10 DRINK HABIT RELIABLE HOME TREATMENT The ORRINE treatment for the Drink Habit can be used with absolute confidence. It destroys all desire for whiskey, beer or other alcoholic stim ulants. Thousands have successfully used it and have been restored to lives of sobriety and usefulness. Can be given secretly. Costs only SI.OO per box. If you fall to get results from ORRINE after a trial, your money will be refunded. Ask for free booklet tell ing all about ORRINE. Geo. A. Gorgas, 16 North Third street, Harrisburg; John A. McCurdy, Steelton; H. F. Brunhouse, Mechanics burg. AdverUsement. MORE RHEUMATISM THAN EVER BEFORE Clergymen, l/owyers, Brokers, 'Me chanics and Merchants Stricken Our old friend Rheumatlz Is having his inning this year, and a few words of caution from one who knows all about it may not be amiss. Wear rubbers in damp weather; keep your feet dry; drink plenty of lemonade, and avoid strong alcoholic drinks If rheumatism gets you, or sciatica, and you have sharp twinges, gnawing pain or swollen joints or muscles, you can get rid of all agony in just a few days by taking one-half teaspoonful of Rheuma once a day. All druggists know about Rheuma; i It's harmless, yet powerful; cheap,! yet sure, and a 80-cent bottle will last a long time. Ask H. C. Kennedy or any druggist. r~ \ Ask The I jlAjh Merchants I For Whom In We Work ll© As To Our V Ability We will gladly furnish you with the list, but here's a good plan: Notice the clean est windows— WE "DID" THEM. Harrisburg Window Cleaning Co. OFFICE—BOB EAST ST. Hell Phone 681-J ID———/ ? EDUCATION AL, School of Commerce Troup Building 15 So. Market Sq. Day and Night School 22d Year Commercial and Stenographic Courses Bell Phone 1010-J Harrisburg Business College Day and Night Bookkeeping. Shorthand. Civil Service Thirtieth Year 838 Market St. Harrisburg, Pa. Tke OFFICE TRAINING SCHOOL Kaufman Bldg 4 S. Market So. Training That Secures Salary Increasing Positions In the Office Call or «.*nd to-day for Interesting booklet "Tl.f Art of Orltlns Along ta tke World." Bell phone 694-R. TIME TABLE Cumberland Valley Railroad In EfTect June 27. 1915. TRAINS leave Harrisburg— For Winchester and Martlr.sburg at 6:03. *7:fi2 a. in., *3:40 p. m. For Hagerstown. Chambersburg, Car lisle, Mechanicsburg and Intermediate stations at *5:03, 17:52, *11:63 a. m.. i •3:40, 5:27, *7:45, *11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mechanicsburg at 9:48 a. m„ 2:16, 3:26. 6:30, 9:35 p. m. For Dlllsburg at 5:03, *7:52 and •11:53 a. m.. 2:16, *3:40. 6:37 and 6:30 p. m. •Dally. All other trains daily except i Sunday. H. A. RIDDLE. . J. H. TONGE. Q. p. A. j Don't Suiter With Headache or Neuralgia USE CAF-A-SO For Quick Relief 12 Doses 10c; 36 Doses 25c STORE KEEPER.!! 1 We now h«tf a apodal exhibition of SHOW CASES and STORE FIXTURES Catalog to intermted partlri. MIDDLETOWN FURNITURE CO. MIDDLETOWN, PA. HEADQUARTERS FOR SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES N Fire Accident J. HARRY STROUP Insurance 1017 If. SECOND STREET Automobile Surety Bonds " THURSDAY EVENING HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH MARCH 16, 1916. Bard Piano Action Co. to Hold Factory Housewarming After being delayed for several weeks because of the difficulty of getting orders for machinery filled during these busy days when so many machine tool concerns are engaged In making munitions > of war, the Charles E. Bard & Company, 921-925 Hemlock street, has now begun the manufacture of player piano actions for manufacturers of player pianos. The Bard factory is in the building formerly occupied by J. H. Sheesley, grain and feed dealer. Mr. Sheesley has removed his place of business to another building owned by him to the side of the Bard factory, after hav ing completely remodeled his old building lor the Bard company which has taken a long term lease on the property. Now that the factory Installation has been completed and the work of the mill is going smoothly, the Bard Company is planning a "housewarm ing" to which the public will be in vited on next Tuesday and Tuesday evening March 21, when all visitors will be made welcome at tho factory. HOW HE GOT EVEN "Getting even" is a hazardous un dertaking. A Philadelphia lawsuit, originally involving less than S6O, has ended a long course through the courts with costs aggregating over SIB,OOO. The plaintiff got the S6O sued for, but his lawyer's bill was sl,- 700. He Is $1,640 to the bad, but he has "got even," for the other fellow had a. lot more to pay. The Chris tian Herald. The Coming Baby! Hooray! Hooray! Nothing else can so completely endear us to the present and the future as the a expected arrival of a baby. But In the mean the mother Is of Taat importance. There Is a splendid external rem edy known as "Moth er's Friend" which ex erts a wonderful Influ ence upon the expand, ing muscles. They be come more pliant, 6tretch without undue pain, make the period one of pleasant antic . , _ Ipation instead of ap prehens on. In a series of splendid letters trom all over the country mothers tell of the great help "Mother's Friend" was to them. Even grandmothers tell the wonderful story to the.r own daughters about to enter tho of motherhood, net a bottle of "Moth ers Friend" today of your nearest druggist. fj v ! splendid help with your own hand guided by your own mind. For a free book of interest and importance to all mothers write to Bradfleld Regulator Co., 409 Lamar Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. It relates the personal experiences of many happy mothers, it tells many things that all women should be fa miliar with; It Is at once a gnido and RH inspiration. Writ® for this book. ECZEMA CAUSED YEARS OF INTENSE AGONY "I have suffered intense agony from '• Eczema on my leg and other parts of; my body for years, and received only temporary relief from other prepara tions. It is only a month since I started to use PETERSON'S OINTMENT, and there is no sign of Eczema or itching. You can refer to me."—Geo. C. Talbot, 27 Penfleld St., Buffalo, N. Y. I've got a hundred testimonials, says Peterson, just as sincere and honest as this one. Years aero, when I first start ed to put out PETERSON'S OINTMENT, I made up my mind to give a big box for 25 cents, and I'm still doing it, as every drusrgist in the country knows. I guarantee PETERSON'S OINTMENT \ because I know that its mighty heal ing power is marvelous. I say to every | one who buys a box that it is rigidly I guaranteed for Eczema. Salt Rheum, j Old Sores, Blind, Bleeding and Itching ] Piles, Ulcers, Skin Diseases, Chafing, J Burns. Scalds and Sunburn, and if not i satisfactory any druggist will return j your money.—Advertisement. RECIPE TO DARKEN GRAY HAIR Tlilw Home Ma«Io Mixture Darkens (•ray Hair uiul Removes Dandruff To a half pint of water add: Bay Rum 1 ox. Barbo Compound a small box Glycerine V* oz. These are all simple ingredients that you can buy from any druggist at very little cost, and mix them yourself. Apply to the scalp once a day for two weeks, then once every other week until all the mixture is used. A half pint should be enough to darken the gray hair, rid the head of dandruff and kill the dandruff germs. It stops the hair from falling out, and relieves itching and scalp diseases. It promotes the growth of the hair and makes harsh hair soft and glossy.— Advertisement. MANY IN HARRISBURG TRY SIMPLE MIXTURE Many Harrisburg people are sur prised at the QUICK action of simple buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., as mixed in Adler-i-ka. This simple rem edy acts on BOTH upper and lower bowels, removing such surprising foul matter that ONE SPOONFUL relieves almost ANY CASE constipation, sour stomach or gas. A few doses often relieve or prevent appendicitis. A short treatment helps chronic stom ach trouble. The INSTANT, easy action of Adler-i-ka is astonishing. H. C. Kennedy, druggist, 321 Market street. —Advertisement. ji Stock Transfer ;i jij Ledger ji iji The Pennsylvania Stock '! !j Transfer Tax Law fact of Jun* !' i'i 4, IBIS) which la now in afreet. '| i!| requires all corporations In the !' j] i State, no matter how large or < j 'll how small they may be, to keep \ 1 !;. a Stock Transfer Ledger. We 1 \ i[ are prepared to supply these |> ] i Ledgers promptly at a very '[ ! < nominal price. $ .The Telegraph ji ji Printing Co. J i Printing—Binding—Designing J i Phofo Gngraving • j ]> lAKRISBCRG - - PA. ]! v^wvyw.svvwirtvv'wwvw^ HIGH COST OF PAPER BLAMED ON MUNITIONS Printers Say War Supply Men Are Buying Up All Materials Pittsburgh, March 16.—That certain munition manufacturers were purchas ing all the available rags in this coun try and Europe at an advance of 2 and 3 cents a pound and converting them into guncotton for the use of the allied armies In the present war, which has caused an advance In the price of paper and chemicals used in the print ing trade, was discussed at a meeting of the master printers of Western Pennsylvania held at the Monongahela House recently. No definite action was taken, but the' meeting will lead to further ses sions in the near future, officials said. Held All Over Country The meeting was one of a number being held throughout the country for considering the excessive consumption of paper and the use of rag stock by manufacturers of war munitions. According to Charles F. Ward, a member of the executive committee of the National Association of Printers, certain munition manufacturers deny that rags are used, but the enormous increase in price cannot be accounted for in any other way. Mr. Ward said that positive proof had been found that rags and old paper were being converted into munition use. Mr. Ward also said that the p'Mces had advanced so unexpectedly that, at this time the master printers could not quote a price in the morning and be assured that the profits on the work would not be absorbed by an advance later in the day. Hundred Beaters in Use Mr. Ward said that it had been dis covered that a certain firm, which is manufacturing war munitions, recently had installed 100 paper beaters in a plant in an eastern city. They are use«l to beat the rags and old paper into pulp. In the past, Mr. Ward stated, a plant with 10 paper beaters was considered as large as could pos sibly be used. These paper beaters, Mr. Ward asserted, were installed at the cost of European countries. NERVOUS HENS SPOIL HATCHES: GOOD MOTHERS ARE CLUMSY Breeds of chickens are divided into sitters and nonsitters. Nonsitters Include all the light, nervous breeds known as egg-type breeds, of which Leghorns are representative. These breeds are too easily frightened, are not relliable enough and are too close feathered for setting. Large breeds like Brahma and Cjpchin although they make good mothers, are often too heavy and clumsy and tney break the eggs. The best sitters, according to au thorities at. the Pennsylvania State College School of Agriculture and Ex periment Station, are those found on the farm, such as Wyandottes. Ply mouth Rocks, Rhode Island Reds and Orpingtons. The first step in setting a hen Is to remove her to the brooding house at night, where she should be placed upon several infertile or glass eggs type of nest from fourteen to sixteen inches square, from which the hen may be released for a period each day is preferable. A sod two to three inches thick placed grass-side down in the nest, will supply moisture dur ing the hatch. The sod should be covered with a base of fine straw un der a layer of coarser straw. To insure freedom from lice a hen should he dusted with a good powder before she is set and at Intervals of 5 to 7 days thereafter. An odd number of eggs, from 9 to 15 acordlng to the size of the hen, will fit into the nest better than an even number. The Pennsylvania Station recom mends testing at the end of the first week to remove the infertile eggs, as one rotten egg may spoil the whole setting. The sitting hen should be fed once a day on a mixture of whole grain. THE RELIGIOUS INSTINCT IN INDIA I said to a Hindu professor who sat by me, "What is the reason for this unaccountable feeling which seems to be sweeping the convictions of these college men?" In reply, he explained to me that the educated men of India, In their awakening to new responsibility for individual, social and political re form, were grasping, with almost feverish zeal, every influence which had helped to shape the progressive civilizations of the West. Further more, he added: "You must remem ber that the students of India have in herited a religious consciousness. They know the Bible as thoroughly, if not more thoroughly, than any sacred book of Hinduism. They need only leadership to make this movement for the intelligent study of the English Bible one of the most popular and profitable branches of Indian educa tion."—Correspondence of The Chris tian Herald. THE LATEST STYLE IN HAND CUFFS Lawbreakers may be nipped in the bud most effectively by the police nippers invented by a Connecticut man. The police nippers or "leaders" as they are sometimes 1 called, are clasped about the wrist or even the ankles of the arrested man. The advantage of the new nippers Is not alone In their effectiveness but also in the fact that they may be quickly and easily operated with one hand. The closing of the hand about the handle portions of the nippers causes the jaws to close. These are plvotally connected by opposed ex tending arms with a sliding tubular member attached to the T-shaped in ner handle. This tubular member slides on a basic rod to which the outer T-shaped handle is mounted. It takes but an Instant to clasp the nippers on the wrist of an offender.— Popular Science Monthly. Editor Tells How D.D.D. Cured His Eczema Clergyman ud Banker AIM Write H. G. RotchklM, Editor Echo. Prophetts town. III.: Remember mine was eczema of fifteen years' standing. Now I am com pletely healed, after 4 bottles of D. D. D. I have seen a case of 25 years' standing cured. I hare seen my own doctor cured of barber's Itch, which he could not cure himself. F. R. Teear, Banker, Hopklnton, la.: I treated with three doctors for six mentis. They did me no good; my face and scalp were full of tho disease. I applied D. D. D. Result—my face is as smooth as a bahy'i. Rev. L. I. Downing, Pastor fth AT. Pres byterian Church, Roanoke, Vs.: For three years 1 suffered, intensely so. I hare at last found relief in D. D. D. I am no longer tortured—completely cured. I have no hesitancy In acknowledging the great virtues of this specific. \Drugglsts are glad to recommend this soothing, cooling liquid. 2V, SOc and SI.OO. Come to is and we will tell you more about this remarkable remedy. Your money back unlet* the first bottle relieves you. D. D. D. Soap keeps your akin healthy. Ask about It. Gorgas, the druggist, 16 N. Third St.. P. R. R. Station; J. Nelson Clark, druggist. i|Miy GEORGE AQNE^HAMBERLAIN CQPYRTQffT J3QT THE CENTVJ3Y CCL 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 hlro good-by. CHAPTER ll—Captain Wayrve tells Alan of the failing of the Waynes. Clem drinks Alan's health on lus birthday. CHAPTER lll—Judge Healey buys a picture for Alix Lansing. The judge defends Alan In his business with his employers. CHAPTER IV—Alan and Allx meel at sea, homeward bound, and start a flirtation, which becomes serious. CHAPTER V—At home, Nance Ster- j ling asks Alan to go away from Allx. | Alix is taken to task by Gerry, her j husband, for her conduct with Alan and defies him. CHAPTER Vl—Gerry, as he thinks sees Alix and Alan eloping, drops everything, and Roes to Pernainbuco. CHAPTER Vll—Alix leaves Alai on the train and goes home to fine 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 falls to trace Gerry. A baby is horn to Alix CHAPTER X—The native girl take Gerry to her home and shows hln the ruined plantation she Is mlstres of. Gerry marries her. CHAPTER XI At Maple hous Collingeford tells how he met Alan— "Ten Per Cent. Wayne"—building u bridge in Africa. CHAPTER Xll—Collingeford meet Alix and her baby and he gives hei encouragement about Gerry. CHAPTER Xlll—Alan comes bad to town but does not go home 11 CHAPTER XlV—Gerry begins to improve . . builds an irrigating ditch. CHAPTER XV—ln Africa Alai. reads Clem's letters and dreams ol home. CHAPTER XVI —Gerry pastures Lieber's cattle during the drought. A baby comes to Gerry and Margarita. CHAPTER XVII Colllngford meets Allx in the city and finds her i changed. CHAPTER XVIII—AIan meets Alix.! J. Y. and Clem, grown to beautiful 1 womanhood, in the city and realizes' that be has sold his birthright for a mess of pottage. CHAPTER XlX—Kemp and Gerry become friends. CHAPTER XX—Kemp and Gerry visit I.leber and the three exiles are drawn to gether by a common tie. CHAPTER XXl—Lieber tells his story. "Home Is the anchor of a man's soul. I want to go home." They were brittle wltb age, the ink yellow and faded In words that no eyes but his and hers had ever seen. "In Two Days," Said He, "the Master Will Be Dead." They gripped his soul and held it steady. Without this letter he would have torn up the other. But the other had come as a complement and he kept it because it helped him to see himself.. As Alan weakened the bridge ap- 1 proaclied completion. Batches of men, I as special work was finished, were dispatched to the coast. With each I batch McDotigal strove to send his master, but Alan was too wenk to go. though he did not say so. He had I realized it with terror and then with j calm. "No, McDougal, not this time,' I he would say, and Anally, "I think I might just an well stay on till thej ; ■end up to take over. It's unprofes I slonal to chuck it before. It won't be long now." And McDougal had cursed low, rolling oaths and taken It out on the men. Alan seemed to have become child lsh in his weakne?*. He spent whal ! strength he had left in cutting word*' Into a board ripped frotn a kerosene box. When he had finished he called McDougal and showed him his hand! work. "McDougal." he said, "if any j thing should happen to keep me here j permanently just cut tht > wordß lntc some big rock and lay me under it Be careful you get them just so. Tht French are mighty particular about tht way we use their lingo, and while 11 wasn't a Frenchman that wrote this bit, I guess he'd he Just as particular.' "Aweel, sir," said McDougal. stifling his rage within him. "I'll do as you wish." He took the board and looked at It. The words meant nothing to him but the scene meant much. He went out and concluded his agreement w'th twelve quiet, lowering men gath ered from the countryside. They were pioneers without kuowlng it. They and their fathers and their fathers' fathers had held these far depths of the world against wild beasts and drought and flood since, centuries ago, the Jesuits swept through the subcon tinent and left a trail of settlers be hind them. They were proud, narrow, Independent. They were unlnventive, unimaginative. No man among them had ever thought to lie. They did not steal, though they were robbed wben ~~er they invaded civilization with jeir wares. From them McDougal had learnJd that due east, halfway to the sea, was a place called Lieber's knd that this Lieber was known as the Americano and had fame as a curador of fevers. Four men could carry a sick man to Lieber's in a hammock in four days. Twelve men could do it In two, and quicker than that a hundred men could not go. For the price of three steers each—two-year-olds—they would un dertake to deliver the sick man at Lieber's in two days. McDougal pon dered. It was a chance. If he sent Alan to the rail-head there wouldn't be even a chance. There was no one who could help at the rail-head, nor along the thin line, nor even at the coast. "In two days." said he despairingly, "the master will be dead." They gathered at the door of Alan's tent and looked in at him as he lay half comatose. "No," said the oldest of them, "he will be dead in seven days' time." As McDougal picked him up and laid him gently in a hammock, Alan came to. The hammock was padded with pillows and blankets and strung on a stout bamboo pole with two men at each end supporting it. "What are you doing with me?" he asked angrily and sank back into the pillows. From there his eyes glared up at McDougal. "I'm sending ye home," said Mc- Dougal gently but firmly. Alan smiled a twisted smile. "Send ing me home." he repeated, and added resignedly, "Oh, all right." Then he started up. "Bring matches," he said. McDougal took matches from his pock et. Alan drew two letters from inside his coat. "Burn them." He held them out and watched jealously as McDou gal opened out the sheets with averted eyes and set fire to the thin paper. The filmy cinders blew hither and thither under the light breeze. The men under the pole moved nervously, anxious to be off. Their eight companions wheeled their flea-bitten ponies and headed for the trail. "No. you don't," shouted McDougal and explained with many gestures that they were to ride behind on account of the dust. "We know, master," answered one quietly, "we would but start." McDougal held out an awkward hand in farewell. "You're ready, Mr. Wayne?" "Yes," «aid Alan between chattering teeth, and then cried, "No, I want the board—my epitaph thing, you know." McDougal dived into the tent and brought out the board with the roughly cut words that he could not read but somehow began to understand. He slipped it into the hammock behind the cushions and then Just touched Alan's hand and gave the word to the men. They started off in a shambling, rapid trot. The horseman fell In behind. A cloud of dust cut thein off from Me- Dougal's gaze. He turned and fell upon his laboring squad with a rolling flood of curses. To them the words were Greek, but nevertheless their blood curdled and they worked as only Wayne had iought them. Lieber, with Gerry and Kemp, sat In the shade of, the veranda, smoking after the midday meal. The stock had been corralled, but, on Kemp's advice, the start for Fazendn Flores was to be made half-way through the afternoon. There was to be a great moon that night Bnd the drive would be robbed of the perils of darkress to cattle as well as of the horrible heat. The three were silent, half somno j lent, when a passing herder grunted ' and pointed westward with his chin. I Lieber stood up and looked. A pillar ! of dust was coming across the desert i He could sec men riding and j thing else. lie took his Held glasses I from a peg and looked again. "Fu i neral, or a sick mau," be said and sat : down to wait. Kemp started whittling to keep himself awake. Since the hour of Lieber's confession he had hardly spoken. (To Be Continued.) t . » HOW TO TAKE PILLS Take Blackburn's Cascaßoyal-PUls, that never gripe nor sicken. One each night as a laxative. Two or three as a cathartic. After a few weeks' use the trouble Is usually corrected. Try a 10c pkg. Just once and you'll want no other—they are so prompt and pleas ant.—Advertisement. Try Telegraph Want Ads K < ■I Sold Out Again! \ ) ........ >! The entire edition of Pictorial Review > ( < for April has already been exhausted! ' * • < This is mainly due to two things: > \ First, the unprecedented demand for the i i next-to-the-last instalment of Kathleen i Norris's sensational success —"The Heart > < of Rachael." And second, the superb * pages in color showing the cream of the ► f advance Easter styles. \ i The wonderful reception our Easter ► i Fashion number has met with is. natu- > { f rally, much appreciated and we sincerely J hope that all of our good friends may * be able to secure copies. This is by no \ L* means certain however. The only April \ > copies to be obtained anywhere are a \ scattering few in the hands of the news \ dealers throughout the country. \ y We must especially request you not \ \ to send us subscriptions to Pictorial \ Review to begin with the April issue, as \ ► we are not in a position to supply them. \ The May number will be the first we \ can send you. < > If the first newsdealer you go to can't \ y supply you with an April issue, please ► try another. It is well worth while. ] n \ * < \ Pictorial Review >; \ New York ;< " " | BUSINESS AND JOHN BARLEY COKN The preachers inveighed against liquor on moral grounds for decades, and even the deacons continued to take their nightly nip: the schools portrayed the terrible effects of alco hol, and every educational process was turned to make it hideous, but boys still learned to drink. Now busi ness has seen the light and it says: "If you drink, even just a little in moderation, I don't want you." And business is going to drive the devil in the bottle out of society with the help of the church and the school. The Simply Pour Boiling Water on a Steero Cube / and your cup of delicious Hot Steero is ready. / Steero Cubes added to soups, sauces and / / J&\ gravies greatly improve the flavor. I J Sohleffeltn k. Co., Distributor*, New York 'Lf I • STEERO^ CUBES Made by American Kitchen Produots Co.. New York Awarded Medal of Honor |Ti, Broctr Panama-Pacific Exposition »rD»Nc«tM cxw>Q<ttQMowm>^ I 25 YEARS OF SERVICE ! 0 V 1 I To Smokers Is the Record of I KING OSCAR 1 I 5c CIGARS | I March i« our Silver Anniversary. g Try one to-day and you will see | why this quality hrand increases §- in popularity. JOHN C. HERMAN & CO. f Harrisburg, Pa. g "The Daddy of Them All." S 8 area in which alcohol is an outlaw is steadily widening; the knell has been sounded for John Barleycorn; even Mars will have none of him. The counting of the almost unnum bered thousands who yearly sink into sodden graves has touched most ot us, but the world at large has refused to be horrified. The man who losea his job because of a glass will re member the reason, and when several hundreds of him lose their jobs tha saloon begins to show in its true colors and they vote it out. The Christiaa Herald.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers