14 KOREA GIVEN SELF RULE BY JAPS IS REPORT Other Reforms Announced in Imperial Rescript; Dis place Militia ft;/ Associated Press. Washington, Aug. 21.—Local self government for Korea and reforms i looking toward home rule, are an nounced in an imperial rescript is sued yesterday in Tokio and received here at the Japanese embassy. The military government has been displaced and succeeded by a civil ! one. The military gendarmerie, so much under criticism of late, is to be repeaJed by a civilian police force ; entirely under civilian control. A system of village and town munici- j pal government based on popular I suffrage also is to be undertaken. j Possibly most important of all, 1 from the Korean point of view, the 1 rescript by the emperor of Japan j provides that Koreans shall have the : same privileges and legal rights as : Japanese. j Cuiicura Soap Best for Baby! S*op rxL. Ointment A M.\. Talcum tTs\ S.vrr'--! ?3cfimailed fno t.. "Cut-iura. I*pt. K. listen . i Lumber And Service WHEN you decide to build you want to know beforehand who will fur nish the lumber. In building operation everything must be on the spot at the right time. The finest flooring in the world is of no use if, when the men come to lay it, you find it has not arrived from the mills. Our yard is centrally located in the heart of the city. We have many horses and wagons and a big stock of lumber cn hand. United Ice & Coal Co. I.umber Department | Special Reductions on LAWNMOWERS, ! WAGONS and FRUIT JARS, During Entire Month of August \\\\ \ \ | WAGONS The wagons we sell arc the **' o ° V " IUe ' * PeClal best on the market. Roller 17.00 -value, special $ 35 gXtt value, special ~0.73 ! LA .VNMOWERS 15.50 Regular Style 14-inch ,7.30 We have a large stock of to an c.., ■ * regular style and oall bearing Regular Style 16-inch fs.oo mowers that we are offering in.oo Ball Bearing 14-inch... ,$5.75 this month at exceptionally low prices. 113.00 Ball Bearing 16-inch... .(0.50 FRUIT JARS '4 pts.. reg. price doz. 11.30, now ,1.15 This is the canning season. 1 Pt., reg. price doz. 11.50, now *1.35 Everybody needs jars. This , _. , is your opportunity to get " re ®- price doz. $1.60, now $1.45 tOSTER SEAL-FAST white Glass tops for Jars. n0w....35c doz. glass Jars at an exceptionally low price. Rubber Jar rings, now 10c doz. H. J. WOLFORD 1603 NORTH HIED SI'KEET Open Evenings Hardware, Gas and Electrical Fixtures of All Kinds Purity Grade A Milk is the safe Milk for baby, especially in the Summer time. Pasteurized and tested for cleanliness and nutriment. The Name on Cap for Purity CHARLES A. HOAK Penbrook, Pa. Both Phones. THURSDAY EVENING, THE ROMANCE OF ! DIAMOND CUTTING Formerly Relieved Art Could Only Re Learned After Years of Work i It was as far back as August, 1907 , that the feasibility of diamond cut- I ting in South Africa was first demon- I strated, says a writer in the Johan j nesourg, Transvaal Times. The pio mer was A. Judlin, who, with the I tools which he had used for ten years in Paris as a diamond splitter, gave n practical demonstration plain for all i to see in a room opposite the post- I office. Messrs. Lovine Bros, and Mr. 'He Joagh also come -i o- with prae ! tical proof ihat the industry could be established with loiai la nor. The difficulty wis to get the dia monds. Geoigo Hay. then ehairman of the Roberts Victor, induced his people • to supply the new industry, until the S mine was obliged to clos< down for j '. v bile. Si the industry petered out ; because the cutters could not get ! suitable diamonds regularly at the I proper price. The diamond mines ro ; fused to sell, and the buyir.g trust ' threw the whole oi its influence in I the scale against ' Meanwhile the 20.0-9 irien and I women employed cutting South Afri i - ,n diamonds, earning wages exceed- I ing five millions yearly, have been tesidents of Europe and America. And on every occasion when we ' have demanded that the men and | women should be employed, the work I done and the money circulated in South Africa, lie have been told that t could net be done. As one writer i put it: l "With tile great majority of those engaged in the cutting trade, the profession passing from father to son, the children virtually grow up in this atmosphere, and are trained to their calling during comparatively tender years." But while commissions were report ing that any attempt to establish the diamond-cutting industry in South Africa would have disastrous results to our diamond mining, the Ameri cans, accustomed to legislate In their own interests, forced the establish ment of the cutting Industry in New Vork by means of the tariff, and soon had the satisfaction of putting up such headlines as: "New York suc ceeds Amsterdam as the gem market of the world." America is now taking 75 per cent, of the "value" of our South African output and half that "value" is nov. be ing taken HI RUUG.I stones. However, the "fairy stories." to quote Bernard Oppenheimer, to the effect that diamond cutting could not be learned except by long years of experience, and that British work men would prove incompetent, receiv ed their final answer from the dis abled soldiers and sailers at Mr. Op penheimcr's factory at Brighton. Here, as early as October, 1917, fifty legless men were employed, and Mr. Oppenheimer stated that they had "made very rapid progress at their new trade, which was simply a mat ter of application and intelligence under expert direction." The results showed thai in from three, to six months the men would be efficient in one or other of the grades of dia mond cutting. So. Mr. Oppenheimer went ahead with his scheme to es tablish at Brighton the biggest dia mond-cutting factory in the world, designated to give employment to I'OOP disabled soldiers, and in Novem ber last year he spoke positively of the success of the scheme. In the course of an interview with a representative of the London Times, Mr. Oppenheimer dealt as follows with the question of other factories and similar schemes being desirable: "i hope other merchants will follow suit. The more competition and the more factories started the better. There is no limit to the number we may train. There may hav.e to be some weeding out: but so far the most unlikely men are proving the best. Many small cutting factories have been started in London by the Belgians since the war." Regarding action on similar lines in South Africa. It is clear that the demand for. such action has become so insistent and has reached such proportions that the public will not be satisfied with any measure which does not produce results. The bill to control the industry and to insure supplies of rough diamonds to those engaged in the rutting is the first serious attempt to get over the great difficulty—the monopoly of the dia mond buying syndicate. Whether the bill will insure that the local cutters will receive their diamonds on a "London parity of price"—and not at the London price after sticking on the 10 per cent, and the freight charges—is a question which must be tested in practice. Who is going to decide the parity of price? The South African cutter's success depends up >n getting the right diamonds at the right price. The hill aims at that, but will the promise be kept to the ear and broken to the heart? Cer tainly the proposal to make all pro ducers sell 35 per cent, of the dia monds worn by all classes to the two million pounds company simplifies the position as far as that company is concerned, because the value of the balances must be declared for taxation purposes at the correspond ing value, and the government will be In the secret of the local com pany's deals. An interesting phase of the prob lem is that, whereas our 10 per cent, export duty on the roughs is esti mated to produce about a million of revenue, the Americans collected 11,115.130 duty on 7." per cent, of South Africa's output in 1917, equal to 16 V> per cent. —which the rich pay. The American duty is 10 per cent, on the rough and 2c per cent, on the cut, and cf course each cut diamond includes the value of the cutting, etc., the system operating as, roughly, 12'z per cent, in favor of the uncut stones for industry. On the 5 per cent, basis we in South Africa were re ceiving only f 100,000. These figures n ay explain the fact that to-day 70 per cent, of the members of the Cnion Parliament are pledged to sup port such an export duty as will in sure the es iblishment of a cutting industry here, and why so many fear that our present 10 per cent, is not sufficient. VITOLYN Nature's Tonic Of Herb, Put New Life nit - your weak and disordered Stomach and natural Vigor and Regularity into your Liver and Bowels. Vitolyn makes Rich Red Blood. Sold at Golden Seal, Forney, Ken nedy and all other leading druggists. STEVENS MEDICINE ().. 54S Ynmlerbllt Ave., Brooklyn, N. V. Also Manufacturers of Stevens Ca tarrh Compound, a sure preventive of Hay Fever. DON'T DESPAIR T f you are troubled with pain 9 or ches; feel tired; have headache, idigestion, insomnia; painful pass ive of urine, you will find relief in COLD MEDAL "he world's standard remedy for kidnrv, ■••or. bladder and uric acid troubles and ational Remedy of Holland einco IGCG. hroe sizes, all druggists. Guaranteed. -ook for the name Cold Medal on trcrr box and accept no imitation THE SENA TE HO TEL Will Serve a Delicious Chicken and Waffle Dinner Thursday, Aug. 21st From 5.30 to 8.00 O'clock P. M. Personal Supervision of Fred. B. Aldinger $1.50 Per Plate HJLRRISBTTRG &&&£s(. TELEGRSPH WRITER EXPLAINS JAPANESE MIND Beginning With Imitation of Foreigners, by Evolution It Is Adapted to Origination Washington "What manner of j folk are the Japanese? "What sort of gods do they wor i ship? "What kind of laws do they have? "These are a few of the ques tion the western world is asking, 'in view of the universal interest aroused in Japan's controversy with i China about the Shantung conces j sion," says a bulletin front the Na | tional Geographic Society. Byway of reply, the bulletin > quotes from a communication to i the society by Baron Kentaro Kan | eko, written before the world war ; gave rise to these controversial ! ciuestions, as follows: "The Japanese have a peculiar j character. When they come in con , tact with a foreign civilization they j always go through three stages of | evolution. First, they pass through J the stage of imitation. At this j period they imitate everything that ! comes from a foreign source, and I 1 might say that they blindly copy. | But after some years of imitation . they arrive at the stage of adapta- I tion. Then, at last, they reach the ; stage of origination. These three i stages are clearly shown by our his | tory, if we only examine into the j inner workings of the Japanese j mind. "About 1500 years ago, when we I introduced the Chinese civilization I into our country, we copied every -1 thing after Chinese fashion. At ' that time we had no National alph abet. There were some sorts of | signs to express ideas in writing, j and even these signs differed in ; different parts of the country. The J Chinese had a highly developed j type of hieroglyphics to express their ideas. Therefore, at one time | the Chinese hieroglyphics took such I a hold on the mind of the Japanese ] that we adopted them as our Xa- I tional language. j "This period might be called the I era of imitation. Fortunately, there I came a scholar—the most famous j scholar we ever had—by the name j Mabie, who returned from China in | 735 A. D. He was in China many I years for his education at Chinese | schools. When he came back he j saw what was most needed in his j native country, and he invented out I of Chinese hieroglyphics the forty ' seven characters of our alphabet, founded upon the principle of phonetic language. As you know, ] the Japanese language is phonetic, I whereas the Chinese is hieroglyphic. "We have passed through three j stages in our religion just as much as in our literature. "Buddhism was first introduced into Japan through Gorea in the j year 552 A. D. At first Buddhism was embraced by the higher claese ~ [ particularly among scholarly circles, : hut the lower classes or common j people still clung to their old faith ,of Shintoism. Those who believed ' in Buddhism went so far as to copy t the. ceremonies and ritualisms. The I doctrine of Buddhism was written j in the Chinese language, and the i believers offered their prayers in ' that tongue. "At one time Buddhism made I such a stride as to become almost I a state religion, but the common : people still opposed it. with a de termination to uphold their own | Shintoism. Consequently a most I terrible struggle began between the I two religions Buddhism in the • hands of the upper classes and j Shintoism in the hearts of the com j mon people. Such a contest as this ; blocked every step in Japan's prog | ress. but finally the statesmen and I priests began to understand thai i they no longer could force upon the ■ people a blind imitation of Bud- I dhism, and they changed their pol | icy and tried to find out some means j to meet the requirements of the j time. "They invented an ingenious \ theory of explaining and interpret- I ing the religious principle of Budd i hism. They adapted the theory of : Monotheism as well as Polytheism I by saying that there is only one ; Supreme Power, which is person i ified in the form of various gods i and goddesses, according to the dif | ferent countries and different insli | tutions. Thus they reconcile the j principle of the one Supreme Powet ' of Buddhism with the Polytheistic j theory of Shintoism "In order to convince the popular i mind with this theory, Emperor j Sliomu' patronized a movement to ! erect a large bronze statue of Dai- I butsu or Buddha at Nara, and this j statue was erected in 752 A. D., | after fourteen years in casting and I construction. | "In the beginning of the thir • teenth century there was one priest I by the name of Shinran, who is con i sidered in our religious history as a > Japanese Martin Luther. He revo lutionized the fundamental princinie of Buddhism by a new doctrine, l'or up to that time Buddhism strenu ously upheld a monastic life, and the priests were compelled to live in celibacy and abstain from eating any animal food. But this famous priest, seeing the popular mind al ready turned toward Buddhism, | started a new doctrine that a priest, | being human, is just as much sus ceptible as laymen, and abstinence from human wants is against the laws of nature; moreover, a priest must live among the people so as to understand the real nature and feel ing of man and woman: therefore a monastic life should be given up and priests (should eat animal food and get married, if they desire so :e do. From this period the progress of Buddhism with this new doctrine was wonderful and took complete hold of the popular mind." [NEWSY JOTTINGS OF THEATER AND SCREEN] ORPHKUM Saturday, matinee and night, Aug. 23. Harry Bulger in "I'omc Along." Thursday night, only, Aug. 2s, Frederick V. Bowers, in "Kiss Me Again." Friday night, only, Aug. 29, "Watch Your Step." MAJESTIC High class vaudeville. Marion Weeks, vaudeville's daintiest song bird: Holmes and LeVare, lively comedy skit; Mabel and Johnny Dare, coin ed) blackface; College Quintet, comedy variety offering, also the Ilrst episode of the greatest stunt serial ever produced "The Great Gamble." COLONIAL. To-day positively last showing of Frank Keenan in "The Master Man" To-morrow and Saturday. Virginia Pearson in "The Bishop's Emeralds," one of the most unique stories ever told. VICTORIA To-day and all this week, Mary Pick ford. America's sweetheart, in her ilrst production from her own studios, "Daddy Long Legs," adapt ed from the novel of the same name by Jean Webster. REGENT To-day. to-morrow and Saturday, the Paramount-Artcraft special. "The White Heather," and the Para mount-Flagg Comedy, "The Immcv able Guest." Monday and Tuesday. Dorothy Dalton in "Other Men's Wives." PAXTANG Vaudeville and fireworks to-day. New York's bright musical success of last season, Harry Bulger in "Come Along." which play- Harry Bulger ed the Nora Raves l ln "Come Along" theater t w en t y weeks, will be seen at the Orpheum. Saturday, matinee and night. A wonderful comedian, a bright, snappy, comedy, catchy music and a bevy of the prettiest girls the theatrical profession yields, it is claimed, go to make up the most en tertaining musical attraction on tour 'this season. The seat sale is now open. The initial episode of the greatest stunt serial ever produced will be shown at the Ma- Thc Great Gamble .iestie theater the Starts at Malestie last half of this week starting to day. It is entitled "The Great Gamble" featuring Anne Luther and Charles Hutchinson. Death-defying leaps from one airplane to another; jumping from the top of a 125-foot conning tower into a lake and other perilous situa tions are shown galore. For the per son who likes to see a real mystery storv tilted with Innumerable thrills this is it. The vaudeville bill is also excel lent. The College Quintet present | some clever harmony and comedy; Mabel and Johnny Dare offer an un usual blackface act. To-day is positively the last oppor tunity Harrisburgers have of seeing Frank Keenan. the Frank Keenan master actor in his At Colonial first production with his own company at the Colonial theater. The title of his first production is "The Master Man." Emanuel Blake was attorney general of a large state. He was also the lead er of a crooked gang of politicians. Whenever a man was elected to of fice. a Blake man got it. Yet this man I who eont rolled the destinies of a state llost his position, prestige, friends and c-nemies through a woman. It's one of I the most stirring stories told. I To-morrow and Saturday. Virginia Pearson will be shown in what is | hailed by her own company, as the j most unique picture ever produced. It 1 is entitled "The Bishop's Emeralds." For the first time in Harrisburg's motion picture history it was neces sary to stop sell- At the Victoria ing tickets for a picture, owing to the enormous crowds. This occurred at the Victoria theater, Tuesday night land last night, where Mary Piekford. I America's sweetheart is being shown iin her first photoplay from her own I studies intitied. "Daddy Long Legs. ' | This picture has drawn the largest I erowds since its start on Monday than any other motion picture that ever Iplaved here. "Daddy Long Legs" is adapted from 'the famous novel by Jean Webster of I the same name. It is hailed as the | funniest, sweetest and saddest story ever told. The first two reels of this i masterpiece are two of the funniest jrrelr ever shown in any motion pic ;ture. Women and children are urgel to 'attend the matinees In order to avoid the enormous night crowds. In addition to an excellent vaude ville show in the park theater there will he a big Fireworks To-night iireworks dis nt I'nxtung I'nrk play at Pax tang Park this evening. It Is assured by the park management that the pyrotechnical [ program will be one of the best of j , the season, and that several new fea- I tures will be added to the usual ex hibition. To-morrow will be Mum- ! mers' Day and one of the biggest j days in the history of Pg,xtang is I expected. The program of events, | for which more than a thousand i i dollars in prizes is offered, will start ! lat ft o'clock in the forenoon and ; , from then until late in the evening j stunts and contests of every"deserip- j tion will follow one another so close that the whole day and evening will I be one continuous round of fun and excitement. Nothing seems to have been overlooked by the Mummers in j their effort to have something in the ! way of rjmusement to please every I one. Plays in Masterpiece Showing at Regent Today Mabel Ballln plays the important j role in Maurice Tourneau's master- I piece, "The White Heather," which | will be shown at the Regent The ater to-day, to-morrow and Satur day. Ben Alexander, the child movie star, appears as her little son in some of the most dramatic scenes of the celebrated Drury Lane melodra matic success. Call For Troops in I Car Company Strike By Associated Press. Hammond, Ind., Aug. 20. —City and | county authorities here last night called upon Governor Goodrich at In- j dianapolis for troops to aid in cop- j ing with the situation here due to | the strike of employes of the Stand- i ard Steel Car Company who last Fri- j . day stormed the streets in the vlcin- [ ] ity of the car company in defiance of | efforts of police and deputy sheriffs I to maintain order. PLAYS IN THE MAKING EMMY WEHI.ES PAYS FOIt GOWN BY INCH Things are getting to a pretty pass when a motion picture star has to pay her dressmaker by the measure. It's like we're paying for cabbage by tile pound and steak by the ounce, but Emmy W'ehlen's latest afternoon tea gown, which she wears in "A Eavor To a Friend." was paid for by the inch. "Thread is getting so expensive. Miss Wehleil." said the seamstress to the Metro star, "that we're forced to raise our prices." "Well then," Miss Wehlen was in clined t.o laugh, "how do vou arrive at your price?" "By the inch," was the reply, "by the sewing-machine inch—three cents ™ r „ every inch of sewing on the out "lf that's the case," surmised Em my, who is partial to fancy things, "well soon have to resort to feed bags. And not tho way horses wear them. l.l'Kl*. WANTS TO FOBM HIS OWN' COMPANY "if all these other guvs are start ing their own companies, i don't see { why 1 shouldn't." Thus in Dog Latin, Luke, the fa ! ! no, i s . j' anino comedian in Fatty Ar . buckle s comedies, expressed himself | to his master, when lie arrived witli jthe rest of tlie troupe and their equip ment at the new Culver City studio last week. Fatty remonstrated. I Haven t I always been good to you nnd Paid you fifty bones a week?" I 'T"r e —.'.. a ' n t kickin' none," retort ed Luke, but you said when we came i tut here, 1 could have my own com j puny. l got a lot of doggone line ..'i-tors. And 1 m tired of saving your pictures ail the time." u i'.j't d'ye mean—saving my pic tures? naked Fatty. l ,i , s , "l e . °t of 't all was that thov ■ lamed Lukes salary to seventy-five | "ones a week and gave him a nice new burying ground for them and a fine j studded collar. He says he'll stick for the season—after that he don't know. ..... .. "bPf'trs in the next comedv, Ihe Hayseed," upon which Fattv is now at work in Culver City. This'is a i real bucolic romance of hilarious ten dencies—and the rube characters and scenes are certain to lie a wonderful [ env.romnent for the incomparable | humor of the heavyweight comedian. ! NAZIMOVA DOES j .. , "BABBIT DANCE" I Nazimova s rare talents as a dancer I |jave ample Opportunity for display in j /*he Brut, ' her own and Charles I.ryants adaptation of Maude Ful ton s great stage success. "The Brat, in which the brilliant Russian star is presented by Richard A. Row land and Maxwell W'arger, is an nounced for release September 1 and will be distributed exclusively bv Metro Pictures Corporation. "The rabbit dance" is the terpsichnr I r aa " u "L hf r performed by Nazimova ,in rlie Brat. It Is described as even more fantastic and fascinating than the sword dance, or "Dance of Death" I that Nazimova did as the Bedouin girl Hussauna. in Henry Klstemaeckor's drama, "Eye for Eye." I* or tlie rabbit dance Nazimova was clad in an ingenious rabbit cos tume of gray plush, with a babv Bunting hood, huge ears and brist ling feelers or "whiskers." she tripped tlie fantastic number to the strains of "Anitra's Dance," from tlie | "Per Gynt" Suite by Grieg, with Dvorak s "Humoresque" serving as a brief introduction. A full t.heuter orchestra especially engaged by Max well Larger, director general, olaved for the star. HELP WANTED \D FAILS LYTELL IN SEARCH FDR TYPF WANTED—Eccentric Italian gen tleman as companion for motion pic ture artist making study of Italian character. Apply in person Tuesday | between 4 and G to Bert Lytell, Winterdale Dances 13 North Market Square Open SuOirility Evo„ A up;. 23rd Ml** ltdrd'.n St ri up; Orchestra Dancing Turn., Tliur. and Sat. Even. Admission 40 and iR) tents VICTORIA To-day and All Week MARY PICKFORD America's Stvcclicart in MDOUONG LEGS The funniest, sweetest and sad dest story ever told. Tin- erowds simply roar with . luugliter when the female bully " of the John Gricr Orphanage falls down the well and when Judy Abbott, the orphan who was mothered by an ash can declares tho prune strike. Crowds Turned Away Oil Tuesday night and last night hundreds of people were turned away owing to tlie enor mous throngs that packed the theater. Come Early and Get a Seat Adults 30c Children 15c i Starts To-day First Episode of the Greatest Stunt Serial Ever Produced X THE GREAT GAMBLE) starring Anne Luther and Charles Hutchinson 1, 5 ACTS 5 KEITH VAUDEVILLE I AUGUST 21, 1919. Metre studios, corner Cuhuenga and Romaine, Hollywood. This advertisement in the Help Wanted—Male columns of the Los Angeles papers, soon after Director General Maxwell Karger announced that Bert Lytell would star for Screen Classics. Inc., in "Lombard! Ltd.," under its "fewer and better" pictures policy, resulted in an aval anche of questions, but not a solitary applicant. "No. it. isn't that I wanted to learn tlie so-called 'dialect,' nor that I eared for the rubber-stamp version of the son of sunny Italy that the average vaudevillian puts over with the aid of a pair of corduroy trous ers and a llanncl shirt." explained Mr. Lytell. "I wanted a well-hrod Italian who could go about with me for a couple of weeks—tie my companion in fact — So that I might acquire any charac teristic gesture or actions of his that would lie appropriate for Tito Lom bardi to use." if no applicants showed at the stu dio. they did accost Bert Lytell in titii ijiFn&uiAiqetji WIL(VW¥^*SNI To-tlny Lost Showing FRANK KEENAN | one of the screen's greatest in his | first production with his own ! company IHE MASTER MAN If you were Attorney General j of a Stat*' could a men 1 woman I so win you that you would he willing to give up your friends, 1 position and prestige for her ! love? Kmaiiuii Blake was placed in this pieilicamcnt. He was tho leader of a crooked clique of poli ticians. I To-morrow nml Saturday VIRGINIA PEARSON in her first production made with i her own company, entitled 'THE BISHOP'S EMERALDS' ' One of tlie most unique stories ever told on a motion picture screen. WILKSVWivJOTS Season °P ens Saturday | MATINEE AT 2:15 NIGHT AT 8:15 I With the "Come Along" Beauty Chorus and Augmented Orchestra | - n„;,, t Matinee 25c, 50c. 75c. St. oo, $1.50 r xight 50c, st.oo, $1.50, $2.00 SEATS ON SALE NOW , EXTRAORDINARY ATTRACTION REGENT THEATER TO-DAY, TO-MORROW AND SATURDAY Maurice Tourneur Presents "THE WHITE HEATHER" f Cpicture Vou never saw such scenes in your life. Two men at death B grips at the bed of the ocean, eight fathoms below the surface. The eyes of mortal man have never beheld such a scone of stag- KJ goring splendor. The imagination of humans has never conceived K such magnificence as this. It is a picture you would be everlastingly P sorry to misa Added Attraction —The Paramount-Flagg Comedy "THE IMMOVABLE GUEST" COMING MONDAY "OTHER MEN'S WIVES" featuring Dorothy Dalton NO ADVANCE IN ADMISSION 10c and 20c and War Tax other and inopportune places. Thos eager for the "posish as companiono* ranged from professors of shoeshin ink' to head waiters, but the eecen tricit.ies ran to uncropped hair am and aura of garlic, and none was on gaged. in fact Mr. I Atoll's chara<" torizntion of Tito Lombardi, as tin studio work progresses reveals itscl a poignantly human one without th< use of "tricks of acting." The would-be "companions" havi continued to trail Mr. Lytell on th streets, however, and once or twice especially since the Bolshevist out break in Italy, coppers have lookei suspiciously after the young acto PAXTANG PARK T O NIGHT GRAND FREE FIREWORKS DISPLAY TO MO It HOW MUMMERS DAY A Spectacular Pageant of Fun and Ileauty FIFTY EVENTS AND CONTESTS for which more than a SIOOO Worth of Prizes will he distributed PARK THEATER Special Matinee today nt 3 p. in. FIVE ACTS OF HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE •J PERFORMANCES NIGHTLY ADMISSION 13 CENTS