i\ Juat One One Just I § J\ly Price Price \\| 1A / He Profits Most , /I |\ i I Who Sells The Best Uf} 1 |ru / Compare Our U. I Isls SPECIALS \f | 1 \ y With others at $lB and S2O \J (|§ Ij/ Clothing for Young Men .pp || I / and Men that will never be ' E M 1)1, reduced in price. \ \i\ H gU/ sls ALWAYS [ I lAy A. W. HOLMAN \ J TO CREMATE HEXSEI/S BODY Special to the Telegraph Lancaster. Pa., April 28. ln ac cordance with liis oft-expressed wish, the body of Harry H. Hensel, the newspaperman and sports promoter, who died recently, will be cremated in Chestnut Hill Crematory, Philadel phia. The ashes will be brought back to Quarryville and interred in the grave of a brother who died in ISB2. AXXWUiE HIGH WINS Special to the Telegraph Annville, Pa., April 28. Annville High's baseball team added another victory to her list of games so far this season by defeating the Hershey nine yesterday afternoon, score 9 to S. Light and Donmoyer did Annville's t.est work while Wirth and Clark hatred for Hershey. The summaries: /Vnnvllle High 0 12 4 0 110 o—9 Hershey High 0020000 l — 3 Batteries: Donmoyer and Berry; iYirth and Henry. % , > Want Amateur Scores Immediately After Came Managers of amateur and semi professional baseball teams are re quested to send full box scores to the office of the Telegraph Imme diately after the games. Have scores In not later than 6.30 p. m. AMUSEMENTS ' -» To-dar. return encnßcinent of FANNIE W ARD in "THE CHEAT." Paramount. Charlie Chaplin Cartoon*. Animal Trainer, unil l'atbe News To-morrow only, HELEN WAKE In "SECRET 1.0VE." BRAY CARTOONS CO MI 1 MARY PICKI'ORD In "POOR LITTLE PEPPIXA." 7 Reel*. * ORPHEUM TO-NIGHT AT 8.15 CHARLES FROHMAN Presents ANN MURDOCK With TOM WISE IN THE NEW FARCE SUKI SEATS 2sc TO 92.00 COMING MATINEES DAILY BIRTH OF A NATION ' \ IWILMER & VINCENT {MATS.2:3OIOI.ISt: EVE.7JQtqIO:3OIO.IS.I?SM A Two-Act Mimical Comedy THE NIGHT CLERK With 21 People—Mostly Girls GIVING THE ENTIRE PERFORMANCE The hlKKeat vaudeville act I——T—l ■ 1 ■■ mi mm 11 !■ ORPH E U M WEDNESDAY, K MAY 3d THE DRAMATIC TREAT OF THE SEASON THE 20TH CENTURY PLAY-PRODUCING CO., INC. PRESENTS The Devil's Invention in I'AIII, E. FIIEYIIE AM) HIItAM K. AIOIIEIIWEM. A XOTAIII.B ( AST-IMI,I D!\U «VII.LIAM It. MACIi, EII.EEA VA.\ E BIK!\E, KATIIKHINI: KHMKTT, IUCIIIE JOSEFII HIIK.WA.V, i GI'STAAE \ (IN SEI-TEItTIT/.. PRICES— Mat., iliir, 50c, 73c, II.INI, Eve., -5c to $1.50. Srata Monday. " r FRIDAY EVENING, 7 ■ HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH! APRIL 28, 1916. CAR SHOP LEAGUE TO START MONDAY Plan Elaborate Program For ! Opening Game at Enola; Band and Parade ! I I HIRAM MCGOWAN SIMMERS President of the Enola Oar Shop Base- j ball League. Plans were completed to-day for j the opening of the Enola Car Shop j Baseball League at noon. Monday, May 1. The president, Hiram Mc-! ! Gowan Simmers is preparing an elab-j orate program. Officials from !burg, Marysville and other points will | attend. I The members of the four teams' | comprising the league with the shop " employes will march from the shops |to the baseball field, the Enola shop j band furnishing the music, it is prob able that C. B. Gray, of Enola with a Harrisburg sport writer will throw the i • first ball. Short Addresses Before Game Previous to the game, between team I Xo. 1, winners of the pennant last sea- j son and better known as the Airbrake! [nine, and team No. 3 known as Mill I 'nine: there will be short addresses. ! The speakers will be C. H. Andrus, I master mechanic of the Philadelphia division and president of the Philadel phia Division Motive Power Athletic Association; C. B. Gray, general fore -1 man -t Enola, and H. G. llasslcr, fore man of the Enola car shops. Presi dent Simmers will announce the rules governing contests this season and the game will be on. The official umpires will be D. C. Chlsholm and D. C. Cunkcl; official scorer, C. E. Kissinger. ' ; AMUSEMENTS To-day iind To-morrow— JANE GREY unit WM. DESMOND In "WAIFS" A flve-reel Human Interest-drama In which a ulrl of the ultima reforms n fallen minister. FATTY ARBVCKI.E In "HIS WIFE'S MISTAKE" Two-reel Ke.vatone Comedy. ——— —J Aftraction^^^^ • ! ¥Rre^ent„andFuturg/r' rv-^ THEA'PRICAI. PIIIECTORV t ORPIIEI'M To-night, Charles Froh man presents Ann Murdock in . "Suki;" Wednesday, matinee and night. May 3, "The Devil s Invention;" special return engagement for three ' days, commencing May 8, with daily 1 matinees, "The Birth of a Nation." •' MAJESTIC Vaudeville and Moving * Pictures. t Motion Picture Houses COLONIAL—"Waifs." ' REGENT—"The Cheat." t VICTORIA—"Human Driftwood." 1 n.AVS WD PI, A VERS Billy Jacobs, live years old, probably ! the youngest star in the motion pic ture business, is reputed to be making 510.000 a year. It is said this prodigy , of naturalness earns a week just , being natural. We wonder! . Have you ever eaten dogs served a la carte or on the bait shell? Rumor hath 1 • it that they are delicious morsels. The ' dog-eating Renguet Igorotes are re- , sponsible for Hie appearance of dog- 1 eaters on the movie screen, where they ! appear in one of Burton Holmes' travel i . releases. ' i I Ethel Clifton does not believe that ' the moving picture is to affect seri- | , ously the attendance of playgoers. Un • the contrary, she believes that one i stimulates the other. At present sho | . is on tiie Pacific coast, with Hrenda i Fowler, "resenting their own dramatic j i playlet. "The Suint anu the Sinner." She . was being interviewed: "Because one is fond of sweets does not imply that j \ staple foods aro to be neglected. One I , I may be a 'movie bug' and still retain a ! '■ healthy respect and admiration for the I j spoken drama. And if dramatic pro- ' ductions could be produced for the I same price as the motion pictures, the latter would have to go out of busi ness. ! Both Palm Reach Florida, and River- ' side Drive, New York, are to figure . j prominently in "Gloria's Romance," the George Kleine motion picture novel in , twenty feature chapters, which has i | been prepared by Mr. and Mrs. Rupert ' i Hughes, featuring Billie Burke. i i I Maude Adams began a fortnight en- ! gagentent in Boston this week, present- j . ing "The Little Minister" and "Peter Pan." In the former nlav she has Dal las Anderson, a well-known interna tional player, as her leading man, who , will be recalled in Hoston as the bril- j ' liant actor who played the Dauphin ; i with Miss Adams when she presented ! ■ "Joan of Arc" at the Harvard Stadium . some years since. I-OCU, THICATBII "Sukl" Tonight At the ! VIOLET DE BIERECI S R Attractive little star who will take p a prominent part in the show that is J coming to the Orpheum next Wed nesday matinee and evening. "The Devil's Invention" is what the play -0 wright termed this extremely dra -1 matic production. • School Diplomas Granted I in Cumberland County Special to the Telegraph ! j Carlisle, Pa., April 28. Announoe | ment was to-day made here by County Superintendent of Schools J. Kelso > Green, o fthe persons In the county who have made a sufficiently high average in the recent examinations and who have been granted common school diplomas. A number of lower end pupils are included among them | being: New Cumberland Mae Naomi Conley, Rose L. Cramer, ft:aoel Eckert, jjohn Owen, Emanuel Reiff. Camp iiill—Katharine M. Goosz, j Lcwrence E. Shuckman. Allen —Miriam Neisley, Edna Enck, Clara Strickler, Alma M. Nlskey, Ida liomaino Enck, Arthur Enck. Mecbaniesburg Ai:ce Duncan, j John C. Zacbarias. Others are: Mary Anderson, How mansdnle: Hachael Flower, Ethel Kraybill, Boiling Springs; Helen Sut ton. lonian C. Walker, Raymond E. [Ruudubuugh, New Kingston, Mobilize U. S. Industries Baker Says on Defense Special to the Telegraph New York, April 2S. Mobilization of American industries and commerce as a prime factor of preparedness for national defense was urged here last night by Secretary of War Baker in an address before the annual banquet of the American Newspaper Publishers' Association. He declared that the necessity of such a mobilization was one of the great lessons learned from the European war. hShi Martz Bros., 21 South Third Street Bogar Hardware Co., 1316 North Third Street BOAT I/INK OPEN" By Associated Press Holyhead, April 28. —The first boat to leave Dublin for Holyhead since the start of the rebellion arrived here this morning." ENJOY AFTERNOON TEA Mrs. G. Floyd Appleton wife of the rector of St. Paul's P. E. Church, North Second street, entertained in formally at tea yesterday afternoon for her mother, Mrs. Francis Miller of Cuba, and Mrs. Richards of Brooklyn. Kilpatrick and Mrs. Snyder poured and there were twenty ladies in at tendance. 19