14 ffisJLN3Hllp3Snwvo • MAJESTIC High Class Vaudeville Herbert i Clifton, female impersonator. "The j Female Doctor," a farce with mu sic; Jack Mcfiowjn & Co., in the j comedy ske*ch, "The New Vork-i er"; Sabina and Goodwin, in songs and nonsense: Enos Frazer, sensa tional aerialist. COLONIAL To-dav last showing of Madge Ken- I nedy in "The Wrong Door." To-morrow and Thursday Con- 1 stance Talmadge in "Happiness a la Mode." ! Friday and Saturday— The She Wolf." VICTORIA To-dav and To-morrow Only—Anita j Stewart in her latest production, j "Mary Regan." Thursday and Friday—Prtscilla Dean in "The Wild Cat of Paris." Saturdaj—William S. Hart in "The Primal Lure." REGENT To-day—John Barrymore in "The Test of Honor." _ _ To-morrow and Thursday -Dorothy j Dalton in "The Homebreaker. ' ira*NT'S 1; TODAY & TOMORROW HERBERT CLIFTON : Famous Impersonator. The New Doctor A lively musical offering. O—OTHER KEITH ACTS —2 I, ' if tin | ucnawmrgyt FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ; One of the greatest pictures ever shown "The She Wolf " v- /I REGENT Tlie Coolest Spot in Town LAST DAY jj JOHN BARRYMORE I "The Test of Honor" j Mr. Barrymore appears as a , man who sacrifices liis career for a worthless woman, but who finds happiness in the entl. TOMORROW & THURSDAY Thomas H. Ince Presents Dorothy Dalton in her latest picture "The Homebreaker" It presents Miss Dalton in a new role, that ot' a traveling j saleswoman. TODAY ONLY MADGE KENNEDY APPEARS IN " The Wrong Door" TOMORROW & THURSDAY CONSTANCE TALMAGE Jovial and versatile screen star in " Happiness a la Mode" I VICTORIA Tomorrow Only || ANITA STEWART in Leßoy Scott's Novel of Big Pleasure in New York "MARY REGAN" Story as published in Metropolitan Magazine— Her father was "Gentleman Jim" Regan, cynic and crook—her mother the refined daughter of aristo cratic parents. Special Music by Profs. Mcßride and Mcintosh. TUESDAY EVENING, I Friday and Saturday—Bryant Wash- I burn in "Venus in the East." PAXTANG PARK I Vaudeville—Two shows every even j ing. "Mary Regan." the screen adapta i tion of Leßoy Scott's famous novel, in which Anita New York's Dollar Stewart will be J Craie Is Pictured seen at the Vic toria to-day and ! to-morrow is a gripping study of the I heartless struggle for the dollar which goes on in New York, the I world's mightiest city. The profiteer lis seen sweating money from the | common citizen, and the society vul | ture is seen in evening clothes i'Ob j bing the representatives of "Big • Business" as they go out for pleas ure. in turn these criminals are i seen paying tlijeir debt to society. I John Barrymore at the Regent to day in "The Test of Honor" attract ed large crowds yes ; Bnrrymorc nt terday. In this charnt j the Regent ing photoplay Mr. Bar rymore appears as a I convict whose career is ruined by a | treacherous woman whom he loved, j Mr. Barrymore has a powerfully dru | matic role in this unusually clever I photoplay. 1 Woman's wit as a successful com batant force, against the intrigue ot j scheming vicious man is forcefully J and humorously portrayed in Thomas IH. Ince's latest photoplay, "The I Homebreaker," which comes as an I Ince-Paramount offering starring beautiful and vivacious Dorothy Dal ' ton, to the Regent for two days be ( ginning to-morrow. I The new bill that opened at the Ma- I jestic theater yesterday, is sure to please. Enos Frazer ' At the Majestic performs some daring feats on the trapeze. iSuhina and Goodwin are a clever team l who inject a lot of good comedy and I singing into the bill. Sabina is an j Italian character comedian, and Good . Attend the Mid-Summer Dance AT HERSHEY PARK Wednesday, July 23, 1919 Special Dance Procrrum by the KnlnrßiMl linnJo-Snxo Orelie*trn V J Summerdale Dances Wright's Colored Dance and Singing Orchestra COLUMBUS, OHIO Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday Evenings July 22, 24, 25 and 26th ! Admission 40c and 60c i-- - 9 • VICTORIA THURSDAY & FRIDAY PRISCILLA DEAN EMOTIONAL ACTRESS IN THE PARISIAN TIGRESS iCAFE DANSANT (Columbus Hotel) , FOUNTAIN DRINKS, ICES AND REFRESHMENTS DANCING Every Evening, 0 to 11.30 P. M. SYNCOPATED ORCHESTRA <£-■ 90 ROUND TRIP V 1 • Including War Tax • Annual Lutheran Reunion Thursday July 24 PEN-MAR PARK Meet Your Friend* cm Top of the Mountain Train No. 3 Leaves Harrisburg 7.45 A. M. Consult Ticket Agents. CUMBERLAND VALLEY RAILROAD PAXTANG PARK THEATER MATINEE AND NIGHT Daleys Tangled Army The Best of All Knockabout Acts The Valadons Racing Wire Cyclists Burke and Walsh , 1 Singing and Dancing Comedians Fay and Fox Mirth and Music Gordon and LaMar The Wise Old Owls Two Performances Nightly ADMISSION 15 CENTS FIREWORKS DISPLAY 1 THURSDAY EVENING MINERS CHARGE ELECTION FRAUD Candidates Declare They Have Evidence of Crooked Count By Associated Press. Scranton, Pa., July 22. Bitter ness is in evidence at the biennial convention of United Mine Workers of District No. 1, charges and counter charges being made. That . there will be a hard fight on the floor of the convention when the report of the tellers is presented was stated by Enoch Williams, of Taylor, candidate for the presidency 'and George Isaacs, of Wilkes-Barre, j candidate for vice-president. Messrs. i Williams and Isaacs stated that they I have obtained evidence of fraud in i the election and that they will make I a fight for justice. Mr. Williams ! charges that he received more than j 1,200 votes in the Carbondale dis | trict but that reports of the tellers : based on the returns show his total I less than 300. j During the day a telegram from j Acting President John L. Lewis, was , read in which, after saying that the i union was facing the most crucial | period in its history, he urged that : the 60,000 unorganized mine work ers in the district be brought into | the union before the expiration of i the present agreement. i win is a former member of the famous j Avon Comedy Four. "The New Doc tor" is the title of a lively farce with I music. Five people present the act, I introduce some new song numbers, and stage the act in novel fashion. Herbert Clifton, delineator of feminine •types is a big hit, and Jaek McCowan jand company in a comedy sketch en- I titled "The New Yorker," offer some -1 thing out of the ordinary along this | line of entertainment. i Hundreds of people attended the ! initial showing of "Through the Wrong Door, featur !\t tile Colonial ing Madge Kennedy at the Colonial the ; ater yesterday and every one liked it I To-morrow and Thursday, beautiful Constance Talmadge will be featured lin "Happiness a la Mode,' a clever feature which gives this versatile screen favorite plenty of rhance lor i self-expression. ""Happiness a ia i Mode" literally means happiness plus ice cream But in this picture it takes I quite a different turn. I Friday and Saturday the ( Colonial I management Is offering £ n °tber treit Mn the film entitled Dhe She Wolf. I Watch for the picture of the she wolf Islanding in the lobby. The ludicrous antics of he ' ▼ I comedians In "Doley's TangleOArmj was the chief topic of among the patrons of the lax tang j Park Theater last evening. V bile every art on the hark hUI a credible performance this particuiar j the ian^lnary, e" aV-The ed a most amusing aketchentitled A ? h re d^ern^- 8 0n muc T h h ln a ge^vay MSwASf'ir. USm in I *rT e * an^W^sfw^aftW a.™i?sV - .T™ K c^M!'V.S , a. 'SvfiTSS after the vaudeville show in the nn L-k theater is over, and an elabor ate pvrotechnical program is prom ised by the park management. RESENTED THE IMPLICATION He —Why is Adeline so angry with the photographer? She —She found a label on the baek of her picture saying. The original of this photograph is care fully preserved!" —Edinburgh Scots man. HUN BETRAYERS LISTED IN ROSTER Carelessness of Clerk on Steamer Leads to Identity By Associated Press. \cw York. July 22.—The two Ger man prisoners landed hero bythe transport Agamemnon, were listed lon the steamer's roster as Alfred | Scholz and Alvin Grothe. it was ' learned here. Scholz is said to have been a German infantry officer, who was made prisoner near St. Mihtel on September 2, 1918, and Grothe, an aviator, who was captured in the Argonne region on October 18. Washington, July 22.—A story of the betrayal of the German high command through the fforts of the American military secret service and of the organization among German officers of a vendetta aimed at the lives of the traitors was brought to light with the arrival at New York yesterday of "two German prisoners of war consigned to the director of military intelligence, Washington. D. C. According to information here, the | mysterious prisoners who landed from the Agamemnon under heavy guard, formerly were German officers of high rank, occupying positions of great responsibility under Von Hind enburg. Before the inauguration lof the American offensive in 1918, operatives of the American military intelligence corps prevailed upon them through inducements which have not been divulged, to deliver plans of the German general staff covering the proposed movements on the western front, probable lines of retreat, points at which stands would be made and other detailed ! information of inestimable value. With these plans before him. Gen eral Pershing was able to lay out his campaign with great freedom and it is believed that a result was to cut the cost of the American advance practically in half. The German officers later surren dered themselves to the American forces. Certain of their former asso ciates had become suspicious, how ever and are believd to have banded together to mete out stern justice. Utmost precautions were taken even within the allied lines to protect the informers, but as officials believed that as long as they were kept in France their lives would be in dan ger, orders were given for their transfer to this country. Preparations for the moving of the prisoners were kept a close secret and it was only through the careless ness of some clerk that they were included in the roster of the Aga memnon when she left France. The plan was to send the pris oners to some Isolated Army post where they might be given military protection for a time. Eventually, it is supposed, they would have been j permitted to "escape" to some other country, there to begin their lives I anew. Officials will not say whether this plan can be safely followed now. HAJaRISBURO Q96& TELEGRAPH GET READY FOR BIG MACK GAME Athletics Will Play the Klein Team Tomorrow at Island Park; Expect Big Crowd Baseball to-morrow. Island Park, 3.45 p. m. Klein Chocolate team vs. Phila delphia Athletics. Who said Harrisburg could not' have league baseball? If St. Swithin | and Jupiter Pluvius will p'ay their > rainy day game after 6 p. fn. to- j morrow, local fans will see base- j ball, for which they have been | longing. Manager Connie Mack, j with his regular lineup, will reach ; here at noon to-morrow. The Klein j team will arrive about 1 p. m. Baseball fans want good weather. ] That is what will happen, according J to predictions to-day. The rainy season is supposed to wind up to night. Old Sol may prove to be a I real baseball fan and get busy early. This means the grounds will be in excellent shape. Manager John Brackenridge started work this afternoon to put the diamond in condition. Interest in this game has spread to surrounding towns and there will be some crowd here. Manager Brackenridge extends an invitation to all soldiers who were in service and are in uniform to come to the game. Everything free to them. This means those still in service. The soldiers from the base hospital at Carlisle will be brought here by the Knights of Columbus. The teams will line up as follows: Athletics—Kope, left held; F. Thomas, shortstop; Walker, center field; Strunk, right field; Burns, first base; Dowd, third base; Turner, second base; McAvoy, catcher; Johnson or Rogers, pitcher. Klein Company Hunter, form erly of Elmira, center field; Crans ton, Bingliampton, second base; Wrightstono, Harrisburg, third base; Kay, Binghamton, right field; Bran non, Scranton, shortstop; Kaufman, Elmira, first base; Craig, formerly of New Tork State League, captain, stationed at Washington, left field; Trout, Toronto, catcher; Mellinger, Harrisburg, pitcher; Harned, Al bany,- pitcher. Manager Brackenridge will be on the coaching line. He will have a number of new things to offer in the way of coaching. Due to the large • guarantee asked by Manager Connie Mack, he is anxious for a record crowd. Moose to Tour Coal Fields by Automobile Members of Harrisburg Lodge No. 107, Loyal Order of Moose, in almost sixty automobiles, will leave the city on Saturday morning at 7 o'clock for I a two days' outing and fraternal visit [to the various Moose lodges in the lower anthracite coal fields. The crack Moose band under the leadership of Prof. J. L. Springer, will I accompany the delegation, which will make its first stop at Lykens. While in that borough, it will participate in the big Welcome Home celebration be ing held in that section. At 4 p. m. the band will give an open-air concert at Mlnersville. At 7 p. m. in front of the Moose home in Pottsville, will be staged one of the most elaborate entertainments that the city has witnessed in years. There will be high-class vaudeville and musical specialties. Interspersed with classical musical numbers. The night will be spent in Pottsville. and at 10 a. m. Sunday, the band will give a concert at Hamburg. At Reading at 3 p. m. the band is booked for a con cert under the auspices of the local lodge of Moose. At 7.30 p. m. Lebanon, will be favored with a short program, j after which the entire party will journey by easy stages to Harrisburg. OSTEOPATH SAYS DOCTORS TO BLAME IX FLU DEATHS Chicago, Osteopaths here laid at the feet of "medical politics and j bigorty" the responsibility for the death of thousands in the recent m : fluenza epidemic. Dr. George W. Riley, New York, challenged former officers of the American Medical As sociation, including Surgeon General Gorgas, to defend themselves, if pos sible. He said 34 per cen*t of soldiers treated by medical men died, while of 109,769 civilians trealed by osteo paths there were only 257 deaths.* DALLAS HONORS SOLDIERS I Along with many other colleges and schools throughout the country I the Cedar Lawn school, Dallas, j Texas, has set out a group of trees | in honor of the late prof. Coley, a i former principal of the school, and for the soldiers from that district who gave their lives for their coun try. according to a report to the American Forestry Association of Washington, which is making a na j tional honor roll of all such trees | and has designed a uniform marker j for them. ; SUNDAY EXCURSIONS SEASHORE ATLANTIC CITY, OCEAN CITY, SEA ISLE CITY, Wll.DWOOl) or CAPE MAY JULY 27 SPECIAL EXCLUSION TRAIN From Fare Lv. A.M. Harrisburg 12.75 4.40 Hummelstown 2.76 4.50 I Swatara 2.70 5^02 | Hershey 2.70 5.05 I Palmyra 2.60 5.12 Annville 2.50 5.22 Cleona 2.50 5.26 Lebanon 2.50 5,3s Reading Termin. (ar rive) 8.15 War Tax 8 Per Cent. Additional. RETURNING Special Train will leave Philadelphia. Reading 1 Terminal. 10.00 P. M„ same date 1 for above stations. I These special excursion tickets will be good only on date of ex- I cursion on above special train in , each direction; they will be ac ! cepted on any train, date of ex- I cursion. from Philadelphia to I destination and return to Phila | delphia. Tickets do not include transfer j through Philadelphia. Conven -1 lent transfer between Reading | Terminal and Chestnut Street Ferry by Subway trains. Children | between 5 apd 12 years of age, 1 half fare. i Philadelphia & Reading Railroad PREDICTS CHINFSE IN SHANTUNG WILL RISE AGAINST JAPS New York, July 22.—Predicting 1 that "the 36,000,000 people of Shan- | tung will never surrender to the ] Japan aggression," Dr. H. F. Kung j and T. H. Hsu, Chinese delegates from Shantung province to the Peace Conference, in a statement here declared that the boycott on Japanese goods throughout the province was the prelude to a pos sible "uprising." "Shantung has sent tens of thou sands of its citizens to Europe to help win the war," said the state ment. "Many lives were sacrificed. Now the reward for this service is to turn Shantung's economic and political rights over to Japan. What will those soldiers find when they go back to their native land? Japa -50 YOUNGSTERS LEAVE FOR CAMP Auto Trucks Carry Equipment For Big Y. M. C. A. Outing More than fifty boys of the city left this morning for Camp Shikel limy, at "Big Pond" near Shippens burg, the summer camp of the Cen tral Y. M. C. A. C. W. Miller left yesterday with a detachment to get the camp in readi ness for the boys and when they arrived to-day everything was in order. Arch H. Dinsmore, boys' work secretary, is the camp director and he will be assisted by Frank Peters. Mr. Miller will direct the athletics and Robert Leiby will be the purchasing agent. Three auto trucks carried the equipment to the camp site yester day, and two cooks also began their duties. The camp will be open from to-day until August 5. The campers who left this morn ning were: Roswell Lyon, William Brown. W. Henry Palm, Theodore Langdon, John A. Witchey, Don Niss ley, Richard Steinmetz. John P. Mc- Cullough 111, James Bowman, Har old Ross, Charles Bowers. Ernest H. Noll, Clyde Rohland, Theodore M. Shaw, Robert Ogelsby, John Pres cott, Wilbur Nissley, Frank Wallis. Edwin Downin, Gerald Fritz, W. S. Bushnell, Willi? m Keller, F. It. Leib, 11. Frank L. Ludington, Herbert Kaum, Morris Lonaker, William Harris, Wentzell Grove, John A. By rem, Lester Bonsom, George It. Seidel, Samuel Roth, Edward Stouf fer, Sidney Bogar. George Bogar, Jr., Norman Sheesley, Frederick Holmes, Hamilton John Holelitzel, John Brubaker. Ira Potter, Ross Bell, Karl Hoffsomer, H. G. Oniwake, Harry Nace, Richard Eckel3, Charles Eeligman, Daniel Bacon, Ross E. Paul. Addison Bowman, John Roth, Forrest Long, Samuel Palm and W. Van Davies. LOOKING AHEAD Mr. Lane (of the Survey)— Se rgeant, I wish to know what voca tional advantages a prisoner with ninety-nine years has. Sergeant—Oh, that's simple. He is either assigned to the band as a ] harpist or as a fireman at the powcr j house, according to his past record. —Stray Shots. A Sense of Flying Breezing along in an Atlantic-fed motor, one is impressed with the marked similarity to the sensation of mechanical flight. For it seems the wheels must leave the road and carry you Up There on the MRATIMTIC) f highway of Hawker and Alcock and Read. That's because Atlantic Gasoline is packed-to-the-doors with power and push that sweep everything before them. Power that will not be denied. Power that seeks release, like a beast ensnared. Atlantic Gasoline is the same in all seasons. It is no fair-weather fuel, merely. Once your carbureter is adjusted for the season, you need not change it —IF you use Atlantic Gasoline, and nothing else. Ask for Atlantic by name. Yes, it does make a difference. A BIG difference. THE ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY PHILADELPHIA PITTSBURGH ATLANTIC Gasoline ' , N Puts Pep in "You.r Motor nese police, Japanese miners, Japa nese enterpriess on their properties. Can we expect these men who have experienced the terrors of war on European battlefields to rest satis fied? "Japan is satisfied with the clause and will attempt to carry it out. but the Chinese people will never acquiesce. Our people have ex perienced the cruelty of the Japa nese Bushido during the capture of Kiao-Chow." The envoys said that not only was Shantung regarded as "sacred terri tory" because of the birth of Chi nese civilization there but that its people would not allow it to be domi nated by a foreign power because . of their sense of justice and desire for self-determination. URGES FOR U.S.FIGHTERS j Would Free All Except Those j Guilty of Felony; General j Pershing Makes Report Washington, July 22. —Complete j amnesty for all soldiers, sailors and marines convicted by court-martial, ' except those whose offenses would j be a felony under Federal statutes, j was proposed in a bill introduced by j Senator Chamberlain, Democrat, ! Oregon, and referred to tfye Com- j mittee on Military Affairs. "The stories coming to me," said | Senator Chamberlain, in a statement ! to the Senate, "many of them veri- j fled, of the outrages being com- | mitted against young men through the. instrumentaltiy of courts-martial are so horrible that some legislation ought to be acted upon promptly to obtain relief. "The fact that already the Clem- i ency Board has reduced the sen- ! tences in the aggregate from 28,000 years to 6,700 years is proof posi- ! tlve that the sentences were out of all proportion to the crimes com mitted. These 6,700 years ought to be wiped out or placed at an ir reducible minimum. "1 want the people to understand the terror inflicted upon our young j men by these sentences and also the 1 cruelties practiced against them. "The Spanish Inquisition was not! | a mark to some of the cruelties J | practiced against these soldiers in 1 | France." Senator Chamberlain referred to 1 ) the investigation of cruelties being j I made by a House committee and : 6aid he would discuss some cases ' of cruelty in a speech to the Senate j at a late date. It became known to-day that Gen eral Pershing had made a report to the War Department regarding charges of brutality against pris oners at the Bastlle and Pr.son Farm No. 2, in France. Secretary of War Baker sa4d no regretted he could not make the re port public immediately, but added JULY 22, 1919. he would do so as soon as he had time to read it and collect from of- I fleers now in this country informa- j tion regarding steps'taken to pun ish those responsible. General Pershing's report was said to have cited the results of the Carter's Little Liver Pills You Cannot be AA .Remedy That Constipated Makes Life and Happy JMSWbms Worth Livmg Small Pill j&aESSlgrZr SPILLS Genuine bear* algnatur* Smalt Doae El , in m AKrriS pARTER'S IRON PILLS many colorless faces but will greatly help most pale-faced people -^*m—nmr— —'i n i n ■BBMWBB—sgs—B—■—? 43* Market Street t.ieeime No* ti-35300 Specials for Wednesday, July 23,1919 Store Open All Day Thursday Sirloin, Club or Porterhouse Steak, lb., 32c Choice Chuck Roast, lb., 20c Garlic, Smoked or Fresh Sausage, lb., 22c Choice Veal Chops, lb., 30c Choice English Corned Beef, 1b.,.. 20c Sliced Liver, 3 lbs. for 15c; lb., ... 6c FRESH FISH AT ALL TIMES 1 Can Corn j All For 1 Can Peas 2 Large Cans Tomatoes j Markets in 65 Cities of 14 States Main Office. Chicago Packing Plant, Peoria, 111. AU Moat Government Inspected. All Goods Purchased Guaranteed or Money '{"funded. HAVE YOUR LAWN MOWER PUT IN FIRST CLASS SHAPE Hedge Clippers—Grass Shears—Sides ard Edge Tools Sharpened All Kinds of Machinery Repaired FEDERAL MACHINE SHOP Court and Cranberry Streets court-martial which was ordered |r. after an investigation as showing I j that official action had been taken | promptly. Four officers and five ser geants were brought before tho( i court nr>d all were said to have beenj ' punished. • v |
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers