18 Is a Mar " Shaped by Hir x.. . >V ill Power ? "H. M."' who seems blessed with a meditative mind, would like to know whether a man's life is shaped. by his own will power, or by some Supreme power of the universe. Thus is a question for great phil osophers to answer, if they can. but even they would not be able to solve it after the manner of a mathematical ' problem. It is the age-old doubt oscillating between fate and freewill. The Turk says, as lie falls, "it was written," and according to the phi losophy of his masters, such resign ation to the inevitable renders him a great soldier. But the American does not believe that history is written be fore it is made, and bis instinctive trust in himself makes him a better goblier than a Turk. The question as between fate and free will is mainly a matter of temper ment, and to quite a large degree of development and climate. Oar Ameri can air is too stimulating for the fatalistic doctrine to find much growth here, while our nationel birili was as vigorous and full of originality that it imparted a self-reliance which makes tho American not only the best soldier, but the best citizen in tho world. The political and social aspects of j Americanism do not present all of it. for it has a religious side, based upon that same sense of personal freedom - and responsibility: "T am of my soul." J This consciousness of freedom of will, which I myself accept as authentic be lief in a supreme planning and govern ing power in the universe. There is a scientific doctrine, gradu ally spreading and taking more defin ite shape, which has a certain bearing upon this question. It is based upon I the idea of tropism (Greek: trope, "truning") the substance of which is Illustrated by the doniluct of a sup- ; ftower in following with its face the sun. This unconscious submission to the j raiding of external influences is ex tended in biology to many forms of | animal as well as vegetable life, in its | extreme form this doctrine would eliminate self-guidance, or choice, in the lower organisms, and, by extensions even in the higher ones. The stimulus FRIEND'S PERSUASION WON RUN HAPPINESS "Upon seeing a rash on my face) recently, a friend, who lives in Frankfort], said. "Bill, you need I Tanlac,'" said William 11. McCool, Sr.. 4140 Paul srect, Philadelphia, a, retired shoemaker. "At first I was in doubt as to whether Tanlac would] tlo me any good,' but after taking a ' few doses I was soon convinced that. I was on the mend. My face to-day is clear as crystal, as Tanlac purified! fktnd cleaned out all the poisons in, lily blood. It also regulated the circulation, as blood no longer rushes to my head. Gas after eat- j ing. which caused an increased heart action, no longer forms, as my food I digests well." The genuine Tanlac, which is be-1 ing introduced at Gorgas' drug store.) bears the name J. 1. Gore Co. on '^3xmacm3So 432 MAKKEI STREET License No. G-assos Specials for Saturday, April 5, 1919 Morning Specials Until 12 Noon Picnic Hams, II) 25c Pure Lard, lb, 30c Choice Rib or Chuck, II) 24c Choice Leg Lamb, lb 30c Lamb Chops or Roast, Rib, Loin, lb., 30c Pork Roast, lb 30c Pork Steak, lb 33c f Frankfurters, Garlic, Smoked or Fresh Sausage, lb 20e ALL DAY SPECIALS Sliced Liver, 3 lbs. for 25c Boiling Beef or Corned Beef, lb. .. . 18c Pot Roast or Fleshy Boil, lb 22c B. B. Butterine, 2-lb. rolls, 52c; lb.. . .27c Compound used as Lard, 11) 25c Steak, Sirloin, Club, Porterhouse, lb., 30c Hearts, Brains, Spare Ribs, Pig's Feet, Snouts, Ears, Fresh Fish. Markets in 65 Cities of 14 States Main Office, Chicago Packing Plant, Peoria, 111. All Meat Government Inspected. All Goods Purchased Guaranteed or Money Refunded FRIDAY EVENING, *** _,, TELEGRAPS " W 'AFRTT:*, T9T9. ! or light rays in general, and the effects ; of rays of different colors and qualities in determining the movements of the I simpler representatives of animal life, hate been profoundly studied, and the i results go far to suggest that, at bot -1 torn, vital phenomena are merely me ] chanical responses to environment. ! The scientist does not undertake to | drive tliis any further than his verl j fiable experiments can take him, but some speculative thinkers would see in I it a proof that the universe is only a vast, complicated machine, containing nothing but wheels, springs, belts and ! cogs, set in motion nobody knows how. i and having a store of energy which j even if tending to ultimate exhaustion. lor dissipation, is at any rate good for 1 undreds of thousands of millions of years yet. This ignores Hod, but it ! fails to get rid of Him. On tiie other ; hand it promotes a form of fatalism I that seems to me particularly ob jectionable, j l.et us stand by the American doc trine. It is the doctrine of optimism. ! and consequently of success. Believe i with all your strength in the eontroll j ing power of your will guided by your ! intelligence. Farragut and Dewey dis regarded the torpedoes not because they believed that the result was predeter- I mined and that a ssiprente power was i urging them out to take a chance which ' had been shaped to favor them, but ! because they had calculated for them ' selves what the chances were, and j reached their resolution by the free , exercise of their wills. I in a broad sense, no doubt, we are I instruments in the hands of Provi i tlence'.' There is an infinitely higher ' power and intelligence which determines the ultimate fortunes of nations and of i planets. But this control may be ! likened in its extent to that which a gcneral-in-chief exercises over the movements of the armies under his command, or to the control of a pre arranged plan over the actions of those upon whom rests the responsibility of ! carrying it into execution. General Pershing did not cease to be I a free agent, guided by his own in telligence and will, because he was placed under the supreme command of i Marshal Koch. He simply by his will. | shaped his actions to accord with the ' scheme of the general commander. The ! soldier on a campaign or in battle re mains a free agent, and when he sub- I mits to discipline and obeys orders, lie does it by virtue of his possession anil ; exercise of a personal will. God would in vain have essayed to make man in His image if he had not furnished hint with the power to shape his own i life. But setting him utterly free from the control of his Maker. ltesponsi i billty goes with freedom. RF.SENT HOSTILE ATTITUDE j Bp Associated Press. London. April 4 —The Metropoli- j tan of Athens has sent to America a ] strong protest against what is con i sidered to he a hostile attitude on , the part of American missionaries in ; respect to the rights of Greece in Northern Epirus and Asia Minor. ; says an Athens dispatch to the Ex j change elegraph. HERE'S RELIEF FOR YOUR COLD! Dr. King's New Discovery . helps to bring the desired j quick relief j It holds a record of fifty continu ■'otis years of relieving—promptly ; and pleasantly—the usual winter colds, coughs and bronchial attacks. 1 It holds a following of armies of regular users in whose family medi . cine cabinets Dr. King's New Dis covery is the watchword for cold and ! cough correction. i Sold by druggists everywhere, j 60c and $1.20. The Boon of Regular Bowels I —the health-promoting properties; !of active bowels, these are yours when you occasionally take Dr. : stomach sweet, the breath untainted, j the system cleansed. Gentle but post- i ' tive in action. Sold everywhere. 25c. ' I^AMUSEj]^[MENTS^| MAJESTIC _ ! High Class Vaudeville—Hugh Herbert; j and Ctmpany in a new comedy en | titled "Mind Your Own Busities.,." j , ; Mills anil Lockwood, the llicksviile ; . | Bubes; three other comedy acts. ) ; ORPHEUM , To day and to-morrow, with daily , | matinee—Robert Downing, in "Tea, j i Nights in a Barroom.'' 'Monday matinee and night, April ? — 1 ' : Walter Hampden in "Hamlet." iTuesda}, evening only, April S Cohan and Harris offer "A Tailor- i ; I Made Man." 1 Wednesday, matinee and night, April ; I ' 9 —Three Hundred and Fiftieth , Field Artillery Band—The Black, i ; Devils. - , Three days, starting Thursday, Apiiii j 1". with a Saturduy matinee ill-' liot, Cumstock and Gest offer "The j M andcier." COLONIAL .'To-day and to-morrow Ma<ige Ken i nedy will be seen in "Daughter of . Mine." I Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday —; jj Mntc. Nazlmovu in "Eye for Eye." ' | REGENT j To-day and to-morrow Cecil ■] H. De Mille presents "Don't Change I Your Husband." ■ | Monday. Tuesday, Wednesday—Elsie j Ferguson, "His Parisian Wife." VICTORIA • I To-day—Peggy Hyland in "The Re i belliotis Bride." ■ I Saturday—Tom Mix in "Fighting For . : Gold." and final instalment of "The j ' Master Mystery." •I ' | | From a very successful tour of the i I cities, including New York. Brook- j lyn. Providence., "Ten Nights in Worcester, Fa! I n llnrroum." River and many I j others. in somi j ij of which the success has been col large tlutt return dates were neces-| I sary to accommodate the people, Ar.- i I thur t". Alston's big revival of the I immortal drama of Ten Nights in ai I Barroom," with Robert Downing in I the part of "Joe Morgan." the drunk | aid who afterwards reforms, is the; ! attraction at the Orpheunt to-day and ; to-morrow. There is no word too I good for this wonderful old play te-| \iscd and brought up-to-date "with I all the old heart interest, tears. ] laughter, and excitement remaining, i hut with a new wrinkle, that makes it all Hie more interesting. To hear the laughter and applauap I during the comedy scenes between "Sample Swiehel" (played by Bert I i Melville) and "Mehitable," the cook j (played by Hdene Andree) brings Joy I to the hearts of all. ! The fame of Walter Hampden's "Hamlet," which New York has ac claimed as t lie "real llnmpUcn dramatic event" of the Presents season, is spreading rap ••Hninlet" idly throughout the coun try. Requests that lie present it in several of the largest eastern cities has resulted in a tour being arranged, which includes Phila delphia. Baltimore, Washington. Springfield. Albany and other cities, lie will appear heor at the Orpheum Theater on Monday, April 7. By spec j ial request a matinee performance j v-111 he given in addition to the even ing play. The unusual spectacle of people be i ing unable to purchase seats marked Mr. Hampden's last appearance in 1 Brooklyn, while the special perform-i Ijjj'res lU the Plymouth Theater, New! jTTirk. which are now in their fifth [ month, are still drawing crowded ] houses. j "Hamlet." as presented by Mr. Hampden and his splendid company, is an entertainment as well as an ar tistic triumph. It is a drama, vital end gripping, and not just an at tempt to present a masterpiece for educational purposes. The ranting and sti lilting of the old school trage dian are conspicuous bv their absence ftnd substituted are real characters living in a tragic moment. I The most agreeable, not to say adorable play that has been seen on tHe American stage for "A Tailor- a long time. is "A ' Made Man" Tailor-made Man." a scintillating comedy j for the late Harry .lames Smith. I whir h will lie presented by Cohan and ; Harris at the Orpheum. Tuesday even ! ing. coming here direct from its solid year's run in New York City. I "A Tailor-Made Man" is one of | those judicious mixtures <Jf imagina . tion and common sense, which, in I play form, nuts one in a state of great, good humor. In this particular case, the enjoyment is increased by j the excellence of the acting and I cleanliness of the theme. Then, too, ' the lines, and situations of the coni ; edy are so uproariously funny that I its sin cess, indicated from the rise of Mho first curtain, is unanimously oon j firmed as (he play progresses "to its | fourth and final act. Every lover of the best that the i American stage affords should see "A 1 Tailor-Made Man." It gives one that j feeling of satisfaction that follows a • well-spent evening. It lias been aptly < termed a comedy of philosophy, in H at it teaches a noble and uplifting lesson to every man with ambition. ] and at the same time never loses I sight of the fact that the main ob ! icct of a stage work is to entertain ! its auditors. This "A Tailor-Made Man' does in no uncertain degree. | Richard Sterling plays the title role. i At the Ornlieum will be seen the j most colossal spectacle ever produced on anv stage i "The Wnnderer" when the great Biblical drama. "The Wanderer." with the parable of [the Prodigal Son as its theme, will be l presented for an engagement of three I days, beginning Thursday. April 10. i with a matinee Saturday. It is being I presented hv the enterprising firm of I young managers who have scored Imanv successes of late. William El jiiott, F. Ray Gomstock and Morris Gest. David Relaseo staged it. Mnu- Irice V. Samuels wrote it and Anselm Goetzl composed special music for it. I With the magic name of Relaseo at- I inched to It, "The Wanderer" would he expected to reveal not only acting of rare excellence, hut stage reall-m in the highest degree. Tt Is said the curtain is onlv raised a few minutes ! when the audience is fairly eleetri- I lied, for there in the poetic" quietude of the pastoral scene, which repre sents the home of the Prodigal Son amidst the hills of Hebron, is to oe seen a large flock of sheep wendir.g their way down the low hillside to the fold at eventide and the friendly barking of the shepherd dogs is heard, as well as the soft grinding of the liand-turned millstones which | provide (lour for the festal bread. i Truly a Lelasco effect. Jerusalem's house of sin, which is ' the second uct of "The Wanderer," also shows the touch of the master. There is a sumptuousness and luxury I with deft touches of the garish in i the lights and decoration, all combin- I ing to convey the impression of a sin-filled atmosphere. The scene is said to be a marvelous piece of imaginative exemplification of St. Luke's brief description that tho Prodigal Son has "wasted his substance with riotous living." Among the well-known and notable players of the original cast, who will be seen here, are: Frederick Florence Auer, Richard Thornton, Olga Newton, Henry Duggan. Mabel (Montgomery. Louise Orth. and nearly a hundred others. A special feature is the ballet of sixty dancing girls, led by Francesca Kuimenova, late of the Imperial Rus sian Ballet. The Majestic'* splendid comedy bill the last half of this week, is headed by Hugh Herbert At the and Company in a new eom- Majcfttle edy entitled, "Mind Your Own Business." The play let is well written and cleverly pre sented. and is brimful of good comedy lines. Mr. Herbert ha* a role that suits him to perfection, while the sup porting company is competent, and each one handles their part in a uleasinc manner. Another comedy j hit on the bill is the clever team. Davis and Greenlee, who furnish live ly entertainment by singing some comedy songs and injecting a lot of tun Into their act. Mills and Lock wood .the Hlcksville Rubes, also de | serve credit, for their line or dialog i is very funny, with a result that the ! audience is kept in uproarious laugh ter all the time. The Hose-Ellis Trio j given an exhibiton of arrel jumping I ;that is clever, anil the Swiss Song j Birds give an entertaining musical ol- I 1 fering. Another episode of "The Lure of the Circus," with daring "Eddie" Polo, is also being shown. To-day and 10-morroy "Daughter"! I will be shown at the Colonial Then- ! ter, witli charm- - • Madge Ivcnm-dy ing Madge Ken- ! ai the Colonial nedy as the star. She had the iin- i • agination of Munchausen, and so she| • had everything In the world she' | wanted just by bringing her imagi- I • lift tion Into action. She has lost heri , sNveetheurt. a would-be author, and in order to find him she publishes tiis • half-finished novel. She knew this I would find him quicker than anything else. Supporting Miss Kennedy is a I weii-seiocted cast. • ; Ti ~ 1 ! 'tie war lias proved that the day of the commercial flying machine is; hero. Aerial routes I eggy tli land are being establish- I at the Yietorin ed and companies are being formed to I I operate airplane passenger service; bet ween tiie important cities of the i I nited States. ' 1 Not so long ago an Army aviator, ' ! stationed at Mineola, L. 1.. had a I • hankering to see his sweetheart. He had hut a few hours' leave and could; ; not make the trip to and fro in the ' ; allotted time. So he went to tile ; hangar, got out his trustv scout air j Plane, and flew away, lie planned to I j volplane into tiie backyard of his swetheart's home just as he had vol planed into lier heart. ! But something went wrong. Just as lie got ready to descend the mn ■ chinery refused to act and he made | a rather ungraceful landing on the I roof of the girl's home, lie escaped injury, but his machine was badlv I damaged. it was the first time an airplane! ; had beer, used difring a courtship, hut i not by any means the last time. For since then aviators in various parts lof the country have adopted this I method of courting. And by-and-by lit will cease to cause any comment. ! A wealthy young aviator flew out! of St. Louis and became stranded he I engine trouble in the Ozark moun tains of Missouri. He was trying to; I repair his engine when an enraged! Ibid man accosted liim and, at the] point if n gun. compelled him to marry a wild mountain girl he had' with him—his granddaughter. He ; went through the ceremony to save | | ids life, and next day escaped and ! ilew away. lie later' acknowledged ! jibe girl as his wife, however, for he' had fallen in love with lier. This is I one of the startling incidents in "The Rebellious Bride." a William Fox photoplay, starring Peggy Hyland, showing at tho Victoria to-day' only, j The marvellous power of Cecil B. ! De Mille in producing super-extraor- | dinary attractions • ••Don'i Change has never been so] tour iiushnnd" well Hustrated as at flic Regent in his latest pro duction. "Don't Change Your Husband," being shown I at the Regent Theater to-day and to- | morrow The picture is an answer to ; "Old Wives For New." written oy ! Jennie MacPherson. Hundreds oft ' people saw the first showings of itl ! yesterday, and these were loud in I ORPHEUM 3DAYS THURSDAY APRIL 10 MATINEE ON SATURDAY ........ .. POSITIVELY THE BIGGEST DRAMATIC SPECTACLE TO-DAY AIGTON TO-MORROW EVER BROUGHT TO THE CITY OF HARRISBURG PRESENTS THE GREATEST CAST EVER ORGANISED IN THE _ „ . __ ___ _ HISTORY OR THR AMERICAN STAGE ROBERT DOWNING firr WW A 1 I ■ I I THE GOHGEOI'S AND GLITTERING BALLET OF M jv- % I ■ lIEALTIFLL DANCING GIRLS.— \ P P THE MAGNIFICENT SCENE OR THE REVEI. OR _____ _ ___ . _ 1 I I THE IDOI.ATORS IX THE lIOISE OR NADINA TEN NIGHTS IN A BAR ROOM ULL. 1 y Daily Matinees, 25d and 3^3SS£%3Sr Nights, 25£, 75c 1 , $l.OO. ALL THIS AND MORE IN THE TITCCHAV NIGHT APDII CTU WORLD'S MOST GIGANTIC SPECTACLE 1 UEiOIJAI ONLY AIKIL O1 fl William Elliott J| | J mdhi'^v COHAN HARRIS ■■ THE GORGEOUSNESS OF THE ORIENT IN /lay ATAII Ilu> THE TIME OF KING SOLOMON TRANS- L 1 MIAAIFCLAIIL PLANTED IN ALL ITS GLORY IN THIS WON v AFm &L| */ mmm mm DERFUL SPECTACLE. /W JBSfl pf Ay C* NEVER BEFORE CjJ Bk ■ in the History of the Theaters Throughout the Uni -1 axrl JftmL verse Has Such a Colossal and Magnificent Stage \ Production Been Placed Before Mortal Eye. RV WAPRY JAMES SMITH YOU CANNOT AFFORD TO MISS THIS PLAY. ° A COMPANY OF 100 LIVING PEOPLE. Y £ Hk- An Array of Artists of the First Magnitude DIKECT 1 KOM ONK JSOt.lt> IK.Ui IN N. Y. NIGHTS, 50£ to $2.00. Prices, 50* 75* 51.00. $1.50, $2.00. ~ m,w MATINEE, w^l.so.^^ I TODAY ONLY—William Fox Presents H9 T <■ ge*m •* B p EGGY HYLAND"Sgt. Walter Shaffer ■ ft'l "hp ninrried tlic II PI main; How ninny chnneeaa (lid ohc 111 r .. T r NI • /" T*-H n a . 1-1 i-n r r VY4 nJI WM .. Of the Lafayette Flying Corps Will Speak at Each Performance of WIM O "Xgsuvzszar " "THF ROMANCE OF THE AIR" S Todny nnd Tomorrow I'lnnl Inxtnllnient of _ . . . _ . . _ LM D"THE MASTER MYSTERY" £3 g Aerial Super Feature of the Great War— Six Reels of Humor and S KenturinK U B Pathos Wonderful Cast Including 0 HOUDINI 0 LIEUTENANT BERT HALL m NEXT WEEK—MONDAY nnd TUESDAY THE AMERICAN ACE and m THE x&. ta VI SERGEANT ROBERTS AVIATION QUARTETTE n 55 KUMAMLL IIM inn, AIK U UNCLE SAM'S HARMONY SINGERS IN THE SERVICE U lil coming 111 Hear Shaffer Tell of the Americans Fighting in the Air for France Don't Km ■ Theda Bara in "What Men Desire" |&m Miss This Three Star Engagement. ADMISSION—IO£ AND 20£ AND WAR TAX MONDAY AND TUESDAY, APRIL 7 AND 8 Girl Swimmer Breaks the American Record fix Associated Press. Philadelphia. April 4.—Anna Wright. of the Philadelphia Turners, made tho fastest time ever recorded in this country in a 100-yard back-stroke swiin ming race for women here lust night, but the time, 1 minute 3 2 1-5 seconds, will not stand as a new American record because she made it in an exhibition match. D. Leopold, of the Meadow brook Swimming Club and a University of Pennsylvania stur, won the 100-yard Middle Atlantic A. A. U. championship for men in 1 minute 1-5 second. Victor lloltz, Meadowbrook. was second and Raymond Uhl third. The Middle Atlantic A. A. U. fancy diving championship for women was won by Elizabeth Becker, Philadelphia: Catherine Murphy, Philadelphia, was sec ond, and Mabel Arklie, Philadel phia, third. their praise. The picture is a glimpse at the divorce problem from u new angle Beautiful women, rich'y gowned: elaborate scenery, lavish set tings and a strong east are features of this greatest De Mille production. H is a magnificent story, rich in heart-appeal, realistic in action; a story that tugs at the heartstrings as few stories do. Elsie Ferguson, beautiful, talented queen of the screen, is scheduled to appear next Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday in her great new picture, "Ills "Parisian Wife." Ml RESPITE "We've got twins at our liouse." "How are they?" "They cry a lot." "Any child is apt to cry." "Having twins, though, is a tierce pro position. They cry in relays."—From the Louisville Courier-Journal. Winterdale Dances 15 Nnrtli Market Squxire Mannix Big Banjo Orchestra Saturday Evening, April 7>th. til mission 'III nnil III) tents. Private Lessons ll.v Appointment ORPHEUM One Mat. & Night Only M A °R N R ?L AY 7 WALTER - w - HAMPDEN IN HiYmlfYl The Dramatic Event of the Season, ™ —X. V. Globe. With Di.stlngiiNlied Cast Prom Plymouth Theater, New York, Including Albert Pruning. Mabel Moore and Mary llall. PRICES: Matinee to $l.OO, Evening to $2.00 The Black Devil Band to Appear at Orpheum Soon | The Black Devil Band, of the 350 th ; Field Artillery Regiment, will appear ; at the Orpheum theater on Wednesday | afternoon afid evening. April 9. at which j time "Mr. Jazz Himself" in the person of Lieutenant J. Jim Brymn, will in , troduce the very latest kinks in syn . copation. This extraordinary combina | tion of some seventy colored musicians. ; arrived from overseas but a few days ; ago. and made their first appearance in America at the Academy of Music in ' Philadelphia on March 19. The pro gram to be rendered at the Orpheum ! theater will consist largely of jazz in ! all of its infinite variations. There will be a number of classical and standard i selections however, including a medley j o,f several of Lieutenant Br.vmn's best ! known songs such as "Please Go 'Way ! and i.et Me Sleep." "Josephine My Joe." j "My Zu|u Babe" and "La Rumba." The • Black Devil Band will appear in Har risburg in full uniform, having just been mustered out of tlie service .and the ! number of wound stripes, service ch!v -• rons and decorations for bravery is in dicative of'the great service that these colored men have rendered the world ) in the fight to make the Globe safe for j democracy. Overseas the Black Devil j Band occupied an important sector be | fore Metz. where the regiment estnb ; fished a record for speed by their ex i pert manipulation of the French 75's. ; In spite of the strenuous duties of the ' 350 th Field Artillery Regiment, the band I leader. Lieutenant Brymn kept His men up to the mark by having band re [ hearsals every day. no matter how j severe the bombardment of the enemy. The band was a sensation in France, 'and proved to be a positive riot when !it reached home after nine months ! abroad. Several offers to go on tour were cabled to the Black Devi) Band, but they could only be persuaded to (leave New York upon the assurance that ! Captain Carl Helm would handle their ! engagements. As a result. Harrisburg | will have an opportunity to see the j Black Devils in all their glory, and hear | them "rag the scale" in every style of WOULD YOU AUCTION YOUR DAUGHTER? Are all parents inbued with the idea that it is their duty to I marry their daughter as "advantageously" as possible? See how ! one girl resents this' policy in the William Fox morality produc tion. "W'hv I Would Not Marrv," coming to the Victoria, May 11-2-3. TO STUDY SOUTHERN. ROCKS (from the Christian Science Monitor.) Dr. Joseph Singewald of Johns Hopkins University expects to sail about the middle of April for South America on one of the most import ant geological expeditions this coun try has yet sent out. He goes es peciallly for research work of the Un iversity, but his investigations will be watched keenly by Washington, and the results, upon his return, some time in the fall, will be at the disposal of the government. It is not generally known that be fore the sailing of the envoys sent by this country to the peace confer ence now meeting in Paris, the care fully tabulated results of Doctor Singowald's first South American trip were asked for and were placed in their hands. They are now in Paris us a part of the basis for guidance in negotiations. The first trip of exploration was un dertaken lour years ago, and at that time Doctor Singewald sailed for P.io de Janieio, going thence to the dia mond fields of Brazil, then through Argentina, returnin glo cross the An des to the Pacific Coast to study the silver mines, the nitrate fields and the many mineral deposits. On this second trip Doctor Singe wald will make directly for the west ern coast, ar.d his first landing point will be Callaos He starts with two main things in view: prospecting over some, points which especially inter ested him on his first journey and in vestigating the fossil deposits found in the Andes on his previous trip. These fossils. Doctor Singewald thinks, will prove that the age of the Andes range is far different from that usually assigned. No real study, he thinks, has yet been given the matter, explorers hav ing been compelled to guess the age of the range hastily and without thor ough investigation. These deposits, which were come upon unexpectedly in iris first trip and which were then .studied hastily, will now claim thor ough investigation. Doctor Singewald. after careful In vestigation. has concluded that the treasure is not and never was. at least as the early discoverers believed it to be. His theory is that the South American hill valleys were peculiarly rich in placer mines, WASN'T IMPRESSED A pompous gentleman happened M stray on to the grounds of Lord Blantyri one day and was ordered oft by tin Scotch gamekeeper in language mort forcible than polite. "Sir," said lite pompous one, "do yo( know who 1 am? I am the Faulds ol Aedgeriff." "I dina care if ye are the Falls ot Niagara," said the gamekeeper, "ye'rt goon oot o' this."—Froth the Boston Transcript. NAZIVOMA appears at her best in her best photoplay "An Eye For An Eye" at the r\ 1 *1 Monday, Ulomalsss., COLONIAL TODAY TOMORROW MADGE KENNEDY in a great story of imagina tion and love. A charming star, a great story. "Daughter Of Mine" ! - Orpheum I BY SPECIAL REQUEST OF I GENERAL FRED T. AUSTIN I AND j COL. WALTER E. PROSSER WED. MAT. AT 2.30 AND NIGHT AT 8.15 APRIL 9TH i CAPT. CARL HELM PRESENTS FOR THE FIRST j TIME IN AMERICA OVERSEAS JAZZ SENSATION LIEUT. J. TIM BRYMN — ° FAMOUS COMPOSER OF "PLEASE GO 'WAY AND LET ME SLEEP," "JOSEPHINE MY .TOE," "MY ZULU BABE," "LA RUMBA," AND 100 OTHERS, INCLUDING HIS LATEST JAZZ HIT, "THE PHILADELPHIA | SUNDAY BLUES." WITH HIS 70 BLACK DEVILS OF THE 350 th U.S.A. FIELD ARTILLERY BAND ONLY BAND TO APPEAR BY SPECIAL REQUEST BEFORE PRESIDENT WILSON AND GENERAL ! PERSHING A MILITARY SYMPHONY ENGAGED IN A BATTLE OF JAZZ. pnippc MAT. 50c to $l.OO. *lVl\rl!i3 EVE. 50c to $1.50.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers