10 EVEN CROSS, SICK CHILDREN LOVE | SYRUP OF FIGS Look at tongue! If feverish,' bilious, constipated, take no chances. "California Syrup of Figs" can't j harm tender stomach, liver, bowels. ■ Don't scold your fretful, peevish j child. See if tongue is coated; this is' ft sure sign its little stomach, liver | and bowels are clogged with sour, waste. "When listless, pale, feverish, full of cold, breath bad, throat sore, doesn't cat, sleep or act naturally, has stom ach-ache, indigestion, ciiarhoea, give a teaspoonful of "California Syrup of Plga." and in a few hours all the foul waste, the sour bile and fermenting food passes out of the bowels and you have a well and playful child again. Children love this harmless "fruit laxative," and mothers can rest easy sifter giving it, because it never fails to make their little "lnsides" clean and sweet. Keep it handy. Mother! A little given to-day saxes a sick child to-mor row, but get the genuine. Ask your druggist for a 00-eent bottle of "Cali fornia Syrup of Figs," which has di rections for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly on the hottle. Remember there are counter feits sbld here, so surely look and see that yours is made by the "California Fig Syrup Company." Hand back ■with contempt any other tig syrup. Advertisement. TO DARKEN HAIR APPLY SAGE TEA Look Young! Bring Back Its Natural Color, Gloss and Thickness Common garden sage brewed into a heavy lea with sulphur and alcohol mlded, will turn gray, streaked and faded hair beautifully dark and luxuriant, remove every bit of dand ruff, stop scalp itching and falling hair. Just a few applications will prove a revelation if your hair is fad ing, gray or dry, scraggly and thin. Mixing the Sage Tea and Sulphur re cipe at home, though, is troublesome. An easier way is to get the ready-to use tonic, costing about 50 cents a large bottle at drug stores, known as "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com pound." thus avoiding a lot of muss. While wispy, gray, faded hair is not sinful, we all desire to retain our youthful appearance and attractive ness. By darkening your hair with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur, no one can tell, because it does so naturally, so evenly. You just dampen a sponge or soft hrush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning all gray hairs have disappeared, and, after an other application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy, soft und luxuriant. Advertisement. STOMACH UPSET Get at the Real Cause—Take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets That's what thousands of stomach sufferers are doing now. Instead of taking tonics, or trying to patch up a poor digestion, they are attacking the r«»nl cause of the ailment —clogged liver and disordered bowels. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets arouse tlie liver in a soothing, healing way. When the liver and bowels are per forming their natural functions, away goes Indigestion and stomach troubles. If you have a bad taste in your mouth, tongue coated, appetite poor, lazy, don't-care feeling, no ambition or energy, troubled with undigested food, you should take Olive Tablets, the sub stitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets arc a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil. You will know them by their olive color. They do the work without griping, cramps or pain. Take one or two at bedtime for quick relief, so you can eat what you like. At 10c and 25c per hox. All druggists. The Olive Tablet Company, Colum bus, O. Pimples Disappear There is one remedy that seldom fails to clear away all pimples, black heads and skin eruptions and that makes the skin soft, clear and healthy. Any druggist can supply you with zemo, which generally overcomes ail Rkin diseases. Acne, eczema, itch, pimples, rashes, black heads in most cases give way to zemo. Frequently, minor blemishes disappear overnight. Itching usually stops instantly. Zemo is safe, clean, easy to use and de pendable. It costs only 25c; an extra large bottle. SI.OO. It will not stain, is not greasy or sticky and is positive ly safe for tender, sensitive skins. Zemo, Cleveland. PARALYSISKr^ DR. CHASE'S Special Blood and Nerve Tablets ■Write for Proof and Booklet *>T. Omk, 224 N. lOttlSt.Phlladelnhln. DIIaC 80-BAN-KO'S PII.E REMEDY ar HvN Gives instant relief in Itching, Bleeding or Protruding Piles. 50c The Dr. Boaanko Co. Philadelphia. Pa. STOP COUCHING!!! pEPTONOIs | MADE IN A HEALTH RESORT. AT DRUG STORES:SI.ooPwBOTTLE THE PEPTONOL CO. ATLANTIC CITY N.a L Z. GROSS, 119 Market St.. Harrisburg, I'a. [fllUi'iiailfW Non-greußy Toilet Cream the Skin Soft and Velvety. Prevents tan, relieves sunburn. An Exquisite Toilet Preparation, 26c. GORUA3 Dltl U STOKES 1« N. Third St.. and P. It. R. Station V— . . . PATENTS WANTED^ Write for List of Patent JBuvers and Inventions Wanted. J1.000,000 in prizes nffered for inventions. Send sketch for free search. Write for our four books ■ent free upon request. VICTOR J. EVANS & CO. Main Offices. Washington, r>. C. Philadelphia Offices: 1420 Chestnut St. Bell Phone. Spruce 6535. Hours, »to 6. Mondays until 9P. M. WEDNESDAY EVENING, Neal of Che Navy Bp WILLIAM HAMILTON OSBORNE Author of "Red Mouse," Novelized from the Photo Play "Running Fight," "Cats- of the Sami Name Produced paw," "Blue Buckle," etc. by the Pathe Exchange, Inc. i CopjTiflkt. Ifiik toy William BuiUtcc <>.t,, r;t) "Tell him," said Herandez, "that he must take us In." Ponto obeyed. He began tg plead In his oiliest accents. The high priest was firm. Once again he held up his hand and from every hut in the ln closure there sprang forth another group of warriors. "Run, partner," cried Ponto, "run for your life." But Hernandez did not run, for sud denly the countenance of the high priest had changed. A crafty smile spread over his leathery old face. Pon to followed his .glance. At the other end of the clearing with a ray of sun shine full upon her crouched Annette Ilington. Without removing his glance from the girl the high priest touched Her nandez on the arm and spoke in high shrill accents. "What does he say?" demanded Her nandez of Ponto. Ponto shivered. "He says," re turned Ponto, "the sun god is angry. That he has commanded his people to destroy you all. That he will smite you hip and thigh unless —" "Unless what?" queried Hernandez. "You give the white girl to the god and the rest of you can get food and succor within the walls—the white girl for the god." CHAPTER XXXVIII. A Bride's Revolt. Hernandez pondered once again. Then he nodded. "We'll do it," he returned. "Tell that beast out there to bring the white girl in." Ponto turned and ran waddling out side the gates. He gave a brief com mand to the brute and at the word the brute seized Annette and held her high upon his shoulder. At another work of command the brute marched toward the gate and entered it. The high priest stood quivering, j watching the approach ot Annette and the brute. The four Aztecs in flam ing red robes darted forward and held out quivering hands toward Annette. "Give her to them,'' cried the priest. ! "Give her to them," commanded 1 Hernandez. But the brute, his feet planted wide apart, stood his ground. Hernandez sprang toward him, an grily seized the ever-ready whip from Ponto's hand and lashed the brute fiercely. He nodded to the four crim son-clad men and they tore Annette roughly away and dragged her to the temple. Neal hurled himself at the four acolytes, but Hernandez dragged him back. Neal was then thrust into a dungeon and its door was locked. Meantime within the temple things were happening. Annette found her self in an apartment gorgeously fur nished with Aztec tapestries. Two old women—toothless, ugly—women with beards, attended Annette, chuck ling and mumbling to themselves in glee. They produced from the re cesses of the temple a dress, gorgeous, bizarre. They draped it upon Annette's slender form. They hung her head, neck and arms with glittering orna ments, and then they beckoned to her and led her to a window, and pointed, chuckling, through it. Annette knew not what they said, but Ponto without distinguished easily the meaning of the high shrill tones. "The sun god waits —is waiting for his bride." Annette's glance traveled past the sun god. She started back in horror. Into that seething pit beyond the acolytes were casting huge quantities of fuel —pouring the contents of huge jars of oil upon the flames. Her glance traveled still beyond, and across an intervening space she saw a dungeon window and the white face of Neal. He waved his hand. And then strong hands were placed upon her shoulders and she was lifted from ».er feet and half dragged, half carried out of the temple into the center of the clear space before the sun god. The cere mony had begun. Neal tore his glance for a moment from this scene and examined his cell. There was a window at his back— a heavily barred window. He seized the bars in desperation and found to his surprise that they were loose. With a superhuman effort, he thrust the bars outward, leaped through the aperture and darted swiftly into the Jungle; then he looked about him for a tree and found the one he wanted. It was a high tree, very high. He climbed it swiftly—climbed it to its topmost branches. Cruising slowly off the shore—and the shore was not very far away—was his cruiser Al bany. He braced himself among the branches with his feet, ripped oft his shirt, tied it by the arms about a broken branch and signaled to the ship. Within the wails Ponto, still terror stricken with the sun god's anger, turned his back for a moment upon that deity and upon that deity's high priest. Then suddenly ho saw some thing. In the top of a high tree without the walls there w«« *> "*Mte rag flut- I yW>^W%*WW>W»UWWWHWWW%IWH»*»WI»m»W%%%HV Neal of the Navy ; SHOWN IN MOVING PICTURES :i rnT OTVTT A T EACH WEDNESDAY j j AND THURSDAY II Season's Greatest Movie Serial tering to and fro—and something more. A man. Ponto gripped Hernandez's arm and pointed upward. The face of Hernan dez froze. He darted toward the dungeon, saw that it was empty, then beckoning Ponto and the brute he darted to the stone wall and with their aid clambered over it. Ponto, with considerably IOBS agil ity and with the assistance of the brute, followed his companion over, and the brute in turn, his head and shoul ders lashed with Ponto's whip wield ed over the top of the wall, swung himself over and followed them. Annette noticed the confusioD —was the first to see it. Suddenly striking an attitude she raised her hand and arm and pointed toward the white flag fluttering from the tree top. The high priest stopped his droning and fol lowed the direction of her hand with his glance. His acolytes stopped and stared—so did everybody else. Annette saw her opportunity. Upon a standard by her side lay a heavy copper scepter. She seized it. Lithe as her body was she had inherited great strength—wonderful agility. Without a moment's hesitation she swung the scepter viciously about her head, dashing the high priest and his acolytes to the ground, knocking the ! Aztec warriors to right and left. Like a whirlwind she fought her way to ward the gate, slammed it behind her and sped away. CHAPTER XXXIX. By His Eyelid*. Hernandez and his two companions reached the tree. They reconnoitered. Above him in the swaying branches, all ignorant of the group below, Neal wigwagged his signals toward the Al bany. His heart leaped within him, for the Albany wigwagged in return, j She was doing more—sho was sending | off her fastest launch shoreward, crowded to the gunwale with marines —marines who knew their business. Below Hernandez smiled a diabolical smile. He was watching, not Neal, but the swaying of the tree. "Look," he said to Ponto, "see how I these roots tug at this scant earthen [ covering. She is a tree growing on a J rock. She totters. And she is more I than a tree growing on a rock —she j grows on the edge of a cliff. Beast, come here. Tell him, Ponto, what to do." Ponto told him, emphasizing his commands with the ever-ready whip. The brute obeyed. He set his shoul ders to the tree trunk and began stead ily, tirelessly, persistently to push. "Now, now," cried Hernandez, in a frenzy of excitement. "On, on." The tree ct ashed desperately over the edge and toppled Into the depths beneath. As she did so there was a scream— a woman's scream—Annette's. Her nandez heard it; so did Ponto; but they could not locate it. Out ot their sight, somewhere along that cliff, An nette was crouching watching with eyes wide with terror. She saw the tree bend slowly outward, though she did not know the cause. Then her heart leaped within her, for the tree had dropped, toppling head over heels, so to speak, but by some great chance it nad brushed Neal lightly, not heavily, against the cliff, and then had plunged down to its own doom leaving liim grappling for his life with a clump of bushes on a narrow ledge below. She saw all this and so did Hernan dez and his partner, Ponto. Ponto smote the brute upon the shoulder. He pointed to a huge stone at his feet. "Finish him," he commanded. "Go down and finish him.'' The brute seized the stone and crept warily down a narrow path and reached the ledge upon which clung Neal. The brute slowly raised the rock above hiß head. As he did so a small firm hand clutched him by the shoul der —a woman's hand. He turned and looked Into the eyes of Annette Iling ton. As though hypnotized he dropped the rock. "Help him," commanded Annette, "help him. Do as 1 say." Hernandez, white with rage, thrust Ponto behind him and leaned far over the edge of the cliff shaking his clenched hand impotently at the brute. "Do as I say," he commanded. "I will flay you if you don't." He leaned too far, not for his own safety, but for the safety of some of his belongings. A paper packet wrig gled easily and Joyously out of his breast pocket and slipped easily and joyously down the cliff, landing almost at Annette's feet. (To Be Continued.) fCHAS. H. MAUK THE UNDERTAKER Shtk aad Kalkar llni» Larcwt •KabHshmaat. Ba« tacHMee. Naarw rouM»oorphoM. WIS fo narwhara at roar all Motor »errlca. No funeral too small. Nona toa expensive Chap«U. raw ma. raolt. ota* nd mkS tut chrrfjm HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Glenwood Just The Other Day a new Glenwood range was shipped to K. Mitsvi, Vice-Minister of Foreign Office, Tokyo, Japan, and one to John D. Rockefeller, Pocantico A \v \ Hills, New York, and yet a Glenwood range with all its eroodness is within reach of all —at about \ | j|j| The Plain Cabinet Glenwood Range is fj-T-, i : ," ~ .. qlenwOod*" DEfr said to be the most perfect piece of fw /diW machinery yet devised to make house- |K) , ff> c\VA WMks : r 'if keeping drudgeless. KP ' \f p^ 88 It's m adein d natural black ironfinish- nj{ (t) 1 Si ° n 8 George C. Fager ® Sons Harrisburg jHg ENTERTAINED OFFICERS Colubia, Pa., Oct. 27. —Columbia Assembly. No. 20, Artisans' Order of entertained at their meeting, Most Ex- Mutual Protection on Monday night cellent Master Artisan Harry C. Smith, and Most Excellent Recorder Allen C. Smith, both of Philadelphia. Deputy John W. Watson, and a delegation of Lancaster Assembly, .also attended the io&W| yr \ tufHoUm I HP/1 vf *®S m£a» j|Hl I m Jj&m WP I GERMANY i | THE TELEGRAPH PRESENTS I I FRANK R. ROBERSON 1 FAMOUS TRAVELER §§ II In the Most Powerful 1 . . Cf. A 1•. § of All Travelogues, at V-ilieStnut Dt. -Auditorium jg THURSDAY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS at 8:15 11 & Impressive Motion Pictures of the Kaiser and His Army and Navy— § Beautiful Colored Views of Germany in Peace and War— jpj a Rapid-fire Talk by Roberson on the War. P I Saturday Evening 1 CLIP THIS COUPON ! | g 1 "BELGIUM and ADMISSION: I rrrvj T x "\TTY , cou P on on fi rst P a S e °* Telegraph. gjj H -A.IN U in Reserved Section (admission in- || Showing scenes in Belgium before the eluded), 25^. HI war and since and a delightful tour in pic- Reserved Section Seats on sale daily at p|j ture across quaint old Holland. ' Telegraph Office. pa J 1] rrcj yf Monday Eve., "California and the Exposition"; Tues. Eve., "Eng- || fe li>l vJ land"; Wed. Eve., "France"; Thurs. Eve., "Ireland and Scotland" p| * 1 1 meeting, whicn was presided over by Master Artisan Clarence R. Smith. A : social session followed. WEDDING INVITATIONS ISSUED Waynesboro, Pa., Oct 27. —Mr. and Mrs. Bernard H. Foreman have issued Invitations for the marriage of their daughter, Miss Adele Brotherton Foreman, to Robert Spottswood OCTOBER 27, 1915 Payne, Jr., of Staunton, Va., on Thurs day, November 4, at their home, 82 West Main street, this city. CIGAR FACTORY SOIJ> Shippensburg, Pa., Oct. 27.—A large cigar factory owned by G. W. Wilt in Soutft Earl street, has been sold to F. Gurney Etter, who has been with Mr. Wilt ever since the factory was started. UNSETTLED WEATHER COMING Washington, D. C., Oct. 27. The weather predictions for the week be ginning to-day, issued by the Weather Bureau yesterday are: Middle )> Atlantic States: Fair four or five days, but by Sunday or Monday un settled weather with rain is probable. Somewhat cooler Wednesday and Thursday and warmer again toward the close of the week.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers