10 HUN LEADERS ARE I EAGER TO LEARN AROUT U.S. ARMY Teuton Soldiers Instructed to j Obtain All Possible Infor- ; mation About Sammees By Associated I'ress With the American Army In Prani'r, Sunday, March 31.—German j urmy leaders are exceedingly anx- ' ions to obtain information concerning j the most minute details of the Amer- I ican Army. This is disclosed by a j captured German document issued to ] the Fifth Bavarian Eandwehr infan- j try brigade and which instructs ev- 1 cry observer and patrol to do his or its best "to bring in information j aboui the new enemy." The results | obtained are to be added to official i reports. The captured document starts out : fcy giving details that are known, j such as those regarding the Amer- j ican uniform, and adds that the In- j fantry is equipped partly with En*- j lish rifles and that the artillery I l.tobably ha's French guns. It says American troops still continue train ing in France, adding: Nothing Known of Method* "Nothing is known as yet about 'he methods of fighting or leader ship." "From the preceding meager de tails," it continues, "it is evident that sectors K and M have the honorable task of obtaining as much informa tion as possible on particular fea tures of American fighting and out post tactics. This will then be used for extending the information bulle tin. Any observation or identifica tion. however insignificant, may be of the greatest value in connection with the information at hand." Attention then is drawn to "self evident questions." which observers, patrols and outposts are expected to find answers for. Under the heading. "The Enemy's Security," the docu- ( ment says: "Are sentry posts sentry posts or j stronger posts? Further advanced ! rcconnoitering patrols? Manner of challenging? Behavior on post dur ing day and night? Vigilance? Am bush tactics and cunning? "Do they Rlioot and signal on ev ery occasion? Do the posts hold their ground on the approach of a patrol or do they Jail back? Do they give barrage fire signals? When are the reliefs and what is the behavior during them? Have they any light signals other than French ones?" "Kiiemy Patrols'' Under "Enemy Patrols." the docu ment asks details on 'strength, methods' of advance, behavior on meeting and initiative." These ques tions come under information on gen eral behavior: "Are the Americans careful and cautlousV Are they careful or noisy? What Is their behavior during smoke | tcreens? What is their behavior at j meal times? When are these? Can j concentration be observed? Is there j much reconnoitering? How is the j behavior day and night? Is there j much gun firing? If there is more ' or less transport of material than I formerly?" The Germans also want to know I whether during reliefs there are ; more troops In the rear than is cus- | ternary with the French and what are the times and sounds of reliefs, l! is said that used Infantry and ma chine gun bullets, unexploded shells nnd shell splinters are of special val ine. The Germans want to know whether the copper rotating bands have sharp Incisions, indicating new or worn-out guns, the caliber of 1 which can be determined by the curvature of the splinter, according to the document. Wlile Information ltenlrcil Information regarding the color and outside appearance of projectiles fired by the Americans also Is de sired. The German soldiers are or dered to keep fuses, splinters of shells and shell bases having factory initials and numbers. Under the heading, "Enemy Shelling," they are asked the American peculiarities compared with the French, what ob jectives are preferred and whether dugouts are shelled. The document asks also that it be determined 1 whether the Americans employ bursts j of fire or single shots at fixed In- ] tervals and what Is the normal firing jate when observation Is good. Many of the above Items while ap parently trivial, it is pointed out by intelligence officers. Indicate why the censorship has been oblged to delete certain matter from press dis patches. Since the captured docu ment was Issued the Germans nat -1:rally have found answers to many of the questions, but about the others the American expeditionary force be lieves It Htill has the enemy guess ing. Vienna Paper Prints Real Facts About Hun Entrance Into the War l.omlon, April I.—The cold, hard, unpalatable truth was ever as pain fully Inimical to the Hun as salt to tile slug. Here Maximilian Harden. A on Gerlacli and Dr. Naumann have tried again and again to drive home to the Teutonic mind some elemen tary facts, but their missionary ef torts have not penetrated beyond their own' special circles. The Arbeiter Zettung, of Vienna, the only Germanic journal which neither Kaiser Wlllielm nor Kaiser Karl can kill, publishes an article on the real cause of the world war which must be gall and wormwood to the fire-eaters of Hunland. "It Is a fatal mistake," it says, "to suppose that it was commercial envy that caused 'Kngland to place herself in opposition to Germany. Indeed, Kngland at first tried most • rergetlcally to conclude a compact with Germany. "It was only when Germany coldly declined all Kpgllsh approaches, when (iermany constantly added to her gi gantic fleet, when a wild nationalism was Inflaming German civilians into n hatred of Kngland and plunging tliem Into the most extravagant <liearns of expansion, when, further, the unfortunate Morocco policy nroused the suspicion that Germany intended an onslaught on France, lliat In England a profound mistrust i.f Germany manifested Itself." American Losses American casualties in France to date are as follows: Reported Mar. 30 Total Killed in action 6 229 Killed by accident ... 2 163 Died of disease 14 776 J.ost at sea *..... 0 257 Died of other causes.. 1 45 Total deaths 23 1470 Wounded 7 781 Captured 0 22 Missing 0 58 Totals 30 2331 MONDAY EVENING, Map Shows German Battle Gains <JlZ■ * ** The solid black portion of the map marks the deep salient driven into the French front. Three towns have been retaken from the Germans and the French have gained one and one-half miles on a seven-mile front 011 the lower side marked by the arrow. The arrow on the upper side of the salient indicates the point where British are lighting fiercel> to lessen the pressure on French. The uppermost arrow near Arras shows where the Germans have extended their drive fives miles to the north. Relationship of the offensive to the remainder of the front is visualized in the inset map. Haig's line of March 21 in the big map is represented by the shaded line. AMERICANS WILL HELP FRENCH AND ENGLISH TO STEM GERMAN DRIVE Paris, April I.—"The French gov- , ernment has decided to accede to the desire expressed by General Per shing in the name of the United States Government." says an official note issued Saturday, dealing with the operation of American troops with the French and British. "The American 'troops will fight sine by side with the Britisn and French troops, and the Star Span gled Banner will float beside the French and English flags in the plains of Picardy." With the American Army in Franco, March 30 (delayed).—By The Asso ciated Press.—All the American troops have been turned over to the allies for such use as they see fit to make of them. American troops may soon be fighting side by side with their British and JFrench allies in BRITISH AND FRENCH HOLD HORDES OF ENEMY AS FIERCE FIGHT WAGES By Associated Press Paris, April I.—The battle con tinued with extreme violence last night in the sector north of Mont didier, large bodies of troops being thrown in by the Germans, the war office announces. The French anil British troops broke up tlio assault ing waves. Further south the fighting was no less violent, the Germans making incessant attacks in an effort to cap ture Griveshes. The French retained possession of the town and inflicted heavy losses 011 the Germans. The statement follows: "Yesterday and last night the bat tle continued with extreme violence north of Montdidier. The enemy di rected his efforts in particular along the front between Montdidier and APPOINTMENT OF FOCH SECURES UNITY, LONDON PAPERS AGREE By Associated Press London, April I.—Unanimous ap proval i.s given the appointment of General Foch to be generalissimo of the allied forces in France by the morning newspapers, including those which have been loudest in their opposition to such a move. "The appointment," says the Daily Mail, "secures a complete unity, a priceless asset on the side of ihe allies, and means that the move ments of Field Marshal llaig and NO ARMY IN BETTER HEART, BRAVER OR MORE CONFIDENT THAN BRITISH 1/ondon. March 31. —King George, , on returning to London from his visit to the battle front, sent a mes sage to Field Marshal Haig, in which I he said: "Though for the moment our i troops have been obliged by sheer | weight of numbers to give some ground, the impression left on my | mind is' that no army could be in better heart, braver and more con- \ fident than that which you have the! honor to command." HUNS FEVERISHLY ENTRENCH AS THE ALLIED PRESSURE GROWS [Continued from First Page.] crushed by the French who wiped out an .enemy force which tried to establish a bridgehead on the southern back of the river. North of the Sommc where the Germans were thrown back with severe losses by the British Saturday the enemy made no further attempts Sunday and the fighting activity has been moderate. An April Fool Joke If Field Marshal Von Hindenburg intended to spend April 1 in Paris he must have meant some other year than 1918. His troops are still more than 50 miles from the French capital and in eleven days of fighting and under tremendous losses they have not even reached the Paris-Amiens railway, tlie principal route from Northern France to Paris. Indeed they are getting ready to defend themselves against the Anglo-Franco America forces under General Focli. The boastful utterances of the German leaders much in evidence in the early days of the present campaign also have ceased. In north Italy the artillery firing is increasing "in intensity and a large scale- American patrols continue active northwest of Toul. •The German lines arc under bombardment. Marked activity behind the enemy lines shows no sign of letting up but the Ger mans have not attempted any attacks. ■ the battle which is raging in north ern France. It is enough to say that great ac tivity of many sorts is in progress in | the entire American zone. Miles of 1 motortrucks loaded with Americans have passed through the tovVns, some going in one direction, some in j another. Through a driving rain the motortrucks plowed their way | along muddy roads, the Americans I singing. Many of the trucks had j American flags fastened to their j tailboards. On other roads mile after mile of marching Americans splashed through the mud, which came over their ankles. The horses were steaming from the work they had to do. All the men are working as hard as possible, with the realization , that they are to be of service in the ; common cause and used in the pres -1 ent con'"ct. the Peronne-Amiens road and threw forward important forces with the particular object of enlarging his gains west of Hangard-Bn-Santerre. j French-British troops broke up the | assaulting waves, which were not i able to debouch, A brilliant counter j attack in which our allies gave proof | of their valor, enabled the French to | throw back the enemy completely | and recapture this village. | "The fighting further south was jno less violent. Grivesnes was the I objective of powerful attacks which 1 were renewed Incessantly, leading to I hand-to-hand lighting, This town I remained in the hands of the French 'who inflicted considerable losses on | the Germans. "Between Montdidier and Las- I signy there is nothing to .report." General Petain will be linked to gether." The Daily Telegraph says: "In conferring this authority the allied governments have come at length to what from a purely mili tary standpoint is the incontestably right thing." The Daily Xews declared Premier Lloyd George's 'statement on the ap pointment puts an end to a contro versy which never should have been allowed to arise. The king recited how he hacl seen the units recently withdrawn from the front and the entraining of fresh troops, "eager to reinforce their comrades." He said he hail listened with wonder as officers and men had narrated their incidents of the stubborn fighting. The king also told of a visit to a casualty clear ing station where "the patient cheer fulness of the wounded was equaled only by the care and gentleness of those administering to their wants." HABJRISBURG TELEGRAPH! Mary PickforcL in New Role in "Amarilly of Clothes Line Alley" Mary Pickford is at the Regrent Theater to-day, to-morrow and Wednesday in "Amarilly of Clothes Line Alley" and will tell you why slie preferred to marry a bartender to a society youth. 1 MINSTRELS HAVE GOOD PROGR AM Coburn's Entertainers Give Fine Vocal and Instru mental Numbers Coburn's Greater Minstrels held sway at the Orpheum on Saturda.\. Riving a Hue program of vocal an<i instrumental selections, interspersed with some clever jokes. After an open ing: chorus, the first part of the offer ing included vocal solos with quar tets, sextets and double quartets for the choruses. "The Trumpeter," and "The Big Bass ' Viol," baritone and bass solos, were two numbers which were appreciated. I Of the comedy songs, "Take Me to My ' Ma," by Roddy Jordan, and "Some- i body Done Me Wrong," by Tom Post, were the most laughable. Charley Gano's appearance added to ' the fun. His explanation of who 1 knows when the war will end was the I best part of his offering. An acrobatic turn; a number of i saxaphone selections by Russell, Cam- | eron, Brown, Bligli and Jordan, who 1 later change to cornet and trombones; \ harp solos, by Kent Gage: an irnper- ' sanation by Karl Denton, and quartet j numbers by Brandt, Clifford, Bishop i and Fulton, are features of the olio, j Gano came in for another share of comedy honors in "Sammy Simpson j Shot the Shoots, Why Shouldn't lte ' Shoot the Shots'.'" and a parody on the I song, "Where Do We Go' From Here?" The closing offering is another laugh- i producer, with Gano in the lead, in j "The Darktown Submarine Chasers." MAX ROBERTSON. I ORPHEUM Three days, beginning to-day, with daily matinees "Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch." Friday and Saturday, with daily mati nees, April 3 and G "The Girl Xo. Man Should Marry." MAJESTIC High Grade of Vaudeville. COLONIAL. To-day, to-morrow and Wednesday Clara Kimball Young in "The House of Glass." Thursday, Friday and Saturday Norma Talmadge in "By Right of Purchase. REGENT To-day, to-morrow and Wednesday— Mary Pickford in "Amarilly of Clothesline Alley." Thursday and FYiday Dorothy Dal -1 ton in "Love Me." I Saturday Tyrone Power in "The Planter." I Thursday. Friday and Saturday—Ben | jamin Chapin in "Son of Demuc- I racy." VICTORIA To-day Robert Warwick and Elaine l Hammerstein in "The Mad Lover." To-morrow and Wednesday—William | S. Hart in "The Cold Deck." I Thursday Sessue Hayakawa in I "The Wrath of the Gods." ! Friday and Saturday Florence Reed In "To-day." j Who is there that hfis not read I Alice Hegan Rice's two books about Mrs. Wiggs, Lovey j "Mr*. Wiggs Mary, Misa Hazy lof the and all the others Cabbage Patch" who companioned them in two of the I most entertaining stories of the past | fifteen years. Everybody has read I them, and from the demand for seats |at the Orpheum, where Alston and i Wood's revival of "Mrs. Wiggs of the ! Cabbage Patch" will be seen for an engagement of three days, starting to-day. with matinees, the popular theater will be crowded at every per formance. Mrs. Wiggs is a genuine creation, both in the stories in which she appears and In the play, and it is a genuine pleasure to see her in tlesh and blood on the stage. Critics have vied with one another in their praise of "Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch." especially in Its dramatic form. "A second hearing of "Mrs. Wiggs,'" I wrote one, "bears out the good impres- I sions of the first. As an entertain iment simply and a perfect portrait gallery of quaint and well-contrasted characters it can hardly be excelled. I From Mrs. Wiggs herself, down to I Little Tommy, not one could he spared ; without subtracting something from I the enjoyment of the story; and the ' redoubtable Stubbins and the melan choly Miss Hazy, are themselves suf ficient to carry almost any play to success." Long acknowledged as a premier comedian on the American speaking stage. Richard Richard Carle In f'arle has reeent "l'urn nnd Frill* ly added ned lau rels to those al ready garnered during his long career by his remarkable performances in "The Tenderfoot." "Mary's Lamb," "The Spring Chicken." "Jumping Jupiter." "The Cohan Revue," and other big musical productions. Mr. Carle will appear at the Orpheum next week, Wednesday, matinee and night." in his latest and said to be his funniest musical comedy, "Furs and Frills." The book of "Furs and Frills" is in two acts. Edward Clark furnished the lines and lyrics, while the music score is the work of Silvio Heln. Lewis Morton has staged the entire production. Among the song hits are; "When Mv Wife Returns." "You Can't Take It With You When You Die," "Does Pollv Want Waily." "Furs and Frills." "You Can't Think of Evervthing." "It's Easy o Lie to Your Husband." "A a boft Farewell Is Best." "Heart of My Heart." "Always Take Mother's Ad vice," "Make Yourselves at Home," land others. A cast of fifty has been engaged to I support Mr. Carle. It includes: Har ; riet Burt, Fern Rogers, Beth Smalley, ; Ward DeWolf, Burrell Barbaretto, < ; Harry Miller. Milt Dawson. Ollie Riv ! ers, Helen Barry. Five Violin Girls, i ! and others. The large chorus, composed of not- j ed stage beauties, and attired in gor- I | geous costumes, furs and frills, will ! be prominent features in many of the I tuneful musical numbers. The scenes j l represent Mac Tavish and Macey's Con- i fservatory of Music 'atop of the Well-I | worth Building and the Mac Tavish I j Apartment in Washington Square. 1 Seats are now on sale. j "Fair and Warmer" is one of these J j plays of whom it is said everyone has heard and which every "Fair one wants to see, and no ami wonder. "Fair and | Warmer" Warmer" opened at the I Harris Theater its New] York one night two seasons ago with i out any more preliminary notice than j it's customary to give any new at traction. Within twent-y-four hours it was tile talk of New York. A more ; hilariously funny play had seldom I traction. Within twenty-four hours I tergoers. Selwyn and Company, who j present this record-breaker of Avery I Hopwood's, have assembled an excel- j j lent cast, including John Arthur, Xaina Curzon, Maud Andrew, Florence J Ryerson, William H. Sullivan. Chester Ford, John Morris and Ralph Sinione, ' for its presentation here and the pro- I Iduction is exactly the same as that in i which the play was first presented in I : Xew York, where it ran for one entire I I year, and in Chicago, where its run of j [ eight months was only brought to a close in order to fulfill contracts made j long in advance. I I !For a "concord of sweet sounds." j probably nothing equals a limpid so- I ~ prano voice and i I Alma liluck and a harp. It is I Snlvatore de Stefano with great en- I, , thusiasm.there | fore, that the music lovers of Harris- i burg await the coming of Alma Gluck land fcalvatore de Stefano, who will; f give a joint recital next Tuesday i evening, April 2, in Chestnut Street Auditoi lum. The memory of Mine. Gluck's tri- ' umpli. last year, when she received ; an ovation such as critical Harris-i I burg rarely rouses to, is too vivid to 1 require exploiting of the songstress. ' | who is probably more popular than! ' soprano on the concert stage to- ! Those who did not hear Alma Gluck I on that occasion are eagerly awaiting her present visit, so glowing were j the reports of her wonderful voice, I which she managed with the skill .if • a great artist, who knows her chief • assets in reaching the hearts of her people are simplicity, perfect enuncia- I tion and feeling. The Boston Herald, in reviewing a recent concert of Alma Gluck, said "Gluck's golden voice is in itself a delight; its melting richness is haunt ing and irresistible. * * *, But it : is hard to say which is lovelier, Mme. Gluck or her voice." Personal charm and a pleasing ap • pearance add tremendously to the suc cess of an artist, which is the reason • that even the ardent admirers of Alma Gluck's records, find her recitals far beyond their fondest expectations. Signore de Stafano is a brilliant harpist, who invariably delights even that portion of his audience which counts itself among the nonmusical. > Seats on sale at the Orpheum Thea ter. Those desiring choice should call i early. Mail and telephone orders fill ed promtply. I * Jean Sothern. the moving picture favorite, who starred in the serial. "The Mysteries of Jean Sothern Myra." "The Two I at the Majestic Orphans," and nu merous other foa • lures, is an attraction of local interest 'I at the Majestic the first half of this | week. Miss Sothern Is presenting a j high-class vaudeville offering, consist ■ I ing of songs and violin-playing. The - headliner Is the "Down Home Ten," an I j aggregation of colored entertainers in ! | a lively singing and dancing offering. I ; They furnish excellent liarmonv and > also give an exhibition of dancing as i it was done in the early days of the r South. Rounding out the bill arc Paul Brady, in a clever comedy va - l'iety turn: The Brt Earle Trio, in ; strumentalists, and Archer and Bel i ford, offering their amusing skit en- titled "The Piano Mover." ' Clara Kimball Young, the popular i screen star, will be seen as the star of "The House of C lnra Kimball Glass," a screen - Young In "The version of Max House of Glass" Marcin's stage suc -1 cess, at the Colo . nial Theater to-day, to-morrow and ) Wednesday. It is the story of a girl 1 who tries to hide her past record from i the man she loves. Ehe is happily mar- ried to a man who sees in her all that - is pure and noble in womanhood. No . cloud mars her happiness, except one, > and that cloud is Fear. The old say ing, "What a tangled web we weave when we first practice to deceive," applies with special force to this story, for with all the deceptions prac ticed by the young wife, the truth f about her past life is divulged. The I outcome of this story is interestingly . told by Miss Young, Corliss Giles and . a capable supporting company. i Mary Pickford, in her latest Art r craft picture, "Amarilly, of Clothesline I Alley," will be the Mary Pickford Easter attraction 1; In "Amarilly. of at the Regent I i Clothesline Alley" Theater, and will l be shown for the s first three days of the week. It is the most humorous picture in which she , has ever appeared. Clothesline Alley I is typical of the tenement district of ■ a great metropolis, and the charac . ters, from the star down, are all in . digenous to the precincts that form so large and picturesque portions of i the city. Mary Pickford, of course, is ■ Amarilly, daughter of a tender-heart i ed Irish washerwoman, and mother ' of a large family, the boys of which , are messengers and newsboys. Amar illy makes her living as a scrub girl in a theater, while her fiance, Terry McGowan, the pride of the alley, Is a ' bartender in the Midway saloon. Aside from the fact that he hold the heart i i of Amarilly, he is celebrated as the Inventor of the famous Hlckey-Boola cocktail, though ho himself never In dulges in liquor.' Tho happiness of the inhabitants of Clothesline Alley is well portrayed, and the moral attitude is compared to the bored and restless life of the upper crust, including one of Its leading members, Gordon Phil lips. whose mother Is anxious he shall marry a girl of social prominence. Mother receives a severe shoclt when she discovers that her son has fallen in love with Amarilly. The events that ensue prove concl jively that the two widely separated elements in the social world cannot mix happily. Y. M. C. A. Equipment Is Captured by Huns in Advance Through France By Associated Press Paris, April I.—Equipment valued at more than $20,000 sent by ehe American Army Y. SI. C. A. to the British front for the use of Amer ican railway engineers and other American units virtually all has fall en into the hands of the Germans. Four times the Y. M. C. A. men moved ! their positions and abandoned during the retreat one large wooden build ing. two large tents and a quantity cf supplies. Five soldier huts loaned to the British Y. M. C. A. have been lost. Two others on the French line were destroyed by shell lire and two were damaged seriously. A rented Y. M. C A. in Chalons sur Maine was dam aged badly by bombs. ! The only casualty among the Y. M. C. A. workers at the front has been that of Miss Marion G. Cran dell, previously reported killed by a shell. The Y. M. C. A. has placed its cars at the front and elsewhere at the disposal of the British and French in removing: wounded soldiers and refu gees. REGENT THEATER]; Double Attraction Today, Tomorrow nnd Wednesday MAItV I'M KIM)111> in "Amnrllly of Clothes IJoe Alley" When the history of the screen is written. "Amarilly of Clothes Line Alley" will be the standard by which historians judge all Mary Pickford pictures. and A Mink Sennett Comedy ♦•THAT NIGHT" Special AdmlMMlon— -10 A. M. till 0 P. *l., loe 15c KvenliiK —ISO and 20c Majestic Theater Double Headliner Program ! HERE THEY ARE "Down Home Ten" Vaudeville's liveliest Song, Unni'f j ■Hill Musical Ottering TEN DIXIE ENTERTAINERS ' "JEAN SOTHERN"! The ClnMHj' l.ittle Movie Star In j S\(iS AMU STORIES. ;t Other Extraordinary Hits 3 ' \ . / Monday —Tuesday Wednesday CLARA (if KIMBALL sk you ng "The | % House fl/WftKIMBfILLYttUNE „ SELZNICKfI&PICTURES (jI3.SS i Thursday Frldnv Saturday i rp|| | ?HA P SE"' i urn r V————^ ORPHEUM o T~) AV<s BEGINNING i O UnlO —TODAY MATINEES DAILY, 25e, 50c j WOOD AND AISTON'S REVIVAL OF Mrs. of the Cabbage NIGHTS, 25c to *I.OO THUR. , M ,\ T APR. 4 L V E. A BRAND NEW SHOW SOME BABIES "> ith TOM COYNE and GRACE FLETCHER LADIES jgjgg, 10* MON. night APR. 8 AVERY HOPWOOD'S GALE OF LAUGHTER FAIR AND WARMER Direction of Selwyn & Co. SEATS, 25c to $1.50 g— — !■ APRIL 1, 1918. i——Wk OheWHJSßOOiiSPreswt ♦ AmcficaV Serial Supreme 1 THEEAGLESEYK SWILLIAM JJIYNN CHIEF of the US. SECRET SERVICE This Patriotic Photodrama is bsed on the actual facts of the Kaiser's crimes against America. It picturizes THE TRUTH about * von Bernstorff and the Lusitania. ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ It reveals the plot to murder SOO American Naval Officers at a ball in the Hotel Ansonia, New York. ■ ■ It portrays the plan to torpedo the Atlantic Fleet while in Presi dential Review In New York Harbor. These and many other startling, vivid facts of the German spy danger in America are Interwoven with a stirring romantic story In twenty amazing episodes. ■ ■ ■ ■ I ( IMPERIAL v . • miJSKZsiw GERMAN Victoria HWGBAGGOT Theater I " ' ggHHHHHnHHHHBHHI Chestnut btreet Auditorium, Harrisburg, Pa. TUESDAY EVE., APRIL 2ND, 1918 • ALMA GLUCK SEATS ON SALE AT ORPHEUM THEATER Prices SI.OO, $1.50 and $2.00 200 EXTRA RESERVED SEATS AT SI.OO .Mail and Telephone Orders filled Promptly—Assure Choice Reser- ■ \at ions—Add 10 Per Cent, to Remittances to Cover II REGENT THEATER | * ® : • Special Program Easter Week E £ Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday • DOUBLE ATTRACTION |TV MARY 1\ t iriCKFORDi • I I In her best and latest Artcraft success v "Amarilly of Clothes Line Alley" • ITlii.s is probably the most amusing production in which "Our pi Mary" lias appeared. It presents scenes from the highest to the H humblest walks of life, some of which were taken in the famous stj Chinatown of San Francisco. ' -I | Shown recently in New York and Philadelphia and proclaimed to be the greatest Pickford production yet released. Packed A i houses at a large admission price. 'm I Our special admission price for this production, 10 A. M. till H 6 P. M. 10c and 15c. |Jg Evenings: 15c and 20c. Added Attraction: a Mack Sennett Comedy—"That Night" ® 9 Thursday and Friday • DOROTHY DALTON in "LOVE ME" • I Miss Dalton thrills you as few favorites of the screen can See H Saturday e I Tyrone Power in "The Planter" | Seven reels of spectacular photodrama produced from Herman ® Whitaker's famous novel of Southern Mexico. I ADDED ATTRACTION i Thursday, Friday and Saturday ® • BENJAMIN CHAPIN J I In the second chapter of "THE SON OF DEMOCRACY" 1 ® entitled | "MY RATHER" J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers