Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, October 23, 1914, Page 9, Image 9

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    Help the Stomach
Digest Your Food
When the stomach falls to digest
and distribute that which Is eaten,
the bowels become clogged with a
mass of waste and refuse that fer
ments and generates poisons that
•re gradually forced Into the blood,
causing distress and often serious
Illness.
Most people naturally object to
the drastic cathartic and purgative
agents that shock the system. A
mild, gsntle laxative, positive in
its efTeet and that will quickly re
lieve constipation Is Dr. Caldwell's
Syrup Pepsin, sold by druggists at
fifty cents and one dollar a bottle.
It does not gripe or cramp, but acts
easily and pleasantly and Is there
fore the most satisfactory remedy
for children, women and elderly
persons. For a free trial bottle
write to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 451
Washington St., Montlcello, 111.
TAKE SALTS TO
FLUSH KIDNEYS
Eal less meat if you feel Back-
achy or have Bladder
. . trouble
Meat forms uric acid which excites
and overworks the kidneys in their ef
forts to filter it from the system.
■Regular eaters of meat must flush the
kidneys occasionally. You must re
lieve them like you relieve your bow
els; removing all tho acids, waste and
poison, else you fee! a dull misery in
the kidney region, sharp pains in the
back or sick headache, dizziness, your
stomach sours, tongue is coated and
when the weather is bad you have
rheumatic twinges. The urine is
cloudy, full of sediment; the channels
often get Irritated, obliging you to get
up two or three times during the
night.
To neutralize these irritating acids
and flush off the body's urinous waste
-get about four ounces of Jad Salts
from any pharmacy; take a tabfe
spoonful in a glass of water before
breakfast for a few days and your
kidneys will then act tine and bladder
disorders disappear. This famous
falts is made from the acid of grapes
and lemon juice, combined ,wlth lithia,
And has been used for generations to
clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys
and stop bladder irritation. Jad Salts
is inexpensive; harmless and makes
a delightful effervescent lithia-water
drink which millions of men and wo
men take now and then, thus avoid
ing serious kidney and bladder dis
• eases.—AcHjertlsement.
SAGE TEA KEEPS "
YOUyi DARK
When Mixed With Sulphur It
Brings Back Its Lustre
and Abundance
Gray hair, however handsome, de
notes advancing age. We.all know the
advantages of a youthful appearance.
Your hair is your charm. It makes
or mars the face. When it fades,
turns gray and looks dry. wispy and
scraggly, just!a few applications of
Sage Tea and Sulphur enhances its
appearance a hundred-fold.
Don't stay gray! Look young! Either
prepare the tonic at home or get from
any drug store a 50-cent bottle of
''Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com
pound." Thousands of folks recom
mend this ready-to-use preparation,
because it darkens the hair beautifully
and removes dandruff, stops scalp itch
ing and falling hair; besides, no one
can possibly tell, as it darkens so
naturally and evenly. You moisten a
sponge or soft brush with it, drawing
this through tha hair, taking one small
strand at a time. By morning the
gray hair disappears: after another
application or two. its natural color
is restored and it becomes thick,
flossy and lustrous, and you appear
_ ears younger.—Advertisement.
Mtnkuta A Mlaera Trans. Cm.
DELIGHTFUL TRIPS
"BY SEA"
"BALTIMORE TO
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SAVANNAH and return * ". 00
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Including jieals and stateroom ac
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for booklet.
W. P. TIR.VER, G. P. A., Baltimore. Md.
EDUCATIONAL
Enroll Next Monday
DAY AND NIGHT SCHOOL
Positions for all Graduate*
SCHOOL OF COMMERCE
15 S. M YRKKT SQUARE.
HARRISBURG, PA.
Harrisburg Business College
329 Market St.
Fall term, September first Day
and night. 29th year.
Harrisburg, Pa.
r
Non-greasy Toilet Cream keeps
the skin soft and velvety. An ex
quisite toilet preparation. 26c.
GORGA9 DRUG STORES
IS K. Third St, nnd P. R. R. Station
V- J
REPAIRING
•r adjusting, Jewelry cleaning or
re polishing, take It to
SPRINGER™^""^
2OS MARKET ST.—Bell Phone
WHATS IN A NAME?
In business it may mean a fortune.
Repetition makes reputation. There
fore it 1s essential that the name of
your establishment stands out promi
nent with the merchandise have
for sale. An attractive name plate not
only serves to embellish your adver
tisement but It makes the name stand
out In decided contrast from the same
ness of type in the group of advertise
ments around yours. Sketches sub
mitted on request, or engravings made
from your own drawings. Telegraph
Printing Company.
ifty, ~~ *
t Try Telegraph Want Ads
V
FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 23, 1914.
THE LAST SHOT
By FREDERICK PALMER
Copyright, 1914. ky Ckirlo t>crlb»er»» Sum*.
[Continued]
"Yes. our JO dependent
on communication, is in danger of dis
ruption," concluded Turcas. "To avoid
disorder, we think it beet to retreat
across the plain to our own range."
At the word "retreat" Westerllng
sprang to his feet, his cheeks purple,
the veins of his neck and temples
sculptured as be took a threatening
step toward the group, fell back
before the physical rage or the man,
all except the vice-chief, his mouth a
thin, ajjby Ilnei who held his own.
"You cowards'." Westerling thun
dered. "Ratreat when we have five
million* to their three!"
"We have not that odds now." replied
the parchment voice. "All their men
are engaged. They have caught us at
a disadvantage, unable to use our num
bers except in detail in trying to hold
on In face of—"
"I tell you we cannot retreat!" Wes
terllng interrupted. "That is the end.
I know what you do'not know. I am
in toueh with the government Tea, )
know—"
This brought fresh alarm into faces
■which had become set in grim stoiclstc
by many alarms. If the people were in
Ignorance of the losses and the army
In ignorance of the nation's feeling,
the officers of the staff were no less Id
Ignorance of what passed over the
long-distance wire between the chiel
of staff and the premier.
"I know what Is best—l alone!"
"Westerling continued, driving home his
point. "Tell our commanders to hold
Neither general nor man 1B to budge
They are to stick to the death. Any
one who does not I shall hold up te
public shame as a poltroon. Whc
knows but Lanstron's attack may be
a council of desperation? The Browns
may be worse off than we are. Hold
hold! If we are tired, they are tired
Frequently it takes only an ounce more
of resolution to turn the tide of battle
Hold, hold! To-morrow will tell a dif
ferent story! We are going to win
yet! Yes, we are going to win!"
"It is for you to decide, Your Excel
lency," said Turcas, slowly and pre
clsely. "You take the responsibility."
"I take the responsibility. I am ID
command!" replied Westerling in un
flinching pose.
"Yes, Your Excellency."
And they filed out of the room, leav>
lng him to his Isolation.
• •
After Marta had learned, over the
telephone, from Lanstron of the cer
tain repulse of the Gray assault, fatigue
—sheer physical fatigue such as made
soldiers drop dead In slumber on the
earth, their packs etill on their backs
—overcame her. Her work was done.
The demands of nature overwhelmed
her faculties. She slept with a nervous
twitching of her muscles,- a restless
tossing of her lithe body, until ham
mers began beating op her temples,
beating, gating with the sound ol
shell bursts, as if to warn her that pun
ishment for her share in the killing
wae to be the eternal concussion of
battle in her ears. At length she real
ized that the cannonading was real.
Hastening out-of«doors, HS her
glance swept toward the range she saw
bursts of shrapnel smoke from the
guns of the Browns nearer than since
the fighting had begun on the main
line, and these were directed at bodies
of infantry that were in confused re
treat down the Blopes, while all traffio
,on the pass road was moving towa'rd
the rear. Impelled by a new appre
hension she hurried to the tunnel.
Lanstron answered her promptly In a
Voice that had a ring of relief and Joy
in place of the tension that had char
acterised it since the outbreak of the
war.
"Thanks to you, Marta!" he cried
"Everything goes bock to you—thanks
to you came this chance to attack, and
we are succeeding at every point! You
are the general, you the maker of vic
tories!"
"Yes, the general of still more kill
ing!" she cried In iadignatlon. "Why
have you gone on with the slaughter'-
Got to Go Deep to
Cure Rheumatism
Liniments Help Lpcally, But
the Disease is Way Down
Inside.
To get at the source of rheumatic
pains it requires the deep, searching In
fluence of S. 8. S., the famous blood pur
ifier. Itheumatlsm is primarily a blood
disease that, since it is In this vital fluid
that rheumatic tendencies are carried,
lodges in the Joints and muscles, there to
irritate the nerves and produce pain.
And in order to drive out these pain In
flicting poisons It requires 8. S. 8. to
sink deep into the tiny glands imbedded
In the innermost tissues. S. S. 8. travels
wherever the blood goes and never loses
its medicinal influence. This explains
why It overcomes the most chronic forms
of rheumatism, why it dislodges those hard
deposits that thicken the joints, for It acts
as a solvent and assists the blood to pro
vide In the tissues those natural elements
for which the body building process con
tinually craves and must have.
If you have never used S. 8. 8. for
rheumatism, get a bottle today of any
druggist. Use It as directed and with
some simple home helps you will soon
dethrone the worst and most painful
forms of rheumatism. Write the medi
cal department. The Swift Speriflc Co.,
63 Swift Kldg., Atlanta, <la., for addi
tional advice. Yours may be a case
where a slight help from a specialist
whose advice Is free, will solve the mys« I
tery that has been making life miserable
for you. When you ask for S. 8. 8. In-1
■lst upon It and refuse all substitutes. I
I did not help you uu>. Why?"
No reply came. She poured ou*
more questions, and still no reply. She
pressed the button and tried again, but
she might as well have been talking
over a dead wire.
• ••••• •
One man alone against the tide
rather, the man who has seen a tide
rise at his orders now finding all Its
sweep against him—Weeterllng, accus
tomed to have millions of men move
it Ills command, found himself, one
man out of the millions, still and help
less while they moved of their own Im-i
pulses.
As news of positions lost came ta,
he could only grimly repeat, "Hold!
Tell them to hold!" fruitlessly, like ad
jurations to the wind to cease blowing.
The bell of the long distance kept
ringing unheeded, until at last his atd«
came to say that the premier must
speak either to him or to the vice
chief. Westerllng staggered to his
feet and with lurching steps went into
the closet. There he sank down on the
chair In a heap, staring at the tele
phone mouthpiece. Again the hell rang.
Clenching his hands in a rocking ef»
fort, he was able to stiffen hie spine
once more as he took down the re
ceiver. To admit defeat to the pre
mier—no, he was not ready for that
yet.
"The truth Is out!" said the premier
without any break In his voice and
with the fatalism of one who never
allows himself to blink a fact. "Teleg-
Mt>hers at the front who got out of
touch with the staff were still In touch
with the capital. Once the reports be
gan to come, they poured in—decima
tion of the attacking column, panic
and retreat In other portions of the
line—chaos!"
"It's a lie!" Westerling declared
vehemently.
"The news has reached the prees,"
the premier proceeded. "Editions are
already In the streets."
"What! Where your censorship?"
gasped Westerling.
"It is helpless, a straw protecting
against a current," the premier re
plied. "A censorship goes back to
physical force, as every law does In
the end —to the police and the army;
and all, these days, finally to public
opinion. After weeks of secrecy, of re
ported successes, when nobody really
knew what was happening, this sudden
disillusioning announcement of the
truth has sent the public mad."
"It Is your business to control the
public!" complained Westerling.
"With what, now? With a speech or
a lullaby? As well could you stop the
retreat with your naked hande. My
business to control the public, yes, but
not unless you win victories. I gave
you the soldiers. We have nothing but
police here, and I tell you that the pub
lic is in a mob rage—the whole public,
bankers and business and professional
men included. I have Just ordered the
stock exchange and all banks closed."
"There's a cure for mobs!" cried
Westerling. "Let the police Are a few
volleys and they'll hthave."
"Would that stop the retreat of the
army? We must sue for peace."
"Sue for peace! Sue for peace when
we have five millions against their
three!"
"It seems so, as the three millions
are winning!" said the premier. .
"Sue for peace because women go
hysterical? Do you suppose that*the
Browns will listen now when they
think they have the advantage? Leave
peace to me! Give me forty-eight hours
more! I have told our troops to hold
and they will hold. I don't mistake
cowardly telegraphers' rumors for
facts—"
"Pardon me a moment," the premier
interrupted. "I must answer a local
call." So astute a man of affairs as
he knew that Westerling's voice, storm
ing, breaking, tightening with effort at
control, confirmed all reports of dis
aster. "In fact, the crockery is broken
—for you and for me!" said the pre
mier when he spoke again. His life
had been a gamble and the gamble bad
turned against him In playing for a
great prize. There was an admirable
stoicism in the way he announced the
news he had received from the local
call: "The chief of police calls me up
to say that the uprising is too vast for
him to hold. There isn't any mutiny,
but his men simply have become a
part of public opinion. A mob of wom
en and children is starting for the pal
ace to ask me what I have done with
their husbands, brothers, sons, and fa
thers. They won't have to break in to
find me. I'm very tired. I'm ready. 1
shall face them from the balcony. Yes,
Westerllng, you and I have achieved a
place In history, and they're far more
bitter toward you than me. However,
you don't have to come back."
"No, I don't have to go back' No.
I was not to go back If I failed!" said
Westerling dizzily.
In the inner room, whose opening
door gave glimpses of Lanstron and
the division chiefs, a magic of secret
council which the Juniors could not
quite understand had wrought the won
der. Lanstron had not forgotten the
dead. He could see them; he could
see everything that happened. Had
not Partow said to him: "Don't Just
read reports. Visualize men and
events. Be the artillery, be the in
fantry, be the wounded—live and think
In their places. In this way only can
you really know your work!"
To be Continued
ODD FELLOWS AT GETTYSBURG
Special to The Telegraph
Gettysburg, Pa., Oct 23. Forty
eight members of Canton Westmore
land, No. 53, Patriarchs Militant, In
dependent Order of Odd Fellows, of
Mount Pleasant. Pa., en route from
Pottstown to their home in eleven
automobiles, stopped In Gettysburg
and made a tour of the battlefield.
TF our advertising will but serve
t * to bring you here for a personal
MHBB_ investigation of our merchandise
—our merchandise will bring forth
Likewise the service rendered
here and your ultimate satisfaction,
which, by the way, we are sure
enough of to guarantee, .will bring
U *° our
ymi||:| Take this Chester Sack Suit,
W mm fmmmiM for instance, here's a garment for
workmanship, the true
f 1 Kuppenheimer Clothes
/ ||fß» S2O, $25, S3O
I Hi Other Good Makes
J 1(1 $lO, sl2, sls, $lB
304 Market St. Harrisburg, Pa:•
Miss Cromleigh Gives Organ
Recital at Mechanicsburg
Special to The Telegraph
Mechanicsbupg. Pa., Oct. 23. —Miss
Clara B. Cromleigh, orKanist of Beth
j lehem Lutheran Church, Harrisburg,
gave a very successful organ recital
in the MAhodlat Kpiscopal Church
last even in™ Assisting her were Mrs.
J. V. Miller, contralto; Miss Mae Sing
iser, soprano, and Roy Mathias, bari
tone, of Hawisburg. The church was
crowded with an appreciative audi
ence, as Miss Cromleigh's ability as a
musician is well knuwn. Her pro
gram was well selected and every
number played with expression and
faultless technique. The singers were
in remarkably good voice and sang in
rich, full tones. The following pro
gram was given: Prelude and Fugue
in E Minor (the short one). Bach;
Legend, Federlein: baritone solo, "If
God So Clothe the Grass," Bischoff,
Mr. Mathias; "The Answer," Wolsten
holme; "Rustic Dance," Demarest;
soprano solo, "My Redeemer and My
Lord," Buck, Miss Singlser; prelude,
"Heroic," Faulkes; overture, "Stra
delia." Flotow; contralto solo, "Rest,"
Bischoff, Mrs. Miller; Handel:
baritone solo. "Still. Still With Thee,"
Jacobsen, Mr. Mathias; March Mili
taire. Gounod.
RIBS BROKEN* BY KICK
Special to The Telegraph
Waynesboro, Pa., Oct. 23.—Abram
Martin, near Smlthsburg, was kicked
by a horse and had two of his ribs
broken. He was holding the hoof of
the mare while Dr. R. H. Smith, vet
erinarian, was operating on It.
MARRIED AT HAGERBTOWN
Special to The Telegraph
Halifax, Pa, Oct. 23. —On Thurs
day evening Miss Pauline Shammo,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William T.
Shammo. and Walter I. Mattls, both
of this place, were marired at llagers
town. Md.
Glorious Relief! Corns
Callouses, Foot Lumps Go
You'll feel like a kid again, you'll be
tickled to death at the painless, quick
, riddance of all your corns once you
paint on Putnam's Extractor.
Do it to-day! Dealers everywhere
have been selling this safe, dependable
and sure remedy for nearly fifty years.
Only costs a quarter. Does the trick
every time.
Putnam's Cream Extractor was the
lirst corn remover on the market, has
:o-day the largest sale, and simply be
cause it's by long odds the best. Sold
by C. M. Forney.—Advertisement,
III'XTKR INSTANTLY KILLED
Special to The Telegraph
Dunoannon, Pa., Oct. 23.—M. W.
Derrick received a message from Lan
caster on Wednesday evening that his
father, Richard Derrick, was shot on
his own land while hunting squirrels.
Later it has been learned that Mr.
Derrick was hunting; squirrels on his
farm near Pequea, Lancaster county,
and in getting over a fence his gun
was accidental* - discharged d.nd he re
ceived the full contents In the head,
killing him instantly. Mr. Derrick was
a former resident of this place and
was proprietor of the I,aird House, in
Market street, removing from here to
Lancaster. He was 57 years old.
iiclstops,
NEURALGIA GONE
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give instant relief Cost
dime a package.
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the whole world. Don't suffer! Re
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found that headache or neuralgia
misery is needless. Get what you
ask for.—Advertisement.
You Should
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YOU WORRY
FFICE YTFA ABOUT YOUR BILLS
-— ——\ or notes when they are coming due?
j Maybe we can help you! We cer
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L the First National Bank as that is
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they need it at the
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Warf Map
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jo «rai7M*der pretesting till* OOtTPOK and 10 omntrn to owe*
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Mr MAIL—In elty or ootalde, lor 12c. Stamps, each or money enter.
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9