4 MOVIE TICKETS GOING RAPIDLY TO THEKIDDIES Peter Magaro and Kiwanis Club Furnish Entertainment to Children Tomorrow Tickets are being distributed to day to worthy children of the city for the special performance ar ranged for them by Peter Magaro, owner of the Regent Theater. Tho tickets will be given free to the kiddles who will attend the per formance arranged for them Thanksgiving Day at 10 o'clock. Blocks of tickets have been sent to the children of the Industrial Home and the Orphanage on the Hill. Others were sent to the Sal vation Army and other sources best acquainted with the poorer children of the city. All children holding ojie at these tickets will be admitted to the Re gent theater to-morrow morning without cost. This special treat was Itching bum] ECZEMAQN ARM In Blisters and Then Rash. Caused Disfigurement Cuticura Heals, "For several years I was troubled with eczema on my arm. At first k twas in blisters and later turned to a rash. It itched and burned aw fully and also caused disfigurement, I irri tated my arm by scrMch ing and tha skin wca sore and Inflamed. The trouble lasted about five years. "1 decided to try Cuticura. I found great relief, and after using the Cuti cura Soap and Ointment a short time I was healed." (Signed) Mir a Helen Mclntyre, Ruffsdale, Fa. Prevent further trouble by using Cuticdra for all toilet purposes. Soap 29c, Ointment 29 and 80c. Talm 24c. Sold throughout the vorld. For aample each free address: "Cuticura Lah oratoriaa. Dept. H. Ma'.dcu. Max." Soap akaraa villiaat ma. — _____^— The Monument We Erect at your direction will endure for ages. We use only the best the quarries produce, erected that they will withstand time itself. If you are planning to have a memorial placed on your plot, our services are at your command. CEMETERY I.ETTERIXG I. B. Dickinson Grnolte, Marble, Tile and Bronze 505-13 X. THIRTEENTH ST., Hnrriabnrg. I'a. SEE THE PACIFIC COAST THISWINTER-AND SEE IT ALL The climate of the Pacific slope—from British Colum bia on the North to the Mexican border on the South is mild and pleasant all winter, varying in degree of mildness as one journeys North or South. Rose and geranium weather, for which warm ocean cuiTents are re sponsible, makes it possible for the visitor —whether in Seattle, Tacoma, Portland, San Francisco, Los Angeles or San Diego—whether motor ing along the Columbia Highway or El Camino Real —to view the scenic wonders of the Far West in comfort, and to engage in all out of-door sports, as in springtime. And the scenery of the entire trans-Sierra region is so varied—with its cloud-crowned peaks, its mountain-born streams, its waterfalls, its flower-carpeted valleys and ocean beaches —that no part of it should be missed. En route visit the National Parks, National Monuments, and other winter resorts. See Hawaii, too. Ask for information about Excursion Fores to certain winter resorts.. "CalifomU for the Tourist," "Pacific Northwest," "Hawaii," and other resort booklets, on request. Let the local ticket agent help plan your trip —or apply to the nearest Consolidated Ticket Omce—or address nearest Travel Bureau, United States Railroad Administration, 646 Transportation Bldg.-Chicago. 143 Liberty St., New York City; 602Healey Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. Please indicate the places you wish to see en route. WEDNESDAY EVENING ENGLAND NEEDS CHORUS GIRLS Londou, Nov. 26.—England Is experiencing a shortage of chorus girls, according to some theatri cal agents, and stage managers. I Plenty of young -women arc still | anxious to get into the limelight, I but experienced girls are said to j be for less plentiful than they i were. One theatrical agent has j explained the situation thus: | "During the war a large nura ' ber of chorus girls, show girls, | and 'small-part ladles' left the I stage for other work. Same are remaining In It permanently;! ! others have not yet come back to the theater. 1 "Many girls, too. were married | to officers during the war, and j have now no need, or Inclination to go back to the stage. Tho lack of first-class show girls for the provincial pantomimes is bccom j lng particularly acute. It is al most Impossible to get them fa go out of London. Even salaries j of four pounds aro not tempting ! them." ; ! offered by Mr. Magaro and the Xl j wanls Club will furnish the Munlci- I pal band for tno occasion. A com mittee from the club will assist Mr. ! Magaro in caring for the kiddles : and In seeing to it that they enjoy the big time. The Regent will open to-morrow at the usual time, and patrons of ; the theater may attend the morning I performance as usual. The pro gram providing for the appearance ! of Marguerite Clark and Billy West as advertised elsewhere In this pa per will be carried out. Criticise Salvage Operations on the French Battlefields London, Eng., Nov. 26.—Civilian visitors returning from tours of the battlefields in France criticise the salvage operations still being carried on there. "Men who ought to be back at their work in England are engaged in collecting useless scrap on every battlefield under the direction of of ficers who have lost all keenness for work since the war ended a year ago," commented one returning visitor. "I spoke to two officers, each of whom told me that the value of the salvage would not compare with the money spent in these operations," said another. Others say that the French are complaining of the presence of thousands of Chinese laborers en gaged on this work laying out tennis courts or building useless army huts. Women Beat Down Prices of Milk Cherts}-, Eng., Nov. 26.—50 suc cessful was the housewives' silent strike against 2 4 cents a quart for milk here, that all the dairymen are now retailing it at 20 cents a quart. DULL, SPOTTING, SICK HEADACHE Dr. James' Headache Powders Relieve at Once—lo Cents a Package ' You take a Dr. James' Headache Powder and in just a few moments your head clears and all neuralgia and pain fades away. It's the quick est and surest relief for headache, whether dull, throbbing, splitting or nerve-racking. Send someone to the drug store and get a dime package now. Quit suffering—it's so need less. Be sure you get Dr. James' Headache Powders—then there will be no disappointment. 1 DAYLICHT SAVING MOVE IS SPREADING RAPIDLY, THROUGHOUT NATION Surveys in Sixteen States Show Progress; Campaign Will Be Extended Before Next April, Declares Head of Daylight Boosters j New York, Nov. 26.—Surveys by I Chambers of Commerce and Indus trial organizations uro In progress j In sixteen stated to ascertain public sentiment regarding a continuation i of daylight saving and the campaign j will bo extended throughout tho country before next April, according to Marcus M. Marks, president of ' the National Daylight Having Asso | ciatlon. i Tho states where the movement jis under way for permanently ex | changing "an hour of night for an ; hour of light" aro Massachusetts, j New Jersey, Delaware, Pennsyl j vuntu, Maryland, Virginia, Tennes see, Illinois, Ohio, Michigan, Wis consin, Colorado. Utah, Connecticut, \ Minnesota and Kentucky. Proponents of the idea In Mussa -1 chuscts, 2,800 manufacturers belong ing to the Associated Industries of j that state, who are making the sur i vey there, uccording to Mr. Marks, 1 reported that a bill would bo Intro duced In the next Legislature which meets In January and that "It would be supported by a majority In both j the Senate and the House." I New Y'ork state for two years has ! had a daylight saving law on its i statute books und, Mr. Marks said, any effort to repeal It would be • hopeless, without the help of legis lators from New York and Buffalo ! most of whom, he said, had been ! found In favor of the law. At pres i ent the months for daylight saving in New York conform to the old ! Federal statute, from March to Oc tober. To have the law uniform, Mr. i I Cost of Providing For Poor Up 700 P. C. in Last Seven Years I'Miludcl|illia. Nov. 26. —The cost | of providing for the poor and needy j has jumped 600 per cent In the lust i seven years, according to the annual I report of the Philadelphia Society j for Organizing Charity, read at the | annual meeting here. Lack of funds hampered the organization in its ef ! forts to extend relief and the sltua | tion became so acute last May it was ; necessary to turn a deaf ear to new j pleas for help. Denikine's Troops Get U. S. Tobacco Kkateriiuxlar. Nov. 26. Half a carload of American tobacco has just been distributed by tlio Ameri j tan Red Cross among the troops of General Denikine, which are operat ing against the Bolshevikl in South ern Russia. General Denikine, himself, received two pounds, ami the members of his staff, one pound. The general was immensely pleased I sayingfj "With a regular ration of Ameri can pipe tobacco, the Southern Rus sia forces could drive the Bolshev ists out of Moscow In short order." General Denikine places tobacco in first position as a stimulant to morale among soldiers. Most of the I American tobacco will be rolled Into I cigarettes as the ordinary Russian j soldier loves to make his own-, j When General Denikine learned j that the supply of smoking material j had arrived he said, "I should like j to buy it all but my salary is only I S6O a month and I am trying to live j within my income. It is the most j appreciated gift I have received In I years," he added, as he tucked the ' tobacco away in his saddlebags. Marks said, an amendment will be Introduced changing the time from the last Sunday In April to the last Sunday In September, The New York Hoard of Aldermen's recent action In pusslng a dHylight saving ordinance, It was said, had Impelled other cities to take similar steps, "Fifteen of the eighteen mayors of Connecticut," continued Mr. Marks, "recently voted unanimously at a conference In New Haven to Initiate campaigns In their cities at once for duylight saving. Hartford previously had biased the trail by adopting an ordinance which will be In effect the last Hunday of April next year, Hlalnfield, N. J„ has taken similar action. In Baltimore, Mii„ a referendum vote showed that live out of six were In favor of it. Cincinnati has adopted It, so has St. Joseph, Mich., and we are getting encouraging reports from lloboken, Jersey City, Puterson, Trenton and Camden, N. J,, Wilmington, Del., Philadelphia, Bcranton nnd Pitts burgh, Pa., Richmond, Va., Chat tanooga and Memphis, Tenn.. Chi cago, Minneapolis, Ht. Paul, Denver, Salt I-uko City, Milwaukee, Louis ville and Lexington, Ky. "It was the Intention of the Na tional Daylight Saving Association, following the repeal of the Federal law," said Mr. Marks, "to confine its efforts this yeur to the Eastern time zone, but so many cities and towns elsewhere have registered such an emphatic protest against the repeal that we are Including the entire country' In our movement." New British Airship, Larger Than the P-34, Will Soon Be Complete By A imitated I'reii. Hnrrnn-ln Fume.*, Nov. 26. —Tho alrnhlp R-80, which In of a larger deiilgn than the P-34 which recently visited the United Htates. Is expected to be completed and handed over to the Admiralty here by Christ- I mas. Airship construction, under or ders of the government, has been sus pended here, but as the It-80 was 95 percent finished, it was decided to complete her. The airship embodies the latest Im provements in British design. Her hull Is of stream-line shape. She is 535 feet long, 70 feet wide and has II an overall height of 85 feet. Her I lifting power ttotal) is 38 tons and L t( ur engines, each of 240 horse power, t I will give her a maximum speed of 65 _ I miles per hour. A crew of 15 or 16 , will be able to navigate tho ship. Salaried Men in i i England Organizing I j London, Nov. 26—"The man In | the black coat," as the professional . salaried man is designated by pro . , motors of the organization, is to have . ,a federation designed to insure him ' j increased income and other benefits L which other workers have gained , | through their trade unions. A meet -5 i ing was held here the other day to , organize salaried men, k Industrial workers have received ■wage increases amounting to 130 1 ° r per cent during! the war while the cost of living during that time has been Increased 128 per . I £, ent " ft p cor ding to organizers of the Pro.cssional Workers' Federation > i sponsoring the new union. But for . the man on a moderate salary, it is i contended, there has hecn no pro > portionate salary raise. Increases for this class of worker has aver aged less than thirty per cent., for the five-year period. Secretary Glass to Act on Budget Committee Washington, Nov. 26—It is learn ed that immediately after Secretary of the Treasury Carter Glass takes his seat as a member of the United States Senate to succeed the late Thomas 8. Martin, of Virginia, he will be named a member of the Senate Select Committee on the Budget. To offset the selection of Mr. Glass, who is a Democrat, Sena tor William S. Kenyon. a Republi can, of lowa, will also be appointed a member of the committee. The selection of Secretary Gloss and Sehator Kenyon will add to the list of legislators Senator McCormick has nssembled to serve on his com mittee. Chest of Roman Coins Delivered to Red Cross Laon, France, Nov, 26,—A chest! of Roman coins, buried in the face' of Invasion ,<nery hundred years' since EOO years A. D., is now pro viding comforts for the refugees around the little French village of Chnrmes In the Aisne district. The chest, containing the wealth! of an ancient Roman nobleman wasj dug up this week near the ruins of' the chateau of Major Titus Leroux, of Charmes, head of one of the old- 1 est families of France. It is the last I heirloom of the aged officer and his wife, and they have willingly cast It I Into the Red Cross fund to aid the' people of their district. German Monument For Allied Memorial' Tarnopol, Roland. Nov. 26. The German monument erected in honor of the then German Emperor's visit to Tarnopol In 1917 has been turned Into an Allied memorial. During the occupation by the Ger man troops the huge monument was erected, bearing the Inscription, "Wil llnm IT. Emperor of Germany and King of Trussia. stopped here on July! 28. 1917." It was a division of Pollsh-Ameri cr.ns members of the French army. ; that took the town for the Poles, and they simply added this .inscription, "and July 4, IPIO, the Sixth Division of American Chasseurs entered the tewn. They stayed." Would Give Nobel Peace Prize to Grey ! 1 ! [ Christ Innln. Nov. 26. —Suggestion J that the Nobel Peace Prize shall be j I given to Viscount Grey, the British | I Ambassador in Washington, is made ; by the Mercantile Shipping Gazette. ' | The paper declares that Lord Grey I ' has done more for the world's pence ; | than any other man now living, and | more than any other who has pre viously had the Nobel Prize, ex- Roosevelt lne.lude.cL WSQBG& TELEGRAPH DID BUSINESS WITH MELONE Martens Admits He Received SI,OOO From Collector of Port of New York New York, Nov-. Bth—Ludwlg Ci Ai Ki Martens, who ealls himself umbassador of the Soviet govern ment of Russia, edmltted late yes terday that he paid Dudley Field Malone, former collector of the -port of New York, $1,600 on September 13 "for help In a commercial trans action:' He told the Joint legisla tive committee investigating radical activities that it was for advice In trying to arrange a $9,500,00 ship ment of boots, meats and chemicals to be paid for on delivery In Petro grad. Martens denied he knew that Ma lone had formed or WRS forming a corporation to do business with So viet Russia, and declared that his | "embassy" was not specifically inter -1 ested In such an organization, lie I did not know that Malone "had been 1 speaking In behalf of the Soviet gov [ eminent of Russia," either before I or after he paid hint $1,000,/ lie saiil, | and denied that he and Malone had I spoken from the sumo platform In ! Madison Square Garden her e last i June. I Malone was not regular counsel for I the Soviet bureau, Martens said, but | was employed solely an special agent in plans to buy and ship to Russia $5,000,000 worth of boots and $4,- 600,000 worth of other supplies. Martens asserted in reply to ques tions volleyed at him by Attorney General Newton that 25 per cent of his activities are devoted to propa ganda for recognition of the Rus sian Soviet government by the United States, or "publicity work to tm press upon the American people that j the Russian Soviet form of govern ment is desirable." Move to Admit Women to Oxford I.SBAUH, NOV. 26,—1t is announced that an efTort will he made to bring about the admission of women to tho University of Oxford. I A New Piano or Victrola j I Will Bring a Merrier and Happier Christmas 3 | For nothing- takes the place of music at Christmas, and the home that has been silent, musi- 3 p cally, and receives its first piano or Victrola at this joyful season of the year awakens to a new 2 life of supreme happiness and perfect contentment. Nothing' quite approaches a musical instru- M jy ment as a gift. £ < C. M. Siller, Inc., is Prepared to 1 j Supply the Best-—The Victrola ( C. M. Sigler, Inc., sells the Victrola exclusively because it is the world's undisputed standard, S j* and as the result of months of preparation offers the largest line of Victrolas and Victor Records ( to be found in Harrisburg. jC | Buy Your Victrola Now-—Don't Delay H g E Every Christmas sees a shortage of musical instruments. This year the demand is greater $ ft than ever before, and the production is far below normal. The shortage will be larger than ever. u- E You should buy NOW. No matter what style Victrola you may desire, you'll find it in our holi- .ft ft day stock. ' # E Remember that only the Victrola plays the famous Victor Red-Seal Records perfectly be- Is ft cause its durability and tone quality are absolutely unequaled. | Victrolas—-$25.00 to $430.00 | I 1 The Famous Steinway and Other Pianos | R The C. M. Sigler, Inc., Store is the Harris- Other pianos famed for their tone and de- S burg home of the celebrated Steinway Piano pendability are the Christman, at $450 up— W. —the standard of piano excellence. What a Artemis Player, $550. The Sigler—a good Christmas for the recipient of the Steinway! piano at a moderate price, $425 —Sigler Play- 2 E Prices of the Steinway uprights start at $750, crs,"s67s and S7OO. The Washburn at S4OO, ft and of the grands at SI2OO. and the Schirmer Player at $550. : 3i ff ' Each of these pianos, and players is a leader in its class ft || jP jM l|| ° Ur onven ' ent terms of payment. i j jjfjj C. M. SIGLER, Inc. j fy SfggK 'he Steinway j NEED SHOWDOWN ON COAL PROFITS McAdoo Makes Reply to the Operators For Alleged Criticism Nerr York, Nov ; 3fl. —A showdown oil profits made by bituminous oper ators Is needed for the American people to form a Just opinion on the coal situation, William Ci McAdoo, former Secretary of the. Treasury, declared late yesterday. Mr, McAdoo's statement was made after he had been read an Associ ated Press dispatch from Washing ton giving the substance of the open telegram addressed to him by the operators, criticising him for "in jecting" himsef into the wage con troversy, Mr. McAdoo had not re ceived the telegram itself. "The question is whether or not the coal operators are making ex cessive profits," said his statement. "Their Income tax returns filed under osth will give an understanding of the truth and the facts. Xf they are making excessive profits, as they were clearly making in 1917, then any Increase of wages that may he ; made to the miners should not be j passed on to the public in the form of increased prices for bituminous coal. A shutdown will enable the American people to form a Just opinion." virju j Zemo the Clean, Antiseptic ; Liquid, Gives Prompt Relief There is one sale, dependable treat ment that relieves itching torture and that cleanses and soothes the skin. Ask any druggist for a 35c or $1 bottle of Zemo and apply it as directed. Soon you will find that irritations, pimples, blackheads, eczema, blotches,ringwonn and similar skin troubles will disappear. Zemo, the penetrating, satisfying liquid, is all that c needed, for it banishes most skin eruptions, makes the skin soft, smooth and healthy. The E. W. Rose Co., Cleveland. (X NOVEMBER 26^1919: STEAMERS COIjUDE By Associated Press. Piillmlclpliia. Nov. 26. - The steamer Nameuug while bound down the Delaware river yesterday for a cargo at Qlrard Point collided with the steamer Edenton, which was at ancjior: Both vessels are reported to have sustained daniuge to bows: What we say it is—it IS . K 1 Gruen Watches ji | For Christmas j y A lasting gift which our own policy which * carries with it all the is based on our slogan, j ear marks of high qual- What we say it is— i . ity, is the Gruen it IS. A, Watch. Just one month until Ever since 1874, Christmas. It is better ! when the Gruen Watch to select your Gruen < Company was founded Watch now from our by Dietrich Gruen, one complete assortments. * A * policy has been pur sued by that concern— Gruen Bracelet ** namely; To make each Watches for Ladies, / Gruen perfect $25 to $150; and Men's d ► and to create a new Watches, $25 to S2O0 — 4 friend. many of them have the * That policy fits in luminous dials, exactly with our busi- Hundreds of other ness policy. articles which easily A We sell Gruen solve your most dif- Watches because they ficult gift problems i back up to the letter await you here. LPSLR JEWELER 408 MARKET STREET The steamer Sangamon, Philadel phia for Novorosslsk. Russia, with a cargo of locomttvcs and ammuni tion. returned to the Delaware Breakwartcr to-day with one blade of her propeller gone: She will re turn here for repairs: Use McNeil's Pain Exterminator —Ad
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers