TO PLACE CORNER STONE OF CHURCH Impressive Ceremonies Plan ning For Exercises at Camp Curtin Memorial Methodist With impressive V \\ religious exercises \VV t l NNv, the cornerstone of Camp Curtin Me . morial Methodist Episcopal Church jSjTtll \iS w 1,6 P laoe< * next lj -jJ jMa, /jK Sunday afternoon KM After brief c.ver- SRS—JSSgiwj fises and the Dox y>ology, the Rev. Dr. Hiles C. Pardoe will offer the invocation. An introductory by the Rev. A. S. Williams, pastor, a hymn and a prayer by the Rev. E. A. Pyles, Ph. D., will follow. Lead by the Rev. Dr. C. A. Smucker, responsive j reading will be preceded by an anthem by the choir, which will bo augmented for the occasion. The Rev. Dr. John D. Fox will be in charge of the Scrip ture lesson. After singing of "Amer- | lea" by the audience, Col. H. C. Dein ming, representing the Grand Army of the Republic will make an address. A talk by the Rev. Dr. A. S. Fasick, su perintendent of the Harrisburg dis trict, will precede the actual plating of the stone. The x Rev. Robert J. Runyan will make the benediction. I)R. HA WES WANTS PLACE IN PEOPLES' HEARTS The Rev. Dr. Hawes, the new pastor of Market Square Presbyterian church whose installation will take place next Friday evening when two former pas tors of the congregation, the Rev. Dr. George B. Stewart, president of the Auburn Theological Seminary and the Rev. Dr. J. Ritchie Smith, who now occupies the chair of Homiletics at Princeton Seminary, will be present and take part In the service, made a statement at the morning service yes terday which was the subject of much pleasant comment. Among the people as they left the church. Dr. Hawes said "t don't expect to take the place of cither Dr. Stewart or Dr. Smith in your hearts. T would not if I could; all I want is that you give me a place !n your hearts also." RABBI TO IJECTCRE The famous Jewish preacher, the Rev. H. Mashiansky, of Xew York City will deliver a lecture to-morrow evening at 7:30 o'clock at the Con gregation Chisuk Emuna. Rabbi Al bum will act as chairman. The Rev. Mr. Mashiansky is the guest of Rabbi Album of 213 Kelker street. SAUERKRAUT MADE IX JAIIL Doylestown, Pa., Sept. 27. —Prison ers in the county jail have turned their attention to manufacturing sauerkraut. Several hundred heads oi < abliage have? been contributed and I'ead Jailer Dinkelaeher has recruit ed a sauerkraut squad. » Eat a Square Meal and Not Fear Indigestion There arc hundreds of people in Har risburg who were not the least bit sur prised when they tend a while ag'o that rlruggists are now selling Mt-o-na on a jtuarantee to refund the money in case It did not relieve. This remarkable dyspepsia remedy has proved it will relieve the worst case of indigestion, headai-he, dizziness, or the general played-out condition that afflicts every one suffering with stomach trouble. Mi-o-na does not simply relieve, it aims to cure. There is hardly a druggist but can tell you of many well-known people in this city who this remedy has restored to health, often after they have tried many other methods of treatment with little or no benefit. We really believe no other dyspepsia remedy has made so large a percentage of cures as Mi-o-na. It is so larre that dealers who have sold it for years stand ready to refund the price to any customer whom It does not help. The best kind of advertising is the praise of a pleased customer, and there are hundreds to-day praising Mi-o-na because It has done for them what it is advertised to do. A few months ago they could eat nothing without won dering what the'result would be. Since using Mi-o-na, they eat what they want and when they want with no fear of suffering. This medicine comes in the ■form of a tablet and is very pleasant to take. It speedily and permanently re lieves almost all forms of stomach trou ble and is the only one sold under a positive guarantee without any restric tion, tb refund the money if it does not relieve. You can get Mi-o-na on this basis from H. Kennedy, or any lead ing druggist in Harrisburg.—Advertise ment. Range Coal Range fires arc being started and it depends on tlie kind and quality of coal with what success they will be managed. Kelley's Range Coal is not only good clean fuel but it is prepared specially to meet the peculiar de mands of your range draft. All hard, all soft or mixed in any way you want it. Know your range and get the kind of coal best suited to its needs. Talk it over with Kclley and get coal that will prove satisfac tory for cooking and heating. H. M. KELLEY & CO. Office, 1 N. Third Street Yard, 10th and State Streets VIGOR, HEALTH and YOUTH for every one are found in every drop of FRANKLIN'S WON DER COMPOUND You will not have to wait months or weeks to feel beneficial effects, for Its wonderful finalities make themselves felt from the very first. For nervous disorders. aenemi,a. sleeplessness, and a generally weakened system it cannot be equaled. A bottle containing a :iO-day treatment will be sent to you In a seal ed plain package for SI.OO. FH WK- I.IN WONDER IUCMKDY COMPANY, Hnrrtshurg, Pa. STOP COUGHING IT! pEPTONOgi 9 MADE IN A HEALTH RESORT I<= £ T DROG STORES; SLooPerBOTILE THE PEPTONOL CO iAT*.ANTIC CITY rsl . -J." E. Z. GROSS, 119 Market St., ttarrlfiburt, Pa. MONDAY EVENING. NEAIo/ ** NAVY Oy William Hamilton Osborne, AUTHOR OF "neo MOUSE,""RUNNING FIOHT" "CATSPAW,""BLUE 00CKL£,"£Te. NOVELIZED FROM THE PHOTO PLAY OF THE .SAME NAME PRODUCED BY PATHE EXCHANGE. INC. COPY/Z/C//7; /9/S, sr US/JLL/A/V//Aff/LToff C\s3oJ?rt£~ FIRST INSTALLMENT PROLOGUE—THE SURVIVORS CHAPTER I. The Red Death, Capt. John Hardin of the Princess regarded the fa6t-receding coast line •with unusual alarm. He shouted to his mate. "Welcher," he cried, pointing aft, "look at that. I've never seen old Po lee act that way before." Welcher, the mate, a surly, sallow faced, ill-conditioned fellow in un kempt uniform, followed with his eyes the captain's glance. "Gee whiz," he said, "me neither." "Ben," exclaimed the captain, "she's spitting fire. By Godfrey, that means death—death, I tell you, death." This was back in 1902. The Prin cess, Captain Hardin's boat, was a tramp steamer bound to New York from the city of St. Pierre, in the Island of Martinique, with a cargo of cocoa, coffee, sugar cane and cotton, and had been under way probably an hour. I "You're right, captain," he returned. "Pelee* means business this trip. Death is right." A feminine ugure emerged from the shadow of the afterhouse and rushed forward toward the bridge. Behind her, following in her wake, raced two sturdy youngsters. One of these youngsters darted past her, swarmed upon the bridge and confronted the captain and his mate. He was Captain Hardin's boy, Neal —the only child. The other boy was the mate's son, young Joey Welcher, sallow-faced and disagreeable like his father. With the roar of a thousand thun ders Pelee bellowed forth "What are we going to do, Jack?" cried the captain's young wife; "what are we going to do?" "Do?" returned the mate, before the captain could reply. "Put on more steam, that's what we'll do. We're well out of that hell-hole yonder. An hour and we'd have been in the thick of it. We're well out of it, I tell you." Captain Hardin applied his eye to his telescope once more. The boy upon his shoulder followed suit. "Welcher," said the captain bravely, we've got to go back." CHAPTER 11. The Lost Isle. On the same day—the day of the red death at Martinique—and but two short hours before the pilot put the helm of the tramp steamer Princess hard aport, three men sat on the ver anda of a low-roofed, white-walled bungalow in St. Pierre. One of these men was Ilington, a young American. He passed around a box of fragrant Martinique cheroots. He folded up some half-dozen slips ot paper he had been examining and re turned them to another individual who faced him from across the table. "Senor Hernandez," exclaimed the young American, "for a week at least —half a hundred times —I have told you your credentials were satisfactory to me." ' Hernandez nodded gravely. He thrust the papers back into a pocket and tapped them significantly. "None could be better," he ex claimed grandiloquently, "I am Her nandez —that te all gufficient." Suddenly the American turned and faced the third member of the coterie. "And what," he exclaimed, "what of Ponto here?" This third individual was the strangest creature of them all. He was a Mexican; dark, very dark; low browed ; low-statured —and —fat. Hernandez nodded significantly. "Ponto, senor," he returned, "is as good as gold. He, too, is brave." "Will he do as I tell him?" queried the American. Hernandez bowed. "You tell mo, senor, and I tell him. He will obey." The American turned his back for a moment and Hernandez and Ponto exchanged significant glances. Ilington turned back to them. "It is agreed," he said, "I will take you on. To have brave men one must take a chance." Ilington crossed the veranda and entered the living room, from there | disappearing through another door. In | a moment he was back, apparently i empty handed. Once more he seated j himself and then drew from the hip | pocket of his trousers a thin oilskin j packet sealed with sealing wax. He j laid it on the table before him. "Gentlemen," ho said, "I am the j owner of '.he lost isle of Cinnabar, j My forefathers held tbe grant direct i from Spain. The lo3t iale of Cinna- j bar is a valuable isle. Tradition has ' it that upon it is located a quicksilver mine—an ancient mine but little worked. My mission is to seek that island, to find it and to claim it for my own." "Where is this lost island?" queried the Portuguese. Ilington nodded. "The secret," he returned, "lies within this packet." In ft flash Ponto's hand darted like a black snake across tho table to clutch the packet in its grasp. The American, for all his hugeness, was quite ao agile as tbe fat Ponto. He snatched the packet away Just as Pon to's fingers touched it. Ponto's eyes reddened; his face flushed suddenly. He fingered the hilt of his knife and glanced toward Her- | nandez. "I will ba careful to take small chance with you, friend Fonto," said Ilington. He waved the packet to ward Hernandez. "All in good time, ; senor," he said. "The Important question," went on ' Ilington, "is this; Who is in posses sion of the lost isle of Cinna bar? It belongs to me. I have the ] paper title —at any rate I can obtain j it, but whom must we eject when we ! arrive ?" "Leave that to me," said Hernan dez. "We shall wipe them oft the face of the earth —" A screen door swung open and a native woman gaudily arrayed In j green and yellow stripes, her head bound around with a strip of orange colored linen, slipped through the door leading with her a tiny girl—a child three or four years old. The child saw Ilington and ran tumultuously toward him, clasping his huge leg with her arms. "My daughter, gentlemen," said Il ington. "She is all I have. Her moth- j er died when she was born and when j I die she will be the heiress to the ! lost isle of Cinnabar —perhaps the j princess of a principality, who knows.'' j Manuella, her native nurse, carried j her out into the narrow white and j winding street, and together they half ran, half toddled down the hill. Ilington resumed his own chair and ! once more exhibited the oilskin pack- j et. "The contents of this packet—pos- I eibly—will indicate the whereabouts , of the lost isle of Cinnabar," he said. ' "Suppose we take a chance." "Break the seal, senor," said Her- j nandez. , Ilington started to obey—but some thing happened. With the suddenness of a jaguar > fleeing from the hunters, a man—half ! I Neal Hardin and the Heiress of tha Lost Island, naked —bounded upon the veranda. "For the love of God," he said, in broken French, "flee for your lives. Pelee has broken loose." Ilington, with the oilskin packet still in hand, sprang to the edge of the veranda and from there into the , street. He gave one look and then i fell back. "By George, he's right," he shouted, j "Look—look." Anxiously he turned his gaze down the hill. Then with a bound he was off. In three minutes he was back clutching his little daughter, Annette, j to his breast and dragging the frenzied Manuella after him. Shrieks from a thousand throats j rent the air without. Ilington glanced into the street. His face went white. Ashes, red-hot pieces of molten lava were dropping in a shower. Ilington, who had been holding Annette, surrendered her in an instant to Manuella. He darted into an inner | room and opened the safe. From this safe he took a canvas bag that jingled with the gold pieces it contained. He thrust this bag into one hip pocket of his trousers, having already secreted the oilskin packet in the other. "Come on," he shouted to the group behind him. "It's death to stay here. Come on down the hill." CHAPTER 111. Terror-Driven. All down that long steep hill —that swarming street filled with its rushing,, frantic mob—llingtcn fought his way with his back and brawny shoulders. Once, twice, he felt a stealthy hand at his hip pockets. Each time he turned swiftly to find Ponto and Her nandez close at his heels. Without warning he slipped aside into a blind alley, and lot the crowd slide by like a huge many-colored avalanche. When he joined the crowd again, Hernandez and his Aztec ally •'."ere of him and not behind. "To the sea—to the sea" —the voice of the multitude raised itself in agony. There was but one cry—"to the sea— let me past—make room for me —to the sea—to the sea." At a crazy little wharf Ilington twitched himself and Manuella and the child deftly to ono side and let the crowd plunge on. He scanned the surface of the bay, the fringe of shore. The bay was dot ted with small boats, laden to the gun wales. The water was alive with ■wjmmers. {To be continued.] HABKISBURG TELEGRAPH S:'l HKRBHffilßß^^^iß^^RiKl up ; . r ; mm 'sS : Si|® 'Ol | ' ' Bxtewi to I8«r E«st«»crs ai>4 Fftentfs . . fl I P iiSailii: 4- : ',- : --,J^ I :•.:' "'''r ffi ■. ■ " I . ;'-\'*.;i'r-,;V ; "/ ?> 'Jf ixy~ fv. jf ' V«" '/!*£*. ••'^>"**i J V;. U jy.' f/jf '•N.* \'V~ 11 "w ' '*•' V I® ..-, ag<-a of'mfoft . - 1 :/^v.: .»slt, ■».'vfff-ti'.vvV^iX?*.7*' h h **O""*''j i js»Viifr,.' frl-- *+cs •** .«>>* v"?;^•'->"• V£YY2*.\k *Ut> "-''v^V'^VV^;^ <■ ."('■<. H I " . * " || Wvj.'"i 8- w : 1 if-J. I - Ss&teifcßatilO . ',- '* telii ;' J -.'; . ■ isgl - fl I [ls 's l i r KB SfißS "!*•' '.' *' ° ° : .' <'.,'■■> - -■ •" FIRE DESTROYS MARYLAND HOTEL Oldest Hostelry on Blue Ridge Mountain Burned on Satur day With SIO,OOO Loss Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., Sept. 27. On Saturday morning the Maryland hotel, one of the oldest and best known hos telries in the Blue Ridge mountains, at Highfield. Md., owned by Benjamin Shockey, of Waynesboro, and occupied by Charles Corwell, Jr., and his sister, was totally destroyed by fire, together with most of the furniture. Along with the large three-story frame structure containing twenty-two bedrooms, an odtkitchen was also burned. The Corwell's were aroused from sleep by the stifling odor of smoke and they made their escape from the building after arousing several other persons, guests at the hotel. The fire alarm was sounded by the whistles of locomotives on the Western Maryland railroad and by the anvil at Blue Ridge Summit. The loss was about SIO,OOO. '•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••♦•# : Try this easy way to i : heal your skin with : Resinoßf • If you are suffering from eczema, n'nr- \ . worm or similar itching, red, unsightly x. • skin affection, bathe the sore places >• * TW • with P.esinol Soap and hot water, then |*i I u\ . eently apply a little Resinol Ointment. § yv \\ \ • You will be astonished how instantly An 1/ \\ \\ \ • the itching stops and healing begins, I \\ |1 A J In most cases the skin quickly be- ] ll .I • comes clear and healthy again, at very \ / ! • little cort. ' B 7 \\f f^oO [ • Resinol Ointment it so nearly flesh- 1 y / I - colored tint it can be kept on the (ace, 1 / / hands or rller f Aaaed surface with- I / / out at.ractinc ucauc attention. \ I /\ / % Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap also clear \ 4 t ' • away piir les, redness, roufhncsa and dandrufi. \ f\ Sold by art druggists. \ / \ Father of Bandit Engages Counsel in Philadelphia Philadelphia, Sept. 27.—The father of J. Frank Anderson, the "saloon bandit," who is charged with the mur der of James P. Campbell, proprietor of a saloon at 2200 Market street, has engaged a Philadelphia attorney to c'cfend hie son. According to the po lice, the father of the accused man, a banker of Ardmore, Okla., is on his way to this city and will reach here about Wednesday. Yesterday afternoon an attorney, I whose name was withheld by the po lice, went to City Hall and requested permission to see the prisoner. He said Anderson's father had called him on the• telephone from Ardmore early yesterday and requested him to look after the interests; of his son until he could come East. Anderson, who, the police say, has confessed to shooting: the saloon keeper, came here from the West ten days ago in search of work as a ma hinist at the Eddystone plant of the Baldwin Locomotive Works. The fam ily is said to be prominent in Ardmore and wealthy. GEORGE F. BAER LEW $3,280,191! Reading, Pa.. Sept. 27.—That George F. Baer, late president of the Reading Railway, who died in 1914, was worth $3,239,192.32 became known through court proceedings here Saturday. Un der the will the widow gets $400,000 outright and the family residence, Hawthorne, in this city. Each of the five daughters is to receive $540,000 Several grandchildren also receive SEPTEMBER 27,1915. large bequests. Servants are given SSO for each year of employment. Walter Douglass, a coachman, receives $1,650 in recognition of thirty-three years of service. Ankle Watches Barred From High School Girls Covington, Ky., Sept. 27.—Ankle watches on co-eds and fraternity pins on boys' socks will be seen no more In the Covington High school. The principal to-day issued an offi cial edict prohibiting the use of such ornaments and threatening violators of the new rule with explusion. The students are angered over the decree, and a mass meeting to protest and formulate plans to have the order rescinded is being considered. DRILL BOAT THAT LIFTS ITSELF OUT OF WATER At the Lake Ontario end of the Wel land ship canal, where there is no natural harbor and all work in con nection with tht new harbor is ex posed to the full force of the lake storms, a drill boat that can be raised King Oscar Quality Put Harrisburg On the Smokers Map 24 Years Ago Harrisburg is widely known as the home of a nickel cigar made of good tobacco. King O scar 5c Cigars won their reputation as a full value smoke for the money long before the civic awakening. Regularly Good For 24 Years four 6r five feet above the waves when required was used in making the rock sounding's. The boat consists of twin hulls rig-idly connected, over which is laid a platform for the drilling outfit, steam boiler, four hoisting engines and capstans and crabs required for handling the boat. At each corner of the boat is a heavy spud workinfe.in guides, and when the boat is to be lifted these spud? are brought to a bearing on the bottom of the lake and the boat is raised by means of a wire rope system worked by four 10-horse power steam crabs. The raising rope is led from the top drum of the steam crab over a sheave at the top of the spud to a sheave on the guide and then to an anchorage on the boat. The spuds are kept clear of the lake bottom when the boat is afloat by ropes that pass through sheaves fixed to the bases of the spuds. These ropes are operated by the lower drums of the crabs, the two drums being so ad justed as to keep both ropes taut at all times. This boat has been successfully used for pile driving as well as for drilling. This unusual apparatus is shown in several views In the October Popular Mechanics Magazine. 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers