Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, June 08, 1914, Page 6, Image 6

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    6
ifARRISBURfi TELEGRAPH
Established I'J l
PUBLISHED BY
TBI TELEGRAPH FRIWTUrG CO.
3D. J. STACK POLE, Pres't and TreM'r.
F. R. OYSTER, Secretary.
PUS M. STEINMETZ, Manartnr Editor.
Published every evening (except Sun
day), at the Telegraph Building. 211
Federal Square.
Xaatern Office, Fifth Avenue Building.
Naw York fcity, Hasbrook. Story A
Brook*.
(Western Office, 128 Weat Madison
■treet. Chicago, 111., Allen 4 Ward.
Delivered by carriers at
six cents a weeK.
Mailed to aubecriber"
at IS.OO a year In advance.
Entered at the Poat Office in Harrla
burg aa second claas matter.
®Tha Association of Amar- , 1
(can Advertisers has ax- /
amined and cartifled Is i
the eircalatiaa of thispab
'i lication. Tha figaraa of drealattoa
i contained in the Association's re
part only are guaranteed.
Assttiatim if American Advertisers >
\ Ne. 2333 WWtibill BM|. N. Y. City
■RMS tally average far the meat* ef
May, 1914
* 24,402 &
Average for the year 1913—21,577
Average for the year 1813—21,175
Average for the year 1911—18,851
Average for the year 191*—17,495
TELEPHONES I
Bell
Private Branch Exchange No. 2046.
United
Business Office, 208.
Editorial Room 685. Job Dept. 20S.
MONDAY EVENING, JUNE 8
HONEY FOR THE PROGRESSIVES
SAYS Vance McCormick's person
ally conducted organ, the Patriot,
discussing the platforms of the
Democratic and Washington par
ties:
There can be no mistaking the
similarity of aims of the Democ
racy and the Washington Party in
Pennsylvania.
The efforts of the Democrats to
take the Bull Moose vote into camp
are as foolish as they are transparent.
There may be similarity of methods
in the two parties, but certainly no
similarity of aims. It is true that
President Wilson forced Palmer and
McCormick, the White House twins,
on the voters of Pennsylvania as can
didates of the Democratic party, and
that "Boss" Flinn "picked" Pinchot
and Lewis as the nominees of the
Washington party. To that degree
the workings of the two parties seem
to bear quite a degree of similarity.
But, as to aims! The thought is
laughable. Why, the two are as dia
metrically opposed as the Socialists
and the Prohibitionists. The Wash
ington party's platform declares for a
protective tariff and practically every
thing else of importance favored for
years by the Republican party. The
Democratic party endorses President
Wilson's free trade ideas, approves his
legislative experiments on business,
and backs him up in his tolls repeal
and his weak-kneed "watchful wait
ing" in Mexico. Democracy has for
its prime object the perpetuation of
Democratic power at Washington and
the Bull Moosers would ask nothing
better than to see Roosevelt in the
White House.
That's how similar in aims are the
Democrats and Progressives of Penn
sylvania at this time.
Palmer and McCormick are playing
for the Washington party vote. They
realize that as things now stand they
are hopelessly beaten. Their only
chance Is to win votes from the Wash
ington and Republican parties. The
Republicans are standing firm as never
before. They have had ample suf
ficiency of Democratic rule and they
realize that the Republican party is
their only means of relief. The Wash
tong party voters, on the other hand,
see their numbers waning and view
with dismay the men chosen by the
bosses to be their candidates. They
may be expected to desert in large
numbers.
Consequently it is to these dissatis
fied Bull Moosers that the Democrats
are looking for aid and it is because
Palmer and McCormick hope to have
the Washington party pull their chest
nuts out of the fire that the Patriot
endeavors to deceive voters into the
thought that the Democrats and the
Progressives are aiming at the same
object#.
It is a plain case of spreading honey
for the Progressive fly.
"ENGLISH" IN CHINA
NEWS dispatches from Peking
are to the effect that the use of
English in China is growing
rapidly and that now some mil
lions of Chinese are using the lan
guage in preference to their own. Per
haps some material good may come
out of China for us in this respect If
the Chinese proceed as methodically
and as logically as is their custom.
For the Chinese are essentially
logical. Strange as their language,
perplexing as their character may
sometimes appear to us, cold, con
vincing logic appears in every line of
both. Long before Isaac Pitman puz
zled with pencil and paper to perfect
his phonetic grammalogues and really
lay the basis of subsequent simplified
spelling controversies, the Chinese
were there with their ideagrams, com
pressing the flowered beauty of fine
phrases into the briefest limits of" ar
bitrary signs. To use the language of
the street, "canned" thought was a
fact In Cathay centuries before
"canned" talk became an experiment
on this continent. To the logical Chi
nese, facts are of first Importance.
It may be that t China will see fit to
adopt many other American institu
tions In addition to our political insti
tutions, our sometimes sorrowfully in
artistic dress and our pastimes.
English may one day become the
speech of the millions in Cathay.
Should that happen, there is just a
possibility that "the thief among
MONDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JUNE 8, 1914.
tongues," as one English grammarian
described modernized Anglo-Sakon,
may cease to be illogical. The "cat"
may come out ot "catboat" and "cata
pult"; the pen out of "penknlf^"; l the
"monkey" out of monkeywrench," and
the "horse" out of "horseradish" and
"horse-chestnut." Our adjectives may
cease their acrobatics, and some of our
conjunctions their contortions, The
race which has produced artists with
both the patience and the power to
labor lifetimes that they might per
fect one peachblow vase or crystallise
wisdom In proverb into a simple com
bination of ldeagrama may be trusted
to give the necessary progressive twists
even to make logical what progress
has made illogical—even in Its name—
the "English" language.
Much Interest Is manifested in the ap
proaching banquet and reunion of the
City Zouaves and City Grays' Veteran
Association at the Armory. The original
date of June 9 having been found to
Interfere with many other engagements,
the date has been postponed until June
18, when an interesting session of the
veterans will be held.
MR. KRETDER'S GOOD WORK
CONGRESSMAN KREIDER'S suc
cessful effort in behalf of an
additional appropriation for the
enlargement of the Federal
Building In this city again demon
strates his usefulness and efficiency as
the representative of this important
district at Washington. It was no
small matter to secure an emergency
appropriation of $75,000 in the face of
a fixed policy in the present session
against any emergency measures of
this sort. Mr. Kreider's active mem
bership on the important committee of
public buildings, his knowledge of
parliamentary procedure and his
frankness in stating the need of the
additional appropriation were impor
tant factors in securing the passage
of the bill.
The Congressman made a personal
investigation of the situation here with
regard to the enlargement of the Fed
eral Building and after consultation
with the custodian. Postmaster Sites,
and further consultation with the of
ficials at Washington, he Introduced
the bill, and, while a single objection
in the House would have meant its
failure, he was successful in having
It passed without a dissenting vote.
It was then up to Senator Penrose
to push the measure through the Sen
ate, and again the bill received care
ful attention. Through the Senator's
personal influence it was promptly re
ported out of committee and a day or
two ago was sent to President Wilson
for his signature.
This additional appropriation of
$75,000 will make it possible to com
plete the enlargement of the building
along the lines that were originally
considered by the supervising archi
tect at Washington. The first ap
propriation was entirely inadequate in
view of the increased space made
necessary by the introduction of the
parcel post business and the efficient
co-operation of Congressman Kreider
and Senator Penrose with the depart
ment officials brought about the
favorable result announced on Satur
day.
It is understood now that a revision
of the plans along the original lines
will be made at once so that the work
can proceed without interruption. For
tunately the operations on the build
ing thus far have not proceeded to that
point where it will be necessary to de
stroy any of the work that has already
been finished.
THE NATION'S CONSCIENCE
A WRITER in the Public Ledger
says:
Antony and Cleopatra to
gether personify the chief
social dangers of our day. They
poisoned Rome and turned Athens
into a memorial of marble and
memory. Sensual living is destroy
ing more people than hard work.
Our country need not fear the foes
without; our dangers are within.
If our nation goes down it will not
be overthrown by foreign enemies,
but by domestic vices. Life rots
at the top. The bottom of society
is purer than the top of society.
Self-indulgence and luxury are to
be feared more than political mis
takes.
All very true! But the warning. It
seems to us, comes a little late. Year
after year the nation swings farther
and farther from regard for the sturdy
virtues on which our early life and
government were founded. But re
cently there has appeared a sharp veer
in popular sentiment. Magazine pub
lishers are indicating through the col
umns of their publications that the
"slush" story no longer tickles the
reader's fancy, the "white slave" play
and the "undressed" show are ad
mittedly '"passe" and those that still
linger on the road are being recalled
as financial failures. Employers of
labor and governments alike are de
veloping systems of welfare work.
Men's Bible classes flourish and are
growing in membership. Great re
ligious revivals are sweeping tens of
thousands into the church. Sane op
timism prompts the opinion that the
nation has not lost its balance and that
its foundations are not crumbling, but
that we are building on a firm and
enduring basis, more careful than ever
to thoroughly inspect the materials
that go to make up the structure. And
the awakened conscience that is
prompting this will do more to correct
existing evils than all the experiment
ing of all the legislative theory pro
pounders in the country.
SAVE OUR TREES
BUENOS AYRES has planted
more than 142,000 trees In the
last ten years. Tree-planting
has become a fixed policy with
many cities and the importance of the
work Is demonstrated by this pro
gressive South American municipality.
But while tree-planting is going on
and increasing from year to year, the
tree-butcher, sometimes called the
trimmer, is permttted to pursue his
destructive work. During the period
that Buenos Ayres has been planting
Harrlsburg has killed about 500 fine
trees by brutal and Inconsiderate
work and probably 1,000 or more trees
have been ruined hy the same sort of
treatment. In other words, whllethe
wide-awake metropolis of Argentine
has been going: ahead, Harrlsburg has
been going back in the care of its
trees.
An authority on this subject said
that the butchery of trees during the
last year has been more serious in
Harrisburg than at any time in his
memory. Pine trees are cut down
ruthlessly, and where they are not ab
solutely removed they are destroyed
by indiscriminate whacking off of
branches until little remains but the
trunks.
We believe the gentlemen of the
City Council should realize the im
portance of a shade tree commission,
as has been provided by an act of the
legislature. And if such a commis
sion is not appointed, then let author
ity be vested" in some official to stop
the work of tree destruction that is
now going on in this city.
I EVENING CHAT i
Have you ever stopped to think
what preparation a contractor or a
company engaged in a large construc
tion operation has to make for the
time when the men pick up their tools
and go to the tool chest to turn them
in? When the men stop work in the
evening there is a corps of other men
who come on duty and who stay on
hand until the whistle blows the next
morning and it is their duty to see that
the red lanterns typifying danger are
filled, lighted and placed. And what
is more important, they are to see that
the lanterns do not go out. The aver
age man when he sees a long line of
red lights or some red constellations
twinkling blocks away never realizes
that if one of those lights should go
out within flvo minutes a man would
be at work fixing it up aguin. The
Harrlsburg Railways reconstruction
work in Derry street, which stretches
from Nineteenth to fur
nishes a good illustration. Half a
dozen men are in charge of the op
eration at night and no part of it is
not under the eye of some man. There
are men stationed at each end of the
reconstruction work to see that cars
go into the right slots on the tem
porary turnouts; then there are watch
men about the tool chests and equip
ment, which is worth hundreds of
dollars; other men patrol the long
line of work' to see that the red lan
terns which they set at sundown are
lighted and in place. A quarter of a
mile of red lights, one every lit'ty feet,
is something impressive and it gives
an idea of what precautions a com
pany must take to prevent people iroiu
gelling hurt by blundering inio places
where they have no business to be.
And when you stop to consider that
every one ot those lanterns is attended
to before being placed and watched
the livelong night through you get
some idea of the extent 01 operations
that are not part of construction at all,
but purely for safety.
Dr. li. C. Shaw, of Greensburg, who
was here a day or so ago, is head of
the schools in Westmoreland county
and president of the State Educational
Association, one of the largest organ
izations of its kind in the world. Dr.
Shaw has been a candidate for Con
gress, but the people in his county liked
nis administration of school aflairs so
well that tney kept hini at home. He
will preside at the big convention to
be held here in December.
Captain Thompson H. Morrow, who
has commanded the Lewisburg com
pany of the Twelfth Infantry since
1908 and who was in command of it
when it began Its march toward the
top of the Guard, is announced in the
general orders just Issued from Na
tional Guard headquarters as retiring.
Captain Morrow is well known to
many of the residents of this city and
especially to men who have served in
the National Guard, as he has been a
soldier since 1894, going through the
Spanish War and rising from the
ranks. He was transferred with his
company to the cavalry arm and de
termined to retire on his laurels.
Richard R. Qauy, son of the late
senator and one of the Bull Moose
chieftains, has lost out in a contest of
which ho did not know anything. It
appears that some western Pennsylva
nia patriots wrote the name of Mr.
Quay on a ballot for member of the
Keystone party state committee in his
senatorial district. Another man wrote
in the name of Harrison Beck, the
Republican state committeeman. These
two votes made the men rivals and in
due course of time it was necessary to
draw lots at the Capitol to determine
the honor. Mr. Beck's proxy, about
which Mr. Beck never heard, beat
Mr. Quay's proxy, of whom Mr. Quay
was in equal ignorance. It also hap
pens that the Keystone party does not
have any state committee outside of
Philadelphia.
A good bit of interest is being mani
fested here in the Superior Court
nomination contest, largely because of
the prominence of Judge Frank M.
Trexler, of Allentown, president of the
Young Men's Christian Association and
well-known churchman. The judge
will not go on the ballot alone, but
just now it is a toss up whether A. M.
Fuller, a Pittsburgh lawyer, or James
M. Clark, a Philadelphia lawyer, goes
on the ballot with him. Mr. Fuller
got a surprising vote in his home
county, due to his wide acquaintance,
and it looks as though he would be the
man.
People who happened to be in the
vicinity of homes of Italian residents
of the city and Steelton were inclined
to wonder at the display of flags and
portraits of King Victor. The Italians
all appeared to be in good humor and
made the most of the occasion. "Dis
our Four Julee," said one man to a
citizen who asked the meaning of the
display of four or five American flass
on one house. "You see, dis day we
celebrate." Yesterday was the anni
versary of the proclamation of United
Italy.
The developments in Mexico started
the usual amohnt of inquiry ahout th»
National Guard on Capitol Hill. The
offices had barely opened this morn
ing before telephone messages began
to pour in asking whether it looked
as though the guard would be needed.
"Guess we will have to start up the
information bureau again," said an
attache of the adjutant general's de
partment.
[ WELL KNOWN PEOPLE 1
—Judge J. H. Reed, the Pittsburgh
lawyer, is spending a few days at the
seashore.
—Dr. Nathan C. Schaeffer addressed
the Lycoming county teachers at Wil
liamsport Saturday.
—Dr. C. P. Hexamer, of Philadel
phia, well known here, has been re
elected president of the German-
American Alliance for another term.
—J. C. Hayden, the retired coal op
erator, was 80 on Saturday and a
band serenaded him.
—A. Merritt Taylor, the Philadel
phia Rapid Transit commissioner, has
given up many opportunities to make
money to study transit problems for
that c'ty.
A NEW DANCE
The Wilson tango, dedicated to the
present administration at Washing
ton, is as follows:
One step forward,
Two steps back,
Hesitate,
Then side step.
SHORT CWM
PLiuvsin no
Candidates Will Be Out on Stump
Within Next Fortnight
According to Signs
PINCHOT IS ON. THE WING
Penrose Plans to Make a Number
of Speeches Throughout the
State This Month
In spite of efforts of Congressman
Palmer and other men high up in the
Democratic councils and the willing
ness of many Republicans to postpone
the start of the campaign for a while
it looks as though it would begin to
move about July 4. It has been the
hope of many Republicans that It
might wait until August because it will
be mid-July before the Republican
platform can be drafted. However, it
does not seem possible to hold back
the start.
Pinchot is going through counties
of the Seventeenth congressional dis
trict this week shaking hands with all
I comers and meeting the people. He
plans to keep it going. Senator Pen
rose will keep numerous speaking
dates during June and July. He will
be here next week on his way to Sun
bury, where he will make a speech on
June 18, and will also speak at Hunt
ingdon, Johnstown and Pittsburgh
during the month.
Palmer and McCormick wanted to
wait until September, but are going
into western counties in July.
One of the interesting things about
the campaign is that Penrose, Palmer
and Pinchot have all been invited to
address the trainmen at a meeting in
Philadelphia and may meet on the
same platform.
J. Benjamin Dimmick, of Scranton,
who contested with Senator Penrose
for the Republican nomination for
Governor, has definitely an
nounced that he will not be
Dimmick an independent candidate
to Stay for senator, but at the same
Regular time he is not saying what
he will do. It is significant
that many of the men who
helped roll up the Dimmick vote are
announcing that they are for the ticket
and Mr. Dimmick is remaining with
the Republican party. It is said that
he has definitely informed some
friends of Congressman Palmer that
he will have nothing to do with the
machine Democracy, whose methods
are commencing to outshine the his
toric performances of steam rollers.
W. Park Moore, treasurer and man
ager of the Brown Knitting Company,
Philadelphia, has sent an open letter
to Representative A.
Mitchell Palmer, in which
he asks for facts and fig- Palmer
ures to prove assertions Gets Hot
made by Mr. Palmer at Inquiry
the Democratic state com
mittee meeting in Harris
burg on June 4 that the Underwood
tariff law "has shown conclusively
that all of the great industries of
Pennsylvania can defy the world in
production costs."
"Do you not know that the metal
trades in your own State are com
plaining of depression never equaled
since the dread days of the Wilson
law in 1893-1897?" asks Mr. Moore in
the letter. Do you know that your
chief, President Wilson, has publicly
admitted the existence of a general
business depression?"
Lehigh county Republicans had the
laugh on the Progressives on Saturday,
when 74 of 80 members of the Repub
lican county committee
turned out for the annual
Lehigh is meeting and the Bull
Solid for Moosers could not get a
the Ticket quorum. The Republicans
re-elected Horace W.
Schantz, one of the party
leaders, as chairman and three secre
taries, among them George S. Psotta,
formerly a clerk in the Treasury De
partment. The most significant move
ment was that P. B. Gernerd, the Dim
mick leader, said that the primary had
settled matters and that people should
turn in for the ticket. In Reading H.
J. Dunn was re-elected chairman by the
Democratic county machine and Ar
thur G. Dewalt, candidate for Con
gress, made a speech.
Speaking at York on his wav to
New Oxford, Saturday, Senator Pen
rose said: "I consider the paramount
issues to be the protective
tariff and business con-
Penrose ditionß. The bringing back
Speaks to of prosperity is the issue
Vork Men that can't be shifted by
any evasion. These facts
are apparent to all men
in the Commonwealth.
"Prosperity is the only ultimate test
of any party policy, and the Demo
cratic administration has utterly failed
in maintaining business conditions.
Thousands of men are out of employ
ment, and genuine alarm is felt by
employer and employe as to the future.
"These conditions are well enough
known here in York that they do not
require any great amount of comment
from me."
He expressed himself as being con
fident that the Republican ticket would
be elected by a big majority in the
State In November.
I POLITICAL SIDELIGHTS
—Notwithstanding some editorials*
and speeches about a united Demo
cracy there appear to be numerous
chasms.
—Dimmick men are lining up
against the Democrats ail along the
line.
—The Philadelphia Democratic or
ganiation appears to be somewhat bent
on having its own way.
—Charles P. Donnelly, picturesque
figure in Philadelphia Democracy, says
he is going to retire. He and Jim
Russ and Sarah Bernhardt are great
on retirement.
—Philadelphia Bull Moosers are
stni contending and the Murphy crowd
is mad at the others.
—Montgomery county Friends are
petitioning Congress to grant woman
suffrage.
—Local Bull Moosers will have a
meeting to talk it over on Friday.
—Congressman Moore is getting a
lot of mail about that speech on trusts.
—lt looks as though the revolt
against the Democratic bosses was go
ing to start earlier than usual.
—As remarked by a certain morn
ing newspaper, there are high stand
ards In the Democratic party. Ex
pense accounts, for Instances.
—To-day we are informed that the
Democracy of Pennsylvania is re
proachless and militant. Also expen
sive, It might be added.
AN EVENING THOUGHT
But seek ye first his kingdom,
and his righteousness; and all
these things shall be added unto
you.—Matthew, 6:33,
NEWS DISPATCHES
OF THE CIV L WAR
[From the Telegraph of Jun,e 8, 1864.]
Repulse Auault
Washington, June 8. Major Gen-
I eral Dlx: Dispatches from headquar
ters of the Army of the Potomac, dated
9 o'clock this morning, have been ra
celved. An assault was made on Burn
side about midnight and successfully
repulsed.
Little Dolnir at Front
White House, June 7. The news
from the front has been meager for the
last two days. Nothing but skiamish
ing has occurred except the usual
nightly attack for the purpose of feel
ing our lines and to learn whether any
change of position is being made.
IN HARRISBURG FIFTY
YEARS AGO TO-DAY
[From the Telegraph of June 8, 1864.]
Templnnt Here
Pennsylvania Grand Lodge of Good
Teijiplars assembled in this city to-day.
Must Use "Dips"
Gas consumers who do not pay last
quarter's hills by Friday of this week,
will bo compelled to "sit in darkness,
or substitute pennydlps for gas lights,
as the flow of gas will be stopped.
I 11TTERST0M1DIT0R
UNNECESSARY NOISES
To the Editor of The Telegraph:
Superintendent McCaleb issued an
order some months ago to stop the
unearthly whistling by locomotives en
tering and leaving the Enola yards.
For a time the order was obeyed, but
recently there has been a return to
the old conditions and the racket is
almost unbearable, especially in the
sick rooms of the western part of the
city.
Another thing which requires the
attention of the polico department is
the use of the uptown streets by mo-
Itorcyclists as race courses. They not
I only endanger their own lives, but the
lives of children and old people who
frequently barely escape injury or
death from these flying maniacs.' These
motorcyclists keep up an incessant
racket with their cutouts and horns
and there. ought to be some way to
| stop the nuisance.
WILDWOOI) PARK DRIVES
To the Editor of The Telegraph:
Automobile owners and others are
now using the delightful drives
through Wildwood Park more than
ever before and a serious situation has
arisen. Unless a rule is established
making these one-way drives there is
almost certain to be a serious acci
dent owing to the narrow roadways
and the sharp curves. This is a mat
ter which should have the immediate
attention of the superintendent of
parks.
SAFE AND SANE.
SCANDALOUS FRIMARY CAMPAIGN
[From the Phila. Public Ledger]
The man who can pay for extensive
advertising, who can meet the ex
penses of organization in many coun
ties, and who can afford to tour the
State has the best chance of success
at the primaries. The Democratic nom
inee for Governor says the nomina
tion cost him about $33,000, and some
of the other candidates for other nom
inations spent nearly as much. It is
no defense of the system to excuse
the high cost by the quality of the
nominee: that it sheer nonsense. A
nomination should not be purchasable.
It does not follow that these enor
mous expenditures are necessarily il
legitimate, but when it is remembered
that the outlays cover the effort to
secure the nominations alone, and that
the costs of the campaign proper have
still to be met, the campaign becomes
scandalous.
WASHINGTON PARTY PLATFORM
[From the Phila. Public Ledger]
The platform contains absurdities
and crudities in sycophancy to their
national hero, and a hypocritical bid
for support in the coming campaign.
The clause regarding Colombia was
dragged in merely to tickle Colonel
Roosevelt; the labored effort to explain
away the real meaning of the "recall
of judicial decisions," the significant
omission of any clause favoring the
extension of the now discredited pri
mary system, indicates a desire to
stay the drift away from the Wash
ington party rather than to proclaim
unshaken conviction in the truth and
justice of political principles and poli
cies.
AMUSEMENTS
PAXTANG
PARK
THEATER
Vaudeville
Palfrey Barton & Brown
in the
Follies of Vaudeville
Addington & Frank
Warren & Ardizovo
Appleby Novelty Musicians
Bounding Johnson
Ladies Free To-night
Matinees Every Day
Except Monday
Distinctively Individual
irtFATIMAI
% TURKISH BLEND H
CIGARETTES M
Youll like the^ choice jffl
MN
v | Ruima Cbupons can be exchanged for distmctivgjjjh H
, LAUG^^
Monk 17 — A Stickler For AMUSEMENTS
h?eh'"° Ilar rath6r Willir™ug-"I ~
Ostrich "Yes suppose for the
gycffiw* r.gifiE u s COLONIAL
"FJSSi 1 Notch Vaudeville
I|g| 3
Cool as the Country
DanKerniM
Papa Bug Even So f —-__
IEsM asr"-=«"~ PHOTOPLAY TO-DAY
In that well, The Wood* Are ——
Tommy Hug." "Tlie cigarette Maker of Seville,"
'i reelK.
"The Idle Hlch," Warner's fenture.
J XQ "The ('look Went Wrong."
tm l/jiSXMff I "Simp Simpson an<l tile .Spirits."
j All >II SS IU \ .-.r
His Part Full Them^
you going in the rear —What poor
amateur theatri- countryman is iticixr
cals?" that buying the INfc.W
Fox "Yes, gold brick?
I'm going to be Second Fish in />■ Y7S* Ffcl YT% ,/"*
the villlnn at the the rear Oh! | |« 3 | V%lf R | IJI
hen party." That's Mr. Sucker. vlEi I 11 J Ov/ 1 *V|" m
HARRISBURG
isn't n a pny Sunday T rain
That we'll lose so soon . „ ,
tv ,„ I.eaves, Gettysburg 7.15 A. M.
Many of the loses Arrives, Harrlsliurg 11.00 A. M.
That we have this June? Leave*. Harrlshnrg 4.50 P. IM.
Arrives, Gettysburg 6.35 P. M.
Seems to me that this year ~ ~ , , ■
, Mnklng Intermediate stops.
We ve so many more
Than we've e'er been blessed with .
In the years before.
In the town and country f ■utngntPTgn. rw
Everywhere one goes
Every little garden fl I II V
Has at least one rose. H*"& y H WW-
If you're fond of flowers JL* ,Ei m JH,
Take some trolley rides,
See the wealth of roses SIDES & SIDES
Blooming on all sides.
$lO IN GOLD
We will give $lO in gold for the best letter of 50
words or less, describing our store orders. All letters
must be submitted on or before June 16, 1914.
We reserve the right to print prize-winning and
other letters submitted in the contest.
Contestants desiring full information can secure
same by calling, writing, or phoning to
<STORE ORDER 5Y5Tm>
GIVLS You CREDIT Whore You Wont It
BELL PHONE 2749R
' \
FARMERS' EXCURSIONS
—TO—
STATE COLLEGE
THURSDAY, JUNE 11 I
Special Train Leaves
Harrisburg 7.00 A. M.
Tickets $3.00 round trip, sold, good on special
train, leaving Chambersburg 5.30 a. m„ stopping at
local Cumberland Valley Stations to Harrisburg.
Friday, June 12
Special Train Leaves
Harrlsburg 6.45 A. M.
Proportionate low fares from points on
Middle Division West to Tyrone, In
clusive.
, Returning, trains leave State College 5.30 P. M. 1
$3.00 r £E?p d $3.00
See Flyers Consult Ticket Agents
PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD