6 BARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Establithtd its' »• ' PUBLISHED BY THE TKI.EtiRAPH PRINTING CO. p. J. STACK POLE, Prest and Treas'r. I". R. OYSTER, Secretary. OUS M. STEINMETZ. Managing Editor. t- Published every evening (except Sun day), at the Telegraph Building. 11l Federal Square. Eastern Office. Fifth Avenue Bulldtnr. New York City. Hasbrook. Story & Brook*. Western Office, 123 West Madison street. Chicago, 111., Allen A Ward. Delivered by carriers at six cents a weak. Mailed to subscriber* ►t $3.00 a year In advance. Entered at the Post Office In Harrls burg as second class matter. ' i /OV The Association of Araer- ( > ' i (•F|la] ican Advertisers has ex- ( 1 Viy imrned and certified to i' 11 the circulation of this pub- i 1 I lication. The figures of circulation i' , > contained in the Association's re- i' 1 1 port only are guaranteed. 1 1 11 Association of American Advertisers J > jj i No. 2333 Whitehall Bldg. N. Y. City ! ow#rn dally atfragf for the month of June, 1914 * 23,376 ▲▼eras* far the year 1813—21.577 ATtrafs for the year 1913—21.175 Average for the year 1011—1H.H51 y Arsrags for Oe year 1810-—17.485 TELEPHOSifcSi Bell Private Branch Exchange No. 1040. United Business Office. 10S. (Editorial Room 886. Job Dept. >Ol. TUESDAY EVENING, Jl'lA' 21 HOPELESS OPPOSITION NOTHING demonstrates more con clusively the hopelessness of the opposition to the Republican party In Pennsylvania than the Besperate efforts of the little bosses !*vho have come Into the limelight Hrlthin the last year or two to com bine their forces in the hope of avert ing a defeat that is now apparent to till who know anything about the po litical situation. It so happens, how ever, that the elements which would naturally be fused into an anti- Republican movement are so widely bpart and so naturally antagonistic that anything like amalgamation for the purposes of the present campaign Is Impossible. Colonel Roosevelt and his admirers are out of joint with President Wil |on and his policies to such a degree that any getting together of the Democrats and Progressives in Penn sylvania is about as likely as the suc cessful mixing of oil and water. Bosses of both parties ha?e declared that there will be no fusion; that the Democratic program is opposed to the very essence and heart of the Progres sive movement, and that the Progres sives cannot join in any contest that would mean an endorsement directly or indirectly of the present national administration. It may be assumed, therefore, that the effort to bring about a combina tion of the Democrats and Progres sives is certain to result In failure. As a matter of fact the trend toward the Republican party is now so strong and increasing daily to such an extent that the opinion is frequently ex pressed that long before the cam paign shall have reached its final Stages the handwriting on the wall (will be so clear that the battle will Icease to be a battle and resolve itself Into a triumphal procession of the party of protection and prosperity. GOOD WORK MUCH credit is due Commis sioner M. Harvey Taylor, head of the department of parks and playgrounds, for working !>ut a plan by which the immense juantities of material to be removed n the excavation of the subway at Becond and Mulberry streets will be Utilized In completing the parking of |he narrow stretches of the River Front north of Calder street. It was Seared at one time that this would not be feasible owing to the expense of hauling the dirt, but It is understood How that the proposals submitted to jthe park department yesterday indi cate that it will be possible to arrange fc satisfactory contract. It is highly important that the parking of the frontage should go fehead at the same time as the con struction of the wall so that with the end of summer something like com pletion of the work shall have been attained. While it was very neces sary to secure the material which will now be utilized in creating a proper jwidth on the western side of Front etreet the fact that Commissioner Taylor is endeavoring to make an economical arrangement is likewise to his credit. TERMINAL PLANS MODERN terminal facilities in this city are necessary for the prop er handling of heavy traffic of th£ \ alley Railways Company. When the cross-river lines first entered Harrisburg the number of ears In use ■was so small and unimportant that the problem was not in any way difficult, but with the increase in traffic and the Installation of the larger and more irequent cars the congestion in Mar ket Square has grown to such an ex tent as to make necessary some other echeme for handling the business. Whether It Is necessary to add a third track half way through Market Square and construct two tracks in Market street from the Square to Front street Is doubtful. Harrisburg has heen more than fair In dealing with Its important public Utilities and these utilities should be Ju»t as fair in dealing with the city, instead of gridtroning the central business district with more street rail way tracks, it wouid seem to be the TUESDAY EVENING, < PABRISBURG TELEGRAPH JULY 21, 1914 part of wisdom to provide terminal facilities which would not interfere with the expeditious handling of pas sengers in the heart of the shopping district and at the same time provide shelter for the thousands of people who travel on the cross-river lines. It is to be presumed that the City Council, when the matter comes be fore that body will closely study the situation with a view to giving the railway company fair and just con sideration and at the same time pre vent any further congestion than is necessary in the business section. When it was proposed to establish a belt line for the cross-river cars there was a general protest against the use of Front street for the purpose. This protest seemed to be almost uni versal. Since that project was aban-. doned nothing more had been heard of the mutter until official announce ment was made the other day of the new scheme for running the cars which is nov proposed. Harrisbu. owes much of its pros perity and development to first-class street railway service and everything reasona' le should be done to facili tate the movement of cars on the city and suburban lines; but it does not follow that a plan which may be merely cheaper than a terminal build ing should be adopted. There are mutual Interests Involved and it will he the duty of the City Council to weigh all the questions with a view to a reasonable and proper de cision. NEW THEORY OF ALCOHOMRM Drt. CHARLES READ, assistant superintendent of the Chicago State Hospital For the Insane. speaking before the national convention of alienists and neurolo gists. takes issue with those who hold that the physical demand for alcohol drives the drinker to ever Increasing indulgences. Dr. Read declares that the appetite is more psychical than physical. , He holds that in two weeks' time after he has been separated from it, the inebriate has no more physical desire for alcohol than any abstainer. The trouble, lies not in the call of the body but in the longing for the effects of alcohol. The inebriate misses his foster mother, who speaks kind words to him when things go wrong, who entertains him, and causes him to forget this Is a real world with sharp corners on it. He is a big baby and nothing more. Take his bottle away from him and he cries until his attention is distract ed and he learns to do without it. The logical; practical manner of dealing with this man is to commit him to a colony where he may he weaned from his foster mother, taught habits of in dustry, and built over into an effective mechanism. Dr. Read believes. The alcoholic's appeal to drink is closely allied to that of a sensitive child who runs constantly its mother to be comforted and reassur ed, he holds. The alcoholic longs to he patted on the back and told that he is a fine fellow, badly treated by an unappreciative world. Rather than meet the demands of life squarely, he slips to one side and comes up smiling with the aid of alcohol. When he be comes sober, the inner censor casts scorn upon such evasions of the issue and this criticism is quieted only by the application of more alcohol. If these premises bis acceptable as based on fact, the cure of the alco holic ought not to be so monstrously difficult in the case of a man of ordi nary will power. The trouble is that too often it is the weak who are the intemperate and with them the promptings of the mind will not de pend on what they know is for their own welfare. For such the cure can be effected only by the removal of the cause. SPANISH IN OUR SCHOOI-S SEVERAL western cities have add ed Spanish to their prescribed course of study. It might be well for other school hoards to follow that example. South American coun tries use the Spanish language almost to the exclusion of all others. OurSouth American trade is constantly on the increase. The completion of the Pana ma canal will bring us into very close business relations with Eucador, Chili and a half dozen other of the little States and republics heretofore iso lated to such a degree as to render trade between the North and the South very difficult. Consequently there will be an ever growing demand for salesmen and mercantile representatives familiar with the Spanish language If the United States does not take advantage of the opportunity afforded it, some other country will. Also, the public schools will be neglectful if they do not prepare their pupils to meet this new condition. South American ex ports and business in general offer a new and enticing field for the Amer ican young man. THE DIFFERENCE THE last Democratic administra tion ga\ k e us industrial depres sion and low prices. The Wilson administration has given us depression and higher prices. That is the distinction and the dif ference between the two. The supposedly impossible condi tion of free trade and growing prices has happened. The tariff wall has been lowered to the Injury of the manufacturer and the workman and the consumer has not been benefited. No wonder there Is such a vigorous swing back toward protective poli cies. Wages for labnr are not lower now than they were a year ago. say the Wil son defenders. They haven't asked the hundreds of men at work on the river wall and other improvements about town. The Patriot Introduced a new guber natorial candidate this morning, thus: "William urapfr Pemls stumps Dau phin county." Thirtyftwo-cent beefsteak and pota toes at JI.RO a bushel Indicate how prires nre going down under the Demo cratic tariff. Great, isn't it! 1 EVENING CHAT I If Mayor John K. Royal carries out his rumored idea of becoming a candi date for City Council after the ex piration of his term as Mayor at the close of 1915 he will be the first Mayor oi the city in forty years to go into the legislative office when he finishes his allotted years as executive. It is not that it is not a laudable ambition for a man who has had the experience of four years as Mayor to aspire to sit in the Council, but it has so happened that all but one of the Mayors had enough of city administration when their terms ended, and efforts to have them run for councilman proved fruit less. In the cases of John A. Fritchey and John D. Patterson they went back to the Mayor's chair, hut not back to councllmanic duties. In borough days it was nothing uncommon for a citizen to serve as councilman and then be elected burgess, go back and serve as councilman and even be elected hurgess again and then return to a seat about the council table. It was an excellent idea because it gave the citizens of the young State Capital the advantage of services of men of intelligence and that experience which is so valuable in municipal jfffairs. That it was generally favored is shown by the continual mention of certain men as councllmen. This practice of re electing men to Council who had proved good and faithful servants was continued even into the days of the bicameral councllmanic system and one man served a dozen years. If that had been in recent times there would have been complaints of continued office hoidiug and demands to give someone else a chance. However, to get back to the original thought. It has happened that only one of the Mafors from Kepner to Meals ever went back to Council. That one was W. K. Verbeke, who served in Select for a year. Practically every Mayor served as a councilman hefore called to the higher place, but onlv Mr. Ver beke ever went hack, although it would have been a good thing for the city hail It been able to command the services of some of its Mayors after they had gone through the troubles that besut the occupant of the chief magistracy of the city. The new third class city commission form of govern ment statute has made many changes in the city government and perhaps it will result in some changes In the re lation discussed. Speaking of city government calls to mind some remarks made by a couple of men actively identified with the gov ernments of other cities of the State. ' 'ne of these men took a Harrisburger to task during the last session of the Legislature for his opposition to the c lark third class city law, the act under which we are now working. The Harrisburger said that this city had found the law governing third class cities to work very satisfactorily here and that Harrisburg had made phe nomenal strides under it. The other man retorted that this city had been the only one which had and predicted that the State Capital would rise to meet the new law as conspicuously as it had the old. When the two men were here re cently one said: "Remember what we told you. Mr. Harrisburg? Here you are getting along all right under the new law." "Well, It did upset us for a while," was the reply. Yes. It did, and it upset some more. I want to tell you," and here the man who made the prediction last year paused and called up some friends from other cities, "and you, that some of the other cities are not straight ened out yet. Rut Harrisburg is, and it si working well under the Clark law and giving an example to some other cities that wanted the change and bump Harrisburg when it did not. You ve got the knack of running a cjty and I think you could do it under a Chinese puzzle let alone the third class city law." The roadside artists have done sorry tilings to some of the pictures of the candidates for State offices which were posted in the merry days of May. Vance C. McCormick appears along the Riverside in a dandy full heard, very black, while Judge Kunkel has been changed to resemble James W Barker, one of the legislative candi date in this city, by a Cumberland county man. Michael J. Ryan has been given a walrus moustache on a card in Steelton and John R. K. Scott has a cowcatcher chin ornament with out moustache and pair t>f "specs" on a card affixed to a pole near Hummels town. Governor Tener has found some who will stay with him as long as he cares to go in for playing golf. The Gov ernor took up golf a couple of years ago and has kept at it. Of powerful physique and fond of exercise, he will play in rain or shine and gets a lot of enjoyment out of it. But it's mightv seldom that he will stop on eighteen »ii ' "Cap" Anson here last fail and kept him going for twentv seven and then for thirty-six holes. He keeps the fat off Samuel C. Todd and Walter H. Gaither and the other dav he got Dr. Kugene Noble, recently president of Dickinson, in a match. . waa there, pood and strong, at the end of thirty-six. The Governed is working up to the fifty-four and sixty-three classes, which are held by George W. Reily, the banker. WELL KNOWN PEOPLE 1 —Congressman Henry W. Temple conducted religious services for the Tenth Regiment at Camp Beaver on Sunday. —W- D. Alcorn, president of the Western Pennsylvania firemen, has called for the convention in Connells ville in August. —Joseph McLaughlin, of Philadel phia, may he the next president of the national A. O. H. —Senator J. P. McNlchol is spend ing the summer at Atlantic City. —Senator E. H. Vare has just cele brated his fifty-second birthday. MONTGOMERY MILLS [From the Philadelphia Bulletinl Not all the prosperity bulletins from Pittsburgh, nor all the crop reports from the West, nor daily anonymities from the White House can change or successfully contradict the facts which the manufacturers of Montgomery county relate in their letter to Presi dent Wilson, v If he wants a bill of particulars they say they arc willing to furnish theni, and if he has any doubts as to the sit uation, he should ask and be given the facts. These men arc known in the community as hard-headed, enterpris ing and generally successful. They are not likely to be frightened by psychological influences, nor are they likely to keep their mills Idle if they could operate them on full time at a profit. In short, they know what they are talking about, and their letter should inspire a half-hour of hard thinking and consequent action at the White House. STARTS WITH HOBBLES [Philadelphia Inquirer] The Palmer and McCormick cam paign starts under happy auspices, with rival committees In the chief city of the State, each waiting for the chance to run rtie knife In the other. AN EVENING THOUGHT Though Allah and Earth'par don Sin. Remaineth forever re morse.—Kipling. BOSSES STRUG TO BE PLEASANT NOW Morris Sets a Receiving Day at the State Windmill and Palmer Asks Support CONGRESSMEN CODDLED Northumberland County Demo crats in Row—How the Age Limit Worked Backwards While Candidate McCormlck is rest ing for the arduous labors of appear ing at country fairs and swinging around the circle. Congressman Pal mer is sweltering in Washington try ing to placate the Democratic Con gressmen who have been ignored in Federal appointments in their home districts, and State Ross Morris Is rushing about endeavoring to put out the fires of revolt that are appearing in almost every county. McCormlck plans to "lay low" dur ing the next month so as to avoid being pulled into the rows which are occurring over patronage, although everyone knows that he has as big a finger in the distribution of ofllccs as Palmer or Morris. According to tho morning dispatches from Washington, Palmer Is trying to get Democratic Congressmen to sign a paper stating that they are in accord with the State machine and Its alms and purposes and desire party success. In this re markable effort to «ave his face with the President and the Democrats at large he has the support o"f just one man, Congressman Warren Worth Bailey, of Johnstown. Other Congress men have not yet signed the paper In which it is set forth that they are all for the machine. Of course, they will eventually be clubbed Into line through Federal patronage and the use of the name of the State ticket, hut Just now they are making Palmer run around in rings in his effort to se cure written evidence of "harmony." Thursday will be receiving day at the Democratic State Windmill in Mar ket Square. This day has been offi cially set by State Boss Morris to meet the Dem- Tluirsday ocrats who want jobs tho Day and who come here to to R«»eeive seek the aid of the ma chine in smoothing out kinks in the county or ganizations. It was selected for the pink tea of the Fourth division last Thursday and will be the rule. No special requirements of dress will be made for Thursdays at the Windmill. State Chairman Morris plans to have working and to be ready with sugges his best sinile and warmest hand clasp working and to be ready with sugges tions as to the best means of killing off the Insurgent and pulling the teeth of/the backbiter. The Philadelphia Press in an article on Philadelphia politics to-day, shows up the Democratic fuss this way: "While the split between the Old Guard and the Re organizer factions of\the Hoskins Democratic party is grow- After ing wider, there is also a Morris division now in the ranks of the Reorganizers them selves, and on Thursday, when the di rectors of the Democratic Club, Reor ganizer headquarters, meet to act on the resignation of the president, Dr. W. Horace Hoskins, the separation, it is believed, will be complete. "Nothing less than the retirement from the State chairmanship of Ro land S. Morris and descent from the pedestal on which, it is charged, Con gressman A. Mitchell Palmer took a position when he became distributor of Federal jobs among the hungry in Pennsylvania, will satisfy the friends of Dr. Hoskins." The Northumberland county Demo cratic committee fell into line with other Democratic committees of the State yesterday and in dulged in a fight at Sun- Knss In bury. The fuss was Sunbiiry whether Edward Zimmer- Meeting man, who was elected county chairman, could act as State committee man as well. After a rumpus the rules committee was (directed to look into the matter. Zimmerman suc ceeded Edward Weidenheimer, of Mil ton, where the Godcharles Nail Works has closed up for good, and all because of the Wilson depression in business. Weidenheimer is a division boss and thought It best to get out of the local fight. Zimmerman defeated Charles Moran, Shamokln, by 77 to 8. Two of the Democratic candidates for the Legislature did not turn up and noth ing was said that could be noticed ahout the Democratic State platform. One of the Sunbury papers very ap propriately runs a story of the closing of the nail mill under the meeting of the Democrats. Members of the. Central and West End Democratic Clubs, as well as pros pective Federal Jobholders, will meet in Market Square to-morrow night and go to Mechanicsburg, where Doc Dougherty has planned a reception to Secretary Bryan, who will be the Chautauqua speaker. Every time an unfair trick is played in politics it comes back to plague those who play it and this is being strikingly illustrated in the case of the appointment When the of the federal judge for Age Unlit Western Pennsylvania. Wont Had Readers of the Telegraph are familiar with the very proper campaigns waged by a number of eminent attorneys for the place. According to the story just told, when the pressure became too great Congressman Palmer, Candidate McCormick and Division Boss Joo Guf fey got their heads together and at the reported suggestion of Guffey decided to frame an age limit. Two of the candidates known to be over 60 were informed that it was with great regret that the bosses had found that 60 ye ars was the age limit for a man to he named to the federal bench. This rule was a new one to many, but the story is that it allowed the bosses to slide in W. H. S. Thompson, of Pitts burgh. the pick of Guffey and some of his friends. After he had been named someone called attention to the fact that the new judge was nearly 6 7. NEWS DISPATCHES OF THE CIVIL WAR [From the Telegraph of July 21, IM4.] Cannon and Prisoners Transferred Near Winchester, July 20. The cannon and prisoners have been sent to Jfartlnshiirß. The enemy's loss in of ficers is heavy. Prisoners admit their force to have been 5,000. fiuerrllliiH to Cross Missouri St. Joseph. Mo.. July 20. Thornton's guerrillas, nearly 500 strong, are in C'arrolt coumy, to-day, and will prob ablv make ari effort to cross the Mis souri liver. OVR DAILY LAUGH ) Ought to Br Cbejtp None Don't you think Where are you you'd like to going on your va marry a young cation, Jones? lawyer like me? I ain't going to I dunno. How have a vacation much would you this summer. I've charge me for a got to go to the divorce it I want- seashore with my ed It and take wife, your fee out of my alimony T Too Quiet This Is certainly Ambiguous a nice quiet spot So your sister ■we picked out for don't like my our honeymoon, mustache? It's too quiet. I She say* It's all haven't seen a right what there nice looking fel ls of It. and there's low since we ar enough of It—such rived, as It is. FINF.-A BEESENESS By Wing Dinner Eet makn-a me seeck, deesa nonsense Of trying to make-a folks think Pat times are much fine, and da country Is right on da edge of a brink Of da greatest prosperity ever. For heeseness we've only to wink—- I wonder how much of dees con stuff Dey think we are going to drink. Oey say you get heep much more money Dan what you pulled down last-a y«ar, But nothing about shorter hours And, therefore, less money, you hear. Oey say "meat Is higher, hut dat's not Oa fault of da Government game." Maybe not, but da Democrats promised Dey'd much lower be, Just da same. Me nobody but a poor dago Dat works on da street by da day. I know I no get as much money As last year when I got my pay. Dey might as well tell me da bright sun Is black as da middle of nighl. As to tell-a me times Is much prosper ous. Dees dago Is wise all-a right. 1 POLITICAL SIDELIGHTS —The Democratic bosses appear to be getting down to a peace at any price basis. —The Patriot neglected to state In Its publication regarding advertise ments in a Pittsburgh newspaper for men that they were Inserted in an ef fort to get men to take the places of men who struck. —These are weary days for State Chairman Morris. He faces a fight all along the line with the Republicans; I Dean Lewis smashes fusion, the Old 'Guard is threatening him, and now Hoskins is starting a row at home. | —Candidate McCormick appears likely to have to fight enemies within as well as without the party. —News of the Hoskins break in Philadelphia has not yet reached the Market Square Windmill. -—The Democratic State lawn ap pears to be overrun with insurgent army worms. —State Zoologist Surface might be able to help Morris and Palmer in their efforts to get rid of party pests. —Perhaps the golden treatment will be tried on Democratic Insurgents after the campaign starts. —Who would have expected the Democratic reorganizers to split? AMU BEMENTS » v Victoria Theater The Coolest Place in Town TO-DAY'S SPECIAL FEATURE Pathe Weekly and Regular Program TO-MORROW Most elaborate picture ever shown. A six-part World Film Corporation production, entitled "The WORLD. THE FLESH AND THE DEVIL." —— ———> Fort Washington Park Dancing Every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday Kventng. BAND and ORC'HESTIIA Tuesdays and Thursday*. Paxtang Park VAUDEVILLE Nellie Brewster & Co. In "Betty" CLARA BALLEREINI 4—Other Big Acts—4 Friday Evening Special Attraction Grand Fireworks Display Hart Schaffner & Marx SUITS FOR Formerly $25.00, $22.00, $20.00, SIB.OO a. $15.00 COATS Aid PANTS WHITE SERGE PANTS Unlined and Very Cool $5.00 Value $7.50 H. MARKS & SON, 4lh •° J Slr "" IN HARRIS BURG FIFTY YEARS AGO TO-DAY [From the Telegraph of Julv 21, 1*84.] I>e»rrter H nnil Mmmjlfr. On lload Deserters and stragsTers, to the num ber of 193. left here this morning under guard, en route for the Army of the Po tomac. 41 Xffrnm For 100-l>ny Service Colored recruits, to the number of foM-y-onc, have been sent from this city t° Camp William Penn, since Monday last, for the 100 days' service. I>H. BRUMBAUGH'S (iOOD TASTE | [From the Philadelphia Inquirer! I>r. Brumbaugh continues to Klve evidences of good taste, which while they may not seem Important to some persons, nevertheless demonstrate that he is the sort of a man that may be safely trusted with the governorship ot Pennsylvania. He has written to the committee of educators who had planned a testimonial pageant of pub lic school children In his honor on September IS, asking that the affair be postponed until the middle of No vember. He does this in order that there may be no excuse for the criti-. cism that the school children mißht be used to promote his gubernatorial can didacy. As a matter of fact, there was no reason in the world why the pupils and friends of the schools should not have given a testimonial on tho occa sion of nr. Brumbaugh's retirement as superintendent of the schools of Philadelphia. It was a perfectly nat ural thing to do and could have been carried out on a successful scale. But in order that there should be no justi fication for criticism on the part of those who hunt for trouble with a mi croscope, Dr. Brumbaugh has seen fit to request a postponement until after the November election. Perhaps, after all, this was the best thing to do under the circumstances, because. If he is spared, Br. Brum baugh in all probability will then be the Governor-elect of Pennsylvania, and the affair will have a double mean ing in the fact that It will speed the parting Superintendent and greet the coming Governor. MNCOLN, TAFT AND LI'RTON "It is just the simple truth to tell your. President Taft wrote to Judge Lurton when he appointed him to the hupreme Court bench in December. 1909, "that the chief pleasure of my adminis tration, as I have contemplated it In the past, has been to commission you a Justice of the Supreme Court; and I never had any other purpose and was never shaken in it until there was pre sented to me the challenge whether X was not gratifying my personal desires at the expensi of public interest in put ting a judge ht your age upon the bench under present conditions. For this rea son I took back my determination to appoint you, wiped it off the slate and gave two or three days to the introspec tive process to know whether I was yielding to personal preference at the expense of the public. I became con vinced that I was not—that the cir cumstances justified the departure from the ordinary rule and that 1 had the right to gratify my personal predilec tion by doing what I have done, be cause the motive in doing it included a desire to strengthen that court as much as I could strengthen it." Judge Lurton was then 65 years old and had been on the United States Cir cuit Court bench for seventeen years. On the appeal of his mother, young Lurton, a prisoner In the Union lines, was released by President Lincoln. Ye~shall do no unrighteousness in judgment; thou shalt not re spect the person of the poor, nor honor the person of the mighty; hut in righteousness shalt thou judge thy neighbor.—Lev. 19:15. jf"" BuotiCAHTsr.i ran 1 SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES AMUSEMENTS mmmmmammmmmmmmmmmm COLONIAL Jesse L. Lasky's Act "Eloping" By (he Producer of "The Trnlned Xnrneii* And "The Hedhends." Frank Gabbay Beau Brummel Trio Ventrlloquldt Some Sinners THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY HARRISBURG NEWS PICTORIAL Sbofvlng HCfneii at Bowman'* picnic at Oood Hope Mills, and alno In Reservoir Purk where there la enjoyment for those of all aiccn TO SEE REAL QUALITY AND REEL QUANTITY, COME TO PALACE THEATER 333 Market Street DANIEL FROHMAN Presents as a Special Attraction To-morrow THE WORLD-FAMED FILM FAVORITE Mary Pickford in A four-reel Drama of the Shifting Sands of time, and the Surg ing, Changing Tides of Life—an epic of the sea with a deep human undercurrent. BARBARA TENNANT and O. A. C. LUND in Eclair's latest 2-recl N irthwestern Drama, "SNOWDRIFT" 808 FUEHRER and LOUISE GLAUM in Comedy, "UNIVERSAL IKE, JR., AND THE VAMPIRE." ADMISSION—ALL SEATS—IO CENTS. POPULAR Vacation Trips SEA SOX OP 1914 SEASHORE Atlantic City, Ocean City, Corsons Inlet (Strathmere) Sea Isle City, Stone Harbor, Wildwood or Cape May FIVE-DAY TICKETS Good on any train THURSDAY July 18. SO and August 13 From . Fare From Fare Harrishurg, $4.00 Fraokville ~53.50 rremont .. . 4.00 Pottsvllle .. 3.25 Lebanon ... 3.75 Reading ... 2.50 Lancaster .. 3.75 Pottstown .. 2.50 Columbia ...3.75 Phoenixvllle, 2.00 S.Bethlehem 3.00 Norristown . 2.00 ONE-DAY EXCURSIONS Good Only on Special Train SUNDAY, JULY 1!>, AUGUST 2 and tfl From Faro From Fare Harrlsburg. $2.75 Reading ...$2.00 Lebanon ... 2.50 Frank]ln st 2 .00 Lancaster . . 2.50 _ A . Frackviiie .. 2.65 Pottstown .. 2.00 Pottsville .. 2.50 Norristown.. 1.75 UP THE HUDSON TO WEST POINT AND RETURN SATURDAYS, August 8 and 20 Via Steamer "SIRIUS" of the Iron Steamboat Company TUESDAY, July II and August 18 Via Steamer "ROBERT FIJLTON" of the Hudson Illrer Day Lino From Fare From Fare Harrishurg, $4.00 Reading ...$3.00 Lebanon .. . 3.50 Franklin St., 3.00 Lancaster .. 4.00 Pottstown .. 3.00 Pottsville .. 3.50 Bridgeport . 3.00 OCEAN GROVE ASBURY PARK or LONG BRANCH Ten-day Tickets SATURDAY, AUGUST 22 From Fare From Fare Haxrisburg, $4.50 Pottsvllle ..$3.50 Likens 4.50 Reading ... 3.00 LeliaJion .. 3.75 Pottstown .. 2.50 Lancaster .. 3.75 Norristown.. 2.00 NIAGARA FALLS~ SATURDAYS July 11, 18. August 1, 15, 22 and 29 September 5 and 19 Round Trip Fare from Hnrrlsburg, Lebanon, Lancaster, Pottsville and Reading, $0.75. Good Fifteen Days. Proportionate Rates from Principal Intermediate Stations DNPKItTAItRBg RUDOLPH K. SPICER Funeral Director and Embalmer 113 Walnut St. Bel! Phoa* AMUSEMENTS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers