8 la® Care Of Cuttcnra Soap Shampoos Are moot effective when aided by lighJ applications of Cuticura Ointment. Samples Free by Mail Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold rvrrywhwa. Liberal nampt« oi each roMMd Irtx with 32-p. book. Addftfl potMftnl Dept. 25F, Boston* ! 11 I TO END CATARRHAL j | j DEAFNESS AND HEAD \ I NOISES j If you have Catarrhal Deafness ; or head nolsex go to your drug- J gist and get 1 ounce of Parmint i (double strength) and add to it i J 4 pint of hoi water and I ounces i of granulated sugar. Take 1 i ! tablespoonful four times a day. i This will often bring quick re- • I lief from the distressing head i noises. Clogged nostrils should • 1 open, breathing become easy and • I the mucus stop dropping into • | the throat. It is easy to prepare, t costs little and Is pleasant to f Itake. Any one who lias Catar- ? rhal Deafness or head noises f should give this prescription a * trial. T J, i" | t * . \ ! Special Excursion ZOOLOGICAL ; GARDEN Girard Ave. (31st Street) Phil | adelphia, via Philadelphia & 1 Reading Railway, f Saturday, Oct. 2 Round Trip Tickets, good only , on trains noted below, will - be sold at rates annexed. | SPECIAL TRAIN Special From Fare I.v.A.M. I HARHISBIHG «,20 Hnnunelatonn 1.T5 «l.:tU , Brownstone 1.75 fl.3tt 1 Swarnta 1.75 (1.43 Henhey .. 1.75 1 Palmyra 1,75 0.53 i Annvllle 1,75 7.02 ! Girard Ave. <3l«t St.) ar... lU.OO TICKETS DO NOT INCLUDE} ADMISSION TO GAHDEN RETURNING Special Train will I leave Glranl Ave. (.tint St.) 5.50 i p. ra. for aliore station*. I YOUR PRINTING NEEDS wit. De best supplied where the faclll ; ties for such work are the best When you consider that the printed : material you use represents a cash In vestment which you calculate should bring to you many times Its cost— THE PRICE OF QUALITY SHOULD BE THE CONSIDERATION If clients are to see the printed mate . rial you use; your thought should be ' the quality, rather than the price. , Which doesn't mean that the price ! need, or should be, exorbitant. : The Telegraph Printing Co. produces the highest grades of work tn Is re spective lines. t All of it is based upon quality at prices which are most fair for the work. We are printing specialists, as well as being leaders In the associate lines; binding, designing and photo-engrav ing. To employ our services means no greater effort than to phone us. THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. Either phone. 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 qualities make themselves ifelt from the very first. For nervous ■disorders, aenemla, sleeplessness, and a i generally weakened system it cannot be I equaled. A bottle containing a 30-day treatment will be sent to you In a seal ed plain package for SI.OO. FRANK UN WONDER REMEDY COMPANY. ; HarrUhurg, Pa. Resorts DOUBLING GAP, PA White Sulphur Springs Hotel DOUBLING GAP, PA., Via Newvllle Noted for its refined patronage. I numerous medicinal springs, natural beauty, and abundance of fresh vege tables which aid In emphasizing ex cellent table service. Special attention along wltb reduced rates will be given 1° Harrlsburg patrons during the month It «Rl. F?>ffr. mPt r ° Ply lnq ' Jlr< ' RUDOLPH K. SPICER ' FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBAI/MER 313 Walnut St. HARRISBURG, PA. A \ THE Office Training School Kaafraan Bid*.. 4 9. Market Sq. NOW IN SESSION Day School and -Vlgbt School Call or send for 32-page booklet— Bell pbone 694-R » V—m— i WEDNESDAY EVENING, NEAltf a® NAVY QyWilliam Hamilton Osborne, AUTHOR Of "fieD«OU3C"fiWWING FIGHT" "CATSPAVCeUK OOCKLE'CTC. NOVCUZCO fRON TTIC PHOTO PLAY Or THE JiAME nahc prooocco er rathe exchange. inc. cor>Y*wvtz: tats, or t*¥LUArr/rA/itLro* cxz&Qtf/y/r llington smiled. "So you have searched me, have you?" he returned. "Well, you're welcome, gentlemen, to anything you find." He rose to his feet. "Come on," he commanded, "we're marooned. I'm hungry. Let us see what we can find." Hernandez caught him by the arm. "Where-is the packet?" he demanded. "And where the gold?" persisted Ponto. llington smiled. "Both traveling north," he answered, "with Annette ll ington. They are confided to her care." "And why?" asked Hernandez. llington shrugged his shoulders. "I thought you and I and Ponto here iwere booked for death, that's why. Who knows —we may still be booked for death." Hernandez glanced significantly at ( Ponto. "Some of us may," he said. ( "Come on," said llington, "there are : mussels on those rocks yonder. Fol- I low me." He strode into the water and waded (toward a patch of rocky reef beyond. Ponto seized a bit of jagged wood that lay upon the beach. He and Her- I nandez waded after llington. Once on the rocks llington stooped and tore huge shell fish from their moorings /with his naked hands. As he did so Ponto in a sudden frenzy lifted high the billet in his hand and brought it with a crashing blow down upon the head of llington. ! llington fell like a log. Hernandez sprang at Ponto and shook him as a terrier shakes a rat. "You fqol," he cried, "what do you gain by this?" "Wait," exclaimed Ponto, clawing llington with his clutching talons; !"let us search him thoroughly." | The search yielded nothing to them. I "Fool," repeated Hernandez, "you have done a useless thing. There's al jiways time I tell you." Ponto shook his head. "Senor," he 'said, "this man Btood between us and the packet. There is no one now to Ikeep us from his child." Hernandez slowly nodded. "True," he returned, "perhaps you are right. He was a menace—now he Is dead. He is removed. Let us leave him to the mercy of the sea. Come on." 'To the mercy of the sea," these adventurers had said, and the sea was strangely merciful. With the tender ness of a mother it laved the limbs of the supine victim—it washed his wound —it laved his brow. It did more—it brought him back to life. Uttering an inarticulate cry, the man rose, staggering to his feet. He put his hand to the back of his head. It came away covered with blood. He Btared at his ruddy fingers vacantly. "Red—red—" he babbled. He stared about him in bewilder ment. Babbling and cackling he rose once more to his feet. Some instinct led him toward the shore. He waded across the narrow strip of water, breast high, toward the narrow strip fit beach beyond. He reached the beach and darted zig-zag hither and thither, always babbling, always cackling. There was reason for this. Some where in his skull there was a dent— a deep depression—made by the billet of wood that had struck him down. Ever and anon as he went he stroked the wound with the right hand and drew the hand away, covered with blood. "Red —red —" he babbled and went on. CHAPTER V. A Night With Flame. Young Neal Hardin was proud of his father's boat, the Princess. He never ceased admiring her. There was no part of her he didn't love. He was well assured that she must hold the same fascination for other people as she did for him. He concluded that little Annette llington would fall des perately in love with his huge boat and he escorted that young lady to all parts of the vessel—in fact, he walked her little legs off. They explored the lifeboats, the for ward quarters of the crew; they vis ited the pilot; they climbed the bridge. Finally, they visited the hold. It was well they did. Something had happened—and had happened on the day before while the Princess lay off Martinique. Cinders had fallen by the hundreds—a condi tion of affairs that the captain and his crew had well prepared for. It was impossible to be everywhere at once and a cinder—a live, red messenger oi death-—had taken advantage of this condition of affairs, had wormed its way unnoticed into the cotton cargo, and like a red-hot cancer had eaten in to it with flame. With just the slightest trace of ex cltement Neal drew the little girl to the deck and with hor at his side sought and found his fr.ther and whis pered to him. The captain stiffened as with shock; hlo face turned pale. He held up a hand and three members of the crew rushed to him. He gave hasty, whis pered orders. Ip ten minutes the fire hose was laid out —men were working at the pumps. But in ten minutes something else had happened—the hold was filled with smoke. Huge tongues of flame were leaping heavenward, and in that same ten minutes panic took command — pandemonium reigned. "Abandon ship," Hardin cried. "All hands to the boats! Women and chil dren first." Two days later a boatload of half starved refugees parched with thirst, chilled by the cold night aud baked by the heat of day, were sighted by a cruiser of the navy. Half in hour aft erwards its exhausted passengers clambered wearily but gratefully up the cruiser's side. The last of the refugees to leave the lifeboat and last of all save the life boat's crew to reach the cruiser's deck ■was young Neal Hardin. Clutched in his arms was the recumbent sleeping figure of little Annette llington. Mrs. Hardin was offered the com mander's cabin. She accepted with gratitude. She tucked Annette llington and Joey Welcher into their berths, but when she came to look for Neal, her young son, she found him missing. She searched for him. A seaman touched her on the arm. "You'll find him there, ma'am," said the sailor. He pointed toward a group in a cor ner of the sleeping deck. The crew Ponto In a Sudden Frenzy Lifted High the Billet In Hia Hands and Brought It Down. were swinging hammocks ready for the night. Mrs. Hardin listened. She heard the clear tones of her young son Neal. She hastened to the group and caught her offspring by the hand. "Mom," he pleaded, "don't." He pointed toward a hammock high above his head. "That's where I'm going to sleep—just once—tonight." A seaman touched his cap and grinned. "He's a sailor from the ground up, ma'am," he said. "You can't make him anything else If you was to try a hundred years." All through that long night a woman lay, wide-eyed, with dumb agony with in her heart. She didn't know —she couldn't know—that Capt. John Har din was exploring the depths unknown with a knife sunk between his shoul der blades by his mate, Welcher. But she knew that she would never lay eyes upon him more—never feel the clasp of his hand, nor his kiss upon her lips, nor his Btrong arms about her —never in this world again. SYNOPSIS. On the day of the eruption of Mount 'Pelee Capt. John Hardin of the steamer Princess rescues three-year-old Annette llington from an open boat, but is forced to leave behind her father and hia com panions. llington Is assaulted by Her nandez and Ponto in a vain attempt to get papers' which llington has managed to sena aboard the Princess with his daughter, papers proving his title to the lost Island of Cinnabar. Illngton'a Injury causes hia mind to become a blank. SECOND INSTALLMENT THE YELLOW PACKET CHAPTER VI. The Whiplash. Hernandez stepped out upon the porch of the low-roofed bungalow. He moved with lazy strides. He was pros perous apparently, this Portuguese, Hernandez. Here was no evidence of adversity nor of hard luck. Years be fore he had escaped from the eruption of Mount Pelee in Martinique. Now It was the year 1915. It was January of that year. He was located —nay, comfortably established—on his own plantation in the southern waters. For months or years—who knows?— he had lived a life of ease upon this island Just off the coast of Porto Rico. Hernandez strode to the table and tapped a bell. "Inez," he cried sharply i "bring me drink." He was a Portuguese, this Hernandez, tall, slender, dark. The expression on his face was sinister, and across his face was an old-time scar planted by a saber stroke. Within a woman had been humming —humming little snatches of familiar Spanish songs. At his command the humming ceased. There was an ex clamation of rage—ot feminine rage. Inez Castro stepped out upon the ver anda. "I am no servant," she exclaimed angrily, "to be summoned by a bell." "Drink," said Hernandez sharply, "give me drink." She poured it out for him and hand ed -him the glass. "May I hope It chokes you," she exclaimed, stamping her foot. "Stop your snarling there, you Span ish cat," exclaimed Hernandez, "and listen to me. I have an order from Porto Rico that I must fill—and fill tonight." Inez was all attention in a moment. jCTo Be Continued. HXRRISBURG TELEGRSTO Walled in by Cleanliness A ROUND the production of Sterling Gum we provide a wall of cleanliness. M • (\jsvT3 1" The factory itself is sunny spotless through and through the model of its I*^ kind—flooded with daylieht from morn- l^--r^ rs \ -A iSP ing tUI night ' 'nftF vu, Throughout the manufacture of Sterl- I iij no hand touch it Each morning «=L- - K&. the men and girls in the Sterling factory _i slip on clean white gloves freshly laun dered. And they wear fresh-washed uni yy • forms and caps. y It is pleasant to keep this in mind as you c=^^>^rT^j s hunt the 7th point of Sterling excellence. *—Crowded with flavor 4—Sterling purity •--X 3m ' —"Velvety body—NO GRIT s—From a daylight factory 3—Crumble-proof 6—Untouched by hands Sterling Gum The Sterling Gum Co., Inc. | J\o /** YXJIIIT OUUTI Suitable rewards for the Long Island City f X" 1 * 11 discovery of the 7th point Greater New York. ■ A V-/ will be offered later. PEPPERMINT - RED WRAPPER CINNAMON - BLUE WRAPPER r FOR SILK AND _FOR COTTON A Dainty Under-Garment that can b« Made with Either Square or with Round Neck* By MAY MANTON 8765 Envelope Chemise for Miaaec and Small Women, 16 and 18 years. Young girls and small women are sura to be interested in this design for they are apt to he on the outlook for dainty under garments that can be easily made. It consists of only three pieces, but bet cause of the extension on the back, it become# a combination garment and serves two purposes. In the pirture, it ia made from fine batiste with trimming of lace, but erPpe de chine and washable silks of various sorts are liked for tinder wear and this garment is perfectly adapted to them all. It can be finished with lace or with fine embroidery or with embroid ered edges, or, lace and insertion can be used on the lower edge, while the neck edge is scalloped and some little em broidery is worked on the fronts of the body portion, and since embroidery always means a certain sense of elegance, this last has special advantages of its own. Here, the neck is cut on trie round out line, but it can be cut square if that shaping is found more becoming. , The pattern No. 8765 is cut in sires for 16 and 18 years. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department this paper, on .receipt of ten centa. Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns. JUNIORS EI.ECT OFFICERS The Junior class of Central high school yesterday held their first elass i meeting to elect the following officers. William Foster, president; Allss Susan Hep ford, Sficrstaix, viewer) T^iUnTeßefli^ Being Worth While By K1.1.A WHEELER WII-COX Copyright, 1915, by Star Company Whatever your position in life, how ever dissHtisfled with your work and recompense, you want to remember one fact—you can be "worth while." You can make yourself worthy of better things, and when you have be come fully worthy of a change for the better, when you have absolutely out grown your present environment, a change will come. You may have no time for self-im provement, as you may be working from early morn till late at nighl at some distasteful labor, and you may tell me that it is impossible to grow or make progress under such condi tions. But watch your opportunities. You are in hourly contact with your fel low workers. Watch yourself to see that you do not show selfishness in your treatment of them. In the place where you live or board, in the street cars, in the shops There you go for your supplies, how are you treating your fellows? Aro you as unselfish, or polite, or consid erate, as you want others to he to you? Vou think Monopoly and Greed are responsible for your trouble#. You are overworked and 111-paid be cause those in higher places have no thought for others. But are you showing thought for others? I ,ook back over this day. Have you been unselfish and kinfl , and considerate toward every oneTj Did you start the day with a loving | word and a smile at home? Did you | The OIL makes the leather soft and the shoe com fortable. • The WAX makes the shoe shine with a shine that F&M lasts -' Mason's Black Shine The TIN makes the polish last longer —it is so easy to open and close. Buy it today —you will be glad you did. 83 Years of Leadership JAS. S. MASON CO., 134-140 N. Fron* Street Philadelphia Try Telegraph Want Ads Telegraph Want Ads SEPTEMBER 29, 1915. enter your place of business with a ' cheerful air and make everybody feel j better by your presence? Or did you carry a cold, surly or j irritable personality into the room 1 that fell like a wet blanket on those' about you? Were you patient and I polite when you went shopping? Did I you remember that the salesmen and | women were needing encouragement j and sympathy In their work Just as much as you do in yours? Did you think to say a pleasant I word to the newsboy and hootblaok, ' or did you forget that they had as much right to consideration in this I world as, yourself? If you have thought of nothing and nobody to-day but yourself, your own troubles, hardships and needs, then rest assured you have not fitted your self to fill a higher position or re ceive better pay. The world wants better men and women more than it wants better gov ernment. All changes which can be brought about, in any way of re form, will never make the world a particle better until you and I, and every living man and woman, set to work to improve ourselves. Great changes are on the way. Great abuses are about to pass. Un expected events are near. But no one of these changes, nor all of them, | can materially benefit humanity un ; less individuals fit themselves to be j better men and women. What have you done to-day to im i prove yourself? Rubber £ Goods We carry a complete line of Faultless Wear-Ever Rubber Goods When we sell rubber to you, you can rely on our recommendation and guarantee. FORNEY'S DRUG STORE 426 Market St. Si i i ii 111 i SAFETY! Sjf first The object of "Safety First" Is prevention. You can prevent your advertising from meet ing the fate of the waste basket If you will make It Attractive with proper Illustration. Bring your next copy to us for Illustrative treatment, One treat ment will convince you •hat our methods are a success. The Telegraph' Art &Engraving Departments j 216 Locust Street / 1 Non-greasy Toilet Cream rveepn the Skin Soft and Velvety. Prevents tan, relieves sunburn. An Exquisite Toilet Preparation. 26c. GORGAS DRUG STORES IA N. Third St.. and P. R. R. Station fCHAS.H.MAUK THE UNDERTAKER Slxtk awl Kalher Steaat* UrlM nHhhawi. Bast bdlMea. Naar Hi Cm u year phone. Win to asrwhereat *oor emit, otorvnlci. No hnaeral too MnaU. Nona to« ezoanatv*. Chspalfc roe mi, vault. eta. a*ed