Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, December 05, 1916, Page 4, Image 4
4 BEST FOR LIVER, BOWELS, STOMACH, HEADACHE, COLDS They liven the liver and bowels and straighten you right up. Don't be bilious, constipated, sick, with breath bad and stomach sour. WmLE YOU SLEE^ To-night sure! Take Cascarets and enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced. Wako up with your head clear, stom ach sweet, breath right and feeling fine. Get rid of sick headache, bil iousness, constipation, furred tongue, sour stomach, bad colds. Clear your ftkln, brighten your eyes, quicken your step and feel like doing a full day's work. Cascarets are better than salts, pills or calomel because they don't shock the liver or gripe the bowels or • cause inconvenice all the next day. Mothers should give cross, sick, bilious, feverish children a whole Cas caret any time, as they can not injure the thirty feet of tender bowels. IF M HURTS ME SALTS TO FLUSH KIBNEYS Says Backache is sure sign you have been eating too much meat. Uric Acid in meat clogs Kidneys and irritates the bladder. Most folks forget that the kidneys, like the bowels, get sluggish and clogged and need a flushing occasion ally, else we have backache and dull misery in the kidney region, severe headaches, rheumatic twinges, torpid liver, acid stomach, sleeplessness and all sorts of bladder disorders. You simply must keep your kidneys active and clean, and the moment you feel an acho or pain in the kidney re gion, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any good drug store here, take 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 prspes and lemon Juice, combined with lithia, and is harmless to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity. It also neutralizes the acids In the urine so it no longer irritates, thus endinpr bladder disorders. Jad Salts is harmless; inexpensive; makes a delightful effervescent lithia water drink which everybody should take now and then to keep their kid neys clean, thus avoiding serious com plications. • , A well-known local druggist says he sells lots of Jad Salts to folks who be lieve in overcoming kidney trouble while it is only trouble. | How To Break Up ■: j: A Bad Cough. If you have a friend with a persistent cough whom you think lias anv ten dency to weak lungs, cut this out and senrl it to him. This prescription is widely used in New England for breaking up severe coughs and colds, catarrh, bronchitis, and thereby preventing Grippe. Pneu monia or other serious and permanent lung trouble. Get from your druggist a large bottle of Oxidaze (containing ninety tablets) and every two hours allow one of the tablets to slowly melt in your mouth so that its powerful healing juices, mixing with the saliva, will reach and heal the Inflamed membranes, clear the throat of all dangerous germ life, loosen a dry, hoarse or tight cough and by stopping the formation of phlegm in the throat and branchial tubes quickly end the Serslstent "hang on,' 1 loose cough. lany a serious, possibly fatal, case of lung trouble or pneumonia can be pre vented by the simple use of Oxidaze in this way. And. as the tablets are pleas ant and easy to take, are not at all ex pensive. contain no harmful or habit forming drugs, and as G. A. Gorgas and other leading d.-uggtsts everywhere Bell them on a positive guarantee that they will stop a cough or monev back, no one who has a cough or cold can lose by giving them a fair trial. Bo sure to insist on Oxidaze and take nothing In its place. A single package taken now may easily save many dollars in doctors' bills in future.—Advertisement. TOSTOPBADCOUGH SOOTHE DRY, IRRITATED TITRO.VT "WITH PARMIXT SYRUP. SAYS TOTS OLD-FASHIONED COUGH REMEDY IS REST We are told that the old time reme dies are best and invariably contain less harmful yet better medicine than those which are in use to-day. This being so. undoubtedly the following old-fashioned recipe which is quick act . lng will be welcomed by many as there seems to be a regular epidemic of coughs at the present time. Secure from your druggist 1 ounce Parmint fdouble strength), take this home and add to it a quarter pint of hot water and 4 ounces of granulated sugar, stir until dissolved. Take 1 tablespoonful four times a day. No more racking your whole body with a cough. Clogged nostrils should open, air passages of Tour head should clear and vour hreath ng become easy. Parmint syrup is pleasant to take, easy to prepare and costs little. Bvery person who has a stubborn cough, hard cold or catarrh in any form should give this prescription a trial. - There is nothing better—-Ad vertisement. FOR THROAT AND LUNGS STUBBORN COUGHS AND COLDS ECKMANHS ALTERATIVE •OLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS WISBAV IVIMUg— DUTY TO FIGHT LIQUOR TRAFFIC Speaker at Meeting of Prohibi tion Workers at Carlisle Says Minister Should Take Part : Carlisle, Pa., Dec. 5. Prohibition | and W. C. T. U. workers from all parts i of the Cumberland Valley between Harrisburg and Winchester, Va., gath ered here to-day for a Prohibition ral- | ly at which Oliver W. Stewart, chair man of tho 1916 Prohibition campaign committee, was tho principal speaker, i The sessions opened this morning and continued throughout the day. C. L. Hummel, of Shippensburg, Prohibition candidate for presidential elector presided—and spoke on the 1916 campaign in this section. He was followed by L. S. Beam, of Le moyne, who urged it as a duty of a minister to take part in politics to the extent of lighting the liquor traffic.' Co-operation in the widest sense of the term was urged in an address by Dr. S. C. Swallow, of Camp Hill, and L. P. Teel, of Shippensburg. gave ad vice on organization methods. ORPHEUM Wednesday, matinee and Couldn't Buy." Friday evening, December 8 Leopold Godowsky, assisted by Belle Story. Saturday, matinee and night, December 9—"The Prince of 1-Mlsen." MAJESTlC—Vaudeville. COLONIAL—"Her Double Life." REGENT—"The Storm." VICTORIA—"An Enemy of the King." The attraction at the Orpheum to morrow, matinee and night, will be an elaborate production of "The Girl He Sumner Nichols' latest Couldn't Buy" play, "The Girl He Couldn't Buy." The play, described as a modern drama of to-day, comes heralded as one of the big American plays in which human emotions pulsate throughout. The first act opens in a tine spirit of original comedy which permeates the happy fur nished room occupied by "Hope Nelson" and "Kitty Burns" in "Mrs. Edwards' " roominghouse on Tenth avenue, New York City. Action and atmosphere deepen into dratna when "David Burn ham," the tempter, arrives. It is said that no play has been written in recent years in which action and atmosphere are made to accumulate into such an avalanche of evil from which, seem ingly, the principal characters, "Hope" ] and Kitty," are powerless to escape. "The Prince of Pllsen," the popular musical comedy by Frank Plxley and Gustav Luders, will be "The Prince seen at the Orpheum, of I'Usen" Saturday, matinee and night. Its tenure of favor has carried it through several seasons which have been uniformly successful. In any comparative analy sis of the elements which gives success to musical comedy, "The Prince of Pil sen" will be found to possess a combi nation as rare as it is welcome—a wholly delightful musical setting join ed to a genuinely humorous story plac ed in an atmosphere of romance and poesy. A company of well-known play ers will interpret the several roles. Charles Home will be seen as Hans Wagner, the Cincinnati brewer, whose vacation trip to Nice provides the humorous incidents around which the story is built, and Estella Birney will be the widow, Mrs. Crocker. A genius of the pianoforte, Leopold Godowsky has devoted the youth and vigor of his body, his soul Leopold and his spirit to the mas- GodoMsky tery of its mechanical in tricacies: to the acquisi tion of a remarkable technique, and to the task of rendering this stubborn instrument of wood and metal, an elas tic means of superlative intellectual expression. He has, indeed, made it his obedient servant in the domain of wide-glancing and emotional interpre tation. In all the marvels of Godowsky's work it is noteworthy that from the' minutest to the superlative effects he never overplays. His big and mighty tones are produced legitimately, and without in the least employing his fingers as instruments of chastisement ol' the black and white keys. It is uni versally acknowledged that among all Ills contemporaries Godowsky Is the one pianist to.be truly compared in in tellectual achievement with Franz Liszt, and worthy of wearing royally the mantle of that genius of Weimer. Godowsky will be heard here at the Orpheum Theater, December 8, asssist ed by Miss Belle Story, coloratura so prano. For the fourth subject in his annual series of Burton Holmes travelogs, be . lng delivered here •"I he I ntherlanil," personally by Mr. With Burton Holmes Holmes himself, _ he has chosen The German Fatherland," a delightful recounting of Mr. Holmes' experiences in that wonderful country of efficiently governed cities, quaint towns and vil lages which still retain the impress of the artistic crafts of former genera tions, and the lovely countryside where are to be found honest country folk, clean and comfortable inns, plenty of good food and smiling, courteous ser vice. From the pulaces and parks of Berlin to the "Passion Plav" at Ober animergau and from the study of the personality on the screen of the Kaiser and that of Anton Lang, who plaved the part of "Christus" in the "Passion Play," is a no greater variety than is to be found in all the im-idents of liis travelog devoted to "The German Fatherland." Mr. Holmes will give "The German Fatherland" at the Orpheum Theater on Monday evening, at S:ls o'clock. From a standpoint of good-looking girls, magnificent costumes, beautiful . „ .. scenery and a large company, At the nothing has been seen on Majestic the Majestic stage for a long time that can excel the musi cal comedy, "Wanted—A Wife," that is appearing at the head of a pleasing bill of vaudeville tho first half of this week. The story running throughout the act is delightful, and the comedy situations are funny. An added attrac tion on the bill is the William Morrow company, offering their near, flirtation skit, entitled "Along a Country Road " Their lines are bright and snappy, and they put them over in such a way as to make the audience wish that their act was again as long. Other acts are: Milton and Dolly Nobles, In their laugh able comedy. "The New Thought Club;" the White Brothers, comedy tumblers and Chuck llass, in a lariat-throwng act. Would you renounce the man you love if you had gained Ills love through Thedn Barn nt gives vou after the the Colonial truth appears: would i .v, y l u . !" a >-ry him? This Is the situation which confronts Theda Bara in her latest play, "Her Double Liie," which was shown to capacity houses at the Colonial Theater yester day and will be seen for the last times to-day. In this new Fox feature, which is the story of a woman's deception. Miss Bara appears In a powerful emo tional role and delighted her many ad mirers. Wednesday and Thursday Douglas Fairbanks, the king of the screen, will head the Colonial program in a new Triangle play, "American Aristocracy." The story opens with a pretty young lady who decides that she will not marry a mollycoddle, and de clares to her girl friends that she will kiss the first real man she meets, and that man happens to be the ever-smil ing Fairbanks, who at once sets out to learn her identity, which leads him Into a series of complications and thrilling adventures. The picture is filled with Fairbanks personality and is the kind ■of story that will hold your Interest. A new two-reel Keystone comedy called ► T T T ▼ ▼ T ▼ ▼ ▼▼ T ▼ ▼ V T ▼ ▼ T T ▼ ▼ ▼ T ; You will find it in abundance a : A Gift From This Store Will Be a Lasting Remembrance : For Christmas Shoppers \ Reduced Prices on All Gift Furniture ► == ; 6-Pc. Queen Anne Bed Room Suite j : 9-Pc. Queen Anne Dining Suite Value s,4s '°°: $115.00 K Solid Mahogany, 60-inch Buffet. flfl ► Value $225.00. Xmas Sale & OmXJU ; Reed Doll Carriages tjw-. | I carriages. Reversible gear, reclin- f ISdrtCOOH V/3tbin@l ing back, round reed, white en- I led. ' The most complete Qs*l cabinet ever built. Special tt r* A K Solid Mahogany - - | /•DU Library Tables * \r "J 1 48-inch, as illustrated. ► = $29.00 Value. . • /- —v. Xmas sale . . , Queen Anne Chairs others from sl7 up. : and Rockers ' Walnut frames covered • ► with blue silk-striped plush. IHfljKflßl Y\Np> ► $21.00 Value. Special, , 7 31 raTj] ~ ilfp A y Y'SEIbI 111 / ■&■ * 11 \xs : $16.75 SJ^lJsXIr ► *■, .. l. Ca||<| KSdkAff'inu TAll TCdUC Varied Selection of Art Lamps in all styles for Gas ' " manogany or Electricity. Silk Shade lamps a specialty. ► the most desirable of gifts. Jf ET 13 I! : $1.98 up to $5.98 JLHTLIL % exactly as pictured, complete with canopy, mattress, pillows, etc Large size, 11x 22 inches. hf 79c Only 1 to a customer None de• £ IViailOgaiiy, W.to W hvered. I "The House That Saves You Money" JIBS f—J CHAS. F. R ggsr ! HURINITURE COMPANY ; OPEN EVERY EVENING "The Day After," will bo seen on the same program. AH a harum-scarum child of nature, light-hearted and care-free, Blanche Sweet appears to-day •The Storm," at the Regent in the nt the thrilling I-rfisky produc llrgtnt Today tion of "The Storm." The scenes of this un usual drama were laid in the Maine woods'and Miss Sweet is seen s a daughter of an absent-minded, rettred, old professor. How she falls in love—a cloud is cast over her life, only to be dispelled by the man her lieart desires, is unfolded and explained In an Intense and Inter esting manner. In this production Theodore Roberts appears in a delightful character of the absent-minded old bookworm—a retired professor. The cast includes, besides Miss Sweet and Mr. Roberts, Thomas Melghan, Hlchard Sterling and Chand ler House. To-morrow and Thursday—A story of plots and counterplots centering in the refusal of the United States to buy a certain very powerful X-ray gun and the battle of wits by two actually war ring nations to get possession of it, is "The Intrigue." This thrillingly real istic picture affords the versatile Le nore Ulrlch unusual scope as sho plays in turn a countess, a spy and an ex ceptionally charming peasant girl, de murely traveling steerage. E. H. Sothern, in a film version of "An Enemy to the King," was the fea tured attraction at "An Enemy to tbe the Victoria. The KlnK>" Victoria picture was taken after Mr. Sothern -had accustomed himself to the differ ence between acting' on the stage and acting' before the camera and for that reason It ts a distinct advance over the first of his pictures offered to the pub lic. The regular Triangle program of releases at the Rl<o, of New York, was suspended for u week In order to permit the Sothern picture to be shown. "An Enemy to the King" is a sumptu ously costumed production from the Vita graph Studios. It gives the. star a role with which he is perfectly fa miliar and affords him an opportunity for the display of hi* well-kuown skill as a fencer. Edith Storey, the Vita graph star, plays opposite him in the role of "Julie De Varion." Miss Rose Tapley, the noted Vita graph star, will be an added attraction at tills theater to-day and will appear In person and deliver a short, but in tensely interesting talk on "Stage L,lfe," after which n speolally made one reel feature will be shown. In this picture such famous stars as Anita Stewart. Peggy Hyland, Ijillian Walker, Edith Storey. Harry Morey, Earle Wil liams, Antonio Moreno, Alice Joyce and B. H. Sothern, are shown.