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Never have tired, aching, sweaty, smelly feet; your shoes will lit line and you'll only wish you had tried "Tiz" sooner. Accept no substitute. EX-XEWSBOYS WII.L TAI.K Some of the men who have grown prominent in the business and social life of the city, taut who at one time fold newspapers, will be invited to | speak at the Newsboys' Club night which will be held in the near future j by the Newsboys' Association. A i committee to make the arrangements j will be appointed to-morrow evening. FIREMEN'S A NION TO MEET All of llarrisburg's fire-fighting or ganizations will tae represented at the meeting of the Firemen's Union to be j held this evening in the parlors of the! Friendship firehouse. POSLAM'S HELP WHATYOUNEED With Poslam Soap Affords Suc cessful Treatment for Ailing Skin When you obtain a box of Poslam you possess yourself of just that much concentrated healing power. You can put this power to work for you when ever the skin is diseased or disordered in any form. Depend upon its heal ing help when eczema causes intense irritation, when acne or herpes mani fest themselves, when Pimples are pres ent, when the nose, complexion or hands are unduly red, when rashes annoy, or when abrasions, wounds burns, scalds, etc., demand soothing antiseptic treatment. Poslam Soap, medicated with Poslam, should be used if skin is tender and sensitive. For sample, send 4c stamps to Emer gency Laboratories, 32 West 25th St. New York City. Sold by all druggists. > Proper Care of Food requires an even temper ature. You cannot get this, in this climate, without asing ice. One spoiled roast will bu.; ice for a week for the average family. A case of sickness from ptomaine poison will pay the ice bill for all year. Ice is an economy. You really cannot afford to do without it. A phone call will bring our wagon. United Ice & Coal Co. Mnln Office■ Forater and Condra sin. Also Steelton, Pa. *- TUESDAY EVENING, rical AWrac%ml »" : Wrefflnt.aiid ' THEATRICAL DIRECTORY ORPHEUM To-night, "Pollyanna:" to-morrow night, Maude Adams, in "The Little Minister:" Thursday, Star Boxing Matches; Friday, matinee and night. "The Frolics of 1915;" Satur day, matinee and night, "Walk This Way." MAJESTIC Vaudeville and Moving Pictures. Muring Picture Houses COLONIAL—"The Raiders." REGENT—"NearIy a King.' VICTORIA—"The Reapers." PI,AYS AND PLAYERS The suggestion that there be a special military instruction camp inaugurated this summer for actors only is being given favorable consideration by Sec retary of War Baker. Hal Pierson, a New York actor, is the one who made the suggestion to Mr. Baker after con sulting with a number of army officers. The actors arc more or less "at lib erty" during the summer and the Idea sounds feasible. I Charlie Chaplin's "Carmen" has been taken four times in order that it might come out of the wringer absolutely per fect. This V. I* S. E. feature, which is a burlesque on the real opera, will shortly be seen on the circuit. j One does not often hear of the death | of a moving picture actor, but whether accidents are suppressed or whether it merely takes its place In the ordinary run of events, little is heard. Perhaps actors in this new means of entertain | inent and education do not die, ai | though from the scenes shown it looks | as though a million chances are taken ito one on the legitimate stage. The ' recent death of Harold Hubert, who appeared in "The Battle Cry of Peace," is being mourned. He was 58 years old ] and was run down a short time ago by j an automobile in New York City. I Ethel Barrymore, the Metro star, who | will next be seen in "The Kiss of Hate," ! a story of autocratic tyranny arid per j secution In Russia, by Mme. de Gris sac, will use several of her own dogs in the production. One of them is a real Russian wolf hound. I.OCAL THEATERS Coining Next Week Thurston, the magician, will be the I attraction at the Orpheum for three | days, beginning Monday, April 17, with daily matinees. Thurston now stands | without an equal in the field of magic | for during the past nineteen vears lie 1 has made a deep study of wicrd things : mystic inventions and deceptive illu sions nad has become so expert that at times an affinity with unseen powers seems almost plausible He even deals deftly in theosophic theories by the projection of the astral I body the reincarnation of the spirit' l and the materialization of the spirit' j form out of air. ' " | I "Is she white or black?" That Is the I question which John Barrymore insists I upon asking concern- 1 •rrymiire ing the girl whom he is Prove. Popular just being forced to at Regent marry. It sounds like .. . . a perfectly reasonable thing for any man to ask concerning his bride, but the men who are thus uncere moniously thrusting Barrymore's head iiii? £? e n . la trimonia! noose, threaten to kill him instantly if he does not pro- I St?£„ Wl< £. t i marriage without further delay. This is one of the near-comic ! near-tragic scenes in "Nearly a King"' at the Regent to-day. | „ r T , o "n™rrow and Thursday, Charlotte Walker, the Paramount star, will make >er appearance in a vizualization or The Trail of the Lonesome Pine." An all- I THE GLAD GAME INSPIRES MANY "Pollyanna" With Adorable Patricia Collinge Enthu siastically Received Again it has been conclusively dcni -1 onstrated by last night's overflow at the Orpheum and the box office man's promise of a repetition to-night, that it is the clean wholesome play and not the false stimulus of extremes in drama or comedy that the public real ly wants. "Pollyanna," adapted from jthe widely popular Eleanor H. Porter ; books, is the sort of play that sends i one away from the theater at peace | with the world, in the same frame of ! mind as that which follows a task well performed or a pleasant discussion i with a friend that clears the atmos , pherc of uncertainty and doubt. Patricia Collinge was adorable. As "The Glad Girl" she scattered seeds of ; gladness over a fertile lield in a man ner to at once delight and frighten the heart of the splendid old doctor whose ! practice diminished in the same ratio i as Pollyanna's radius of gladness-giv : ing lengthened throughout the village. The audience couldn't decide whether | she was more irresistible as the 12- l year-old girl or as the 17-year-old I young lady; suffice it to say that her '•'ery presence diffused rays of glad- Iness that lighted up tlie entire theater jwtth their soft glow. Miss Collinge was ideal as Poltyartmv, andjier power over the emotions of her audience? con firmed the rumor that floated up in | advance from Philadelphia, that hand | kerchiefs by the ladies and gruff clear- How Harrisburg Women May Keep Their Hair Soft and Beautiful I The next time you go to the theater observe how the women with well kept ! hair stand out from their sisters with | wispy, lusterless, scraggy locks. Even if their faces are not beautiful, you will notice how they seem to just radi | ate attractiveness. If your hair is not all you desire I you can make it and keep it so by I following just a few sensible directions. ; Start doing this to-day; first pour a ! little Parisian Sage into the hollow of | the hand, then wet the hair roots j thoroughly with it. rubbing briskly ! into the scalp until dry. Do this for a j few daj's and you will surely be sur j prised at the difference it makes in j your appearance. Lustrous, thick, long, glorious hair is not always a "gift of nature;" it i may be acquired by careful and faith ! fully following these few little sug j gestions for cleanliness and invigora tion. Be sure you get the real I'aris- J ian Sage as there is nothing just like | it. ft is not expensive, very easy to apply and absolutely guaranteed to contain no harmful chemicals. | H. C. Kennedy, as well as the bet iter druggists everywhere, sell Paris | ian Sage with a guarantee of satis j factory results or money refunded.— | Advertisement. ! star cast, headed by Miss Walker. Theo dore Roberts, Thomas Meighan and others will be seen 1n the Jesse L, Lasky j plcturization of John Fox, Jr.'s, novel. Time was when Jesse was looked upon by vaudeville goers as a __ producer of girl acts 'The Kiddies' only, but this ingenl "urjjlnr" Heads ous theatrical man is Hajeatle Bill now turning out some features In juvenile acts that promise to be as attractive to the theatergoing public as were his other productions. At the Majestic Theater for the first three days of the week, his- newest achievement. "The Kiddies' Burglar," is holding forth and this clever group of youngsters simply took yesterday's audiences by storm. Master Ted Warwick, about as cute and clever a youngster as vou could wish to see, heads the youthful aggregation, and five other interesting little folks and two grown-ups. complete the com pany. Some new song hits are intro i duced during the action of their little ! skit. But the Hlckville Minstrels can not be overlooked. These country cui i ups, who are among vaudeville's fore most "rube" comedians, possess splen i did voices and provide as much har | inony as they do good fun. Another \ act that belongs in the headline class jis Everest's Monkey Hippodrome, a whole three-ring circus provided by a troupe of monks. Bernard and Myers, clever couple in songs and comedy, and the Three Arthurs, cycling expert*, complete on» of the best programs of the Majestic's season. John Mason, in 'The Reapers," is the feature at the Victoria to-day. To-morrow the Vlc- Vlrtorla Show* torla presents for the "The Reapers." first time in this city a photodrania of an i all-absorbing question, prohibition. Prohibition, the five-reel motion pic ture, is what its name implies—a ser mon in the cause of temperance. The story which Hal Reed has used ! as the framework of his drama deals i with two brothers, one of whom in- I herits a craving for liquor from his ' sire, both sons being in love with the I same woman. The struggle of the in ! temperate brother, also those of his father and ills father's best friend, to throw off the shackles of the Rum Fiend, and their final triumph, are told with all of Mr. Reid's comprehensive knowledge of melodramatic values. There Is no mistaking the meaning of the scenes nor the motives which actu ate the characters. He who looks may understand. H. B. Warner, erstwhile star of the original company that presents "Alias Jimmy Valentine" H. R. Warner so successfully, is Splendid In making his debut Colonial's Triangle in the silent drama for the Triangle Film Corporation in "The Raiders," the excellent film play that will be pre sented for the last time at the Colonial Theater to-day. The Raiders" gives Mr. Warner his first opportunity to make a dash into high finance, as the New York Stock Kxchange plays an import ant part in the story. The young artist is first seen in the role of junior clerk in a brokerage office and one fine day lie meets David Haldeman (Henry Bel mar) and his daughter Dorothy (Dalton) In the corridor of his office building. From that time on he Is Dorothy's slave, worshipping her from afar. Close confinement in his office forces Warner to leave his work for a rest in the woods. Assigning his work to his partner, he leaves town, and then the slick work of the broker begins. Many interesting and daring schemes are attempted, some of them pulled through, while the young broker is safe in the Adirondack Mountains. Dorothy and her father, of course, ftgurje con spicuously in the action of the piece, as her father Is also a man of high finance. The dramatic offering for Wednesday and Thursday will be a Fox Feature entitled "The Ruling Pasion." starring Claire Whitney and William E. Shay. ings of the throat on the part of white-haired old gentlemen would be freely employed at certain stages in the action of the play. The lesson of gladness and optimism which every thought and action of the little orphaned Pollyanna inspires is splendid in its purpose and con structive in its effect. The wonder ful effect of "The Glad Game" on each individual upon whom it is tried is astonishing; a whole village is con verted to gladness; a houseful of "gabby" gossips (who entertain most delightfully by the way) is completely put to rout; a twenty-year recluse is brought hack to sunshine and the Joy of living; a little orphan boy gets a home and father; and many others arc given an insight into what consti tutes the worth-wliile things of life in such a way as to fill a crowded theater with thrills of gladness. l j Miss Jessie Busley as Uancy, a gal vanized wire of Irish humor and ef fervescent life, shared to a large de gree in the honors of the evening, along with Pollyanna and Jimmy Bean and Sodom and Gomorrah. We must not forget the two latter, for I their advancement in life furnishes ' one of the most amusing incidents in • the play. Herbert Kelcey as Dr. Chil ton, Arthur Forrest as John Pendle [ ton, "The Hermit," and Harry Barfoot as Bleecker. Pendleton's man, to gether with Jimmy Bean, who furnish ed the audience with considerable ma terial for speculation as to whether he was the same individual in both acts at different ages—these gentle men provided the necessary masculine setting in a very finished manner. Dr. Chilton particularly pleased the enter tainees. You who are always looking for a safe and productive investment for your money, Mr. Hard-Headed Busi j nessman, the returns on Pollyanna are of a sort that few ventures will pay; are declared every minute of the day ari(f coufK>na_arc _ always there for the clipping. The shares are not difficult of purchase and the cor poration of gladness is invincible and incapable of bankruptcy, because its resources are unlimited. Pollyanna Wins! MAX ROBERTSON. Reveal German Plot to Blow Up Chinese Bridges Special to the Telegraph ] | Vancouver, B. C„ April 11.—News \ papers received aboard the Empress i of Russia give details of a plot re i cently discovered in Shanghai in " volving destruction of bridges on the ( Manchurian Railway connecting with • Russian territory and the placing of . bombs aboard the steamship Empress i of Russia before she left on the trip , just ended. Details of the original plot for the l supply of several mousand rifles, am munition and automatic pistols to a 1 I raiding vessel in the service of the Germans came out when two Shanghai merchants named Abbas, father and • | son, were arrested. The rifles were seized, the elder Abbas sentenced to ! fifteen years' imprisonment and his 1 son to two years. Further information led to the dis covery of a plant for making bombs ! and heavy ammunition but for a long time none of the products could bo found, it was said. The French police jin Shanghai, it was learned, finally discovered some boxes in the bottom lof a pond. The boxes were raised j and found to contain artillery shells 1 for field pieces. HABJUSBURG TELEGRAPH QUARREL OF 40 YEARS' STANDING ENDS IN WEDDING Sweethearts' Disagreement Bc- : gan in Kentucky Terminates 1 Happily in Kansas Topeka, Kan., April 11.—A lovers'] quarrel that began forty years ago in j Kentucky was patched up and the lovers united last week at liberal, in Southwestern Kansas. The official j document read that John KendaH, G6 j years old, and Mrs. Fannie Bowers, 65 years old, were married by the probate judge of Seward county. But the i documents do not tell half the story. John Kendall and Fannie Myers | were children together in Grant county, Kentucky. They went to the same log ! tn'mnH 1 ! 0118 !' played together and grew Jpw. . and womanhood together. | They became sweethearts and were ® n ( ™ e . d '. The wedding day had been j set, and both families were rejoicing at ! lift ? hen sudden| y Kendall I Thl wLS? Un yto seek hls fortune. P»nnir ", ever was performed. ! was P thr',° n M ered - u Ut a " the >' learned | quarrl? re h&d been a love,s ' > H«H°T ea L a later Fa "n'e Myers mar- ! = L',<r° WerS and they ™"IC to j Kansas, settling on a farm near Ingalls, ! J '5 e ' ar . western edge of the State, j ["if, years ago Bowers died, Inml < wid ow many acres of land,' no chi?d?en. 3 m ° ney - There were I wand , er ed around over aj a r d when his father died he drifted back to Kentucky and be farmer. He, too, had married I and had several children. Some vears I ago his wife died and all his children j 5» 11 slal5 lal T l # an( * moved away. Last all Kendall went to a neighbor s home and learned that the girl of his boy- i hood days was a widow. He wrote her a letter. Early in March Mrs. Bowers wrote that she was going to liberal. Kendall beat Mrs. Bowers to Überal. When she walked into the hotel there sat Kendall He had posted the j clerk, and when Mrs. Bowers regis tered Kendall walked up to her I Neither knew the other. Both had I almost white hair. "Well, Fan," said Kendall, "we's ! waited a long time. Let's us not wait i any longer." "Just as you say, John," said Mrs Bowers. Forthwith they went to the court- i house, got a marriage license and were i married. Makes New U. S. Altitude Record With Passenger Special to the Telegraph Newport News, Va., April 11. Steven Mac Gordon of New York, an instructor in the local Curtlss aero plane school, established a new Am erican altitude record for an aeroplane carrying a passenger yesterday when he ascended to a height of 14,800 feet. He was accompanied by W. A. Hudson, of Toronto, Can., a student. The flight was made in a Curtjss mili tary tractor biplane. TTntil yesterday the passenger-carry ing altitude was held by Lieutenant J. E. Carberry, U. S. A., who on January 5, 1915, attained a height of 11,690 feet in a flight at San Diego, Cal. The world's record is held by MAUDE ADAMS FLIRTS FATALLY WITH "THE LITTLE MINISTER" Many people have seen Maude Adams in a number of roles. There are those who remember her as Viola in "Twelfth Night," as Juliet in "Romeo and Juliet," as the Eaglet in "L'Aiglon," and as the Cock in "Chantecler."' Still others remember her in "Quality Street," in "What Every Woman Knows" and a very considerable number in "Peter Pan." But ask a number of those who have made it a point of late seasons to see the actress in all that she presents if they ever saw her in "The Little Minister." Many of them will be forced to admit that while they have heard much of the play and of the success of the actress in it they never had an opportunity of witnessing it. And this is one of the reasons why Aliss Adams is giving the comedy dur ing her present tour and will make it her offering at the Orpheum to-mor row evening. When Charles Frohman Induced J. M. Barrie much against his will and judement. to dramatize his novel he made a ten strike. He made another when he decided to make the play the vehicle for the first starring tour of a little actress then under his man agement, Maude Adams. The fresh ness and wit of the play coupled with the charm, vivacity and artful coquet try of the young star made of the work the biggest success of the period | i^E-A-CENTI Soft Scouring Compound \ i (plltffe-*' | ■; The mighty FOUR cent punch at dirt j > It's good FOUR all cleaning ;! ;i It's bad FOUR all dirt J (' It's fine FOUR housecleaning !; Does more work than powders—does not waste jj j Only FOUR Cents 1 £ At Your Grocers 5 Living Models App earl In the "Windows 'Tke New Store of W Strousel Thursday Evening, April Thirteenth From 7.15 to 9.30 O clock Everyone should see this STYLE SHOW of Young Men's Spring styles, which will feature Adler-Rochester Clothes ""Wesco Fifteen Dollar Suits Emery Shirts "Shohle and "Mallory Hats for which we are distributors. Our store WILL NOT be open that evening, the models appearing only in our windows. It will be a most attractive and interesting exhibition and everyone should see it. IsT of P=] the 7.15 1 & \Dm.^tfotUtc. » H. Bieran, an Austrian aviator who flew to an altitude of 6,170 metres (20,243 feet), June 27, 1914. Will Demonstrate Skill With Rod to Fishermen The art of fly and bait casting will be demonstrated in Market Square, Thursday afternoon by C. M. Leighton, who will cast a plug and put It in a target at a distance of 150 feet. This demonstration begins at 3.00 p. m., in front of Bogar's store. Mr. Leighton has a world-wide fame as a bait and fly caster, and has fished in the streams of every state in the union and many of the streams abroad. Many of the local sportsmen will be interested in seeing how effectively a rod and line may be controlled. in which it was made known. It surely will be interesting to view the comedy again and laugh over the gos sipy elders of the church who pried so outrageously into the affairs of their pastor. The story, if you remember, deals with one of Lady Babble's pranks. She went into the woods dressed as a gypsy and there met Gavin Dishart, the little minister, who was ignorant of the fact that she was the daughter of old Lord Rlntoul. Lady Babbie flirted with him and she did it again when she met him later with the result that the minister fell head over heels in love with her, which was all fun for the girl until she learned that she was in love herself. Then her identity had to become known and the minis ter was dumbfounded and so were the congregation and so was Lord Rintoul and there was an awful time until Lady Babbie invoked the aid of an old Scotch law to insure her hap piness. The four acts of the play will be tastefully staged. The scenes in <"addan Wood and in the Old Manse Garden are said to be very picturesque. Much of the charm of Mr. Barrie's play would be hopelessly, irretriev ably lost if the work were carelessly cast. Few' more delightfully humor ous characters than the elders of the church have been seen on the stage, but it requires skill, cleverness and an intimate knowledge of Scotch charac teristics to give them their true values. It is said of the present cast, of the comedy that it Is one of the very best It has ever had. Of course, Miss Adams will be seen as Lady Babbie. APRIL 11, 1916. Investigating Alleged Insult to American Flag by Representative Maurer New York, April 11.—Mayor Mitchell yesterday requested President William G. Wilcox, of the Board of Education, to investigate an alleged insult to the American flag at a meeting held in the Washington Irving High School. Point ing out the State law covering such offenses, the Mayor said: "It seenis to me unspeakable that there should be heard In a public school in this city such utterances as I un derstand were made." The speaker to whom the alleged in sult was attributed was .lames H. Maur- TAKE A "CM®" TONIGHT AND SEE! Spend a Dime! Liven Your Liver and Bowels v and Feel Fine. Knjoy life! Your system is filled with an accumulation of bile and bowel poison which keeps you bilious, MAJESTIC ALXi CHILDREN ADMITTED THIS WEEK And a great show for children, too The Monkeyville Circus The Kiddies' Burglar The Hickville Minstrels And otlier good acts besides Mats., 2:30, lOe and 15c; Eve., 7:30 to 10:30, 10c, 15c and 25c V _______ • 1 .»!W] BTI s Cf-P-j mm. ARE BOOKED THROUGH mm company or phila.r \. mm HEARTHE S2 5000 mm HOPE-JONES UNIT PIPE ORCAN JyEQUALOF 90 PIECE ORCHESTRA mm To-day Only Mm JOHN MASON in |W "THE BEAPKHS." W To-morrow One of " the greatest picture* of the age "PHOHIBI | T10.V." Don't fall to nee It. . I ORPHEUM TO-NIGHT AT 8.15. I TO-MORROW F.YEN'mG 8.15 KI.AW * KRI.ANOER and GF.O. CHARLES lItOHMW Prrnnla TV I.Kit Prrarnt the Ulntl Piny, ■> v < 1 D „ Maude Adams rollyanna "THE I.ITTI.K MINISTER" With the Original Company. n ,. M> Barr | e SEATS, 25c TO »S.Ot». SEATS, r.Or TO fa.oo er. president of the Pennsylvania State federation of Labor. In opposing the I proposed establishment of a State con -1 stabular.v in New York he was quoted as having shouted: "Down with the stars and Stripes!" I.AltOll I.F.ADKH EXPLAINS lieading. Pa.. April 11.—James IT. (Maurer, labor leader and Socialist mcm- Iber of tue State legislature, pf this I city, who was quoted in New York as saying, "down witli the Stars and j Stripes, denied the assertion lust night i J." exp aming his speech, which he Jellvered in the V ashington Irving High School, New Yortt. he said tie referred to the actions of the State Constabulary j of Pennsylvania at a burial service in the coal regions. lie said the constabu lary ordered the American flag lower ed at a funeral. I.KCTt'RE ON VOLCANOES Professor Percy U Grubb will givo | an illustrated lecture to-night on "Vol | canoes and Lava Sheets of the South western United States," before thw members of the geological section of the Harrisburg Natural History' So ciety. Willis Whited will speak on "The General Geological Conditions Af -1 fecting the Foundations of Bridges." headachy, dizzy, tongue coated, breath bad and stomach sour—Why don't you set a 10-cent box of Cascarets at the drug store and feel bully. Take Cascarets to-night and enjoy tha nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleans ing you ever experienced. You'll wako up with a clear head, clean tongue lively step, rosy skin and looking ami feeling fit. Mothers can give a whole Cascaret to a sick cross, bilious, feverish child any time they am harmless—never gripe or sicken. AMUSEMENTS To-day— -11. 11. WARN BR In "TUB RAIDIOItS" A beautiful live-reel love romance ■insert In Hie Adirondack Mountains. JOE JACKSON In "GYPSY JOE" Funny Tiro-Heel Keyntone Comedy. To-morrow and Wodneadny Win. Fox I'reiirnts WM. E. SHAY nnd CLAIRE WIIIT NKY In "THE RILING PASSION" To-day. JOHN RAHRYMORE In "NEARLY A KING." BURTON HOLMES TRAVEL PICTURES. To-morrow nnd Thuradny. CHAR LOTTE WALKER In "THE TRAIL OK THE LONESOME PINE." 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers