12 AMERICAN ARMY DROVE HUN FOR WORLD VICTORY Not One in Thousand Heard of Wilson Points, T, R. Says By Associated Press New York, Dec. 4.—Asserting that the United States had not done nearly as much as the British navy and the British, French and Italian armies to bring about the downfall of Germany, Col. Theodore Koose velt declared in a statement here last night that it is "oqr business to stand by our allies at the peace con ference." •He said it should be "instantly conceded" that Great Britain needs the world's most powerful navy and that it is "sheer nonsense to say the American army was fighting for President Wilson's famous 'fourteen points.' " He made the assertion "there was not one American soldier in every thousand who ever heard of them." "Inasmuch as Mr. Wilson is going over, it is earnestly to be hoped that it is his business not to try and be an umpire between our allies and our enemies, but act loyally as one of the allies." said the colonel. "We have not suffered anything like as much and we have not rendered as much service as the leading allies. It is the British navy and the French, British and Italian armies that have done the most to bring about the downfall of Germany and therefore the safety of the United States." OLD PRESCRIPTION FOR WEAK KIDNEYS Have you ever stopped to reason w,hy it is that so many products that are extensively advertised, all at once drop out of sight and are soon forgotten? The reason is plain—the Reticle did not fulfill the promises of the manufacturer. This applies more particularly to n medicine. A medic inal preparation that has real cura tive value almost sells itself, as like nn endless chain system the remedy is recommended by those who have been benefited, to those who are in need of it. A prominent druggist says "Take for example Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- Root, a preparation I have sold for many years and never hesitate to Recommend, for in almost every case It shows excellent results, as many of my customers testify. No other kidney remedy that I know cf has so large a sale." According to sworn statements and verified testimony of thousands who have used the preparation, the suc cess of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Hoot is due to the fact that, so many people plaim, it fulfills almost every wish in overcoming kidney, liver and bladder pijments, corrects urinary troubles snd neutralizes the uric acid which causes rheumatism. You may receive a sample bottle of Swamp-Hoot by parcel post. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghumton, N. Y., and enclose ten cents; also mention the Harrisburg Daily Telegraph. Large and medium size bottles for sale at all drug stores. Constipation Biliousness-Headache Dr. Chase's Liver Tablets Make the liver active, bowels regu lar without pain or griping, relieve sick headache and that bloated feel ing after eating, purify the blood and clear the complexion, l.tirgr box, enough to Inst n month, 30c EXITED MEDICINE CO., i'hilttilelphin, I'M. WAS RUN DOWN AND NERVOUS Had a Poor Appetite- No Ambition says Margaret Kodgers, 340 High street, Middletown, Pa. "I was run down, nervous, had headaches, did not sleep well, felt tired, had no ap petite, did not relish my food, had no ambition, seemed worn out. I had felt this way for several months when I was advised to try Sanpan, and it started to help me right away. Now I feel as well as ever, have a good appetite, sleep well, am not nervous, headaches don't bother me, and am full of life and ambition. Sanpan is being sold only at Kel ler's Drug Store, 403 Market street, Harrisburg. |j JOIN OUR CLASSES NOW SPECIALISTS IN EACH DEPARTMENT SCHOOL OF COMMERCE I Harrisburg's Leading and Accredited Business College Bell 485—Day and Night School—Dial 4393 ■ TROUP BUILDING • 15 S. MARKET SQUARE Write, Phone or Call—Send for Catalog H A Representative Will Call Upon Request TIRES! - TIRES! - TIRES! We Are Offering the Following TIRES At a Big Reduction in Prices Goodyear—Firestone Double Fabric —Knights—Federal and Blackstone (Tubes to Match) These prices will be maintained in this sale only; so come in and get the size for your car from a complete assortment. 30x3 Regular Price, $lB.O0 —Sale price $12.93 30x3*4 Regular Price, $25.00 —Sale price $16.90 31x4 Regular Price, $37.00 —Sale price $24.00 32x4 Regular Price, s37.oo—Sale price $25.70 34x4 Regular Price, $40.00 —Sale price $28.00 OTHER SIZES AT CORRESPONDING REDUCTIONS ALL MAKES OF TIRES VULCANIZED Harrisburg Auto and Tire Repair Company Agency For the Liberty Six 131 SOUTH THIRD STREET WEDNESDAY EVENING* ST A TE'S LAND RECORDS SHOW EARLY HISTORY Royal Chapter of 1681 Vests Penn Proprietary Interests in Common wealth; Settler's Family Receives $650 y 000 as Compensation George F. Ross, search clerk In the Department "of Internal Affairs, was requested by B. M. Nead, presi dent of the Dauphin County His torical Society, to prepare the fol lowing paper on tho "Land Records of Pennsylvania," which was read at a recent meeting of the society: "But comparatively few people in this state are familiar with the fact that, filed away In the Depart ment of Internal Affairs at the Capi tol, are so many priceless and in teresting records pertaining to the land grants from the time of Wil liam Penn down to the present day. As a matter of face, the legal fra ternity, surveyors, historians and professional genealogists are largely those who find these records so es sential in their lines of work and re search, while the general public knows little about them, or even of | their existence. They are in a large room especially designed for them, which is of fire proof construction. State Land Given to Penn "At the outstart I beg to assure you that it is not my purpose to weary you with a mass of dry de tails concerning these records, but rather, in a general way, to referj Jo some of the more interesting ones, j with the hope that this article may j be worth while and not overtax your j forbearance. With this end in view, j first of all let me say that the Royal Chapter of 1681, as is generally! known, vested in William Penn and j his heirs the absolute ownership of i the soil of Pennsylvania, and to their j credit it must be said that any land j acquired by them from the Indians j was by purchase and not by force. | 'The State of Pennsylvania, _by an act passed November 27, 1779, commonly known as the 'Divesting | Act,' vested the Penn proprietary! interests in this Commonwealth, 1 paying the family $650,000 for them, | and alowing them to retain their j manors, forty-four in number,worth : probably as muh more, also their j private estates. In the case of the i Penn estates this act was a gener- j ous one. John and Richard Penn i had remained here during the Revo lutionary War and their sympath-1 ies were known to be with the nioth- , er country. They well knew that, plenty of precedents existed to war- i rant the confiscation of all their [ proprietary rights and estates, . hence they gladly accepted this ten- | derby the Legislature, which had j passed numerous acts forfeiting the i estates of those whom it called tor- j ies and traitors. It is proper to j say that the titles to lands front the , Penns prior to the taking over of > their proprietary rights by the Com- ] monwealth, were confirmed. ' I Garden Spot of State "Incidentally let me say that in the selection of their manors the Penns appear to have had a vision of the possibilities of the land etn braced within their boundaries, for, generally speaking, it is the most j fertile within the confines of the Commonwealth. To bear out this statement, it is only necessary to mention their manor of Lowther, containing 7,351 acres, which was situated between the Conodoguinet creek on the north, and the Yellow Breeches creek on the south, and extended for a considerable distance up the Cumberland Valley. This land, in our day, is frequently re ferred to as 'The garden spot of Pennsylvania.' "The surveys of those manors I clearly demonstrate that those who ' made them were skilful in their pro- I l'ession and 1 pay tribute to the deputy surveyors who, in the early I history of this Commonwealth, sur veyed its lands. Their letters to ! the surveyor general, among the I archives, graphically describe the I hardships they endured and the dangers encountered by them, not only from the wild animals that infested the forests, but froin the Indians as well. It goes without saying that they were courageous and sturdy characters. "I cannot, however, say as much for the orthography of some of them, for in several instances that have come under my observation their spelling was notoriously bad. To illustrate, there is a survey of 1755 to which this assertion is espe cially applicable, and some one, pre sumably an attache of the surveyor general's office at the time, with a sense of humor, wrote on the face of it the following: " 'My dear Billy Brown, oh hone, i oh hone, Pray spell better or let surveying alone.' Records Often MJs-spcllcd "Apropos of the methdd of spell- j ing in some of those early records, a woman of evident intelligence and culturo wrote to the department re questing that a copy of a patent which had been granted to an an cestor by William Penn, be sent to her. In the record of these patents Pennsylvania is invariably spelled 'Pensilvania,' as it was in the copy that was sent to her, to the end that it could bo eertilied to as being a copy of the original. She prompt ly returned it with the gratuitous statement that she had always heard that the employes of the state at Harrisburg held their positions as a reward for political services and not for their etHeiency, and she was not ready to believe it, for we could not spell the name of our state cor rectly, as the copy of the patent which she returned for correction disclosed. 1 confess that when 1 re plied to her my inclination was to resent this insinuation, but 1 re frained from doing so and courte ously explained that Pennsylvania was spelled in that manner in the j patent on record here. She did not i reply to this byway of an apology for her llagrant violation of the proprieties, so the employes of the department realize that such criti cism is part of the day's work and let it go at that. The method now in use, and which was devised by Major Isaac B. Brown when he was secretary of internal affairs, is to red line the mis-spelled words that appear in a record when a copy of the same is made, to indicate to the person receiving it that we wore cognizant of the fact that the word was incorrectly spelled. Sells I-ami For Penn "Some of the surveys contain rather unusual information and' I will mention a couple of instances. A survey has inscribed thereon the following: Grant Case had owned or claimed the tract but being a dis sipated wretch he sold his right to "Cheating George Henry," a dis tinction by which he was readily known from others of the same name, for a half a gallon of rum, and said Henry obtained a warrant for the land.' "I quote from a survey of the year 1769: 'This tract was claim ed by William Duncan, and to de cide the claim Duncan and Wilson resolved to put personal prowess to the test in wrestling, in which Wil son came off victorious, and hence the name 'Wilson's Conquest' was given the land. Duncan ever after wards relinquished his claim to the land.' "This method of settling disputes as to land titles was probably less expensive than that of the present day. In quite a number of in stances I have been delegated to produce original land records in court that were relevant to the case betng tried, and it has been my ob servation that the legal talent en gaged on both sides of the contro versy was of a high order and cor respondingly high priced. l.nnd Record on Card "Another rather unusual record is an application for land in Chester county, more than a hundred years old, which was written on the deuce | of diamonds, and whicli is a bona tide land record. iff course it is I purely conjecture on my part, but when the sporting proclivities of j the men of those days are recalled. ! the thought that the applicant may have acquired his right to the land ! in the American game of poker is at least permissible. "A letter written in its entirety | by Wilfjam Penn, from London, dat ! Ed 15th, second month, 1686, is a j rare archive, it is to his surveyor : general, Thomas Holmes, and di i reels him to lay out land to the persons whom he mentions by name, | and he especially requests that they ! get a 'front Skulkill lott.' The con i eluding paragraph of this letter is jso quaintly characteristic that 1 ! quote it: " 'I add no more but my true j love to thee & thyne & ye people jin gen'll desiring that it would please ye lord to be with you & di j rect you in his fear and wisdom to i his glory. lam thy reall friend. •WM. PENN.' Old Letter In Arcltlves "This letter now 233 years old is in a remarkable state of preserva tion, as are many other records of n similar period upon which his 1 signature uppears, evidencing the j fact that the paper and ink used in those days were of superior qual ity to that of our day and genera tion. Then, too, the penmanship of some of these records, which was probably executed with a goose quill pen, excites one's surprise and admiration. This letter has been photographed and will appear in a history now being compiled by Al bert Myers, a historian of note, which promises to be the most com prehensive history of William Penn | that has ever been written. Mr. j Myers spent several months in the I department searching the records ] for anything that he 'might deem : worthy of a place in that history, and he regarded the letter above re ferred to as a most valuable con tribution to it. Last Purchase From Indians " 'The last purchase from the In dians is a record worthy of men -60 3O ! Doses CeBlS J JUNIPERTAK \ A Reliable Renedy for J V COUGHS, COLDS / \ SORE THROAT/ At All S DroCglete • g • • \ HAHRIBBURO.66Sk TELEGRAPH tion. This purchase was made on | October 23, 1734, and otnbreuod al moit one-thtrd the aroa of the state. 1 can convey a hotter Idea of Its ex tent by saying that the counties of Erie, Crawford, Venango, Mercer, ' Lawrence, Boaver, Butler, Warren, ! McKean, Potter, Tiogu, Forest, Elk, Cameron, Jefferson, and parts of Allegheny, Armstrong, Indiana, ; Clearfield, Clinton, Lycoming and Bradford are within the bounds of I that purchase. It may surprise yoy to learn that the sum of $6,000 was! paid the six nations for, this goodly i portion of the Commonwealth. At 1 the time of Its purchase the great- i or portion of it wus a primeval wil derness of virgin pine and hemlock, j of supposedly inexhaustible supply. ' As late as 1863, when I lived in Elk ! county, no one even dreamed that j within a few years from that time practically all of this timber would | have disappeared. A largo fclirt of j this purchase was subsequently no- { quired from the state by the Hol land Land Company, a company 1 composed of wealthy Hollanders whose names In our land records are quite as difficult to pronounce as are the names of the towns and cities of Europe that we pass up when reading the daily papers in these war times. Some of the des- ; cendants of these Hollanders still j reside in Pennsylvania, and I have ) in mind General 11. S. Huidekoper, | of Philadelphia. To mention his I name suggests an incident, and I < pray your indulgence If I digress! at this point and relate it. The in- 1 cident is absolutely true for I have-1 the general's word for it. During the Civil War ho was presented to President Lincoln and the gentle man who accompanied him to the White • House informed the Presi dent that Colonel Huidekoper en joyed the distinction of being the youngest officer of the rank of colo nel commanding a regiment in the Union army, lie being at that time twenty-four years old. As soon as the President heard his name ho saw an opportunity to perpetrate one of his jokes, and he usked the colonel if he was not of Holland ! descent. Upon receiving an affirma tive reply, he then Inquired, 'Colo- i nel are you an Amsterdam, Rotter dam, or just a plain damn Dutch man?' Washington Aquircs Laud "On the 28th of February, 1782, George Washington was granted six tracts of land now situated in Fay ette county, aggregating almost two thousand acres. When this land was j surveyed, in October, 1769, It was i in Cumberland county, which leads ! me to say that so many counties of the state were erected from terrl- ! tory that originally was a part of Cumberland county, that that coun ty is often referred to as 'Old Moth- I er Cumberland.' Therefore, in my ] search work, it is highly important j that I should be familiar With the i genealogical history of the sixty- I seven counties of the Common- j wealth, for It frequently happens i that the record of a grant for land j that now is situated in the west-1 ern part of the state will be found ! in the warrant register of one <*f J the old eastern counties, where the j land was at the time it was war ranted, surveyed and patented. "Subsequent to the Revolutionary Wtor, by authority of an act of the Legislature, lands then in West moreland county, but now in several other counties, were laid out in what is known as 'Donation Dis tricts.' These districts were subdi vided into tracts varying In size from 200 to 1,500 acres, and the tracts were donated to the soldiers who served in the Pennsylvania line of the Continental army. The privates received 200 acres and the officers to their rank. The rec ords "6f these donation lands have, to my personal knowledge, in sev eral instances supplied the neces sary evidences to enable persons to become members of the Sons or Daughters of the Revolution. Survey of Susquehanna "In the year 1827 a survey of the Susquehanna river from the New Tork slate boundary line to its mouth was made by Charles Tro ziyulny, a noted civil engineer of his day. The map of this survey wus made on a large scale and it shows the towns along the river that then existed, the hills on its sides, the streams that were its tributaries, and the islands that dotted its bosom. It is truly a work of art, and it has called forth high.encomi ums from those who have seen it. Charles Troziyulny was one of the linest engineers in the United States to use the theodolite in engineering practice. "Many of us in our school days were required to make a map of the State of Pennsylvania from our memory of its contour as shown in our geographies, and 1 recall that that part of the state lying in the extreme northwestern corner always appealed to me when 1 was struggl ing with the map-making problem. It is sometimes called "the smoke stack of Pennsylvania," but In the land records is known as "The Erie Triangle." This land was claimed by the state of New York, but it was awarded to this state by the Fed eral government by patent dated March 3, 1792, the patent bearing the signatures of George Washing ton and Thomas Jefferson, president and secretary of slate, respectively. "The boundaries of this Com monwealth as they exist to-day were not permanently established with out considerable controversy. The State of Connecticut claimed a good sized slice Of the northeastern part of it, while Virginia laid claim to a big bite out of ts southwestern ter | ritory. It is a historical fact that a large portion ot' Northeastern Penn sylvania was settled in early days by people from Connecticut, and when this state later on granted warrants to its citizens to take up aland in that section, these-Connecti cut claimants resisted the attempts to deprive them of their lands, with the result that embryo civil war de veloped over the controversy, and in at least one instance blood was slied. These disputes were Anally I settled by commissioners from the respective states, who were appoint ed for that purpose. Pen us Owned This Land "Coming closer to home, it may Interest you to know that the ground upon which this building stands, is a part of the tract of land that was granted to John Harris by John, Thomas and Richard Penn by pat ent dated December 17, 1i33. "In the preparation of this paper I have avoided using figures as far as possible, but that you may be able to form some Idea of the mag nitude of these records, permit mo to say there are approximately 150,- 000 applications, 126,000 warrants and 200,000 single survey* in the files, and the patents 'are recorded in 185 large volumes. I mention with no little pride that those who have had occasion to exainino the land records of other states have been pleased to say that- they find ours much more accessible, and that our system of 1 filing and indexing them Is vastly superior to that of other commonwealths. "My duties in the land office bu reau of the Department of Inter nal Affairs have naturally made mo quite familiar with these records but were It possible for rue to round out a century delving among them, — A Scene From "The Girl Without a Chance" at the Orpheum Theater Friday and Saturday Y_ : ' A A ■ B B& M 8 b J& 8 I n ■Hi ■huß n||| • JBf tBL '>>3BB vjjpr, • I '' r iiiL. •- ' iA Robert Sherman will offer for a return engagement "The Girl Without La Chance" at the Orpheum for two days, beginning Friday, with daily matinees. 1 MAJESTIC High Class Vaudeville All week — Pietro. Change of program Thurs day, with M. Thor's musical comedy, "Some Baby," as the headliiicr. ORPHEUM Friday and Saturday .with daily mati nees, December ti and 7 "The Girl Without a Chance." Tuesday, night only, December 10 "Chin Chin." Coming, soon—"The Brute of Berlin." COLONIAL To-day Clara Kimball Young in "The Road Through the Dark." Thursday - - Norma Talmadge ift "The Missing Links. Friday and Saturday Marion Davics in "The Burden of Proof." REGENT To-day and to-morrow Fred Stone in ."The Goat." Friday and Saturday John Barry more in "On the Quiet." VICTORIA To-day and to-morrow Kitty Gor don in "The Whip" also, to-day, "Hands Up,"' and to-morrow "A Fight # For Millions." Friday Peggy Hyland in "Mar riages or Maid." Saturday Mrs. Vernon Castle in "The First Law." , j The concert by Josef Rosenblatt, the famous Jewish tenor, on Thurs day evening, December The f, is not only enthusing Rosenblatt those of his pwn faith; Concert. who are so farqiliar with Ills great ability as an artist, but music lovers gener ally will avail themselves of the op portunity presented of hearing him on this occasion, and he will no doubt be received by a large and appreciat ing audience. Mr. Rosenblatt, besides being one of the greatest singers on the concert stage, is a composer of note, and will sing, some of his own compositions, as well its a group of English songs, the latter by special request. Though well-known in re ligious circles, he became fur more 1 noted after his iirst public recital, coming so soon after his refusal of Campanini's generous* offer to sing in the Chicago Opera/Company. 1 he success he achieved on this occasion ! and the comments of the press all 1 point to the undeniable fact that here i| g a tenor voice to be reckoned with i and whose sheer beauty alone, if for ! in) other reason, would make it well I worth listening to. Mr. Rosenblatt i will be assisted by -Master Stuart Ross, a young pianist, who is said to create a sensation wherever lie ap pears, and who will add to the pro gram a feature which is sure to give genuine pleasure. Choice seats are still available and can lie secured at Miller and Kades, Market Square, and from Nathan Gross, North Sixth stret. Tickets will be on sale at Miller and Kades this evening special from 6:30 to 3 o'clock. I When a contractor starts to build !a great building, he goes down into • the filth and slime for "The Girl his foundation, but the Without building stands just as u t'hanee" firmly, when finished, as though it were built on white stone. That's what A\ hitney Collins did when he wrote_ "The Girl Without a Chance," which will lie seen at the Orpheum, Friday and Sal urdav, with daily matinees. He went into the slums .f a great city. He brought forth characters that were reeking with crime, but they ;were human. He brought scenes that will cause a lump to rise in your throat, hut thev are true. He brought forth a wonderful character in the irre pressible "Jerry Sullivan, hut lie, too, is a picture from life and one that will make the world better for his having been in it. . Seven gorgeous settings make up the stupendous production of Charles Dillingham s Chin Stupendous which is ched- Rroductlon uletPto appear at the lof "Chin Chin" Orpheum next lues day night. Knowing the value of "Chin Chin" as a theatri cal propertv, Manager Dillingham has seen to it that the production has not my knowledge of them would still be very imperfect. The original title from the Penns or the Common wealth to the land upon which the home of every one is located, is based upon these records, which make them, in my Judgment, the most valuable ones In the posses sion of the Commonwealth- And when it is remembered that many of them are considerably over two hundred vears old, and that they have been moved from place to place no less than four or five times, but happily Escaped destruction when the old Capitol building was burned, It is somewhat Incredible that they are as intact us they are to-day. May ivc not hope that, protected as they now are, they will survive the vicissitudes and ravages of the coming years as they have those of the past,"" I taken on a shop-worn look or that | the performance has not deteriorated iin any particular. Tho scenes are as ! attractively staged as they were at I tho Globu Theater. New York, where tho play was first made known three years ago, and this, the only company, is just as large and well trained in Its duties. The story unfolds amid scenes charming in their variety, color and entertaining worth, deals with the adventures of a young American girl, who is touring China with her father. In an old Chinese shop, she meets Aladdin, of the won derful lamp. By its magical proper ties, he becomes a prince of China and makes life very pleasant for the girl until the lamp Is stolen by a thief, who also abducts the youthful globe trotter. The pursuit of the thief, the recovery of the lamp and the givl make up the rest of the tale, which is a merry variation of the Arabian' Nights epic. "Chin Chin" has been given a good cast, it is beautifully cos tumed and th< stage settings are still pretentious and possessed of unusual massivlt,y "Chtn Chin's" music has been I hummed, whistled, danced and sung the country over and by reason of its peculiar properties of popularity will j continue to be so for some time to come. A pleasing variety hill is now ap pearing at the Majestic, with Pietro as the feature, attraction. |At the Although a thange of pro- Majestic gram will take place to-' morrow, tills celebrated uc t cordionist will continue bis engage ment until the end of the week, ln i eluded on the hill to-day are: Bird i and Beaumont, clever song and dance . entertainers; "Jack" Marlcy, the . popular "nut" comedian; Rawson and ; Clare, offering a very beautiful little i playlet entitled "Yesterdays," and , Durlun's Animal Jubilee, several dogs . and monkeys impersonating human beings, in a show all their own called , "A Day in Dogtown." It Is a splendid ; act, the kind everyone will enjoy. . A few of the attractions scheduled j to appear on the hill the lust half of i the week are: Wallace and Holllngs > worth; young couple in u bright song J and patter skit, and M, Thor's spqe f tacular musical comedy, "Some Baby,'-' i presented by nine first-class musical . comedy entertainers. The remainder , of the bill will be announced later. f t • ', To-day is your last opportunity to , see Clara Kimball Young, the screen's most beautifuj and most . At the popular star in her latest , ! Colonial success. "The Road Through , | the Dark." Miss' Young is I given a splendid opportunity to dis t play her talents as an •motional t actress. , : Thursday only, Norma Talmage | will he seen in a return •engagement of the popular story, "Missing Links," | I a story of mystery. Miss Talmage Is L j Use McNeil's Cold Tablets. Adv. ; FOR STUBBORN COUGHS AND COLDS i 3 1 Dr. King's New Discovery has a fifty-year record " behind it 1 It built its reputation on its pro -8 ductlon of positive results, on its I sureness in relieving the throat irita -3 tion of colds, coughs, grippe and bronchial attacks. "Dr. King's New Discovery? Why, 1 my folks wouldn't use anything • else!" That's the general nation 1 wide esteem in which this well known remedy is held. Its action is t prompt, its taste pleasant, its relief * grntifying. Half a century of cold and cough checking. Sold by druggists every where. Bowels Out of Kilter? That's nature calling for relief. > Assist her in her daily duties with ; Dr. King's New Life Pills. Not a ' purgative in the usual dose, but a | mild, effective, collective laxative : that teases the bowels into action and chßses "blues." ' % Catarrhal Deafness May % 1 Be Overcome * I If you have Catarrhal Deaf- <(> <#• ness or are even Just a little <i> ] * hard of hearing* or have head <j ! ! ♦ noises go to your druggist and <{• + get 1 ounce of Parmint (double ♦ strength), and add to It M * ['♦ pint of hot water and a little ♦ , - ♦ granulated sugar. Take 1 table- ♦ . I y spoonful four times a day. Y I * This will often bring quick * T relief from the distressing head v ,I Y noises. Clogged nostrils should * ; 2 open, breaniing become easy ♦ .| T and the mucus stop dropping 2 I T Into the throat. It Is easy to * ' I.Y prepare, costs little and is ! I T pleasant to take. Anyone los- ? T ing hearing or who has Ca- T T tarrhal Deafness or head noises ? . 2 should give this prescription a T ' X trial. !jj! DECEMBER 4,1918. supported by Constance Talmadge and ltobert Harron. To-day, Fred Stone, the same Fred Stone who was one of the team of Montgomery and Stone, the At the famous comedians, is ap- Itegent peal ing at the ltegent Thea ter In a picture entitled, "The CloHt." Admirers of Mr. Stone, who have seen him on the stage, will welcome hint to the silent drama. He is known as one of the best.'athletic actors of the day, and in moving pic tures he is sure to give the audience thrill after thrill with hair-raising stunts. And In "The Goat" It Is said he sure does "let Loose." . Friday and Saturday, John Barry more, the famous Paramount star, will 1 he at the Regent in his latest release, j "On the Quiet." The announcement that the cele : brated and sensational stage melo drama, "The Whip," had : At the been adapted for the i Victoria screen, resulted in as much interest as the original an- I nounccment ihat the play itself was | to be offered to the public. : Beautiful Kitty Gordon, known ! everywhere for her marvelous gowns land famous beauty, as well .s skillful j noting, Is east as the star of "The ! Whip." seen to-day and to-morrow at ] the Victoria Theater. The fair sex I will bo especially Interested in her I nppearance, while the masculine mind will also find ample Justification for viewing Kitty and the screen story. Identified as Man Wanted For Murder Philip Goslin, colored, of Sykesville, Md., was identifledw by the sheriff from Sykesville, as the roan who has been wanted there two years on the charge of murder. The sheriff, who came here in an automobile following a telephone conversation with Cap tain Thompson, of the local police de partment, took Goslin back to the Maryland town last night, where he will face a jury on a tirst degree mur der charge. Goslin was arrested in the Pennsyl vania Railroad Station yesterday by Patrolmen Holland and Foultz, when Mr. and Mrs. John O. Brown, of Sykesville, also colored, saw hint come into the station and immediate ly recognized him. Mr. Brown left the station and summoned the patrolmen, ,who placed Goslin under arrest. America Deciding Factor in Victory, Says Joffre Purls, Dec. 4. in a conversation with Dr. Horatio S. Kruns, of New .York, yesterday, Marshal Joffre gave credit to the United States as being the winning factor in the war. "It was the weight of America," he said, "her moral and material re sources, and surely not the least her very considerable army, thrown into the balance at the crucial moment, that turned the scales and won the victory. And the Americans showed themselves true soldiers and a mili tary power that counted tremendous ly in the decisive conflict." r > a PARAMOUNT A ARTCKA IT I'ICTUit ES AT THE REGENT TODAY AND TOMORROW FRED STONE "THE GOAT" FRIDAY AX D SATURDAY JOHN BARRYMORE "ON THE~QUIET" Admission, lOr anil -0c anil war lux lORPHEUM Friday - Saturday DEC. 6-7 I HOHEItT SHEKMAN I'lCMMits T 1 11 l? Iri f | A Moral llml FnirlMn Plea for H n |_ B K I the Betterment of YonnK lrls B , 111 1% I . Mho Are Without Pure lit a mill * ** "■ V# 111 U ,| Hoiiim—t'omplete Senile Effects. f-MII-1 WITHOUT feilrl |Every Mother, Wife, Dntifch <>r ( 1 /"If A |kT J* I Sinter, Sweat heart Should See I t\ B H S\ Iml I H It—lt Telia the Truth mill H I. llf\ II 0.1", I Ttjaehen 11 LPNNOII A \ ital Play J * • V**lB 1L V U Hy WHITNKV COLUXS f\ • Dailv Matinees..- 250 and 500 rrirPQ Nights ... .250 - 500 - 750 -$1 VICTORIA TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW J FRANK HATCH HLM CO. Presents WHIP Fcwrtrs AWTAC^ Also: Today—"Hands Up" Friday Only, Peggy Hyland in "Marriage or Maid" Saturday, Mrs. Vernon Castle in "The First Law" ADMISSION : 10 AND 20 CENTS AND WAR TAX I§§ Chestnut Street Auditorium JOSEF ROSENBLATT FAMOUS JEWISH TENOR . STUART RQSS —Marvelous Boy Pianist Popular Prices—sl.oo, $1.50 and $2.00 |§f 500 Choice Reserved Seats at $l.OO HH 500 Choice Reserved Seats at $1.50 5x5 Tickets till Sale at Mi'lcr & Kudos. Market Sq. OPEN THIS EVE |||s NINO, O.SO to o'clock. Also at Nathan Gross', 2015 N. Sixth St. BOLSHEVIST INQUIRY IN CUICAUO PROPOSER Chicago. It is reported that 0 federal grand jury investigation of Bolshevist activities in Chicago maj be started on account of evidence lected concerning the manifesto bear* ing the shop label of the Arbeltel Zeltung, German language Socially newspaper. The question is now la the hands of the United Stutes Dls< trlct Attorney's office. Fills Stomach With New Energy Weak, Worn Out, Gassy, Soul Stomach Revived and Made to Enjoy Food With Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets. Most of us eat three times a dat anil often forget that each mew should be disposed of in the stomach to make room for the next. Th failure of the stomach to do this is called indigestion or dyspepsia, with Its sour risings, gas, rumblings, pain, depression and the feeling of stuffls ness when breathing is difficult. The most effective remedy and the most, reliable one, because you can get it at any drug store in the United States or Canada, is Stuart's Dys pepsia Tablets, at 50 cents a box. In stead of depriving yourself of food or going on a starvation diet simply keep on as you have und let these tablets, straighten out your stomach, digest the food and keep you in the light, / e GORGAS DRUG STORES | MAJESTIC^ PIETR O Till: WIZARD OF THE , PLYNO-ACCORD lON FOUR OTHERS, INCLUDING "IN DOG LAND" Thursday, Friday ami Saturday "SOME BABY" A Lively Musical Comedy S Others, Including PIETRO feoLQN.AL 1 1 CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG —ix— ; "THE ROAD THROUGH | . THE DARK" THURSDAY ONLY NORMA TALMADGE in II return engagement j "MISSING LINKS" .a-- I™' 1 ™' ' Wright's Orchestra of Columbus, Ohio, at WINTERDALE HALL J 18 NORTH MARKET SQUARE! I'll nr., l'"rl„ Sat., Dec. B, . 7 M underfill Dance Attraction Admission 30c and 73c
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers