10 Wharton School Will Close Registration For Coming Year Friday This is tho last week for registra tion for membership in tho Wharton school for the coming year. Regis tration lists VUi close Friday night and tho school will open Monday of next week. While war has taken a large num ber of tho students from the city, \he school will number more than fifty at its opening. This is consid ered a very encouraging number, considering the conditions. IS H, ■OilS MOTHER Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Restored Her Health. Philadelphia. Pa, —"I was very weak, always tired, my back ached, P llium,, and I felt sick- Mllilt !y most of the BMQfiaJ time. I went to j_, he said X hid , 1 nervous indlges tion. which add od to my w.Mk 1 condition kept n.o -< Mill worrying most of Jk> ' tbe time —and he "ffl ■■ • sold if I could not s ~ to l' 'hat, I could ML..: ■ not get well. I lieard so much 1 about I-ydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound my husband wanted me to try it. I took it for a week and felt a little better. I-kept it up for three months, and I feel fine and can eat anything now without distress or nervousness." — Mrs. J. Worthline, 2842 North Taylor St., Philadelphia, Pa. The majority of mothers nowa days overdo, there are so many de mands upcn their time and strength; the result is invariably a weakened, run-down, nervous condi tion with headaches, backache, ir ritability and depression—and soon more serious ailments develop. It is at such periods in life that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will restore a normal healthy condi tion. as it did to Mrs. Worthline. For Skin Soreness of infants and children you can find nothing that heals like Sykes Comfort Powder Leading physicians and nurses have used and endorsed it for more than 25 years. 25e at the Vino! and other drug stores Comfort Powder Co., Boston. Mass. I REGENT Vent Your Wrath on the Hun In tbe Shape of Liberty Uonda of tbc FOURTH LOAN. ON 10 SIRE WAY! FINAL SHOWING TO-DAY Cecil B. De Mille's GREAT PRODUCTION Tbe Story of tbe UelKiana, "TILL I COME BACK TO YOU" THURSDAY imd FRIDAY CHARLES RAY "In the Claws of the Hun" Tbij* 1M n Mtory with a moral. HE SURE TO SEE IT SATURDAY ONLY "Italy on the Firing Line" GAIL KANE in LOVE'S LAW" Admiaaionloc and 20c and War Tax ORPHEUM Today MATINEE and NIGHT SELWYN & CO.'S THE NAUGHTY WIFE Annual Laugh Festival By FHEI) JACKSON VIRTUE IS A STATE OF MIND. DON'T LOSE YOUR MIND. PItICESi Mntlnee 25c to 81.01) N'lght 25c to $1.50 | COLONIAL j CONSTANCE TALMADGE "SAUCE FOR THE GOOSE" FRIDAY SATURDAY MARION DAVIS —IN"— "CECELIA OF THE PINK ROSES" MONDAY TUESDAY TOM MOORE -IX "JUST FOR TO-NIGHT" COME ON BUY LIBERTY BONDS % loRPHEUM SATURDAY OCTOBERs| GEO. V. HOBART'S LATEST SUCCESS. WITH MUSIC JL - S £ GEO.V. HOBART W I Lvmcs by ? Ij * Author of "Biperlmcf" — ■ ▼ ED W POULTON f BLUE EVES! Miimlc by SILVIO HKIY, Com power of "FLO-FLO" With EVA FALLEN and Notable Cast including WM. PIIII.BBICK CLARA MACKIN M WM. POWERS LUCILLE FIELDS THOS. F. GRADY ■ MAHJOHIE BOSXEII PERCY OAKES WINNIE ARCHER ft ' ROBERT AUSTIN MAY DE LUR HENRY BELMONT f WITH THE ORIGINAL PRODUCTIONond n BEAUTY CHORUS OF YOUTtf AND CHARM 1 Evenings—2sc, 50c, 75c, sl, $1.50. Popular Mat.—2sc to sl£ I J? WEDNESDAY EVENING, REEVA GREENWOOD, BELLE DARCY AND FREDERICK SUMNER IN A SCENE FROM 'THE NAUGHTY WIFE' AT THE ORPHEtTM TO-NIGHT v —J ■. ' ~~~| \,rr j - '- *?- When "The Naughty Wife," Selwyn & Company's annual laugh hit, is seen here at the Orpheum Theater to-night theatergoers are promised bn© of the reul treats of the season. Playing the leading roles will be Miss Reeva Greenwood and Frederick Sumner, two of the best-known farceurs on the stage to-day. Some years ago Selwyn & Oompuny determined on a policy of sending their New York companies as nearly intact as posible on the road. The result has more than Justified the added expense. The reputation of the plays that have been successes in New York have never suffered by their road presentation, and the pub lic hits not been slow to show its appreciation. MAJESTIC High Class Vaudeville. ORPHEUM To-night Selwyn and Company offer their latest comedy success, "The Naughty Wife." To-morrow evening—Free Christian Science Lecture. Tfte Morning After khe Jg Night The Wise Precaution of a Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet After tlie Ban quet Brings Pleasant Memo ries With the Morning Coffee If It Hadn't Geen for Stuart's Dys pepsia Tablets Like as Not I'd Have u Hcaduolie This Morning. If you ever feci distressed after eating he sure to take a Stuart Dys pepsia Tablet. For no matter what you eat there will be no gas. no sour | risings, no lump in your throat, no ! biliousness, no dark brown taste in the morning. And should you now be | troubled, eat a tablet as soon as pos- j sible and reljef will come promptly. These tablets correct at once the j faults of a weak or overworked stom- i ach, they do the work while the stom- | ach rests and recovers itself. Partieu- i larly effectivi a •' they for banquet ers and tin. whose environment brings them in • ontact with the rich] food most apt to cause stomach tie- I rangement. Relief in these cases al ways brings the glad smile. Get box j of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, 1*0! cents, in any drug store. Be gcoi'. to ! your stomach.—Advertisement. Majestic theater The Musical Treat uf the Season. "The Rtalto Revue" With n 1 levy of PRETTY GIRLS j siirronnil<-<| by four other well- | elected variety otVcrhiK*. HERE TO-MOKHOW "The Bonfire of Old Empires" A patriotic appeal for "World Freedom, h) Marion Cralß Went- j worth, author of "War Bride*." 4th Liberty Loan Drive Now On V ' 'VICTORIA MUM' TO-DAY and TO-MORROW "LES MISERABLES" \ —with— WILLIAM EARN I'M as "JEAN VALJEAN" The Motion Picttire Wonderful! Also to-day lll'TH ROLAND In "HANDS IP" Friday mid Saturday, THEDA BARA In "A FOOL THERE WAS." | and "THE LAST RAID OF THE | ZEPPELINS." COMING "THE CRUCIBLE OF LIFE" I Admission 10r and lillc all# war tax ■ f I Saturday, matinee and night, October s—George V Hobart's latest musi- i cal success, "Miss Blue Eyes," with , Eva Fallon. Tuesday, matinee and night, October ! B—"The smarter Set." COLONIAL. To-day and to-morrow Constance i Talmadge in "Sauce for the Goose." j Friday and Saturday Marion Da- ] vies in "Cecelia of the Pink Roses." Monday and Tuesday Tom Moore in I "Just for To-night." REGENT To-day Cecil B. DeMille's "Till I ; Come Back to You." To-morrow and Friday Charles j liay in "The Claws of the Hun." VICTORIA Tq-day and to-morrow —William Far num in "Les Miserables." Friday and Saturday Theda Bara; in "A Fool There Was," and "The Last Raid of the Zeppelins." I "The Naughty Wife," a farce by j Fred Jackson, the author of "A Full House," and other ex- 1 "The tremely successful plays, ! Naughty will be presented by Set- j Wife" wyn and Company at the I Orpheuni Theater to- j night. It is said the play comes here j exactly as presented in New York. I Chicago and Boston, where it scored successive triumphs. An excellent I cast has been selected, among whom I are such well-known farceurs as I Reeva Greenwood, Belle D'Arcy, Fred erick Sumner, Gaston Bell, Henry ) Keen, Entile Collins and others, all of whom are well known to those , who follow the affairs of the theater. The farce has been pronounced by I critics to be of exceptional merit. Cer | tain it is, that the unqualified sup- j port accorded it by theatergoers i wherever it has been presented, gives j added weight to the assertion. I Selwyn and Company have long since made an unmatched record for skill in producing this kind of play. It will be many years before such i ! farces as "Twin Beds" and "Fair and Warmer," both of which were pre sented by these managers, are forgot i ten. In their announcement they de- I clare "The Naughty Wife" to be their most successful farce. The statement i is a guarantee of its worth. I Something new in musical comedy i will be seen at the Orpheum on Sat urday, matinee and night. ; "Miss when Harvey D. Orr presents Blue here for tlie first time George I Eyes" V. Hobart's latest play, "Miss Blue Eyes." It is the first play i to hold that new love interest—the I love of a happily married couple. The I wooing, while it still Is held dear in ' the hearts of our audiences, is giving 1 way fo the theme built around that iinoie lasting love, the married. Woo ; ing is one of the more transitory, mar ried love the constant, lasting, and I to most of us it comes nearer home, j George V. Hohart wrote "Miss Blue nam Get at the Real Cause—Take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets ; That's what thousands of stomach sufferers are doing now. Instead of taking tonics, or trying to patch up a poor digestion, they are attacking the | real cause of the ailment clogged liver and disordered bowels. . Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets arouse the liver in a soothing, healing way. When the liver and bowels are per | forming their natural functions, away ■ goes indigestion and stomach troubles. If you have a bad taste in your j mouth, tongue coated, appetite poor, j lazy, don't-care feeling, no ambition or j energy, troubled with undigested foods, j you should take Olive Tablets, the j substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are a i purely vegetable compound mixed with ! olive oil. You will know them by their I olive color. They do the work without I griping, cramps or pain. I Take one or two at bedtime for quick relief, so you can eat what you like. At 10c and 25c per box. Ail druggists* HARRISBTJRG TELEGRAPH Eyes," to quote himself, "for wives i and for husbands and for others," j showing how all encompassing is the theme of happily married love. The ! east is headed by winsome Eva Fal ! ion, and includes: William Philbrick, I Clara ( Mackin, William Powers. , Thomas J. Grady, Lucille Fields, Mar gery Bonner, Winnie Archer, Frank ! Austin, Harry Belmont, Percy Oakes, May DeLour and Hart Mitchell. "The Smarter Set," an organization of colored entertainers, will be the at traction at the ; "Whitney mid Tutt'x Orpheum on Smarter Set" Tuesday next, presenting a new and original musical comedy, en j titled "Darkets Salem i Tutt Whitney and J. Homer Tutt are I the principals, and prominent in their support are: Lena Sanford Roberts, Emma Jackson, Virginia Wheeler, i Carrie King. Kstelle Cash, Julian Keith, Al. F. Watts, Alonzo Fender ; son, to say nothing of the bronze j beauty singing and dancing chorus. The two comedians and authors ; have had an extensive career, Salem .Tutt Whitney's first engagement be j ing with Puggsley's Brothers "Ten \ nessee Warblers" in lSm, from which he graduated and organized his own j company, which he culled "Famous Troubadours." Homer also turned his ] attention toward the stage, and with j his brother co-starred with the I "World's Famous Black Patti" or ganization in HUM, after which they I organized the "Southern Smart Set," I which merged into the present com pany, "The Smarter Sat," and in "Darkest Americans" these two I brothers are said to have provided an | entertainment that is clean, spark i ling, wholesome, rhythmic and tune | ful. Introducing typical negro fun. One of the pleasing features of the j Majestic bill tb first half of this | week is James O'Brien and |At the liis Southegn Girls, in an i Majestic up-to-the-minute vaudeville ottering. The girls make a : number of costume changes Und sing and dance in a pleasing manner. Mr. 1 O Brien, of course, does his share to : make the act enjoyable. Other attrac \ turns on the program are "Jimmle" ■ Connor, clever Irish monologist; De . lano and Pike, entertainers in variety; ! Lloyd and Whitehouse, in a comedy | ami singing offering, and the "itialto 1 Revue," a pretentious musical coni- I edy. I For the' last three days of this ; week, George Webb and Company will ; present "The Bonfire of Old Empires," j in reality a dramatization of President Wilson's demand that the world be | made as safe for the small nations as ! 'or the great ones. Marion Craig, 1 who. wrote "War Brides" for Mine. ; Xazimova, is also responsible for "The j Bonfire of Old Empires," and it is said thai she has conceived and written I not only an excellent one-act play, j but a light on the pathway to Democracy. Grouped around this | dramatic offering are: Adratn,-black face comedian; Wilson and Moore, two young girls in a repertoire of songs; the Frietches. novelty acrobats, and one other Keith attraction. j To-day and tomorrow brilliant Con ! stance Talmadge will be seen at the Colonial Thea t onsmm-e Talmadge ter in "Sauce , at the Colonial for the Goose." Sauce for the j goose wasn't sauce for the gander | 'his lime. In fact, it was a pretty i bitter pill for the gander to swallow. (■But having a vegy young and exceed ingly pretty and unusually resource ful wife, John Constanble hadn't any | business to go galavanting around j with a widow, so his wife set out to serve the gander with some of the I sauce he thought he was serving the goose. Constance Talmadge is as clever and pretty a little goose as you would want to see anywhere. Friday and Saturday, Marion Davis will be seen in "Cecelia of the Pink Roses." To-day is the final showing of the greatest production Cecil B. DeMille has yet released, "Till I • "Till I Come Come Back to You." I Buck to Vou" The large audiences that have seen it say it is one of the best pictures, with timely | interest, that has been booked at the ' Regent. This is the same picture i that filled the great Itialto Theater to I its doors for one solid week at $1 ad mission. ; To-morrow and Friday, the famous ! Thomas H. Ince star, Charles ltay, is \ appearing at the Regent in a great | .story, "The Claws of the Hun." This j is a picture that has a lesson in it for : mothers, inasmuch as its theme is the : enlistment of the young men of the country in the great world war. I I To-day and to-morrow will be the > I last times motion picture devotees of Harrisburg will I "I.es Miserables" have an opportunity i at the VU-torln of seeing the won ] derful William Kox 1 i superproductlon, "kes Mlserables," in 1 j which the noted screen artist, William I rarnum, is starred. "L,es Miserables." j Victor Hugo's famous masterpiece, has j been read by millions, and the screen ; version of It will doubtless be shown l to many more millions, because the screen play is so much more intensely interesting than the book could pos- I sibly be. It is the story of a man who has been thrown Into prison be i cause he stole a loaf of bread for his starving wife and children. Thq cruel treatment of the jailors forces "Jean Valjean" to escape. He afterwards , leads a changed life, and maltcs a ! success of It under and assumed name. His subsequent discovery and the great sacrifice he makes for thofte ho ' loves will grip the neart strings of all [j Who are fortunate enough to see it 1 to-day and to-morrow. And Buv Them Liberally— . mmmmm And I will ROOST on the Kaiser's Palace in Berlin! OCTOBER 2, 1918.
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