"CASCARETS" FOR YOUR BOWELS IF HEADACHY, SICK For biliousness, bad breath, colds, indigestion and constipation. . , ] Jbnjoy life! Liven your liver and bowels to-night and feel fine. tongue is coated! Look inside your watch cover and sec! That's bad business. What have you been eating? What were yon drinking? What kind of a lazy chair did you take exercise In? Now don't think it doesn't mat ter, because, it's your bowels that talk now every time you open your mouth. That doesn't help your popularity, nor your earning capacity. Besides, a per son with bad bowels is in a bad way and a coated tongue or a bad breath are sure signs of bad bowels and poor digestion. Why don't you get a 10-eent box of Casearets at any drug store and give Sour liver and thirty feet of bowels tile nicest, gentlest cleansing they ever ex perienced? Take one or two Oascarets to-night and wake up feeling fine and Jit. All Headache, Dullness. Bilious ness, Bad Breath, Stomach Sourness, < 'old and Constipation gone—wake up with your head clear, tongue dean, stomach sweet, liver and bowels active, step elastic and complexion rosy. Casearets work while you sleep— never gripe or sicken. Oarearets act so gently that you hardly realize you have taken a thorough cathartic. They don't bother you all next day like salts. Pills, oil or calomel—Casearets being perfectly harmless is best children's laxative. MONUMENTAL. A. M. E. Special services will be held in Monumental A. 11. E. Church to-mor row. The program will be as follows: 10.45, preaching by the presiding elder, the Rev. Dr. F. T. M. Webster; ".30. musicale by the Busy Bees, Miss Edith Evans, chairman; chorus, "All Hail the Power of Jesus' Name," con gregation; prayer by pastor; piano solo, Miss Louisa Jenkins; vocal solo, Mrs. Fannie Matthews; select reading, Miss' Mary Howard; vocal solo, Fred Weaver: oration. John Baker; vocal solo. Miss Rachel Lyons: piano solo, Mrs. E. P. King; vocal solo, Mrs. George Page: piano solo, Miss Emily Howard; vocal solo, Paul Evans; violin solo, William Jefferson: vocal solo, Arthur Briscoe: closing remarks, pas tor: chorus and offering; offering in charge of Mrs. Ohada and Mrs. Lillian Keys and Miss Ferby; 7.45, sermon, "The Wedding Garment," by the pastor. AMUSEMENTS VAV.%*bW.V.VAW.V%%V.V.*. | VICTORIA 1 ■j '--00 C.'omfortalile Sealm. J \ TO-DAY 0\l«Y ■■ j i;"THE DEVIL'S } PRAYER BOOK"? featuring '■ •! \ IITIfIR HOOI'K* !• anil ■, AI.MA HAM,OX J Hominy Win. Faverahmu. "J j I Tk u - Fri. Sat. m DUNBAR'S Ding-Dong 5 KU * quintette (if nlngcrn anil bell H lingers. Four Other Keith Acta II NEXT WEEK~ 0!»lon.. Tuva., Thur-I'rl-Snt Wed. E~9 *n theichool Vaylmova'* Sfi Playground WAR A inimical **** ra H» BRIDES Matn., 10e and 15e; Eve., lOr ■ 15c and -5c Sal. Kve. Hhoiv intnrtn nt A o'clock Come early. AMUSKMKNTS AMUSEMENTS ORPHIUMf 7®AY ' FIRST CLASS ATTRACTIONS J*M» 1 I l.oiitr floor, 01.00, *1.."0, *'.'.oo; balcony, JOc, 75c, Curtain 8:15 $1.00; gallery. -sc. L SKATS NOW SElZlNG—Augmented Orehentro ANDREAS DEPPEL Presents The Musical Success of Beauty, Fun and Fashion 100 THE JM, In Three Acts —By Charles Cuvillier Jy A Freak Frwa Coiqwrti is New York, Boilon ud Ckicaf «. CHORUS Laughter—Song Hits—Musical Gems—Novelty ••first inimical itow Mince «Tke Chocolate Soldier.'" Chicago Journal. To-day only. Daniel I'rohman preaent* ihr charming DAWN, In a strong dramatic photoplay, "THE 111:AHT OF JENNIFER." Paramount. FATHE N RWS NEXT WEEK OUR FIIIST ANNIVERSARY Monday and Tuesday. Denman Tbonipion'n llnral Maaterpleee, "THE OLD HOMESTEAD" featuring FKANK LOSEE and LOUISE HUFF PARAMOUNT. Ilon't mlas our Hrsl annlvernnry next neck. Especially attractive l>lll all week. Free aouvenira to all pntronM. ADMISSION—ADUI.TS, 10c; CHII.UIWN, sc. SATURDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JANUARY 15, 1916. FOODS THEY BUILD OR DESTROY Amazing but Rarely Suspected Truths About the Things You Eat. (Copyright, 1916, by Alfred W. McCann.) CHAPTER fi Hundreds of foods consumed reg ularly by children will kill chickens in six weeks. If a worn-out body, suffering; through low resistance with tubercu losis, can be cured by nature's meth ods, what is society's justification for permitting tuberculosis to develop, in the first place? Go to the morgue. Witness the autopsies. 'Ask the surgeons what caused the scars in the lungs or. the glands of this or that body. They will tell you that scar is a healed wound. It is a calcified lesion. That body once suffered with tuberculosis. It did not know it suffered and was cured. It was one of the thousands of cases of accidentally renewed vitality over coming Ihe ravages of tuberculosis and pulling out the peg. These articles, dealing with pure food, will trace that fortunate acci dent that nulled the peg, locate it, re duce it to a law and make plain the natural processes of nutrition which, easily understood and applied, can be substituted for the unhappy chance that sometimes intercepts the Journey of a useful creature on his way to death with that, removable peg undis turbed. The proper place to teach the mysteries of food is in the school, but even we who were not taught there can begin now to learn, with inevit able increase in the number of our days and blessings untold to our children. Food news is glad news when we get it uncolored, untainted, and un refined. It is the purpose of these articles to give It to you in that way. The food falter is no longer per mitted to kill chickens, but he may kill babies. This is a hard saying, but 3,000 dead chickens in a heap prove its truth. A thriving chicken farm, doing a business in New Jersey that made its owner happy, had had splendid suc cess. The bulletins issued by the gov ernment's printing press had passed the wisdom of trained minds into the chicken coops and the wee chicks thrived. Then came a "poultry food" l'rom a big wholesaler. It was well labelled. No questions were asked. Feeding time came, the baby chickens ate. They continued to eat. The labels on the sacks contained a statement indicating that those sacks were made up of fixed quantities of protein, carbohydrates and fats, In strict accord with the high-sounding scientific formula. Five days passed. The wee chicks seemed listless. Ten days passed. Some of them were dead. On the fourteenth day all of them were dead. Equitable Life Men Off to Attend Jubilee John C. Jolinson, general agent for the Equitable Life Insurance Com pany of lowa, left to-day at noon for Des Moines, lowa, to attend a jubilee celebration of the company at its home office, which will be held Mon day and Tuesday of next week. P. B. Rice, special agent, also of this city, and J. A. Tyson, district agent at "Wll liamsport, who is under the Ilarris burg agency, will also attend. This trip is the consummation of a contest that had been running for the last four months of 1916. All agen cies that produced a certain allot ment, and all agents that personally wrote a certain amount of paid-for business were to qualify for the trip. The Harrisburg agency, under the supervision of Mr. Johnson, has made rapid strides the last few years and is one of the most progressive insur ance agences in the city. That it Is progressive is evidenced by the fact that the agency produced more paid l'or business during the month of De cember than was written by the agency the first year, which began November 1. 1911. The agency now ranks second in the State of Pennsyl vania and ninth in the company. It is rapidly enlarging and now has dis trict agencies in York, Lebanon and "Williamsport. Practically all of its agents are college graduates, men who are able to advise the insuring public and render them efficient service. Mr. Johnson has been honored by the general agents of the company by having elected him secretary of the agency association at their last agency convention at Chicago. A sample of tlie food was then analyzed. The lavs of chicken nutri tion had been broken. The food was adulterated. The chicks paid the price, for not even chicks can thrive on food which departs from the low. The State lawmakers noticed. They have since established standards for chicken food. Any one who trans gresses against those standards Is guilty, for his transgression means sickness or death to the chicken world. In this case it was death. The owner of the chicks had re dress. The adulterated food had sick ened and killed his property. The wholesaler was obliged lo pay the bill. He paid. Human lawmakers have provided for this sort of meddling with the natural law. This is important. Let us repeat. The chicken victims of food fakers were sent to the tank and the owner was recompensed for his loss at the expense of the faker. All this came about because this particular batch of chicken food had been overdone. It was mixed by a bungler who went too far with his de viltry. If he had kept within a rea sonable margin of fraud in adding foodless filler to the product the chick ens would not have died so suddenly. The work of destruction would have been slow and subtle. There would have been feeble chickens, easy prey to disease, but the food iself would never have been suspected. An "epidemic" would have been blamed for the trouble and then an other "epidemic," but there would have been no wholesale sudden deaths to point a finger at the food. Chicken food must be food that will make chickens grow and keep them well. There is such food upon the market. Children's food must perform the same service for children. There are hundreds of foods now oil the market which children eat every day which would kill chickens in six weeks. These foods do not. cause children to topple over on the streets In paroxysms of pain. They (Jo not cause children to fall dead after consuming them. They rob the children, a little at a time, and so slowly but surely undermine their vitality and reduce their resistance to disease that they become eventually the easy victims of any pathogenic organism that may come along to take up its residence in their tissues. The same law "of building with building materials" operates with children as with chickens. Universities have not yet been able to change the law, although some of them have tried to change our notions regarding Its origin. Dodge Brothers Are Now Fourth in Production According to Automobile Topics, a trade authority, recent figures sub mitted to Wall Street interests with regards to tlie volume of business done by the various motor car com panies during the first nine months of 1915, put Dodge Brothers in fourth place. Dodge Brothers have no dealings with the financiers, as the business is owned entirely by the brothers, John F. and Horace E., but the figures were submitted by another company which placed itself considerably further down in the ltst. The accomplishment of Dodge Brothers in one year of starting the manufacture of motor cars and then jumping into fourth place in the na tion is regarded as the most amazing performance In the industry, which has always been full of surprises. No announcement on production plans for next year has been made by Dodge Brothers but it is known that several new buildings are being rush ed to completion .and that the total floor space of the plant will total more than 60 acres when tliees new build ings are occupied. POSTPONE SERVICES Owing to the illness of the Rev. Dr. William N. Yates, pastor of the Fourth Street Church of God, the evangelis tic services announced for January, have been postponed and will begin on the first Sunday in February. AMUSEMENTS COMING SOON TO THE' ORPHEUMTHEATER JOH.\ COHT will prenent Superb cant mid rhoru*. Augmented Herbert Orrhentra. Watch daily papera for dnte and partleulara, J " KREISLER S. Mall ordera now * Colonial The Home of Triangle Film* TO-DAY KATHBRINB KABI.It ED "The Winged Idol" Five-reel lave drama. FRKD MACK In "Crooked to ihe End" Great two-reel railroad eomedy. Monday* Tueaduy and WedaeNday, ORKI.\ JOHNSON AMI SKKNA O W Eft" la "THE PENITENTS" A live-reel drama with a great moral. KOHU STERLING la "TUB HUINT" Two-reel Keyatone Comedy. < omli»K—S.vd Chaplin In "The Sub marine I'lrate/' four-reel Keyntone eomedy. lAMnsewefirei TIIIiATRU AI. IIIHEtTOItY OnPIIKUM Monday night, January 17. Andreas Dlppel presents "The IJlae Domino." MAJESTIC Vaudeville, and Moving Pictures. REGENT To-day only, "The Heart of Jennifer." (Movlr- Pictures). VICTORIA "The Devil's Prayer Book." (Moving Pictures), j COLONIAL "The Winged Idol." (Moving Pictures). ! The plot of this wonderful play, from the pen of Edith Barnard Delano, is novel and compelling. Hnxel Dawn Some of the situations nt the are startling in their ori- Kegent ginallty, and taken as a whole the story Is un i conventional and refreshing. I "The. Heart of Jennuer" Is the story of a woman's strong love for her hus band. which prompts her to place upon herself the guilt of the crime committed by Ids slater. Miss Dawn, appearing in the title part, renders a captivating and winsome characterization of Jennifer. The tense dramatic construction of the story is so well balanced that the swift progress of the plot never pauses, until I the logical and overpowering climax Is reached, in which, by the way. Jen nifer's husband discovers the Innocence and courageous renunciation of his wife, and learns to appreciate her love more than ever before. Next week our first anniversary week, 1 with a special bill. One of the well-known Howe Travel Festivals will soon be seen in this city. A mighty rich comedy is said to lie "Crooked to the End.' 1 that appears at the Colonial for the last ISext Week time to-day. The feature nt Colonial of the bill, of course. Is the splendid drama called "The Winged Idol." starring ICatherine Kaelred. House Peters and Clara Wil liams. The two Triangle plays an nounced to hold forth at the. Colonial during the first half of the week em braces "The Penitents." a spectacular story of Mexico in the seventeenth cen tury. with Orrin Johnson and Seena Owen, while the comedy feature is called "The Hunt," with Ford Sterling and Polly Moran. Orrin Johnson, who plays the role of a shepherd picturesquely in the new Triangle play, "The Penitents," is a lventuckian by birth. Johnson has had a career of note as a Broadway star in dramatic productions. Of the unusual vaudeville turns booked for the Majestic during the coming week, is the "Mar Bride*" dramatic sketch called JVext Week "War Brides," declared to be vaudeville's most timely ami best-presented one-act drama. This sketch will appear at the Majestic Theater during the last half of the week, although a clever one-act musical comedy that made good at the Orpheum. called "On the School Play grounds." is booked to head during the first half of the week. Other Keith nets of the bill for the first half of the week will iriciude Deßosa's Cat Circus, man and woman presenting a group of well trained cats and pigeons, while comedy aplenty Is provided b- a clevei monkey. Also Hal and Francis, man and woman, in comedy, song and pat ter. anil Keeman and Anderson, the roller skating wonders. Max Marain, in writing "The Devil's Prayer jJook." it is said, lays the blame of a host of crimes to a pack At the of cards. Beginning with a Victoria short poker game way through five reels to where the father and daughter meet and show their affection for each other, covering a period of twenty-two years, one se quence follows another in effective story-telling. The plot is said to be absorbing and the interest is sustained throughout "The Devil's Prayer Book" will be shown at the Victoria to-day only. THE I'ROGKA)I I'llll AWIVERSAUV WEEK AT THE URGENT I Next week will be anniversary week at the Resent Theater, the Harrlsburg home of the Paramount Pictures. Just a year ago Mr. Magaro first opened his house to the motion picture public, having in mind a definite kind of ser vice which he intended to render. Tn making a statement to-day. Mr. Magaro said tliAt he has every reason to believe that what he has given, both in the way of accommodation and pictures, | has met with the endorsement of the public. This he bases on a record of 7.">0,000 paid Admissions during' the last [twelve months. In selecting his film service for the Regent. Mr. Magaro said ho chose the Paramount, a service built around the releases of a half dozen pro ducing companies, featuring in many cases the stars of the legitimate and operatic stages. For anniversary week Mr. Magaro has devoted a strong effort to have a Para mount Program of unusual strength. And in addition he will present souve nirs. the nature of which at this time is still secret. On Monday Penman Thompson's "The OH Homestead." is the attraction. In this film nlay will be featured Huff. "The Old Homestead" will be offered on Tuesday also. Managare Magaro feels that he has been especially fortunate in having booked for the main attraction on Wed nesday and Thursday, ever charming Marguerite Clark, in a picturization of Mark Twain's famous story, "The Prince and the Pauper," while 011 Friday only Florence Reed will appear in the masterpiece. "At F.ay." For Saturday, the wind-up of anni versary week. Sam Bernard will pre sent that whirlwind of fun. "Poor Schmaltz," than which, critics say, there is no more sidesplitting film comedy: Special programs of music on tlie Re gent's new four-manußl pineorgan will add to the entertainment during anni versary week. Again Heads Democratic Caucus of U. S. Senate SENATOR JOHN W. KERN Senator John W. Kern, of Indiana, has been re-elected to the chairman ship of the Senate Democratic caucus. His election took place at the first meeting of the caucus several days ago. It is sure lie will see some noble battles before the fights over many Senate questions are fought to a finish. BAR MHKTING POSTPONED Thf< meeting of the Dauphin County Par Association, which had been sched uled for last evehing, was postponed until Wednesday, January A Fifty-Six Foot Umbrella YVTAS the big Marquese across our store front, spreading over three fourths of the sidewalk, placed there for beauty or protection? The ques tion has been asked. Has it ever occurred to YOU just why? Hundreds of observing folk have remarked that it gives the building a finished appearance, and a metropoli tan air. Hundreds more have sought refuge from an unexpected shower under this defiant copper and glass umbrella. It is our electri,c sign—marking the location of Progress in storekeeping. A more comely and serviceable sign has never been created. CAM. 1001—ANY I'HONK IOIMJKD 11*71 EXPECT BRITISH SOON TO ANNOUNCE ACTUAL BLOCKADE Shilling Around lo American Contention in Regard to Ger man Commerce Restriction London, Jan. 15. —That Great. Brit-| ain will soon announce the establish- i ment of an actual blockade of Ger- j many and her allies, thereby supersed- | ins? the condition which had been es- • tablished by the orders in council, was I the statement made to-day by Amer icans who have been in close contact | with the machinery of the British | orders in council in consecjuence of I their acting here as representatives of , American shippers whose business had ; been affected by the execution of the | orders. A person who can speak authori tatively and who has acted as a rep resentative of American interests in connection with British prize court proceedings, reviewed to-day for the Associated Press the evolution of the orders in council. He said: "The British Government shows an unmistakable tendency now to shift around to the persistently expressed American contention that the interna tional law which prevailed before the present war must ultimately govern Great Britain's assertion of her sea power. It is well known that when the war bejran the admiralty urged> upon the foreign office the necessity for the declaration of an actual block- I ade, but the latter believed that the I susceptibilities of neutrals could be | better made by orders in council and j after the adoption of these the gov-1 eminent began its interminable agreements with neutrals. These agreements might have succeeded had it not been for the opposition of the United States, which took the stand from the tirst that the orders in coun cil were illegal and that therefore even veiled or sub rosa recognition of them, in forms similar to the Danish agreement and the Netherlands over seas trust would be a surrender of American sovereignty under interna- : tional law. Even though not endors ing the attitude of t.he biggest of the | neutrals, the smaller neutral States! began to chaff under the agreements, ; which are criticised as being partial. "Great Britain's attempts to sub stitute a code of her own that would not form dangerous precedents when she herself may be a neutral, ore doomed to fail and I should not be j surprised if the foreign office adopts | the course recommended by the ad miralty and declares an actual block-I ade." Alderman "Farming" Foreigners For Costs Believe Commissioners Detectives may be employed in the ; future by the county commissioners \ to investigate the unusually big fees > obtained by aldermen throughout the : county for court and discharge costs, i it was said at the county offices to- J day. Investigations will be made It was ! stated in view of the statement con- j tained In the annual report of Coun- i ty Controller H. W. Cough. Some of ' the magistrates drew as much as ; SI2OO to $1 400 In costs during the last year. These the commissioners want to know something of as It Is expected that in many Instances, defendants, particularly among foreigners, are being "farmed." That is, the magls- j trates try to work up a trade among unsuspicious foreigners by insisting upon their bringing suits. BROWN'C . Bronchial m j ' TROCHEYJ Keep the Voice Clear ft You mar depend upon them ' to relieve bnarfteness. eaao the ••ought'- j?. and t«» atop the frrl /y\ tation in the throat. The new 10c ™s l BOX B fit carries ron7rn!e:it!y In pccket K \ or purse. Use the Trorhca as I */? needed—contain no harmful ■ cJnifir*. Regular maef m, 60c an ,l druggjgtß. TT> will mail any tic* upon rmm ' } receipt of price, if your dealer cannot I up ply you. JOHN I. BROWN & SON, Boston, Mann. ~DR CHASES " Blood and Nerve Tablets Fill the shriveled arteries with pure, rich j Hood, imrtase the weiftht in aolid flesh and i muscle that «iv« you strenarth. the brain and | tiervea with fresh vital fluid that force nevr life a-id vigor into every part of the body. W£tGH YOURSELF BEFORE TAKING I Price 60 cents; Special Strength 75 conta. Dr. CkwaCe.. 234 N. 10U» St. rkiiadtipkia, Pa. 1 1 JOHN I'. GOHI. HOll K | John P. Gobi, of the tlrm of Gobi and I Bruaw, returned last night from Pltts . | burg. He was a delegate to the annual 'convention of the Master Painters of I'Pennsylvania, and was re-elected a I member of the executive committee. 11 This organization was started by Mr. Gobi thirty years ago. The first meet | ing was held at the Bolton House. Always Open COMMERCIAL BANK Christmas and Vacation Saving Ciub One of the big advantages of this club is that it has no closing date for enrolment. You may join at any time and enjoy its full benefits. <| But most people prefer to join at this time so that when vacation time or Christmas time comes round, they may have a snug sum laid by. <J So, prepare for these two important periods in 1916, and JOIN NOW! S classes—2sc. 50c and 91.00 weekly pay ments. Interest at rate of per annum. Withdrawals may he made any time after twenty weekly payments, provided payments are not more than two weeks in arrears, and interest allowed on amount paid in. Wo pay in eash—unless cheek is preferred. Savings convertible into Sa\ings Account, when desired, with interest at rate of 1% per annum. Commercial Bank 1222-24 North Third Street ■■aHaaaaßaanananaß mr aaBMBHnaM jaßHaaaaraaßßß^ E3 j|> 3 i § Warmth For the Baby When the child is taken from the warm bed ami not yet warmly dressed, it is easily chilled. Doc tors say chill causes a large percentage of child sick ness. A Gas Heating Stove will give the desired pro tection at this time of year before the furnace fire lias been started, and in winter when the fire is low. See the heaters at our store or send for a repre sentative. HARRISBURG GAS CO. 14 South Second St. "unhand Valley 752 Day and night it hangs as a silent servant —a part of the big Thought of Service that transformed this store and now steers its daily course. Underneath in five large windows, the new things for self and home arc usually first shown to Harrisburg. I:.\.IOIM:I) KHOH (U1.1.E» TI\«; Ail injunction was granted by HIP Dauphin County Court to-day against W. H. Idell to restrain him from push ing execution against Mark M. Mattis. until a bill which Mattis claims of I doll is settled by a Dauphin county jury.. Mattis a.-'ked for the restraining order, and the Court iixed 10 o'clock Wednes day, January 26, for the Hearing. Mat tis claims Idell owes him $88..15: (dell's claim against Mattis is for $45.62. 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers