10 Don't You Want to Get Away from the Amoyiog Feature* of Catarrh? C. E. GAUSS TELLS YOU HOW. lie Offers to Take any Cnae of Catarrh, no Mutter How Chronic or D|>-Sftfd It llao Become, nntl Prove That It fan lie DRIYKX OUT. Mr. Gatiss has been manufacturing tills Combined Treatment for years, during which time over one million have come to him for medicine r.nd advice. The medicine" relieves the dis ease by tirst removing the cause, and produces results where all else has failed. Write him to-day for a free package of GAUSS' COMBINED TREATMENT FOR CATARRH tind you will be hap pily surprised at the results. Fill out the coupon below, npd s;id to C. E. GAUSS, 9733 Main St., Mir shall, Mich. FREE This coupon Is good for a pack age of GAUSS' COMBINED CA TARRH TREATMENT, sent free by mail. Simply fill In your name and address on dotted llnrs below, and mail to C. E. GAUSS. 9733 Main St., Marshall, Mich. WOMEN! \ JfIOTHERS\ f DAUGHTERS' jrmoi will increase your Icakrance 200 per cent in many cases.—Ferdincj^^Klng. . IRON ibotv by Dr. t* obtained rtruifiit •n an vw rusrantea of snwor money re rtmdFd. Wfc usually preecj* \m fle-grtm tV |<<a to three ft; aHer meala Croll Keller, G. A. Gorgas, J. Nelson Clark. | THIS- J Neva i I "Black Bob" Hand-Made Tires Built for longer service. Mrst cost is the last cost. 5,000 miles guar anteed. "Black Bob" Tlrcj kept in repair until worn out, j free of cliarge. Dauphin Sales Co. Sixth and Ilcrr Sis. "JOE" ALBERTS, Jlgr. Bell 271-J OXIDAZE I2H ASTHMA and BRONCHITIS Many users who for years wer obliged to sit up In bed ga.splng for hreath and unable to 9leep report that they now put a single Oxidaze tablet In their mouth when going to bed anil can then lie down and breathe easily and naturally and get a good niirht's restful sleep. Harmless. Sold by G. Ji. Gorgas and druggists everywhere. EDUCATION A Ij School of Commerce ffron* Handing IB So. Blarket Sq. Day & Night School Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Stenotypy, Typewriting; and Penmanship 801 l 4H3 Cumberland :t#.Y Harrisburg Business College A Reliable School, 31st Year Mtrket St. Harriiburg, !*• YOUNG MEN'S BUSINESS INSTITUTE Hershey Building Front and Market Streets The School That Specializes Day and Night Sessions Bell Phone 4361 THURSDAY EVENING, DAUPHIN BOASTS 25,870 FIGHTERS 'Military Roll For 1916 Shows Increase of 656 in County Military Strength MMaßian| Dauphin county JJJ )( )J) could muster Just 65<i more men—a ' little over a third -2ji> of a regiment, ; ft* fighting strength— I for military service in 15,16 than dur- ■ kSP f SBS" i,l({ u similar peiiotl ! AS ili |a I S[H& last year, accordlnir • to the annual a ■(■■HBiMnJ cessment of the; j military roll Just completed and tab ulated by the clerical foreo of the coKnt.v commissioner's office. The roll shows that 25,870 men be tween the ages of IS and 45 are eli gible for duty in lttlii as compared to ; 25,214 in 1915. More than 13,000 of j this number arc registered from the j oity and whilo there is a general in i crease as a whole there is a slight falling off in several wards. Steelton i leads the boroughs of the county, I while Susquehanna leads the town ships. Kakas Wunts Insurance.—Acquitted a. few days ago by a Dauphin county jury of charges of arson in that ho set fire to his Steelton properties /to ] obtain the insurance. Damjum Rakas I yesterday began suit against the i Providence-Washington and the Ger man-American insurance companies for $2,400 and SI,OOO recpective bene fits. Prisoner Asks Fees.—The Dauphin ! county commissioners yosterday were ; asked hy O. Q. Wickersham, counsel ' ftr James Casterow, a witness in the i Newton Rodgers' case, for an allow-1 ance of $40.50 for 27 days' witness j fees during- the time he was incarcer ated In the Dauphin county jail. The j precedent for allowing a jail witness fees pending the trial was established several years ago. The commission ers will investigate the Casterow case. To Change Water Hates.—By order of the Dauphin county court. Charles H. lCinter, Receiver for the Hummels town Consolidated Water Company, is permitted to charge Mercer B. Tate, receiver for the Kutherford Heights Water Company, three and a half cents per 1,000 gallons. Tate is permit ted to charge the Susquehanna com pany three and three-quarters cents, and the Paxtang consolidated four cents. Wants License Change.—The Dau phin county court will be asked Thurs day, January 4, to permit the trans fer of the wholesale liquor license held by Andrew Schutzenbach at 400 Wal nut street to 310 Verbeko street. ' OUPHEUM Saturday, matinee and ' nigat. December Id "The Million i Dollar Doll." Monday evening. December IS "La Belle France," with tiurlon Holmes. Tuesday, evening only, December la Cyril Maude in "Grumpy." | MAJITAL ic—Vaudeville. I UUI.MAU "The -Microscopic Mvs- ' I tery." ; Rl-.UcJN'T—"The Dollar and the Law." | VlC'luitlA—"CivilUation." j No English actor who lias visited America in recent lias impresseu ; 1 , himself as agreeably ! Cyril Mnutle upon our public, as I M ••01-UIHI>" Cyril Maude, now mak _ ing his fourth Anierl- : cun tour in "Grtinipy," and who comes 1 to the Orpheum Theater on Tuesday : evening. Mr. Maude's career In this ! country started tnree years ago, unit I nearly all oi the time he has played here, he has devoted his time to the | presentation of "Grumpy." For many 1 | years Mr. Maude has stood high In the legard of English plavgoere, Deing for j ntteeu years one of most' I prominent actor-managers. It was his I I intention, when lie first came to the ■ L'nited states, to play a season of j twenty weeks and then return to his I I Playhouse, in London. However, so keen became the demand for his "Grumpy" performances, gpfter that ' i comedy-drama gained a Broadway ' i bearing, that it took a year to satisfy* New York's craving for his charac- : ! terization. 1 "La. Belle France," for the first time i in his career as a lecturer on travel, ' .... . .. has been chosen by ! With Ilurton Hurton Holmes for Holme* in Frnnee the subject of his l _ next travelog. Al though he has often taken his fellow- i travelers to Paris and its immediate i vicinity, this is the first personally- ; conducted Journey into the heart of 1 beautiful France, as a country. His ! ! travelog will reveal the grandiose old j r ranee of regal splendor and aristo ! cratic traditions—of princely palaces 1 and feudal fortresses—of great ecclesi- 1 astic monuments, such as the Abbey of I Mont St. Michel—of exquisite chateaux ! .along the Loire—of wonderful walled i ►cities such as Aigues-Mortes and Car cassonne; it will also reveal the simple, home-like France of quiet villages and j fair landscapes; and it will carrv the traveler across the Mediterranean to j the beautiful Barbary Coast of North ern Africa to reveaj the most pictur esque phases ot Colonial France In Tunis and Algeria. Mr. Holmes will give "Da Belle France at the Orpheum Theater on Monday evening, at 8:15 o'clock. The Majestic s feature act the last half of this wnek in George Kvans' ' .Seven Honey Boy Mln- Honejr Iloy strels. This aggregation Minstrel* of comedians, singers u. .t.Mjeaiilc and dancers present one 0 of the most expensive and at the same time most enjoyable novelties that has been seen on the Ma jestic stage so far this season. Rav Fern and -Marion Davis are also on the bill. This clever couple offer for local approval a bright singing, dancing and talking skit called "A Vaudeville Di versity." Completing the list of at tractions are: Gertrude McGlll and company, presenting an entertaining comedy sketch; Helen ijnd Rice in their comedy vehicle entitled "Kggs " and Raymond Wilbert, excellent com edy hoop-roller. In Ethel Leginska, who appear* with Paul Kelmere, world-famous lieder tenor, in the Keystone Con l.ett lnk:i- cert Co urge at Chestnut K.iin.rx Street Auditorium, this Concert evenlnff, *Harri9burg will see a umall elfin-like tlgure in a long- CONQUERS RHEUMATISM IN A VERY FEW DAYS .It Is an established fact that one half tcappoonful of Rheuma taken once a day has driven the pain ana agony from thousands of racked, crip pled and despairing rheumatics during the last Ave years. Powerful and sure; quick acting, yet harmless; Rheuma gives blessed relief almost at once. The magic name has reached every hamlet in the larid and there is hardly, a druggist anywhere who cannot tell you of almost mar velous cures. If you ore tortured with rheuma tism or sciatica, you can get a bottle of Kheuina from 11. C. Kennedy or any (lruggifct for not more than 50 cents, with the "understanding that If it does not completely drive rheumatic poisons from your system—money back. i ■■■ ■ i J Smokers' Electric or fc- A j I Stand Gas Lamp CHEST 14 § I I . * ===== 1 i ' I £3®" I frfc Comes in antique GLfc. ===== jg: H i ''l'r*' bronze finish—large Jjfc E* :< iwJ glass shades : W i Colnes in mahogany finish , - Amber colored A roomy, well-constructed and nicely finish- $■ B; I and has heavy unbreakable B shade 40 other ec j c l ies t; has copper trimmings on sides and .% £ J glass ash tray, with holders for ■ st noluo?r V Lm,p K — .top; metal castors. An absolute protection if fjf I cigar or cisraret. Give one to ■ Ivory finish, at SO.OO ' .'.t • , , r fk g: y the man who smokes ■ ' Tablp - against moths. An ideal gift for mother or : U ■ Silk shade with gold "wifie " #' I Others Up to $7.50 _B_ S I. If: Double burner, an- .Vt $ tlque bronze finish. 'iE' |f at $8.50 | Give "Her" This For " M^"<X his S [ Fireside Chair rlOOf \ *??■ ili Lamp l Y grm I imAwmk _ t removable cushion seat. I pedestal arc finished mahog- finished in ma - *r g; A great big value. any. Equipped for cither hogany. Tz V W *■ electricity or gas. An excel- W • * lent article—low priced. I Windsor T3EGINNING Saturday, December 16, we will CLUB ROCKER § R keep OPEN HOUSE each evening until 9 , _ : ff: I' - • .*r . x |J .. 1_ „ o'clock. Come if you can, in regular store hours, t f O & j?: r JOU Ca " mak ? youc selections much easier (nf fl $: & l' | A 1 shipment of these I^' i mMUM ID Automobile Esri I * U^~i r -to get their-s last 1 :j H fP njiffllgr Comes in black 1 Fireside Style as 1M [III I |||l||[ |||j | ||||l]j||||||||]|| tllllStfiiW A | znzzz With Flashing-OA I J ImK f \ painted decorations • • < . 11 Spanish leather. .*3 | Rear Light I | WEMJL^ CENTS DOLL "STROLLER" | | A Doll Hammock | t wood Folding /\ An all-metal, friction gear Limousine style, t Jk ti T tfoe J Toy Auto that winds up, with chauffeur, j :1 ; I* S" •• • • when running, shows Red Rear Light. i Burns&Co. ~ I 28-30-32 So. Second Street ?&*£* | There's nothing in toys that will please the Harritburg ' Comes with upholstered seat and steel rubber- * little girl more than a bed for her "dollie." Get ..~. t - 4 „ tired wheels. One of twenty styles that we show ,|| her one of these. • , Gifts For All the Family in doll vehicles. [ tailed black velvet coat crouched over i a big- piano on the platform, wielding a hypnotic Influence over the Ivory keys until every listener will forget the personality of tlie musician and feel only the presence of a wierd spirit of music. Of her the Detroit Times re cently said: "In a program of im mensity and power, this little English Bill, In her twenties, and with a di vine gift for playing the piano, dis played a genius and an equipment that outrivals Paderewski." with her will be Paul Relmers, who, though he lias never appeared here before. Is well known to talking machine owners as a singer of great power and remark able charm. Ha came to America a few years back with a reputation as wide as Europe and is a much better singer to-day than he was then. He Is Alma Oluck's choice as a partner when she Is called upon to sing duets with a male voice, his fine lyric voice com bines excellently with hers. The Boston Herald says of him: "Mr. Reimers is a polished singer. He controls a light voice skilfully. His phrasing Is finish ed. He has finesse In diction-, elegance in style. As an interpreter he can be sweetly sentimental, gently amorous, tenderly mournful and discreetly hum orous." Notwithstanding the rush of the holiday season the advance sale has been encouragingly large and to accommodate the large number of out of-town people, who will come by trains for the concert, the program will start promptly at 8:10. "The Microscope Mystery," a thrill ing and absorbing mystery story, fea turing • Constance <"Tke Microscope Talmadge and Wll- Mjitery" t the fled Lucas, which Colonial Theater 'was so well received at the Colonial Tlicu ter yesterday, and which will be seen for the last times today, is a plav of lovo and mystery that cannot fail to hold your interest and create a favor able Impression. It is a gripping, force ful drama, with a smashing climax that leaves a lasting satisfaction. The latest Path® News and a new comedy will be shown on th# same program. Lillian HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Gish, one of the Triangle Company's most popular stars, Is booked to head the show for Friday and Saturday In a new five-part drama, "The Children Pay." A play which depicts the hor rors of divorce, the lasting effect, and the sad handicap it forces the children to struggle against. It is an Intense drama with a powerful moral. "Fatty" Aubuckle will be the added attraction in "The Walters' Ball," one of his fun niest comndies. A treat for the old and young alike. Th* attraction at the Regent, to-day only. Is "The Dollar and the written by Irvln S. "The Dollar Cobb, and featuring and the l.uvr," the dimpled darling of Hegent Theater the screen, Lillian Walker. This picture was produced In eo-op eratlon with the Savings Bank Section of the American Hankers' Association. The story deals with the use and abuse of money. It shows the "birth" of a dollar bill In the United States Treas ury. It brings out very clearlv how easily people are "duped'* by swindlers, who promise them enormous rates of Interest and dividends, taking their sav ings of years and Investing them fool ishly. The picture is not only educa tional, but also interesting. A love story and a "mystery" keeps Interest throughout. Charlie Chaplin, the funniest man In the world, has "put something over," vernacularly speaking, In his new play, "The Kink," to be shown to-morrow and Saturday. A special show will be given the schoolchildren Saturday morning from 10 a. m. till 12 m. I Wharton School Notes Members of the third year invest ment class have each been assigned a thesis that will require at least a month of steady effort. Th thesis is to cover all the details of a complete j railroad report, each section having some particular railroad to cover in their report. The men who won the contest con ducted by the University to secure new students at the beginning of the school year have been awarded their prizes. Henry, Levin, whose Wharton spirit never could be beaten, won first prize. Other prizewinners were C. W, Wolfe, I. W. Appier, Fred Knier, Francis Gingrich and Fred C. Bur ris. Monroe Vance, a third year man, was recently transferred from a local shoe store to a branch in Lancaster. Since he has taken charge the Lancaster store which; formerly had the lowest sales record in a chain of fifty stores, now leads the list. A number of thirtl year men will spend the week-end at their cottage at Daupjiin. The party includes Richard McCallister, Bland Cornell, Frank Tu rano, William Lutz, J. A. Gebljard and Charles Warner. • Committees for the second year class have been appointed. The ext ensive committee Includes F. F. Heber lig? chairman; D. C. Harvey, C. E. Fox, L. B. Smith. The social commit-, tee Includes Thomas J. Bard, chair man, B. F. Mordal, J. W. Mumma, Lawrence Och, John E. Zook. The men who will handle the publicity for the class are Howard Neidlg, chair man, William H. Dimmick, J. L ? . Olehl and L. A. Schlitzer. Ira CBrglll and Howard Xeldig will spend the week-end at their cottage on th Conodogvlnet. DECEMBER 14, 1916. Santa Claus has sent thousands of his most beautiful Christmas Trees! from away up North, down here to IJarrisburg. THEY ARE-HERE NOW, AT ScheU's Seed Store FRESH CUT FROM SANTA'S OWN WOODS. SHOP EARLY! Let us enter your order NOW—you tell us the price and the size, and we will reserve a beautiful tree and deliver it when you say. Walter S. Schell ' QUALITY SEEDS 1307-1309 MARKET STREET. Both Phones. Use Telegraph Want Ads
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers