WAGE INCREASE RAILROAD MEN IS SET FOR JUNE 1 By Associated Press Washington, May 27. —Effective next Saturday and retroactive to last January 1, general pay increases for nearly 2,000,000 railroad employes were announced yesterday by Direc tor General McAdoo, thus carrying out substantially recommendations of*J the railroad wage commission. The aggregate of the increases prob ably will be more than $300,000,000 a year, half of which will be dis tributed within a few weeks as back pay in lump sums ranging from about SIOO to nearly S2OO each. The director general departed from the wage commission's rec ommendations in Uie following particulars: The principal of tlic basic 8- lK>ur day is recognized, but ow ing to exigencies of the war sit uation, hours of employment are not. actually and overtime is to be paid pro-rata; future adjustments of pay are to be made on the basis of eight hours; "Di addition to the ordinary scale of increase, day laborers employed mainly on track work, are to get at least 2 1-2 cents an hour more than they received last December 31; "A minimum of 55 cents an hour is established for the shop trades, including machinists, boilermakers and blacksmiths, and; Women's Pay Same as Men's "Women arc to receive the same |>ay as men for the same work, and negroes are to get the same as white men for similar employment. "To work out a multitude of ' inequities of pay anions em- | ployes doing similar work in different localities and other in- Even In Clilnenc you hear "Take Nuxated Iron" AH II tonic, strength and blood builder) probably no remedy has ever met : with Kuch phenomenal Muecefcai us hH > Hinted Iron. It Is conservatively estimated that over three million lieople annually are taking It in thin country alone. It has been highly en dorsed and used by such men as Hon. | Leslie M. Shaw, former Presidential Cabinet Official (Secretary of the j Treasury). United States Judge At- ! kirson of the Curt of Claims of ' Washington; Judge Win. L>. Cham bers, Commissioner of the United ! States Board of Mediation and Con; dilation rmerly Chief Justice of the Intei i .lional Court. Samoa: former. United States Senator and Vice Presi dential Nominee Charles A. Towne of! Minnesota; former 0. S. Senator I Richard Roiland Kenney of Delaware,' at present Assistant Judge Advocate! Ceneral U. S. Army, General John L. ; t'lem (Retired), the drummer boy of i Shiloh, who was Sergeant in the ,U. S. Army when only twelve years of tige: General David Stuart Gordon hero of the battle of Ge.t- Tysburg: physicians who have been | connected with well-known hospitals' have prescribed and recommended it. Former Health Commissioner Wm. R. Kerr, of Chicago, says it ought to be in every hospital and prescribed by every physician. Dr. A. J. Newman, late Police Sur geon of the City of Chicago, and for mer House Surgeon Jefferson Park Hospital. Chicago, says Nuxated Iron lias proven through his own tests of it to excel any preparation he has ever used for creating red blood, building up the nerves, strengthening the muscles and correcting digestive disorders. Dr. James Francis Sullivan, former ly physician of Bellevue Hospital J • Outdoor Dept.), New York, and the] Westchester County Hospital says there are thousands of men and wo men who need a strength and blood builder but do not know what to take. In his opinion there is nothing better than- organic iron—Nuxated Iron for enriching the blood and helping to increase the strength And endurance of men and women wno burn up too, rapidly their nervous energy in the strenuous strain of the great busi ness competition of the day. If you are not strong or well, you owe it to yourself to make the follow ing test: See how lonpr you can work or how far you can walk without he coming tired. Next take two five Brain tablets of Xuxated Jron three times per day after meals for two weeks. Then test your strength again and see how much you have gained. MANUFACTURERS NOTE: Xuxated Iron, which has been used by former members of the United States Senate and House of Representatives and other prominent people with such sur prising results, and which is pre scribed and recommended above bv phvslcians is not a secret remedy, but one which is well-known to druggists everywhere. Unlike the older inor ganic iron products, jt is easily as similated, does not injure the teeth, make them black nor upset the stom ach. The manufacturers guarantee successful n(J entirely satisfactory results to every purchaser or thev will refund your money. It is dis pensed in this city by Croll Keller. Geo. A. Gorgas. J. Nelson Clark and all other druggists.—Advertisement. I Classy Men's Oxfords Just in Time for Your Memorial Day Needs I v tanß gun-metal m/Ssmjdi L v * c * ne wor^" ] manship good ma- D||/ ter i a l regular ' $5.00 and $5.50 values, ALL STYLES /\ Other grades in \f s:=;^S!! * ,s O e n 'B l° w shoes for V jl sl9B $2 - 49 $2.98 G. R.Kinney Co., Irtc -19-21 N. Fourth St. MONDAY EVENING, BAItXUSBUftO fBLEGRXPH! MAY 27, 1918 Justices caused by varying rules of cnfployment and condition of organization the director gen eral created a new board of railroad wages and working conditions, consisting of three labor representatives ami three railway executives, which will conduct extensive investigation and recommend wage and other employment changes. "All increases now ordered will be determined according to a porccntage scale based on i pay received in December, I9ir>, t I and any increases which have been allowed within that time will be deducted. In many cases raises in pay in the last two and a half years are equal to the increases ndw approved and consequently those employes will get little or no more. To cor rect just such situations when injustices arc ap|Mircnt will be one of the principal duties of the new wage board, whose creation was suggested by the railroad wage commission. In |io cases arc wages to be reduced. ".Men working on the monthly, daily, hourly, piece work and mill basis will benefit by the new allowance*, and members of the four leading railway brotherhoods whose |ay was raised through operation of Hie Adamson act are to receive from 10 to 40 per cent, addition, a ; smaller increase than they asked of railroads shortly before the government took control. 181 Koads Feel Raise The wage order applies to all em- ! ployes of the 164 roads ,iow under federal management, but not to be j so called short Jines unless they are retained by the government after '< July 1. It affects employes of ter-j minal, union station, and switching [ companies, lighters, ferries and tugs] owned by railroads, but not em-1 ployes of railroad boat lines on the j lakes, rivers or coastwise traffic. Al though pullman cars now are un- . der government operation, Pullman | employes will not benefit unless the ' railroad administration decides to retain management of the cars. To meet the expense of the wage increase, the biggest ever granted to railrojid or any other class of * employes at one time, the railroad administration has discussed raising freight and passenger rates. The percentages of wage increase range from $43 for men who received' $46 a month in December, 1915, down to a small rate for those re ceiving just under |250, and no more pay is allowed men who made $250 or more In 1915. The actual addi tions fun up to $34. With the exception of officers and messenger boys under 18 who are given smaller increase, all employes who received loss than $46 a month 1 are given a flat increase of S2O with the provision that laborers paid by the day shall get a minimum of 2 1-2 , cents an hour above the rate six months ago. Nummary of Increases The table of increases as an nounced, Itemized for each dollar of wages received in December, 1915, | may be summarized as follows: Monthly Rate Increase Above in 1915. 1915 Pav. $46 to $45 $20.21 to $21.50 SSO to $55 $21.60 to $22.55 $55 to st>o $22.96 to $24.60 S6O to $65 $25.01 to $26.65 $65 to S7O $27.06 to $28.70 S7O to $75 $29.11 to $30.75 $75 to SBO $31.16 to $32.70 SBS to S9O $33.85 to $33.25 S9O to $95 $33.10 to $32.50 $95 to SIOO $32.35 to $31.75 SIOO to $lO5 $31.60 to $31.00 • $lO5 to sllO $20.11 to $27.50 sllO to slls $27.12 to $25.66 slls to $l2O $25.31 to $23.96 $l2O to $125 $23.64 to $22.40 $125 to $l3O $22.11 to $20.96 $l3O to $135 $20.96 to $19.63 $135 to $l4O $19.38 to $18.39 $l4O to $145 $18.16 to $17.24 $145 to $l5O $17.02 to $16.17 $l5O to $155 $15.96 to $15.16 $155 to $l6O $14.97 to $14.22 $l6O to $165 $14.04 to $13.33 $165 to $l7O $13.16 to $12.50 $l7O to $175 $12.34 to $11.71 $175 to SIBO $11.96 to $10.97 SIBO to $lB5 $10.83 to $10.27 $lB5 to $l9O $10.15 to $9,61 $l9O to $195 $ 8.48 to $8.97 $195 to S2OO $8.85 to $8.38 S2OO to $205 $8.26 to $7.80 $205 to $2lO $7.79 to $7.26 $2lO to $215 $7.16 to $6.74 $215 to $220 $6.64 to $6.25 $220 to $225 $6.15 to $5.78 $22J> to $230 $5.69 to $5.38 $235 to $239 $4.81 to $4.56 $230 to s23> $5.24 to $4.89 $239 to $250 Enough to make $250 flat. Basis For Learning Raise To figure the increase he will get, each employe should determine the pay which his present position car ried in December, 1915, for if he has been promoted or demoted, his new wage is based upon the 1915 pay of the position which he now holds. Increases which have accompanied promotions are not increases iti the sense of the new schedule, since "the wage runs with th% place," not with the man. Back pay due under the retro active increases will be sent to any man who has been dismissed from the railroad service since January 1 or who has entered the Army or Navy, but not to an employe wh6 quit voluntarily. An important principle contained in the Director General s order is that reductions in hours since 1916 are not to be regarded as increases in pay. This means that employes of the four brotherhoods affected by the Adamson Act are to receive additions on topNjf the increases de veloped by that act. For instance, an engineer who made $4 a day working ten hours in 1915 may have had his pay in creased to >5 for the same number of hours under the Adamson Act. But for the purpose of applying the new scale, the $5 is considered as $4 a day of eight hours, with $1 for two hours Consequently, the pay will be increased on the basis of $4 a day, and overtime will be paid at the same rate of increase. On this principle train employes, including members of the leading brotherhoods, will receive approxi mately the following proportional Increases over 1915 pay, or their equivalent when pay is based on miles operated: Passenger engi neers. 11 per cent.: passenger fire men and helpers, 28 per cent.; pas enger conductors, 15 per cent.; passenger baggagemen, 3 8 per cent.: passenger brakemen and flagmen, 40 per cent.; freight engineers. 15 per cent.; freight firemen and help ers. 34 per cent.; freight conductors, 20 per cent; freight brakemen and flagmen. 40 per cent.; these men also must deduct increases granted since 1915. B.Hour Day Recognized The recognition of the eight-hour basis, though important as a prin ciple. does not materially affect the scale of new wages granted. For instance, a man who in 1915 received $3 for a ten-hour day would now get $4.28 for ten hours, but this $4.23 would be considered as $3.38 for for a day's work—eight hours — and 85 cents for two hours over time. When readjustments are made later, involving possibly extra rates of pay for overtime, the full effect of the new principle will become more apparent. in addition to the rule regarding women's pay, Mr. McAdoo specified that "where women are employed, their working conditions must be healthful and fitted to their needs." The new board of raidroad wages and working conditions is composed of J. J. Dermody, vice-president of the Order of Railway Telegraphers; G. H. Sines, vice-president of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen; A. O. Wharton, head of the Railway Employes' Department .of the Amer ican Federation of Labor; F. F. Gaines, superintendent of motHe power of the Central of Georgia Railway; C. E. Lindsey. maintenance of ways engineer for the New York Central, and W. E. Morse, general manager of the Denver and Salt Lake Railroad. The board will sit in Washington, probably continu s ously. • "It shall be the duty of the board," says the wage order, "to hear and i investigate matters presented by i railway employes or their repre- I sentatives affecting inequalities as I to wages and wor king conditions, I whether as to individual employes or classes of labor; conditions aris ing from competition with employes in other industries; rules and work- j ing conditions for the several classes of employes, whether for the coun try as a whole or different parts of the country. The board shall hear and investigate other matters affect ing wages and conditions of employ ment referred to it by the Director General. The board shall be solely an advisory body and shall submit its recommendations to the Director General for his determination."' i nts order contemplates a strong effort to iron out many inequalities' now existing. The board will deal with organized and unorganized em ployes alike an<jthe railroad admin istration on its own initiative take up the claims of railway clerks and other unorganized men. FREIGHT RATES RAISED 25 PER CENT. [Continued irom First Pace.] the order wipes out all Intrastate lower rates effective on either freight or passenger traffic. Travelers in standard sleeping and parlor cars are required to pay three and a half cents a mile in addition to Pullman fares and in tourist sleeping cars three and a quarter cents. Pullman rates remain the same. Commuters Must Pay More | Commutation and other suburban rates on railroads are increased ten per cent. Fares on electric inter urban lines are not affected. Special excursion, mileage, conven j tion and tgurist rates, with a few I exceptions, are discontinued, privi- I leges such as stopovers and free side I trips are abolished and excess bag j gage charges are increased. ! Both freight and passenger rates j on boat lines operated on the lakes, rivers or coastwise by railroads .are j to be raised proportionately with the : general increases. | Export and import freight rate ! are ordered canceled and the higher | domestic rates *lll apply to and ; from ports. A number of flat increases, instead of percentage additions, are ordered for coal, coke, lumber, ore, stone, grain, cotton, livestock, meats, su -1 gar, bullion and other commodities. | Existing differentials and rate re- I lationshtps between various- localities are to be preserved so far as pos [ sitjle, but many adjustments will ; have to be made later. AH rates are j subject to review by the Interstate Commerce Commission, but the Presi dent has final authority. In announcing that the rate in creases are required by public inter est, Director General McAdoo refer red to the S3OO 000,000 or more add ed the payrolls of railroad labor lUnder an order published to-day, to the rapialy rising cost of coal which he estimated this year alone at $160,- 000,000 more than last year and to higher cost of every other matarial entering into railroad transportation. Operating expenses, he estimated, would be between $830,000,000 and $860,000,000 greater this year than the $2,852,000,000 figure of last year. No part of- the increased rates is on account of the program of nearly a billion dollars of improvements, additions and new equipment this year, he explained. Mr. McAdoo called attention to the fact tbat "there is no way in wljich the present increases will inure to private profit." Passenger fares In some sparsely settled regions now more than three cents will not be reduced. Although excursion and tourist fares are abol ished,, the order permits the re-estab lishment of round-trip tourist fares somewhat lower than the three-cent I rate". Exceptions to the three-cent rate are made for soldiers and sailors, who may travel at one-cent a mile when on furlough at their own ex pense and for persons attending the national encarnpment of the Grand Army of the Republic at Portland, Oregon, and the United Confederate Expert Marksman Reaches France With His Division MARTIN E. MII-.L.ER Martin E. Miller, a member of the American Expeditionary Forces, lias arrived safely in France, a letter to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Mil ler, 1521 Penn street, advises. Pri vate Miller left Harrisburg Au gust. He was stationed at Camp Hancock, Georgia, and was awarded medals as an expert marksman and machine gunner. He is a graduate of Technical Hfgh School in the class of 1917 and was prominent as an athlete. He was familiarly known as "Muzz." Veterans' reunion at Tulsa. Okla. Both of these organizations are per mitted rates of one-cent a mile and for various state meetings of the veterans two cents will be charged. Children Vnder 5 Free Children under five years of age will be carried free as at present and those between five and twelve will be charged half of the new higher fare. Commutation fares, which are raised ten per cent, are construed to apply to persons having daily or fre quent occasion to travel between their homes and places of employ ment or educational institutions. To discourage the use of heavy sleeping and parlor cars the new or der provided that the following minimum number of tickets should be bought for drawing rooms, com partments or sections: Two adult tickets for a drawing room in a sleeping car; two adult tickets for a compartment; one and one-half adult tickets for a section; five adult tickots for exclusive oc cupancy of drawing room in a parlor car. Passenger fares by water routes or by rail and water are to be increased proportionately with the higher rail charges. The basis for computing charges for excess baggage is to be one-sixth of the normal passenger fare with a minimum of fifteen cents per hun dred pounds and minimum collection of 25 cents per shipment. The Director General provided fully for the redemption of tickets and mileage books purchased before June 10 and rendered invalid after that date when the higher fares be come effective. Unused portions of mileage books and unused or part ly used tickets will be redeemed at their original purchase rate. Dodger of Draft Kills Three Men; Hurried From Mob Grayson, Ky., 27.—Fearing mob violence, the authorities rushed to another town Melvin Collins. 23, of Olive Hill, near here, who killed three men who he believed had re ported him eligible for the military draft. The men killed are Vint Carpen ter, Cleveland Sparks and John How ard. He tried to find another man, to kill him also, but failed. Collins then fled to a farmhouse, barricaded himself and defied the Sheriff and posse, who surrounded the house and prepared to burn it. Collins fired from a window and wounded Eevi Shields in the hip. The Sheriff's officers fired as a man came from the house and wounded Tony Stephens, who had entered the house to persuade Collins to surrender. Collins surrendered when the of ficers started to fire the house. $17,000 FOR RED CROSS Hiiiumelstowii, Pa., May 27.—The drive for subscriptions to the Red Cross war fund in the borough clos ed on Saturday evening and was .successful, the amount subscribed being over $17,000, The young wo men collected on Saturday afternoon and evening 1140.67. The quota lor Hummclstown district was $15,000. MRS. SUSAN WEIMKR DIKS Marietta. Pa., May 27.—Mrs. Susan Weimer, ased 95 years, the oldest woman of Providence township died last night. She was a member of the Church of God eighty years. She was twice married. Several children and grandchildren survive. Her son. Har vey, was the first man to fall in the brittle of Perryvllle, being attached to the 79th Regiment, which lost heavily that day. ARRIVES IN FRANCE Lieutenant Robert G. McNeal has arrived safely overseas, a cablegram to his mother, Mrs. Susan E. McNeal, 825 North street, advises. He was stationed at Camp Hanco-.k before his departure, and while in this city was a civil engineer In the State Highway Department. GAVE DELICATE Cll 10 VNOL It Built Him Up and Made Him Strong Newaygo. Mich.—"My little boy was in a delicate, weak, emaciated condition and had a cough so we had to keep him out of school for a year. Nothing seemed to help him until Vlnol was recommended, and the change it made in him was remark able. It has built him up and made him strong so his cough is almost entirely gone. We can not recom mend Vlnol too highly."—Mrs. E. N. Hanlon. Mothers of weak, delicate, ailing children are asked to try this famous cod liver and Iron tonic on our guar antee. Children love to take it. George A. Uorgas, druggist; Ken nedy's medicine store, 321 Market street; C. F. Kramer, Third and Broad streets; Kitzmlller's phar macy, 1326 Derry street, Harrisburg, -and at the best drug store In every town and city In the country. f^AMUSEfI&TMENTsIiIf BEHIND SCENES AT A CIRCUS Veteran Performer Talks of Life and Work Among People of Strange World lo one who has always been acu customed to look at the circus from u OU P a glimpse from the x- °ut" brings many surprises. Novelists who have chosen the circus life for depiction in stories have found it a fruitful field. Back of i! e curtain. the glamor and the hoop-la' of the circus rings there la a world of very real and very likeable people. Most of the performers are from families that have followed the circus from the time it first began to be mankind's never tiring amusertent. They have preserved the home ties i# spangleland as completely as is the case elsewhere. "ft is hard to make the person "out side ' understand that we have a real home life, close sympathetic and pro tecting,'' said a veteran of the road, who is always found with his wife and children when the big show is over in the afternoqn. "Most of us who follow the show business were born to it. Our fathers and mothers were performers and our grandparents before them. When we. married we took girls who. like ourselves, were born into the Kuild. We are training our children during the school vaca tion periods, just as we were trained. That is the way the profession is kept up." Showmen say that all the star per formers who are featured to-day were taught the essentials when, they were children. Krnest Clark, the greatest aeriaiist who ever lived, as serts that no man or woman who did not train long and well before the age of 15 years, can ever become re markable in the profession. The muscles must be taught before they become set and hardened To those laymen who hold that children should not be brought up In the profession, the performer points out thai there is no life more healthful than the circus life, in that it keeps one out of doors: the majority of performers live to be better than three score and ten, and the fine salaries earned per mit the thrifty to cease his labors long, long before that time and to re tire in ease and comfort. IJuring his active career the performer lives in a world that understands him thor cnifrhly. Therefore he is likely to be quite content and while traveling he, because he is -accustomed to it, is quite as comfortable in an eight by ten stateroom as he would be in much larger quarters. Starting to tie one's rravat in front of one mirror and fin ishing before another on the opposite side of a fifteen-foot bedroom is, he will tell you, a waste of energy and a form of nervousness. With the Ringling Brothers' circus coming here Tuesday, June 11, there are 400 performers gathered from every part of the world. Ninetefti different languages are spoken in the dressing tents. Most of these perform ers travel in families. Many have laid aside neat sums which they have invested in homes where they spend their winters. It is this domestic side of the performer's character that first caused novelists to portray cir cus life. It is said this season's circus is the finest the Ringlings have ever offered. The programs include the gorgeous spectacle of love and chivalry, "In Days of Old." enlisting more than 1,200 characters. Here are scores upon scores of arenic sensations and hundreds of novelties. A bis trained animal revue and the famous flve continerit menagerie contribute to the marvels. ORPHEUM , All this week, with daily matinees Ambassador James W. Gerard's "My Four Years In Germany." MAJESTIC All week Vaudeville Clayton, the' Mystic, for headliner. Daily mati- I nees. COLiONIAL, To-day and to-morrow "The Face In the Dark." REGENT To-day, to-morrow and Wednesday— Marguerite Clark in "Prunella." Thursday and Friday Wallace Reid in "Believe Me Kantippe." Thursday, Friday and Saturday "Tlie Son of Democracy"— "Native State." VICTORIA To-day Macilte in "The Warrior." To-morrow William t S. Hart in "Truthful Tulliver." Wednesday "The Doctor and the Woman, 1 ' and the eighth episode of "The Eagle's Eye." The climax of "My Four Years In Germany," the screen version of Am bassador Gerard's •'My Four story of his experiences •Tears In at the cburt of the Germany" Kaiser, is a most fitting one, and' one for which extraordinary preparations were made. Those who have seen the film will never forget the last reel, in which the German Emperor gets his answer to the slur h£ has put upon the Unit ! WHEN YOU WAKE ~| UP DRINK GLASS OF HOT WATER Waih the poiipna and toxins from system before putting more food into stomach. Says Inside-bathing makes any one look and feel clean, sweet and refreshed. Wash yourself on the inside before breakfast like you do on the outside. This is vastly more Important be cause the skin pores do not absorb impuritfes into the blood, causing Illness, while the bowel pores do. For every ounce of food and drink taken into the stomach, nearly an ounce of waste material must be carried out of the body. If this waste material is not eliminated day by day it quickly ferments and gener ates poisons, gases and toxins which are absorbed or sucked into the blood stream, through the lymph ducts which should suck only nour ishments to sustain the body. A splendid health measure is to drink, before breakfast each day, a glass of real hot water with a tea spoonful of limestone phosphate in it, which is a harmless way to wash these poisons, gases and toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels; thus cleansing, sweetening and freshening the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. A quarter pound ot limestone phos phate costs but very little at the drug store but is su(Rcient to maJ<e any one an enthusiast on lnslde-bathing. Men and women who are accustomed to wake up with a dull, aching head or have furred tongue, bad taste, nasty breath, sallow complexion, others who have bilious attacks, acid stomach or constipation are assured of pronounced improvement in both health and appearance shortly. Ed States by saying that "The Ameri cans won't fight." "They won't, eh?" is Mr. Gerard's reply, and then comes scene after scene showing American troops in training and lighting. These scenes were filmed at Camp Upton. Long Island, with the permis sion of the Government. Battle scenes were filmed in which the boys went through special review and duplicated the western battlefront scenes In France, and they are shown going "over the top" as America's answer to Germany's taunt. The work at Camp Upton was done under the per sonal direction of William Nigh and in the presence of Mr. Garard. Clayton, the Mystic, opened a week's engagement at: the Majestic Theater to-day. Clayton. At the who halls from oriental Majestic stock, claims to be endow ed with powers that enable him to co-operate with spirit mediums in answering questions put to him by the audience. In arranging a vaude ville offering. Clayton has upsel only that part of his physic work that proves entertaining to the masses, and he Invited all those who have wor ries on their brains to lay their troubles before him and he will delve into the future to give them some word as to what it holds In store for them. Clayton's act is only one of a regular vaudeville bill, which, among other things. Includes Kmmet Welch's Minstrels, a fun-making ag gregation In blackface. The third epi sode of the Pearl White serial. "The House of Hate," will be shown. The ever popular Mae Marsh will be featured In "The Face In the Dark" at the Colonial "The Face Theater to-day and In the Iturk" to-morrow. Mae at the t'oloniul Marsh is aeen to decided advantage in the leading role. Her part is o"he that required a neat mixture of light comedy and pathos, the star meeting every requirement and playing in that delightful style that has made her one of the popular screen idols. On Wednesday, Thursday and Friday Anna Nllson will be shown in one of Uex Reach's most powerful stories, "The Heart of the Sunset." a melo dramatic romance. Do you remember the giant In "Cabiria?" Well, he is with us again— this time in "The "Mitelste. the Warrior," a picture Warrior," nt production far out of the Victoria the ordinary at the Victoria to-day. Mar velous Maciste. as he was named in a ! picture released last year, uses his j wonderful strength, this time in a I worthy cause. The settings for the j picture have been furnished by the 1 great war. Maciste and a company of motion picture actors are arrested by an Austrian cavalry troop as sus- j picious characters. They and several hundred other suspected persons are herded like sheep and imprisoned in u bary. Maciste contrives their escape and from then on the bicture Is a riot of action. Particularly good are soldiers of Italy scaling cliffs and crossing chasms in full war regalia. All of these scenes provide Maciste with opportunities of displaying his supernatural strength. William S. Hart in "Truthful Tul liver," will be the attraction to-mor row. "Prunella," which was in Its time one of the most popular of stage pro ductions. and Marguerite Clark as has been re-' ••l'runelln," at Regent vived by the Para m<ount | Pictures Corporation, is the at traction at the Regent Theater to day, to-morrow and Wednesday, star ring Miss Clark. The screen version has been taken from the play and many features that were impossible of reproduction on the stage, such as the details of the old garden where dwelt Prunella and her three aunts, have been incorporat ed in the screen version. The old sun dial and statue of Love, erected by Prunella's runaway father, are all beautifully shown. "Prunella" tells the story of a beau tiful, young and innocent girl, who is carefully guarded by her three aunts, but who is finally won by a strolling player who happens in the town; how, after two ytjajs of mar ried bliss, he tires of her and runs away, after providing her with every thing except his love; how he finds he cannot live without her, and re turns to. find her kneeling before the Statue of Love in the garden. •Realizing that war-time means sac riflce for everybody, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Drew, whom Richard Walton Tully is presenting on the legitimate stage in a merry spoken comedy, "Keep Her Smiling," have voluntarily made the biggest sacrifice within their power. At Seagate. L L, they have a beautiful home, whose portals they have not entered for three years owing to the coneecutlveness of their engagements, but this summer Tully has promised them a vacation before the opening of their New York en gagement, and they were naturally In tending to spend it at Seagate. Word reached the Drews last week, how r i Particular People Their W°r k toU The best cleaning, Mock ing and dyeing in town f* 1 I Hat Cleaning lOlUmDUS Parlor 44 North Third St. TheHarrisburg Telegraph Will feature EVERY TUESDAY in all its issues 7he Handy Buyers' Guide Indexed and Classified For Quick Reference Containing Different Advertisements of Local Business Firms As a Special Attraction Four Tickets to the Colonial Theater Will be given to each of ten persons whose names and addresses will appear in these different ads each week. These names will be picked at random from the city directory and rural phone books. Every one has a chance to get these tickets. Watch For Your N then bring the ad that contains your name t> the business office of the HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH and receive your four tickets. Look For the Handy Bayers' ever, that just such estates were needed for convalescent American soldiers back from France, and Imme diately they tendered the use of their home to the Government for this purpose, the offer being gratefuly ac cepted. Hurrah! Joy at Mt. Union; Takes Series of Huntingdon Mount Union, Pa., 27.—There was great rejoicing at Mount Union \ High school Saturday when the ball | team of the institution journeyed to | Huntingdon anil defeated Hunting don High school, thus taking the third game and entire series of three games from the county seat town. The score was 9 to 6, and as the score shows, Mount Union outclassed her rivals at the stick. MOUNT UNION R. H. O. A. E. Rosenburg 1 1 3 4 0 Rosensteel ........ I 0 2 0 0 Thompson 1 1 2 0 0 Peters 0 2 7 0 1 Ashman 2 2 2 0 0 Gracey 0 2 0 0 0 Luders 2 1 8 3 1 Welch 1 2 3 0 0 Longacre 1 0 0 2 1 Totals 9 11 27 9 3 HUNTING DON R. H. O. A. E. Port 1 1 2 3 0 Donelson .. 1 2 0 3 0 Carr 1 2 8 1 0 Wolfe 0 0 2 S 1 Simpson 0 1 0 0 0 Slaughters 1 Oil 0 1 Jacobs 1 0 0 0 0 Greene 1 0 1 0 0 Daubenspeck 0 0 3 0 1 Totals 6 6 27 12 3 Mt. Union .01300104 o—9 Huntingdon.. 005 10000 o—6 Two-base hits, Gracey, Suders, Donelson, 2. Home run, Ashman. Strike outs, Longacre, 6; Donelson, 5. Umpires, Graham and Morning-, star. Scorer, Smith. [MAJESTIC Five Flrst-Ctass Vaudeville Feature*. Including 4 'Clayton" Ask Him Abaut Anything: Thnt la Troubllnir You HE WILL TELL YOU Emmett Welch's Minstrels Different From All Other*. Full of Fun nnd Knjoyment. EPISODIC NO. 3 PEARL WHITE ! "THE HOUSE*"OF HATE" AMBASSADOR JAMES W. GERARD'S IT FIR TEARS 111 CERiNT A T B ORPHEUM ALL THIS WEEK Matinees —2.30 Nights—B.3o Nights and Decoration Day * 11.1 Matinee, 25f, 50*, 75*, SI.OO i Matinees Daily 25c and 50c "■ LET'S ALL LIVE IN RIVER-VIEW ADJOINING WOKMLEYSBVRG / NOW OPEN FOR INSPECTION fp TO BK SOI.D IN ONE SALE Friday and Saturday, June 21st and 22nd BKI.I. 1390 1)1 All 3573 11 COLONIAL MAE MARSH —IN— , "The Face in the Dark" Story of ii Girl Who Must Decide' lletwcen "Love and Duty" Wednesday, Thursday. Friday FASCINATING ANNA Q. NILLSON In the Mont Powerful of Hex lleach'it Stories "THE HEART OF THE SUNSET" VICTORIA • TO-DAY ONLY "THE WAKHIOK" Starring Maclste, the Stronireat Man In the World and Hero of iVmittV3 TO-lIOIUtOW ONLY WILLIAM S. HAItT In "TRUTHFUL TULLIVKR" WEDNESDAY ONLY MILDRED HARRIS In "THE DOCTOR AND THE WOMAN" Coming Soon Sergeant Arthur Guy Empey.'ln "OVER THE TOP" Vlctorln Price* Always i 10c and ISc I*l U-H War Tax REGENT THEATER TO-DAY, TO-MORROW AND WEDNESDAY Marguerite Clark In her latest success "PRUNELLA" Miss Clark's great stage success of the stage has been transferred to the screen, greater and better than the famous spoken play that held llrondway enthralled. DECORATION DAY, nlao FRIDAY Wallace Reid —lN— 'Believe MeXantippe' Admission 10c and 13c and war tax
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers