MOTHERS--YOUR CHILDREN'S HAIR NEEDS CARE Seeds of Baldness Come Often From Neglect in Youth The hair of some children is natur ally backward in healthy development. Grooving up so fast, mental and bodily i development of these boys and girls makes tremendous demands upon their vital forces. And oftentimes,' when there is not enough of that vKal force to supply all needs, it is the hair which suffers. Dry, dull, brittle, lifeless looking hair and dandruff is the result and l Mother is distressed because of its lack of beauty. Parisian Sage is the ideal hair and scalp treatment for growing children as many mothers can teßtify. This delicate and wholesome scalp vitalize!' is entirely harmless and Its nourishing ingredients supply just the elements of nutrition that properly invigorate the hair and scalp, dissolve dandruff and promote healthy normal hair growth. Many mothers have become personal users of Parisian Sage because of the good it has done their children. Cer tainly a preparation that is tender and ■wholesome enough to Invigorate baby's scalp is a preparation well suited for mother, too. Parisian Sage is sold by 11. C. Kennedy and many other good • iruggists, and the cost is trifling.— Advertisement. AMUSEMENTS RsaaTi 'I o-dft v .terme 1.. Lanky preneutn LAURA HOI'K CREW S In a plcturl /at ion of her tfnmoii* Broadwaj *ur ceMv, "BLA( KIIIRDS," Paramount. Paramount \fu* Picture*. I'o-morrtMV and Thursday JfMc I*. Lanky presents t LKO ItIDGLKt and WALLACE RKID In "TUB CHORUS LADW Paramount. Friday and Saturday (iEH \ LDI\E IVHHMt in TARMEX." AdmlMNlon: Adult*. 10«*; Children, Se. V / • VWVd-AW.".%V.VbW.VrtVW% 0 :• £4,000,000 Lecture J •I Russell H. Conwell s \ :■ "Acres of Diamonds" j *« The most popular lecture in !• the world. 1 ,« Has been delivered more than ? •' fifty-three hundred times. ? ■| Total earnings of this one lec- { % ture in fifty-four years, $4,000,- S % 000.00. ' S '• Total earnings of one lecturer J J nearly nine million dollars. ? The five-thousandth delivery ? >J netted nine thousand dollars. ? Has helped to educate two % S thousand young men. % J It is a lecture of Uplift and 5 Inspiration. 5 ? It has pointed the Road of > % Success to many thousands of ? S men and women. i \ Its lesson is fundamental— J J" Every boy and girl, man and 5 ? woman should hear it. J { To be delivered ;• December 18th at the i 1 Technical High School $ J, under the auspices of \ j TheHarrisburg Academy J % Tickets for sale by the Academy d % Pupils and at the Academy S > Office < ? aiul J. H. Troup Music House } Try Telegraph Want Ads ORPHEUM MORROW S THUS. % DEC. IS Seats now Everything New in This Burlesque Ruth "Beauty, Youth o w\ . and Folly " ilflMl £* 40—PEOPLE—40 fiJ L I/cIIIS * Beautiful Chorus PRICES— Assisted by Mat., 25c, 35c, 50c. Night, 15c to 75c. TED SHAWN America's Foremost Character FRIDAY ONLY DEC. 17 Dancer . , „ ro> i Seats To-morrow And a Company of Solo WINTHROP AMES Dancers Presents Beautiful Grecian Dancing Girls and A Pair of Native Hindoo Assistants Presenting Oriental, Charac- SIIK StOCKiR^S ter, Classic and Modern f Dances. A. 3-Act Comedy by Cyril Harcourt TCIKS— Which ran for a Year at the 1 Little Theater, New York. Lower Floor, $2.00, $1.50, • EXCEPTIONAL CAST SI.OO. PRICES— Balcony, SI.OO, 75c, 50c; Gal., Orchestra, $1.50, SI.OO. 25c. Bal., sl, 75c, 50c; Gal., 25c. The Talk of the Town TO-DAY ONLY The Talk of the Town Metro Pictures IT TTT"R T "RA"RPVMOPT? Metro Pictures Every Mraday and Tuesday ■" X ITI \J X\. JE/ £ very (V| o nd a y and Tuesday Americas Most Popular Actress TO-MORROW AND THURSDAY —■■■ ROBERT MANTELL in The Unfaithful Wife Tl\l M N TTVI A T TTTTII—IUTA great artist in a great play produced by a Ne„ Jo WHUH 1 EDWIN ARDEN in The Gray Mask FIVE-ACT POWERFUL DRAMA BY GEORGE SCARBOROUGH played "Nobody" in "Everywoman." 5) f Production METRO FEATURE A v - , T , Viv tUI ACL JL ilvd LCI Through an arrangement with the Stanley onipany Theater will show a Metro Magtcrplay XC tvIjLCl JL llvCi t/V X TUESDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TFLEGRAPH DECEMBER 14, 1915. Cotton Spinning For Month Breaks Records Ry Associated Press Washington, Dec. 14.—Activity in cotton spinning throughout the coun try was greater during November than in any month for some time. The monthly report of the census bureau issued to-day showed 31,497.- 433 cotton spindles were active during November, a greater number than at any time for several years. There were a million more spindles in oper ation than during November last year, and almost 100,000 more bales of cot ton were used than during November a year ago, the quantity in 1915 be ing 514,535 bales. Juniata College Closed by Mysterious Ailment Hy Associated Press Huntingdon, Pa., Dec. 14. A mys terious disease having incapacitated about forty of the students at Juniata College here, this institution will be closed to-morrow until after the holi days. The ailment is pronounced by the college physician as grippe, although delirium is said to be an accompany ing feature in some of the cases. Sev eral city students are also affected by the disease. MADGE 13. LOST AT H. 13. FOUND AT 9.13 Police badge No. 13, the property of Jolin Hess, patrolman, was lost about 5.13 o'clock last night. This morning it was found by Joseph Demma, police chauffeur. The hands of the clock pointed to 9.13. The badge had fallen from the officer's coat and lodged in a crevice on the run ningboard of the ambulance. AMUSEMENTS Colonial 1 Triangle Features \VM. S. HART E£3J in tf-H "THE DISCIPI.E" POO A picture with a ETy moral HAMILTON CHj in "HEK PAINTED hero" prq Two reel Keystone D"Q comedy nrn Special music on or- fifin gan aiul by the Co- mj lonial orchestra at all hours U HIGH HERBERT A CO., preoentlnK "THE SONS OF ABRAHAM" Four other Keith act* Thursday—Frldnv—Saturday "THE BETTING HETTIES" A muHleat comedy girl act Mat.! 2.15, lOe, 1 Tic ; eve., 7.50 to 10.30, lOe, 15c, 85c Saturday Evening shon Start* at <1 BARD COMPANY LEASES FACTORY To Begin Manufacture of Pneu matic Player Actions at Ninth and Hemlock Within a few weeks, it. was an nounced this morning by Charles E. Bard, president of Charles E. Bard & Co., the concern recently chartered with a capital of SIOO,OOO, the com pany will begin the manufacture of pneumatic player actions. The company will lease the building at Ninth and Hemlock streets, now occupied by J. H. Sheesley, feed man. The building will be remodeled throughout and an elevator and steam heating plant will be installed. Mr. Bard has contracted for ten Westtnghouse motors from the Harris burg Light and Power Company and has arranged with this company to run the power lines to the Bard fac torj*. Each machine will be equipped with an individual motor. The equip ment includes two saw tables, two single spindle boring machines, a planer, a jointer, a sander and a swing saw. purchased from the American Woodworking Machinery Company, of Rochester, N. Y„ and a multiple spindle boring machine and two special boring machines purchased frotr M. E. Andrews & Co.. Cincinnati, Ohio. The machinery represents an outlay of about $3,000. It is uII crated and will be shipped in time to .'each here January 1. The products of the Hard company will consist of single-', alve player ac tion and double-vah e player actions for the use of pKno manufacturers and also an adsptahle action which converts any ordinary piano into a modern playei piano. Ofliccrs of Company : The officers and directors of the company are as follows: Charles E. i Bard, president; Samuel S. Fackler, | vice-president: Albert Alley:, treasurer; 1 Thomas A. Thorley, secretary; Joseph IW. Pomraining, director. The legal matters of the company will be looked I after by Charles C. Stroh, attorney. [Charles E. Bard will be general roan | ager and Albert Alleg, superintendent. Mrs. Charles E. Bard will have charge of the pneumatic and assembling de partments. The foremen of the mill room. bellows and hardware depart ments have been engaged and C. E. Russell. Jr. .of Yoakum. Texas, will I arrive here in a few days to take i charge of the stockroom and shipping j departments. The factory payroll will be about SSOO per week. Dr. Theo. Kharas, efficiency engri- I neer. is assisting in the organization j of the company and the Industrial Se curities Company is financing the en terprise. Several nearby towns have offered ] inducements to secure the location of j the Bard factory, but Mr, Bard re -1 mained in Harrisburg, believing that 1 its unexcelled shipping facilities and . the high class of skilled labor to be I obtained here were worth much to his j company. Mr. Bard is well and favorably | known in the musical industries. 1-Ie i has been in the player action busi- I ness for years. Several orders for player actions ' have already been received, announce ' the company officials. FIRE IN RUBBISH Fire last night at the home of J. R. j Carl, 2138 North Third street, caused damage amounting to $lO. The blaze ! started among some rubbish in the cel lar. The Reily Chemical Company j was called. TO NAME OFFICERS ! At the regular meeting to-night of I the West End Republican Club officers I will be nominated. The annual elec i tion will take place Tuesday night, | December 28. MEAT CAUSE HE LAME BACK AND K DNEY TROUBLE 1 Take a glass of Salts to flush Kid neys if your back is • s. aching. ( Noted authority says Uric Acid from meat irritates the Bladder. Meat forms uric acid, which excites an<l overworks the kidneys in their efforts to filter it from the system. Regular eaters ot meat must flush the I kidneys occasionally. You must relieve them like you relieve your bowels, re moving all the acids, waste and poison, else you feel a dull misery in the kid ney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stom ach sours, tonguo is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheu matic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment the channels often pet irritated, obliging you to get up two or three times during the night, i To neutralize these irritating acids and flush off the body's urinous waste get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy; take a table spoonful in a. glass of water before 1 reakfast for a few days and your kid neys will then act fine and bladder dis orders disappear. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys and stop bladder irritation. Jad Salts is inexpensive; harmless and makes a delightful effervescent llthia-water drink which millions of men and women take now and then, thus avoid ing serious kidney and bladder dis eases.—Adv. DICK JOHNSON SOLD MOST SEALS Youngster in Camp Curtin Building Disposed of 3,539; Records Broken ( \ H \ X DICK JOHNSON Dickinson Johnson, fifth grade Camp Curtin building, is the banner Red Cross Christmas seal salesman for 1915. Dickinson, a pupil in Miss Ruth Wells' room sold $35.39 worth of the Tuletide "stickers" just 3539 seals. .Miss Christine Sheets, a pupil in Miss Meloy's room. Forney building has the next best record. She sold 3100 or s3l worth. Previous Red Cross Christmas seal sales records were knocked sky high during the single week in which the schools participated. The final re turns were made to the teachers on Saturday and the completed report was made to D. D. Hammelbaugh, secretary of the school board, and chairman of subcommittee on school distribution yesterday. The school children throughout the city sold just 116,090 Red Cross seals. That means more than a thousand dollars, $1,160.90. The very best that the schools could do last year was 64.920, just 51,170 less than the sates of 1915. The Cameron building led the various school buildings, this year, in total sales, while the school taught by Miss Blanche Meloy In the Forney building was the banner school. Just 8,000 seals were sold there. Miss Ruth Wells' school in the Camp Cur tin building sold 5,250 and Miss Maude Kennedy's room recorded a total of 5,167. The film picture stories of the fight i 'against the "white plague" are to be exhibited during the latter part of | the week in the Colonial, and Regent I moving picture theaters while a girl and music act at the Majestic will be the medium used to dispose of hun dreds of seals. Pretty booths pre sided over by Red Cross "nurses" will be opened at the Regent and Colonial [while the pretty girls ot' one of the I acts at the Majestic will sell seals during the performances in that play- I house. NO ELOPEMENTT DECLARES WIFE [Continued l'rom First Page.] her here. I'm from the Telegraph and I'm to see her." "Oh! then you're a reporter," in alarm. "Why I'm sure she won't see you." "Then you know of the story which I'm to ask your mother about?" "Yes," she faltered. "Oh! he left for his health last evening. But he's com ing back—in a month," she added : hastily. "And Miss Hazzard?" "Oh! she's been gone for some time. 1 But, indeed, he's gone alone. She isn't with him. Why, why, he hasn't sold a thing. All this is still to be run un der his name." and she indicated with a sweep of her arm the cigar and newsstand. I "And he's coming back. Indeed, he is—in a month," she again added. ! "Well, could you tell me where he's [gone?" "Oh! why—why, indeed I—Oh! I can't talk any more." she concluded. Mrs. Wolfe was besieged to-day with culls relative to the alleged departure of her husband to join his former manicurist in some western town. She would say little for publication except i to deny the rumors connected with her husband's name. "It is true." said Mrs. Wolfe, "that my husband has left the city for a while. His health has been bad. He is a sufferer from throat trouble, and is seeking a better climate. It is false that he went to join his former mani curist." "Where did Mr. Wolfe go?" was asked. "Why, he left for Pittsburgh and promised to send me his address later when he finally settles down for some length of time. He may travel for a while before settling. I intend to cor- 1 respond with him while he is away." I "Is it true that Mr. Wolfe has sold j the Commonwealth barber shop?" "Yes." said Mrs. Wolfe; "he needed i some ready cash to make his trip and I he sold the shop to Mr. fJensler. Charles W. Williams is looking after the Pennsylvania Railroad Station shop during my husband s absence." Mrs. Wolfe made it especially clear that there had been no quarrel. "He kissed us all good-by," said she. "and said that if he liked any place better than Harrisburg, he would send for me and the children. There are lots land lots of rumors that aren't true, ! and it would be very unkind of you to print them against my wishes." Mr. Wolfe told the men In the bar ber shop that he would be back in a few days and nothing has led them to believe anything to the contrary. Reserve Your I Christmas Victrola or j Edison—Quick ] i IF you have planned to give a Victrola or Edison j * Disc this Christmas loose no time in placing j Every day now the demand increases. ' Unless all calculations fail we expect to be able 1 to supply any style in any finish up to the eleventh fff|f Ifgff/T|jf !KB 1 But-to avoid possible disappointment we are look- lit j SllfW ing orders in rotation—so we urge you to reserve mj| |m||| B |M||jpi j] Just come in and tell us the exact style and finish jf j you prefer, settlement may be made as best suits J you—cash, charge account, or by Victrola Xl—sloo j Our Christmas Club Terms \ No Interest No Extras Delivery When Ordered j " j Victrola IV, $15.00 Victrola X, $75.00 12 selections of music, your 12 selections of music, your •. choice 4.50 choice, 4.50 < /: J Pay $5 cash, $3 monthly, $19.50 Pay $5 cash, $5 monthly $79.50 1 Victrola VI $25.00 Victrola XI, SIOO.OO 1 12 selections of music, your 16 selections of music, your J choice, 4.50 choice 6.00 \ Pay $5 cash, $3 monthly, $29.50 Pay $6 cash, $6 monthly $106.00 jj Victrola VIII, $40.00 Victrola XIV, $150.00 -j 12 selections of music, your 20 selections of music, your * choice 4.50 choice, 7.50 J Pay $5 cash, $4 monthly, $44.50 Pay $8 cash, $8 monthly, $157.50 j J Victrola IX $50.00 Victrola XVI, $200.00 : 1 12 selections of music, your 24 selections of music, your i choice 4.50 choice, 9.00 i Pay $5 cash, $4 monthly $54.50 Pay $lO cash, $lO monthly,. .$209.00 \ Edison Discs SBO to s4so~lnterest Charged on Deferred Payments J. H. Troup Music House Troup Building 15 S. Market Square ; Workmen's Compensation To-day Is the Livest Topic Any Employer Can Consider Every employer must have compensation insurance or some kind on January Ist, next And the best insurance can only be had from a reliable company—one with a sufficient reserve to properly take care of any demand which might be made upon it. Such a company is THE TRAVELERS Assets over $100,000,000 Surplus over $13,000,000 Special Reserve for catastrophe hazard $1,000,000 There are many questions not thoroughly understood about the new Penn sylvania law. We will be glad to give expert advice concerning any feature of this law. Phone or write F. R. LEIB & SON AGENTS 18 North Third Street 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers