The Workers of the World with hand or brain, in doors or out doors, under all conditions and in all climes, will find in Shredded Wheat the food that supplies all the material for building healthy tissue and good brain —a food that nourishes every organ of the body and keeps the bow els healthy and active —the one universal cereal food that appears on the breakfast table of thousands of Ameri can homes every day in the year. It is ready-cooked and ready-to-eat. For break fast with milk or cream, or fruits. Made at Niagara Falls, N. Y. A MATTER OF PUNCTUATION A bachelor had been persuaded by the Ladies' Aid oC a church to speak at an entertainment provided they would furnish him with subject mat ter. In a spirit of mischief he had been given as subject: "Woman: without her, man would be a savage." On the nigl.t of the entertainment he arose and said, "Sly subject, which 1 consider a very fine one, is never theless not of my own choosing, but has been furnished nie by the ladies, and is—"Woman, without her man, would be a savage."—The Christian llerald. AMUSEMENTS r - DAN BURKE & CO. PrffifiitlnK n rather different slrl act, "THE OLD MASTER" Frfd Weber A: Co. Yentrll To-day and To-morrow TIIOS. ||. I\CE Prexent* CLARA WILLIAMS In the Story of a Triangle Friendship, "Three of Many" V piny of aerlou* purpo<-. rrnudnl Willi action nml lull of lirrathlc** excitement In which n tliucweldrd friendship 1* Put to a severe tet. Moiday anil TiaeNilny LIM.IW tJISII In "THE HOUSE BUILT Ul'ON SANDS" ■ ' ami skm i:vrs OriPHEUMcom k Mon.Jan.22 TWICE DAILY i pMp Jil ORCHESTRA—2S Piece. jfrjtlp PrirAC^'^ ts: 25c to SI.OO ■HttP gPPPfI Matinees: 25c to 75c j ipi SEATS NOW SELLING Phone Orders J i"Sv To-day and To-morrow Only pjf 2200 i/ VIOLA DANA MM In the Great Russian Drama |b Mi "The Cossack's Whip" Pflfl MM ° nC ° f the Master Pictures of 1916 S Jfo SB Also To-day—A Comedy Featuring MM Charley Chaplin's Double |P ® MONDAY AND TUESDAY EH "THE BATTLE OF LIFE" COMING Mrs. Vernon Castle America s Best Dressed Woman in gWJ-J "PATRIA" ADMISMOR he aerial nupreme everv AYedneaday 5c and JOe beginning January 24th. See the Hnr 1 ork Journal. FRIDAY EVENING, AMUSEMENTS ORPHEUM To-day and Saturday, January 19 and 20 Lyman H. Howe Travel Festival. All next week, beginning Monday niglit, with daily matinees thereafter "A Daughter of the Hods," with Annette Kellermann. MAJESTlC—Vaudeville. COLONIAL* —"Three of Many." REGENT —"Teas of the Storm Country." VICTORIA —"The Cossack's Whip." B aHnM ■BP 3 HP I In 1888 Id|tr Alltn Poe published his remarkable narrative of "A Gordon Pyni." . It was a fanciful tale Howe'* of a vast continent in the un ! l'lcturea known Antarctic. It was a remarkable story told In Poe's best style. To-day that amazing ! imaginative flight Is transformed from I Action into fact by the films which Ly man H. Howe will present at the Or pheum to-day and to-morrow, with a matinee Saturday, of Sir Douglas Mawson's Expedition and discovery of the Antarctic continent. Still another AMUSEMENTS \ i Orpheum * TO-DAY— —TO-MORROW Matinees Adults, Me unil 35c. Children, ISo jflßll Nights 25—35—50 i * AMUSEMENTS bit of history conjured up by this re production is the fact that in the same ' year that Poe wrote his fanciful tale, Captain Charles Wilkes. IT. S N:„ be gan a voyage of exploration to these fiolar regions. He returned four years ater—in IS42—-with a chronicle of his expedition that was published In nine teen volumes, eight of them written by Wilkes himself. In them he told of a vast mysterious Southern continent sur rounded by impenetrable ice barriers. He could not estimate its extent, but declared it to be enormous. However. • for no reason in particular, the world at large refused to believe it anil it has taken just seventy-eight years to vindicate Captnln Wilkes by the most, convincing proof imaginable—the mov- | lng pictures just referred to. When William Fox read the story of j "A Daughter of the Gods," and deter mined to create it, he II "A Daughter shook his head dubious ot the lMjetle Burke, assisted by a company ; of talented players, presents ! "The Old Master," one of the most ar- i I tistic sketches seen at the Majestic this | l season. The dancing in the act is of | ] a high order, while the stage setting, I which is an interior scene in the study i of a dancing master within a stone's I throw of Old Drury Lane Theater, Lon- I I don, is very beautiful. Surrounding this ! I attraction are: E. K. Clive and Com : pany, in a laughable comedy sketch en- ' ; titled. "One (iood Turn;" Skelly and i Sauvain, entertainers of comedy and | i song: Fred Weber and Company, in an l i excellent vcntriloquial act, and the | Zylo Maids, clever xlyophonc players. j | Tt is not often that a motion picture j ! can utterly surprise an audience, but it ! is said that "Three of | Clam Williams of Many," the new at the Colonial Triangle play written I by C. Gardner Sulli- | ! van, which is showing at the Colonial • I Theater, will prove a series of surprises and thrilling situations. Clara Wil- ■ I Hams, star of this clever drama, is first | I seen as a trained nurse in a New York | Hospital, and when the war breaks out J I she leaves for the Italian front. In | I New York she has two admirers. Both of them she meets again at the battle front. How the rejected suitor proves, when the test comes, that friendship Is I more powerful than racial hatred, is fine | of the many exciting moments of this powerful love story, which uses the ' great war only as a background. A | couple of new funny comedians will be ion the same program. Monday and j Tuesday. Lillian Uish in a five-part so ciety drama, "The House Built Upon I Sands." j Mary Pickford will be presented to- I day and to-morrow at the Itegent Thea ter in "Tess of the ! Mary Plekford Storm Country," an iat Heeut To-iluy elemental type of j womanhood strug- I j gling with modern conditions and the I ! delicate tortures of civilization. Miss! | Pickford, as "Tess," renders a portrayal | iof inexhaustible fascination. "Tessibel i ! Skinner" lives with her father in a rude I ! hut on the shore of Cayuga The ; | vicinity is called the "Storm Country," while the poor and ignorant lislier-folk I thereabout are generally known as | "squatters." "Tess" is one of these I - Cocoan' . Fine If yot. want to keep your hair In ' good condition, be careful what you | wash it with. Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkali. This dries I the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and is very harmful. Just plain inulsifled cocoanut oil( which ispure and entirely j greaseless), is much better than the most expensive soap or anything else you can use for shampooing, as this can't possibly injure the hair. Simply moister. your hair with water and rul it in. One or two tea spoonfuls will make an abundance of rich, creamy lather, and cleanses the hair and scalp thoroughly. The lather rinses out easily and removes every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and ex cessive oil. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves it fine and silky, bright, fluffy and easy to manage. You can get mulsifled cocoanut oil at most any drug store. It Is very cheap, and a few ounces Is enough to lost everyone in the family for months. —Advertisement. people, and adores her uncouth father, who lives by poaching and the illegal netting of fish. One day he is found near the body of a murdered game keeper, with a rifle close by Containing one empty chamber. "Skinner" is ac cused of the murder and convicted on circumstantial evidence. "Tess" is fran tic with grief and anxiety, but Fred erick (Slaves, a handsome theological student, and his sister, "Teola," be friend "Tess." To-day and to-morrow the Victoria will present what has been termed one of the master pro "The f'ONNai'k'H ductions of the Whip," nt the photoplay world Vifturiu Theater (luring the year 1916. "The Cossack s Whip," in which is featured the talent ed and beautiful star, Viola Dana. The scenes of the Cossack raids are said to be particularly effective, showing the wild horsemen of the Russian steppes riding at breakneck speed through the streets of the ill-fated village, slashing with sword and knout at the crowds of helpless peasants whom they have been called upon to crush. There arc scenes, also, of the Interiors of Russian pal aces and Parisian boudoirs; great in teriors of theaters in London and Petro grad, maav Other tremendous sets that i mis production out of the ordinary "feature" class. To-day, also. Charley Chaplin's double in a screaming com edy. "Patrla." the picture that has taken the larger cities by storm, has been booked and will be shown here on Wednesday, January 21. It is in this great feaure that Mrs. Vernon Castle, the best known as well as the best dressed woman in the world, is featur ed. SEAL SALES FOR 1916 HIGHEST EVER [Continued From lirst Paste] school sale which netted $2,507.32 did not cost more than SBO including all prize money to lie distributed. "I feel that the people of Harris burg and Dauphin county will be glad to know of the really remarkable results of the lied Cross Seal cam paign this year—results which were obtained at a minimum of expense," said Dr. Phillips. The school sale which netted $2,507.32 will not cost, including all prizes, as jnueh as SBO. In dispersing this money, there is ab solutely no overhead expense, this feature being cared for by the organi zation of the Associated Aids. Hershey I /ends "Hershey, as in 1015. has made a wonderful record," Dr. Phillips point ed out. "Seventy seals were sold in the bustling little, 'chocolate town' for each man, woman and child in the place as against 20 in 1915, which was a county record and for which they received the pri?e banner. Her shey this year wins a school banner for the largest sale of seals per pupil and Mary Keefer of Hershey wins the prize for individual effort on the port of school children throughout the county. "The sale in some of the nearby towns was so large that we feel special mention is due them. In the city the work of tho Cameron school building stands out especially. Here a total ot 26,195 seals were sold, and while no one pupil made exceptionally high sales records, yet we know that every boy and girl must have been working like a beaver to accomplish such a splendid result. "I wish to thank the newspapers, the light company and all the organi zations and individuals who helped to make the 1916 campaign a success." The High Salesmen Dr. Phillips announced that Miss Blanche Meloy's room in the Forney school building on Allison Hill had the record for rooms throughout the city schools with a total Bale of 14,150 seals. In Miss Meloy's room, Christian Sheets, alone sold 3,255 seals. The Susquehanna was the high building, an average of 235 sales per pupil being attained. The total num ber sold by the 43 children of this building was 10,100, The total number of seals sold In JANUARY 19, 1917. the city was 170,271, an average of 15 seals per pupil based on enroll ment. anil 16, based on average daily attendance. In the city selling work Dr. Phillips said that a student in the high school who is to be nameless sold 2,000 seals; that Evelyn Mail' of the Susquehanna j building sold 5.700 seals and Dickin son Johnston of the Camp Curtin building, 5,750. The Johnston and Mair lad and las-i sie were the two high record salesmen I for the city and each will receive! prizes of $2.50 lor their splendid work. | In the county wonderful records! were made in many places. At Pax-1 tang Frederick Holmes sold 450 seals; Madeline Hoff, Dykens, sold 1,080, and she receives honorable mention for the county; and Mary Keefer, who wins the $2,50 prize for best county work, sold 1,247. In Middletown high v school an aver age of 12 >4 was attained, the total sale being 3.535. The average school sale in the Her shey schools was 15.98; at Steelton it was 15.59; and at Camp Hill, 15.38. The total number of sales in the Ilershey schools was 11.911 seals; the total for the town was 05,800. Steelton's school total was 17,397, and the total for the town 27,897. The county total school sales was 78,128; the city 170,271, making a grand total of 250,732. In 1915 the total for city and county was 167,059. JMUWAYB UNION TO MEET A special meeting of the Seven j Hundred and Ninth Division, Street and Electric Railway Employes will | be held this evening in the quarters! of the Pennsylvania Federation of) Labor in the Commonwealth Trust i Company. President Joseph B. Pol-j leek announces important business to j be transacted. THE BARE FEET A teacher asked her class of chil dren what a skeleton was. One little fellow, Benny, seven, said: "I know; j it's bones with the people rubbed off." —The Christian Herald. Independent of price, you look for. and expect here, furs of |i Service and of unduplicated f Style. [| Nor have we failed ever to I' suit the most particular and l| the most exacting. | | I Chestnut Stmt | Philadelphia j Tht •/ Exclusive UoitlM DECLINE OP DIVORCE INT JAPAN' Half of the population of Japan | is from 20 to 65 years of age, and ! j one-third of the entire population is | married. The ratio of divorces for j every 1,000 population has decreased j In the last generation from nearly 3 1 j to 1 >/4; but even at present it is a source of deep anxiety on the part 'of unmarried statisticians. —Maynard 1 j Owen 'Williams, in the Christian Her , I aid. PfISLMI EXCELS 111 CONQUERING WORST ECZEMA That results should show overnight is a great deal to exepect of any skin Remedy—except Poslam. Hut Posl.ua (lifters from all other remedies in posr sessing healing energy in a more con centrated and more active form. That is the reason why in stubborn Eczema It shortens the time of treat l inent and drives away minor troubles | before they become serious. I It is a pacifying balm to angry irri gated surfaces. j Sold everywhere. Eor free sampl* write to Emergency laboratories, 32 I West 25th St., New York City. I Urge your skin to become clearer, j fresher, better by the daily use of Pos lam Soap, medicated with Poslam. Dr. Ferdinand King says: EVERY WOMAN EVERY MOTHER EVERY DAUGHTER NEEDS IRON AT TIMES To put strength in her nerves and color in her cheeks. j harm than good. To-day doctors pre scribe organic Iron—Nuxated Iron. Tills i particular form of Iron is easily as similated, does not blacker nor Injure* j the teeth nor upset the stomach. I| j .rill increase the strength and endur i ance of weak, nervous, irritable care- I worn, haggard looking women 200 per cent, in two weeks' time in many in- I stances. I have used it in my own prac ! tlce with most surprising results —• Ferdinand King, M. D. j NOTEi NIJXATKI) IRON recommend*. I ed above by Dr. King can be obtained jfrom Croll Keller, G. A. Gorgas, J. Nel son Clark or any good druggist, with or without a physician's prescription, on an absolute guarantee of success or ! money refunded.—Advertisement. i * A SUCCESSFUL COUGH REMEDY lO CIS. BUYS THE NEW Tit LAI. 8IZ1: lIOX I Regular Kies 2fc, 60c, It. At DrunrtaU. , BROWN'S.™.-TROCHES i JOHN I. BROWN * SON, Boatoa, Hwa 9