LEVINSKY HOPES TO GET DECISION OVER LEO HQUCK TOMIfiHT—- AMIISF.MF.NT GOSSIP LEVINSKY IS AFTER DECISION Promises to Give Leo Houck a Drubbing at York Tonight Many local sports who like to see real boxers In action will go to York to-night to see Battling Levinsky, light heavyweight champion of the world, and Leo Houck, of Lancaster, in action. It promises to be the best show ever held in that city. Joe Barrett, the veteran promoter, made up this all-star bill. Levlnsky and Houck hold a griev ance against each other since they met in Houck's home town, several years ago. The bout then was given to the home fighter by the local pa pers. and Levinsky says this time there will be no doubts as to who is the best man. Other bouts, on the card, three in number, are all-star events. John ny Gill, York's contender for the welterweight championship honors, who is now matched with Britton, for the crown, will meet Eddie Han lon, of Baltimore, the southern mid dleweight champion. Gill recently stopped Johnny Wolgast. Buck Taylor, another Yorker, un der Barrett's careful handling, has come to the front rapidly, and proved his worth four weeks ago. by knocking out Frankie Erne, in the second round. He will meet Eddie of Lancaster, an other youngster who is coming fast. The opening bout is between the two little wild men, Dick Gotwalt, of York, and Jack Wolpert, of Lancas ter. These two bantams met twice before with honors breaking even, and Barrett told them there must be a decisive winner this time, or no work before his club in the future. The first bout starts at 8.30 sharp. RACING BAN LIFTED London, May 16. The govern ment has reconsidered Its decision regarding the future of flat racing, and has decided to make substantial concessions and allow the x sport to continue at Newmarket. The suc cessful appeal, made by large num bers of owners, trainers and breed ers, has brought great satisfaction to all followers of horse racing throughout the country. The famous "Derby" the biggest classic of the English season, will be run on May 30, and the "Oaks," on June 1. both to be decided at the first extra Newmarket meeting. Winning Number The total number of runs scored by Harrisburg in the nine games played, including yester day, is: 41 Alfred P. Davies. 2020 North Third street, is the winner of the HARRISBURG TELE G R AF II Guessing Contest, being the first to enter a guess with the abpve total. The season ticket will be forwarded to him as soon as Sec retary Seiss returns to this city. kammmaa^tmrnrnaam^^ammmm^mammmaaamamm^m^aa^ Quality GORGAS Service Everything For Kodaking Gorgas' might, appropriately, be called a Kodak Service Store. Anything you may re quire in filming, developing, printing or mounting Is here and at your command Day or Night When in need of anything for photography, think of Gorgas. GORGAS' DRUG STORES 16 N. Third St. and Penna. Station s 1 >' Seasoned Lumber T UMBER should be seasoned with a * definite use in view. United Ice & Coal Co. Frequent neglect to procure properly season ed lumber is responsible for such trouble as furni ture and interior trim of the house shrinking and checking, or wood swell ing out of shape. If the lumber is not very' dry shrinking will occur causing cracks to appear on walls and ceil ings. Special attention is given to the purchasing of properly season wood for our customers. We arc as careful as we can be to have our ma terial that will make a £ood job when placed in your home. United Ice & Coal Co. Forster A Cowden Sta. WEDNESDAY EVENING, MOHAN IS AFTER CARL MORRIS' SCALP New York. May 16. A breathless world awaits the result of the ten round bout between Carl Morris and Frank Moran at the Harlem Sport ing Club Friday night. Of course, there's a question as to just why the world is holding its breath, but we have the word of the press agent that such is the case, and it's not for the likes of'us to dispute. Morris, who might delicately be compared to one of the huge Brit- 1 ish "tanks" in France when in action, j has been training for almost two i weeks and declares ho will enter the j ring weighing 223 pounds. This is | MANY GUESSES YT TICKET CONTEST Ilarrisburg closed the second week | of the league season yesterday, scor ing a total of 41 runs. Nine games were played, the Islanders winning two. Alfred P. Davles. 2010 North Third street, was the best guesser ill j the season ticket contest and his name S has been handed to Secretary Frank j Ceiss, who will mail the ticket to the j winner when the secretary returns to Harrisburg. There were just 1,141 guesses. The estimates of the total number of runs Harirsburg would score in two weeks varied from 11 to 101. There were a number of persons who guessed 40, FIGHTERS HERE FOR BIG SHOW ; Al. Murphy Anxious to Win Laurels From "Tim" Dronev Tomorrow Night P 1* ■ jm mm AL MURPHY, SCRANTON Young fighters who are on the bill to-morrow night came here to-day. They had a workout at Island Park, and along the river road. Much in terest is manifested in the ten-round bout between Al Murphy qt Scranton and Tim Droney, Lancaster. Murphy fought Frankie Erne here j twice and gave the crowd a run for' their money with his battling. He | recently knocked out Tommy Wil liams in a ten-round fray in the! west. Williams is known as a very tough boy. Tim Droney in Shape Tim Droney, who meets him. ii in j excellent shape and is sure to take I some of the fighting stuff out of | 1 A (Wl Dr. Ferdinand King, a New York City Physician and Medical Author, •ays: "There can be no strong.,vigor ous. iron men nor beautiful, healthy, rosy-cheeked women without iron— Nuxated Iron taken three times per day after meals will increase the : strength and endurance of weak, : nervous, run-down folks 100 per cent, j in two weeks' time in many Instances. ! Avoid the old forms of metallic iron i which may Injure the teeth and cor- > rode the stomach, and thereby do I more harm than good. Take "only j organic iron—Nuxated Iron." It is dispensed in this city by Croll Keller. G. A. Gorgas, J. Nelson Clark and all ! food druggists.—Advertisement, Tnr'^ 1 " that c 'l has been I pe atrt something equally des- V& Francis Charles: weirhYl C ?V beat an >' heavy mi lihi „ \ or, . a 1,1 a twenty-flve- Man J".' 'V 1 slip over nly • x\ i on Morris on Frida&v wfniii n \ an? ii matched wlth Jess tion." V Pr ° Ve thiS conten "' thJ h Mor,is\i S mucl ! to b * ■>< for' the Jlonts Vran soiree—after it Is, 1 ?*NTINT> E ABL ® T0 TURN OUR AT | Europe. \ lhe finish fl6ht j and five sent In 4 J as V r guesses- The winner sent in nw.. eBS May 1. His guess was register^L s yj 0 40 The guesses were all n\uK rp( j c on _ i secutively as received. Th®., ergona ' figured out the total f r "V ~fflc i al ! scores and handed their estlL to ! the Sporting Editor of the j BURG TELEGRAPH. They fol . 1 lows: May 2. one run: May 3. oniLn,. May 5, live runs; May 5, 6, 9. rain; May 10. two runs; May lifc x runs; May 12. eiglit runs; May 13*1 runs; May 14. eleven runs; May seven runs; total. 41. [Murphy. Droney fought here twice | before with Frankie Maguire and Paddy Sylvester and recently met Johnny Kllbane In York. The balance of the bill is made up of real battlers like Tommy Tiggens and Pete Howel in the semi. Frankie Erne will be referee. West End A. C. Schedule Includes Many Big Games On Saturday West End plays Mer cersburg Academy at Meroersburg. i One week later the local nine plays [ Bethlehem Steel at Cottage Hill field. Other games follows: Memorial Dax, May 30, Harrisburg Motive Power 1 of Pennsylvania Railroad league will | bo the attraction at Fourth and Sen eca streets, morning and afternoon; June 2, Palmyra, at home. June 9. Goldsboro, at home; June 16. Baker A. A. of Steelton. at home; June 23, Palmyra, at Palmyra. BARONS LAND INFIEI.DER Pittsburgh. May 16. The release of Hoke Warner, intieldcr, to the Wilkes-Barre club, of the New York State League, was announced at the offices of the Pittsburgh Baseball club. Werner was obtained from the Dayton club, of the Central League, last season. It was also announced that Arthur Reilly, infielder, who played with the Wheeling team, of the Central League, last season, will report to the Pittsburgh club Sun day. ROSEWOOD DEFEATS GALAHAD Rosewood won last night's game in" the Allison Hill league, score 5 to 3. defeating the Galahad nine. Gardner and HefTelfinger were the opposing pitchers. Each pitched good ball. Er ror! back of HefTelfinger were costly. Use McNeil's Pain Exterminator.—adv. 298 Loads of Rubbish Taken From Hill in Two Days of Cleanup The spring cleanup on Allison Hill was completed late this afternoon, health officials reported. To-morrow the flftv-stx men at work on the removal of ashes and refuse will start at the extreme low ed end of the city and start for Divi sion street. It is believed they will reach the upper end of the city be fore the end of next, week if weath er conditions permit. Rain would cause a delay in carrying out the . schedule. Dr. Raunic.k said. One hundred and fifty loads of • ashes and others waste were remov ' ed yesterday from the hill districts | by the four gangs. This makes a total of two hundred and ninety ' eight loads for the first two days of the cleanup. >i Tractor Arrives For Susquehanna Engine i The tractor for the Susque ; hanna steam fire engines arrived to-day. The motor apparatus will ; be installed at once, Park Commis sioner E. Z. Gross and Fire Chief . John C. Kindler said. Mechanicians from the contracting firm will be here within the next few days to install the tractor and test out the machinery in service. The two city service trucks and three of the chem ical and hose wagons are expected within the next few weeks. Deaths and Funerals FUNERAL OF ACTO VICTIM Funeral services for Bertha Prls cilla Devers, aged 16, who was kill ed on Sunday evening in a motor cycle accident at Front and Lewis streets, were held this afternoon at 2 o'clock from the home of her grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Craver, 120 Pine street, York. She is survived by three sisters, Mrs. Catherine Stegner, of this city and Jennie and Lillian at home. STANLEY C. SHI'EY Stanley C. Shuey, aged 49 years, died yesterday at his home, 1942 North street. The survivors are four daughters, Rosie. Geraldine, Mary and Anna, and tw sons, Albert and Ira. The funeral will take place Saturday afternoon. Services will be conducted at. the home by the Rev. Harry Nelson Bassler, pastor of Second Reformed Church. Burial will be made in East Harrisburg Cemetery. Mr. Shuey was for many years an employe at the Harrisburg Pipe and Pipe Banding Company's plant. ROTH LEAVES SYRACUSE Syracuse, N. Y„ May 16. Man ager Mike O'Nell, of the local team, of the New York Stale League, an nounced that Dave Roth, the big pitcher of the Stars, had quit the j team. Roth, who was depended I upon by O'Neill to be a factor in the | team's progress this season, received | a fine tender from a manufacturing I plant in Western Pennsylvania, of | faring him a substanUal salary and i also the chance to earn extra money 1 by pitching on Saturday afternoons 1 and holiday HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH ORPHEI'M Entire week, with matinees Wednesday and Saturday —"Experience." MAJKS'i IC—Vaudeville. COLONIAL "A Magdalene of the Ilills.' REGENT— "The Dummy." Those who have not been anio'ng the fortunate unes who have seen the wonderful morality ••Experience" play, "Experience, ' now being presented i at the Orpheum. should lose no time ; in making reservations while there are seals remaining. No offering 111 years has aroused such pronounced i enthusiasm as this wonuertul plav j with its eighty-two vital characters and ten captivating scenes. Four more I performances remain—the engage- I ment closing with a matinee ana night i performance on Saturday. Speaking of gliosis in a recent inter- view, Thurston, the magician, who will appear at the Or- Ihurnton, pnoura three days be •bc Maglelnu ginning Monday, says. , "Like the magicians or the past, I, too. doubted the asser tions of the spiritualists, that spirits or ghosts could manifest themselves to mortals. My knowledge of trickery easily detected the deception of many mediums whom 1 met. But several times during a period of twenty years of investigation 1 encountered mani festations 1 could not explain and finally after meeting Madame Eusupla Paladina. the famous Italian medium. 1 was forced to admit that she pos sessed a power that not only mani fested itself In movement of solid ob jects such as chairs and tables, but under certain conditions there appear ed in her presence figures of ghost like forms. i Otis Skinner comes to the Orpheum Friday evening. May 25, In the best 1. . play that has fal- Ma Skinner In len to his lot | wtter Antonio" since "Kismet." tA. It is called "Mis- I and was written ex- i I i nlfcly for this popular star by Booth j |jo gk'Kton. In "Mister Antonio" are i i for vt' und all ,he elements that make 1 hum!% u ' ar '*y and success. It has i and vAatmospliere. characterisation frr\^l an "y— a " presented with lit i cere'aJ* rn> b y the author and sin i npr p ]!Atry by the actor. Mr. Skin vf,nt|p. 'A*n Italian organ-grinder, a [ L. with the soul of a and,Jjp hcart o( a knlght errant . eomedy show is ap i P* arln S at Majestic Theater the \ the ofV" 11 ' of thls w eek. One MaJeJtlc bilM la Khing hits of the naji tic bm j ß en and Haiel Mann, I riinnina- fliV nrt e° u Ple. who have a I out anvone !M ght ,alk tha t would Soier acts Jack Gardner auVnmL.i' travestv°ori 'tSU'TI sonality, who sing s L a bre^v f muTicSrt " T J le Brokers." featurinsr Tom l'a^ mcdy " Klrl " act, comedian, and Rrll ing some difficult and amusintr feats . on a bounding pad P o ??he Kt half ' . of the week. GautierVT " Shon n ; ' will th be W IL h HtUe°f P olks ' Grouped around this an I' and Erwood. comedv enter ! tainers; Green, Miller and Cireen n . a novel comedv ofTerini j," [ and Leedon. Italian character com.! , dians. and Pipifax and Pa nlo ! lent pantomime artists. ' excel " Mabel Taliaferro Is Reen as an emo tional actress of powerful charm in Mabel Taliaferro featured "A at the Colonial dalene of , Hills," which is showing at the Colonial Theater to day, the greatest vehicle she has had since the beginning of her motion picture career. n Heretofore Miss Taliaferro has been seen as "the sweet girl in rags" the type that wins the heart and sym pathy of the picture-goer bv sweet j ness alone. But In this production h j is "the sweet girl in rags"" who bat- I ties with great emotions. | She Is a type of the Southern moun- 1 ! tain girl. Her brother is killed. She' I vows to avenge his death. She tries to' I kill a wealthy young man from the East. He repays her with kindness and she falls in love with him. Then a tragedy takes place. The girl is arrested for murder. The young East erner defends her and she is acquit ted. | Besides being- powerfully noted, the play has splendid scenic settings, the exterior* having been made in Georgia anil Florida. "The Little Strategist " one of Paula Blackton's Country Life Stories, will complete the program Thursday, Frances Nelson in "The Power of Decision," a powerful story of love and tragedy. Coming soon Anita Stewart in "The Girl Philippa." Jack Pickford, brother of "Mary," will be seen at the Regent to-day and to-morrow in a film i "The Dummy adaptation of the at the Reseat great stage success, "The Dummy." Members of the cast who worked with Jack in this production, In which he is starred, had a great deal of fun at his expense while the picture was being made. In this subject he is supposed to be a messenger bov, ex ceedingly fond of detective stories of the "Jessie James" and "Diamond Dick" sort. Never having read these masterpieces. Jack thought it his duty to familiarize himself with them, and consequently sent a boy out for an armful of them—the "yellowest sort." Unfortunately the boy stubbed his toe, in the exact middle of the studio, ex posing to the public gaze a small mountain of "thrillers," which he In nocently explained were for Mr. Pick ford. much to that gentleman's dis comfiture. Friday's attraction will be "The American Consul," featuring Theodore Roberts. Express Companies Look ■ Forward to Higher Rates By Associattd Press New York, May 16.—Rumors that the principal express companies were about to file with the Interstate Com merce Commission an application for an increase in rates were met to-daj by a statement from the executive of ficer of the Adams Express Company that the rates of the companies were now being analyzed "In connection with the Increased cost of conducting business." The Adams, American and Wells Fargo Companies have taken the lead In the movement to have express rates analyzed In tills connection it was explained, and the Southern Northern, Great Northern and West ern companies are taking slmlllar steps. Recently It was asserted the business of some companies has been conducted with a deficit. Harrisburg Man Honored by State Odd Fellows York. Slay 16. At the opening of the annual session of the Grand of Odd Fellows the following officers were elected: Grand mas ter. Hobert W. Montgomery, Phila delphia; deputy grand master. Roy D. Bentan. Harrisburg; secretary, Usher A. Sail, Philadelphia; treas urer, Fred C. Hanyn, Scranton: warden, Jacob Weaver, York, and representative to sovereign lodge, James S. Avery, Philadelphia. BELL TELEPHONE EMPLOYES WHO ARE MEMBERS OF SIGNAL RESERVE CORPS ARE SWORN IN Is fffff j A* vfcSHiilK* 1 A nB" f • MWBI m WfffWwwg n iBBr r w ■ TMiMti - a -J Photo by Roshon. The picture shows twenty-two Bell Telephone employes taking the oath of allegiance. Lieutenant Douglas Macfarlan, of Philadelphia, of the Medical Officer Reserve Corps, is shown administering the oath. The men are enlisted in the Signal Reserve Corps. $100,000,000 LOAN! MADE TO RUSSIA BY UNITED STATES American War Mission Will Not Take Part in Fac tional Fight By Jssociatrd Press Washington, May 16.—The gov- j i eminent to-day made Its first loan j to Russia, $100,000,000, bringing the' amount thus far advanced to the allies up to $625,000,000. To controvert the German intrigue j which seeks to convince the Russian people that the American commis- j sion, headed by Ellhu Root, intends j to lend its Influence to one or an- j other of the factions there, it was reiterated officially to-day that the commission has no purpose whatever ot interfering in the internal affairs of Russia and has only two objects. They are: ' To convey to the Russian people the gratification of the United States at the transformation of the ancient despotism into a republican form of government, and to render any help ful service it can to aid the new gov ernment rising from the ruins of the old empire. To Lend Aid The commission has no purpose to sway the judgment of the Russian people as to which faction shall con trol in the organization of a perma j nent government. I This statement, mace to-day upon I the highest authority, is for the ex press purpose of meeting sinister misrepresentations by Germany in iKussia, which are calculated to pro- I voke some of the Russian factions into making a separate peace with (■ermony before the American com missioner can arrive in Petrograd. ' Th commission is going to Russia as fast as railroad trains and steam ■ ships can carry them on what , amounts to a race against time. Aid to the new republic from the i United States will take other forms than .the loaning of money. file sewer exceptions ' Exceptions to an opinion by Addi- I tional Jaw Judge S. J. M. McCarrell j ruling that the borough of Lykens | has no legal right to give permits to , j property holders to tap a sewer own * j ed by a private corporation, were filed j by Jackson k Jackson, counsel for the I ; borough. The exceptions will be 1 argued. y ! RIGHT OF WAY FOR BIG BILLS ■ opening of the session of the House j to-day to give right of way to all . revenue and appropriation bills. The appropriations committee will be- I gin to rcpotr out uppropriations to i 1 day. • j HXXSXSXSXXXS3 THEY KNOW THEIR COUNTRY HEEDS ' ill"! 1 *!! ' t ■ LEROT D. SMt'CKER T-eßoy D. Pmucker. son of Dr*Clay ton A. Smucker, a junior in Syracuse University, is now in training at Nor folk. Va„ preparatory to serving Unci# .Sam on the sea. if pa scd through Harrisburg last week on lit* way to enlist in the naval reserves Mr. Smucker Is a graduate of Ontral High school and in the city Is well known as an allielete. Although under military age he wants to get into the fight. NO FRICTION OVER SAFETY MEASURES [Continued From First I'a go] I aary to do so. Just now I call see j no emergency for using any of It. J I would rather that the money be I held in reserve until such time as nn | emergency does arise. X believe in holding It until the use of any part of it becomes necessary. "It is for the members of the com mission to decide how and when the ; money is to be expended and wheth : er any part of it should be placed at the disposal of the Public Safety I Committee. The members of the • committee are but agents of the | Commission, which consists of state : officials sworn to do their duty by j the people of Pennsylvania. * Representative Men "The members of the committee are as representative a body of men i as can be found anywhere and they lifcv enobly and unselfishly assumed j patriotic but difficult tasks at a great ! personal sacrifice of their own time ] and interests. There is no truth I whattever that any friction has arisen between these men and any members of the commission, so fat as I know. "The story that has been circulat ed that there has been friction among the members of the commis sion. or that there Is likely to be be tween any of them and any members of the Public Safety Committee, Is untrue and unwarranted. I am sure. "There could not have been a more harmonious meeting that we held yesterday. Why, it was Aud itor General Snyder, wha had been described as antagonistic to me. who suggested that my own secretary, William H. Ball, look after the cor respondence of the commission, as ho was accustomed to take care of my own mail. Mr. Snyder and all of the others were most affable and when they left me I felt pleased that our first meetin gshould have gone off so smoothly. "One of the things we agreed upon was to meet at noon to-morrow. We also discussed inviting a subcom mittee of the Executive Committee of the Public Safety Committee to meet us as soon as possible, so that we might confer and decide upon the needs of the latter. We were able to arrange to-day for thfe conference to take place at 11 o'clock to-morrow morning. "While I do not know who will represent the Public Safety Commit tee I have been given to understand that Mr. Stotesbury, Mr. Pepper and W. W. Atterbury, vice-president of the Pennsylvania Railroad will meet the members of the commission in my office to-morrow. , "Another thing,we discussed yes terday, which I will make public now, was the use of the various State departments for the furtherance of the war work we have undertaken. With the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Labor and In dustry, the Departmn etof Mines and other well developed and efficient departments the State possesses there is no need of seeking elsewhere for the splendid work they are capable of doing. No Wastage of Funds "It would mean saving money for the State as well as genuine efficiency for us to have the Department of Agriculture for instance assume j charge of the Held agriculture work j which is one of the big war prob-1 lems confronting us. With the cap-! able and experienced men who have i in the Department of Labor and In- j dustry we could secure the best pos-! Bible results In taking a census of | the industries of the State—and so i on. "In conclusion. I merely wish to dispel the idea that there is to be I any wastage or extravagant use of I the $2,000,000 which has been placed at our disposal for war purposes. We | agreed upon that, as well as the use I of the machinery of the State gov ernment, at yesterday's meeting, and 1 do not anticipate the slightestj hitch in our plans or the slightest j misunderstandings among us. "We are confronted with a great: as well as a patriotic task and we' owe It to our country as well as to 1 our State to do everything In our power to carry out those purposes j for which we were created members ;of the commission." Start Suit to Recover $1,735.75 With Interest A suit to recover $1,735.75 with in terest from January, 1916, was heard ih court room N0.2 to-day before Judge B. J. M. McCarrell. Quinto, Cohan & Levin, Inc., clothleri, plaintiffs in the action contend Fide* A Sldea purchas- ! ed suits and overcoats costing that ! ■ : um. but did not pay the bill. The ! ► ' defenae rlalms the orders tbr the cloth •ng were not complied with. It is ex- ' c : Petted the iase will reach the Jury I j late to-day. ' I In cotivt room No. t, before Presi- | • j dent .lailgf Kunkel the suit of Mrs. | I ! Joseph Anthony against A. C. Troup. , I piano dea\r, waa started tills morn r Owing to the Illness of Frank J. I s 1 Roth, court stenographer, proceedings l| 1 delayed slight^'. MAY 16, 1917. Three Harrisburg Charity Bills Are Reported Out Three of the Harrisburg appropri ation bills will be reported to the House of Representatives to-day. The Harrisburg Hospital which got i $35,000 last session, will get $44,000. The Harrisburg Polyclinic Hospi ! tal, which got $4,000 will get $5,500. The Sylvan Heights Orphanage i which- got $6,500 in 1913, will get I $7,500. GLASS OF WATER BEFORE m EAT ANY BREAKFAST Wash poison from system each morning and feel fresh as a daisy. Every day you clean the house you live in to get rid of the dust and dirt which collected through the previous day. Your body, the house your soul lives in, also becomes filled up each twenty-four hours with all manner of filth and poison. If only every man and woman could realize the wonders of drinking phospliated hot water, what a gratifying change would take place. Instead of the thousands of sick ly. anaemic-looking men, women and Kirk with pasty or muddy complex ions; instead of the multitudes of •'nerve wrecks,'' "rundowns," "brain fr.gj" and pessimists we should see a virile, optimistic throng of rosy cheeked people everywhere. Everyone, whether sick or well, should drink each morning before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it to wash from the stomach, liver, kidneys and ten yards of bowels the previous day's indi gestible waste, sour fermentations and poisons, thus cleansing, sweeten ing and freshening the entire ali mentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. Those subject to sick headache, biliousness, nasty breath, rheuma tism, colds; and particularly those who have a pallid, sallow complex ion and who are constipated very often ,are urged to obtain a quarter poundof limestone phosphate at the drug store which will cost but a trifle but Is sufficient to demonstrate the qi;ick and remarkable change in hoth health and appearance await ing those who practice internal san itation. We must remember that in side cleanliness is more important than outside, because the skin does not absorb impurities to contami nate the blood, while the pores in the thirty feet of bowel do.—Adv. V —• / TO-DAY ONLY Mabel Taliaferro In ■ Metro-Woaderplay "A MAGDALENE OF THE HILLS" The Story of ■ Girl's Vow Broken by Love ADDKD ATTRACTION "The Little Strategist" A Two-nrel Piny from Paula Blorkton's Country Life Stories. • THURSDAY ONLY FRANCES NELSON —ix— "THE TOWER OF DECISION" ■* I Come and Have Yonr Flrat Surf Dip of the Season THE BREAKERS i A Lively Girl Art With a Heal Oeean of Ita Ona. A Surrounding Vaudeville Bill af Lausual Eiecllea^e. [ Masonic Candidates Are Guests at Big Banquet The spring reunion of the Harris burg Consistory, Ancient Accepted Scottish Jtite Masons, began i last evening with a reception to the class of candidates who will take degrees during the week. After the entertainment in the au ditorium the cand-dates were the quests of honor ut a dinner In the banquet lmll. The entire day and evening will be spent to-day in the conferring of deKrres. Friday even ing the golden jubilee meeting will be held In the Cathedral auditor ium. MRS. HALEY DIES Mrs. Alice Ann Ilaley, widow of the lute I.uther Haley, aged 67, died al her late home, I'll Blackberry .street. She is survived by five daugh ters, two sons, six and I two great-grandchildren. 1 Funeral Monday afternoon at 2.30 o'clock from the home. The Rev. Bills X. Kremer, of Salem Reformed church, of which Mrs. Haley was a member, will officiate. Burial will feo private in liarrisburg Cemetery. BE PRETTY! TURN GHAT M DARK Try Grandmother's Old Favor ite Recipe of Sage Tea and Sulphur Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly com pounded, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays, by asking at any drugstore for "Wyeth's Sago and Sulphur Compound," ' you will (.et a large bottle of this famous old rr-cipc improved by the addition of other Ingredients, for about 50 cents. Don't stay gray! Try it! No one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as It does it so naturally nn(* evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair disappears, and after an other application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy and attractive. Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com pound is a delightful toilet requisite for those who desire dark hair and a youthful appearance. It Is not in tended for the cure, njitigatlon or prevention of disease. —Adv. / ~ ' " r % Regent Theater TO-DAY AND TO-MOHKOW JACK PICKFORD —irr—■ A plctnrlzatlon of the arrest stage aueceaa, "THE DUMMY" FRIDAY "THE AMERICAN CONSUL" with Theodore Robert*. Saturday Mary Milan Mlnter In "ENVIRONMENT." ORPHEUM ALL THIS WEEK MATINEES sat"R\>AV William Elliot-, F. Ray Comitoclc and Morris Goat 'lf Pre tent THE MOST WONDERFUL PLAY \ 1N AMERICA Gor J. HAfcai* j. ; ' 9 Months in vl J |B £ 7 Months in t'lA Vj 6 Months in .. & Boston i 10 BIG SCENES COMPANY 82 JrplVQLiTvl Tamptatioas. PRICES— Al ''- NIGHTS * SAT. MATINEE 50c, 75c, SI.OO, 91.50, *2.00 MATINEE TO-DAY 50c, 75c, 91.00, 91.50 Harrisburg MONDAY, MAY 21 I ruprifviK r\t ah uiTinM(l4l*T7lkV parade ATiowoaunH DOOR> OPEN AT I AHO7 P.M. H||M PCSFORMAffCCS M4l#AT2*flPM*Hni ONESO(MnCXaADNiT3 AIIHMM CWtPBfH UfIPEB I? HAIFPfiKt Tickets on sale show day at Bow man's; same prices as chuM at show grounda^^^^^^. 13
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers