The Farmlyn Company OFFERS FOR SjiLE On Saturday, March 27th ALL UNSOLD LOTS AT Tarmlyn" Harrisburg's (Located on the Jonestown State Road, Along the Linglestown Trolley Line, Near the Colonial Country Club) OUR T $5 Down $1 Per Week Takes Possession Pays the Balance DISCOUNT FOR CASH Over Half Sold to the Best Class of People—None Sold to Undesirables rnrr PKD Leaves Market Square Every Hour 1 iVLL V/ AiV On the Hour Saturday Afternoon First Car at 1 O'clock—Stops Any Place Along Route. THE FARMLYN COMPANY, Incorporated Local Office 610 Kunkel Building MAJESTIC Friday evening Maude Adams in "Quality Street." Wednesday. March 21, matinee and evening—"Within the Law." " ORPHEIM Every afternoon and evening High- , class Vaudeville. IOI.OMAL Every afternoon and evening Vau deville and Pictures. MOTIOX PICTURES Palace. 10 a. m. to 11 p. m. Photoplay, io a. m. to 11 p m. Regent. 1! noon to 11 p. m. Royal. < p. m. to 11 p. m. Victoria, 10 a. m. to 11 p. m. MAIDE ADAMS Maude Adams made no mistake in se- , lecting "Quality Street" for her bill vhen she appears here at the Majestic on Friday evening. To many people ! t » comedy will be new. but those who j are looking forward to its presenta- i tHer m Medicine jf Chest I ns *ant Relief For:— <*i F—t ttmnt*. * SOT MBSCIM Cold Limbs TaathadM Stiff Neck Wietmtif Infection Stiff Mats Or—ie Mwarotera InHimnutiM MM MNMLR Khmmriun COUTH Strata Sciatica Sore Ttreat SLOANS LINIMENT KILLS PAIN (GUARANTEED) DR. EARL S. SLOAN. Inc.. Philadelphia. Pa. St. Lout*. Mo. Price. 25c.. 50c. and >I.OO WEDNESDAY EVENING, ' tion with the most interest are the ones who saw the plav when it was given by Miss Adams several years ago. They remember it most distinctly, and , for them Phoebe Throssell has ahva-s I lived. To them she will always be the Puritanical little Quakeress with the merrv gleam in her eye that time will forget and leave unmarked in its flight. In the record of Miss Adams' achievements on the stage her por trayal of Phoebe Throssell in "Quality Street" will always have a prominent place, for it is one play and one role j that has admittedly been aIV her own. . -io other actress daring to follow her lin it. The sale of seats for Miss Adams* appearance here opened this morning, i —Advertisement. "WITHIX THE LAW "Within the Law." which is to be presented at the Majestic next Wednes j day. matinee and night, has proven ' more than an American success, as it it is equally popular in England and I Australia. One has to see the play to l know the effect it has on the masses who understand the injustice of some •>f the department stores and the graft i ing interference of some of the police. } Every scene of the play has been veri i fied iu court—often the similarity has ' been remarkable. Only recently the heroine who works "Within the LAW" . was matched by the "Wolf of Wall Street." Removed from the coinci -1 dence to EnglandVyand Australia the play stands upon its merits as one of the strongest melodramas ever writ ten.—Advertisement. ORPHEIM One of the interesting artists on this week s bill at the Orpneum is Miss Claire Rochester, a Southern miss, -os sessor of a most phenomenal voice. This is Miss Rochester's first appear ance in Harrisburg, but judging: from her receptions at each performance it will not be her last. Her voice might be described as a double, being bari tone and soprano, and she divulges from one to the other with apparent ease and marked ability in each. A very extraordinary number of Miss Ro chester's repertoire is the quartet from "Rigoietto." in which she sings all the parts herself. Not once has the audi ence permitted her to retire withofit singing an encore. This request is usu ally responded to by Miss Rochester with "1 «ast Night Was the Kn.i of the World.' in baritone. Another rare treat for music lovers or. this week's bill is the engagement of Ralph Dunbar's "Eight Royal Dragoons." an exquisite vocal and instrumental production. Advertisement. COI,OVIAI. "The Sorority Girls," the bang-up musical comedy at the Colonia will play its last engagements to-dav and this evening. And to-night in connec tion with it and the clever supporting bill of Keith acts, we will enjoy the weekly laughfest. Country Store. Some fine gifts will be distributed and some new comedy "stunts" will be injected. The Six Musical Gormans, presenting a high-class vocal and instrumental act. and Gordon and Marx, the popular Ger man comedians, will be two of the bright lights of the Colonial's show during the last half of the week.—Ad vertisement. "THE BARGAIN" AT THE HEGEKT "The Bargain." a Paramount Feature featuring the popular actor, William S Hart, will be shown Wednesday and Thursday at the Regent. It contains a typical Western story, full of fast thrilling action, some of which is most sensational. One scene in particular warrants special mention. William 8 Hart, who plays the leading part, and his horse, which most certainly must be a wonderful animal, roll over and over down a steep embank ent. Mr Hart plays the part of "Bill Stokes the two gun man. and constantly- ov. hlblts his ability as an actor, and alto hfrnitW A*, tl" e ? c , e " ent account of himself. As the picture was taken in Grand Canyon of Arizona, scene* obtained are not all familiar, which gl\es the picture an air of decided freshness—Advertisement. "encieu CHARLES CHAPLIX AT PHOTOPI. W The man you like to see Charles Chaplin, cornea to the Photopliv to-dax in a two-reel Kssanav comedy "The Champion." returned at the request of hundreds who have seen this picture and who want to see it again Don't miss it this time, for it's a knockoui all around. Along with tills two-reel comedy we present "In the Dragon's Claws, a two-reel J.ubin feature, and our regular Wednesday program. Com ing Monday, March 29. everybody's favorites. Anita Stewart and Karl Wil liams. in a Broad way-star three-reel production. '"From Headquarters " A real treat to the public.—AdvertUement. VARRISBURG tisf&Z TELEGRAPH COMPENSATION URGED IN REPORT TO STATE Commission Says It Would Tend to Lessen Dependency Throughout Penna. A strong pie* for the enactment of a workmen's compensation act as a means toward lessening dependency In Pennsylvania Is made in the con cluding portion of the report of the State Dependents' commission just made public. This report, which is the result of two years of expert study by some of the most qualified men In Pennsylvania deals with every phase of the vast subject and the conclusion is earnestly in favor of prompt pas sage by the legislature of a rational compensation system. The commission's conclusions which follow a discussion of the unemploy ment situation a.-e as follows: "The present Industrial depression, causing so great an increase of at least partial and temporary dependency, calls for the immediate relief of all deserving people thrown out of regu lar employment. The most obvious remedy for unemployment is the prosecution of all kinds of Federal. State and Municipal public works for which there is a general need or u general demand. There is much of this kind of work to be done and it would help the present situation if it were started at once. This question must ultimately be met. by each com munity. which will eventually recoup Its outlay In greater convenience, and those other advantages which follow in the wake of all public improve ments. The method of meeting the present depression by initiative schemes of public works will bo found to be more satisfactory and less ex pensive than any system of merely charitable work. Those out of work are asking for work, not charity, and where public works are a necessity, their postponement or abandonment is a costly piece of civic blundering. The Federal, State and Municipal gov ernments should cause inquiry to be made into the trustworthiness of every unemployed applicant for work, and where satisfied, should make an ap propriation to provide his employment on some necessary public works. This has been successfully done in the city of Heading, and the commission com mends the study of this simple meas ure of procedure to the attention of the officials of the Federal and State Governments and of the municipal executives In all the large industrial centers of the Commonwealth. Conditions Demand It "In Pennsylvania the maximum percentage of the community is en gaged in manual labor, a very large part of it in factories where power driven machinery is in use. Statistics of wages lost and of poverty resulting from industrial accidents cannot be compiled without the expenditure of very large sums of money for a con siderable number of years throughout the State, ami even then the results of such an investigation would probably be wholly unsatisfactory. In single corpniunities, however, such facts are available as hint at the importance of this factor as a cause of pauperism and dependency in the State. In Al legheny county alone one family out of every six hundred in the community Is deprived of its chief wage earner each year by death as a result of a work accident. The statistics of those companies which keep the most care ful records of such matters show that for every one who is killed, fifty are injured, the degree of injury varying from practically no disability at all up to the total permanent disability of the wage earner. In many cases the prudence and foresight of the worker are such that the temporary loss of earning power does not mean dependency upon public or private charity: but in a very large propor tion of these cases the injured man. after a few weeks of enforced idle ness, becomes a charge upon the community either directly through its public agencies or Indirectly through the generosity or charity of the citi zens of the State. It has been esti mated by various officers having to do with the relief of poverty at several different localities in the State of Ohio, that the adoption of the plan for workmen's compensation in the State has alone brought about a reduction of about 25 per cent, of the number of paupers dependent upon the charity of that State, its municipalities and its people. While from the nature of | the case such estimates cannot, of i course, be mathematically precise, this statement has not been successfully challenged. Good Economy "If it be suggested that the system ' of workmen's compensation is but the establishment of a charitable system ,| WITH ||F* IF SPLK WITH I FISK FISK SERVICE I * MITLIW SERVICE A New Fisk Branch FOR THE CONVENIENCE of Dealers and Car Owners we have opened a Local Fisk Branch where we shall carry a Complete Stock of Fisk Tires to fit all rims—Plain tread Non-skid and the handsome new tire— The Fisk Red Top Our Service Policy And Facilities Are Incomparable Only second to the Quality of our product is our effort to see that your satisfaction is complete in each individ- /Wa J ual transaction. Our Service is FREE TO EVERY TIRE USER. Hf THE FISK RUBBER COMPANY .... OF N. Y. 19 South Third Street Harrisburg, Pa. Hupmobile CAP OF|THE AMERICAN FAWIUV Ask the Garage Man The garage is a motor car clinic. I I kinds of cars with all kinds of symptoms and« V J diseases come there to be cured. Ask the surgeon in overalls about the Hupmobile.' He will tell you that many of them come for gas and oil. "But mighty few," he will add, "for repairs." "I have no reason to 'boost' Hupmobiles," he will say with a grin.- "They don't particularly help my business." After that admission, listen to what he has to say. He knows cars. He will tell you that the Hupmobile is a wonder. He will confirm what you already have come to believe—that the Hupmobile stands up under conditions that would kill a car less sturdy. He will tell you that the Hupmobile motor is a wonder—a glutton for hard work. The garage man is the friend of the Hupmobile in spite of the fact that it does not swell his income. He is its friend because he loves a good car —and he can't help saying so. He is always a Hupmobile booster. Let us add to his testimony with a Hupmobile demonstration. ENSMINGER MOTOR CO. Distributors Q- Salesroom Third and Cumberland Streets T Bell Phone 931J conducted at the expense of the em ployer, tlie answer is that in all of the other civilized nations of the world the system has prevailed for many years, and everywhere, so far as we can learn it has resulted auto matically in the cost of compensation being passed along in the price of the product to the community as a whole, where it seems to us the burden prop erly belongs. The purchaser of any article has always paid the cost of keeping up the machinery which went to produce it. There is no reason, either in theory or in practice, why the same principle should not apply to the workman who is injured in the course of his employment. Twenty three States in this country have al ready adopted the system of work men's compensation. It is inevitable in the other States. It has become impossible to explain to the satisfac tion of the workmen who are left (unprotected, why such a' system can not be adopted in these few remaining conservative States, as it has been adopted through the balance of the civilized world. Pennsylvania has been in the forefront of those States which have guarded the safety of i their workmen through factory and MARCH 24. 1915. mine inspection laws. She cannot now afford to las behind in this supple mentary movement which is of equal importance to the men and women who furnish her strength and her wealth. "We have found a pronounced change of sentiment among the em ployers of the State on this subject, and we believe the sentiment now in favor of a Compensation Act Is very strong, not only among the employed, j but among the employers as well. We | have found a growing sentiment j among all classes in favor of such | legislation. ' "TI 1,1,1 E*S I'lMTl HUU ROMANCE" AT THE VICTORIA TODAY Of all the laugh provoking films that I have ever been produced "Tillie's Punc tured Romance." a Keystone comedy In I six parts, is by all odds the best. Marie j Dressier, of musical comedy fame, was l specially engaged to play the leading [one of the role, while America's fun- I niest motion picture star, Charles Chap | lin, plays a part which only he himself ! could do justice to. From start to finish this rip-roaring feature has the i audience in a continual uproar it's ! one laugh l ight after another and every j person who saw "Tillie's Punctured I Romance" will remember It for some [" HAIR CQMING OUT? j Dandruff causes a feverish irritation of the scalp, the hair roots shrink, loosen and then the hair comes out fast. To stop falling: hair at once and rid the scalp of every particle of dan druff, get a 25-cent bottle of Dander ine at any drug store, pour a little in your hand and rub It Into the scalp. After a few applications the hair stops coming out and you can't find any dandruff.—Advertisement. time. To add to its realism, our new J25.U00 Hope-Jones Unit Pipeorgan Or chestra gives each action of this great laugn n>n,;er its proper tone expres sion. You'll forget everything else if you visit the Victoria either today 01 this evening and see this greatest of all silent comedies.—Advertisement. TOWN IN DARKNESS Special to The Telegraph Columbia. Pa.. March 24.—East Pet ersburg. one of the county's big .towns, is in darkness, the contract for elec tric lighting having expired a few days ago. 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers