10 |u'.'i.nu?ui<rrral ; \ MASTE/iP/£CEjS £| :q „ arr/r& \ CtMS StAHfKS ART | the new Bifocals — \ far and near In one—are the result of years of study and research. There are no unsightly cemented lines to make one appear older. Truly, they're Masterpieces of the leismakers' art. Sir Wm. Crookes' Lens —ln a delicate tint that removes only the Injurious ultra-violet light rays. We can grind them to your prescription at a very small cost to you. Every pair of Belslnger glasses gives practical and permanent eye relief —and we guarantee it! J. S. Belsinger 205 LOCUST STREET Belsinger Opp. orpheum Glasses as Theater Low as $2 Estab. 1014 8 AMUSEMENTS I 1 gB ceHnrrr or mi fßauALorßo Piece IKM to-day only \MM BEATRICE FAIRFAX JM FEATURE NO. 2 M presenting the eminent W stars. ' HARRY FOX AND | GRACE DARLING • in a story of love and romance written by the original Beatrice Fair fax. Also pictures of the KTPONA CELEBRATION and Harrisburg Scenes. Beginning To-day, All Children Admitted Tom Farnum and Kathryn Williams, In "THE SPOILERS," Oct. 3 and 4 To-dny last opportunity to see M.UIY PICKFOIU) In "HULDA OF HOLLAND" and TiWilgbt CHARLIE CHAPLIN In "THE COUNT" Added attraction to-day and to morrow, BILLIE BURKE In tile tilth chapter of "GLORIA'S ROMANCE." (The Murderer nt Bay) To-morrow only Special Chil dren's Show lO a. m. till IS in. CHARLIE CHAPLIN In "THE COUNT," and other Komedles. APPROPRIATE SOUVENIRS MARY MILES MINTER In "YOUTH'S ENDEARING CHARM* _____ COLONIAL ' Today a Tomorrow A pulsating story of a man's de votion to the Stara and Stripes. Added Attraction! "THE FRENCH MILLINER" ~ , Funny two-reel Keytone comedy. MONDAY AND TUESDAY NORMA TALMADGE in "THE DEVIL'S NEEDLE" QRPHEUM TOMORROW Monday gjfr Oc>. 2 A* WOODS SEATS fO^DAY COMMON THE JUN [ OR MIMIC .VcMiL WORLD OF 1916 ONE SOLID YEAR IN NEW YORK , „ _ , PRICES i 30—Juvenile Performer*—3o Mat., 25c to $1 ( Eve., 25c to $1.50. PRICES—2Sc, 50c, 75c, <I.OO Tuesday Evening, Oct. 3 i"W| Tfce MARBURY-COMSTOCK CO. - I I | I I 1 Off era the amarteat and I JM V I I brightest IJUST FUN, MUSIC AND GIRLS Prices, 25, 5), 75, SI.OO, $1.50 and $2.00 Wednesday "™,f T K October 4 MAT I N*BE Lower Floor 50c, 75c, SI.OO Balcony 25c, 50c THE NEW YORK CASINO THEATER SUCCESS Lady Luxury Book aad I.yrlca by Rlda Johnaon Young, author of "Nauvhty Marietta." WITH VllA JEANE AND NOTABLE CAST (TIGHT PRICES 25c, 50c, 75c, SI.OO, $1.50 Use Telegraph Want Ads Use Telegraph Want Ads FRIDAY EVENING, GOVERNOR WAKES UP RURAL PEOPLE [Continued From First Page] Journey. The governor had Just vis ited one of the fairest sections of the Keystone State and was fresh from addressing impromptu meetings of the Perry county farmers who showed an appreciation of his work and his hopes as did those of a dozen other counties lying wide apart. The Governor and those who ob served the people and heard the com ments upon the three tours were im pressed by the deep Interest taken by his audiences in what he said. Speak ing in a year marked by hounteous harvests in many sections the gover nor voiced the gratitude of the whole people to Providence for the blessings vouchsafed and his words found a ready echo everywhere. Ready For Work "Now we are ready for work" said tho Governor Just before coming into Harrisburg. He had placed his ideas before the rural folk and had found them in sympathy with his policy of going out and talking it over. He will embody in his forthcoming mes sage which the constitution requires he shall send to the general assembly plans for such legislation as will give the funds for the improvement of the roads, tho development of vocational education, the placing of scientific ad vico for farmers within immediate reach of all and the making of life in the country so attractive that the ratio of population in favor of the urban communities shall be over borne. Details must be worked out, but the governor feels that the people are with him and although he must study out propositions involving revenue, appro priation and disbursement so that this year's conditions shall not come again and schools and public improvements be advanced, he will take up his la bor heartened by the Interest dis played. The three tours covered sections of the State notable for every crop ex cept those peculiar to the western tier and the extreme northwest. In his abounding knowledge of the affairs of the people of the State which the Governor evidenced so many times in the eighty or ninety speeches he made in thirty-five counties of the State Dr. Brumbaugh showed ho was aware of what the districts unvisited required. The Highways The Lincoln highway came in for its share of praise during the first and second day's Journeys, but the new William Penn highway received un qualified and splendid support on the final day's run. "I want this William Penn high way, stretching from Philadelphia to the Ohio line to bo a parnorama of the life and tho interests of the people of this marvelously endowed common wealth," said he at Millerstown. At Lewlstown he bade the people rejoice for the time was coming when the Juniata valley would be Justly famous for the scenic features he eulogized in a speech at Huntingdon which his friends declare to have been one that even this master of diction has seldom equaled. "You Juniata county people may feel certain that I will never rest until the William Penn highway is as fine from the eastern to the western line of Pennsylvania as it Is from Lewis town to your gates," was the remark of the Governor at Mifflin. At other points the Governor chided borough people for not rising to op portunities to better roads aryi to co operate with the State and he praised the people of Cambria and Blair for the excellent county roads they had built from their own funds to match what the commonwealth is doing in memory of William Penn. The Lincoln highway the Governor said in one of his speeches In the southern tier Is destined to be known throughout the land and he pointed to the ever-increasing traffic and to the automobile license tags of many States which he met upon the tours. For Better Schools "The child that lives in the remote districts is entitled to just as much of a chance to get an education as the boy in a city" said the Governor in New Bloomfield. He said a short time before that the education of the army of children In this State was so Important that everyone should realize It. I£ the school children of AMUSEMENTS GRAND THEATER 1 1420 Derry Street TO-NIGHT BESSIE BARRISCALE AND WILLIAM DESMOND in "NOT MY SISTER" Trlangle-Ince Picture Also MOONSHINERS" Keystone Comedy With .41 St. John. Special mimic on our masniKlcent Moller Pipe Organ by Profeaaor C. W. Wallace. N. A. 0.. the eminent blind orgnnlat. BWWIiMlii Wm. Strouse—Clothier-Hatter-Furnisher <mtmmmimmmm■mbhbm— mb ftyle, Fit or, Quality? By which of these standards do you buy clothes? You'll find all three in Alder-Rochester— Every man has his own individual style—it's spelled p-e-r-s-o-n-a-l-i-t-y. This style, or personality, is magnified or diminished, according to the taste exercised in selecting the clothes he wears. There's a certain individuality built INTO ADLERRCEHESTER, Clothes that seems to act as a microscope in emphasizing one's personality, picking out the arch of the chest, the "hang" of an arm, or a well-rounded shoulder, and playing up that feature. That's why Adler-Rochester clothes stand supreme. Do they cost more? No. They're priced at S2O, $25, S3O, $35 Wesco Fifteens being built by Young Men, for Young Men, the viewpoint and clothes-ideals of * Young Men are moulded right into Wesco Fifteens. The Young Man and Young-ish Man of to-day demands super-styled clothes—hand-tailored—built to -g _ _ perform true clothes service, while touching the pocketbook but | gTl| Ihp IV pig) St OTP of lightly* Wesco Fifteens answered that demand, at The same enviable reputation _____ enjoyed by the Clothing Depart- A W gs[ §T r K gj "T* ment of The New Store Is also § I S w IE fca Jr m n B I Hj a MB _j notably evident in the Furnish- Wajf X A# I f R BK wl 9r E I lngs Department, the place WW 8W Ha W OT S W & i V | I - ~'~B§ where fashions in Men's wear • ■ ® ■ HLi JSLm jfjjf apparently originate. Q Pennsylvania could be placed upon the William Penn highway, for in stance, said he, the flag of the com monwealth would be ascending the Alleghenies before the formation of the line could be completed in Phila delphia and If all were upon the road the procession would run Into the Puckeye State with the last ranks on tho banks of the Delaware. The Governor is firmly convinced of the necessity of providing voca tional education, practical education thai will enable the farmer-**) do his own repair work and to better his labor and pledged his hearers a dozen or more time In the last three weeks to his best efforts to get the money not only for training In practical ways of the boys and girls, but to strive U> "sweeten the life of the country side so that the boys and girls will stay on the farm." For Clean Government Several times in the first and sec ond tours the Governor declared that to bring about the enactment of laws that would advance agriculture and insure Pennsylvania a food supply not dependent upon other States and other lands, "sordid Influences and mean, petty men" should not be allowed to interfere. Speaking at Ebensburg he took an other shot at those he raked at Bloomsburg and Danville and said that those who decry Pennsylvania and Its glorious history should not be tolerated and that he would not stand for men who did not make the wel fare of the people their first consider ation. "We want the best and the cleanest government and we are going to have it" was an utterance at Somerset in one of the most Independent counties In all the State and he capped that at Huntingdon by the remark that every boy and girl should bear that in mind. In Fulton county the Governor said that the people should be as staunch as their hills for the right principles In government and that Justice and fair dealing would bring advantages to the rural communities as well as to the cities. No Fancy Appropriations Plain notice was served on the Leg islators who will meet here next Janu ary that the Governor did not propose to again undergo the iask of cutting down appropriations to the revenue. He said that he should not have been compelled to reduce hospital appro priations and to hamper governmental nctivities because of the failure of legislators to do what under the laws of Pennsylvania was their duty and net that of the Governor. "We have hard problems to work out and I will insist that appropria tions are made fairly and within the limits of our revenue," said he. Several times the Governor went Into details of advanced agricultural work, mentioning the horticultural and soli propositions and told the far mers if they wanted information to ask for it. "Am I for local option?" asked the Governor on the first day's run when a question about it was fired at him." I said I was at York. I say so now." At I-ewistown he was as blunt in his declaration for local option as he was in his campaign and he asked that the Mifflin countians send back to the House the man who voted for it. The "farm toure," as they were called were unique and conducted in a .typical Brumbaugh way. He got AMUSEMENTS / "WATCH THE CLOCK" a mualcal comedy act with a bevy of pretty maiden*. 4—-Other Excellent Offerlnga—4 COMING MONDAY CATHERINE CRAIFORD and her nine pretty model* In a new foahlon review. All children Admitted HARRISBURG BgsS£s TELEGRAPH SEPTEMBER 29, 19L6. right down among the people and he talked in a way they could under stand and he feels confident he has their viewpoint and that a policy of agricultural advancement can bo worked out that will be of vast bene fit to Pennsylvania. Commissioner of Highways Black developed briefly In a speech at Hunt ingdon his thought that revenues for highway building could be provided by a trifling tax when the taxpayers who now contribute practically noth ing to the cost of the State govern ment. In all his talks the Governor argued strongly for dustless, durable roads, which will make easy of access the towns and cities and the rural com munities. Marries a Poor Woman to Find Sho Has Million t)es Moines, La., Sept. 2 9. —When Felix Scalice, an Italian, was married in Vermont eight years ago he didn't know he was marrying an heiress. After being released from the army Scalice brought his wife to Des Moines. Mrs. Scalice is a millionairess. When her husband ume home from work his wife was waiting with a letter from her mother, Mrs. W. M. Rogers, of Burlington, Vermont. The letter told her the estate of Patrick O'Brien, her great-grand father, an Irish landholder, is being settled, and that between $15,000,000 and $20,000,000 is being held in trust in the British-American Bank in San Francisco, to be distributed among American heirs. Dog in Flight Over Trees When Bird Steals Meat Pemberton, N. J., Sept. 29.—1n a battle between a turkey buzzard and a small buN terrier for the possession of a chunk of raw meat, which Caleb Bennett, a farmer near Mount Relief, had given the , dog for dinner, the bird won only after its canine antag onist had executed a remarkable feat in aviation. The dog ran off into the woods with the meat, near where the buzzards were feeding, and was attacked by the birds. When a large buzzard attempt ed to fly away with the meat, the ter rier, with bulldog tenacity, clung to its meat and was carried into the air, far above the tree tops. Fortune sailed with the dog, for when its teeth finally lost their hold it dropped into a pond and swam ashore unhurt. Wife Beater Chooses fine to Beating by the Judge Milwaukee, Wis., Sept. 29.—Given his choice between a term in the house of correction and a Seating, Anton Kastrewiski, charged with beaUng his wife, chose the former. Mrs. Kastrzewiski appeared In dis trict court carrying a baby in her arms. She sfl.ld her husband beat her continually. I v- e got a good mind to take you Into my chamber and beat you up " Judge Hedding told ICastrewiskl. What will you take, a beeatlng or a few days in jail?" Kastrewiski chose a fine of $lO. Must Get sllO in 30 Days For Mother or Go to Jail Trenton, N. J., Sept. 29. Under an order issued by Judge Rulif Law rence, of the Monmouth county court Mrs. George C. Widmann, of Trenton, must obtain sllO by October 21 to pay arrears due for the support of her mother, or she will be committed to jail. Mrs. Wtdmann ts one of six children who have been ordered to support their mother. The remaining five convinced Judge Lawrence thut they were doing their duty or making an effort to do so. but Mrs. Widmann couldn't do that. Pint of Girl's Blood Saves Aunt in Crisis Jollet, 111., Sept. 29.—A pint of blood—blood that was "thicker than water" —saved the life of Cora Drew. It came from the veins of her niece, Gladys Shaw, Miss Shaw was stepping into an auto to go to a party when word came to her of her aunt's danger. She ordered the chauffeur to the hospital. There she learned that blood transfusion alone and that without delay would save Miss Drew's life. The party dress was sleeveless. In a few moments her left arm was being tapped. Aunt and niece are both convalescing. LEFT HIND FEET IN THE TRENCHES It is reported that on May 20 the steamship Cumberland passed through the Panama Canal with a cargo of 500 tons of rabbits dressed and frozen, T°P that Outfit ' .Mli IP MflS /&■&. ° nc of the roost important details of the Fall |Mm i •il l-'"' ' ° utfit is your New Fall Hat. In buying your , Fall headwear let us suggest that you look for *fsP: *' le name Schoble or Mai lory stamped on frill ' ill'" • ■i l® t,IC swcat ha"d. Either name guarantees a Rj | J | : : . cravenetted hat—proof against rain or snow. .Ijlj j :t|f SMSS® lllSßtffi High in thc faVOr ° f P articular men is Fall's i jlj . - |II latest creation, i I II! '• •" _ ' (Illustrated above) SSSw':': illl i II ta Blwn Gr *y and many shades of Green. § iji" | P .1 And this season, more than ever before, ••'•''"'if: Ij&BttfrfaSMT-prosperity prompts most men to own more than one "correct" hat—the Derby for more 'i $ formal occasions demanding much favorable 1 attention. But, whatever your choice, Wm. ' 1 SC&S? WOM: Strouse, the Hatter, has the hat that looks best f wmW# ° n and at the Price you want to pay. #2—s3—s4—ss . ii||! The New Store of Mi ■lift WM. STROUSE ii: I I I Hat Department— jjjjji I J I j charge. consigned from Wellington to Liver pool.—The Christian Herald. THE HERO OF MANILA GOES TO BED AT 0 O'CLOCK —mong the Interesting People of the September American Magazine is Ad miral Dewey, who gives some reasons why he is hale and hearty at 78. The writer hays: "Every night at 9 o'clock finds Dewey in bed, because he was taught as a hoy that an hour of sleep before midnight is equal to two hours after midnight. Along about 4 a. m. he wakes up; but he lies in bed and reads until 6 o'clock, which he regards as a respectable ris ing hour. After breakfast he reads un til time to go to his office at the Gen eral Board of the Navy, where he puts In two or three hours a day. If the weather is pleasant he walks to the office and walks back home, about half a mile each way; if the weather is un favorable he goes in his limousine. In case he has the slightest suggestion oi a cold he doesn't go out at all." Kaufman Stores to Hold 11th Anniversary Sale In celebration or the eleventh an niversary of the Kaufman Under selling Stores, the management has planned a special selling event which will begin to-morrow and continue for fifteen days. Every department in the big stor© has been given its orders to do its utmost in providing special values for \ the occasion, and friendly rivalry be- ' tween the heads of the various de partments has been responsible for the provision of many unusual sale attractions, in an attempt to outdo one another. New attractions will be offered from day to day, and will be covered in the advertisements which will appear from time to time in this paper. Two pages are given over in this issue to the opening announcement of the bis event, In which full particulars re garding prices and items are set fortl in detail.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers