12 WOMEN FROM 45 to 55 TESTIFY To the Merit of Lydia EL Pink ham's Vegetable Com pound during Change of Life. Westbrook. Me. through the Chan "I wa» passing je of Life and had pains in my back and side and was so weak I could hardly do my housework. I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound and it has done me a lot of good. I will re commend your med icine to my friends and give you permis sion to publish my testimonial." Mrs. LAWRENCE MAR TEC, 12 King St, Westbrook, Maine. Manston, Wis. "At the Change of Life I suffered with pains in my back and loins until I could not stand. I also had night-sweats so that the sheets would be wet I tried other medicine but got no relief. After taking one bot tle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound 1 began to improve and I continued its use for six months. The pains left me, the night-sweats and hot flashes grew less, and in one year I was e different woman. I know I have to thank you for my continued good health ever since." Mrs. M. J. BROWNELL, Manston, Wis. The success of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots «2d herbs, is unparalleled in such cases. If yon wont special advice write to I.ydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confi dential') Lynn, Mass. Tour letter will be opened, read and answered bv a v >• confidence- II Heals Skin Diseases |j It is unnecessary for you to suffer ' with eczema, ringworm, rashes and similar skin troubles. A little zemo, ; gotten at any drug store for 25c, or SI.OO for extra large bottle, and prompt ly applied will usually give instant re- [ lief from Itching torture. It cleanses and soothes the skin and heals quickly and effectively most skin diseases. Zemo is a wonderful disappearing liquid and does not smart the most delicate skin. It is not greasy, is easily applied and costs little. Get it to-day I and save all further distress. Zemo. Cleveland. Advertisement. j SO.OO Sunday O THp 1 " 1 Excursion NEW YORK America's Metropolis SUNDAY, OCT. 31 A hip; opportunity to see a blit city. SPECIAL TRAIN I.EAVES Harrlshurft J».45 A. M. KfturnlDK leaven \eTr ' York rt.SO P. M. Tickets on sale at ticket office* beginning October 20. Pennsylvania R. R. —m—— mt YOUR PRINTING N3EDS wll. oe best supplied wher«s the facili ties for such work are the best. When you consider that the printed material ycu 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 Which doesn't mean that the price need, or should be. exorbitant. The Telegraph Printing Co. p-oduces the highest grades of work iD Xs re spective lines. Ail of it is based upon quality at prices which are most fair for the work. 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Station CHAS.H.MAUR THE UNDERTAKER SktkuJlUbrlWi Larswt wMbm. Bm bdlitW Naarta Cu « roar pfcoa* WTfllouar~her.alTTJ-rr.lt otar x-rrlce. No funeral too small Nona to* mceociva. Ou»«ia. n vault. aaa» wad MONDAY EVENING, ( f**f frfff ff*Tf pf ff f f fr r rf f f.j | |! NEAL of t NAVY By WILLIAM HAMILTON OSBORNE J | j4ulher of "Red Monte," "Running !; Fight," "Cahftaa," "blue Buckl'i" clc. ![ 1 1 1 1 __________ I i Novelued from tha Photo Play of the Sam* Name Produced by !| the Pathe Exchange, Inc. ! 1 i~~— (CoDTrijht, Uli. bf William H&uillion Ooburziftl SYNOPSIS. On the day of the eruption of Mount Pelee Capt. John Hardin of the steamer Princes* rescue* flve-year-old Annette Illusion from an open boat, but Is forced to leave behind her father and his com panions. lllngton is assaulted by Her nandez and Ponto In a vain attempt to get papers which Tlington has managed to send aboard the Princess with nls daughter, papers proving his title to and telling the whereabouts of the lost Island of Cinnabar. Illngton's Injury causes his mind to become a blank. Thirteen years elapse. Hernandez, now an opium smug gler. with Ponto, Inez, a female accom plice, and the mindless brute that once was Illngton, come to Seaport, where the widow of Captain Hardin Is living with her son Neal and Annette Illngton, and plot to steal the papers left to Annette by her father. Neal tries for admiaslon to the Naval academy, but through the treachery of Joey Welcher is defeated bv Joey and disgraced. Neal enlists In the navy. Ine* sets a trap for Joey and the conspirators get him In their power. He agrees to steal the papers for them but accidentally sets fire to the Hardin home and the brute-man rescues Annette with the papers from the flames. Annette dis covers that heat applied to the map re veals the location of the lost Island. Sub sequently In a struggle for its possession the map is torn in three part*, Hernan dez Annette and Neal eacli securing a portion. Annette sails on the Coronado in search of her father. The crew, crazed by cocaine smuggled aboard by Hernan dez. mutiny, and are overcome by a boarding party fron V. S. Destroyer Jackson, led by Neal. SIXTH INSTALLMENT THE CAVERN OF DEATH CHAPTER XXV. A Secret Service Message. Neal turned to Annette. "Good," he exclaimed, "you're safe at any rate. Where is my mother —where are the rest?" "In the wireless room." returned An nette. She laughed a bit hysterically. "Even Joe Welcher is quite safe," she said. Neal held her for a moment, shield ing her body with his own. He looked about him. "This mutiny is over," he said, in a tone of relief. He was quite right. The mutiny was over, but with disastrous results. Neat's commanding officer lay on the deck with a fractured skull. The cap tain and the mate of the fruit steamei Coronado were dead or nearly so. and the decks were strewn with disabled, bleeding mutineers. "Now come with me." said Neal. He waved his hand and a small squad o( his companions Joined him. He sought and found his mother and her fright ened companions. Joe Welcher and the Castro girl—known to the rest as Irene Courtier. He led them aft and placed a guard over them. "Now," he said warningly, "stay where you are, mother, and all the rest. You, too. Annette. I've got my work cut out for me for some hours." Annette shook her head. "Not until I dress your arm." she said. Neal nodded to one of his compan ions. "Mate," ho said, "shoot the first person who disobeys. I've got other fish to fry." He went back to his work. He wig wagged to the Jackson for his orders. The orders were brief and to the point: "You take charge of the steamer We are sending help." He took charge of the steamer, not only because he was ordered, but be cause he had to. Inside of half an hour he had his own lieutenant 8 wounds carefully and scientifically dressed —had all his own companions well attended to—in short, in a few hours he had righted the ship completely. He signaled for further orders, for the Coronado was now resting quietly at anchor, and he got his orders: "Put into the nearest port." By midnight they had reached the nearest port—had docked. By mid night he had landed all his passengers and had reported considerable prog ress to his commander on the Jack son. By midnight something else happened—a secret service message filtered through space and got the wireless operator on the destroyer. Reduced from cipher, it read about like this: American citizen said collecting arms and ammunition at Martinique or Porto Rico for Dolores insurrec tion. Follow at orce. Investigate, ar prevent. Report. Next morning this news had filtered into Neal. He took it to the homely little hotel where Annette and his mother and their party had been har bored for the night. He dropped into a chair. "Now," he said, "I can talk and listen to some talk. Gee whiz, but I'm dog tired." Annette pouted; then she smiled. "I love to talk," she said. And then she added two significant words. "Scar face." Neal leaped to his feet. "Scar-face," he cried. "Where? When? What?" "On the Coronado," said Annette. "I saw him twice —Scar-face and his two companions, the big man and the other." "Tell me everything," said Neal. She told him. He waited impa tiently until she had finished, then darted down upon the wharf again. He the '*■ and gave or- Neal of the Navy SHOWN IN MOVING PICTURES POT (XTJT A T EACH WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY Season's Greatest Movie Serial ' ders for a search. The search was made, but without avail, for at mid night on the night before something else happened. Hernandez and his two companions, together with his cargo of cocaine and heroin, had slipped quietly overboard into a bor rowed rowboat and had disappeared. Neal, chagrined, went back to An nette. "The bird has flown," he said dis gruntled. "Where do you go, Neal?" queried his mother. "It's an open secret where we go," said Neal, "but why we go nobody .knows. We go first to Martinique—" Annette sprang to her feet. "Mar tinique," she cried, "that is where my father came from—where you picked me up. Igo there, too, Neal. It's the beginning point. It is there I can find trace of my father." Inez shrugged her shoulders. "It is fate," she said. "We will all go," said Mrs. Hardin, "we will stick to Neal. But how?" "Search me," said Neal, "but I can find that out—there must be 3ome ves sel from this port for southern wa ters." Inez rose and placed a hand on Welcher's shoulder. "Leave it to Joey here and me," she said. They scoured the town, bnt Inez Castro was looking for something other than a boat for Martinique. Fl- nally she saw what she was looking I for—a grimy hand thrust from behind a window shade. Pausing before the door of a dis reputable-looking habitation. she glanced up and down the street, then dragging Joe Welcher close behind her she entered the low doorway and passed into the gloom beyond. A mo ment later she faced Hernandez and his crew. "So," she said airily, pushing Joe Welcher into a chair, "so my flash friends, where do you think we go to now?" "Where?" demanded Hernandez. "To Martinique," said Inez Castro. Hernandez smiled and slapped his thigh. "So you go to Martinique," he cried, with a note of triumph in his voice. "How very fortunate. I go to Martinique myEelf." • *••••• The governor of Martinique glanced gravely at the pretty girl who faced him. He laid down the piece of tat tered parchment that he had Just in spected aud took up the locket that she placed before him. "I knew your father well fifteen or sixteen years ago—even before that. I remember him. This resembles him, this picture. It does indeed." He smiled. "I remember something else. I remember also you." "You remember me," cried Annette. "You must have a wonderful memory, sir." The governor held up his hands. "One remembers everything that hap pened in a year like that," he said, "a year that wined out thousands upon thousands of our people." "Is there any clue to my father?" queried Annette. "Little one," said the governor, "there was no clue to anything or any body, or any place." Annette rose. "There's nothing else that you remember of my father?" she queried. "The governor searched his mem ory. "Yes," he said. "I think a mys tery—there was a tang of adventure about him. He, too. was a rover— always restless—always on the move. But for his child one might have called him a soldier of fortune —honest, per haps too honest, but fearless —" "And true," said Annette. "Fearless and true," repeated the governor nodding. "What is past is past," he said. "Old Pelee is ashamed of himself. The Isle of Martinique grows green. We sing, we laugh, my people and myself. Even all this week we celebrate. You must Join us." He signed half a dozen cards of invitation and h?nded them to Joe Welcher, who sat quite as usual, sulking In the background. "The governor's levee." he went on airily, "and you ar» all invited." CHAPTER XXVI. The Razor Back. Around the corner of the coast line on the Isle of Martinique—invisible both from the bridge of the destroyer Jackson and from the grounds of the governor, there Jutted out Into the sea a cliff, stern and forbidding. As a matter of fact, it was not ail rock, this cliff —a large part of its formation was of clay. Down the face of this cliff, its sharp edges rising now and then into the air like peaks, there trailed a path, narrow and perilous, from shore to cliff edge, known to cer tain of the inhabitants of Martinique as the Razor Back. Along this sharp, steep edge ran a rope, and climbing the Razor Back, clinging to this rope with a huge bur den on his shoulders, upward crawled ft man. Below him, thrusting its nose Into the beach, was a disreputable looking boat laden with heavy wooden boxes. (To Be' Continued.) HARRXSBURG TELEGRAPH $500,000,000 Anglo-French Five Year 5% External Loan THE JOINT AND SEVERAL OBLIGATION OF THE GOVERNMENTS OF THE UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND AND THE FRENCH REPUBLIC DATED OCTOBER 15, 1915 DUE OCTOBER 15, 1920 INTEREST PAYABLE APRIL 15 AND OCTOBER 15 Both principal and interest payable in New York City in United States gold coin, with out deduction for any present or future British or French Taxes Coupon bonds in denominations #IOO, #.>oo, and #I,OOO, which may ho registered as to principal. Registered bonds in denominations of SI,OOO, SIO,OOO and $50,000 and athorized multiples. Coupon and registered bonds interchangeable. Convertible, at the option of the holder, on any date not later than April 15, 1920, or (provided that notice be given not later than April 15, 1920) at maturity, par for par, into 15-25 Year Joint and Several 4'4 per cent. Bonds of the Governments of the United Kingdom of Great Britian and Ireland and the French Republic. Such 4\/ 2 per cent, bonds will be payable, principal and interest, in United States gold coin, in New York City, free from deduction for any present or future British or French taxes, will mature October 15. 1940, but will be redeemable, at par and accrued interest, in whole or in part, on any interest date not earlier than October 15, 1930, upon three months' notice. A large amount of these bonds having already been withdrawn for investment, we, whose names appear below, offer, on behalf of a country-wide group of institutions and bankers, the unsold balance, subject to prior sale and change in price PRICE 98 AND INTEREST, YIELDING NEARLY 554 PER CENT. Payment may be made either in full on October 29th or at the option of the purchaser 50 per cent, on October 29th and the balance on December 3rd. Application will be made to list these bonds on the New York Stock Exchange. Temporary bonds will be ready for delivery on or about October 29th. exchangeable for the definite bonds when prepare*. Barclay. Moore & Co.. Philadelphia Charles I>. Barney & Co., Philadelphia Battles & Co., Philadelphia C. H. Bean & Co.. Philadelphia Benson & Packard, Philadelphia Thomas A. Biddle & Co.. Philadelphia Hotline Sons Co.. Philadelphia William P. Bonlirißht & Co.. Inc.. Philft Brooke. Stokes & Co., Philadelphia Butcher, Sherrerd A Hansell, Phila. Cassatt & Co., Philadelphia E. W. Clark & Co.. Philadelphia C. Clothier Jones & Co., Philadelphia THE PANAMA CANAL AT WORK By Frederic J. Haskin rContinued from Kditorial Page ] j of their systems, and the symptoms | are no longer acute. Throughout thei rural districts in Panama may bej seen many persons atflicted with en-: iarged spleen, which Is said to be j Biniply the result of chronic malaria. | Rather Drink Rain At any rate, many of the Panama- j mans are even opposed to drinking the pure water with which the United | states government supplies them. They prefer to capture rain water and keep it in earthen jars, and these jars form an ideal breeding place for the ever-present mosquito. Thus, con tinual effort is necessary to keep the pest down in the city of Panama, where it should not exist at all. As a result of these strenuous and unrelenting measures against the mos quito. 'he indigenous malarial rate in Panama has been reduced to such a low figure that the health department officials like to state it as "practically none." Whenever the people become severely ill they always journey to Panama, so that there Is always more or less Imported sickness, but this cannot be charged to heal'h conditions on the zone. Fever and Plague The other two diseases to be coni batted, in addition to malaria, are yel low fever and bubonic plague. There have been no indigenous cases of either of these diseases In the Canal Zone since 1905. In order to fully safeguard Uncle Sam's employes against the menuce of plague, It is now the purpose of the health depart ment to make the city of Panama absolutely ratproof. Already the great er part of the streets of Panama have been paved by the government, the I whole town has been sewered with J concrete and tiled drains, and many 1 of the worst quarters have been de stroyed and rebuilt in a more substan | tlal style. i A law has now been passed which ; prohibits the making of any change in a building in Panama without the , consent of the health department, i Thus, whenever an application is I made to alter or rebuild a house, the i health department refuses to give its i consent unless the house is made I absolutely sanitary and ratproof. As the structures in the poorer quarters ' of Panama City are nil of frame and i very poorly built, it Is only a matter ! of time until they will all be replaced I with ratproof structures. One of the great difficulties en countered by the health department is due to the native love of crowded con ditions. Real estate men in both Panama City and Colon have found that one large house with a great number of small rooms will rent for a great deal more than several small houses with the same number of rooms. The Panamanian and likewise ti, P West Indian black, want "plenty neighbors right handy." Sabanas, Cocoa Grove and other poor quarters of Panama City are the most amazing spectacles of swarming and odorifer ous humanity that can be found any where. One of the most interesting phases of the sanitary work on the Canal Zone is the light whleh It has thrown upon the question of how the tropics affect white men. For long years they held, nothing for htm but almost cer talr. death. When the first hardy voyagers from Europe tried to land along the South and Centra) American coasts, plague and fever destroyed J. P. Morgan & Co., New York Dre.vel & Co.. Philadelpliia Broun Brothers & Co., Philadelphia Coles & Worts, Philadelphia Klkins, Morris & Co.. Philadelphia felrvtn & Co.. Philadelphia Charles Fcaron & Co., Philadelphia M. M. Freeman & Co., Philadelphia Frazier & Co., Philadelphia Bobt. Gteiidinning & Co.. Philadelphia Goodall, Wlster i Co.. Philadelphia Graham & Co.. Philadelphia N. W. Halsey & Co., Philadelphia Harper & Turner, Philadelphia Harris, Kovbes & Co., Philadelphia Clias. C. Harrison, Jr.. & Co., Phila. ! them before they had a chance to be-11 i come acclimated. Then came the 1 ! wonderful discoveries as to the cause and prevention of tropical diseases in | Cuba and the Philippines, and the re j markable work of Colonel Gorgas at | Panama, which has made tne Canal j Zone one of the most sanitary places | in the world. Colonel Gorgas has stated it to be I his belief that when the tropical dis i eases have been eliminated white men j can live just as well in the tropics as ! anywhere else. Lieutenant Colonel i Charles F. Mason, who is Colonel { Gorgas' successor on the Canal Zone, | and who has also had a lons ex ! perience in the tropics, dissents from i this view of the matter. He points out that the Panamanians, who are not lan indigenous people but largely of Spanish and Negro blood, have been decidedly affected by their life in the tropics. They mature quickly, women in the interior often marrying at the age of fifteen, while women of twen ty-tive look to be forty. Both men and women are decidedly old before they are fifty. Life is telescoped, as it were, both maturity and death be ing hastened. Furthermore, indo-j lence and irritabiltiy are marked characteristics of the natives. Colonel Mason believes that the same effects are produced in some de gree upon all white people who go to live in the Canal Zone. However, splendid work has been and is beingi done by the Americans at Panama, so j that the troplcul conditions certainly i have not prevailed over Yankee nerve j and energy. And this much may be said with safety: Under present con-1 ditions the Canal Zone is an extremely ' pleasant and beautiful place to live in: j and it is amply proved by example that men of temperate habits may en-1 jay the best of health here for many | years. SKIN TROUBLE ! OH BABY'S FACE So Sore. Crust On Left Cheek. Seemed To Itch. Tried To Scratch. Very Cross. HEALED BY CUTICMRA SOAP AND OINTMENT , "When my baby was five month* old her face got all red and It looked puffed up. In a couple of weeka Uie little face §w as so sore, and it had a crust on the left cheek one-half on Inch thick. It seemed to itch as she was trying to scratch It all the time. She ' used to be very cross , and reotlom. and I never thought she would get , well. "I saw Cuticura Soap and Ointment advertised and I sent for a free sample. I bought a cake at Outkrara Soap and some ! Ointment and after using them for a week , | she la healed." (Signed) Mrs. Elisabeth : ' (ioetter, Wynecote, Pa., Jan. 30. 1915. Sample Each Free by Mail I ' With 32-p. Skin Book on request. Ad i I dress post-card "Cuticura, Dspt. T, >—■■ II IH.' BolC throughout the world. i OCTOBER 18. 1015 Salmon Choke River Near Kelso, Washington Special to The Telegraph Kelso, Wash.. Oct. Is. T lie re is a heavy run of salmon In the Cowlitz and Kalama rivers, and in the latter stream, on which the State fishery hatchery is located, the run is the greatest ever known by white men. This stream is protected by law on account of the hatchery, and fishermen are forbidden to operate in it with their gear, and S. S. S. Greatest Blood Remedy Gives Results When Olhers Fail Nature's Remedy for Blood Troubles The purifying and curative proper tics of Nature's great remedy have made "S. S. S. for the Blood" a household saying. Thousands to day enjoying perfect health owe their recovery from blood or skin dis eases to this universally used blood purifier. S. S. S. is made entirely from roots, herbs and barns, which possess cleansing and healing ingre dients. You cannot be wplt when your blood Is impure; you tack strength and energy natural with health; your complexion becomes pale and sallow; your vitality is weakened. When WORLD FAMOUS EMBROID- To indicate you are a regular reader you must present ONE Coupon like this one, with 68 cents. THE WORLD FAMOUS EMBROIDERY OUTFTT « anteed to be the beat collection and biggest bargain in patterns era offered. It consist! of more than 450 of the very latest design*. i~x any one of which you would gladly pay 10 cent*, bet! hardwood em . broidery hoop*, sef of highest grade needle* (anorted sizes), gold-tipped bodkin, highly polished bone stiletto and fascinating booklet of tnstruc hoat- firing all the fancy stitches *o clearly illustrated and *nrpl»im»j that any school girl can readily become expert. »-* SEVERAL TRANSFERS FROM EACH DESIGN ONLY SAFE METHOD- , AD old-fashioned method* using water, benzine or injurious fluids are crude and out-of-date. This is the only safe method. Others often injure expensive materials. N. B. Out of Town Readers will add 7 cents extra fee postage and expense of mailing ITcnr.v & West, Philadelphia Klenim & Keen, Philadelphia A. B. Meller & Petry, Philadelphia Montgomery, Clothier & Tyler, Phila. W. H. Xewbold's Son & Co., Phila. Wm. A. Read & Co., Philadelphia Rellly, Brook & Co., Philadelphia K. B. Smith & Co., Philadelphia J. \V. Sparks & Co., Philadelphia K. Ijowber Stokes. Philadelphia Town send, Whelen & Co., Philadelphia Rufus Waples & Co., Philadelphia j many of the riffles are so crowded w flsli that one can hardly cross I stream without stepping: on fish. The men at the hatchery go into fish like in a drove of fat hogs and p them up, examining each fish, and i! it is "ripe" the salmon is killed. 1 spawn is taken and placed in hatchi trays at the hatchery, there tend until the eggs are hatched and t small fry taken care of until lar enough to protect themselves, wh they are turned loose in the river. Th return in four years to the stream which they were hatched, being f sized fish within that time. waste or refuse matter, which Na ture intends shall be thrown off, is left in the system, it is absorbed into the blood and boils, pimples, rashes, blotches and other eruptions of the skin appear. S. S. S. goes into the circulation and removes every particle of blood taint or poison of every character. All skin diseases and eruptions pass away, and the smooth olear skin, glowing with health, shows that the body is being nourished by rich, pure blood. Rheumatism, Ca tarrh, Scrofula, Contagious Blood Poison, all are deep-seated blood dis orders. and for their treatment noth ing equals S. S. S. Get S. S. S. at any drug store. If yours is a peculiar case write S. S. S. Co., Atlanta, Ga.
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