II- CHILD IS DROSS, FEVERISH AND SICK Look, Mother! If tongue is coated give "California" Syrjo of Figs." Children love this "fruit laxative," find nothing else cleanses the tender Vtomach. liver and bowels so nicely. K child simply will not stop playing to empty the bowels, and the result Is, thay become tightly clogged with wutt, liver gets sluggish, stomach ■ours, then your little one becomes cross, half-sick, feverish, don't eat. ■leap or act naturally, breath Is bad, system full of cold, has sore throat, stomachache or diarrhoea. Listen, Mother'. See if tongue is coated, then give a teaspoonful of "California Syrup of Figs." and in a few hours aUI the constipated waste, sour bile and undigested food passes out of the eyatem, and you have a well, playful child again Millions f mothers give "California Syrup of rigs" because It Is perfectly harmless; children love it. and It never fails to act on the stomach, liver and bowels. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bot tle of "California Syrup of Figs," •which has full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown ups plainly printed on the bottle. Be ware of counterfeits sold here. Get the genuine, made by "California Fig tiyrnp Company." Refuse any other kind with contempt.—Advertisement. ACID STOMACHS ARE DANGEROUS of All Stomach Trouble Said to lie l)u<- to Acidity A Physician'* Advice on Cauiie and Cure A famous physician whose successful researches into the cause and cure of stomach and intestinal diseases have earned for him an international repu tation, said in the course of a recent lecture that nearly all Intestinal troubles, as well hs many diseases of the vital organs, were directly trace able to a deranged condition of the stomach which in turn was due nine times out of ten to excessive acidity, commonly termed sour stomach or heartburn, which not only irritated and inflamed the delicate lining' of the Btomach, but also set up gastritis and Ftomach uplcers. It is interesting to note that he condemns the use of patent medicines as well as of medical treat ment for the stomach, stating that he and his colleagues have secured re markable results by the use of ordi nary bisuratetl magnesia, which, by neutralizing the acidity of tho food, re moves the source of the trouble. He contends that it is as foolish to treat the stomach itself as it would be ror a man who stepoed on a tack to rub lini ment on the foot without first remov ing the tack. Remove the tack and the foot will heal itself —neutralize the acid and the stomach troubles will disappear. Irritating medicines and medical treatments are useless, so long as the contents of the stomach remain acid; remove the acidity, and there will be no need for medicine—the inflamed lining of the stomach will then heal itself. Sufferers from acldltv, sour stomach or heartburn should get a small bottle of blsurated magnesia from tho r druggist. and take a tea spoonful in a quarter of a glass of hot or cold water after meals, repeating in fifteen minutes. If necessary, this being the dose which the doctor has found most efficacious in all cases.—Adver tisement. RESINOL WIFT HEAL YOUR SK'N Stops Itching Instantly, and Clears Away Unsightly Eruptions No matter how long you have been tortured and disfigured by itching, burning, raw or scaly skin humors, just put a little of that soothing, an tiseptic Resinol Ointment on tho sores an the suffering stops right there! Healing begins that very minute, and your ekln gets well so quickly you feel ashamed of the money you threw away on useless, tedious treatments. Resinol is also an excellent house hold remedy for pimples, dandruff, sores, burns, bruises, bolls and for a score of other uses where a soothing healing application is needed. It con tains nothing of a harsh or injurious nature and can bo used with confi dence on the tenderest or most irri tated surface. Practically everv drug gist sells Resinol Ointment (50c and I $1.00), and Resinol Soap (25c). For trial free, write to Dept. o-R, Resinol Baltimore, Aid. Ask for Resinol bv name and thus avoid "substitutes." Advertisement. ! 1 j f * Sulphur Vapor Bath Regular price SI.OO For a limited time only 50c For Ladits and Gentlemen Lady Attendant Health Studio Walnut near Second Open 8 A. M. to 10 P. M. Bell Phone 2102 R Merchant! A Miners Trans. Co "SPRING SEA TRIPS" Baltimore and Philadelphia —TO— Boston, Providence Savannah, Jacksonville Through ticket* on sale from and to *ll principal points including meals and ftateroom accommodations on steamers "lne steamers. Best service. Low tares. Staterooms de Luxe. Baths Marconi wireless. Automobiles carried Send for booklet. City Ticket Office. 105 South Klnt* Ft., PUla., Pa. W. P. Turner. P. T. SI.. Baltimore, Md. Try Telegraph Want Ads. • < ;v . .•, .vf/* '.r "i FRIDAY EVF.NING, HARRJSBURG TELEGRAPH APRIL 17, 1914. GARDENS URGED FOR ALL PEOPLE Commissioner Dixon Gives Some Good Wholesome Advice to the General Public Planting and attending to a garden are declared by Dr. Samuel G. Dixon, State Commissioner of Health, to be excellent for the health and welfare of the average peron and in one of his weekly talks on taking care of oneself the commissioner say that everyone who can do so should work a little in the garden. Few know it, but Dr. Dixon is one of the successful farmers of the State. He owns a number of farms, including a large one near Philadelphia, and his management of it takes up a good bit of his time when he is home. They say that the eminent scientist and lawyer who is at the head of the health department can turn a furrow or even spray a fruit tree. In speaking about the advantages of making a garden Dr. Dixon says: "Plant a garden. Some of the world's greatest thinkers have found diversion and inspiration in their gar dens. If your control of agricultural space is limited to a 20-foot back yard, do not be discouraged. It is even pos sible to transform an unattractive flat roof into a garden. The possibilities of exercise and profit to be derived from the cultivation of even a small plot are greater than one might think. "The use of the spade, the hoe and the rake prove the equivalent of manv of the gymnastic exercises which everybody concedes to be beneficial and few people take. In addition to the advantage of exercise in the open air it is a keen satisfaction to the vast majority of men and women to see tilings that they have cultivated grow and mature. "The practical benefits derived from tho tillage of a little garden are usually exceeded by the aesthetic, but In the hurly-burly of everyday life perhaps we weigh as to too little Im portance our opportunites for the cul tivation and appreciation of the beau tiful. It is difficult to tell how far reaching may be the effect of some slight effort at beautiflcatlon. ears ago a boy station agent of a railroad traversing the plains of the Canadian Northwest sent back home for a few packages of flower seed and with such time as he could spare transformed the surroundings of his mean little one-room station. Sir Thomas Shaughnessy, president of the road, was making a tour of inspection and when he reached this little garden spot in the then uncultivated wastes he asked to see the boy and learned from him the story of his garden. As a result the next year all agents of the road, which stretches from the Atlan tic to the Pacific, received packages of seeds and instructions to plant flowers around every station, and the custom then begun has ever since continued. "The cultivation of twenty feet or more of back yard may not result in anything of this sort, bat should prove a healthful, restful and profitable diversion after tho labors of the day for the busy man or woman." The Theater in New York BY MYRON C. FAGAN. Margaret Angliu Is Seen in "Lady Windermere's lan" One of the best of all the attrac tions ou view in New York is Mar garet Anglin's performance of Erlynne In "Lady Windemere's Fan," Oscar Wilde's dramatic gem. As we all know, the role of Mrs. Erlynne Is one that might lead the average actress into an emotional display verging on the maudlin. A mother who has played the game of life so badly as to cheat herself out of a daughter is a character likely to fill the actress who plays it with self pity. But Miss Anglin knows her art too well. Never for a moment, not even when words are like so many daggers to wound her. does she play for sympathy. This revival Is In very good hands this year, Miss Anglin being well sup ported by Mrs. LeMoyne as the duch ess, Miss Margery Maud In the title | role and Pedro DeCordoba as the young husband. Gaby Leslys the "Belle of Bond Street" Recent activities have been exclu sively to revivals, Shubert theater being given over to Gaby Leslys and Sam Bernard, who appeared in a re vised edition of "The Girl from Kays" now known as "Tho Belle of Bond Street.". First honors went to Bernard in his old role of Hoggenheimer. He played the part with all the zest that he brought to it in the days when "suffi ciency" was the byword in Broad way. Gaby makes a beautiful "Belle" and is proving possession of real histrionic powers. Others in this revival are Harry Pilcer Lawrence D'Orsay and Lottie Collins. But it was sputtering Sam Bernard and disdainful Gaby Deslys who carried "The Belle of Bond Street" Into the highway of success. Clyde Fitch's play which Mr. Ames is presenting at the Little Theater, be ginning this week, has probably been translated into more languages than any other American play. It has been given in practically every country of Europe, und there are versions of it in German, French. Italian, Norwe gian, Danish and Swedish. Mr. Fitch's first real London success was this play. It ran for a year in where Marie Hempest played the role allotted to Grace George in the pres ent production. Vitagraph Not to Establish Chain of Theaters The recent convention of exhibitors in Cleveland, Ohio, emphatically con demned the manufacturers of aim who entered into the exhibiting game, ] and. while no definite names were used, it very evidently was Intended as a direct shot for the Vitagraph Com pany, which operates the Vitagraph Theater. The Ohio exhibitors surely reckoned with little consideration, if such was the case, and it now seems that the many rumors to the effect that the Vitagraph Company was embarking in the exhibiting business on a large scale have been started, but are all unfounded. This is shown by an an- I hereby announce myself as a candidate for the nomination, on the Republican Ticket, for the office of Representative in the General Assembly from the City of Harrisburg. J. W. SWARTZ. imliiiaiiiß Non-greasy Toilet Cream —keeps the skin soft and velvety In rouith weather. An exquisite toilet prep aration, 26r. " f.OHGAS DRUG STORES 10 N. Third St., and P. R. ft. Station I FREE "WUNDER SCHOEN" ALTERING (WONDERFUL PRETTY) DONE A Remark Passed In Our Store By a Woman As Her Daughters Were Filling On Suits and Coats j-S Low These Beautiful Suits, CoatsK Livingston's | I aT and Dresses Are Going' Fast piSfe INllrttlO FOR MEN AND WOMEN | K\r^ T q L I'" ' 'l-— ® or Constant Demand Upon Our New York Buyers to p 5 = Send More Manufacturers' Samples Is Now Limited. f||jjj jjljlf I Saturday HI Our Former Patrons Who Know, I ™f hts 10 Hi Buy Here Every Season. It Is You, Who Do Not Know Us, I _____ JK That We Want to Become Acquainted With This Sale, /ill If , I $r LADIES 1 COATS, K. $10 :$5 y Jf" Say, Do You Have siit I h LADIES 1 DRESSES,ffiS* $5 , H Men's Suits ? I*l Ladies' Dress Skirts, ?RICE, ii# ! $5 L selfstout Men ; s k suits, a ««• wit Bmm Hit 150 Ladies' Fine ,CT —I 200 MEN'S SUITS sflfl| 111 Silk Lined Suits jB FOR THIS SALE 111 I I■ I This Closes the Lot Worth S2O. ft In Blue and Black Serges & Fancy Cloths. ■1 ■ ■ Choice at y " m Worth $lB Choice at SCs?* | VP SIA 50 Ladies' Suits "boys' SUITS * I M ALL SAMPLES In Blue Serge and Fenc* l Stripe. | m Beatiful Shades. Easy Worth CMO Worth $9. || IHB $22.50. Choice at Choice at CASH Q LIVINGSTON'S Q| CREDITi j IFYOUHAVEIT j S SOUTH Market Square Sj| IF YOU WANT IT| nouncement that "A Million Bid" and "Goodness Gracious" are being re leased to the public through the Gen eral Film Company. The Vltagraph Theater opened Sat urday night, February 7, 1914, with the policy of four shows a day. The pictures displayed were "A Million Bid," a live-reel drama from the plr.y "Agnes," by George Cameron (Mrs. Sidney Drew), and "Goodness Grac ious," a three-reel comedy evolved principally by J. Stuart Blackton and staged and elaborated by James Young. Shabert to Book Pictures New company formed with Joseph L. Rhinock as president will control long list of dramatic and musical plays. Announcemnt is made by the Shu bert theatrical interests that a new company has been formed to b" known as the Shubert Feature Film | Booking Company for the purpose of booking motion pictures to be made for a long list of dramatic and musi cal comedy produc'ons controlled by the Shuberts, W. A. Brady and other dramatic managers. The total num-, ber of plays thus made available for picture production approximates about two hundred, many of which are vot ed successes. Joseph L. Rhinoch is president of the new corporation. Jules Murray, manager, and Lou Weed the booking agent. J. E. Brulature and Ch. Jour jon, of the Eclair Company, are said to be interested in the enterprise. Work on productions for the new booking agency is now under way at the Eclair studio at Fort Lee and, un fortunately, some of the negatives were destroyed in the fire that burned the Eclair factory two weeks ago. But the plans for the new Eclair factory and studio are designed to take lof the large enterprise contemplated |by the organization of the Shubert , Feature Film Booking Company. THE CHILDREN AND THE \U THOR OF "LITTLE BOY BLUE" Eugene Field was tall and spare, though not ungainly. As an enter tainer he was at his best in the path tic passages of his own character sketches. He rendered these with marvelous effect upon his hearers. Like Riley, whom he resembled strongly in many ways, he was an intense lover of children, arid If there were any little ones about he was very apt to forsake the grown folks. To the children ho was himself in all the exuberance of his own buoyant childhood. To them he sang songs they inspired in him, the soft, sweet lullkb} s, to them he told the wonder stories drawn from their own fairy land Imagination, and with them he romped and played with all the zest and abandon of his care-free soul. One night we were the guests of a mutual friend, and while sitting in the drawing room Field, who had heard the voices of children in an adjoining room, quietly disappeared. Soon there after shouts of joy and peals of mer riment rang through the house. Some thing unusually frolicsome had broker, out among the children. What could it be? The door was opened and there was Field, in hi§ dress suit minus his coat, down on all fours, in the center of a group of excited chil dren. all screaming with delight Such a picture! Field was in his element among the children. He was one of them. He played and romped and rolled on the floor and kicked up his heels in all the reckless abandon of a boy Just out of school. He made grimaces, sang funny songs, told funny stories and mocked funny people. From the depths of his great, heart he loved (he children Ami how they loved hfm!—"Riley, Nye and Field—Personal Notes and Recol lections," Eugene V. Debs. In National Magazine for January, 1914. VAST TERRITORY NORTH OF CITY MAY BE TAKEN INTO HARRISBURG IN NEAR FUTURE IF PLANS OF RIVERSIDE RESIDENTS DO NOT MISCARRY \ / / *"ro*>oseo . "tt"/ / ""CX.JTSOA \ —f , V / - t O 7VV4J /S I / I x 7T J: !.y ... HI FOLK 1 TIE UP H [Continued fi-om First Pago] The map hterewith gives complet > details of the area that it is proposed to admit to the city. Beginning from Division street the land runs to the Linglestown road. From the Susque hanna it goes eastward, taWng In Wildwood Park and ending at the park limits. This section contains sev eral thousand Inhabitants and is already well built up in the part near est to Harrlsburg. Two factions are now discussing the pros and cons of the question. Sev eral years ago the project was squash - ,ed and this year, say its opponents, it will meet a similar fate. But those who want to ,loin Harrisburg sayi Rome wasn't built in a day and they: are ready to try again e\en if de feated. SHE SMOKES PIPE HECK IT HELPS [Continued from First Page] market has closed," she says. "Yes, I like it now. Made me sick at first, but now I got so I like to have a puff. What kind of tobacco do I use? Well, not 'beggar's delight,' anyway. Oh, I change oft. When 1 get tired of one kind 1 get another." Smokes Pipe for Company "Granny" has been coming to Har rlsburg market for thirty-one years. . In the summer she drives in, but of . late years In the winter she takes a . train. And for twenty of those years she has smoked. She explained how she started. Her husband was very 111 with pneumonia and Mrs. Martin sat up night after night and all through thi* day to watch at his bedside. One ' l night. in order to stay awake, she ) jtook her husband's pipe and smoked i I ft. It nude her half-sick, but, had the | I desired effect, and during the vigils ' 1 that succeeded "Granny" found the pipe a solace and a stimulant. So she became a pipe smoker, and now it forms one of the comforts of a rather lonely existence; for her husband, al though he recovered from the par ticular attack of pneumonia which was responsible for sending "Granny" along the nicotine route, died several •years ago. And every market day "Granny" may be seen at her stall. Before busi ness begins she puffs her briar pipe and then lays it away; and after the business Is over she again enjoys a smoke before departing for her home in York county. To Cure M UMU IU one UAJ Jake BttUJiR git.\iNb Tablets. Druggists refund munsj if a (ails to cure. E. W. Grove's signa ture is on each box 25c Advertise ment TO LECTURE ON ROADS W. 8. Shaw, road expert for the Uni versal Portland Cement Company, of Pittsburgh, will deliver a lecture on "Concrete Roads," following the month ly business meeting of the Engineers' Society of Pennsylvania, this evening. The lecture will be illustrated. When Joe Frog was dining with Mrs. Duck he asked her why she didn't ha\n a demitasse, hut she replied a ladv never touched nnything to drink and that, she would never speak to him 3-Sain. 7