Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, June 23, 1916, Page 13, Image 13

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    A Tasty Summer
"Snack for the warm
days when the appetite
craves " something differ
ent"—for luncheon, for pic
nics, or any kind of outdoor
excursion is Triscuit, the
Shredded Whole Wheat
yVafer. It is made of the
whole wheat steam-cooked,
shredded and baked. Toast
it in the oven to restore its
:rispness and spread over it
butter, soft cheese or mar
malade. Its snappy, tasty
aroma is a delight to the
palate, supplying the great
est amount of nutriment in
smallest bulk. A deliciously
wholesome toast. It is
ready-cooked, easily carried,
is strengthening and satis
fying. Made at Niagara
Fafls, N. Y.
(Little Benefactors
of Mankind
BlacKburrf9
Pills
I Constipation Ills I
Negrlected—Kills I
———
AMUSEMENTS
t
JwILnER & VINCENT VAUDEVILLE:
jriATS.
DON'T HA> E THE BI.VES
Couie and nw
"MR. INQUISITIVE"
and DOC O'.NEIL and the FVXXY
DOXKEY THAT PETE HAS
and the rest of thta Rood bill.
Coming—MOX., TI ES., WED.
The Devil's Daughter
'
Paxtang Park
TO-NIGHT
GRAND FREE
Fireworks
DISPLAY
* >
The Home of Trlanprle Plays
TO-DAY AXD TO-MORROW
Thomas H. Inre Present!
H. B. WARNER
In
"The Market of Vain
Desire''
An intensely interesting lore
drama In six parts.
Requested Return Fngaitement of
• FATTY" ARBI'CKLE
in
•BRIGHT LIGHTS**
Screaming 3-reel Keystone Comedy.
V
%
To-day and to-morrow Double
Bill the world's most beautiful
■tar,
Billie Burke
In the greateat aerial ator; ever
written.
"Gloria's Romance"
By Mr. and Mra. Itupert Hushes.
Shown every Friday and Saturday.
To-dny'e frature RET Lit.V EN
GAGEMENT of
Pauline Frederick
lu
"Lydia Gilmore"
TO-MORROWS FEATURE,
Violet Meresereau
In
"The Great Problem"
Comlni —Monday and Tuesday
George Beban
In a his elicht-reel feature
"An Alien"
'
Try Telegraph Want Ads
FRIDAY-EVENING,
'
' Vs
Billie Burke in "Gloria's Romance"
The Regent Theater is to be con
gratulated upon securing the great
serial story, "Gloria's Romance," by
Mr. and Mrs. Rupert Hugnes, featuring
Billie Burke, supported by a star cast,
including Henry Kolker. In this pro
duction Miss Billie Burke is said to be
seen at her best.
The first episode. "Dost In the Ever-
I glades." Miss Burke is seen as Gloria
Stafford, a pretty girl of 16 and vivaci
! ous. bubbling over with fun and good
spirits and naturally resents the rigid
• rules and regulations under which her
governess who has oared for her ever
since the death of her mother, would
have her live. She takes advantage of
. every opportunity that offers for a larH
and frequently escapes from beneath
the vigilant eye of her governess to
i romp about like a veritable tom-boy,
and many other thrilling adventures,
i This series will consist of two reels
eaih week, being shown Friday and
< Saturday as an extra added attraction
i to the regular program.
THEATRIC Al. DIRECTORY
I MAJESTlC—Vaudeville.
PAXTAXG—Vaudeville.
COLajMAD —"The Market of Vain De
sire."
REGENT—"Gloria's Romance."
VICTORIA—"A Matrimonial Martyr."
PLAYS AND PLAYERS
A whole morning was spent by the
director and members of the "Gloria's
I Romance" company at the Grand Cen
j tral Station in New York City in order
to secure the scene shown in Chapter
VII of the Rupert Hughes novel.
| "Plastiques," animated sculptory, is
the latest novelty to be introduced in
to the Paramount Pictographs They
j were originated by Ashley Miller.
! Virginia Hammond, for the past few
| years a leading lady with E. T. Sothern,
I has joined the Vitagraph forces. She
j is working in a picture as yet unnamed
! unuer the direction of Thomas Mills.
I "The Girl Phillipa," Robert Cham
ber's latest story, is to be filmed by
I Vitagraph. Anita Stewart will have the
title role.
Audrey Munson. the model who posed
| for the greater majority of the statu
l arv for the San Francisco Fair, will be
seen in a six-act American Mutual fea-
I ture, "Purity"
• ••
LOCAL THEATERS
If you follow Harrisburg's crowd of
amusement seekers, this evening, vou
will, in all probability.
Firework* find yourself at the big
at Paxtang free fireworks display at
Paxtang Park. Several
fireworks displays have been contracted
! for. The first one snould have been
sriven last Friday, but you can't shoot
fireworks in the rain, and a postpone
| ment was necessary. However. Man
ager Davis promises his park patrons
ian exhibition this evening that will
i make up for two shows. Some of the
; very latest novelties in set-pieces and
aerial fireworks will be included in the
\ program.
The vaudeville performance at the
park theater will not start until after
the fireworks are over, in order that
those who wish may take in both the
fireworks and the show.
H. B. Warner will be offered for the
third time on the Triangle program.
when he is presented
H. B. Warner at the Colonial Theater
nt Colonial to-day and to-morrow
as the star of "The
Market of \am Desire. The produc
tion is totally different from either of
the young actor's previous vehicles, be
ing a sociological play, with a dominent
love interest.
Warner appears as a young minister,
who. called to the pastorate of a fash
ionable city edifice, finds the congrega
tion composed of society leaders whose
views of life's problems are far from
being in accord with his own. The
story concerns his f itorts to show liis
congregation the iniquity of marriage
without love.
"Fatty" Arbuckle will b«* on the same
bill in a return engagement of "Bright
Light."
"A Matrimonial Martyr" is a five
five-part Pathecolored feature. Ruth
Roland is featured. The
Ruth Roland scenes were all taken
at the Victoria in the sunshine of Cali
fornia; and so perfect
was the photography, and so exquisite
the outdoor scenes, that the film was
sent to Paris and there treated to the
process of Pathecolor. To-dav will also
be shown the twelfth part of "The Iron
Claw." featuring Pearl White. As an
additional feature to-day there will be
Charlie Chaplin in "The Fireman." For
to-morrow. "Sudden Riches," featuring
Robert Warwick. 8
Pauline Frederick will be seen in a re
turn engagement of "Lydia Gilmore."
In this emotional roie
At the Regent Miss Frederick sug-
Today Only gests with infinite
strength and pathos
the faithful wife and devoted mother,
who suffers indescribable mental'
agony to shield her husband's name and
save his life after he has been proven to
be faithless to her and the murderer of
the man whose home he had violated
The intense struggle she exerts in her
great mother-love to save her son from
going through life with the brand of
Cain, is one of the most vital and ten
der dramatic episodes ever witnessed
on the screen.
"The Great Problem." the stirring
sociological drama, exhibited at the
AMI' SEMEXTS
ME2333333
IARI?iL.O rr fw PICTURta I
G* E -» §/***■ JOOKEO Th*QU«*
FfHOn-JOHti UNIT Pi PC MMV
WMmuALorßontciOKHornA
MM TO-DAY ONLY
MM RCTH ROLAND
WM The famous star, sup
jm ported by an all-
W star cast, in
f "A MATRIMONIAL
' MARTYR"
A 5-aet Pat lie colored
Feature.
* CHARLIE CHAPLIN
in
"THE FIREMAN"
To-morrow i
HUBERT WARWICK
I " The Live Store" "Always Reliable" I
I Call to Arms I
1 lljjtKjiM Was Quickly Answered by the Brave Youth I
I flfflmM* Loves the Stars and Stripes I
1 §k If you are aiming to hit J
I the mark "ENLIST" with 1
I "DOUTRICH" "The Live Store" that §
I //W|®|! as won on merit - No advertising is better than the
■ f store behind lt > and no Store is better than the mer
-1 ''' chandise, the values and the service it renders.
1 iiIMEI The unlimited variety and high quality I
ma rk of our Clothing, the unequaled values we give
pi? |'U and the intelligent attention we pay to every custom
er have made this « Live store" great and our adver- I
4 ' tising profitable because it's truthful.
KUPPENHEIMER
118 *
So it is that we speak to you We make no effort to sell cheap
week after week, bidding the time when merchandise at "Doutrichs". Present satis
you too will grant us an opportunity to demon- r .. , .. ,
strate our greater value-giving—our better 1n an con mue P atrona g e cannot be 1
way of selling better clothes—and to add your secured by any store with merchandise selling
name to the satisfied "Doutrich" customers, at a price which commands less than absolute
whose names are already legion. fabric superiority, perfect style and tailoring.
Since those who once buy here continue that very pleasant I
habit —of their own accord —it is to those who still are strangers that our messages
are largely aimed. f
sls-M $lB-M S2O-00 $25-M I
SHIRTS SWEATERS |
If you knew how many Yes they are scarce, but 1
Shirts we are selling and how we have plenty at this "Live Store."
great the demand for Doutrichs n Another careful selection of the sea-
Shirts you would understand why ? 01 ?' s choicest styles were purchased
we are so enthusiastic about Jh|Sl j f/jij * n f w York this week and are here
I them To those who do not know MP reaoy for your inspection. Hun
tnem. 1 O tnose Who do not know jpgff dreds of fine "fibre" and "silk" sweaters as
about the plain color shirts we well as the newest creations of Shetland
are selling this season we feel that Sweaters with border effects. We're selling
we owe it to you to call your spe- tiT in the right placed 1
Cial attention to them and urge.! secret of this "Live Store' s" success,
you to visit our store and ask to Women's Sweaters .. .$5.00 to $37.50
see them. This is the store of Girls' Sweaters $3.50 to $ 7.50
values. Infants' Sweaters $3.50 and $5.00
Regent to-morrow, with Violet Mer-'
sereau as the heroine.
Coming. Monday and Tuesday. "An
Alien," one of the greatest pictures
ever produced, featuring George Beban.
This is a big eight-reel feature.
BOYS' CAM I* OPENS
The fifth annual Y. M. C. A. State
Boys' Camp at Inglenook opened yes
terday at noon with upwards of 140
boys. Delegations came from the fol
lowing places: Williamsport, Ber
wick. Sunbury, Pottsvllle, Somerset.
Allentown, Harirsburg, Pittston. Hol
lidaysburg. York, Stroudsburg, Milton.
Lebanon and other places.
HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH
XO-TIPPIICG SYSTEM WINS SUC-'
CESS OF HOTEL MANAGER
In the July American Magazine is
an account of Mrs. V. V. Farone, a
Now Tork Hotel manager who forbids
tipping and enforces her rule. When
one gentleman informed her that he
had tipped an employe, Mrs. Farone
demanded his room, declaring that she
could and would enforce her non-tip
ping rule ana Keep her servants satis
fied
1' But can you do this?" asked the
astonished guest.
"Absolutely," she said. "When the
| no-tipping rule went into effect here
i the wages of one hundred and thirty
employes were raised SIO,OOO a year.
Then we have a Christmas fund. A
guest who wants to express apprecia
tion for the servants may contribute to
tine fund on going away. At Christ
mas time the regular tenants all give
something. So we have a holiday dis
tribution of several thousand dollars."
WHAT EUROPE WOULD
IJO WITH AMERICA
You can Imagine what the Euro
peans would do with the Hudson If they
had It—the Dickens, the Hugos, who
have wound and curled the murky
streams of Thames and Seine* through
the life of their capitals, making the
JUNE 23, 1916.
river a force, an agent, a mirror, a
commentator upon the life on Its banks.
The rivers of Europe are the Greek
choruses to the drama of the cities—
Dondon Bridge and Pont Neuf. Hardly
a hero of Parisian Action crosses the
Pont Neuf without making it his confi
dant. Yet what is the tiny current of
the Seine to the mighty sweep of the
Hudson? What are the lights on the
bridges of Paris to the thousands of
lights of mystery that swing along the
base of the Palisades north and south
CASTORIA For Infants and Children
The Kind You Have Always Bought
13
—lights of heavy, squat barges lost In
the shadow*; light* on trim, white
yachts reflected In the sheen of their
enamel; and the sudden upflare of hug*
spouts of Dame from the furnaces and
gas-houses on the western bank? it
Is only a question of flndlng our Dick
ens, Wordsworth, or Hugo, before the
electric blaze of the great real estate
advertising frames on top of the Pali
sades is coined Into legend and story.
—Simeon Btrunsky In Harper's Maga
zine for July.
Bears the _/?