12 It Helps Your Eyes to see with clearness arid comfort; it brings beauty and cheer into your home; it puts money in your purse, —this wonderful "SHIELD or Q.UALITY" Ga.s Mantle "SS* Now 15c (For Upright aod Inverted G»> Lights) Awarded Grand Pri*e Highest Honor Panama»Pacific International Exposition 100 Points Excellent FOR SALE BY Gas Company and Dealers EIjPM For Acid Stomachs Use Magnesia Quickly Stnjw Soar Hurtling Keeling j nod Makes Digestion Palnleas The almost universal use of mag- | nesia by physicians and specialists in j the treatment of stomach troubles, is j due to the fact that it stops food fer- j mentation and neutralizes the acid—the ! direct cause of nearly all stomach | troubles. Of the many forms of mas- I nesia such as oxides, citrates, carbon- [ ates, sulphates, e>tc„ the most suitable j and efficient, and the one prescribed by leading specialists is bigurated mag- I nesia, a teaspoonful of which in a little warm water immediately after eating will instantly neutralize the acid, stop I fermentation, and thus ensure painless ; normal digestion. Care should lie taken to get bisurated magnesia, as its action is infinitely more effective. It ts also, by the way, usually stocked by drug gists in convenient compressed tablets j as well as in the ordinary powder form. | Stomach sufferers and dyspeptics who j follow this plan and avoid the use of | pepsin, charcoal, soda mints, drugs and [ medicines are invariably astonished to find that the stomach, relieved of the | irritating acid and gas, soon regains its i normal tone, and can do its work alone without the doubtful aid of artificial j digestants.—Advertisement. INDOOR LIFE MAKES FAT TAKE Oil, OF KORKIX TO KEEP WEIGHT DOWN, OR TO RE DUCE SUPERFLUOUS FAT People who are confined within doors and who are deprived of fresh, invig orating air and exercise must take pre caution to guard against over-stout ness, as fat acquired by indoor life is unhealthy and a danger to the vital organs of the body. L>ack of exercise in the fresh air weakens the oxygen carrying power of the blood, so that it i is urfable to produce strong muscles and I vitality and the formation of unsightly and unhealthy fat is the result. If you are 15 or 20 pounds above nor mal weight you are daily drawing on your reserve strength and are constant ly lowering your vitality by carrying this excess burden. Any person who is satisfied In their own mind that they are too stout should go to a good drug'- gist and get a box of oil of koreln capsules, and take one after each meal and one just before retiring at night Even a few days' treatment should show a noticeable reduction in weight digestion should improve, energv re turn. footsteps become lighter and the skin less flabby in appearance. 011 of korein is inexpensive, cannot in jure. helps the digestion and is design- I ed to increase the oxygen-carrying • power of the blood. . Any person 'who wants to reduce their weight 15 or ">0 pounds should give this treatment "a trial. There is nothing better. Ad vertisement. Moone's Emerald Oil For Varicose Veins Try This Simple H»me Treatment! If you have large, Varicose Veins, the quickest and easiest way to reduce them to norma] size is to apply Moone's Emerald Oil (full strength) daily as directions advise. Start this easy treatment to-day and j you will rejoice to notice that" the large unsightly veins are gradually growing smaller. Ask your druggist for a two ounce bottle. It is so very powerful and pantratlng that just a few treatments with Emerald Oil will banish any case of Hemorrhoids or Piles.- Generous j sample by mail on receipt of 10c, from , Moons Chemical Co., Rochester, N. Y. All druggist can supply you.—Adver- I tlsement. SQ.OO Sunday fp Round Excursion NEW YORK America's Metropolis SUNDAY, OCT. 31 A big opportunity to nee n big city. SPECIAL TRAIN LEAVES HurrlNhurK .... 5.4,1 A. M. Returning leaves \tn York B.SO p. M. Tickets on sale at ticket offices beginning October 29. Pennsylvania R. R. 12 ST' For Headaches 36 Lebanon, Pa., l-P-15. You are at liberty to uae my name and testimony for advertis ing CaPA'So tablets, and you may refer any person to me and I will gladly tell them the food they kave lone for me. Wishing you aucceaa, I am yonra truly, MRS. LIZZIE FRITZ, k 731 Spring Ave. I THURSDAY EVENING. ! || NEAL of NAVY ] Br WILLIAM HAMILTON OSBORNE Aulhtt of "Rai Move." "Running Fight. " "Catipatt. " "Blut Buckle. " etc. I i| || I Novelized from the Photo Play of th* Sam* Nam* Produced by tbc Pa the Exchange, Inc. 'CocTrUbt. U)U. by WUllu fUmllioc Oiboru«: I Annette sprang to her feet. "Never," she cried. "Never will I give it up. The lost Isle is mine. It is my fa ther's, too. I am fighting for him, ; Irene, and he is fighting in me. His : blood is in my blood." There was a knock upon the door. "Come in," said Mrs. Hardin. The door opened and a man in the uniform of a common seaman entered. "Hardin," he said, "been looking for you everywhere. The commander wants you to report to him at once." He grinned a bit sheepishly. "Beside that," he added, "he told me I might hand you this." He passed to Neal & folded sheet of paper. Neal opened it and read it. A flush crept Into his face and his | eyes sparkled. "Godfrey," he exclaimed. "I never . thought—" He handed the paper to his mother. "Annette —Irene." he said, "I have been promoted—promoted from sea -1 man on the Jackson to gunner on the cruiser Albany." The bearer of the note saluted once more. "Rank—chief petty officer," he explained, "and the cruiser Albany is 1 due hereabouts this week." Ten minutes later when the excite ment in that hotel suite at Martinique had subsided —at least to some extent, Irene Courtier leaned forward toward i Annette. "Charming friend," she began, "let 1 us get down to cases —let us look things in the face. What is the situa ' tion now?" "For one thing," Annette returned, "these pirates don't know —can't know—that 1 am alive." Irene Courtier smiled a reassuring smile. "Of course," «he responded. "How ! could they know?" "They've got me at a disadvantage," went on Annette. "They've got my : parchment map of the lost Isle of Cln- ; nabar —and my locket with my fa j ther'B picture in it. It's evidence." "Ah," said Irene, leaning farther 1 forward, "map or no map we shall spike their guns. Let me plan out a campaign." She rose, seized a sheet of paper and j • an envelope and placed them before Annette Ilington. "Charming friend," j she said, "write as I dictate." At the end of flv.e minutes Irene took the sheet of paper from the table and read it aloud. This is what she read: To the Fathers of Santa Maria Mis sion. Santa Maria, Lower California. | Reverend Fathers: As sole heir of the family of llinflton I am entitled to 1 possession of the original grant to '.he lost Isle of Cinnabar—the same isle | granted to my ancestor by Joseph Bonaparte, the king of Spain, more than a century ago. I have solved the secret of the map and am on my way to you. I inclose my photograph for the purpose of identification. Sincerely, ANNETTE ILINGTON. "So far so good," said Irene Cour tier. "Now add this postscript, j please: P. 8. My photograph la Identified upon the back by the signature and seal of the governor of Martinique. ' A. I. "But it Isn't," exclaimed Annette. Irene held up her hand. "You have a photograph," she said. "Get it at j once." Annette obeyed. "Now," went on Irene, adjusting her hat, "let us go on to the governor of Martinique." In half an hour they were in his I presence. Annette proffered her re- i quest. The governor nodded. He placed his signature upon the I back of the photograph and impressed I his seal in sealing wax also upon the | back. "Now, charming friend," said Irene j Courtier, "let me have the photo-,' graph." She placed it in the envelope and ' sealed the letter. On their way back to the hotel she darted into the local I : post office, darting out aknost immedi- : ately. "The deed is done," she said, "the | identification is complete." Half an hour later, in the solitude of j her own room at the hotel In Mar- i tinlque, Inez Castro took from the ° folds of her dress the letter —the let- i ter which she had not mailed in the j post office. She tore it open rapidly | and dropped the photograph upon her dressing table. With a keen-edged knife she performed an operation. Then she pasted her own photograph upon Annette's cardboard. When she ■ had completed this performance she I held up the finished product with sat- i isfaction. "So," she said to her own counter feit presentment, "it is you whom the governor of Martinique vouches for as j the heir of the Ilingtons. So far so i good. Let us complete the Identifier tion." She eat down and wrote —wrote the i same letter that Annette had written at her dictation, and she signed it ' Annette Ilington. Then she placed it In an envelope, addressed the en velope and affixed a stamp. Later, i j Neal of the Navy SHOWN IN MOVING PICTURES i! POT ONTAT EACH WEDNESDAY i j! J-fV/ll iilL AND THURSDAY JI Season's Greatest Movie Serial surreptitiously, she mailed it. She was quite right. Identification was a matter of importance and the Identification was complete. CHAPTER XXX. Behind Closed Doora. There are many cubby holes on the Idle of Martinique. In one of these cubby holes or hiding places in a re markably secreted district of St. Pierre, behind doors closely locked and barred, there sat a man. He was a negro, tall and gaunt; he wore a mustache and an Imperial; even as he sat at ease his bearing was military. Suddenly he stiffened. There were three taps upon the barred door. Hi rose, strode swiftly to the door and ■ noisily threw back its bars and bolts. The door opened and three men crept Into the cellar. The negro saluted. "Senor Hernandez," he exclaimed, "I am from Dolores." "So I understand," said Hernandez. J "Dolores," continued the negro, "is a republic on the coast of Central America." Hernandez nodded. The other man leaned forward. "Senor," he said, "I am the agent of the insurrecto party in Dolores. The insurrecto party in Dolores will one day own Dolores, body and soul. That day Is sure to come. It needs but one thing, senor." "And that one thing?" queried Her nandez. The Insurrecto smiled. "We need a man who will take chances," he went on, "a man who will stake little to win much; a man who will put up money and put up brains to get us what we need—to deliver us the goods." "And what goods do you need?" I queried Hernandez, smiling in his turn. The insurrecto showed his white teeth. "Oil stoves," he returned, "oil stoves—of the Mauser type—of any ! type—made in America." "How many do you need?" queried Hernandez. "Twenty-five hundred rifles will suf | flee," said the other man, "including j ammunition to correspond. And this cargo, senor," he added, "is here in Martinique. It has come by devious routes from the United States. It is being watched —closely, jealously watched, by secret service officers— by the government of the United States." I Hernandez sighed. "What return | does this man of daring get?" "We will pay you tenfold," said the ! spy, "when you land the rifles." Hernandez smiled. "What more— what after delivery"!)' "Ah," returned the other, "twenty— thirty—a hundredfold, when the rev olution has succeeded."' Hernandez tapped himself upon the chest. "It will succeed," he said. "I shall bring to It something more than rifles. I shall bring the brains of Her nandez. I am a gambler, senor, and I will take a chance." The negro thrust a hand across the table. "You are a man among men, senor," he exclaimed. Then suddenl? he stiffened once again. He bent for ward in a listening attitude. He low- I ered his voice. 'There■ is someone Just outside the door," he said. Hernandez strode to the door, drew back the bolts and opened. A woman entered —Inez Castro. "Senor," said Hernandez to the ln« surrecto agent, "this is Senorita Inez | Castro. She is one of us." Inez nodded to the agent a bit j curtly. ; "You bring news?" said Hernandez. "Good news," said Inez. "I have j dispatched a letter to the fathers of | the Santa Maria mission in lower Call i fornia." "You have been discreet, I trust," i eaid Hernandez. "I have been more than that," re ' turned Inez. "The governor of Mar tinique himself has Identified my pho tograph as the heiress of Lost Isle." Hernandez was plainly puzzled. "Who induced him to put his name— to place his seal upon this photo graph?" he Inquired. [ "Annette Ilington and I—'* she be gan. Hernandez started back. "Annette Ilington and you," he faltered. "Oh, I forgot," said Inez. "I have been getting messages from you, but ! I could get none to you. She still lives, this Annette Ilington." "Incredible," exclaimed Hernandez. "And what of her companion—what of ! this sailor boy?" "He lives, too." said Inez. "He will be a gunner or a gunner's mate on the cruiser Albany," she said. "Good," exclaimed Hernandez. "Then he returns to the T nlted States." i Inez shook h' i cead. "Returns— not," she answered. "The cruiser Al j bany comes to him —comes here." j The insurrecto agent stepped back a pace. "Come here," he said. He glanced at Hernandez significantly. "Senor," he added, "we have no time to lose." (To Be Continued.) ! HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH . ... Delicious Wholesome i The New Sterilized Breakfast Food. Containing All of the Nutriment of the Whole Wheat Wheat Meats NOW BEING DEMONSTRATED AT THE Pure Food Show LARGE P.4C/L4GE Especially Recommended by Physicians For Invalids and Children EXCELLENT FOR GRIDDLE CAKES AND MUFFINS - ) MANUFACTURED BY Groff Cereal Co. Lancaster, Pa. • * I 'f (€ He Is Coming' 9 i The \ I TELEGRAPH Presents for the Exclusive Benefit of Its Readers r J \ Prank Roberson World-Wide Traveler. Famous Traveloguer Featuring "The Nations at War" AT THE * Chestnut Street Auditorium Commencing Thursday Evening * October 28 . I \ \ PRICES-- 10c. with Coupon on first page of the Telegraph commencing next Wednesday or— -25c • for seat in reserved section 25c. Seats on Sale Monday at the Telegraph Office I J < OCTOBER 21, 1915.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers