Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ee ee A TAKE r GLASS OF SALTS TO FLUSH ~/ OHIO SOCIETY VOTES THE KIDNEYS IF YOUR BACK HURTS, 0% UNIVERSAL SUFFRAGE More than 100 members of the Ohio ‘Kavises folks to overcome Kid- ounces of Jad Salts from any good | Society of Now York voted last night mey and Bladder trouble pharmacy; take a tablespoonful in @|at the Waldorf-Astoria to Indores lass of water before breakfast for a while it is only trouble. lew days and your kidneys will then | act fine. This famous salts is made Eating meat regularly eventually |from the acid of Erapes and lemon produces kidney trouble in some fori | juice, combined with lithia, and has or other, says a well-known authority, |been used for generations to flush, because the uric acid in meat excites |clogged kidneys and stimulate them the kidneys, they become overworked; get sluggish; clog up and cause all President Wilson's action in breaking cena en ene relations with Germany and called on Congress to pass @ universal training law w would be a perpetual #a: gunrd to the country, Pacifist members of the society who were expected to oppose any attempt |to normal activity also to neutralize the acids in the urine so it no longer sorts of distress, particularly back- |irritates, thus ending bladder dis-|to place the society * 4 ache and misery in the kidney region; |orders. — | rheumatic twinges, severe headaches, | Jad Salts cannot injure any one;|trality policy failed to appear and { acid stomach, constipation, torpid |makes a delightful effervescent lithta-| the yote to support tho President waa j liver, sleeplessness, bladder and urin-|water drink which millions of men | unanimous } ry. lrritation. and women take now and then to keep | president Wilson was proposed by he moment your back hurts or |the kidneys and urinary organs clean,| “irises P. Bruch, Presidemt of the kidneys aren't acting right, or if blad- |thus avoiding serious kidney disease, | | | a get about four |—~Advt. . hers yo : fe etn erie You understand Cigarette Value! i You recognize Cigarette Quality! You appreciate pure Turkish to- baccos, Put together right! Sure you do! Then Helmar is your cigarette— ‘ 3 Friend, if you will once, you will many times. ronal zretics wn the Warid Makers of the Highest Grade Terktsh and Eqyptan Liga ' ‘The Mildest tobacco for cigarettes is Turkish. The Best tobacco for cigarettes is Turkis: _ aed MAKES LITTLE Dit FERENCE WHAT YOU NEGhonh ORL D “WANT” WILL GO GET IT, ) | a qby “Our Betters,” which bappens to! THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, ‘i gave us Galeworthy’s “Justice.” | “Our Bettera” ts ill-timed and arti- ‘The motion indorsing ficial. To say that a play ts artificial | Maugham is an Englishman, we must doesn't mean necessarily that it is eomething to be damned. Oscar Wilde wrote brilliantly the sort of thing that Mr. Maugham has at- tempted to write, Comparison is a matter of the ear, Brain doesn't enter into the present question, It doesn't matter to you or te me whether an English title ts bought or sold. If title-seeking women go to London trom New York or Chicago they go about their own business. But we “take in” the theatre because | Mt is supposed to take in the world, London, with {its cut-and-dried morals, would undoubtedly be shocked find a market here, London would probably stand aghast at the immoral spectacle of Lady Grayston, even | though she has come from New York, entering into @ clandestine affair with | dissolute Englishman, It ts only by | getting someth! for nothing, ac- jcording to Mr, Maugham, that En) }land can be satisf nd as M CUTICURA HEALS INTENSEITCHING Covered With White Crust. | Hair Fell Out In Handfuls, THE NEW PLAYS “Our Betters” Ill-Timed and Artificial. BY CHARLES DARNTON. O MY MIND, there Is nothing #0 outrageous on our stage Meh play that makes Americans ridiculous, last night at the Hudson Theatre in “Our Betters,” written by W. on record as Somerset Maugham, a surgeon who still devotes himself to the Landon favoring the President's armed neu- | drawing-room, and produced by John D, Williams, whose earlier intelligence ‘Ofthe ba ih a Cost of 75¢. | ° i | | | | “Twas irritated for a great length of time by a continual itching of the scalp, and my scalp was becoming covered with a thick white crust. The itchin; | became so intense that it almost pestle | beyond myself to endure the torture | much longer, and | was compelled to keep scratching my head constantly, My hair was falling out in handfuls and became very thin, and I was ever finding | | haic and dandruff on my shoulders. “After reading of the results obtained | from using Cuticura Soap and Ointment 1 bought them, and when | had used one box of Cuticura Ointment and one cake of Cuticura Soap I found myself | free from dandruff, itching, and falling | hair. I was healed." (Signed) Albert E. Hansen, 289 New York Ave., Union Hill, N. J., Sept. 14, 1916, | Clear the skin and scalp and keep | them clear by using Cuticura Soap for every-day toilet purposes For Free Sample Each by Return Mail address post-card: “Cuticura, Dept. H. Boston."” Sold everywhere. Adv H Give “California Syrup of Figs” if Cross, Fever-| 1 ish, Sick, Bilious, Constipated— They love it =| A laxative to-day saves a sick child to-morrow, Children simply will not take the time from play to empty their bowels, which become clogged up with waste, liver gets sluggish, stomach sour Look at the tongue, mother! If coated, or your child is listless, cross, feverish, breath bad, restless, doesn't eut heartily, full of cold or has the erippe or a sore throat or any other hildren's ailment, give a teaspoonful of “California Syrup of Figs,” then don't worry, because it is perfectly harmless, and in @ few hours all this | constipation poison, sour bile and fer- ‘ | able ecesf + in Eng- Buch @ play was seen take his word for it. So far as the author is concerned, however, the point to be made is that be has written a play of no impor- tance. At the same time be makes point when he says that Americans who go to England on the bunt for titles can only seek to enjoy them- elves, whereas the English thom- vee bave certain duties that engage ut he never ther on America or England, There ts a great deal of idle talk, together with a rather sorry lot of American-born women who find themselves at a disadvantage on Eng- lish soll, “They're not worth talking about,” remarks the American girl who has managed to take her common sense abroad with her. And eho is quite right. Her judgment might be extended to the play asa whole. Lady Grayston is merely a bard, worldly, seifish creature who has made a social success in London and all sense of spiritual values in the process, Mr, Maugham presents this character quite ruthlessly and skilfully enough to snow her shallow- ness, pettiness and baseness. As a foil he iven her a mature duchess who ivorced her husband and is pursuing a worthless young cad called “Tony.” When their lalson is discovered, Lady Grayston cheerfully swears at “Tony,” adding “I told you It was too risky.” The rest of the story isn’t worth telling. In the end the play descends to burlesque wit & rather amusing scene between Lad Grayston and fatuous patron, who calls her “girlie.” In this incident Chrystal Herne and John Flood did capital work. At other times Miss Herne pitched her a] o high for the good of her performance. Rose Coghlan added gely to the mance as battle, asure of the per- an old campaigner in the and Ronald Squire did bit of acting as the unspeak- ony.” It was the acting of Leonore Harris as a princess without ‘Nusions, however, that gave the per- formance its only claim to sincerity. With Her dark beauty to count upon. Miss Harris proved herself capable of playing something more than the adventuress of melodrama. Quietly and \spelendidly—again her beauty must be considcred—she always com- manded attention and interest. After many misadventures, this handsome creature has discovered the secret of poise on the stage. In other words, Miss Harris has finally learned the first lesson in acting Fritz Willlams gave himself lightly to a minor role tn whic Gottacha k might have others acted well in a that ts likely to be forgotten | v Restans. | SACKAM , Mareh 13.—Gov. | Hiram W. Johnson announced hie res- | fenation from the Governorship here to day, effective March 15, to t dution United State Wash! MOTHER! LOOK AT YOUR CHILD'S TONGUE Watch Children Now! Guard Against Colds, Grippe, Sore Throat and Sickness by Keeping | | Liver and Bowels Free from Poisons | | menting waste will gently move out éf the bowels, and you have a well, playful ehild 0. \ thorough “in side cleansing” is oftt all that is MAROH 18 Nuxated Iron, 1 had I do not make @ practice of reeom- various mineral a mending advertised al produets, " vaoideeaey but [nay Tron #0 potent y to meat complaint i, Pisces hardened secretions, ete. and 1 {nad about reached the usion that the jway to supply tron was to get the 7 ationt to eat very large quantities of tn f hom : carrots and lentils, when I came demand for 1 Iron, Ar ‘ ry to offset the greater 4 Nuxated Iron, an bet of health hazards to be met @t The Right Way “ The Right Number Bre AS SURE of the numbers of those you call by telephone as you are of the street addresses of those you call upon in person. ‘THE RIGHT WAY to obtain the rigAt tele- phone numbers of those you wish to call is to consult the Telephone Directory. Tus PRACTICE saves your time, because it eliminates the ‘‘wrong number’’ connections that result when you take telephone numbers that have grown out of date from old billheads, letter-heads or business cards. Always consult your Telephone Directory first Niwas hon Shoda Be Used In Every Hospital and Prescribed by Every Physician Says Dr. Howard James, late of the United States Putlic Health Service. It quickly enriches the blood, strengthens the nerves and puts most astonishing youthful power and vigor into the veins of both men and women. It often increases the strength and endurance of delicate, nervous, run-down folks 200 per cent, in two weeks’ time. Opinions of Dr. Ferdinand King, New Yor k Medical Author, Dr. T, Alphonsus Wallace and other physicians who have tested Nuxated Iron in their own private practice, p In @ very interesting and instructve scourse on the great value of plenty iron tn the blood, Howard James, the United States Public Health bea Service, sata A patient of mine remarked te me te of n enaily di 4 and je health bullder ptury ol salen m a preliminary eXamination %, & phyatotan tor having been on a #ix weeks’ course yeara' exporlence in’ thie counts? caayine © iMho hae. been wiven_ many. Nomeraes ay, Doctor, that there stuft le tke vn upinion on Nuxnted Iron, Dr. Wallace mastic,’ , te readily and quickly mak creased viMOr who said artily concur tm all that Dr, James in ko acta I would ot to mention value by im In the moet essary to enable 4 into ilving ter how much Dr, Howard James, late of United States Public Health Service, tells physicians he believes that more Nux ated lrou should be prescribed meet the great problem of iron deficien with its attendent symptoms of ness, meroousness, lack of vitality, pale mess and generally rundown conditions. WARNS AGAINST USE OF ORDINARY MET- ALIC IRON so commonly taken by most people, Nuxated [ros not #tronK © Yourself to make the you can Work or without becom! te two five grain tabiets o} i ie per day Bel them Then test aC amiee A @ how much you eaming with the y own experience feel it fe such a ft should be kept tn every howp preseribed by every Wh ne fan In antry."” ‘ PAE DB. Sauer, & Boston phystctan, who ei haw studied both in this country and great mst Ton uropean Medical Institutions, was ark necessary. It should be the first treat Beware of counterfeit fig syrups Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of “California Syrup of Figs,” which has full directions for babies, children of all ages and for groun-ups plainly printed on the bottle, See that it is made by the “California Fig Syrup Company.” Don't merely ask for Syrup of Figs, but ask for “California Syrup of Figs.” Remember, “Call- dornia.”-—Advt, ‘ ‘ he New York World Sets the Pace) .