14 infraction • %lrefflnjati4 t- THEATRICAL OIRKCTORT MAJESTlC —Vaudeville. ?AXT ANG —Vaudeville. OLONIAL—"A Modern Thelma.'' i.KGEXT—"The Heart of Nora Flynn." i'ISTORIA—"The Gill With the Green Eyes." PLAYS AMI PLAYERS Valeeka Suratt completed her work n the new William Fox Him in two iveekr. Her director. Roland West, says this is the quickest time he has ever tieard of, for a star. The most notable production of the Secade. according to the members of the Harvard Dramatic Association, was that of Maude Adams at the Harvard rtadlum when she did "Joan of Arc." t'hls memorable performance was given in H'os, with Dallas Anderson, now Miss Adams' leading man, as the Dau phin. "Somewhere in France," Richard Hard ing Davis' last story, is to be made in to a pictuie play by Thomas H. Ince. The story was first published in the Metropolitan Magazine. "Character Building in Children" is R late chapter in the campaign for Better Babies" being waged by the Paramount Pictographs. In these pic tures. mothers are shown how to aid the liild properly In its moral and mental growth. A riot of song, color and fun is what I.® said of the Majestic's headliner, a blight musical comedy, cn- At the titled "Mr. Inquisitive," that Majeatle is appearing at that theater for the last half of the week. There are seven people in the cast headed by Earl Cava n a ugh. who was formerly a comedian with the "Honev I'Hiis." Another act on the bill is that of Santley and Norton, who present a piano and singing act. Completing the vaudeville list are: Doc O'Netl, stvled the king of "nut" comedians; Henry and Adelaide, couple In a singing and dancing act. and Pete and His Pals, romedy act consisting of a blackface comedian and a funny mule. AA'hen it comes to preparedness. Uncle Gray Hair Restored to its Natural Color In a lew applications to Its original dark. Rloesy shade. no matter how Ion? It has been gray or faded, r.tnl dandruff removed by It is not a Jye—nc yon ore using i;. 25c. 50c. sl. nil deseHc r direct upon receipt of price. Send for "Beautiful Hair." JTMIo Hay Specialtiefii^JKian^^t>wark^^l. fyS? Suits to Order | ALWAYS SIO.OO J i- \T~Ys Room 2 JI 16 N. Third St. —— t AMIM;MI:\TS Paxtang Park THEATER MAT. AND Evalyn C. May & Co. in "THK LIVE WIRE" 5 OTHER BIG ACTS 5 FIREWORKS FRIDAY EVE. The Home of !:• > ter Fkototan | to-day William Fox proftcntn VIVIAN MARTI* in "A Modern Thelma" An interesting love drama that is n photographic masterpiece. FRIDAY and SATURDAY H. R. WAItXKIt in "Tin.; MAPKKT tyk—lgj i/J COMPANrcrPtllLi.A'v BTTS CfP HEARTHtf 5125000 KP* Ml /?#HOPE-JONES UNIT Pipe OHMS WECECMiOTRA SLJ!Jn Sfi TO-DAY ONLY Ev|w katherine K AEL- P f <*7M P „ in a r, " act picture BnAegKrv based on. Clyde Fitch's HB <®'U famous play, "THE GIRL WITH THE fJREEX EYES" 1" A M VrHIMOMAL MARTYR" A I'iitlie Ilnud-Colored ' Feature. DO voir KNOW THAT E\ KBY ONE OF THESE FELLOWS 1 • « * ' ' ' " ' ' " > mmlil iiult Dklill'ic mill lii-urln to ■mile ir (lifj could »er Vm vv w-kt yvTTv n vp _ —__ _ .A.TTimRKWKKK MR. INQUISITIV E MAJESTIC A PI'LL OP FUN MUSICAL COMEDY THURSDAY EVENING, Sajn has nothing on the management at Fp*work» been making prepara mt Prrtut tlons for a grand fire . works display for two w i«#»s and bad w«ather has always pre vented the show being presented on the da.y wet. To-morrow evening an other attempt will be made to show , the patrons of Paxtang just what a real ; fireworks display looks like. All the I pyrotcchnical novelties acquired for the ! displays that should have been are on ) hand, together with the program of ex ! plosives that were ordered for this week's display, and between the two Manager Davis expects to have some firework* show at Paxtang to-morrow evening If the weather, u favorable. The vaudeville show at the park thea ter this week Inoludee Evlyn C. Slav : and company in "The Live Wire," as the feature act. It makes one of the best i headliners the park has had for some time. The balance of the show is also ; irtade up of real big time material. To-day's attraction at the Victoria ; will be "The Girl With the Qreen Byes," a five-part pioturiaa j At the tion of Clyde Pitch's play of i Victoria the sa.me name. Mies Kathe j Today rlne Kaelred is featured. It is said to be a film based up on what jealousy has done and will do. I For to-morrow there will be "A Matri monial Martyr," a Pathe hand-colored feature, in which Ruth Roland is i starred, and Is supported by an all-star cast. To-morrow also the twelfth part of "Tlie Iron Claw," featuring Pearl White. I Vivian Martin, the little star that Is I featured in the latest William Fox pro duction, "A Modern "A Modern Thelma," which is being Ttaolnin" shown at the Colonial for at Colonial the last times to-day, is said to be more eaptivat j ing than ever in her new role. Miss ! Martin appears as a Norwegian girl, who marries an English aristocrat, ! Later he brings her to his home in Eng land. where one of his former sweet hearts succeeds in arousing her jeal i ousy. In a short time she rung away 1 back to to her home In Norway. Her husband follows after her. and they 1 are happily reunited in the old home- '■ ' stead. H. B. Warner will be shown i | here on Friday and Saturday in a dra matic narrative from the pen of C. . Gardner Sullivan, entitled "Thte Market of Vain Desire." The first, release of , the Fine Arts comedies entitled. "The 2 I O'clock Train.'' will be on the same bill. "The Heart of Nora Flynn," in which Marie Doro is being starred In at the Regent to-day, has to »!arle Doro do with a loyal, warm lit the hearted Irish girl, who Regent Today endangers her own good name and her hopes of future happiness with the man she loves to protect the mother of the child whom she also loves. The first showing of Billie Burke In Gloria's Romance will be shown to morrow and Saturday, and every Friday •ind Saturday hereafter for a period of twenty weeks, as oil extra feature. "Gloria's Romance" Is a story of love, adventure and romance, written by Mr. anil Mrs. Rupert Hushes, with scenes and atmosphere laid in ar.d around the most fashionable and exclusive sections of the United States. The dramatic portion of the bill to- I morrow will be provided by Pauline i Frederick in a rturn engagement of Lydia GUmore." SMALL PIMPLES BURNEDAWFUI On Forehead. Got Larger, Spread Around Chin. Face So Sore Could Not Wash It. HEALED BYCUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT —.— "My trouble began with small pimples upou my forehead. Later they began to j get larger and more came every day and my | tskln was very red. They burned something avrful and I lost sleep especially around the hot weather. They spread around my chin and made me look as if I had a dirty face. At one time my face was »o sore that I could not wash myself and I always had a greasy face. "I had this trouble for some time before i I used Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I put on the Ointment and then applied tha Soap and in a little while I was healed." j (Signed) Albert Z. Myers, Jr., 2131 8. Le« St., Philadelphia, Pa., July 23, 1915. Sample Each Free by IVlall With 32-p. Sldn Rook on request. Ad- ! dress post-card "Cuticura, Dept. T, Boa> j ton." Sold throughout the world. AMUSEMENTS ! < | ■> | To-day, the last of MARIE DOnO In "THE HEART OF NORA FLYNN" To-morrow & Saturday, Double mil, "GLORIA'S ROMANCE" A (treat motion picture aerial drnina fenturlnu the celebrated star, BILLIE BCRKR First Episode. To-morrow's feature, PAL'I.INE FREDERICK In I "LYDIA GILMORE" liet n plioto of Illllle Rurke FREE, i MOTOR CLUB TOUR FAMOUS GALLITZIN SPRING BRONZE TABLET UNVEILED AT GALLITZIN SPRING CUT STONE PERGOLA ERECTED AT PRINCE GALLITZIN SPRING ON THE WILLIAM PENN HIGHWAY Motorists Sunday who wished to go east or west over the Allegheny moun tains, on the William Penn Highway near Cresson. found it an impossibil ity. The road was blocked, not by a landslide nor a flood, but by almost $400,000 worth of automobiles parked along the highway. Special police made an effort to clear the road for the through tourists, but their efforts were fruitless. As a matter of fact the special police merely made the tan gle more complete. The 384 automo biles or every description which com posed the line stretching a mile p.bove and two miles below the Prince Galit zln Spring were jammed together so tightly that no impression could bo made upon the tangle. Five thousand persons went by train and in these 384 automobiles to attend the ceremonies held in connection with the unveiling of the monument to Prince Galitzin, the Russian priest who went to Loretto. Cambria county, in 1799; and took charge of a parish which Included hundreds of square A "A M ATRIM ON lAART (PA^ Frid^- SCen * fr ° m " A Matrlmonlal Martyr," to be sho*n at the Victoria HARRISBURG PEOPLE GET INSTANT ACTION Those who have used it In Harris burg are astonished at the INSTANT action of simple buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., as mixed in Adler-i-ka. Because it acts on BOTH lower and upper bowel, ONE SPOONFUL, Adler i-ka relieves almost ANY CASE con stipation, sour stomach or gas. It removes such surprising foul matter that a few doses often relieve or pre vent appendicitis. A short treatment helps chronic stomach trouble. H. C. Kennedy, druggist, 321 Market St. HARRISBURG V&&&2 TELEGRAPH ] miles of mountain territory. In his travels through his parish he frequent ly went out of his way to drink at a spring in the mountain, about four j miles east of what is now Cresson. i After the prince-priest's death in IS4O ; the place become known as "Prince Oallitzin Spring." Several years ago ithe M. T. of Altoona determined to 1 erect a memorial to Prince Oallitzin at the spring. A cut stone pergola i has been erected; and last Sunday a bronze tablet was unveiled. These ceremonies attracted thousands. | Interested persons who covered .the ! three miles of parked vehicles count i od 384 automobiles and over a hun dred motorcycles. They figure the cost of these autos and motorcycles as | being almost $400,000. while' there were also many thousand dollars worth of horses and horse-drawn ve hicles. Members of the Harrisburg Motor olub on their next week's western tour will pass Gallitzin spring on the road from Hollidaysburg to Cresson. STATE BONDING WORK DEFINED Attorney General Makes Public an Important Decision on a Question Attorney General Brown has given an opinion to Samuel B. Rambo, execu ! tive officer of the Department of Pub | lie Grounds and Buildings, to the ef- I feet that bonds must be given only by j officers of State institutions who ac- I count to the Auditor General and Ktate • Treasurer for moneys paid to the in* i stitutlon. In some hospitals others | have been bonded, but hereafter the j State will not pay the premiums on the bonds. In an opinion to the Auditor General's | Department it is held by W. M. Har dest, deputy nttorney general, that Ben jamin Maxey, mine Inspector in the Susquehanna district, is not entitled to an Increase of salary under the act or 1915, notwithstanding an opinion bv the late Judge R. R. Little, or Susquehanna i county. The judge held that the in spector's term ended with 1915 and ap pointed him to serve until his succes sor, to be elected this year, could i Qualify, but the State officer decides that no, vacancy existed and that he Is ' still serving under the term for which lie was elected before the salary raiser • became elective. PEACH TREES GET HIT BY BAD PEST Reports Showed That a Couple of Nuisances Arc at Work in Orchards In spite of reports spread to the con trary, Pennsylvania peach trees are having their troubles this year. Some reliable information to the State De partment of Agriculture is that all over the State damage has been done to trees by peach leaf curl. This is a fun gous disease wliiyh winters over, appar ently on the wood or buds, and infects the young leaves as they arc pushing out of the buds. Once infested there is no cure for the disease during .that season. With this disease an ounce of preven tion is worth a pound of cure, it can be prevented by spraying during the dormant season with lime sulphur wash, as for San Jose scale, diluting concentrated lime sulphur wash to test 1.03 specific gravity. The common practice lias been to do this in the early Spring, Just before the buds burst, but recent experiments have shown that this is not the best time for applying the preventative. Better re sults are obtained when the lime sul phur wash is applied during the late Fall or early winter, soon after the leaves have fallen. The season is that the spores of the fungus are on the buds and if there is open weather in the winter which causes the buds to swell and the bud scales separate, everything is In favor of an infection at that time which early Spring spraying cannot prevent. Woman, 80, Manages Farm of 2,000 Acres Marion. Ohio.—Sixty-one veare ago Eunice Concklin, a direct descendant of tije historically famous Roger Wil- I liams, of Rhode Island, and d'Estaing j Salisbury Covert, of Cincinnati, plight j ed their troth in the spacious drawing | room of the picturesque Concklin home here. The furniture and mural decora tions of the room are the same as they were the day tha Salisbury, now dead, claimed his bride, who is now in her eightieth year. .Despite her age, she manages the largest agricultural lands in Marion County, left her by her father, who bought 2,000 acres from the government for $1.50 an acre in IS2I. Letter List .UST OF LETTERS REMAINING IN the Post Office, at Harrisburg, Pa., for the «eek ending June IT. 1916: Ladies' List Miss Jeannette M. Bix ler, Mrs. Laura Brooks. Mrs. Janie Brown, Mrs Ida Colledge. Miss Helen Co\ alesk, Miss Ida Fells, Miss Katie Foy. Mrs. Ema Green, Mrs. Lizzie Main, Miss Mabel Hainer, Cora Harvey <D. U). Laura Hickman, Miss Anna Johnson, Miss Maggie Johnson, Mrs. Geo. kumpp. Mrs. Luvenia, Mrs. J. A. McCurdy, Miss Mildred K. Murphy Mrs husle Pope. Miss Anna Seitz, Lulu Shaf fer. Hazel Sheldon <D. L>, Miss Mary Smith. Mrs. Lorma Snyder (I>. Li. Mrs. L. fenyder <l>. L.i Mrs. Alfred Stokes, Blanch Taylor. Mrs. Lillie Terry, Mrs bamuel G. Thorple.v. Miss Edith Tyree, Mrs. Barbara VanHnusen, Mrs. Annie \\ ilson. Mrs. John Yortev. Gentlemen's List Bovd D. Alter Nichol&t) Ardelean, Theodore Ardelean Frank A. Bathman, H. F. Backenstoe! John H. Best, Chas. A. Burns, Harri- Proper Thing Now Is to Peel Off Soiled Skin Those who abhor sticky, greasy, shiny, streaked complexions should re ligiously avoid creams, powders and rouges during the heated davs. There's no need foi them, anyway, since the : virtues of mercoiized wax have be j come known. No amount of perspira tion will produce any evidence that I you've been using the wax. As it is ap plied at bedtime and washed oft in the ! morning, the complexion never looks like a make-up. Mercolized wax gradu ally takes oft a bad complexion, instead of adding anything to make it worse. It has none of the disadvantages of cosmetics and accomplishes much more in keeping the complexion beautifully ] white, satiny and youthful. Just get an ounce of it at your druggist's and see what a few days' treatment will do. I'se like cold cream, j Another effective warm weather ■ treatment—beat tending to cause | wrinkles and flabbiness—is a skin tightener made by dissolving 1 oz. pow j dered saxolite in H pt. witch hazel. Its i use (as a face bath) leaves no trace.— Advertisement. tx. Does Your Printing Fit Its Purpose? ? We are Printers—and having formed the f habit of looking at things from our custom ers' point of view, we've developed some very positive opinions on the subject of planning printing that fits its purpose. We write, plan, design and illustrate Cata ostLJ logs, Booklets, Brochures, Folders and Mail ing Cards, in addition to demonstrating our ability as Printers. Let us solve your problems of direct adver tising. Shall we call at your office, or will you call at ours? Sales Department The Telegraph Printing Co. Printing—Binding—Designing—Photo-Engraving HARRISBURG, PA. JUNE 22, 1916. ent y of Fresh Air and a ? Bloch Carriage Insure Your Baby s Health and Comfort Let baby spend his or her daytime sleep ing or waking hours outdoors, in a cozy, comfort aide Bloch Carriage. Every mother who has used a Bloch Carriage is always glad to recommend it. See our great variety—all price?—ss to $35. GOLDSMITH'S « NORTH MARKET SQUARE son Burton. Geo. Conrad, Bert M. Craig [ (2). Bert Crossit, J. Doley (D. Lt), Saml. i Kachus, J. F. Bberly, Hon. J. S. Elick, ( Miles Foster. W. J. Ginter. Wm. Oliff , Gray. John M. Harris. Randolph C. Har rison. Andrew Hines. Nathan Jones, ! Emory Lutz, Robert. W. MuConnell, W. ' E. Mercer <2>, R. C. Miles, .las, Miller, i Frank Nash, Robt. P. Oyler. Harry Reed, | P R. Scliminkey. Peter Schmolze, I Henry Shefer. Abraham M. Shock, Wm. i P. Shoffer, Geo. W. Smith. N. S. Snyder ! (2), A. E. Stees, L.. E. Stelgermalt, E. E. Stone, Stubbefield, Chas. A. Thomp- ' son, 0. Tumma, Norman F. Tyler, Dale Wahley and Family, Oscar Walbourn, Frank E. Weber, A. W. Wentworth, i Frank Wheeler (P. L.). Bert Williams j (D. U>, C. A. Walker. Ray Williams. | Firms Atlas Powder Co., J. P. Cox I SPEAKING ABOUT 5c CIGARS j King Oscar—Quality j | Quality—King Oscar i ! IT'S ALL THE SAiE I j 25 Years of Uniform Quality I 1 Harrisburg, Pa. r— ■■lWlßHlM—■!■!■■■■■ lll II !■! II !!■ I 111 IliriiTlfllfl— j & Co., Parisian Pleating Novelty Co. I 12), The Sun Magazine. Travelers Pro- I tective Association. j Persons should invariably have their | mail matter addressed to their street and number, thereby insuring prompt ; delivery by the carriers. FRANK C. SITES, Postmaster. ;■ ... MEDKIXE ECONOMY A pleasurable, physic, tonic and blood purifier combined in one sweet little pill makes an ec onomical treatment fur {constipation, biliousness, stomach, liver and bowel trouble Obtain a 10c or jr>c pkR. of Blackburn's Cascaßoyal-Pills of any good druggist.—Advertisement.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers