18 James M. Auter Selected Marshal of the Parade to Welcome Soldiers Home Colonel James M. -Auter will be j chief marshal of the big parade that 1 will be held for returning Harris- j burg soldiers of several negro regi- i ments that have arrived from over- j seas, art* in camp awaiting dis- j charge and will be home next week, j ™ j There Is a Difference between the ordi nary peanuts and our Heal Jumbo Peanuts, roasted fresh daily, and i sold at 25c per lb. Convince yourself of this fact. We also roast all our own coffee and have your blend at your price. IMPERIAL TEA CO. 213 fHESTSI'T STREET — i The Whisper That Comes in the Night The Glorious Knowledge Women Gain When a Wonderful Thought Steals Orer Them. Happiness In its most thrilling degree comes to woman with the thought of pos sessing a baby- Krery woman la the Joy of coming moth erhood Should prepare ber system for the unusual strain. Threw generations base found the tried and reliauie preparation, i . lothrr Friend, of the greatest help at such I • time. By Its dally use throughout the yenoa. the skin of the abdomen is mado snft and elastic, expanding musolea relax easily sben baby arrises, and pain at the crisis U In this way ssoided. The inflammation of breast glints Is jjocthsd. Obtain from your druggist by all means, th;s great preparation which science baa of- i fered for so many years to expectant • mothers. , w " ri 'e the Bradlleld Regulator Company, pept D. Lamgr Buildln*. AtltnU, Georgia, i for their helpful and Intereatln* Mother hood Book, and begin tbo use or Mother'a Frtend. It Is for external use. is absolutely i safe and wonderfully effective And remember, there is nothing to take 1 !! PJKS of MOTHER S FRIEND. ' OLD TIME HOMEMADE Martha Washington Candies Assorted Chocolates. Assorted Nuts, Assorted Caramels, Chocolate Bon-Bons, Vanilla and Choco late Butter Creams. EXCLUSIVE SALE AT THE SWEETSHOP FOURTH AND WALNUT STS. BELL, PHONE OIPOSITE Y. W. C. A. mag 432 MARKET STREET License No. G-.15305 Specials for Saturday, March 1,1919 Morning Specials Until Noon Hickory Smoked Hams 32c Smoked Picnic Hams 26c Chuck and Rib Roast Beef 20c Pork Chops, Loin or Rib 31c Pork Neck Bones or Pig Feet 10c Lamb Roast or Veal Roast 25c Stewing Lamb or Veal 15c All Day Specials Pure Lard 26c Steaks, Any Kind 24c Round Shoulder or Rump Roast Beef 25c Pot Roast Fleshy Boiling Beef .. .20c Hamburg Steak 22c Pork Loin Roast 31c Lebanon Bologna 33c Cervelat Sausage 22c Cooked Tripe, Cooked Pig Feet.. 10c Sliced Liver, 4 lbs. for 25c Cheese —Cream, Brick, Longhom, 30c B. B. Butterine, 2 lbs 53c •, % * MtHKFT" IN PH-TV-aix riUNrri'Al CITIES or i i "STATE* MAIN OFFICE, PACKING 1M \\T CHIC AGO, 11,1.. I> R| g. 11. K FRIDAY EVENING, HAJtEUSBtTRG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 28, J919. He was selected at a meeting of citizens arranging for the event last evening. The llnal meeting will be held on Monday evening in the Bethel A. ■ M. E. Church before which time Colonel Auter will select his staff. j The general committee to arrange i for the event was named to include ' Dr. C. H. Crampton, C. Sylvester Jackson, of Harrisburg, and C. F. ! Howard, of Steelton. Woman 111 With Smallpox Believes She Has Cold When Odela Green, aged 26, col ' oreii, 422 Herr street, came to the ! dispensary at the Harrisburg Hospi i tal for treatment for a "bad cold* I Dr. J. M. J. ltaunick, city health ' officer, discovered the woman was i suffering from smallpox. She has | been lil since Saturday she told him. The health authorities sent her to • the municipal hospital yesterday af -1 ternoon and last evening Dr. Hau j nick arranged a tour in the district I in which the woman resided, and a number of persons were vacci nated. It is not believed that there i have been contacts but the officials | will watch for any new cases and ■if necessary take further steps to | prevent an outbreak of the disease. S. P. C. A. to Hold Annual Convention Here Next Week The local Society for the Preven tion of Cruelty to Animals will be the host at the State convention of the society to be held here next Monday and Tuesday, it was anno | uneed to-day. The local committee I outlined plans for the gathering at I a meeting held yesterday afternoon, j The convention will be held in the I Penn-Harris Hotel. Delegates will be entertained at a luncheon Mon ! day by the local society and other | features will be offered. A number of prominent speakers j are expected to be present and it is predicted that action of various les ! islative meatsures will be taken by j i the societies. PAYORS RELIGION IN SCHOOLS Toronto.—Adaptation of the pub- ! | lie school system in the United [ States and Canada to provide relig-' : ious education for tin- youth of both. 1 countries was indorsed at the annual I convention here of tiie International j | Sunday School Association. TROLM2Y CAR BURNS j While Harrisburg Railways em- . i ployes were trying out an old street ; car. it caught fire at Fourth and Market streets last evening, but the j ( blaze was extinguished before much 1 damage was done. TRAINING BILL TO BE CHANGED i ■ * :j Heavy Cost May Interfere I With Complete Military Training [ j legislation to be enacted by the j present General Assembly for ' lishment of military training in the ' | schools of Pennsylvania will prob ! i ably provide for only a start of a i : system of Instruction of the youth of i 1 the State in preparation for national ' | defense. Investigation of the sub ] ; ject which has been under way for . '■ some time is said to have shown • ' that the establishment of military ; J training with a period in camp ' ! would be very expensive and the . ! plan now is to create a course of 1 i military exercises similar to those | | used in the physical training of men |At army camps and naval stations | and to develop it when the soldiers ! return from France and reorganiza- I tion of the militia has been worked ! i out. Adjutant General Frank D. Beary. | j who has been in Washington in con -1 j Terence with army officers and eon | gressmen, has discussed the general plan with Col. Edward Martin, com j missioner of health, and Dr. J. | George Becht, secretary of the State j Board of Education, and they will ; have further meetings and then take j up the matter with the legislators lon the military committees. There are several bills for military train ; ing in the bands of legislative com j mitlees. i Even if the national government provided the equipment the Stale i would have heavy expense, as an in ' structor would have to be provided for each of the great majority of ! the 960 high schools and thirteen normal schools in Pennsylvania, i One estimate is that the cost would run from $7,000,000 to $5,000,000 a i yea r. The legislation to establish the j Council of National Defense as the | State Commission of Public Welfare will be presented to the General As | sembly uext week. It has been gone j over by State officials and will pro ; vide for n permanent body author j ized by statute with objects and pow i ers outlined by the State Defense j Commission last moitfh. Dishwasher For 20 Years, Leaves $12,000 at Death Albany. Feb. 28.—Thomas Price, restaurant dishwasher, wages sl2 a week, left $12,000 in various hanks. lit was learned to-day. Price, who j ! died suddenly, had been a dish j washer for twenty years. MARTIN YINGST HEADS TOWNSHIP SUPERVISORS Martin Yingst. of Conewago town ship. was re-elected president of the I road supervisors of Dauphin county, ■ j at the closing session of their con- ; j vention yesterday afternoon held in 1 the courthouse. T. F. Bogner, of Upper Paxton township, was re elected secretary. Reports on road | . conditions in various townships and | • successful construction methods were ' > discussed before the session adjourn- i |ed late in the afternoon. for Colds, Grip and Influenza Take "Laxative I Bromo Quinine Tablets" ! Be sure you get the Genuine Look for this signature (o on the box. 30c. COLDS Head or chest— ■ are best treated w( "externally" with AfkL VICK'SXLporuIQ YOUR BODYGUARD"- 30E 60EP20 11 IB! : S IEEE 1 ROUGH- i I u NUTS at | H Davenport's— ee !1 arg e, well- || bakecL rich, H delicious P doughnuts B smooth and M tasty but not M greasy. Only || W one place to H M get them like p == this. 2 for ii | sc. | 1 St. EE Architect* of Appetite* ~ IliiliiiiiiiiiiimH ISTHL WORK FOR ; ARMY IN FRANCE Men Anxious to Get Home, but Restoration Work Is Enormous I THE AWFUL PLIGHT OF PERN AN t Homes, Churches, even its Graves Destroyed, its Fields Sown with I nexploded Shells—Not even a Candle for light and No Water Fit for Drinking. I The Fato of a French Village Described by Mary Master Needham Whose Husband. Famous American Writer, was Killed While Flying in France. Paris, France.—"Now that the war iis over, when are you going home?" ! an American army officer asked me ' today. ! "Going home?" I echoed: and the surprise in my voice evidently struck , him as strange ; | "Why. yes" he said. "We have done jour part. I'm glad to be going back to r America, and to my business." (He is ] a business executive of unusual energy I and insight >. | "But pleace remember," I replied, j that while the army has about ftnished its task, the civil life of devasted dis tricts in France yet remains to be re stored." "That is {he affair of France, not ours," he answered. "Not at all," was my response. "The end of fighting increases, instead of lessening the task of the American Committee for Devasted France. We are no longer limited by German occu pation, we can do much more than relieve refugees and give temporary aid. unless America helps these returned refugees to gather up the scattered threads of life and begin anew with i new heart and strength, we will have j failed to understand what the war has meant to France, —failed to convey to • these people the understanding and I sympathy of our own great democracy j for the nation that has suffered so severely." ! My officer was dubious. His duties I in Paris kept him out of touch with the I devasted region. He could not quite j see why America should be concerned lin the work of restoration. So I told I him: i Last week I went into the little villi age of Pernatit. ten miles from Sissons. ! Here, before the war. 260 people dwelt )in the homes of their forefathers, i worshipped in the quaint twelfth cen i tury Gothic church, and, when they died. J were gathered to their own in the little j churchyard where for generations their j dead had been laid to the last, long ! rest. They weren't rich, they weren't j poor. They were industrious, happy, | frugal, content with their lot. J War broke. From their sunny fields ; (he men of the village went to the I trenches, many never to return. Then j came the Germans, and all the horrors of the occupation that oppressed the I aged, the women and the children so unspeakably. French armies swept .over the village. Last of all. came the I Americans. There is a new cemetery ! in the little village today, and in it lie ' 161 gallant heroes of our Second Di j vision j The villagers.—those that remained, j —wore driven out ty the tide of bat j tie. Where did they go- God knows. — Iby muddy lanes, by foul and other crowded freight cars, by lonely roads, i to other villages, where other refugees | were crowded in throngs. They left ; their homes, their beds, their chairs, ! and stoves, and pictpres, their cows, and sheep, and chickens, their dear old church, the graves of their loved ones. Today they are returned.—and to what? Two tottering walls are left of their j thousand-year-venerated church, their j eosv gray houses are jumbled heaps of ruifis entombing their household goods, the quiet God's acre where sleep their cherished dead lies been upheaved by high explosive shells, and the bones of 1 their ancestors lie strewn to the four I winds, even the very fields from which j they must wrest their living in years to j come are sown thick with unexploded I shells and bombs, a deadly menace eo I the tiller. But this is their France, : I these are their homes. We Americans thank God that the 1 war was not fought on our soil. But France did not chose to be the battle ground. Still less did these simple villagers desire that war should rage among and over their homes. What do you suppose are their feelings today? When we arrived the place seemed uninhabited. We honked our automo bile horn They came out, —literally out of the ground, out of their ruined cellars, out of rude shelters in shattered outhouses And of the 260 who lived happily in the village in 1914, there greeted us just thirty-seven women, and old men a few children A woman of forty-eight the shadow of what had been a woman of unusual vigor and frame, —was thctr spokesmnn "Where do you get your food?" I asked "We don't have much," she re plied "Sometimes one of us goes to Sissons, but few shops are open there. We have no horse, no wagon, no wheel barrow. It is ten miles there, ten back. How much do you think we can carry in our arms? Our men haven't come back, and when they do—well we haven't even tools to till the ground, none to mend our houses. We haven't even water to drink, the Boche smashed the pump and we cannot get another. "But you must have water," said I. "See that pond?" she added. I did, —green and slimy. "That or nothing," said the woman. "We boil it. when we can get a fire. When we can't. —we run the risk of disease. A great many sikduers died here, you know. "Worst of all," (her voice broke) "we have no candles. Do you know what It means to lie in the dark hour after hour with nothing but our mem ories of the horrors we have known' It is like dvlng over again every night. •Vo one bothers about us. You arc the very first to come to us." This village of Pernant which I des cribed to my friend is no isolated in stance There are hundreds like it in the region of France which the war has devasted. The fighting may be oyer, but the horror of the war are not ended. They will not be for a long, long time to come. . , _ France needs our help, and we must •rive that help. Time is the obstacle to be overcome. These poor people must not wait in vain for assistance that comes at last too late to be of use to them When France gets along on the road to restoring her railroads, replac ing transportation and communication, re-establishing the means of produc tion and distribution by which the ordinary business of life is carried on, she will be able to care for her people. But in the Interval, the task is Al My'army officer friend admits It, now. T IVT FLU BAN AT NOME Nome. Alaska, Feb. 28.—The quarantine against Influenza was lifted yesterday after having been In effect more than three months. During the influenza epidemic in this district, thirty-four whites and nearly 1 000 natives died. i SEINE AGAIN AT FLOOD STAGE I Ports. Feb. 28.—A sudden rise in the River Seine occurred yesterday as a result of floods in the streams which flow into it above Paris. The river rose nearly nine inches during the last twenty-four hours. MAJESTIC H 'A h .. Class Vaudeville Josie 1 Heather and Co.; Morris Campbell, i presenting "The Aviator;" three other Keith attractions. Also another episode of "The Lure of the Circus." ORPHEUM To-night—"Play things." Saturday, matinee and night. March 1 'Feck's Bad Boy." Monday, night only, March 3 The .lewish-Ainerican stock Company, presenting "Toe World In Tears" or W itbout a Home." Tuesday night and Wednesday mati nee and night. March 4 and 5 Lou Tellegen In "Blind Youth." COLONIAL To-dav and to-morrow Alice Brady in "The Indestructible Wife." Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday Mabel Normand in "Sis Hopkins." Wednesday and Thursday "The Prodigal Wife." REGENT To-day and to-morrow Bryant I Washburn in "The Gypsy Trail." VICTORIA To-day—Tom Mix in "Hell Roarin' Re form." and a Flagg comedy, "Impropa-1 ganda." Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday D. W. Griffith presents "A Romance! of Happy Valley." "Playthings", is the attraction at' the Orpheum to-day. The story of] "Playthings" hinges' V Fun Show and no doubt this) "Playthings" around the lives of j two young girls liv ing unprotected in New York amid trials and temptations. One comes j through wiser, but pure, the other loves not wisely but too well, realiz ing only too late that she is but a. "plaything" of the man she trusted, j Loved by an honorable man. she is i confronted by the eternal question—' shall she tell or be silent? Matters are] brought to a crisis when the man who, had betrayed her. again cutters her life, this time as the ostensible wooer! of the sister of the man who is in; love with her. She is threatened with an exposure of her whole dark past' if she does not acquiesce to a friend-; ship she knows will be fatal, and matters hate come to a supreme pass; of emotionalism when there • is a startling and unexpected turn of events which is said to form one of; the most stirring climaxes of the modern stage. j "Peck's Bad Boy" has always been a [strong magnet to attract the juvenile j class to its matinees,' "Blind Youth" and no doubth this \ reputation will be; fully sustained at the Orpheum to- i morrow, matinee and night, when tliisi comedy will be seen. The play this; season is said to be better than ever —funny situations, bright dialogs, at tractive musical numbers, artistically] blended, making It the greatest of j matinee attractions for the children! and equally entertaining for the older class. This city will have its first Yiddish | attraction of the season on next Mon- j day evening, when the; ••The World Messrs. Stein and Litt- In Tear*' man will offer the lat- i (Yiddish I est success of the Yid-I dish stage. "The World j in Tears." or "Without a Home." The ; cast will contain the names of sev-: eral prominent players; including': Mr. I and Mrs. Weinstein. former Adler] players: Stella Swartz, Louis Hitman and several others. Seats are on sale! now at thf bo>. office. • "Blind Youth." a dramatic comedy j with Lou Tellegen as the star, will be, the attraction at the I.on Tellegen In Orpheum next Tues- - nesday, matinee and! night.. The play is in three acts and s was written by Wiilard Mack and Mr. Tellegen. Not only is the brilliant young actor star and author of the play, but is his own manager, as well. The piece was brought to production in New York last fall and had a pros- I perous engagement in New York. The i present tour includes the Pacific coast and is being directed by Charles Lmerson Cook. So great has been the popularity of Mr. Tellegen among the younger set I that it would seem he has once more] brought a matinee idol to our stage. | Kis first appearances in this country I was in the capacity of leading man l with Madame Bernhardt. He fell in | lore with the United States and has!- remained here ever since and married \ an American girl. Geraldine Farrar. j Since becoming an English-speaking | actor, Mr. Tellegen has achieved many great successes on our stage and no single personality has proved more; striking than his. I Charming .losie Heather won her way intc the hearts of yesterday s au diences at the Majestic. At the Miss Heather is pleasing to Majestic look upon, and is also a clever little songstress. Her numbers arc all new and original and put over in an artistic manner. Miss Heather is assisted by her pretty sis ter, and William Casey, a pianist of marked ability. A popular comedy number on the bill is the skit present ed by Morris and Campbell, entitled "The Aviator." The act is brimful of - gcod comedy, the. kind that makes one f forget their troubles. b'mith and Kaufman are a clever team, who of fer a hodge-podge of nonsense and j comedv songs. The Arras Sisters give] ii dance offering that is pleasing. The! stage settings are artistic, and the girls make several changes of elabor ate costume. Ed Hastings, in a good comedy Juggling novelty, completes Another episode of "The Lure of the] Circus," with daring "Eddie" Polo, is also being shown. I The "Indestructible Wife" with ■ charming Alice Brady will be the at- i traction at the Colonial ! \ lloc Hrmly Theater to-day and to-j Ut Colonial morrow. This picture , gives the star the op- V portunltv to display her talents as an emotional actress. This is a ripping good story and shows the star in an entirely new role Monday and Tues days Mabel Normand, the star of "Mickey," will be seen in a foaring comedv that is by all means the best entitled, "Sis Hopkins." Sunshine, love and laughter in a norfect blend—and what more could you wish for? In Ur*ant Washburn this delightful new at Urgent picture. "The Gypsy Trail," Bryant Washburn takes his audience out Into the great wide world, leav ing the city behind. There is the I beautiful blue sky, the long, long trail over the open road and the hap- : piet kind of a companion to tramp with. A-down the gypsy trail of hap piness and laughter and love ,he tramps. And there is real love in the picture. Mr. Washburn will play in this famous picturizatlon of the famous stage success, supported by Miss Wanda Hawley, seen with Wil liam S. Hart In "The Border Wire less" and in a number of notable productions. The Regent Theater announces "A Romance of Happy Valley." D. W. Griffith's greatest Griffith Prod lie- production. This tioa Coming to will he presented Hegeot Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. I Seldom is there given to we of the I ..mailer towns the opportunity to see 1 such a remarkable offering as this. ilt is said to be a truly marvelous picture produced In a truly marvel ous way. featuring the noted stars. Lillian Glsh, Robert Harron and I George Fawcett. it is enough to say that "A Romance of Happy Valley" i amply upholds Mr. Griffith's repuia- tion made when he presented "The Birth of a Nation." Tcm Mix. in "Hell Uoat'in' Re form,'' which opened a two-day run at the Victoria Thea- Tum Mix ter yesterday, is ■it Victoria cast in one of the most sensational and dare devil dynamte plavs of his meteoric career. Besides, Houdlnl, the "Hand cuff King." is at the Victoria to-day and to-morrow. Thnt's enough, isn't it? Some more thrills and some brand new aaventure* of the sort that only the groat lioudini can have. Troop Twenty-Six to Go on Hige •Our Scout meeting on Monday night was one of the beat the troop i has ever had. V. lo Huntsberger, the field Scout executive, was pres ent and gave the troop one of his interesting tulks on good scouting. We were very much pleased to have him, as he is one of the best signal- ORPHEUM : 2========= ! To-night V?mk | C. S. PRIMROSE ; Offers ! PLAYTHINGS Matinee: 25 Night: 15 to 75 i v_—- COLONIAL i T oday—T omorrow Alice Brady • —in— The I Indestructible Wife A strong emotional play which gives this dainty actress the opportunity to show her talent in a new role. Monday—Tuesday Mabel Normand Star of Mickey , k —in— Sis Hopkins A roaring comedy with a noted comedy star. By all odds her best. Regent Theater Today—Tomorrow Bryant Washburn In hi* latest picture, "THE GYPSY TRAIL" Also l-'I.AGG COMEDY, •♦I niiroi>HKuiitla M Benefit Dance lly Employes of llowmiin A Com pany. usslstcd by I\nlglit of Co lumbus anil Harrisburg Operatic Society, For Children's Industrial Home, Day Nursery, Sylvan Heights Orphanage Table for those desiring to play curds Music hy two orchestras; The Hnnjo nnil Unto, and Upde grove'a. CHEST.VI T STREET AUDITORIUM Monday. Murcb 3, 1010. Ticket*, 50c VIC T O R I A TO-DAY ONLY TOM MIX In "HELL ItOAHIV REFORM" A William Fox Production Also: HOI DIM TO-MORROW ONLY William Fox Present* JANE AND KATHERINE LEE. the Famous Fox KhlrllcH lit "SMILES:*' . Also HOVOIN I. Alii. NEXT W EEK THEDA lIAlt \ in "S\I.O ME" A tale of the days when Herod Ruled 40 tear* Before Christ. Admission. Flic and 20e and war l Winterdale Dances 15 North Market Squnre Wrights Orchestra (Colored) OF COLUMBUS, OHIO Will Flay and Sing For Dancing SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 1 Admission, 50£ and ORPHEUM WED. MAR. 4-5 NEXT WEEK — LOLT . NEXT WEEK |l TEULEGEN htf VOu¥h-| lail Orders Now NIGHTS A SO<^TO C 12.M Seats Saturday — j- ers In Harrisburg and gave some good pointers In Morse signaling. The main thing he brought out in the signaling was to "practice, und after that practice some more. Tickets for a high class concert and entertainment were given to the bouts to sell by Scoutmaster Vanna mun. A hike was planned for Saturday afternoon. We will leave the Square at 1 o clock. Field Scout Executive Huntsberger and Assistant Scout masters Sparrow and Kohihas will l>e in charge. All the Scouts thut go will have a chance to pass any of their second class tests. So long. Scouts, und be prepared to pass your tests. red CRANE. {SUNDAY MOVING PICTURE C * BY WORKMAN'S CIRCLE J For Benefit of War Sufferers j MADGE KENNEDY j "THE SERVICE STAR" j COLONIAL THEATER C MATINEE AND EVENING ff NO ADMISSION SILVER OFFERING n HPTf FIIM TO-MORROW I J.J. M*J ITJ. Matinee and Night I MATINEE: Adults 25 Children 15 NIGHTS: 15, 25, 35, 50 ! Fourth Anniversary Week REGENT THEATER Monday—Tuesday—Wednesday We celebrate our fourth birthday, by presenting D. W. GRIFFITH'S "A Romance of Happy Valley" A Page from the Book of Life t Created by the master hand that produced "The Birth of a Nation," and on an equal scale of grandeur and artis tic excellence with that famous production. Mr. Griffith has switched from royalty to the old folks at home, from uniform and bursting rockets to homespun and oil lamps, in this marvelous cinema triumph. His brush has painted in glow- I ing colors the life of the simple, country people I of today. With accuracy and artistry unrivaled he has transformed plain, everyday folk into a I new kind of motion picture. | If you want a good seat you had better come early in !the afternoon or in the early evening. Thursday—Friday—Saturday Elsie Ferguson and Eugene O'Brien in a sunshiny romance, " Under the Greenwood Tree" , NO ADVANCE IN PRICES although these pictures 1 commanded high admission in the large cities. 1 ANNOUNCEMENT We Wlmli to announce our connections with F. MARIAN* SOI'It -11l BEER'S HAWK ORCHESTRA will no longer exist lifter March Ist, 111 l linn. Retaining the sump personnel of the OHItiIAI. DOritnKF.lt 111 ORCHESTRA, excepting Mr. Sourbeer himself—formlnK n eumblnntion I tlint will lie known In the future us the "lliinjosnxn" Onnee Orehestru, , , we eon guarantee .our pntrons the same exeellent music as on previous occasions, AT REASON ABI.E HATES. Now booking engagements for March, April and Slay BANJOSAXO DANCE ORCHESTRA Merlin C. Crawford. Mgr. Illi Bell '12(10.1-2 000 Chestnut St. Dial 5975 Hnrrisburg, I'a. mi] At Wintcrdalc, Tuesday Evening, March 4th. MAJESTIC JOSIE HEATHEI IS HERE! Hfr Voire la nn Sweet a* Ever. 4 Other Excellent Wilme and Vincent Acts Coming Mcndey "Crosby's Corners"
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers