10 This Columbia Grafonola 18 D ot! e Records No Money Down; Only 50c a Week The instrument is the sls Columbia model, complete with all the details of the modern disc talking machine equipment. The records you can judge for yourself when you hear them. You can make your own selections, if you desire, up to sls worth, and you have thou sands of records in the great Columbia catalog from which to choose. * Will you call and hear this remarkable in strument, or will we send the outfit to your home? Either way suits us. xSjigX Miller & Kades /nr BFI \ Furniture Department Store IM' j : J 7 NORTH MARKET SQUARE Tile Only Store in TTarrisburg That Guarantees to X^^iVoSell on Credit at Cash Prices AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS COLONIAL Tg^grrow WILLIAMS. HART Acknoiuledged as the World's Greatest Portrayer of Western Characters in "THE RETUKN OF ' DRAW EGAN" *Gripping Story of a W / estern Bad Man Whose Reformation is made possible through a Girl's Innocencq and Purity Also Fay Tincher in "THE LADY DRUMMER rIZZ Valeska Suratt in "The Straightway" TO-DAY ONLY* I w Mable Taliaferro TAmm ONE OK AMERICA'S FOREMOST STABS tm IN A REMARKABLE 5-ACT METRO PLAY L fj"The Dawn of Love" I IS ADMISSION 10cI CHILDREN 5e ' S TO-MORROW—A MCE BRADY IN r ••THE GILDED CAGE" L MON. AND TUBS. CLARA KIMBALL YOING IN | "WITHOUT A SOUL" *! TODAY AND TOMORROW What would YOU do If your hcart'a desire seemed about to be won by your Muter f—Set "THE HOUSE OF LIES" for EDNA GOODRICH'S novel notation of thla altuatlon. Added Attraction To-day PATHE NEWS OeutHchlnnd Returns TO-MOIIROW— BRAY CARTOONS IVIOINDAV AIND TUESDAY "THE FALL OF A NATION" Thoniax Dlxon'n Thrilllne Film Spectacle of America'* Future ln Seven Dynamic Part*. ADMISSION! 10 a. in. to Op. ra. Lower floor, adulta 13c; children lOct balcony 10c. Evening Adulta Ssc| children IBe; balcony 15c. Use Telegraph Want Ads FRIDAY EVENING, GROUCH AND YOU GROUCH ALONE? It's Like the Story of il Laugh ing World When You Laugh Through ftfe THE STORY OF GRUMBLE TONE By Ella Wheeler Wilcox There was a boy nunied Grumble Tone who ran away to sea, "I'mcick of'things on land," he said, "as sick as I cau be, A life upon the bounding wave is just the life for me!" But thApcetliing ocean billows failed to stQßlate his mirth, For he aid not like the vessel or the dizzy, rolling berth And he thought the sea was almost as unpleasant as the earth. lie wandered into foreign lands; he saw each wondrous sight, But nothing that he heard or saw seemed just exactly right, And so he journeyed on and on, still seeking for delight. He talked with kings and ladies grand, he dined in courts, they say. But always found the people dull and longed to get away To search for that mysterious land where he should want to stay. He wandered over all the world, his hair grew white as snow; He reached that final bourne at last where all of us must go, But never found the land he sought; the reason would you know? The reason was that north or south, where'er his steps were bent. On land or sea, in court or hall, ho found but discontent, For he took his disposition with him, everywhere he went. (Copyright, 1916, Star Co.) • As you go along through life, if you find a great, majority of people you encounter difficult to live with in so cial relations, it might be well for you to analyze your own disposition. You will not like such an intima tion, yet I am sure it will be worth while to entertain it. 1.,00k back five years, to begin with. How were things with you five years ago? Were you having discordant ex periences in business or at home? Did you feel out of sorts with sev eral of your friends and wish you could be in a more congenial at mosphere? Then come down another year how was it four years ago? No Uoube you will be able to bring at once to mind the most trying and annoying people who marred your com fori at that period. Disagreeable personalities have a way of leaving a mental photo graph on sensitive mind plates. Three and two years ago, being still at closer range, you will easily place the individuals in focus who interefcred with your enjoyment of life. Look at Home Now if you are still finding diffi culty. in adjusting yourself to your environment, make up your mind that some one besides all this varied company you have known in five years is in fault. I<ook into your own disposition. Are you not aggressive regarding the manners and methods and ways of others? And are you not always sure that you are right and that others are wrong? Even if you do not tell them so, if you are thinking It, your thoughts are at work laying the underground wires of discord. How many people have you fallen out with in five years? How many have disillusioned you? It tugs at your heartstrings when you think flow many and you say to yourself that it is terrible to havfe friends and acquaintances prove so unworthy and unsatisfactory. But remember, these same people: may all be thinking that it is- you who have proved unsatisfactory and ! unworthy. Of course you resent such an idea. | So would they resent your i thoughts of them, possibly, even! probably. That there have been un-1 AMUSEMENTS QRPHEUM TO-NIOhT Tomorrow—Matinee and Nigit SELWYN & CO. ANNOUNCE A RETURN ENGAGEMENT Fair&Warmer By Avery Hopwood Matinee: 25c, 50c, 75c, SI.OO Mgbtm 25c to $1.50 Monday Eve., Nov. 13 mBBvA -j s jTi y*. rrr IYI tin AT THE SPECIAL I'RICESi Lower floor, 75c, 50c; Balcony, sc Gallery, 25c; llovex, If I.(Ml. |Rk ORPHEUM ' jfiM Margaret Wood row jip Wilson BENEFIT POLYCLINIC X\t< K HOSPITAL ,M NOV. I*7™' ' * 1 Scats 50c to $2 B¥RTON HOLMES Five MONDAY EVENINGS Canada VO'CSAST NOV. 20 Canadian Rockies - Nov. 27 Imperial Britain - - Dec. 4 GEHMAN Fatherland, Dec. 11 La Belle France .Dec. 18 'Conrnr Sale Now—ss, $4, t.t. $2 AT BOWMAN A COMPANY BAKRISBUHG TELEGRAPH I jfi oumiar n . . i #, ... Men! Men! You Should Visit the Bowman Store V. , - [EjVERY day we are ad- • 9B ding scores of men and young men to the clientele of this store, men who ap preciate these three-fold ad vantages in clothes-buying: f J.. The tremendous economies which 9 the great volume of the Bowman busi- s||® 1® ness makes possible enabling us to jp||2p if offer at sls, S2O and $25 values which g are altogether out of range of a one story 2. The fact that we are maintaining in our clothing the ' highest standards known to clothes making science all wool fabrics one hundred per cent and ' no compromise; silk sewing at all points of strain; painstaking workmanship )MfL\ through and through. M|ipM 3. Tlie fact that we are supported to the full by the great resources and equip ment of that famous Philadelphia house, fjiffi ||||M 4ilPI of whose product we are the exclusive ISBH distributors in Harrisburg— A. B. Kirschbaum Co. In these days when every man is inter ested in a new overcoat, you should see IfKB \ our selection everything from belted ! WS '''Wiii. back coats to Chesterfields, and a prac sls, S2O, $25 & up to S4O I|jr f / ' worthy, unkind and untrustworthy individuals among all who have dis pleased or pained you is more than likely. And again it is more than j likely that if you are always being disappointed in humanity the trouble lies sometimes in yourself. Refuse to tTilnk tlvu consecutive minutes on the misdoings or faults of your associates. Watch for things to like and! praise. Tell the people you are thrown j with something admirable about themselves. Then do not spoil it by an immediate criticism. If you find I some one in the oltlce or the house annoying you, make a pleasant re- j mark, and if you can get out into] the fresh air, take a few Inhalations BAD SPRAINS- OR MUSCLE STRAIN Rub pain, ache, soreness and swelling right out with "St. Jacobs Oil." Rub it on a sprained ankle, wrist,! shoulder, back or a sprain or strain! anywhere, that's when you realize the j magic in old, honest "St. Jacobs Oil," j because the moment it is applied, out | comes the pain, ache, soreness and [swelling. It penetrates right Into the j injured muscles, nerves, ligaments, [ tendons and bones, and relief comes instantly. It not merely kills pain, but soothes and heals the injury so a quick recovery is effected. ' Get a small trial bottle of "St. Jacob's Oil" right now at any drug store and stop suffering. Nothing else sets things straight bo quickly so thoroughly. It is the only appli cation to rub on a bad sprain, strain, bruise or swelling. \ AMUSEMENTS No Doubt Now About Who Wins It I BOBBY HEATH MP Six Pretty Girlies Ami the Hrat of 'l'hla (tond Bill 3 SHOWS TO-MOKBOW NIGHT HunnlnK run tiuuoiml}' from 6.30 o'clock conic crly and ■ void tile runli. and think you are drawing In'seren ity and love and peace. Then go back and make yourself | agreeable. Watch yourself that you do not wear an air of superiority over your associates. If you feel that you know more than they do, keep it to yourself, and let them find it out. If they do not detect it, be sure I you are not so superior as you j think. The superiority which "has to announce itself is very inferior, jlf you are thrown with one of those unfortunate souls so far be hind in the march of evolution that :it Indulges In malicious lies, in I mischief making or with dissolute habits, be more sorry than angry. Ta,lk to the offender as you would to a child throwing knives about for amusement, and endeavor to make him or her realize the danger, while you keep as wel? out of reach as permissible until your subject I has awakened to a better under | standing. Do the same with any really vl- I cious qualities you encounter in your close associates . The little | faults and blemishes ignore as much ias you can, and remember others ! are obliged to condone many of j your shortcomings. Cultivate charity, sweetness of disposition, appreciation of others, amiability, patience and good na ture. I And In the interesting effort to j acquire these qualities you will for ! get to notice the many faults in i others which have heretofore ren- I dered you o dissatisfied with the many. WORTH TRYING Did you say you liavp a trouble? If you wish to make It double. Just you tell It to your neighbor in a confidential way. Spread it out where folks can know - it. I.ct your face and actions show it. Do not let a soul forget It from the dawn till close of day. Would your soul forget its trouble. Make It vanish like a bubble? Then you put that little trouble in a closet out of sight. Bid it' stay there all unheeded, Say Its presence Is not needed. Then you start to work at something that requires mind and might. Set yourself to work for others. For your struggling, burdened brothers. You will tlnd so many burdens heav ier than the one you bear. That your trifling little trouble Soon will vanish like a bubble, And your very self, niy brother, will forget 'twas ever there. —Mabel Brown Denlsdn in Kami an<} Homo. A PROFITAM,K SKUNK FARM Several hundred akunta 'as raised every year for their fur, And oil on a fur farm owned by Hetjr'v Ferguson In the foothills of the Adirondack moun tains In New York. .Alost of the reve- NOVEMBER 10, 1916. ■ nue comes from the fur as there is little profit from the oil, writes W. P. t Doyle in a descriptive article In Farm and Home. Purs were low last win ter, but Mr. Ferguson got about $2 ' each for his best furs and 400 of nil 1 kinds of skunk skins brought him brought him over ?700. [ As his farm is poor and not adapted to regular farming, being rough semi , mountainous land, it is ideal for fur farming. There is never the unpleasant odor about the farm that most persons al ways associate with skunks. The scent sack is easily removed when they are about six weeks old. But another reason is that the odor is employed by the animals only as a means of de fense, and on this farm they are all I pets and nothing is allowed near them that would put them on the defensive. ' t i The space devoted to the fur pro ducers covers several acres and is ' fenced in with galvanized steel sheet ing driven into the ground. On top of ' the two-foot higfc sheeting are several i strands of barb wire to keep out dogs I and other enemies. Several small springs break out of the hillsides in the inclosure and plen ty of brush and trees afford the pro ' tection, shade and seclusion that the , skunks desire. Breeding females are fenced apart from each other and the , males and females are kept apart when the young are small. When a year old they are full size and ready to be killed for their pelts. Dice are about the only thing that AJII'SIIME.VTS > ' r ' A FREE LECTURE ON j j Christian Science ,; WILL BK GIVEN IN THE Orpheum Theater, Harrisburg, Pa. BY \ FRANK BELL, C. S. HARRISBURG, PA. Member of the Christian Science Board of LectureshiKof the First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. v Sunday Afternoon, November 12, 1916 AT 3:30 O'CLOCK Lcclure Under Auspices of First Church of Christ, Scientist OF HARRISBURG, PA. THE PUBLIC IS INVITED NO TICKETS REQUIRED ever trouble the skunks, and lice can be controlled by the use of a good powder. The mother skunks raise one litter of from 4 to 10 once a year. They eat much the same food as cats —milk, cornmeal mash, meat, tablo scraps and green stuff forming their chief diet. AMUSUEMKNTS Tenth Annual Course of Lectures Harrisbur; Teachers' Association TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 11)10 Bishop William A. Quayle "Hall Cnlnc aiul His Island" Thursday, Jan. 11, 1917 Burnell R. Ford i THE ELECTRICAL WIZARD Thursday, March 8, 1917 The Cadman Concert Co. Reserved Seats at StlcfT's Piano Rooms, 24 Xortli Second Street, on and after Saturday, Nov. 11, 1910. COURSE TICKETS, SI.OO Single Tickets Sold Monday at 50c
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers