10 lAMuseffleflrei ORPHEUM To-morrow, matinee and night—lto shanura's Danse Divertissements. Wednesday, matinee and night, De cember 26 —Harry I>auder and His Company of international Artists. Friday night and Saturday, matinee and night, December 28 and 2!) - MAJESTIC THEATER lie One of the Flrnt to See Vaudeville'* llinucst SeiiMatlon SANTI The woman with the mont omler f■ 1 nriiiN in tlie world. In houkn eInMM, and <lum*cM of Orient. PERCY HASWELL & CO. In a Comedy Sketeh, entitled "COUSIN ELEANOR" "The Aeroplane Girls'' In a Sensational Aerial Novelty. 2 - Other IIIk Keith Feature® - __________ Earl Williams wiKliex everybody a Merry Christ max and wants you to know lie will he at the Colonial to-day nod to-morrow in The Grel! Mystery WKD.VKSDAV mill THURSDAY WM. H. HART "THE PRIMAL LURE" FRIIIW and SATURDAY Douglas Fairbanks —in— "His Picture in the Papers" V ICTORIA I To-day, To-morrow and Wednesdny THK MOTION PICTI'ItK THAT 2 IS HOISIX; TIIK NATION I Thos. 11. lnee*H Newest and g (jireateat Sjiectaele, "THE XKIM'KI.I VS LAST U it \ur* Written liy C. (inrdner Sullivan, s directed and |liotiKrnplied by I Irvln V. Willat. Admission Adults, Matineen, J l.*e, KveniiiKx -JSo. Children, 10c to All Show®. I VICTO RI A REGENT THEATER TO-DAY—GEORGE BEBAN in "A ROADSIDE IMPRESARIO ADMISSION Adults, 15c; Children, 10c CHRISTMAS DAY and on DECEMBER 26 AND 27 GERALDINE FARRAR IN "THE DEVIL STONE" The gifted star, and noted prima donna in the best pic ture in which she has ever appeared before the camera. Admission 10 A. M. till 6 P. M.—Adults 15d, Children 10c. Evening—Adults 25c, Children 10c. DOUBLE ATTRACTION—FRIDAY and SATURDAY JACK PICKFORD in "TOM SAWYER" By Mark Twain and The Mack-Sennett Comedy. "INTERNATIONAL SNEAKS" fHEAR Sergeant EMPEY Author of "Over the Top" Friday Night Dec. 28 CHESTNUT ST. AUDITORIUM Demonstration—Trench Warfare UP-AND A Sensational Kvcnt for HaiTibiir£ AT tm POPULAR PRICES Sa, ° °P cns —° r ' AT EM 400 seats -,oc " heum Thcatcp ~ EMPEY 1000 seats .. . SI.QO j <*• 2B - Christmas To our friends, newly - made and of i f long standing, steadfast in their endorse- ; yv ment of our merchandising principles, J whose loyalty has made it possible to ex- ; AfS. pand and bring our organization up to 1 J \*\ ' ts P resent standard, we extend the Sea- : son's Greetings. 1 Ym2 Myers Accessory House \ Geo. W. Myers j / • Cameron and Mulberry Streets .1 / / Harrisburg, Pa. * I - •• : \ MONDAY EVENING. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH * DECEMBER 24, 1917. I William A. Brady presents "The ' Man Who Came Bark." , i Monday, matinee and night, Decem | ber lit "There She Goes," a i sparkling musical comedy. Tuesday (New Year's Day), matinee and night, January 1 "The Prln | cecs Pat." MA J ESTIC i High. Grade of Vaudeville. COLONIIAL 'To-niffht and to-morrow —Earlo Wil liams in "The Grell Mystery.' WVdnenclay and Thursday William J S. Hart in "The Primal Lure." I Friday and Saturday Douglas Fair banks in "His Picture in the ! Papers." REGENT j To-day George Beban in "A Itoad i side Impresario." 'Christmas Day, Wednesday and Thursday—Geraldine Farrnr in "The Devil Stone." Friday and Saturday—Double attrac tion Jack Pickford in "Tom Saw- I ver," by Mark Twain, and a Maek- I Sennitt comedy. "International | Sneaks." VICTOBIA To-day, to-morrow and Saturday "The Zeppelin's Last Baid." Thursday—"Shall We Forgive Her." Friday and Saturday—"Babes in the Woods." What is said to be one of the great est motion picture sensations ever shown upon any "The Zeppelin'* screen will be tin I,nut Itnld" <>t attraction at the tlie Victoria Victoria Theater to-day. to-morrow and Wednesday, when "The Zeppelin's Raid" will be presented. This re markable spectacle Jilm is the product ORPHEUM TO-MORROW CHRISTMAS II \\ | Roshanara Danse | Divertissements W ITU MICHIO ITOW. Japanese I.egciMlnry Dancer Thomas Allen Rector Tulle Lindahl BALLET-INTIME AND ORCHESTRA PRICES Matinee !M)e to $1.50 livening; to $-.00 Wednesday, Mat. and Eve. DECEMBER 25 Pit IOCS >latlnee Joc to sl.riO F.vcniuu Toe to PAHMW Kl.lt \MKItI(A\ TO! It HARRY LAUDER of Thomas H. Ince, the producer of "Civilization," and Is considered a much more wonderful production. "The Zeppelin's Last Bald" is the tirst. motion plcturo In which the central figure is one of the vultures of the sky by which the lluns spread death and destruction through England, i Belgium and Northern I-'rance before the allies' air fleets were made suf- I I'ciently formidable to put them to rout. A whole vast country is the I stage—fields, roads, villages and cities, the sea and far up into the sky j the picture carries one as that thrill after thrill keeps one's attention. The inner workings of tlie giant cigar shaped dirigible, iscuddlng through a cloud-flecked sky thousands of feet above the earth. Is a scfentlflc treat. I All the characteristic Prussian efflcl ! uncy obtains inside the giant bird as J the crew releases a shower of bombs ' upon the sleeping cidadel. A (lash of lurid red. An ear-splitting roar! A deafening chorus of frenzied cries from tin' throats of the doomed men. ; -And the mighty Zeppelin, mortally ■ wounded by an internal explosion. I plunges toward the shell-swept earth j like a giant meteor. That's the oil- i j max of this wonderful picture. Have you been reading the "Inter views With Empey" in the daily papers, or have I Sergeant Kmpcy, you read his fam i Friday Mglit ous "Over the Top," tho fastest selling book in America? If you have ; not. you should read them all, but bet jter still. Sergeant Empey himself Is coming to Harrisburg Friday, Decem ■ ber 28, to give one of his sensational I demonstrations and talks on actual trench Empey's appearance here promises to be one of the great est patriotic meetings Harrisburg has ever had. Or ever will have, for that matter. Empey spent over seventeen month.- in the trenches, in the front line t cliches, mind, and he was so se ver. 1 wounded that he was discharg ed ' active duty as a soldier. He ' h;i i giving his demonstrations lat. to packed houses all over |tl.< try, and one of the largest '■' ii' ever assembled in Harris i>:n.. x ,11 greet him here or. tile even ing "i' December 28. Every patriotic ! citizen, and of course that means | every citizen of Harrisburg will want ,to hear Empey. This will lie the first actual and firsthand information p<jo | pie can get, on tho real trench war -1 lare, on the future of the war, and lon the thousand and one things every lone of us would like to know about. After his demonstration, Sergeant | Empey will answer any and all ques tions. that his audience may ask him, Jso far as it is possible to do so. j Empey is being brought to Harrisburg through the enterprise of Fred C. ! Hand, of tho Keystone Concert Course, j The seat sale opens at the Orpheum i Theater, Wednesday, December 20, jand as the prices are popular and the • demand great, an early reservation , will give a choice. | The performance at the Orpheum Tljeater to-morrow, Christmas Day, matinee and even- J "llosluinaru ing, promises to be j Illvcrtl*ements" sufficiently diver silled to interest all (classes of amusement lovers, as well j att the patrons of music, the dance and [allied fine arts. "Boshanara's Diver tlssments" —and there are many are presented by a company of dance artist* brought from the four quarters jof the globe. Boshanara is the por trayer of the folk dances of ancient Burinah and the ceremonial dances of mystic India. Mich to. Itow is an ex iponent of the legendary dances of j Japan. The associate artists are from , France, Belgium, Bussia and our own j United States. The Mallet lutime is j also an assembly of allies. M. Alex andre Si-dan. a Frenchman, directs the | symphony orchestra, which has sev eral Italians. It is altogether the | most remarkable assembly that has j ever appeared in an American theater, j The performance savors of an Ara : bian Night storyteller's dream of a festival in an imaginary Paradise for , Dancers. The solos, the groups and the ballet ensembles move against backgrounds of wonderful colorings : <>n rich tapestries illuminated with I strange lights, and the stories of the j sensational episodes are told througii the medium of pantomine, danse, music and sumptuous scenery and other effects, which combine to create an atmosphere that appeals to ••11 the known emotions, incidentally adding a few new thrills. Harry Lauder has at last announc ed his definite and positive retirement from the stage, | Farewell Tour ot and when the Harry I.nuder well-known Scot says anything, I anyone can go gamble upon its be- I ing a certainty, and his present tour lof the United States and Canada, which opened in New York on Oc tober 22. and which turned out to be the greatest ovation ever tendered to any stage celebrity in history, will be his final tour. Lauder is to-dav the greatest single artist in the world. If there was any doubt of this, if he had even a remote competitor, and tlint doubt would have been removed when after two hours of single effort on his closing night in New York, the audi ence declared they would not let him go and cheered him for fully ten min utes while he stood speechless In the midst of the tumult and tears of hap piness coursed down his face. It needs no fake farewell announcements to bring people to the Lauder banner and were it not for the circumstances which the war has brought about, Lauder might have gone on indefi nitely, for every critic said that he was at the zenith of his powers. But Harry has lost his only son in the war, the son for whom he purchased an estate in Scotland, so that father and son. when the war was over, might there enjoy the fruits of the comedian's labor, and when Lauder returns to his native land he will, un til the end of the war, give his ser vices toward lightening the burden of the men in the trenches and bring ing some happiness into their lives. Then he will go to that Scotland es tate, and in his loneliness be buoyed up with the satisfying thought, as he himself expresses it, that he has been able to give the sacrifice of a son to his country. Lauder's engagement here is set for Wednesday, matinee and night. "The Man Who Came Kick," after a tremendous run of over one solid year at the Playhouse "Man Who in New York, where It tame Hack" outlasted all of the other big successes of j last season, will come to the Orpheum Friday night and Saturday, matinee |and night. j The play is by Jules Eckert Good man, founded on a short story of John Fleming Wilson's, and gives, in vivid detail, an account of the Journey of a man who .sank from the top to the very depths, and there, in an opium den in Shanghai, found the girl who was to lead him the long way back again. Its intense interest hel'd New Yorkers for thirteen solid months even during the heat of summer, so that William A. Btadv, the producer was forced to institute extra Thurs day matinees to accommodate the crowds. The cast will he headed bv Dorothy Bernard and includes: William Crow ell, Bedfield Clark, Harry Sleight, S B. Hamilton, Henry Davis, Irving White, Frank Howson, William Blais dell, George Howard, Ben Nedelle Hulbert Frederick, Fuller Golden! Alice Lorraine, Alma Chester. Cora Calkins. Marion Berry, and Anna Pohl all of whom appeared in the roles at some time during the engagement at the Playhouse in New York City. Some splendid holidays attractions are booked for tho Majestic the early half of the present week. At the A feature of the bill that >lnjestlo promises to prove a big drawing card is the first appearance in Han isborg of Santi. the woman with "The Most Wonderful Arms in the World." in a series of re markable dances that are very artis tic. An added attraction on the hill is the Monarch Comedy Four, a quar tet of excellent male singers, who put over a number of popular song hits In excellent fashion. They also intro duce some hokum comedy into their act, which Is always well received by local vaudeville devotees. John I Geiger, comedy violinist; the Airplane Girls, presenting a sensational aerial novelty, and one othef Keith act. com pletes the bill. Earle Williams, the well-known' MARKETS MOW YORK STOCKS Chandler Brothers and Company, members of New York and Philadel phia Stock Exchanges 3 North Mar ket street, Harrisburg; 1336 Chestnut street, Philadelphia; 34 Pine street, New York furnish the following; quotations: Open. Close. Allis Chalmers 1616',i American Beet Sugar 66 66 j American Can 64 64 , American Car and Fdy.. 62* i 64% American Locomotive .. 49 50% American Smelting .... 70% 71 Anaconda 55% 56% Atchison 80% 79 Baldwin Locomotive ... 55 56% Baltlmoro and Ohio .... 40% 40®, Bethlehem Steel (B) ... 69% 70% Butte Copper 14% 15 California Petroleum .. 12 'l2 Canadian Pacific 132 . 131%' Central Leather 34 34% Chesapeake and Ohio . . 43% 43 Chi., Mil. and St. Paul.. 39 38 Chi., R. I. and Pacific... 16% 17 Chino Con. Copper 38% 39% Colorado Fuel and Iron. 33% 33% Corn Products 28% 29 Crucible Steel 48% ■ 49% Distilling Securities .... 32% 33 Erie 14 14 General Motors 93% 95% Goodrich, B. F 35% 35% Great Northern pfd 82 82 Great Northern Ore subs 24% 24% | Hide and Leather 11% 11% Inspiration Copper 39% 39% Kennecott Copper 30% 30% Lackawanna Steel 74% 74V4 Lehigh Valley 52% 52% Maxwell Motors 21% 22% Merc. Marine Ctfs 20% 20% Merc. Marine Ctfs. pfd.. 79% 80 Mexican Pfetroleum .... 72% 70 Miami Copper 26% 26% Midvale Steel 41% 41% New York Central 64 64 N. Y„ O. and W 19% 19% Northern Pacific 78 77% Bailway St! Spring .. 41% 41% Ray Con. s'iper 20% 21 Beading Bailw*.f /v . --. 68% Republic Iron an 4tal, 75 j Southern Pacitlo 78% 78 Southern Railway ........ 22% Studebaker 44% Union Pacific 104% 104% U. S. I. Alcohol 110 111% U. S. Steel 84 85 !' S. Steel pfd 104% 104% Utah Copper 74% 7^i Westinghouse Mfg 36% 37 AY illys-Overland ........ 18% 18% PHILADELPHIA IMtODUCE By Associated Press Philadelphia, Dec. 24._ — Wheat Nominal; No. 1, red, $2.27; No. 1, soft, •<u $2.2b. No. Z. ten. $2.24, .<o 2, son. red. $2.22; No. 2. red. $2.21; No. 3. soft, red. $2.19: No. 4. red. $2.17; No. 4, soft, red. $2.16. Corn Market nominal; No. 2, yellow, $2.3502.40; No 3. No 4. and N'o 5. yellow nominal. Oats Firm, but scarce; No. -, white, 90®90%c; NO. 3, white. 89® 90< '- „ ~ Rran Tne market is firm; sort winter, per ton. $ 16.50@47.00; spring, per ton, $45.50® 46.00. Refined Sugars Market pnw.'erort 8 4T.-: fine grni|tMd. 8.15fie8.35c; confectioners' A, 8.35 c. Butter The market is firm; western, creamery, extras. 50c; near by prints, fancy, 54c. Eggs—Market firm; Penssylvania, nnd othei nearby firsts, free cases, $ 17.10® 17.40 per case; do., current re ceipts, tree cases, $16.80 per case; western, extras. firsts, free cantos $17.10® 17.40 per case; do., firsts, free cases. $16.80 per case. Cheese Quiet, but steady; New- York, full creams, 22®25c. Live Poultry Firm; fowls, .3® 26c; roosters, 19c; spring chickens, 21@25c; ducks, Peking, 26®28c; 00-> Indian Runner, 22#24c; geese, -o<g> 28c; turkeys, 27@28c. , „ Dressed Poultry The market is firm; turkeys. nearby, [choice to fancy, 40® 42c; d').. fair to good, 35@39c; do., old, 34@36c; do., western, choice to fancy, 39®4l'c; do., fair to good, 34®38c; do., old toms, 34®36c; do., old, common, 24®26c; fowls, fancy, 29%(&)30c; good to choice, 27%®28%c; do. small sizes, 22®27e; old roosters, 23c; broiling chickens, nearby, 30®37c; do., west ern, 30®32c; roasting chickens, 23® 30c; ducks, nearby, 25@30c; do., west ern, 24®29c; geese, nearby, 26@29c; do., western, 25® 28c. Tallow Steady; city prime in tierces, 17c; special loose, 17% c; prime country, 16% c; dark, 15%®16c; edible in tierces, 18%@19%c. Potatoes Dull and steady; New Jersey, No. 1, per basket. 75®90c (33 tbs.); New Jersey. No. 2, per basket. •10@C0c; New Jersey, ner 100 lbs. SI.BO ®2.20; Pennsylvania, per 100 lbs., $2.25 ®2.60; New York, per 100 tbs,, $2.20® 2.40; western, per 100 lbs., $2.20® 2.40. Flour The market is quiet but steady; winter straight. $ 10.10® 10.25: Kansas, cieur. IH.ni'u 10J00; do., patents, $10.50® 11.00; spring firsts, clear, spot, $10.00®10,25; spring fli-ts, clear, mill shipment. $9.75@10.00; spring bakers, patent. and popular screen star, will be the attraction at the Co- I.nrlo Williams loliial Theater to ut the Colonial day and to-morrow. in a powerful drama, entitled, "The Grell Mystery." This picture is said to be an excellent holiday attraction, for aside from the immense drawing power of the star, there is a story full of heart, interest and mystery. Mr. Williams' pleasing personality is much in evidence throughout the five leels, and he plays with his usual grace and naturalness making the leading role stand out well. An added feature on the program is a funny Keystone comedy entitled, "Haunted by Himself." A Christmas eve attraction of un usual merit will be shown at the Be gent Theater George Ilelian In "A to-day, when ltoad.Mldc Impresario" George Beban appears in "A Boadsido Impresario." This is one of tho most unusual of the noted char acter actor's ssrio-comic photodramas, and will play here Monday only. In his recent production of "The Marccllini Millions," Mr. Beban is seen an an Italian truck gardener, and in "A Boadside Impresario" as a roam ing Italian with a trick bear perform ing for the benefit of the children in wayside towns, Mr. Beban doing him self the tricks the bear is supposed to do. How, while trying to earn money enough as a dishwasher in a restau rant, to get Bruno, the bear, out of jail, where he has been incarcerated for wrecking an apiary, he discovers a blackmailing plot against the local candidate for mayor, and also finds his daughter, for whom he has been searching for sixteen years—all this is brought about In a most unsual and appealing manner. A Merry Christmas and j A Happy New Year to All : CRISPEN MOTOR CAR CO. 311-815 S. Cameron Street ' HARRISBURG, PA. : COUNCIL TO HOLD OPEN MEETING ON j ITS 1918 BUDGET Commissioners Are Unable to j • Find Solution to Ash Collection Problem City Council to-day decided to let j the public attend a meeting of the! budget committee on Wednesday evening, so that the taxpayers of the city can get first-hand information on the problems which are confront ing the Commissioners. This action was taken upon the re ceipt of a communication from the Chamber of Commerce urging Coun cil not to drop the nineteen police men asked for by Mayor Keister and also to give the patrolmen tho salary increase which lias been requested. Commissioner Gross, as soon as City Clerk R. Ross Seamun read the com munication, made a motion to hold an open meeting and request the officials of the Commerce organiza tion to attend. The other Council men at once asked to have the meet ing open to the public. The letter from the Chamber of Commerce started a general discus sion in Council, the Commissioners saying they would be glad to have some suggestions about raising enough money for the budget esti mate. It was said in official circles to day. that by eliminating the? provision for ash collections the estimates will be slightly above the total revenue which will he aavilable next year. A number of the officials said they had not made any decision on what action will be taken on the ash dis posal question, but that they opposed the move to let the individual resi dents dispose of ,the refuse. AVIATION INSTRUCTOR KILLED By Astociated Press Shreveport, La., Dec. 24. T. Carl Jones, of Shreveport, an instructor in the aviation corps, was killed in an accident at the aviation field near Lake Charles yesterday. A brief tele gram telling of the accident was re ceived here by his mother. FRENCH "GET" 18 MACHNES By Associated Press Paris, Dec. 24. —Intense artillery activity is reported by the war of fice. In the course of one hundred combats in the air during the last few days the French brought down eighteen German marchines. spot, $11.25® 11.50: spring patent, mill shipment, $10.30®10.85; spring family brands, $11.00@11.50. Hay—Small supply, but firm; tim othy (according to locution) No. 1, large bales, $28.00@28.50: No 1. small bales. $28.00®28.50; No. 2. $26 00 @27.00; No. 3. $23.00@24.50; samples, $lS.00Cj)2l.00, uo grade, $15.00® 17.00. Clover mixed hay. Light nilxei *26 00@27.00; No. 1. Co.. $25.00026.00: No. 2, do.. $22.00 @ 23.00. CHICAGO CATTLE By Associated Press Chicago, Dec. 24. Cattle Re ceipts, 14,000; firm. Native beef steers. $7.35@ 14.40; western steers. $6.4041/12.75; stockers and feeders. $6.50@10.25; cows and heifers, $5.20® 11.30; calves. $9.00® 16.50. Sheep Receipts, 8,000; strong. Wethers, $9.00®13.10; lambs, $12.60® 16.40. Hogs Beceipts, 25,000; firm. Bulk of sales, $116.60® 17.00; light. $15.90® 17.00; mixed, $16.35® 17.10; heavy, $16.30 i, 17.10; rough, $16.30@16.60; pigs, $11.55@15.60. RESORTS LAUREL HOUSE LAKEWOOD, N..J. First class American Plan Hotel. A short motor run from Camp Dix, at Wrightstown, N. J. A. J. Murphy, Mgr. C. V. Murphy, Asst. Ufr. Up State Hotel Man Benefited By Tanlac S, J. Zalncratls Tells How He Freed Himself From Tortures of Stomach Trouble "For many long and miserable months I suffered torment from stomach trouble, indigestion and ca tarrh," says Simon J. Zalneratis, the well-known hotel keeper of Wanomie (near Wilkes-Barre), Pa. "I could eat scarcely anything and that little caused me terrible distress. I had no energy or ambition, I -was badly run down and I was always so awfully tired. Even my sleep didn't rest me for I would wake up in the morning too tired to move. "Tanlac was recommended to me and it has done me so much good that I want to pass the word on to others who suffer with stomach trouble so that they may profit by my experience. "Tanlac has worked wonders in my case, for not only has my .ippe tito improved wonderfully, but my stomach has been toned up and my digestion is excellent. "That terrible sluggish feeling has left me entirely and when I wake up in the morning I feel refreshed and rested. "I certainly urge all others who are afllicted with stomach trouble to take Tanlac and get well." Tanlac, the famous reconstructive tonic, is now being introduced here at Gorgas' Drug Store, where the Tanlac man is meeting the peo ple and explaining the merits of this master medicine. Tanlac is also sold at the Gorgas Drug store in the P. R. R. Station; in Carlisle at W. G. Stephens' Phar macy; Elizabethtown, .Albert W. Cain; Greencastle, Charles B. Carl, Middletown, Colins S. Few's Phar macy; Waynesboro. Clarence Croft'• Pharmacy: Mechanicsburg, H. F. Urun house. —Adv. Service Flag Unfurled at Sixth Street Church The congregation of the Sixth Street United Brethren Church paid tribute to its honor roll at the serv ices yesterday. A service flag con taining twenty-three stars was un furled. The Bev. Joseph Daugherty, pastor, read the honor roll, which contained the following names: Fred C. Hurrls, assistant paymas ter, U. R. Navy; John L, Bruckart, Coast Artillery; Roy Dewey Brlner, Signal Corps, Aviation section; Charles Clements, Medical Depart ment, Nlnteenth Infantry Head quarters; Harry A. Clark, Twenty sixth Recruit Company; Harry Chubb, Company I, One Hundred and Twelfth U. S. infantry; Ross F. Oarverich, Company H. Fifty-ninth t T . S. Infantry; Chalmer M. Good year, Medical Department, Thirty second Infantry Detachment; Paul W. Holtzman, Twenty-sixth Recruit Company; Bobert B, Kerr, Signal Corps, Aviation service; Howard L. Kuhn, Medical Department, Fourth IT.l T . S. Infantry; Deliner Lantz, Med ical Department. Nineteenth in fantry Headquarters; Benjamin H. Linkous, General Hospital No. 4; Paul Magill, Battery A, Fourteenth Field Artillery; Paul W. Miller, Headquarters Company, One Hun dred and Twelfth U. S. Infantry; Raymond C. MeCurd.v, corporal' Company C, Seventh Infantry; George E. Pressley, corporal, Com pany C, Provisional Battalion; Wal lace A. Smedley, Company C. Twen- TOO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION LOST AND FOUND LOST—A lady's light purple pocket book, containing a sum of monev and some receipts, on Fourth and 'Sixth street car or on Progress car. Reward if returned to address on receipts, H RLP WANTED—FEMALE WANTED A cook and house maid. Good wages. Beferences re quired. Address L, 6444, care of Telegraph. The Largest Assortment of Silk Neckwear in the city Consylman & Co. 1117 N. 3rd St. TXT" ithout flippant dis regard for the troubled times, without minimiz ing in the slightest degree the seriousness of the situation which confronts our land, we can still, with the same old hearty ring, wish everyone a Merry Christmas; and, with a hope as deep as ever, bespeak for all a happy and prosperous New Year. Hupmobile Sales Corp. R. J. CHURCH, Mgr. East End Bank Thirteenth and Howard Streets Announces 1918 Xmas Savings Society Now Open—Will Remain Open Until Dec 29, 'l7 1917 Was Largest Year Help Make 1918 Larger Yet ty-third KnKin&ers Corps; Harry D. Sollenberger, Eighth Regiment band. Headquartero' Company; Donald O. Stewart, nerKeant, Motor Truck No. 1; Raymond H. Thlrouin, Battery D, Fourteenth Field Artil St. The Leader Bargain Store 443 Market Street lery; Daniel H. Werner, Company I, One Hundred and Twelfth U. 8. Infantry; Gilbert Werner, Ambiv lance Corps, Three Hundred and Twelfth Infantry, Seventy-eighth division.
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