8 Geraldine Farrar Stars in "Turn of the Wheel" The romantic and dramatic atmos phere of Monte Carlo supplies the environment ' of Geraldine Farrar's first Goldwyn Picture, "The Turn of the Wheel." coming to the Colonial Theater, Thursday, Friday and Satur day. The only operatic star who has brought her high estate to the world of motion pictures and held it is pro vided by Goldwyn with a powerful drama. Geraldine Farrar is "Rosulie Dean," an American, who sees at the great gambling tables a young man fever ishly watching the turn of the wheel. No matter when you I come, you will always see 1 pictures that are showing I for the first time in Har- H| risburg. I REGENT SHOWING TO-DAY Mary Roberts Kinehnrt's j ■ "The Street I Seven Stars" —Featuring— I DorisKenyon I The Picture That Proves I.lfe I Worth Living 1 TO-MORROW A THURSDAY j Dorihy Dalton I "GREEN EYES" By Ella Stuart Carson A story of the great South, I ill FRIDAY AND SATURDAY \ Vivian Martin "Viveite" ! MACK SENNETT COMEDY "HER SCREEN IDOL" H Lnugh-Screuiii—Good as n jn| Fenture E NEXT WEEK—MONDAY' AND j TUESDAY' I Cecil B. Be Mille's 1 "Till I Come Back to You" Ailrrnft Picture —Starring— jg Bryant Washburn H The greatest" story- of Bel- I WH giuui, with scenes laid just be- ! jgjß fore and after the lliin luvn- j W* Admission—loc, 15c A wnr tax ' ddßlvWllW . The Star of All Stars GERALDINE S^ARRAR In a Two-Hour Motion Picture Entitled The Turn t o h f e Wheel What Would I Did You Ever You Do For the Gamble With Man You Love? j Your Love? COLONIAL, Thur., Fri. Sat. Adults 25c-~Children 15c And War Tax iORPHEUMjO R p HE U M| IO S" FRIDAY Sept. 27 J FAIRf 1 SEATS WEDNESDAY Coined ie* I _ AND V. J STUART WALKER PRESENTS WARMER BOOTH TARKINGTON'S COMEDY SEATS—BSc to $1.50. Bft w sB® 2NIGHTS WI7\7I7MT , iri7\i 1 MATINEE THURSDAY JR* ?&£ |A 1 TORT S WR* ITM G A. H. Woods & the Messrs. W ■ .A Jj ¥1 H I J3 il Shubert Announce the Beau- ■ tiful Dramatic Fantasy . TAI ___ ___ A Play of Youth and Love and Summertime I p Yf \ OF DIRE cT 8 Solid Months At BOOTH I L*FL 1 IJU FROM NEW YORK THEATER | 17/\f THPI ¥ See " Seventeen " and Be Seventeen Again I I 1 91 I i H SEATS 250 TO .$1.50 > 111 SATURDAY NIGHT ONLY, SEPT. 28! BY MAX MARCIN AND A. H. WOODS Presents CHARUES OUERNON _ THE COMEDY SENSATION '■ One Year Maxlne) Elliott Theater, New York i 11l I 1 I id ,l I B ■.lll Tj > v ' flUMKvjf 114 IU 111 A Caat of Snper-Exeellenee, * IM I j $| lUej |I B J II | J MABEL BROWNELL j 8111 IH B ■IR'H||J.|9P MATINEE—2Sc to $l.OO. w NIGHTS—2Sc to $1.50. SEATS—2Sc to SI.SO—ON SALE THURSDAY I TUESDAY EVENING. She cannot tell why she Is attracted to him more than any man she has ever seen, but it expluitis why her sympathy goes out to "iMaxlleld Grey" when he sees his stakes swept away. "Rosalie" halts his hand when he is on the brink of suicide, and her hu mane act brings the young man back to himself. They spend many wonder ful days together, when an interrup tions comes in the form of dete.ctives. "Rosalie" and "Grey" are arrested, the latter charged with the murder of his diyorced wife in New York. "Rosa lie" has no trouble in establishing her identity and announces she will return to America with him. "Grey" will make no satisfactory explanation to his lawyer, nor to his elder brother, whom he adores. This makes it hard for "Rosalie," but she is steadfast in getting at the truth. She becomes acquainted with "Bertha." wife of "Grey's" brother, and at once distrusts her because of her intimacy with "Wally Gage." whose reputation is not of the best. How she finally wrings a confession from the pair brings the play to a thrilling climax. COLONIAL TO-DAY MABEL NORMAND "PECK'S - BAD GIRL" WEDNESDAY ONLY' BERT LYTELL —lN— "Boston Blackies Little Pal" ! THl'ItS.. FRI„ SAT. GERALDINE FARRAR "The Turn"" oif "the Wheel" / v Lancaster Fair The GREATEST EVER j Oct. 1,2,3, and 5 Vast Agricultural and Farm Machinery Display j Big Automobile Show RACING DAILY $6,300 IN PURSES POLLACK BROS. CARNIVAL SHOW Don't Forget the Date ! 1 _ * Majestic Theater The IJttle Queen of the Screen Jean Sothern In n repertoire of New Song:* Homer Miles& Co. l'renciitlng The Clever Comedy Sketch, "SPARE RIBS OF LOVE" 3 Other Excellent Feature* 3 UfAMUSEj^MENTsS MAJESTIC High Class Vaudeville, ORPHIiUM To-night only Sel\Oyn and Com pany offer "Fair and Warmer." To-morrow night and Thursday, mati nee and night—"Eyes of Youth." Frlduy, night only, September 27 Stuart Walker offers Booth Tark ington's "Seventeen." Saturday, night only. September 28— A. H. Woods presents "Business Be fore Pleasure." Tuesday, night only. October I—Corn stock and Elliott present the origi nal New York cast in "Oh. Boy." COLONIAL To-day Mabel Normand in "Peck's Bad Girl." To-morrow only Bert Lytell in "Boston Blackie's Little Pal." Thursday. Friday and Saturday Geraldine Farrar in "The Turn of the Wheel." Monday and Tuesday, next week Mae Marsh in "Money Mad." REGENT To-day "The Street of Seven Stars." by Mary Roberts Rinehartt featur ing Doris Kenyon. To-morrow and Thursday Dorothy Dalton in "Green Eyes." Friday and Saturday Vivian Mar tin in "Viviette." VICTORIA To-day Pathe presents "Mora". Sui cide." To-morrow Syd Chaplin, in "A Submarine Pirate," and "Hands Up." Thursday William Farnura in "The Bondsman," and "A Fight For Mil lions." Friday and Saturday Mae Murray in "Her Body in Bond." and Marie Dressier in "The Red Nurse." A year in New York—eight months in Chicago! Certainly a strong rec • ommendation for "Fair "Fair and and Warmer." the riotous Warmer" farce by Avery Hopwood which Selwyn and Com pany will present at the Orpheum to night. Should there be anyone who would ask for more, the management resppectfully refers to whatsoever corner of these United States they may particularly prefer as an authority for what they shall see and what they VICTIMSOF INFLUENZA Those Who Are Weak and Run-Down Easy Prey to Wide-Spread Epidemic Comrponsense Way to Avoid a Threatening Public Danger Doctors agree that people who are weak and run-down are the earliest victims of the influenza epidemic, whose ravages are assuming serious proportions in New England and New York. If you find yourself tired, weak or r losing flesh this warning should be heeded promptly. You are in real I and very great danger because the : germ of this epidemic is specially ! contagious and in your weakened condition should you cbme in con | tact with it you would fall an easy I victim. The commonsense preventive is to 1 begin taking Father John's Medicine ! I at once because the pure food ele | ments of which this old-fashioned, wholesome body-builder is made are easily taken up by the system and I turned into vital, resisting energy; j giving you fighting strength to ward I off the influenza germ. Remember, Father John's Medi | cine is not a stimulant. It is guar anteed free from alcohol or dan ] gerous drugs and does its work sim j ply and effectively through the [ wholesome food elements which it contains. 'VICTORIA THEATER' TO-DAY ONLY—Final Showing I JOHN MASON anil I.EAH BAIHD i In "MORAL SUICIDE" i TO-MORROW ONLY SYD CHAPLIN In "A SUBMARINE PIRATE" Also I Pathe Serial, "Hands Up" THURSDAY ONLY WILLIAM FOX Presents WILLIAM FARNUM In "THE BONDMAN" Audi "A Fight For Millions." COMING NEXT WEEK: "LKS MISEHABI.ES" I Admission 10c and 15c and war tax HARiUSBURG TELEGRAPH shall not see in the theater, contldent the answer will be the same, whether it comes from Portland, Ore., or Jacksonville, Fla. " 'Fair and Warmer' is one of the best farces that was ever seen in this city." Tlie engagement of "Fair and Warmer" here is Considered a credit by the local management in its efforts to bring the best of the theatrical output to the city. It is due. too, to the insistent demands that have been made upon Selwyn and Company for more than a year to make it possible for theater patrons in the country i.who not thus far had an oppor tunity of seeing the farce, to do so. It is said to be no exaggeration to say that there was never a perform ance of "Fair and Warmer" given in either New York or Chicago at which there was not at least one patron from an outside city who did not make personal request of the manage ment that at some time in the future "they would be sure to send it to their city." Mabel Normand will be seen for the last times to-day in a regular Mabel Normand story, "Peck's Bad Girl" "Peck's Bad Girl.' nt the Colonial How the village scamp foiled the city vamp and won the man she lov ed. Wednesday, only, Bert Lytell will he seen in "Boston Blackie's Little Pal," an adaptation from the popular story in "The Red Book." How a gentleman crook revels in wealth while society gasps. The story is packed full of thrills and wijl hold the interest of all from the first to the last reel. Possibly everybody has tried crys tal gazing, with the rather forlorn hope of getting a glimpse "Eyes of into the tantalizing future. Youth" The secret of the failure is not in the crystal, but in j the gazer. One must know how to look if one wishes to see anything. Of universal interest, therefore, is the famous New York dramatic novelty, "Eyes of Youth," which A. H. Woods and the Messrs. Shubert will present at the Orpheum to-morrow night for engagement of two nights and Thurs day matinee, direct from a run of one year at the Maxine Elliott Theater, New York. "Eyes of Youth" needs little introduction to playgoers. Its remarkable metropolitan success has been an augury of popularity every where. The play is the work of Max Marcin and Charles Guernon, and consists of three acts and four epi sodes. The story has to do with the choice of a young girl on the thres hold of of life, to whom several alter natives present themselves. Unde cided what to do, she meets a Hindu Yogi, who teaches her how to study her own heart, and through this un derstanding how to see the future, revealed through the medium of a crystal ball. The episodes in the play are visualizations of the scenes and incidents revealed to the girl in the crystal. They are said to be not only picturesque and interesting in them selves, hut they are part of a pro gressive dramatic story with a great moral signifies,nee. The production is an effective one. The notable com pany includes twenty-five metropoli tan players, including Mabel Brownell. A special matinee performance will be given on Thursday. Everybody who knows Willie Bax ter and has chuckled at his first love affair, who delights "Seventeen" in the tender under- standing of his mother and the. uncanny frankness of his impish stster, Jane, will be glad to know that these and many other of the characters in Booth Tarking ton's "Seventeen" stories will make their appearance in Harrisburg at the Orpheum on Friday evening. The stage version of "Seventeen" is a four act play of youth and love and sum mertime revolving around the his toric incident of Willie's purloining father Baxter's old dress-suit in order to dazzle the charmer, Lola Pratt, the "Baby-Talk Lady" vam pire. Stuart Walker is sending here his metropolitan production and cast direct from a run of eight solid months in New York. The comedy was first produced in Indianapolis in the summer of 1917, where it proved so popular that it broke all theatrical records of that city. In the autumn of that year Mr. Walker presented it at the Playhouse, Chicago, where it ran for three months. Then came its record-breaking run in New York. Up to the present season, "Seventeen" has never been seen in any other city jn the country. , "The latest story Involving Potash and Perlmutter has just come from the front." says Montague "Business Glass, co-author with Before Jules Eckert Goodman of Pleasure" "Business Before Pleas ure." the sensational El tinge Theater comedy success, which A. H. Woods will present at the Or pheum Tneater on Saturday for an en gagement of one night only. "My first play. 'Potash and Perlmutter,' the predecessor of.'Business Before Pleasure,' had ben running for a long time at one of the London theaters, and the managers decided that one of the best ways to advertise it would be on the busses, of which there are thousands rumbling up and down the principal thoroughfares of the city. Ac cordingly. every bus has had a big sign, 'Potash and Perlmutter." tacked across the top. "But with the war. a great many of these vehicles have been used to transport the British troops through Belgium, and on one occasion when a long string of the motors entered a town over there, the natives were all lined up on the sidewalks cheer ing a wild welcome. They saw the big sign. 'Potash and Perlmutter,' on every bus. and thought they, were names of famous English generals. "Suddenly everybody along the line commenced to yell, 'Vive Potash! Vive Perlmootaire!' " That "The Street of Seven Stars." the Saturday Evening Post story, pic turized by De Lux "The Street of Pictures. Inc., fea- Seven Stars" turing Doris Kenyon. at Regent is one of the best that has come to Harris burs for many a day, was evidenced by the many complimentary remarks of the large audiences at the Regent Theater yesterday and last evening. This picture.- the story of which was written by Mary Roberts Rinehaft, is all smiles and tears, and to those who see it life takes on a different aspect, seems more worth living. It is show ing again to-day for the last time and in the words of the great New York critic, Mrs. Russel, should be booked all over the country. To-morrow and Thursday, a story of the great South will be the main feature, "Green Eyes," featuring Dor othy Dalton. All pictures of Dixie has a heart appeal to the lovers of good pictures, and it is said that "Green Eyes" will not prove disap pointing in this respect. A very welcome attraction, "Oh. Boy," will be at the Orpheum next week, Tuesday evening. "Oil, Boy" The books and lyrics of "Oh, Boy," are exception ally brig.ht and witty, while the music, by Jerome Kern, is one of the humm able, whistley kind that lingers long in the memory. Doubtless all will be fox-trotting to the strain of "Till the Cloud's Roll By," and waltzing to the rhythm of "An Old-Fashioned Wife," this winter. It is said one can hardly keep from dancing while hearing these charming selections, as well as many others in the score of "Oh, Boy." This city has been fortunate in se curing the original cast which will present "Oh, Boy." It is the same company that played for two years at the Princess Theater, New York, and includes: Anna Wheaton, Marie Car roll, Augusta Haviland, Edna May Oliver, Charles Compton, Stephen Ma ley. Harold Crane. "Jack" Raffael. Ethel Forde and others. An attrac tive ensemble from the famous Prin cess Theater, enhances the beauty and Mabel Brownell in "Eyes of Youth" ffl?m ik MABEL BROWNELL Miss Mabel Brownell who plays the principal role in the famous dra matic success. "Eyes of Youth." which will be presented at the Or pheum to-morrow for an engagement of two nights and Thursday matinee was discussing acting and work in genera], and her own point of view in particular, in her dressing room the Other evening. Miss Brownell speaks from a wide experience of life and the theater and everything she has to say is therefore of consider able interest. "Try as hard as you can," says Miss Brownell, "it is impossible to act a straight leading part so as to convince people you act anything else. 1 do not care how much of a hit you may make in a straight role, people say, 'Oh well, it is personality, not art.' In the fact the better a straight Part is played the more convinced most people are that you are not act- | ing, but only playing yourself. 'She I is so natural," they t say, 'it must be ! easy for her to do that." Those who have a technical knowl- ) edge of acting know better, as a i rule, and realize that the subtle char- ! acterization of a straight role and I the effect of naturalness which causes j the layman to exclaim, 'Why, how natural she is," is the camouflage for I real artistry. Yet it remains that | melody of "Oh, Boy." "Moral Suicide," the noted Pathe production, was shown to an enthusi astic number of mo "Moral Suicide" tion picture tliea at the Victoria ter-goers yesterday at the Victoria | Theater, and will be displayed to-day again for the second and final time. It carries with it a strong moral les son that words or pen might fail to send home, but which the screen startlingly and graphically sets forth in a manner unmistakable. Briefly, the story relates the ex perience of a wealthy man, who, de spite the warnings of his children, that marriage to the woman in ques tion meant "moral suicide," entered into an alliance with an adventuress who proved to be all that the man had been warned against. HANDY BUYERS' GUIDE j A. B. C. OF BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS WHERE SATISFACTION IS GUARANTEED Watch for your Residence or Rural Route Address among these Ads. If you find it call at THE HARRISBU.RG TELEGRAPH office and receive FOUR admission tickets to the COLONIAL THEATER (This does not include war tax.) TEN addresses will be selected at random from the City and Rural Route Directories each week and the tickets will be given to the first person calling from each address This Guide will appear EACH TUESDAY in THE HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH. See if your name appears in small type. If it does, come in and get your tickets—FßEE. Automobiles ™ I tatter m nHT H 1210 n. Third street THE OVERLAND-HARRISBURG CO. &£*&&&> |~| ] ___ 212-214 North Second Street -THIS IHK.PT CAB- * PANAMAS ""SPECIALTY £££' KNE James R. Dean, 1217 Julia. Walter Miller, 2527 North Sixth.~ Auto painting KEYSTONE MOTOR CAR CO. icecream o l > superior , T n o n ps c ß ?Ai£ p C T vera 1 nersiiey s i C e cream 57-109 S. CAMERON STREET Made In Sight by Men In Whits • BELL 77 DIAL 8353 4 UTO REPAIRS SUNSHINE GARAGE —— __ rk and STORAGE o f G A£L ra KiNDl! ne w s e , idFnr SSTBTZSS: f EWELER S Chas. Krauss Co., 411 Market St. JL JL NEW LOCATION [Frames and Fenders Straightened. All H w s y Money on Dla . , city Loan Office.—M.,n.v . 37 N.CAMERON STREET Uvork Guaranteed. monda. Watches. Jewelry.hllvir- ed „„ X Martin H. Khor, 1511 Liberty. ware, etc. I rates. AUTO supplies Myers' Accessory House C! P " CO, \cceiior I e° V„, A n't mlng? " ' DUtrlbutlon of Dl.moad Tire. ii OPTICIAN l •3 • iiClSlllger BellPhcnes6l Cameron and Mulberry St. 2 12 Locust Street—Next Door to Orpheum MOTORCYCLES a y' on % c ' e Company AINTS ol Every Description IVIvJ 1 Lllst, I H. F. Esterhrouk Prop. Ul3 N. 3rd St. BJF _ . n , TTOTTn( , Specialties VALSPAU. ONE. Motorcycles from *30.00 up. Bicycles from *B.OO up. We can save H and VAIxINIIoxtLo COAT AUTO FINISHES you dollars on used and new tires. DIAL 4000 Jg, HAItKISBUKG WALL PAPEK AND PAINT CO. Billiards and bowling Leonard's "" S3o ~ w 201 CHESTNtJT STREET ■ 0 Carom QHOTOGRAPHER JHE MUSSER STUDIU ..™ PUr ' tbmt >UUCb bo " r "* Ui, " aidm ° r "" h " e ■,•- OF PHOTOGHAPHY AND PORTRAITURE ctton M. Peace, hi H ,nnZ NEW LOCATION-37 NORTH SECOND ST„ CLEANERS SIMMS Beu Phono 704-j qhoes KINNEY'S 19 and 21 N. 4th St" and DYERS OllVllflO, ;>u,ck Service Guaranteed W For Entire FamUy and N > AU o an P .,°en r v e e n r , . , " H - St * Fifty-eight Stores and Still Growing. GERA'LDINtI 1 EARRAR T AILOK SWTS TO ORSEHL-2O W * "THE TURN OF THE WHEEL" ' 1 N O R TH FOURTH STREET James Sloan, 1202 North Cameron. A TIT 1 !? MOX.-TUES.—XEXT WEEK DRUGS RAZOR BLADES SI I >HPENED—AII Kind* 25c Dozen * I A t TOM MOORE See Our Sharpeners - I COLONIAL XX * KELLERS Drug Store, 405 Market St. * "JUST FOR TONIGHT" A real Down-Town Drug Shop ! WlllTalirH. Hasson. 95 North Seventeenth. FLORIST The New Flower Shop I JNDERTAKER GEO. SOURBIEK 706 N. Third Street I J FUNERAL DIRECTOR Cn i f.'^H er " " nd Potted Plants. Funeral Designs. 1310 N. THIRD ST Bell Phone 3470-H. Ruth M. Maeder '* illX1X " *3 A . URNITURE PphoTsury remnants \ P IVJ OYI IT 1 1> AND lIPHOT price & less. and RECORDS 1. mjmlj 221 North Second Street Harris--lhe Upholsterer 14 SOUTH FOURTH STREET P ROCERIES POLLECK'S— XJil OMEN ' S WEAR VTvTS'Fr&tF'ftl l3th and Perry Streets lOq'n!' Vron/'st.* Steelton ** Robinsons Woman Shop, 20 N. 4th St. Fmnio McKay. Steelton. , Anna M. Bishoo. SIB Crescent. many actors and actresses do not get the,credit that is their due, or enhance their reputations by succeed, ing in straight parts. You do not have to mention any names to prove this is true. Just think of the eminent actors and nctresses who have confined themselves to acting straight leads, or star roles, and re flect on what the average person thinks and says of them—that is the answer. ' "I love my work, but I realize that it is only a small part of life, a means to an end. The actpess lives every other woman's life in the course of her career, but seldom lives her own, or even tries to, until it is too late. You feed upon the emotions of other women, that come and possess you and pgss on to the audience, but you starve your own natural emotions by doing it That is the sad part of it. EPHRATA ESCAPES SHUTOUT | Sinking Spring, Pa., Sept. 24. Sinking Spring defeated Ephrata A. A. 6 to 1 here, before the largest crowd of the season. Harry Drey held the visitors to two lone hits, which were made in the eighth in ning. EPHRATA A. A. R. H. O. A. E. Walker, rf 0 1 1 0 0 Toot, If 0 0 4 0 0 Doremus, ss 0 0 0 1 0 N. Lutz, 3b, p 0 0 0 2 2 Mull, lb 0 0 7 0 0 Killeffer, cf 0 0 1 0 0 Tribel, 2b 1 1 1 0 0 W. Lutz, cf 0 0 8 2 0 Zeanier, p, 3b 0 0 2 7 1 ' Totals 1 2 24 12 3 SINKING SPRING R. H. O. A. E. Lord, 2b 1 2 0 2 0 Merkel, ss 2 2 1 0 1 Rigony, 3b 0 1 0 2 0 Schrader, lb 1 0 12 0 0 H. Drey, p 1 1 0 4 0 Kauffman, c 1 1 13 3 1 Fur man. cf 0 0 0 0 0 Gaul, rf 0 1 0 0 0 Wilk, If 0 0 1 0 0 Totals 6 8 27 11 2 Ephrata A. A 00000001 o—l Sinking Spring ... 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 3x—6 MAC LAY-WILL ARD THURSDAY The second football game in the public school schedule will take | place on Thursday, 6.30 p. m. sharp, between Maclay and Willard. These teams opened the season with vic tory for Maclay, 6-0, and the latter aims to gobble this one. The line up will be as follows: LJH| use of Nuxated Iron", says Former Health Com. ! missioner VVm. R. Kerr, of the City of Chicago. "From my own experience with Nuxated Iron I feel it is such a valuable blood and hody building preparation that it ought to be used in every hospital and prescribed by every physician in the country.' Nuxated Iron helps to make healthier B women and stronger, sturdier men. ■ Used by more than 3,000,000 people W annually, in this country alone. In- H creases the strength and endurance JH of weak, run-down, nervous folkt^^^rfJßJj SEPTEMBER 24, 1918. WILLARD MACLAY Jackson, I.e. Hoerner, I.e. J. Williams, l.t. Daugherty, l.t. P. Williams, l.g. Reed, l.g. P. Johnson, c. (Ruby) Harris, r.t. W. Johnson, c. Smith, r.g. Blosser, r.g. SHOESNEAtHH J SHOE I ■ POLISHES | 432 MARKET STREET License No. G-35305 Specials For Wednesday, September 25th Round Sir l°in | {T 5 a 1 4% 32c BUTTERINE AND GROCERY DEPARTMENT Lincoln 21 <H I Cream Cheese ... r> r\ Premium 33£ | Limburger imt C Swiss Cheese, the best 43c PRIXCIPAb CITIES OF FOURTEF.X STATES MAIN O pvir T<* CHIC AG o, ILL.' Get the Habit • K j J j . pl t a^T' i n< unl A, ILL. I EDUCATE FOR BUSINESS I s ttftfon r.;ss iz "■]& i DAY OR NIGHT SCHOOL 1 W theircoStfve S S uWects nd - lhand ° r ma = h <*>. Typewriting, and W g SCHOOL OF COMMERCE 1 HarriHluirg's Accredited Business College 15 South Market Square £& M in I I 455 Wr,te * pho,,e ' or c ' all For Further Information E H. Shrimp, r.e. Ylngst, r.t. Peters, q.b. Richards, r.e. P. Shrimp, r.h.b. Shocker, q.b. Daly, l.h.b. Stcckley, r.h.b. Bricker, f.b. Spotts, l.h.b. Minnlg, f.b. (Shoop)
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers