Blood Sufferers Want to Know The Light is Turned on to a | Subject of Darkness. Tue mere fact th»t S. 9. S., the famous blood purifier, drives out disease is a world's story, a topic of conversation wher- j ever men set together. They wonder why, simply because most t remedies are mystified and put before tlicm as "discoveries." The facts am that we pay too much attention to possibilities and not enough to real, homespun accomplish ment. 8. S. S. is a remedy of our fathers. It has a history that is written deeply in men's minds because It hss done the work, driven out deep seated disease, revived hope, put the O. K. on appearance and damped down tight any effort of germs to get the upper hand. Any sore spot on the skin is an Immediate demand for S. S. S. since the first principle of this famous remedy is to strike out for places of trouble. This is a physiological fact and S. S. S. Is true to the workings of our body. Get a bottle of S. P. S. today at any druggist and begin blood health. It will master any blood disease and do It In a way to emphasize Its Influence. And If you would like definite advice write The Swift Sperlfic Co., ."6 Swift Rldg., Atlanta, Ga. Their medical department Is where most people first seek advice that puts them on the straight road. BIG EATERS GET KIDNEY TROUBLE Take Salts at first sign of Blad der irritation or Backache The American men and women must suard constantly against Kidney trouble, because we eat too much and all our food is rich. Our blood is filled with uric acid, which the kidneys strive to filter out, they weaken from over work, become sluggish, the eliminative tissues clog, and the result is kidney trouble, bladder weakness and a gen- Lerul decline in health. When your kidneys feel like lumps of lead; your back hurts or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment, or you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night: if you suffer with sick headache or dizzy, nervous spells, acid stomach, or you have rheu matism when the weather is bad, get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a table spoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This fa mous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for gen t rations to flush and stimulate clogged kidneys; to neutralize the acids in the urine so it no longer is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder dis orders. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot In jure, makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water beverage, and belongs In every home, because nobody can make n mistake by having a good kidney flushing any time. —Advertisement. TO DARKEN HAIR APPLY SAGE TEA Look Young ! Bring Back Its Natural Color, Gloss and Thickness Common garden sage brewed into a heavy tea with sulphur and alcohol added will turn gray, streaked and faded lu«ir beautifully dark and luxu riant, remove every bit of dandruff, stop scalp itching and falling hair. Just a few applications will prove a revelation if jour hair is fading, gray or dry, seraggly and thin. Mixing the Sage Tea and Sulphur recipe at home, though, is troublesome. An easier way is to get the ready-to-use tonic, costing about 50 cents a large bottle at drug stores known as "Wyeth's Sage and !•' iphur Compound," thus avoiding r< lot of muss. While wispy, gray, faded hair is not sinful, we all desire to retain our j youthful appearance and attractive ness. By darkening your hair with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur, no one can tell, because it does so naturally, so evenly. You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning all gray hairs have disappeared, and, after an other application or two, your hair be comes beautifully dark, glossy, soft and luxuriant.—Advertisement. Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE in Effect May 24, lilt. TRAINS leave Harrlsburg— for Winchester ami Martlnsburg at 1:03, *7:50 a. m., *3:40 p. m. For Hagevtown, Chambersburg, Car- I lisle, Mechanlcsburg and Intermediate stations at 5:03, *7:50, *11:53 a. m •»:40, 5:32, *7:40, *11:00 p. m. Additional trains lor Carlisle «n* Mechanlcsburg at V:4B a. ui., J:lg, |;fr <:SO. 9:30 a. m. For DUlsburg at 5:03, *7:50 and •11:63 a. in., 2:18, *1:40, 5:31 and p. in. •Dally. All other trains dally exosM •undav. H. A. RIDDLE, J. H. TONQE. O. P. A. Quick Relief for Cough*, Golds and Hoaraeneoft Clear the Voice—Fine for Rpeakers and Singers. 25c. COBRAS' DRLG STORES. MONDAY EVENING, | Runaway June ! By George Randolph Chester and Lillian Chester. <| CopyrigM 1915, by Serial Publication Corporation. —; Sammy O'Keefe came to the door in j answer to Ned's ring, and. a'much Blye! Always Blye! wrinkled face poked itself out of the second story window. "Does June Warner live here?" asked Ned. "No, sir." The head in the second story wiudow was jerked in Immediately, and there was a hasty shuttle on the stairs lead ing to the third floor, a shuffle made by setting tip tlio right foot first and pull ing the left one up to it. Also there was a mad scrambling on the third floor, while Sammy O'Keefe In the front doorway looked the thyong iu the eye with admirable truthfulness and swore that there was no June Warner there, no June Moore, no June any thing: that there had never been any June in the house except the one be tweeu May and July: that there had never been in this house any such young lady as the one who had just been described; that there probably never would be; that he had never seen such a young lady or heard of one or expected to or hoped to. "What's the matter here.Sammy7"the Widow O'Keefe herself asked, panting considerably and holding a much warp ed hand over her heart, but talking shrilly nevertheless. "Come, search the house!" she proud ly dared them. "If you find hide or hair of any such two young ladles, one or either of them, I'll go to jail—if you can find an officer to make the arrest Come on in. all of you!" Some of them were for holding back, but Ned Warner was perfectly callous as to whether or not lie took any one's word or doubted it. He meant to find his wife. By the circumstance of bringing home a genuine gourd to little Maggie Casey, June came home around by an extremely back way and so missed the searchers. "Search the cellar, if you please!" mocked the Widow O'Keefe, leading the way. "Maybe you'll look in the kindly bin! And here's the coal chute! Now come on upstairs! Here's the hall that you saw before, and here's my son Sammy, a fine young boy still: and this is the parlor. The organ there, sir, is not hollow, as you can tell by lifting up the lids! Open all the doors and see." The place was vacant. No one was there. Ned Warner, puzzled and deter, mined, inspected the third floor. No re sults. The Widow O'Keefe had gath ered up all the clothes and belongings and put them in a sheet and poked them into Mrs. McPherson's third story window. June Warner tripped lightly across the street, let herself in at the Widow O'Keefe's front door and trotted brisk ly up the stairs. She swung around the curving banister. "Maybe you'd like to look up the mm RED MOJPD Also Itching. Kept from Resting, Real Fretful. Used CuticuraSoap and Ointment. Eczema Left. Also Itching Pimples Healed. • B. F. D. No. 1, Felton, Pa.—"My boy was about six weeks old when he had ecze ma badly. We got an oi?Bment but found It did not help him. The eczema seemed like a rash and it was very red, itching and Inflamed. It seemed to keep him from rent ing. He was real fretful. Ho had ths breaking out several weeks. We used only ono cake of Cutlcura Soap and one box of | the Cutlcura Ointment and the eczema left him and he hasn't had It since." (Signed) Mrs. Oicar Frey, June 11, 1914. 634 Cypresa St., Philadelphia, Pa.— "Every part of my body was full of pimples. They were of small size with little whit® heads and Itched something awful. My clothing Irritated and I would go along (he street scratching. The trouble lasted a good many years. I used medicine* but they did not heal me. I used Cutlcura Soap and' Ointment for one month and I was well." (Signed) Benj. Gaev, June 19,'1^ Sample Each Free by Mall With 32-p. Skin Book on request. Ad dress post-card "Cutlcura. Dept. T, Mos -1 ton.", boid throughout the world. cuiruuejri,* suggested the Widow O'Keefe on the third floor. Ned Warner walked toward the hall door. .Tune Warner started up to the third floor! SEVENTH EPISODE Tbs Tormentors. CHAPTER I. mFIE Widow O'Keefe stooped quickly and snatched some thing from the floor while fire strangers peiyed into every ab surd nook and eornejvf the two rooms and bath which comprised the Widow O'Keefe's top floor suit. The object was a small snapshot of June. The deserted husband of pretty .lune Warner was at. the hall door with his hand reached out for the knob, aud in another instant Ned Warner and June would hare been face to face'. In that instant the Widow O'Keefe whipped the snapshot under her apron, aud the very swiftness of the motion struck into the corner of Ned Warner's rest less eyes. He turned, and he and the father of June glanced at each other. There wa# something susgfciijls in the bent and warped and withered Widow O'Keefe and her tall slip of a son. Ned came abruptly from the door and re newed his search. At that very mo ment June, just outside, had paused <ili the third step from the bottom to retie the bow upon her saucy little slip per and to give it a vigorous pat to make it behave and stay in place. Slim young Sammy O'Keefe walked to the window, whistling, and glanced out with an air of great indifference. On the other side of the itree'e stood Officer Toole, and his eyes roved anx iously from window to window of the narrow, dingy slice of a house which wag the Widow O'Keefe's. At sight of Sammy Officer Toole pointed energet ically toward the door. He waved both arms and pointed toward the doorway. Sammy then slipped quietly out of the room. June! The listless Sammy used the next quickest method to wireless. With one noiseless spring he straddled the banister rail, whizzed around the curve and down to June, who was halfway lip the stairs, jumped o(T with a footstep as light as a feather, grab bed the astounded girl by the wrist and dragged her down the steps at the risk of both their necks. Sammy shov ed June into the second floor hall closet. Sammy locked the door and siuck the key in his pocket and set the springs in his thin legs to work and was sitting lazily on the top step, bored and whistling softly, when Ned Warner and Mr. and Mrs. John Moore and Bobby and Iris Blethering cams out Bobby extremely dejected and Iria explaining volubly that it was all a mistake. June couldn't possibly hare been ticre. But she must have been, after all, because— Still, how could it be? June in the dark closet, shut off from all light and sound, stood bewildered, her eyes distended in the darkness, while Ned stood not two feet away from her. He had paused before that very, door, as if some delicate mag netism had caught and held him there. No trace of her anywhere; no trace of 1 Marie, the French-Canadian maid with the high cheek bones; no trace of the mysterious black Vandyked man, whom none of them had cared to mention to the Widow O'Keefe. Gilbert Blye! Ned clinched his lists, and his brow grew black as his mind filled with the image of that dark, handsome face with its glowing eyes and suave smile. That image had never been absent from I Ned's mind since the disappearance of his beautiful bride. A thousand times I that succession of incidents had flash- I ed upon his memory with vivid clear -1 ness—June asleep in the Pullman drnw i ing room on their honeymoon trip. 1 while he, up forward, happily smoked; the finding her gone after (he train ■ had left Tarnville; the discovery that [she had been helped by the black I Vandyked man to board a local head ed to New York; Ned's chase after ' them in an express train, and his train : pulling alongside them in the approach , to the Grand Central station; the sight, ! through the windows of the parallel car*, of that suave stranger bending j over June with his infernal smile, and ! her smiling tip at him; Blye following ; June's taxi in another from the sta i tion. and Ned's fruitless pursuit in a ] third taxi; the chase out to Brvnport | that same night, when June had stolen i her clothes and Marie; the return ! chase, where Ned had seen June and ! Marie step Into Blye's luxurious lirnou sine and whirl away with him! Ev erywhere that Ned hiW found a trace of June he had found a trace of Gil bert Blye. and lie wished to live for ene thing—to meet Blye face to face and with his bare hands strangle that 1 scoundrel to death! ; Ned became aware of the Widow , O'Keefe eying him from midway of i the stairs. She was a frail looking | old woman, with her gnarled hands j clasped before her. hut her beady little (.•yes were as sharp si# the unexpected fires from dull jewels, and there was not ono move of Ned's party which es caped her. Sammy, still whistling with j overnonchalance. was so persistently not gazing at the closet door that it was a wonder no one asked for the ! key. ! See Runaway June in motion pic j tures every Monday at the Victoria j Theater. The picture* each week por i tray the episode published in the Tele srnnh int. weex previous.—Adverttse j ment. Runaway June will be shown in mo i tion pictures every Monday nt the Royal Theater, Third street above ! Cumberland. Be sure to see them.— j Advertisement. (To be continued Wednesday.) HARRISBURC- TELEGRAPH l George \V. Geistwhitc 22 South Fourth Street . \f Easter Is April Fourth jf; : ; LET THIS YEAR'S SUIT BE TAILORED 1 > </ : TO YOUR INDIVIDUAL MEASURE ( \ V I i ; ; c v V You should place your order now if you want it in advance i * "3 of the festal dav. Our styles reflect the smartest ideas of most I ij V/ r " approved fashions, and an almost infinite selection of new pat- Tftl * 1( terns arc here most of them exclusive with us. jik?# *-TT With prices right and satisfaction assured, a Spring Suit, f T p fashioned in the Geistwhite-way, will appeal to every good h j J y • S2O to SSO ; GEORGE W. GEISTWHITE : ' Leader in Fine Tailoring / jf '« -24 DADDIES OF 25 1 BOYS IN BIG CLASS Derry Street Bible Class Attend ance Shows How Men Are Tak ing Hold of Church Work That men are foe-1 coming: intensely In- | terested in Sunday j school work was j shown yesterday In a , report from a class o? J * "J boys taught by Lewis: ' IfllJ It. Hlbshman In the i • - 'ln Derry Street United • •! Brethren Sunday! • ' School, Fifteenth and J ■JH ; In Mr. Hlbshman's i HCfl' 'lßflf class were twenty-i>ve ! ItSr 11 "How many boys V'. JC*l have daddies in the I men's class downstairs?" was asked, j Twenty-four hands shot Into the air. t Despite the storm of yesterday 275 j men gathered at the session of the bU? | men's class of Derry Street Church I yesterday to hear a stirring address by O. P. Beckley, one of the teachers. Mr. Beckley spoke on "Filling Your Job," pointing out that Saul, the son of Kish, so dignified the Job of mule ' driving that the Lord made him a : king. "How many of you fellows that are | whiiflng because you are not pro- j moted," asked Mr. Beckley, "arc lay- ! Ing down on the job where you now are? Are you so dignifying your place • that the boss will be justified In calling, you Into the office some bright morn- j ing to tell you he has a better place I for yotf? Tou mustn't forget that the | man who doesn't work at the Job he j has is likely to loaf on the next he j gets." Prayers were offered for local op-1 tlon yesterday by a score of men in the season of sentence prayer. At the suggestion of 11. L. Carl, another of the teachers, the men of the class de termined to send personal letters to ! Representatives Wlldman and Sw&rtx I and to Senator Beldleman asking their I support of Governor Brumbaugh In ; the local ontlon fight. Begins Scries.—The Rev. Dr. Lewis I S. Mudge. of the Pine Street Presby- I terian Church, preached last night on i "The Permanent Ood." the first of e i series of sermons on the theme "God."l New Pastor Preaches. —At. the Park Street United Evangelical Church the new pastor, the Rev. A. E. Hangen, uppointed at the recent annual con ference held at Bethlehem, preached I his first sermons yesterday. The sub- Ijects were "Obedience to the Heavenly Vision" and "A Reasonable Service." Mr. Hangen comes to Harrlsburg from I Mohnton. He has held other charges at White Haven, Xowistown, Lancas ter (Grace Church), Pine Grove, Fleet wood and Alientown (Trinity). He is a member of the board of examiners I of the East Pennsylvania Conference i a trustee and vice-president of the church extension society, member of j the board of directors of the East Pennsylvania Bible conference nnd official reporter for the Eev Am I Gellsche. Scores Southern Europe.-—The Rev. j Robert W. Runyan, pastor of St. Paul's • Methodist Church, said that some of | the southern countries of Europe and I the northern ones in Africa were de j generate nations in his sermon yester- I clay on "Our Defense in Time of ; Trouble." He said that "these coun- ! ; tries bred the weakling, unhealthy, j ; cowardly and the worst people." One Hundred hi Clwt. More than j one hundred men were present yester- i | day at the meeting of the men's Bible ' class of Redeemer Lutheran Sunday ! School. In response to the invitation i extended to their wives, forty-five were '■ present. Rescue Workers' Service. The American Rescue Workers will hold i meetings every evening this week ex j cept to-night. Last week two persons | were converted at the services. On j Saturday night a reception was ten j dered to Adjutant Lew Smith and his I wife. To llohl Parcel Post Sale.—The Sun day school class taught by Mrs. Albert Burkholder will hold a parcel post i sole and social, Thursday evening in! : St. Matthew's Lutheran Church, I Seneca and Green streets, j Invite Men's Classes to Social.—The | linen's Bible class of the Olivet Pres j byterlan Church, will have a social I meeting to-morrow evening In tbel basement of the church, following tho 1 j regular business session. Invitations' i have been extended to many mem i bers of other men's classes in the j neighborhood to Join the members of i the Olivet class at the meeting, j The social committee has arranged 'an excellent program, including mu i sic, monologues, and the skit. "The i Milllos Dollar Artist," by Ray Snow and Edwin Tittle, of Technical high school. Bible Study Class to Meet. —"Your : Standing Before the Lord in Jesus." i is the subject of an address to be given I before the Immanuel Bible study das* ■ of the Fifth Street Methodist Church ! to-morrow evening at 8 o'clock. The ■ meeting will be in charge of W. W. ! Rugh. director of the National Blblo I Institute of Philadelphia. I HILL MEN PLAN SERIES OF BIBLICAL "MOVIES" The Allison Hill Men's Christian As sociation yesterday afternoon was ad dressed by H. L. Carl and J. P. Bras seiinan. Next Sunday a series of mov- MARCH 8. 1915. I Ing pictures on biblical subjects will |je started, to continue every Sunday during the remainder of the season. Otterbein S. S. Gains 150 Per Cent, in Year Officers elected for the ensuing year I by the Sunday school of the Otterbein 11'nited Brethren Sunday School. Fourth | and Reily streets, are as follows: Charles Shaffner, general superintend ' ent; t'harles Zarger. assistant; Wil j llam Ream, secretary; John Runkle, I treasurer; William Brownawell, libra | rian: advisory committee, Harry Sol- I lenberger, John Fortenbaugli, Frank Slike; auditing committee, Christian Houseman, Harry Garrett, Russel Kawel. During the past year the Sunday school attendance has increased 150 i per cent. A series of sermons on the | "Attitude of Christ" will be preached I by the pastor, the Rev. S. Edwin Rupp. on the Sundays preceding Eas ter, as follows: March 14. "Christ and the Sa>ed," "Christ and the City;" March 21. "Christ and the Church." "Christ and the Nation;" March 28, "Christ and the Multitude," "Christ arid the Cross." Raster morning ex ercises will consist of communion, re ception of new meirtbers and infant baptism. Covenant Presbyterian Brotherhood Plans Feed The annual banquet of the Covenant (Presbyterian Brotherhood will be held | Friday evening at 7.30 o'clock In the church parlor. ' Jesse E. R. Cunningham and Profes isor L. E. McQinnes. of Steelton. will I make addresses and a varied program lof music and entertainment will be ' provided. The Ladies' Aid Society. II which Includes wives of Brotherhood | members will act ns caterers. S. R. Harris is chairman of the committee of arrangements. Missionary Tells of War's Havoc in East Interesting sidelights on the war and • the work of missionaries in the Far East were given yesterday by the Rev. i E. E. Calverley, a missionary recently i returned from Arabia, who preached in the morning at Olivet Presbyterian i Church and in the evening at Im nianuel Presbyterian. He told some of the experiences of himself and wife among'the Moslems In the valley of the Euphrates ana along the Persian Gulf where the English and Turkish troops are now fighting. The missionary told of the oppor tunity given by the war for the natives to exercise their natural tendency to loot and kill, giving one instance of, a murder committed in front of the missionary residence for three bars of soap. In the evening he spoke especially on how the war is hindering the mis sions in Arabia, interfering with the usual school and preaching work, but increasing the medical work. He told something of the medical work of hU wife, who was Dr. Eleanor Taylor, ol York, before her marriage. Commissioner Jackson to Talk on "Safety First" The men's Bible class of Immanuel Presbyterian Church announces that John Price Jackson, commissioner of labor and industry, will address a "safety first" meeting "Wednesday. Dr. Jackson will talk on his experiences in Europe at the outbreak of the war and. in addition, will speak of the "safety first" movement in Pennsyl vania. The program committee has been able to persuade Mrs. Wilbur Harris, of the Market Square Presbyterian Church, to render a vocal solo. Sev eral reels of motion pictures will be shown. FINE FOR RHEUMATISM i Musterole Loosens up Those Stiff Joints —Drives Out Pain ' You'll know why thousands use | MUSTEROLE once you experience tho 1 1 glad relief it gives. Get a Jar at once from the nearest drug store, It is a*clean, white oint ment made with the oil of mustard. Better than a mustard plaster and doe:? : not blister. Brings ease and comfort ■ while it is being rubbed on! MLSTEROLE Is recommended by doctors and nurses. Millions of Jars ' are used annually for Bronchitis, Croup, Stiff Neck, Asthma, Neuralgia, Congestion. Pleurisy, Rheumatism. Lumbago, Pains and Aches of the Back or Joints, Sprains, Sore Muscles, Bruis ■ es. Chilblains, Frosted Feet, Colds of ' tho Chest (If often prevents Pneumo nia). At your druggist's, in 25c and 500 ' jars, and a special large hospital size for $2.50. Be sure you get the genuine MUS TEROLE. Refuse imitations - get what you ask for. The Musterole Company, Cleveland, Ohio. Ml 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers