewers' right to decide questions of law, and objected to the way Council had authorized the open ing of the street. "Were these points of law raised before the board of viewers?" asked Judge Kunkel. "No," said Mr. Harnett. "Then how.' asked the court, "could you expect the viewers to pass upon fact and conclusions of law if these points were not submitted to them?" Opening a Street President Judge Kunkel also took issue with Mr. Barnett on the latter's contention against the way Council had directed the opening of the street. "The city solicitor was directed to l&OnfyGrandPrize I (Holiest l Dictionaries 1 at the a I Pacific ExposiHoinlHMf a I was granted to 8 WEBSTER'S NEW INTERNATIONAL; j-or Superiority of Educational Merit. , | This new creation answers with 1 final authority all kinds of puzzling > g questions such as "How is rrzemysl • I pronounced?" "Where is Flan- I acrst" "What is a continuous voy -1 aget" "What ■iaahoivUzerf" "What I is white coalf" "How is ikat pro-1 nounced?" and thousands of others. 1 More than 400,000 Vocabulary Terms. § s 30,000 Geographical Subjects. 12,000 I 1 Biographical Entries. Over 6000 lllus-1 Itrations. 2700 Pages. The only diction. 1 wry with the divided page—a stroke of g e f n 'i Us * I lustrations, (■■■■WIIIIIIIHHinMBaDnBMIHMBHHMi Stock Transfer I Ledger 5 The Pennsylvania Stock S Transfer Tax Law (act of June 5 J 4, 1915) which la now In *OOOI. J S require* all corporation* In the / £ State, no matter how large or J c how amall they may bo, to keep / % a Stock Transfer Ledger. We J C are prepared to supply these 5 J Ledgers promptly at a very s <■ nominal price. 5 \ The Telegraph j Printing Co. J Printing:—Binding-—Designing 5 J Phofa Engraving J i lARRISBCRG - - PA. 5 i Lv.V.V.-.V^Wi%WA-JWWi open the highway," pointed out the attorney. "Now what authority is there for such method of legally open ing the street? Council alone has the power to do this. It cannot delegate the power to anyone." "How would Council open the street?" President Judge Kunkel wanted to know. "By passing an ordinance declaring it open." "Would the street then be opened?" inquired the President Judge with a suspicion of amusement in his voice. POLITICAL ADVERTISING WORKWOMEN'S FRIEND GOOD GOVERNMENT ■ V |Bk jMMmm ML Edward Dapp Republican Candidate For Legislature Ist District, Harrisburg, Pa. Primary Election Tuesday, May 18, Irttc. Your Vote and Influence Respect full j Solicited AUTO STORAGE— First class, fireproof garage, open day and night. Rates reasonable. Auto Trans. Garage REDUCED FARE BY SEA BALTIMORE TO BOSTON $15.00 K SSIS.OO EACH FRIDAY DURING APRIL Send for Particulars. Merchant* and Miner* Tran*. Co. i \V. I'. Turner, G. P. A., Halto., 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers