Uneeda Biscuit are extraordinary soda ■ crackers and have a distinctive appetizing H Buy Uneeda Biscuit because they are H soda crackers with a flavor, but, above g| all, buy them (or their crisp goodness. H I mTI^AL^BISCUIT ATTENTION! Bargains For 1 Day more we will sell a $3.50 Guaranteed General Electric Sanitary TOASTER for $2.25 Harrisburg Light & Power Co. Down the "Shadowy" | fgSSSg' St Joe by Steamer—Over | the Rockies by Electricity Two exclusive features provided travelers to 1 sWT&mS Pacific North Coast over the " St. Paul" j I A memorable and rest-giving break in "i the transcontinental journey is avail §WW • i able at St. Maries, Idaho. Here the traveler leaves the train, boards a wait *■: in £ steamer and enjoys a four-hour - trip down the "Shadowy" St. Joe River A and the shady windings of Lake Couer gi '% d'Alene to Spokane, where the journey = to the Coast is resumed on either "The M Olympian " or " The Columbian" 1 j|gp ' trains. This detour is optional and costs 11 nothing extra. i: - a The stupendous marvel of electrification is an- ft] other exclusive feature to delight and instruct ?f on the jouraey over the P||j|| Milwaukee & StPaul | Smoothly riding behind the great electric loco- R motives, one enjoys the magnificent scenery of the ; mighty Rockies without trailing smoke to mar tig IkSE™ ~ the v l3 ' oll or cinders or fumes to annoy. aq rjjf| At Butte, '_ide trip can be made to Yellowstone, % * r Jj*t. Rainier and the innumerable attractions of the Jf *- Fuget Sound Country at the end of the route. S ig*, 2>vi for "Shadowy St. Joe" and c!her travel Hkraturt— addreu 3 ,■■ ■ lr ,i W , tlTOMmiu , | Workmen's Compensation Act Blanks We are prepared to ship promptly any or all of the blanks | made necessary by the Workmen"# Compensation Act which took > effect January 1. Let us hear from you promptly a* the law re ! qulrea that you should now have these blank* In your poaaeaalon. | The Telegraph Printing Co. Printing—Binding— Designing—Photo Engraving HARRIS BURG, PA. THURSDAY EVENING, JLQur Library TableJL BOOKS c. MACAziiwKs^aitf^^aPff^'A The Xext Step in Democracy, by R. W. Sellars. Ph. D. (MacMillan Com pany, N. Y., $1.50.) A discussion of the ever-present theory of government that we call so cialism is scarcely profitable without a working knowledge of what consti tutes socialism and what its aims and hopes are. This very necessary infor mation, essential to a fair-minded crit icism, is here given in a broad, com prehensive way by the assistant profes sor of philosophy at the University of Michigan. Many will absolutely dis agree with the opinions advanced and the deductions reached, but the treat ment given is extremely Interesting in his development of the subject. The author describes socialism as "a democratic movement whose purpose is the securing of an economic organi zation of society which will give the maximum possible at any one time of Justice and liberty." He is here de scribing the ideal condition, but un fortunately he minimizes the powerful force of human nature pulling the other way. He develops the idea of socialism from the Utopists, who be lieved in the natural goodness of all humans and in an artificial environ ment; through the Marxian school, which was more practical and bro\ight the socialists' belief Into direct com munication with an adaptation to the working classes connected with large industries —the realistic stage in other words; finally to the present stage, when agitators and educators are both necessary to the spread of the social istic propaganda. The Red Debt, Echoes from Ken tucky. by Everett Mac Donald. (G. W. Dillingham Co., 51.25.) This is an absorbing: story of the McGills vs. the Lutts, one of the fam ous old Kentucky feuds. Moonshiners and revenue men, law-haters and ruthless slayers keep the action at a high pitch of excitement. These rough giants of the hills, with their own honest but misled conviction of right and wrong, are an interesting lot. The plot deals with the history of the young Lutts who are determined to avenge their father's death at the hands of the revenue man. Little Belle-Ann Benson, the adopted daugh ter of "Paw" Lutts, registers a vow that the man who shall kiss her lips must first kill the "revenuer." She loves Lem Lutts and he reciprocates. However, she goes away to school and receives a new vision of her duty, which after a powerful struggle Is also revealed to Lent. The ending is a happy one, but the suspense entirely satisfactory. The power of visualiza tion in the author's work Is exception ally good. The Gate of Asia, by William War field. (G. P. Putnam's Sons, $2.60.) The author takes his readers on a geo graphical Journey from the Persian Gulf to the Black Sea, recounting in an interesting fashion his own trip through the region including Mesopo tamia, Kurdistan, Armenia, and the Persian province of Azerbaijan, that connecting link between the character istically European nationalities and the equally characteristic Asiatic races. All invading armies, all trade routes from the west that have gone east or vice versa, have passed through this country and the author's route cross ed that of the great Cyrus, of Persia. Nadir Shah, Xenophon, Alexander the Great, the Emperor Julian, and other conquerors. It is a valuable work for those who are concerned with ft study of that particular region, an adequate and ample view of the commercial relig ious. civil and martial life and cus toms of these peoples who live in the pathway that connects two great con tinents. : The tragic death of Lord Kitchener | has revived Interest in the many stor |^AMUSEj^[MENTs|| THEATRICAL DIRECTORY MAJESTlC—Vaudeville. PAXTANG—Vaudeville. COLONIAL—"A Man of Sorrow." REGENT —"The Moment Before." VICTORIA—"The Law Decides." I.OCAL THEATERS Everyone experiences a thrill ot pleasure at seeing him or herself on the moving pic- X. G. P. Parade ture screen, and Pictures at Majestic perhaps you may be fortunate enough to see yourself on the Majestic's screen, where the Patriot-Wilmer-Vin cent Pictures of the Harrjsburg Soldier Boys are being shown the last half of this week, if you stood in line with the thousands of others to witness the wonderful parade last Saturday. Even should you fail to see yourself, you can, at least, pick out some of your friends here and there in that huge gathering. The pictures show the boys preparing for war, exocuting maneuvers, being mustered into service and bidding fare well to relatives and friends. The regular five acts of vaudeville, headed by the dramatic sketch entitled. "Mead owbrook Lane,'' are being given along with these pictures. Pauline Frederick scored another suc cess as Madge, the gypsy heroine. In the picturiza •'The Moment Before" tion of Israel nt the Regent ZangwlU's in tense story, "The Moment Before." The plav will be shown for the last time to-day at the Regent. Miss Frederick is seen first as the elderly Duchess Maiden, who. in a mo ment before her death, has her stormy past revealed to her. As the gypsy, Madge, she is seen at her best, and her acting takes on additional emotional power with the various sensational in cidents in her career before she became the wife of Lord Maiden. To-morrow, for the benefit of those unable to see the first episode of "Gloria's Romance," featuring Billie Burke, last week, the management lias made arrangements to show the first and second episodes together to-day. The last two days of the week "David Garrick" will be shown, featur ing the celebrated actor, "Dustin Far num. The little town of Rio Vista. Cxi., was rudely shocked the other day when Wlllard Louis and William Fnrnum his bride, Mary Ruby, at Colonial led their wedding procession into the principal saloon of the town. It de veloped that the incident was to serve as one of the scenes in the William Fox production, "A Man of Sorrow." star ring William Farntim, which is appear ing at the Colonial for the last times to-day, but even In an equal suffrage State this unusual scene, while in the making, could not escape attention. Friday and Saturday Thos. H. Ince will present a five-reel story of war and romance, entitled "The Bugle Call," which features William Collier, Jr. On the same bill will be another of those roaring funny two-reel Keystone com edies called "Hearts and Sparks," which features Hank Mann and a typicat Key stone cast. To-day's attraction at the Victoria will undoubtedly be of great interest to every person "The Law Decide*" In the city in at Victoria Today view of the fact that the mobili zation of the National Guard of Penn sylvania will be shown. The photoplay, "The Law Decides." featuring Louise Baudet, supported by an all-star cast, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH tes told of him. It is curious that a man so talked of should have so few books written about him. Perhaps the one most quoted now is Harold Beg bie's "Kitchener. Organizer of Vic tory," which was published a year or two ago by Houghton Mifflin Com pany, and Is now in its third printing. Japan Honors the Great Indian Poet. —The arrival of the Indian poet. Sir Rabindranath Tagore, in Japan, where he was expected at the end of May, was much looked forward to. A re porter of the Tokto Asahi interviewed him at Singapore on his journey thith er. Tagore wore a white robe and looked very dtgnifled with his gray beard, reminding one of an ancient saint. On reaching Japan, his pro gram will beain with calling on friends and acquaintances, Japanese and In dian, including Taikan Yokoyama, the noted painter, who once lived with him in Calcutta, after which he hopes to spend a few quiet day. in Kyoto or N'ara. Tagore prefers vegetable diet to meat. On board the Tosa Maru. he usually ordered Japanese dishes; miso soup and tofu, he took with rice a 11a japonnaise. Expression in Singing, by H. S. Kirk land. (Badger, SI.OO net.) This volume of 160 pages is a trea tise on the "art" o fsinging, a work systematically planned, clearly and concisely expressed. The work had a double mission; for the author ad dresses those "who wish to use intel ligently the means of expression which nature has given them" and the lay men who would listen more intelli gently to music, especially song. The writer, who is intimately acquainted with the author and in fact studied under him, knows with what fervor he has applied himself to the work of giving society at large a means to appreciate th 3 real art of vocal en deavor; a means not iconoclastic, but which goes deep into the realms of ar tistic endeavor, without which, true expression in any art is a thing Impos sible. Mr. Kirkland's book might be condemned, into one thought; "good singing is not a quality of the song— the music—it is of the singer." The writer recalls the author's statement "that to be a perfect singer, one shall be able to sing in a hall so large that the last row cannot fully understand the words of the song, that the singer shall sing in a tongue foreign to his listeners, yet make his audience, by his "expression," laugh or weep with him. This then, is the end to which the author is working in his volume; perfect expression, based not upon tonal beauty, placement of voice or method alone, but by feelings of emo tion and passion, by real expression through genuinely "living" the text and concept of the words. SIXTEEN THOUSAND YARDS OF MARK TWAIN Mark Twain's popularity is in no danger of diminishing, to judge by an order just given by his publishers, Harper & Brothers, for sixteen thou sand yards of cloth to be used in bind ing his books. If Mark Twain were still alive and this cloth were stretched out along the New York pavement, we might see the familiar white-clad fig ure walking over this green carpet for ty Inches wide all the way from City Hall northward to One Hundred and Fifty-fifth street. Bonnie May, the little heroine of Louis Dodge's serial In Scrlbner's, has contributed a lot of wise sayings on the conduct of life. Here's some good every-day advice on being pleasant: "You ought to laugh sometimes when you're not really amused. And you can make people take a sensible view of things sometimes just by laughing at them. But, of course, you have to know how to do it right. If you bray at them, or giggle, they'll be in sulted, naturally." i— —————————_. is the feature for to-day and to-mor row. Ten per cent, of the receipts of to-day and to-morrow will be turned over to the Telegraph's fund for the support of saldiers' families. Admis sion for to-day and to-morrow will be fifteen cents for the first floor and ten cents for the balcony. Gordon and Day are presenting a comedy act at the park theater that is in a class by itself. Some The Show might term it a bicycle at Paxtang; stunt. although the wheels are but a sec ondary consideration. So is the gro tesque antics of the tramp comedian, Mr. Gordon, that puts this act in the headline class. Evlyn May and com pany are offering one of those delight ful little comedy sketches, entitled "Much At Home." A surprise finish makes Miss May's act a decided nov elty among the various one-act plays on the vaudeville stage. Three other acts of standard caliber complete a most pleasing performance. Arrangements have been completed for a grand free fireworks display at the park to-mor row evening. In order to give the park fireworks program plenty of va riety, Manager Davis has ordered changes made in set-pieces and aerial stuff at each exhibition. To Keep Skin in Fine Condition All Summer It would be much better for the skin if little croam, powder or rouge were used during the heated term. Mixed with perspiration, dust and grime, these things are anything but beautifying. Ordinary mercolized wax will do more for the complexion, and without giving an oily, streaked, spotted or pasty ap pearance. It is the ideal application for the season, as it not only keeps the pores clean, but daily removes particles of scarf skin which have been soiled by dirt or weather. By constantly keep ing the complexion clear, white, satiny, it does more toward perpetuating a youthful countenance than any of the arts or artifices commonly employed. One ounce of mercolized wax, obtain able at any drug store, will completely renovate the worst complexion. It is applied at night like cold cream and washed off in the morning. To keep the skin from sagging or wrinkling, or to overcome such condi tion, there's nothing better than a face bath made by dissolving 1 ounce pow dered saxolite in '/4 pint witch hazel. —Advertisement. AMUSEMENTS S Paxtang Park THEATER MA TJNEE Fontaine Vaudeville's Premier Entertainer Evelyn May & Co. in MUCH at HOME 4—Other Standard Acta i FIREWORKS FRIDAY EVE. ■5 s,. SMITH'S Last 2 Days One Hour Sale last 2 Days I The last 2 days of our big sale will end with the greatest price sacrifice ever heard of in Harrisburg. We will sell every hour specials commencing at 8 o'clock Friday morning as stated below. A. M. P. M. From 8 to 9 o'clock we will sell From 12 to 1 o'clock SI.OO OQ/> $1.50 Striped Shirt Waists Cn ' S n * on Suits for OVC From 9to 10 o'clock we will sell From Ito 2 o'clock $2.00 AQ. $2.00 Ladies' and Misses' Suit Cases for VOC Skirts at • From 1° to I I o'clock we will sell From 2 to 3 o'clock $1.50 $3.00 and $4.00 trimmed OC Men's Shirts, all styles. ... • Ladies Hats at From 11 to 12 o'clock we well sell From 3to 4 o'clock the best Ladies' 10c Gingham for 4c| Suits in the house go $11.75 Above 11 hour values are only good for Friday and Sat urday at the i u SMITH'S STORE I 412 Market Street Water Carnival on Swatara Creek at Hummelstown Special to the Telegraph Hummelstown, Pa., June 29. A water carnival will be held on the Swa tara creek bordering the town on the evening of July 15. The owners of ca noes, motorboats and rowboats form ed an organization at the home of Homer Hummel Strickler reecntly with Mr. Strlckler as chairman and Charles Fackler, secretary and treas urer. The carnival committee consists of W. H. Fackler, George Bartels, John Baer and C. Ylngst. The carnival will be headed by the Acme Band, which will also hold a festival on the banks of the creek. Six prizes have been offered by mer chants of the town for the best dec orated boats as follows: First prize, umbrella, offered by F. D. Blessing & Sont second, flash light, S. B. Zerfoss; third, box of shells, by Nye & Conrad; fourth, bottle of lilac toilet water, Dr. J. Irwin Ruff; fifth, pair of Suspend ers, E. Z. Etter,; sixth, box of toilet soap, Morris M. Engle. The prizes are on display In the show windows of the various merchants donating them. Much interest is being shown and as Hummelstown has not held a water carnival for several years, this one promises to be a big affair. AMUSEMENTS ÜBI The Coolest Theater In the City TO-DAY William Fox Present* p LAY WILLIAM FARM M In "A MAN OF SORROW" A Story of Love and Hate Unsed on tlie Famous Staßc Success, "Hoodman Blind" FRIDAY AND SATURDAY WILLIAM COLLIER, JR. In "THE BUGLE CALL" * pEGEFiT Last day, PAULINE FREDERICK In "THE MOMENT BEFORE." Para mount. Added Attraction Paramount Plot ok rap ha. To-morrow, first and second episode of "GLORIA'S ROMANCE," featuring; BILLIE BURKE. To-morrow and Saturday, DUSTIN FARNUM In "DAVID GARRICK."' Paramount. Added Attraction—"Gloria's The Theater that Is 30 degrees cooler Inside than out. BP a J A»C BOOKEDTHNOUaW Frl SB COMPANY or PMiUA. r V r MM H EARTH ff*2oooo ' ftj fc| Mm HOPE-JONES UNIT PIPE 039 AH Ljl Jy EQUAL or 50 Pi tCL ORCHESTRA t t J tM To-day and To-morrow "THE LAW DECIDES" B : Mffg A 7-act Photoplay uJi' Supreme, Featuring; MM LOUIS BAUDET Bar and an all-star cast Mi % Motion Pictures of FIJLzJR. MT. GRETNA CAMP 10 per cent, of receipt goes to Telegraph fund. Admission—Flrat Floor, JScj Balcony, 10c. JUNE 29, 1916. WEDDING AT MIDDLERURG Special to the Telegraph Lewistown, Pa., June 29. A pretty wedding took place in the Lutheran Church at Middleburg, on Tuesday aft ernoon, when Elizabeth Moyer, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Moyer, of Middleburg. became the bride of Harry Earle Callahan, of Lewistown. The groom is a clerk in the Johnson shoe store. W. C. T. U. TO MEET Special to the Telegraph Blain, Pa.. June 29. The Women's Christian Temperance Union Society will meet on Monday evening, at 7:SO o'clock, In the Methodist Episcopal Church. AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS fiiiniH! r B w JFVF.Mnm | IWILTIER & VINCENTVAUDEUVILLEI | COMFLEi E CHANGE OF VAUDEVILLE TODAY B NEW BILL HEADED BY I MEADOW BROOK LANE and HOEY & LEE AND THE | Patriot- Wilmer Vincent Pictnres of HARRISBURG SOLDIER BOYS GOVERNOR'S TROOP AND COMPANIES D AND I Preparing for War, Saying Good-bye, Executing Maneuvers, Mustering In, AND THE GLORIOUS PARADE OF LAST SATURDAY 1 If You Were One of the Thousands Who Saw the Boys Depart, I You May See Yourself on the Majestic Screen. I Also IIARRISBURG TELEGRAPH'S BIG OUTING FOR SCHOOL Seven Per Cent Increase in wages has been granted the coal miners. They are also working an eight-hour day instead of nine hours. This change from nine to eight hours reduces by 12/t per cent, the amount of labor expected for a certain sum. It also increases wages by a propor tionate amount. The Compensation Insurance Act and the great increase in the cost of mining supplies further adds to the expenses of producing coal. For these reasons coal prices have advanced about 7 per cent. Prices Now 30c Per Ton Lower than will b$ charged next winter. By engaging your supply now you are able to save 30c on every ton required for next winter. Better have your coal bins filled while you are thinking about it. United Ice & Coal Co. Foriter & Cowden ISth St. Chestnut Third & Boaa Hummel ft Mulberry Also Steelton, Pa. Cupid Was Member of ; Gettysburg High Faculty Gettysburg-, Pa., June 29. Cltizenf f r are beginning to wonder what kind o1 » instruction was given to the pupils ir 5 the high school during the past winter Already sinoe the close of school thre< of the girls of the school have beer married and it is an unconfirmed re s port that a fourth one has been addec J to the list. Patrons of the school be. 1 Have that Cupid was one of the most successful members of the faculty.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers