"RED" OWENS WITH HIS MOTIVE POWER TEAM WALLOPS QUAKERS—THEATER NOTES ISLANDERS IN DREARY CELLAR Lose Three Games in Row to Syracuse Stars; Play Utica Today Harrisburg will be home this week for a series with Syracuse. The first game is scheduled for Thursday aft ernoon. Manager Cocklll starts to day on another scouting trip. He is anxious to have the team in a winning stride before the games with Reading next week. He has confi dence in the ability of the pitchers, who In his opinion have not warmed up properly. On Saturday Syracuse adminis tered a whitewash to the Islanders, score 6 to 0. Taylor allowed but two hits. At Syracuse yesterday two games were played, the Stars taking both. Errors Prove CosUy In the first game. Huenke and Shields held the Islanders to four hits and Syracuse won out, score 3 to 4. Errors by Cook and Harrison were costly. It was another white wash for Harrisburg in the second, score 4 to 0. Adams pitched a good game but received rotten support. To-day the team plays Utica. The scores of yesterday follow: (FIRST GAME) SYRACUSE— AB. R. H. O. A. E. Madden, 2b. ... 3 1 0 2 3 0 Evans, 3b 5 U 2 2 1 0 Quinn, lb 3 0 2 t> 0 0 Riley, cf. . ... . 4 0 0 4 0 0 O'Neill, If 3 0 0 1 0 0 Konnick, c. ... 4 1 2 7 2 0 Keating', ss. ... 4 0 0 2 2 0 Hildebr'd, rf. . . 3 1 1 3 0 0 Huenke, p 0 0 0 0 1 0 Shields, p 3 2 1 0 0 0 Totals 32 5 8 27 'J 0 HARRISBURG—AB. R. H. O. A. E. Burke, it" 3 1 2 1 0 0 Cook, 2b 4 0 1 1 2 2 Downey, 3b. ... 2 0 1 1 1 o Boley, ss 5 0 0 4 2 0 Harrison, rf. .. 3 1 0 0 0 1 Gaffney. cf. ... 5 o o 3 0 o Bold, lb 4 1 1 10 1 0 Miller, c 4 1 2 5 1 0 Burns, p 4 0 2 1 3 0 Totals '. . 34 4 9x26 10 3 Two out when winning run was Ji*ored. Syracuse 02001010 I—s Harrisburg 04000000 o—4 Two-base hits, Cook, Miller, Burns, Evans, llildebrand. Stolen bases, Evans; Burke 2, Quinn 2, Madden. Sacrifice hits, Madden, Shields. Dou ble play, Boley to Bold. Left on bases, Syracuse 5, Harrisburg 10. Base on errors. Syracuse 3. Bases on halls, Huenke 2. Shields H, Burns 3. Hits and earned runs, off*Huenke. 2 and 2 in 11-3 innings; Shields 6 and 0 in H 2-3. Hit by pitcher, by Burns (O'Neill). Struck out, Ileinke, 2: Shields, 3: Burns, 6. Umpires— Williams and Brown. Time—2.2s. <SECOND GAME) SYRACUSE — AB. R. H. O. A. E. j Madden, ... a o 2 2 l 0 Evans, 3b 3 0 0 3 3 0 Quinn, lb 2 1 1 8 3 oj Riley ,cf 3 0 1 0 0 01 O'Neill. If 3 0 0 0 0 0 Konnick, c. .. 3 0 2 64 1 0! Keating, ss. ... 2 1 0 1 2 0 llildebrand, rf.. 3 2 0 2 0 0 1 Bills, p 1 0 0 0 1 0 Totals - 23 4 621 11 0 HARRISBURG —AB. R. H. O. A. E. Burke, cf 3 0 1 1 0 1 Cook. 2b 3 0 0 2 3 'l Downey, Bb. ... 3 0 1 1 2 1 Boley, ss 3 0 2 2 3 1 Harrison, rf. . . 2 0 0 0 0 0 Gaffney. cf 3 0 1 2 0 0 Bold, lb 1 0 0 a 2 0 Carroll, c 3 0 0 1 1 1 Adams, p 2 0 0 0 3 1 •Miller 1 0 0 0 0 0j Totals 24 0 5 18 14 6, * Batted for Adams in sixth. Harrisburg 000000 o—o ; Syracuse 110101 x—4 1 Stolen bases, Quinn and Keating. | Sacrifice hits, Konnick. Double play.! Cook to Boley to Bold. Left on I bases, Harrisburg fi; Syracuse 5. j Bases on errors. Hildebrand, Riley, i Bills. Bases on balls, off Adams, 3: | off Bills, 3. Struck out, by Bills, 4. 1 Umpires, Brown and Williams. Time, I 1)11 ■ 11l !■— I I—mil III! I No Idle Acres This Year! Dig Up the Dollars Buried in Your Back Yard. Make Sure That You Plant Schell's Quality Seed For They Grow Better They Yield Better They Are Absolutely the Best To Have a Good Garden, You Must Plant Good Seeds. We Have Them and Everything Else You Need For Your Garden Walter S. Schell QUALITY SEEDS 1307-1309 Market St. Lawn Mowers Ground and put in good condition, i The Federal Machine Shop Court and Cranberry Sts. Harrisburg, Pa. tSDERTAKEH ITU 1 Chas. H. Mauk " PiIIVATF. AMBULANCE PHOXES MONDAY EVENING, WELLYS Harrisburg is still in the cellar, j |No lilts when pitchers are going i ! right; weakness in fielding, and a j few other things not good in a ball same, have been responsible for the Islanders' failure to get into the win- i I ning stride. Perhaps the players are , homesick. They certainly have not had a chance to get acquainted with \ Island Park. The lateness in getting the con scription bill through is looked upon as a good thing for baseball. It is I probable there will be no players | ! called until in October. Cities wfth | i'l easy reach of mobilization camps are expected to be liberally patron | ized. | If the Catlin bill becomes a law. and there is an army of fighters in j the State who would like to see it a I certainty, there will be no violations ! iof ring rules. Timers will be obliged i to use stop watches, and it is certain there will be no oversights in ringing the bell at the proper time. Letting | ! a fight go eleven rounds, as was the ' ; case a few weeks ago. will not likely 1 happen under the new law, Lee Strait Is still the leader at the bat in the New York State League. • He has an average of .429 in twelve ! games. Adams, Harrison and Boley are showing form at the bat. Tech athletes had another big cel : I BAR NORRIS WILLIAMS FOR SERVICE IN MARINES FALLEN ARCHES IS CAUSE New York. May 21.—Fifty college students, including some of the fore- I most in sports at Harvard, Yale, j Princeton and Cornell, will take ex aminations here on Monday for com- | missions as second lieutenants in the United States Marines, it was an nounced to-day. They include Harry LeGore, John i W. Overton. Louis A. Ferguson and j Okum Yorke, captains in four; branches of athletics at Yale; Wil liam D. Jewett, Harold B. Hoskins j and William A. Eddy, Princeton cap- t tains and Clinton K. Seymour of the Cornell crew. The news that three of the great est athletes in Harvard have been i Anita Stewart in "The Girl Philippa" at the Colonial gg? ■ sfj " - * . 'V- Y - ~ i ' A mere slip of a lass, a wholesome, sprightly-charming wood violet! How else can one typify Anita Stewart? Radiating the spirit of joy and naturalness—imbuing all her portrav- Sif, W U?ffl u "soul"—Anita Stewart's characterization of "The Girl Philippa,' it is said, reaches Hie highest point of her dramatic achievements. She has beauty—she has poise—she has magnetism. She is dainty in manner—poised in action-and finished in performance. Her wide range and control of delicate emotions—her ability to register her feelings and thoughts so as to convey them across the screen, her rare grae<* of bodv and her finely chiselled features, it is . laimed, not only make her the ideal Philippa, but America's most popular heroine. "The Girl Philippa" is the attraction at the Colonial Theater to-day to-morrow and Wednesday. Quality GORGAS Service Reasonable Hours For Clerks The average period during which an employe is on duty at Gorgas is 9 hours a day. i Yet, Gorgas' store at 16 North Third street is open all day and all night. Good service is as essential as good drugs and tired, ex- j hausted people can't give j good service. Gorgas sells good drugs. Gorgas gives good service. That's why 19 people are re quired to wait on the trade. I GORGAS' DRUG STORES 16 N. Third St. and Penna. Station | ebratlon this morning. It was a | great victory for them at Pittsburgh ! Saturday. Considering that the west- I crn high schools have been leading in all meets for several seasons, llar risburg's victory is all the greater. It came with the absence of a num ber of stars on the Tech track team. The biannual Far Eastern Olym pic games, held in Tokio, Japan, last week, proved unusually successful. The entry list was larger than in any previous meet and the competition closer. Although the Japanese ath letes emerged victors, they were forced to show better performances than heretofore. Close to 400 ath letes took part fn the week's games, of which nearly fifty per cent, came i from China and the Philippines. Pat Moran last night vigorously denied the charge that his pitchers ' had stopped the streak of the Cubs by using the "bean ball". "My pitch ers have too much ability," said Mo -1 ran, "to have to resort to such kind of methods, and besides they would not be guilty of any unsportsman i like tactics. It is merely the wail |of a team which was beaten on its merits." The charge was made by James Cruainberry, baseball writer of the Chicago Tribune, who is with ! the Cubs on their trip east. Mr. t"rußlnbcrry wired his paper that the Phils stopped the Cubs' winning streak by resorting to the "bean ball." ; rejected by United States examining | physicians came like a bolt from the ! blue. N. Norris Williams, national tennis champion; Bill Moore, Har j vard's second best sprinter, and Ed die Casey, of football fame, were | turned down and will be unable to i join the officers training corps at ; Plattsvurgh because of minor de ! fccts in their respective physical ; make-ups. Foot trouble, which barred Cham- I pion Williams, is most common i among track athletes, not a few of them suffering from "fallen arches" and similar injuries often brought on by continual running on board . i tracks. f Has Plan to Burn All German Crops to Starve Nation Into Peace Birmingham, England, May 21. i A plan to destroy the German crops ! by setting them on lire by means of ; fireballs dropped from Entente air planes is suggested by L,or<l Cal thorpe, a former member of the British army who has given much : thought to tho food situation j brought about by this war. Lord C'althorpe married a daughter of Og ; den Hofmann Burrows, of Newport. ! It. I. Lord Calthorpe's proposal, made j known through letters to the news papers in London and other cities of j England, has attracted a great deal :of attention. While many methods . for bringing Germany to terms by i the starvation route have been sug i gested, no such theory as Lord Cal thorpe's had before been broached. "In the Rhine Valley and districts 1 within reach of our aircraft," he ! writes, "there are vast tracts of land i planted with grain, the fields touch i ing one another, and without fences or hedges. Similar conditions exist near the Russian frontier of Ger many and in the plains in Hungary. "Fireballs dropped from airplanes | would, if properly constructed, de- I stroy thousands of acres, as the | crops become much drier than in i Kngland, and with little risk to the ; Inhabitants, otherwise noncombat ants, as cottage and farm buildings among the fields are rare. CHAXCKLLORKVTLLK SURVIVOR Marietta. May 21. —Fifty-four I to-day was the battle of Ohanccllorsville, in which a number . of Marietta men participated. A sur vivor Is George G. Lindsay, who was , a member of the Forty-fifth Regi ment. In this engagement, the regl j ment lost 13S men. General Jackson i was killed during this cusaseiucat. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH SATURDAY GAMES SHOW INTEREST Dauphin-Perry Teams Move With Speed; Thrills in Local Contest League games proved interesting Saturday, and those played by ama- | teurs and semi-professionals fur nished many thrills. In the New York State league superior work brought victories for Reading, Bing hamton. Wilkes-Barre and Syracuse. ; The work of the winning pitchers was evidence that the game is get ting better. In the Dauphin-Perry league Marysville had a close call with Halifax winning a score of 3 to 1. Davis won his game by special work, holding his opponents to three hits. King Lear was touched up at inter vals by Newport but won his game over Dauphin, score 6to 1. Dauphin lost opportunities to score when j Newport fell down on fielding chances. Duncannon handed Millers burg a hard bump, score 9to 3. Er- 1 rors by the upper end team were costly. Ilutlicrforil Wins Again Rutherford's fast aggregation in j the Philadelphia and Reading Rail- : way league romped away with an other victory, defeating the Trans portation department of Reading, i score 4 to 1. Johnson pitched for Rutherford and allowed live scat- i tered hits. Geary's fielding and Mil- J ler's hitting was a feature. East End A. A. and Midway pulled eft' a sensational battle Saturday, the East Endcrs winning by a score of 5 to 4. It was a fourteen-inning contest. Pitching by Neimond and i the fielding by Midway were features, j Belmont A. C. won over Ruxton I A. C.. score fi to 3. Both teams hit I the ball. Errors by Ruxton were costly. "Shorty" Miller with his Bethle j hem Steel Company league team i walked all over Enola A. C., winning jby a score of 11 to 2. Due to a late start on account ot' the parade, the game only went six innings. The hitting of Miller and Neblnger were • features, Landis pitched a good game. Manager Calahan Has Valuable Man in This Boy CAREY, PITTSBURGH. Riderless Horses Used to Recruit Australians Sydney, New South Wales, May 21. —W. M. Hughes, the Prime Minister of Australia, addressed a mass meet ing of 20,000 here this week, appeal ing for recruits. While he was speak ing some troopers of the Light Horse led into the square fifty horses, with out riders, carrying cloths inscribed: "Who will fill an empty saddle?" Mr. Hughes pleaded: "You are | living: you are Australians: your country is in danger. God will be with you." Within ten minutes every horse had a rider, and the jangling bits and clatter of hoofs roused the crowd to a state of intense excite ment. Before the meeting adjourn ed, a larger number of recruits had been enlisted than at any similar meeting this year. NEW MEXICO. MISEI'M BUILT LIKE INDIAN MISSIONS The new museum building In San ta Fe, N. M., which is being con structed under the auspices of the School of American Archaeology at a cost of SIOO,OOO, is a fine example of the results of a movement in the Southwest to preserve, as far as pos sible In new buildings, the distinc tive features of the Indian architec ture of the region. The new structure is an enlarged replica, in reinforced concrete, of the brick and stucco New Mexico state building at the San Diego fair. It combines the pic turesque characteristics of several famous missions, reproducing the balustraded recess of one, the facade of another, and so on. It bears spe cial resemblance to the ancient Span ish mission church at the pueblo of Aeoma, N. M.—a massive building of stone, timber and stucco, having walls 10 feet thick in some places. The museum will serve as a state civic center as well as an appiopriate shelter for rare archaeological col lections.—From the Popular Me chanics Magazine. MOTHKRS* DAY AT FLORIN Mount Joy. Pa.. May 21. Mothers' Day was celebrated in the Florin United Brethren Church, yesterday morning and evening, with an elabo rate program at each session. The morning services opened with an anthem, "Songs Our Mothers Sang," followed by tli** origin and purpose of Mothers' Hay by the pastor, the Rev. .T. E. Morrison, and closed with "A Mothers' Prayer," by Blanche Frey meyer. In the evening the rxerrlsps included a sermon on "Uur l>ubt to Mothers." I AMUSEMENTS f OTIS SKINNER COMING TO THE ORPHEUM IN BOOTH TARKINGTON'S "MISTER ANTONIO" Y.'- Y ' : Y Otis Skinner's new play, "Mister Antonio," is one that calls ff>r no great actor in the supporting ensemble, but does require good acting. Conse quently the Skinner company is, it is said, one of those well-balanced or ganizations from which we get the best performances. In the cast sup porting Mr. Skinner will be seen sue h well-known names as Walter F. Scott, Ernest Elton. Louise Sydmeth, John McCabe, Agnes Marc, Sue Ann Wilson and Jessie Crommette. Mr. S klnner comes to the Orpheutn next Friday evening. ORPHEUM Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday. May 21, 22 and 23. with matinees Tuesday and Wednesday —Thurston, the Magician. Friday, night only. May -5 Charles Frohmun presents Skinner in i "Mister Antonio." I Saturday, matinee and night, May .8 j —"The Smart Set." the World's I Greatest Colored Show. I COIX)NIAL- "The Girl Philippa." i REGENT—"The Spirit of Romance." Thurston, the magician, is coming ; to tile Orpheum for three days, begin ning to-night, with ■ Thumloii. matinees to-morrow ' the >liikl<luh" and Wednesday. It is said that local theatergoers will have an opportunity of witnessing the most varied pro gram ever given by this inimitable I master of magic. The popularity of 'Thurston is readily understood afW'i' ' seeing one of his performances. The | absence of sameness is strikingly no : ticeahle, every act is different from | the one preceding it. for while one i astounds and astonishes, the lest may ] be of such an amusing character as to throw the audience into a convulsion lof laughter. Thurston is conceded to be the peer of entertainers In his | class. His genial manner, his mode j of execution of the various tricks and I illusions and the great amount of j luimor lie throws into his work with his delightful patter add to the gen | cral excellence of the program. This year Thurston is presenting ! many strange weird and inexplicable mysteries, making affinity with un seen forces seem certain. I A show which is attracting general I attention this season from all lovers of both music end comedy ; "The is the "Smaller Set," better j Snuirtcr known as the "Smart Set," : !••" which :s headed by Salem Tutt Whitney and J. Homer | I'utt, supported by Blanche Thomp son and the stiongest company of Afro-American actors ever assembled, and is presenting a prepaiedness musical comedy'entitled. "How New town Prepared." with a continuous, ' bombardment of melodious numbers, | and will be the attraction at the Or pheum on Saturday, matinee and j night. I Boy'e Woolfolk's most elaborate and p.etentious musical comedy tab loid, "Vanity Fair of 1917," At the will be the big attraction \ lliiJeHtie at tiie Majestic Theater the first half of the present week. Jack Trainor, the well-known comedian, who was one of the shining lights in "Watch Your Step," is featured in the show, and the company surrounding him is a com petent one. The act is in seven beau tiful scenes, and the elaborate cos tumes worn by a bevy of chorus beau ties, adds greatly to the production. "Vanity Fair" affords the kind of en tertainment that is now so popular among theatergoers. "The Spirit of Romance," a whim sical Pallas-Paramount production which is the attrac "The Spirit tion at the Regent to of Honiaurr" day and to-morrow, at the Regent with Vivian Martin in the stellar role, is a I story that deals with secret rooms, J sliding panels, peepholes through the eyes of oil paintings, and should prove a great delight to everyone who loves the old, romantic stories of haunted houses, mysterious sounds, and the lilce. The star is first introduced as a drudge, but later blossoms forth in an array of beautiful and stylish tracks and gowns. On Wednesday and Thursday, Sessue Hayakawa, the cele brated Jap actor, will be seen in a thrilling drama called "The Bottle Imp." GERMAN VETERAN DIES Marietta, Pa., May 20.—John Feller, of Holtwood, aged 71 years, a veteran of the Franco-Prussian war, died Sat urday night. He has been a resident of this country since 1884. He is sur vived by his wife and seven children. I rami Anita Stewart TO-DAY, TO-MORROW, WEDNESDAY America's Daintiest Screen Star in a Special Vitagraph Feature in 8 Parts, Adapted From Robert W. Chambers' Popular Novel. I "The Girl Philippa" A Story of two hearts told in terms of love, courage and adventure. Showing on the regular program for the usual price of ■ admission. NOTIi: The screen time of this feature is 2 hours and no other films will he shown on the same program. Show starts ! j Carries First American Flag Through Paris ij f . • ■" ■ I IM* -jKgi 'f X xM? • I j &Ji_£CVMpX . j When R. T. Scully, of Pittsburgh, and Edward Tinkham. of Montclair, N. J., led an American contingent of sixty men through Paris streets, I the other day. bearing the American flag before them, the city went wild. They were the first detachment of the newly-created munitions trans lance Corps. LITTLE TH EATER PROSPERS IN MID-WESTERN TOWN Those concerned with the advance- | mcnt of art in the drama will be in • tcrested in knowing that Galesburg, an Illinois college town, is support- I ing its "little theater" in a note worthy manner. Popular Mechanics Magazine describes this unusuul in stitution, which is owned, managed, and directed by local men and wom en, and in two years has built a sub j stantial foundation for further de velopment. It is fittingly known as the Prairie Playhouse and has be come a democratic community enter prise that is backed by the good will of hundred of citizens. .When prop erties are needed for its s"!|'ge, they can be obtained from practically any home In the town. Box office receipts during the theater's first season paid expenses. The past winter, It is in ferred was even more encouraging. The aim of those actively connected with'the venture is interesting. The hope is eventually to organize a strong group of players and bring about the dramatization of unwrit ten stories of life in the upper Mis sissippi Volley. PROSPECTORS USE A STOVE FOIt VENTILATION A novel method adopted by some Ingenious prospectors in Montana for ventilating their prospect holes, Is described in the Popular Mechan ics Magazine. When they have dug to such a depth that fresh air no j longer circulates freely to the bot tom of the hole, they set up an air tight stove at the edge of the shaft, putting up three or four lengths of stove pipe for a chimney and run ning another pipe from the bottom of the hole to the air intake at tl\e I front of the stove. The latter pipe i is held in place by fastening it to ] , the shaft timbering. When a fire is I i built in the stove, air is drawn from j ■ the bottom of the shaft and fresh t air circulates downward to replace it. | Ventilation can be secured in this, way to a considerable depth. WAY 21,1917. ! GERMANY IS MUCH CHANGED BY IRVIN S. COBB We liavo got to remember that the Germany with which we have broken is not the Germany of Heine and Goethe and Haeckel and Beethoven; not the Germany that gave us Steu ben in the Revolutionary war, .-rl Slgel and Scliurz in the Civil war; . not the Germany of the sentimental, chivalrous, lovable Saxon, or yet of the music-loving home-loving Bavarian; not the Germany that was the birthplace of the kindly, honor ] able, industrious, patriotic German speaking neighbor round'the corner from you—but the fanatical, tryran nical, power-mad, blood-and-iron Prussianized Germany of Bismarck and Von Bernhardt, of the Crown Prince and the Junkers —that pas sionate Prussianized Germany which for forty years through the instru mentality of its ruling classes—not necessarily its Kaiser, but its real ruling classes- —has been jealously striving to pervert every native ounce of its scientific and Its inventive and its creative genius out of the paths of progress and civilization and to join it into the grooves of the great- I este autocratic machine, the great ! est organism for killing off human j beings, the greatest engine of man j begotten and misdirected efficiency 1 that was ever created in the world, j Because we have an admiration for I one of these two Gernianys is no | more a reason why we should abate • our indignation and our detestation i for the other Germany than that be cause a man loves a cheery blaze upon his hearthstone he should re fuse to fight a forest lire. We have got to remember another thing. If our oversea observations of this war abroad have taught us any thing, they should have taught us that the German army—and when I say army I mean in this case, not its men but its officers, since in the Ger man army the officers are essentially the brain and the power and the mo tive force directing the unthinking, blindly obedient mass beneath them —that the German army is not an army of good sportsmen. And that, I take it, is an even more important consideration upon the field of bat tle than it is upon the athletic field. Asthe saying goes. the Germans don't play the game. It is as inconceivable ■ to imagine German officers going in I for baseball or football or cricket as ! it is to imagine American volunteers ; marching the goose step. | The Germans arc not an outdoor j race; they arc not given to playing outdoor sports and abiding by the I rules of those sports, as Englishmen j and as Americans are. And in war— that biggest of all outdoor games—• | It stands proved against them that : they do not play according to the | rules, except they be rules of their i own making. The German is a greedy | winner and he is a bad loser—a most remarkably bad loser. Good sports men would not have broken Belgium into bloody bits because Belgium stood between them and their goal: good sportsmen would not have sung the Hymn of Hate, or made "Gott Strafe England!" their battle cry; good sportsmen would not have shot Edith Cavell or sunk the Lusitanla. (iood sportsmen would not have packed fhe helpless men and boys of a conquered and a prostrate land off as captives into an enforced servitude worse thart African slavery: would not wantonly have wasted La Fere and Chauny and Ham. and a hundred other French towns, us they did last month, for no conceivable reason than that they must surrender these towns back Into the hand of the enemy; would not, while ostensibly at peace with us, have plotted to de stroy our industrial plants and to plant the seeds of sedition among our foreign-horn citizens, and to dis member our country, parceling it out to a brown race in Mexico and a yel low race in Japan. Good sports do not do these things, and Germany dfd all of them. That means something. —Courtesy of the Saturday Evening post. BLAIN COMMENCEMENT Blain. Pa., May 21.—Graduation ex ercises proper of the Blain Joint High I school, which includes the public schools of Blain borough, Jackson, Toboyne and Southwest Madison townships, will be held to-morrow evening in the High school room. There are fifteen members in the Se nior class. The class of 191S present ed its play, "The Brookdale Farm," on Saturday evening to a crowded house. The Rev. E. V. Strasbaugli delivered the baccalaureate sermon last even ing in Zion's Reformed Church, the class of 1917 attending in a body. The Junior class reception for the Seniors wi'.l take place in the High school room this evening. INDIAN MISSIONARY TALKS Dauphin, Pa., May 21.—Two inter esting talks were' given yesterday morning and evening, in the Zion Lu theran Church, by Miss Jessie Brewer, of W'illiamsport. who returned re cently from India, where she spent fifteen years as a missionary. Miss Brewer told of the habits and csu tcms of the Hindoo. 2.30—7.30—9 The Greatest Musical Comedy Offering in Vaudeville VANITY FAIR A Company of 25 Players, a Bevy of Pretty Girls—A Bar rel of Fun. " Francis Leon Chrisman to Address American Boyers Halifax, Pa., May 21.— Francis Leon Chrisman, a nephew of William Har ris Boyer, has accepted an Invitation to address the association of Amer ican Boyers at the annual reunion at Mauch Chunk, Pa., in August next. The reunion attracts the Boyers by the hundreds from all over the Middle States, und is a very enjoyable oc casion. Mr. Chrisman's mother is Mrs. Margaret Boyer Chrisman, who spends Home time at the old Boyer homestead in Halifax every year. She is now visiting: her daughter at Harrisburg. MRS. CHARLOTTE! OH MIT DIBS Marietta, May 21.—Mrs. Charlotte Ohmlt, widow of Benjamin F. Ohmlt, the oldest woman in Marietta, died Saturday night. She was 93 years old and was a daughter of the late Doctor Samuel Houston, one of Lan caster county's leading physicians, and was an aunt to the late Rear Ad miral Edward S. Houston, U. S. N. There survive three children and two grandchildren. Civil, WAR VETERAN - DIBS Marietta, May 20. —Ira C. Knoll, aged SO years, a veteran of the Civil War, who served In the Forty-eighth regiment, died in the Columbia Hos pital Saturday night from injuries re ceived in a fall eight months ago. He is survived by two nieces, living at Philadelphia. will be safe from - all harm if placed "t J^j 1 ,N MOTH - PROOF r**.. ..PjyWn GARMENT BAGS / Vegetable Plants Strong Transplanted Heavy Rooted Plants Tomato, Earliest Varieties 20 cents per doz. $1.25 per 100. Pepper Egg Plant Cauliflower 25 cents per doz. $1.40 per 100. Cabbage, 15e doz. 75e per 100. Few Potted Tomatoes Heady to Blossom, $1.25 per doz. Fertilizer Plants must be fed if they are to grow and produce. Give the soil what it needs to make the plants grow. Wizard Brand Pure Pulverized Sheep Manure 52.00 per 100 lbs.; 50 lbs., $1.2f1; 25 lbs., 75c; 10 lbs., 40c; 5 lbs., 25c Baugh's Vegetable and Potato Fertilizer •2.50 per 100 lbs.; 50 lbs., $1.40; 25 lbs., 75c; 10 lbs., 40c; 5 lbs., 25c SchelFs Seed Store Quality Seeds They Grow Better—They Yield I Better i 1307-1309 Market St. < .1, * AMUSEMENTS f i Regent Theater TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW "The Spirit of Romance" with that dainty little s&r Vivian Martin WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY SESSUE HAYAKAWA in "THE BOTTLE IMP" * ORPHEUM 3n AVQ BEGINNING L'A X O TO-NIGHT Matinees WKDNEsiIAY This Wonder Show of the I'nlvcme THURSTON The World's Grentciit Magician Mitt*. 25c, s©e. rI\ILLJi Kvf*. 25c to 91.00. I AHIPQ Attending Mntineea L.AL'IEhJ Will be given Horo mco|icr of their lJves. 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers