Don't Merely "Stop" a § Cough Stop the Tklar that rautt It X and the Couck will Stop Itaelf [ cough id really one of our host •nds. It warns us that there is in timation or obstruction in a danger place. Therefor#, when you net a rough don't proceed to dose yourself h a hA, of drugs that merely "stop - ' temporarily bv deadening the oat nerves. Treat the cause—heal the amed membranes. Here is a home de remedy that gets right at the cause I will make an obstinate cough vanish re quickly than you ever thought pos le. *ut ounces of Pine* (50 cents •th* in a pint bottle ajid till the bottle h plain granulated sugar syrup. This es YOU A full pint of the roost pleasant 1 effective cough remedy you ever used, a cost of only 54 cents. No bother to pare. Full directions with Pinex. t heals the inflamed membranes so tlv and promptly that you wonder vit does it. Also loosens a dry. hoarse tight cough and stops the formation of egm in tne throat and bronchial tubes, « ending the persistent loose oough. 'inex is a highly concentrated com ind of Norway pine extract, rich in lineol. and is famous the world over its healing effect on the membranes, 'o avoid di«appointment. ask your icreist for "2t,4 ounces of Pinex," and I't accept anything else. A guarantee absolute satisfaction, or money prompt refunded. goes with this preparation. > Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. EAUTY DOCTOR TELLS SECRET roil Beauty Doctor Gives Simple tecipe to Darken Gray Hair and Promote Its Growth liss Alice Whitney, a well-known uty doctor of Detroit, Mich., re tly gave out the following state it: "Anyone can prepare a simple :ture at home, at very little cost, t will darken gray luiir, promote its wth and make It soft and glossy, half pint of wuter aty of lemonade. his advice, says an authority, is jing. but as all know who have ered, rheumatism is a stubborn iase and yields only to a remedy htv enough to conquer it. lanv doctors liavo prescribed and of helpful druggists have isec«ssi half teaspoonful of Rbeumu ES a day, because they know that erful Rlieuiua, harmless as It is, i with speed and overcomes in a days the most torturing case of jmutism or sciatica, ry Hheuma; H. C. Kennedy and druggists sell lots of it and will irn your money If two 50-cent bot do not stop all rheumatic misery, d vertiscment. W APPENDICITIS CAN BE PREVENTED arrisburg people should know t a few doses of simple buckthorn k. glycerine, etc., as mixed in Ad i-ka, often relieve or prevent ap dicitis. This simple mixture re cs such surprising foul matter ONE SPOONFUh relieves almost V CASK constipation, sour stom or gas. A short treatment, helps jnic stomach trouble. Adler-i-ka easiest and most thorough action uiythlng we ever sold. H. C. Ken s', druggist, 321 Market street. ertisement. ST WAY TO CURE COLD IN CHEST rjctors advise not to allow cold in it or sore throat to hang on. Pneti ia otttlmes results. The minute r chest or throat shows signs of ness rub on true Mustarlne, which • costs about cents, and which druggist can give you in the origi yellow box. It stops pain and con ion and there's blessed relief in ■y rub. to Begy Medicine Co., of Rochester, . makes true Mustarlne! and tens housands use it because it acts so kly and is so much better than Uni ts or Internal remedies. All drug a guarantee It.—Advertisement. 9.50n) ROUND TRIP TO Philadelphia A city rich In historic iticmorien Sunday, March 12 sppclal Train I-eavei HAHItlSni/RG - 74H) A. M. Ileturninac* Leaven I»IVII,AUKLI'HIA - 7.041 F. M. Cv See tbr llattlcahlpM at League Inland Hinvy Yard, open until 4.00 I*. M. # City Hall Tower, open 12.30 to 4.00 P. M.» Independence Unll, opeu 1.00 to 4.00 P. T.» Memorial Hall and Academy of Fine Arta, open 1.00 to 5.00 P. M. v Falr inount Park and the many other ohJectM of Interest of •'The Hunker City." Pennsylvania R. R. IIF.AIHM'ARTRnS FOR SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES ry Telegraph Want Ads THURSDAY EVENING KARRISBURG TELEGRAPH MARCH 9, 1916. GEORGE AONE^raSBmAIN 27iE CSN7WKXO. SYNOPSIS CHAPTER I—Alan Wayne Is sent away from Red Hill, his home, by his uncle. J. Y„ as a moral failure. Clem ' runs after him in a tangle of short skirts to bid him good-by. CHAPTER ll—Captain Wayne tells i Alan of the falling of tho Waynes. I Clem drinks Alan's health on his ] birthday. CHAPTER lll—Judge Ilealey buys I a picture for Alix Lansing. The judge i defends Alan In his business with his | employers. CHAPTER IV—Alan and Alix meet at sea, homeward bound, and start a l flirtation, which becomes serious. CHAPTER V—At home, Nance Ster ling asks Alan to go away from Alix. i Alix Is taken to task by Gerry, her husband, for her conduct with Alan 1 and defies him. CHAPTER Vl—Gerry, as he thinks, : sees Alix and Alan oloping, drops everything, and goes to Pernatnbuco. CHAPTER VII —Alix leaves Alan on the train and goes home to find that Gerry has disappeared. CHAPTER Vlll—Gerry leaves Per nambuco and goes to Piranhas. On a canoe trip he meets a native girl. CHAPTER IX —The judge fails to trace Gerry. A baby is born to Alix. CHAPTER X—The native girl takes Gerry to her home and shows hint the ruined plantation she is mistress I of. Gerry marries her. j CHAPTER XI At Maple house ' 'ollingeford tells how he met Alan—- "Ten Per Cent. Wayne"—building a bridge in Africa. CHAPTER XII- —Collingeford meets Alix and her baby anil he gives her encouragement about Gerry.. CHAPTER XIU —Alnn comes back to town hut does not go home. He makes several calls in the city. CHAPTER XlV—Gerry begins to j j Improve Margarita's plantation and' ! builds an irrigating ditch. ' CHAPTER XV In Africa Alan I reads Clem's letters and dreams of, ' home. CHAPTER XVl—Gerry pastures l.ieber's cattle during ihe drought. A i baby comes to Gerry and Margarita. CHAPTER XVII Collingford | meets Alix in the city and finds her changed. CHAPTER XVIII—AIan meets Alix. j J. Y. and Clem, grown to beautiful i womanhood, in the city and realizes | that he has sold his birthright for a \ mess of pottage. They sat ami looked at each other for a moment and then J. Y. arose and held out his hand again. "If that's j the ease, - ' he said, "I won't keep you. ! j Good-by and good luck." j "Good-by, sir." said Alan. As he reached the door J. Y. spoke I again. "Alan," he said, "I'm glad yon i i dropped in." "I am too, sir," said Alan. He was just leaving the sedate old , office building, sandwiched in betv een modern towers of Babel, when a cab drew up at the curb. The door opened and a girl stepped out. She suddenly stood still. Alan's eyes -were drawn to her and found hers fixed on him. He drew a quivering breath. Clem stood before him. She saw his hesitation and a cloud came over the light in her j face. Hep moist lips trembled. Their hands met. "Alan!" she said and he answered, "Clem!" And so they stood, his eyes fixed in hers that were blue and deep. He felt his soul sinking, sinking into those : cooling pools. He did not wish ever to speak again—ever to think again. And then Clem laughed. Her eyes wrinkled up. There was a gleam of even teeth. The wind blew her ftirs ' j about her and lit the color in her cheeks. "How solemn wo are after three years!" she cried. "Three years, Alan. Aren't you ashamed?" Alan felt a sense of sudden insula tion as though she had deliberately nut the current that had flowed so strongly between them. "I am going away," he stammered weakly and waved at an approaching four-wheeler, piled high with traveling kit and con voyed by his hurried but never flurried servant. But Clem stuck to her guns. "Real ly?" she sa id with a glance at the loaded cab and with arching eyebrows. HANDS Plfflf ~ MYSORE Red and Rough, Could Not Put Them > in Water, Could not Sleep. Always Aching and Very Ugly, HEALED BYCUHCURA SOAP AND OINTMENT , "My hand. would break opeu and bleed, thli being caused by the wind, aud they I would become pimply and very sore. They twere red and very rough and , I could not bear to put my band> In water. They would become a little better and then tbey would become wone. My handi were always aching and 1 could not go near the heat and I could ! not. «leep. They were very • v-y>" ugly and often I would not : go to school because of my hands. "After using Cuticura Soap and Oint ment my hand* began to heal. Now I don't know what It is to have a cracked kand." (Signed) Miss Cora HUI, R. F. D. No. t. Box 78, Derry. Pa., July 3, 1915. Sample Each Free by Mail With :W-p. Skin Hook on request. Ad dress post-card "Cuticura, Dept. T, Bos- J Sold throughout the world. ' Then her smile burst again. "You can't expect me to be surprised, can you? We seem to have a habit of meeting when you are on the point of gofng away. There. You must be in a hurry. Good-by," and she held out a gloved hand. Alan's spirit was ever ready for war and this, he suddenly perceived, was war. He braced himself and smiled too. "Twice hardly amounts to a hab it," he drawled. He had never drawled ! to Clem before but then Clem had nev er before taken up the social rapier with him. ' Besides," he went ou, "there's a difference. Last time you j ran after me." Clem's smile trembled, steadied it self aud then fought bravely back, j "Yes,"' she said, "yes." And then her ) | eyes wavered and wandered. She dropped his hand. "Good-by," she said, the faintest catch In her voice, and hurried away to seek J. Y. Alan stood and watched her. He ; felt a sinking within him. "For a mess of pottage." he muttered and ' . then his servant touched his arm anx- J iously and held out his watch, face up, , ' "You'll never make it, Mr. Wayne." Alan turned on him but not angrily. 1 "Perhaps not, Swlthson, and perhaps yes. You may go back to the flat. I'll*; get along all right." And with that he , hurled himself at the cab. "Double fare if you make the Battery in ten j minutes," he shouted to the driver and j then settled back in the seat to pou- | der. At last the rains came to the valley aud Fazenda Flores. Gerry spent long ; hours beside his sluicegate watching ,; for a rise in the river, but it did not j j come. The torrent of rain was local j ■ and he remembered that I.ieber had told him fhnt the floods—the great ; floods—came from hundreds of miles up the river and generally tinder a brazen sky. Night, black night, had fallen with the rain antl he was just turning to seek shelter from the un broken downpour when a voice raised j in song reached his ears. He waited. \ The voice drew nearer. lu a nasal tone, which somehow sounded familial though it was unknown to him. it was chanting a long string of doggerel end ing in an unvarying refrain. Finally Gerry could make out the long-drawn , tail-end of the song: "couiin' down the ! drawr." English! American! Cowboy mu sic! The impressions came iu rapid succession. Gerry strove to "tierce the darkness. lie could hear the near by splash of careful mules, picking their way through puddles with finick ing little steps. He felt a shadow in the darkness and could Just see above It a blur of yellow. Behind it. more shadows. Ou an impulse he did not stop to measure, he shouted in English, "Hallo, there!" , , The doggerel was choked off in mid- i flight. The yellow hlnr came to a sud- j den stop and the nasal voice rang out lin quick staccato. "Speak again, I stranger, and speak quick!" "It's all right," Gerry laughed back. "Where are you bound for?" "I'm headed down the drawr lookin' for a chalk line where I c'u dry my feet. What do you know?" "Can you see the water in the ditch at your right?" "Yasser, I can. I c'n see you, too." "Well," shouted back Gerry, "your eyes beat mine. Follow the ditch un til you come to a bridge. I'll uie*»t you there." Gerry found the little cavalcade i waiting for him. six pack-mules, a na- ' tlvc driver and, towering above them, a great lanky figure in a yellow oil skin slicker topped by a broad brimmed Stetson. Gerry looked over the outfit as carefnliy as the darkness would allow and then said tentatively, "There's a house down there in the valley." "Is the'?" drawled the stranger spit ting deliberately into the ditch. "Well," : he volunteered after a further pause. | "my name's Jake Kemp. The rest of this outfit is six mules packin' orchids ' i and the greaser packin' the mules." 1 "That's all right," said Gerry, "I j < guess we can put you up." He led the way and the pack-train I splashed along after him. The mules ! I were soou relieved of their burdens | and turned Into the pasture. Boui- j facio took the native muleteer away to his quarters and Gerry and the stranger passed through the house to j the kitchen. A patriarchal hospitality, came nat- ' urally to tho Inmates of Fazenda j Flores. It was a tradition not only on i that plantation but throughout a vast hinterland, where life was rude and ' death sudden, to be gentle to the 1 stranger, to feel hitn and his beast 1 i and to speed him on in the early morn ing. There was but one rule to the stranger: He mu«t keep his eyes to the front. .Take Kemp had evidently learned the brief code. He ate raven ously. poured down coffee with the recklessness of a man that draws on « limitless power to sleep, ntid made his few remarks to Gerry and to Ger ry alone. XTo be continued ~J |. at 530 p -"• i 808 111 l I !■ ■—■■—■»—■Wl !■■■—■■—MiiniillW In Our Enlarged Bargain Basement | ' i The Big Ten-Day Vloney-Saving Sale of Spring Goods Continues If i These Extraordinary Special Values On Sale To-morrow (Friday) i I , MUSLIN FILLED Fleecedown SLUMBER APRON SHeTf TAPESTRY , ' | | CURTAINS CUSHIONS BLANKETS ROBES GINGHAM OIL CLOTH * CURTAINS » M 50c ruffled mus- $1.59 round and $2.00 gray and $'.'.25 glilmbrr 9c full standard uc shelf oilcloth, tains' wtUi '"border, I lin curtains, good oblong sateen rush* white wool finish robes and bath apron gingham. 27 In many different Kuo d green color- < M length and aualitv i ons * e i^?2 ay colt °n blankets, robe blankets: inches wide: all styles and color- j for snm n doors 1 \ K |, n q * tor use. 1' riday Friday special, heavy quality. Kri- stj'les and colors, ifififs. I* riday only, lin< j sintrle door, m J* riuay only, pair, special, each, each, day only, each, Friday only, yard, yard, Friday only, pair, I J| 35c 69c $1.39 98c 2c $1.19 | I LONGCLOTH TOWELING WOOLNAP BED BASKETS COLORED OUTING § > I $1.25 English 5c cotton twill BL'ANKETS TICKING ?! to 50c nam-1 SATEEN CLOTH If I ! longcloth. 10-yard £° w *^*od i quail . , 10c heavy bed boo sandwich bask- 10c outing flan- I' j piece; full 36 j tv Friday yard 7 cx . tray ticking. Old-fash- ets, also fruit bask- . . «fr uiShii Chiefly light I< ' ' I inches wide. Spe- * ' * Pade n . wh , U V; *oned blue stripe e ts a flnal cle-tn- ** 6 , \dark colors in |J | cUL piece. 2'/2C a yard? 1 ' >ard W,dei 11 "• Special, each, M '" RJ*I 1 V S3c (5 yar t d ome?) a CUB * $1.59 lie 12 ; /2C 11c 6 ; /2C jji MUSLIN BED TABLE HUCK WOOL BED !] Tc unbleached SPREADS CLOTHS TOWELS • GINGHAM FIBER RUG SHEETS || i muslin, ..6 inches SI.OO crochet bed so,, nattern i ihl.> . ~. l«c dress gins- , r . ... "oe seamless nius- &. ' wide, good quality spread, full bed C loths. P hemstUcht toweN ' These are SS , il "' l, " ! l ruw vr"" ex- !'" sh '"; t '"' :! V"" h I * for general use. Hize and an extra e( i „ uo ,i „| ze am i ' i , wide, extra good 1 l, k*. JJ XJ - hem; tree from |j $ SUP IMI ...... I heavy quality. To- ( m',|jtv extra good and quality and put- *!'" K°od quality, dressing; size Six H special, yard, morrow, quaiuj. specially big size. terns. Friday only, each, !(0 *" ■ K 5c 85c 55c 4c 8c $5.95 55c 11 Friday Sale of F i: Another Astounding Spring Suit Sale} DRESS SKIRTS ; is 4 pi FOR WOMEN AND MISSES AT pB I T*" 1 . S*P|k Positively Worth $lB to $22.50 To-day «P IL. ; Hf, 1 IqJ TEN OF .> A EVERY SUIT | j * v , ni l l i SPRING'S Up-to-the Minute ;• [ MOST CHARMING MODELS _ IN STYLE "i j, vj KiJ Made 1 of pure'wool poplin in black I ■Ji POPULAR SHEPHERD Perfectly Handsome } '.'.'Sl xMbn «J V: CHECKS, SERGES,POPLINS N« w Qnn»<, Cnif* { """ " k "" 5 .... 1 $2 - 95 (j AND GABARDINES f| "If f\ ? JHi'S:!'"j'ri-'S'JS""' i ): : IN ALL THE NEWEST Nothing to Equal Them | - i:m» sjgC Si SPRING COLORS © JJ/TT Shown m Hamsburg j Ml,s j K J f| ,/ / / j - • jVV/.'.' >' _. | p Black and navy; pure wool pop- M «I Buy Now and Save ' r Buy Now and Save ( \ . . >j//r i\\ Prices Higher Later on j: 1 f Alteratwns Free a, Alwaysl \ o„i t lß n n t„ H22 50 i Showing the New |? |i Genuine SIB.OO to $22.50 "*/ j V \ Real vllues" Only i SPRING COATS 2 £■! n_|„ f I V I „ ' % A display that Includes every K M » alues Unly ■* prf !■ ncw 'nodel, color and material K u)■ Y CII ~'M L fla 1 ,• brought out by tlie foremost * K /|K -* mad n —~r' I % ra ■ >' makers for this season's wear. K 3■' CM 1 MM M ■ : i _ ICV R . f ®w « ■ •[ All here. In scores of different. S g* ■) I m 9 ■ M rsMm %nir © styles and all the most wanted K K'■ . jj"B ■ 1 I■■ ■ > II \ new fabrics; all sizes. % 15 T A^fV " * Alterations Free as Always j | ANOTHER SALE OF] 1 I Startling Friday Specials in Men's and Boys Clothing swi(c[ieS I Unheard of Values at Record Breaking Low Prices For | C OX SAIiK FRIDAY OM.V OX SALE FRIDAY OXI.Y ON SAI.E FRIDAY ONLY J Men's 81,50 Pants OQ r Moll's SIO Suits -7tt &4.00 Xoi-folk Suits tfO SO Cf i\ /% 1 C Just 50 pairs of these good " Just 20 good Casslmere 'P Sises 0 to 17 years. w I || J Work Pants: sizes 32 to 42. Suits, made in the new sack model. Odd lots, but all sizes in plain and € OX SAME FRIDAY ONLY ON SALE FRIDAY ONI.Y mixed cassimercs: a great bargain. v „u,s worth to IB«0 I / Men's #4.00 Raincoats. .