rank Rubbers With Real Style Hub-Mark Rabbera leire a doable purpose. They not only protect the feet in bad weather, but they give them a natty appearance as welL These rubbers have a bright finish that lasts re markably well. Hub-Mark Rubbers defy the stormiest days—and save you money. Accept no other kind. Also made in low cot style. U* ii IBHIiHI W" Look for the Hub-Mark on all kinds and <tyle« ai Rubber Footwear fer Men, Women, Boy, and Girl*. Vo/« thm : You can rely on anything you buy from dealers who •eli Hub-Mark Rubber Footwear They are dependable merchant*. Boatoa Rubber Shoe Conpaiy Maid.*. WUm. NO MORE RUNNING SORES (irorsp \. (-orgas Sells An Ointment Called San Cura That Is a Posi tive Relief It matters not how old. persistent or poisonous the sore is. Sail Cura • Mntment the powerful antiseptic, will •lraw out the poison and promptly heal the sore. So sure of this are the owners, the Thompson .Medical Co.. that they have authorized George A. Gorgas to return the purchase price if San Cura Oint ment doesn't do all this paper says it will do. No fairer offer was ever made. B. D. Dutton. Titusville. Pa., says: "My arm was covered with twenty four running sores and swollen to twice its natural size. San Cura Oint ment relieved the pain, drew out the poison and healed the arm in an in credibly short time. It is the greatest compound for healing 1 ever used." The healing powers of San Cura Ointment are little short of marvelous. It gives relief, and is guaranteed to help salt rheum, eczema, bleeding, itching or protruding piles, ulcers, boils, carbuncles, chapped hands and • hilblains. In cuts, burns, scalds and bruises, it allays pain and is healing. 25c and 50c a jar.—Advertisement. I For Rough Chapped Hands! • K\ lint I'lirblnti Women l «f to Mnkei *a Their Hnnti* Hettiitiful. Soft • N »' ntiil White • The best preparation for softening, j whitening and beautifying the hands is a funious French formula composed of •lapora Concentrate, - ozs.. Alcohal 2% ozs.. Kose Water 1 oz., Witch Hazel H oz. This product will also quickly re move freckles, yellow or dark spots on the skin, overcome enlarged skin pores, blackheads and unnatural redness of the skin It is most refreshing for gentlemen to use after shaving as it is exceptionally healing to a sore or tender skin. In reply to an inquiry Croll Keller, druggist. 40.1 Market street, of this city says that they keep all the In gredients required for compounding the above prescription and that they are prepared to fill it Just as well as a Paris Pharmacien. j CREAM FOR CATARRH OPENS UP NOSTRILS Tells How To Get Quick Relief from Head-Colds. It's Splendid! In one minute your clogged nostrils will open, the air passages of your head will clear and you can breathe freely. Xo more hawking, snuffling, blowing, headache, dryness. Xo strug gling for breath at night; your cold or i atarrh will be gone. Get a small bottle of Ely's Creatn Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of this fragrant, antiseptic, healing cream in your nostrils. It penetrates through every air passage of the head, soothes the inflamed or swollen mucous membrane and relief conies instantly. It's just tine. Don't stay stuffed-up with a cold or nasty catarrh—Relief comes so quickly.—Advertisement. TEETH Do Your Teeth Need Attention? We will be glad to have you visit our office and our honest advice will save you money and save your teeth. No charge for examination. Wo make teeth that must tit and look natural and give satisfaction. Painless extraction included when plates are ordered. Tour old plates made over or repaired. Gold or porcelain crowns, bridge work and all kinds of fillings. Large, comfortable offices, sani tary throughout. Lady attendant. Bell Painless Dentists 10 .\ortU Market Square, llarrlxbtirg Hours: S a. in. to 9 p. m. Sundays: 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. ' HARRY M. HOFFMANN I SorofiKor to .1. J. Ogelabyt UNDERTAKER Sl# -NORTH SECOND STRKKT Try Telegranh Want Ads. THURSDAY EVENING, ACTIVITIES IN THE LEGISLATURE NEW COUNTY ACT TROTTED OUT AGAIN This Time It Is Proposed to Call the New County After the Penrose Family Representative William Adams is said to be about ready to introduce the bill for the erection of a new county i out of portions of Luzerne and Schuyl | kill with Hasleton as the county seat. Humor has it that there is a project to call the county in honor of Senator Penrose's family, which have been prominent in the affairs of the State for over a century. The project was first boomed about twenty-five years ago and one of the big things of the session of 1895 was the bill to make the new county and call it in honor of Matthew Stanley Quay . It bobbed up ten years ago and hist session it was in full flower under the name of Hazle county. Adams and John Robert Jones locked horns and Jones knocked it out because it would take some slices of his beloved Schuyl kill county. This year Adams says | that the plan would take in part of j Luzerne county south of the old pro posed line and annex some of the pine trees and cave winds of northern [ Schuylkill. He is real earnest about it 1 and thinks it will be a winning propo- I sition. 1 Three bills for the selection of a j state song are expected to make their I appearance at an early day The plans j are to put in the two "Pennsylvania" j songs of last session, those of Scranton . and Philadelphia, and to have a song fcst in the hall of the House so that the legislators can judge of the re spective merits. The Municipal Home Rule League ! back tracked yesterday after much talk. It decided to stand for the re peal of the Public Service Commission ! act as decided on Tuesday, but to pre- j sent a substitute act. Tuesday the j attitude was against any substitution, one man saying he wanted the whole commission wiped out, a sentiment which was applauded. The latest idea, which is to be framed by a legislative committee, will be to draft a substitute for a commission having jurisdiction o'er common carriers only and to > leave local matters to the courts for | adjudication. This bill will be sub- | mitted to the Governor. Representa- ; tive Garner has bills abolishing the 1 commission and also allowing it to re- ' main, shorn of its power over munici- j palities and competition in utilities. ' Representative Maurer also has an abolisher. The league's bill to wipe out the commission was presented in the Senate by Mr. Graff. The proposed borough code will be introduced into the House by Mr. Me Vicar. Allegheny county, probably on Monday night. The measure will make its appearance as turned out by the Legislative Reference Bureau anil the changes recommended to be made by the Association of Boroughs will be made in committee. The House elections committee will take up the Milliron bill, which is aimed to prevent placing a man on a ticket under more than one party name. The bill has aroused much comment and is the forerunner of numerous eleetion bills. I Among bills attracting attention is j that of Judson W. Stone, of Bradford, which requires all vehicles to display lights atter dark except wheelbarrows and wagons used for hay and straw. Coming from a rural county, the pro visions have attracted much attention, as grangers have bitterly contested anv j bill requiring lights, j Congressional apportionment Is not | a very popualr thing this session. The j indications are that it will not get very far. The administration bill amending the military code is being prepared ;»nd will likely make its appearance about the middle of February. I>E \TH OE MRS. PETER KILINGER Special to The Telegraph Union Deposit. Pa., Jan. 29.—Mrs Peter Kilinger. a lifelong resident of I nion Deposit, died at her home Tues day night after suffering several weeks with pneumonia. Mrs. Kilinger was i o years old and a member of the Lu theran ("hurch. She is survived bv her husband, a daughter, Mrs. Henry Peiffer, and two grandchildren, of this place; one sister. Mrs. John Stauffer of Harrisburg, and three brothers' Martin Hocker. of Middletown; George and Rudolph Hocker. of this place Funeral services will be held at the house on Saturday morning at 10 o'clock, with burial in T'nion Deposit Cemetery. The Rev. A. C. Forscht will officiate. SCHOOL BUILDINGS FUMIGATED Special to The Telegraph York. Jan. 28.—Dr. J. S. Miller, county medical inspector, after inves tigating the outbreak of scacrlet fever in Codorus and Manheim townships, ordered the township high schoo's closed and the buildings fumigated. The schools will reopen in a day or so. There are about a- dozen cases in Codorus township, while but one case was found in the Summit school. WHIT WILL RELIEVE STOMACH TROUBLE A Hard Question —But This Retired Ohio Farmer An-, swers It —Mr. Matteson's Statements Are Reliable. Upper Sandusky, Ohio. —"I suffered \ from nervous dyspepsia and stomach j trouble so that large lumps would seem to come up in my throat, and would get so dizzy I could not stand up or even see. I tried different rem edies but nothing seemed to help me until one day my druggist told me about Vinol. I tried it and soon no ticed an improvement and now I am well."—lra T. Matteson, Upper San dusky. Ohio. Vinol seldom fails to strengthen and tone up the tired, overtaxed and weakened nerves of the digestive or gans and remove the cause of indi gestion and soon enables the sufferer to digest with ease the foods that once caused distress. Vinol also cre ates a healthy appetite and builds up the weakened run-down system. We have such faith in Vinol. our delicious cod liver aud Iron tonic with out oil, that we ask every per son in this vicinity suffering from nervous dyspepsia or stomach trou ble to try Vinol on our offer to re turn their purchase money if it fails I to benefit. George A. Gorgas, Druggist; Ken nedy's Medicine Store, 321 Market street; C. F. Kramer. Third and Broad streets; Kitzmiller's Pharmacy, 1325 Derry street, Harrisburg. Pa., and at leading drug stores every . where.—Advertisement. COMPENSATION IS TO BE WORKED OUT j Notable Labor Leaders Will Be Here to Meet Attorney General Brown Next Week Steps to secure not only the views of the people of the State at large but of the men active in labor circles and in compensation affairs in other States have been arranged by Governor Brumbaugh and Attorney General Brown. The first big conference will be held some time next week. John Mitchell, head of the miners in some of the big contests; Francis Feehan and Van Bittner, Pittsburgh; Frank Feeney, Philadelphia; C. B. Bonner, Tamaqua: John T. Dempsey. Scranton; David Oates. Charleroi. will represent labor: Francis H. Bohlen, Pennsylvania: W. E. Stubbs. New Jer sey, and Wallace D. Yaple, Ohio, will represent compensation commissions, and the Attorney General and his deputies the State. Ijater on. when the insurance fea ture comes up. the services of Deputy Insurance Commissioner S. W. McCul loch will be asked. Because of the great Interest in the I compensation act and the numerous [suggestions and the desire to get a measure which can be -passed, the ! drafting of the bill may take some time and it will not be ready as soon as local option and child labor. These will be the three big measures of the session. ELLENTERIIY IN SHAKESPEARE Famous English Actress Presents a Study of Well-known Heroines A markedly representative audience, albeit not a very large one, heard Ellen Terry, the famous actress and inter preter of Shakespeare, last night at the Majestic. The performance was a lecture recital of the heroines found in some of Shakespeare's plays. The characters were studied not alone from the viewpoint of acting the character, but from the standpoint as well of knowing why the character had to be acted in that way. Conditions of the times and the personality of these characters were clearly illustrated by the artist. Ellen Terry believes In Shakespeare. | | not only for presentation on the stage. | j but for the careful, diligent study by 1 ' everyone. Her study last night was of j ; the heroines only and in her lecture she I promised all o! ner audience that in j I such study there would be found in j [ Shakespeare an emotion equivalent for ! j every emotion of the present time. | I Shakespeare's Juliets, Portias and , Amelias are as much a part of our I life to-day as tney are in the play in j which they are written. Hiss Terry's work in her reading was splendid. Her voice, clear anil ! vibrant, and her enunciation brought j to the audience every emotion, every thought she endeavored to convey. Two big readings marked the work of ! Ellen Terry in that direction. Her" reading from "Romeo and Juliet;" the scene wherein Juliet soliloquizes upon the taking of the draught by which means she shall be enabled to join Romeo, ending by casting all fears pjiide and triumphantly drinking the draught, was by far the better read ing. Although one dare not rob the J reading from the court scene of the l i "Merchant of Venice," Portia's plea i j with Shylock for the life of Antonio. 1 ending in the triumph of the lover i barrister, won a hearty round of ap | plause from the audience. Ellen Terry j frankly admits that there are almost no end of interpretations which might be given to this character, but her work clearly demonstrated that her conception was one with the audience agreed. MAX ROBERTSON'. | COOK VOI R MEAT THOROUGHLY j In connection with the present rav-1 I ages of the foot-and-mouth disease, I |the following advice to meat consum-! | ers, taken from the current issue of I I Farm and Fireside, is both interesting' I and valuable: j "Many inquiries have been made as! ■ to the effect of foot-and-mouth disease! ion meat. There is no particular dan- 1 j ger from this source—provided. First, | I more than half the meat the country j ,'uses is killed in establishments where l i the federal meat-inspection law is en- j | forced. Here the animals are Inspected on the hoof first; a diseased one goes | promptly to the fertilizer vats. After they are killed the meat is inspected again, and if anything is wrong the carcass is thrown out. I "This inspection, however, does not' 'extend to small plants that do not killi I for any interstate business. If you are j j near a region of infection, and if your' meat comes from a small plant, then! I you can be secure if the meat is cook !ed thoroughly. Just as pasteurization of milk will kill the germ, so will cook ing of the meat. i "It is worth while to take all precau ■ tions with both milk and meat." | A NOVELTY IN MOTOR VEHICLES A novel motor-driven racer is the in vention of a St. Louis genius, who has e-iven the name of the "unicycle" to the great hoop. Though a couple of : small wheels, or rollers, are attached to the side of the queer craft, they , merelv serve to steady it when it is • still, and are raised when the device is 1 in motion. The motive-power is a j gas-engine of the rotary type, with ' three cylinders, and this drives a pro ; peller, five feet in length, at such speed i that the wheel travels at a better rate | than a mile a minute—seventy-four [miles an hour, to be exact. The frame ■ whirl) carries the engine, propeller, j driver, and fuel supplv Is very ingenl- I ot:sly constructed with a set of rollers that revolve against the inner side of the big wheel. In this manner the I frame remains upright while the wheel j revolves. The latter is of aluminum ; and has a diameter of elghty-lne j inches. Its circumference is protected i by a solid rubber tire.—From the Feb ruary Strand. TO GIVE HISTORY OF HORSE Prof. R. C. Shiedt, of Franklin and] Marshall College will speak before the I ! Harrisburg Natural History Society at! 'Technical High school to-morrow' I evening on "The Modern Horse and j i His Forbears.'' W. K. WILLIAMS DIES AT LVKENS* Special to The Telegraph Lykens, Pa., Jan. 2ft,—W. 11. Wil-} j liams. a well-known citizen of Lykens. I died yesterday. He was about 80 vears t old and a member of the Odd Fellows ; for many years. His death occurred i at the home of his son-in-law, John Stuppy, in North Second street. * HAKRISBURG TELEGRAPH NEW ESTIMATES WILL BE DRAFTED State Treasurer Young and Auditor General Powell Will Take Up Matter Soon Illness of State Treasurer R. K. | Young this week has prevented mak ' ing of a new estimate of the income of the State for the appropriation period that will be covered by the j present Legislature, but it Is expected that definite information can lie placed in the hands of the Governor and the • chairmen of the appropriation com ■ mittees next week. The detailed figures made up by I Auditor General A. W. Powell in work ing out his estimate for John K. Tenor i to use in his message have been given ! to the chairmen for their study. Since that time some new calculations have | been made and it is expected that the capital stock and loan tyix revenue will ; not fall as low as expected. There | have been n number of large payments lof bonus on incorporations and in crease of stock lately and several com j panics are understood to have entered I this State as home companies. The : new estimate is being eagerly awaited, j as it will furnish a tlnal working basis. | Renting an T'nderwood Typewriter a sound investment, certain to increase your income. "The Machine You Will | Kventually Buy." 25 X. Third St.— I Advertisement. Deaths and Funerals MRS. HARRY SIMON" KTTI DIKS Mrs. Mary May Simonetti, wife of Harry Simonetti. died last night at her home, 1315 Wallace street, aged ■ls- On Tuesday evening Mrs. Simo netti sustained a stroke from which she never regained consciousness. She was a member of the Ridge Avenue Methodist Church. Survivors are her husband, one son Ray and one daughter Edna, her aged mother who has been at the point of death for more than a week. Mrs. Anna Clouser. and the following sisters: Mrs. Jennie Frey, Mrs. Maud Pryne. Sirs. Sadie Reynolds. Mrs. Tes sie Huss. Mrs. Elsie Martin. The funeral will be held from the home Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock, and will be conducted by the Rev. J. H. Daugherty. Interment in the Harris burg Cemetery. INFANT DIKS Charles Warfleld. son of Mrs. Flor ence Warfiekl. died, at the Harrisburg hospital last night of pneumonia, aged S months. Undertakers T. M. Mauk Son will take the remains from 1422 Xorth Fourth street, to Middletown Friday afternoon where services will be held at 2 o'clock. Interment will be made in Middletown Cemetery. MRS. ROBERTA C. SH V KT7 The funeral of Mrs. Robert C. Swartz. aged 49, wife of John NV. Swartz, of I-ower Paxton township, took place this afternoon, at - o'clock. Burial was made in Shoop's Church Cemetery. DEATH OF MRS. M. K BI'SIIFY Oreencastle. Pa.. Jan. 28.—Mrs. Mary Ellen Bushey, wife of Dr. F. A. Bushey. died yesterday at her home on Xorth Carlisle street, following a two weeks' illness. Mrs. Bushey is survived by her husband, two daugh ters, Mrs. Elise Grimes, at home and Mrs. Morris Bierly, of Thurmont. Md., and by one brother, Dr. George Carl, of Greencastle. ARMY OFFICER TO I.ECTI'RE Colonel Lensing 11. Beach, of the Fnited States Army, will deliver an il lustrated lecture before the Engineers' society, to-morrow evening on "The NYork of the Corps of Engineers of the I'nited States Army in Peace and War." A buffet luncheon will be served afterward. A GOOD COMPLEXION MEANS PURE BLOOD Everybody that wants a fine, glow ing. youthful skin, should take old reliable Hood's Sarsaparilla, a phy sician's prescription, which gives a clear, healthy color. When your blood is made pure, pimples, boils, hives, eczema disappear. Langour. loss of appetite, tired feel ing. weakness are symptoms of im pure. unhealthy blood. Hood's Sarsaparilla purifies the blood. Get a bottle to-day.—Adver tisement. UTOBEMEXTB At the Victoria Today The Key to Yesterday (in 5 Parti) >\ avlaid by liighntiymrn, Frederick Mnr*ton. doable of (•corse Carter, South Ameri can revolutionary- fugitive. In robbed of all but—a Key. Memory a blank, be annume* the name of Robert Saxon. Then he begliiM hi* Mearch through the yearn for Jhe no tation to the problem of bin Identity, or at leant—the Key. Five year* of life In n re-, belling South American re public: love of a Sou h Ameri can beauty; firing nquadn; the wlrel«»*n; purnulng gun hoatn; battle*; the en<»fipe—all figure In the worry Nrhenie of thug* that lead to the ulti mate finding of— the Key. Solution of the problem on the threMhold of Mtudlo with the "Key of \ en terda >' In thrllllngly told to day In a five-part film at the Victoria, with Carl vie Black well In the dual role. REGENT THEATER ' OPBX iajv6oy to it p. m. Hot SB OF EXCIiIMVK FII,M PI,AYS TODAY The Typhoon TOM OH ROW AS YE SOW FEATURING ALICE BRADY Adinlulon Children, sri Adult*, !(><■ j $ 17*50 ' '" ac * c '' t ' on tof^e ' owroun d trip Exposition fares in effect Mar. L.you can make a circle tour of the entire TacomWest, going out from Chicago via Denver, Salt Lflk# iV* Lake City, Scenic Columbia River, Portland, Tacoma and Seattle "ij —twTulVi Xitt' rA toSan Franciscoandtlie Panama-Pacific Exposition, returning via San A •'.■'.' M Diego Exposition, Los Angeles and Southern California, if you travel ■' IJ|3B Union Pacific System - Standard Route of the We*t '. This enables you to see the entire Pacific Coast with three months ■ ' N return limit and stopover privileges in both directions. Write for tvronew booklets just issued, 'The Scenic Colum- * bia River Route to the Great Pacific Northwest" and "Cali- •HjjW / y ' * fornia and Its Expositions." J36& V < I, They give you the actual cost of side trips, faithful descriptions and facts without which you cannot *&- "■Ffr*- r 3. \ intelligently plan such a trip. Write today for /£•'•'• Denver "'"e Married 53 Years Ago, Couple Die Same Night Philadelphia, Jan. 28.—After fifty three years of married life, l.ewis Kratz. of Plumsteadville. Bucks ooun ty, and his wife, Mrs. Esther B. Kratz, died at their homestead last Tuesday ninht within six and one-half hours of each other. Sirs. Kratz. who has been blind for ten years, fell ill last Thursday and died at ti o'clock Tues day evening. Her husband, taken sick last Friday, died at 12.30 o'clock Wed nesday morning. He was 84 years old; she was only three weeks less than 95. There will be a double funeral from the New Mennonite Church, Plumsteadville. WHISTLES SILENT I'OK SICK (ilia Palmyra, Pa.. Jan. 28. —For ten days all the factory and industrial whistles in this town have been silent owing to a generous agreement on the part of the factory owners to omit the usual signal whistles at morning, noon and night, to help in the recovery of Car rie Gingrich, a young daughter of l.evi Gingrich, who is suffering from spinal meningitis. The physicians state that the silencing of the whistles has helped the girl very much and hopes are held out for her early recovery. The Easiest Way To End Dandruff There is one sure way that never fails to remove dandruff completely and that is to dissolve it. This destroys It entirely. To do this, just get about four ounces of plain, ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring; I use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. By morning most ,If not all, of your ; dandruff will be gone, and three of four more applications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter iiow much dandruff you may have. You will find. too. that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop in stantly, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive, and four ounces is all you will need. This simple remedy lias never been known to fail.—Advertisement. AMUSEMENTS MA ICQTIP Wilmer, Vincent & mHULUIIU Appell, Mgrs. TO-NIGHT-LAST TIME llPKiilar V ll iiii H l Knitauriiiriit of DE.N MA.VS THOMPSON'S I*l, A V I:VEIU,ASTIX<; The Old Homestead Same \ enterday Today Forever PRICKS 25e, 50c # 75c. 91.041 TOMORROW A SIT. MA'tfs JJAII.Y VATIXEK I'll ICES: Adult*, .TTK* SUM! -."ir; Children. |."k\ lUYMAN tt.HOWE MCSKNTB MIS STUPENDOUS (FXCLUSIVS NAVAL SPICTACLK - TNI I U.S.NAVY OP 1015 MLLL FRMSAMMT TO CIVILIZATION ■I MAJttMO A NATIONAL QM* fm Mulit Prleeji: 23c. .'lsc. ?50c. Week of February 1 .NATHAN AI'I'EM, prcNcntK ARTHUR CHAITERDON and Hl* Premier Stock Co. I\ PLAYS WORTH WHIM* MONDAY Matinee Kindling KVCDIIIK % (• rain of l>uwt Tt USD AY Matinee The tilrl From Nowhere Kvenlnic 'l'he Mr. Cliatterdon and MIMM llunhuell Introduce Tanjco Danm In above. WKI)\KMI) KX Matinee % t.rnlii or Hunt KvenliiK Kindling Till It SI) % \ Mat., Cilrl in Taxi and 'I'IIUKO Danccra Kve. ... Tea* of the Storm Country Fit 111 A \ Matinee What a Woman Will l)o Co. Tauitu Ten After Mat. Ktenlnjt . The '('myelinic Saleauiau SAT. AWOI \CKU LATKIt Pill Cl*: St KveialnKa, lOm, '.'ON. 30C. ftOes Matlneea. 10c. -Oc. Monday. I.adlea, 15c; limit 200. Sale Friday. V. II »T JANUARY 28, 1015. " Politics Held to Blame For Collapse of Bank Special to The Telegraph W'aynesburg, Pa., Jan. 28.—The Farmers' and Mechanics' National Bank of Mount Morris has closed its doors indefinitely by order of the board of directors. The bank's capital is $25,000 and its deposits total $050,- 000. The failure is said to be due to a political tltfht and not to the collapse of the Uniontown institution controlled by J. V. Thompson. The light grew out of examinations for the post mas tership. Miss Mary Arrison, a school teacher, took the examination and obtained the highest percentage. She resigned her position as school teacher and made arrangements to take charge of the post office, when it was ascertained, that her papers had been declared void and she was told to take a re axamination. Rho did so, but was beaten for the place. The residents of the village took sides and factions formed. The hank officials, it is said, were favorable to The Difference between the man who asks for King Oscar 5c Cigars and the man who doesn't is that the former knows the value of his nickel. King Oscar quality has been regularly good for 23 years and is what your nickel entitles you to. Don't hesitate to ask for them—there are always enough fresh ones to go around. AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS = ___ UNA CLAYTON & CO. y- In the One Act I'lay . .. # "milk" Cieisha Girls \M> <1 OTHER KEITH HITS ~ * The Telephone Tangle ,3 *3 A IIIC; CO MED V NUMBER 1 v Aw 1 O ami THB MYSTERIOUS REST ('KTt ItKS Brindarnour 5, 10 and 15c PHOTOPLAY TO-DAY FRANCIS X. BUSHMAN Fcfllnrrd In 1 DEAR OLD GIRL Tbe Fantou* Drama Taken at Cornell I nlvernlty (HIEEI.V CONCERNING >1 tl.KS—red In I.EVA—i Art Edlaon. Miriam Nrsbltt I'ealuX Hanrnpli Comedy featuring Hnhliy Connelly. r *■ ( SI'ECI A,l, TOMOKKUW , Hrondna)-Star Feature—THE SAGE-HH I Sll GAl—Acta. , / Special Announcement CHESTNUT STREET AUDITORIUM ' THURSDAY NIGHT, JAMJAR\ ITS, AT 8.15 I RVI IN S. CO B B (Of tli«* Sin IT of fb<* Saturday I'lvrniiiK l*o«t) W 11,1. (.1 \ i: AN ILLUSTRATED TALK Ob some recent experlencea In Ikr War '/.one. Movluii Picture* of authentic nnr hituck. I>l It I:< T'lON SEI.WtN Jt 111. ■SEATS VOW ON SAI.E \T At C. M. SIGLER. Inc ;tl» NORTH SK't.ONl» STREET ... PRICES, TO c Mrs. Morris Hatfield, the success nl candidate, while many of the residerts took the side of Miss Arrison- About four months aso many of the deposi tors began drawing their money out «t the bank. FARMER DROPS l)F\I» Lebanon, Pa.. Jan. 28. —John Tom<>« kins, a retired farmer, fell over de: d in Chestnut street this city, on We I nesday afternoon. Jieart failure, is supposed to have caused his dcat'.i. He was. 68 years old. Winter Coughs, the Early Form of Bronchitis Winter cough is the early form rf Dronchltis and comes after exposure i > iret and cold. Acute bronchitis cr Pneumonia often follows. A short, painful, dry cough, a feeling of rawne»s : tnd pain in throat, and behind breast none, and oppression in chest are dange iignals. Qoff's Cough Syrup will end the Cough, ease the pain, reduce th* inflammation and bring relief. Start tak ing it today. A few doses will mak* you feel better. Guaranteed by Groceri and Druggists. 25 and 50 cents. No opiates. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers