8 3,000,000 ARMY PROGRAM READY, HOUSE EXPECTS Secretary Baker Due Before Committee This Week With Estimate of Nation's Needs Washington. April 29.—Secretary Baker is expected to appear before the House military committee' this week to furnish long delayed esti mates for the support of the \rmy during the next fiscal year. The House committee is inclined to be lieve that it will be asked to appro priate for an Army of approximate ly ,000.000 men, and that the Secre tary will gro into detail concerning plans for the speedy training of ad ditional forces and thir dispatch to France. When Secretary Baker recently ap peared before the Senate and House military committees he informed them that he was not read> v then to present estimates for the Army, nor to reveal the size of the Army want ed by the War Department. These matters, he said, were pending with the general staff. Much of Mr. Ba ker's testimony was devoted to a. description of his visit to the battle front. He promised to return to the Capitol "In a few days" and furnish definite figures. The paramount question to be de cided this week is the size of the Army for the next year of operation. There will also be raised the ques tion whether it is necessary to ra'se the draft age pmit. Representative Shallenberger (Neb.) of the House committee has announced that he will seek introduction in the bill of a provision for the registration and drafting of men up to forty years old. Should Secretary Baker declare such an amendment unnecessary at thia time he will not press it. Driver Woodward Wants on Ballot Mandamus proceedings to compel j the Secretary of the Commonwealth to certify a nominating petition for George Woodward, a driver, 19X8 ISonitJ! street, Philadelphia, for Re publican nomination for senator in the Sixth (Philadelphia) district were institnted in the Dauphin county court to-day. The hearing will be k held May 2. The petition charges that the secretary's department ac cepted his nomination petition, but has not certified it to Philadelphia. The Secretary will file an answ°r through the Attorney General's De partment At the Capitol it is said that whilr> the Woodward paper was received it was accepted conditionally. i>eing subject to examination and that when examination was made it was found short of signers. Dr. George Wood ward is also a candidate in this dis trict. Y. M. C. A. BOAR 1) MEETS A meeting of the woman's advisory board of the Central Y. M. C. A. was held at 3 o'clock this afternoon in the association building Second and • locust streets. Routine business was transacted. "Wtat noma Make* Corc.m Rairantm" Gorgas' CREAM LILAS A Fragrant Non-Greasy Toilet Cream It is almost immediately ab sorbed by the skin and can be freely used at any time with out injury to gloves or cloth ing -Delightfully cooling and healing in all cases of rough ness or irritaUon of the skin. 25< k Gorgas' Drug Store 16 NORTH THIRD ST. and PENNA. STATION BLISS NATIVE HERB TABLETS THE GREATEST FAMILY MEDICINE It Is very gratifying to receive words of praise every day from all parts of the universe as to the beneficial results experienced by people in all walks of life for tak ing Bliss Native Herb Tablets. Yet the ingredients used in these tab lets contain nothing injurious, con sisting of roots, barks, and herbs, scientifically compounded in proper proportions. They assist nature to perform its functions, correcting constipation, indigestion and bili ousness, relieving sick headache and rheumatism. They have been serving people for more than thirty years and are the favorite house hold remedy in many thousands of homes. Mrs. Mary Jackson. Scott City Hans., writes: "I know Bliss Native Herb Tablets 1* the best family medicine In the world and would not be without them. I am now NEED Is • heahhy, active, industrious Hrer. Small dose* of these pills taken regularly insure that. You may also need a purgative sometime*. Then take one larger dose. Keep that in mind; it will pay you rich dividends in Health and Happiness. fttaalae X? . Small Pill Small Don nature / Small Price ROSY CHEEKS or HEALTHY COLOR Indies tea Iron la the Blood. Pala or ssrs&tsCARTER'S IRON PILLS 7 MONDAY EVENING, MARY GAR DEH, AS "THE SINNER '^^MM^MM^^MMi^'//M'Mt.^M2SQ.:^ The Colonial Theater to-day will show Mary Garden in "The Splendid Sinner." by Kate Jordan. The story depicts life as we see it to-day, and the locale ranges from ISew York and its environs to the battlefront of France. Miss Garden is seen as a dominant figure in the smartest set of Bohemia and as a Red Cross nurse. As Dolores Fargis she is a woman who puts behind Jher the hectic, hollow life she lias led for years and, against the promptings of her better judgment, marries Hugh Maxwell, a young physician, who is ignorant of her past. But her happi- j ness is short-lived, for the man who had protected her appears without warning and urges her to renew their tie. Nor does disaster stop here, for her husband interrupts them and in | SHOVES TRADE . I ASIDE TO RUSH TROOPS TO WAR Ships Will Be Used to Last j Ton For Troops and Supplies Washington April 29. The most j important announcement of the war) was made here to-day. The United I States is to furnish the "last re- i serves" that will give the final de- j cision against the military machine! of Germany. • "Men, men, more men!" on thej western front in the present crisis of the war is the cry from all quar-j tors that has been ringing in the I ears of the American people. "Ships, ships, more ships!" for the I transportation and maintenance ol' i American troops albroad is the echo! of that appeal that has stirred the 1 United States shipping board from j day to day. The decision his now been reach- j ed. The supreme effort is to be madei to get troops abroad. Considerations i of commerce and trade have been | definitely put aside. The business of) winning the war is the only business! that will be recognized from this | time on. Want to Hear a Lewis Machine Gun in Action? Demonstration Tonight If you want to see—and hear—a! Lewis machine pun in action, as it is at the front, go to the illustrated war i lecture to be given by members of j Company A. Three Hundred apd Twenty-sixth Battalion. Light Tank j Corps, at the Technical High School Auditorium this evening, at 8:15 o'clock. A real I*wis gun ha* been brought from Gettysburg and the men who have been drilled in handling it and , J who will use it in France against the ! I Huns, will put it through its paces I and will fire enough blank cartridges I to make the auditorium of the High! School sound like the Interior of a I French trench during a Hun attack, i This will be only one of the features ] of the illustrated war lecture to be ! delivered by Sergeant-Major Robert | Bowman, of the Light Tank Corps. • who was formerly a lieutenant in the French field ambulance service and | j was in many of the big actions before ' America went Into the war. He has I some remarkable moving pictures of j the war zone and an interesting war ! story to tell. ; The money raised will all go toward the athletic recreation fund of the Three Hundred and Twenty-sixth Bat -1 talion. eighty-five years old and for the i past twenty-two years have used Bliss Native Herb Tablets when needed. I live alone, do my own housework, and thank you for your wonderful prescription, for it is due to them that I am able to do my own work." If you feel run-down, fatigued or have no appetite, take Bliss Native Herb Tablets, and you will be agreeably surprised at the im-' provement in your condition. One tablet at night will make the next day bright. Bliss Native Herb Tablets are put up In a yellow box of 200 tab let*. The genuine have the photograph of Alonzo O. (jSt) Bliss on the cover. Everv VT/ tablet Is stamped with the trad.> mark. Take no other. Price $1 per box. Sold by Kennedy's Drug i Store and local agents everywhere. a burst of fury and shattered hopes he leaves Dolores. They meet again, Dolores as a nurse in a French hospital captured by the enemy, her husband as a wounded soldier taken prisoner in a dash across [ the front. The old love surges on : them and Dolores resolves to atone for the wrong done the man she worships. She enables him to escape, j the precious documents stolen from | the German officer next his heart. | Willingly she pays the penalty for her ' devotion, and critics say that in a i poignant Scene Mary Garden as Do- I lores achieves a triumph of acting. | Miss Garden is enthusiastic over the j production, declaring it to be in ev'ery > respect a worthy successor to her i "Thais," with the added advantage of I allowing her to be herself— a woman of to-day as her friends know her. GIVE EVERYTHING, URGED BY SINGER ' Mine. Schunaann-Heink Moves Big Audience at Patri otic Bally | "Give them everything we have. 1 What is money compared to our chil dren? Nothing! 'They are making j the sacrifice, not we! We must sacri j fice! The quicker we send; the quick ; er we give; the quicker we do every thing, the sooner will we have those ! brave boys back home again." In | these words Madame Ernestine Sclu : mann-Heink, known as one of the world's greatest contralto singers,urg -1 ed the 2,500 people who heard her. In I buy Liberty Bonds and to "put heart | and soul into the war." Mine. Schu- J mann-Heink sang and spoke at the big patriotic rally in Chestnut Street I Auditorium Saturday night. 'I "We never realize what is in our i boys," the great singer continued, j "They are too great for hatred. They • have their mother's religion. If any- I one wins, it will be our boys. For I everything I possess I thank the | United States. It's my time to pay j back, even at a terrible sacrifice. I've spent twenty years of my life here and I owe everything to your United States and mine. The singer's voice trembled as she tcld of her boys, some of them in the uniform of Uncle Sam. and one light ing with the Kaiser. "We never thoußht there would be war with Ger n any or he would have been nere too. He loved the United States," >'he cried. Crowds began to gather for the big meeting at 6 o'clock, Saturday even ing. To avoid congestion of traffic, the doors were thrown open at 6.30 and the throng '.'Cgan to pour into th? big building. At T.;',o, t.he announced time for the doors to open, the build ing was comfortably filled, and by 8 o'clock, virtually every seat was oc cupied. Henderson Gilbert, chairman of the meeting, introduced the Rev. .1. Bradley Markward, pastor of the Bethlehem Ijutheran Church, who of fered a short prayer. Mine. Schumann-Heink was next in troduced. When she stepped to the front of the stage she was greeted by volleys of applause. She sung as her first number. "My Heart Ever Faithful." "I love the Irish." she said, announcing that she would sing "Danny Boy," an old Irish folksong. There was infinite tenderness in her voice as she sang the song of an Irish maiden whose lover had gone to war. "She's thinking of her own boys at war." commented many of the audience. "When the Boys Come Home," was her next number, follow ed by a brief address, and the sing ing of "The Star Spangled Banner.'' The Rev. J. Bradley Markward, pas tor of Bethlehem Lutheran Church. In an inspiring address, urged all to pur chase Liberty Bonds. "Bon't be a slacker; dream Liberty Bonds." he cried. Sergeant Maior Robert Bowman, of the "Light Tank Corps at Camp Colt. Gettysburg, spoke of his experiences in France, and described a drive upon German position by allied troops. The meeting was closed with the singing of "America." under the leadership of Mrs. Wilbur F. Harris. Coal Shortage to Be Felt Severely Next Winter Unless Conditions Improve The coal shortage this winter will be worse than last year unless th car shortage is alleviated, according S to statements given to the National j Coal Association to-day by operator.-! |ln the eastern producing fields, | where more than 90 per cent, of the j nation's coal supply Is mined. In the opinion of the operators it j is time for the war industries board to readjust the traffic so coal may be . moved in sufficient proportion In the ' summer to prevent a famine in the winter. The local situation at the present time is not encouraging. While there is coal corning into the city every day, and the dealers have no trouble supplying present needs, they have been unable to do anything toward supplying the needs of the consum ers for next winter. At the central coal office there are many hundreds of orders for next winter's coal which the dealers are unable to fill. Dealers are hopeful that the sup ply arriving in the city will increase as the summer advances, in wrder that the needs for next winter may be supplied before the cold weather arrives. rit'TIRES OF RI'I.VED FRENCH CHincifKS SHOWN ON SCREEN At Westminster Presbyterian Church last evening pictures of churches ruined by the shelling of the Germans were shown on a screen, among these being the no table cathedral of Hhelms. The pas tor, the Rev. Kdwin K. Curtis, deliv ered a lecture In connection with the pictures. The audience sang "The Star Spangled Manner" and "Amer ica," and, with Augustus G. Shant/ singing the verse of "Keep the Home Fires Burning,"' the large au dience sang the chorus, the being thrown on the screen. HARHISBURG TELEGRAPH DEMOCRACY OR HUN MUST DIE, PREMIER WARNS Lloyd George Says Autocracy and Freedom Arc in I Grip of Death Ivondon. April 29. —ln a special} preface to a volume containing cx-j tracts from the Prime Minister's war' speeches, Mr. Lloyd George says; "I never believed that the war would be a short war or that in some mysterious way, by negotiation or compromise, we could free Europe from the malignant military auto cracy which is endeavoring to train-i pie it into submision and moral death. "I always believe that the ma chine which has established its des potic control over the minds and bodies of its victims and has th.>n organized and driven them to slaugh ter, in order to extend that control ] to the rest of the world, would only be destroyed if free peoples proved themselves strong and steadfast enough to defeat its attempt in arms. 1 "The events of the last few weeks must have made it plain to every) thinking man that there is no longeri room for compromise between the' ideals for which we and our enemies stand. Democracy and autocracy i have come to the death grip; one or j the other will fasten its hold on man-! kind. "It is a clear realization on t"nis| issue which will be our strength in trials to come. I have no doubt that 1 freedom will triumph. But whether it will triumph soon or late, after' a final supreme effort in the next f'W months, or long drawn agony, de pends on tha vigor and self-sacriliro with which the children of liberty, especially those behind the lines, de-j dicate themselves to the struggle. j "There is no time foi ease, delay I or debate. The call is imperative; the choice is clear, it is for each' free citizen to do- his part." CHINA GOES OVER TO JAPAN IN PACT, CHINESE CHARGE Shanghai Gazette Asserts Se cret Agreement Gives Con trol to Island Empire Muingliai, April 24, (Delayed).— J The statement is made in the first issue of the Shanghai Gazette, j which has made its appearance un-j der the editorialship of Eugene Chen, that the Chinese government irasj agreed to new demands made by Japan, which are of such a nature that the country has virtually been turned over to the Japanese. The Gazette asserts it has been informed by a high official at Peking that the Japanese demands are far more se rious than those in Group V, of the famous twenty-one demands Tuade by Japan in 1915. "Notwithstanding the fact that the utmost secrecy is being observed," says the Gazette, "it may be stated safely that the following is not far from the true terms of the agree ment. "Chinese expeditionary forces sent to Siberia shall be commanded by a Japanese. "Chinese police shall be organized by Japanese officers. "Japan shall control all of China's arsenals and dockyards. "Japan shall have the privilege of working mines in all parts of China. "Special privileges shall be grant ed to Japan in outer and inner Mon golia and the whole of Manchuria. "Other articles include provisions for financial control and educational assistance." A dispatch filed in Peking April 4, said it was reported there that Japan had submitted a new series of demands to China, including com plete control of China's finances, the purchase of fifty per cent, of China's ammunition in Japan, operation of Chinese from mines and dockyards under .Japanese control and recogni tion of special Japanese interests in Mongolia, as in Manchuria. Beidleman Goes to Western Counties Senator Edward E. Beidleman, candidate for lieutenant governor, left to-day on a tour or the western part cf the state and will bo in thai section, with headquarters in Pitts burgh, ail week. The Senator will visi; a number of the western coun ties. His dates not conflict with Senator Sproul, who will be in the western end of the state after Wed nesday for a fortnight. "I am very well satisfied with the outlook and with what I have heard" said the Dauphin Senator this moi',l - ins,'. "I have been in eastern coun ties and from what I hear the wes r , is all right." The Senator on Saturday closed a campaign among 'he Republican electors of Schuylkill for their sup port of him as a candidate for the nomination of lieutenant governor. He mingled among the delegates of the Travelers' Protective Association, in session in Pottsville. He was accompanied by James Lentz, regis ter of wills and (recorder of deeds in Dauphin county, who,'for a number of years as a commercial -travoier, frequently visited the county and be came familiar with hundreds of in fluential citizens. Senator Beidle man expressed great satisfaction at the cordial greetings given him everywhere. YOUR SHOES HEAT jSP IN B POLISHES jffEttßmagtiK preserve the leather A W / A W\ UQU'DS 8. PASTES m W /, ,A W ) *°* BLACK, WH/TE, TAN, DARK \ / TMEr.r.DA^uY^Tt 0Wt ITD. , ™ — / 900WN OR OX-BLOOD SHOES. u■■ ■/ 1 " 1 ' ' : t\ ' / •■'- 1 •• I , I-in Lorraine Lester, in "When Dreams Come True n v • "When Dreams Come True," the musical comedy sensation which will > be the attraction at the Orpheum next Kriday, bijf pong •'earns Come True" is in three acts. ■ I the first showing the deck of an ocean II liner at sea, the i-econd llie ljvingrootii | | in the home of nr. American millloK '| aire, and the third the ballroom in the j same home The company is a large one of clever s tigers apd dancers, in- I I eluding a dancing and singing , ' | chorus of graceful and beautiful girl- j j hood. I | The New York Winter Garden j claims never to have housed a show that has proved I I The "Shan such a success as lof Wonders" did. the "Show of nt the Orpliemn Wonders." the huge j spectacle clue at the \ ■ Orpheum, Saturday, matinee and ! > night. In the New York home of these 4 huge offerings, the "Show of Won r ders." played for seven solid months to capacity business. And no wonder, either, for if we are to judge from ad- I vance report, it is one of the biggest 1 and best entertainments of its kind I ever produced. In the first place it I has a truly wonderful cast of Broad-1 way favorites —enough in fact for ( two or three shows. This east is 1 headed by such notables as Eugene I 1 | and Willie Howard. Tom Lewis, and I ! it includes others of prominence, such ! as Sidney Phillips. White and Clay ■i ton, Flora Lea. Charles Wright, Ernest | • I Hare, Dan (Jiiinlan. Edmund Mul-] i cahey, Arthur Davis, and Adele Zolar. L j There is also a marvelous scenic . [equipment, which includes the thriller I I| of the century—"Over the Top." a j ! stage representation of American j " I aviators bombarding the German first 1 | line trenches. -j Appearing at the Recent Theater, | to-day, to-morrow and Wednesday, in \ ,| his late st • DouKln* Fnlrlmnks, photoplay, "Mr. In "Mr. Flx-I." Fix-It," as the " nt the Regent expounder Of > A theory that! . happiness is a habit and comes only I to those who afford happiness to . .'others, Douglas Fairbanks' will be j , 1 seen in a new and novel character! I creation vastly different from those of " tiie Wild West in which he recently i "I has been seen with such success. j • ] The scenes of "Mr. Fix-It" are lo [ cated in the home of wealthy resi-j j dents of New York, and he is an all- | i i round fixer of hearts and things. There i is much bickering, petty hatreds and I jealousy among these aristocratic] 1 I men and women, T>ut when "Mr. Flx ' 1 It" enters a magical transformation . takes place. He is a genial, smiling . chap, who laughs and conducts him . j self in a manner that provokes (lie j sternest criticisms of 'the elderly 'I maidens and aunts of the contracted! couples. This does not dismay him one whit, for he keeps right on Axing j 'matters by practical illustrations of' his philosophy, the result being o ! series of mirth-provoking develop ' menrs, which afford amusement to all who behold them. An exciting scene in-the picture is a battle between "Mr. Fix-It" and sev i oral gangsters in the slums. Mr. Fair j banks climbs down the side of a house on a clothesline and swings across a street on an election banner. | This is said to be one of the most I thrilling stunts Mr. Fairbanks ever | has performed. It is said that no musical comedy of the Broadway season has been more persistently hummed "Flo-Flo" nl and whistled into tlic Orplu-um fume than "Flo-Flo," John fort's latest musical comedy, which he is bringing to the Orpheum Theater on Tuesday find Wednesday.and Wednesday mati nee. next week. "Flo-Flo" is now tile attraction at the Cort Theater, New York, where it has been running for a number of months. "T Don't Know What You See In Me" has been sung everywhere this season. It is one of the features in which Mr. Cort's "perfect thirty-six" chorus comes to the front to estab lish its claim to being the only comedy iliorus in captivity. The eccentric dancing of the girls in this number captivated New York. • The chorus supports an excellent cast, which in cludes: Louise Kelley. Hal Skelley, Harry Firsh, Ben Hendricks. Rert Gardner, Blanche Bellaire. Mildred Beverly, Anna Sands, Joseph Holland, Innis Brothers. C. Hickinger. Lou Leathers, and the Perfect Thirty-six Chorus. In "The Splendid Sinner." Goldwyn's elaborate screen production starrinK the magnificent Mary Garden Mary Garden, it in "The is interesting to Splei'.illd Sinner," note that the play nt the Colonial chosen for the famous pr im, a donna's second appearance in motion pictures, is in no sense an echo of "Thais," which scored nation-wide success. "The Splendid "Sinner" will he shown at the Colonial Theater to day and to-morrow. Critics say that the role assumed by Miss Garden en ables her to express the vivid, electric quality of hef unique personality, and also Rives the thousands of people everywhere, who want to know what Mary Garden looks like shorn of the robes and mantles ■ of her operatic heroines, a chance to see her dressed in modern clothes. One of the scenes in this production is a banquet. Junior Red Cross TAG DAY May 4 EDUCATIONAL / i School of Commerce AND Harnsburg Business College Troup HulUUns, 15 S. Market So. lit-11 phouu 453) Dlul BooKKeeping, shorthand, steno type. Typewriting, Civil service. If you want to secure a gpod position and Hold it, get Thor ough Training in a Standard school of lOMtubllabed Itrpulutlou. Da* and Night School. Enter auy Aiun ci ay. Fully accredited by the National Association. , 1 I - r % Ladies a "r d Gents v Your nt/7 Panama JcZ! Needs Attention The season is before you. Now is the time to have your hat put in order. You have a fine hat. It is entitled to the very best renovating. We have the season's latest blocks. Our hatter is thoroughly experienced in every detail of the work. Columbus H,, Pario r ning 44 North Third St. APRTL 29, 1918. ' IJancers entertain the guests on a glass-topped table and Miss Garden herself, as guest of honor at tills bril liant revel, stands above the light streaming through the glass pane and plays a violin. Throughout the pro duction she moves—or rather dashes —a gorgeous figure, dancing, lovlnfcr, hating, cheating, fighting and finally rising to noT>le martyrdom. "Rocky Pass." the Majestic'* head liner the early half of the present week, 'is described as a i \ the roundup of comedy, sing- I Majestic ing. roping nnd dancing. and tells of life among the cowboys and the manner in which a pretty girl from the Er.st is welcom ed when she visits her cattleman! brother. With a special stage setting! showing a mountain valley, with il 3 J waterfalls and stream, and with the j ranch house nestling in a clump of | trees at the foot of the valley, the act i is satd to have the real western as- j pect Grouped around this attraction 1 arc: Sidney and Townley. clever duo. j in songs, dances and nonsense: i Manikins, a novelty offering: Harry Preen, clever "nut" comedian, and Mr. | and Mrs. Mel liourne, presenting a, laughable sketch. A picture which is notable for the huge amount of that much abused : word, "punch, > William Farnum. In is William I •■ltouKli and Rend>," Farnum's de nt the Victoria luxe produc- ! tion, "Rough | and Ready," which will be shown for 1 the first time at the Victoria Theater | to-dav and to-morrow. "Rough- and Ready" is the irst photoplay in mora : than n year, with the possible excep tion of "The Heart of a Ijion," in! which the famous William Fox star has had a "blue-shirt role" almost ! from the beginning of the story. It is i AMUSEMENTS ! Regent Theater 1 To-day, To-morrow A Wednesday j Douglas Fairbanks —IX— "MR. FIX-IT" ADMISSION t ; • 10 A. M. till 0 P. >l. Adult* 15c, Children 10c, and War Tax. # KveninKt • Children, 104* nnd War Tax. Adult*, 20c. *• J MAJESTIC j An Extraordinary Feature Bill Including "Rocky Pass" A round-up of comcd.v, roping, 1 dancing; nnd xinglng;. Mr.&Mrs.Melßurne In An I p-to-Dnte Comedy Sketch. \ 3 Other Cla**y Kenture* ;i THIS WEEK THIS WEEK Majestic Liberty Week EVERY DO M.Alt TAKEN IV AT 1 THE BOX OFFICE Wll.l, HE.IN VESTED IN I.IBEHTY IIOMJS 1 THROUGH THE HAKHISHUKG COMMITTEE. REGENT THEATER SPECIAL ATTRACTION Today, Tomorrow and Wednesday DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS THE MOST POPULAR SCREEN STAR, IX " MR. FIX-IT " HIS NEWEST ARTCRAKT COMEDY One sight of •'DOUR" doing ••stunts" in immaculate evening dress will be enough to start you laughing; you'll keep it up through five '°Tliis C i> one of the best comedies in which Fairbanks ever has been seen. The Fairbanks smile bgams as "Mr. Fixi-lt fixes things even a human heart. | Shown to Capacity Audiences Everywhere—Come Early ADMISSION —10 A. M. till I*. M.: Adults, loc; Children. lc and war tax. Evening: Children, 10c and war tax; Adults. 20c THURSDAY AND FRIDAY A Great Stpry of Racial Instinct SESSUE HAYAKAWA in "HIDDEN PEARLS' A Soul-Stirring Drama of Racial Call ADMISSION 10 AND 15c AND WAR TAX SATURDAY ONLY ANN MURDOCK in "THE RICHEST GIRL' ORPHEUM N?ght & ORPHEUM "ght & FRIDAY. MAY *3. "J™™-.™ PRICES: Mat., $1.50 to 50c Eve., $1.50 to 25c; Mat., SI to 25c Seats Thursday; Mail Orders X Scats Wednesday *• *• Winter Uudn]i Earn. Mastodon of Musical Show: THE BRILLIANT AND CHARM- m i vi. s _ < *ST OF INC. MUSICAL COMEDY " ■ Wh en Dreams Come mm Howard I Chnrlrx f Wr^J. I 1 I*! Tom Lenin \ J l>nn quli • VI Ancle White anil \nl*ley, New York Applauded It For One Clayton i f Ptal Whole Yeai—SO WILL YOU 1/ O'Hearn . And the far-lamed beauty bri% A (-REAT SINGING AND Also the thf TnrJ DANCING CHORUS tsalion vcr xne I °H in this type of work that Mr. Karnum won his earliest fame on the screen, because of his rugged characteriza tions of heroic figures la always so vividly strong and good. Mr. Farnum's newest vehicle is sure to receive the same splendid reception given to every drama in which he ap pears. There are many unusually fine touches In the building of the dramatic situations and Director Richard Stanton has provided the dis tinguished star with an admirable supporting company. AMUSEMENTS Victoria Theater TO-DAY AND TO-MORBOW WILLIAM FAR*CM "ROUGH AND READY" WEDNESDAY ONLY MRS. VERNON CASTLE L "VENGEANCE IS MINE" —ALSO— "THE EAGLE'S EYTT Thursday. Friday and Saturday CHARLIE CHAI'LIN In "A DOG'S LIFE" VICTORIA I'RICESi 10c nnd 15c and War Tax —' 4 ORPHEUM THURS. MAY 2 A DIG BANNER BURLESQUE The Mischief Makers LADIES HH COLONIAI •TODAY AND TOMORROW Mary M .AAKV GARDEM. C;_ ■ •oMwyn Plcjurr# Star.. I Mary Garden as the vaniplrM who became an angel of portrays the story, of a womaß who knew all sorrows and I save one. WEDNESDAY —THURSDAY ■ Constance Talmadgel Up The Road With Sail J