9 SILVER JUBILEE TRAVEL PROGRAM Howe Presents Fiftieth Semi- Annual Program at Or pheum Theater Beginning the twenty-fifth year. Lyman H. Howe's travel festival "silver jubilee" program maintains tbe high standard established by these famous pictures. Scenic views of exceptional natural beauty, thrill ing trips on mountain tops and glaciers, close glimpses of a big steel the usual animated cartoons and many other features complete the Howe variety program. Opening with a visit to the Mag nolia Gardens near Charleston. S. C.. some wonderful scenic \ effects are shown. Next is a short seel giving iff screen visits with such famous dim stars as Mary Miles Minter. Bill Hart. Edith Storey. Fairbanks. Far- Pickford. Climbing the Canadian Rockies the •amerman caught some views of big REFLECT! —on the advisability of S listing your property Think it over! Con sider it carefully! And then decide. Results BACKENSTOSS REALTY CO. A Listmq Means a Sale" (Harrlsburg's Real Estate Bureau) 331 Market Street See Kough, Brightbill & Kline for REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE Bell 3902 307 Kunkel Bldg. Dial 4509 r FOR SALE Plot of land on North Thirteenth Street, running through to Linden Street and containing two frame dwellings on Thirteenth Street and two brick dwellings on Linden Street —Frontage 28 ft.; depth, 152 ft. This propery has a very promising future. Consult us about it. J. E. GIPPLE We Sell low about that real estate _ you have beei) trying to sell for Uy years? We can find a pur- L©clSo chaser, or sell any kind of m w . propertv vou may have to of or Manage {cT PROPERTY We Settle \\ e handle real estate of any Estates, Negotiate kind. 1 erhaps you have been Loanß looking for a Farm, Summer Home, a Hotel or Factory site. A .i • • n i If you wish to buy property of Anything in Keal any kind tell us what you want Estate is Our and where you want it, we will RlKinaag tl,Kl f ° r - V ° U alld bu >' at a ousiness price that will please you. Lincoln Realty Co. 1129 NORTH SEVENTH STREET Bell Phone 1617-J MB— [SERVICE ► LIST your property with hustlers. Our lists contain only properties whose selling prices arc fair to the buyer , as well as to the seller. We seek only such properties—others we do not care for. We are constantly thinking of where we can fit a purchaser to a property and a property to a purchaser. A listing with us means a sale. ► Bell Phone 353-J ► i BAUM & ROBESON ► Real Estate and General Insurance J Room 3, Russ Building ► Harrisburg, Pa. ► A SATURDAY EVENING, , ice tic-Ids and sunlight and cloud ef fects. Studies In clay of master n} u " sicians. past and present, with snatches of melodies from famous compositions by these composers, fol lowed. Chopin. Liszt. Beethoven. Verdi. Mendelssohn. Klman, Caruso, Sousa. Lauder and Cohan. were shown. The Bethlehem steel works tour was decidedly novel and educational for many persons who have never had the opportunity to see the big '""J 5 " mil's in operation. Loading blast fur naces, lifting tons of iron by mag netic cranes and similar operations were illustrated. . Th i second par' of the program opened wl' h a handcar ride down the Andes in Peru. It was followed by tarpon listing ir Florida and spoil lovers will llnd plenty of excitement watching t.iesc views. A novelty mo tion picture and animated cartoon ef fect was next, after which there vero some amusing and interesting glimpses of animal life. Mere cartoons and ife at CaniD Wohela for girls, with hun dreds of -h-mi in bathing suits doing aquatic rt mis. close the program Too ntic.i canrc 1 be said about the Howe travel festival. It is certainly one of the most interesting of film productions and by far the.must. n joy able of all CLASS TAKES DEGREE A large body of candidates had de giees conferred upon them last eve ning by Harrlsburg Lodge No. 68. In dependent Order of Odd Fellows. STUDENTS TO HEAR SERMON High School and Academy Pupils Will Attend Serv ices at St. Paul's The autumnal sermon to the stu dents of the Harrlsburg High school and the Academy will be delivered to-morrow evening at 8 o'clock by the Rev. Floyd Appleton ut St. Paul's Episcopul Church, Second and Emerald streets. These ser mons to the students of this city at the beginning of another school year have been one of the most impor tant phases in the school life of Harrlsburg's High school boys and girls. Many of the Tech students and members of the faculty will at tend the service to-morrow evening. First Tatler All material lias been turned in ' for the first issue of the Tech Tat j ler by the members of the Tatler ! Club and the first number will be a Hallowe'en issue that will be dis tributed October 30. Every one of the thirty-five members of the Tat ler Club will have a contribution in the first number of the eleventh volume. George McCahnn. reporter for the Natural History Club, reports an in teresting meeting ot' the organiza tion with Mr. Grubb yesterday. Frank Gregory was elected presi dent; Robert Keller, vice-president: Roy N. Minnlng, secretary and treasurer, and George McCahan, re porter. Guyer, Keller and Blessing are the constitution committee. On the program committee are Wash ington, McCahan, and Naylor. Mr. Grubb gave an interesting account of a trip through Yellowstone Na tional Park. Members of the club gave impromptu talks on wild birds, and then helped to arrange the curios in the case. President Wilbur Bowman gave the members of the Cartoon Club an exhibition of drawing a face on the blackboard. He explained the different ways to do it so as not to get it out of proportion. The club members then made a copy the face. Carl Beck is president of the His tory Club, being elected at the last meeting. Lee Lutz is vice-president, and Robert Longacre, secretary and treasurer. The club will discuss the biographical side of history during October and November. Wireless Working The members of the Edison Club listened to a talk by Professor Longnecker on the high tension transmission lines of the east and west. The speaker also gave some of his experiences in several of the power plants of the east. The Wireless Club now has its aerial in working order and the other instruments are installed tem porarily. DR. MARK T. HESS Eye. ear, nose and throat specialist, will open an office, Monday, Oct. 20, at the corner of Second and Pirce Streets, Steelton, Pa. MEMORIAL PARK ADDITION The Suburb Unnaralleled. —Adv. FARMS of All Kinds Sizes From 1 Acre to 430 Acres With or Without Crop, Stock and Implements H. C. FERBER 107 CHESTNUT STREET (Near Front Street) Estate to Be Closed Eleven Houses For Sale IxK-ated In Harrlsburg and MJddlctown Ay Prices Right Bell 439 Dial 467S BERGNER BUILDING We Have Many We Want Attractive Homes More Property FOR SALE To Sell City and Suburban p or a Quick Salc _ All Sizts andPricas gEE US Many on Easy Terms C. H. CORDER 1722 Green Street Bell 560-J / Bellevue Park IF, when selecting the place for the family home, you will consider the needs and comforts of the wife and family, you cannot go wrong. Let us tell you the story of Bellevue Park and the many advantages for the home seeker. To go to Belle vue, take Res- MILLER BROS. & CO. first and Mar ket streets. Locust and Court Streets HAKRI6BURG telegraph: WOMEN TO HELP FIGHT PROFITEERS Named on Committees to En force Laws Throughout London Ijoiulon, Oct. 18.—Women are to ! have an important part in enforcing the anti-profiteering act under in i structions for its enforcement is- I sued by Sir Auckland Geddes, | President of the Board of Trade. ! • Local authorities in England, ' Scotland and Wales are instructed |to appoint local committees, two | members of which must be women, i to investigate all complaints aris -1 ing from the sale at retail of the ; articles to which the antl-profiteer- I ing act may be applied, from time ! to time, by the Board of Trade. Complaints must be heard in pub- I He except in particular cases and i books or documents must be treat- I ed as confidential if the owner so desires. The committee may either dis,- iniss the complaint or if satisfied the profit is unjust, require the seller to repay the amount paid In excess. The committee also may cause the arraignment of the profi teer in court where he will be liable on conviction to a fine of not more than SI,OOO or imprisonment not exceeding three months or both. CHARACTER IN FOREHEADS According to the president and the employment manager of one of the largest industries of St. Louis, tirst impressions are a large de termining factor as to the giving of employment, but physical charac teristics and certain habits which have become stereotyped as the signs by which character and capacity may be judged are not. The re ceding or low forehead has long had a bad reputation with surface char acter judges, yet every man, if he will stop to think, will be able to call to mind individuals of strong men tality to whom nature dealt out the frontal aspect of a chimpanzee. The famous Bishop Simpson was an illus tration of what great intellect may lie behind a forehead which had a crease instead of a bulge. A low forehead may also be sipiply a ca pillary peculiarity and not a skull contour. If men were to be given or denied jobs on their frontal oc cipital shapes they might be forced to resort to the kind of philosopher forehead wigs we see in the movies. In fact, it is not the shape of the head, nor even the size of it some of the 6 3-4 people like to think, which determines mentality, but the quality of the brain inside the skull. We see many small-headed men at tain distinction, while many a megal ocephite is drawing his daily rations in a penitentiary or poorhouse. But the receding chin! Ah, there you have the sure index to a weak and vacillating character, say the surface judges. Again we have but to go over the list of those who know to discover that not all the protrud ing chinners are forceful nor all the recedes weak. St. Louis Globe- Democrat. OLD IRONSIDES How much has Holmes's "Old Ironsides" cost the country? The old frigate, which, by the way, is not mentioned by name in the poem that saved it, is to be overhauled and repaired again. This has been done so often that there must be very little of the original timber left in it. In fact, when one considers the multitudes of canes and articles of 'furniture and bric-a-brac that have been made out of the old wood that has been replaced. It becomes evi dent that the vessel has in some mysterious way shrurlk to a frag ment of its former proportions. The first repairs of importance that were found necessary were made in 1813, fifteen years after it was launched and the same length of ytime before the announcement of the intention to break It up inspired Holmes to intervene In a way more suitable for a poet than that adopted by D'An nunzlo. Following the abandonment of the plan to destroy the frigate, three years were spent in putting it into good condition, after which it saw much service, including a cruise around the world. Once more, ac cording to a writer In the Boston Transcript, it was in danger of de struction, this time through neglect. Fortunately, the Philadelphia Cen tennial suggested to the Navy De partment to rebuild it once more, and it was pretty well torn apart and "restored." In 1907 It was "re stored" again, and now the familiar process is to be repeated. New ! York Evening Post. Newsy Jottings of Theater and Screen ] f T mm Geraldine Farrar, America's most noted operatic star, plays the part of a singer while her husband, Boil Tel legen, is seen in the role of the Rus sian prince in the great production, "The World and Its Woman," which will be shown at the Regent Theater all of next week. Much interest is ORPHEUM To-day matinee and night—Lyman H. Hcwe Travel Festival. Monday night only. Oct. 20—"The Dream Girl." with Muriel Ostriche. Tuesday and Wednesday and Wednes day matinee, Oct. 21 and 22—-Hen rietta .Croßman in "The Critical Mo ment." Thursday night only. Oct. 23—'The | Old Homestead." Friday night and Saturday matinee and night. Oct. 24 and 25—Oliver Morosco offers "Please Get Mar ried." MAJESTIC High Class Vaudeville—Jean Baird and Company present "When G"!t Comes to Town"; "The Geralds, musicians who play th,rtJ 'r£°"\ mandolins at one time; three other standard Keith acts. Coming next week—One of t comedies in /vaudeville, "The ion Shop"; also Corporal BoberU, the jovial tenor who was stationed at Middletown. COLONIAL To-dav —Last showing of Bil 1i o Burke in 'Peggy." Monday. Tuesday and _\\ednesdaj Constance Talmadge in The lem peramental Wife." VICTORIA To-day—Last showings ofGeorge Walsh in "The Winning All next week—Mary B' ckfo £L ,Av„" second production from tiW studios. "The Hoodlum, a wonder ful production. REGENT To-day—Double attractian. Elsie I-er £ru'on in "A Society Exile arm Cliiirlie Chaplin in "The 1 loorwal Alt r next week— Geraldine with Lou Tellegen in The "oi ici and Its Woman." DOUBLE ATTBATT.ON HK RKGEVR The stellar double attraction, which has delighted huge crowds at the Regent Theater the past two days, will be shown for the last time, to-day. Elsie Ferguson appears in what 'has been voted here the best picture of her careen It isi the ne Artcraft production, A bociei> r* ile." Charlie Chaplin forms half of the bill, appearing in one of his funniest comedies. The t tool W Driver, from England by the scorn of society. Nora Shard, placed ' Miss Ferguson, takes up l esiden - under an assumed tiame'n \ enice. where matters finally adjurt tnem selves happily. The Pi'turcis from high life. "THE DREAM GIRI'" . A note-worthy addition to the local theatrical "eaaon is promised in the coming to Olrl"' which w?U be presented at the Ornheum Theatei on M t ?" d * y of' the sen heralded as th® H. honk Ivrics and son's offerings. J ith lyri^^ r CL°King. than twent^two in the aco !'^'^ i hip plot in addition to "■ C Dream QW" will signalize the ret,™? to the -Peaking stage of Miss Muriel." at^.ho e eh' ha s just terminated screen star, who P^ a ' p( , nlpnt in th pj p sp\eia' y Ostriche. said to intent. than ever will an he more charming dnnclng , ro]e pear in a s g companv of more than j $- rs*smt l i'pnni Jack Tern- and a host of girls j 1,,e 2 hois selected to vocalize as well a? visualize the roles portrayed. PIPASR GET MARRIED" TTverv family who has a daughtei ifX f Aneasred and whose marriage it I U rumored fa noon to take place will immediately P®P°^ n n ; ieh borhood girl hi that new farce Man" Pled" the* 'neighborhood pest Betty r led - rPfp the Ashlev bungalow o— horns into the derfttands the only cause ah^,. lr |p] i B to be married to daughter Mur el. is whose Ferdinand I Oliver t o,hls father pW e^n nroa chlng nuptials. If S!? ly F i f i n anv Question which Is not th £ r a I hv the officious and pretty Rettv 11 is because the feminine j?* Idii "aeter°" arf exc"Ue ti * "oU to Pat of the demure bride-to-be and Olfver Morosco. with his usual per sniearitv has engaged Beatrice n livit tn niay the young woman, nA ieves he has a find in the ac tress he bas assignedl to portray the ro .. , plPsse"oet y Married" is the latest fSSS" flrst" pro duced ?t the Little Theater In New York last February and so great was the demand for seats that it was re moved m the Fulton Theater a much house, to accommodate the nubile Mr. Morosco is sending a Htvn cal Morosco cast" to Present this hilarloiir work of James Cullen and s"en W at e 'the. Orpheum for n engagement of three perform nncos. cemmenclng Friday. Scats, will be on sale at the box office on j Wednesday morning. PRINCETON HAS NEW UNE-tP j 1 ul By Associated Press. Princeton, N. J., Oct. 18. Prince ton coaches planned to start the football game with Universlty of Rochester to-day with a different, team from that which narrowly es- | caped defeat last Saturday by La- . fnvette Of the eleven men who I faced the Enston team, only five I satisfied the coaches sufficiently dur- | ing the week's practice to hove first | coll on their positions and at least I six changes were expected in the makeup of the Tigers to-day. MEMORIAL PARK ADDITION ' The Suburb Unparalleled.—Adv. aroused here as Lou Tellegen appears on the screen with his famous wife lor the first time. This picture comes to Uarrisburg nft-r successful tuns in New York and Philadelphia, in the latter city, it played at the Chestnut Street Op era House. To-day is the last opportunity Har l'isburgers liave of seeing the bill at , the Majestic Theater At the Majestic for the last half of I this week. "The Ger | aids. who play thirty-four mando lins at one time are here to-day only Ihe bill throughout is exceptionally good. Clever dancing, good music | and plenty of comedy comprise the' snow. Jean Baird and Company pre : | sent "When Ella Comes to Town." a ■ I delightful comedy drama that depicts . I New- York's night life and how an couple decided to see it. i 'Next week will be a gala one at ] the Majestic. The shows for both parts of the week are hailed as win ners. For one. Corporal Roberts and company will bo here. Corporal Roberts is the wonderful tenor who was Quarantined at the Middletown barracks last year and who formed a quartet which bore his name. Har- I r.sburgers should turn out en masse land give this affable soldier and fun | maker the glad hand. | To-day is the last opportunity to see Billie Burke in "Peggy" at the Colonial Theater, jAt the Colonial This picture has . been well received | ln Hnrrishurg during its fhree-day I run on its return engagement. Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday |°' next week Constance Talmadge I will he shown in "The Tempera ' | mental Wife," her iatest starring ve hicle issued by the First National - Exhibitor's Circuit and is hailed as 1 the best picture she has placed on the • market. The picture is a scream from start to finish. It is somewhat on the order of a comedy yet the ten sion maintained makes it good enough I for the more 'than good drama. 1 The prices will not be increase! • | during the run of this picture despite I the fact it is hailed as a wonder • I film and costs much more than anv- I thing she has heretofore acconi -1 plished. "THE OLD HOMESTEAD" The seat sale fop "The Old Home stead." the famous Denman Thomp son rural comedy drama of New England life, which Augustus Pitou. Inc., will send to the Orpheuni next Thursday evening will open Tuesday. "The Old Homestead," which will be presented here by an excellent cast, headed by William Lawrence, in cludes many artists who have been identified with the piece for fifteen to twenty years. A complete new pro duction has been built and every fea ture and detail which made the suc cess of the play is duplicated in this the thirty-third annual tour. It is needless to relate the narra tive of the play as the characters and their oiiaint sayings are world re nowned The p'ay remains as of old the shrine of wholesome entertainment for fathers, mothers, and brothers. WIIK&MNTS TODAY LAST SHOWINGS JEAN BAIRD CO. "ELLA COMES TO TOWN" 4—Other Keith Acts—4 CORP. ROBERTS COMPANY COMING NEXT WEEK The likeable corporal with the excellent voice who was stationed at Middletowu during tile war. ISIS TODAY—MATINEE AND NIGHT ffiriYMANRHnWF^ VyiflF " r TRAVE -k At festival r if 25tk'Ybar-SilverJubilee Hi THRILLS IN THE V&in /CANADIAN ROCKIES '<EmL NIMBLE WATER NYMPHS fWM RETHLEHEM STEELWORKS 10—rEnu ARPON FISHING OT MATINEE PRICES Adults 25c, 35c Children 15c NIGHTS, 25c, 35c, 50c 2 Days ~%gsf Oct. 21 Matinee Wednesday PRESENTS HENRIETTA CROSMAN in a new comedy drama ifetafew BY Stanley DarK Cr Lva Denntson SUPPORTED BV AN INCOMPARABIC CAST MATINEE 25c to 51.50 NIGHTS 50c to $2.00 SEATS TODAY OCTOBER 18, 1919 SKII.I, OK THE CLAY MODELERW !< SHOWN IN MOTION PICTURES! Few people realize the remarkuble I f kill of the clay modeler. Lyman H. j Howe, however, has filmed 'some re- j markable clay modeling- for his new- ' est Travel Festival, at the Orpheum | to-day matinee and night, upon Its silver Jubilee tour. In rapid fire fashion. Mr. Howe i shows the making of clay busts of I the great musicians past and present, ! from Chopin. Liszt, Beethoven. Verdi, and Mendelssohn to Mischa Finnan. , John Philip Sousa and George M. Co-j ban, with incidental and exceedingly life-like "clays" of Sir Harry Lauder singing "1 Love a Lassie" and Ca-1 ruso doing his famous aria from i "Pagliaccl." This novelty is but one of several t dozen features on Mr. Howe's anni-j versary program, which numbers' seme thrilling tarpon fishing pictures! taken off the Florida coast; a pic-1 turesuue hand-car trip down the An des Mountains in Peru; a camera; hike o\er the Canadian Rockies: ai visit to the beautiful Magnolia Gar-! dens in South Carolina; "Water i Nyniphing." showing diving and | I swlming contests at the famous Camp' I Wohela for girls on 1-akc Sebago trc Maine: a tour of the vast Bethlehem i Pa., steel p'ants, and visits to the homes and haunts of the big motion! picture stars, including Douglas Fair-' hanks. Mary Pickford. Kdith Storev I Dustin Farnum and others. The uro gram is rounded out by a number of I trick pictures and animated cartoons I that are decidedly amusing. loon; > HENRIETTA CROSMAN At the Orpheum Theater for two I nights beginning Tuesday, Oct '1 ' Henrietta Crosman will appear iii her REGENT THEATER • ALL NEAT WEEK GERALDINE FARRAR THE WORLD AND ITS WOMAN" WITH LOU TELLEGAN Achieved a Complete Success at the Chestnut St. Opera House, Philadelphia, where it played for $2 a seat. You can ?he year 15 3 ° The biggCSt P roduction ° £ Praise from the Philadelphia Press: Elaborately mounted, Spir- Love, intrigue, jealousy, ltedly acted and unclouded in naR - inn i._ fA ; . . y issue, is "The World and its passion > hate ' not - revolution Woman"— Press. and anarchy are portrayed Farrar supported by her a plentitude of detail.— husband and an exceptional- Bulletin, ly talented cast have ample The star's acting is a de opportunity to display the light she fulfils all the re dramatic powers which have quirements of her role and made them so popular.—ln- looks the part to perfection, quirer. —North American. The music that has been arranged for the picture is de lectable in every way and was a means of enhancing the production as an absorbing entertainment.—Record. New York Symphony] ———_— ___ Walter Damrosch—Conductor Soloist Magdeleine Brard (Sensational Child Pianiste of France) Chestnut Street Auditorium November Ist, at 2.15 O'clock \ Tickets Now on Sale at C. M. SIGLER MUSIC HOUSE, 30 N. Second St. Direction of Salome Sanders m ° n g ° a t y OCT. 2o| POPULAR PRODUCTIONS (INC.) PRESENT I MURIEL OSTRICHE WITH I PAUL E. BURNS And Company of Seventy Player Typos With Boys and Girls Per- \ t sonally Selected by Miss Ostrich? to Vocalize and Visualize in Person I Uic Marked-to-the-Minute Musical Play. I THE DREAM GIRL : STORY. LYRIQS AND MUSIC BY WALTER 1 IRVING AND ARTHUR G. KING I PRINCIPAL MUSICIANS OF THE AUGMENTED ' ORCHESTRA CARRIED WITH THE COMPANY I PRICES, 50c to $2.00 SEATS NOW 1 , THURSDAY NIGHT ONLY, OCTOBER 23 ' > AUGUSTUS PITOU, INC., PRESENTS £ AMERICA'S OLDEST AND BEST PLAY 1 DENMAN THOMPSON'S THE OLD HOMESTEAD WITH ' WILLIAM LAWRENCE AS UNCLE JOSH ALL THE ORIGINAL FAMOUS FEATURES OF PAST YEARS , ' THE DOUBLE QUARTET —THE GRACE CHURCH CHOIR 1 i THE SALVATION CHOIII—THE SWANZEY BAND PRICES, 25c to SI.OO 1 latest success, "The Critical Moment** The pluy is a comedy drama in three acts, and is without question the beet vehicle Miss Crosman has had many years. She is surrounded by a I selected metropolitan cast. The scenic I investiture is said to be superb. There will be a matinee on Wednes ! day. VICTORIA TODAY I.A ST SHOWINGS GEORGE WALSH ill liis fascinating; photoplay of colli'jtp (lays, depicting tlio great est boat race ever shown in film, entitled 'THE WIN NING STROKE' A Play You Will Like. Thrills Galore
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers