"The Quality Store" I I House-Cleaning EASIER Do you know that you can take all the drudgery out of house-cleaning? There will be no more backaches no run-down systems after this important semi-annual cleaning event if you use one of our VACUUM SWEEPERS I Carpets and rugs need not g? be taken up to be cleaned. I Dirt is removed from under carpets and rugs by our guaranteed Vacuum Sweep ers. Very easy to run. They really get the dirt without making any dust. Let us demonstrate one for you. Without Brush, s(> With Brush, #7 to $5) I L. W7~COOK SAGE TEA TURNS GRAY HAIR DARK If Mixed With Sulphur It Dark ens So Evenly That It Cannot Be Discovered ■r •'< || •<ls ■ " lp?f 1 WW \ HHP- '/ v 4 i \ That beautiful, even shade of dark, glossy hair can only be had by brew ing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sul phur. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. When it lades, turns gray, streaked and looks ilry. wispy and scraggy, just an appli cation or two of Sage and Sulphur en hances its appearance a hundredfold. Don't bother to prepare the tontc; you can get from any drug store a 50c cent bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sul phur Compound," ready to use. This can always be depended upon to bring 1 ack the natural color, thickness and luster of your hair and remove dan druff, stop scalp itching and falling l-.air. Evtrybody uses "Wyeth's" Sage and Sulphur because it darkens so natur ally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morn ing the gray hair has disappeared, and after another application it becomes beautifully dark and appears glossy, lustrous and abundant. - Advertise ment. Kssorts ATI.AVTIC CITY. X. .». | I THE ■Ofiltitbctni' J7TLANT/C c/rr. N.J. -J THE LEADING RESORT HOUSE or THE WORLD is particularly attractive, with its two blocks of ocean frontage facing I south and cooled by the prevailing Southwest ocean breezes, during ATLANTIC'S GREAT SUMMER SEASON c*(ending from JUNE TO OCTOBER inclusive It has 400 private baths, each with sea water, and its exquisite music, every night throughout the year, with special solo week-end features, is lustly celebrated. White service in both American and a la ctrle dining rooms, v 'heatrcs. Rolling-chair?.. Golf and | „» other amusements in full swing. UlmciMtXT JOSIAh WHITE & SONS COMPANY Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect June 27. 1918. TAAINb leave Hamaourg , £ or ., W i' ncheßter . and ilai tlnaburg at! i:O3. '7:52 a. m., p. in . "j For Hagerstown, Chumberaburg. Car- ■ lisle. Mechanlcsburg and lniermedlata stations at *S:O3. »7.52. *ll6* «. •3:40. 5:37, •7:46. *11:00 p m „ Additional trains for Carlisle and For Dlllsburg at 60S "7-s» •ires a. m.. 4:11. •3:40 6:17 aid L'lPdty 7 - ah other^var t: i. H TONGE. Q p. A. , Try Telegraph Want Ads ! FRIDAY ' BXRREBBURQ QS6& TELEGRAPH 1 OCTOBER 1, 1915. NEAL 0 / NAVY Oy William Hamilton Osborne, AUTHOR Of "RED MOWCRUNNING FIGHT," "CATSPAW," "6LU£ 00CKL6.* ETC. NOVCUZCO fROM THE PHOTO PLAY Of THE MME NAHE PRODUCED BY PATHE EXCHANGE, INC. coPYf*/c#r. /?/£, £Y v/LUAtr/fA/i/Lro/r Neal nodded. "I go pas- there." an swered Neal, "I'll take J ou t0 it- Come with me." Neal liked she didn't ring true. "This Is the poat offlcf." he ex claimed at length. Neal passed on toward the beach. He had not gone far when is heard a woman's scream. He looked back. In front of the post office * crumpled heap turned out to be the pretty wom an. "I slipped—l stumbled— something," she exclaimed, "and, oh—the pain—the pain—" "Where?" queried the postmaster. "My foot, my ankle," returned the young lady; "It is bad—bad'' She fell back, half fainting "* Neal's arms. The postmaster nodded to Neal. "She was going to your mother's, N«>al," he said. "My mother's," gasped X*al "does— does she know my mother?'' The postmaster shook h' s 'head. "She wanted a quiet place —not a boarding house, nor nothing of the kind—a quiet place for her and her old father. I gave her your mother's name. I didn't know. I thought may be your motfter might take em in." Neal clutched her in hie strong arms and staggered to his feet "I'll take you to my ir' her's," he said aloud; "that's whe- 1 'U were bound —I'm Mrs. Hardin n." Neal's mother, Mrs. Cai 1 Hardin, had spent a good part of t iast hour in the attic of her cozy 'e house. She was delving into the < (lis of an old leather trunk —and it meant that she was delving into the past. At the very bottom of the trunk where she had placed them years ago, was a newspaper package carefully tied up. She opened it ; spread its contents on the lid of the trunk. They consisted of the clothing—all the clothing—of a little girl—the dress and the linen articles had turned slightly yellow—even the thirteen years had left their mark upon them. But this was not all —there was a bag of gold—the bag of gold that the little girl had brought aboard the Prin cess during that day of terror back at Martinique. And pinned to the tiny dress was still the note—hastily pen ciled by an unknown hand: I am Annette llington. heiress of the lost isle of Cinnabar. I will be very rich some day. Save my clothes ! and the oilskin packet until my father comes fop me, or until I am eighteen. I must look out for a man with a saber cut upon his face. For God's sake, keep me safe. She was startled by Ar.nette's cry from below. Hastily she Flowed away the contents of the newspaper pack age and shut and locked the trunk. When she reached the living room, she started back. A yo j : woman, her skirt dusty with tb'. of the road, was lying full upon the lounge. Her eyes were closed. Neal was standing at her head placing a wet cloth upon her foreU' id Annette removed her shoe. "Ah, the pain—the pain—" groaned the sufferer. "Why, there's no swelling,'' said An nette. The girl on the lounge opened her eyes. "It is always that way," she re plied; "that is not the first time. It Is the injury to what you call the —the synovial membrane —the coyering of the bones. It has happened twice be fore." The girl signaled for her leather handbag which was on the tal Neal fetched it for her, ar.d she t k from It a card. She handed it to Annette. Annette passed It to Mrs. Ha i n. This is what It said. Miss Irene Courtier, Nassau, The Bahama Isles 'l—l must send a telegram," she added, shutting her bag ar.d handing It back to Neil. The girl dictated and Neal wrote as follows: Napoleon Courtier, Esq.. HoHl Ber muda, New York City: Bpralned my ankle. Don't worry. Have found friends In Beaport. IRENE. ! Over In the Hotel Bermuda in New York sat Mr. Napoleon Courtier—a j foreign-looking gentleman of digtin- ; guished appearance. He was a strik ing-looking figure and had many pe culiarities and eccentricities of man ner. The most striking hlng about him, however, was a livid saber cut across his cheek —a deep, deep cut — ' a bad scar. It is probable, however, that Mr. Courtier attracted no more attention than his companions did — i one of them a fat little Mexican of ! most villainous appearance the other a huge giant clad in ill-lit'ing clothes, who followed Mr. Courtier about like a dog—a faithful dog. Mr. Napoleon Courtier sat within his room. He was not alone. With him were the Mexican and the giant. With him also was another personage, ill favored, low browed, treaeheroua. This latter lpdl" M " M "'as a New Neal of the Navy SHOWN IN MOVING PICTURES mT fiNTAT EACH WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY Season's Greatest Movie Serial York crook. A telegraph boy entered with a tele gram. Courtier signed for it with a gold pencil, gave the boy a quarter for a tip and opened the telegram. "Ponto," exclaimed Mr. Napoleon Courtier, for the moment totally ignor ing the presence of the crook; "look, friend Ponto. Read." And Ponto read. It was the tele gram of Miss Irene Courtier. "At last—and after thirteen years," he said. The crook once more seated himself and Mr. Courtier followed suit. Ho seized a piece of paper and wrote rapidly. He pushed the piece of paper toward the crook. "Read that," he commanded; "it is intended for your principal." The crook read: Have 200 pounds best gum opium. Will land same tonight at Seaport, N. J. Be ready to receive It. Signal with flash flare. The crook nodded. "Right, bo," he commented. Half an hour later, on his way up Second avenue. New York, the crook was boisterously hailed by a crowd of boon companions. These boon com panions were loungtng in the doorway ; of the "Side Pocket." "Come on. Shorty," cried one of them, catching the crook by the "I'm just blowing. Come on in and have some steam." A few minutes after they entered the place, One-Eyed Mulvaney and his gang entered the saloon. Followed a fight and a raid by the police. When it was over Shorty lay in a corner with his skull cracked. Something white protruded from the crook's coat pocket. The sergeant drew it out. It was a note. It read like this: Have 200 pounda best gum opium. Will land same tonight at Seaport, N. J. Be ready to receive It. Signal with flash flare. The sergeant read it twice. Then be signaled to one of his men. "Hey, Tim," he cried; "take this to the captain right away. There ain't a second to lose. This here's a job for the federal authorities —ask the cap to send it down to 'em at once." CHAPTER IX. A Stern Chase. Miss Irene Courtier, if such were her name, rose from her couch in an upper room in the Hardin cottage with an agility that gave no hint of a disabled ankle. At last she spied a knot in one of the floor boards. She procured a nail file from her handbag and within a few moments had removed the knot from its containing hole. Then she treated herself to a view of the room ' below. She perceived that a celebration was in progress. Upon the table was a birthday cake with eighteen candles In It, and about the table were four people. Annette, the center of attrac tion; Neal and his mother and his foster brother, Joe Welcher. Mrs. Hardin stepped to a cupboard and drew forth a paper bundle. She placed it on the table and by the light of the eighteen candles she unwrapped it, exhibiting to Annette llington and to the boys a set of childish garments, a heavy leather bag, th?.t clinked as she laid it down, and a mysterious looking yellow packet, sealed with red sealing wax. She unpinned from a diminutive dress a piece of paper which she read aloud. The listener above started as the note was read. It was a strange note —it contained both a promise and a warning. "Look," said Annette suddenly, as she examined her possessions, "here j is a locket." In it there was a picture of a man, "My father," said Annette, "I am sure it is ipy father. Where is he — when will he come for me?" Suddenly Welcher started forward. "Godfrey," he cried, did you hear that." ! "It's a shot from a small-bore gun." ■ said Neal. "Come on, Joe Welcher, ! | "let's go out and see." I The shot was the indirect result of the raid upon the gangsters of the | "Side Pocket." For an hour at least a government destroyer with United States revenue officers aboard had patrolled the coast waiting for the signal arranged as per the unsigned bit of paper taken from the coat pocket of Shorty. The signal was a flash flare. The destroyer waited for it. Suddenly an officer held up his hand, j "There, close in shore." (To Be Continued.) WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENT Wrightsville, Oct. 1. Mr. and Mrs. John F. Hersh, have announced the marriage of their daughter, Miss Margaret, to Walter B. Crumbling. The ceremony was performed on July 11, by the Rev. S. J. McDowell, at Bal timore. The bride Is very popular, and the groom is connected with the Wilton Manufacturing Company. A mm mm mm a £e* ASTRICH S || r 1 Market and Fourth Streets I f I A Mammoth Sale | I IjlplJSl °f Trimmed Hats | I'' S / Placing on Sale Over g) 1 k IIP lUfef mmh THREE HUNDRED NEW HATS 1 || \\ Brought From Our Workrooms This |j 1 $3.98r54.98T55.981 WE WERE PRACTICALLY SOLD OUT OF TRIMMED HATS LAST SATURDAY EVENING. We worked as 1 - - hard as the law permitted us this week in order to place for your selection the - : THE CLOSEST FIGURING COULD PRODUCE FOR TH NEVER IN THE HISTORY OF OUR BUSINESS have we been able to sell hats as good at these prices. Compare our lal hats and prices with those shown by other stores—and use your own best judgment. y§s We incude in this sale HATS TO SUIT ALL AGES —Black and colored velvet hats for misses. Semi-dress and tailored y§i hats. Hats for the middle-aged women. Classy hats in the new tricorne and turban shapes. Close-fitting velvet turbans with -vg simple ornate trimmings. . ® Sg NEWEST PURITAN SAILORS in the narrow and wide brims with medium and high crowns—both in velvet and Hat- <§ AS tcr's plush—and many other NOVELTY SHAPES which go in a class by themselves. jzjj ;| IN THE BETTER STYLES OF DRESS HATS g* we excel all others in prices and variety of newest ideas—these range from s(i.9B to, s9.9B—and compare in every rgz respect with hats sold elsewhere from SIO.OO to $15.00. ' ALL YOU NEED IS ONE LOOK in our Trimmed Hat Department in order to be convinced of the truth of this c|r announcement. &S ;■ We Have the Best Showing of CHILDREN'S TRIMMED HATS in 4Q i QQ Harrisburg, At Prices Ranging From tO § At $1.49 and $1.98 an immense assortment of Velvet Hats for children from 4 to 6 years—which are worth positively Children's Hats at $2.49 to $3.49 I jH made and designed only by us. and which you will not find anywhere under $4.00 to $5.00. We make these hats from the frame up—using the best silk velvet, best ribbons and newest imported flowers and trimmings—giving you exclusive models at prices which you generally pay for factory-made hats. ' >§ A Marvelous Showing of FELT AND VELOUR HATS—Sailors, Crush Hats, Sport ja . CyflOQ 1$ || Hats, Etc., in Black, Brown, Navy, Rose, Green, Purple, Etc., at sl*49 tO <p4««/0 More than twenty different styles and shapes to select from. " §Bl oS We never do things on a small scale in qur millinery department. Nothing new ever appears on the market but you'll y§! /S find it here in large variety and at lowest prices. * BS Girls' and Children's Felt School Hats—velvet plush and corduroy tamoshanters, crush hats, etc from 490 up. Try to come during day time before the assortment is broken up. Funeral Services Are Held For Philip Bongart jH| PHILIP BONG ART Philip Bongart, an ice man on Allison Hill, for 25 years died at his home 1418 Derry street Tuesday eve ning. He was 64 venrs old. Mr. Bongart, well known to residents in that section of the city, came here in 1877. Funeral services will be held to-morrow afternoon ut 2 o'clock at his late home, the Rev. Dr. Clayton Albert Smucker, pastor of Stevens Memorial Methodist church officiating. Many Firemen Will x Attend Convention Harrisburg firemen will be repre-' stnted as individuals at the State Fire-1 men's Association meeting in Phlla-' delphia next week. Local delegates i will leave here Monday. It Is expected I that at least 1,000 Harlsburgers will go by special train on Thursday. The members of the Royal Fire Company No. 14. with a band, will' leave here Thursday morning at 6 o'clock. Two cars will be attached to the special train. This train will take on the Marietta Fire Company at Lan caster. WANT MOTOR FIRE APPARATUS Enola, Pa., Oct. 1. Enola Fire Company, No. 1, will hold a citizens' meeting to arrange plans for the pur chase of a new motordriven apparatus, on Monday afternoon and night. All the citizens of the 'cross-river town have been requested to be on hand at these meetings. One of the fire en gines will be exhihited during the day. DIES AS ME READS Special to The Teltgropli Sunbury, Pa., Oct. I.—William K. Fisher, a pflnter.- died suddenly to day. He was reading of the Phila delphia club's success as a pennant winner when he suffered nn attack of acute Indigestion and died in 10. minute#. | TWO SKXT TO PEN Dauphin Judges Impose Two Stiff Sentences In September (Quarter Sessions Two stiff penitentiary sentences were Imposed in Dauphin county criminal sessions yesterday afternoon when George Furlong, the second con victed bigamist in two days, and Zar Walter, of Dauphin, were ordered confined in the State's prison. Fur long is the Brockton, Mass., man who married a Lykens girl while separated but not divorced from his first wife in Brockton: he got from a year and a half to two years and a half. Zar Walter, who was convicted of attack ing his own 14-year-old daughter, got from three to six years. Sentence was suspended upon Har vey Bowers and Russel Mader, two of the Lower Paxton youths who had been auiirehended by State police for chickeWjsteallng. William D. 'Maro, convicted of robbing the shacks of for eigners got six months. The same sen tence was handed out to Alfred Robin son and David Key for felonious as sault. PERRY VETERANS' REUNION Special to The Telegraph New Bloomfleld, Pa.. Oct. I.—At a meeting in the courthouse preliminary arrangements were made for the forty-tirst annual reunion of the Perry County Veteran Association on Satur day, October 9. Congressman B. K. Focht will be the orator of the day. The following committees were ap pointed: Entertainment, James M. Barnett and H. E. Shelbley; finance, Charles H. Smiley and Enimet Clouser; decoration, Georgre Garber, John Hal man and James Stewart. The Busy Store A o J f Fourth on the /I OT fl ft h D and S g Busy Corner XA 01/ f IKs fI O Market Sts. Just a Word About Blouses You probably know about our 98c and $1.98 waists. The assortments gz we carry in these lines have given us a reputation for unusual quality and j|g style at these popular prices, and though we cut profits to uphold this repu- gr HS4 tation, our increased sales prove that our policy is right. §£ We want the same reputation for blouses of the better kind. Our buying sg 5g facilities now enable us to get the newest and most exclusive models just as soon as they leave the designing rooms—styles so unique, so bewitch- §3 Kg ingly attractive, and so correct in every detail, that they are sure to de- S§ Kg light you. jg aS q Let us show you the waists, and style, quality and price will speak for themselves. Smart Blouses Distinctive Models If I , $5.00 $7.50 to sls ife H ■ agasaMjassiiaiiaisaßa^^ LANCASTER COUNTY DEATHS Special to The Telegraph Marietta. Mrs. Florence Steven son Campbell, a former resident of Columbia, died yesterday at Hickory, North Carolina, aged about 60 years. She will be buried at Duncannon. Marietta. Howard R. Kahl, aged 28, a printer of Lancaster, died last, evening. His wife, a son and a brother survive. Marietta. Mrs. Leah Atland, aged 76, one of the oldest residents of East Berlin, died last evening very sud denly. She is survived by four sons and four daughters. TYPHOID AT SHIPPENSBX7RG Special to The Telegraph Carlisle, Pa., Oct. 1. —With 30 cases already reported and every day bring ing fresh quarantines, Shippensburg is facing a serious epidemic of typhoid. The origin of the fever local health officers and State Department men have not yet been able to locate. It is thought that the contagion be gan by the pollution of the water sup ply of the town of Mainsville, where a new $30,000 dam and reservoir have just been constructed. TRI'CK GOES OVER BANK Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., Oct. 1. Clyde Rose, deliveryman at the store of B. Davis, was knocked down by the au tomobile truck he was trying to stop at the town dump yesterday. and painfully injured. When the truck ran over the bank. Rose was carried down with it about fifteen feet and was caught under it. He was extricated by workmen nearby. The truck was j badly damaged. 7 BENZOL PI/ANT COMPLETED Special to The Telegraph Lebanon, Pa., Oct. I.—A SIOO,OOO benzol manufacturing plant, with a capacity of 800 gallons per day, is rapidly nearing completion at the local plant of the Lackawanna Iron and Steel Company, at Sixteenth and Forge streets. The plant will be run in conjunction with the coke ovens and the greatest part of the benzol will be manufactured from the coal gases generated there. STOMACH MISERY QUICKLY_VANISHES Your money back If you want it Is the way in which ail the leading drug stores are selling Ml-o-na, the great dyspepsia remedy. This is an unusual plan, but Mi-o-na has so much merit and is so almost in variably successful In relieving all forms of Indigestion that the dealers run but little risk in selling under a guarantee of this kind. Do not be miserable or make your friends miserable with your dyspepsia. Mi-o-na will help you. If it doesn't, tell your druggist that you want your money back and he will cheerfully re fur.a it. A change for the better will be seen from the first few doses of Ml-o-na, and Its continued use will soon start you on the road to nerfect digestion and enjoyment of food. Mi-o-na has been so uniformly suc cessful that every box is sold under a Rosltlve' guarantee to refund the money ! It does not relieve. What fairer proposition could he made? You can get Mi-o-na on this money back guarantee from practically every druggist in this vicinity, including H. C. Kennedy.—Advertisement.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers