I Temporary Location i If There Are Any Remainin i After To-day's Selling They Will Be On Sale 1 TO-MORROW (SATURDAY) | Look For Announcement in Saturday Morning's "Patriot" { # ON MONDAY NEXT WE BEGIN REMODELING / € Our Temporary Store Room, 9 North Market Square, < I and will OPEN ON OR ABOUT MARCH Ist With 1 | Entire New Spring Stocks^® I t^ Newspapers For the Opening Announcement MEN'S MASS MEETING Special to The Telegraph Halifax, Pa.. Feb. 12.—A service for men only will bo held in the United I'.rethren Church on Sunday after noon. The orchestra will lead the music. An address will be made by t lie pastor on the subject, "Who." IF YOU ARE A DRINKING MAN You had better stop at once or you'll lose your job. Every line of business is closing its doors to "Drinking" men. it may be your turn next. By the aid of ORRINIi thousands of men have been restored to lives of sobriety and industry. We are so sure that ORRIXK will benefit you that we say to you that if! sifter a trial you fail to get any benefit! from its use, your money will be re-1 l'unded. When you stop "Drinking." think of A tie money you'll save; besides, sober| Anon are worth more to their employ* j TVs and get higher wages. Costs only Si.oo a box. We have an) interesting booklet about ORRINEi that we are giving away free on re-j quest. Call at our store and talk it over. George A. Gorgas, 10 North Third street, liarrisburg; J. A. Mc t'urdy, Steelton: H. F. Brunliouse,! Mechaniesburg. Pa.—Advertisement. RHEUMATISM IN ANKLES One Bottle of Rlieuma Relieved Wo man Who Could Not Walk Marvelous as this story may seem, it is absolutely true; but this is only one of the many almost magical cures that Jlheuma is performing these days. Use of one bottlei will convince any suf- j fcrer. Mrs. Gertrude Kozel, Smithtield, Pa., i writes: "1 had rheumatism for over | "a year; it settled in my ankles and 11 could not walk. I have taken one bot-i tie of Rheuma and do not have any! more pain, and 1 can again walk at! ■will." IT. C. Kennedy and all druggists sell I Rheuma for 50 cents. It is guaranteed to cure any case of any kind of rheu- j in at ism or money back. Gratifying relief comes In a day, be-I cause Rheuma acts at one time on the kidneys, stomach, liver and blood, and ; starts to rid the entire system of poi sonous uric acid at once.—Advertise- i ment. AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS MAJESTIC Tt.EAT R To-morrow—Return Engagement All Next Week—Matinees Daily Matinee 2.30) Event..* 5.30 "THE MAN WHO WIXSTHEM ALI.» Ge man War Films Chas. K. Clump in Offering Metropolitan Piny* 111 See the German Side of thin Greut Metropolitan Style by Hl* War. Metropolitan Company. _ . . . _ Mon. Mot.—••The Reformer/* Two new reel* nlnmlng Indian „ mi . „ ... . _ Mon. E. ve.—- 4, 1 he Man I- rom Home/* troop* and llritlnh armored train* _ . Ladle** Tieket* Mon. Mglit, 15c. "* C ° n# Pricest Mat*., It* and 20c; Mghta, Price*s Orche*tra, -sc; Balcony, 15c. 10c, 20c, 30c, 50c. v * EMMA CARUS Rill V VAN Aaalntrd by Carl Randall JJ fI4 I 4 ( ff\ } * Ilert Fltaalbhona The Volunteer*. The Mln.trel Man with a new Mon- NEXT WEEK oloifue nn«l Sew Songs HOME AGAIN Mimical Comedy with 15 People and - J « f-r p J Van and. Schenck MAJESTIC THEATER " THI'RSDAY AND FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, IS Gilbert and Sullivan's Ever Tuneful "MIKADO" For Belgian Relief, Presented by the Harrl*hurpr Operatic Society. Ca*t and chorn* of nlxty-flve voice*. Price*, 25c, 50c, 75c and $1.00; Box neat*, f1.50. Box office open* Tue*day morning. Yicr°»* ANTONY and CLEOPATRA C__l * 1 Shown In aoine of the larsrat (hratrrn at 500 to <11.50. uXIIA !i * r " *»-«'■»' »< Vlotorln—the hoimr of feature*—for lOe. Miunn to-day for the Unit time In IlarrlaliurK. Show atarta 11.30 A. M.. and laata two bourn. Feature To-day 6 Acts--7500 People--2 Year* Required to Make Production FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 12, 1915. One of the sceres from the big motion picture, Antony and Cleopatra, I shown to-day at the Victoria. I \ STORY RITEN' By tlic Messenger Boy V By the Messenger Boy Swell-head is one ot' them diseases j that gets kronick with some people, i and comes occasionally to most every- i one when they gets their bills all paid I up. When it lasts too long the only jwav to kure it is to have some one ; ] take you down a peg or two, or duck ; I your head in muddy ice water. It can : j also be did by puttln water in a man's j i gasoline if he has a auto, or in the I i lease of a lady, by tellin her she's j «'lookin older and aint usin enuff paint.; jThis will also lose her friendship for j I you if you aint careful how you say it. , I Swell-head don't do no one any | {good, and should be kwaranteened and i I disposed of by the reducshun company l that gathers garbage. It is a useless i I pastime for some who gets to be j known as snobs and aint liked by ordi- j ;nary people. It is usually generated; by leavins from your grandfather of j I a rich unkle or ant, or else by growin i I rich with money you didn't work for. Those that works for 4 and 0 a week Saint likely to have it; but I'm a little ! bit in doubt about me in three years, i when I get my four a week salary as J i reporter. | There aint much use in gettin all | swelled up when someone tells you ; you're good lookin, or praises some i smart thing you've said, or when the ; life insurance agent tells you what a fine fis/.eek you have and buys you a i drink at the soda foundten. On" such oceashuns jist think of the time when you'll be fertilizin the rose bushes in the cemetery and when the wigglers | will be crawlin through your hide, j and there aint much left of your cof fin but the silver handles; then th j swell-head will vanish and you can settle down to pluggin away at work, : and eatin and drinkin and bein merry ! with Sally Jane, and laffln over the 1 back fence with your nabers, or crakin i jokes with the ice man. Pluggin away regular so you aint | got time for gettin snobbish is the way ! Abe Linken got to be one of the big | gest Americans. Doin of his dooty i was the big item of pleasure in his life and lie kep on doin so without carln what people said about him. i Quit Sneezing! A little Kondon's Catarrhal Jelly placed in i the nostrils will bring relief. Your druggist i guarantees it. Money back if it fails. A 25c I or 50c tube of KONDON'S Original and Genuine CATARRHAL JELLY Don't delay. Use it at once. Its cooling, soothing, healing effects are wonderful. Best thing you can use for chronic nasal catarrh, colds in head, sneezing dry catarrh, sore nose, nose bleed, etc. 16.000.000 tubes have been sold. Write lis for generous free sample. 35,000 druggists sell this splendid remedy. Avoid dangerous substitutes. KONDON MFG. CO., Minneapolis, Minn. AMUSEMENTS Photoplay To-day Broadway-Star Fenture Under Neath the Pain: 3 Aet* Featuring: HEI.EX GARDNER Our Regular Friday Railroad Serial THE LITTLE ENGINEER SATURDAY "HIS NEW JOB"- Acta. Chan, t haplln In the lead. It*. In.- menae. V / \ Free Moving Pictures every evening 7 to 11 P. M., Palace Confectionery, j 225 Market street. LENTEN REOUUITIONS! Hi RULES MIfINCEO Local Churches Preparing Their Religious Programs; Starts Next Wednesday I The regulations of I..ent for the , present year, which j begins next We«l-] nesday and ends Sunday. April 4, - *1 . have been announc- J (All ed. Special ser-| . * W vices prepar . .» atory to Easter, will be held in, ML™- many churches i starting Wednes-t The rules will be, ft A J read in the church- j Ify 1 es by the pastors and rectors on Sunday. The Reform- I ed, Lutheran and Protestant Episcopal j Churches will have special devotional ■ services. 1-enten regulations for the Roman Catholic Church are as follows. 1. All the faithful who have com pleted their twenty-first year are bound to observe the fast of Lent, un less dispensed for legitimate reasons. . 2. The persons exempted from fast- | ing are: The infirm, those under twenty-one years of age, women in pregnancy or nursing infants, those who are engaged In laborious occupa tions, and those who are enfeebled by old age. 3. Only one full meal a day is al- I lowed for those who are bound to fast, (except on Sundays. ' 4. On the days on which permission is granted to eat meat, both meat and fish are not to be used at the same meal by any one. 5. A collation or partial meal is al lowed In the evening. This should never exceed eight ounces. By virtue of an Indult of the Holy See," dated August 3. 1887. the follow ing special dispensations are granted: «. Bread, butter, cheese, fruit of all kinds, salads, vegetables, lish, milk j and eggs are permitted at the colla tion. 7. It is lawful to drink in the morn ing some warm liquid, such as tea. coffee or chocolate, and to partake of a small portion of bread, not exceed ing two ounces. 8. The use of lard instead of butter is allowed in preparing fish, vegetables, etc. 9. The use of flesh meat is permit ted at any time on Sundays, and once a day on Mondays, Tuesdays. Thurs days and Saturdays, with the exception of Ember Saturday and Holy Satur day. 10. On the above named days when meat is allowed, its use is not in structed to one meal in the cases of persons exempt from fasting by age or laborious occupation. 11. When the principal meat can not be conveniently taken at midday, it is permitted to change the order, taking the collation then and the din ner in the evening. 12. By virtue of powers granted by! the Holy See, workingmen and their families are permitted the use of tlesh meat once a day on all the fast days and abstinence days throughout the year, with the exception of all Fridays, Ash Wednesday, the Wednes | day and Saturday of Holy Week and the eve of Christmas. Those who j avail themselves of this dispensation I are not allowed to eat fish and flesh at the same meal, and they are exhort ed to perform some voluntary act of mortification. Agoga Bible Class Elects Officers and Committees Dona Griffen was elected president of the Agoga Bible class of Market Street Baptist Sunday school, at the | monthly meeting in the church last I night. H. D. Jones, superintendent of j I the Sundav school, was a guest of the i class. Refreshments were served. The complete list of officers follows: Dana Griffen, president; Harold Mc- Namee .vice-president: Irvin Ripper, treasurer: George Bender, recording | secretarv; John Peters, corresponding I secretary; Jesse White, reporter; Fred I Kinney, Earl Bricker and Earl Stone jslfer, membership committee; Victor Neft. Ralph Henry and Norman Ward, social committee: Donald Dallman, ! Willis Allander and Fred Henry, visit - ! ing committee. PHOTOPLAY Chas. Cliajmn, the backbone of the former Keystone comedies, is now ap pearing In Essanay Features. His first picture, "His New Job." will be shown at this theater to-morrow. Alice Joyce, most beautiful photoplay artist, will appear in the sensational two reeler, "The Swindler." We ask our patrons to try and get a glimpse of little "Charlie." the mimic of the real Chas. Chaplin, in front of the theater all day Saturday.—Advertisement. XI,\V INDUSTRY AT DAUPHIN Special to The Telegraph Dauphin, Pa., Feb. 12.—A new in dustry has been started here by Wil liam Strieker and McClellan Douglas. This industry is the manufacturing of | wheelbarrows and is being carried on j in the rear of Strieker's grocery store. I USING SOAP SPOILS THE HAIR Soap should be used very spar ingly, if at all, if-you want to keep your hair looking its best. Most soaps and prepared shampoos con tain too much alkali. This dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and ruins !t. The best thing for steady use is just ordinary mulsitied cocoanut oil (which is pure and greaseless), is cheaper and better than soap or anything else you can use. One or two teaspoonfuls will I cleanse the hair and scalp thor ! oughly. Simply moisten the hair I with water and rub it in. It makes , an abundance of rich, creamy 1 lather, which rinses out easily, re moving every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and excessive oil. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves the scalp soft, and the hair fine and silky, bright, lustrous, fluffy and easy to manage. You can get mulsifled cocoanut oil at any pharmacy, and a few ounces will supply every member of the family for months. JSxKtma^i Overflow News of Bowman's Big Bargain Sale (Sale Ends February 17th) Choose From a Large Variety U nusua l or Dress Cottons at Ol r> • 1 sc. Yard e Bar § ains Women's Button and Lace Shoes at 98^ Here are wanted fabrics, and everyone is a pr. regularly $2.50 to $3.50 in black and splendid value. At 15es Women's Mender Gloves 32-inch Crepe Plisse, beautiful rosebud pat- rr\ l sr\ terns. Value 25c. SUp onn nMp Main FIoor—BOWMAN'S. S S CAIIVJ J - BD D Q " 1 ,1 clasp gloves, pique and overseamcd. All sizes. . D. D. opecials 111 tnc $3.00 to $3.50 white 16-button length French r t 1 1 I T * Gloves, sl.pr. Underwear and Hosiery < Sections R R R On Women's Underwear, — regularly 25c ■*-' ' •* * ICCS UIIKS —vests and pants; medium and heavy weight; K ___ __ bleached; peeler color. \X/aV I )n\A7T» Women's Underwear, 25t regularly 50c * ** J 11 —vests, pants and union suits; white and peel- . .... , , , er color Sllk Crepe de Chine, <»9<- yd. regularly Children's Underwear, — regularly 36 inches wide; in Copenhagen, navy, 25c vests and pants; medium and heavy sand and wistaria. we j, T | lt Black Satin Messahne, yd.—regularly Women's Hose, - 89c yard-wide, ly IZViC —double heels and toes; plain black armeu ® e » I'egnlar and colors ~ 40 ,nches w,de - Children's Hose 140 pr. - regularly 19c- Cheney Bros. Shower-proof Foulards, .190 fine ribbed cotton; double knees; black only. " . L es ' f et figures. Infants' Hose, VM pr., 4 prs., 250 - rcg- , Satm . Messahne, 590 yd - regularly 75c ularlv 10c and 12tfc—fine ribbed cotton; black P»n stripes; in navy, black, Copenhagen, and colors. brown and tau P e " Main FIoor—BOWMAN'S. Main FIoor—BOWMAN'S. MUSICAL TRAVESTY PARTICULARLY TIMELY "Prince of Harrisburg" Is Brilliant Burlesque of "Famous Opera"; Red Cross Benefit Many Lutherans of the city attended the concert given by twenty-two boys of the Muhlenburg College Glee club in Technical High school under the auspices of the General Council of Lutheran churches for the benefit of the Red Cross Society. The chief number on the program and one that drew rounds of applause was "The Prince of Harrisburg," a musical travesty on a "famous opera by Gilbert and Sullivan" in which all the club members took paj-t to the ac companiment of "our sympathy or chestra." It was uproarious and in touching a note of local Interest, it stood as proof of the ingenious talent of the glee club. The travesty was prepared by E. E. Frederick the pianist, and the caste was as follows: King Hogo, a foghorn basso, the royal head of "The Place," Roderick; Sigfraud, a sawmill tenor. Lord High j Executioner, Marks; Hucklewortz, minstrel who plays a doghaus, later the prince, Laury; Felix Grunter, an uncanny and snoopercillous baritone, Reisner, Olivia Prunes, a peroxide con tralto, with schlltz in her skirt. Miller; Broomweilder, called Bum-Bum, a beefy soprano, Elizabeth, a peach, a mastiful contralto, Pauline, a peril and a hofbrau, three little maidens from Siwash college, brilliant but worthless, Brubaker, Day, Erlckson; Street sweepers, court attendants, ballet girls, etc., The Club. Here It Is Hucklewortz, the Prince, disguised as a minstrel, goes in search of Bum- Bum. a pretty little girl from Siwash collegefl At once, you see a love af fair Is on. But, he finds that she is engaged to Slngfraud, the Lord High Executioner. Slngraud is celebrating his coming to the vital olfice of Lord High Eexecutioner, when Bum-Bum meets Hucklewortz. and at once the two become soft towards each other. When this gala affair is at Its height, Felix brings a letter from the King, i demanding that Slngfraud cut some body's head off within the next thirty days. At the same time, he finds Hucklewortz in the act of hanging himself because of his disappointment nl love. Hucklewortz consents to have his head cut off after a month If he [may iuarry Bum-Buir.. Slngfraud DYSPEPSIA GONE! I INDIGESTION. GIS. SOURNESS-PIPE'S DfEPSIN Time it! In five minutes your sick, upset stomach feels fine When your meals don't fit comfort ably or what you eat lies like a lump of lead in your stomach, or If you have heartburn, that is a sign of indiges tion. Get from your pharmacist a fifty cent case of Pape's Dlapepsln and take a dose Just as soon as you can. There will be no sour risings, no belching of undigested food mixed with acid, no stomach gas or heartburn, fullness or heavy feeling in the stomach, nausea. agrees. Here's where Olivia Prunes comes in. She is a handsome (?) woman, much in love with Singfraud, but the latter is just a bit reluctant about accepting her as a wife. While all is merry, the King comes in and Singfraud tells him he has killed Hucklewortz, which you and I, of course, know is not true. The King is horrified, knowing that Hucklewortz was the Crown Prinrefi and to even things up, makes Singfraud marry Olivia Prunes. Then Hucklewortz and Bum-Bum come back from the Per- J All fruit syrups used in our : ; candies are made by our own • • experts from fresh, ripe fruit. • • Our Sales Agents In Harrisburs are # J. H. Boher F. J. Althouse Cunningham's . • Huyler's Cocoa, like Huyler's Candy, is supreme . debilitating headaches, dizziness or iu testinal griping. This will all go, and, besides, there will be no sour food let! over In the stomach to poison your breath with nauseous odors. Pape's Diapepsln is a certain cura for out-of-order stomachs, because it takes hold of your food and digests it just the same as if your stomach wasn't there. Relief In five minutes from all stom ach misery Is waiting for you at any drug store. These large fifty-cent cases contain enough "Pape's Diapepsin" to keep the entire family free from stomach disor ders and Indigestion for many months. It belongs in your home.—Advertise ment. former of Matrimony, and all ends happily. , The leader of the club is "*. G*' D, Marks and its members are: First tenor, W. A. Freihofer, G. D. Marks, G. G. Brubaker, C. A. Erlkson, J. T, trammel; second tenors, W. H. Laury, C. F. Miller, E. J. Brong, T. B. Keck. H. E. Zinzer, first bass, W. L. Reisner, H. W. Smeltzer, A. D. Roderick, R. E, Schoenly, J. L. Kline, H. D. Elvidge; second bass. E. W. Moyer, R. C. Wal ters, I). F. Day, J. S. Kleckner, E. It, Moyer. 5