12 FIGURES GIVEN ON COAL VALUES Export Preparing Maps to Calculate Assessments in Northumberland County i Sunltury, Pa.. March 24. Maps showing; the coal deposits In Northum berland county designed for the pur pose of calculating coal land assess ments are being made by T. Ellsworth Davies. Scranton expert, for the county commissioners. Before the figures are put in the duplicate the coal companies will be given a hearing, and asked to tell where they stand: whether they j will accept the assessments or go lnt u i court and light for lower valuations. | The companies engaged in extended j litigation over nine years ago. and ob tained somewhat lower valuations than the commissioners had sought to im pose. According to Mr. Davies Northum berland county lias an area of 460 square miles, fifty square miles of 32.- 102 acres of which arc within the coal ' measures. The coal deposits in the , county are controlled by the Ehiladel- j phia and Reading Coal and Iron Com pany. the Lehigh Valley Coal Company, and the Girard Estate, with some minor owners. Gettysburg Merchant Shot by Boys Slowly Improves Gettysburg. Pa.. March 24. The j condition of Abner Mills, the merchant who was shot three weeks ago by the two boys who meant to rob him as he j was closing: his store, is slowly iinprov- j Ing. lie was permitted by his physici- , ans to sit up for a short while during the last two or three days. The bullet J lias not yet been located in his head, i it being considered unwise to subject j hint to an X-ray examination in his weakened condition. 11c cats and j sleeps well and is becoming more raj tional. but seems to be unable to re member names. With all his apparent j improvement the doctors, however, will | not sav that he is yet out of danger. SOI.DIER DIES IN FRANCE l.ewlatomi, P . March 24. Mrs Hostetler. of Belleville. has , received a message from Washington. D. c\, notifying her that her son. | David Clarence Hostetler, died in i France of pneumonia. He was sta- ; tioned at Lille, a member of the i engineer corps of the Seventy-ninth Division. He went to France in 1918 1 and was in the light at Argonne for- j eats. He was twenty-eight years old j and was employed by the Spanogle I & Yeager l'lour Milling Co., at Reeds- | \illc. I WOMAN I'ALLS DEAD Moreersburg. Pa.. March 2 4. —Mrs. Margaret E. Curley, wife of William I Curley, a blacksmith of this place, ! fell over dead front an attack of j heart disease at her home Saturday j evening. She was aged 64 years l and is survived by her husband and! two daughters. Miss Annie at home, | and Mrs. Margaret Hanna. of Ha-| gerstown. WEDDING AT m.AIX Blain, Pa.. March 2 4.—The mar riage of John L. Barnes, of Tckes burg. Perry county, and Miss Hester t E. Reisinger, of Donnally's Mills, j took place on Friday evening at the | Reformed parsonage in Blain, the; Rev. Edward A". Strasbaugh, of- j ficiating. MRS. CRAIG TELLS SOME GOOD NEWS Giving evidence of a real cheer- j fulness. Mrs. B. t'raig. 5412 Lancas-j er avenue, Philadelphia, tells of her i experience wih Tanlac. "I suffered 1 from catarrh of the stomach and was weak and run down. There were j discharges from my throat and ; 'nose, and I had distress from thej gas that formed from fermentation. ; I started to take Tanlac after neigh bors where 1 live told me about it. | It has helped me. I am much bet-1 ter, and I hope this bottle does me ! as much good as the others I've used." The genuine Tanlac. which is be- 1 ing introduced at Gorgas' drug store. ; bears the name J. 1. Gore Go. on! outside carton. —Advertisement. EYE INSURANCE An Accident Insurance Com pany will insure your eyes against j injury or blindness to the amount ] of many thousands of dollars. What value do you put on your I eyes? Some people think more of a 1 dollar or two than they do of their precious sight. For the sake of a "bargain" they will patronize some irresponsible itinerant or someone who makes price concession the big induce ment. Your safeguard is to trust your eyes to a reputable optome trist who will not mislead you and who will only charge what his examinations and glasses are worth. If you come to me you will get ! reliable service and my charges will be reasonable. z* 11 17 rrr 12 N. Market Square Second Floor Froat A MONDAY EVENING. 1 WEST SHORE\ Marysville Surgeon Is Promoted to Captain CAPT. CHARLES R. SNYDER I Mnrysvillc, Pa., March 24. —Cup- ! tain Charles R. Snyder, of Marys- i I ville, with the Medical Corps of the ! I First Army in Germany, lias been; j commissioned a captain, announce- , ; ments just received here tell. He| i has held % first lieutenant's commls- j | sion since entering the Army serv- i I ice early in the summer of 1917. He | took his pre-medioal work at liick- j inson College and is a graduate of j Jefferson Medical College, Phila-! ' delphia. He is a member of the j j Alpha Chi Kho fraternity. Personal and Social Items of Towns on West Shore Mr. and Mrs. George Matliias, of j j Mount Washington, spent Sunday I ■ with friends at New Cumberland, j ; Mrs. AA'. H. Speck, Mrs. Park I | Minter and daughter, Louise Mln-! iter, of New Cumberland, spent Sun-1 , day with Mrs. Speck's sister, Mrs. ! j Mary Barnes, at Mechanicsburg. Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Baker, of New I i Cumberland, returned from Lewis- j j town on Saturday evening, acc-om- j j panied by Mrs. Baker's parents, Mr. ■ and Mrs. Henry Sulker, who will Intake their home with Mr. Baker's | family. ■ Sergeant John L. Hain, of Camp • Leo. A'irginia. is spending a ten-dav j furlough with his parents, Mr. anil i ' Mrs. John 1.. Hain. Front street, j ■ Marysville. Hugh Bell, of Philadelphia, spent I the weekend with relatives a; i 1 Marysville. Miss, Miriam Iless, a Senior at j i Millersville State Normal School, lias i i returned to her studies after spend- j ling the weekend with her parents,! I Mr. and Mrs. Simon E. Hess, Maple! f avenue, Marysville. Mrs. E. L. Beaver, of Mifflintown, I was the guest over the weekend of I Miss Stella Deckard, Front street. Marysville. Mrs. S. B. Bidlack and son. Ken neth Bidlack, and Mrs. Samuel Melester are among the Marysville people who are attending the an | nual sessions ot' the Central Penn j sylvania Conference of the Metho ; dist Episcopal Church at Sunbury. Miss Lillian Rohyer, of New I Bloomfield. is being entertained at Marysville by her sister, Mrs. Wil i liam DePngh. Miss Louise Roush. of Philadel i phia, is visiting at Marysville with ' llr. and Mrs. Joint Roush. Lawrence Warren, teacher of the I eighth grade in the Marysville | schools, spent the weekend at his home at Shippensburg. Miss Irene Ashenfelter. of Marys l ville, spent the weekend at Balti i more. Miss Dorothy Shipley lias ro | turned to her home in Harrisburgl after visiting with Miss Doloris Hartntan at Marysville. BIBLE CLASS PROGRAM New Cumberland, Pa., March 24. —On Friday evening the Bible class j taught by E. H. Fisher, of the! Methodist Sunday school, held a so cial in the social room of the church. The program included: | Music, by the class: reading, Alary Ma lone; solo, Miss Beaverson; reei i tation, Mrs. Frank Feneil . duet, j j Airs. Clarence Sweeney and Aliss! Beaverson: recitation. Airs. Sweeney: j address. E. H. Fisher; spelling con- j : test, class. i Refreshments were served in one ; jof the classrooms, which had been i | arranged by a committee of women. | I The long table was prettily dec-' : orated with potted plants. The class! lis composed of forty members. Thel j next meeting will be held at the s home of Airs. Joseph AA'eatherbv. SENIOR CLASS SOCIAL New Cumberland, Pa., Match 24. —A large party attended the box i social held by the Senior class of the High School held in Buttorff's Hall lon Friday evening. The hall was I tastefully decorated with the class colors, crimson and steel, and the ' New Cumberland ' Band furnished i music. Dancing and games were • enjoyed. Boxes containing lunches ; were sold and the receipts amounted i to over SIOO. CANTATA BY CHOIR New Cumberland. Pa.. Alareli 24. I —On the evening of Easter Sunday I the choir of the Alethodist Church t will give a cantata entitled, "King of Glory," by K. L. Ashford. F. W. ' Burns is leader and Airs. P. A". ! A! inter organist. PREPARING SCHOOL GARDEN'S j Gettysburg, Pa.. Alarch 24. The Playground Association has deterni | ined that the northern end of the 'playground, which has never been | titilized for any particular purpose, I shall be used this year as gardens for the school children of the sev | enth and eighth grades, and already | the boys and girls who desire them have put in their applications for ' plots. PET DEER DIES j t'ashtowu. Pa., March 24.—The lit j tie deer which has been as tanie I around this community as ".Mary's | little lamb," In the story, is dead. | The little animal has been a great j pet with our people ever since its ' life was saved last summer, but it was found one morning last week in a dying condition and died a few hours later. , PARTY FOR YOUNG FOLKS | Blain. Pa.. March 24.—A pleasant I pa"rt.v was held at the home of David | Hassinger, which was attended by I fifty or more young folks of tills 1 section. The evening was passed with amusements and games and refreshments were served. GERMAN SOLDIERS ACCUSE OFFICERS FOR ATROCITIES Return From France and Bel gium and Openly Tell the Truth In lj Associated Press Paris Alarch 24. —Oswald Garri-, j son A'illard, of New Pork, editor of I the Nation, lias pust returned to ; Paris front a week's observation of j j conditions in Germany and made a l report to the American peace cont ! missionei's and the British prime: | minister. David Lloyd George, by ! which they are said to have' been | profoundly impressed. "The drift toward Bolshevism is | i rapid in Germany," said Air. A'ill- ; j ard today, "and it can be stayed only 1 by prompt food relief and the lift-, I ing ol' the blockade so that trade j I may begin and tlie idle German I factories may receive raw materials as fast as arrangements can be made ! to pay for them." Food Alone Won't Help Fooii alone. Air. A'illard declared, j would not save the situation, though ! ! many Germans thought so. j "The brutalities of the Noske j troops have put down the upris i ing for the Eliert government." j he continued, "but have produced la profound reaction. 1 did not find | j any responsible person who did not! i expect another general strike, with ' j more fighting, this month. "The people arc worn down and helpless, and the masses are very j bitter against the old regime and the officers, who dare not show themselves in the streets of Alunich I and who curry revolvers in Berlin ! for self-protection. Officers Accused "Many people are still ignorant of ;ihe atrocities of the German troops j jin France, Belgium and Rumania, but soldiers retiming from these! 'countries are telling the truth and! openly accusing their officers of j wholesale thefts and deliberate! I cruelties." AA'ith reference to the German i J view ot the possible peace condl- j j tions, Air. A'illard said: "1 have talked with several Ger-1 j man delegates to the Peace Con-1 ! t'orence, who say that any German I j government signing a treaty calling j I for heavy indemnities and the an-i nexation of territory other than i Alsace-Lorraine by the Allies could | not live twenty-four hours. They will submit any peace terms to the AN eimar asseml.v, and possibly to the; German people itself. "The feeling of bitterness against! .be Allies, these men said, grows' j with the delay in getting food." AIRS. JOHN' 1,. NOLI. Airs. John J. Noll, died at her home ! j 236 Lincoln street, yesterday morn- ' I ing at 5 o'clock. She loaves a hus- j j band, one son, Harry C. Noll, one ! i daughter. Airs. Ralph Flrich. and one ) sister, Mrs. George Sherk, of AUddle town. Funeral services will be held AA'ed nesday afternoon at 2 o'clock, in Grace United Evangelical Church. The Rev. J. K. Hoffman will offciate, and will be assisted by AA'. H. Ickes. Burial will be made in the Baldwin Cemetery. GRANGER TO LECTURE Iliiiiimclstowii, Pa., Alarch 24. Thursday evening at S o'clock in the parish house, of Zion Lutheran church, C. J. Jordan, a noted Chau- | tauqua lecturer, will deliver his lec-j ture. "The Old Homestead," or "The' Farm Redeemed." Air. Johdan is aj granger and comes here in behalf of this organization. An invitation is extended to the people of the com munity to attend. This lecture is not only for the agriculturist, but for the man of the town as well. STKEI.'I'() V PERSONALS | Airs. Julia Eckinger, North Sec ond street, has returned from a visit of several weeks with relatives in New A'ork. < John Al. Donovan, of Bethlehem, spent several days with relatives in the borough. Mrs. Charles Aleehan. sister of Airs. John Gillctt, of North Harris -1 burg street, will leave to-morrow for New A'ork, from where she will sail for England. VXNOI \CE E.NGAGEAIENT Air. and Airs. A. Beck, Swatara street, have announced the engage | ment of their daughter, Margaret, to < William Fisher. The <lat of the wed- Iding has not been announced. BOA' SCOI'TS DEFEATED | The baseball team of troops 5. Boy j Scouts, was defeated on Saturday I by the Junior Nine team, by a score j of 18 to 11. Dr. Sharpe to Be General Athletic Director at Yale Vi' -hesv-oe Dr. Al H. Sharpe has been ap pointed'as coach of the A'ale football | eleven next fall with the title of j general athletic director in charge ! of all sports according to announce ■ ment made by the Athletic Board of ! Control at New Ilaven. Dr. Sharpe, who was graduated from A'ale in i 1902, has been head coach of the j football, baseball and basketball ' teams of Cornell University for scv | eral years, where his success has j! been generally recognized. As foot ball coach at A'ale he takes the , of Tad Jones, who is now in I business in California. Use McNeil's Pain Exterminator--Ad HAJRRISBUR.G TELEGRAPH STEELTON |! ! RED CROSS WANTS ;; MORE CLOTHING; Old Clothes Drive to Be Con-\' tinned This Week by the 1, Conunitlee in Charge t Tlio drive for old clothes for desti-| lute families in France and Belgium 1; is to be continued this week, accord- I i ins to an announcement made byi •M rs. \V. K. Harder, chairman of I the committee. While a large quan- I tity of c'othing was received last I | week, the quantity desired, eight' tons, is not yet in sight. Those who | have not been reached by motor; ; messengers are asked to 'send the | clothes to Bed ("teas headquarters or to telephone, so that the clothing; 1 may he called for. Corp. John P. Atticks Returns From Overseas CORP. JOHN* P. ATTICKS Corporal John I*. Atticks, son of' i Mr. and Mrs. Robert Atticks, 032 j I North Second street, landed in Xew I I York, March 13, after serving nine-] I teen months in France. Corporal Atticks enlisted in the 1 10th Regiment Engineers in May, ] 1317, and sailed overseas July 28. | After spending a short furlough with j his parents, he leaves for Camp ; Meade, where he expects to be nius-1 j tered out. Two Local Boys, Veterans of Big Engagements, Are Released From Service Edmund Gallagher, of the Twen | ty-eighth Engineers, and George Zorger, of the Twenty-sixth Engi neers, returned to their homes on Saturday," having been released from military service. Both boys saw active service in France and took part in several big engagements, among them the St. Miliiel campaign 1 I and tho Argonne-Meuse drive. Gallagher was once gassed. He lis tho son of Captain Gallagher, ] who. although over 50 years of age, j enlisted as a surgeon and is now in charge of an Army hospital in | southern France. Zorger was- in Frarice for almost I seventeen months. . i Corporal Lamke Reported Dead; Cause Not Stated: Corporal Charles Lamlie is dead in j France, according to a notification ] received by his sister, Mrs. Ambrose j Martin. The date and cause of his death was not given. He was a mem ber of the first contingent of drafted mc-n from this section, and left for i France in April, 1918, as a member ] of Company F. 30th Infantry. Nothing was heard from Corporal ; Lamke since last October, when he | was reported wounded in action, de i gree undetermined. : Boy Scout Baseball Team Is Looking For Games The baseball team of troops five of j the Boy Scouts is looking for base ] ball games with teams of boys from | twelve to fifteen years of age, .They announce that they will accept any J I challegne for any Saturday. Emery | Myers, of 163 South Frant street is | i manager of the team. Give Farewell Party to Son Re-enlisting in Army Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin F. Swart j ley, 566 Myers street, on Saturday ] entertained a number of friends at a i farewell party for their son. Harry, j wiio left to-day for Douglas, Ari , zona, to join a cavalry troop. Young j j Swi; r ley was lately discharged front | j military service and is now re-en ; li.t-ing in the cavalry. It is under i stcd that he is to be sent to the ' | Hawaiian islands. The guests at the party were: Mr. j and Mrs. John E. Funk, Mr. and i I Mrs. David \V. Funk. Mr. and Mrs. Blither A. Funk, Mrs. Jacob B. j Funk, Mr. and -Mrs. E. it. Fetter j liotf, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Funk, j Mr. and Mrs. J. Russell Keuglt, Mr. , and Mrs. Chester Cooper, Mr. and i Mrs. Robert C. 'Crumling, Mrs. j Charles Brashears, Mrs. Andrew ; Uolteak, Mrs. Ellen MePhearson. l Mrs. John Holder, Jr., Mrs. Elsie ! Plsle. Susan i-'unk. Mary Mickiey, 1 Bcona Eby, Earl Swartley, Parson I i-'unk, Margaret Funk, Annie E. ink, Mary Funk, Maud Funk, j Margaret Funk, Ethel Funk, Elsie Swartley. Mildred Pisle, Alfretta I Funk, Ether Pisle, Bonnylin Funk, ] Alnieda Swartley, Ruth Funk, Ellen I J.'oheack, Freda Funk, Mary Crum- I ling., John Funk, Charles Eby, ; rtrpir Swartley, Beroy Funk, Robert 1 funding, Jr., Robert Swartley, Mel vlr. i-unk, Andrew Roheack and John Reider, Jr. MRS. CATHERINE ZOLL Mrs. Catherine Zoll, wife of Jo j seph Zoll. died at the Harrisburg , Hospital Saturday evening. Funeral | services will be held to-morrow ; morning in St. John's German Catho | lie Church. CATHERINE GUSIC i Catherine Gusic, the 9-year-old ' daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Philip ! Gusic, died Saturday afternoon dt 4.30 o'clock, at the home of her I parents. 752 South Second street. Fu ] neral services were held yesterday, ' and burial was made In the Baldwin jCemet* , SPORTSMEN JOIN TO I, KEEP GROUNDS OPEN [Continued from First Page.] other active sportsman front Bykens. ! 1 In his letter Barrett says: "It may he well realized at this | time that the long looked-for time 1 has arrived, the time when large . land owners are beginning to take i advantage of the hunter and fisher man. lty acts of legislature a resi- ' dent of this Commonwealth must pay | a license fee of one dollar in order | to go gunning. The money that is j derived from this procedure is set aside for the use of the State Game i Commission for the purpose of re- 1 stocking in. order that the sport lie [ possible. With this law the hunter j never murmured but felt that the j plan was a good one, not only for the j present but an assurance of the j future. But the time is fast tip- j proaehing. in fact the preliminary j stroke has already been delivered ' in the upper end of Dauphin county within throwing distance of the ; Capitol of Pennsylvania. "A year ago the State Game Corn- I mission established a game preserve ; west of Bykens, Pa. They have and i rua; still displaying considerable in- j terest here, placing numeroupa deer, i turkeys, rabbits, pheasants and other ' game, and the project is looked upon as a great success. Almost imme- I diately upon its Hearing completion a I certain corporation owning large 1 tracts of land in the vicinity begin ] to buy tip the small individual hold- i ings surrounding them and make an : effort to close to hunters and fisher- j men the very heart of the hunting and fishing gwounds that the pre- ■ serve affords. If this move were | successful there would he no land ] whatsoever left for the sportsmen ] upon which to hunt or fish for the j game which his money applied by | his license, paid for. "Instead, he reaches a large pri vate game preverse, his former ] hunting grounds, and is notified by i notice or enclosure to stay off not- j withstanding the fact that his money : has helped to stock the private pre- , serve, if this instance is successful, i I where will-ti-endThis may be only ! - the forerunner of a State-wide en- ] deavor. Hunters and fishermen of | Pennsylvania, the time has arrived | to get up and act. Delay means ' ruin. These plans must be blocked I if we still wish to resort to our I ideal recreation. We have been and still are paying the price for our hunting, and it now looks as though j the sports of this old Keystone State j are about to pay the way for privileg- ) ed individuals. "Different sections of tho State I are falling in line with them and • getting in touch with their r'espec- j tive senators and representatives to i | suction and approve of anything! I tending to help the outdoor sports ! men of Pennsylvania. "Sportsmen of Pennsylvania, the | movement of the upper-end of Dan- | phin county against closing this tract is justifiable and is worthy of State wide co-operation. Deaths and Funerals JOHN LI'POLD I Funeral services for John Bupold. j aged 77 years, who died yesterday at his late residence in Camp Hill, will jbe held Wednesday afternoon at 2 I o'clock. Burial will be in the Harris burg cemetery. Mr. Lupoid held a ser vice record as an employ of the Penn sylvania Railroad for fifty years, be fore his retirement in 1910. He is sur vived by a daughter Mrs. H. B. Hum phreys. Philadelphia, and a grand daughter. Esther.- He was widely known in railroad circles and was a veteran of the Civil War PAUL M. LEACH Funeral services for Paul M. Leach, three-year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Clark Leach, 136 Htunmel street. Be moyne will be held Wednesday after noon at 2 o'clock. Burial will be made in the Mt. Olivet cemetery. New Cum -1 beriand. The boy died yesterday after | noon following a long illness. He is ) survived by his parents, a brother. Hus j sell and a sister, Elsie. MISS CARRIE M. BEIDBER I Miss Carrie M. Beidler, aged forty j three years, died this morning, at the j home of her parents. 419 Hamilton J street. Funeral services will be held Thursday morning at 9 o'clock in St. Mary's Catholic church, the Rev. W. V. Dailey officiating. Burial will be made in Mt. Calvary cemetery. Mrs. Beidler is survived by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Beidler. .She was widely known in the city and had many friends here. MRS. ELIZABETH C. SIPLE Mrs. Elizabeth C. Siple, 69 years old. died last night at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Sadie Gingrich. 533 Hetrick street. She is survived by her daughter, on sister, Mrs. Sara Shindler of York; five grandchildren and three great grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Thursday afternoon a; | 1.30 o'clock from the home of her I daughter, conducted by the Rev. Myron ! E. Shafer, of the Lutheran church of the j Redeemer. Burial will be made in the | East Harrisburg cemetery. MRS. LEAII IH PP DIES Hiuuiiielstowii, Pa., March 24. Mrs. Beah Rupp, died at Iter home at Chamber Hill, on Saturday morn ing after an illness of about one year, aged 87 years. Mrs. Rupp is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Parthemore, of Chicago. 111.: Mrs. I Eshenonr, of Oberlin, and Miss Fan j nie Rupp. at home. | Funeral services will be held on j Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock iin the Chamber Hill church, the' i Rev. Herbert S. Gaines, pastor of j jZion Lutheran church, of town, will! officiate. Burial will be made in the: cemetery adjoining the, church. SANDY HILL. LITERARY j Hlnin. Pa.. March 24.—A Literary Society meeting was held on Friday evening at Sandy Hill in the scliool house and a large crowd attended. Question debated was: "Resolved, That a corrupt politician is more harm to our country than bad school teachers." Speakers who gave the discussion on the affirmative side were J. Gardner Paint and Reed Mo- Millen. and the negative side was argued by Lynn J. McMHlen and Dolly Minlch. The judges decided in , favor of the negative side. LITTLE GIRL DIES Hiimnielstown. Pa.. March 24. Fredella. the 9-year-old daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Corrdo, who lives south of town, died at the home of her parents, after a short Illness. Funeral services will be held to morrow morning, with mass at St. Patrick's Catholic Cathedral, Har risburg. with burial in the Catholic cemetery. STRAND THEATER Mttolicl I/cwis in "The Code of Yukon." "Wolves of Kultur," fenturing leah Baird. 1 MAJESTIC 1 High i'lass Vaudeville "Jlmmle" 1 Hodges and Company in the new ; J I'j version of "Pretty Baby." —_ i OKPHEUM To-day and to-morrow, with dui'y' matinees. Match -1 unit 2b "The | smarter Set." { I WedncHituy, matinee and night. Mar. a I L'U—Samuel NVw loek oilers Hoot It • i Talking ton's comedy, "Seventeen.' ; Thursday, night only, March 117 Jewith-American Stock Company. I*T iday, nigui only, March US —Bo.vng | Show. Suiuroay. matinee and night. March ! i!fl —Siij and Mrs. Cob urn present I Janu't K. Huckt it in "The Better COLONI XI. !To-dn.v and to-morrow Tom Moore in "A Man and His Money. *' | Wednesday and Thursday Alloc • Brads in "The World to REGENT j To-day and tu-niorrow Bryant i Washburn in "The Way of a Man ! With a Maid." and Mr. and Mrs. Sid ney Drew in "Roniuuce and Ring's. ' i Wednesday and Thursday— Mmc Hum ■ Una Cavalierl in "The Two Brides." | and a Sennett comedy, "The Village I Smithy." . VICTORIA ! To-day, to-morrow and Wednesday - I "Tho Better Ole." i No more fertile subject has ever been afforded the American author and playwright thun that "The • furnished by the Afru . Smarter American. Black-fa e j .set' comedy is put on the, country over by men andl I women of" more or less ability in this ! line, and when ably presented never | fails to make a hit. To-day and to j morrow the patrons of the Orpheinn I will bo given something of its nioio I serious side, portrayed by members !of this race. The play is called | 'Darkest Americans," a musical cont | edy in two acts and eight scenes, and ;is headed by .Salem Tuit Whitney and Homer Tutt, who are supported I y . the strongest and largest aggrega-j lion of colored talent ever, seen i .-1 igether in one company, while Whit-' jney, who is considered the funniest ] colored man on the stage to-day, mis] the role of comedian. Then there is {a chorus of brown-skinned beauties I I who can sing and dance. | Samuel Wallack's production of "Sov |cnteen," the four-act comedy made trout Booth 'xarkiug j "Seventeen" ton's Willie Baxter] ! Gomes to stories, will conto 'the oriilicum from a year's run in New York and Boston ; to the Orpheuni. Wednesday, matinee ;and night.' Never has. there been a play so delightfully typical of that age when shaving is more of an MI- 1 feetionate desire than a desire, for, 1 like the book, tho play is full of good humored pesting at the expense of; I youthful human nature's growing | pains, and there is uti irresistible sympathy inspired for the harried and misunderstood hero aged 17. Wil liam Svlvanus Baxter, Jr. And the the villain of the piece is little sist i ] Jane, aged to, a short-skirted, be-1 socked young person with a wild !'- ] lection for "bread-and-butter--and-! I apple-sauce-and-stigar," and .111 even j stronger love for "telling on" Wiliic. j His every move, almost his every j thought, is retailed to the parents. | The play starts with the arrival in , town of Lola Rratt and her dog, ] Flopit, end Willie's instant capitula tion to her charms. His fatliei wilt rot get a dress suit for him, so lie takes his father's, his parent having grown too stout for the cloths. \\':l - is carried through his love affair through all the joys and sorrows of calf-love, through the awful serenade . by himself and Johnnie Watson, and through Ilia's departure after tiie party at which she has not given Wil lie a single dance. And the play 1 leaves him held close in his mother's arms, tho only comfort left him in life. Humorous and wholesome, youth giving in its sincerity as the storv , is, much credit must be given to Mr. Wallack's cast, for his voting actors seems veritably to have' stepoed out ■ ot the bcok. ' i Announcement of the forthcoming ] engagement of James K. Hackett in : • "The Better 'Ole." at .lames K. the Orpheuni, Saturday. Hackett matinee and night, will In "The tie greeted by tlieater j Better •Ole" goers of this city with great expenctancV. The fame of this unique play, following its New York- presentation this fa'!, has 'permeated throughout ihc i'nited States. It is described as "a frug [ 'rent from France in two explosions, .seven splinters and a short gas nl te.ok, ' by Captain Bairnsfather's tn . ! intitable war cartoons. A dozen or 111 uv , I catchy musical numbers by Herman ' Darewski and Perclval Knight add 'o the attractiveness n , u | charm of tho . 1 production. T omedy will be pre i sented by Mr. ,d Mrs. Coburn. who . are appearing in it at the Port Thea ter. New York, with enormous sin ct ss I Seltvyn and Company have a genu ' ] ine treat for theatergoers in "Tea For j... , Three," which linrlotte Walker they will presbnt in "Ten lor Three" at the Orphcum . , on March :;i and ■ April 1. with matinee Tuesday. The i play itself, the cast and the prodii"- ; ton are heralded .as one of the real I c rani a tic novelties Of the year. I Tea For Three" is a comedy in . jtnree acts It is a real human docu .jii.ent, a style of writing in which Mr. iMegrue may well l, e said to excel. 1 Abounding in real humor, the plav, i L'V" Pr b r ist J"s with situations that |aie intensely dramatic. !, „ 7' r Mr. Megruo it may be said in Lint) that no American pinvweight. In the past few years, has shown 1; greater facility in the wi ling of Uhr^f a .K comf ' dy ' viewpoint is "! e } u ayPra Si man in this coun . ,D> .end he has the knack of trans- T~ I Regent Theater i Home of I'araniouiit and Artcraft TODAY AND TOMORROW Bryant Washburn In a Splendid Now Play j "The Way oi a Man With a Maid" The second picture featuring I litis popular star. A wholesome, j good-natured story of a $-1 a weak ! clerk who had SSO a week aspira tions, and what happened to him. Aildcil Attraction Monday Tuesday Wednesday Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Drew in n high-class comedy, j "ROMANCE AND RINGS" Wednesday Thursday UNA CAVALIERI The world'* most beautiful wuntan "The Two Brides" A powerful dramatic story, re plete with Interest for the thou sands. Love, tragedy, happiness, sunshine and tears in tills, the greatest Cavalierl picture ever produce^. Also SENNETT COMEDY, "The Village Smithy." Friday and Saturday—Fred Stone, star of "Tlie Wizard of Oz." in "Coder the Top." MARCH 24, 1919. IVrrlng his way of looking at things to his i. lay a. "Teu For Three" abounds wile laughs. It is tilled with tense drcmalp situations and it moves along through its story rapidly and smoothly. Not a little of the exeei-; tenet* ot the play is due to tile cast j which includes the charming actress and well-known star, Charlotte I Walker, who will be seen in the lead-I ing role. ".linimie" Hodges and his coinpann ol twenty-live clever entertainers, in | a new liilii version of the At the well-known musical comedy Mnjeslle success. "'Pretty Baby," is tlie attraction at the .Mujes- ; tie to-day, to-morrow and Wednes-j day. The show comes buck to this; lily newly costumed and with a pro- I gram of all new musical tiuiubet.-. antuilg which are: "Till We Meet Again." "How Are You tionna Keep l Km Down on tlte Farm," "Some I .one - . s.uae Night." "Jazz Baby," and other' popuiui song hits. The lust three days of the week ".linttnlc" and his company will pre sent a different "tali." which will be j announced later. To-day and to-niorrow, "A Malt and His Money," another tloldwyn attrac tion will lie at the Co- Tom .lloore Initial Theater, with at 1 oloninl Tom Moore in another of his of his lovable roles adapted front the original story, lie is seen as a young man of wealth, (lie love a girl of his own set, but being a sensible young person, she 'dismisses him because he indulges too , fregui nlly in cock-tails. Then he he gins to reform and engages himself ins a valet to dogs. You can Imagine ithe laughable situations, hut there are I some highly dramatic ones, so come Prepared to enjoy yourself. Wednes day and Thursday, a rate type of pleasurt -loving female, impersonated by Alice Brady, in her latest screen success, "The World to Live In." i Urgent patrons are to-day anil to morrow given tlte opportunity of wit nessing tlte second and Bryant best of Bryant Wash tYnsliliiim burn's pictures, when n< urgent lie is presented in "The Way of a Man With a Maid." It is a story, throbbing with human interest, thrilling, and replete with- smiles, teats and the sunshine i which makes life brighter and hap- j MAJESTIC j j TO-DAY TO-MORROW WEDNESDAY S I JIMMY HODGES | AND A COMPANY OF 25 IN A 1919 VERSION OF | "PRETTY BABY" j ORPHEUM sr: The Smarter Set HEADED BY Salem Tutt Whitney and J. Homer Tutt Matinee and 50^ Night 25cS Wednesday & Nig" Mar. 26 Samuel Wallack Announces the First Tour of RootJi Tarklngton's Famous Comedy Production tM City j Love Mat., 25* to $1.0(1; Eve., 25* to $1.50 Saturday March 29 AA /? A A Lj Balcon y •••75c, 50c lr§ tfo <k SjJ Gallery 25c /P IL >V NIGHT— Orchestra... $2, $1 i-\ TtflpJ.'Balcony ..SI.OO, 75c Gallcr y 50c K %<? Better f,os Baimsfather Comedy ?>„%. '™,;Su B ,'K*" ,er WITH MUSIC DELIGHTFULLY THE INDISPUTABLE HIT OF .NEW YORK,' NOW FLAYING AT TBI TORT THEATRE ™ Ar 1 ■ pier. Mr. Washburn portrays thf 11 hnractet of a young matt with SSO A week ambitions. There is only on© drawback to the realization of tlies# ambitions and tliat is the simple an-i bare l'aet that he makes only s2l a • week. However, lie manages, on th' I s2l, to keep the hall a-rolling at a pretty pace. There is romance and - power i.nil dramatic interest a-plenty lin this splendid picture. Mr. and Mrs. I Sidney Drew, in an exhilarating new | comedy, "Romance and Kings," eom i plete tlie bill. I Mnip, Ditta Cavalieri, in "The Two I Brides." will lie the attraction for Wednesday and Thursday. The Drew comedy will also lie shown Wednes day and a new Mark Sennett fun-pie- I tare will he presented on the last | three days of the week. COLONIAL TODAY and TOMORROW Tom Moore in a new Goldwyn picture. A fine comedy with some high ly dramatic situations. Just the sort of picture Tom Moore is seen to best ad vantage. A Mail and His Money Wednesday and Thursday ALICE BRADY '< /
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers