6 Mahe lour boo) Tingle with life and en ergy for the day s work by eating foods that contain real nutriment —that do not use up all the vitality of the bod; in an effort to digest them Shredded Wheat Biscuit supplies the greatest amount of body - building, energy - creating material with the least tax upon the digestive organs. It is a real whole wheat food, ready - cookec' and ready-to-serve, contain ing the life of the whea grain, nothing added, nothing taken away. Star, the day right by eatinr Shredded Wheat with he or cold milk. Serve it fo: J luncheon with sliced bana- 1 nas or other fruits. Mad'- j at Niagara Falls, N. Y. 1 t t' | Clear, Peachy Skin j I Awaits Anyone Who || Drinks Hot Water I I |! *:* Says an inside bath, before break- £ * fast helps us look and feel f V <|» clean, sweet, fresh. ♦> * X * * Sparkling and vivacious—merry, bright, alert —a good, clear skin and a natural, rosy, healthy complexion are assured only by pure blood. If only every man and woman could be! induced to adopt the morning inside | bath, what a gratifying change would take place. Instead of the thousands' oC sic'ily, anaemic-looking men, wo-! men and girls, with pasty or muddy complexions; instead of the multi-1 tudes of "nerve wrecks," "rundowns." i "brain fags" and pessimists we should j see a virile, optimistic throng of rosy- I checked people everywhere. An inside bath is had by drinking each morning, before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a tea spoonful of limestone phosphate In It to wash from the stomach, liver, kid neys and ten yards of l»o-.,*els the pre-j viuus day's indigestible waste, sour | fermentations and poisons. thus; cleansing, sweetening anil freshening the entire alimentary canal before put tins; more food into the stomach. Those subject to sick headache, bil iousness, nasty breath, rheumatism, colds; and particularly those who have a pallid, sallow complexion and who are constipated very often, are urged to obtain a quarter pound of limestone phosphate at the drug store which will cost but a trifle, but is suffi cient to demonstrate the quick and re markable change in both health and appearance, awaiting those who prac tice internal sanitation. We must re member that inside cleanliness is more important than outside, because the skin does not absorb con taminate the blood while the pores in I the thirty feet of bowels do.—Adver-i tisement. A CLEAR COMPLEXION Ruddy Cheeks Sparkling Eyes —Most Women Can Have Say* Dr. ICilnardx. n Wrll-Knowu Ohio PhyMlclun Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17 years treat ed scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well-known vegetable ingredi ents mixed with olive oil. naming- ilium Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, you will know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on j the liver and bowels, which cause a' normal action, carrying oft' the waste i *nd poisonous matter that one's system collects. If you have a pale face, sallow look dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, head aches. a listless, no-good feeling, all I out of sorts, Inactive bowels, you take i one of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets I nightly for a time and note the pleas- i lug results. Thousands of women as well as men, 1 take D'r. Edwards' Olive Tablets now I and then Just to keep in the pink of' condition. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the sue- I ressful substitute for calomel—loc and 1 25c per box. All druggists. The Olive Tablet Company, Colum-1 bus, O. STOP COUCHING •! t DEPTONQS | MADE IN A HEALTH RESORT. AT DRUG STORES= SI.ooPerBOTTU THE PEPTONOL CO. ATLANTIC CITY N .a fc. t*. UKobS, 11W Market St. Uarrlsburc. Pa. fCHAS. H MAIK UNDERTAKER Sixth and lielker Street* Largest establishment. Best facilities. Near to you as your phone. Will go I snywhere at your call. Motor service. No funeral too small. Nono too expen- I slve. Chapels, rooms, vault etc.. used without charge. I Efficiency INCREASE the profits of your business by aiding your skilled liclp ers to make the best am of Iheir time. Use the proper blanks, blank books, stationery and a<l- Irertlslnp matter. Get Uie right kind of designing, engraving, printing and binding nt the right prices from The Telegraph Printing Co. Federal Square \ MONDAY EVENING, HARRIBBURG TELEGRAPH •' MARCH 20,'191fi. ' HOMTu| GEORGE AQNE^n&MBEIMN CQPY&IOffT 2£T THE C&VTUEy CQ 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 Waytus tells Alan of the failing of the Waynes. Clem drinks Alan's health on his birthday. CHAPTER lll—Judge Ilea ley buys a picture for Alix Lansing. The judgo defends Alan in his business with his employers. CHAPTER IV—Alan and Alix meet at sea, homeward bound, and start a flirtation, which becomes serious. CHAPTER V—At home, Nance Ster ling asks Alan to go away from Alix. Alix is taken to task 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 Pernambuco. CHAPTER Vll—Alix loaves A'a*}. on the train and goes home to And 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 j trace Gerry. A baby Is born to Alix i CHAPTER X—The native girl takei- Gerry to her home and shows him the ruined plantation she is mistreat of. Gorry marries her. CHAPTER XI At Maple houst Colllngeford tells how he met Alan — "Ten Per Cent. Wayne"—building a bridge in Africa. CHAPTER Xll—Colllngeford meets Alix and her baby and he gives hei ' encouragement about Gerry. CHAPTER Xlll—Alan conies back 1 to town but does not go home. He makes several calls in the city. CHAPTER XlV—Gerry begins ti ; Improve Margarita's plantation and builds an irrigating ditch. CHAPTER XV—ln Africa Alan reads Clem's letters and dreams of i home. CHAPTER XVl—Gerry pastures i 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 Alls. J. Y. and Clem, grown to beautiful womanhood, in the city and realizes that he has sold his birthright for o mess of pottage. CHAPTER XlX—Kemp and Gerry become friends. CHAPTER XX—Kemp and Gerry visit > Lleber and the three exiles are drawn to- , gether by a common tic. CHAPTER XXl—Lleber tells his story. ; "Home Is the anchor of a man's soul. I want to go home." CHAPTER XXII—Tn South America Alan gets fever and his foreman prepares to send him to the coast CHAPTER XXIII—AIan Is carried to Lieber's fazenda, almost dead, and Gerry sees him. Gerry sat down lti a chair beside the settle. He had not known how tired he was himself. Soon he drowsed. His head fell forward on his chest. Sleep came to him and then a great trouble came to his sleep. He roused himself from a nightmare and, suddenly wide awake, found Alan's eyes fixed on his face. "You!" murmured Alan. Gerry did not answer. His face be came a mask. It seemed to him that only Alan's eyes were alive, and to Alan that Gerry had projected his spirit to his bedside to watch him die. Alan tried to smile in defiance. "Can't you epeakV" he whispered hoarsely. Gerry leaned forward. The question he had to ask was stronger than he. It forced its way through his lips. "Alan, what did you do with her? Tel) me that and I'll go away." A troubled look came into Alan's tliin face. lie frowned. "Do with her? Do with whom?" "Alan." said Gerry, his suppressed voice trembling, "You know. With Alix." "Oh," said Alan, still struggling on the verge of consciousness. "I remem ber. I did nothing with her. She wouldn't go with me." "Alan," groaned Gerry. "I saw you. I saw you and Alix on the train." The frown was gone from Alan's forehead. He felt sleep coming back Make No Engagement For Thursday Evening From 7.30 to 9.30 You Are Invited to the Kaufman Underselling Store's Musicale and Big Spring Style Show On Living Models Sec To-morrow's Pajicr For More Particulars 1 " -s HRADQI ARTBKS Poll SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES i L ( t FUXERAIi DIRECTOR HARRY M. HOFFMAN (SawMior to .1. J Oirelsby) UNDERTAKER 310 North Stvuid Street ito him and *he was glad. "Yes." ho said, "she was on the train with me. I remember. She jumped off. A bag gageman—caught her." He dropped off to sleep again. Lleber stepped catlike across the floor. He caught Gerry by one ear, and with the other hand over his ; mouth led him out of the room. Gerry went tamely. When they were on the veranda Lleber looked at him. "So," he said, his blue eyes blazing, "you only want to kill him." "No," said Gerry, dazed, "not now." "Mr. Lansing." said Lleber. "you get out of here. We'll settle this busi ness some other time." Gerry's Up trembled. "You're right, Lleber," he said. "You're right, only you don't know It all. That chap In there —we were boys together. He ran j away with my wife, 'that's why—" ■ Gerry suddenly stopped. Alix had not I run away. She had Jumped off the train. Where was she, then? What had she done through the years he had been away? Why had she Jumped off the train. He struck his hand to his head and stumbled off the ve randa. Lieber's anger died tn him, but he turned and went back to Alan. Two hours later he came out again to find Gerry crouched on the veranda. The spirit had gone out of bhn, but be turned on Lleber with a determi nation In his tired eyes. "You told me to get out and I haven't. There are things I've got to know. I'll wait." "I spoke in haste, Mr. Lansing," said Weber. "I want you should forgivt me. You are all in, too. Come with me." He led him Into his own room. mad« him lie down, and closed the shutters Gerry threw himself across the bed, arms outstretched, face down. Licbet slipped out and noiselessly shut the door. Gerry lay exhausted. He could not think any more. A great weight j lay on his brain. The ten minutes' | doze in the chair at Alan's bedside had i not been rest, but a nightmare. Pres. ently he fell into sleep, a deep sleep : that was all unconsciousness. It was almost night when be awok* and with the awakening the weight settled back on his brain, only now he had the strength to thluk in spite of It. He got up and went out in search of Lleber. l.ieoer heard him and came out into the hall. Gerry uodded | towards Alan's room. "It's all right, Mr. Lansing. He must have a solid inind. Your talk didn't excite him— didn't even disturb his sleep. He's on the road up—weak, a baby, but he's started life again. He's asked for you twice. Seems to have something he's j got to get off his chest to you. You'd better go In." Gerry sat down once more beside Alan. The questions he must ask crowded to his lips, but he forced them back. He tested his strength with res olutions and held tbeia. It was his way of reassuring himself. He want ed to feel his firmness rising In him to meet the struggle he felt must com® when Alan spoke. Alan knew he was there. He saw him through half-closed eyes, but, more than that, he felt him. Hia brows puckered in a frown. It was Btill hard to use words. "Gerry, last f j "Alan, What Did You Do With Her?" j night I wanted to tell you more only : I couldn't. I had to sleep. Alix didn't go with me. She only came to the l' train. When I kissed her she woke 1 up and found she wasn't—carnal after . all. She went back home. You didn't ' turn up. You never turned up. They j traced you to a river, an empty ca noe— pyjamas you know." He stopped and sighed as though his task ' were over. The veins on Gerry's forehead stood j out in knots. His chin rested on his , clenched hands, bis elbows on his ; knees. "Alan," he said, "where is Alix now? What has she doueV" (To He Continued.) "j|p§l# A Great National Public Utility That concerns all merchants 1 ■ 1% • and aU P e °P le . r original Cash Register rang a bell, indicated and recorded the amount of the purchase. It benefited the wlilili, In a of a centur y this ol( * model has developed into a ash Re g ister that directly benefits every man, woman ( Im'mmrWllm anc * s P cnc * s money in a store. f \ This new Register equally concerns every mer- L. chant and clerk > every banker and wholesaler in this land. \ It furnishes every customer with a receipt or sales slip. JHK\ prints on this the amount paid or charged. ° n this is also printed the date of the sale and who i ** forces a duplicate, printed record for the merchant. liiill It: P revents dis P u tes over charges and bills paid It saves shoppers' time. * l gives the merchant all his profits. It gives him more It promotes more and quicker sales. J? against the mistakes of others. |Hp Jggp DRV which one makes the largest number of sales and which :S ° nC g6tS thC greatcSt amount of business. H %lf|j||j§ It assures the banker additional security for the money hC anS t^lc merchant. It gives the wholesaler additional assurance that the merchant will have money to pay his bills. | >. 11 furnishes the banker and the wholesaler mechanical ' 6videncc that the merchant 's statement of his business is Jill 11|| v * s a ÜB * ness necessit y- | fij jjj jj) ||i' W» have new 1916 models that give this pet' £')RUCS 4.i jfi | jfc Write us today or tee oar agent in your city pj|| and learn how yoa can secure one of these public Liberal allowances art made fort old National I I. Jl v } B|3 A q Wf|llsf sjOl<*\v Cash Registers that were good in their day, bat J | AS* 1 IS I fli- wrp'Sr * do not so completely protect yoa or giim the valu fy| 1 ll ab!e " d ™' Ce °^ r 19 ™ Mod ' t * d ° -ito 11! The National Cash Register MEN'S CLUB OF ST. PAIL'S TO GET TEST IN GEOGRAPHY An entertaining test in world's geography, such as would be presented if one followed an imaginary zigzag line from a given point clear 'round j the globe, is promised for to-morrow evening by the Men's Club of St. Paul's i Episcopal Church. "Interesting things | in Interesting countries" will bo the! theme of the program and a lot of pic tures of the far-away points of the world will be included in the series. During the entertainment there'll be cigars, pipes, and so on. The program begins at 8.15 o'clock in the gym nasium. The committee on arrangements in cludes Frank P. Coates, E. C. Lamey. J. R. Lane. George Dolbin, Samuel Forbea and R. M. H. Wharton. \V<ttfEN* PREPAREDNESS GETS UNDER WAV HERE Women's preparedness propaganda i was inaugurated Saturday evening In { the assembly hall of the Public Library I when George Wentworth Carr, Phila delphia, chairman of the National Se curity League, and Mrs. Anne Wallace LaDomas, Chester, were the principal speakers. Music was a feature of the program and among the numbers were the fol lowing: 13ugle call, assembly. Miss Irene Wagner, trumpeter of Post 58, G. A. R.; vocal solos, "The Birthday," Miss Catherine Heicher; "Ashes of Roses" and "Love In the WincV' Mrs. Roy G. Cox, and a violin solo, "Hu moresque," by Miss Lillian Miller. CLASS MEETINGS Class meetings will be held by the juniors and seniors of Central high school to-morrow and Thursday even ings, respectively, in Handshaw's Hall nnd following the business sessions there will be informal dances. Class elections will be held during the latter part of this week. , I I ! GRACE METHODIST YOUTHS TO ORGANIZE SCHOOL. GYMNASIUM | Initial steps were taken yesterday by ' ! the Sunday school pupils of Grace j Methodist Church to establish a gym- I I naslum In the near future and further j details will be threshed out at another | | meeting for the purpose to be held on ' April 2. i The entire school was well represent- I l] ed and the sentiment was unanimously I in favor of the proposed "gym." Half ' i a dozen or more well-known workers talked on the project. These included, Harry B. Snussaman, C. W. 801 l and ! Robert A. MciVarland. general invl i tation to the men and boys of the | church to participate in the movement i was extended and at the next meeting ' It Is expected that from 150 to 200 will j attend H CASTORIA For rnfints and Chilrtrer- Bear* the ,/&/, T** ; The KN Yoti Hare Always Bought g "S°" DRAMA AT BLAIN Special to tin Telegraph Blain, Pa., March 20. —On Saturday j evening the dramatic troupe of the I New Bloomfield Academy gave the | drama, "The Fascinating Fanny 1 Brown." In the town hall here to a well-filled house. ENTERTAIN ED GIRO FRIENDS | Waynesboro, Pa., March 20.—Miss Omega Berlin entertained twenty of t her ycrt ■? friends at the home of her parent# Friday evening. TO TELXi BIBLE STORIES "Early Bible Stories" will be the subject of an interesting Illustrated talk to-morrow evening by Rabbi Charles J. Freund in the Young Men's Hebrew Association.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers