VEGETABLE CALOMEL { H ■ ■ II II ■ II ■ M > Vegetable calomel, extract of the root of the old-fashioned may-apple plant, does not salivate. As a liver stimulator, it's great. It's a per fect substitute for ordinary calo ;jiel (mercury); in fact, it's better, yecause its action is gentle instead ;>f severe and irritating and it •eaves no mean, disagreeable after effects. Physicians recognize this and prescribe may-apple root (po dophyllin, they call it) daily. Combined with four other stand -1 ard, all-vegetable remedies, may apple root may now be had at most any druggist's in convenient sugar coated tablet form by asking for Sentanel Laxatives. If you forget the name, ask for the box that has the picture of the soldier on it. These tablets are small, easy to take and are really wonderful lit tleperformers. They quickly clean out the poi sons that are causing you head ache, constipation, sour stomach, biliousness, dizzy spells, bad breath and coated tongue. They are mild. They never gripe. And they are a bowel tonic as well as a cleanser and liver regulator. A 10c box should last one several weeks. A Physician' 3 trial package (4 doses) will be mailed you free if you write men tioning this advertisement. The Sentanel Remedies Co., 802 Madi son Ave., Covington, Ky. Bar Children From Skating in Front Street During the evenings of the week sev eral hundred children have been using: a considerable stretch of Front street as a skating link and there have been some narrow escapes from death owing to the large number of automobiles and motorcycles which make more or less of a speedway of this boulevard. Last night the police department decided to stop the skating on this highway. Owing to the fact that the lighting scheme on the river embankment does not extend farther north than Harris street .the Department of Parks will probably find it necessary to assign « wide-awake and vigorous ofiicer to that section. Already benches have been torn from their fastenings, the shrub bery has been uprooted, stakes have been removed from the trees and other damage has resulted from the hood lumisin of a number of unruly boys, who should be taken in hand It is be lieved the extension of the lighting system would be equivalent to several policemen. THROUGH APRIL DI SKS When April trips along the road and twilight settles down, she passes lightly through the mist of Spring time gray and brown. And as she goes along her way the stars peep out and glow, the moon smiles down with merry smile, a gleaming silver bow. And old folk, sitting in the dusk, lift up their weary eyes, and look along the Springtime road with unconcealed surprise. And, half uncertain, half surprisedj-tthey hear the song of love, the song of youth and happiness, the songs from Heaven above. And half bewildered, half amazed, they know that through the land a train of lovers so/tly walk together, hand in hand. They know that farmers plant their crops, that mothers sit and sew; that robins build again their nests; that gentle, slow, is singing on the nreeze of night; they know that flow ers spring upon the brown of well loved graves; that moss and Ivy cling with tender arms about the earth that guards each sleeping form; they know that'.resurrection comes and banishes the storm. —Margaret IS. Sangster, Jr.. in The Christian Herald. NERVES TREATED FREE 1)H. FHAMvI.IX MILES, THE UREAT SprelnliNt, tilvi-n Xtrw Hotik null n $-.50 N europil! Lite Treatment l'rce as a Trial Sick people whose nerves are weak 1 or deranged—who have blues, head ache. dizziness or dullness; nervous i dyspepsia, irritability, cold hands and feet, shortness of breath, palpitation or irregular heartbeat, drowsiness, nerv ousness, sleeplessness, trembling, wan- ! dering pains, backache, irritable spine, j hysteria, and many cases are eompii- j cated with heart, stomach, bowel, hlad- i der or rheumatic troubles—-would do well to accept Dr. Miles' liberal offer. You may never have another opportu- ; nity. Write now. His Book contains many remarkable testimonials from those who report cured after many physicians failed, and also endorsements from Bishops, Clergymen, Statesmen, Editors, Busi ness Men. Farmers, etc. *en«l For Itenmrknlile Text Imoniiil* His improved Special Treatments for these diseases are the result of :I0 : years' experience and are thoroughly scientific and remarkably successful, so much so that he does not hesitate to offer Free Trial Treatments to the slclc that they may test them free. Write at once. Describe your case, and he will send you a two-pound Free Treatment and Hook. Address Dr. Franklin Miles, Dept. NS, 525 to 535, Main St., Elkhart, Ina.—Advertisement. WHATWEAK WOMEN NEED We Have It in a Remedy Con taining the Three Oldest and Most Famous Tonics , Known. Vinol contains the three oldest and 1 most famous tonics known to medi- j cine, viz., the medicinal extractives of \ fresh cod livers, without oil, peptonate I of iron and beef peptone. That is why Vinol is such a won derfiM remedy for weak, run-down persons, feeble old people, delicate' children, and to restore strength after sickness. Read this testimony: Savannah, Ga.—"l was weak, nerv- i ous. run-down, had no appetite, and could not sleep. 1 had tried medicines ' without any benefit, and one day the j nurse asked me to try Vinol. I did so ! and it made me feel like a new woman. I It has restored my strength and I can do all my own housework. I would | not take anything for the good Vinol has done me." Sarah White. We return money in every such case where Vinol fails to benefit the pur chaser. George A. Gorgas, Druggist; Ken 'nedy's Medicine Store. 321 Market street; C. F. Kramer, Third and Broad streets; Kitzmiller's Pharmacy, 1325 JDerry street, Harrisburg, Pa. P- S.—ln your own town, wherever /ou live, there is a Vinol Drug Store. Look for the sign.—Advertisement. REDUCED FARE BY SEA BALTIMORE TO BOSTON $15.00 $15.00 EACH FRIDAY DURING APRIL, 1 Send for Particulars. Merc limit* nnil Miner* Tran*. Co. W. V. Turner, U. ft A., Hullo,, 1 FRIDAY EVENING, - HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH APRIL 14, 1916. HOME A Novel by George Agnew Chamberlain (Copyright by the Century Co.) * She smelt the stacks of pineapples, the heaped-up mangoes, the flying flsh, and through his eyes she saw the blue skies dotted with white, still clouds and glimpsed the secret, high-walled gardens with their flaring hibiscus, trailing fuchsias, fantastic garden cockscombs and dark-domed mango and Jack trees. She sat with Gerry and, later, on the long slim coasting craft she listened with bim to the creak of straining masts and stays and to the lap of hurrying waters. She followed him up the San Francisco, felt his im patience with Penedo, took the little stern-wheeler and learned the fascina tion of a river with endless, undiscov ered turns. They came to Piranha*. Here she felt herself on familiar ground. Letters from the consul's en voy had made this place hers. Uncon sciously she nodded as Gerry described the tiers of houses, the twisted, climb ing streets, the miserable little inn. Gerry told of the happy flays of pon derous canoeing and of the unvarying strings of flsh. He lingered over those days. Thus far he had brought Alix with him. He felt it. Now he came to the morning when he must leave her behind. He told her of the glorious break of that day, of the sun tighting through swirling mists. She saw him standing stripped on the sandsplt. She saw the canoe nosing heavily against the shore and his pyjamas tossed care lessly across a thwart. She knew that she had come to the moment of revela tion. She breathed softly lest she should lose a word for Gerry was speaking very low. Then he showed her Margarita, Margarita as he had first seen her, kissing and kissed by dawn. A hard light came into Alix' eyes. Gerry felt himself suddenly alone. He went doggedly on. He told of the chase and the capture, of how he and the girl bad seen the ennoe drift out into the clutch of the eddy and swirl out into the river and away. He told her of how they laughed and Alix shrank. Gerry paused, his brow puck ered. He wished he could tell in words the battle of his spirit, the utter ruin of bis downfall. He could not and in stead he sighed. There was something in that sigh so eloquent of defeated expression that it succeeded where words might have failed. It called to AUx with the strong call of helpless things. It drew back her mind to Gerry. With him and the girl she threaded the path to Fazenda Flores. Its ruin sprang upon her through his eyes. With bim sbe discovered the traces of an ancient ditch, with him and the old darky she dug along that line through long, hot months. She grew to know T.ieber as the tale went on and finally to love him because of all things Lieber seemed to need love somebody else's love— most. She amused herself with Kemp and his drawl. She tried to keep her thoughts away from Mar garita and at the coming of Marga rita's boy, she winced. As he finished telling of the coming of the Man, Gerry stopped short. The thought came to him with tremeudous j force that Alix too bad gone through that for him. The impulse to get up and throw himself before her and on his knees to thank her almost tore him from his seat but he fought it down. He hurried on with his story. He told of the coming of Alan and of the reve lation he had brought. And then in a choked voice and only because he had set himself to tell the whole truth he pictured the flood, the death of True Blue, and the overwhelming by the waters before his very eyes of Mar garita and the Man. Then he arose and with hands braced on the table leaned towards Alix. "I have told you j this so that perhaps you may under- | stand what I am going to tell you now. j If the flood had not come—if Margarita and the Man had lived—l would not 1 have come back." Alix sat very still and studied Gerry's face. He had finished the task he had set himself to do and he was suddenly very tired. His eyes dropped as though from their own weight and then he raised them again to her in scrutable face. "Well?" he asked after a long pause. "Well?" replied AUx. Gerry's stalwart figure drooped. "It is quite just," he said, "after all that, that you should not want me. I have i spent the last weeks making myself i ready for that. You waited for me; I didn't wait for you. If you do not I wa. me, I will go away." Alix rose slowly to her feet. She looked very slim and tall in her cling- 1 ing gown. To Gerry she looked very cold. "Refore you go," she said, "there is just one thing. I wish you would kiss me—once." Gerry's body straightened and stif fened. He stared at her grave face with wondering eyes. Then he felt a strange tingling ripple through his blood and before be knew what he did ; he had swept her from her feet, crushed her to bim, brushed the crown j of hair back from her brow and kissed her eyes, her mouth, her throat. He 1 was rough with her. He was bruising I her body, her lips, but Alix clung to him aud laughed. Then suddenly all J her slim body relaxed and slipped j through his arms to a little white heap i on the floor. She began to sob. Gerry ' stooped down, picked her up tenderly j and laid her on the great leathern I couch. He knelt beside her. On one j arm be pillowed ber head, with the j other hand he sought hers. "Please, ! Alix," he begged, "please don't cry." j "I'm not crying," sobbed Alix, "I'm laughing." (To be continued.) Try Telegraph Want Ads j | "BELTERS" | Before the season has \ / I fairly started we have pushed I here We're the recognized leaders in 1 Here's the Story of the Belter Suits I These Suits have a pedigree as long as your arm, but I we won't waste space on that. What do you care whe ther they originated on this Continent or Europe?— They can be had at Doutrichs—and they're good to look upon and good to wear and the I newest thing out of the style box. What are they? Just a little The idea of greater value giv different from the ordinary run ing so intimately associated of clothes. As a rule they are not high with our store is not an original one with colored, but in soft subdued tones with us—We claim no particular credit for it plaid and stripe effects, almost invisible on that score—our putting that idea in patterns, that the most conservative men everyday practice however, is a matter may wear—a temptation to those who of particular pride with us—of particular try them on or look at them. personal interest to you. Belter Suits $15.00 SIB.OO $20.00 I Our Shirt Department j | !j We've been very modest about our steadily in- j I |! creasing shirt department. We have in stock right now at least I; I 5 30,000 Shirts and that's a few when you count them over. Every desirable make :■ j: and quality is represented here. I; There are shirts of glossy sateen with Shirts of high grade mercerized fabrics Plain sateens of peach pink, yellow, terra j" I soft cuffs, shirts of B^^ta S Ue,heU ° andtan ' cotta and mercerized percale and madras A A shirts with laundered /•* m V A poplins of green, tan, fom p/\ J • r.™ sl-00 Es«sl.so All Silk Shirts,. $3.50 and $5.00 | Fibre Silk Shirts,. $2.50 and $3.50 \ I; Boys' Sport Shirts and Blouses, short Men's Percale Shirts laundered and soft cuffs-- j: \ sleeves, with convertible roll collars, blue, chambray, Anckor and Home Shirts, 50c and SI.OO 50c New Neckwear—Pajamas—Rockingchair Underwear &=====s===^l 304 Harrisburg, Market St• . Li " 15