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12 MOVIE MEN SCORE (V ONE ON UNCLE SAM A Wi|Jard-Johnson iijzht at Havana May lie Shown on Hroad wav Without Actuallv Import. ;e in;r Into I'nited States, v r? v.'a lagUu. April 11 -Trust the} ni a r: >tion picture people to do a thiug 1* - ?nt to do lf it an l>" done. oc A -it .atlcm t at is attracting ->ouio ci sM.ciiti i at tii ' hands ot the federal , > . hf> , v/?- t!~r ?r. well as n j. NV V-rk t -ported from thej t !?n * stat-\ ' It ?.?. m be recalled that when Jack it J mii.- and J '-- Willsr i hi'! a scrap ir doao .r Havan;- 'he nation pi'.turej . f n\ . tv i " ei forhiddeni 01 t i b? ii.r?or'-?'i ' * f L"itn*d ?tat?-? c! It w;<.? o' ill .>?>.. : v th-m to b-. 0< ?h.?-v:j N- V :k -t t. wheroip ,4j t: -e P" ipt ' r-r... <.ri, their p -^ductlcr. than In any otheri. hut c ?'. - tl. pi< tur >. or the films, lot - -h 'ni '. ,, -.i ns 1'- v * orbi'l ' ! r riu; i ir. .?r.getiiu1- of some hody so .t tr . foand a way. A E fe * day <2- ?ji .- ntativf of one1 <v 'be r . \ir. < -r/f-rns took a ptvoia hi. < consisting of th-' fit lit f:i". - mi his way from' $ s>nv? point >nf- o?" th<- islands ot" th sea beyond the l?o- ler- of th- a if. a d Srv ? r-.nadi, T :i he '? mvlo p. -a a;, partly L> train, partly ny auto obile. and partly by foot. ? wrhi- pf -ir ;> par to the bor- *] i" line bft? . rm... la and New p V rk t t - port r <> |rs jour- (I d" tli-'' ? accomn! ^:i f 1 r>ti foot, a .?- in oi- nor.-s-.ary by the fact that eh r a h-? v .i- folio vine crossed '* r!- hoi i-r b.'fnn r---i tie the point '' of his ! -stiiK-t >11. ni.l as lie i-.ilC Ti > carry ' f in- \ i:' hiiu on tl at ! ;:? \ : f-f :i - th" prohibi- v r - v- ' nto |h - m ole ..-1v a mile jS h 'rip t. i/Ot - itl. the pack- ti : Iln. - or. his shoulder. ?n ? in- pain* * dost !r. at Ion. ho was hi n. other representatives of his a ,i\' -ra h had -one ahead of him vnj ia-1 t- . a lar--- tent astride M >.?- I:n A considerable porp n >t tii" ?pn< (: covered by the t<*nt ' - Canadian -oil .,uil the rest of :r , in ?- American terltory. f) tii<- Canadian side a screen was a| pi" up and the fight films were "put if .? Tlie Jolinson-Wiilanl fight wa- ui \ ii to an :mi -n " ot about four. fo nost of w hom were hi the United i* .*? .? os nri"~? of i'i? t*ittthough in al ftins fr'.io f?,? i another. 'l| -.o '.ator might c.isilv transfer the fv"isfllction of hi- body front Wa?!i ,j, sfon to Lmdon -front I'resldeut tli ^ ;?on't dominion i.. t -i? sovereignty lb V King Georg". pt t fi'A inehc- within the American - a mo tins picti'i- machine bait *>1 t? - rer'ed and when the "show" ^ going on over in Canada a dis (. :; of some ttfi incite* front the x>_.d r -tlie operator of the motion j( (*;. :?! e machine pot entirely new 8t made front the scene- that tli .'. ii h-dng shown on the screen In a: this V : v he spi -ir.lr.iwl in :*1 ni of the film* v ' Msc imp f w f: -it had boon forbidden. and vet th (> . *1.1 in i. importation had not > n \ iolated. nccoidini: to the v'ew V i v 11o* film company concerned. It )( f- their intention. ??< . online to re- < pot published. to exhibit tiie film ( on V.ro.ulv.ay a thing that has lii+t: . *? desired by tin- promoters asi ,, i.* ! a- some tew thousands of "'f.:1 " 1 n Ww York ritv for a Ion Wme. \\"h r tiie film^ are legnllv >n I* Foiled Stales j< n question thn' paroles -nine of the lawyers wh ha e paid more or less attention t . ( He* Incident. It is tru- thtit tie* pa' tt.Mjlar films that wer?" taken tit H < ^ v . v not been imported into . c . tefl States: lot; in a sen-;** rept "sentntion of the light has been "imported." though it catne hy a method that is not tangible or tna (. rr-ri.il It is Hi#* view of sump that hv -malfiRv with wireless telecrap1 ,j m> i n 'Mi*, vs 11i' h ar. under the con rrol of the Rovernment, oven ther? is .??? material transportation or t.i"lis ion concerned. the eivornn e:u would have the r.ftht to apply t' satin principles to the srcurine f iliiis in the manner suggested I.v the t>?t of the owners of the! J ihni'ii1 W'lard films. liwleeil. it Is pointed out that if ttould he an eaav matter. If such *rere not the on?e. for ihr mo?dne picture people to rvold all custom* duties on film a by mere'v ?etMttg au plants at the hftrri.T t?v vrht??'? | .Hina could be re-phMoRra^hM and thvirt "Imp'* from one country another without actiiAllr helper imported. Whatever view is correct. on? has t > "ha id it to" the motion picture man who conceived and executed the tinw*? pUa. I ICRS UPHEAVALS MAY COME hundani Proof That Nature's Reslstle?e Force; Have Not Been Forever Quieted. Ti'i? VV atatcli mountains, once a 1 ve 1 plain and formed through some igantic upheaval of nature, are atlll istless. showing that the process of atur? which carved the peaks and inyon* 1* still in progress. During l? long period of slow earth movetent which made these mountains, at-Iytng parallel beds of rock were lo- t k!> tlirn?il nn ?>l?aa rrnm ?,1 a.l onH ? ? ?r*?" ?- i >lded it* ? wonderfully Intricate miner. These upturned and crumpled rocks ro well shown In Ogden canyon. Tfce , e?* face of the Wasatch range is beev>wi to mark the plane of a normal arth fault at a nearly vortical crack 1 * the earth's crust, the rocks on the , is? aid" of which went up or those n the 3?dc "*eut down A uumer of parallel faults were developed ' lose together and the broken pieces ' the earth s crust between them were .shed up. ihe rocks on one side of iOh crack riding up over those on : :e other side until the great tnoun- ( i.r. range was formed. ( !ED ALWAYS DANCER SIGNAL Ixcellent Reasons Why That Color ' Should Have Seen Selected for the Purpose. | Everywhere you turn, red is used to 1 ignify danger. As tail-lamps to motors and trains.j: t toru-up streets, red lights universal ' r announce ' Danger!" ! . Why is red used in preference to any I i ther color * There is a very good and ' . lilBclent reason for this. Red. no mat-' s now instant. never ceases to ap ' ^ ear red It retains its color better' tan any other, and plays no illusion- ; ry tricks with your eyesight. Enjoying normal weather conditions.;' xe ranges of colored lights in use on < ie railways are recognized as tol 1 >ws ' J Red 3'a miles; green. 2Vfe to 3 , nles lunar white. 2 to 21 ? miles. It , ill be seen that red is tar ahead of s fellows Green, its nearest rival, . of course, the color of which natrv makes such < xtenslve use. Gonse- 1 n-nt.ly. green is much more liable to u >tn? absorbed in any background t tun rod. ji That in why red takes pride oi < lace.?Answers. , , r Able to Defy Burglars. / The story of the strong room is noth- ^ H more than one long light between le safemaker and the burglar. But last the vault maker would appear > have won and it is the boast of iperta that many of the strong rooms v iund in the more up-to-date safe de- J >slts, banks and other institutions e not only burglar proof, but proof (i ;ainst atta.k in armed mobs and j, so from earthquake shocks. Their 1 oat steel walls arc absolutely un-ilUble on account of the hardness of ' ie metal employed, while by welding ' n ie plates together it is virtually 1m tssihle to burn through them . c Then, by means of time and comnatton locks, it is impossible to open > o ie doors without a key and a knowl- , < tge or the combination, once they | e closed. As a further precaution, j any of these strong rooms are so ^signed that an electrical alarm is landed shouhl attack be made upon lem. or the basement in which they e sit-aiud is tlooded with water the I oraont their mechanism is tampered ith \Mtll. \\ K \1TIIS id now another lyric April blows r dim tunes from the hills, iring roses twine, oar floods of sunlight, cool with moil..tain snows, rim all the world with sparkling goldr n wine. (I ,io> > in horn a,"ii:n. old dreams arise, ml call my spirit, life far, gloaming seas. Id sweetheart* kiss my brow and nuiuth and eyes. "if 1 |i grown sweet as April rev 1 I >rgoti?n Aprils. ? I ji ?f in cherry blooms iu?> drift!- k hark atony the orchard reams; *hey fill my heart with golden faint perfumes, tnd haunt me with the lethargy of d reams ?Perrln Hoinies Lowery. Reducing Tuberculosis Mortality. Lord Rosebery. in a I?ndon address on tuberculosis, said that preventive measure* had reduced the mortality from -consumption in London by 33 per cent between 1901 and 1911. and t>y 14 por rant in l^nfflAnn ana waies for the ?arae period APRIL No a is high-tide of the year And whatever of life hath ebbed a way Cone* flooding back with a rippling sheer Into every bare Inlet and creek and bay. ?Jam** Rnaaeaa Lowell. / THE LANCASTER NEW A SPLENDID EASTER STORY rHF, RESURRECTION OF RICHARD RICE By latiiev h. The. shadows of the night were mm iv i'iu.'iimk hi ii|>i'u i ne grcHi I'uy, From the office buildings and factories streamed forth the workers. Fhe soft fall of the April rain, gave evidence of spring, but the chill ivhich swept along with it told that vlnter had as yet not departed. From numerous windows the lights twinked. and from equally numerous trolley cars the blatant, discordant gong rounder. It was Saturday night! md the crowd, merry and impatient u the same time, was anxious to cot home. For to-morrow was Faster. Easter with her lilies and her lights; with her fine clothes, her dowers and her music. And the ivoik of the week was slowly fading from the minds of many, in the brighter recollection of the Khistoi "Well, olil top." smiled the tmblian. "sort of soused." "(Jo 'long with you." retored the ther." do you take tne for n pint up. See" and ho stretched out Tils and toward the bur "see that there fork of yours, why man I've drunk hat much ten times over in the last wo years. Soused? I'm no gutter nipe. firing me a whiskey traight." The bar keeper went ark to his liar with a smile. TT > ad seen many n one just that way. 'his man. despite his uncut beard, lis tattered clothes, his half ti|/sy onditton, had once been a gent feitan. Perhaps he had once been a aoderate drinker, he mused FJltt ow Fft> chuckled to himself This mnr piece of floatsam actually bought that ho could drink tho Atuntio Owin. and get away with it. tonrehow his hoart wnrmed to th<nan. Maybe there was a wife at rontp, and litfte children Maybe he rould after nil straighten up. But hat was not his concern So he nixed the whiskey, and st;? rued to hp table Rut the wind had blown in an>fher person As the publican advanced from bis bar. this yotrng. slin iir! advanced from the door N'n S-i 1 radon lassie she. Her's wn* a fac? which to see was not easy to forget ^lu came timidly forward and stoor' by the publican as lie placed tlv whiskey on the smalt table. "May I speak to him." she m terrupted. "Yes. miss." he laughed, "hut can't be responsible for his answer. Then ns If deafrfng to get her out o the place, be remarked: "*Bett< leave hiiu alone. lie's pretty bft soused rlehi now. and he mav nr I ke It." Hut the ynuDe girl was payiii no attention to htm. Hhe had a< vanced and placing hei hand on tt shoulder or the drunken wretch, si asked: "Won't yon come .round to tl Trinity Mission with me? It's on just around the corner. Plea come?" The man startled. Through t water In his eyea he looked at h< How strangely familiar that fa was. Put no, that coold not be tn resurrection. Down a squalid side street lurched md rolled a man. From one sid?to the other he reeled. His un diaved face, his bleared eyes, his unsteady gait, all gave evidence to i too palpable fact. He was a drunkird. For him there was no Raster. How could there he? His only mode was the wild delirium of his 1 reams. Flowers? The blear in his >.ve made everything look red 'lothes? His scattered garments once bore that name. On he lurched fow a young girl, hurrying boulevard stepped to one side to avoid lini. A little farther on a street :aroin stepped into the gutter and uade faces at htm. To none of them rave he one moment's heed. Square after square lie covered litis. First in the cutter, and tlie'i gainst fences. Suddenly his blear >d eye tok on the chost of an e\>ression. Surely lie could not b* nistaken. It had always stood there a hoy lie remembered Its frosted loors, its ornamental class windows. \s a young man, he recalled its aint, sickly aroma, enticing. porttading. urging. Ah. there was rami til, and cheer within, and this kpril rain was very cold. On he lurched, past the swinging loors. How good it felt! he stunitled forward, and fell into, rather liati took, ills seat. For a few nmnents lie blinked in the fierre glare f the liclits S AI'lilL 14. 1916 And the name. Trinity? Trinity? "Why, why," he stammered "I was " He stopped and gazed blankly at her. "What do you want me at Trinity Mission for, eh? he sneered. "I'm no goody, goody. You church people '? But something in her face stopped him "Please." she entreated. "We want to help you.'* She patted him again on the shoulder. "Oh," she said, "how wet you are. Where are you going to sleep to-night?'' "Say, pard," broke in the bar keeper," "better go along with the young lady. They've got the lid on tight in this town now, and after twelve I'll have to fling you out." l)..t A .K. ?? 1 M uui iiitr uuiri uidut' nu ii-'pi). mstead he placed the tumbler to his lips and began to sip the fiery stuff slowly. Tlie girl looked first at hint and then ;.t the publican. She hesitated for a moment. "You better go on back, miss," the barkeeper said. "When 1 close at twelve I'll see if I can get him to come around." From the door of the public house . a the last stroke of twelve the man lurched, lie was drunk, horribly so. Hut the last drink had braced him up. Everything seemed strangely familiar. lie knew this corner well. That saloou had always stood there. And he knew where Trinity Mission was. Why not go there and spend the night? lie could get away eatly In the morning and no one need be i the wiser for it. Why had he eveen me back here? And why had that face so troubled him? Me would go. anyway. Into the door of the little mission he lurched. He flung himself into the last seat. At least, he could dose. He need not listen. Hut what was ail this? He almost laughed out. The usual crowd was there. Men on their uppers, women with pasts carefully concealed, the young plunger, the old hand at the business. And what was this the man on the platform was telling thai crowd? \\*h> . that to-morrow was Master. And that Raster meant tin resurrection of Christ. There was nothing to lnngh at in that. Hut this was the funny part. "Vim men and women." he said, "arc dead. Dead to your families, to society, to usefulness in the world "J* . - ^ . *"? ". " ? | FLC S I C I "For + -fv I U I 1 ji Absol' I G I +-*- w 1 I Let Y II ! A. B a1: 1 ;g; iy : Be - ' ' ^jf Why not come buck to-morrow an<l start all over again. Come back to life. Go back home. There Is hop* W for every one of you In Christ.'' if tl The man on the back seat chuck- ti,0 led. lie had heard just such stuff jure, in a hundred mission halls in a hundred different cities. And he had 1 u never come back to life. All he wcu cared for was a bed, and something attei to eat. He did wish they would get |(jea through singing and praying. But on what was this? has "Before we go to-night." continued the man on the platform, "1 want t0 ^ to ask that you will assist me in """ finding a man. He is one of these tlve lead men. Five years ago he left to d his home. He was cashier of the ly t< First National ban!: of this city. His not accounts were found short. He was ougl convicted of embezzlement, a?d sent of tl to the penitentiary. From there ho that escaped, and has been at large eve! tern since. No." and he cast a quiet tion glance over the crowd, "I don't want mus you to peach on him, for it has just do r come t ? light that he did not em- mist bezzle Ihe money. A friend of his It it took it. and he has iu;lde a confes-Jbrit sion. We want to find this man, ate bring him back to life again, and the! give him back to his family. His peo| name is pret The man on the back seat held P his breath. There was the young ni'K girl who had found hint in the sa- ('Pe< loon. How familiar she looked. And reas that older woman over there in the ',e ' choir with the tears on her checks? >'l'm Why, why, no. it could not be true. Boni That had been his name once, but tor now he was known from New York to Frisco as Drunken Dick. He rose heai to his feet. Benches, men and wo- ,08E men. the man on the platform, reeled about him. He staggered forward. If?oei "Rlrhanl!" , mor It was the woman In the choir.,in 1 She too. had gotten to hor feet. ' sOU "Father!" vv<>n The clear young voice of the girl of the saloon rang. '}-v The man stumbled forward. The 'n"' one on the platform took him by the a bo hand. \ stillness fell on the crowd. VNiU "Richard Ft Ice has come to life ' u-1 again.'' he announced. con: And a gray haired woman mur- I'-x 1' mered softly:-"Tliis. my son. was dead, and Is - ?-? true Intl nnd lu Xt**.' found."" " 1?^ )RSHE IH0E5 the Man V Pafpc^ utely Guarante ive Satisfactioi our Next Pair "Florsheim" *i * ' f j rrorn I LjIVUVJ & SON HMt # % <;OI\G TO CHURCH e go to church to worship and, int purpose is lost sight of all social betterment idea9 and lecs aiming at the improvement of mind are beside the point. It Id be interesting to compare the ndance at churches in which the of making the service border the character of entertainment been followed with what it used e In the days when worship \nd t ship only was the service attrao- ^ ; but, if the service element tends isappear. tl en the change is like> do more harm than good. It is social enjoyment that people it to seek in church; the ideal he minister should not merely Do of getting people away from the ptation of the streets. Kecita s from the parts and beautiful ic will be of little avail, if they lot form part of a direct and un;akable preaching of the goapel. s not by alluring people with the of enjoyment that their souls to be won: it is by appealing to r sense of duty. To inveigle ;>le into church under specious oxts is not likely to win ther.i raver and. unless they pray, they lit just ;ts well stay at home. In1 a man of character may very lonably resent the trick?for such s likely to esteem it ? of getting i 11 to church with a promise of e entertainment. Rut the miniswith a high ideal of the responslv. who bids him to come and r the word of God. will command iect and stands a better chance winning the man for a churchr. We have had too much of the etricious and the ad captandum rjur churches: why not try the nd and substantial fare which I the hearts and minds of a genion ago? The Rible explained a minister in sloemn earnest, is litely more interesting tlian talk ill magic lantern slides. Ji it men to come to churrlij?or i souls' good, why not appeal to science?- -Tin Uocliostet Postiress. Piles Cured in ri to 14 Days. r druggist will refund money if PA 7.Q TS1EST fails to cuit any ca--e of Itching, d, Weeding or Protruding Vilesin6to:' '"a-, * Crr.t application ufvc* Fa>e a?*\ Rest. 4">c *, H-+ > + JM 9 I || > J Vho | u n :ed to I"" M n . i i Be a *} ZX 41 33 SON |j :