LOOK AT CHILD'S TONGUE IF SICK FEVERISH Hurry, Mother! Remove poisons from little stomach, liver, bowels. Give "California Syrup of Figs" at once if bilious or constipated. Look at the tongue, mother! If coated, it Is a sure sign that your little one's stomach, liver and bowels need a gentle, thorough cleansing at once. When peevish, cross, listless, pale, doesn't sleep, doesn't eat or act natu rally, or is feverish, stomach sour, breath bad; has stomach-ache, soro throat, diarrhoea, full of cold, give a (caspoonful of "California Syrup of Figs," and in a few hours all the foul, constipated waste, undigested food »nd sour bile gently moves out of Its little bowels without griping, and you have a well, playful child again. You needn't coax sick children to take this harmless "fruit laxative;" J they love Its delicious taste and it al- . ways makes them feel splendid. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bot- ' He of "California Syrup of Figs.'' \ which has directions for babies, chil dren of all ages and for grown-ups plainly on the bottle. Beware of, counterfeits sold here. To bs sure you ' gel the genuine, ask to see that it is! made by "California Fig Syrup Com- ■ pany." Refuse any other kind with contempt—Advertisement. I p | Women Save $5 f | Using Gasoline j 1 Says It Is so easy to dry clean 3 f and nothing shrinks, fade* y 4 or wrinkles. % ♦ I A 4 Save $5 to $lO by doing your own flry cleaning. Here is a simple and j Inexpensive way to clean and brighten | children's coats, suits, caps, woolen 1 garments, Swiss, lawn, organdie and chiffon dresses, kid gloves and shoes, furs, neckties, ribbons, silks, satins, lace, yokes, silk shirtwaists, draper ies, rugs, in fact, any and everything that would be ruined with soap and water. Get two ounces of solvite at any drug store and put it in two gallons of gasoline, where it readily dissolves. Then put In the goods to be cleaned. After a little rubbing out they come looking as clean and fresh as new. You will And nothing fades, shrinks or wrinkles, requiring no pressing. Any woman can do home dry cleaning in a few moments at little cost and save lots of money. It is as simple and easy as laundering, and you can't make a mistake. Your gro cer or any garage will supply the aasoline, and your druggist will sell two ounces of solvite whloh is simply a gasoline soap. Then a wash boiler or large dlshpan completes your home dry cleaning outfit.—Ad vertisement, Parades and Receptions on First Day of Celebration of Penn's Creek Massacre Special to The Telegraph Selinsgrove, Pa., Oct. 13.—T0-mor row the three-day celebration of the fiOth anniversary of the Penn's Creek Massacre will open here with parades, receptions and band concerts. Friday and Saturday will have interesting features during the day and evening. The program for to-morrow Is as follows: 7:00 a. m.—Official opening by her alds In Market Square. . 9:00 a. m.—Opening of Loan Ex hibition in mansion of Governor Bnyder. 10:00 a. m.—General reception to visiting guests. 1:00 p. m.—Crowning of queen In Market Square. 2:30 p. m.—Firemen's parade, with State Fire Marshal Baldwin as guest. 7:00 p. m.—Mummers' parade and band concert. WANT GAME The Palmyra A. A. football team is without a game for Saturday, would like to hear from a good team. Ad dress C. S. Manwlller, Bell phone 7S, Palmyra, secretary. Safe Home Remedy For Skin-Troubles Eczema, ringworm and other itch ing, burning skin eruptions are so easily made worse by improper treat- jjCTr• ment that one has to be very careful. There is one method however, that you A/y 1 need never hesitate baby's tender skin H 11 —that is the res- Inol treatment. Keslnol Is the prescription of a Balti more doctor, put up In the form of res inol ointment and reslnol soap. This proved so remarkably successful, that thousands of other physicians have prescribed It constantly for over twenty years. Reslnol stops Itching Instantly, and almost always heals the eruption quickly and at little cost. Reslnol oint ment and reslnol soap can be bought at any druggist s. Write for free samples. Dept. 3-R, Reslnol, Balti more, Md.—Advertisement. TOUR PRINTING NEEDS wi: be best supplied where the f&clli. 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 b« Which doesn't mean that the prloe need, or should be. exorbitant. The Telegraph Printing Co. p-oducee the highest grades of work ID ts re spective lines. 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 as greater effort than to phone us. THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. iWEDNESDAY EVENING, NEAL of the NAVY By WILLIAM HAMILTON OSBORNE & Author of Moa''Running Fig)*. " "Catspa*. 00 "Blur BuckU, " etc. ■ 11 'i Novelised from the Photo Plij of the Same Nam* Produced bj the Pathe Exchange, Inc. Bill left the captain snoring in his bunk and stole across the deck and down the gangplank to the wharf be yond. Once upon the river front he turned east and strode on rapidly for a quarter of a mile. He darted into a narrow alleyway, reached a dimly lighted window In an old board house on the shore and rapped sharply on the window pane. A door was opened stealthily and he shambled in.' Huddled at tables and flung care lessly in corners were the forms of sailors, supine, drunk, drugged. BUI took an electric flash light from his pocket and examined carefully each of these slumbering objects of hu manity. "I'll take him," said Bill, "and him there with the broken face; and him —and that chap over there." Ten minutes later he nodded in a self-satisfied way and Jerked his thumb over his shoulder toward an other door. Is he inside?" he queried. "Oh," said the proprietor, "the three of 'em is there." There were three men in that Bmall room, a strangely assorted trio. One was a huge individual, bigger and stronger than Bill himself; another was an uncanny, fat, little Mexican with dangerous eyes; the third was a Portuguese with a saber cut cross his face. Bill grinned. "Huh," he said, "we're all here, mates. Outside I picked up enough men to fill up the Coronado's crew and here I run against three of her passengers." Hernandez smiled and showed his teeth. "Three unbooked passengers," he said. CHAPTER XXIV. The Trickle of White Powder. Hernandez motioned toward the door. Ponto, the Mexican, closed it noiselessly and swiftly and shot the bolt. "You understand the terms," Hernandez said. "This stuff has Just come in to us tonight. We have it load ed in our launch outside." "You understand then," said Her nandez, "that when this cargo of co caine is sold, yonr share will be many hundred dollars—a thousand— over a thousand." Two mornings later, a sailor lying In his bunk against a bulkhead in the hold —kept wakeful by his battered face a gift from Bill. On this par ticular morning, however, the unusual thing that attracted his attention was a quantity of fine white powder that Bifted through the knot hole. "Holy smoke," he exclaimed Joyful ly within himself, "this ain't no fat thing, ain't it? This here's cocaine." By noon the whole forecastle knew about the rat hole and what is more had sampled it —or rather the strange white powder that came trickling through. Next day something happened. Bill, the mate, gave Snooks an order that Snooks declined to fill. Bill was accustomed to being disobeyed, and for every ill he had a remedy. He seized a capstan bar and aimed it at Snooks' head; but there was a glitter in Snooks' eye that Bill did not un derstand. Snooks leaped for him and wrestled with him like a wiMcat. He forced Bill, panting, up against the rail, bellowing meanwhile like a mad bull. Bill felt for a belaying pin, found it, clutched it, raised it high in the air and brought it crashing down upon Snooks' shoulder. It broke a collarbone, but it might have been a feather for all Snooks cared. "Mates," cried Snooks, "you ain't going to seo me licked. Come one and all." They came. Some sprang down from the shrouds; some appeared from companionways; some camo hurrying along the decks. They were men bat tered and broken —but all had one un canny characteristic—their eyes glit tered, glittered fearfully and fear lessly. Bill sprang away from the clutch ing grasp of Snooks and drew his gun. "Captain Peter Handy," he roared. "Mutiny." And mutiny there was—a mutiny based not so much upon the ill treat ment of Bill the mate as upon the ef fect of the trickling white powder. The captain responded to the call; so did one or two others of the un drugged crew. The four booked passengers heard the riot —it could have been heard half a mile away. They rushed on deck and watched. Annette, who had Inherited quickness of mind, saw what was happening and turned to Mrs. Hardin. "You and Irene," she said, "go into the wireless room. Let us all go even Joe." Just as she said it a mutineer rushed past her, stopped, leered into her face and grasped her by the hand. With a sudden wrench he closed the Neal of the Navy SHOWN IN MOVING PICTURES rnT OTVTT A T EACH WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY Season's Greatest Movie Serial (Conrrl«ht. 191fc. faj Willimb Hamilton OaSonZ door of the wireless, shutting the three people inside—Welcher and the two other women—and then with a glare Into Annette's eyes, he drew her toward him and crushed her strug gling form against his breast. Below there were other passengers who watched the flght—Hernandez and his two companions. The brute watched stupidly—Ponto and Her nandez with polite Interest. * But sud denly the brute looked up toward the deck. He growled deep In his throat. "Hold him," said Hernandez to Ponto. But it was too late. With one bound the brute dashed up the com panionway and reached the deck. With another bound he was upon the sailor who had caught Annette. In an Instant Annette found herself re leased, hardly knowing how it had happened. She wrenched open the wireless door, sprang in, slammed it shut and shot the bolt. "Where is the operator?" she In quired. There was no answer. The operator was not there. Annette seized the wireless appa ratus, donned the headgear and sent out the S. O. S. —that long wail of terror that is heard far out across the sea. On the deck of the destroyer Jack son, a naval vessel which had left Newport a day or two before on a practice cruise, the wireless operator reported to his lieutenant. He sa luted. "Sir," he said, "I have an S. O. S. from a steamer Coronado, flvo miles south. Mutiny on board." A seaman standing near started for ward. "Godfrey," ho exclaimed under his breath, "the Coronado—Annette's ship." The lieutenant gaie an order. "Put her about," he said. Forced draft ahead." When the destroyer reached the Coronado, the Coronado was in dire straits. The mutineers, maddened and emboldened, and strengthened with renewed doses of the white pow der, were In possession of the ship. The mate and Capt. Peter Handy lay unconscious on the dock. Every sail or had a bottle in his hand —a bottle full of strong drink. In less than a quarter of an hour the Jackson was upon them—she had launched a boat and her boat had reached the Coronado's side. With the agility of perfect training the Jackson's men swarmed over the rail, boarded the Coronado and without an instant's hesitation attacked the mutineers, their lieutenant at their head. Neal drew a deep breath and nudged the man next to him. "This is war," he said, "it is what we're looking for. Come on." There was a fight—no arms'-length flght at that. It was man to man. It was a melee—it was a riot —it was pandemonium. In the midst of it there was a resouding crack. Neal's lieutenant, off his guard for once, re ceived a well-aimed blow upon his head—a blow from a capstan bar. He fell like a log and three brutes leaped for his head—seeking to batter him into a shapeless mass. Neal saw his peril and sprang into tho midst. Never in his life had he fought as then ho fought. The blood rushed into his brain; unwonted strength flowed into mus cles! his eyes were everywhere—his voice strong and fearless. "All together now," he shouted. One —two—three." There was a mighty superhuman rush, a ringing shout—then It was all over. The mutiny was quelled. Neal leaped upon a bridge and waved a cutless. He said the first thing that occurred to him—tho thing he felt he had to say. "I am in command," he shouted. "The first man who disobeys me will be shot." There was a clutch upon his arm. He looked down. He found that his right arm was bleeding from a cut, but he found something else. A small hand was grasping it quite tenderly. He turned. Annette laughed hyster ically. "What about any woman who dis obeys?" she said, S. B. Nissley Wins Cup in Colonial Club Play The match play grolf tournament which was started at the Colonial club the latter part of September has been completed except for the first eight of the second sixteen. S. B. Nissley by defeating Prlzer, 8 up and 6 to play In a thirty-six hole match, wins the tournament and the cup which was presented by the mem bers of the club. The other cup win ners were Prlzer, runner-up in the first eight, M. A. Seely, who defeated C. S. Sauers, 5 up and 4 in the beaten eight: Thomas Devlne, Sr., who won from Geo. F. Watt, 7 and 6 In the sec ond beaten eight, and the winner of the first eight In the second sixteen, which hasn't been played off as yet. HARRISBURO TELEGRAPH Glenwood Just The Other Day JaHB a new Glenwood range was shipped to K. Mitsvi, Vice-Minister of 7|L Foreign Office, Tokyo, Japan, and one to John D. Rockefeller, Pocantico f Hills, New York, and yet a Glenwood range with all its goodness is within reach of all —at about \ jp| The Plain Cabinet Glenwood Range is " machinery yet devised to make house- JM)jh (§) ' Gas It's made in natural black iron finish— Jflj (0) ® \1 WiM); ' i||||l Ran?® so smooth and easy to clean—the "Mis- Jm l n (Y\ sion Idea" applied to a range. & I j ' a °' r SOl -- P| FAST RACES AT NEWPORT FAIR Big List of Entries in Trotting and Pacing Events For Tomorrow Special to The Telegraph Newport, Pa., Oct. 13.—Yesterday the annual exhibition of the Perry County Agricultural Association open ed with a large attendance and yith a fine exhibit in every department. The races to-day were trotting and pacing for Perry county horses without rec ord and trotting and pacing, class 2.16. Entries for to-morrow's great races are as follows: Newport Trotting and Pacing; Class 2.27: purse $300: Sam Wheeler, b., R. D. Eschbach, Milton; Dan C, b. g., F. B Sipe, Jenners; Dr. L, b. g., W. H. Finkenbinder, Carlisle; Silver Mine, s. g., O. P. Green, Highspire; Carrie Hal, b. m., Elmer E. Lay, Carlisle; Rob erta, br. m., C. S. Middagh, Mifflin; Ashland Rose, b. s., G. H. Ritter, Elliottsburg; Jolla P, b. g„ J. Page, Derry Church; Puzzle, b. m., Thomas Gibbons, New Martinsville; Orphan, b. g., Louis Von Lunen, Johnstown; Hon est Robert, b. g., U. H. Cook, Johns town. Trotting: Class 2:9; purse S3O0 — Nash, bl. h., R. W. Smith, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Tobe Ward, c. g., C. S. Middagh, Mifflin; Unkle ike, br. g., Geo. Rhoades Maytown; Puzzle, b. m., Thos. Gib bons, New Martinsville; Candy Boy, b. g.. F. H. Smith, Johnstown. Trotting and Pacing; Class 2.21; Purse S3O0 —Sam Wheeler, b., R. D. Eschback, Milton; Chesterwood, b. g., R. W. Smith, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Eliza beth, b. m., F. B. Sipe, Jenners; Dr. L, b. g., W. H. Kinkenbinder, Carlisle; Silver Mine, s. g., O. P. Green, High spire; Carrie Hal, b. m., Elmer E. Lay, Carlisle; Gertrude Direct, b. m., Elmer E. Lay, Carlisle; Almedia Hal, br. P. M. Smith, Bath. N. Y.; Roberta, br. m., C. S. Middagh, Mifflin; Ashland Rose, b. s., C. H. Ritter, Elliottsburg; Tom Patch, b. g„ Louis Von Lunen, Johnstown: Orphan, b. g., Louis Von Lunen, Johnstown; Duncan Direct, bl. g., Louis Von Lunen, Johnstown; Candy Boy, b. g., F. H. Smith, Johns town; Honest Robert, b. g., U. H. Cook, Johnstown. BATTERIES BOMBARDED By Associated Press Constantinople, Oct. 13, via London. —The war offlce makes the following announcement: "Near Anafarta on Sunday our artillery hit an enemy tor pedoboat which was cruising to the north of Kiretch Tepe, whereupon an other torpedoboat and an enemy cruiser successfully bombarded our batteries for ten minutes." GREECE'S POSITON IN DODBT By Associated Press Paris, Oct. 13.—"What will Greece j dc now?" is a question which ia being J asked on all sideb to-day. Her treaty i with Serbia expressly stipulates that if one of the contracting parties, already ] engaged in war against a third power, | ib attacked by Bulgaria as well, the! allied general staffs of Greece and Ser- I bis must consult with a view of im- j mediate action. THREATEN TO STRIKE By Associated Press East Liverpool, Ohio, Oct. 13.—Kiln ' firemen In the various potteries to-day i rresented a demand for an increase of 60 cents a day. bringing their pay to j $4, with the alternaUve that they would strike on Monday next. ' TRINKLE LEAVES STATE'S SERVICE Public Service Counsel's Resig nation Accepted With Re gret by Attorney General Attorney General Brown last night announced his acceptance of the resig nation of William N. Trlnkle, of Phila delphia, as counsel for the Public Ser vice Commission, with expressions of regret. Mr. Trinkle, who was the first man to be appointed counsel, took office in the latter part of 1913 and has won considerable notice by his work. The correspondence between the At torney General and Mr. Trlnkle was as follows: October 1, 1915. Hon. Francis Shunk Brown, Attorney General, Harrisburg, Pa. Dear Sir: Tn confirmation of the intention ex- GOING"I GOING-!! GONE ill EH (T} / (o / (C) £ CH nn«c»twit£jiwtir Huncutwumrt toourtro«mnax Nature does her best to make all women attractive. ' By reasonable care of the hair every wo man may increase her personal charm. P The Modish World Endorses HERPICIDE MI S reat success of Herpicide is due JJiJ YW entirely to its dependability. Persons suf ferin? Rom dandruff and falling hair turn t0 th * S known sca lp prophylactic and // germ remedy knowing that the desired re // mm suits will follow its intelligent use. On *'/ II account of its exquisite odor, Newbro's '*j/\ [| \ //\f Herpicide finds favor among those of the \ S reatest refinement. The ladies are en thusiastic because of the brightening ef -oss? \\fect upon the hair which it keeps always / Kfl hair dressing. Stops itching jf / |pf M of the scalp due to dandruff almost in- Jjjr Send 10c, stamps or silver, to The Herpicide Co. A V Dept. 127-B, Detroit, Mich, for sample bottle and booklet. Applications at the better barber shops. Sol