4 i ' NOW FOR OUR FIRST MONDAY MILLINERY SALE Presenting the Most Stylish Shapes of This Season in Exceedingly Nice Qualities and At Prices About One-Half Actual Values For the One Day, Monday Only / 1 1 e ■» Lot No. 1 Lot No. 3 Silk, Satin. Crepe, Poplin and £?£ Barnyard Straw Hats, actual small and medium shapes, all col values $1 to $ 1.50. ors; actual value $1.50 and $2.00, 48c • P™e day 79c ' ' = ' Lot No. 2 Lot No. 4 Milan Hemps In distinctive Plain Hemp, latest shapes md shapes and colors, actual values all colors, actual value $1.50. $2.00 to $3.00. Monday CCp Monday Price, Price, r New Millinery Trimmings and Fancies Newest Flower, Fruit, Wreaths and other Trimmings, lc to 25c Department Store Where Every Day Is Bargain Day p 215 Market St Opp. Court House | in i J ■AMUSEMENTS * 1 ~~ r MAJESTIC > Champlin Stock Co. will present this j afternoon, "He Fell in Love With His Wife." . To-night, "The tihost Breaker." <» Monday afternoon at 2.30, Twilight i Sleep Lecture to women only. £ Tuesday evening, Raymond Hitch cock'in "The Beauty Shop." " Friday afternoon and evening, Feb " ruarv 26, "Uncle Tom's Cabin " • Saturday afternoon and eveuiug, Al • Wilson in "When OKI New York was Dutch." ORPHEUM " Erery afternoon and evening, high . class vaudeville. COLONIAL j Every afternoon and evening, vaudo • ville and pictures. * " • VICTORIA Motion Pictures. PHOTOPLAY Motion Pictures. REGENT Motion Pictures V. ,/ Chas. K. Champlin To-night the Olias. K. Champlin Com pany will present as the tiual plav in "this city the great eomedy success which rau all season at the Lyceum theatre. Xew York, and in which H. B. -Warner played the leading role for the entire year. "The Ghost Breaker'" is She play. It is a great steam roller for the blues and a knockout for the glooms. Don't miss this great comedy, a score of laughs every minute. Adv* "Twilight Sleep" Mrs. Frauds X. Carmody, who Mon day afternoon at 2.13 o'clock at the "Majestic theare will deliver a lecture on '"Twilight Sleep" to women only, has mau\ distinctions besides being the —mother of little Charlemagne Carmody, J tho little American "Twilight Sleep" • baby w'ho was born at Freiburg, tier -' many, last August. Recently she became I-one of the charter members of the • "Twilight Sleep Association," together with Mrs. 0.-nie Wilson, Mrs. John i Jacob Astor. Mrs. Alida ('hauler Em •lueu and other well-known and public drited women. • One of the principal objects of this ' association is to raise funds for the en dowment and maintenance of a hospital •and training school where prospective 'mothers may re.'eive the benellts of the j f ailig'ht Sleep" treatment aud where ' American physicians may be trained in „tiio proper use of the drug "Seopo ■tainin," which induces "Twilight *£leep." Mrs. Carmody, as well as all .the other speakers lecturing under the Jauypices of the association, give their ,time to this work without any conipen •sa'tion whatsoever, and turn over al! received by them for their lec itures to the treasury of the organiza tion. Adv* Raymond Hitchcock • Talk about the aerial stunt of Hying •■upside dowu, Raymond Hitchcock loops !the laughing loops so many times dur ing the course of his performance in O'The 'Beauty Shop" that his audience Jgets dizzy with delight and stays so ijiutil the final fall of t'he curtain. In fact, "The Beanity Shop," made > order for Hitchcock by Messrs. hanning Pollock, Rennold Wolf aud {Charles J. G«*best, provides the 'best ♦fun cf any play that comedian has had TSn several seasons, and that this is so iproved by the crowds that have been in evidence at every performance of "this laughable and whistly musical com edy, which has been overtaxing the seat ing capacity of tho Astor theatre, !New York, for many months, in fact, nearly • half a year. The famous Broadway cast, which will positively appear here, is one of the jnost exceptional merit, including the following well-known artists: (Marion Sunshine, Anna Orr, Ohristihe Man- Jasarian, Gertrude Webster, Margaret Poir. Agnes Giidea, Gertrude Barnard, 1 Gertrude Aldrich, Karl Benham, Joseph Herbert. Jr., George 13. 'Mack. Edward 'Metcalfe, Oeorge Komaine and Fred; Mason Emerson. Adv.* AL H. Wilson During Al. H. Wilson's career as a' star he has coni'j>osed and, with his won derful singing voive, made popular many entrancing songs—delightful love songs and lullaby s that carry you back to other days. It is dmvbtful, however, if any will enjoy a wider popularity than "When 1 First Met You,'' "Moon, Moon, Moon,'' ''When the Roses in Springißloom Again'' aud "iMr. Bear," which will be heard for the first time in this city at the Majestic Saturday matinee and night, when Mr. Wilson will appear in "When OM New York; was Dutch."' Adv.* At the Orpheuin To-night witnesses the finale of a bill at the Orpheuin that was generally conceded to be one of the very best the popular Locust street playhouse j has seen. It includes the Four Marx j Brothers in "'Home Again,'' tthe best; "big" act in vaudeville, also Van and Schenck, the popular trillers, and a wealth of other clever attra-ctions. The j roster for nest week will be headed by j the most unusual grand ojera produc-' tion ever offered in vaudeville. It is known as the Omar Opera Company j and comprises a company of some i twelve or more 'singers, ail of whom j have achieved laureis in grand opera in ! this ■country and abroad. This com- ! [any will be under the personal direc tion of the well-known European Grand 1 Opera conductor, Mr. Rmil Volpich. I >ome of the characters in tihe various | scenes will be assumed by-such artists as Mr. M. Brasilow, the Russian basso,' from the Royal Opera house in War saw; Bessie Mitchell, of t'he Convent Garden, Londou; Clara Druar. famous! contralto from the Comic Opera, I'aris; | Kathleen Xordy, from the •Stockholm I Opera Company; H. C. Svlvers, well | known tenor from the Winter Garden, Berlin; K lea no re Volpich, lyric soprano J of the Royal Opera Company, -Budapest; 1 !M. S. Rossini, baritoue, from t'he San j Carlo opera iu Xapoli, and five or six others, each one of whom is strongly identified wit'h some of the leading opera companies of Europe. The scenes and selections of the pro duction are as follows: First, An ori ental fantasy called "The Sultan's Pal- ! ace;" second, tower scene of the pop-: ular Italian opera, "II Trovatore;'' 1 third, final scene of Verdi's immortal; opera, " Bigoletto." The fourth scene j is laid iu the Sultan's palace and al! I the principals and chorus are called in. j Scenically and vocally the Omar Opera 1 Company should create a sensation. Adv.* At the Colonial The Em'pire comedy trio of harinon- j isifrs and comedians and three other in teresting vaudeville hits that round out ! a | leading entertainment will appear at that playhouse for their last engage- 1 ments to-day. An unusual musical ! comedy extravaganza, entitled \'(Fun in Poppyland,'' with pretty girls, clev-I er comedians, delightful scenery and j pretty cosumes will head off the new ! bill that comes to the Busy Corner on 1 Monday. Other important names' of the new show will include Tops Topsy j and Tope, Dillion Shallard and company , and John F. Clark. Adv.* j Regent Another successful week of success-1 ful film plays at this theatre will close to-day with the presentation of "The; Girl I Left Behind Me," and will pass; into history and bring increased repu-! tation to the Regent as the house of j high class film plays. The program! of the past week h«s been a strong ono j indeed, but if reputation and advance! press notes mean anything the program | for the coming week will be an im- j provanient of all that has preceded it. —Adv. * A Feminine Failing. "Sometime* m.v little girl says she Is eight; at other times she says she Is si*. 1 don't understand it; there must be something wrong with her." "I wouldn't worry. 1 know plenty of older females who can do no bet ter."—Kansas City Journal. v Disappointed. She—l'm disappointed In Jack; he's fried to put his arm around my waist He—And he couldn't get it round?— Baltimore Sua. ■ HARRISBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT, SATURDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 20. 1915.' RADICAL CHANCE 111 FOOT AND MOUTH QUARANTINE Restricted Area Much Enlarged By the Secretary of Agriculture to Protect Other Sections From Infected Ship ments of live Stock Washington, D. C., Feb. 19.—Two orders just signed by the Secretary of Agriculture make radical changes in the quarantine regulations' for the foot and mouth disease. All the territory east of the Mississippi and north of Tennessee is now included in the quar antined area and 110 shipments of live stock, except l'or the purpose of imme diate slaughter, will be permitted from this area to the south or west. Stock owners, however, in the States of Vir ginia, West Virginia, Vermont, Maine and the District of Columbia, may ship out their stock upon affidavit that it has been on their farms for a certain length of time and has not been exposed to any risk of contagion. This step the authorities believe to be necessary for the protection of the South, Southwest and West, which have not jis yet been affected by the disease. The recent discovery of a few cases where cattle, shipped froan areas where the disease had existed, carried it to previously uninfected sections, such as four counties in Kansas, convinced the department that no precautions will make such shipments absolutely- safe. The new measure, it is said, should con fine the disease to the regions in which it has already made its &p]>earanee and in which the work of eradicatijit} it will be pushed as before. All of the slaughtering centers are within this area and very few shipments (or im mediate slaughter are expected to be made out of it. Under the new regulations territory within the area now quarantined, which was formerly free, is designated as re stricted territory. In this restricted ter ritory live stock may be moved freely to other points within the same ter ritory, but cannot pass beyond the lim its of the quarantined area, except for immediate slaughter. The regulations governing the area known respectively as closed, exposed and modified, remain practically the same as before. From the modified area live stock can be shipped for immediate slaughter to points within the quarantined area and from exposed arei as well, after a prelimi nary inspection and certification by fed eral authorities. Xo stock may be ship ped out of the closed area for any pur pose and cau only be shipped into it for immediate slaughter. Immediate slaughter is now defined as slaughter within forty-eight hours after the stock arrives at the abattoir. Xo reshipimeuts from abattoirs are now permitted. rhese regulations have been made necessary by the fact that in a number of instances cattle ostensibly intended for immediate slaughter at one abattoir have been held there for sev eral days and then reshippod to other yards where they have been allowed to remain until the disease had actuallv broken out. These regulations are embodied in the order known as Bureau of Animal Industry order Xo. 234. which defines and classifies the various areas in all the States affected. Another order— Bureau of Animal Industry order No. -33, requires that on and after Feb ruary 17. 1915, all live stock,, unless intended for immediate slaughter, shall be transported only in railroa-d cars which have been cleaned and disinfect ed. This applies to the whole United States. A Personal Statement There are so-called "honey and tar" preparations that cost the dealer half as much but sell at the same price 23 the original and genuine Foley 's Honev and Tar Compound. We never offe» these imitations and substitutes. We know you will buy Foley's whenever you need a cough syrup if you once use it. People come long distances for the true FOLEY'S—over thirty vears the leading remedy for coughs, colds, croup, whooping cough, bronchial and lagrippe coughs.—George A. Gorgas 16 North Third street, P. ft. R. Station.— Adv. The Wedding. "Tills pour sir! was simply sold to si rich husband." "Ob. yon'iv mistaken. I was there and saw lie; i'.ither stive her away."— Baltimore Ainei i-an. Few persons live todVy. hut are pre paritc t > dn •■•o f.mmrrow.—Diderot. STEAMSHIPS, c ToSr lauil lag iiaaxeotirro at tlir dork Iu Bermuda without tranafer by tender. WEST INDIES S. S. Guiana aud other Steamers every fortnight for St. Thomas, St. Croix, St. Kitts, Antiqua, Guadeloupe, Dominica, Martinique, St. Lucia, Bar bados, and Demerara. l or full Information apply to A. R. OITfciKBIIIDGI2 A CO., Atrnti Quebec S. S. Co., l-td., at) Broadway, .Vin York, or any Ticket Agent. New York to HAVANA *S3ST Sailings Thursdays and Saturdays. NASSAU Weekly service from New York and 11 direct connections with Havana. MEXICO Regular Sailing J Fleet of large steamers built in America and sailing under the American fu*. ; Special toon hcMiai amy or .11 of «be above points may be arranged. Excellent service. apaeieu. paa.cnaer quart.r«. Booklet., rate, aad .chedulaa will be promptly supplied oa application. NEW YORK mi CUBA MAIL IS. CO. (Ward Line) liawl Mat. !W 14 L 1., Dar fwfc Or any Kailroad Ticket Office or Authorized Tourist Agency The Daily Fashion Hint .' A M j»v •; (B^X BBHR^' V \< : I 1 Kw *' w. • i mmm*Ms w. m Morning fror'k of elaborately hand embroidered white batiste. The skirt Is laid in box pleats: the waist has hemstitched seams and fastens with rroebet buttons. Irish lace on eollur md cuffs. High girdle of black velvet CONCERT IN THETABERRfIGLE Prof. Hohgatt, of the Miller Evangelist ic Party, Conduits Musical Pro gram of Feature Songs Meehuuicsburg, Feb. 20. —Last even ing, under thj direction of Prof. Hoh gatt, a musical program was given in the tabernacle, at which time all of tbc feature f.ungs and niauv of the oth er special musical numbers given dur ing the past weeks of the campaign were repeated, with the addition of some new numbers. The program was received with great appreciation by the large audience present. An offering was taken for the Fam ily Altar League. After h fervent prayer by the Rev. C. F. Raaeh and a splo by Miss Cree, '"He Died of a Brokeu Heart,' Evangelist Miller made a brief but fervent appeal to the unsaved, to which two persons re sponded. This evening Mr. Miller will preach. To-morrow morning the usual services will be held in the co-operating churches; to-morrow afternoon Airs. Bowman will give to men the address on "The Second Coming of Christ," which she gave to women last Sunday, and to-morrow evening will be the fare well service, witn sermon by the evan gelist. The converts will meet at 6.30 in the bethel of the Church of God, proceeding in a body to the tabernacle, where a section will be reserved for them. ' Hl(* DAY KORZION CLASS Men Are Endeavoring to Have Largest Attendance in History To-morrow Efforts are being made to havp the largest attendance in the history of the Men's Organized Bible class of Zion Lutheran church at to-morrow's ses sion, when "High Watermark Day" will be observed. A special program has been arranged. The lesson will be taught by Dr. K. E. Campbell, president of Irving college, Mechanicsburg. Since the tirst or the year, twenty three new members have been added to the class, anil the average attendance has been increased more than twenty live per cent. The class has been taking a big part in church activities at Old Zion. A patriotic program will be given on Monday night by the Men of Zion Brotherhood, in celebration of Wash ington's Birthday anniversary. The meeting will be held ait 8 o'clock in the chapel. The speaker will be Captain Georpje i\ Lurab, deputy superintendent of State police. His topic will be "The True American." ■ Man is a funny rreature. He'll lose $lO on a liorse we and never say a word, but |f>f 'him drop a quarter thrliußb n crack in t!:o floor, and he'll want r-> iinwn.—Florida TM». ... . Directory of Leading Hotels of Harrisburg *T~" ——■ - ■ - - - IN ' HOTEL VICTOR No. 25 3outb Fourth Street uircctir opiiiuili Luluu niatloa, ■ quipped ultli all Modern Improvr uruim runuln K nutrr ii every rouai line Until; perfectly aaultaryi aii-elv lurulalied iliruiiEcb»ut. (intra moderate. Kurupeaa Plaa. JOSEPH OIUSTI. Proprietor. THEPLAZA i£i-4SS Market St., Harrlabnrg, Pa. At tbe Entrance to the P. B. R. Station EUROPEAN PIy the Museura-tt will bo with the rank at least of lieutenant I">r. Valentine, according to Dr. Mayer, Is now with his regiment at Verdun. He bas been in several battles and has escaped unscathed. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Umholtz, at New Bloomfleld. MARY S VILLE Opening of Tabernacle Delayed On Ac count of Lumber Special Correspondence. Marysville, Fe'b. 20.—The opening of the tabernacle of this town has been delayed a week because it is not pos sible to get the lumber in time to com plete the tabernacle before the 28th when it was planned to start the cam paign. The services will not begin until March 7. Samuel S. Leiby is visiting his broth er, .Tames B. Leiby, of Newport. Miss Agnes Stimeling, of Harrisburg, spent Wednesday with her sister, Mrs. Lueian Wileman. Mrs. W. W. Kuhl, of Baltimore, is visiting her aunt, Mrs. L. C. Wox. Mrs. Sicott S. Leiby spent Wednesday and Thursday with friends in Lebanon. Mrs. Clarence Scott and children, of AMUSEMENTS | AMUSEMENTS MAJESTIC RW MAJESTIC RS^. 2 ciu. k. CHAMPiiH Twilight Sleep Talks BY To.Night x wj |jght sleep Mothers ■ Ml w | I fliler thf aiiHplcrn of the Twilight TheGhostßreaker >lr«. Mary *umnrr Boyd will imnwrr PRICES 10,20,30,50 C MAJESTIC-TUESDAY, ° N %Z!? HT FEB. 23 SKAT SALE OPENS SATURDAY, 9 A. M. PRICES: !H»wfr Floor, (2.00, #1.50; balcony, 91.A0, 91.00, 75c; Gallery, 50c. LiO COHAN * HAKRB FRIfINT IT Old DA NY ftc lOHI mnai'rRAYMOND rfl COMEDIAN IIW Wlf IIU j ORCHESTRA I HITCHCGCKIJ IN THE OBBAT 810 MUSIC AX. COMKDT SUCCfcM, 9fl "THE BEAUTY SHOP" f| By Chanatac PatUek, lUnnuld ll .ii Photoplay To-day ~ REGENT ■ # # P. Mavaro, Owner and Manager „ „ , # B I To-day, David Belaaco'a Spectacular "In the Hands ot the Jury- -the NOT GUILTY" L£FT BEmHD „ Knlrra. 3 Rwli Oatirla, Bohrrt Edraon and Claire I Whltnry "THE PASSEBBY," SrllK, 2 rrrln Monday and Turaday l Paramount l'rofgraon "sweedie GOBS TO lOM,bge» j The Man From Mexico S. & A. Featuring John Barrymore Pitcairn, spent several days of this week with her parents, Mr. an