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The Evening News from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania • Page 20

Publication:
The Evening Newsi
Location:
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

'A PAGE TWENTY THE EVENING NEWS, HARRISBURG, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1926 finally smiled and allowed the battle to be refought and the company to return to civilization. i i Spotlight and Screen Legislature Is Responsible For Mounting Costs of State Government rvG QAiGST2- -A the balance from the Brumbaugh and Sproul administrations, which did not spend all their money but left unpaid bills far in excess of the book balances. When the figures were presented, the Senate withheld comment, but ordered the report printed in the appendix of the Legislative Journal, and 1000 copies printed for use of the members of the Legislature. Then, after the figures had been firescnted, it adopted the Barr reso-ution which asked for classification of these figures in such a way that their significance would be shown. At the same time it adopted the Alexander amendments which asks for payrolls of the Departments of Welfare and Public Instruction.

These figures will be presented later by Auditor General Martin, who set'his clerks to work on it at once. The report shows that the first three years of the Pinchot administration resulted in $378,988,038.48 re-ceipts and $365,108,622.14 expenditures; the Sproul administration, $318,507,273.29 receipts and expenditures; the Brumbaugh administration, $144, 519, 625. 17n receipts and $142,090,545.86 expenditures; the Tener administration, $131,292,105.37 receipts and expenditures; and the Stuart administration, $110,927,289.80 receipts and $112,458,293.38 expenditures. As a reason for the constantly mounting cost of government, the re MAJESTIC THEATER Now Playing Hadji. AH, Egyptian marvei rrosini, riano Accordion Harrisburg's Charleston-.

ersj Davis and McCoy, and Romantic Youth. Thursday Pepito, Famous Spanish Clown, Played the Palace, New York, Last Week; The Paramount Quintet, Spectacular Song Offering, mil Tkra. nt t. VAlfkAlk. 4.1.

Next Monday Signor Friscoe, Fa mous r.aison itecora Artist, ana His Marimba Band. COLONIAL THEATER Now Playing Rex Beach's Greatest Since The Sea Hawk, Winds of Chance, Featuring Anna Q. Nilsson, Ben Lyon, Viola Dana, Victor Mc-Laglen. Next Week Constance Talmadge in Just a Woman. VICTORIA THEATER Now Playing Ha Ha Week at the Victoria, Raymond Griffith in Hands Up, a Riot in Every Sense ot the Word.

Next Week Atlantic City Beauty rageant Picture, The American Venus, Starring Fay Lamphier (Miss America), Esther Ralston, Harrison Ford and Lawrence Grey. Famous Spanish Clown Buffoons at Majestic If Pepito is a fair example of Spanish clowns, buffoonery in Spain has been developed to a very high art. The moujite-banks of Spain judged by this one must be as versastile as a troubadour of the past. He is funny in various ways which of course win have to be judged entirely by his audiences. His clowning at the Majestic the last half of this week includes imitations of birds anl animals and he does as well a bit of cycling on a miniature wheel.

Then also Pepito has an assistant in the person of a comely girl who plays the saxophone and does straight as it were for his antics. Pepito was first clown of the Circus Parish, Madrid, for five years and became a favorite with King Alfonso and the Royal Family. Rain Halts Battle of Gettysburg in Ha! Ha! Week Show at Victoria Now The battle of Gettysburg had to be called off on account of rain and a muddy field. All of which means that Raymond Griffith and several hundred Union and Confederate soldiers remained encamped on the spacious Mojave Desert for an extra week until this important episode of his newest Paramount starring picture, Hands Up! which is now at the Victoria Theater, could be filmed to the satisfaction of Director Clarence Badger. Old Sol NEW RIALTO Sharrt8asntd.

POLA NEGRI in THE CHARMER Also Good Comedy And FLORENCE VIDOR "The TroubleWith Wives" Added Vaudeville Attraction Todny nnd Tomorrow JOHNNY HINES With His Funsliow and Famous niorktiead Family SPECIAL MATINEE FUK CHILDREN TODAY AT 4 O'CLOCK Clinrlle Chanlln II In "The Cold Rush" THE" THEN Et' .1 by Inil fftnin Scrvict. tm.Crtf Bntftin rights reserved. Margaret Keene, of this city; six children, Mrs. L. P.

Heath, of Philadelphia; Mrs. J. R. Sterringer, of this city; Samuel W. Kopenhaver, of Halifax; Mrs.

Harry Adams, of Philadelphia; Mrs. Willis Salt, of Chicago, and Miss Margaret Kopenhaver, of this city, and four grandchildren. Funeral services will be held on Friday evening at 7.30 o'clock at the home of his daughter, 437 Muench street, with further services at Oak Hill Cemetery, Millersburg, Saturday at noon. The Rev. A.

W. Brownmiller will officiate. I THE WEATHER I Forecasts Till 8 P. M. Thursday: HARRISBURG AND VICINITY Fair tonight and Thursday.

Slightly colder tonight with lowest temperature about 18 degrees. EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA Fair tonight and Thursday; slightly colder tonight. Fresh northwest winds diminishing. RIVER The Susquehanna river and all its branches will fall slowly or remain stationary. No change in ice conditions.

A stage of about 12.5 feet, ice reading, is indicated for Harrisburg Thursday morning. Yesterday's Weather, In Harrisburg 8 a.m. Noon 8 p.m. Barometer 29.88 29.61 Temperature, dry. 22 22 23 Temperature, wet.

21 21 22 Humidity 86 92 86 Wind, direction NE. NE. Wind, velocity 6 '8 Rain for 12 0 .07 Weather Misting Lt. Snow Highest temperature 24 Lowest temperature 20 Mean temperature 22 Normal temperature 29 Deficiency in temperature for this date 7 Accumulated excess in temperature since February 1 8 Accumulated excess in temperature since January 1 16 Excess of rainfall since February 1 0.63 Excess of rainfall since January 1 2.66 River Bulletin Ml out DA FOfV 300 Top. 415" Anj- -pot A OBITUARY I FUNERAL OFMRS'.

1YERSTMURSDAY Funeral services of Mrs. W. Hay-ward Myers, of St. Davids, who died yesterday morning at her home after an illness of several days following a heart attack, will be held in St. Davids tomorrow with the Rev.

Richard Curley, pastor of St. Martin's Church, at Radnor, officiating. Mrs. Myers, who was Miss Eliza Sargeant, of this city, was the widow of W. Hayward Myers, vice-president and general manager of the Pennsylvania Railroad, who died about three years ago.

With Mrs. Myers when she died were her sisters, Miss Sarah Sargeant and Miss Mary Sargeant, of Carlisle, who were spending the winter with their sister. Another sister, Mrs. John C. Kunkel, 17 South Front street, this city, is at Cambridge with her son, who is a student at Harvard Law School Mrs.

W. W. Galbraith, Second and Pine streets, this city, is a cousin. Mrs. Myers was a daughter of Col.

William Sargeant, who was killed during the Civil War. Her sister, Mrs. A. Dallas Dixon, also of Philadelphia, died last September. After her father's death, Mrs.

Myers and her other sisters resided with her grandmother, Mrs. James Espy, at 321 North Front street, the home now occupied by Bishop and Mrs. James Henry Darlington. Mrs. Myers is also survived by five children: W.

Hayward Myers, Mrs. G. W. Pepper, Mrs. H.

R. Wharton, Mrs. John F. Meigs, 2d, and Mrs. J.

F. Disston, Jr. Alice Cooper Singer Mrs. Alice Cooper Singer died this morning at 4 o'clock at the Methodist Hospital in Philadelphia, where she had been seriously ill since Monday afternoon. Mrs.

Singer was the widow of C. Wayne Singer, of this city and Bloomsburg, and resided, since the death of her husband, with her daughter in Philadelphia. She is survived by her daughter, Mrs. Macon Smithwick, of Philadelphia, and a sister, Mrs. Abner Claiss, of Enola.

The body will be brought to Harrisburg. Funeral announcents will be made later. Mrs. Singer was the daughter of the late Albert Cooper, who resided here for a number of years. C.

Singer died October 23, 1925. MRS. LILLY J. NEWMYER Mrs. Lilly J.

Newmyer, aged 66 years, mother of Sergeant George Newmyer of the City Police died yesterday at her home 1739 Market street. She is survived by one son, George, and one daughter, Lilly May. Funeral services will be held at 3 o'clock Friday afternoon at her home, with the Rev. Harold Thompson officiating. Burial will be in the Harrisburg Cemetery.

MRS. MARY E. STOBER Funeral services for Mrs. Mary E. Stober, aged 61 years, who died Monday at her home, 2718 Jefferson street, will be held at' 3 o'clock to Vj mil DA.

Film Version of Rex Beach Novel Greater Than Sea Hawk at the Colonial Now i Running back over the ever-chang- ing roster of motion picture popular- ity, it seems as if Viola Dana has always been a star. Especially so, when one remembers her as the star of The Cossack Whip, made by the Edison Company about 1915. But the real truth of the matter is that Miss Dana although still in her early twenties, has been featured either on stage or screen ever since she was 6 years old. And like Blanche Sweet, was playing leads in pictures when she was a mere slip of a girl. Men fight for freedom.

Then they begin to accumulate laws to take it away from themselves. Tlmrday, Frlilny, 8n-turriay PEPITO Unusual Spanish Clown Former First Clown of Circus Parish. Madrid, Simin, for Five Years Played the Piilnre, Last Hick PARAMOUNT QUINTETTE Five Hrllllnnt Soloists In Recital WILL J. KENNEDY CO. In a Fertile Field of Fun for a Funster AND 2 OTHER KEITiTaCTS S'ext Moml-iy.

Tuporiny. SIGNOR FRISCOE Topuliir Edison Phonograph Artist and His Jb unions Guatemalan Knseimt'e Let Us Take You Back To The Days Of '97 And '98 I THE KLONDIKE GOLD RUSH REX BEACH'S WINDS OF CHAfl Directed by Frank Lloyd, Who Made Sea Hawk Lost World. OUR GANG in "Shootin' Injuns" Ha-Ha This Is a Good One It's HA-HA-WEEK At the Raymond Griffith His Hat Highness Is Pleasing Thousands in HANDS UP! But, Sh-hf He Thought the Civil War Was a Frame Up A Riot From Start to Finish. Next Week-MISS AMERICA In THE AMERICAN VENUS Dancing Tonite 8.00 P. M.

to 12.00 GIRLS! Study These Figures and See How You Measure Up With FAY LANPHIER (Miss America) Who Will Appear at the VICTORIA Next Week In the Picture You're Heard So Much About THE AMERICAN VENUS Valuable Prizes Will Be Awarded To each of the Six Girls W'hose Measurements are Closest to those of The American Venus. Send your Measurements' to Mrs.Otellie Weber, Judge of the American Venus Contest, 317 Walnut Street, and tell her you wish to compete for the Prile- Are You A Harrisburg Venus? Get In On This Novel Contest nrl fe 111 J. A. 1 I I own voluntary motion which contains admissions of insolvency. Heagy certified that his liabilities are $38,456 and his assets $29,300 of which $29,000 represents real estate.

Creditors will meet February 19 at 2 p. m. in the office of John T. Olmsted, bankruptcy referee, to elect a trustee. SERIOUS TRAFFIC TIE-UP AVERTED From Page One week's storm, had threatened serf ous traffic troubles.

The railroad yards in the Harrisburg district were seriously congested, and pas senger service on all lines entering the city was badly handicaped. Wilbur J. Burkholder, 32, of 433 South Tenth street, while cleaning switches in the yards at the Reading Company, station here early j. i mis morning was swuck Dy an engine and instantly killed. The fatal accident occurred at 5.37 o'clock this morning.

It is believed Burkholder and the men in charge of the engine by which ne was killed were blinded by the driving snow. The locomotive was moving backwards when the trackman was struck. Still filled with snow and ice from the twelve-inch snowfall of last Wednesday and Thursday, State highways in many places are being made virtually impassable by today's storm, in spite of heroic efforts of highway crews to keep them open. Snow removal facilities of the city are being taxed in, keeping only the principal thoroughfares open to traffic. Now Playing to Packed Houses at Popular Prices Ton won't have to stand If you attend the S.30, supper show, or at 8.48 P.

M. musr be earned' DGW61.AS IN TK9 TWEP ef Have vou ever seen a Marie Rug soar above the city bearing a Thief and a Princess? Have you ever seen a Whitr Horse with wings fly through the Haye you ever seen the Magic Rope, live dragons and bats as big as elephants? Have you ever seen an "Invisible" cloak? -2 ON THE STAGE Rose Perfect' "America' Nifrhtineale" NEXT WEEK 2ND BIG JAZZ TEK i I The mounting costs of government in Pennsylvania duo to legislative enactments which extended mental activities and created new divisions of the government, are shown graphically in tables of figures presented to the Legislature yesterday by Auditor General Martin. The figures were asked fori1 by the MacDade esolution which was adopted by the Legislature with the intent of showing the people that the Pinchot administration has spent more money than other administrations in-the past. What the tables show is that each succeeding administration spent more money than the one just before and since the road bond issues began and the school appropriations have been increased, the jumps in the expense items have naturally gone up. The contrast of figures of last year with those of almost two decades ago is startling when the figures are taken by themselves but the Legislatures and not the Governors authorized the expenses and provided the additional ways of spending the State funds.

In 1907 the receipts from taxes i amounted to only 527,027,132, while 25,681,465 was spent that year. In 1925, the taxes imposed by the Legislature netted 5173,435,123, of which $157,721,918 was spent. The 1925 taxes and expenditures were approximately six times those of 1907. Shatters Motive Another feature of the report entirely shatters the motive of the Mac-Dado resolution to make it appear that the Pinchot administration has been a poor financial housekeeper. The report shows that the Stuart admin-, istration (1907-11) spent $1,500,000 more than its receipts; and the Tener administration (1911-15) spent more than its receipts, leaving a deficit of $8,000,000 for those administrations alone.

The Brumbaugh administration (1915-19) spent $2,500,000 less than its expenditures; and the Sproul administration (1919-23) spent $500,000 less than its receipts. Balance On Credit Side The Pinchot administration, however, in its first three years in office, kept its expenditures $13,800,000 below its receipts, the first time in the score of years covered by the report that such a balance could be shown. Because the information was not asked, however, the report fails to show that in the same three years th.i Pinchot administration in addition to keeping its expenditures. below receipts, paid off in old debts, a part of which resulted from the $8,000,000 deficit of the Stuart and Tener administrations, Who Takes Pills For Constipation? Try this new idea so simple; works so quickly it's hard to believe No diets nor exercises Special cable from London. As a result of eating too much meat, sweets and devitalized foods and not enough raw salads, raw fruits and fresh green vegetables, powerful intestinal poisons often form in the lower bowels.

These poisons work their way up to the stomach and by weakening the stomach and intestines they cause indigestion, gas, chronic constipation. They also seep chronic constiaption. They also seep into the blood and through the blood poison and weaken every vital organ. Millions are afflicted who never suspect that this one thing is the cause of all their troubles. To destroy Intestinal poisons take from two to four tablets per day of enro-sulfur for a while.

Erro-sulfur Is a wonderful Idea, newly discovered. Where cathartics and dyspepsia tablets afford onlv temporary relief ehro-sulfur Klves new vitality and power to weakened walls of constipated Intestines and bad BtomachB: It Improves the digestion and restores more normal bowel movements and Increases strength and endur-nn08 often In one or two weeks time. It should be made known without delay to physicians to everyone everywhere. NOTE: Ehro-sulfur may now be had In America. Get a trial tuhe of tablet! today.

Your money back If not convinced. At all dealers Including Clark Cut Rate Store. 800 Broad St. and SOU Market street, Square Cut Rate Store. 200 Market Croll Keller.

405 Market St. End in 24 hours All the results disappear quickly in this way Do you know that millions end colds within 24 hours. Those who know the method use it so promptly that colds do not get started. It does more than end a cold. It checks the fever, opens the bowels, stops the headache, tones the entire system.

All th.e ill results disappear with the cold. That way is HILL's. It is so efficient that we paid $1,000,000 for it. It is so well-proved that countless homes rely on it today. It brings no bad reaction.

Start HILL'S at once. Every hour of delay lets the cold get deeper-seated. Starting now means relief tomorrow. It means that you are doing for the cold, in all ways, the best that science knows. At all druggists, i Sure It's jtfLftrw Price 38e GUSGARA QUININE Get Red Bos foO with Portrait Cuticura Soap Best for Baby Sotp, CM fitment.

Talcum mid tiywhr. Swnolei raa ox uvnnn lAMTMoriM, itp Htuom, mm Artificial TVeth $10, $15, $20, $25 Guaranteed Plates Repaired. 75c. Two Drs. Blumenschein Lewis DENTISTS 310 Market YVoolworth Building HeU riione HJ8S (SMS UidU Hours HAD INOOOr? 5POUT" TO THS COULOA IJHOOCPA ESTATE" CWJP AS iT Wards' up.

propogation $1,093,909, bounty Spent For Agriculture Pinchot Agriculture Department, $1,824,430, including dog fund, 56,279, experimental agriculture, Snroul Agriculture Department, $114,679, including dog fund $102,130 and experimental agriculture, 579. Cash disbursements of the board of finance and revenue under Pinchot are listed at $4,276,699. No similar board existed under Sproul. Pinchot-State Banking Department, $1,107,429, including $124,035 for the State Securities Bureau. Sproul-State Banking Department, $574,629.

No securities bureau existed under Sproul. Pinchot-Department of State and Finance, $1,101,362. No similar department existed under Sproul. Fmehot-State isnery wepanmeni, Sproul-State Fishery Department, $178,814. Cash disbursements of the Department of Labor and Industry are listed under Pinchot at $207,964 and under Sproul at $78,071.

Cash disbursements of. the Public Service Commission under Pinchot are listed at and under Sproul at $261,161. Cash disbursements of the sinking fund commission under Sproul are listed at $2,104,705. No similar commission exists under Pinchot. GRADE GROSSING HEARING APRIL 2 Additional testimony of a character intended to help the Public Service Commission allocate the cost of widening the Market street subway and abolish grade crossings on Second and Paxton streets, will be offered at the next hearing to be held either February 23 or March 2.

The March 2 date was set definitely for hearing the grade crossing matter but after February 23 was set for the final hearing in the subway tase some lawyers found March 2 would better suit their convenience and it was proposed to combine the hearings on March 2, provided that is satisfactory to all concerned. Slightly revised figures on the probable cost of changing the railroad and trolley tracks may be submitted at the next subway hearing as the Pennsylvania Railroad and Harrisburg Railways representatives said at yesterday's hearing in the subway case that they have obtained modified figures since the original estimates were drawn. Included among yesterday' witnesses were John E. Gipple, real estate man, and Ray S. Shoemaker, contractor, who had acted as arbiters, to determine the extent to which real estate will be damaged by the subway widening.

They explained how they reached the conclusion that this property damage might reach $350,000. To Observe Program for Negro History Week National Negro History Week will be observed at Second Baptist Church tomorrow evening at 8.15 o'clock with Mrs. Maudle B. Coleman, of the'Wel-fare Department presiding. The program follows: Open with "America" invocation; "Lincoln and Douglass," Harry Burrs; (a) "Negro in Africa," (b) "Negro in the Discovery and Exploration of America," W.

J. Carter, "Negro Labor in U. S. F. Jefferson; solo.

Miss Mary A. Lewis; recitation, "A Soldier's Reprieve," Miss Pauline Miller; "The Negro in Art and Poetry," A. D. Bibb; "The Negro Spokesman," W- J. Carter, piano solo.

Miss Lillian Ball; "Negr in the Professions," Dr. A. L. Marshall; "Negro C. F.

Howard; 'Negro in Ministry," the Rev. J. L. White; violin solo. Dr.

W. G. Jefferson; "Negro in Business," S. W. Rutherford.

"Negro National Anthem," audience. USE THE OpD SILKS When sewing on a velvet garment use up all your odds and ends of sewing silk for basting threads; never baste velvet with cotton thread. The silk will pull out, leaving no traces, while cotton thread is apt to leave marks bo-hind it All things come to him who waits bad luck included. port is self-explanatory. In parallel columns, it shows the record of administrations in expenditures, department by department.

Blank spaces appear following the name of department after department in the Stuart administration; a few are filled in during the Tener administration; more' are filled in during the Brumbaugh administration; and virtually all of them during the Sproul and Pinchot administrations. The table alone shows how the Legislature has added to. centralized government at Harrisburg by increasing the number of departments. With each new department added, the cost of government increased. An example of management is of-fered in one of these departments, however.

That is the Welfare Department, created under Governor Sproul by the 1921 Legislature, for political purposes as was openly charged in the Legislature at that time. The department functioned only a year and one-half under the Sproul administration, and cost $1,798,224. Governor Pinchot reorganized the department on a business basis and administered it three years for It cost the Pinchot administration only $100,000 more for three years for $1,897,129. It cost the Pinchot administration- only $100,000 more for three years than for the year and one-half under Sproul. General fund receipts under Governor Pinchot for three years amounted to compared to for the entire Sproul administration; $142,262,754 for the entire Brumbaugh administration; for the enitre Tener administra tion, and $109,761,812 for the entire Stuart administration.

Receipts For State Under three years of Governor Pin chot the receipts of the State High way Department have totalled 817,812, including $48,843,050 of State Koad Bond funds, while under Sproul receipts of this department totalled $102,467,219, including $66,337,874 State Road bond funds. Receipts from the gasoline tax, which was doubled in 1923, under Pinchot totalled $6,506,697 and under Sproul, $2,124,634. These amounts dp not include the shares of the tax which the counties receive. Cash disbursement from the general fund under Sproul and Pinchot were almost the same. Disbursements from this fund in three years under Pinchot totalled $200,028,879 and in four years under Sproul," under under Tener, under Stuart, $111,119,152.

Cash disbursements of the Department of Public Instruction under Pinchot in three years have totalled $32,347,494 as compared to $11,074,231 under Sproul; $341,821 under Brum baugh and $40,865 under The itemized figures for three years under Pinchot and four years under Sproul list cash disbursements as follows: General Fund Itemized Pinchot-general fund, Hiehway Department. $111,007,842, including $44,920,237 road bond funds; department of public instruction, 347,494, including $20,924,954 school employes annuity reserve, school employes annuity savings vocational educational (Federal appropriation) State school, former teachers engineers licenses normal school $5370. Sproul-general fund, Highway Department, $96,083,434, including $63,691,391 road bond funds; department of public instruction including $4,121,752 school annuity reserve, $5,777,325 school employes annuity savings vocational education (Federal appropriation) State school engineers licenses $13,917. Pinchot-gasoline tax, $6,178,224. Sproul-gasoline tax, $917,924.

Pinchot-Insurance Department, including $1,960,127 insurance tax and $48,346, insurance department. Sproul, $1,542,152. Pinchot-Welfare department, Sproul-Welfare department, $1,798,224. Pinchot-Game Commission, including game $1,699,117, game protection and propogation, $189,321, bounty $78,149, an4 miscellaneous. Sproul-Game Commission.

including game protection and Just Like a Man "My husband suffered for several years with stomach trouble. He often had colic attacks that put him to bed. But a man can't stand the pains that a woman can. He thought he was going to die and the doctors didn't seem to help him any. Like a drowning man grasp-ine for a straw he tried AYR'S "One Dose Will Convince" which a nurse told us about and now he is entirely well and eats anything." It is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the inflammation which causes practically all stomach, liver and intestinal ailments, including appendicitis.

One dose will convince or money refunded. CI Ted" Brownagle's Arcadians 20c PER HOUR OR 50c ENTIRE EVENING FEB. 13TH PECK MILL'S ORCHESTRA Fet tk Tsntha BUtlsns ESS tw Huntingdon 14 3.4 0.0 .65 Clearfield 9 0.8 0.0 .03 Renovo 16 1.8 0.3 .12 Cedar Run 12 2.3 0.0 .28 Williamsport '20 2.9 0.4 20 Corning; 16 4.7 0.2 .30 Binghamton 16 3.6 0.0 .14 Towunda 16 2.7 0.1 .17 Wilkes-Barre 20 6.2 0.2 .10 Sunbury 20 Harrisburg 17 12.6 0.2 .48 Frozen. i 1 GIRLS! How Do Your Measurements Compare With Those of the American Venus? Sporting Goods Dealer Is Declared Bankrupt Harvey C. Heagy, sporting goods dealer at 1115 North Third street, has been adiudered hanknint hv FHl Judge Johnson who acted on Heagy's GRAND What Is Free Love? See "WINE OF YOUTH" With Eleanor Boardman Thursday Bill Miller la a "i'ttlr of Hellions" DROAn Ur 3rd Bronril Adit.

2Sc: 10c 6 80 P. M. 11 P.M. Today "Another Man's Wife" 1 Thursday, Friday. Saturday "FIGHTING CUB" Tat (J Malley (Jeo.

Fawcett Wesley Barry Mildred Harris Mary Carr Walter Lone Stuart Holmes EffSflfSBB ROYAL Third and Cumberland GEORGE O'BRIEN THE FIGHTING HEART First Run Fox Picture. COLISEUM THURSDAY NIGHT JOE NESBIT AND HIS ORCHESTRA BFT.CIN, WEIGHT 8 IBS. WMST MIPS 37 IN. THtCH 30 IN. JvjHL 107 in.

ANKLE morrow afternoon at the home. The Rev. Thomas MacEwen will officiate Burial will be in Snoop's Church Cemetery. INTRUDER FLEES 'An intruder in the rear yard of the home of Jeremiah K. Greenawalt, 130 Walnut street, last night was frightened away and leaped a fence in the yard before the arrival of several policemen in response to a telephone call from Mr.

Greenawa.lt. THE REV. HENRY F. LUTZ Funeral services for the Rev. Henry Frey Lutz, a former pastor of the Fourth Street Church of Christ and the Church-of Christ.

Lemoyne, who died on Monday evening at his home in Cincinnati, will be. held tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock at the Church of Christ, Lancaster. Burial will be in Mellinger's Cemetery. The Rev. Mr.

Lutz was a teacher in the Cincinnati Bible Seminary. His survivors are his wife, Mrs. Anna Barr Lutz, and four sons, Karl E. Rus-sel and Herbert Lutz, of New York City, and Allen Lutz, of Cincinnati. JAMES D.

KOPENHAVER James D. Kopenhaver, 82 years old, died yesterday at the home of his daughter, Mrs. J. R. Sterringer, 437 Muench street.

Mr. Kopenhaver, who formerly resided in Halifax, is a retired stone mason. He is a Civil War veteran, having served with Company 210th Pennsylvania Volunteers, and Company 36th Pennsylvania Infantry. He is survived by two sisters, Mrs. J.

P. Miller, of Williamsport, and Mrs,.

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About The Evening News Archive

Pages Available:
240,701
Years Available:
1917-1949