Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, June 04, 1919, Page 14, Image 14

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    14
RUMANIA EATS
AMERICAN FLOUR
Without United States Aid
Starvation Would Have
Become General
Belgrade, Serbia, June 4. "All
Rumania is eating flour from Amer
ica to-day. The people realize where
the aid has come from and are ex
ceedingly grateful. Without Ameri
can help starvation certainly would
have become very general." These
are the words of Lieutenant Colonel
H. Gideon Wells. American Red Cross
Commissioner to Rumania, who re
cently arrived at Belgrade from Bu
charest.
Colonel Wells said the great bulk
Hair On Face
Xk^lliraefe
Ordinary bir growth on fnco,
neck, and arm* >OOll become coarse
and bristly when merely removed
from the warfare of the akin. The
only comuion-aenae way to remove
objectionable hair l to attack It
under the *kln. DeMlrnele, the
original sanitary liquid, doe* thin
by absorption.
Only ftnilne DeMlrnele ha* *
money-hack gnnrnntee In each
pneknge. At toilet eonnter* In
doc, fl and ff size*, or by moll
from; n* In plain wrapper on re
ceipt of price.
rppc hook with testimonial* of
r ntl. hjg-heot authorities, ex
plain* what caane* hair, why It
Inerleaaea and how DeMlrnele de
vitalise* it. mailed i plnln sealed
envelope on reqnest. DeMlrnele,
Park Ave. and 12Sth St., Mew X'ork.
r
Star Carpet Cleaning Works
Let Us Clean Your Carpets Now
General Upholstering
Awning Making
EXPERT WORIC GUARANTEED
Give Us a Trial
Joseph Coplinky
Eleventh and Walnut Streets
HARRIS BURG, PA.
Bell 398-It Dial 6051
,/
A Memorial of Beauty
Always expresses to the passerby
the loving care with which it was
selected. If you have an idea for
such a memorial, we will carry
it out to the last detail in accord
ance with your desire. We are '
at your service for monumental
work and memorials of any kind.
I. B. Dickinson
Granite, Marble, Bronze and TUc
505-13 N. THIRTEENTH ST.,
Harrisburg, Pa.
Bell -1773-11 Dial 1201
► f V VT*T W~~W f
! 28TH \ J ron / DIVISION
: \ Division/ =^—
;\ / |
► 1
► We have been able to secure a
►
: limited supply of the
Pictorial History
►
I of tlie
110 th and 112 th Regiments
►
► .
►
; Price, $2.50; by Mail, $2.60
►
► '
► '
► Call at the Business Office of the
►
; Telegraph and get a copy before
jgMkthe supply is exhausted.
1 A
WEDNESDAY EVENING.
of the Rumanian food supply, includ
ing about twenty thousand tons of
flour monthly, is furnished by the
American Food Administration. It
is sold in wholesale quantities to the
government, which attends to all de
tails of transport and distribution.
Flour trains run continually from
the ports to the interior and have the
righ-of-way over all other transport.
The supply is being well handled and
there is no longer danger of starva
tion except in isolated areas, particu
larly in the Dobrudja region, where
local transport is excessively diffi
cult.
Supplementary to the Food Admin
istration program the American Red
Cross Commission to Rumania has
already developed a nation-wide food
and clothing relief program which
aims particularly at the relief of the
destitute, the welfare of orphans, the
organization of sewing-rooms and
the general amelioration of condi
tions. This effort has had the hearty
co-operation of the Rumanian gov
ernment. From King Ferdinand and
| Queen Marie to the last clerk, the
i Rumanian people are very grateful,
; and "to be an American is to be
; honored."
I
WORKED BOTH WAYS
i A novelist said at a Bar Harbor
| tea:
"It is incredible what some wo
i men will spend to get into society.
' A western millionaire's wife came to
I New York, took a house in Fifth
j avenue and gave a ball of great
magnificence.
"When her husbar.-d totted up the
I bills he winced and said:
"My, Maria, these here bills tot up
Ito $30,000!"
| "It costs money, dearie," said the
| wife, "to get into society."
"Humph!" said the millionaire.
| "it don't seem to me that we're
| gettin' into society as much as so
'ciety is gettin' into us."—Washing-
I ton Star.
Daily Health Talks
What Is the Cause of
Backache?
BY DOCTOR CORNELL
Backache is perhaps the most
common ailment from which women
suffer. Rarely do you find anybody
free from it. Sometimes the cause
is obscure, but Dr. Pierce, of Buf
falo, N. Y., a high medical author
ity, says the cause is very often a
form of catarrh that settles in the
delicate membranes of the feminine
organs. When these organs are
inflamed, the first symptom is back
ache, accompanied by bearing-down
sensations weakness, unhealthy
discharges, irregularity, painful pe
riods, irritation, headache and a
general run-down condition. Any
woman in this condition is to be
pitied, but pity does not cure. The
trouble calls for Dr. Pierce's Favor
ite Prescription, which is a separate
and distinct medicine for women. It,
is made of roots and herbs put up
without alcohol or opiate of any
kind, for Dr. Pierce uses nothing
else in his prescription. Favorite
Prescription is a natural remedy for
women, for the vegetable growths
of which it is rpade seem to have
been intended by Nature for that
very purpose. Thousands of girls
and women, young and old, have
taken it, and thousands have writ
ten grateful letters to Dr. Pierce,
saying it made them well. In
taking Favorite Prescription it is
reassuring to know that it goes
straight to the cause of the trouble.
There is but one way to overcome
sickness, and that is to overcome the
cause. That is precisely what Fa
vorite Prescription is intended to do.
Send 10c for trial pkg. of Tablets.
Address Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo,
N. Y.
Constipated women, as well as
men, are advised by Dr. Pierce to
take his Pleasant Pellets. They are
Just splendid for costlveness.
STATE ROADS ARE
NOT BOUNDED
County Lines Have No
Significance on State
Highways
Allegheny county officials have
been Informed by Highway Com
missioner Lewis S. Sadler that when
a primary system of highways was
planned for Pennsylvania it became
I necessary immediately to wipe out
all divisional lines, such as county
I boundaries, and consider the prop-
I ositlon from the sole angle of "tho
greatest good to the gi cutest num
ber." The Allegheny county officials
had expressed the opinion that their
cciunty, with its great population
and varied industries, had not re
ceived as many miles ol primary
highway as might be possible. Tho
Highway Commissioner pointed out
that the primary road sjstern in
cludes mileage of lasting construc
tion which will give Pittsburgh and
Allegheny county 18-foot ribbons of
thdronghfare connecting them with
Erie and northeastern Pennsylvania,
the Ohio boundary, through Beaver,
Beaver Falls, New Castle and Wash
ington; the West Virginia boundary,
through Washington and Waynes
burg; the Butler-Clarion region,
tho entire Lincoln highway terri
tory through the southern tier of
Pennsylvania "cur.ties: and the cen
tral tier of Pennsylvania counties
byway of tho William Penu high
way. The primary road map shows
Pittsburgh the cen'cr of a very ex
tensive cobweb of goal roads. In
the Allegheny county delegation
were County Commissioners A. C.
Humbert, Frank J. I tarns and G.
F. Meyer, Chief Cle-lt W. S. Mc-
Clatchey, countv engineer and
others.
Commissioner Sadler advised a
delegation from Armstrong county
that many couhtles are laying out
road systems which will "tie" with
the State's primary system; and he
suggested something of this sort for
Armstrong county, which recently
voted 8 to 1 for a big bond issue
for road construction. This dele
gation included Milo Shaw and
Frank Meyers, of Apollo, and Repre
sentatives Charles F. Armstrong and
Albert E. Curry, with State Senator
W. Fred Turner. Representative
Armstrong told the Commissioner
that the Armstrong County Good
Roads Association, of which L. Todd
Owens, of Appollo, is president, and
which has a membership of 1,000,
does not favor piecemeal construc
tion—or the "here and there a strip"
construction, as Mr. Armstrong put
It, but asks that a system of roads
be laid out which will link up the
entire county. This association will
bold a meeting next Saturday.
ABLE DEFENDER
"Grandpa, did you fight in the
great war?"
"Yes, my boy."
"Did you carry a gun, grandpa?"
"No. A carried a check book and
a four-tain pen. and whenever the
chairman of a finance committee
called my name I answered, 'Here.' "
—Birmingham Age-Herald.
i C LOVER DaTE]
o
S • 1
■ I/ook for the Answer Tomorrow I
■ in The "Telegraph" ■
HAHRIBBUR.G TELEGKXPH
MAJESTIC
lgh Class Vaudeville Dotson.
c ever dancer; George Choos' musi
"it, cc " nedy • "°h. Charmed;" three
0 her acts. Also the opening chap
• of a ne w serial, "The Perils of
Thunder Mountain."
COLONIAL
To-day La Jt showing of Norma Tal
madge in "The New Moon."
Thursday, Friday and Saturday—Gc<- !
aldinc Farrar in "The Stronger
\ ow."
VICTORIA
To ..",p? y £ nd to-morrow Tom Mix in
Coming of the Law."
■MnnX Man in the Open."
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday
Bolshevism On Trial." (
REGENT
Thursday and Friday "Maggie Pep
featuring Ethel Clayton.
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
lagK comedy, "Welcome, Kittle
i* trnngxr.
Sa . t " r i da J 2"|y, 'Come On In," fea
luring Shirley Mason and Ernest
' rucx.
.. . PAXTANG
\ sudeville—Two evening shows.
To-night is the last chance to see
the opening chapter of the Majestic s
new serial, "The Perils of
the Thunder Mountain," featur-
MnjcMlc ihg Carol Haloway and An
tonio Moreno. The lineup
or Keith acts on the bill includes:
George Choos' sparkling musical com
edy. entitled, "Oh, Charmed;" Dotson,
excellent dancer; Day and Neville, in
a patter skit: Tnman and Lyons, com
et!v entertainers, and the Beaudoins,
introducing some bicycling, gymnas
tics and juggling.
Harry Beresford and Company in
the cnf -act comedy. "A Live Wire," is
the feature the last three days of the
week. The story is told among the
| picturesque Adirondack Mountains.
Grouped around this act are the Five
Partrowas, sensational gymnasts;
Beatrice Doane, dainty singing com
edienne: Harry and Emma Sharrock,
in a screaming comedy offering, and
Follettes Monkeys.
Were you among the hundreds of
I people who saw the latest Norma Tal
madge picture. "The
Hove you Seen New Moon?" If not,
the New Moon? you still have an
opportunity of see
ing this wonderful photoplay.
Suppose the United States Govern
ment vou'd issue a decree to the ef
fect that every woman between the
ages of 18 and 45 must register for
whatsoever duties the Government
would desire.
, Would you register? Norma Tal
madge wouldn't. Tt's a wonderful
picture that shows the place a pretty
woman ran take in the role of a poli
tician, if she but tries.
Geraldine Farrar, the ever-popular
star In Harrisburg. will also be shown
in a three-day stand picture entitled
"The Stronger Vow." What do you
Imagine the stronger vow means?
Have you any Idea? Get your mind
together and arrive at a conclusion,
then sec if you don't get the surprise
of yrur life wWcn you see this re
markable nieture, which shows what
really ir the stronger vow.
Can you imagine a tenderfoot whip
ping two seasoned cowboys with his
flsts if the cow-
Tenderfoot Whips boys had guns
Two Cowpuncher* on their hips?
Well, lively Tom
Mix does this in his latest picture
which is being shown at the Victoria
Theater to-day and to-morrow. It's
a great picture that everyone likes.
On Friday and Saturday, Dustin
Farnum wili be shown in "A Man In
the Open."
Who is throwing the deadly
bombs? Don't blame the honest work
ing man for these outrages against
human society. It is not his doings.
Just because he belongs to a union
that does not arouse a desire in him to
burn homes, ravage and destroy
everything In his sight. The United
States Government knows what Bol
shevism is. But do you? Whether you
do or not. see "Bolshevism On Trial"
at the Victoria Theater, Monday,
Tuesday or Wednesday of next week.
It's a wonderful picture, which shows
the deadly work of Bolshevik ma
chines and what free love has to do
with starting this wanton perpetrat
ing.
There has probably been no play of
recent years in which the element of
heart interest has
Ethel Clayton been so compelling
at the Regent In as in this romance
"Maggie Pepper" of a department
store employe, for
"Maggie Pepper," head of the silk de
partment for fifteen years, has had
nothing but commonplaces of business
in her thoughts until suddenly she be
comes obsessed with the desire to
enter society. This she does with
complete success and wins the admira
tion of a man who turns out to be the
head of the firm. He. makes "Maggie"
manager of the business, but the
scandal spectre stalks about, and to
save the situation, she resigns.
Through many trying situations
"Maggie's" love remains steadfast
and ultimately triumphs. A two-reel
Flsag comedy is an added atttraction
entitled, "Welcome, Little Stranger,'
ar.d is good for many laughs.
On Saturday only, Shirley Mason
and Ernest True wll be seen In "Come
On In."
The big hit. of the bill at the Pax
tang Park Theater, this week, is be
ing made by Miss Fre-
Tho show mont Benton and Com
nt Pnxtitng pany in the comedy
1 sketch, "Handkerchief
No 15" This is a very funny play
let and furnishes a bundle of laughs
from start to finish. Miss Benton Is a
clever comedienne, and her support
ing company is excellent in their re
3A° we*!come "addition to the bill this
wePk is an accordian player of rare
-ibilitv whose name does not appear
the urogram. Others on the park
MM worth" of special mention are:
Veronica and Hurlfalls in an acro-
J.tic novelty called "By the Sea.
Frank Moore and Kitty Sterling in
••Hits of Musical Comedy.' and The
American Beauty, the Tetrazinni
vaudeville.
WHAT IS INCONVENIENCE?
The tall bookkeeper wound
three yards of lower limb a™"™ l tb ®
leg of the table and remarked as he
gazed off into space.
"I would like to know what some
people's idea of inconvenience s. For
instance the other day a small child
helonrfng to of our neighbors
kr.-ocked at our back door.
" 'What can I do for you, little
girl?' I asked.
" 'Well,' she said, 'my papa says he
hopes it won't inconvenience you
any, but he has sent our icebox
downtown to have a new lining put
in and he wants to kr.-ow if you
will lend us your refrigerator for
three or four days until ours gets
flX '*Can you beat that?"— Pittsburgh
Leader.
the rookie
Captain (to rookie) —Here, you
come back here! Dor/t you know
better than to salute an officer with
a clgaret In your mouth? How long
have you been In the army?
Isidore —Three days. How long
have you been In?
Captain—Seventeen years.
Isidore —How do youiUke It?
stnag Shot*.
CONFERENCE PUTS
GLOOM m JAPS
Failure of Racial Clause
Causes Bitter Dis
appointment
Tokio, June 4. Failure of the
Japanese delegates to secure the in
troduction of an "equality of races"
clause in- the League of Nations cov
enant caused deep disappointment
throughout the Japanese nation and
has lead to a serious self-examina
tion on the part of the Japanese
people. The disappointment was all
the more bitter because at first a
dispatch came from Paris announce
ing the adoption of the racial clause.
Japanese who frankly discussed
the problem said they could not un
derstand on what standards Japan
was judged to be a first class power.
If it were merely because Japan was
. i strong in a naval an-d military sense,
, this was not flattering to the Japan
ese amour-propre, who would much
rather have it based on standards of
• civilization, capacity and culture. Yet
small countries like Holland and Bel
gium, they said are placed on a foot
ing equal with the United States,
France and England.
"We are keenly disappointed,"
wrote the editor of one paper. "It
is as if we had tumbled from a very
high precipice. We must look into
our hearts, examine ourselves rigid
ly and see why we are not permitted
to join the other nations of the world
on a footing of real equality."
The Osaka Mainiehi said: "The
adoption of the American amend
ment for the Monroe Doctrine and
the failure of the racial amendment
affords a most glaring contrast as
between a great success for the
i United States and a great failure for
i Japan." „
! The Tokio Asahi says, "part of the
! blame should be placed at the door
; of European and American states
men whose political conscience has
■ been so besotted that they do uot
. understand or respect the principle
I of justice and humanity except when
it is politically used to their advan
tages." __
PAXTANG PARK
THEATER
2 Performances Every Even
ing
The Fremont and Burton
Players Presenting
Handkerchief No. 15
VERONICA AND HURL
FALLS
In
By The Sea
I other High Class Acts—3
15 Cents Admission to All
Parts of the House
/Sgtuma&to WILLA-VILLA
Bell 1901—231 M United Wednesday, Jane 4, 191®. Fonnded 1871 EARL FULLERS
f FAMOUS JAZZ BAND
Direct From Rectors—June 5-6-7
-i Iww'VOTiT
NK- THE GREAT METROPOLIS
LOW RATE EXCURSION
X f j" See Broatwi}) Pennsylvania j| B I II
Station; Central Pork; lllvernlde IJJ • Ve V/
J tan Art tiallery; Fifth Avenue; I ROlTNfll
H Klluipne of tlie KreateHt city on War Tnz I
* the Ainerlean Continent. | 24 Centa I
| J Sunday, June 15 J
Direct to Pennsylvania Station, 7tii Avenue, and 32d Street
Lvs. Harrisburg .... 6.00 Lvs. Ellzabethtown ... 6.29 A.M.
! " Middletown .... 6.15 " " Mt. Joy 6.39 "
IleturninK. leaven New York f1.40 P. M,
Sec Flyers Consult Ticket Agents
PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD
I WHO IS THROWING THE DEADLY BOMBS?
Don't Blame the Honest Working Man For Bolshevism?
He may belong to a labor union, but he would not blow up your home.
If You Want to Know the Truth About It See
I BOLSHEVISM ON TRIAL
AT \T ¥pTA DI A You will find that men with money are sometimes
THE V A IV/l\ 1A back of Bolsheviki deviltry! You will find that worn-
A picture made after a en sometimes lead in these wild attacks. You will find
careful study of what 80l- that Bolshevism is based on free love as well as an at
shevism would mean in the tempt to ruin government, and free love as a policy o(
United States. any people cannot endure.
Proof to KRAMER, Inside..
K. of C. Found Jobs,
Now Hunt Workers
to Fill Vacancies
New York, June 4. —So remarkably
successful has been the Knights of
Columbus hunt for jobs through the
efforts of the 100 ex-service men be
ing paid $4 per day to scour Greater
New York for employment for their
comrades and themselves, that the
Knights have listed hundreds of jobs
for which tlicy have found no aspir
ants.
The Knights have catalogued their
work in New York as representative
of the work proceeding in all the
large cities and in hundreds of the
smaller cities, for there are, in all,
1800 Knights of Columbus employ
ment bureaus. In New York the re
sults for the past two weeks are:
Eight thousand jobs filled with
' SUMMERDALE PARK
DANCES
Hull's Orchestra (Colored)
of Columbus, Ohio,
One of the best dance and sing
ing orchestras on the road. A spe
cial treat every evening this week
] at 40c and 00c
Good car service leaves the
Square 7.45, 8.00, 8.15, 8.30 and 0.00
o'clock. Autos can bo parked
I around the pavilion.
S
'REGENT THEATER
Coolest Spot in Town
LAST SHOWINGS
CECIL B. DEMILLE'S
PrcMenta
"For Better For Worse"
Comedy -NOBODY'S BABY"
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY
"MAGGIE PEPPER"
Featuring; Clayton
Thin IN one of the mont appeal
ing Mtories ever plcturlzed and one
of Charles Klein's most successful
creations.
ADDED ATTRACTION
A 2-r*el FlngK Comedy
"Welcome Kittle Stranger"
Beautiful
Hershey Park
Now Open to the Public
For the Season
Dancing at
Beautiful Hershey Park
every Wednesday and Saturday
evening. Music by the Harrisburg
Banjo-Saxo Orchestra.
Special concert Sunday, June 8.
by the Perseverance Concert Band.
Grand concert June 15 by Prof.
Clarence Devant Royer. Violinist:
Pearle Quymby, Contralto: Eliza
beth M. Schlegalmileh, Harpist;
Anna E. Martin, Pianiste Accom
panist.
jmSTE 4, IVI9.
the Knights, I.DOO applications from ~~
ex-service men, 1,000 men placed in ___ T _ __-no
employment, 500 not yet placed ig ICED AIR K E ii> " O
positions they can or want to till,
4,276 opportunities are for types of l|l||iientlflllfteilTV
employes of special training, and the MUM M ] M I S
others are awaiting ex-service men If ILI 11.11 J V iHrbin I J
who need . tbem - , nnn theater so cool in summer
Among the positions open are 1,000 ______
for tailors. The Knights have had , rnl . v , i ACT ntiv OF
no applications from soldiers for po- LAST I,AST H
sitions as tailors, most of the men SHOWING WEEK,
engaged in this occupation being FIVE
over draft age. Two hundred Jobs are VAUDEVILLE
open to leather workers, 150 shoe- EPISODE NO. 1 ACTS
makers, 100 for locksmiths, 75 bar
bers, 250 printers, 500 carpenters and __
125 piano workers. PERI 1.8 OF FEATURING
■ THUNDER IIARRY
y/ii urn 4 wmnck T Th ~ , ,
Rail Ff! COLONIAL I nil The plnee to spend ■
If I I | LII f l mi lit .T. II I summer afternoon or evening is at
■ ■• Ibll i * IllWblll „ (heater. If you haven't tried It,
TODAY ONLY ask your neighbor who has.
NORMA :
TALMADGE Harr y c - Hun,er Sh# " s
at her best in WIU Exhibit ■
THE NEW MOON | Th ;, r f i" ar ™J ts
, , . AliL NEXT \\HL.lv
Don't miss tills feature. I
9 The Bent Ventilated Theater in The coo lc*t place to apend a
Town
H Iff a e Ai Cfj & Ullllf>CUT summer afternoon or evening I. at
WI I Pj COLONIAL] I a theater. If you haven't tried It,
• ' I■! itn 1 ? Illlyhli I ask your neighbor who hnm.
WEEK END FEATURE SHOW
Crowds always greet Miss Farrar's pictures.
GERALDINE FARRAR
In a play replete with twists and unexpected turns. .So dramatic
and so clever you will IK- more than convinced tluit
-THE STRONGER VOW
is the iK'st picture tills popular star has appeared in.
STANLEY'S I T coolest place to spend a
wv v i summer afternoon or evening Is at
V B B , fl S Bfx B A ' a theater. If yon haven't tried It,
I ask your neighbor who has.
Today and Tomorrow is Your Lost Chance to See
A remarkable story of a young tenderfoot attempting to enforce
the law among a band of desperadoes. The tenderfoot is
BLOODED TOM MIX
in Ills Is-st photoplay production, just released, entitled—
THE COMING OF THE LAW
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY
DUSTIN A MAN IN
FARNUM IN THE OPEN