Simply Pour Boiling Water tin a Steero Cube / and your cup of delicious Hot Steero is read}'. / Steero Cubes added to soups, sauces and [ / gravies greatly improve the flavor. IJ Schiaffelin 4 Co.. Dlatrlbutora. New York Lj* STEERO^ CUBES >1 Made by Amirlcin Kitchen Products Co., New /rW irfmfijj Awarded Medal of Honor fit!! Sroctr Panama-Pacific Exposition •rßtilcatu- San Francisco, 1915 ' !_%' *•" Ofllif. | Wantaßosy,PeachyComplexion? J j Drink Hot Water Every Morning! I 1 H I i' ■ I 1' V* 1$ 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 woman could be induced to adopt the morning inside bath, what a gratifying change would take place. Instead of the thousands of sickly, anaemic-looking women and girls, with pasty, sallow, lifeless or muddy complexions; instead of 1 lie multitudes of "nerve wrecks," "rundowns," "brain fags" and pessimists we should see a virile, optimistic throng of rosy cheeked 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 leu yards of bowels the pre vious day's indigestible waste, sour fer mentations and poisons, thus cleans | § I 25 YEARS OF SERVICE ! ° a g I To Smokers Is the Record of I KING OSCAR ! o ScCIGARS | O a 5 Marcli it our Silver Anniversary. 8 Xry one to-day and you will see g g why this quality brand increases g | in popularity. g JOHN C. HERMAN & CO. 1 Harrisburg, Fa. a J "The Daddy of Them All." f | s § OodaOi>£iOooo<M>ODO<>oo-DOoi>o<!OO<Jol>OCH><iCH>o<H>CH3-oOoao<iDaoO<i< TWI -U' L !JkA Where's a Differen f A vast difference. Tou may be burning more eoal than is neces f sary, because you are not burning the kind especially adapted to your % requirements. . # Talk the matter over with us—we'll steer you right on the par- i 1 % ticular kind of coal you ought to be using —and supply you with the # best heat-giving fuel you can buy. Costs the same—and goes further. ? J. B. MONTGOMERY # BOO—either phone Jtrd and Chestnut Streets I THURSDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH MARCH 23, 1916 ins, sweetening and freshening the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. Those subject to sick headache, bil iousness, nasty breath, rheumatism, colds; and particularly those who have a pallid, pimpled or 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 sufficient to demonstrate the quick and remarkable change in both health and appearance, awaiting those who prac tice internal sanitation. If you want to see the slow of healthy bloom in your cheeks, to see your skin get clearer and clearer, be sure to try this for a short period. We must remem ber that inside cleanliness is more im portant than outside bathing, because the skin does not absorb impurities to contaminate the blood while the pores in the thirty feet of bowels do. HQVTCM GEORGE AO NEWCtIAMBERIAIN CS/OVOXXCL SYNOPSIS j CHAPTER I—Alan Wayne la sent away from Red Hill, his home, by hl» uncle, J. Y.. as a moral failure. Cteni runs after him in a tangle of short skirts to bid him good-by. CHAPTER ll—Captain Wayne tells Alan of the failing of the Waynes. Clem drinks Alan's health on his birthday. CHAPTER lll—Judge Healey buys a picture for Allx Lansing. The J"dse 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 homo, Nance Ster ling asks Alan to go away from Alix. | Alix is taken to task by Gerry, * ler husband, for her conduct with Alan I and defies him. CHAPTER Vl—Gerry, as he thinks, sees Alix and Alan eloping, drops everything, and goes to Pernambuco. CHAPTER Vll—Alix leaves Alan on the train and goes home to lind that Gerry has disappeared. CHAPTER VlH—Gerry leaves Per nambuco and goes to Piranhas. Ob a canoe trip he meets a native girl. CHAPTER IX—The judge fails to 11race 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 i of. Gerry marries her. CHAPTER XI At Maple house Coliingeford tells how he met Alan— "Ten Per Cent. Wayne"—building a bridge in Africa. CHAPTER Xll—Collingeford meets Alix and her baby and he gives hei encouragement about Gerry. CHAPTER Xlll—Alan comes back to town but does not go home. Hi makes several calls ill the city. CHAPTER XIV —Gerry begins It improve Margarita's plantation and builds an irrigating ditch. | CHAPTER XV—ln Africa Alar; i reads Clem's letters and dreams of home. | CHAPTER XVl—Gerry pastures jLieber's cattle during the drought. A baby comes to Gerry and Mafgarita. CHAPTER XVII Collingford I meets Alix in the city and llnds 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 i mess of pottage. CHAPTER XlX—Kemp and Gerry become friends. CHAPTER XX—Kemp and Gerry visit Ueber and the three exiles are drawn to gether by a common tie. CHAPTER XXl—l„ieber tells his story. "Home is the anchor of a man's soul. I I want to go home." ! CHAPTER XXII—In South America \ Alan gets fever and his foreman prepares to send him to the coast. ! CHAPTER XXIII—AIan is carried to j Weber's fazeada, almost dead, and Gerry J sees him. CHAPTER XXIV—Alan tells Gerry the ! truth about Alix and Gerry tells him of Margarita and the baby. Alan wonders and is disgusted. CHAPTER XXV—A flood carries away Margarita and her baby, despite Gerry's attempt at rescue. Her two bauds were clenched and held ' above her gray head. Thin wisps of ( bair hung about hor face. Her face was distorted. She was cursing Gerry, cursing the day of bis birth, the day of his coming, the day he bad opened his ditch. She swept her arms over the terrible scene and called down the i curse of ail the ruin and death on his head. Rut Gerry was beyond hearing. I In all the world there was none to hear the old woman. She stood alone; about her the silent waters, above her the bla/.ing blue sky. The tree shot out of the eddy. The | current, the main current from the I cleft, caught it squarely and swept it | away. It suddenly shook its long trail of riffraff, and turning and turniug. i more and more swiftly, swam out on j to the churning bosom of' the great I river. The valley bad disappeared. Squat ting on the very level of the far-flung ! waters, the old bouse stili stood. The j bright sun struck a glint of light, from Its white walls and gave rich colors to its moss-grown tiles. The roof was crowded with fowl and a strange med- ; ley of heavy flying birds, glad of a ! perch on which to rest. Dona Maria went into the house. She closed the great board shutters. The house lookefl i I How To Get Rid of a 1 Bad Cough I A Home-Mfide Remedy that Will ? Do It ttulckly. Cheap aid | Easily Made & 1 ll you have a bad cough or clu-st cold which refuses to yield to ordinary reme dies, get from any druggist 2V& ounces of Pinex (50 cents worth), pour into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar syrup. Start taking a teanpoonful every hour or two. In 24 hours your cough will be conquered or very nearly so. Even whooping cough is greatly relieved in this way. 'ihe above mixture makes a full pint —a family supply—of the finest cough syrup that money could buy—at a cost of only 54 cents. Easily prepared in 6 minutes. Full directions with l'inex. This Pinex and Sugar Syrup prepa ration takes right hold of a cough and gives almost immediate relief, ft loos ens the dry, hoarse or tight cough in a way that is really remarkable. Also quickly heals the inflamed membranes which accompany a painful cough, and. stops the formation of phlegm in the' throat and bronchial tubes, thus ending the persistent loose cough. Excellent for bronchitis, spasmodic croup and winter I coughs. Keeps perfectly and tastes good ■—children like it. Pinex is a special and highly concen trated compound of genuine Norway pine extract, rich in gitaiacol, which is so healing to the membranes. To avoid disappointment, ask your , druggist for "2 J ,£ ounces of Pinex,"—doj not accept anything else. A guarantee' of absolute satisfaction, or money prompt , ly refunded goes with this preparation. ! The Pinex Co.. Ft. Wayne, lad. as If it had closed its eyes in a last renunciation. Gerry'B tree floated down the river. It swung slowly along near the north shore. Just below It were houses. They were perched on the cliff. Below them were more houses and under these the tiled roofs of still other houses Just topped the flood. The houses were what was left of Piran has. From the shore canoes in search of loot began to shoot out on the quietening waters. One of them hap pened upon Gerry's tree and then upon Gerry. Gerry's eyes opened and then closed again. He scarcely felt the arms that lifted him. They car ried him to the old inn, the miserable little inn he had left behind on that glorious morning of so long ago. A sharp attack of fever followed Gerry's exposure and immersion. The old woman of the inn knew no medica ments, but she knew fever. She piled blankets on Gerry and let him sweat it out. On the third day nature, assist ed by his magnificent physique, finally routed the attack. He called the old woman. He asked her if she remembered him. She peered at him. "No, master," she said. "I do not remember you. You are like the foreigner who was drowned, but he is dead." Gerry shook his head. "Not dead," he said, "only disappeared." "You are not be," said the old wom an. "He could not talk words that one could understand." Gerry nodded gravely. He felt as though words could never make him smile again. "I have learned." he said. "Now tell me what became of the things I left here?" He went through t/ie list. The old woman checked off each Item and then shrugged her shoulders. She led him to a little dark room whose only light name from the inter stices of the tiled roof. As his pupils expanded he began to make out one after another of the bags that had made up his traveling kit. "There is a letter," she said, and went off to fetch it. Gerry dragged the bags out into the light. Their locks were all sealed with the seal of the American consulate at Pernambuco. He started knocking off the brittle wax. The old woman came back with the letter and handed it to him. He tore it open. It was a note from the consul saying that by order of Gerry's wife his things bad been sealed and left at the itin, telling him where to find the keys. The room, he learned from the old woman, had been paid for regularly, at first by the month, then by the year. She felt no resent ment at his return, only resignation. "You are the only guest I've had since you went away," she said quaintly and with a sigh. "Fear nothing," said Gerry kindly. "You have been faithful. You may consider the room engaged by me for the neSt ten years." He carried his bags into the room overlooking the river and then lay down. He was too tired after the fe ver to open them. He knew that the opening of those dust-covered bags with their rusted metal fittings was going to be another ordeal. The next day Gerry sat before his unpacked bags. He had turned out all their contents. On the bed. the floor, the table and the chairs was piled such an array of liueu aud shoes and suits of various cut and weight as he had once deemed the minimum with which a man could deceutly travel. Now they Beemed to him wasteful and futile. The clothes did not carry his mind back as he had expected. The starch in the linen had gone yellow. He had always hated yellow collars. The suits struck him as belonging to someone else—ail except one. One sturdy suit of tweed had a cut that was different from the others. Of all the clothes it alone seemed to have a personal note —the note he had ex pected to find in the bags aud had shrunk from. Then he remembered. This suit had been made by his own tailor. He had worn it during a flying visit to Ited Hill. He had had It on the day he left New York. He tud worn it that morning in Alix' room. Red Hill came back to him, Alix stood before him. Through the suit he saw her room, the shimmering blue of her dressing gown, her erowu of hair and her thin fingers busy with it. He felt again the nip of the dear air as it had streamed in through the open v-lin'ow. (To Be Continued.) RKWAJtD FOR PUNCTUALITY Special to the Telegraph Columbia. Pa., March 23. The Schwartzenbach-Huber Company, pro prietors of the Columbia Silk Mill, has decided to offer, besides prizes, a bonus to the hands for punctuality. Such who do not ntins any day or time for a period of ten weeks will receive one week's additional full pay, and any who iniss only two days In that time will receive three-fourths of a full week's pay. mmmrnmm FeaturesMoney-SavingOpportunitiesonthe Newest and Best SPRING MERCHANDISE ; r>o(J<n><>ooo&OOCK>Cn>OOCH>ooo<n>o-00 jj'V Your Easter Suit !!l Ti roRFRIDAYONLY I ii \ / r To A t a Price You ' !l i: S This Season s Newest 1 || >S>* Xiere Consider Small jig I ffK fop " ,e style ami quality of materia! !j £ I IflTnt))Al| H?|y® O R,,< ' ,a "" r ' nlt - w ® is iliat you come O • 1 UlllilCU llutu 0 ; i ) ami see the wonderful values we offer at ' 1 0 o \st } " <>,(, - Tlnu '" l : ndersclliug Prices. jjg h ' K "*~, p g / / I v*"? Smart Spring Suits for djl QQH]! O iu 0 !' / lil l \ Women au*i Misses, at... I >'«j 2 J| / J 11 "\ Worth up to 910.50 <; 2 " K 5 !> I fv®i/ y Serges, Shepherd Checks, Poplins, |i X ,- ——' • 1 B <> . |,\ JJ/ \ \V—/ etc.; clever new flare effects, in all the j> g •' 2 «! lif ly \ \ best colors and all sizes. Can't lie <| 2 N®W ® 1 Clfl r> :i W 1 \v\ S"fiS 3 r s ' whm """ ,h ™ 111 i; | Turbans 1 1 $ :! // '\ii I o , « M Kiqui.it. 5 U Natty New Spring Suits 4|l C Art 0 and V • Creations u for Woincn and Misses, at wIBiUw S O \ 1 y/ "" " ,e 2 j! \""" \ That positively can not he duplicated «' O Newest Colors '! / I I\\ \ anywhere for less than SIB.OO to Jig Trimmed with lovely flowers, § <! /[ \\ \ f "•,!?; ' ,am,son J, e , now 5 quills, ribbons and win K s. livery X / J \\ \ models, in all color Serges, Gabar- «' X . , . ~, , , , , X !' /111 / \l \ dines. Checks and Poplins; all sizes. «1 8 model is beautiful and becoming, g J! lif J \ \ go Special Friday at 92.90. <$ <| ;/ 1 \ liKxtra Size Suits for .Stout tfj 1 C !i « § '! f!f\ 1/ \ I aud Stuhhy Stout Women, at. . *•* * 0 ;| 2 .. . , .. .-tp $ !; it ,* \ i sizes 35 to 55. m serges, Popiins ami ;!o Latest Untrimmea HATS 6 ■ _ 1 / |JH jffl Gabardines; all the leading colors: '! O ltl , „ o ii ™ »S'XiXiTCi l R»"2t i|| Worth up to $1.49, nr g ; I Qfafp W »„„„ ttorcrtrcu. j. g FrU> Qllly «t. . ..'*»«- g il j. Our SPRING SUITS, at II g Scores of different new styles and P '! r A Are th< * ef,ua ' of Suits sold elsewhere at from ! i colors, in a fine quality hemp; all q i \\ V\ $«0.00 to S4O 00. An inspection will soon con- '|§ ne w and distinctive. Can't be 2 S JA Vi_ vince you of that fact. See the vast arrav of new 1 ° . . , . t .i_- v | «1P styles and fabrics to-morrow; all sizes for women I § matched anywhere at near this g ? and misses. ' > S price. 9 SKCONO FIiOOR, FRONT J! n Second Floor, Kcar 5 s<l » P ■i>o<><>O<JO'oO<»O<H>O<H>o<i-0<»0O<a-OiJ<iOO . . \ A Big Priday Bargain Sale IN OUR NEW NOTION DEPARTMENT Large spools carpet and button '2OO yards silk finish basting cotton, Vanta twistless tape, white and col thread 4c | spool for C is tic Stocking darners with handle .. 4c Wire hair pin cabinets, 3c, 4c ami Kc l'"i-.vd. rolls of cotton tape for .. tc 0, 7 and 8-inch srissors for .... Oc GO-inch tape measure for 2c Nusilk crochet cotton, all colors. r, US .! ,io "' f° """ T H" ttonh u°. le , , taPe 'J yardS f ° r " • 8c CrfKlold combsV , Whit'e'.'' 'pl.Vk' and Sewing machine oil, ox. size for 4c Uress shields, white and flesh color. blue for Sc looks and eyes, per card 2c I pair - P o_ v( i ii s i e poroet liieers each for Revol Snap fasten.'i-s, dozen for Se Silk finish lingerie braid, bolt .. r.c Nub'hooks and eves, p'or card . So 2S£ n JS a customer. tS. amless sanitary napkins, for r.c Nickel skirt gauges, each, for .. He t rr , hail pins, box of six, 5c C ashable Middy braid, 6-yd. bolts. Hook and eye tape, white or black. Taffeta seam binding, boll. f bolt yßrt i .... ....... tie, lU<- anil ISe Gold Kye needles, assorted sizes, Knibroldery edgings,' h-.vd. ii'oVt,' all I Sew-On hose supporters, pair for 8c paper I C colors v i.'ii's-i' KI.OOII, _________ Best New Spriag Clothing in Harrisburg For MEN & BOYS at LOWEST PRICES Every Suit Guaranteed to Your Perfect Satisfaction or Your Money Back. Best Values & Lowest Prices in Town. Boys' Navy Blue tf»Q QA Boys' Norfolk d* O Aal 1 Serge Suits <PO.O*7 SUITS SU«UU rjjffl a A IIBAL «.'> XAtA h:—SI/.KS STO SI/.BS «TO 17 YKAHS ,•' <£; * dfa Ip*' 1 These suits are made'in the new- With One and Two Pairs of est Norfolk models, thp pants cut. rpp/>rTQi?DC full, double stitched, taped and full I XxUUoilKo / / V lined. The material in those suits These nuits are made of fine union / / MK R are strictly all wool and fade-proof. mixture cassimere, in neat patt«*rns; [J E \ JF\ A limited lot of about 100 suits. The the coats of the newest models; 4 /' ) iiw best all-wool sun-proof blue serge values in this lot to $4.00. The lot W 7 V I ) suits we ever offered. is limited. f }r ' C -* r\t S / Boys' Odd Knickcr 4Q r Ho.vs' Odd Blouses: O A Kaufman s Offer the Highest Pants; a 75<- \alue, at. . a :?#<• Value, at Grade of Hoys' tfyf qa A good, strong union cassl- Made of fine Percale and SPITS, at ...... w^r.O" mere, and double stitched— Madras; open cuffs; link col- You'll pay $7,50' elsewhere I g the best Pants Bargain we lar, good fitting; tapeless; all for the same grade; sines 7to ■ ■ ever offered; Sizes sto 17 yrs. for 24c. 18 vears IV/ v ' v I f "N 1 tzr BOYS' LONG PANT <t»Q TTE? We Offer MEN'S SUITS <f» r* AA I SUITS JpO./D at *P&.UU HI to 20 yenr«—\ alnfn to #i:t.r»o—lo to 20 yenm. We ofrft* for Friday handsome, aii-wool You Would Pay Elsewhere to $lO 00 Knjfl'sh model suits for the young men; 16 to 20 years: to Hi; ch«>st measure. The newest Tfandsome cassimere and worsted. The best suit bargain in Harrisburg. 1,500 Pair of Men's Good Serviceable Dressy Trousers in a BIG FRIDAY SALE Men's $1.50 Pants, Men's $3.00 Pants, Men's $3.50 Pants, Men's si.oo \n Wool sun -32 to 42, 32 to 42, 32 to 42, !»»7 0 f ~,uc SorKC I>nn,s ; 90c $1.49 $1.95 $2.49 HBBBHMHMiHBnBaanHannannR Another Rousing Friday Sale in the Bargain Basement CUP and $2.00 FLEECE- APRON Mercerized BED SAUCER DOWN GINGHAM NAPKINS TICKING , „,.„„p RT.ANKRTS !*c full standard 95c a dozen nier l.arge sUe, lose IV-E. 10 apron gingham, cerlzed napkins, ~1,9 c heavy bed design, set, \V hite and gray inches wide: all 18x18 inches, hem- tieking. Old-lash , pot ton blankets, styles and colors, mod ready for use. ioned blue stripe •If good £ize and ciual- To-morrow only, Special, each, denim, yard wide, ll >'- yard, \l/if. s'ard -22c TABLE , " >3/ 4 < ' ' 1 OILCLOTH SLUMBER OUTING TOWELS WOOLNAP cloth"good t8 patterns ROBES CLOTH ,J RT ANKFTS and <Tuality! Spe- $-.25 slumber ! 0c f ?, u l ti i l . K ( a ?". to "' els - Tho . so BLANKETS elal vard. . robes and bath "el. Chiefly light extra good and , An extra henvy • robe blankets; and dark colors in specially big size. grade in white, 1 heavy quality. To- K" od .._j!S avy qual * 4-C Ki'ey and tan; full morrow only, each, "J- 1 L, . size, 6'/ 4 C BROWN 9S< ' M H^ LIN 1 * 59 MUSLIN DRE SS BAS KET S lengtli's'r' 1 to 10 V ids: GINGHAM wash I'^gth'^fid'^ua^ Jfpecial, yard. J,- «n pink and To morrow only, 4C wide extra good Special? to- |,B '"' „ t |v. ,Ulh " et ' lul ' quality and pat- v only> -Wf eaihl .... si,-. \'2V 2 <' 10^' 69c PATTERN <M* TAPESTRY TABLE —————— SHELF CURTAINS BED CLOTHS COLORED OIL CLOTH ta^s SPREADS .18x58 Inches 5 C nhelf oilcloth, good green color-' SI.OO crochet bed square; good pat- 25c remnant lu many different ing for small doors spread», full bed terns. with hem- lengths, 36 inches styles and color- and single door. size and an extra stitched all around, wide; fine quality, ings. To-morrow To-morrow only, heavy quality. To- Special. yard, only, yard, pair, morrow. llf 2<f $1.19 85<* 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers