10 Ty Cobb, Super=man, World's Greatest Baseball Player, Tells How Nuxated Iron Gave Him New Life This great giant of strength and endurance says he now plays a better game than when he was younger. Physician explains why taking Nuxated Iron gave Ty A KEI ent tron« ,o and ß take nu" Cobb such tremendous strength and vitality after he was ated °i n ron? n i am Convinced "that so weakened and all "rundown"—says it will often increase mt*ht' e be 0 8« wed "who* °now rß< die "Now they say I'm worth $50,000 a| year to any baseball team, yet with- i out plenty of Iron In my bipod 11; wouldn't be worth five cents. Nuxated i Iron supplies that 'stay there' strength j and vim that make men of mark and j women of power." Continuing. Dr. j. Sauer said: "Mr. Cobb's case is only one of hundreds which I could cite from j, my own personal experience, which li proves conclusively the astonishing power of nuxated iron to restore strength and vitality, even in most complicated chronic conditions." Not long ago a man came to me who was nearly half a century old and asked me to give him a prelimi nary examination for life insurance. I was astonished to find him with the: blood pressure of a boy of 20 and as full of vigor, vim and vitality as a young man; In fact, a young man he : really was, notwithstanding his age. The secret he said was taking iron Nuxated iron had filled him with re newed life. At 30 he was In bad health; at 48 he was careworn and nearly all in. Now at 50 a miracle of vitality and his face beaming with flto buoyancy of youth. As I have 1 mtM « hundred times over, iron la the Creotavt of all strength builders. If i people would only throw away pat-/i AMUSEMENTS Tbta Theater ta 30 Degrees Cooler Inalde Than On the Street To-day only, PEGGY HYLAND la "SAINTS AND SINNERS." Paramount. Added Attraction Paramount- Burton Holmea Travel Pictures. To-morrow and Thursdav, BLANCHE SWEET in "THE THOUSAND DOLLAR HL* SB AND. Paramount. Added Attraction Paramount Pictography. V / M§^fd TT^^PMC^?Cß 2200 //£^ ar ir ou * w rjf ■ JBWBUALOf BO PIECt CRCHOTWI LIJ jjjj TO-DAY ONLY JW the charming actress, in IV "THE INNOCENCE OF A atory of life and Also the BOWMAN & COMPANY PICNIC PICTURES To-morrow ••The Gilded Spider" and "THE MYSTERIES OF I MYRA" Bringing Up Father # # # <fl) (fl) By McMamis || COME BACK U S»T DOVh| - SHUT UP- YOU'RE ALWAYS J™ " " THAT'S. RIGHT- f HERE - YOO'RE ( 77T YOU INSECT- I'M <iFTT)N/- OUT - "YOU NEVER YOU BRUTF- TUESDAY EVENING, " Ihow much you have gained. I have jseen doieos of nervous, run-down peo ple who were ailing all the while double their Btrengtn and endurance jand entirely get rtd of all symptoms of 'dyspepsia, liver and other troubles in from ten to fourteen days' time simplv by taking iron in the proper form. !And this after they had in some oases been doctoring for months without ob taining any benefit. But don't take the old forms of reduced iron simplv to save a few cents. Tou must take iron A Rood batter must be iu prime physical condition—he needs n cool brud, a quick eye and tremendous strength to put the rnvlng beliiud the bat. Ty Cobb la undoubtedly the greatest baseball pluyer In the history of the game. A snort time ago he wus weakened and all •■rundown" to-day he la • miracle of atrength and endurance, due to Ailing his blood with plentv of iron. He aaya Nuxated Iron has given him new life and renewed energy and pat the old-time vim and vigor of youth Into hit blood. NOTE—Nuxated Iron, recommended above by Dr. Sauer. Is not a patent I medicine nor secret remedy, but one which Is well-known to druggists and whose Iron constituents are widely prescribed by eminent physicians everywhere. Unlike the older Inor ganic iron products, it Is easily assi milated. does not injure the teeth, make them black, nor upset the stomach; on the contrary, It Is a most potent rem edy in nearly all forms of Indigestion as well as for nervous, run-down con ditions. The manufacturers have such President's Critic Leading in Texas Special to the Telegraph Washington, July 25. "Washington i Is commenting to-day on the political significance of the primary in Texas. Ex-Governor O. B. Colquitt, who is the severest critic of the Wilson ad ministration, is leading the ticket in the senatorial contest with Senator! Culberson, an ardent defender of the Administration, second. There were six contestants in the race, and, under AMUSEMENTS ' — ~ ffUL.-'m TT" - 1 h% ilailllaUß The Coolest Theater In the City. TO-DAY ONLY "FATTY" ARBUCKLE in ••THE WAITERS' BALL" The funnlefit two-reel comedy ever filmed. DEWOLF HOPPER in "CASEY AT THE BAT" A five-reel comedy drar.ta v\ hlch tell* J tint why Casey atruck oat. Alno Pictures of Dlvea, Pomeroy & Stewart'* Picnic at Hershey. WEDNESDAY AND THI'RSDAY WILLIAM FARNUM in ' L "THE BATTLE OF HEARTS" in a form that can be easily absorbed and assimilated like nuxated Iron If you want It to do you any good, other wise It may prove worse than useless. Many an athlete or prize fighter has won the day simply because he knew the secret of great strength and en ; durance and filled his blood with iron | before he went into the affray, while many another has gone to inglorious . defeat simply for the lack of iron. I E. Sauer. M. D. | great confidence In Nuxated Iron that ! they offer to forfeit SIOO.OO to any j charitable Institution if they cannot | take any man or woman under 60 who | lacks Iron and Increase their strength 200 per cent, or over In four weeks' time, provided they have no serious organic trouble. They also offer to re fund your money If It does not at least double your strength and endurance in ten days' time. It is dispensed in this city by Croll Keller. G. A. Gorgas and all good druggists.—Advertisement. | the Texas law, as no one received a majority of the vote cast, Colquitt and Senator Culberson will be compelled jto enter a second primary, with in dications, Judged by his big lead, that Colquitt will receive the nomina tion. I The Republicans are especially pleased with the result in the Demo cratic primary in Texas, as they say it justifies the contention of the Re i publican leaders that the Administra ; tion is especially weak in its foreign policy, especially in its dealing with Mexico. TROLLEY STRIKE PREVENTS MISSIONARY RALLY TO-NIGHT ' Because of the Inconvenience result ing from the trolleymen's strike the missionary rally that was scheduled for to-night in the Nagle Street Church of God has had to be called off until Au gust 8. By that time, the traffic con ditions, it Is hoped, will be improved sufficiently to enable the representa tives from various other Churches of God in the city to meet. The meeting will be called at 7.30 o'clock bv the Rev. A. L. Krlner, pastor of the Xagle Street Church. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for anj case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall'i Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. We. the undersigned, have known p. J Cheney for the last 15 Tears, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obllgatl >m made by bis firm. NAT. BANK OF COMMERCE. Toledo. Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure I* tiken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 7S eenta per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take HaU'a Family Pills tor constipation. I # HARRISBTTRG TELEGRAPH REVERSAL IN COMPENSATION Altoona Referee Sets Bad Precedent Rules the Chairman Chairman Harry A. Mickey, of the State Workmen's Compensation Board, hae reversed a finding by Referee Ja cob Snyder, of the Altoona district, in making an award to Edward anil Amelia Mayer, Johnstown, for com pensation for the death of their son on the ground that the Board can ttnd no evidence in the record to sustain the conclusion, raying that as the referee interpreted the testimony he evi dently believed that death was caused by an injury in the course of employ ment. The claim was that the deceased "met with an accident while lifting a dressed calf in the meat market. The accident is known and described as 'embolism,' resulting from an acci dental strain of the back which result ed in his death." Mr. Mackey says that the only evidence regarding the strain was from relatives who swore that the deceased had told them prior to his death and adds "with this alone and uncontradicted it would create a most I dangerous precedent to baae a verdict upon such Interested and unsatisfac tory evidence." It is also declared that one witness swore that Mayer did not carry the calf at all, while the opinion says that the Board is at a loss to know how, from the evidence, the ref eree could have formed an idea of what "embolism" means. In conclusion the finding of the referee is set aside with the comment "We cannot imagine a more unsatisfactory record on which to sustain a verdict." Referee Paul W. Houck. of the Pottsville district is sustained in his decision that Anthony Neary, Shenan doah, did not forfeit his right to com pensation for an injury Ijy refusing to continue the medical aid offered by the employer, and employing his own phy sician. Chairman Mackey says: "It is not In accordance with the spirit of compensation laws to imagine that the legislature intended to create so se vere a penalty for the employe's re fusing employer's medical services that he should thereby forfeit all right to compensation." lAoouse^eprel The funny "Fatty" Arbuckle was shown at the Colonial yesterday and will be shown for "Fatty" Arbuckle the last time to at the Colonial day in a new two reel comedy en titled. "The Waiters' Ball." A Keystone comedy, in which "Fatty" takes the part of a cook in a quick lunch restau rant. De Wolf Hopper will be seen again to-day in his tp-eatest screen suc cess. "Casey at the Bat." The picture is based on the famous baseball poem of the same name that was written more than a quarter of a century ago, and was originally printed in a com paratively obscure newspaper and re printed thousands of times in other papers and magazines. The picture follows closely on the poem, with just enough pathos added to make it very interesting. The pictures of Dives, Pomeroy and Stewart's picnic at Her shey Park, will be shown for the last time to-day. William Farnum will be the feature Wednesday and Thursdav ir. a new five-reel Fox production callea "The Battle of Hearts." Harrisburg film followers were given an opportunity at the Regent yesterday to observe for "SnlntK and Sinners" the first time the at the Resent work of Miss „ . . Peggy Hyland, ot England. "Saints and Sinners" is a drama which has modern settings and delightful atmosphere. It will be shown to-day for the last time. Letty is an innocent little soul whose whole life is wrapped up in her father and her lover. She is a daintv and sympathetic girl in whose career one ;annot but become interested. In this production Miss Hyland plays the role of a clergyman's daughter, whose inno cence very nearly brings her downfall. It is only the faith and determination of her lover and her aged father which save her after she has been taken to the city and lodged at a hotel by a man in whose honor .she has every faith. The artful devices of the fake fortune tellers and palmists are cleverly expos ed in the Jesse L Laskv production of "The Thousand Dollar Husband," m which Blanche Sweet will be seen to morrow and Thursday. To-day the Victoria presents Viola Dana in a five-act picture play of life and its "pitfalls, -Innocence of Ruth" entitled "The In at the Victoria nocence of Ruth." It is essentially a ■ story of Greater New York. Wall Street | millionaires, debauchers, charitv balls, a helpless, beautiful girl, an equaliv fascinating bad woman and the usual high life sidelights. To-day also the picture taken at the Rowman and Com nanv picnic, at Good Hope Mills. Foi to-morrow the thirteenth part of "The Mysteries of Myra," and also "The Gild -d Spider." Queeri Alexandra Is Grief-Stricken Over Death of Lord Kitchener London (correspondence of the As sociated Press). —Perhaps none out ride his immediate family was more grief-stricken at the news of Lord Kitchener's tragic death than Queen Alexandra. The attertiveness of the soldier to the queen-mother had long been notable and there was a very strong bond of sympathy between these two, undoubtedly two of the loneliest figures prominent in contem , porary London. " Indeed there was something pathetic Paxtarig* Mausoleum r^:v .'' :,v ■ F : " " M «■ -<: V" :k : ; 'V : I !' % ff ! . ; ' . ' %■ A: ... ■ ' <i£ ''± sx The Realization of an Ideal "TAKE THEM. O GRAVE AND LET THEM LIE FOLDED UPON THY NARROW SHELVES AS GARMENTS BY THE SOUL LAID BY AND SACRED ONLY TO OURSELVES." There is certainly a sense of relief in considering this method of tenderly caring for, rather than merely disposing of the dead. Crowning a beautiful eminence in Paxtang Cemetery with a wonderful pano rama of the mountains, the broad Susquehanna, the Cumberland and Lebanon valleys spread before it, will stand this stately Grecian Temple, a landmark throughout the coming ages. Its walls of granite, its corridors lined and sealed with snowy marble, its crypts inscribed with the names and deeds <"»f those dear ones laid within. Here will be none of the grewsomeness, the dampness and mold of'the grave. Instead all will be light, sunshine and cheerfulness surrounding the silent forms of its occupants. The dignity of death is there, but with it is peace and tran quility and the light and hopes in a bright hereafter. The sunlight mellowed through its windows of golden opalescent art glass re flecting from the sparkling marble make of this a mansion of life. ( To feel that to the last and for always we have cherished and honored our be loved and protected that tenement wherein abided a well-loved soul from the ignominious violation of the elements and creatures of the earth, to know that i they lie secure and calm behind these marble walls is the most consoling thought we can have regarding the last tragic act of this little drama of life. A very few choice spaces yet remain unsold but only enough to accommodate a very few families. To secure space at all or ever, reservations must be made at once as construction will begin within the coming month, after which time we will have absolutely no space for sale at any price. < If you wish to make this provision for yourself and your loved ones you must act at once else forever lose the opportunity. Full particulars will be furnished upon application. Mail the coupon below today. . __ - Please send me your booklet describing the Pax- HarriSDUrg-YOrK tang Mausoleum. lam interested and wish particu lars of the plan. Mausoleum Co. v Isame Room 22, Spooner Bld'g Street Harrisburg, Pa. Citv or R. F. D | in the lonely bachelorhood of the war ' secretary, who occasionally to his inti- j mates dropped remarks bearing on his I I lack of home and near relations. Not | i a week passed during the war in which 1 he had not paid a visit to Marlborough j house, where hp would remain for long i visits with Queen Alexandra, and come j away with a long list of those com-J I batants of whom her friends had made j special inquiries However pressing I the demands of the campaigns on the ' various fronts, he would always return j within a few days with the desired in- ! ; formation. Lord Kitchener had promised to be ■ j the queen-mother's guest during the; j coming summer at Sandringham. He ! constantly had ladies to lunch at his \ ! i.eat in Kent. Broome Hall, near Can- i | terbury, on Sundays, and would show | them how he was developing his gar- JULY 25, 1916. I. " 1 j dens and dilate to them on the beautiet. ! iof his china. Younger women were | conspicuous by their absence at these \ | times, the gues's being chiefly peeresses and experts on gardening as well as ' the wives of men who had served under him in various campaigns. At York House, St. James' Palace, he gave a number of dinner parties to j j men only, the military element being 1 I not always conspicuous at these. He ] liked doctors, though cared nothing ; • for actors or musicians. Several of '< ! the higher clergy in London enjoyed I | his friendship and hospitality. liOrd Kitchener was personally well ! ; known to the owners of many of the i 1 more expensive curiosity shops in i London. He would "bargain over pur- ! j chases, but did not possess the com- | | mercial sense, and in the end would j always pay a good price, usually on his own initiative. The dealer gen : erally received a check the day after delivery, the check being quite often post-dated a month or two. Cherry Stems Bought to Make Trench Gas I Portland, Ore.—Agents for the allies j have been quietly buying up all the ; cherry stems they can find in the j Washington and Oregon fruit belts for i the past three weeks. Much specula | tion has been excited by the purchases, j To-day the secret came out. The stems will be used In the manufacture i of poisonous gases for trench warfare. I From the stems are obtained some of I the chief elements of cyanide of potas | sium. The agents have spent thousands of dollars in the last few weeks.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers