YOUR SICK CHILD IS CONSTIPATED! LOOK AT TONGUE Hurry, Mother! Remove poisons from little stomach, liver, bowels. Give "California Syrup of Figs" if cross, bilious or feverish. No matter what ails your child, a gentle, thorough laxative should al ways be the first treatment given. If your little one is out-of-sorts, half-sick, isn't resting, eating and act ing naturally—look, Mother! see if tongue is coated. This is a sure sign that the little stomach, liver and bow els are clogged with waste. When cross, irritable, feverish, stomach sour, breath bad or has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, sore throat, full of cold, give a teaspoonful of "California Syrup of Figs," and in a few hours all the constipated poison, undigested food and sour bile gently moves out of the little bowels without griping, and you have a well, playful child again. Mothers can rest easy after giving this harmless "fruit laxative," be cause it never fails to cleanse the little one's liver and bowels and sweeten the stomach and they dearly love its pleasant taste. Full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups printed on each bottle. Beware of counterfeit tig syrups. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs." then see that it is made by the "California Fig Syrup Company." q-BAH REVIVES COLOR GUIS Darkens Gray Hair Naturally Q-Ban Hair Color Restorer is no dye, ■hut acts on the roots, making hair and scalp healthy and restoring the color glands of the hair. So if your hair is |gray, faded, bleached, prematurely gray, brittle or falling, apply Q-Ban Hair Color Restorer (as directed on .bottle), to hair and scalp. In a short time all your gray hair will be restored to an even, delicate, dark shade and en tire head of hair will become soft, fluffy, long, thick and of such an even beautiful dark color no one could tell you had applied Q-Ban. Also stops dandruff and falling hair, leaving your hair fascinating and abundant with out even a trace of gray. Sold on a money-bacK guarantee. 50 cents for a big bottle at Geo. A. Gorgas' Drug' Store, Harrisburg, Pa. put-of-town folks supplied by mail.—Advertisement M.o(F=j JUL Round Trip TO I [ Pittsburgh k Sunday, October 22 ! I Special Train I,eaves , v HAKItISBIItU 12.32 A. M. ■ Tickets gooil to return in p* roarhps of regular trains IS leaving Pittsburgh Sunday, I October 22, or Monduy, Oe- ■ tober 23, 2.4-1 A. M., 3.20 A. M.. 7.05 A. M., 7.10 A. M„ -.5T> A. M. t 11.40 A. M., 12.01 I*. M.. 1.00 P. M., 4.50 P. M., 7.00 P. M.. 7.10 P. M., 8.30 P. M. or 11.20 P. M. CT Visit Sehenley Park Rand I'hlpps Conservatory with tlielr beautiful floral displays, inspect Carnegie Institute with Its interesting museum and iiiugnlfleent Art Gallery, see "The Zoo," free to the public, in at tractive Highland Park and enjoy a pleasant day's outing in the 'Metropolis of Western Pennsylvania. J See Flyers. Consult Agents, Pennsylvania R. R. DOVITAM for TYPHOID DOVITAM is readily assimilable and undergoes practically complete conversion in the alimentary tract leaving little or nothing for decom position. DOVITAM is prepared from week old squabs that have never left their nests to exercise and their flesh is practically TOXIN free Hereby giving a perfectly natural food for the stomach. Ask Your Doctor 250 Forney's Drug Store SECOND ST., NEAR WALNUT ——— ' —■n Use Telegraph Want Ads 1 1 < FRIDAY EVENING. " HAKRISBTOG SBSI TELEGRAPH ' OCTOBER 20, 1916. REVIEW OF ~ MAJESTIC BILL A Clean Bill, Full of Variety at the Majestic For the Last Half Exceptionally pleasing is the Majes tic bill for the latter part of the week. There's variety enough to please the vaudeville lover and critic and every number on the bil is a top-notcher. Nor man Brothers, billed as The Athletic Sampsons, do some clever stunts, ex hibiting at limes almost super-human j strength. Ed Morton, an old favorite with Majestic Theater goers, is hack on the boards with "Songs As You Like to Hear Them Sung.' His parodies and characterizations please his audience immensely. "Who Is She?" presented by Joseph E. Bernard and company, proves amusing and well-rendered. Gen erous applause greets their efforts. Venita Gould, a clever comedienne, keeps the house in the very best of humor with her impersonations of pres entdav stage celebrities. The hand given 1 Miss Gould is second only to that of 1 the headline attraction, Eva Laßue and 1 her Broadway Revue," an act compris- | ing eight girls and a man. Costumes | are gorgeous and are worn by an ex- , ceptionally handsome chorus. Miss Laßue, good-natured and jolly, has the audience with her from the start. The act is positively clean, wholesome and thoroughly enjjoyable—or would be, if the one young lady would not try to i use her voice for singing. MAX ROBERTSON. What Are Yonkers? They Are Scene of New Play! I' | Yonkers, N. Y., Is a town which has been made famous by many things, among them a bum joke. Most every body has heard ;t —the alleged query of the English visitor to this country, when first he heard the name of the place. He asked, so it is alleged, "What are Yonkers?" His question, so far as known, has never been answered. Be that as it may, Yonkers are a fine, thriving and beautiful suburb of "the big burg,'' and also it are the place where most of the scenes In the newest Douglas Fairbanks-Triangle play, "Manhattan Madness," that is booked for the Col onial Theater to-day and to-morrow, were made. The Triangle studio used in many of tho scenes stands on the property which was once tho Clara Morris homestead. Here the famous Ameri can actress lived for many years, un til, a few years ago, she disposed of the place and moved to a smaller home on Long Island. In addition to the studio building, erected on the property after its purchase for pic ture uses, the old residence is also standing, overlooking the Hudson river, and it plays a big part in ad ventures of Fairbanks in his latest role. ORPHEUM To-night and to-morrow, with matinee to-morrow—Lyman H Howe Travel Festival. Monday evening, October 23 "The Simp, an American comedy. Wednesday, matinee and night. October 2o—Robert Edeson in "His Brother's Keeper. Friday, matinee and night, October 27 1 —Return engagement of Arthur Hammcrstein's musical play, "Ka tinka." MAJESTlC—Vaudeville. COl£NlAL~"Manhattan Madness." GRAND—"The Bugle Call." REGENT—"The Waster." VICTORIA—"The Tarantula." Aside from the novelty, humor and exquisite beauty that always charac terize Lyman H. Howe's Howes Travel Festival, which Travel comes to the Orpheum to- Festlval day and to-morrow, with daily matinees, the new pro duction may well be said to be an intel lectual treat such as may be derived only by roaming over the world—"For to admire and for to see." One of the features will familiarize Americans with far-off Hawaii—a subject of most timely interest, considering that native Hawaiians are rapidly becoming ex- Unct- To-day there are not more than 26,000 natives of pure blood. In this por tion there is a supreme spectacle of fered by old Mother Earth—a lake of living fire and boiling lava in the crater of the Hawaiian volcano of Kilauea. At the Orpheum, on Monday evening Clarence W. Willets will present Zel .<*<•. „ lah Covington's latest '"lhe Simp" comedy, "The Simp," a .... , new American play which has laughter every foot of the fr £!" New York New Hamp shire. The laughter is carried in motor cars, and it is resistless. The story has to do witli the discovery of a young mans talents through complications arising over a munitions contract. The tale starts in Wall Street, and con cludes in New Hampshire, and it is filled with laughter all the way. Inci dentally, the young man's plan of pro cedure, that results in his triumph is suggested by a woman who has ideas of self-exploitations. Robert Edeson. and his associate players, will be seen for the first time j j in four years at the Orpheum. Robert next Wednesday, matinee li.deson and evening, in a new play by Robert Porter. It is a play that will cause much discussion and wide comment and will force every person who witnesses it to think seri ously over one of the greatest evils of present day life. No attempt has been made to preach or force a conclusion. The audience will be left to judge whether the big. strong character in the play met a big situation in a right and honorable manner. Burton Holmes' announcement for his coming season, soon to |>egin in this _ . „ . . city, is suggestive of Barton Holmes' novelty and wide va- Comlns Season riety of subject and treatment. Canada has never been included in any former list of his subjects, and he Is to give hfs audiences the results of his last summer's delightful journeyings in the FOR THROAT AND LUNGS STUBBORN COUGHS AND COLDS ECKMAN'S ALTERATIVE SOLD BY ALL, LEADING DRUGGISTS I u 77ig LtVg Store" "Always A Store Is as Big as Its Merchandise \ matter how fine the fixtures J or how polished the salespeople in it-- the true test bf a store's place in the commun ity will be found in the merchandise it sells. , *. W!l , y!ij I When it comes to store service, courtesy, JHf completeness of stocks, we believe you will find our store a leader. But! we want you to judge us first by our merchandise. I S.® Every article in our store, large or small, you will find the best and we believe J ust a little better value than you will find elsewhere. In clothes IgMBU for men and young men, we have a complete assortment from good clothes headquarters— , i; 1 TP The Hou I titlf New style ideas in overcoats are here g||N| in gorgeous array, the new belted-back over bjiij coats all becoming very popular with young men and with a 1 I good many older men too. But, no matter what your prefer ence may be as to an overcoat you will find it here in a greater Shft BOUM Qt Kuppahelnf value at any price. I I | S2O s2s s3O j| Underwear HATS "SdcSi" I Munsing, Duofold Hansens and 1 Osborne Work Gloves 1 Interwoven Hose Work Shirts I Adlers Gloves - Headlfehtand r reeland Overalls A New Hat from "DOUTRICHS" Sweet Qrr— SWEATERS means much to your personal appear- For Men, Women and ance; it also means that you have the Visit the Boys' Children right hat at the right price. Section on Balcony f| I' — 1 j"* n p— ——— Mark 1 ] land of our next Northern neighbors, in his two opening travelogues, under the titles: "Canada, From Coast to Coast, and "The Canadian Rockies." During the year that Triangle Alois have been showing at the Colonial Theater. Douglas Fair- Douglas banks has appeared in Fairbanks many roles, and, as a 111 New Play hero of every imagin able type, but it remain ed for "Manhattan Madness." his latest play, which is booked for the Colonial Theater to-day and to-morrow, to fur nish him with a part that called for a brand new type of hero. In his new play, which is breaking all records In houses in the larger cities, he appears as a young, western ranchman, in New York Citv for a short visit. While at the club he complains about the lack of excitement. One of the members of the club bets hlni $5,000 that he can show him the thrill of his life, and here follows adventures without num ber. Upstairs and down, into secret ninaets. over roofs, up eaves pipes. through trapdoors, in and out windows, the dizzy plot takes the hero, until a wholly unexpected denoument brings peace to hero, heroine, plotters and counter-plotters. A new two-reel Key stone comedy called "Maid Mad," will be seen on the same program. At the request of a large number of our patrons the Victoria is showing "The Tarantula." for "The Tarantula," ths second time in Victoria Today this city, to-day. Edith Storey arid Antonio Moreno are featured. "Friday, the 13th," is the attraction for to-mor row, and shows Robert Warwick at his best. Pavlowa, the incomparable star, in "The Dumb Girl of Portlci," will prove to be the real photoplay sensa tion at the Victoria for the present sea son. One of the most gripping scenes is that of the brutal flogging of the dumb girl by orders of the royal Duke, whose son Is her faithful lover. For sheer emotional Intensity in scenes of lavish scenic investiture, no motion pic ture near approaches "The Dumb Girl of Portlci," which will be shown only on Monday and Tuesday next. October 23 and 24. Admission will be: Adults, first floor, 20 cents; balcony, 10 cents; children, 10 cents. To-day Richard Bennett will be pre sented at the Regent as Philip Holden. in "The Waster," a "The Waster" modern drama, in and 'Gloria's which this noted Romance,' Resent star even surpasses his wonderful suc ces in "Damaged Goods" It is the story of a dreamy, young literary chap, whose obsession is books. Philip is a great discouragement to his brother, Milesrin whose home the young dilletante is living, when the story opens. Louise Holden, wife of Miles, labors valiantly to interest her dream young brother-in-law in something be sides literature, but falls In this until after great urging, Philip Is induced to attend a bridge party at the house. The eighteenth chapter of "Gloria's Romance' 1 (The Bitter Truth), featuring beautiful Blllie Burke, will he shown to-day and to-morrow. Glimpses of plot are revealed in this chapter, and further light is thrown on the murder mystery, which has formed the founda tion of this story. To-morrow Chmarlie Chaylln will be pdresented In a return engagement of "One A M." „ Eviation Officers Work on Lighter Than Aircraft Washington, D. C., Oct. iO.—Army c.vlation officers are preparing to carry their campaign for the development of the air service Into the field of balloons CASTORIA For Infants and Childnn Bears the _/y The Kind You Have Always Bought < and other lighter-than-alr craft. Major Charles DeF. Chandler, of the Signal Corps, who has had many years of practical experience with bal loons, has been appointed head of a new division created In the aviation section of the Signal Corps. All mat ters pertaining to'free and captive bal loons, dirigibles, hydrogen generating plants and the like will hereafter be under his charge. There Is no present intention of en tering upon the construction for the army of airships of the Zeppelin type. Small dirigibles will be sought for the new branch of the aviation section as Its development progresses; but It will require the establishment of a new policy by the department If the bigger craft are to be developed. 15