16 INDOOR DRILLS FOR RESERVES Schedule For Instruction of Students Will Be Made Finally at Armory Permanent assignments of men from the Harrisburg Reserves who will have charge of drills of High school students will be arranged at the drill to be held to-night at the City Grays' Armory. All of the men who have been on instruction details are requested to be present a short time before the regular drill. The captains will recommend the men to be named on high school de tails. The Reserves will give instruc tion to men of draft age or students who may appear at the armory. The men of the Penbrook district, who have been in charge of Harry W. Miller, and those from Dauphin dis- j trict in charge of Carl W. Davis, have been told to come to the drill to-night as the weather and early nightfall will prevent outdoor drills at suburban places. Lieutenant Shelley, of Company I, will have charge of the special drills of high school students who have had ex perience In the Reserve Militia and other organizations, and Paul Kur zeuknabe will give instruction in bugle calls to students and Boy Scouts, who should report at the armory at 7.45 o'clock. Details front the Reserves will go to Halifax to-morrow to give final I instruction. The Hummelstown work last night was in charge of A. Reed er Forriday and Thomas D. Caldwell. Hershey, Millersburg, Gratz. Wil liamstown. Lvkens, Elizabethville and other towns where Reserves have given instruction are now in c harge of local organizations, while r. en of draft age living in Susque hanna township. Penbrook and Dau phin will be taken care of at the armory on Friday nights. Steelton Reserves have been doing valuable work with the men of draft age in that borough and vicinity. TO AID ITALIANS Joseph J. Parialo, a notary public, will give his services free of charge to Italians who are filling out their questionnaires, he announced yester day. He will beat his office, at 306 South Second street, until 10 o'clock each evening. License No. G-35305 Specials For Saturday, Sept. 21 } STEAK, 28c in dividual 7 ... MP } ROAST 25C (,'rfOICK SHOI'I.DER . J 7 ALL-DAY SPECIALS sliced 1 flfv Honey Cured Liver, lb Picnic Hams m. v- Cooked Tripe, lb B. B. Jowl Conked Pigs' IUC Bacon, lb OUC I- eet. lb . Boiling "I Honey Cured 'I Beef, lb XOL Reg. Hants w ( lioice Chuck Pork, Veal and lamb Meat Tb . We Have It BUTTERINE Lincoln 27C Gem Nut 30c Swifts Premium 33C B. B. Special 28c MARKETS IV 36 PRINCIPAL CITIES OF FOURTEEN STATES MAIN OFFICE. Get the Hahit PACKING PLANT, ( HICA GO, ILL. uet tne aDlt PEORIA, ILL I l'lav Safe — , Stick to KING OSCAR CIGARS because the quality is as good as ever it was. They will please and satisfy you. 6c~- worth it JOHN C HERMAN & CO. Makers _ I EDUCATE FOP BUSIN Because business needs you and offers splendid opportunities to ffl ■ the yopng man or woman who is thoroughly prepared. DAY OR IMiOHi ■ I Bookkeeping, Shorthand, (hand or machine). Typewriting, and ■ their-correlative subjects. I SCHOOL OF COMMERCE I Harrl*l>nrg'n Accredited Buxlne** College 15 South Market Square Write, Phone, or Call For Farther Information ■j BEI.!. AfSi DIAL 43®3 B * FRIDAY EVENING, Famous Japanese Star in Oriental Picture .at Regent The famous Japanese star. Sessue Hayakawa. who will be remembered as the leading actor in pictures that have recently appeared at the Regent. "The Bravest Way." "The Honor of His House." and others, is again ap pearing in a picture of the first mag nitude. "The City of Dim Faces." This picture is showing to-day and to morrow at the Regent Theater as the main attraction. The tragic story of "The City of Dim Faces" deals with a young Chi nese-American. a college graduate, whose father is a Chinese merchant in San Francisco's Chinatown, and his mother a white woman. He is ig norant of the existence of his mother, who is her husband's prisoner in an underground den and is hopelessly demented. He falls in love with a young wo man and when she breaks their en gagement he imprisons her in the same den in which his mother is con fined and later sells her to a mar riage hroker. who in turn places her upon the auction block, to be sold to the highest bidder. It is when he sees the degradation of the woman he loves, that the white Wood in his veins asserts itself and remorse seizes him. He learns that tile demented woman is his mother, and when he discovers that he is half white, he runs to the aid of his sweet heart, and after a battle, in which he ■s mortallv wounded, he effects her rescue. His mother's reason returns 'or an instant and she recognizes her lost son. just HS he dies ftt ner feet. . As an added attraction to-day and 'o-morrow. at the Repent. Manager Magaro has hooked the popular Mack Bennett comedy. "Indies First. ' This s no ordinary comedy of the cheap kind. It is said to he as good as many ■ f the headliners and goes to make his week-end program as good as have been booked at this showhouse for a long time. MAJESTIC High Class Vaudeville. ORPHEUM To-day and to-morrow, with daily matinee "The Unmarpied Mother." Tuesday, evening only, September 24 Selwyn and Company offer "Fair and Warmer." "Wednesday and Thursday, and Thurs day matinee, September 2 and 26 "Eyes of Youth." Friday, night only, September 27 "Seventeen." COLONIAL To-day Norma Talmadge in "Her Only Way." To-morrow only—"The House of Mirth. Monday and Tuesday Mabel Nor mand in "Peck's Bad Girl." REGENT To-day and to-morrow Sessue Hayakawa In "The City of Dim Faces," and "Ladles First." comedv. Monday and Tuesday Jack Living stone in "The Price of Applause." " ednesday and Thursday Dorothy palton in "Green Eyes." Friday and Saturday Vivian Mar tin in "Viviette." VICTORIA To-day Jewel Carmen in 'Lawless Love." To-morrow—William S. Hart in "The Disciple." Monday and Tuesday "The Moral Suicide." Avery Hopwood, master of farce, ran his own record up with "Fair and Warmer." the bubbling. "Fair and hilarious farce which Warmer" Selwyn and Company will present at the Orpheum on Tuesday evening. Mr. Hopwood's admirers, dating from "Seven Days" and "Nobody's Widow." two great successes of former seasons, found in his latest work the same sparkle of line and cleverness of characteriza tion which had graced the others, with an added ludicrousness of situations. The scene built around the inexpert making of a cocktail, puts its audi ences practically into hysterics. The long run of the piece, with its thousands of out-of-town visitors, and its subsequent record of unparalleled success wherever it has been seen, spread the fame of "Fair and Warmer" all over the country and created a vigorous demand for it. Selwyn and Company promise to send it here with an excellent company of farceurs. "Eyes of Youth," the notable New York success, will be presented at the Orpheum Theater on "Eye* of Wednesday, September 25, Youth" for an engagement of two nights and Thursday matinee, direct from a year's run at the Maxine Elliott Theater, New York, under the joint direction of A. H. Woods and the Messrs. Shubert. The play needs little introduction to theatergoers. It has achieved a na tional distinction as one of the con spicuous metropolitan successes of last season, and as one of the most novel and original plays of recent years. It was written by Max Marein and Charles Guernon, and is describ ed as a dramatic fantasy in three acts and four episodes. It is a visuali zation of a girl's glimpse into her own future—a future that is reveal ed to her through an understanding of her own heart. The play contains four of these mystical dream episodes. Each act begins in the home of "Gina Ashling," the heroine of the play; then occurs the transition to the fu ture episode revealed in a crystal; then there is a return to her own home at the end of each episode. The girl is on the brink of choosing a career; several alternatives are pre sented to her. In her dilemma a Hindu Yogi appears, learns the situa tion. and reveals to her" the conse quences of each choice. These revela tions are visualized, and so the girl is enabled ultimately to make a happy choice. These episodes are not only picturesque and interesting in them selves. but they are part of a pro gressive, dramatic narrative, with a tremendous spiritual significance. A very effective production has been provided, and a splendid company, which includes twenty-five metropoli tan players, headed by Mabel Brow nell. A special matinee will be given on Thursday. To write a play of* boys and girls of 17 as they see themselves is a thing almost new to our •Seventeen" theater. But such a play has been wrttten from " 'Billy Baxter Stories" and staged with masterly sympathy and delicacy by Stuart Walker, or it could not have played eight solid months this year in New York to capacity audiences. "Seventeen" is really a play of adolescence, in which all the principal characters are boys and girls at or about "last year's High school," who speak for themselves and tell the stories which are their own, not those which their parents make up about them. One would carelessly call the play a "tragic-comedy." It is not. It is a tragedy which looks funny to the outsider.? For the growing youth is funnv. And the unhappier he is, the funnier he is. There is no denying it. The bitterest of his experiences, let us say in his attempts to learn to dance under the spell of the little pig tailed girl who lives around the cor ner. provide the richest entertain ment for his elders. "Seventeen" goes pretty deeply into the sorrows of youth. Hence it becomes, thanks to deft authorship, comedy which keeps its audience chuckling with laughter. The plot of the play of "youth and love and summertime" hangs upon the efforts of William Sylvanus Bax- 1 ter. Jr.. to possess a "dress-suit" that he 'mav properly woo the "baby-talk lady." Lola Pratt. Stuart Walker is sending "Seven teen" to Harrisburg. where It will be seen at the Orpheum on Friday even ing. When Montague Glass and Jules Wkert Goodman decided to transfer the activities of the "Business celebrated partners. Before "Abe" Potash and "Maw- Pleasnre" russ" Perlmutter from the cloak and suit busi ness to the more novel and interest ing world of the movies, the result of the Inspiration was "Business Before Pleasure." the great Eltinge Theater comedv success of the season 1917- 191R which A. H. -Woods will present at the Orpheum Theater on Saturday. September 28. for an engagement of one night only. It is as movie mag nates in "Business Before Pleasure, the third and latest of the famous series of Potash and Perlmutter com edies that "Abe" Potash and "Maw rut?" Perlmutter are presented at their funniest and most whimsical. The strange and unfamiliar back ground of the movie world and their amazing experiences in it bring out more emphatically than the other two plavs those quaint and delightful pe culiarities of speech and conduct that have made them the two most lovable and popular creations In the American theater Their vitality and hold on popular affection is demonstrated by •he fact that "Business Before Pleas ure" proved even more popular and ' amusing than either of of Its two pre- I decessors —"Potash and Perlmutter" I anud "Potash and Perlmutter" in So ciety." This is the last opportunity patrons of the Colonial Theater will have of seein~ Norma Norma Tnlmadge Talmadge and in "Her Only Way" Eugene O'Brien in their latest select feature, "Her Only Way." It is a play of laughter and tears. Those who witness this beautiful pro duction will not be disappointed, for it holds out an appeal to old and young alike. There is not a doubtful situation in the whole story. Satur day, only, the attraction will be "The House of Mirth." a screen version of HASRISBUEG TELEGRAPH Gijia Looks Into the Crystal v B u Bp jj b v ' B Kv JM B i xk Hr .> TVW . <y-;: :ju . • . ji. < 1-1 A SCENE FROM "EYES OF YOUTH," NEW' YORK SUCCESS WHICH WILL BE PRESENTED AT THE ORPHEUM THEATER FOR AN ENGAGEMENT OF TWO NIGHTS AND MATINEE Gina looks into the crystal and beholds the tragic ending of a loveless life. At the depth of her misery she sees in the crystal vision Peter, the man of her choice. The following scene ensues in the street directly in front of a Broadway lobster palace, whence Peter has just issued with a merry party. Dick is a plain-clothes man who has been observing Gina at first with suspicion, then with friendliness: PETER—Pardon me, but have | you seen anything of a gold mesh iiiag? A lady dropped it here. DICK (showing him the mesh | bag)—ls this it? PETER—Yes. that's it. DICK (to GINA) —Wait a min ute. (To PETER) I guess she's : deserving a reward. • PETER —Of course. DICK —Be as generous as you I can. PETER —Madam, I want to thank j you, and offer you (Recognizes i her.) Gina! 1 GINA —I thought you were in South Africa. PETER —I have been back for over a year. I heard about the di vorce and I asked what became of you; nobody seemed to be able to tell me. but I have always hoped some day to And you. GINA —Find me? What for? PETER —Don't you know? Can't you guess Think back. GINA —No, no: I don't want to think back. I don't want to think back. There your wife's purse; she'll be anxious about it. PETER —I'm not married, Gina. It's just a friend that I took to the Edith Wharton's celebrated novel. For this week-end program, Man ager Magaro has made special efforts to make it the Double Attraction best that has been ; at the Regent shown at the Re gent for some time. Two strong pictures are being shown, both in themselves capable of taking a headline part. In the main attraction, the famous Japanese star, Sessue Hayakawa. takes the leading part in an Oriental story of San Fan cisco's Chinatown, "The City of Dim Faces." This is a tragic story and deals with a young Chinese-American and a beautiful white girl. There are many dramatic scenes and many thrilling moments that make this an ideal picture. I Last, but not least, is the Mack Sennett comedy. "Ladies First," with j | an all-star cast that is said to be one of the best Sennett comedies that has yet been produced. I Next week, the famous Saturday ■ | Evening Post story, by Mary Roberts! Rinehart. "The Street of Seven Stars," is booked. It will appear Monday and Tuesday, and features Dorris Ken yon. SfCCOTH TO END JEWISH HOLIDAYS To-night ushers A the eight day Feast of the Tabernacles or Succoth. On the next to the last day of the Jewish celebration the Feast of As -1 sembly is observed while on the last day the Rejoicing of the Law is held. I Emphasizing the idea of God's pro-! 1 tection and guidance in human af j fairs is the reason for the observance of the Feast of Assembly. At 7.45 o'clock to-night at the Ohev Sho lem, the services will begin with a sermon by Rabbi Louis Haas on "the ' Value of Symbols and Ceremonies in Religion." The Chizuk Emeriuii Synagogue, Sixth and Forster streets, services will also he conducted to night by Rabbi M. Humanoff and at Kasher Israel, at Capital and Briggs streets, by Rabbi L. Silver. r ——— ■ m Double Attraction B B To-morrow (HJTB ■ A* Story of San Frnncltco*n Chinatown hjl "The City of Dim Faces" IHI FEATURING g 1 SESSUE HAYAKAWA Mack Sennitt Comedy I L 35 "Ladies First" WITH A POPULAR ALL-STAR CAST £|| Extraordinary Attraction B Monday Tuesday MARY ROBERTS RINEHART'S rnß "The Street of In; ■ I Seven Stars" FEATURING H 1 pffl Q I DORIS KENYON Admission 10 and 15c and War Tai 1 1 N 4 theater. Can't I take you home with her? GINA—Ha, what will she say about it? PETER—It doesn't matter what she will say. Where do you live? GINA—Down in Center street. PETER—How do you live? GINA—I sing once in a while, hut I haven't been singing lately: I've been sick. I've been in the hospital. PETER—What are you doing up here? GINA —Oh. I'm not what you think! Not what you think! PETER—Oh, Gina, there is so much I could do now—so much I'd like to do. GINA —That's what Goring said. PETER —Don't think all men are like him. Gina. I want to see you as you were. You've changed out wardly. but I believe you are the same girl within. No, come let me take you home. I found you now and I'm not going to lose you again. GlNA—What do you mean? PETER—I mean there is still a lot of happiness in store for both of us. GINA— Happiness for me —for me? I'm tired, Peter, I'm tired. More Siamese Troops, Join Allies in France Paris, Sept. 20.—Siamese troops.! with a general and his staff, have ar-1 rived in France to participate in the! war. This evidently refers to a new Sia mese contingent arriving in France. On August .8, a Marseilles dispatch reported that a large number of Sia mese troops had landed there. REV. H. H. HERSHEY TO REMAIN WITH CHARGE The Rev. Harvey H. Hershey, who j is completing his second year as pas- j tor of the Green Street Church of God, received the unanimous call [ of the church for the ensuing year at j the annual congregational meeting of the church held Wednesday evening, i Dr. Hershey came here from Lan-| disville, his home town, where he ministered for twelve years. * D. S. Lowe was elected eld,er fori four years and J. Lease, Jr., and Paul! Stcuffer elected deacons for the same I length of time at the meeting last; Wednesday. Charles ShamDaugh! was elected deacon for one year. I George Good. William Kimmel and! Charles Shambaugh were elected! delegates to attend the annual elder- j ship meeting held this year in thei Mechanicsburg Church of God. TO ATTEND CONVENTION City Electrician Clark E. Diehl,; president of the International As- j sociation of Municipal Electricians, i will leave to-morrow evening for At lanta, Ga., where the twenty-third annual meeting of the organization will be held from September 24 to 27. Following the address of wel- 1 come by Mayor Asa D. Chandler, of! Atlanta, and the reply by Dr. Charles ! P. Steininetz, Mr. Diehl will speak. I Son of Congress Leader Kills Dog and Self | By Associated Press Chicago. Sept. 20.—After shooting] and killing his pet dog. James R-| Mann, Jr., son of tho Illinois con-| gressman and Republican leader in j the House, shot himself to death] here to-day. Tn a note addressed to I his mother in Washington, ho said, he did not expect to live much long-j er. "and I might as well end it now." He was .suffering from tuberculosis. He was 28 years old. OVERLAAD-H ARRISBI'RG CO. EXHIBITS PLOWMAN TRACTORS An exhibit that has attracted con siderable attention at the big farm tractor demonstration on the United blates grounds below New Cumber land. is that of the Overland-Harris burg Company. The exhibit consists of two sizes of "The Plowman" trac tor. a 13-30 and a 15-130, which trac tors are made by the Interstate Trac tor Company, and sold in this territory by the Overland-Harrisburg Company. NEW MILITARY MAP A large map, showing the various training camps, air stations, naval bases and other military establish ments of both the Army and Navv are being distributed through the courtesy of the Insurance Company of North America by the local office. Although this map shows the loca tion of all these base, it in o way gives any information to the enemy, as it does not disclose the number of men in training at any point. RIVE SOLDIERS CHOCOLATE Hershey, Sept. 20. Soldiers pass ing through Hershey on truck trains will be provided with Hershey almond bars and other sweets for which this town is famous, as the result of a fund contributed by citizens of the town. To this fund $9O has already been given. The town's prettiest girls will meet the truck trains with bas kets of the sweets, and predictions i have been made that Hersliev will be I long remembered by the khaki-clad TO-DAY NORMA TALMADGE and EUGENE O'BRIEN HER OLNY WAY SATURDAY The House of Mirth MONDAY TUESDAY MABEL NORMAND Pecks' Bad Girl VICTORIA THEATER TO-DAY ONI, Y JEW U.I. CARMEN In •'LAWLESS LOVE" Special Added Feature TO-lIAY AND TO-MOItItOW CHARLIE CHAPLIN In "THE ROUSTABOUT" TO-MORROW ONLY WILLI VM S. HART in "THE DISCIPLE" MONDAY AND TUESDAY SEPTEMBER "THE MORAL SUICIDE" Admission lfle nnd I,lc and war tax r Knights of Pythias and Friends COME TO THE PYTHIAN" , HOME COMMI TT E E GRAND BAZAAR October 24 and 25 AT THE ARMORY Second and Forster Streets f\ | Two!\i<jh*s rain/ Urpheum s; 25-26 The First of the Big Broadway Dramatic Successes of 1917-18 to Reach Harrisburg A. H. Woods and the Messrs. Shubert Prcscnti Dlrcft From One Whole Year At Maxlne F.lllott Theater "GIN A READS HER FATE" VYouthV "A drama of great novelty and H thrill" and "a beautiful dramatic I fantasy" blended in this wonder- 1 derful play" by Max Marcin and I Charles Daemon. I Woulc , y ou Look Into The Future? b ig NO r'd a .b. m oo°deTpfay B acd I Read Your Fortune? Know Your Fate? by flesh and blood actors well Ifi / * / r l • • 'r;';": Y : ka " dheaded ;; Eyes Of Youth Mabel Browne!! Prp r i ces 2 s c to $1.50 Seats on Sale Monday I Thursday Matinee, Best Seats $1 SEPTEMBER 20, 1918. Pershing Cables President Words Inspire U. S. Army Washington, Sept. 20.—The White House last night, gave out this mes sage from General Pershing to the President: September 18, 1918. His Excellency, the President of the United States, Washington. Please accept the most sincere thanks of the American Expedition ary Forces for your stirring message of congratulations. Your words of commendation have been received with deep ap preciation by all ranks and will in spire in us a higher sense of our obligations to our country. I assure you that it shall always be the endeavor of the army in Prance to prove worthy of the con fidence of the American people. PERSHING. MAYOR ADVISES ALL TO CARRY REGISTRATION CARDS It is likely taht city patrolmen in the near future will stop registrants in the street and demand that they produce their registration cards. While Mayor Keister contemplates no con certed action against alleged draft slackers, he declared last evening that his policemen will stop any men of registration age whom they sus pect to he unregistered, and ask them to produce their cards. 0 = R = P=H=E = U = M TODAY AND TOMORROW 2—MATINEES—2 2—NIGHTS-2 25c and Daily Matinee For 25c and 50c LADIES' ONLY 50c 1 NIGHT PRICES 250, 500, 750 r Nights for Everybody Over 15 Years of Age At all matinees for Ladies Only Dr. Goodman will address the ladies on subject of "WAR BABIES." 101I OIN NIGHT RY Tuesday, Sept. 24 THE BARNUM OF ALL FARCE COMEDIES AVERY HOPWOOD'S GALE OF LAUGHTEfc TAIR WARriCH jj DIRECTION S^ELVVY N C CO, E One Year in New York;" 6 Months in cmcAGo PERFECT CAST AXI) COMPLETE PRODUCTION I PRICES, 250 TO -til .50—SEATS TOMORROW ifMfWliMßßßinrar"'' ■" AHCHIIISIIOP IRELAND WEAKER St. Paul, Minn., Sept. 20.—Arch bishop John Ireland, of the St. Paul diocese of the Roman Catholic Church, who has been 111 for a long time, is gradually becoming weaker, it wits announced at his home here last night. Last winter Archbishop Ireland suffered a breakdown and since then never has fully recovered. His physicians said last night that they have grave doubts whether the archbishop would recover from this relapse. I ————— Majestic Theater George Damerel MYRTLE VAIL—EDWARD HUME AND COMPANY —ln THE CLEVER MUSICAL FARCE "The Little Liar" With a Splendid Cast and Beauty ChoruH supported by Other Pleading; Fenturft | EVERY ONE A WINNER
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers