6 IT'S YOUR LIVER! YOU'RE BILIOUS, HEADACHY, SICK! Don't stay constipated with breath bad, stomach sour or a cold. Enjoy life! Liven your liver and bowels to-night and feel fine. 111 To-night sure! Remove the liver and bowel poison which is keeping your head dizzy, your tongue coated, breath offensive and stomach sour. Don't stay bilious, sick, headachy, constipated and full of cold. Why! don't you get a box of Cascarets from j the drug store now? Eat one or two; to-night and enjoy the nicest, gentlest j liver and bowel cleansing you ever j experienced. You will wake up feel- j ing fit and fine. Cascarets never gripe j or bother you all the next day like, calomel, salts and pills. They act gently but thoroughly. Mothers should | give cross, sick, bilious or feverish children a whole Cascaret any time.; They arc harmless and children love \ tljem. The FoJly Of Taking Digestive Pills A Warning to Dyspeptic* The habit of taking digestive pills ' after meals makes chronic dyspeptics of many thousands of men and women be- j cause artificial dlgestents. drugs and medicines ha\e practically no tntluence I upon the excessively acid condition of the stomach contents which is the cause of most forms of indigestion and dys pepsia. The after dinner pill merely lessens the sensitiveness of the stomach nerves and thus gives a false snse of free dom from pain. If those who are sub ject to indigestion, gas, flatulence, i "belching, bloating, heartburn, etc., after eating would get about an ounce of , pure bisurated magnesia from their i druggist and take a teaspoonful in a little water after meals, there would be I no further necessity for drugs or medi cines because hiuratcil magnesia in- j stantiv neutralizes stomach acidity, stops food fermentation and thus in sures normal, painless digestion by en abling the stomach to do its work with- > out hindrance. Geo. A. Gorgas can supply you.—Ad vertisement. BEAUTY DOCTOR TELLS SECRET Detroit Beauty Doctor Gives Simple Recipe to Darken Gray Hair and j Promote Its Growth Miss Ali' e Whitney, a well-known beauty doctor of Detroit, Mich., re cently gave out the following state ment: "Anyone can prepare a simple , mixture at home, at very little cost, | that will darken gray hair, promote its growth and make it soft and glossy. To u half pint of water add 1 oz. of \ baj - rum, a small box of Barbo Com- ! pound and U oz. of glycerine. These i ingredients can be bought at any drug 1 store at very little cost. Apply to the hair twice a week until the desired shade is obtained. This will make a gra>-haired person look twenty years younger. It is also line to promote the growth of the hair, and relieve 1 itching ar.d dandruff." A SPOONFUL OF SALTS RELIEVES AGH NG KIDNEYS We eat too much meat, which clogs Kidneys, says noted authority. If back hurts or Bladder bothers, stop all meat for a while. When you wake up with backache ■ and dull misery in the kidney region j It generally means you have been eating too much meat, says a well known authority. Meat forms uric acid which overworks the kidneys in their effort to filter it from the blood and they become sort of paralyzed ! and loßgy. When your kidneys get sluggish and clog you must relieve them, like you relieve your bowels; removing all the body's urinous waste, else you have backache, sick head- j ache, dizzy spells; your stomach sours, tongue is coated, and when the weath er is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment, channels often get sore, water scalds and you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. Either consult a good, reliable physicinn it once or get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; uke a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize acids in the urine so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is a life saver for regular meat eaters It is inexpensive, cannot injure and makes a delightful, effer vescent lithia-water drink. Use Telegraph Want Ads TUESDAY EVENING, ASSOCIATED AIDS NEED MONEY Secretary Yates Tells of Many and Varied Services Ren dered Poor and Needy Funds are urgently needed to con tinue the splendid work that lias been conducted by the Associated Aid So cieties and Just how necessary Is the appeal for financial aid is explained to-day In an Interview in the Tele graph by John Yates, the general sec retary. In discussing these needs Secretary Yates goes Into detail with facts and ligures of the wide scope of work that has been undertaken and of why more money is needed to keep the ball roll ing. "It is no easy task," said Secretary Yates, "to place a money value on the many and varied services which the workers of the Associated Aid Societies render to families in distress Every kind of adversity in which a family finds itself can be brought to the or ganization and time and labor will not be spared that the family may be helped. "The report of the secretary to the board of managers, which met Friday, shows how great a variety of prob lems must be solved. More than 100 fnmilles will be under the care of the workers during November. Besides these the report showed that 73 fami lies and individuals had been helped 110 independence and their problems ; finally solved during the past month. I Twenty-two of these families received I material relief in food, coal, clothing I and medicine. Sickness, unemploy ment because of drink, old age, large families and consequent insufficient in come, widowhood and the high cost of living were some of the causes why relief was found necessary, and along with this relief went sympathy and interest that helped to self support. In nine families tuberculosis was the caue of the family breakdown and the stricken members of the family were either sent to a sanatorium for j treatment and care or supplies and \ help toward proper treatment in the j home was secured. In nine families 1 relatives and friends of the families were sought out and gladly gave of j their means to relieve all present ne-l cessity. Five families ignorant as to , the way to secure medical treatment I when their money was gone found j that way through the Associated Aid Societies, and at the same time had the assurance of supply for all needs as long as necessary. Sometimes it is not so much material help that is needed as sympathy and advice, for in eleven familiej, each presenting a dif ferent problem, this service gave en couragement and established self reliance. In one of these especially I was the service of very high value to ! he community, for the husband and wife had serarated and the children were about to be scattered, but the keen iii*tnlit of the worker with sym pathy and intelligent interest re established the home and gave the family ns an asset to the community. "This work is not selfish and help often goes to other communities. Eight societies in other cities asked that relatives or friends might be found and help distressed families un der their care and in every instance these relatives and friends when found were ready to do their part." "The most unsatisfactory work that has to be done from the Associated Aid Societies' viewpoint is the treat ment of homeless individuals. They have no friends, and, broken in spirit and health, have lost all incentive to independence. Ten homeless persons called at the offices of the association during the month; four were sick and received medical care. Two who had tuberculosis were sent to a sana torium for treatment. Transportation to his home was furnished for one, employment was found for another, and a man and his wife were en couraged by employment secured and a home established. "The association is planning to add a visiting housekeeper lo the force of workers—Miss Lila Neidlg, of Mechan icsburg. who will teach families how to buy, cook and keep house. This service ought to prove of great value, especially in view of the increased cost of living. Miss Rachel Staples was appointed assistant secretary. "At this time of year the funds of the society are about exhausted and a "nmpaign will be undertaken to secure the necessary money for the winter work." TI I.L or LABOR'S PROGRESS Baltimore, Md.. Nov. 14.—Fraternal j delegates from Great Britain, Canada ! and Japan this morning told the eon- i vention of the American Federation of i Labor of the progress of trades union- ! ism in their respeetive countries. The speakers were William Whitofield, representing mine workers in the Brit ish Isles; Harry Gosling, representing bargemen on English rivers and in English seanorts: Thomas Stevenson, of the Canadian Trade and Labor Con gress, and B. Susuki. representing the Friendly Labor Society of Japan. He Felt So Tired and Depressed Nerves Were All Out of Tune and His Whole System Was In Bail Shape TANLAC TUXED HIM UP "I suffered with kidney trouble for years," says George M. Lyter, who lives at 123 Paxton street, Harrisburg, "and my whole system wjis so run down that I felt tired and depressed all the time. Not sick exactly but just downright miserable. "I was nervous as a cat and my nerves seemed to be all out of tune, iso jumpy and touchy that I couldn't | even sleep at night but would keep I waking up all the time. "I didn't take any interest in any tiling and felt as though 1 had to drag myself through each day because when I woke up in tli£ morning I seemed to be more dragged out than I was when I went to bed the night j before. "I tried a lot of® different medi- I cines but I can't say that they did mo j any good because I didn't get any bet ter but just moped along in the same old way until I discovered Tanlac | one day when I was reading the paper. "I think it is a wonderful medicine for it seemed to go right to the seat of my trouble and It fixed me up in no time at all. It made my kidneys ; strong and healthy so that "they now • lid my system of the waste that used to poison me and it strengthened my | nerves so that I brightened up all over. "1 feel better in every way now, I sleep fine. 1 have a good appetite and I fee; energetic and ready for work. Tanlac. the famous master medicine i:i now bt'ng specially introduced here at Oorgas' Drug Store, where ] the Tanlac man Is always ready to ex -1 plain the uses of and the benefits to <), dorivod from this master medicine. PREPARE NOW COLD WAVE FROM An ounce of the New Store's pre- NORTHWEST WILL vention is worth a pound of cold cure HIT HARRISBURG OVERCOATS ' Temperatures at Many Places Myriacs of them—At The New Store —the kind you want —no matter what kind that GAG A Lower Than Ever Recorded may be—For The New Store of Wm. Strouse is literally "chock full" of good overcoats — Jpf f' in November Blue unfinished worsteds, gray and brown mixed cheviots—single or double breasted, belt - or full back. Overcoats for the snappy young man and for the conservative man of more i o R npi n\v TV WYHMTVP mature years. When you compare Wm. Strouse Overcoats with overcoats from other " __ " u,WhNU stores, you can't help from saying that those of The New Store surpass all others—the lH - prices are ~||MCL, TO Diminish in Intensity, but sis-$20..523 r *ssr* *£ \ ¥ Aif J [ UJu 5.% Vw f i B% ■■ \ ' J;and ice is due this weelc In Harrisbur Nt- / \IS ji'j According to a dispatch from- W Underwear is not often compared, as outergarments are, be- | etngton, a c.oid wave, which is jfff •■{ \ cause it is seldom seen except by the wearer—yet everyone knows I I h records wcst of lhrt . A J? M jj Oi that a difference exists—How often have you had scratchy, poorly- !mV' \L & fitting garments, buttons coming off and always uncomfortable p i Local ob8r""cr V J j But you will have nothing but the greatest comfort and pleasure V *'< * Swiss American, $1 to $4 the suit. Vp p . ,n/ The New Store of Wm. Strouse of Amusement, Art, and Instruction.. REVIEW OF MAJESTIC BILL Varied Bill Clean in Spots With Some Truly Good Acts The Majestic bill for the earl}- part of the week started off to three capac ity houses. The show is opened by Mints and Wertz, two eccentric come- i diafis, who do some clever tumbling, and for a time they have the audience guessing with their "strong-man" stunts before they finally let the house "in on" the overhead wire. The act I goes well. Kennedy and Burt, in a lit- I tie sketch, "Engaged, Married and Di- , vorced," put across some good singing i and a bunch of jokes that goes well, j Barrett and Opp then present a Mexi can travesty, "Across the Border." that ! hands the audience several surprises i and a lot of laughs. Leo Beers, billed as j Vaudeville's Distinctive Entertainer, holds the boards much longer than an act of Its character is entitled to. lie | plays the piano well, but his songs, al- ' most without exception, are not the sort that should be thrust down the throats ' ot the theater's patrons. Eugene Em- j mett and company, in a rural revue, en titled "Town Hall Frolics." is rather i clean, full of melody and pretty girls. | The male characters in the piece are es pecially funny in their rural character roles. MAX ROBERTSON. "The Straight Way," starring Va'.cska Suratt, was shown at the Colonial Theater yesterday and "The Straight will be seen for the Wbj" nt last times to-day. the Colonial "The Straight Way" ; tells the story of a J woman's quest for happiness. Mlssi Suratt has the part of a wife who has been misunderstood and deserted | her husband. Later she seks revenge ; on him. but linds *.liat h*>r efforts work ; as a boomerang, and wound herself as : much as him. Wednesday and Thurs- I day The Fine-Arts Company will pre- ' sent Norma Talmadge in a new five-part ' play called "Fifty-Fifty," a story on the matrimonial problem in which a I husband tires of bis pretty wife and ; "frames" her in ordr that he may j easily secure a divorce. Later he dis- | covers his error, but it is then too late i to right the wrong. This is the last ap- I penranee of Miss Talmadge oti the Trl- ' angle program, and it has been pro- ' nounced by the leading critics as hei I i best picture. Special attention is call- i ed to "The Tug Boat Romeo," the new 1 : three-reel Keystone comedy that will be I j the added attraction for these two days, j The main interest in this great storv ! Is its somewhat unusual and grotesque plot, which furnishes Miss ."Without Young with an excellent i j n Soul" at opportunity to displav h<-r ! Victoria wonderful dramatic pow ers. The play concerns the death of a beautiful young girl who has been restored to life by a secret method. When she again lives It is with completely changed habits and morals, j See this great picture and then decide what you would do were she your 'daughter. James Young, husband of I Clara Kimball Young, also plays an im ! portant part in support of his famous ! wife. To-day the Victoria also presents : The Romance of Harrisburg," played | iiv an all-Harrisburg east. To-morrow I Florence will delight Victoria 1 natrons in a powerful play, "The Pil ! lory." ORPHEUM Wednesday, matinee and night. November 15 "Mutt and ■left's Wedding." Friday evening, at S:2O, Margaret Woodrow Wilson. CHESTNI "T STREET AI DITORIUM Alma Gluck, November 15. MAJESTIC —Vaudeville. I COLONIAL—"The Straight Way." I REGENT—"The Fall of a Nation." VICTORIA —"Without a Soul." I Ous Mill will prenont for the first | time the fifth edition of Bud Fisher's great cartoon suc | "Mutt find cess, "Mutt and Jeff's ; Jrlt'N Weihllnß" Weddinp "at the Or pheum to-morrow, j matinee and night. This season's offer ing, it is said, will show an entirely : new scenic and electrical production. I consisting of several sensational nie chanical effects never before attempted lin a musical comedy. An entirely new I musical score has been furnished. Marpsret Woodrow Wilson, who will | be heard In a concert at the Orpbeuiu Theater, Fridaj'. November j Margaret 17, has been described as 1Woolro povsessinir a clear lyric so \\ UNOII piano voice, with a lean ing toward the dramatic, and. is aaid lo be well suited to the HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH NOVEMBER 14, 1916. ' rendition of the folk songs and other simple melodies which constitute her program and which has been arranged j with an aim to please and entertain rather than impress the audience which the young prima donna attracts, i Melville A. Clark, harpist, with Miss Wilson, is a lineal descendant of Tom Moore, the Irish poet. As a harpist, Mr. Clark ranks high, having been heard as accompanist for such artists as Mary Garden, John McCormack and Alice Neilson. This coming week Burton Holmes, ; famous for his travelogues, is to begin his twenty-fourth Burton Holmes season. The subjects Here Next Week which he has chosen for the coming year are for the major part absolutely new. | Cana.dr< and France—outside of Paris, itself—are among the very few lands which he has never heretofore touched upon in his pictorial wanderings. The travelogue with which Mr. Holmes be gins his season, is entitled "Canada I From Coast to Coast," and in this pic ture Journey he will take his audiences ! from the lovely Evangeline country of | Nova Scotia, through quaint Quebec, I busy Montreal, Ottawa. Winnipeg, Cal | gary and others of Canada's thriving I centers of commercial interest to far away Vancouver and Victoria on the Pacific. | Packed houses and enthusiastic i patrons greet "The Fall of a Nation," now being shown at the ! "Fall of a Regent. Many call it the | Nation" at greatest picture ever I Regent shown in Harrisburg. "The Fall of a Nation" I stirs patriotic enthusiasm. Thomas Dixon's play (as likewise Victor Her bert's accompanying music) vibrates with genuine Americanism. While the locale of the story is in and near New York, its momentous les son applies to any country unprepared to meet the foreign foe. At the end of the present war t.iere will be millions of idle troops in Europe. What new | task will be set for them? Will covet ous eyes be cast on the riches of the [continents discovered by Columbus? (Will some Emperor—like Napoleon 111, l who sent the French invaders into I Mexico—attempt to seize a fair and wealthy portion of the new hemt j sphere? Then—unless the country at ! tacked is ready and well prepared—-his- I tory will record a real tragic "Fall of a ] Nation." Tt is against this terrible dan ! ger that Thomas Dixon, the author of ; the spectacle, provides an awful warn ing. I To-morrow and Thursday "The | | Daughter of MacGregor," a photoplay of I laughs and thril's. with a touch of pathos will be nresented with Valen- J title Grant in the stellar role. ) Alma Gluck, famous for her I songs. "The Land of the Sky Blue Water," "Carrv Me Back to I Alack Old Virginia." "The Brook" ! Hceltnl and a score of others known and loved by owners of talk ing machines, will sing at Chestnut Street Auditorium to-morrow evening | under the ausoices of the Keystone Con- I eert Course, this being the second num- I ber. She has arranged a special pro- I gram for Harrisburg and will sing a number of her most popular selections I as encores. , j In this respect Madame Gluck recent ly said: "Only after three recalls do I I sing an encore; the first recall Inscribe !to politeness, the second to apprecia { tion of the song and the composer and the third that the audience really | wants me to sing a second number." i It is interesting to note, also, that J Madame Gluck sings nearly all of her . j songs in her native tongue, so that the I music and expression are enhanced for I the average coneertgoer by a full knowledge of the words of her select ; tions. The Gluck voice has few equals; , , it i soft and gentle or brilliant and I thrilling, as the occasion demands, and ithe singer holds her audience captivat ed not alone by her voice but by her I wonderful smile. j The great sincer will bring with her I for her concert to-morrow night Anton ; Hoff. - voung German pianist of mark •ed ability, as her accompanist. Hoff I has been In America for several years, j and is a master of the piano. Dominican Order Marks Seventh Centenary Washington. D. C.. Nov. 14.—Cele bration of the seventen centenary of ; i tlie Dominican Order, known as the i i order of preachers, of the Catholic ' ! Church began here to-day with a pon * 'tifical high mass attended by the three " | Amorican cardinals—Gibbons, of Bal ! itiniore. W'IO was th„- eelehrant; Farley, r of New York, and O'Connell, of Bos . jion—and many prominent Catholic : I ivmon from throughout the United .State-. The celebration, which is being ob- I fervrd all over the world, marks the seven hundredth anniversary of the confirmation of the order by the I 'chur"- I '. approve' havinor been triven by 1 Pooe i loncriiis Hi 121 C. The order wns founded in 1213 bv St. Dominie 1 Guzman, a Spanish,nobleman of Cala . rotra. and its members have always . , been recoornized as the leaders in study s and exposition of Catholic theology. HE NEW STORE OF WM. STROUSEI PUSH CAR ORDERS Railroads are placing rush orders for new and additional equipment. They are doing so under necessity, and in face of abnormally high prices. An average freight car now costs full $1,500, or quite 50 per cent more than it could be bought for a year ago. Close to twenty-five tons of steel are i -£ vA' ■ Engineer Ford, like thousands of other Liniment It should be in every [~ZT _ .. _ ~ medicine chest and emergency kit" I^teTtrVel ß 96lS H Sloan's Liniment quickly penetrates and between New York and ||l a WsMk soothes without rubbing, cleaner than mussy Chicago in 1140 minutes, |||||| y||li| plasters or ointments, does not stain the skin. The men who operate ||ili] P At 811 dr IB required for a car. The Philadelphia and Reading Rail way has just ordered 2,000 additional steel cars. The Norfolk and Western is in the market for 4,700 cars, the Wab ash-Pittsburgh Terminal Rairoad for 1,000, while the Baltimore and Ohio has placed contracts for 2,750 new cars and Is in the market ft* 5,000 more. The New York Central has ordered $15,000,- 000 worth of new equipment, including 300 all-steel ears to cost nearly $20,000 each. About $5,000,000 worth of cars liava been contracted for by American rail roads within a couple of weeks. Pop their construction at least 750,000 tons of steel will be required.