AtmSefIOQTTSI THEATRICAL DIRECTORY MAJESTIC Vaudeville and Motion Pictures. PAXTANG—Vaudeville. COLONIAL—"The Primal Lure. REGENT—"The Isle of Love. VICTORIA "Gods Country and the Woman. I'I,A VS AA'D PLAYERS A production of "Love's Comedy," by Henrick Ibsen, is bei-- prepared by the Art Drama under the direc tion of Hilda Englund, who will herself appear in the leading role. She is an authority on the plays of the Nor wegian dramatist. The Board of Governors, American Ambulance Hospital. Gentlemen: It gives me pleasxire to inform you that the Triangle Film Corporation will exhibit for us the moving pictures of the American Ambulance Field Service recently taken at the battle front by the French Government, and that the Triangle Film Corporation has volun teered to render us this service without any charge, as its contribution to our work. I am, vAy sincerely, ROBERT BACON, President. Peggy Hyland, who has appeared on the legitimate stage and In feature pic tures in England, is one of the latest players to be signed by the Vitagrraph Company. LOCAL. THEATERS Yesterday the new hill for the last half of the week came to the Majestic. The bill, which presents The Bill at quite a wide line of va- Ibe Mnjemtle riety. Is made up of Kuter, Hughfts and Kuter, two little boys and girl, who do a singing and talking act. The Seven Honey Boy Minstrels present an act that is full of singing and comedy, while Edmonds and Leedom present a comedy talklne act. Rounding out the vaudeville list are Harry Holman and company In their comedy sketch, en titled "Adam Killjoy," and Samayoa, trapeze artist. All arrangements have been complet ed for the fireworks display at Paxtang Park this evening. A large Pnxtnng number of frames for set- Fireworks pieces, some of them the Tonight very latest In the pyrotech nical art. have been erect ed on the hill at the rear of the park theater. The vaudeville performance at the park theater will begin immediately after the fireworks are over. The bill has as Its feature attraction the Gal- Irrini Four, one of the best musical of ferings, it is claimed, that has played the town in a long time. Another act on the park bill is The Youngers. who present a posing act that is strikingly beautiful as well as artistic. William S. Hart has the leading role in "The Prinjal Lure." Triangle-Ince production of Vingie E. Wm Hnrt Roe's novel of the same nt Colonial name, adapted for the screen by J. G. Hawks, of the Ince staff. "The Primal Lure" is a drama of life in the Canadian Northwest, which will be shown at the Colonial to-day and to morrow. It recites the romance of An rus McConnell, a young Scotch-Cana dian factor, and Lois Le Moyne. daugh ter of a French settler at the post. The Kevstone players in "The Moonshiners," a new funny two-reel comedy, will complete the program. To-dav the Victoria presents for the last time "God's Country and the Wo man." All the scenes were \t the taken in the great Canadian Victoria woods. To-day will also be Today shown another part of "The Iron Claw," featuring Pearl White For to-morrow there will be "The Lights of New York" and Charley Chaplin In "The Floorwalker." which ! we showed on Wednesday. Charlie Chaplin will be presented in AMUSEMENTS 111111 TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW WILLIAM S. HART In "THE PRIMAL LURE" A Thrilling Lore Drama of tlie Great Northwest. "THE MOOXSHIXKRS" A screaming 2-reel Keystone comedy. ' ' iar,f "LMER & VAUDEVILLE] IMATS. £:3O lOt 15<: EVE.7:30i010JQ10.15.t25^ 7 GEORGE EVANS HONEY BOY MINSTRELS HARRY HOI.MAX & CO., Kt'TGR, HIfiHES and KI'TER, EDMt'.N'DS and LEEDOM, SAMAYOA SHOW STARTS AT 6.30 SAT. EVE. Coming Monday For Three Days THE BONNY SEXTETTE All Glrla, in a Vocal and Instrumental Act *■ HTCI (*£-> MM A* t BOOKCOTNUOUitt MM CSNMNr or *HILA,« V MM- HKARTHt S2BOW MM HOPE-JONES UNIT PI Pt OHM MM The Last Time To-day MM "GOD'S COUNTRY AND WM THE WOMAN" j i • ' discriminating buyers has worked wonders in popularizing our that S unsui passed at the pi ice. Department of Boys' Clothes. Here, you'll find everything for the rpi Pwr c . lixi i j «i sturdy, growing youngster. And, in our Boys' Department as in all the name of Wm. Strouse would not be coupled with other departments, every article carrier with it the personal endorse esco Fifteens were it not that they're guaranteed to the ment and guarantee of Wm. Strouse. last stitch. They're the very embodiment of clothes value at A Handsome Watch or Baseball Fifteen Dollars and Bat With Each $5 Boy's Suit THE NEW STORE OF WM. STROUSE IP ■ his second and latest Mutual release, "The Fireman," at Chaplin In the Regent to-day and •The Fireman" to-morrow. In "The at Regent Fireman he includes a little "serious" acting. The first few scenes of "The Fire man" marks the beginning of the fun, which continues through to the end. The sliding pole, a fire engine, which comes in handy around lunch time, it being only necessary to turn a spigot to have cottee, rich in color and smok ing hot, and other aids numerous and varied assist Chaplin in provoking laughter. In addition the feature to-day will be "The Isle of Love," featuring the popu lar star, Gertrude McCoy. To-morrow "The Trail of the Thief" in addition to "The Fireman." POSTPONE PYROTECHNICS Felix M. Davis, superintendent of transportation of the Harrisburg Rail wavs Company, announces that the fire works displav scheduled for to-night at Paxtang Park, will be indefinitely postponed because of the wet weather. AMUSEMENTS CARNIVAL Beginning Monday JUNE 19 For One Week at 17 th and Chestnut Sts. Under the Auspices of The Royal Fire Co. THE COL. FRANCIS FERARI SHOWS UNITED and Trained Wild Animal ARENA will furnish all the attrac tions. Ride THE WHIP 4 New Riding Devices 3 Brass Bands 20 Big Shows All High Class Features DON'T MISS IT CERTAIN FOODS CO DESTROY DISEASE CHAPTER 72 School Children, Studying the Chick en-Feeding Experiments Outlined in the Last Chapter, Will Learn How, Upon a Diet of Certain Foods, Nat ural Resistance to Disease Is Largely Increased, Whereas, Upon a Diet of Other Foods, Such Resistance .Is Completely Destroyed Through Their Own Observations They Will He Forced to the Vigorous Convic tion That Man Is Guilty of an Un pardonable Sin When, For No Other Purpose Than to Make His Products Commercially Profitable, He Delib erately Removes from the Invigor ating nnd Immunity-Conferring Foods the Very Elements Upon Which Vigor nnd Immunity Depend. Having become familiar with the chicken-feeding experiments, as con ducted in the ten cages In the school house basement or on the school house roof, the children will learn ,that it is possible to alter the resist ance of animals at will and to over come the effects of one diet by com bining it with another. They will learn the facts concerning gl^jl MALTED MILK Rich milk,malted grain ex tract, in powder. For I nfonts, I n val ids ud growing children. Pure nutrition,upbuilding ti»« whole body. Invigorate* nursing mothers and the aged. The Food-Drink for all Ages More nutritious than tea. coffee, etc. Subititnte* cost YOU Same Price AMUSEMENTS To-day and to-morrow ' the King of Comedy, Charlie Chaplin, In his Intent nnd funniest aide-splitting comedy, "The Fireman." The second Mutual release. To-day'a feature, "The Isle of Love," featuring Gertrude MeCoy. To-roorrow'a feature, "The Trail of the Thief," featuring YVlnnlfred Greenwood and Edward Cozen. Also Bray Cartoons Bohby Humps and hla Gnatmohlle. Pathe News. 11 V I HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH the discovery of Hunt that the resist ance of animals to certain poisons differs greatly according to the char acter of their diet. They will learn that Bulletin 69, Hygienic Laboratory. United States Hygienic Laboratory, United States Treasury Department, declares that in extreme cases mice, after having been fed on certain diets, may recover from forty times the dose of acetoni trile fatal to mice fed on other diets. They will learn that experiments with oats and oatmeal and eggs are of special interest. They will learn that a diet of oats or oatmeal usually leads to a marked resistance of mice to acetonitrile. and that the administration of certain iodine compounds with such a diet further increases the resistance. They will learn that the experi ments reported by the government show that as far as resistance to acetonitrile is concerned iodine ex erts its action through the thyroid gland and the resistance caused by an oat diet is in part an effect exerted upon the thyroid. The results achieved with iodine in the Rotunda hospital, Dublin; the thyroid researches of Victor Horsely, and the discovery of thyroidlne by Bauman led T. Alphonsus Wallace to the conviction that iodine was a very potent factor In the neutralization of the toxic substances elaborated with in the human body. Finding all the pharmaceutical preparations of iodine either power fully irritant or altogether inactive, Wallace departed from the beaten path and compounded an organic iodine solution which bears a remark able resemblance to the active and non-Irritant constituents of the thy roid gland. The proper name for the Wallace formula, which we can promptly for get, is tri-chloro-di-phenol-di-iodide. Our interest in this high-sounding .substance lies in the results obtained through its use at the Central and Neurological hospital on Blaokwells Island during incumbency of Stlvel man. Its influence, significant of the role played by the healthy thyroid gland when able to secrete from unde natured food the organic compounds of iodine necessary to the normal re sistance of the body, has been follow ed by almost miraculous results. In the treatment of long-standing, perforat ing ulcers, empyema of knee Joints, erysipelas of legs and faca, blood poisoning, post puerperal infections, diphtheria and many other violent cases of poisoning. The school children will learn from CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears - Signature ol such hints as these that man is guilty j ofunpardonable sin when he deliber ately removes all the iodine com pounds from his food supply for no other purpose than to make such food commercially profitable. They will j learn that all through nature there are subtle and significant hints that the fixed laws under which all natural food is elaborated were intended, with the co-operation of man's intelligence, to control the preparation of foods for him that would serve his needs. They will learn that nature demands of man that he shall accept the prop osition that her dispensations are not the result of blind accident, but beau tifully ordered, rhythmical processes, profound in ther operation and be-' nevolent' in their functions. Electric Iron Burns Way Through Building Dayton, Ohio.—The strangest freak fire in the history of the Dayton Fire Department occurred at the Paris store. An electric iron left on a table in the repair department on the sec ond floor burned its way through the table, through the flooring, through a ten-inch Joist and was dangling by its wires from the ceiling of the store room below when found. The fire department investigated, but did not use any water, for the iron had j not fired the building. GOOD GRAIN* CROPS Berlin, June .—Everything indi-! cates that Germany will have un usually good grain crops this year. From all parts of the country the re ports are most satisfactory. The win- , ter was mild, and thus far the Spring i weather has been well-nigh ideal. The rainfall has continued satis factory in nearly all parts of the country; hence grain and meadow grass have been making fine progress. Livestock has been turned out to grass, and thus the scarcity of feed stuffs has been relieved. The greatest j danger just now for the grain crops! is that there may be a relapse of cold | weather, which may injure the well- j advanced plants. Another factor that is expected to increase Germany's production of grain and other crops j is that much moorland has been re- j claimed and will now come into culti- < vation for the first time. The pros pects for an excellent fruit crop are also good. $200,000,000 Merger For Automobiles Called Off Toledo, Ohio, June 16.—The $200,- 000,000 proposed merger of the auto mobile industries of the country was j abandoned because of lack of cash, ! according to John N. Willys, president 1 of the Willys-Overland Company, in a statement. He said. "As the proposition was first put to j me. I understood that I was to receive j payment on a - cash basis for the hold- \ ings which I would turn over. There would have been no objection to such procedure. "When I discovered that the cash j was not forthcoming and that it was the intention to carry through the proposition on a different basis. I de- i elded to withdraw." Mr. Willys asserted that fear of vio lation of the Sherman antitrust act j had nothing to do with the abandon ment of the combine. JUNE 16, 1916. Church Members Don Overalls to Lay Steps Special to the Telegraph Thompsonville, Conn.—Led by their new pastor, the Rev. Harvey E. Dorr, the made members of the Methodist Church here worked to install new concrete steps to the front entrances of the church, as well as a concrete curbing, dividing the church lawn and sidewalk the entire frontage of the property. At 7 o'clock in the morning twenty five men of the church reported for work and not until after 6 o'clock in the evening did they lay aside their shovels and trowels after one of the most strenuous day's labor some of them had done in years. Even then .the work was not completed and ar rangements will be made for another "picnic" as soon as possible. The Indies' Aid Society served din ner to the workers In the church par lors. I'm Sorry, New Custom, 'Beg Pardon' Dropped Special to the Telegraph Cambridge, Mass.—Harvard students no longer use that hackneyed phrase, "I beg your pardon." The new idea is "I'm sorry." Harvard men dread being answered, preferring, as does the uni versity's most famous alumnus, to do all the talking themselves. For that reason nowadays when they step on the hat of an untutored Bostonese in the course of their gambols they In variably admit that they are sorry and let it drop right there. "I'ai sorry." comes from England via France, via Chicago, which learned it from New York." J--.-' . . = 9 In planning your investments, always consider carefully two vitally import ant points—security and interest. H Investing mnnfv without looking «i« th# nrraHt; of the § = proposition, may he literally throwing It nnay, Shares In the Harris Building; and Loan Annotation make a 5 = ataple Investment that never depreciate* In value. The Income = ~ unusually high; shares left until maturity never havlnjc 2 = yielded leu* than H.fl per cent, on the InveNtinent although hor- == = rower# have paid hut six per cent. The difference In due to Hi = the thal «H receipt* are compounded monthly at six per 3 = cent, per annum. S Money put In the Harris Buldlnjt and Loan Association Is a H =§ conservative and Income bringing; Investment, and one that Is is = rarely offered to the salaried man. Our new booklet, -The Harris Way," tells about the many 2 = advantages of stock In our mutual association, mend for It. 2 | The Harris Building and EoanAssociaticai J niiiiiiiiiiiM— Insect Broth Tasty, Scientists Declare Special to the Telegraph Washington, D. C.—lnsect broth, beetles a la mode, larvae lachnesterni on toast and white grub salad are pos sibilities of the menus of the future. I Dr. h. O. Howard, chief of the Bureau of Entomology of the Department of Agriculture, says there is no reason I why people should not eat bugs. ! Or. Howard confided this news to I the Washftigton Biological Society at the Cosmos Club. Several scientists ; present declared that insect broth was very appetizing. The subject came as a result of inquiries in regard to what hungry humans were going to do if the food supply continued to decrease. Spooks Took Him to Hills and He Lost Young Bride | Denver, Colo.—Clairvoyants, whom he frequently consulted, convinced ! Fred Sherman, son-in-law of William I C. Nevin, president of the Nevin Candy j Company, that a fortune lay within his grasp in a prospect hole, high on the Medicine Bow mountains in Wyoming: so Sherman went there with his 22-year-old bride, Edna Nevin Sherman, who was fresh from high j school and society, and took up his j residence In a dilapidated log shack j with a dirt roof through which rain and melting snow poured in muddy , streams. Months of life in this rude shelter obliterated Mrs. Sherman's love for her husband. This is the substance of an answer (lied by William C. Nevin to the $lO,- j 000 alienation suit tiled against the candy manufacturer. 7