Cold Sores and Fever Blisters are only outward manifestations of the inflammation of the mucous surface that lines the lungs, the stomach and all the digestive tract, but they give you evidence of how sore a membrane may become as a result of inflamma tion, which is stagnation of the blood, """ w rightfully called acute catarrh. If you suffer from such conditions don't let them bec«me chrome, don't run the risk of systemic catarrh. Clear it Up With PERUNA When your system is cleared of all its prisons, the membranes soothed aad healed, the cold gone and your digestion restored, you will enjoy life, feel equal to all its tasks, aad be at peace with the world. Let Penina do for yoo what it did for this sufferer: Mrs. L A. Patterson, 238 Utah Avenue, Memphis, Tenn. says: " I have been a friend of Peruna for many year*. I hare used It of and on for catarrhal complaint* and found it a very excellent remedy. I have a small family of children. Times are hard with us. hut lean scarcely afford to do without Peruna. especially during the season of the year when coughs and colds are prevalent. • We always roccommend Peruna •o our neighbors, for the benefit it has been to us." You needn't suffer longer with such a remedy at hand. / | Peruna can be obtained in tablet form. I M i" a<»a«oi (*3! , Ycm can carry it with you and take it sys te-matically and regularly for a remedy, or I *■* needed f°r a preventive. Get a box today. I | The Peruna Company, Columbus, Ohio YORK COrXTY FARM SOLD Dillsburg, Pa., March 14. The Aaron Enrich farm in Franklin town ship, was sold at public sale to Robert Weaver for $3,553. The property con tains 43 acres improved with brick d wellinghouse and frame bank barn. dckkkkhjoo 000 o<HKK>o<>a-wo<K>OQ<K>o aoo sw»a aoo-o-oooooaoooao g c J EXPERIENCE ! 1 I I For 24 YEARS we have teen § g making I KING OSCAR! 5c CIGARS § o a o o S from the best tobacco money and 2 | experience could buy, preparing it S | it tbe correct manner and blending | in to mellowness, in proper com- 2 bination. O D JOHN C. HERMAN CO. | £ Harrisburg, Pa. g o o 0 o OCKXKJ-CKr/00000-DOCOOOOOOO'OOOOOODOaOOOO-OOCIOOOOOO^OOOOOOOC 1 NOTICE !> 2967-R, William W. Lott, Piano Tuner, 701 N. Seventeenth Street jj !> This number and address is the correct and only one which should ]> J[ appear in the Telephone Book just issued by the Bell Telephone Co. <j .j Owing t.j ;i misprint in the new Telephone Book, my name is printed |> $ twice, with two different numbers and addresses. Patrons and all J| | piano own« r», please <j WILLIAM W. LOTT I'IAXO TI'.NKK || Headquarters, 701 N. Seventeenth St. s There's a Differen f A vast difference. You may be burning: more coal than is neces v sary, because you are not burning the kind especially adapted to your % requirements. I M Talk the matter over with us- —we'll steer you right on the par- i % tioular kind of coal you ought to be using—and supply you with the M best heat-giving fuel you can buy. Costs the same —and goes further. f J. B. MONTGOMERY ■ 60ft—either phone 3rd and Chestnut Street.* | Additional Trains jj Lebanon Valley Branch I j Philadelphia & Reading Ry. j; Additional trains have been added to schedule as follows: LATE TRAIN Leaves Harrisburg 10.00 P. M. daily. || !; Arriving at Reading at 11.50 P. M. j; EARLY TRAIN Leaves Reading 5.00 A. M. daily. Arriv- «! j! ing at Harrisburg 6.55 A. M. Train No. 49 leaving Reading 4.50 A. M. now carries Milk <; ;! and Express only, no passengers. For full schedule of Trains apply any Ticket Agent. Stock Transfer Ledger | I The Pennsylvania Stock Transfer Tax Law (Act of June j! 1 ! 4, 1J1B) which is now in effect requires all corporations in the State, 11 \ ! no matter how large they may be to keep a Stock Transfer Ledger. ] 1 ' 1 We are prepared to supply these Ledgers promptly at a Terr nominal ]! price. '' ' i ' | The Telegraph Printing Co jj Printing—Binding—Designing—Photo Engraving ] ! ;;! UARRISBURU, PA. TUESDAY EVENING, ' HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH MARCH 14, 1916 WILD TURKEYS LIBERATED Dillsburg. Pa.. March 14. Game Protector Gemmil last week liberated ;a number of wild turkeys in the South Mountain near Dillsburs. A number of pheasants will also be I placed in the mountains this Spring. HOME A INovel by Grot-Re ApioM Chamberlain (Copyright by the Century Co.) SYNOPSIS CHAPTER I—Alan Wayne Is sent away from Red Hill, his home, by his uncle, J. Y„ as a moral failure. Clein runs after him In a tangle of short skirts to bid him good-bv. CHAPTER ll—Captain Wayoe tells Alan of the falling: of the Waynes. Clem driuks Alan's health on his | birthday. CHAPTER lll—Judge Healey buys a picture for Allx Lansing. The judge i defends Alan In his business with his j employers. CHAPTER is Alan and Allx meet at sea, homeward bound, and start a j flirtation, which becomes serious. ; CHAPTER V —At home, Nance Ster- I I ling asks Alan to go away from Allx. : Allx Is taken to task by Gerry, her husband, for her conduct with Alan and defies him. CHAPTER VI —Gerry, as he thinks, sees Allx and Alan eloping, drops everything, and goes to Pernambuco. CHAPTER VII —Alix leaves Alan on the train and goes home to find that Gerry ha 3 disappeared. CHAPTER Vlll—Gerry leaves Per- j nambuco and goes to Piranhas. On j a canoe trip he meets a native girl. | CHAPTER IX —Tile judge fails to j trace Gerry. A baby is born to Alix. CHAPTER X—The native girl takes | Gerry to her home and shows him the ruined plantation she Is mistress! of. Gerry marries her. CHAPTER XI At Maple house Colllngeford tells how he met Alan—| "Ten Per Cent. Wayne"—building a tiridge in Africa. CHAPTER Xll—CollingeCord meets Alix and her baby and he gives her encouragement übout Gerry. CHAPTER XIII —Alan comes back to town but does not go home. He makes several calls in tho city. CHAPTER XlV—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 Lieber's cattle during the drought. A baby comes to Gerry and Margarita. CHAPTER XVII Collingford meets Alix in the city and finds her changed. CHAPTER XVIII—AIan meets Alix. J. Y. and Clem, grown to beautiful womanhood, in the city and realizes; that he has sold his birthright for a j mess of pottage. CHAPTER XlX—Kemp and Gerry become friends. CHAPTER XX—Kemp and Gerry visit Uieber and the tlir*e exiles are drawn to gether by a common tie. "There are lots of men with the be ginning of my story. It's common and takes little telling. I was born In P?nnsylran:a. We were mighty poor farmers but I got all the schooling there was within walking distance of home. My old man saw to that. When I was still a boy our little bank took me In. It wasn't doing much business then but a couple of yearg later the region struck oil and the bank's busi ness soared by leaps and bounds. It turned into as good a spouter as any of the Wells. The family that ran it became rich and went to higher jobs or out altogether. The staff was shoved up nnd about the time I was of age I was handling more money than I'd ever known was in the world. The amount 1 stole was an even thirty , thousand and I got nw.iy with it. It was easier to do thirty years ago than It is today. I got awny with it and then It got away with me. It lasted me a year and four mouths and I saw the end of it up the coast at Pernam buco. "I date my birth from the day I spent the last doHar and woke up. I worked. Nothing was too small or too big for ma to handle. I got something to risk and then I risked it. I risked It again and again. After ten years I could draw my check for thirty thous and plus interest and I did. I sent the check to the little bank back home. I waited two months for the answer and then it came: my check torn across aud a short letter saying that the loss had already been met by a bankers' surety association. I wrote the asso ciation a dozen letters and some of them took some writing. In the last I offered fourfold the theft. There had been plenty of Bible in my bringing up. They wrote back that It was no use—that I could keep on climbing in peace but It was their business to jail me for fifteen years the first chance they got and they'd do it the minute I set foot where they could grab me. "That letter frightened me. I be gan to realize that what I'd been work ing for wasn't money, or honor, or rehabilitation but just the right to go back—the right to go back home. "Nobody had been harder on me than my old man. l'or years nobody in the house was allowed to say my name and if he saw a letter from me he threw It in the fire, opened or un opened. But somehow it got to him that I had offered to pay fourfold and that I'd been refused and that turned him. It was the fourfold that did It— tile divine and sacred measure of jus tice. He started to fight for me as hard as he'd ever fought against. Aud then he died and my old mother died. Letters stopped. My brothers and sis ters were coming up in the world. They couldn't afford to own a thief much less fight for him. So the letters stopped. "I spent money then. I built me a house in Pernambuco that was a won der palace and I started in to forget. But when you've been remembering with all your might, the color of the paper on the walls of home, the lay of the wood-pile, of the shedj and the tumbling barn and stables, the holes in the fence, the friendly limbs of ap ple trees and the smell of hay; when you've been coddling bare memories of simple things like those for fifteen years, you can't turn around on your inside self and forget. "There's n flag the sight of which makes my heart come up into my throat and tears to my eyes. You think I mean the Stars and Stripes, but I don't. I mean the Blue Peter that flies at the halyards of big ships and says to everybody that takes the trouble to look. "We sail today.* Over the tops of the houses I've seen that flag blinking iu the heavens like a bit FJR IN OUR SBSR More Phenomenal Bargains wXXy * Newness Everywhere . Price Lowness the Big Feature This wonderful Bargain Basement Sale has proved to be a tremendous success, literally eclipsing both in volume of sales and money-saving opportunities all past notable events of this character. Hundreds and hun dreds of Harrisburg's most economical and skeptical shoppers came, saw and eagerly bought, complimenting us upon the remarkable value received at such small prices. To-morrow's offerings are still more remarkable, scores of things in lots too small to advertise. Come, the sale will only last a few more days. Grasp your oppor tunity while it lasts. Hsoc noubtesid.wash* j|, e ßiggestßiig Bargains inH rrisburg 39c Clothes Basket ✓V anr 3x12 ft. Tapestry ! 9x12 ft. Tapestry 9x12 Axminster <£BSSSeSESjrr-J' Each, * B J Brussels lIUKf. Brussels Kue a ; RIIKS. good nualitv m £ good, new designs Rood quality and and handsome new 1 111 W M M ~ and colorings; reg- designs; regular designs; regular I M ular $12.50 value. $17.50 value. Spe- $25.00 value. Spe- 1 a/l Special. cial. cial. Made strong and dur- $9.95 $12.95 i $19.95 I Large size chip clothes baskets I able, two side wash 9x12 ft. Tapestry 9x12 ft. Tapestry with strong wire handles, hoards Brussels Rugs, Brussels Rugs, EXTRA SPECIAL V HAIUiAIX BASHMFA'T M [' heavy quality and extra fine new de- S9- 0,) wool fiber ■> tiAflt.AlN BASEMEN I good rich color- signs and quality; Rugs, size 9xl-; I —ay / \ ings: regular $15.00 $19.50 value. fipe- good patterns and 5i.59 PORCH GATF Fnr I RUBBER DOOR MATsI v *""i !l Tcl"i ""til I « «- O-An i IMT 25c mmm *—2H2L. 1. L e ,,L»T Ji±£i—l $1.09 MMM 1.. . r . _ _ f 1 N A '" ft - collapsible (XXXXa/, | 75c Value, n mw'J v\ « ■% 3*l IP •! p . OI i? or , s ' a ' l- gate; YYYYYVi II \«.,:>n:vr Y Bed SpfCcUlS TUfkiSlll6W£tS \T , »3c BEI) SPREADS; CQ. 1»c Turkish Guest OA „ oc Junior CAMERA, sale Price. eneh OUC Towels: Sale Price. .1 for $3.25 BISSELS CYCO Carpet iflßnjcg.- Full size crochet bed spreads Jn pink, blue and lavender II Swrenerc ■HBjWW MMi' . AQ and good heavy quality. borders and place for Initial. 11 t/OC sl.lO BED SPREADS; OQ. 17c Turkish Bath 1 01/„~ - /fe 1 r\ T Salt* Price, each u *' l ' Towels: Sale Price.. '2*- !H I H / BmkSß{B BsjEaa Takes pictures 2'< x Hemmed crochet spreads; full Extra good size and quality, V* • 0 BCM :: 1 . ; has good lenses. size and good weight. hemmed. n m „in« h.n ind made by Kast- $1.39 BED SPREADS; Q7_ <iM ¥7CTi bear Ins carnit nan Kodak Co. Sale Price, each VI C 19c Turkish Bath Towels; 1 C r sw~S?r- fuffv i V HAnfiAlN BASEMENT Hemmed and fringed crochet Sale Price, each........ guaranteed fnr I t bed spreads; full size and 'splen- Extra heavy quality and ex- one y oar I m * T)T T? T TTVTinVTC did quality. tra large. V BARGAIN BASEJIEJiT__J X Llri JLil w 51.65 Bed Spreads; tfj 1 OQ 25c Turkish Bath in , -n.. i.s.n uvßrrniTrn TtitiF' Sa,p Prlce ' each «PX»Oi/ Towels; Sale Price I*7C cnr..T r . 1 niu«(i fV. '.'i,!' nr\ ' Very fine grade of hemmed Plain white and fancy colored .'7.. ™ /<ir\ / \ DAMASK, extra wide. xQp crochet spreads in variety of new styles; all hemmed ready for SAl.fc, PRICE, //' A special, yard patterns and heavy grade. use. /t» * f\ ct-«u>U V s!tc COI.ORKD BORDER MER- ' v THE RARGAIV MtsF.MF.VT , I KU ff CERIZEI) TABLE DAMASK—in V*■ Cedar Oil Mop and Polish Uombination (S^* CI.OTHS. size 58x:»8 inches: hem- L weight o !!»». 7 —— ; —\ 81.25 HEMSTITCHED SQl T ARE PJ,,L'„n i- \J ?\ (T Beautiful Cops ami Saucers: Iw-se TABLE CLOTHS, 04x64 inches; roll^hinq' IO PxyT- Kftr /VV size, set ot one cup 10c good patterns and 2»>«i saucer lor quality; special, each OOC This offer include# 2 mops with fz Japanese lea Set 51.50 MERCERIZED PATTERN' ~,,8 u ' , " , "*"H a ™ r °' w TABLE CLOTHS. 72 inches square, ■ two handles and 1 bottle of Oil, Consisting of 6 tea cups and fXT'SS* s,le 97c aWMMBE. (4 oz) all for 98c ST* ' "**"• ' "" 1 V ' V " 'V THE BARGAIN n*«P«f\'T V or deep blue sea married to a white 1 cloud and to me it always said, 'We sail for home today.' I'd shut my eyes ; or close the blinds but what was the use of that? Night aud day I could hear the bellow of the great horns—a blast for good-by and another for a challenge to the sea—as the big boats headed out for home. "I couldn't staod it. I came up here. And now. last night, I dreamed that I heard it in my sleep—up here. Gen tlemen, a man without a country Is in a bad way but a man without a home, even if it's a hovel—well—we all know the old song." He paused to master , rr nn 'That Letter Frightened Me." his voice. Then in a wliinper that they just caught he added, "Home is the anchor of a man's soul. 1 want to go Home." Lieber stopped talking. The reveal ing silence had done its work. It had brought them close—so close that he had spoken lest they take his soul by assault. He left them and went to his own room. They saw he was an old man. beyond the years he had dis closed. (To be continued.) U. of P. Trustees Pave Way For Military Drill Philadelphia, March 14.—Making possible a voluntary military course jat the University of Pennsylvania in the near future, members of the i Hoard of Trustees yesterday author ' l/.ed Provost Hrnith to appoint a coni ! inittee composed of trustees to take llnal action on the matter. The devision was brought about by ;the visit last week of Major General Leonard Wood, commander of the Department of the East, to the Uni versity when he stirred the students by his patriotic address. More than 100 of the students signed a petition | asking for the course. i THIEF FIRES DWELLING Lewistown, Pa., March 14.—A bur i glar gained entrance to the cottage of Clair Fultz, in the Narrows, east, of town, at night and stole a bicycle. Mr. Kultz works at night and was B3 3P ; mKMm^SsiHK^^^^^ . A medium or full figure, seeking to /^'V mould the waist-line shown in the \V. . ? v - spring fashions, will find corsets of ordinary strength absolutely Am/ill h inadequate to stand the strain. / ( f\ Such garments will break down / Jl 1| \\ or stretch hopelessly out of ft 11 \\ shape very quickly. And if a BL J \ fleshy abdomen must also be rffi WJK reduced, the task is hopeless U f without garments made spe- J daily for the purpose. Caff 1 [ J / Rengo Belt Reducing Corsets \u J\l. are made for just such figures 7 //i\ fl 1 \ U/No^ and just such purposes—slen- S\ /^r.7\ V \V — der women do not need them> II jA'IV J, * f ,, 7// They have the latest figure RENGO / "'"V lines and no amount of wear- RFIT < YI ■' Jif ing pressure can change them. pp ATMD _\ jj Jl\ The change will be yours when *tATURE I II I S'\ these extra strong corsets \ i j; with the well-known Rengo STEEL AS TIC \ / \ J^Si Belt reducing feature have WFRRING "A A rrn^W imparted to your figure every WLDDINb bit of the mould of present fashion which they possess. W\iL Boned with double watch-spring steels, guaranteed \ not to rust. \J\ For Sale By Dives,Pomeroy Stewart Prices $2.00, $3.00, $5.00 ; i 1 =J not at home at the time, but his family were. The thief pried open a door in one part of the house and while ran sacking- the house built a fire on the floor of the room where the wheel was kept. Fortunately, the lire went out without setting lire to the building. MOVING RAIL-ROAD STATION Duncannon, Pa.. March 14. The station at Clark's Ferry on the North ern Central railroad will be moved a short distance east of the present loca tion. where the foundations are now nearly completed. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers