qrph^um To-iNitHr VOGEL'S BIG CITY MIkTRELS 50—PEOPLE—I MATINEE I'Hlip Children, 15e, any a* Adults, and 500. \ Xisht Prices, Use ( > kg. The Place Where You Cnn Ways Count on Spending a CouL of Pleasant Hours. \ TO-DAY ONLY* \ "The Thoroughbrd" A romance of the Sunny Soottj n five parts, featuring Frank Keenai Let the Children See the Funi Keystone Players In "A LOVERS' NIGHT" \ Two-reel Keystone Comedy featuring FRED MACE ' MONDAY AM) NORMA TALMADGE I "The Social Secretary" ■ . BEHSOHI2 DON'T MISS THIS Your Last Opportunity to See Catherine Crawford AND HER 9 FASHION GIRLS Presenting BOWMAN Jk CO.'S STYLE SHOW 4 OTHER KEITH FEATURES MOW, TIES., WED. The Crosman Entertainers One of the best musical attractlona lu vaudeville. I r 1 The Orpheum, Wednesday Evening, October 11, at 8.30 Kreisler —IN— £ Violin Recital Benefit of Harrlstmrg S. P. C. A. PRICES SO?, sl, $1.30, $2.00 Seats Now on Sale at Box Office. To-day only CHARLIE CHtP LIX In "THE PAWNSHOP." It's a grrat laiighmaker and Is bound to make jou roar and forget your cares. AND BILLIE Bl ItKE in the sixteenth chapter of "GLORIA'S ROMANCE." (A Modern Pirate) MONDAY and TUESDAY MARGUERITE CLAKIC In a romantic photoplay "LITTLE LADY EILEEN" Added Burton-Holmea Travel Pictures. TO-DAY only PICTU NCR Grace D " mo ' d fess® R , , • Ralph Kellard KB in the greatest, the most sensational and the tostllest mm serial ever produced. f The "Shielding Shadow" ALSO I E. K. Lincoln, in "The Almighty Dollar" Cut Out This Coupon—lt's Worth 10c and .will y° u to the Victoria Theater to-day, from 10 a. m. to TELEGRAPH" NAME ADDRESS ORPHFIIM THEATER—SEATS TO-DAY unrncuiH Tuesday night, oct. 10 • * GEO. M. COHAN at His Best HIT THE TRAIL HOLLIDAY t XS'SA I FAHNESTOCK HALL TUESDAY OCTOBER QIC Second & Locust Sts. I Evening U Tenth Ualv SASCHA JACOBINOFF "The Violinist of the Younger Generation" IN RECITAL Assisted by ELSA LYONS COOK, American Soprano. Ticket* on ule at Fahnestoek Ilnlli C. M. Staler & Co., 30 \orth S*®. ond street) Rose's. Serond and Walnut atreets. PhllaUeiphl| EMENT — , * 1,,l ■ d ' lph, " Mualeal Bureau, Welghtman Building, LOCAL DIRECTION-—Miss Olive K, Jnmlson. SATURDAY EVENING, HARRJSBURG TELEGRAPjI OCTOBER 7, lflS. Royal Cords Break the Coast-to-Coast Record The Hudson Super-Six which broke all records from San Francisco to New York has broken them again on the return trip, beating the westbound record by 57 minutes. The original 'Royal Cord' Tires on which the car left New York arrived i in San Francisco In perfect condition, j The drivers report but three punctures I along the route, which entailed no de ; lay at all. i H. A. Farr, assistant to the general manager jf the United States Rubber ! Company, of California, has wired the New Qork office of the United States .Tire Company as follows: ; "Hudson ran into bad storm Nevada ; but arrived San Francisco five days, seventeen hours, thirty-three minutes beating westbound record fifty-seven minutes. Original tires In perfect I condition. Had three punctures. Everyone wildly enthusiastic over phenomenal wearing ability Royal Cords." GRANDPA DIDN'T NEED CASCARETS > FOR THE BOWELS - !\vo hours a day sawing wood will keep liver and \ bowels right. * Yo\ who take exercise in an \ easy chair must take \ "Cascarets." I EnJ \life—feel bully! Don't stay | sick, ijous, headachy, constipated. ! "*niovi (he liver and the bowl poison | which i< keeping your head dizzy, your .tongue coated, your breath offensive, stornacl sour ar.d your body full of cold. Vhy don't you get a 10 or 25- cent bo: of Cascarets at the drug store , and en.>y the nicest, gentlest liver | and boel cleansing you ever experi | enced. Cascarets work while you i sleep. "ou will wake up feeling tit and fine Children need this candy cathartic too. r 1 ~~~ ■> INSMINGER MOTOR CO. THIRD AND CUMBERLAND STS. Distributors. fc. j AMUSEMENTS jGRAND THEATER 1418 Derir Street TO-MVHT LIONEL BARRtMORE AND GRACE VALENTINE in "DORI&N'g mvOltCE" AM) OTHERS SPEC'IAI, MUSIC i- "The Storm" (by You AVeber). U-nnM-rlbed for tlie organ by Prof. WalliK-et alao, by request, "The MocMok lllrd" with variations. IMASS.G.O.P.IS : IN CONVENTION B i Senator Lodge Arraigns i "Dreary Catalogue of Short 'g comings" of Administration Boston, Oct. 7. Delegates rep j resenting the Republican party In r Massachusetts met in State conven e tlon to-day to adopt a platform and choose presidential electors. The gathering also served as a ratification of the vote #in the recent primaries , when Senator Henry Cabott Lodge, Governor Samuel W. McCall. and other State officers were renominated. t Senator Lodge had prepared a s. j lengthy address in which he ar r raigned what he termed "the dreary ■' catalogue of shortcomings" of the present administration. He dwelt - particularly upon President Wilson's conduct of foreign relations. Shuffling Methods "I have watched with bitter regret," he said, "the shuffling methods dealing with other nations which have , made us hang our heads in shame k when the noisy boast of 'keeping us out of war' has filled the air. The | whole course of this administration in | dealing with the grave questions [ J which Mexico on the one side and the j war in Europe on the other hand j brought to us, has tended to loosen j the fibers of American conscience. In ' such times it is the duty of the j President to lead, and this President I 1 has dropped to the rear and has oc- j cupied himself with confusing the public mind and lowering the Amer ican spirit. He has pushed aside ttie American traditions, darkened the Ideals of the country and reduced the aspirations which we once held to the level of a mere desire to live sheltered and in comfort." DEMOCRATS MEETING Springfield, Mass., Oct. 7. Can didates for State offices and other party leaders came here to-day to at tend the Democratic State convention. The committee on resolutions had prepared a platform whicn endorsed the Democratic nutlonal platform and declared that "nothing but the most extreme partisanship can blind any intelligent and conscientious critic to the fact that in the last three years and a half the Democratic congress and administration have promoted the welfare of every man, woman and child in the United States. CALLS ROOSEVELT "NOISOME PESTILENTIAL PARTY SCOLD" Des Moines, lowa, Oct. 7.—Necessity of dry law enforcement was urged y upon lowans yesterday by Ira E. Lan '• dritli. the Prohibition vice-presidential J candidate, as the special dry train • moved eastward through the state, f "Long, long ago," Landrith said - here, "when Theodore Roosevelt was e yet in office and had not become a r noisome pestilential party scold, ho - uttered the immortal truth, 'The worst ' evil in any community is unenforced J laws.' law enforcement Is not a po litical issue. He who opposes the en _ forcement of law is not a politician— he is an anarchist." "Out of the Shop in Eight Hoars" Is Ford Slogan; to j Go After "Industrious" Vote i New York, Oct. 7.—Henry Ford an nounced yesterday that his contri -1 bution to the Wilson campaign would be a country-wide eight-hour-day propaganda. This will be spread from every point where there is a Ford agency, according to tentative plans discussed. Where there is none, there ' will be established a special agency for disseminating the Ford literature on the benefits of the eight-hour day, as _ he sees them. All this will be done in co-operation with the Democratic na tional campaign committee. "Out of the shops in eight hours" j will be the slogan. It sprang into be ing in a discussion of the subject at a Hiltmore Hotel luncheon when Mr. Ford was reminded of his peace expe -1 dition and its slogan, "Out of the : trenches by Christmas." At the luncheon were Josephus Dan- I iels. Secretary of the Navy; Vance C. McCormick. chairman of the Demo cratic national committee; Thomas A. Edison and Mr. Ford. ' Eight-Hour Law as Passed Is Bitterly Scored by Taft Indianapolis, Ind., Oct. 7.—The eight hour law recently enacted by Congress wos attacked by William H. Taft last ; night when he addressed thousands of : persons, at the* Coliseum, discussing 1 tho development of constitutional gov ernment of the state. Mr. Taft's speech was a part of the county day program In connection with Indiana's centen nial celebration. Mr. Taft declared that the law for bids the formation of combinations for oppression. But, he said, there has developed in this country a tendency in high Quarters to disregard consti tutional limitations and to overlook certain classes of acts, provided a po litical *ad vantage could be gained. Ha regarded the eight-hour law as such and said: "This is the most noteworthy In stance of a group whose labor was necessary that society may live refus ing to perform its function in the so cial machinery." j SEES "LEOPARD" PROSPERITY Fairbanks Finds "Spots" of Adversity Also Under Democratic Policies | Eugene, Ore.. Oct. 7. —Charles W. Fairbanks, Republican nominee for Vice-President, spoke half an hour here yesterday, devoting his talk to a comparison of the policies of Repub lican and.Democratic parties. He said: "The Democratic* party is a great kicking party, to use an Indiana phrase, and I believe it will be kicked out on the 7th of November. "There is at the present time pros perity in spots, a kind of leopard pros perity. but In certain sections of the country you know and I know that there is adversity, and this has been caused by the adoption of the policies of tho Democratic party. Tho Repub lican party spreads prosperity from ■ sea to sea. —like a blanket." x Chamber of Commerce Elects Board of Directors Hummelstown, Oct. 6. At a meet ing of the Chamber of Commerce in the firehouse last night the following directors who will later elect their own officers were chosen by the mem bers: Joseph M. Brightbill, Joseph Burkholder. J. Landis Strlckler. E. Z. Etter, Leroy Holler, Uriah L. Bals baugh, William Karmany, William F. Shoemaker and Horry M. Horst. Com mitteemen elected were; Prothonotary Harry M. Holler, Edwin Blessing and George Hoffer: tellers, Harry Shriver, j George W. Karmany and Charles, Brehm. Chandler to Continue the Present Model One of the most Important recent announcements In Imtomoblle circles Is that Just Issued by the Chandler Motor Car Company of Cleveland to the effect that for the coming season the Chandler company will continue its present model and that there will be no reduction In price of Chandler cars. The announcement adds that in all probability the Chandler price will be advanced. ' There is no doubt regarding what the Chandler Motor Cnr Company is going to offer its patrons for the com ing season," says Andrew Redmond. "I have Just received word from Cleve land that the factory has decided to let well enough alone and that no radi cal changes are contemplated for 1917. The wonderful success bf the Chandler company Is due to the fact that It has established an enviable reputation for Itself and has concentrated on a six cylinder car that has made good and is steadily increasing in popularity all over the United States. The factory officials have decided to continue the present Chandler six for another sea son. It would be a difficult matter to Improve on the marvelous motor whicb has become famous for Its remarkable power, flexibility, simplicity and econ omy. This motor has stood the test of time and it is giving the very best of service to owners of Chandler cars. All that we hear Is comment of the most favorable nature regarding the way it is standing up and delivering the goods. "What is true of the motor applies \ with equal force to the beautiful wal ! nut paneled tonneau-cowl type of j bodies, with soft, deep cushions and 1 lustrous finish. These body types are | recognized as being in a class by them ! selves and they were so far in advance ■ when first introduced that they have become an accepted standard in high j grade body building. "Regarding the price I am assured I that the Chandler will not be sold at I a lower figure, but in all probability j an advance In price will be made. "While the Chandler company has ! been very successful from the start, it was the price announced a year ago last February that gave the Chandler Its greatest boom. When that an nouncement was made the Chandler established a new standard of value in up-to-date motor cars. This value was made possible through quantity production and the boom is still under way. In 1916 the production of Chan dler cars will be 15.000 and in 1917 the production will be at least 20,000 cars. Contracts have already been placed for materials for this produc tion and the Chandler we are now offering our patrons will be Just as up-to-date next spring as the cars that will be coming through from the fac tory at that time." Nash Works Hard Booming the Jeffery J. A. Bentz Is firmly convinced that there isn't a man among the thousands Working in the big plant of the Nash Motors Company that labors harder than C. W. Nash himself, the concern's chief executive. He's really the mar vel of the automobile industry. Just now Mr. Nash is toiling like a Trojan in an effort to bring the pro duction of Jeffery motorcars and trucks up to somewhere near the de mand. Like the men working for him, the manufacturer reports every morning at whistle time. All day he spends out In the works amid the hum and whir of machinery, and then, seemingly fresh despite his nine hours of effojt, goes to his office and puts In several more hours caring for his administrative duties. It's a rare day that he doesn't work twelve hours. Mr. Nash is a coatless worker, too. Tt has to be a pretty cool day to' find him with a coat on. He's been that way all his life, and that's why, per haps. he is so conversant with the problems entering into every single phase of the automobile business. He's a production expert, knows shop con ditions from alpha to omega, and is thoroughly informed in the intricacies of accounting, service, advertising, merchandising, office management and what not. And it is due altogether to his inti mate knowledge of such things, cou pled with his long, fruitful experience in methods of factory organization, that enables him to keep overhead ex penses down to a minimum. He's a stickler for labor andtime-saving de vice, too. Thus he is able to turn out the utmost in quality at the least In price. Being a "doer," C. W. Nash has lit tle time to talk about himself. In fact, he's about as communicative about his own affairs as a phonograph minus records and needle poirtts Which explains why, when asked the other day to define his secret of suc cess. the interviewer came away with such a short commentary as this: "Whatever success I have made during my career as a manufacturer," he said, "I attribute to my close appli cation to details and to my careful se 31V2 HORSEPOWER • f m jagP gg *sjT new Overland Series 758 is the world's most powerful low priced uK_jjfijtf No other car at anywhere near the Model 75 B price has the power, pep, speed and % In all parts of the country it is deliver ed Off ing 50 miles an hour! w V §3*3 20 to 25 miles on a gallon of gasoline is f. o. b. Toledo not unusual. Come in for a, demonstration and in -4 cylinder on bloc motor spection. 3%-Inch bore x 5-inch stroke 4-inch tires, non-skid rear __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2251 The Overland-Harrisburg Co. Klectric starter Electric liglits 212 NORTH SECOND ST. * Magnetic si>ccdomctcr _ _ . , complete equipment Open Evenings Both Phones K-passonger Touring so3s* Roadster s2o. The Willys-Overland Company, Toledo, Ohio CARS % Several 1916 models taken in trade; some rebuilt, repaint ed and carrying new car guarantee. Also Overland six demonstrator, re painted, with new car guar antee. Willys Knight demonstrator, white * wire wheels, new car guarantee. V The Overland-Harrisburg Co. 212 NORTH SECOND ST. Open Eveqings Both Phones The Willys-Overland Company, Toledo, Ohio , r' lection of competent men. Also it has been due to a large extent to my de termination always to give the great est possible value for a dollar." WILLIAMSTOWN MINER KILLED Wllliamstown, Pa., Oct. 7.—Thomas i Reilly, aged 40 years, was killed at Natalie mine yesterday. He was a widower and is survived by his mother and several brothers and sisters. i [ k\ From the frozen. north e tropics IpiipP; Bakerk Cocoa I is known its |CTJ''i'¥i purity and high i&^S^l i M | "Walter Baker & Co. Ltd | ESTABLISHED I7SO DORCHESTER. MASS. MUST RESTORE $50,735 Reading, Pa.. Oct. 7.—By the Su preme Court refusing the petition of the defense for reargument In the case of the Reading Trust Company, John D. Elsenbrown and E. Carroll Schaeffer, executors in the estate of the late Colonel E. W. Alexander, a wealthy hat manufacturer, against John S. Thompson, the latter must return to the estate $45,000 worth of bonds which Thompson claimed to have re ceived from Colonel Alexander as a 13 gift shortly before the latter died, No vember 24, 1912. The verdict of tho jury in the Berks court, awarding $40,000 worth of bonds, together with $10,735.8.'' damages, to the plaintiffs, stands, the Supreme Court affirming Judge Wagner in this case. MRS. JOHN HAYES DIES , Williamstown, Pa., Oct. 7. - jlrs. John Hayes, aged 65 years, died sud i denly at her home here on Thursdav night from paralysis. She is survived . by her husband, five sons and fiva daughters.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers