6 RED BLOtCHES IB PIMPLES ON BACK , * And Arms. Skin Was Sore. Would i Itch All the Time. Scratched and Made Worse. Completely SOAP AND OINTMENT •'I noticed small red blotches and pimples breaking out on my back and arms. Tho sUn was sore and red. and the pimples festered aud came to a head. They would Itch all the time 9 y and every time I scratched d -if? "l t'acm It made ihera worse P _ Zi and I could not stop as my j I I clothing would rub against j the sore places. A I -A "I noticed a Cuticura Soap and Ointment advertise ment and I wrote for a :Ver aiirple. The sair.pio secaaad ta giva uu relief so I purchaj.-d more and !t took oa'.y . a half a box of Cuticura Ointment cad two cakes of Soap to heal ine compistely." (Sisned) M. Schwei'zer. 1401 Eu; St.. I X. S. Pittsburgh, Pa.. Sept. 10. 1315. Sample Each Free by Mall With 32-p. Skin Cook on request. Ad- . dress no#t-card ••Coticurn. Dept. T. Ho«- ion." Soli throughout the world. EAT LESS BP AND TAKE SALTS ! IF XIDIEI3 HURT Says a tablespoonful of Salts flushes Kidneys, stopping Backache. Meat forms Uric Acid, which excites Kidneys and Weakens Bladder. Ekiting meat regularly eventually i produces kidney trouble in some form 1 or other, says a well-known authority, because the uric arid in meat excites the kidneys, they become overworked; get sluggish; clog up and cause all sorts of distress, particularly back pebe and misery tn the kidney region; rheumatic twinges. se\ere headaches, acid stomach, constipation, torpid, liver, sleeplessness, bladder and urin ary irritation. The moment your back hurts or kid neys aren't acting right, or if bladder bothers you. get about four ounces of .Tad Salts from any good pharmacy: take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com- , blned with lit Ilia and has been used for Kenerations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity; also to neutralize the acids in the urine so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts cannot injure anyone; makes a delightful effervescent litliia water drink which millions of men and women take now and then to keep the kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus avoiding serious kidney disease. •—Advertisement. A FINE Deafness Treatment FREE Do you realize the terrible fate which ' '1 \ the face? Do you I f- \l know what total « II Deafness means? It. means a living *l9 de ath- Shut out WJ* from all human in ,W TV 3 m tercourse the mp / jp J worlds of business F / and pleasure, life |r' . y becomes a fearful v # /■/ blank. » Will you suffer • • *■ ~J ¥ this untold misery and loneliness with- V> ~& out investigating the New .Method of Treatment?— The Method which has re etored to hundreds of s ifTerers their full .sense of hearing, quick and acute. 1 have rescued hundreds from Deaf ness. YOU must come before it is too late. Beeauso T have been so successful in j curing Deafness and because my heart aches for its victims, I am going to GIVE AWAY a Free Treatment for J >eafness to every sufferer who asks for it. Surely this is a present worth having. Out of my sincere desire to relieve human suffering, I gladly make you this gift. My treatment lias cut pel hundreds of people of the most dis tressing. wearing head-noises, and re stored their full perfect hearing. Write lor the treatment to-day, and give me ! the opportunity to show YOU my sue. cssful new method for the treatment* < f Deafness RIGHT IN YOUR OWN 11'iMK. All I ask is that you will act NOW. Don't hesitate or it may be too late t" help you. My success has been great, and applicants for treatment are many, so that I can only make this offer "a very short time. Remember this treat ment for Deafness is given to you with out any charge whatever. I* is abso lutely free, send off Now, in this mail, a po3t card or letter request with your full name and address upon it, I and I will send you free trcatm»nt for Deafness. Deafness Specialist Sproule, M Trade lluililing. Dntion, Mam. For Conventions Banquets Entertainments Dances use Board of Trade Building 112-14 MARKET STIIKET Apply Commonwealth Trust Co. 222 Market Street Harrisburg V a CHAS. it. MAUK THE UNDERTAKER Sixth and Kelker Streets Largest establishment. Best facilities. Near to you as your phone. Will go •nywhero at your call. Motor service No funeral too small. None too expen sive. Chapels, looms, vault, etc., used without charge. .WTL K L>A V I'. \ll iN ll\ Gr, tiEORGE AONEW CHAMBERLAIN CCPY&TCrSIT THE c&ovjzy ccl SYNOPSIS ! CHAPTER I—Alan Wayne is sent ■ away from Red Hill, his home, by nisi i uncle, J. Y., as a moral failure. Clem runs after him in a tangle of short skirts to bid him good-by. CHAPTER 11— Captain Wayne tells i Alan of the failing of the W aynes. Clem drinks Alan's health on his birthday. CHAPTER lll—Judge Ilealey buys a picture for Alix Lansing. The judge defends Alan in his business with his j employers. CHAPTER IV—Alan and Alix meet ' at sea. homeward bound, and start a | flirtation, which becomes serious. i CHAPTER V—At home. Nance ster ' ling asks Alan to go away from Alix. | Alix is taken to tusk by Gerry, her husband, for her conduct with Alan and defies him. CHAPTER Vl—Gerry, as he thinks, sees Alix and Alan eloping, drops everything, and goes to Pernanibuco. CHAPTER Vll—Alix leaves Alanj on the train and goes home to find : that Gerry has disappeared. CHAPTER Ylll—Gerry leaves Per nambuco and goes to Piranhas. On a canoe trip he meets a native girl. CHAPTER IN—The judge fails to j trace Gerry. A baby is born to Alix. I CHAPTER N—The native girl takes i Gerry to her home and shows him the ruined plantation she is mistress j ! of. Gerry marries her. CHAPTEi: XI At Maple house, i Collinpcford telis how he met Alan —\ i "Ten Per Cent. Wayne"—building a ! bridge in Africa. 1 CHAPTER Xil—Collingeford meets Alix and her baby and he gives her, : encouragement about Gerry, j CHAPTER Xlll—Alan comes back to town but does not go home. He ! makes several calls in the city. CHAPTER XIV —Gerry begins to! improve Margarita's plantation and | builds an irrigating ditch. CHAPTER XV—ln Africa Alan ! reads Clem s letters and dreams of ! home. CHAPTER XVl—Gerry pastures I.ieber's cattle during the drought. A baby comes to Gerry and Margarita. CHAPTER XVII Collingford meets Alix In the city and finds her ; r-hanged. CHAPTER XVIII—AIan meets Alix J. Y. and Clem, grown to beautiful womanhood, in the city and realizes that I o has sold his birthright for a 'mess of poitagc. CHAPTER XlX—Kemp and Gerry become friends. "Hoes he live off his stock?' Kemp looked up. "Haven't you ever b>n up to I.ieber's?"' "No." said Gerry, "it's two years since I came here and I've never been i off the place. I.ieber's been down here a coupie of times.'' Kemp grunted but asked no further question. "Lieber," be said, "c'rtainly don't live offen his stock—lie plays with it. I.ieber is the goatskin king. Ships 'em by the thousand baies. It ' you or any other man in those parts was to sell a goatskin away f'm Lie ber. you'd be boycotted. I.leber oti this rauge is God—you're fer him or , you're ag'in him an' there ain't b'en any one ag'in' him for some spell now." "Oh," said Gerry. "As fer knowiu' him." continued Kemp, "everybody on this round-up i knows Lieber but there ain't anybody knows why he is. Lieber holds ques ! tions and smallpox about alike. He ain't thar when they happen." pmjTfftr Lieber, accompanied by two herders, came eatiy for his stock. He greeted Kemp warmly. "Going my way':'' he asked. "I b'en ioafin' around here with that in mind," drawled Kemp. "I'll take a band if you'll allow me a mount." "You can take your pick." said I.le ber, "that is, after Mr. Lansing has had his." The three of them walked into the pasture. Lieber looked at the "stock with kindling eyes. Ho turned to Ger ry and held out his hand. "Shake," he said, and Gerry did. "What do you say to the first five of the itorses out and the last ten of the cattle for your . share?' Gerry flushed. "That's more than fair," he safd. "You know the best of the horses will lead the bunch and the fattest of the cattle will lag be hind. You see, they're all strong now." "That's just it." said Lieber. Kemp had gone off to round up his mule. He came up from the river driving it before bim. At every jump he caught, the mule a flick with his rope and kicked and squealed but came on with lor e, stiff-legged strides. "Hi'yi!" yelled Kemp and snatched off his hat to beat his mount while he kept the rope-end flickering over the mule. Gerry and Lieber laughed. Kemp was like a miiraty come to sudden life. "Do yon know what?" said Ger ry, "I think I'll com* along with you." He led the iron-gray out by his fore 'oek and old Bonifacio hurried to help bridle and saddle him. Lieber mount ed his stallion and turned the horses as they came out. Kemp suddenly sobered down to business. When Lie ber had thrown back the last ten of the cattle, Kemp came out aud closed | the gap behind him. "I think I'll go ahead with the horses," said Lieber. "You go and take yo' men with you," *aid Kemp. "I could drive this fat bunch from here to Kansas with nary a hand to spell me." Gerry had expected a surprise of Rome sort when at last he arrived at , Lletoer s but the Utiuus lie saw there. ' stranger than anything lie could have imagined, left hint calm and unmoved as though some prescience bad pre pared him. The house was built on tho usual solid lines of plantation head quarters. Great, rough-hewn beams; towering rafters, built to carry the heavy tiles and to bear their burden for generations: unceiled, vast rooms with calclmincd walls; all these were not outside Gerry's experience in the new land. The strangeness came with the rugs and the linen, the etchings and the furniture, and last and most significant, the shelves and shelves of books and ihe tables piled with maga zines In three languages. Everything boro the stamp of quality, everything had the distinction of a choice. Gerry did not let his curiosity carry him beyond a rapid glance around the great living-room whore they found Lieber. bathed and freshly dressed, superintending the making of ice in the latest ingenious contrivance for the pampering of the pioaeer. "Ice water in the desert." thought Gerry and the phrase seemed to him more than words—it seemed to paint Lie ber dimly, but as the mind saw him. The veranda at I.ieber's was like that of Fazenda Flore< only much big ger. It looked out upon a wide stretch | of desert but away at the rim of the desert one could feel the river. The roar of the falls mumbled in the ear. | It came from so far away that one ! had to strain one's ears to actually define it. After supper they gathered on the veranda. They sit in rude, raw hide chairs wjjich were comfortably strong aud tilted them back to the national angle. I.ieber and Gerry smoked corn-husk cigarettes but Kemp stuck to his yellow papers. Gerry did not want to talk. He sat where he could watch the strange pair whose companion he was for a night. Into the souls of I.ieber and Kemp the long silences of solitude had entered and become at home. They were patient of silence. Speech had its restricted uses. They still had their hats on. Lieber's was pushed back, Kemp's was drawn forward. Kemp was whit tling. Kemp's words of farewell came i back to Gerry. "It's a long trail from the Alamo to New York, but the whole country's under one fence." Texan. Pennsylvania Dutchman and New Yorker might be social poles but to night they seemed strangely near to each other. The next morning Gerrv was up ear ly, nervous after his night's ab sence from Fazenda Flores. Kemp watched him saddle his horse. "That ain't one of the five." h-:- remarked. "No," said Gerry. "I traded the roan for the ircn-gray. Do you think I was done?" ! "I ain't sayin"," said Kemp cautious ly. "I don't want you should think I was tcachln' you, Mr. I.ansing. but that hoss ain't no Iron-gray. There ain't no such color for a hoss as I ever heern toll on. That hoss is a blue an' he's a true blue." "All right. Kemp." said Gerry, smil ing. "You've named him true blue and True Blue be is from this day." Lieber came out !u pyjamas and called them for coffee. When they were seated he proposed to Kemp that he make his headquarters at the ranch for a while. The rdvantp.ges were evi dent. It was a congregating point for the natives from miles round. Goat skins came into I.ieber's from hun dreds of miles up country. They came singlv. in donkey loads or in whole paektrains. Sometimes they passed directly into his hands from the pro ducer; some'inthey rnti through a chain of transfe -. from hand to hand. All news centered a' and radiated from Lieber's. The same men that brought in goatskins would be glad to add orchids to their stock in trade. Kemp grunted bis thanks. He had waited two years for {his offer. The realization of the obligation I.ieber was putting h!:u under embarrassed him. Ife began to talk. "These greas ers," he said, "itkm a lot o' tcachln' sometimes, an' sometimes they don't. F'r instance, yon 'em that Cat tleyas are wo'th mon»y and that the rest o' their parasites ain't, *nd after they seen you throw Bu'lin'tonias an' Oneidiums an' Miltonias into the dis card fo' three months steady, they be gin to sober down to jest Cattleyas 'nd realize that it's no use holdln' a four flush against n workln' pair." At the scientific names dropping so Incongruously from Kemp's lips, Ger ry stopped eating and looked up. Lie ber's face "Wore the smile of one who had heard it before but is quite will ing to hear it all over again. "But," continued Kemp, "yo' o'n pull till you're bilii' an' you cnu't head 'em around to see that ouless a Cattle ya has eight leaves. It's too young to be packed an' no good to the market besides bein' a victim to race suicide. "As to their bringin' in Bu'lin'tonias an' Oneidiums an' Miltonias, I never get onpatient o' that. How c'n a greas er ever learn that a Miltonla Speeta bilis Moreliana that looks like pigeon's blood in a pu'ple shadow ain't a com mercial proposition, while the Cattle; yas Is? When he's in the woods an' a smell straight f'm heaven draps its rope on him an' he looks up an' sees a droopln' spike o' snow, how you go in' to teach him that a Bu'lln'tonla Fragrans ain't Just as good business as a Lfrblpta? (To be continued.) HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH I THE PRESS GALLERY } v j The preas gallery is not a constl tutional part of the machinery of gov ernment at Washington, hut it is none the loss an Important pert. A century ago Kdmund Burke. In the house of commons, said that there wore three estates in parliament—nobles, clergy anil commons—but in the reporters' nailery yonder there sat a fourth estate , more important far than they all. ; With the advancing years and the in creasing power of the press, the dig nity of the fourth estate, thus chris tened. has waxed rather than waned. in Washington the term press gal- I lery means two distinct things. It; may mean the gallery in either of the i chambers of the- two houses of Con- j gress. Of it may mean the organ- ! ization of newspaper correspondents, I the individual membqfs of which have j access to those galleries. In each house the gallery is directly over the chair of the presiding officer | and is eqipped with desks for the use of correspondents taking notes. With the decline of the custom of reporting actual debates for tho newspapers the i desks are not much used, and Indeed the galleries are actually filled only when something very important or very interesting is going on. But in the lobbies back of the gal leries there is always great activity. Here are huge tables with blotting pads and bountiful supplies of ink. | pens and paper. In another room are typewriters, and in stiii another bat- I terles of telegraph instruments which take the news of the national legis lature to the people of the country. The duly accredited representatives | of newspapers who are telegraphic correspondent", are admitted to the gallery. Thj correspondents them selves ele' l a standing committee, which is the governing body of the gallery, acting in conjunction with the chairman of the Senate committee on rules and the Speaker of the House. On all questions affecting the per sonnel the standing committee is su preme. No man may be a member of the gallery, even if ho be a bona tide correspondent, who holds any ofllce of, profit »inder the Vnlteil States govern ment or who represents any bill or legislative measure In Congress or be fore any committee of oitlier house. This rule, is strictly enforced, and more than one bright youn™ man who has | / ™-~x] / Ask the man who owns one \ m * ! I 2 . ' i The Speed, Capacity and Endurance | Offered by the New .PACKARD j Service Trucks Sol ' • • - —• = —= —= . G " ■ V ■ TRAFFIC'S Gordian knot has been the difficulty of joining speed, carrying I capacity and endurance in effectual combination. ■ £ JL It has long bound light hauling to dissatisfaction and money-loss. i3_ , . ■ ; J Summary attempts to cut through it at a stroke met with indifferent success. Mounting a delivery body on a touring car chassis gave the user a delivery car, not J a light service truck. £ The need for the patient unraveler was great. Then Packard engineers took up the problem. They knew hauling conditions 2 and hauling needs. They had at their command the resources of a mile-long factory 2 employing 13,000 men and producing the highest class of motor vehicles in the world —51 acres of industrial activity representing the heaviest investment in the 5 industry, $25,000,000. j" They produced the PACKARD JLIGHT /SERVICE TRUCK —to meet the growing, insistent demand for a swift light carrier of Packard quality. ■ They were the unravelers. J The truck they built is strong, a long-time investment. It has the stamina to 2 2 withstand continuous high-speed travel over any roads, the activity to perform just 5 as effectively in traffic, with speed enough for a wide radius of action. A wide range of body styles adapts it to any service. 2 ■ Built in two sizes, rated respectively at 1 to 1% tons and to tons, it is the profitable solution to any light hauling problem. A telephoned request mil 2 bring one qf our sidesmen tc discuss with you the motorizing qf your traffic. 2 • a : PACKARD MOTOR CAR COMPANY S o/* PHILADELPHIA 107 Market Street, Harrisburg \ /i "VT▼W▼TT▼VVT▼ T ▼ T V V T 1 T WW T * [ilMSlbw, SP"ng Opening j /»' S What a surprise awaits those of you who will come here ■< to the new Spring Hats, Coats, Suits, Dresses, Waists, ! y . 1 V \ Shoes, etc. The supremely attractive models —the refresh '/_> i-... 3 ' >!l ' ns colors and color combinations and their complete at- \ ► , j 4 tractiveness make them strikingly handsome. I t V J? a Our present new assortments offer hats and apparel that * V j 4 have not been equalled In past seasons for artistic color . ► .1 irk DW (T-T effects and distinctiveness. We have only those models / o J***- ?sA!i\ rf,'/ which we know to be correct —the super-flashy, sensa- 4 I ► tional styles were not even considered. The assortment of th^ 0 "- conta ' ns the ver V handsomest models brought out 4 ► &Ss[ y Thus we have brought together bountiful supplies of / % i / Spring Millinery, Apparel, Shoes, etc. We offer them for A f: . } your critical inspection confident that the styles are the ► beat and with the assurance that our prices will give you "* 811 overflowln f> measure of value. 4 AGAIN. WE EXTEND TO YOU AN VN- !< (► \ QUALIFIED INVITATION TO ATTEND h J ► ; J, ) OUR SPRING OPENING. WELCOME! A y in! 26th Anniversary Sale < ome to our 26th milestone and invite our I jf ► f \ friends to be our guests at a feast of tempting values 4 t i specially prepared for this occasion. ► Sale starts to-morrow at 8 o'clock * ► . " ' ;:L;U If you have not received a copy of our "Store I 11 News," giving full Information about this sale, phone ► U8 ftn< * WC '' la " sent ' you a co,,y on(:e - * I ite/ f.. Robinson s i ► < ► "Uptown Department Store~ 4 sought to turn an honest penny by do ing a little lobbying or. the side has found himself kicked out of the gallery. If you would like to know all the MARCH XT, 1916. interesting things about the govern ■ ment you should read the two great j patriotic books, "The American Gov | eminent" and "The Panama Canal," both by Frederic J. Haakln. See the details tn tlio Tt-legTaph's oKer to its readers In the coupon printed else where in this issue.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers