6 What Subsoiling Did u||p This corn was grown on worn out land at the Experiment SSSr/ Farm at Brookhaven, Miss. All of it was planted and culti wted the same way, at the same time. The ground on the Sjfl left was untreated; that on the right was subsoiled—blasted and /broken up four feet deep and thus restored to fertility. By uaingVV^J |f \1 \ you can double the productiveness You can save time and money by /J {M of your fields. Under the top-soil using Atlas Farm Powder to blow #K> al is rich plant food that needs only out stumps and shatter boulders, #£S Ml to be opened up to give you dig ditches, plant orchards, and bumper crops. You can do the do many other kinds of farm lj(S5 &9L\ blasting cheaply and easily work. It is m-.de especially for with The Safest Explosive, farm use and sold at a low price. fKS We Sell Atlas Blasting Supplies /§j§^ We sell and recommend Atlas Farm Powder and Atlas blasting supplies because they always give our customers good results. Call and get our prices. /t§S§s r " RUTHERFORD BROS, " j ADJ.-GEX. SADLER DIES Carlisle. Pa.. Nov. 11. Adjutant- General Wilbur F .Sadler, Jr., of New Jersey, died of heart disease at the home of his brother here early to-day. He was 15 years old and was appointed adjutant-general in 1910. Medicated Smoke Drives Out Catarrh Try This Pleasant Herb Smoke. Sent Free By Mail. Dr. Blosser who has devoted forty years to the treatment of Catarrh, is the originator of a certain combi nation of medical herbs, fiowers and berries to be smoked in a pipe /■VT A or ready prepared smoke - vapor £y,Y\ > "NV \ reaches all the air x* Passages of the l/JzTS c-J head. nose and throat. As the disease is carried 1 into these pas saKes with the air <& JOU breathe, so the antiseptic, - ' """ jr healing vapor of this "Remedy is jprried with the breath directly \P parts. This method applies the medicine where sprays, douches, ointments, etc., cannot possibly go. Its effect is soothing and healing, and is .•ntirely harmless, containing no tobac co or habit forming drugs. It is pleas ant to use. and not "'ckening to those who have never smoked. No matter bow severe or long standing your case may be, we want to show you what our Remedy will do. To prove the beneficial, pleasant ef fect, The Blosser Company, 650 Walton St.. Atlanta, Ga.. will mail absolutely free to any sufferer, a sample that will verify their claims by actual test. This free package contains a pipe, some o* the Remedy for smoking and also some of our medical cigar- j9!swk. ettes. If you wish to con tinue the treat-.-r ment, it willt fjL* ** cost only one)> &ZT ' dollar for aL month's supply ? {L A for the pipe, or a box containing jFlf-i one hundred 1 VF7; r7v cigarpttes. We pay postage. If you are a sufferer from Catarrh, Asthma, Catarrhal Deafness, or if sub ject to frequent colds, send your name and address at once by postal card or letter for the free package", and a copy of our illustrated booklet. a A m WASHINGTON D.C. OPPOSITE CAPITOL and UNION STATION S Ablutlr New and Strictlr Modern Renowned for its High Service and Low Rates. / EUROPEAN PLAN Room pr iy $ 1.50 111,' Room per d7 $2.00 ' Jpl 'ln i w,th batl > nJ P A! 1 Rooms ° utside Bringing lip Father (s) Copyright, 1916, International News Service # @ By tou HAVE * CiCAß'tj ' \ S HOV/ M*rr* GALL'b \~~~ / r CLAW ON \OUR WATCH CHMN- I \ 010 IT W>£ TO K\UL \ N>r COODtHEVa - ** THEN- i t-a . 9 I SUPPObF. KILLEO J ) HIM? J D, ° TOO KILL HIM HOW O 'ALKEO - —i -.-L .... 'fifl s SATURDAY EVENING, FAIR AND WARMER SEEN AT ORPHEUM For Second Time This Season "Fair and Warmer" Keeps Audience Laughing Last night witnessed the first of' | three performances of "Fair and | Warmer" at the Orpheum, seen here! for the second time this season. A different company this, but one which j has even more commendable points; than the former ones, for the entire 1 personnel is one of greater unity and a more delicate sense of balance. The show itself is so generally well known j i that it needs but little comment. An> entirely plausible plot made up ofj many amusing situations, compromis ing and otherwise kept the audience : in an uproar of laughter particularly the second act. The third act toward the end grows a trifle weak when compared with the rest of the show | I but the situation could scarcely be I j handled otherwise. Dorothy Mackaye | who headed the summer cast of the • | original company was seen in the I leading role in this company and with | Ruloff E. Cutten in the "comprising" j i w as seen to excellent advantage. Helen ! ] Joy, the other wife, has smiled many i of lis into buying kodaks, for to Miss 'Joy goes the distinction of having been the original "kodak" girl for the I j Eastman Company. Every one In the j company acquitted themselves most i creditably, and for an evening's I I amusement with a liberal dash of! J laughter, "Fair and Warmer" fills the I bill. MAX ROBERTSON. 4,600 Vickers Machine Rifles Are Recommended Washington, Nov.. 11. The im i mediate purchase of 4,600 Vickers ma j chine rities of the present standard j model for the equipment of the regit- I lar army and the National Guard is I recommended by the joint board of i army, navy and marine corps officers J which has been studying for months machine gun problems. The depart ment has $10,000,000 available for this purpose. In tke' Realms J of Amusement, Art, and Instruction. v Jj SCENE FROM "A FULL HOUSE" AT THE ORPHEUM MONDAY The Orpheum announce# the first appearance In this city on Monday even ingl of last season's successful farce, "A full House," by Fred Jackson. Bargain prices have been arranged and the seat sale will open to-morrow morning'. MARGARET WOODROW WILSON ! 1 Friday evening, November 17 at the, Orpheum, Margaret Woodrow Wilson • j will be heard In recital with other I I artists. The program follows: Miss Margaret Woodrow Wilson, | soprano; Carmine Fabrizlo, violinist; ; Meville A. Clark, harpist; Mrs. Ross! David, accompanist; I—Le Nil, Le- j rouXr Miss Wilson and Mr. Fabrizlo. j 2—(a) Patrol, Hasselman; (b) Men j of Harlech. Old Welsh, Mr. Clark. 3—' (a) Mit einer Wasserlilie, Grieg; (b) | Heimweg, Kaun; (c) Fruhlingsnacht,] Schumann: (d) Ini Herbst, Franz, ! Miss Wilson. 4—(a) Berceuse, Town-i | send; (b) Spanish Dance, Kreisler; (c) Tambourine Chinois, Krelsler, Mr. i ! Fabrizio. G—(a) 11 s'est tu, Gretch-| inow; (b) Falthfu Johnnie, Beethoven; | , (c) Zueignung, Strauss, Miss Wilson and Mr. Clark. G —Airs on Irish Harp, i (Selected), Mr. Clark. 7 —(a) Leeziej I Lindsay, Old Scotch; (bl Dannie Boy, j (Old Irish arranged by Weatherly; : j (c) Good-by, Tosti, Mis 3 Wilson. j ORPHEUM To-night "Fair and j Warmer." . Monday, evening only, November 13—j j "A Full House." ' Wednesday, matinee and night, No- i j vi>mur 15—"Mutt and Jeff s Wed- I i ding." Friday evening, at 8:20, Margaret Woodrow Wilson. CHESTNUT STREET AUDITORIUM j Alma Gluck. November 15. MA J ESTlC—Vaudeville. COLONIAL—"The Return of 'Draw' Egan." REGENT—"The House of Lies." j VICTORIA—"ihe Gilded Cage." The familiar significance of the title, I "A Full House," to American theater- ! goers, as well as its >iuaint-J '"\ l ull ness, has made it well] Mount:" known the country over, | apart from the fact that the i farce enjoyed a run of nearly a year In | New York, nncl is now heinpr played | North, Fast, South and West. The play j 1 was received by the metropolitan crit- 1 ics with an expression of praise that ■ almost exhausted the superlatives and the hilarious farce has made good everywhere despite tills avalanche of I I praise. It has made theatergoers ex pect much and they have not been dis appointed. For ingenuity of plot, I HjSIRRISBURG TEIJEGRjSJPH bright dialogue, hilarious complications I and most amusing situation;;. It has i been declared the best play of its kind ever eeen on the English-speaking j stage. "A Full House" conies to the Orpheum Monday evening. I Burton Holities lias begun what prom- I ises to be one of the busiest as well as | most successful of ! Burton Holmes' his entire career be.- j ; Busy Senaou fore the public, as I traveler, author and ' | "traveloguist." With two travelogues j | on Canada, for which he went after his I material this past summer—one on i Great Britain and her colonies—one on the German Fatherland and one on France and her colonies in Algeria and Tunisia, Mr. Holmes brings something to his patrons which is not only sus ceptible of much delightful plcturiza tion, but also of very timely interest. While every daily, weekly and monthly I magazine and newspaper Is filled to | ovurflowlng- with the frlghtfulness and awfulness of the European conflict, it is a truly welcome event for someone I like Burton Holmes to show what the countries In conflict really look like— or looked like—and what the people of these nations do—or did—and holv they |do or did it, before the war began. It is not an easy task, but the Chicago I press seems to think Mr. Holmes has j accomplished the impossible along j i these lines and his coming series Is j 1 doubly an object of interest to every one who would know more about uc : tual conditions, past and present. Bur i ton Holmes begins his series here about I j the middle of the month. | Don't forget that there p.re three I thews to-night at the Majestic, tlio j first one beginning at 6:30, At the and running continuously Mnjeatlc from that time on. A good I comedy show, haded by ; i Bobby Heath's Revue, is appealing at ; the theater the last half or this week. I For the first half of the coming week 1 i the "Town Hall Follies." with Eugene j | Emmett and company, has been book- j ed as the feature alti action. This is ai j rural song and dance revue, comprls- I ing eight people, who Inject lots of i brl"ht comedy Into their act. Grouped [around this headline)' are: Leo Beers, I "Vaudeville's Distinctive Entertainer; I Kennedy and Burt, presenting a com edy skit entitled, "Engaged-Married- Divorced;" Mintz and Werts, comedy 1 | acrobats, and Barrett and Onp, In a ' | military travesty, "On the Border." j j A story of high romantic Ideals, j I showing up the real falsity and shams of modern fashionable I | "The House society life, Is told in of l.lfs" "The House of Dies," at Ueitent shown at the Regent for the last time to-day, in which Edna Goodrich Is the star, j Thomas Dixon and Victor Herbert's dramatic spectacle with music, "The j Fall of a Nation," will be shown next Monday and Tuesday. Its peculiar dls j Unction among the great war films is jln its imaginative prophecy of ] America's future against the back ! ground of the European struggle and In i the full vle*.v of nil the besetting na tional problems. The author faces the I welter of nil the forces working in our I national life—liberty, foreign ties, i 1 peace propaganda, militarism, suffrag- | ism, Imperialism—and pictures their I combination in a world-shaking cat- ' aclysm. The outcome forms a surpris- I ing denouement, in which women as sume a leading part In the country's emancipation. I "The Fall of a Nation," which Is ins' kfrc not ■■one becauae pncea are lower, oat because qualities are 4-=Pour4 Values In Untrimmed Hats For Monday's Sale Our direct-buying methods present a rare money-saving opportun ity in this Monday Sale of Untrimmed shapes. The hats include the new and very popular flare shapes, large and small sailors, Turbans, mushrooms, Tam O Shanters, etc., all of which are this season s goods, in Lyon's Velvet and Hatters' Plush, of the very best qualities. $1 Values, Mon- £Q _1 $2.50 and $3.50 Values,l A Q day's Price, , ... . DJ/C Monday's Price $1.50 and $2 Values. AO $4 to $6 Values, ," "My Old Kentucky Home," "Lass j With the Delicate Air," aria, 'Depuis Be j Jour," from "Bouise," and "Chanson j Indoue" (song of India). The sale of ! seats has been unusually large and in- J dicates it will be a record breaker for j such events in iiarrisburg. To accom modate the many who desire the I popular-priced seats, the management I has arranged to place extra seats on the stage and the main lloor of the au ditorium. Admirers of/Wiliam Hart's work on the screen will have their last op portunity to see this Wllllnm S. latest Western picture, Hnrt nt "The Return of 'Draw' tlie Colonial Kuan." at tlie Colonial Theater to-day. As I "Draw" Kgan, the desperado, who swings over to the patli of righteous- NOVEMBER If, 1916. ncss under the influence of a sweet, I young girl, Hart is said to liave con | tributed a part that compares favorably I with those he portrayed in "Hell's i Hinges" and "The Aryan." He is once | again at home with two guns on his j hip and a chip on his shoulder. The pic ; ture was shown to capacity houses yes terday and was admired by all. A new • two-reel Triangle comedy, called "The ! L.ady Drummer," will prove a rare treat I for the young and old alike. Monday | and Tuesday, William Fox will present ]\'aleska Suratt in "The Straight Way," ja story of throbbing interest, written around the life of a woman who seeks , vengeance for her wrongs, and her I quest for happiness. j Xo matter what your lot in life may be, there comes a time when you ex perience the feelings of a "Tlie Glided bird in a gilded cage. ! C'nise" nt That is the way the | Victoria heroine in this drama felt for a period in her life, j The reason why this feeling came to her and what came out of it, forms an intensely interesting drama. I This is a story that thrills and throbs, lit moves swiftly from start to finish, j with not a single lagging moment. Alice Brady is seen to wonderful ad ! vantage in this latest production. ! For Monday and Tuesday wo offer the I famous Clara Kimball Young in "With out a Soul." flesides featuring one of the most popular stars of the screen to-day, this picture is from the pen of one of America's favorite authors Owen Davis. Originally presented as a play, its adoption for the pictures has en larged and improved it to unexpected excellence. SCHOODCHITJDREN PARADE More than 400 schoolchildren pa* raded over the city streets last even-* lng, carrying banners that voiced their appreciation to the voters who hail realized their need and voted for tho school loan. The parade was the idea with the children, which they organ ized and executed unaided. WILL GIVE CONCERT The Orpheus Boys' and Girls' Or chestra of the Odd Fellows' Home at Sunbury will give a concert in the Chestnut street hall December 8. Tho local Odd Fellows are endeavoring to make the concert a success. OLD FOLKS NEED "CASCARETS" FOR LIVER, BOWELS Salts, calomel, pills act on bow . els like pepper acts in nostrils. 1 Enjoy life ! Don't stay bilious, sick, headachy and constipated. Most old people must give to th< bowels some regular help, else tlicy suffer from constipation. The condi j tion is perfectly natural. It is just us natural as it is lor old people to ! walk slowly. For age is never so ac | tive us youth. The muscles are less | elastic. And the bowels are muscles. I So all old peoplo need Cascarets. One might as well refuse to aid weak j eyes with glasses as to neglect this gentle aid to weak bowels. The bow- I els must be kept active. This is im ! portant at all ages, but never so much as at fifty. Age is not a time for harsh physics. Youth may occasionally whip the bowels into activity. But a lash can't be used every day. What tho bowels of the old need is a gentle and natural tonic. One that can bo constantly | used without harm. The only such | tonic is Cascarets, and they cost only 110 cents per box at any drug store.