12 Harrisburg Surgeon Loses His Appendix «->r. Harvey F. Smith, 130 State i street, was operated on for appendi citis last evening in the Harrisburg Hospital by Dr. John D. Deavor, of Philadelphia. On Saturday Dr. Smith was playing tennis and seemed per fectly well. He took sick Sunday. Word was sent to Dr. Deavor who arrived yesterday afternoon and performed the operation. Dr. Smith's condition was very good this morning. Dr. Smith has performed hundreds of appendicitis operations as surgeon at the Harrisburg Hospital. AMUSEMENTS p ESSES fgA*t BOOKED THROUGH ■f C»««WNT Of fMIIA.A V Kg HCAHTHt«aeo*o ## MOPE-JONES UNITftPC OMM «7/fiQUALOr9O PIECE ORCHESTRA I fa TO-DAY ON'I.Y rnff FRANCIS X. BUSHMAN , Wff and BEVERLY BAYNE: iff in a 5-act film play of M "A M11,1,10.\ A MIWTE" ¥ Also Part No. B of . r »\VH«'S otiiTrr i To-morrow: T "THE SALAMANDER" adapted from Owen Johnson's great novel of a lone girl's tight against the wolves of a city. Admission for Tuesdayi First floor 15c, linlcony ••>« '"■•••Pliq.l ••>Ol WilliklMM Douglas Fairbanks IN The Mystery of The Leaping Pish Two-Reel Fine Arts Comedy Special Free Attraction Paxtang Park All This Week James E. Hardy The World's Greatest High Wire Artist r , | j! Mr. Hardy is the man who performed on a wire suspended over the Whirlpool Rapids at Niagara Falls. He will give two performances daily at the park on a wire suspended 60 feet in the air. DON'T FAIL TO SEE THIS WONDERFUL FREE ATTRACTION Hardy Performs at 4.30 and 8 p.m. PAXTANG PARK THEATER fO-NIGHT The Kanazawa Japanese Troup Sensational Oriental Equilibrists and s—Other Big Time Feature Attractions—s Ladies Admitted Free This Evening |j A / Just One One Jil I\A PriCe §A I Holman's 1 |y $15.00 J | ■ Clothes ,v 1 | \{i for Men and Young Men, \jj 1 I\ l ]j have always been sold with- |V || |; a out premiums or reductions. A|| PA | I Quality is the Standard, and L< v 3 a \I/ my! how the many, many \. || jj A j people have approved of it A P Suv/ A. W. HOLMAN \ I j 82R Market SU Bell Phone 1500 MONDAY EVENING, VILLA PLANNING TO TAKE FIELD Border Rumors Says Bandit | Has Large Force; Carranzis tas Fighting One Band El Paso. Tex., July 10. Pancho Villa is undoubtedly alive and affairs are shaping themselves for another great military exploit In which the re volutionist will play the leading part, according to Information pouring into the United States from scores of sources. It looks as the Villa's forces under the personal leadership of Contreras had won another victory over the troops of the de facto government. Early yesterday General Domingo Arrieta, commanding the 200 Car ranzista troops sent out by General Trevina to dispense the Villistas. who had slaughtered the command of General Ramos and later looted and then abandoned the town if Jiminez, and that he was then engaging the Villistas. Since then no word has been received froifi Arrieta by General Trevino at Chihuahua City. AMUSEMENTS / ■» This Theater I* 30 decrees cooler Inside tlinn on the street. To-day and to-morrow, Jesse L, I.asky presents the great Japanese Actor, SESSUE HVYAKAWA, late stHr of "The t'heat»** In U AI«IGN SOULS." Added Attraction Pnrainount- Burton Holmes Travel Pictures and Mutt & Jeff Cartoons. Wednesday and Thursday, H AZEL DAWN In "THE FEUD OIRI,." Wednesday only. First and Sec ond Episodes of "Gloria's Romance," hy request. LAST MEN LEAVE MT. GRETNA CAMP Eighth Infantry, Ambulance Company and Hospital Corps Off For the Border Mt. Gretna, Pa., July 10.—The last units of Pennsylvania's quota of 12,- 711 officers and men for military duty on the Mexican border entrained here last evening. They comprised the Bth Infantry, Colonel Maurice E. Finney, Ambulance Company No. 1 and a Held hospital corps. Accompanying them is Brigadier-General C. T. O'Neill and staff of the 4th Brigade. The detach ment is traveling in three sections, which left at intervals during the early hours of the evening. The regiment, which was hard hit by the United States medical inspec tors in the rejection of more than 200 men, left with a strength of 56 officers and 986 men, made up of 12 compan ies, two each from York and Harris burg, and one eacn from Carlisle, Chambersburg, l.ewlitown, Bedford, Mahanoy City, Tamaqua and Potts ville, a sanitary corps at Tamaqua and a band from Easton. The hospital and ambulance outfit numbers 141 men. With the departure of the troops, there are but a dozen uniformed men remaining here. Among them are Colonel H. C. Trexler, chief of the new quartermaster's corps, and his assist ants. Some weeks will be required before they can finish their work, as was pointed out by Adjutant General Tho mas J. Stewart on the occasion of a visit to camp. He placed the cost of mobilization, transportation and equipment of the Pennsylvania divi sion at $2,500,000. These figures in clude the cost of transportation of the soldiers here and thence on to the bor der. Their maintenance in camp and on the way to El Paso is fixed at 300,- 000 rations at a total cost of $90,000 exclusive of the vast amount of equip ment. Five hundred railroad cars were required for transportation, 400 of them being coaches. Eulogize Gen. Hutchinson. Lieutenant-Colonel James Kemper, of the Bth Infantry, did , not go out j with his regiment, but will remain j here for a week or more in order to j complete his work an chief mustering j officer for the United States army, in which capacity he came here and continued up to the time of his ap- | pointment and assignment to the State militia, to fill the vacancy caused by J the elevation of Lieutenant-Colonel] Finney to the command of the regiment j on account of the fatal illness of its j old commander General Joseph Hutchison, whose death occurred on Saturday at Chambersburg. In an or der posted to-day. Colonel Finney is commenting on the death of his old commander, saye: "In his death the service loses a highly esteemed, valued and efficient officer, whose impartial administration has always been respected." The military post office which was opened here with the establishment of the mobilization camp, has been clos ed, but orders were issued by Adjutant \ General Stewart that the telephone j and telegraph lines are to be maintain- j ed in first-class order, and the opera- I tors continued at their posts, prepared j to meet any situation that may arise, j Lieutenant-Colonel L. V. Rausch and ! his arsenal force will take up the work ! of getting the camp grounds in shape for the coming here, on July 22, of the 3d Brigade, consisting of the 9th and j 13th, and a separate battalion of the! 12th Infantry, for an eight days' tour j of duty. Preparations are also to be made for the reception of all recruits ! who may be sent for training prepar- ! atory to their departure for the bor der. Penna. Guardsmen to Participate in Maneuvers on Big Scale at El Paso El Paso, Tex., July 10.—American , soldiers may never drive another tent stake into the soil of Mexico, but the two brigades of Pennsylvania troops now here will participate in the great est maneuvers ever attempted in this country in times of peace. Behind this plan, which has reached the regu lar army already, is a scheme to de liver to the respective States next Fall or early winter more than 150,000 citizen soldiers, trained and equipped for instant call to warfare, regular army officers here declare. Volunteer troops will learn of these plans after they have taken hold of camp routine here for several weeks and pave the way for the more am bitious performances by drills, dress parades and guard mounts. The Pennsylvania forces, two brigades of which are complete with the arrival of the Eighteenth Infantry started work on the usual humdrum mono tony. Possibly two weeKs will be al lotted for this work, which will harden the men sufficiently to send them into the more ambitious and involved tech nical instruction. The volunteers will be drilled with regulars, and while the Guard officers will maintain their present rank dur ing this time, the border maneuvers will be under the direct supervision of a regular army officer. These men compare the present plan of intensive preparedness and preparation to the tack that Lord Kitchener finished be fore his death with the volunteers and territorials of the British Isles. "To insure success in battle through the efficiency of teamwork" is the manner in which the orders to the ragulars characterize these maneuvers. They comprise 18 distinct forms of education and embody the greatest program ever known in peace to whip into shape a civilian army for the United States, subject to instant call if needed. In acordance with this program the Pennsylvanians here for the next few months will have learned these 18 subjects which will be taught at the rati of perhaps one a week: First: To advance through a zone of artillery fire. Second, third, fourth: To advance through a zone of infantry fire before fire superiority has been gained. Fifth. Sixth: Gaining fire superiority the advance to the assault; the final assault. Seventh, eighth: The attack com plete; officers required to write a critique on the attack, while they will lecture their men into its system. Ninth: Reconnaisance and selec tions of various defensive positions and trench digging and construction. Tenth: Rifle practice and machine gun training in defensive work, clear ing the foreground of obstacles, sight inn and constructing obstacles In the field to baffle the offensive gunners firing at range marks, firing in various sectors and sham battles which couple the actual defense of a position from attacking force. This portion of the program calls for war umpires, who will decide with whom victory rests, while the army of defense will be kept at this work until it has achieved suc cess. Eleventh: Outpost training, educat ing sentinels in observation, defensive arrangements of supports, trenches, obstacles, lines of retreats, patroling. Twelfth: Outpost duty with com pany performing exactly its normal functions, various positions to be oc cupied and compared. Positions oc cupied all night, the frequent patrols . under competent instructors. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH lAMuseooemsi LOCAL THEATERS The many admirers of Francis Bush- | man, who has been called "the sovereign i of the screen." will ; Francis Bushman have an opportu- ' at Victoria nity to see this | famous star in one ! of his greatest plays, entitled "Millions a Minute." To-day the Victoria pre- ' sents Part No. 'J of "Who's Guilty?" i To-morrow, for the first time in this I city, Owen Johnson's great novel, "The j Salamander." Admission for to-nior- ] row will be fifteen cents for the first floor and ten cents for the balcony and live cents for all children. The bill at the Paxtang Park Thea- i ter for this week promises to be a j regular big time vaudeville ! Paxtans show. The feature attrac- Park tion will be the Kanazawa Japs in a sensational equilib- | rist stunt with a line of original aero- ; batic thrillers direct from the Orient, j This act is said to be one of the most ' beautifully costumed Japanese offer- , ings appearing in vaudeville. Mui- j lane and Montgomery will be seen in a new musical comedy sketch entitled, ! I "Collect on Delivery." Mr. Mullane as an eccentric messenger boy has the 1 reputation of being one of the funniest j comedy characters on the storage.! De Amore and Douglas, knockabout I comedians, Billy Davis, blackface | monologist and parody singer, and j Quinn and Lafterty, grotesque dancers i and singers will complete the bill. The Colonial theater these days is j one of the coolest spots in the city for j an afternoon or even- I.llliuii (■ I sli ing's pleasure. To-day's In Kontcky new feature from the | Feature. Griffith studio is called "An Innocent Magda-| lene" and features Lillian Gish. It is a story of the sunny South that carries a message to all women. It has to do with Colonel Carter, who lives in an old mansion just outside Louisville. Kentucky., and is very much opposed j to the newer families who have come to live about him since the war, and I brings up his daughter to keep very ! much aloof from them. Dorothy (Lil lian Gish), the daughter, grows up, therefore, with no other companions ; than two ol.d negro servants. Into her life there comes a millionaire gataibler from the North. Their friendship rip- J ens into love and when the colonel re fuses his consent to their marriage, they elope. A new t\yo-reel Keystone j comedy called "When Lovers Quarrel," I will complete the bill. Sessuo Hayakawa, the noted Japa- j nese actor will be seen at the Regent ! to-day and to-mor- | Sessue Hnjnkawn row in the Jesse L. In "Allen Soiiln." Lasky production of "Alien Souls," a pliotodrama written especially for him by Hector Turnbull, author or "The Cheat" in which play Hayakawa estab lished himself as one of the distin guished actors of the day. ,r Hayakawa as Sakata. a wealthy Japanese importer is in love with Yuri Chan, a beautiful Japanese girl, who Is the pet of the American school from which she is about to graduate. When thev were but three years old, Sakata and Yuri Chan were betrothed by their parents. Upon the death of her father, Yuri Chan's support is intrusted to Sa kata. Ignorant of this fact, she Re lieves herself immensely wealthy, and decides to have some American inde pendence before she settled down to married life with Sakata. She meets Aleck Lindsay, a social parasite who lives principally on the mone> f furnish ed him by Mrs. Conway, widow of the deceased business partner of Sakata. How she is finally brought to realize that the East and West can never meet, is graphically shewn in a number or thrilling and unusual scenes. Late News Flashes New York. The street cleaning department will flush the streets daily in an attempt to blot out infantile 1 paralysis, and the throwing of offal on I streets is to be punished. Four million ; gallons of water daily will be used. New York. Men interested in ' dvestuffs are greatly interested in the arrival of the German submarine at. i Baltimore. Others will attempt to ! send money to Germany on the re | turn trip. New York.—Julius Pirnltzer, presi dent of the Trans-Atlantic Trust Company, foretold tVue arrival of the German U-boat in a newspaper ad on June 30. Oyster Bay. F. R. Coudert, inter national law expert believes the gov ernment will have to regard the Ger man submarine at Baltimore as a ; war vessel. Paris. The Russian forces In j France are reported to be fighting be side the alies alotig the western front. 1 w^—»^W [ y i - ■ ■ . .1- ; Cameron it Cameron Co. 1 ~B »= - , ■ I ; RICHMOND, VA. :' I 1 »- 1 : IIOGCTT & MYtRS TOBACCO C&, SUCCESSOR j - M f •v Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart ALLABOARD FORV^CATIONLAND! The Mid-Season Clearance of Men's and Young Men's Fancy Suits Brings Interesting Reductions $12.50 Suits Reduced to $9.75 $15.00 Suits Reduced to $11.75 SIB.OO Suits Reduced to $13.75 $20.00 Suits Reduced to $15.75 $25.00 Suits Reduced to $19.50 $30.00 Suits Reduced to $22.50 All Spring and Summer fancy suits remaining in stock are entered in this July clearance event. Included are cassimeres, worsteds, mixtures, homespuns and flannels in English and conservative sacks and pinch-backs. Sizes for stout, regu lar, short and tall men. If you need a new suit for your vacation, take advantage of these savings and start off on your trip with more money in your pocket. Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart —Second Floor, Rear. Bathing Suits, Sport Hats and Shirts: Men's and Boys All wool worsted two-piece bathing suits; navy and white or navy and red trimming $2.25 and $3.00 "Life Guard" bathing suits; white worsted shirts and navy blue flannel trunks with white web belt 82.65 anil $3.75 Navy blue two-piece bathing suits SI.OO One-piece navy blue bathing suits 85c Boys' navy blue bathing suits 50c to SI.OO Men's belts 25c to $1.50 Boys' belts % 25c to 50c BOYS' SPORT AND NKGMGEE SHIRTS GOLF AND MOTORING CAPS With adjustable collar, in plain colors; allover Boys' and men's golf hats, In silk and mohair stripes and with stripe collar 25c to SI.OO 50c and, SI.OO Boys' negligee shirts with collar attached Raffia outing hats for men and boys 50c 25c to SI.OO Dives. Pomeroy & Stewart —Men's Store. f\ 17..AMM0. f. Talra as the date for the Payment of ! will keep Its doors open and its clerical upen Evenings 10 IOKC I delinquent personal school taxes and force on the job. About 2,000 personal • D 1 C L IT beginning tomorrow evening the of- accounts are still unsettled. HI DcICK school 1 axes flee of the collector in the court house Roy G. Cox, a former school direc will be open evenings until 9.30 o'clock tor, has been appointed by ex-City for the accommodation of the delin- Treasurer O. M. Copelin, as deputy Saturday, July 15, has been fixed quents. Saturday afternoon the office delinquent school tax collector. JULY 10, 1916.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers