6 WEAK WOMEN! A. Pennsylvania Woman Testifies Oorry, Pa.—"When I got Into that condition where a woman feels dragged out all the time, I began taking 3? 'Favorite Pre ft iffikjifcL was living in iWtir Plttefleld, Pa., at the time. I read |f|JJI. of what 'Favorite Prescription' had Ptyy/F%frf/,'done for others 1 used two 'V ///ft.Z/jl/If/il '/bottles. 1 found -y ////'//Jlj//'it gave me the de ' '/J ./ /' /' / eired etrength, im proved my appe tite and made me better in every way." •—Mae. HOMEB ROGERS, 62 Brook St. At the first symptoms of any de rangement of the feminine organism at any period of life, the one safe, really helpful remedy is Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Thousands of women right here In Pennsylvania have taken it with un failing success for diseases of a wom anly nature. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Is a true friend to women at times of trial and at times of pain when the organs are not performing their func tions. 4 It banishes pain, headache, backacne, low spirits, hot flashes, dragging-down sensations, worry and sleeplessness surely and without loss of time. Get It now /—in liquid or tablet form. If you are ill —or a sufferer from some chronic complaint—write Doctor Pierce, Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., and get free and confidential medical advice, also free medical book on Diseases of Women. Doctor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regu late and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated and easy to take is candy. Put up in sealed vials a perfect vest pocket remedy. A SPOONFUL OF SALTS RELIEVES ACHING KIDNEYS We cat too much meat, which clogs Kidneys says noted authority. If back hurts or Bladder bothers, stop all meat for a while. When you wake up with backache and dull misery in the kitlnev region it generally means you have been eat ing too much meat, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which overworks the kiilneys in their effort to filter it from the blood and they become sort of paralyzed and loggy. When your kidneys get slug gish and clog you must relieve them, like you relieve your bowels; remov ing all the body's urinous waste, else you have backache, sick headache, dizzy spells; your stomach sours, tongue is coated, and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment, channels often get sore, water scalds and you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. Either consult a good, reliable physician at once or get from your l pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts: take n tablespoonful in a glass! of water before breakfast for a few I days and your kidneys will then act line. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon Juice, i combined with llthia, and has been I used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize acids in the urine so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is a life saver for regular meat eaters. It is inexpensive, can-' rot injure and makes a delightful, ef fervescent lithia-water drink. Ad vertisement. "New Invention" pate*'# appurd foh Totma \Our specialty, gentlemen, is Tou pees and Wigs, which we make and 1 > »end on approval with privilege of 14 hours' examination. .Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Our new Invention Is a Toupee that •will not lift up off the head in front where the part Is as all other toupees will do after being worn a month or two. The foundation of this toupee la so fine it fives a reproduction of the natural scalp. Manufactured only by u«. Write for our price list of these toupees and other*. Welles Mistratar & Co. 168 MAIN STREET, EAST ROC HE STEM. X. V. ~ TIME TABLE~ Cumberland Valley Railroad In Effect June 27. l#ltv TRAINS leave Harrlsburg— For Winchester and Martlnsburg at 8:05. *7:52 a. m., *3:40 p. m. For Hagerstown, Chambersburg, Car lisle. Mechanlcsburg and Intermediate stations at *5:03, »7:52, *11:53 a. m •3:40. 5:87. *7:45. *11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mechanlcsburg at 9:48 a. m.. 2:16, 3:2« C:3O. 9:36 p. m. For Dlllsburg at 5:03. *7:62 and •11:5: a. m., 2:16. *3:40, 6:37 and 6:30 p. m. •Daily. All other trains dally except bunday. H. A. RIDDLE. J. H. TONOE. a. P. A. fCHAS. h. MAUK THE UNDERTAKER Sixth and Kelker Streets largest establishment. Best facilities. Near to you as your phone. Will go anywhere at your call. Motor service No funeral too small. None too expen sive. Chapels, rooms, vault, etc.. used without charge. f > HEADQUARTERS FOR SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES Try Telegraph Want Ads SATURDAY EVENING, HARBXBBURG TELEGRAPH! APRIL 1 8. 191<5. GEORGE AfiNE^xffillßEßLAlfj copyj2ja/fT.jorxaE CENTV/SY ccl SYNOPSIS CHAPTER It—Alan Wayne Is sent away from Red Hill, his home, by his uncle. J. Y.. as a moral failure, runs aft&r 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 The JudKe defends Alan in his business with his employers. CHAPTER IV—Alan and Allx 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 A' l *- Alix is taken to task by Gerry, her husband, for her conduct with Aian and defies hlin. . . , 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 nnu that Gerry has disappeared. , CHAPTER Vlll—Gerry leaves Per nambuco and goes to Piranhas, y a canoe trip he meets a native slrl. CHAPTER IX—The Judge fails to trace Gerry. A baby Is born to Alix. CHAPTER X—The native girl takes Gerry to her home and shows nun the ruined plantation she is mistress of. Gerry marries her. CHAPTER XI At Maple house Collingeford tells how he met Alan "Ten Per Cent. Wayne"— building a bridge in Africa. CHAPTER XII —Collingeford meets Alix and her baby and he gives her encouragement about Gerry. CHAPTER Xlll—Alan comes back to town but does not go home. He atakes several calls in the 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 Lleber's cattle during the drought. A baby comes to Gerry and Margarita. CHAPTER XVII Colllngford meets Alix In the city and finds her changed. CHAPTER XVIII —Alan meets Allx. J. Y. and Clem, grown to beautiful womanhood, in the city and realizes that he has sold his birthright for a mess of pottage. CHAPTER XiX—Kemp and Gerry become friends. - CHAPTER XX—Kemp and Gerry visit Lleber and the three exiles are drawn to gether by a common tie. CHAPTER XXl—T.leber tells his «tory. "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 XXITI-Alan Is carried to I Ivleber's fszenda, almost dead, and Gerry sees him. CHAPTER XXIV—Alan tells Gerry the ! truth about Alix and Gerry tells him of ! Margarita and the baby. Alan wonders i and Is disgusted. CHAPTER XXV—A flood carries away Margarita and her baby, despite Gerry's attempt at rescue. CHAPTER XXVl—Fever follows Ger- j ry's exposure. He send a note to Allx ! by Alan when Alan and Kemp go home, lie tells Lleber he can't go home. CHAPTER XXVII—AIan gets back to the city and sends Gerry's note to Red Hill. Allx calls on Alan, but he refuses to tell her Gerry's story. Alan goes home to Red Hill. XXVIII—As Alan returns to 2 1 l lf U, , R barrier between him self and Clem, who does not understand. XXIX— Alan and Clem play hide and seek" with the children. I CHAPTER XXX—Alan meets Kemp !n ! the city and takes him to Red Hill. Kemp tells Allx that Gerry will "hog-tle hlsself" ! and come home. CHAPTER XXXT—AIan meditate' leav ing because he Is not fit to love Clem. He goes for a ride. Alan sighed. "Between the lines of my words you must rend for yourself. My smile is dead—l killed it long ago. Yours is alive—alive. You have kept It pure, guarded its flame and you shall bold It high like a beacon. You are ready to give all aud you have all to give. I have nothing hut the empty shell. I have kept nothing. I have gained the whole world—and lost It. The little strength left to the pinions of my soul could carry me up to clutch your beacon and drag it down, but Clem—dearest of all women—l love you too much for that. You've got to trust me. The things I know that you do not know shove the duty of denial on to my shoulders. I could give you an empty shell, but I won't." Alan had not looked at Clem. He bad talked like one rehearsing a les son, with bis eyes far away in the gray world. He dropped the bit of bush, i and his hands, locked about his knees, gripped each other till the knuckles and fingers showed white against the tan of his thin wrists. When he ■topped speaking Clem turned curious eyes upon him. "Is that all?" she asked. Alan sprang up and faced her. "All? All?" he cried. "Isn't it enough?" Clem rose to her feet. In her uplift ed right hand she held her agate headed riding whip. Alan's eyes fas tened on It as she meant them to do. Then, with a full, free swing, she flung It from her. The whip, weighted by __ I BROWN'C , Bronchial m 1 TROCHEYJ For Sore Throat Relieve irritation and hcmr*enesv esse coughing. strengthen the voice. . 10c t slzk l box flts purse or pocket—ron ■t \ venirnt to carry. These Kl/V Troches may be taken as [ST I required. Contain nothing harmful. Other sties 82c, Mic&ll. At oil druggists. If your dtaltr eannot tup- plv you, wt trill mail any I aus upon recupt of prxei. i JOHN L BROWN * SON. Bocton, Ma?a. I the agate head, described a long curve through the air and plunged into the brush far down the mountain side. "That," Clem cried, her eyes flashing Into his, "for the beacon. I kept It for you. It wai too good for you; you would not take It, so there it goes." Her lips trembled and she snapped her fingers. "It Is not worth that to me." "Clem!" cried Alan, protesting. "Don't speak," said Clem; "you have said what you had to say. Now listen to me. You are blind. Alan, or worse than that, asleep. I'm not a thin legged elf with skirts bobbing above my knees any more. You can't make me Rwallow my protests today with. "Clem, you mustn't this and you mustn't that.' There's one thing you've closed your eyes on long enough. I'm a woman, Alan, bone, spirit and a great deal of flesli. I iove you, and you say you love me." Alan started forward, but Clem held him off with a gesture. "What do you think I love In you? The things you have spent? The things you have thrown away? Has a woman ever fallen in love with a man because he was perfect?" Clem made a despond ing gesture with both hands as though •he sought words that would not come. "Some men clap a wife on to them selves," she went on, "as you clap a lid on to a hot flre. If the fire grows cold quick enough the lid cracks. Some just let the tire burn out and take the dross with it. A woman knows that there is always something left In the iman she loves. And even if she did not know It, it would be the same. She would rather give all for nothing than never give at all." Clem's voice fell Into a lower key. "The things you know that I do not know! What a child you are among men. A half-witted woman Is born with more knowledge than the wisest of you ever attains aud the first thing she learns is that life laughs at knowl edge." Clem stopped speaking and her eyes that had wandered came back to Al an's face. She drew a quivering breath. Her face had been pale, but now the sudden color surged up over her throat and Into her cheeks. She put up her hands to her forehead. "Oh," she gasped, "you have driven me too far. I am a mean thing In my own eyes as I am In yours." At first Alan had stood stunned by the words in which she had poured out her overburdened heart, but as she went on pitilessly laying bare her sub jection a flame lit up his eyes and flred his blood. Now he sprang forward and dragged her bands from her face. "Mean, Clem? Mean In my eyes?" Then his tongue failed him. He sank to the wet grass at her feet, took her knees In hiR arms and hid his hot face in her skirt. "My God. my God," he cried. "I am mean, hut what there Is of me has knelt to you by night and worshiped you by day. When you were little you were In my heart and you have grown up to It. When you were little there was room there for other things, but now that you have grown up you have filled it—all of it— •very nook and cranny." A tremor went through Clem's body. She rested the fingers of one hand on Alan's head and tried to turn up his face. But he held it close to her knees "If you want me. Clem, if you want me, then there must be things left things I have never—could never give —to anyone else. But lam ashamed ' to pour them into your lap—l must pour them at your feet." "No," said Clem gravely. "I do n want you to pour things at my fet It's got to be eye to eye or nothing, and if there's any man left In—" "Clem," broke in Alan, "there Is enough man left in me if you'll only i give me time. Time to groom him. "My God! My God!" He Cried. You con understand that. Clem? Yon know what grooming and a clean stable will do for a shaggy hor«e?" (To Be Continued.) J - - V ASK THE MAN WHO OWNS ONE \ .../ '""N 3 Jh w \ I A Horse will Stand Still Just as Fast as a Mo But— Map out your traffic so that it rolls steadily all through the working day, and you get the last penny of extra profit to be had from motor hauling. At the same time you get the difference between a truck that keeps on hauling and one that keeps on stalling. For there are trucks and trucks. The lame ones will stand up at the loading platform with the same swagger as the real ones. But they won't stand up on the road—and that's where the real truck turns miles into money. That's where the Packard truck has squelched pretenders in more than two hundred lines of trade—on the road. Which is not surprising. For the Packard truck is built for the road, in the factory which has set the standards of motor vehicle progress for seventeen years. Because of Packard experience, resources and lasting responsibility, it naturally is built stronger, simpler, more carefully. And being a Packard, from motor to monogram, it needs less atten tion, fewer repairs, less coaxing—it will stand more shocks and ham mering the year around. y * It will haul more goods, over a longer time and at a lower cost than any other railless carrier. There is a size for every service. From the swift, light one-tonner to the 6V2-ton dreadnaught, all are of the same advanced silent, chainless design. . PACKARD MOTOR CAR COMPANY of PHILADELPHIA 107 Market Street, Harrisburg I,our Library Tabl^L V A vFIW MINUTITS BOOKS 4 MACAU NEBa*^^®CLL American Municipal Progress, by Charles Zueblin. (Macmillan, 66 Fifth avenue, New York City, $2.00). The vast extent of municipal growth, development and improve ment in recent years Is no more clearly emphasized than in this all inclusive and all-instructive volume on American municipal progress by an authority on the subject. The ap parent hopelessness of being able to record in one volume all the events which stand out in the growth of cities and municipalities is shown by the omissions which have occurred in the preparation of the book, omis sions, however, that are inevitable in a work of this sort. The spirit of the book is one of optimism, in the belief that the world Is getting better instead of worse, the European War to the contrary not withstanding, and this attitude is supported by proofs of the progres sive and constructive activities for municipal and civic amelioration which characterize the American cities of to-day. The author has personally investi gated tho achievements in municipal improvement both in this country and abroad, and has classified his dis coveries in a compact form that is of inestimable educational value to all who are interested in broadening the scope of their knowledge of municipal affairs; ergo, to every livewire citi zen. The book discusses In a clear and forceful manner public utilities of all sorts, public baths and gym nasiums, open-air schools, social cen ters and milk stations, the transforma tion of municipal courts into institu tions for the prevention of crime, the altered idea of the duty of the police and the advent of the policewomen. Likewise are discussed the parks and playgrounds, the schools, the com mission form of government, direct legislation, and a host of other sub jects having direct bearing on the city and its welfare. Local mention is made in Mr. I Zueblln's work of the Mulberry street viaduct in HarrisbuiK as an example i of concrete construction and the won ! derful river front which is a blessing to Harrisbursr and an inspiration to many other cities. The book should i prove entertaining nnd beneficial in * that it is a minn of information to every city official and private citizen 1 whose heart is attuned to the notes of progress which for fifteen odd years have been sounding so sustainedly in \ Harrlsburg. It is profusely illustrated I and abounds in facts of interest and j importance. Booth Tarkington, author of "Sev i enteen," has just been voted its favor i ite writer of fiction by the class of j1916 at Princeton University. Mr. Tarkington, it will be recalled, is a graduate of that university, and as I an alumnus he continues a close con j nection with its life and interests. "There has been altogether too | much talk about the secret of suc [ cess," says Dr. Russell H. Conwell in , the April American Magazine. "Suc cess has no secret. Her voice Is for i ever ringing through the marketplace and crying in the wilderness, and the 1 burden of her cry is one word—will. Any normal young man who hears and heeds that cry Is equipped fully to | climb to the very heights of life." | James S. Harlan, Commissioner of ffc&L A Charming Friends are calling or you hive a sudden Invitation. Just a moment to look your beat. It takea but s taw accoods to app'r Gour&ud's 14 Oriental Cream and obtain a perfect complexion - • soft, clear, prarly-whlte appearance that is always refined and and in good taste—Non-greasy---In uae M years. Send 100. for trial alaa DR. CHASE'S Blood and Nerve Tablets | Fill the shriveled arteries with purs, rich fclood. Increase the weight in solid flesh and muscle that rive you strength. the brain and nerves with fresh vital fluid that force new life and vigor into every part of the body. WEIGH YOURSELF BEFORE TAKING Price 30 canta: Special Strength 75 rents. Dr. Chut Co.. 224 N. lOtk St.. PUUMphU. Pa. Interstate Commerce, says the follow ing of the recently published book, "Theodore lloosevelt, the Logic of his Career:" "In his all too short sketch of Col one! lloosevelt, Mr. Washburn has Riven us an intimate view of one of the great figures of this generation. It is highly important that we should Oen. Martranft Che cigar for esiery s/moker who expect w full nickle * /W every- w^ere. % There's a Differen A vast difference. You may be burning more coal than la neces sary, because you are not burning the kind especially adapted to your requirements. Talk the matter over with ue—we'll steer you right on the par ticular kind of coal you ought to be using—and supply you with the best heat-gtving fuel you can buy. Costa the same—and goes further. J. B. MONTGOMERY 600—rttlier phone 3rd and Chestnut Street* know and understand our public men and' be able Justly to weight their course and attitude on public ques tions. In this instance Mr. Washburn has helped us to do this by hia most interesting and timely narrative of th« early political career of Colonel Roosevelt and of the public questions In which h« took an active Interest."