Hot Weather " Punch! n You can't get it from ice cold drinks, frozen foods or stimulants of any sort. Get mental vim and physical vigor that enable you to put "punch" into your work in the hot days by eating SHREDDED WHEAT It is the perfect hot weather food because it supplies all the body-building, material in the whole wheat grain with thejeast tax upon the di gestive organs. We do the cook* ing for you in our two-million dollar bake oven. Deliciously wholesome with berries, sliced peaches, sliced bananas or other fruits. More strengthing and more easily digested than meat or eggs and costs much less. Get the Punch. #THE GREAT Allentown Fair September 21, 22, 23, 24 The One Big Event of the Year 4 DAYS' TROTTING, RACING AND RUNNING $35,000 in Purses and Premiums EXTRAORDINARY SPECIAL ATTRACTION Match Race For $5,000 —Winner Take All! ,i f DIRECTUM I, 1.58 vs. PETER STEVENS, 2.02 Driven by Thomas W. Murphy Driven by G. Rav Snedeker (Formerly Driver of Directum I) Wednesday, September 22 In case of rain, race will be held Friday, September 2 4 New $20,000 cooling-out shed. New Grandstand. Seats over 10,000. Best vaudeville and circus acts. A sight worth seeing and one vou and the little folks should see. Largest Poultry and Pigeon Display In the World TRANSIT SERVICE UNSURPASSED All Roads Ecad to Allentown—Accommoda- No Fair can offer better travel accommo- /WWjfe \ dations to Its patrons than this Gigantic Ex- I \ hibltion. Special trains and reduced rates on I all railroads —The Reading, Lehigh Valley, \y? OTW Jersey Central and Perkiomen R. R. The Le- IT Mf ,s / high Valley Transit Co. will run limited trains \% wjgzL/ nJvtSf / direct to the grounds from Sixty-ninth Street 7 ' / and Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia. H. B. SCHALL, Secretary. SO^-V^ Every Ton Sun-Glo Coal is good dependable fuel. SUN-GLO COAL will warm your house as you want it warmed. SUN-GLO COAL will cook your meals to your wife's entire satisfaction. " SUN-GLO COAL gives the maximum amount of heat with the minimum amount of trouble. SUN-GLO COAL is high in Carbon and low in Ash. SUN-GLO COAL comes in all sizes and grades, Hard, Medium and Soft. United Ice & Coal Co. Foreter 4 Cowden Th)rd 4 Boai Hummel 4 Mulberry 15th & Chestnut » Also Steelton, Pa. f lANPASTFR ! L 1 A| |» September 28, 29, 30 * ■****»' aß) j October 1 Near Long Park TWO MILES WEST OF LANCASTER REDUCED FARE EXCURSION TICKETS Will be sold September 28 to October 1, inclusive, good on date of issue only, from Harrisburg, Littleßtown, New Freedom, Peach Bottom Paoli and all intermediate stations, except those from which the reguUr excursion fare is less than 50 cents. " Special Train, Thursday, September 80 will leave Lancaster S.OO P.M. for East Downlngtown and all station* on New Holland Branch. Frequent Special Trnlna between Lancaster and Fair Gronnda PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD ? Try Telegraph Want Ads Try Telegraph Want Ads MONDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH SEPTEMBER 20, 1915 ROTARY CLUB MOPTS FINE NEW PLATFORM Joins With Others All Over World to Raise Standard of Its Service The Rotary Club of Harrisburg has adopted the new Rotary platform of the International Rotary Clubs. It was read as follows for the first time at this week's meeting by President Arthur D. Bacon and is as follows: "Recognizing the commercial basis of modern life as a necessary incident in human evolution, the Rotary Club is organized to express that proper relation between private interests and the fusion of private interests which constitutus society. "To accomplish this purpose more effectively the principle of limited and representative membership has been adopted, the Rotary Club consisting of one representative from each dis tinct line of business or profession. Each member is benefited by contact with representative men engaged in different occupations and is enabled thereby to meet more intelligently tho responsibilities of civic and business life. "The basis of club membership in- I sures the representation of all inter ests and the domination of none in the consideration of public questions "elating to business. On account of Us limited and representative mem bership the Rotary Club does not con stitute Itself the voice of the entire community on questions of general im portance. but its action on such ques tions Is of great influence In advancing the eiric and business welfare of the community. "The Rotary Club demands fair dealings, honest methods and high standards in business. No obligation, actual or Implied, to influence busi ness exists In Rotary. Election to membership therein is an expression of confidence of the club in the mem ber elected and of its good will toward him. As his business is an expression of himself, he is expected actively to represent it. "Membership in the Rotary Club Is a privilege and an opportunity and its responsibility demands honest and efficient service and thoughtfulness for one's fellows. "Service is the basis of all business. "He profits most who serves best." BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it 25c at all druggists. 'riiimi'iiiiim Non-greasy Toilet Cream neeps the Skin Soft and Velvety. Prevents I tan, relieves sunburn. Aa Exquisite Toilet Preparation. 25c, GORGAS DRUG STORES < r d and P. R. H. Station / ■ THE Office Training School Kaufman Hl<lc., 4 S. Market Sq. NOW IN SESSION Day School and Slight School Call or send for 32-page booklet-- Bell phone 694-R. «■ AMUSEMENT To-day and To-morrow, JOHN BARRYMORE In nn Irresistible lllin version of the famous melodramatic comedy, "The Dictator" By nichnrd Harding Davis. Wednesday and Thursday ELSIE JANIS —lN— "Betty In Search of a Thrill." Written by Herself. AMUSEMENT AMUSEMENT P| IMPROVEMENT WEEK ~|n □j Harrisburg Is the Imp'oved City g q Majestic Is the Improved Theater Ijj And you will have no trouble finding the Sljj Q| improvements if you see this week's show j-^ E] The Six Serenaders □ [1 - g gj King and King Ward and Howell 0 jljj Lavine Cimeron Trio Exclusive Film Feature ® [JJ Franker-Wood and Wyde-Bunee ™ S ~ ra " Hi □ Good q fiS l) OPEN WBn - * THURS. V « V\ n- 00 A - The R °y al »«<«•«■ VSNfirxwoX \ D4.ILY ' f,,e s '* Part PHOTOPLAYS supreme Photo-dramn TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW "™ E hate." of THE MASTER LAUGH CREATOR —*■— RAYMOND HITCHCOCK ftm* Epi.ode or In I.nbln'n Four-Part Rlotoun Farce Comedy thr ' Great Serial | The Ring Tailed Rhinoceros j " NKA S, ; A vf..- ™ E A Humor Medley A Carnival of Fun. The World'* I" Two Reels, Funniest Funny Han In the Screen's Funnleat Funny Featurln* r "* y ' LUllaa Lorraine. TRAVELETTE By NIKSAH ST. MARY St. Mary, Maryland, is the Ply-1 mouth Rock of the Soutn. There | came George Calvert and his two sons, Cecelius and Leonard, in 1632, ; and planted this, the first settlement j in Maryland. For two oenturles the j community waxed rich and populous | and then the ebb came. I St. Mary is lost to Uie modern 1 world. When George Calvert settled theer it was in the very front door of ! America. One had but to sail In at j the wide mouth of ChesaycaKe Bay | and turn to the left up the ttrst, stream. This was the Patuxent River, • the natural habitat of the best oysters | in the world. Those were days when commerce went forward by water, and gentlefolk were satisfied to ride blooded horses. But with the growth of the railroad, | water traffic died and horseback rid-1 ing became confined to the outlands. j St. Mary has never heard the whistle of a train. It is but occasionally that an anltquated river steamboat pushes I up to its old wharves. The roads are not inviting to the automobiilst. This one time metropolis of the South, this busy mart of the pre-revolutlon ary times, has found itself in an eddy of the centuries and gone to sleep. St. Mary, the town, and St. Mary, the county, are typified by an old estate i that stands a little further down the Patuxent. It is known as Sotterley, and the house was built in those early, gala days of Maryland by an inden tured man from a London prison who was an architectural genius. Here is to be found Interior woodwork of ma hogany and walnut, great easy stair ways that invite the feet, h!g«-celllng ed rooms of ballroom proportions, j gable roofs, dormer windowo. Deep throated chimneys Invite the back-log. The moss of ages has accumulated on the roofs. Only the glory of the past remains. Yet here dwelt the early governors of Maryland. These people, though Catholics, invited the Puritans to come from New England into their land of plenty and share it. From this settle ment went Father White to convert the Emperor of Piscataway, who was a mifrhty Indian chief living where the city of Washington now stands. Old St. Mary fought for a century with Annapolis before yielding !t the capi tal. and for a like period wttn Balti more before granting that city tlie palm of being the metropolis. Yet in the strange metamorphosis of time once proud St. Mary has found itself stranded beside a sluggish la goon and forgotten, while infant Chi cago and Pittsburgh are flaunting the world with their achievements. Bankruptcy Will End War, Ford's Prophecy Special to The Telegraph Detroit, Mich., Sept. 20.—"1f I were io live with the future generations of Europe I would urge the people to repudiate the debts that are being piled up by their governments In this war. J believe It Is the duty of the I people to repudiate them. What right have the governments of Europe to impose on future generations the un bearable burden they are amassing through this war?" Such and similar sentiments were expressed to-day by Henry Ford, the automobile manufacturer, In an inter view regarding means for overcoming the forces of armament. Mr. Ford would welcome bankruptcy for the belligerent nations to put an end to the "whole miserable business" and prophesies the building of a new type cf submarine which he terms a "fish boat" to wipe the navies of the world off the seas, making wars impossible in the future. "The best thing that could happen would be for the nations of Europe to go bankrupt: then they would be com pelled to stop fighting," said Mr. Ford. To Demonstrate Edison's New Submarine Batteries The new battery developed by Thomas A. Edison for submarine use, deliveries of which are already being made to the United States Govern ment will be shown to the public for the first time at the forthcoming Elec trical Expos'tion, October 6. The army and navy departments of the United States Government will show the uses of electricity in modern war fare. ' An accident in the radio research laboratories of John Hays Hammond, Jr., at Gloucester, Mass., has de stroyed his selenium cells and there fore made impossible the first public exhibition of his wonderful Invention, the stramoscope. Mr. Hammond's in vention, which promises to revolution ize modern warfare, depends for its operation on selenium cells. These cells come from Europe and it Is quite improbable that any more can be ob tained until after the war. J2xxtman2 CALU 1901—ANY PHONE FOUNDED 1871 Knowing the Merits of Electric" Hous Is to every homekeeper a necessity in domestic economy. They are recognized as the most practical and serviceable dresses on the market to-day. For kitchen, street or impromptu parlor entertainment, they are equally appropriate. Dainty in style, well made and fit perfectly. We are Harrisburg representatives of "Electric" House Dresses and our showing is now complete with a wide range of styles, sizes and patterns; for in stance: High and low neck styles in striped, checked and figured ginghams and percales; sizes 36 to 56; priced at SI.OO, $1.25, $1.50 and $1.75. New Taffeta and Messaline Petticoats A goodly variety of dark shades including changeable effects: flounced bottoms; wanted lengths, $1.98, $2.50, $2.98, $3.98. BOWMAN'S—Third Floor. Coats' Cotton & Notions Save On Special Interest to Dressmakers . / Coats' Cotton 2OO-yd. spools dozen, -L'OITICStICS special 440 Reg. Sale To-morroW' Silk Featherbone—doz. yds... 85c 770 Girdle Foundation, yard 10c 7 Drapery Cretonnes, <0 yd. regularly Hooks with invisible eyes cut rom pieces; good weight and —gross 20c Y&M Pattens- Dressmakers' Pins Yi-lb. . Unbleached Muslin, 70 yd. regularly box 19c and 21c 12J/20 10c —36 inches wide; good heavy quality; Dress Shields double remnant lengths. covered and silk. I2 l /jc and 15c 90 Outing Flannel, .">0 yd. regularly 8c Garment Dress Shields 27 inches wide; light patterns. adjustable ...... 24c 20e rillow Tubing,'lßo yd. - regularly 25c Pearl Buttons. 3 cards 30c ~JoO —Pequot; 45 inches wide Bias Seam Tape 3 pieces .. 30c 33J Unbleached Sheeting, 220 yd. - re~u- Basting Cotton dozen ooc .580 , , , n •.■ ' ... ~ Collar Supporters and lady 30c -bl ,nches wide; will bleach Foundations 10c, 2 for I,>o ' Inside Dress Beltings— \]/ 2 o, 1 Sheets ; ~ regularly 9oc & 2/ 2 - in., per 10 yds., 50c to 90c 400 inches = S 00(1 weight. Machine and Sewing Needles 4 papers 100 Pillow Cases, 12y<$ regularly 15c Roll Tape—24-yd. piece 10c 70 42x36 or 45x36 inches. Wide silk seam binding— Shaker Flannel, 90 yd. regularly 12'/<c black and white 15c 110 —36 inches wide; cut from full pieces. BOWMAN'S—Main Floor. BOWMAN'S —Fourth Floor. %AMUSE|^MENTsfIjf MUNICIPAL WEEK AT MAJESTIC Municipal Week celebratlonns really have their start at the Majestic, ac cording to the clever offerings that are slated to appear there for both the first and last halves of the week. The fun started this afternoon by a rollicking, pleasing company of girls and youths called "The Serenaders." Wood and Wyde, th« very clever couple, who won so much favor at the Orpheum two sea sons ago, are slated as the chief Keith : hit supporting "The Serenaders. Miss i Wvde is altogether charming and she J and her partner olter one of the bright est and "nicest" flirtation skits with j songs, that local vaudeville devotees | have seen. Ward and Howell, known as the "Tantalizing Tenors," will bring ■ some tine harmony and good songs with them on this bill: while King and King will exhibit something new in equiii bristic stunts and The Lavine Cimeron Trio will offer their eccentric: comedy' called "Imagination." The last half of the week will find Max Comedy Circus, vaudeville's best comedy animal act, in the big position. And next week we are to enjoy a return engagement of Will Oakland and company. Mr. Oakland it will be recalled Is the splendid tenor, whose voice is so popular on the phono graph. Adv. COLONIAL,—'TO-DAY Rnymoud Hitchcock In ,4 Tlie Ring Tail ed Rhlnoceron" The last of the great Broadway stars to take a liver into the "movies" is Ray mond Hitchcock, who couldn't resist the tempting offer of the Uubin Cora fiany to appear In the leading fun-mak ng role In the four-part carnival of fun. "The Ring Tailed Rhinoceros" in which Hitchcock wil be seen at the Colonial to-day and to-morrow. "The Ring Tailed Rhinoceros" is about the most laughable concoction of mirth and frolic ever screened and the adventures of John Carter (Raymond Hitch cock) furnishes many a side-splitting lau«h in his search for the Ring Tallec. Rhinoceros, which he set out to kill and returning with it as proof of his ad venture?. In this character and adven ture. Hitchcock is seen in many amus in situations and laughter rises at its highest point when he is captured by a band of Pirates and pyt to work on the pirate ship. Wednesday and Thursday the feature will be William Fox's six-part produc tion. "The Song of Hate" in which the distinguished royal actress. Betty Nan sen, is featured here.—Advertisement. TRAIN STRIKES AUTO Special to The Ttlegraph Gettysburg, Pa., Sept. 20. When the automobile of Abner S. Mills, a Gettysburg merchant, was struck by the 9.05 train arriving from Harris burg on Friday evening, the occupants were fortunate in escaping serious in jury, as the automobile is a complete wreck. Mrs. William Codori, Jr., daughter of Mr. MHIs, was severely cut and bruised and when picked up after being thrown ten feet from the ma chine upon tta* tracks, was in an un rnnsrtnm condition. M. E. CONFERENCE OPENS Gettysburg, Pa., Sept. 20.—Every thing points to a successful conven tion of the ministers of the Harris burg District of the Methodist Episco pal church, which opens this after noon in the Methodist church, the first session commencing at 2 o'clock. It is expected that at least 4"> ministers will be in attendance. IJTTIiESTOWN WATER POLLUTED Gettysburg, Pa., Sept. 20.—As the result of an investigation made by State authorities, Charles H. Myers, secretary of the town council of Llt- His-s-s-s-s-s-s-s-s-s-s-s-s!!!. A But read the six points first— carefully. 1 —Crowded with flavor 2-Velrety body-NO GRIT flf 3—Crumble-proof gTI C 7 Sterling purity M ratffM Cf (/> s—From a daylight factory \Jv|»||s ] * 6—Untouched by hands f f * i » © to^» w , PEPPERMINT-IN RED WRAPPER CINNAMON - IN BLUE WRAPPER Suitable rewards for the discovery of the 7th point will be offered later. tlestown, has been notified by State Commissioner of Healtl>, Samuel G Dixon, that the water used by the town is polluted by bacteria of sewage origin. U. S. ARTILLERY AT GETTYSBURG Gettysburg, Pa., Sept. 20.—Battery E, Third Htattalion, Third United States field artillery, arrived here and pitched camjp Saturday morning, at the Railroad woods, northwest of town. The battery will remain at Gettysburg flor the dedication of the monument to* General A. S. Webb, Oc tober 18. 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers