12 BAN AVAR FILMS IN CAMDEN Censor Relieves They Will Retard United States Recruiting Philadelphia, Pa., April 17. The Rev. Dr. Isaac W. Bagley, Camden's censor of motion pictures, haa placed his stamp of disapproval on pictures which show the horrors of war. He said he had no doubt such plc utres would hamper the Government In getting recruits for the army and navy. Dr. Bagley was formerly pastor of the First Baptist Church in this city. AMUSEMENTS ROYAL and NATIONAL THEATERS Showing To-day Brady-made featured in five part* with Clara Kliuliall Young; In "Camille" Also Mrs. Vernon Castle in •'PATH I A" * t A Splendid Vaudeville Ulll of 7 I Varied Talent* J CHARLES HOWARD & CO.— ; I Comedy. • IMOOX HARRIS Dancing i CECIL WESTON & Co.—Songs f i MAHONEY A ROGERS—Laugh- ; I Makers 1 • JOHN LAYIER— On Flying Rings; {Coming Thursday—"OH DOCTOR," t a Mnslenl Comedy Girl Aet i "Alter Ihe War WhaV?" □ Free Public Patriotic □ Q Lecture Bi g "After the War- [I □ What ?" a D by Q i q Frederick C. Howe j| rm U. S. Commissioner of mi Uj Immigration IjJ 0 Wednesday, April 18, M S3 8 P. M. 0 C 3 Technical Hiffh G3 school 1 m El FREE fil l Q PUBLIC INVITED n=a FREE EJ "After the War What?" REGENT MSAmwa'raoTO-PLAv THEATER TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW MARY PICKFORD IX llKit NEWEST 810 SUCCESS "A POOR LITTLE RICH GIRL" MTTI.E MARY'S GREATEST ROLE COMING—FRIDAY AND SATURDAY CHARLIE CHAPLIN in "THE CURE" Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1917, International News Service By McManus THERE <OEb THAT | I ( JAMES- L 1 MAN\ TIMEb • SOCIETY <OY- J M oo SHAKE- NEXT | AFRA\Q MUST \ TELL YOU / s C lOmpl 3 * JONES'OUT I r 1 I —' _ 00 SUNDAY -XOU AN TOUR. WIFE Not TO RF *Srs ( THAT • \S TAK\N' HIS f 111 ' #V |# 1 I'• * * TUESDAY EVENING, Allies Kill 11 and Wound 29 in Airplane Attack Over Freiburg University By Associated Press Berlin, April 17.—via London—An of ficial announcement by the war office says that eleven persons have beerl killed, 29 injured and considerable dam age done to the University building by an air attack-on Freiburg. A British Admiralty statement is sued last night stated that a large squadron of British and French air planes had bombarded Freiburg on Sat urday. It was stated that the bom bardment was a reprisal for German submarine attacks on British hospital ships. FRANK ROC KEFELLER DIES Cleveland, April 17.—Frank Rocke feller, 72, youngest brother of John D. Rockefeller, died in his apart ments in a local hotel from a stroke of paralysis and a blood clot on the brain as a result of a relapse he sustained following an intestinal oper ation a month ago. Frank Rockefel ler was not on speaking terms with his brother John as a result of a quarrel they had years ago. use alTen'sToot-ease, 1 he antiseptic powder to be phaken Into the shoes and sprinkled in the foot-bnth. If you want rest and comfort for tired, aching, swollen, sweating feet, use Allen's Foot—Ease. It relieves Chilblains and Frost lliUs, and prevents Misters, sore nnd callous spots. Just tho thing for Dancing Parties, Patent J.rather (Shoes, and Tor Breaking in New Shoes. Try it to-day. Sold everywhere, liSc. Von't accept any snbititute. Trial package FBKK. Address, Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Boy, N. Y. AMUSEMENTS ;|fc k rf.ifci Tjf i I LAST TIMES TO-DAY • From Robert \V. Chambers' | Popular Novel * An EnrhnntliiK love Story Stncrd' * Anilil Ilriiiitiful Out-of-Door Scenes t Also MR. and MRS. DREW In "DUPLICITY" anil the PATH 13 NEWS ? Wednesday and Thursday : Edith Antonio: j Storey Moreno: l —ln— i "ALADDIN FROM BROADWAY" 1 Coming Soon. ROBERT WARWICK • In "THE AROYLE CASE" || AMUSEMENTS || 1 > ORPHEUM Wednesday, night only, April 18 Sam Adler in "A Woman's i■ Secrets." (Yiddish). Saturday, matinee ana night, April 21— The Glady Play, "Pollyanna." COLONIAL,—"TiIe Hidden Children." REGENT—"A Poor Little Rich Girl." Sam Adler, the celebrated Yiddish actor, is comiiig to the Orpheum for one performance only. Sum Adler In "A Wednesday even- Womuik's Seerets" ing, in 'A Woman's Secrets." Mr. Adler, who is known over the entire world, has been secured by I. Levitan to make a tour of this country and Wednesday wiy be your only chance to see this famous actor of the Yiddish stage. Hun dreds of thousands have heard of Sam Adler in Uussia. Come and see him. Come and greet him. Come and wel come the King of the Jewish stage. Sam Adler, who amused your parents In tho Old World, and who now is here to amuse you. The seat sale opened to day. ''Pollyanna" will be brought to the Orpheum Theater, matinee and night, Saturday, April 21, by "Pollyanna" Klaw and Erlanger and George C. Tyler. When the joyous heroine of "Pollyanna" stretches out her hands and asks every body to play the "glad game" her ap peal reaches far beyond tile confines of the theater. It goes throughout a whole community, carried by willing messengers, to spread an optimistic urging that finds eager response. Most people are anxious to be "glad." "The Pollyanna" treatment for real and fancied ills is extremely pleasant. It is needed in schools and honieo and in the marts of trade. There Is deep signifi cance in the fact that so many men of promise in professional, political and big business afTairs have become "Pol lyanna" enthusiasts. All womankind loves the "gladsome" comedy for its romance and comforting philosophy. "There is something about everything to be 'glad' about if it is looked for." This sums up the spirit of "Pollyanna," one of the most genuine and welcome successes registered in the modern theater. "Everywoman," in many ways the most talked about play of recent years, is to be offered at the "Everywoman" Orpheum. on Monday evening, April 23. This unique production, which made such an extraordinary success in England in ad- AMUSEMENTS i OK PHEUM I ; j TO-MORROW KV T YIDDISH PLAYERS i Mr. Sam Adler and Company in |"A Woman's Secret" i SEATS—3Se <o 1.00 j THURSDAY ***• APRIITi9 I THE NEW ' : j September Morning Glories —with— | RERT RERTRAND and > FLORENCE DARLEY j T A Fast, Furious Whirlwind of i • Fantastic Aoveltlon EARRISBURG t/SfStl TEUMRAPH ditlon to its American triumphs, has been witnessed by 4.000.000 people dur ing the seven years which elapsed since its first performance. There has never been a No. 2 or road company. Mr. Savage is bringing his own great or ganization, the one, the only, "Every woman" company. "Everywoman" is a clever admixture of grand opera, drama and musical com edy, and yet, strictly speaking, it does not belong to one of the three classes. "Everywoman" is a chapter in the life of every woman. It is a pilgrimage in quest of love, a portrayal of uni versal experience. "Everywoman," the central figure, whose life story Is the motif of the play, is a beautiful, refined and accomplished young woman. She is of our day and the yearnings which lill her soul are those which every wo man knows. An unsatisfied longing in her heart for love—for a great over whelming love—takes her from the lire side of her home out into the mystery of life. Mary Plckford in "A Poor Little Ricn Girl," is a production that every child should see. It is a sub- Mnry Plckford ject that every grown nt the Urgent up in this neighbor hood should see. It is a photoplay that every father and mother will appreciate. It is really unique in the successful manner in which it will interest both the child and the grown-up. Many plays are claimed to have appeal to "young and old alike," but none have ever lived up to this claim more effectively than "A Poor Little Rich Girl." Gwendolyn, the "poor little rich girl," is so called for her wealth of material comforts and her poverty In the hap piness and affection she craves. Sur rounded by everything that money can i purchuse, she longs for the maternal love and care that her mother's social duties leave no time for. Neither is she permitted to follow her own inclinations, for when paren tal watchfulness is lacking, there are numberless paid servants ever ready to forbid what she most desires and to in sist upon what she least wants. In this environment her dreary little life goes on day after day. Each morn ing the austere tutors instruct her in the schoolroom under the guidance of Miss Royle, the governess, and each af ternoon that the sun shines, Jane, her nurse, accompanies her for a ride through the park in her limousine, guarded by liveried footman and chauf feur. At sundown a hurried kiss dis misses her from the parents, who must hurry oft to some social function or to a. business conference, and her tearful eyes close on one drab day only to open on another. "A Poor Little Rich Girl" will be at the Regent only two more days, to-day and to-mdrrow. On Friday Charlie Chaplin makes his d<V>ut in his newest riot of comedy, en titled "The Cure." The Chaplin picture will be augmented by an additional big feature both on Friday and Saturday. Henry Burr, Albert Campbell, Arthur Collins, Byron G. Harlan, Billy Mur ray, John 11. Meyer, Record-Maker* Vess L Ossman at CheHtnut and Theo. Morese Street Auditorium will appear per sonally in all-star concert. Thousands have heard the phonograph records produced by these artists, but few have had the oportu nity now offered the music lovers of Harrisburg and vicinity of not only hearing their voices and instruments, but actually seeing them in person at their concert in Chestnut Street Audi torium, Tuesday and Wednesday even ings, April 24-25. It is impossible to speak too highly of these international favorites; they are the biggest kind of a success wherever they appear. Take Billy Murray, for instance, with his line of funny songs. Then there is Henry Burr, that big. Jovial second tenor of this group of stars. Who has not heard his beautiful voice reproduced and often wishes they might sen his actions when "putting over" one of his famous songs? And the same may be said of the others, not only in solo work, but in their world-famed combinations such as Campbell and Burr. The Sterling Trio (Meyer, Burr and Campbell), Col lins and Harlan, Meyer and Burr, and the well-known Peerless Quartet. Leaving for a moment the vocal of ferings on the program, there are Theo dore Morse, the famous composer and pianist, and Vess L. Ossman, the banjo king. Until you have heard the lat ter performer on a banjo you simply cannot realize what real music can be produced from this wonderful instru ment. He is in a class by himself and when his magic fingers are at work it | is almost impossible for an audience to 1 keep still, it is so carried away by the spirit of the music. Robert W. Chambers' splendid novfA "The Hidden Children," with Harold Lockwood and May Alll "The Hidden son in the leading roles. Children" nt will be seen for the last the Colonial times at the Colonial Theater to-day. This popular story, which was run in the Cosmopolitan, has lost none of its charm in screening. The picture fol lows closely on the original story, which tells of the love romance of a boy and girl who were "hidden chil dren" in accordance with an Indian custom, and the brave struggle, they made to find their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Sydney Drew, in a laughable one reel comedy, "Duplicity," and the latest Pathe News, are showing on the same program. Wednesday and Thursday, the Vitagraph Company will present Edith Storey and Antonio Moreno in a splendid Blue Ribbon feature, "Aladdin From Broadway," an exquisite modern romance of youth and adventure, set amid the mystery and enchantment of the East, by Frederick S. lsham. A roaring two-reel comedy, "Lonesome Luke's Lively Life," the added attrac tion of the program, is said to be one of the funniest comedies ever produced. Coming, Monday, Tuesday and Wednes day, Robert Warwick in a special seven part Selznick production, "The Argyle Case." TO POBE BLAST Chester, Pa., April 17. The in quest into the catastrophe at the plant of the Eddystone Ammunition Cor poration last Tuesday which resulted in the death of 132 and injury of scores of employes, mostly young wo men, will be held Thursday according to an announcement to-day by Cor oner Drewes. "It will be a real in quest," said the Coroner, "and I in tend to sift the explosion to the bot tom." RUSSIANS TO GET FULL SUFFRAGE Women as Well as Men to Get Ballot From New Gov ernment By Associated Press London, April 17.—A Petrogi'ad dis patch says the congress of the Council of Workers, soldiers and delegates has adopted a report regarding the con stituent assembly which makes the fol lowing recommendations: The Assembly shall be convened at Petrograd as early as possible in the principle of universal suffrage. The army shall take part in the electiort like the rest of the population but the active army shall vote separately. Women shall have the same voting rights as men. hTe qualifying age for the vote shall be twenty years. The Council of Workers, soldiers and deie | gates shall control the election, which slial fix the political regime of Rus sia and her fundamental laws. The report also provides that after constitutional questions are sttled the Assembly shall take up agrarian proh lems and draft new laws on matters of labor, questions of nationality, or ganization of local self-government and all questions of an international char acter. Charles of Austria Knows Value of Peace By Associated Press Berlin, April 16, via London, April 17. —Emperor Charles of Austria is quoted by Bjorn Bjornson, as saying in an in terview at Luxemburg near Vienna: "I believe I know war better than most of the men who are at the head of the enemy powers to-day. I know not only the financial and economic effects of war, but I know also what It means to die in the trenches. 1 have lived a long time in the field and have seen men fall and die at my feet. Therefore I know also, maybe better than any other emperor or king, what peace means." TWO ESSENTIALS In the Woman's Home Companion Clyde Scott Stilwell says: "The important thing is that the insurance policy—big or little—should come into every home with the mar riage license. It should precede the savings bank account, the home, yes, even new clothes, or butter on the table. No man has u right to take a girl out of her father's home without protecting her from starvation in case of the accident of death. "There comes the unhappy word Greet |MH Every Morn With Joy! Jl. If you are well, you do —when sick, you don't. To waken feeling dull and stupid, with a sick headache, sour stomach, a bad taste in the mouth and a grouch against everybody, makes you feel out of sorts, and takes the joy out of life. taken at night, make a great difference in the way you greet the morning. Try them, and know the joy of waking fresh and fit, eager for the work of jS the day. Beecham's Pills act on the stomach, liver and bowels, cleanse the |1 | organs and strengthen the vital processes. They are quickly helpful for §1 run-down conditions caused by overwork, loss of sleep and general debility. I Take Them Tonight— I | Start Tomorrow Right 1 At All Druggists, 10c., 25c. Directions of special value to women are with every box jrak "The Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the World" APRIL 17, 1917. again—death. Yet the shadow of it need not rest heavily upon us. The unfortunate thing about a will is that it Is associated in the average man's life only with death. It should be as sociated with life. The time for a man to make a will is to-day, while he can do it with a smile on his lips, and the jests and good wishes of his wit nesses ringing cheerily in his ears. Such a man cannot cheat death of its ultimate victory; but he robs it of its sting, for he has made death pow erless to bring poverty and distress to those who are left behind." Why Look Wrinkled and Old? To Renew Youthfu Try This French Recipe Tonight Transform a wrinkled, aged-looking complexion into fresh, glowing loveliness with Creme Tokalon Roseated—entirely different from any other cream. Many a wrin k 1 e d, hollow cheeked, faded looking woman who, after count less vain trials with soaps, creams and treat ments, had given up all hope of ever regaining her youthful charm has made herself beautiful with every sign of wrinkles and complexion blem ishes gone by means of the fol lowing' French beauty recipe. Are you as beau tiful and /outh ful looking as you should be? If not you owe it to yourself and to those who care most for > V ( Mil. Simoot Marti* you to appear at your best. Make this test to-night. Look at your face in the mirror, under a bright light and see if you have crowsfeet or pouches around the eyes, deep lines or furrows in the forehead or about the mouth, enlarged pores, blackneads, or . a coarse, mottled complexion. Then wash your face in clear warm water and rub Nolo! The nliove IK one of a series of articles on beauty specially writ ten by Mile. Marcix, of I'arls, who, alter originating this recipe, won two Brent international beauty prized. Slie In no positive that it will banish every complexion lilenilHh anil enable any woman between (liirty anil sixty to liulekly make herself look from live to fifteen years younger that she personally KuarnnteeN success In every eawe or will refund the amount pulil for nuy products she recommends, provided you take your dealer's reeeipt at the time yon make your purchoHe. Furthermore, Nile offers to for feit 9-00.00 to any ehurltnhle InHtltutioii If It can lie shown that this method will not islve most nstonlNhinK new beauty to wrinkled, careworn, aged women In three dayN' time. Her American Address Is Mmoiie Marclx, 20 Went 2!id Street, New York. Crenie Toknlon Itoseated and the other ar ticle!* mentioned can he obtained at Nmall cost from (ioriciiH, Ivenneily, Croll •teller, Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart or must any kooil druggist or department store. USE DISTILLED WATER In the Woman's Home Companion C. H. Claudy, the automobile expert, oays: "There is only one kind of water to use in a storage battery; that is, dis tilled water. No other water of any character will do. The animal and vegetable matter, as well as mineral, which is in all other water is very in jurious to a storage battery. Only distilled water, which can bo bought from druggists in bottles, should ever be used to replace water evaporated from a storage battery." in a teaspoonful of Creme Tokalor Roseated, which you will lind entire*? ilfferent from any other cream. In tn ■norning wash the face with colA water and rub in more cream, after which use a pure, specially adherent lace powder like Poudre Petallas or I'o ud re Fascination de Tokalon. In stantly you will note the improve ment. Day by day watch how the old, hardened, coarse, rough skin be comes now, fresh, soft and beautiful, simply because you have helped it in the Right Way to act freely and re new Its youthful activity. But don't expect to accomplish this with creams, soaps, or lotions containing a large amount of free alkali, as it is only a question of time when this will de stroy the delicate skin tissues and completely ruin the complexion. You must use a pure neutral, specially pre pared product, such as Creme Tokalon iloseated, to rebuild the worn-out cells so as to bring back a true girlish freshness and glowing loveliness to the skin. If you have bad wrinkles, get a box of Japanese Ice Pencils from yonr druggist and use them in con nection with the cream, and you can get quick action on the deepest wrin kles, no matter of how long standing. For giving an indescribably beauti ful effect to the neck and arm's as well as suppressing almost immediately the appearance of all smaller wrinkles and marks of age, many women use a little Santonex.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers