4 Makes Your Stuffed, Germ-laden, Catarrhal Head Clear as a Belt ■\Vlipn you walcc In the morning! leagued with the tortures of head folds and catarrh, head, nose and throat stopped up, air passages clog-; ged with obnoxious catarrhal ilis- ; charges that have collected during the night anil you can hardly breathe —just put a little llyomei Pocket In- ! haler charged with the pleasant hcul ing oil of Hyomei between your lips. Hold it there while dressing and breathe the medicated, antiseptic, germ killing air deep inlo your nose, j throat and lungs with every breath: you draw. Ry the time you are dressed your I head will be clear as a bell, you will breathe with ease and comfort, eat 1 your breakfast, with a relish and go about your day's work with a clear brain and steady eye. This clean smelling, germ destroy ing air of Hyomei pentrates deep down ; into every fold and crevice of the j membranous linings of your nose, throat and lungs where no liquid spray coud possibly get and absolutely, kills and drives out of your system every germ it finds there, heals the intlamed swollen tissues and after the very first trial you notice a wonderful i improvement. A few weeks' use and every catarrhal germ is killed and driven out of your system. Druggists everywhere think so well of Hyomei that they agree to give you a guarantee with every complete in-' baler set you purchase that if it docs not satisfy they will gladly return every cent you paid for it, but if using for the first time be sure to ask for the complete Hyomei Pocket Inhaler outfit as tlie smaller package does not j contain the inhaler. I-T. C. Kennedy 1 or most any other reliable druggist will gladly supply you on request. An Inside Bath Makes You Look and Feel Fresh ! | Says a glass of hot water with phosphate before breakfast keeps Illness away. Thlt excellent, common-sense health measure being adopted by millions. Physicians the world over recom mend the inside bath, claiming this is of vastly more Importance than out side cleanliness, because the skin pores do not al«sorb impurities into the blood, causing ill health, while the pores in the ten yards of bowels do. Men and women are urged to drink each morning, bal'ore Isreakfast a glass of hot water with a lea spoonful of limestone phosphate la it, as a harmless means of helping: to wash from the stomach, Jiver, kidneys and; bowels the previous day's indigestible material, poisons, sour bile and tox ins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the ! stomach. Just as soap and hot water cleanse and freshen the skin, so hot .water ana i limestone phosphate act on the ellrn- ! illative organs. Those who wake up wfth bad! breath, coated tongue, nasty taste or have a dull aching head, sallow com plexion, acid stomach: others-who are I subject to bilious attacks or consti-1 pation, should obtain a quarter i pound of limestone phosphate at the; drug store. This will cost very little but is sufficient to demonstrate the value of inside bathing. Those who continue it each morning are assured of pronounced results, both In regard to health and appearance. Adver tisement. FEEL YOUSG! It's Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets For You! Beware of the habit of constipation. 1 it develops from just u Sew constipated days, unless you take yourself in hand. Coax the jaded bowel muscles back to normal action with t>r. Edwards olive Tablets, the substftute for calo mel. Don't force them to unnatural ac tion with severe medicines or by merely , Hushing out the intestines with nasty, sickening cathartics. Dr. Edwards believes In gentleness, persistency and Nature's assistance. Or. Edwards' Olive Tablets open the bowels; their action is gentle, yet posi- I tive. There is never any pain or grip- j ing when Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets j are used. Just the kind of treatment { old persons should have. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are a veg- ; ctable compound mixed with olive oil, you will know them by thair olive , color. Take one or two occasionally and have no trouble with your liver, bowels or stomach. 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. The Olive Tablet Company. Colum- t ous„ O. —Advertisement. PARALYSISM^ DR. CHASE'S Special Blood and Nerve Tablets Write for Proof and Booklet Pr. Cluw, XtA W. tOtH St. Philadelphia. mi 80-SAN-XO'B PILE REMEDY Gives instant relief in itching^ * Bleeding or Protruding: Piles. 60c Use Dr. Bounko Co- Philadelphia. Pa. Bringing Up Father (Jjj) <$ THE IT'S THE Bear WE imagine HOW'HAPPY HERE COME',] ( ow! 1 fTr^ E AftE I TO nr> - birthday v^ e ST have ever made I am at thi«> partt.'J mr. jig?* V J -JUt>T . I ° DAUGHTER. | PARTY AND V .^ LU AND lTt> FRE r RFTX-'blX CANDLEV ANO ' WEDNESDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG *&&&& TELEGRAPH * FEBRUARY 9, 1910. In the Realms of Amusement, Art, and Instruction, j THIiATIIICAI, niRBCTORV iORPHEUM To-night. Harry louder; to-mftrrow. matinee and nlglit. The Military Maids" (burlesque); Friday] and Saturday, with dally matinees, Lyman IF. Howe's Travel Festival; all next week, "The Birth of a Nation." MAJESTIC Vaudeville and Moving , Pictures. Moving Picture Hounc* CODONIAL—"The Missing Links." FAMILY—"The Devil's Daughter." j GRAND—"The Cray Mask." | REGENT—"The Cheat." I VICTORIA—"The Strange Case of Mary Page." PI.AYS A\ I) PLAYERS James K. Hackett and Viola Allen are j co-stars In the sumptuous production! of the revived Shaskespearean roles be- j fore, but not extensively, and it has | always been his desire to keep the im mortal pla.vrlght before the public. I Several years ago. when he was play- ] ing in "A Grain of Dust." and acting j for the movies, he was even then plan ning a big surprise, the springing of i which has evidently just taken place. Ruth St. Denis has returned to vau deville. She has always been a draw ing card for the two-a-day form of j amusement. Wonder if she and Ted Shawn, tlio "beautiful" man. can't agree or whether the full evening perform- | ance idea doesn't satisfy her. Poor Rose Stall 1' says a New York newspaper, criticising the production "Moonlight Mary," In which Miss Stahl \ i has a part. V'oor Rose! She is rapidly ! becoming the johndrew of her sex. | wandering from pillar to post and beg ging pitifully to be given a regular i part in at least a half-regular show, i It is always a pleasure to see and hear i her. Truly, this is a melancholy de scription of the poor girl's apparent | plight. ! George Bronson-Howard, the dtstin- ; guished playwright, author of "Snobs'" I : and a number of other plays, has gone ! to California to write exclusively for the Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Com- j I pany. I.OCAL THEATERS Tonight—Harry Lauder A new song by llarry Lauder has be come something of an epoch and when I it is announced that he will sing at j I least six new ones during h's visit to I this city at the Orpheum this evening, it is readily understood that there is | something worth going to hear. Mr. Lauder, on this occasion, will be making his eighth annual tour of America, the longest he has made. The i company will Include the At Golem troupe of sixteen dancers, acrobats and | comedians, who have never appeared | in this country before: Mile. Lucille and ! her talking Cockatoo; Selwyn Driver j and his humorous and novel piano j specialty; Dave Generao and Isabelle j Jason in a series of dances, and Albert j Donnelly, the silent humorist, in ahadowgraphlc art. t«'ROOF Of AMERICA" /-V (GLACIER NATIONAL PARK) / M LYMAN M.HOWE^Q 1 V '' T <^M^^^hERE.I>IATtWSAY.r^-. Travel With Howe The date for the return engagement of Howe's Travel Festival at the Or pheum is Friday and Saturday, with daily matinees. An enttrelv new pro gram will he presented, which includes trips to the Swiss Alps, Madeira. Frai.ce. Holland and Italy. Also trips ! ""abroad at home" to Glacier National I Park and through a great American in i dustry representative of our era in l product, magnitude, organization and inventive skill—the Willys-Overland | automobile plant, in Toledo. Ohio. Also there will be some revelations of na ture's secrets such as curiosities of j crystallization, some acrobatic "'stunts" by little-known insects, and J the movements of fleet-footed animals reproduced so slowly as to seem weird , and uncanny. < oinlng Moon i This morning a little bird whispered In our ear that there were a few sur- I prises in store for us if we would be I patient and allow the Lyman H. Howe's | Travel Festival and the "Birth of a Na tion" to have their run at the Orpheum Theater. After that is over, and by the way, you are advised to get seats early for the Griffith spectacle, the management will bring to Harrisburg several productions which have been much talked about. "Potash and Perl mutter," with their reputed immortal line of wit and wisdom, will be here In a few weeks. And after that "Paga- tnini," with the distinguished George Arllss. a play which Chicago critics I describe as "better than Disraeli." Did Mary Page murder the man she hated? "She did," says the district ; attorney, and the jury Third KpiMixle Is almost convinced : of Mary Page that he is right. "I I was delirious; 1 don't i remember: Perhaps I did!" says Mary | I Page. "No! it can't be true!" cries I Philip Langdon, her sweetheart, as he leaps into a battle for her life. Before the case goes to the jury four persons, j including Langdoti himself, are under i suspicion. An astonishing series of de fective tricks lead upu to the denoue ' ment and all is so mysterious that the ! j interest never lags a, second. Every ! I episode is a complete pietura in itself. I j To-day the third episode is shown; also, ! j a specially picked program. Including ' a four-part Vltagraph feature entitled ; "The Making Over of Graffney Man ; nlng." It is the story of the rejuvena j tion of a man. I To-day will present local moving pic- i ture lovers wit litlieir last opportunity j to see the splendid 1 Colonial Shows Griffith Fine Arts play. Henllj l"unii) "The Missing Links," ( Triangle Piny with Robert 1-larron and Norma Talmadge; as well as the Keystone comedy, "Be | cause He Loved Her." with Sam Ber nard. Triangle audiences who have wondered how Mtck Sennett can get ; so much material into thirty minutes of a hilarious Keystone, arc given much cause for speculation. Sennett first I shows a restaurant in full blast from j the kitchen to the corner where the ' favored patron sits; he wrecks a tnxl | cab In a chase that Includes the Key stone police force and two ambulances, and makes Bernard drive a motorcycle ' through a brick house and a lunch wagon. Sam Bernard lias one of the funniest roles he has appeared in In moving pictures. \ The Kokomo Girls at the Majestic i are not only unusual in an athletic sense, but they llahy Helen are just as un l eave*; *Tlie usual as bright. j j Schoolmaster" Arrives pleasing ali d clever enter ' tainers. These pretty girls gave Harris- j burg a good shiver yesterday morning 1 by merely having their pictures shown. m which they were seen at gymnastic j frolic on the Island Park playgrounds. They are just as attractive as vaude ville entertainers and their last en , gage ment at the Majestic to-day will probably witne.-s large audiences. On the same splendid offering Baby Helen. I vaudeville's most celebrated little girl i comedienne, is singing some original I songs in her own cute little way. "The Schoolmaster" is the title of a school frolic with song that will occupy the coveted position of the Majestie's bill for the last half of the week. Pretty girls, funny comedians and a 1 school teacher, who is a very clever ; eomedv character, indeed, will provide the tuneful laughfest. Another well known vaudeville team of the new bill AMUSEMENTS / _ \ 1248 IJERRY STREET TO-NIGHT The World Film Corporation pre sent* Edwin Arden and Barbara Trncnt In The Grey Mask ■ wonderfnl thrilling; live-part de tective photoilraums remarkably powerful acting, strength and originality of «tory. a tenur and ex citing production. THURSDAY rathe feature* C. Aubrey Smith and Mnry Limtuu in I John Glayde's Honor In Ave parts, adopted from Alfred SutroN famous play * * ORP HEUM tonight only Sent a SOc to Scotland*** Pet. I World'* Baglißd'H Pride. Greatest America** l-'n vorltc. i Kntcrtiiiner. TOMORROW Evening I .Morri* \Vn(n*tock present* THE MILITARY MAIDS With Hlniicli llaird, Lytlla Joapy I and tilady* Seurs. * > / j will be Cantwell and "Walker. Mr. Cant- | j well has appeared at the Orpheum on i several different occasions In company , I with Mr. McKay, and his partner. Miss j Walker, is just as charming as alie is I • petite. 35 MEM HKKS EN ROM .KB Lemoyne, Pa., Feb. 9.—The officers of the Usher's Association of the United Evangelical Church were elect- 1 od last evening as follows; Ralph J C'rowl, president; A. K. SCelgler, vlce l president; Walter Moul. secretary, and; 1 Martin Scheaffer, tresaurer. About i 3 5 members were enrolled at the ses sion. EXTENDING ELK WOOD STREETS j New Cumberland, Pa., Feb. 9. —' ■ AMUSEMENTS ■ Bff 7 m Jj 25J8m*3* A tilrly-C.lrly Vaudeville Show The Girl From Kokomo and four other Keith lilt* Hals*. -:HO. 10c and liles eve., 7:30 tn 10:30, 10c, 15c, 25c. I oRPH EU M I 1 One Solid Week, Beginning Monday, February 14, With Matinee Daily § EVENINGS, 8 O'CLOCK SHARP. MATINEE, 2 O'CLOCK SHARP ■ _ „ TI „ t-,. . ** r < _ r The Most Realistic and Stupendous I E^tly D eW l°p S t ri fO E Co r n - th 'l Jf 18,000 People, 3,000 Horses, 8 1 | | ■§ H The Expression of Genius in a New || ■ at '° nal B I Comedy Which Relieves the Thrill F JV|T J Love and Romance Midst Historic cony, 50c, 75c, $1.00: Lower Floor, | SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA OF 2Q | ODDIirilM 2 DAYS COM. FRIDAY KT |C 1 la r,l J Wl DDirrC* MATINEE, ADULTS 35c CHILDREN 15c * MM. M. JLJL JL-l lit PKHEJ!K NIGHTS. 25-35-50 C SEATS NOW 1 1 • 'j'| * || * ji»|,4% m\i\ * j|*| * # i iju r * iiii•»(!..*• >jj 'ji'i^[l* P<-«->K * OVER THELRAI Ij GLACIER NATIONAL PARKf W§R AEROPLANE FLIGHTS V"7