6 432 Market St. More than a meat shop an actual money saving institution to every meat buyer in Har risburg. Specials For Tuesday Pork Liver lb 6c Soft Rib Boil lb.. . . 11c Stewing Beef lb. . . 12^c Boneless Rump lb. ♦ . 14c _________ Pin Bone Steak lb.. . 18c Smoked Picnic Ham lb. 16c Rich Phila. Scrapple lb. 12c MARKETS IN PRINCIPAL CITIES OF 13 STATES MAIN OFFICE CHICAGO, ILL. PACKING HOUSE PEORIA, ILL. IF GOODS ARE NOT SATISFACTORY MONEY CHEERFULLY REFUNDED Recent Deaths in Central Pennsylvania Bainbridge. Robert H. Fitzger- J aid, aged 66, died Saturday night, after a short illness of pneumonia. His wife, five children and a number of grandchildren survive. Marietta. Mrs. Mary Longenecker of Longenecker's church, aged 74, died Saturday of pneumonia. She was a member of the Church of the Breth- j ren more than fifty years. One son is j her only survivor. Sunhury. Samuel F. Ludwig, aged j 64, died at his home at Milton. He was a retired farmer. Sunbury. Patrick Martin, aged | 73, died at his home at Shamokin. lie was a retired farmer. Sunbury. Mrs. Jane Moore, 761 haviigtroi^ Doe your skin itch and bum? Oris ment for over twenty years in thetreat your appearance marred by patches of ment of skin affections. So you need 2S?'Z-If n °p nC '°, f ™ durin * not hesitate to it, nor to recommend t,a ifv r v . es 1 n °l Ointment it to skin-tormented friends, usually stops itching at once and quickly makes the skin clear and healthv a train R ? lnol 9 intme ® t is so nearly flesh-colored that It rWtorVav* nrcrriU-A D lA' „ ean be used on exposed surfaces without attracting uoctors lia\ e prescribed Resinol Omt- aodue attcntfoa. Sold by all druggists. ResinoLfl I Know What My Customers Owe I his man knows because every charge account is posted to date each time a sale is made. McCaskey Service sees to that. He docs not run a chance of slow paying customers get ting into him for more credit than they are entitled to. He doesn't have to wait for monthly statements to go out before he gets his money. McCaskey Service collects outstanding accounts without monthly statements. Find out more about it by dropping a card or phoning to— The McCaskey Register Company Harrisburg Office—2ll Locust Street c. L. MWTRI.US, sales Agnt MONDAY EVENING, ! years old, died at her home at Sha ! mokin after a long illness. Mercersburg. Daniel S. Hart, | aged 83 years, died at his home here | Saturday evening. MI'SICALE AT IIUMMELSTOWX Hummelstown, Pa., Jan. 15. Mr. and Mrs. William Harvle entertained a number of friends at a musicale at their home in Prospect street on "■Saturday evening. The program con | sisted of piano and violin duets and I solos, and several vocal selections by | Mrs. Harvie. Those in attendance | were: Mr. and Mrs. Harry Knull, of Hershey: Mr. and Mrs. David Cassel and daughters, Margaret and Gert j rude: Air. and Mrs. George Larsen I and Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Hartwell and I Misses Mary Ella and Dorothy Hart- I well. In the Realms W l of Amusement, Art,' and Instruction. t jj \SpI 1 I SCENE FROM "BIRTH OF A NATION" After a sensational tour of the country following its record-breaking engage ment here, D. VV. Griffith's "The Birth of a Nation," returns here for an en gagement of three days, beginning to-day at the Orpheum. The presentation of the great spectacle is identically, in every respect, the same that appeared here previously with the same large symphony orchestra. As before there will be daily matinees. For "The Birth of a Nation," Mr. Griffith took as the skeleton the story of Thomas Dixon's "The Clansman," but he had In mind a far vaster conception than Dixon's. It was his aim Jo reproduce an epoch in American history so vividly that the spectators would actually be carried out of the present and live for three hours In a past that is fast becoming remote and hazy. He did not make the mistake of desiring to depict this period of the past in a naked and horrid realism. He was determined from the start to throw about it a glamor of romance that would soften the picture without distorting it. Among the gigantic scenes of "The Birth of a Nation," are those of the bat tles of St. Petersburg, fought by 18,000 men on a Held Ave miles across; the march of Sherman to the sea, culminating with the burning of Atlanta; the assassination of President Lincoln in the crowded Ford's theater; the'wild rides of the Ku Klux Klan and the session of the South Carolina Legislature under the negro carpetbagger regime. "THE INNOCENT SINNER" PLEASES New Play That Is Well Bal anced Presented Here For First Time Harrisburg- theatergoers who saw "The Innocent Sinner" at the Orpheum on Saturday could not have found a more entertaining, thrilling and tense drama to enjoy. From the rise of the curtain in act 1 until the final words of the last act the play is full of action, presenting a forceful life story as it moves on to its close. Despite the fact that it is a new play and must come before many other critical audiences before it is finally I approved, the characters could have 1 made but little improvement In their work in the presentation on Saturday. All of them played exceptionally well, knew their parts and with the excep tion of a few minor slips exceeded the expectations of even the< most opti mistic. The story of the play is almost sure to please. It is one of the life of a daughter of a notorious woman who fights a life battle to overcome the ignominy of her mother's name. She finally sacrifices her life so that her daughter shall not know who she is. Miss Julia Dean as Sylvia played the part of the daughter whoso fight was to overcome her heritage of a name, Tliurloy Bergen took the part of Gilbert Dexter, her husband. In an argument with his wife concerning her past and her relations with Mr. Boyde-Clyde, represented by Frederick Truesdell, Dexter falls down the stairs at their home in Paris and is sup posedly killed. His wife, leaving the home, joins Clyde, a New York "con fidence" man with a shady reputation. How the action moves forward seven teen years and terminates with the reappearance of Dexter, who finds his wife and daughter, the murder of Cljde by Sylvia, and her suicide, is the climax of the third and fourth acts. Other characters in the play are George Riddell, as Martin Dexter, father of Gilbert Dexter; Franklin George, as Ambrose, one of the serv ants in the Dexter home; Miss Kate Blancke, as Mrs. Martin Dexter; Ed win Holt, as "Doc" Prlngle, one of Clyde's accomplices; John F. Webber, as the "Saint," also in the Clyde ring; Miss Mona Bruns, as Loulu. associated, too, with Clyde; Miss Ellis Baker, us Mona, daughter of Gilbert Dexter and Sylvia; Sydney Blair, as Jack Stan nard, llona'a sweetheart; Joseph R. Garry, George Summers and G. O. Howard, police officers. The drama, by Oliver D. Bailey snd Joseph Noel, is well written and con tains just enough humorous situations to keep it from becoming tiresome. MAX ROBERTSON. ORPIIEI'M Starting to-dav. three days, with daily matinees—"The Birth of a Nation." Two days, Friday and Saturday, Janu ary 19 and L'O Lyman 11. Howu Travel Festival. MAJESTlC—Vaudeville. COLONIAL—"A Man of Mysterv." REGENT—"The Years of the Locust." VICTORIA—"The Vixen." A most marvelous fllmizatlon of hu man achievement in polar regions will he presented by Lyman t A Film H. Howe at the Or- Incomparnble pheum, Friday an d Sat urday. with daily matinees. It is a living pictorial record of Sir Douglas Mawson's Expedition through mountainous seas, raging bliz zards and towering icebergs Into the heart of the Antarctic continent. The close-up scenes offer endless amaze ment. They show penguins, a kind of bird-fish which cannot be seen In any zoo nor elsewhere on earth, and vet for natural comedy they are truly "head liners." They nre as funny as they are real. To see these queer creatures Is alone, worth the price of a ticket. I The attractive feature booked for the Majestic Theater the first three davs of I this week is B A. Rolfe's At the latest musical comedy, "The ! Majestic Girl From Amsterdam." in ; , troduclng an unusually! ! clever comedian in the person of Roy Clair. A cast of twelve people are em ployed. and all are said to present the act in entertaining fashion. Grouped , around this attraction are; Billy I< Wells, offering some new parodies on .the lntest popular songs; Jolly. Francis and Wild, presenting a musical farce entitled "Step Lively;" the Yaltos, In a novelty dancing act, and the Mlllettes, sensational trapeze artists. E. H. Sothern, one of the most noted HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH actors on tlie American stage, will bo in ii e IL . * h ® attraction at ;he , rr ." at Colonial Theater to tue Colonial day and to-morrow :n t>i,,. . a special Vita'sraph Blue Ribbon feature, "The Man of Mystery," adapted for the screen from Archibald Clavering Gunter's popular story, "The City of Mystery." When the story opens ho is seen as an rJvn rI K,. is 'ater buried in saved through tile efforts of a newly discovered scientific process, and when tlie bandages are removed his appear f" c ,® la entirely changed. The transfor mation is cleverly done, in fact the au dience will find it hard to believe that lfr?.i,M OUS star portrays both roles. With his new appearance he returns to . °^ e makes himself most )ii i u l t0 hts wife - who being swin dled by an unscrupulous lawyer. The latest Path© News and a screaming comedy will be on the same program. To-day marks the beginning of the exhibition of the wonderful Fox pro ™. .. Auctions at the Victoria. Tbtda Bari, The bill will be Theda , ,J£ . • Bara, in a story of a wo fhe Vixen" man's wiles. "The Vixen." Passion for power is the underlying motive of the character played by Theda Bara in this remark able picture—but it is a passion which ends with her own defeat. The man agement of the Victoria also announces that very shortly Pox comedies, totallv different from any over shown and tiie kind that every person will thoroughly enjoy, will be presented. Fannie Ward is to be seen at the Re gent to-day and to-morrow in "The Years of the Fannle Ward at cust," an adapta- Kcisent Tw- Day* tion from "The „ . 'Happiness of Three Women, by Albert Payson Terhune. The story of this drama has to do with a young wontan who was unfortu nately wedded to a swindling stock broker. How his ruin is accomplished, how to escape the law he is supposed to have committed suicide, and how his wife is married to the man whom she really loves, only to have her first hus band appear on the scene, is brought about in a series of unusual scenes, which swiftly take the audience from the drawingrooms in fashionable New York homes, to the dirt and heat of a South African diamond mine. On Wednesday and Thursday—Mar guerite Clark in "Miss George Wash ington." WILL ENTERTAIN CLUB Middleburg, Pa.. Jan. 15. This evening the Home Study Club will be entertained at the home of Mrs. A. F. Gilbert. Mrs. George W. Has singer will five a talk on "The Early Pioneers;" Mrs. George Moatz on the "Travel. Yesterday and To-day" and Miss Klizabeth Scharf, assistant principal of the Middleburg schools, will speak %n "American Authors." 1913 CIiA&.S BANQUET Middleburg, Pa., Jan. 13. On Saturday evening the class of 1915 of the Muldleburs High School held a banquet at the Middleburg Inn. Thir teen ot the fifteen members of the class attended the banquet. Prof. H. M. Barton, editor of the Dun cannon Record, who was principal of the Middleburg schools, attended the banquet. AMUSEMENT Today lASiUikuJII Tomorrow E. H. SOTHERN Supported by Charlotte Ives in "THE MAN OF MYSTERY" A Unique and Interesting Love Romance Adopted For the Screen From Archibald Clavering Gunter's Popular Story, "A City of Mystery" A Powerful Story and One of the Screen's Most Famous Stars Presented on the Regular Program. Wednesday and Thursday, Bessie Love in "THE HEIRESS OF COFFEE DAN'S" MB _ TO-DAY AND TO-MOHHOW Olfl.V, IN rw\ TT T> T\ A T> ATI A ' THE V!XEN " * ---- - I I Shown the flrat time la tbl city A I# B I AdinUnlon 10c i Children sc. VICTORIA THEATER Welcome Home Troop C §Boys[ We're . The New Store of Wm. Q± I • II II • L f otrouse Joins all narrisburg in Extendin Hearty L T E f4 E c RDES Welcome One of the boys of our store. —— Our Store Is At Your Service Make this your headquarters anything we can do for you, will be done cheerfully, for we feel that any service we render, is but slight recognition of your patriotic devotion to your home and to your country. Respectfully, Wm. Strouse The New Store 310 Market St. STRONG FIGHT AGAINST LICENSE Monster Mass Meeting Held at Carlisle Opera House Yes terday Afternoon Carlisle, Pa., Jan. 15. A mass meeting held Sunday In the Carlisle Opera House here marked the open ing of the fight of the "No License" forces against the liquor trade In Cumberland county. Meetings were also held In the churches of the town and at Newville, where an attempt will be made to have license refused to the Central Hotel, the one remain ing licensed place in that borough. Dr. W. A. Granville, president of Gettysburg College was the speaker at the meeting here and made a strong plea for universal temperance. The places against which remon strances are out here are the wholesale business of John S. Low, one of the two remaining in the borough; the Letort Hotel, conducted by James Grandone, formerly ot Harrlsburg, and AMUSEMENTS * -i Regent Theater To-day aad To-morrow Jcanc L. I.nsky present* The versatile and charming FANNIE WARD In a powerful drama of diamond* and heart* "The Years of the Locusts" Wednesday and Thursday MARGUERITE CI,ARK In a screamingly funny farce >IISS GEORGE WASHINGTON" Admission, Adulta lOe, Children Sc. * > >* For Three llajra. Beginning; To-day 5 Excellent Vaudeville Featurea Headed by H. A. Itolfe'a latest Mimical Comedy Success "The Girl From Amsterdam" IS people, mostly girls, and • car load of special scenery. Ton can bank on an act. If It'a Itolfe'a. JANUARY 15, 1917. one of the oldest hostelries in the State, having been a noted stopping point during the last century, and the saloon of George James in the First ward. In all cases "no necessity" is alleged. There are at present 26 licensed places in the county, all have again applied, the only new one being that of Mrs. Charlotte IC Freyer for license at the Doubling Gap Springs Hotel. AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS ORPHEUM 3 EOM S TODAY Matinees at 2—Evenings at 8 D. W. GRIFFITH'S GIGANTIC SPECTACLE 5,000 3,000 SCENES $500,000 PRcSIKJE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA „ , REDUCED PRICES °'' < ' , ' ost,a > 50c and 'sc; Balcony, 50c; Gallery, 25c Editing, orchestra, 31.00; Balcony, 75c and 50c; Gallery, 25c *= WEEK E COM. MONDAY qteJJJ TWICE DAILY THEREAFTER j Seats For All Performances W / —WEDNESDAY— Mail Orders Now fr\ WILLIAM FQXP resenh M ADAUGHJER W OF THE GODS W KELLERM ANN IT )\ BmßlHiHHftllL milll NEW YOkKV JIJCCErXT SPECIAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Prices Same as in Philadelphia LOWER FLOOR, 75c AND 500 MATS "■ ENTIRE BALCONY, 500 GALLERY, 25c ENTIRE ORCHESTRA, SI.OO NIGHTS m BALCONY, 7 ROWS. 75c; BALANCE, 50c GALLERY, 26c BANK DIRECTORS CHOSEN Hummelstown, Pa., Jan. 15. At the annual meeting of the stockhold ers of the Hummelstown National Bank the following directors were elected: Uriah L. Balsbaugh, Allen K. Walton, Frank J. Schaffner, Joseph M. Brightbtll, William H. Moyer and A. B. Shenk.