ft, ZW GO TO The Gem Studio For All Kincls of » j!PHOTO O R A P H S I PICTURE FRAMES made to order : When you tliink of buying a CAMERA inspect !our line We can supply you at any price From £2.00 to §125.00 Films find Photo Supplies THE OHM STUDIO 730 Phila. St. OCP.Me Hotel Indiana, Pa. * — ) MOVIE DOINGS | Ip _ | NEAL HART LIVED THE LIFE HE PLAYS Neal Hart, who has the lead in the Gold Seal picture "Bill Brennan's Claim," is one of the picture players who is now reproducing for the cam era the life which he has lived In earnest for many years. Hart Is of Scotch-Irish descent and was born in New York state, but he has I Neal Hart. spent nearly all of his time in the West. He is a college-bred cowboy, having been educated in Bucknell university, Lewisburg, Pa., where he played half-back on the football team, and was chosen as one of the stars of his year. There is hardly a man in pictures who has had a more Interesting career than Neal Hart. During the Spanish-American war he served on the U. S. cruiser Panther. Later he acted as guide for the professors of the Smithsonian in- Coming- to I ndiana Pennsylvania UNITED DOCTORS SPECIALIST WILL BE AT THE New Indiana Hotel TUESDAY JUXE 26, 1917 One Day Only. Hours 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Remarkable Success of these Talented Physicians in the Treatment of Chronic Diseas OFFER THEIR SERVICES FREE OF CHARGE The United Doctors, licensed by the State of Pennsylvania are experts in the treatment of diseas of the blood, liver, stomach, intestines, skin, nerves, heart, spleen, kidneys or bladder, diabets, bed-wetting, rhe umatism, sciatica, tape worm, leg ulcers, appendicitis, gall stones, goitre, piles, etc., without operation, and are too well known in this loca lity to need further mention. Call and see them, it costs you nothing. Laboratories, Milwaukee, Wisconsin Grim Solace. "Is Bliggins an optimist?" "Yes. He's one of the kind who con vince you that everything is going to the bowwows and then tell you there is no use woirying about it."—Wash ington Star. Teeth of a Shark. A shark's teeth are movable at will and become erect at tue moment the animal is seizing its prey. stitute of Washington, D. C., dur ing the exploration of the Spanish Dig gings country In Wyoming. Hart Is really a civil engineer by pro fession and was superintendent of construction for the Thurman branch of the Delaware & Hudson railroad In the Adirondacks, with a force of 900 men under his orders. He held the same position with the Titusville Electric Traction company, at Titus ville, BEd at Keevance, 111. He spent some time In South Dako ta, where he drove the freight team from Fort Pierre to Rapid City. He punched cows for two years on the Sioux Indian reservation at the mouth of the Cheyenne river. He was foreman of 77 Ranch in Wyo ming, and manager of another ranch at Willow for many years. He has worn the insignia of city marshal in earnest at Manville, Wyo., and been deputy sheriff and brand inspector at Counerse county In the same state. One of his "jobs" was buyer and advance man to handle all the inspec tions and shipping of horses for the British government, for the use of the army. He has also seen his name on the posters of the 101 Wild West Show, touring the country as a buck ing horse rider. If there is any vari ety of Western life which Hart does not know from personal experience, it is because it exists only in the imag ination of the writers of so-called "Western" stories and pictures. He says that he went into pictures because the work is so fascinating, and he made his first hit in the Blue bird photoplay called "Love's Lariat," in which he supported Harry Carey in a role which he managed to make very funny, though there was really not so very much in it to start with. MOVIEGRAMS Ben Wilson, star of the Universal serial, "The Voice on the Wire," works without a make-up. The Universal Animated Weekly has a force of nearly two hundred camera men in all parts of the coun try. Ruth Stonehouse 1s the youngest motion picture directress in the game. She writes, directs and acts her Uni versal films. Eileen Sedgwick climbed out of a nine-story window and was snapped hanging from a rope in the Universal comedy, "The $l,OOO Drop." MOUNTAIN CLIMBING. ) " Care Should Be Taken to Minimize the Danger of Accidents. At least three-fourths of the acci dents that occur in mountaineering are the results of foolhardiness. More than half of the entire num ber of accidents happen to persons climbing without guides, some to climbers attempting a dangerous or impossible route with guides, and there are still other forms of folly. One may carelessly engage an incom petent guide or an overbold one, who will undertake an ascent under unfa vorable conditions. Eliminating these contingencies, there remain certain risks which must be taken by every climber who ascends difficult mountains. However fine the weather, there is the possibility that a sudden storm may render the descent perilous, though even then the chances are ten to one that a skillful climber with first class guides will return in safety. Furthermore, on certain mountains there are places where a party is ex posed to danger from avalanches or falling stones. The risk may often be reduced to the minimum by waiting for the best of weather or by making a very early start—All Outdoors. Our Humorists. All we cau say is that we hope any given humorist of ours will live out the greatest length of days and not stop joking before he dies. We need every moment of his threescore years and ten to keep us sane and kind, and we cannot be satisfied with a stinted measure of time for him. When he be gins unsurpassably to delight the world our national i>ride_as well as our hu- Color blindness was discovered bv the famous Dr. Priestly in 1777. !how shall we PAY FOR THE WAR? A Gosistrusiive Griiioissi on tirj Holso Revenue Bill. LOANS BETTER THAN TAXES Five Reasons Why Excessive Taxes at the Outset of War Are Disadvantage ous —Great Britain Example Worthy of Emulation—How the Taxes Should Se Apportioned. By EDWIN R. A. SELIGMAN, McVickar Professor of PoliUcal Econ omy, Columbia University. On May 23, 1917, the House of Rep resentatives passed an act "to provide revenue to defray war expenses and for other purposes." In the original bill as presented by the Committee of Ways and Means, the additional reve nue to be derived was estimated at $l. 810,420,000. The amendment to the hi come tax, which was tacked on to the bill during the discussion in the House, was expected to yield another $40,000. 000 or $50,000,000. In discussing the House bill, two problems arise: I. How much should be raised by taxation? 11. In what manner should this sum be raised? I. How Much Should Be Raised by Taxation? How was the figure of $1,800,000,000 arrived at? The answer is simple. When the Secretary of the Treasury came to estimate the additional war expenses for the year 1917-18, he calculated that they would amount to some SG,GOO,* 000,000, of which $3,000,000,000 was to be allotted to the allies, and $3,600,- 000,000 was to be utilized for the do mestic purposes. Thinking that it would be a fair proposition to divide this latter sum between loans and taxes, he concluded that the amount to be raised by taxes was $1,800,000.- 000. There are two extreme theories, each I of which may be dismissed with scant ■ courtesy. The one is that all war ex ! penditures should.be defrayed by loans, and the other is that all war expendi tures should be defrayed by taxes I Each theory is untenable. It is indeed true that the burdens of the war shoulcj be borne by the pres ent rather than the future generation; but this does not mean that they should be borne by this year's taxation. Meeting all war expenses by taxation ! makes the taxpayers in one or two } years bear the burden of benefits that ought to be distributed at least over a decade within the same generation. In the second place, when expendi tures approach the gigantic sums of ! present-day warfare, the tax-only pol icy would require more than the total surplus of social income. Were this absolutely necessary, the ensuing hav oc In the economic life of the com muni ty would have to be endured. But where the disasters are so great and at the same time so unnecessary, thy tax-only policy may be declared im practicable. Secretary McAdoo had the right in stinct and highly commendable cour age in deciding that a substantial por tion, at least, of the revenues should be derived from taxation. But when he hit upon the plan of 50-50 per cent., that is, of raising one-half of all do mestic war expenditures by taxes, the question arises whether he did not go too far. The relative proportion of loans to taxes is after all a purely business proposition. Not to rely to a large ex tent on loans at the outset of a war is a mistake. Disadvantages of Excessive Taxes. The disadvantages of excessive taxes at the outset of the war are as follows: 1. Excessive taxes on consumption will cause popular resentment 2. Excessive taxes on industry will disarrange business, damp enthusiasm and restrict the spirit of enterprise at the very time when the opposite is needed. 3. Excessive taxes on incomes will de plete the surplus available for invest ments and interfere with the placing of the enormous loans which will be neces sary in any event. 4. Excessive taxes on wealth will cause a serious diminution of the in comes which are at present largely drawn upon for the support of educa tional and philanthropic enterprises. Moreover, these sources of support would be dried up precisely at the time when the need would be greatest. 5. Excessive taxation at the outset of the war will reduce the elasticity avail able for the increasing demands that are soon to come. Great Britain's Policy. Take Great Britain as an example During the first year of the war she increased taxes only slightly, in order to keep industries going at top notch. During the second year she raised by new taxes only 9 per cent, of her war expenditures. During the third year she levied by additional taxes (over and above the pre-war. level) only slightly more than 17 per cent, of her war expenses. If we should attempt to do as much in the first year of the war as Great Britain did in the third year it would sutfice to raise by taxation $1,250,000. 000. If, in order to be absolutely on the safe side, it seemed advisable to increase the sum to $1,500,000,000, this should, in our opinion, be the maxi mum. In considering the apportionment of the extraordinary burden of taxes in war times certain scientific principles are definitely established: How Taxes Should Be Apportioned. (1) The burden of taxes must be spread as far as possible over th.> whole commrnaty so as to cause each individual to share in the sacrifices ac cording to his ability to pay and ac cording to his share iu tlie Government necessarily loi . ! y the community at large, sliou. 1 n La luce che non fallisce mai W FMm ATLANTI w dà una luce più chiara del petrolio ■ ordinario perchè è fatto meglio. ■M HHH Niente stoppini carbonizzati. NMfH Niente puzza. R|M Avrete luce o calore superiore senza spen- H H IV//■ deredi più per quello che paghereste per B JHB ■lf/JH qualità inferiore. HI I HIV/IH Chiedete 11 "Rayollght Oli" per nome. HH I Il AH Raccomandiamo l'uso della "New Perfec- H M HI IH tion Oli Cook Stove" "Perfection Smoke- HI E IIH lesa Oli Heaters" e Lampade f Lanterne HI I HI IH "Rayo". Per perfetti risultati usate H I H I [ll Ogni dove. I I II I II Ognidwe nella Pennsylvania • Dehwwa H I |ll|| ftlUl 6 chiedetelo lÉfIÉfIUHHfIV