6 COMPARE \Wonder | CLOTHES ALWAYS > With Clothes Costing sls to ' slß—Then Draw Your 1 Cwn Conclusions ' This much we know I I never before have Wonder fM •' J®fU I suits and topcoats repre- ■l| I sented such remarkable j I ' values as they do today. ' i Km\ V^\t i The cost of woolens, |-t| ulj \ linings and other materials j|| \\\ '{ is higher than at any time r| y\ 1 during our years of clothes- n ■ nmrn building. So we are actually sacrificing profits to give you Wonder clothes at $lO of the quality to which you are accustomed. We will maintain this high quality even if con tinued pressure of war prices forces us to raise our price. Wonder clothes, sold direct with the middleman's profit of $5 to $8 saved to you, are still guaranteed on a money-back basis. Wonder Store 211 Market Street Store Open Saturdays Till 10 P. M. i iw AMERICAN VNITY It Is not enough even to have a navy Y a ,e'Review.) Apr "|and military programme, coast de- And here lies the first of our lessons fenses - an army, ships and aeroplanes. r>t the war. That we shall have men Such a program means the establish withou\ Un savinl- f 7h,T' r „ def h n >f m , ent of a new Profession, diplomacy; have sc-ne , h,n r,V, r sha " ev .® n of new careers in the public service, true Mth »,m ." is equally civil and military, which shall attract But that weshall have the spirit men of talent awav from the mprp I.SC of C o . n r te re ? o e uKM lo ii make th ® bert PUrSUit 0f wealth - u means not mere use or oiir rehouices. the courage to ly the education of men to fill such 87l ?« e »n ?h Sreat de " ec < llall >" upon posts, but of the people at large to est l\s\Tof\ m £uZ; I ° r ,he ? reat " '" ee l these ne * responsibilities® and e.t assess ot a nation in a crisis are ; the burdens which thev entail above ers "and followed w»h they arC lead " a "' to vipw lif e -nd public affairs with vond e tn «I\- P" r .P°se b e- new eyes, and to exchange their old Tf «•» 1 1 ° , elr sk,ns - provincial attitude of mind for an in hurdens of a wor to ,al \ e "P the telligent conception of the world in L world power, it is not which they live. It means, in brief enough to have resources such as ours, regeneration and a policy. Drive Catarrh Away By Purifying Your Blood During winter, nature changes tkt blood of man and we, because of our habits, unconscioualy do those things which are against nature. Then far down amid the vital organs creep weaknesses, that our blood is not vig orous enough to fight off. Here is where Catanh enters and quickly makes a conquest. We feel the effects of a cold in nose or throat and sometimes in lungs and stomach. The most common symptoms of the presence of Catarrh is an inflamed and tender condition of the breathing pas sages and the blocking of throat and nostrils with mucous. It is a frequent mistake to treat this symptom and neglect the actual disease. If the blood was pure and vigorous Catarrh would not get a foothold. But < ■ ■ ■■ ■ ■ - ■ ■ ■ T . T | ff t > t I-I-1.11..J NOTICE The Capital City Building and Savins Association, located at No 202 ~ .North street, which has been operating: very successfully for the last IS 1 i. years will open a new series APRIL 5. 1916. Thi<= association lias grown to such an extent that several years ago ~ it was necessary to increase our capital stock from $500,000.00 to $1 000 - i i, 000.00 in order to meet the great demand for shares. Place your money where It is safe and sound and managed by efficient < officers. , I <, Shares can now be had from any of the following officers: i President, T. B. ROCK A CELLAR, 202 North St. Secretary, C. A. .SCHELU 2203 Walnut St. Assistant Secretary. H. K. BUFFINGTON, 248 North St Treasurer. A. G. KRIEG. 202 North St. Directors: CHAS. Ott. Riverside. 1 P. EDGAR HESS, 228 Market St.. or Camp Hill P. HOFFMAN. 420 Reiiv St P 1 < K. MONROE LEONARD, 1931 N. Fifth St. " ***** * rn nniimnij^ Stock Transfer Ledger The Pennsylvania Stock Transfer Tax Laur <Act of June i I 4, 1818) which is now in efTect requires all corporation* In the State, I no matte? how large they may be to keep a Stock Transfer Ledger! j ' We are prepared to eupply theae Led fern promptly at a very nominal ' price. ! > The Telegraph Printing Co ij Printing—Binding—Designing—Photo Engraving I> HARRISBUBG, PA. i! 1 FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH MARCH 31, 1916 having gotten a foothold in our sys tem, the only possible way to cure the disease is to remove the impurities from the blood and at the same time tone up the blood so it will become vigorous and health, again. The use of washes, sprays, salves, have only a temporary local effect; they do not reach the disease. S. S. S. ; has proved for half a century to be the most powerful antidote to poison iin the blood. Its action is to strengthen the bloocl corpuscle* so they fight off disease. If you suffer from Catarrh in any of its forms, don'l be misled into treating the symptoms ; but take S. S. S. and remove the cause Any druggist can supply you. Oct the genuine. Write our Medical De : partment. Room 21, for advice. Swifi ; Specific Company, Atlanta, Ga. THKATHICA I. DIRECTOKY ! OBPHECM Next Tuesday. April 4, Nell O'Brien and his Minstrels; Fri day night, April 7. Combined Musical Clubs of Pennsylvania State College. MAJESTIC Vaudeville and Moving Pictures. Motion Picture Hoiiaes COIXSNI Alj—"Hell's Hinges." REGENT—"The Painted Soul." VICTORIA—"The Iron Claw." PLAYS AND PLAYERS The -Winter Garden observed its fifth anniversary last evening in New York City. AI Johnson give a number of his old songs for the occasion. Includ ing "Sumurun," "Rum Turn Tiddle" and "\\ lien Grown L'p l_udies Act Like Babies." An article in a recent Puck com ments most philosophically upon the , recent acquisition by one Charles Chap lin of a contract which brings him in some odd $250,000 a year and royalties. And then, in somewhat embellished j terms, the work he does to earn this money Is carefully sketched. All one can discover is a melange of flying custard pies, babies being thrown into ash cans, bakers disappearing into their I own dough, etc. And the article ends with a tribute to American intelligence. Director Wm. Taylor had a too effi- ! dent actor when he "shot" the castle ' Kates in "Davy Crockett." He instruct ed the player, who was especially j adapted for the part, to dash out of the castle with the maiden in his arms and I j to break him way through the men-at arms to liberty. The player appeared in | j his black armor with the girl alright, but Immediately began to slaughter the i J poor supers, even the ones at the edge | I of the scene, and would have trimmed j the whole crowd but for the imperiously | shouted command to stop. When | i brought to task he mumbled something | I that sounded like "1 was just putting a little action into the scene.." j To win fame, money, riches and honor, | I to have fildom as your puppet, to wrest ! j the honors of motion picture land from i al coiners, and then—when all Is done, to get married and live quietly your ! remaining years in a secluded cottage j where you can raise your children in i the way they should go, is that your j idea of happiness? No? Well, that is | exactly the program which pretty, vi various, and young Mae Marsh, whom everybody who has seen "The Birth of a Nation" will remember as Flora Cam eron, has mapped out for herself. | "Audrey," one of Mary Johnston's ! most popular novels, which was played | successfully on the stage several years | ago. will soon be seen on the screens. Pauline Frederick will take the part of I Audrey, and the play will be set at < Palm Beach and Jacksonville. LOCAL THEATERS The Pennsylvania State College Com bined Musical Clubs are the first or- | sanitation from any college for some , years to presenting a meritorious pro- ' ; gram in the Orpheuni Theater. This I j musical group of over sixty college , men come to the theater next Friday | evening with the established reputa- 1 t tion, won by it in open contest, of being ; one of the best, if not the very best, | of its kind in the college world. With new wearing apparel of gorge ous textures and hues, striking in their "combinations and stun | -The FnMliion ning in tlieij- designs, I Cllrtt" Are all these, together with | Mill Ith I * $50,000 in jewels, deck out "The Fashion | Girls at the Majestic Theater for the I week-end. The act has taken on a de cided newness from what It was earlier in the week not only In the matter of costuming, but even in staging and theme. The Keith show surrounding I "The Fashion Girls" in all their splen- I dor. is entirely different, too, from the original supporting show. They who I | like to see famous pieces of jewelry, jewels noted for their design, and value in workmanship and gems, will not want to overlook the extraordinary i treat that H. C. Claster Is affording, by permitting the pretty girls to wear 1 them with their gowns. The creations ! in lingerie, gowns, suits and whatnot J •are doing pretty well for Bowman and! 1 Company in backing up their challenge. The interesting supporting Keith hits | include Cunningham and Marion; Hugh! I Herbert and company, offering a clever i comedy, "Prosperity;" Carew and Burns, and Tyson and Barbour. I There are some great moments pack - ' : ed with action and suspense in the new ; Triangle feature, , "n»«l" linn HOIIIM "Hell's Hinges." I oloulul Audiences that will be pre- ] sented at the I Colonial Theater to-day and to-morrow. William S. Hart, whose chief character izations are that of western "bad" men, is starred in this piece. Among the i many striking scenes, two stand out j particularly. One is the fight between the tough and the good elements of the I town, which results in temporary vic tory for the evil forces. They signalize their triumph by burning down the church. But the evil doers had not ; reckoned with Blaze Tracy (William S.I Hart). He kills Silk Miller, the crafty and treacherous saloon and gambling housekeeper, and stands off a whole 1 room full of desperate men while he I shoots the wires In two by which the I | lamps are suspended. William Collier, i the famous comedian, starring in "Wife and Auto Trouble," will be the Key stone comedy for to-day and to-mor row. , "The Painted Soul," a stirring story j IS YOUR HEALTH WORTH £S,OP? Woman Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound Restored Her Health. Lima, Ohio. —"I was all broken down in health from a displacement. One of my I 1 ■ i'> 1 111:n111111111 latJ y friends came to | jj | see me and she ad i vised me to com jPr" mence taking Lydia |! ■ • jX E. Pinkham's Veg ! I eta b'e Compound [ ? ■ 2® and to use Lydia E. P' n kh am ' a Sanative ing y° ur remedies i jSKl* and took $5.00 worth BBfc i in two months : wa6 a we || woman after three doctors said I never would stand up straight again. I was a mid- j wife for seven years and I recommended the Vegetable Compound to every wo man to take before birth and after wards, and they all got along so nicely that it surely is a godsend to suffering women. If women wish to write to me I will be delighted to answer them." —Mrs. JENNIE MOYER, 342 E.North St, Lima, Ohio. Women who suffer from displace menents, weakness, irregularities, ner vousness, backache or bearing-down pains, need the tonic-strengtnening properties of the roots and herbs con tained in Lydia E.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. If yoti want sprcfnl advice, write the Lydia K. Pinkliam Medicine Cxi. I, vjlll. Mugs* (f ' : ~~~~1 T AO PAT T to take adv antage of the wonderful GET-AC REMEMBER X po^^la NTED FFE ** we are making on the This When BLUBIRD DINNER SET Rlivinff „ Ifl 3 "T des ?P i" dinnerwarc The Bluebird has always been the harbinger ouyiiag of Spring and sunshine, the bnnger of happiness and contentment; it's therefore esoe fi .. ciaUy appropriate for a place in every home. F Furniture I A 10 °- pie <* $lB Words can be made the /Fw*\ tools of any man. with r~7 Bpr Bluebird bet others little! So with some (My p M dT\ M Btore " atl9 " Sfeb iiK In its polley this v_y 11 r»%. J Before you buy any furnl- M 'Ugs. Set consists of all the use | ture. you come COUNT here is al- one of these sets displayed in a ways open to you. '' china closet or spread on a ~~—————'■—„ ■ tal) 'e with happy bird in blue UMBRELLA Spring Floor Coverings • ndre4o '"" itsb ™' ? STAND Unparalleled conditions among floor covering manu- I facturers haven't affected us—so we are able to show a |P* WMy•/K p— 'arge variety at prices that have not been affected by w||§ advances. al 4P a> BRUSSELS RUG —size 9x12, tan Ori- gQ I i i A good SI.OO AXMINSTER RUG size 9x12, good d* fj a r*/~| j ] jp • |Z2 ' fl o n , Jg h oak ' fumed We |'h ow a large line of Karnak Rugs—the highest Pullman Carriage IJT '"'■ pTfcj arms and good ,ar £ e 54 * i nch base, genuine ° ne of the many new designs m I "" i"" i . . ' x pi yy / auartered nuL' /ti /\ /\ that fire here for mothers Inspec- T' 1 height of back. for ' 532 00 tio "' Rcc,lnln K ba(>k . "oil around lor body and hoodi rubber Ure> 1 iSHL BURNS & CO. — Jj of a regenerated girl's supreme sacri fice. will be the | Hegent Exploits attraction at the | "The Painted Soul" Begont Theater ! _ , to-day only. Bessie Barrlscale, the star, makes just as repulsive a girl In the streets jas she makes a sweet and attractive I girl when she has reformed, due to the influence of a picture in front of which she sits as she poses, the model for a ; painting *of "The Fallen Woman." Bessie Barrlscale finds splendid sup- I port In Truly Shattue.k, as the artist's mother, and Charles Ray, as Edward Barnard, the artist. To-morrow only, "The Grip of Jeal ousy," a romantic drama of the South, featuring Louise Lively. A long standing feud between two Southern families is taken as the basis for the story. One of the daughters in the Grant household is secretly wedded to Jack Morey, and dies in glv ; ink birth to a child, whom her sister places under the care of an aged negro, I nele Jeff, who believes that it was born to his own daughter. In later years, when Ijinda has become an at tractive young woman, the struggle i centers between the son of Lacey, the supposed father, in his effort to pos | sess her, and Linda's aunt, determined j upon the girl's freedom. i ~,T t s ® en l?, that tUo management of the \ictoria Theater in announcing to-dav's „ , program is following lllg Bargain In the foosteps of Bill for x the various depart- Mctorin Patrons ment stores and .. business houses of j the cit >' in , making to-day a r> riday Bargain Day. Every fea ture is a star feature or strong" I enough to be a headliner in itselw. One shows Alice Joyce, the well-known artist. In "The School For Scandal," a i five part production. , Pearl White will be shown in "The Iron Claw," a sensa tional drama of compelling Interest. And A Man's Work,' a three-part I photoplay that tells Its storv on the 1 s !', l \ een , be » e '" than the pen could pos i sibly describe. As to comedy, the origi nal his Hopkins will be presented in the , laugh-provoker called "She Came She Saw, She Conquered." AMERICA'S AXOMAIiOI'S POSITION' IX THE WAR | (Wilbur C. Abbott of Yale University in the April Yale Review.) But what of the United States? I What lias it learned and what is it to jtlo as a result of what we have seen 'and endured, and we hoped, and feared, while our kinsmen beyond the sea were engaged in this work of de struction? We have been in, if not of. the war; when it is done we, like the combatants, and in perhaps no less degree, must face the problems it has I raised. We have grown richer, and jit seems to many, in consequence, more powerful; we have contributed to every phase of the conflict but one; we have been appealed to by every side not merely for material but for moral i support. And what is the result? The answer is peculiarly difficult and j unsatisfactory. We have grown in i wealth without a corresponding in crease In responsibility, and our pros perity has been accompanied by no discipline which makes for the ; strengthening of national character. IWe have lacked the tremendous ex | perienee which comes from the expen- I diture of the last ounce of physical energy, and a faith Strained to the j breaking point: and, with all the ma ! terial losses which accompany any I such struggle such as Europe now en dures. it remains an open question whether in comparison, let us say with France, we have gained or lost in the ultimate resolution of events. For of all the nations of equal rank In the i world, we have not been able to form ulate with any deflniteness a collective opinion into a national ideal or policy. I and take measures to put it into ef fect. SECRETARY TO SPEAK Special to the Telegraph Blain, Pa., March 31.—Miss Cogan, field secretary of the Woman's Mis sionary Society of the General Synod of the Reformed Church, will speak on Sunday evening in llic Uluin lion's Reformed Church. "FASHION GIRLS" IN LOCAL GARB ■ Bowman and Claster Creating Public Sentiment in Favor of * "Shop at Home" Policy Packed houses greeted the first ex hibition and those that followed yes ! terday at the Majestic Theater, where the Fashion Girls are posing* as living j models for the display of gowns, lin i gerie, hats, shoes, gloves and what | not of Bowman & Co. The girls will play the week out in Harrisburg show , ing exclusively the Spring styles of the ; local department store. The $50,000 i worth of jewels which Catherine . j Crawford herself donned for the finale 11 of the act created an interested buzz of conversation and surprise each time they and she together made an ap pearance. Not for a long time has Harrisburg j been so interested in a display of local | finery as is shown in the acceptance of | the Bowman challenge to the Fashion ! Girls and the attempt, admittedly suc cessful, to prove that when it comes I to a matter of styles little old Harris | burg isn't taking any back seat. The i twelve models themselves had the time { of their young lives previous to the | first exhibition, when they spent, hours in the big store going over everything | from stockings to bathing suits and | selecting the gowns and other para | pliernalia unnameable by mere man I which they would wear in the tliree- I day exhibit. Milady and milady's ; daughters and sisters and aunts, all were there, and if an intense gaze had power to burn there would have been a mighty conflagration on the Ma jestic stage during each performance. The display of everything that fenii- S nine beauty requires convinced many —unfortunate husbands included— f that "shop at home" is not such a bad policy after all, particularly when one • can get here in Harrisburg just ex ) actly what one thought it required a i, trip to Philadelphia or New York to 1 j possess. b j For several minutes before the cur - ( tain is rung down on the Fashion t J Girls' act Miss Crawford, clothed in a 5 shimmering biaclc creation and s j crowned and bedecked with gleaming s | jewels, displays a cloudburst of dazzling 1 gems which would adorn with grace , the person of a queen. Sunbursts, 1 brooches, bracelets. rings galore, $50,000 of them, literally burdened the attractive person of the commander in-chief of the Fashion Girls. Henry C. Claster is the exhibitor. When the act is not in progress at the theater j a miniature show is put on in front of | his store in Market street. Needless j to say, the detectives maintain a strict neutrality as far as the jewels arc concerned, but it has been observed that the wrinkles of worry are deepen ing on their brows. The show will be given to-day and to-morrow. 1 . AMI' SKMKNTS wiwmirea Today nml Tomorrow I WM. S. HAHT The Popular Star, In HELL'S HINGES A Powerful Wentern V,ove Drnma In Five Reel*. 1 WILLIAM COLMBR In i "Wife nml Auto Trouble" ' Funny Two»lteel KeyMtoue Comedy SENIORS SHY I AT OSCULATION i< Forty-three Princeton Men De clare They Have Never Kissed a GM Special to the Telegraph Princeton, N. J., March 31.—Con e fessions wrung from the Princeton I ■f seniors by the time-honored custom of \ . finding' out all the secrets and pub- j t iisliing them to their classmates were 1 given out here by U G. Payson, the ! . class secretary. The most startling! b of all facts laid bare by members of ) the class was that the record-break -3 ing total of 43 had never kissed a girl. 3 The reason given by "most of the un t. successful suitors was lability, but i some consider it unhygienic. Forty of - the class think it is morally wrong to kiss a girl. f Of the 230 men in the class, 19 are 1 supporting themselves entirely, and C 38 are earning at least part of their i way through college. The average age - of the class is 21.7 years, but one man 3 is only 18. There are 136 seniors who ■ smoke, 194 who dance, 36 who con - sider dancing morally wrong, and 199 3 who play cards. For the last 20 years, without ex * ception, Yale has been termed the > favorite college next to Princeton and 1 the seniors this year did not depart * from the opinion of former Prince tonians. Vassar leads among the wo men's colleges. The favorite character * in history is Abraham Lincoln, with 1 Bryan near the end of the list. Booth 1 Tarkington is the best fiction writer, with Penrod Schofield the most likOd character in fiction. Falstaff leads for the favorite character in litera " ture, however, and Shakespeare is the » most popular playwright. Shaw is sec a ond in this respect. "Crossing the e ■■ i _ a AMUSEMENTS ° ■ • \ J To-day, BESSIE BARRISCALE. In i the vivid dramn of the underworld, I "THE PAIXTED SOUL" A Krlpplngr story of mornl uplift nnfl the dawn of aplrltuallty In n down trodden victim of clrcum atancea. PATHE NEWS TO-MORROW "THE CHIP OF JEALOUSY" Featuring LOUISE LOVELY. 5 • A romantic drama of the South. BflAY* CARTOONS Admlaaloni Adulta, 10c) Children, Bc, CJ/'PIQS ■"l® Tl #F PICTUR E 3 B > mm ARE BOOKED through Fa . WcOHPANrOfPHILA.r ## MEARTMt $25000 ftj fcfl ##HOPE-JONES UNIT PIPE ORGAN KJ WWEQVALOF SO PI EC£ ORCHESTRA I, I J KM ALL FEATURE DAY ALICE JOYCE EpLJRF "SCHOOL FOR KJf PEARL AVHITE In KV "THE IRON CLAW" | SIS HOPKINS In "SIIH CAME, SHE SAW, 'I "SHE CONQIEIIEU" I ' Bar" by Tennyson, is the favorite ! poem, and Its author the favorite | poet. The favorite novel is Ivanhoe. 1 . The position of "worst poet" is given jto Edmund Wilson, a member of the ■ senior class, but Ella Wheeler Wilcox runs a close second. A choice of personalities also was | made by the class, und resulted as fol ' lows: Best all-round man, C. L. Hey ; niger; best athlete, B. (J. Law; the man who has done most for the class, ! the busiest man and the man most j likely to succeed all were accorded to IL. G. Payson. H. 11. Harvey was voted the most respected man. } Professor George B. McClellan, for j mer mayor of New York, and now in j the economics department at Prince- I (on. was voted the favorite professor. | The best entertainment was the movies and Marguerite Clark the most pop | ular actress. _____________ Resorts ATLANTIC CITY, N, J. SERVICE "The Ideal Resort Hotel of unusual Mettt." On the Ocean Front. Fireproof. Always opto. Capacity 600. Phone Atlantic City 1466. A Hotel that is different Good Golf Ownership «vaiy Day in Yaar Manatcmaal FUNERAL DIRECTOR " HARRY - M. HOFFMAN (Sneceaaor to J. J. Ogelaby) UNDERTAKER 810 North Second Street AMUSKMENTS CATHERINE CIUWFORD and her 12 FASHION GIRLS display a new line of npparcl under the aunplcea of 1 BOWMAN & CO. Mlaa Crawford will wear *."0,000 worth of Jeirela nt each perform ance, provide! by H. C. CLASTER All other aci* new to-day, Includ ing HUUH lIEHHKHT & CO., In "PBOSPERITY" Mat. at X.30, lOc and ljci even- Inn. 7.30 to 10.30, 10c, 15c, 25e. Show Start* Saturday Evening at j <1.30. !O R P HEU M TUESDAY S;'.: APRIL 4 SEAM TOMORROW p.flUDUtr * SwaktiLwmMmiU: DDIPFC . Itlatinee, 23c. 30c, 73c. ri\lV/£iO, Evening, 25c to SI.OO. *-11'
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers