10 BAKER AGREES TO NEW DRAFT FROM 18 TO 45 Army of Overwhelming Num bers Could Thus Be Put in the Field \> nsliiiigton. Juno 20. — Secretary of War Baker has been won over to the program to extend the military rervlce draft act to all men between eighteen and forty-five years. It will apply the "work-or-fight" order to many millions of men not affected at this time. The Army au thorities do not .seek nor do they ex pect that Congress will give them the right to say just where and at what occupation a man shall work, but as a matter of military necessity the Army feels It must have the power to say that if a man of recognized military age and qualification is not devoting himself to work connected with then he must be called to serve with the colors of his coun try. Baker Announces Approval The War Department nas not for mally recommended the new legisla tion to Congress, but Provost Mar shal General Crowder has been urg ing it and Secretary Baker said to day: "If the amendment to the draft act to extend the age limits to all; men between eighteen and fortv-1 five years is submitted to me 1 shall I recommend that it be passed." This virtually settles the matter, l for there seems to be no doubt at I all that Congress is ready to follow I the advice of the military author!-1 tics. Youths Best SoUliers It has been demonstrated time and time again, however, that boys be tween eighteen and twenty-one make the very finest soldiers in the world, and it is further admitted that in clusion in the Army of the classes! below twenty-one has virtually a neg ligible effect upon the industries of a I country. For instance, it is said to be the I lirst plan of the military authorities) to call into the Army all single men; between thirty-one and thirty-six j years of age. It is believed these will fill the requirements of the Army fori some time to come, taken in con junction with the men who become eligible automatically as they reach twenty-one years of age. Moving Fast to Front Secretary Baker specifically con fined himself to-day to the years be tween eighteen and forty-five. The head of the War Department had' hoped that it might not be neccs-l sary to change the draft laws thisj J ear, but the speed with which j American troops have been sent 1 overseas and consequent quick ab- i sorption of so many of the men ori-'; A Second TWO weeks ago the Telephone Company re quested all telephone users to please refrain from asking the operators for the correct time, ex plaining that this request was necessary because of the considerable volume of such calls which, • if eliminated, would so reduce the abnormal calling volumes as to permit of a redistribution of both operators' service and telephone equip ment, and result in the Company's ability to care for the very heavy telephone demands of the present and the even greater demands for service which are expected in the months to come. It was explained that the same service on the part of the operators, the same length of time, and an equal general use of telephone equipment are necessary to answer such questions as are required to complete an ordinary connection. While the response to this request has been very gratifying and the voluaie of such calls has decreased appreciably, the burden has not been entirely lifted. We, therefore, again bring the matter to the attention of those users of the service who did not read, or who were not impressed by our earlier appeal, urging them to discontinue the practice of depending upon the telephone oper ator for the correct time. The Telephone Company feels that it can count on a continuation of the public's helpful atti tude which will be of very real assistance in meeting the ever-increasing volumes of tele phone calls and demands for telephone service. THE BELL TELEPHONE CO. OF PA. fill W. H. FETTER, Local Manager, VsL U HARRISBURG, PA. SUMMER SCHOOL ATTEND THE BEST The School of Commerce is the Largest, Oldest and Best business school in Harrisburg organized 1894. It is an Institution of Established Reputation, a Recognized Leader whose solidity and permanency are unquestioned. Its Past Record r.mi S Q^?^ PmCnt .' teacl \ ers - methods of instruction. Its management, and ® tandin K have been INVESTIGATED by a by that organUa"on. 0n Commercial Education and fully accredited cation 8 knOW " and by the LEADERS in business edu- | the Nattonal Association of Accredited Com- ' mercia] Schools, Private School Managers Association, National Commercial Teachers Association, and Eastern Commercial Teach ers Association. I 1834 h °°' 8 haV ® come and sone—School of Commerce is here since | Its graduates are uniformly successful. Many were recently placed at beginning salaries of $75. SIOO and $l3O a month ! WHY TAKE A CHANCE INVESTIGATE SCHOOL OF COMMERCE . I THOVP BrM 4M _ mw 4M J. . MARKET SQUARE j ESTER AW MONDAY | THURSDAY EVENING, Descendant of Fighters Arrives Safely in France j jt■ - l|Hßr BBBPtIiP < J s . ; 4 f JOHN W. McELWEJE Relatives of John W. McElwee, formerly of this city, have received word of his safe arrival in France. Mr. McElwee enlisted March 6 and trained with the 20th Engineers. His grandfather, father and six uncles fought in the Civil War. He resided for some time in Franklin county, but is known in Harrisburg as he spent much time here also. ginally called from Class 1 has led to an entire change in the aspect of the manpower situation. If the present rate of shipment to Europe can be maintained and there is every reason to believe It can be increased before very long— troops will move forward to the bat tle fronts at the rate of more than 2,500,000 a year. Czecho-Slovaks on Way to U. S. to Enlist in War Against the Austrians By Associated I'ress \ Pacific Port. June 20. —Lieuten- ant Colonel Raymond Robbins, head of the American Reel Cross Mission to Russia, accompanied by Captain Heywood Hardy and Alexander Grunberg, members of the mission, i reached here late last nigjit enroute' home. The party left Moscow on) May 14. Wliile lieutenant Colonel Robbins said he would make no statement until he hail conferred with the State Department, unofficial members of the party asserted that thousands of ('zecho-Slovaks are on their way to the United States to offer their serv ices against Austria. PARDON BOARD IN RECORD SESSION May Not Finish Long List Be fore Late This Evening; Members Speak Out Members of the State Board of- Pardons who are sitting to-day to hear the list commenced yesterday morning may not be able to reach decisions until late to-night. The; list to-day Included a series of Phil-1 adelphia cases with the application, for release of Freda frost, granted: commutation from a death sentence in 1913, listed "for late in the after noon, to be followed by two Alle gheny dounty first degree cases. Dur ing the hearing of the application for release of Cora Dayton, convicted of damaging railroad property while masquerading as a man with a com pany of tramps, Judge S. B. Sadler sent a' letter of recommending mercy and Secretary of the Commonwealth Woods declared that such persons as | the convict should be kept under po lice supervision when released. The first day's session was enliv ened yesterday by a declaration from Secretary of the Commonwealth . Woods that the Army should not be j made a dumping ground for crimi j nals. E. M. Gilbert, of Lancaster, de clared that, if pardoned, Dr. D. F. i Kline would immediately enter the i Army as a surgeon, but that the Board would have to get busy be cause the doctor is near the age lim ; it. "But this Board doesn't think the Army and Navy of the Unfted States should be made a dumping ground ■ for all the criminals and degenerates who through enlistment hope to se cure release from just punishment," declared Secretary of the Common wealth Cyrus li. Wood. "That sort of an army will not win the war." Deputy Attorney General Keller, op posing the Kline plea, declared he couldn't get in the Army if he want ed to, because the Government re fuse to accept "morally unfit." Lieutenant-Governor McClain also enlivened proceedings when he told J. W. Shannon, of Philadelphia, that the fact that the King's Daughters asked him to take up Stewart Chil son's case wasn't getting Chilson any consideration. "It's hot a very good recommendation," said McClain, "be cause I find that the people who make a practice of visiting prisons— the King's Daughters and prisdn vis iting societies of that sort —are apt not only to get soft-hearted, but soft headed." Chilson's attorney • indicated that j the indefatigable authorities sent the i wrong man to prison. "Well," said Attorney General | Brown, when it was indicated that a I pardon would be forthcoming, "it will be a great source of satisfaction to I Chilson, after serving two years in j tlie penitentiary, to know that doubt i exists as to whether he did it." I P. 1... Walsh, of Scranton, who ap ! peared for Peter Slazzoka, one of a | party of five who beat a fellow coun tryman to death, got scant satisfac tion when he said that Slazzoka's six years In jail have beene plenty. He was sentenced to eighteen and one half years. "If we recognized pleas of the sort you are presenting to us," said Lieu tenant-Governor McClain, "we'd have a general jail delivery. And, any ways, this Board Isn't going to at tempt to adjust race feuds, to the det riment of society In general." Applause Once Custom In Religious Services Someone having written a protest against hand-clapping as being an inartistic method of appreciating musical contributions, Clement An trobus Harris in the Etude makes a few observations on the antiquity of the practice. He says: It is interesting to recall the fact that in what we moderns regard as a less developed stage of musical evolution, clapping the hands, far from being looked upon as an out rage on the musical sense, was an integral part of an orchestral per formance. A bas-relief from Kou yunjik, found among the ruins of Nineveh, and now in the British Museum, represents a procession of musicians. In front are men play ing Instruments, while following them are a number of women and children, probably singing, but cer tainly clapping their hands in time one with another, the arms and hands all being in exactly the same position. In this the Assyrians were following a well-known Egyptian and Ethiopian custom. Most members of the more an cient Communions will probably be surprised to learn that in those early days of Christianity to which they appeal for authority, audible commendation in churches was evi dently quite common—in approval of sermons, if not of musical per formances. With this allowance nay, en couragement—of applause in a sa cred building, it Is interesting to contrast the prohibition of it in secular ones. At one time demon strations of approbation, at least In the form of encores, were prohibit ed in Prance, as was the calling of an author before the curtain. Ap plause is generally tabooed at the performance of Wagnerian operas to-day. Undaunted Overbrook Girl Is Anxious to Get Back Overbrook. Undaunted by the dangers which she experienced dur ing the present Hun drive, Josephine Hayden. of Overbrook, has an nounced her intention of returning to France within a few months. For a year she has been driving a motor truck loaded jvith supplies from Paris to base hospitals. When the Germans started their spring offensive Miss Hayden aided In rescuing the refugees from French villages. For two weeks this 22-year old girl rushed from the actual firing line to points more remote, carrying hundreds of women and children to safety. "I don't feel that I have done any thing very unusual," she said; "there are many young American women working now hi France, and a great many more are needed. What the French need most is airplanes. They don't let anyone coming back lose sight of that fact for a moment." Miss Hayden, daughter of Row land C. Hayden, D 958 Woodbine street, Overbrook, was sent abroad by the Emergency 1 Aid. One Killed When Auto Rolls Into Canal Bed By Associated Press Honovo, Pa., June 20. George Washington Bradncy, aged 78 years, of Renovo, was killed, and Miss Edith Baddorf, a trained nurse, of I.ock Haven, was badly injured in an automobile accident near here last evening They were enroute to the homo of a sick relative of Bradney'H when their automobile overturned into the old Pennsylvania canal bed. HAHRISBURG TELEGRAPH ALL IN BERLIN EXPECT VICTORY Mrs. Challis, Back From Ger many, Declares People Confident of Winning Xcw York. —Mrs. Herbert Challis, wife of the American opera singer, has just returned to the United States from Berlin with her two children and is on the way to her home in Kansas City after being away for eight years. She said that her husband had many inuential friends among the Prussian aris tocracy and said she believed the report published on April 24, 1917, that Prince Eitel Friedrich, the sec ond son of the Kaiser, had died of typhus fever was true. Speaking of the conditions in Ger many, Mrs. Challis said: "The German people know noth ing of the true war conditions. They believe that their armies are vic torious and have no doubt of their utimate triumph. The wounded in the present offensive are not taken publicly to the great cities, and as the people do not wear mourning on account of the high cost of clothing there is little to lead them to be lieve that the losses of the G.ermans are as heavy as they are. Muuli Money in Germany "Never before has there been so much money in Germany. There are no longer any really poor people, for every one has received good wages in the different war work and there is little time for useless ex penditures. In fact it is very hard to spend money, for there is noth ing to buy. All food is rationed at a price fixed by 'the government, and every one is forbidden to sell any personal effects or household be longings. When X left there X sur reptitiously sold some of my belong ings, and when a few of my ac quaintances learned that I wished to dispose of my things they begged for a chance to buy them. For my sheets, which I had bought long ago at a dollar apiece. I received $507 and a worn-out rug, which was prac tically valueless, was bought by two women who paid me three times i what 1 paid for it many years ago. "Wool and soap are two articles that are now entirely unknown in Germany. Automobiles, too, have be come extinct. All clothing Is made of shoddy and one is allowed but one dress, and that can only be ob tained by permission of the govern ment. The people are patient In spite of the tilth and disease, for they believe it will only be a short time now until the war is over. "The familiar stout German fig ure Is no longer to be seen. I was simply aghast when I saw the first fat man here, for I had not seen one for so long. I am now more than fifty pounds below my average weight. "Xt is really strange to see able bodied men again. All the men have been away from Berlin so long that every one has grown accustomed to their absence. Only the very old ones remain, and the children are not the sturdy youngsters they used to be. "There is no news of the war to be had except that favorable to Ger many. The people hear nothing of the movement of American troops, except that they are not being able to reach their destination and that at every turn the enemy is being thwarted. There is never any ques tion as to the provocation of Ger many for entering the war, and the feeling has always been strong that had the Belgians not resisted there would have been little trouble at all. "The people in the country are really better off than those in the city, for, being thrifty, they have been able to raise enough to main tain them. The city people have now converted their courtyards, which were kept in splendid condi tion, into pig pens, and the pig is the pet of every household." Dormitories Built in U. S. Shipped Overseas Quccnstown. A large dwelling house, with a considerable area of land attached, has been acquired near Queenstown for an American naval hospital. It will be used for men from the American warships. Wooden dormitories will be added to I the existing building so as to bring! the capacity of the hospital up to 250 beds. The dormitories are being I built in sections in America and I shipped to Ireland in knock-down I form. Going to Command Marines /•'%N E xV BrlKadler-General John A. Lejeune la on his way to France to take com mand of the United States Marines on the battle front under Oeneral Perilling. Steelworker Leaves For Training Camp Monday julius shi>omb{:rg Julius Shlomberg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Shlomberg, 427 V 4 Ver beke street, who will leave with the Harrisburg contingent of drafted men for Camp Lee, Va., on Monday, has been for the past three years em ployed as a foreman at the merchant mill department of the Bethlehem Steel Company at its Steelton plant. He is also an honorary member of Good Will Fire Company, No. 7. ITALIAN LINES ARE STIFFENING [Continued from First Page.] have not yet gained control of this dominating height nor have they ap. parently had any success in attempt ing to debouch onto the lower ground at Sovilla, south of Nervesa. River Hinders Austrian* The waters of the Piave have come to the aid of the strongly resisting Italians. The British official state ment on the fighting says that the river has risen suddenly. The rise has been sufficient to carry away many of the bridges the Austrians had thrown across the stream. Emperor Charles, fearful that the Austrians by themselves will not be able to emulate the Austro-German success of last fall on the Isonzo line, personally is urging his troops forward. The Emperor is said to de sire still greater efforts before calling on Germany for help. Meanwhile internal conditions in Austria, especially as regards food, are causing trouble. The city council of Vienna has protested against re duction of the bread ration and the labor organizations in the Austrian capital call for the "speediest genera) peace." The food supplies in Aus tria are reported at the lowest ebb since 1914. Meanwhile there are re ports that peace demonstrations have taken place in Berlin, Hamburg and Cologne and that several per sons were killed and many arrested. The German Crown Prince has not repeated his attacks against the de fenses of Rheims before which 40,- 000 of his troops were repulsed with heavy losses in a night attack Tues day. The front there again is quiet and the French maintain their po sitions. Berlin says the effort was more an artillery and mine-thrower bombardment than an infantry at tack, but all other accounts agree that the effort was in great force .and that it was broken up in des perate fighting in front of the French lines. Elsewhere on the western front there has been only minor raiding activity. East of Chateau Thierry American patrols have crossed the Marne in boats and bested enemy patrols in encounters. In addition to killing a large number of Germans, the raid ers brought back prisoners. Amer ican bombing airplanes again have bombarded Conflans, a railroad junc tion midway between Verdun and Metz, dropping thirty-eight bombs. German aggression in the Ukraine is beginning to reap the whirlwind, according to reports from Moscow. A revolt on a large scale has broken out in Kiev, the Ukrainian capital, and there has been much street fighting there. Forty thousand armed peasants have risen and the revolt has spread to the provinces of Tchernigov and Poltava. United States Will Move Slowly Against Turk Raid in Persia Washington, June 20. —Through Spain and Sweden the American government sought further informa tion to-day regarding the seizure of the American consulate at Tabriz. Persia, and looting of an American hospital there by Turks. Only the meager account of the incident con tained in a dispatch yesterday from Minister Caldwell at Teheran, has reached the State Department. There will be no hasty action by the United States toward recognizing what may have been an act of war and thereby adding Turkey to the nation's enemies. A complete and official report will be awaited be fore the State Department lays be fore President Wilson the informa tion upon which he will base a de cision as to whether he will ask Con gress for another war declaration. Mrs. J. E. Sweeney, of Camp Hill, Chairman of Child Welfare Work Carlisle, Pa., June 20.—The Child Welfare Work for Cumberland coun ty, under the women's committee of the Council of National Defense, was launched at a meeting at the home of the chairman. Miss Mary Bosler, with almost every district of the county represented and members of the local committee out in full force. Dr. Harvey Bashore, of West Fair view, county health officer, address ed the meeting and offered many suggestions. Plans were made for a Baby Saving Bhow to be held in a short time. The state has offered to loan the committee its exhibits and physicians of the county will co operate. Mrs. J. E. Sweeney, of Camp Hill, has been appointed chairman to look after this work in the lower end of the county. HEARINGS EXTENDED By Associated Press Washington, June 20. Revenue hearings before the House ways and means committee have been extended another week, the plan now being to close them Friday, June 28. Ar rangements for a recess of Congress while the committee frames the bill during July will be made soon, ac cording to word passed by leaders to their colleagues MURDERER ENDS LIFE BY JUMPING THROUGH WINDOW When Jury Returns Verdict, David Adams, Negro, Dives to Pavement Pittsburgh—Preferring suicide to the electric chair, David Adams, aged 40, a negro, of Wilkinsburg, plunged through a window in a criminal courtroom on the second floor of the courthouse when a jury found him guilty of murder In the first degree. He fell to street forty feet below and was instantly killed. The suicide is the first of its kind in this county. Adams gave not the slightest indication of his Intention of self-destruction. The jury reach ed a verdict late at night and was brought into court in the morning. Adams heard the verdict without ap parent emotion and when the jury had left the courtroom he leaned forward in his chair and asked his attorney, J. Welford Holmes, what could be done. Attorney Holmes re plied that he would ask for a new trial. Makes Dash For Window Deputy Sheriff John H. Dailey, who had Adams in charge, touched the negro on the shoulder. "Come along, Dave," he said. Adams rose and made a dash for the window on the Ross street side of the courtroom twenty feet away. There was no one between him and the window and before anyone could prevent him, Adams sprang on a chair and plunged head first through the dou ble-thick plate glass window, which is a quarter of an inch thick. His body turned a somersault through the air and he struck on his head just beyond the curb between two automobiles. City Detectives Cor nelius Buckley, James Rea, Guy Dailey, Charles A. Freeborn and Mrs. Margaret Taylor, a policewoman, were showered with glass from the broken window, but were uninjured. Adams was placed on trial before Judge J. McF. Carpenter charged with the murder of his wife, Bessie Adams, at their home, 1509 North avenue, Wilkensburg, on December 7 last. Frank Morgan, a negro, tes tified that Adams, his wife and him self were in the defendant's home the day of the shooting. Adams was playing the banjo and became exas perated when his wife insisted on him playing a certain tune. The wife continued to tease and importune him, the witness declared, and Adams becoming enraged, shot the woman through the head. Adams' defense was that the shooting was accidental. Possible Escape Plan It is the belief of some court at taches that the escape had been planned by the prisoner in. the event of an adverse verdict. Some think that he had surveyed the situation carefully in passing across the bridge of sighs in coming to the courthouse returning to his cell. He had op portunity of seeing the lines of au tomobiles with the tops up, standing out on Ross street, just beneath the courtroom windows, which are un guarded. By diving through the win dow and landing on the top of an automobile he would escape with slight injuries and he would have an opportunity of making his getaway. Interstate Commerce Commission May Change Daylight Saving Status Washington.—Present application of the Daylight Saving Law, as it affects localities, will probably be changed in detail by the Interstate Commerce Commission before the 1919 spring advance touches Ameri can clocks, thriugr. In main, investi gations now proceeding find the hour advance working satisfactorily. Examiners for the commission have completed the taking of evi dence on the subject in eastern and mountain cities, but still have to conclude hearings in the Middle West. At El Paso, Texas, June 17, the final hearings will be completed, and after that formal reports to the com mission will be available. While the duty of prescribing the limit o' the four time zones in the United States fell to the commission, as a temporary expedient it adopted the demarkations of Eastern, Cen tral, Mountain and Pacific time as made by railroads, and fixed a fifth belt to govern Alaska. The examiners were sent out to see whether changes in the railroad time limits would not convenience business and social life if adopted. They have found to date a number of points, generally on the eastern edges of time belts, which already had systems of daylight .saving by run ning on the hours of belt adjacent to them. A dual system of time has been found in several places in the United States, where "railroad time" and "town time" have both been custo marily recognized, the latter being one hour faster than the former. Some points have continued the sys tem, even under the general time ad vance last spring, while others have adopted a single standard. Rulings ■i,i |ff f.l1■ t th cisc RIVER VIEW 1 58 Home Sites Sold in RIVER VIEW Last Week JUNE 20, 1918. THOUSANDS OF FOREIGN-BORN CITIZENS TO PARADE Men of Every Nationality to Show Loyalty to Adopted Coun try in Great Demonstration Foreigrn-born residents of Harris burg* and vicinity to the number of several thousand are planning to turn out en masse for the big patri otic parade on Independence 13ay. Edward Moeslein, who is chairman of the committee in charge of getting the foreign-born people to parade, ih working hard to make this divi sion one of the largest in the whole line of march. A meeting of the committee will be held early next week, at which time plana will be completed for the demonstration. Several bands will be secured to furnish music for the division. All national enmities and preju dices will be dropped on this occa sion by tlie sons of the many foreign nationalities living within the gates ol Harrisburg. Former subjects of the central powers will march side MAJESTIC High Class Vaudeville and Musical Vomedy. COLONIAL, To-day and to-morrow Williamson Bros, in 'The Submarine Hye." Saturday only May Allison in "The Winning of Beatrice." Monday and Tuesday Madge Ken nedy in "The Fair Pretender." , REGENT To-day—"The Crisis" and "The Son of democracy." To-morrow and Saturday Tyrone Power in "A Modern Lorelei," and "The Sor. of Democracy." Monday —■ Henry B. Walthall in "The Birth of a Man." VICTORIA To-day Sergeant Arthur Guy Empey in "Over the Top." Friday Virginia Pearson in "The Firebrand." PAXTANG PARK THEATER Vaudeville Specialties, In addition to the many wonderful scenes representing great battles in the Civil War, which "The Crisis" will be revealed to at Ilegent theatergoers at the Regent Theater to day, when "The Crisis" will be pre sented, there are elements so vitally human and so universal in their ap peal that the spectator is held spell bound. Among these scenes may be classed those in which Abraham Lin coln is shown advising and coun selling the young man from the North, Stephen Brice, who. seeking his fortunes in the southern section of the country, has fallen in love with one of the fairest daughters of the South, Virginia Carvel. Their love affair is proof of the old adage that "true love does not run smooth," for they have differences of opinion to keep them apart until they are finally united at the coffin of the martyr President. To-morrow and Saturday "A Modern Lorelei," starring Mabel Jones, California's perfect venus. The Williamson Brothers will be seen at the Colonial Theater, at the Colonial's regular "The Submarine prices. in "The Eye" at the Submarine Eye." Colonial Theater The timeliness of this picture is re markable in view of the havoc being wrought by submarines. Then, too, it discloses the uncanny things which inhabit the bottom of the ocean. The pictures are not marvels of rare beauty, but full of dramatic inten sity. Saturday, only. May Allison, the pretty little Metro star, will be the at ,tract ion at the Colonial Theater in 'The Winning of Beatrice." As an en tertaining factor the picture meets full requirements. It is quite simply told and will hold the interest of the audience from beginning to end. Along with a very good vaudeville i show, made up of acts new to Har- | risburg theatergoers, the ' At the Majestic Theater will offer I Majentlc for the final three days of the week "Mollie and Her Suitors, ' the moving picture that was made on the Majestic stage a short I time ago in full view of the audi- ! ence. This is the picture in which j many local amateurs took part. The big attraction among the vaudeville | numbers Is "Help! Police!" a musical comedy girl act. that takes front rank I among lively summer vaudeville ofTer- ! ingrs. To-day will be the last dav motion picture lovers and everbody interest- | ed in why Uncle I "Over the Top" Sam Is at war for j With Sergeant the protection of j Guy Empey human rights, will have an opportu nity to see Sergeant Arthur Guv Empey (himself) in "Over the Top." The book, "Over the Top," has no I doubt been read by more persons than I any book within the last decade and i the plcturization of it will, in all | probability, break all house records for attendance wherever It is shown. I It is one of the most gripping fea- j P.A.X.T. A.N. G| PARK-THEATER j | MATINEE DAILY CARSON & WILLARD | America'* Eoremoat Comedian* SUDER & DELL Comedy on Wheel* ANN SUDER Younvcnt Comedienne on the Stage BROWN & BARROWS Novelty Singing and Dancing Maestra & Company European Juggler* and Acrobata I f If you have read about the latest menace of the German % • U-Boats in American waters, see— C | The SubmarineEyel 1 v TO-DAY or TO-MORROW at the J ) Colonial Theater { 1 THE LATEST UNDER-WATER MARVEL OF I The Williamson Brothers? I Look through your own eyes and see what the Submarine # sees at the ocean bottom. j PRICES: 100 AND AND WAR TAX J by side with former subjects of th entente or neutral nations in the pa rade for democracy. Large bodies of Italians, Austrians, Greeks, Ger mans, Hebrews, Rumanians, Rus sians and people from numerous other countries will b e in the line of march. Plans are being made to have at least a thousand foreign born from Steelton and a large showing from the mining districts of and Williamstown in the upper end of the county. There will be no differences of loyalty for the United States shown by the march ing foreigners in the parade. As on former occasions they turn out to show the native-born Ameri cans they they are as much back of the Government in the war against the autocratic nations as the Ameri cans are themselves. tures ever shown on the screen, all because it deals with vital facts and factors leading up to and including the world s greatest war. Here one sees how men are trained and pre pared in every way for the hard bat ties that are to be fought—how to throw bombs or hand grenades—how to go "over the top." etc., and lust as realistic as it was humanly pos sible to portray upon the screen, ro-morrow Virginia Pearson, In The Hrebrand," will be the attrac tion. Vaudeville enthusiasts, who take pleasure in everything: in the way of • novelties in the juggling Paxtang and acrobatic line, have i rk a new and Interesting I heater act at Paxtung Park Theater in Meastra and Company. This 4s probably tiie latest as well as the most original act of itu kind that the European vaudeville stage has given us during the past season, and is without doubt the most talked-of offering that has played at Paxtang for a long while. The balance of the bill at Paxtang is made up of such standard acts as Carson and Willard, one of America's best-known comedy teams; Brown and Burrows, in a bright little humorous sketch; Suder and Dill, sensational cyclists, and Ann Suder, singing come dienne. I I ■ -■ l.l|——* RIVER VIEW Call Bell 1390 Dial 3573 . -r Majestic Theater A Special Five-Act 1111 l For the I.HNI Tlirer DII>H Thin Week Including; Robinson & McCann Presenting "2 BITS" Burt, Johnson & Co. pretientlng Tlielr IjRtCNt Comedy Offering. Special Added Attraction: '•MOM,IK AND HER SUITORS" The Picture Made on the MajcMlc Stage. See the l.ocnl Star* on th Screen ————- ' Victoria Theater TO-DAY ONUY SERGT. ARTHUR GliY EMPEY In "OVER THE TOP" TO-MORROW and SATURDAY VIRGINIA PEARSON In "THE FIREBRAND" MONDAY and TUESDAY "WOMAN IN THE LAW" COMING—MRS. VERSION CASTI.E In "THE MYSTERIOUS CLIENT" ■ —< Regent Theater I To-day Only "THE CRISIS" WlnMon Churchlll*M Immortal Civil War ( IHNHIC. Come and e It—it's RIOHOUM. To-morrow and Saturday "A Modern Lorelei" utarrlnK Tyrone Power & Mabel Jones -oO Diving ChoruM and SuliumlDg Ballet 250 To-day, To-morrow & Saturday "The Son of Democracy" (Under the Starn) Adnilxslon, 10c. 15c and war tax. COLONIAL Thursday <— Friday Williamson Bros. —IN— The Submarine Eye* PRODUCER OK THE HtHMAItI.NE SCENES IX -o,o I.EAGLES UNDER THE SEA. SATURDAY ONLY MAY ALLISON —IN— "The Winning of Beatrice"