Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, March 26, 1915, Page 7, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    t
Victrolas-- 11 SI I
Entertainment l|||B|i| f
Whenever You Wish
Temperament the characteristic W
found in so many artists, is never ™ j
found in the artist's representative yl
—the Victrola. .
The artist's work is there —in any record you place on
the Victrola. Temperament doesn't enter into it—the
artists will sing. And encore if you so desire.
Your entertainment may be for minutes or hours —
you are the one to decide. With a Victrola in your
home, the entertainment is solved for all time. Con
sult us for Victrolas on easy terms. Hear any records
you wish in our Victor rooms.
Victrolas, S1 •"».()() to
Rothert's
312 MARKET ST.
CONVEYS f.HKim\GS <,7< Runyan
CONFEItKNCK TO UOVKRNOR , p"eac hed Lt Sunduy.
The Rev. Robert W. Riinyan. who !
was returned for another year as pas- ■ Don t overlook the many opportunl
tor of St. Paul's Methodist Church, I ties that arp offered for effecting sav
tarried greetings to Governor Martini in *-' s 118 we " as niaking money in the
Brumbaugh and official endorse- classified ads. To-night there are op
tuent of his attitude and activities i n port unities in real estate, chickens,
the effort to obtain local option, from ! nlltoß - positions, household goods and
the Shamokin conference and also >"any other lines. Turn to the class!-
| lied page NOW.
I Nature undoubtedly intended Florida as the world's greatest 1
I source of supply for oranges and grapefruit. Grown here they I
f§ reach the greatest perfection. The soil of the citrus fruit sec tion I
H of Florida produces orange and grapefruit treo» of unusual vigor. I
Sfl Florida showers and sunshine supply just the elements needed to 1
H rij>en into rich, spicy, juicy and sweet oranges and grapefruit the I
HJ product of these fine trees. They gather sweetness as they ripen. I
■ Florida's Soil and Climate Give to Her I
I Oranges and Grapefruit Surpassing Quality I
I Realizing that the producers' prosperity The Exrhanpe ia'risU that its members I
I depends_ finally upon the consumers' send to market only tree-ripened fruit. I
S satisfaction, progressive orange and handled by white-gloved workers. No I
■ (frapefruit growers of Plorida have matter what grade of fruit you buy, I
I formed the Florida Citrus Exchange, a you will get your money's worth if the I
| co-operative, non-profit-making associ- red mark of the Florida Citrus Ex- I
I ation for mutual protection aial benefit. change is on boxes and wrappers.
AMt'SKMKXTS AMI'SF.MI'.NTS
j Palace Theater
333 Market Street
fIOMC OF THE I.NIVEHSAL PROGRAM
FRIDAY, MARCH 26th
"THE AVENGING DENTIST," featuring Billie Ritchie
In 2 Reels.
Yon *tIII fttirdy wnut In Mnrfln Hrown and lUn/lka Dolly In
D.WCE Mcmiujt All tlic in iluiiclnt;,
ANo a one-reel Hex, "SI I II IS 1,11 I!."
"TIIE HI XAWAY lIiOSET/' Sterling.
CI on ins the fthow vxlih the fnniouM \nlmated Weekly, shoulnff all the
latent hupiM-nlnu* of the iln.v.
Admission All Seats, 5 Cents
The nilnilftxloii priee :it (lie I'Hlaee villi be 5 cent* except Saturday |
DiKlitn nml liolldayM, 10 (rum,
REGENTTHEATER
THi:V C'AXT STOP
TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW
TILLIE S PUNCTURED ROMANCE
AT THE HECiENT THE A TEH. THIS (.HEAT COMEDY HIT OF FILM- i
DOM IN SIX HEELS AIM'EAHS AT THE BRA I TI Fi"l< THEATER TO-DAY
AM) TO-MOHHOW WD THE t'Ol HT SAYS IT'S O. K.
Mnrle Drc*»ler. fburlCM t'liaplln and Mnhol Normand, the three icreat
comedy ntarn In movie*. \ Iniißh. A otcrcstm.
ADMISSION—Sc AND 10c
IN A CLASS BY ITSELF
The New $25,009 Pipe Organ Orchestra
Termed the pipe* organ with the human voice.
"A WOMAN OF IMPULSE"
la our apeeinl feature for to-day nitd is an exceptionally utronc offer
ing lu four part*.
VICTORIA
8 Royal Dragoons 6 Musical Gormans
Claire Rochester A Wonderful Instrumental
I Five Other Excellent Keith Musical Act
Hits. And 3 Other Features
Do You Believe in War? ~
c as well as
See
Henrietta Crossman Moving Pictures
Next Week in Matinee, 5c and 10c. Evening
"Thou Shalt Not Kill." 10c and 15c.
FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH MARCH 26, 1915.
HE WET IS !
PRESENTED TO POST
i
i
Patriotic Review in Courthouse
Attended by Hundreds
of Veterans
The Maine Memorial Tablet, made
iof metal recovered from the battle
| ship M-.ine sunk In Havana harbor
■February 15, 1898, was formally pre-j
| scnted by the United States Govern-1
I ment to Captain Howard L<. Calder j
[Post. Xo. 31, Veterans of Foreign Wars '
jof the United States, at the ilrst an-1
nual entertainment and patriotic edu- i
Icational review in the Courthouse last 1
I niKht.
Senator E. E. Beidleman acted in
behalf of the government anil made
the presentation speech in the ab- j
sence of Congressman A. S. Krelder, j
who was unable to attend.
The audience of several hundred in-1
eluded members of Grand Army posts, |
Sons of Veterans and Spanish War i
Veterans. Members of Post 58, G. A.!
11., marched in uniform to the Court
house. The tablet was unveiled by
Miss Charlotte M. Heist, as Buglers
Braun, Smith and Uoblnson sounded
"to the colors." It will be placed at :
the post's headquarters at present, but {
later may be kept in some public i
place.
E. 1.. Wagner gave a lecture on!
Cuba, Porto Rico and the Philippines. |
with stereoptioon views. Miss Kuth A. j
Woolcott sang a solo and the Ruther- 1
ford Y. M. C. A. Glee Club and this j
audience sang. Mrs. Charles Lawrence '
was accompanist. Lieutenant Frank j
A. Awl spoke on "Veteran Orders," anil
Miss Moeslein recited. The Rev. J. C.
Fornerook made the invocation.
SORROW'S SHADOW
Some days, when I am drest in shim
mer-stuff.
With yellow roses at my breast and
hair;
When just the air and sunlight seem
enough
To make the whole world delicately
rai e;
When people love me, and I them, and t
all
My heart is like a hill-brook's lilting
call:
Then, if I pass Her. in her dim black |
dress.
With heavy eyelids darkened by old
tears.
I feel a sudden clutch of loneliness:
1 stare down vistas of unsparkling
years.
. I And there behold myself, clad close in <
! black.
With tired brows, thin hands, and j
aching back
i Oh. Sorrow's Shadow! let me be awhile! I
I Wreck not my happy yellow roses; '
set
!No watch upon my sudden cry and
smile.
j Why should I not forget—ah, half- j
forget!—
i That Sorrow's Self will meet me some
strange day.
I And take my hand, nor let me dance
away.
I —Fannie Stearns Davis, in Harper's;
! Magazine.
HER ADVANTAGE
| A mermaid sat on a high sea rock,
! And combed her golden hair.
I For the rocks are mermaids' own bou
doirs.
I As everyone's aware.
She combed It with a pearly comb.
I And loud and clear sang she.
j "It mays he hot where mortals are,
, But 'tis cool enough for me."
She tossed her golden tresses back
! Down in a gleaming shower.
Then dived among the waters clear
Into her coral bower.
And as she sat on masses soft
(if sea moss, caroled she.
"I rare not where the mercury climbs,
'Tis cool enough tor me."
I So warm waves came where soon she
swam,
| All cool waves were her lot,
Their -Measant laps of luxury
Marked every resting spot,
And as she reveled in those waves,
Far from heat's misery.
She sang, "Is't hot enough for you?
'Tis cool enough for me."
■—Baltimore American.
BAD BREATH
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets Get
at the Cause and Remove It.
Dr Edwards' Olive Tablets, the sub
stitute for calomel, act gently on the
bowels and positively do the work.
people afflicted with bad breath tlnd
ciulclt relief through Dr. Edwards' Olive
Tablets. The pleasant, sugar-coated
tablets are taken for bad breath by all
who know theui.
Dr Edwards' Olive Tablets act gent-
I lv but tlrmly on the bowels and liver,
stimulating them to natural action.
! clearing the blood and gently purifying
the entire system.
They do that which dangerous calo
mel does without any of the bad after
effects.
All the benefits of nasty, sickening,
irrining cathartics are derived from Dr.
I F.lwards' Olive Tablets without grip
ing. P~ln or disagreeable effects of any
j ki "ir F. M. Edwards discovered the
i formula after seventeen years of prac
tice among patients afflicted with
bowel and liver complaint with the at
tendant bad breath.
Dr Edwards Olive Tablets are pure
lv a vegetable compound mixed with
o'Hve oil. you will know them by their
olive color.
Take one or two every night for a
week and note the effect. ICo and 25c
per box. All druggists.
The Olive Tablet Company. Colum
bus. O.
AMUSEMENTS
= N
Free Moving Pictures
every evening 7 to 11 P.
M., Palace Confectionery,
225 Market street.
PHOTOPLAY TO-DAY'
BROADWAY-STAR PRODUCTION
The Radium Thieves
In « reels, featuring riIAItI.KS
i KENT—LEO DELANEV nnd LEAH
j BAIRD.
To-morrow I* CHAPLIN DAY
I CHARLBS CHAPLIN, thnt Funny
Gay, featured In "A NIGHT IN THE
| PARK."
Ilroßil"nj-Stnr Feature at
Photoplay To-day.
i
MAJ BSTI g*
TO-NIGHT AT 8.15
Charles Frohman prcienti
MAUDE
ADAMS
lu J. M. Ilnrrle'* Comedy
QUALITY STREET
SHU* to (in!. Koncrvrd. 75c
:: Many Hearts Have We
Made Happy With Our
FREE SOUVENBRS
and Our Prafit-Sharing
L SUIT andTyFWSJ CASH and CREDIT PLAN far EASTER
| i ——
HA nnii ,re . rurß „„ . Mlal Our Former Patrons and New
I\PBICES NEVER 88 LOW fea Qnes Are clamoring for These
I W CASH & i beautiful Ladies' Suits, Coats and
I If You Have ll a ' B Saturday Night.
MAN OF THE '
Open Nights Till 8 You^oteest. O
LAST CALL (Wff£^< M ' n ' S S " HS &
5 DRESSES SATURDAY ONLY.
YOUR CHOICE. I Choice at .... $9.90 VOU
FARMERS SAY DEER
DAMAGE ORCRARDS
Want Legislation Put Through
That Will "Protect Them
From the Critters"
The Legislature is hearing from the
forested section of tho State where the
Statu has placed deer and is protecting
them. Farmers and fruit growers who
have cultivated the cleared spaces in
the valleys and have planted orchards
on the mountainsides are complaining
of the ravages of the deer on their
crops. Heavy lines are stipulated for
those who kill the deer out of season,
and those in the State's preserves are
rigidly protected.
Since Spring has come and the fruit
trees are beginning to bud deer are
said to be coming out of the forest
preserves and eating tender shoots off
the fruit trees. They commit ravages
in the wheatfield and among other
crops in the lower lands, and the
farmers and fruit growers do not dare
to shoot the marauders. The game
bill, introduced by Representative J. E.
Phillips, of Clearfield county, has a
provision that deer which invade and
destroy a farmer's crops may be shot.
Representative Charles Walter, of
Chambersburg, has received several
appeals from constituents In the wood
ed sections of Franklin county. One
man up near Mont Alto writes him,
"if you want to prove yourself a pub
lic benefactor and earn undying fame
as a legislator put some legislation
through which will allow us to shoot
these pesky critters. If they keep it
up much longer. I won't have any
c rops at all in my mountain orchards.
\Ve daren't shoot them for fear of
the law, and they just dote on tender
fruit tree shoots."
Another man has written him that
the deer have Invaded his fields and
are eating up his early crops.
British Say U-29 Has
Been Sunk; Captain Killed
London, March 2G.—The British ad
miralty announced last evening that it
is believed the German submarine
U-2S, which recently In twenty-four
hours sank four British and one
French steamship in the English
Channel and damaged three other ves
sels. had been sunk with all hands.
The U-29 displaced 800 tons and was
one of the largest and fastest of the
German undersea boats. She made
her record raid oft' the Scilly Islands
and in the Channel.
If the admiralty's information Is
correct, the British are rid of the most
destructive of all the German under
sea raiders which have been preying
on their shipping. Also a gallant offi
cer, looked upon as Germany's most
daring submarine navigator and an
opponent praised by his enemies, has
been killed.
According to\a letter from the cap
tjiin of the steamship Headlands, one
of the ships sunk by the U-29, that
submarine was commanded by Captain
Otto Weddigen, who won fame and
the iron cross on the U-9 earlier in the
war by sinking the British cruisers
Hogue, Aboukir, Cressy and Hawke.
Do ocoming events cast their
shadows before?
Yes! Emphatically, yes!
To the man or woman who has the
push and go—the determination to
succeed, a hint alone brings as much
as repeated entreaties would to the
less determined.
And you have the push and go!
So here is the hint.
In Telegraph classified ads from
day to day appear offers and appeals
which ought to lead you to bigger,
better ways. Turn to the classified
page NOW —Read them and profit.
Mexicans Insult U. S.
Flag Following Murder
Washington, March 26.—Secretary
Bryan remarked to-day that when Za
patistas attached and killed John B.
McManus, an American citizen, at his
home in Mexico City the invaders tore
down and partially destroyed an
American flag flying over the Mc-
Manus house. The Secretary stated.
Ladies' Newest Millinery Boots Unusually clever
Military lace boots of patent coltskin and gun metal,
with gray, brown or black cloth tops, made on stagy
short vamps or the long slender effects.
Specially Priced at $1.98 V"
Factory-Outlet Easter Fsotwear \
of Charm and Character / /
Never were so many varied and distinctive Spring styles !
shown anywhere, nor at such Economy Prices as one will / //i ll
find here now. j||j^
Ladies' Colonial *1 f Baby Doll Pumps') / 11 f'llj; ill
Pu MI |is, patent colt ladies Cravenette for growing fflrls. Mil I ill\
vamps, with black Button Boots, tips or Broad roomy toes, 1111 111 I i '111! Itt\
Kid or I*awn < loth plain toes* priced as shapes with flat wide ]/ J 111 l I /111 F,\
quarters made in * . ' heels. Patent colt I I'l I\ln\
new smart lasts; s|>e- usual an ,j „„„ metal; spe- I I 111 IHW
daily priced at cially pi-iced at I I 111 I fimiU
$1.98 si.9B $1,98
Little boys' gun metal calf button and blucher QQ ' |l/u
Shoes, specially priced at t/OC J, jj |||jj /Ijj jily^
Ladies' Fine Viol Ladies' jII ■ lljiljj/lj 111 I \
Kid Juliets, with or Comfort Shoes for Ladies' Fine Viel II I SI! A.
without tips, rubber tender feet, fine vici Klll K | lo ~, I I fl/ I ' I %.
heels: specially kid in lace or button. Dress Shoes. jMII Ml I 11 /ffl a
priced at ™ , i!sun, h ° o,S; pr,COtl »»" value, at I 111 f,|
, 98c J 1 Si 98 J , 98c J
VERY SPECIAL Ladies' $4.00 Patent Colt Button j 1I |\ \\!
Boots; hand-turned soles; black cloth tops; plain toes;
celluloid covered heels; principally narrow tfj 1 AQ J
widths. Specially priced at «j) JL *%/0 \fX
f f *\ f \
Men's Tan Russia Calf Men's Gun Metal Blucher Men's Black and Tan
Button and Blucher Shoes. Shoes; good value at $2.00. 0 *oi - -v *■*
$3.00 value. (fclQO Specially <M/IQ ® C ° U * ,$ 1 .98
at <P± i/O priced at .... M> 1 .Hbi/ Priced as usual,^
v t v i 1
FACTORY-OUTLET SHOE COMPANY
Walter L. Stern, Mgr. 16 N. 4th St.
that the flag incident was set forth in
the original report ofthenuirder by the
« Brazilian Minister, who is in charge of
United States interests in Mexico City.
The Secretary said that a request for
■ reparation for the indignity to the
. flag was sent at the time, but he did
; not reveal what form it had taken,
i He denied, however, that there had
i been any request for a salute of the
flag.
Secretary Bryan said that while re-
i gret had been expressed for the killing
i of McManus, ho did not recall that
' any regret had been expressed for tlio
. Hag incident.
A messenger reached Mexico City
> to-day from General Tomas Urbina, of
1 the Villista forces, saying that ex
| President Gutierrez and several of his
! former cabinet members bad been kill
ed in a light at Palmas Gordas, State
■ of San Luis Potosi.
7