10 MANY HUNTERS . TO GST LICENSES Demand Is Already Higher Than Has Been Known at This Time of the Year Sales of Pennsylvania state hun ters' licenses this year are running considerably ahead of last year In some counties, notably in the east ern and southern districts. This is put down as unusual by people at the game commission as it was thought because of the war taking away so many men and the farmers being so busy that there was small chance of hunting. But the number of hunters is growing. Last year a total of 315,000 licenses was issued, which broke the record. Th.. agitation for a change in the law governing the killing of black birds is growing rapidly and it is likely that it will result in an amend ment to the game code which will make August 1 the start instead of September 1 because of the big llocks and the damage done. There is not likely to be much else done to the code. The reports coming to the Game Commission tell of an abundance of squirrels and that their provender is plentiful. In some sections there are more nuts than known for a long time and the chestnut crop seems to be fair, considering everything. The quail reports from southern counties are improving and the opening of the duck season on Monday found a goodly number in the state, although t will be some time before they come around in any quantity. The north western section has quite a few ducks. State game officials will not change their policy in regard to the issuance of the pamphlet list of violations, it has come to stay and the August list is in the hands of the printers. In August collections in the way of game law fines alone reached $8,500. Chicken Corn Soup Nets Big Money For Red Cross The Red Cross chapter of Pen brook had one of the most success ful benefit suppers Thursday even ing. ever held in the borough. Tho receipts were almost S3OO. No hall in Penbrook was large enough to accommodate the people and tho basement of the Lutheran Church was crowded from 4.30 p. m. to 3-30. Chicken corn soup and home baking brought hundreds of people there. The residents of the borough and farmers :n the vicinity donated liberally. The committee in charge was Mrs. Anton Benson, chairman; Mrs. A. L. Bhope, Mrs. William Small. Mrs. John Rohland, Mrs. J. O. Kelly, Mrs. ! Jlarner and Mrs. Stauffer, Miss Ida I Gilchrist, Miss Elizabeth Rauch and Miss Sara Gurverick. The Penbrcok chapter of the Red Cross has been very active. New quarters were recently secured above the council room where the Red) Cross work is done. The officers are: : Miss Emma Nissley, president; Mrs. A. L. Shopo, vice-president; Miss Spease, secretary; and Miss Tilda Zurker, treasurer. TWO SOLDIERS KILLED Los Angeles, Cab, Sept. 21. Two soldiers, members of the Bulloon School of Arcadia, near here, were in stantly killed and three others were injured, one seriously, when a quan tity of Hash powder exploded late yes terday. „ MAW REGISTER DEEDS More than 6,500 deeds, held by city property owners, have been registered. City Engineer M. B. Cowden reported to-day. While owners in the Tenth and Fourteenth wards are the only ones who have been notified to pre sent deeds for registration, hundreds of other taxpayers have taken their instruments to lawyers and real es tate agents or brought them to the office in person and had them regis tered. FIVE CHILDREN GIVE 155 TO THE RED CROSS Five Briggs street children brought five $1 bills into Red Cross rooms, in the basement of the Public Library, this morning, as the proceeds of an entertainment they presented last evening. Evelyn Lone-. Mildred Clas ter. Mabelle Mickley, Bertram Claster and Richard Long were the partici pants. • JAMES H. GARRETT James H. Garrett, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Garrett, 326 Pef fer street, died at the home of his pa rents yesterday morning. Funeral cervices wil be held Monday after noon, at 1:30 o'clock. The Rev. S. Edwin Rupp, pastor of Otterbein United Brethren Church, will officiate. Burial will be in the Harrisburg Cemetery. DAIRYMEN TO ELECT Election of officers by the Dairy men's League of Cumberland and Dau phin counties will occur on Tuesday. October 8. in Keystone Hall, Mechan icsburg. Candidates for directorship, one to be elected from eacli county, ure us follows: Dauphin county, William H. Jones. David Smeltzer, Irvin Cassell and William Lenker; Cumberland county, David Deitz, I. E. Bobb, John Clen dennin, Harry Albright, George Schaull and William Wertz. | 91 MA Sufferers, write to ran day for my words hVHtfl of value FREE about Weak Lungs and how to treat Lung Trou bles. Address M. Beaty, M. I)., 102 Cincinnati, O. \ The nation relies on its 250,000 industrial and railroad firemen, and the 15,000,000 house hold firemen, to stop that waste and save the day. Don't start your furnace until cold weather comes to stay. The way to save most is to use none. United Ice & Coal Co. /- \ A plate without a root, which dura not Interfere with taate or .peech. PoorLESS $ 5 krjfe Hlatea repaired while yen wait. Come la the morning, have your teeth made the aume day. BID A r IT'C DENTAL Ivl MU n O offices SIO MARKE'I STREET SATURDAY EVENING, HAimiSBTTRG TTZLEGHAPIZ SEPTEMBER 21, 1918 Mabel Brownwell and tier School Children in li Eyes of Youth" A. H. Woods and the Messrs. Shu- I bert will present the notable New York success, "Eyes of Youth," for j an engagement of two nights and • Thursday matinee direct from a| year's run at the Maxine Elliott' Theater, New York. It is said few 1 plays of recent years have attained | the tremendous popularity or have, been so widely discussed as this nov. j el drama with its mystic and spirit- I ual implications. The play has | been widely heralded as a crystal gazing drama. It tis pronounced far more than that. It is a symbolic and allegorical study of a girl's search for guidance within herself. The j RAILROAD RUMBLES j Brotherhood Members to Gather in Baltimore Sept.2o The fifth Sunday meeting of the! Brotherhood of Locomotive Engi- j neers from points east of Pittsburgh j and Erie on the P. R. R. will be held in Baltimore, Md., September! 29, at 9.30 in the morning and at' 1.30 in tho afternoon. The last! meeting was held at Sunbury and, was largely attended by local | brotherhood members. By a ma-1 jority vote at the last meeting, the! placeof holding the next meeting is decided. Only In months that! have the five Sundays are these i gatherings held. Railroad Notes W. H. Arnold, of Chambersburg and formerly a clerK in the pas-' senger service of the P. R, R., was j in town last evening on a furlough. ; He entered the naval service last! January and is on the U. S. S. Vir- | ginia in the storekeepjng depart- j ment. Arnold says he likes the service and has been in many U. S. ports, but never in European waters. A splendid response to Superin tendent Johnson's appeal to Middle' division trainmen resulted on Thurs day when they moved a total of 8,074 cars, 7.022 being taken past Denholm and 1,052 being inter changed with the Tyrone division. The record was 171 more cars hauled than the figures for Wednesday. Harry I. Blake, formerly in the service of the Cumberland Valley Kailroad Company, has been ap pointed superintendent of the Penn sylvania Railroad power plant at Pitcairn. When the Cumberland Valley took over the operation of the Chambersburg & Gettysburg trolley line Mr. Brake was placed In charge of the power plant at Cham bersburg. Announcement was made at Union Station to-day, when a request was made for a New York division time table, that a consolidated time table (for the Pennsylvania, the Philadel phia and Reading and the Baltimore and Ohio railroads between Phila delphia and New York had been Issued in the interest of railroad economy. In two days the men at the Read ing Railway shops in Reading sub scribed for $25,500 worth of war savings and thrift stamps. Six of the men employed in the steel car department at the Reading locomotive shop secured work at Hog Island as riveters. Their places were promptly filled at the shop. There is a perceptible falling off in the freight trade on the Reading, officials here said to-day. The local business is holding its own; but the merchandise trade shows a decided slump. The fast Black Diamond express of the Leliigh Valley Railroad was thrown from the tracks by the trick |of an eight-year-old boy, near | Wilkes-Barre. Edward Gouse, a boy of Carey Patch, was playing on the railroad tracks, and just before the coming of the big train placed two heavy bolts on the rails. The pony truck of the engine hit them and was thrown off. The train was stopped In time to prevent injury to the passengers. The Lehigh Valley Company has been placed on trial in the Federal Court in New York city, together with Fred E. Signor, its freight traf fic manager, and Charles Schaeffer, and Charles Schaeffer, Jr., hay and grain dealers, charged with con spiracy to violate the Elkins law pro hibiting railroad rebating. The rail road company is accused of dis criminating in favor of the two Schaeffers in the matter of providing freight cars, expediting their move ment and rebating on freight rates. "William G. McAdoo, director of railroads, refused a request made on hehalf of the railroad securities owners that the railroad administra tion enter into an agreement by which a friendly suit should be br ought by one of the roads to test the form of contract and that the decision of the courts should subse quently be incorporated in the con tract. The cabooses of Reading freight trains which must be assisted up tlie steep grades, are now cut off and placed in the rear of the assisting engine. While nothing serious has happened to any of the cabin cars, the change was made to avoid the possibility of an accident. The rail road officials are now experimenting to ascertain the delay and the cost of the stopping of the trains to re i U *1- —, crystal symbolizes her own heart, and the incidents revealed in the crystal represent the self-under standing that has come to her. The play consists of three acts and four episodes, each episode being the visualization of the revelations in the crystal ball. Both in its story and in its production the play is said to be one of the most extra ordinarily effective dramas in years. The splendid company- includes twenty-five metropolitan players, headed by Mabel Brownell. A special matinee performance will be given on Thursday. Seats will go on sale Monday. Keystone Lodge to Observe Anniversary | The thirty-fifth anniversary com. | ! memorating the founding of the j | Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen J will be observed to-morrow after j noon at 2 o'clock by Keystone Lodge No. 42 of the Brotherhood in, White's j Hall, Broad and James street. Key ! stone Lodge is the oldest circle of | Railway Trainmen in the state. Officials of the Middle Division land the Philadelphia Division of the ! Pennsylvania Railroad will attend ! celebration which will be addressed | 1 A score or more of Pennsy train j ! pastor of the Bethlehem Lutheran j Church; E. J. Stackpole, and Ser i geant John Blake, of the Harrisburg J Recruiting Station. Composing the committee of arrangements are: | W. T. Patrick, D. H. Zorger, and jM. T. Robinson. Charter members 'of the brotherhoods are, Thomas J. I Sweeney and Thomas Kilpatrlck. ! Organization of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen took place Sep tember 3, 1883 in Oneonta, N. Y. j Employes of the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company were the organizers. Starting with a mem bership of six men the brotherhood now has u roster of 175,000 railroad employes. Youthful Railroad Employe Killed by Backing Engine Altoona, Sept. 21.—Alfred Robert Halo, aged 17 years, a laborer em ployed since Tuesday at Pennsy en ginehouse No. 3, was instantly killed at 3.15 o'clock on Thursday after noon when he stepped in front of a backing engine near Sixteenth street. He was evidently returning from the lower end of the yard where a patriotic rally had been in progress a few minutes previously. The youth failed to see engine 2411 as he crossed yard track No. 4 and was felled without warning. Hostler James E. Miller was bring. [ ing the locomotive from the engine house, as Hale started toward a group of engine cleaners with whom 1 he was working. His left side was terribly crushed and mutilated from the shoulder down. The youth was dead when picked up, although Al toona hospital ambulance was sum moned. The institution physician responding said death was instan taneous. Train Dispatchers to Receive More Wages J A score o rmore of Pennsy train | dispatchers in this city and vicinity and at Middle division points will re ceive a notable advance in wages I soon, according to advice received | from official sources yesterday, t Dispathes are to e paid $207, or | slightly in excess of that amount, monthly, while the chief dispatchers will he rated at $230 per month, or approximately that salary. Standing of the Crews HARRISBURG SIDE Philadelphia Division The 105 crew first to go after 1 o'clock: 125, 126, 120, 104, 118, 119, 111. Engineer for 105. Firemen for 102, 125, 126. Conductor for 120. Brakenien for 102, 104, 105. Firemen up: Steffy, Ryan, Houstal, Lambert. Lowery, Bair, Wider. Conductors up: Inswiler, Petitjean, Ressler, Gara, Henry . Yord lloard —Engineers for 1-14 C, 2-15 C, 32C. Firemen for 1-7 C, 2-7 C, 10C, 11C 1-14 C, 2-14 C, 1-15 C, 3-15 C. Engineers up: Rauch. Wigle, Lac key, Coxerly, Mayer, Sholter, Snell, j Bartolet, Getty, Sheets, Bair. Firemen up: Hilmer. Cordes, Shant, Weaver. Kllnepeter, Walborn,, Mat ter. Jones, Bennett, Gruber, Heck man, Lewis, Lauver, Ettinger, Wevo dan, Ellenberger, Hampton. EN'OLA SIDE Philadelphia Division The 218 crew first to go after 2.15 o'clock: 234, 208, 241, 237, 214, 206. Engineer for 237. Fireman for 208. Flagman for 41. Brakenien for 34, 08, 06. PASSENGER SERVICE Philadelphia Division Engineers up: Pleam, Lindley, Hall, Osmond, Kennedy. Firemen up: Floyd, Althouse, Ever hart, Copeland. Middle Division Engineers up: Graham, Keane, Crimmel, Crane, Buck, Alexander, Crura, Riley, Kelser, Miller, Robley. Firemen up: Dunn, Snyder, Steph ens, Yon, Ross, Sheesl'ey, Fritz, Reed er, Arnold, Slieats, Zeiders, Bender, i MAJESTIC High Ciuse Vaudeville. UKPHiCM To-night—"Thu Unmarried Mother." Tuesauy, oveulng only, September 24 —Seiwyn und Compuny otter "Fair and Warmer." Weuuesuay and Thursday, and Thurs day maiinee, September 26 and 2ti — "Eyes of Youth." Friday, night only, September 27 "Seventeen." COLONIAL, To-day—"The House of Mirth." Monday and Tuesday Aiauel Nor mand in "Peck's Bad Girl." Wednesday only Bert Lytell in "Boston Blackle's Little Pal." REGENT To-day Sessue Hayakawa in "The City of Dim Faces," and "Ladies First," comedy. Monday and Tuesday Jack Living stone in "The Price of Applause." Wednesday and Thursday Dorothy Dalton in "Green Eyes." Friday and Saturday Vivian Mar tin in "Viviette." VICTORIA To-day William S. Hart in "The Disciple." Monday and Tuesday 'The Moral Suicide." "Fair and Warmer," the farce by Avery Hopwood, which Selwyn and Company will present at "Fair nnd the Orpheum, on Tuesday Warmer" evening, perhaps needs no introduction to local theatergoers, beyond that which has already been furnished them by the ardent admirers who saw and were convulsed by it at the Eltinge Thea ter in New York, or the Cort Thea ter, Chicago, and who returned to their home towns with loud praise of it, as the season's greatest treat. The year of its run in New York, to say nothing of its eight months in Chicago, established the fame of "Fair and Warmer" in all parts of the coun try. The demand for it had begun even before the end of the ttrst ca pacity month. It is one of those rare farces with so universal an appeal, and so pronounced a trick of making laughs, that every known kind of per son rises to call it blessed. Selwyn and Company will present the famous farce here with a cast ideally suited to its proper interpreta tion. The coming of "Eyes of Youth" to the Orpheum Theater on Wednesday. September 25, for an en "Eycs of gagement of two nights Youth" and Thursday matinee, promises to be of more than usual interest to theatergoers, who remember the unprecedented success of this play in New York last season. It ran for an entire year at the Maxine Elliott Theater, New York City, where it was acclaimed one of the most novel and original plays of recent years. "Eyes of Youth" is the work of Max Marcin and Charles Guernon. It consists of three acts. These three acts include four separate episodes. These episodes are sup posed to transpire in the crystal in which the heroine of the play sees her future. As the girl is brought face to face with various alterna tives, every eventuality of her pos sible future is revealed to her in the crystal ball. She may choose an op eratic career, she may marry a rich suitor, she may remain at home and take care of her family, or she may marry the man she loves. The life she will lead in any one of these careers is shown to her and visual ized on the stage. The production and the cast are in keeping with the ex traordinary nature of the play. "Eyes of Youth" is presented under the joint direction of A. H. Woods and the Messrs. Shubert. The players in clude twenty-iive metropolitan artists, headed by Mabel Brownell. A special matinee will be given on Thursday. Seats will go on sale Monday. The principal incident in "Seven teen," the four-act comedy dramatized from Booth Tarking "Seventcen" ton's novel, is the Coming to dress-suit part of the the Orplieum story. Willie Baxter, the 17-year-old youth, who is in love with a visiting girl, steals his father's dress-suit in order to impress the "Baby-Talk Lady." The climax comes in the party scene, when the negro servant. Genesis, in nocently exposes the origin of the clothes worn by the hero. As a study of character and atmosphere the play has its greatest value. As staged by Stuart Walker, the middle-western town and its characters are true to life, giving an impression of reality that one seldom sees on the stage. The whole comedy of the story con sists not in the incidents themselves, but in the hero's attitude toward them. To Willie Baxter the whole series of accidents is a somber trag edy. He. as is the manner of adol escent youth, thinks he is far more grown-up than his elders, far more capable of feeling, and gifted with faculties unrecognized by the world. He is misunderstood grossly by every one. especially his parents, who look on him with sympathetic amusement, and his life is made particularly mis erable by his lp-year-old sister, the demon of the home, who is even less impressed by her brother. Stuart Walker is sending his New York production and metropolitan cast to Harrisburg, where the local premier of this play of "youth and love and summertime," will take place at the Orpheum on Friday evening. The sale of scats for the engagement will open at the box office on Wednes day morning. No doubt there will be more than the usual interest in the announce ment that the perennially "BuNtness amusing "Abe" Potash and Before "Mawruss" Perlmutter Pleasure" will be seen at the Or pheum Theater, on Satur day evening, September 28. in their newest and greatest success, "Busi ness Before Pleasure," the conspicu ous New York comedy hit of the sea son of 1917-1918. Not only the New York press, but the thousands of playgoers who filled the Eltinge Thea ter to capacity during the entire run of the piece, have testified that 'Busi ness Before Pleasure" is by far the funniest and best of the famous series of comedies in which "Abe" Potash and "Mawruss" Perlmutter are the ir resistible heroes. It was a fortunate day for the host of followers of "Abe" and "Mawruss" when the authors of "Business Before Pleasure" Mon tague Glass and Jules Eckert Good man, decided to transfer their activi ties from the prosaic cloak and suit business to the adventurous and as tonishing realm of the movies. As "fillum" magnates, "Abe" and "Maw russ" are said to furnish continuous laughter from curtain to curtain. A feature of the production is a moving picture interlude, in which the action of the piece is consistently developed. William S. Hart appears at the Vic toria Theater to-day in a role that is unique for him, but Wm. S. Hurt In which calls for all "The Disciple" his great talents of dramatic acting. In "The Disciple" Hart takes the part of a missionary to the western "bad lands." who himself "sees red" when his wife is stolen from him by an unscrupulous ex-physician and present saloonkeeper. One of the scenic features of this remarkable film is what is declared to be one of the best photographic reproductions of a storm scene ever filmed. In its graphic realism it is said to be unsurpassed. Dainty Jean Sothern. ertswhile moving picture star, and Just at pres ent a big hit in vaudeville, At the will be one of the features Majestic at the Majestic Theater next Monday, Tuesday and Wed nesday. Miss Sothern appeared at the same theater late in the past sea son. and was one of the biggest fa vorites that Wllmer and Vincent had The Street of Seven Stars Famous Saturday Evening Post Story With Gifted Star Coming to Regent One of the best stories that have been given publicity through a lead ing magazine, published in book form to the extent of over 300,000 copies and later put upon the scrfeen by as popular a company as the De Luxe Pictures, Inc., is the main attraction booked for the Regent Theater next Monday and Tuesday, September 23 and 24. The name of this famous story is "The Street of Seven Stars," by Mary Roberts Rine hart, and the star is none other than Doris Kenyon, who leads her own company in the picture. It is safe to say that no American screen star has found a more ad mirable vehicle for the expression of his or her talents than has Doris Kenyon in this delightful story. Mrs. Rinehart says she does not know of any other star so perfectly fitted for the charming part of the heroine. Harmony Wells. Harmony is not only a type of pure and winsome American girl hood, but also a talented musician and an adept at athletic sports, and so is Miss Kenyon. One of the pic turesque and thrilling passages in the picture is a carnival of winter sports at the famous St. Moritz, in the Alps. There is a skiing con test. Harmony shows her skill at this dangerous pastime. It is the real Doris Kenyon on the skiis. Harmony goes abroad with the small savings she and her widowed mother have managed to get to gether to complete her musical edu. cation. She takes up her abode with other Americans in an old house in Scene From Avery Hopwood's Gale of Lauthter y "Fair and Warmer" ■ ;; . ; . , So great was the success of "Fair and Warmer," the Avery Hopwood farce of Temperature and Tempera ment, which Selwyn & Company will present at the Orpheum Tues day evening, that before it had reached its first hundredth per formance at the Eltinge Theater in New York there was a demand for it from every quarter of the coun try, and its fame had been car ried from coast to coast and from provided in some time. She has such a charming: personalitv that she in stantly wins her audiences, and holds them—in fact, her audiences are al ways reluctant about letting her leave them. There will be a splendid show of vaudeville surrounding Miss Soth ern. The big bilt that is now on will have its final presentation to-night. Another big attraction in the show for the early half of next week will be the final chapters of "The House of Hate." The feature at the Colonial Theater, to-day only, is a screen version of Edith Wharton's cele "The House hrated novel, "The of Mlrtli" House of Mirth," with Jack Kilgour and an all-star cast. The direction and photography of the play is excellent, the story is one that holds the atten tion of the audience throughout. The story is one of high society. Mon day and Tuesday. Goldwyn presents Mabel Normand in the first of her new releases, "Peck's Bad Girl," the exciting and sensational career of a country wild flower. Mabel Normand as the girl who set the quiet village by the ears. A special Saturday show, with two attractions, is on the bill for the Re gent Theater to- Double Attraction day, Sessue Haya at the Regent kawa, in a great story of the big gest Chinatown In America, "The City the Latin Quarter of Paris, formerly the hunting lodge of the Empress Marie. It is in the Street of Seven Stars. One of those abandoned characters styled Apaches insults Harmony. Dr. Peter Byrne, a young American surgeon, who lives in the old house in the Street of the Seven Stars, comes to her res cue and handles the Apache rough ly. The doctor then and there lays his heart at her feet, but she re minds him that they both have ca reers. The three meet later in a lonely cabin in the Alps, where Harmony and Dr. Byrne have taken refuge after being lost in a snowstorm. The Apache has tied to the moun tains to escape arrest for murder. There is a desperate fight, in which the doctor again triumphs. Har mony, Dr. Byrne and Dr. Anna Gates, an American specialist, are living later in the old house in the Street of Seven Stars. The tongue of scandal begins to wag and Har mony steals away and disappears, after bidding a tearful farewell to a little crippled patient, Jimmy, whom she is mothering in her own way. And so the story runs on, with a touch of tragedy, a touch of remorse in the picture of a life broken, a touch of regret as a glance at this picture shows Harmony the perils of the path she has chosen. —and then the denouement, with its naive con fession of love by the girl, who abandons the uncertainty of a ca reer of fame for the certainty of a life of happiness. the Gulf to Canada by the out-of town members of its capacity au diences. Its success was so instantaneous and so unceasing during its year in New York and the following eight months in Chicago that a nation wide interest was created. It will come here with the promise of a typical Selwyn & Company cast of excellent farceurs, who will give the fullest flavor to the Hopwjood lines and situations. of Dim Faces," and an extra good Mack Sennett comedy, "Ladies First." Next Monday and Tuesday, the ex traordinary attraction that has just recently been released, "The Street of Seven Stars," the great Saturday Evening Post story by Mary Roberts Rinehart, is booked for the Regent. This is a story of an artist who went abroad to study and who gave up a great career for a greatr love. The star in this picture Is Doris Kenyon. Majestfc Theater Yon don't know whnt you're miss ing—JUST READ THIS. J) _ Great Ulg Keith Hits _ tt EVERY ONE A WINNER " Headed by The classiest mistical comedy of the season, entitled "The Little Liar" With a splendid cast and beauty chorus. HERE MONDAY A Real Harrlsburg Favorite Jean Sothern The Little Queen of the Screen. tf I- a uKlft IHEftTtH COLONIAL WILLIAM S°HART in "The House of Mirth" "THE DISCIPLE" — WITH AN Al.i, -STAR CAST — AI.o, Special Added Attraction. „ Y^SSSS tUYY € MABEL NORMAND MONDAY and TUESDAY "Paelr'o Raul r.irl" "MORAL SUICIDE" ™ ck s D 8!"?! WEDNESDAY ONLY "EES MISEHABI.ES" ! —IN— •> Admlamlon 10c nnd 15c und war tox 11 "Boston Blackie's Pal" v ' \ f SPECIAL SATUItDAY SHOW REGENT DOUBLE ATTRACTION Sessiie Hayakawa "Ihe City of Dim Faces" A Mtory of tlic grenteMt ( liinaloMn in America, vividly brought oat by tlic most popular of Oriental actor*. —AND A— Mack Sennett Comedy "Ladies First'' With mi All-Stnr dint that la svarth the price of ndmlimion alone. ! MONDAY AND TUESDAY The great Saturday Evening I'oat ntory by MARY HOUERTS HINEHART "THE STREET of SEVEN STARS" —Featuring— DORIS KENYON Tlic wtory of an nrti*t who gave up n wonderful career for a great er love. You have read the Mtory—-now nee the picture. ADMISSION loc and 15c, and War Tax. '*> . j 0-R = R-H-E = U-M TODAY—LAST 2 TIMES 25c and Daily Matinee For 25c and 50c LADIES' ONLY 50c I NIGHT PRICES 250, 500, 750 I 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." I ON NIGHT RY Tuesday, Sept. 241 THE BARNOM OF ALL FARCE COMEDIES AVERY HOPWOOD'S GALE OF LAUGHTER . fAIR-WMiriER ■ DIRECTION O S^ VVVN tC °' I One Year in New York; 6 Months in cmcAco PERFECT CAST AND COMPLETE PRODUCTION PRICES, 250 TO SI.SO—SEATS TODAY WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY September 25-26 2 NIGHTS With Special MATINEE THURSDAY Dtrcct From One Whole Year at Muxlne Elliott's Theater—Tlic BIG BROADWAY BULLSEYE OF THE YEAR A. H. WOODS 5S'." ™u. r lE MESSRS. SHUBERT EYES [By Max Marcin 1 I & Chas. GuernonJ YOUTH A SUPERCAST OF NEW YORK PLAYERS Including MABEL BROWNELL SEATS ON SALE NIGHT PRICES —2Sc, 50c, 75c, SI.OO and $1.50 THURSDAY MATINEE—Best Seats, SI.OO
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers