16 OF INTEREST T IN LOVE By DOROTHY IJIX A woman recently told me. with tears of disappointment in her eyes, that her daughter was goin" to marry R certain worthy but commonplaco young man, who did not come up to the tnother's ambitious aspirations for her girl. "X can't see why Alice wants to marry him, or what she sees in him," wailed the mother. Third Parlies Huve Xo II u*ln en* Med dling With Any One's Affairs of Heart "Of course you can't," X replied, "the only match that has ever taken place since the world began that outsiders could account for whs that of Adam and Eve. Every other match has us guessing." Nobody could ever understand why any one falls in love with any one else. We don't know why we love the one we do. No one on the outside feels the attraction, physical and physic, that draws two people together, and this being the case, it is a pretty good indi cation that third parties have no busi ness intermeddling in love affairs, or making or breaking marriages. No one heeds the warning, however. There probably isn't a single individual living who doesn't consider himself, or especially herself, perfectly capable of picking out husbands and wives for everybody in the community. We all liave a **eret feeling whenever we hear of a marriage that has turned out badly that it is the result of people following their inclinations instead of having asked our advice. Certainly there are no parents who do not consider themselves perfectly qualified to settle their children's love a flairs. Every mother in the land feels that ehe could guarantee her son's happiness by marrying him off to that nice, do mestic, pious Mary Smith next door, who has a comfortable fortune in her own right, and a pug nose and carroty hair. The Staid Parents" Ideal of n lliisluind IN Different From Their Daughter** Every father is sure that it would be for his daughter's welfare if he could only induce her to look with favor upon the sensible and substantial widower around the corner, who has a good home and a good income to offer her along with his embonpoint and fifty years. ... The mother would, if she could, break off the engagement between her son and the pretty and ga.v and im pecunious young gitl whom he has chosen for a wife. The father consid ers that he is doing his duty in keeping his daughter from throwing herself Rway on a youth who still has his for tune' to make. Alkali in Soap Bad For the Hair Soup should be used very carefully, If you want to keep your hair look ing its best. Most soaps and pre pared shampoos contain too much alkali. This dries the scalp, makes the liair brittle, and ruins it. The best thing l'or steady use is just ordinary mulsifled cocoanut oil (which Is pure and greaseless), and is better than the most expensive soap or any thing else you can use. One or two teaspoonfuls will cleanse the hair and scalp thoroughly. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, which rinses out easily, removing every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and excessive oil. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves the scalp soft, and the hair fine and silky, bright, lustrous, fluffy and easy to manage. You can get mulsifled cocoanut oil at any pharmacy, it's very cheap, and a few ounces will supply every mem ber of the family for months. The Brick Business of The Sarah L. Bigler, Est. will be continued under the management of James C. B. Rhoads — UNION MADI! THOMAS P. MORAN Nun Kn-.io> 1 utiei Cream Keeps the Skin Soft and Velvety in Itough Weather. An Exquisite Toilet Prep aration, 25c. KOHKAS' DIIITi STORES Ip j, Typewriting and Peniiiannhlp liell 4fv'i Cumberland JH-y Harrisburg Business College A Reliable School, 31st Year S'-iU Market St. Hurrlbur|[, I'a. YOUNG MEN'S RUSINESS INSTITUTE Hershcy Building Front and Market Streets The School That Specializes Day and Night Sessions liell Phone 4361 FRIDAY EVENING, AFFAIRS And neither parent is troubled by the slightest suspicion that the girl or boy whose lives they are doing their con scientious best to wreck, are the only possible judges ot what they want In a husband or wife. For there is no other such mystery as the mystery of love. Science can measure the distance to the sun and determlnfe the course of the stars, but it cannot tell where one's fancy will fall. Philosophy has fomulated codes of ethics and system of religion for man to live by and die by, but it has not formulated any theory by which he can be happy and successful in love. Experience has taught humanity wisdom in everything except love. He fore that the sage and the fool, the adept and the amateur, the debutante and the valetudinarian stand upon the same platform. Nobody is capable of judging of who is another's affinity, or with whom he or she will be happy. We do not know by what tests we make selections our selves. We only know that out of all the world someone who has not more beauty, more worth, more charm, ot more intelligence that a million others Is the only possible one for us. Marrluge Mock* nt All the liulea and Philosophic* of Civilized .Society We are swayed in our choice by a double current of mental and physical attraction that draws us to some par ticular one that sweeps us capriciously and helplessly away from one man or woman to another. This Is why marriages that are ap parently Incongruous so often turn out well. None of us would pick out a dull husband for a brilliant woman; or a simple and ignorant wife for a learned man, or a gay little butterfly for a preacher, or a grave scientist for a so ciety belle, but these people select each other for mates against the protest of their friends, and are happy ever after, because each answers to the other for some need that no stranger could pos sibly know. In matters of the affeotion love is su preme, and a man or woman should take counsel of nothing but his or her own soul. Family and friends have no right to dictate on the subject. Because a girl does not fire a man's mother's fancy is no sign that he will not love her forever and a day. Be cause a man does not cause a girl's father's heart to go pit-a-pat is no token that he will not thrill her as long as she lives. ' The Individual who Is going to marry, and who lias to live with the party of the other part, lias the right of choice, and this Is a fact that families who in termeddle in love affairs would do well to remember. President Wilson Is Called Practical Dictator Washington, Jan. s.—With an ar raignment of President Wilson's ad ministration and of what he called de cadence In American society and gov ernment, Senator Works, of California, who retires March 4, began a valedic tory speech yesterday In the Senate. He deplored a "tendency toward cen tralized, unchecked and unlimited" power on the part of the President, de nounced profigacy of wealth, recom mended that the idle rich be compelled by law to work, and urged formation of a new progressive political party known as the "Liberty Party." Worsr Titan >lonnreliy Senator Works declared usurpation of power by the President had amount ed "practically to a dictatorship." Re ferring to executive measure on legis lation, he said: "If this kind of executive coercion is persisted in and submitted to by Con gress, then our government Is no longer a government of the people. It Is not a democracy. It is not a republic. It is a despotism worse than any known monarchy." Cold in Chest and Sore Throat Cured Overnight, By Gingerole Doctors Prescribe It Druggists Guarantee It Stops coughing almost instantly; ends sore throat and chest colds over night. Nothing like it for neuralgia, luinhago, neuritis and to speedily drive away rheumatic pains and reduce swollen joints. Money back if it isn't better than any preparation you have ever used lor tonsilitis and pluerisy. Use it for sprains, strains, bruises, sore muscles, stifl neck, swellings, sore, painful or frosted feet and chilblains. He sure it's GINGEROLE, the giner ointment. All first-class druggists sell it for 25 tents and jour money will be refunded if you are not satisfied. For sale by Gross' Drug Store, Croll Keller, Clark's Medicine Stores, and dealers everywhere. f Everyone Should Drink Hot Water in the Morning Waih away all the stomach, liver, and bowel poisons before breakfast. To feel your best day in and day out to feel clean inside; no sour bile to coat your tongue and sicken your breath or dull your head; no constipa tion, billious attacks, sick headache, colds, rheumatism or gassy, acid stom ach, you must bathe on the inside like you bathe outside. This is vastly more important, because the skin pores do not absorb impurities into the blood, while the bowel pores do, says a well known physician. To keep these poisons and toxins well flushed from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, drink before breakfast each day, a glass of hot wa ter with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it. This will cleanse, purify and freshen the entire ailmen tary tract, before putting more food into the stomach. Get a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from your pharmacist. It is inexpensive and almost tasteless, except a sourish twinge which is not unpleasant. Drink phosphated hot water every morning to rid your sys tem of these vile poisons and toxins; also to prevent their formation. To feel like young folks feel; like you felt before your blood, nerves and muscles became saturated with an ac cumulation of body poisons, begin this treatment and above all, keep It up! As soap and hot water act on the skin, cleansing sweetening and purifying so limestone phosphate and hot water .before breakfast, act on the stomach liver, kidneys and bowels. RUSSIAN STYLES INSPORTSFROCK Bandings of Wide Braid Give a Smart Finish to Costume of Gabardine By MAY MANTON 9239 (With Basting Line and Added Seam Allowance) Russian Blouse, 34 to 42 bust. 8851 (With Basting Line and Added Seam Allowance) Two-Piece Skirt, 24 to 34 waist. The sports costume makes an im- | portant feature of the Winter fashions as it did those of the warmer weather, j for sports include motoring and j skating and all sorts of outdoor occu- j pations, and we also use the so-called j sports costume for various other I needs. This one shows the Russian j blouse that is a pronounced favorite | of the season with a two-piece skirt. ' It is made of wool jersey and is banded with a wide braid, lersey cloth is an excellent material for such use and it is an extremely fashionable material, but the gown could _ copied in serge or in gabardine or in any one of the materials that we use for costumes of such sort, or, it would be pretty to make the blouse of one material and the skirt of another. F-or the medium size the blouse will require, 5 M yards of material 27 inches wide, 4% >ards 36, 3 yards 44 with 8 yards ot banding and for the skirt will be needed, yards cf material 27, 3>4 yards 36 or 2 yards 44; it is 3 yards and 4 inches in width at the lower edge. The May Manton pattern of the blouse No. 9239 is .cut in sizes from 34 to 42 inches bust measure and of the skirt No. 88.SI In sizes from 24 to 34 inches waist measure. They will be railed to ~ny address by the Fashion Department of this paper, >u receipt o! fu ecn ce.Us for each. Allies' Agents Buy Full Stocks of Pa. Shoe Stores Pottsville, Pa.,' Jan. 5. —Agent ifor English and French Arms are touring this region offering to buy out the en , tire supply of shoe stores at prices 35 per cent, above their valuation. The 1 shoes are to be used for the civilian : I population of European nations. Several sales of entire stocks have already been made, and one Pottsville dealer, who has already sold the stock ; of one of his branch stores, is consider ing an offer of SIOO,OOO for the stock ! of his Pottsville store. Men's Fall Clothing Fashions Unchanged i Cincinnati, Jan. 6.—No great changes in the fashion of garments worn at present will be made in men's clothing during the fall and winter of 1917-18, if the styles exhibited at the annual convention of the National Association jof Clothing Designers, which opened 1 yesterday, are adhered to. The most popular shades worn by the models I were blue, gray and brown. GAME WARDEN AItRKSTKD I Charged with using insulting and 1 profane language to the passengers on a street car, Albert Uaum, of Pen , brook, a game warden, was arrested last night by Detective Shuler and I Policemen Fry and Hess. ——————______ : DON'T LET WIFE : DIE OF LOCKJAW ; Warn her against cutting corns because they can be lifted out. , Women wear high heels which - buckle up their toes and they suffer terribly from corns. Women then proceed to trim these pests, seeking - j relief, but they hardly realize the ter ' rible danger from infection, says a j j Cincinnati authority. t! Corns can easily be lifted out with , | the fingers if you will get from any II drug store a quarter of an ounce of 11 a drug called freezone. This is suf -1 fieient to remove every hard or soft ; corn or callus from one's feet. You simply apply a few drops directly s'upon the tender, aching corn. The I ' soreness is relieved at once and soon -'the entire corn, root and all, lifts out j without pain. ! This is. a sticky substance which , dries in a moment. It just shrivels up > the corn without inflaming or even r irritating the surrounding tissue or II skin. Cut this out and pin on your wifa'si dresser. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH THE ENEMY —BY— Gr/)RGE RANDOLPH CHESTER & LILLIAN CHESTER Autbo of "THE BALL OF FIRE," etc. Copyright, 1915, Newspaper Rights, Hearst International Library. International Feature Service. Continued. Lane stood looking thoughtfully down Into his empty glass. There were a couple of drops in the bottom, and he twirled them slowly around and around. "I have been hitting It up a little freely," he confessed with frank self-judgment. "I'll have to watch It. Let me see. I was lit up night before last, wasn't I?" His brow cleared, and he laughed. "That was certainly some party! We started in for a little game of fan-tan, and we ended up by serenading Sammy Langstcr and his bride. Regular country affair. We all got tea-ed trying to spifllcate sober Sammy In his own house!" "Then last week," gravely prompt ed Stuart, who had no smile for the hilarious serenade, even though he recognized the genius of Tommy Tinkle in the background. "Last week was different." Billy frowned, as he tossed his coat and vest on a chair. "I was down at the Pannard Building in the rain that night, and I got some of Mike Dowd's good old whisky. I took three drinks while I talked with Mike, and by the time I got up to the club I seem ed to want more. First time I ever had that sensation; a sort of a crav ing. I don't like it." The older man shuddered. "Be careful, Billy," he warned. "That's a bad symptom. If that crav ing Is ever firmly established in a | man, it never quite leaves him as long as he lives. "It can be controlled," argued Billy, who had no measure of this foe because he had never, as yet, deemed It necessary to offer any particular i resistance. "Look at you. Why, you haven't taken a drink since your sec ond night here." Harrison Stuart drew in his breath sharply. "I>o you think it has cost me noth ing?" His voice was suddenly harsh. I I "Do you know how many weary | hours I have fought, walking round and round that table?" and he in- I dicated the decanter. "The yellow devil in that bottle calls to me in the night, it drags me from sound sleep, and, before I am awake, I am out I here with that bottle in my hands! I I have stood there holding it for llf- [ | teen minutes at a time, shaking from \ ] head to foot, with the perspiration j j pouring from my brow. I have sat i down, weak and faint and sick, from I J the agony of that fight! No, don't 1 | put it away, Billy!" and his jaws j set. "I have some safety in the very | fact that my enemy is visible. The I damned stuff waits for me! It tries jto take me unaware! I walk into this ; room. I am studying some problem of construction. I have no thought of whisky in my mind, no apparent feeling for it in my body. Suddenly, just as I pass, my eye catches the golden glint of it; and theii, before I know it, the fight is on (me again. And It Is all to be done over, Billy; over and over. Why, look!" He stopped his nervous pacing, and pressed his hands upon his chest. "I am Harrison Stuart! I have every thing in the world to live for! I have my work; I have my reputation to re gain; I have my wife; I have Tavy; and I have the memory of that hor rible hell to warn me! I know that one drink of the infernal liquor will set up in me a thirst which will not stop until I die! I have no strength to come back a second time. And yet, as I stand here this minute,l want it!" A piteous appeal rang into his voice. "I want it!" He reached out his quivering hands toward the de canter. His fingers were working convulsively, and over his counten ance came such terrific traces of the bygone Bow-Wow, that Billy was hor ror-stricken! There was an agony of passionate desire in his suddenly blearing eyes, as they distended upon the gleaming yellow contents of the cut-glass bottle. He was bent and crouched, and, for a moment, it seem ed as If he were about to seize the bottle, and drain it to its dregs, and | die! Billy hurriedly snatched up the decanter. The old man's eyes follow ed It greedily, but he straightened, and, with a stern struggle of his muscles, regained control of himself. He was deathly pale, and a cold per spiration stood on his forehead. "That's what it is to crave!" His voice was hollow and of inexpressible mournfulness. He shook his head. "Hard liquor isn't for some people, and I'm afraid you're one of us." Billy held out the decanter and looked at it as if it were some new species of bomb. He set it down slow iy. "If I thought it'could ever get me like that, I'd never touch it again," he pondered. "But, Hal, I can't afford to admit that there is anything in myself which I can not conquer and control! To say that I do not dare do this or that would weaken me in my own confidence of strength. It would take something from me which I could never replace. It would rob me of one of the big things which make me a man. If I need to control this stuff, I'll control it; but I won't run from it." "Run, Billy!" begged Stuart. "Be a coward! It's the bravest thing you can do! I have been thinking of all this with especial keenness to-day You know, I met Miss Penning in the office. She's a charming girl. Billv a delightful girl." y ' "Isn't she?" Billy's voice rang with enthusiasm. "The best girl in the world!" The old man smiled. "She likes you, Billy," and he shook his head. "Really though, speaking from the viewpoint of a bystander I should be distressed to see you marry, with this tendency growing upon you. Very few hard drinkers are reformed by marriage. The re formation must comd from within themselves, or not at all. I am tak ing this liberty because of my grati tude to you, because of my affection for you, and because I know, as few men are unhappy enough to know, just how tragic the consequences of an unconquered fight against that foe might be. My God, Billv, can't you realize what it has brought me to! Didn't you find me in a condition lower than the brutes. Didn't you discover my gentle-born family hu miliated, disgraced, and living in poverty? Didn't you see me, to-day, stand before my own daughter, and not dare to say that I was her father, and not dare to take her in my arms, not dare to call her my Tavy! And! oh, Billy she's beautiufl! Beauti ful!" Here, at last, was a proposition 'lth which Billy could agree, and the look of distress left his brow. "Didn't I tell you you wouldn't be lieve how beautiful she is until you saw her?" he enthusiastically remind ed Stuart. "I'm going over there to night." "Are you?" The old man's earn estness was lost in his eagerness. Billy's reports of his visits to tho Stuart's home were what the old man lived on. If he could not go himself, | he could go by sympathetic proxy. I "I'll sit up and wait for you." "Go to sleep," urged Billy, beaming down at him in great friendliness, j They were pals again now, conspira tors together. "I'll waken you. I've! a great excuse this time. That check!" They both laughed. The framing of excuses for Billy to call at the Stuart home had been one of their most elaborate pastimes. "You didn't give it to Tavy this afternoon." "Certainly not!" laughed Billy in triumph., "I almost cheated us out of this call, but I remembered In time. What dq you think of this, Hal ?" j and he tossed over the sketch he had brought home. "By jinks, I'll have to hustle!" In two minutes more, he was heard splashing. So ho was expected to marry Ger aldine! He pondered this, as he deftly tied his black bow. What the dickens j was the matter with people! Couldn't j a fellow have a close girl friend with out their being hustled into matri mony about it? Wouldn't Geraldine enjoy that! Why, they were as open with each other as Tommy and him- . self! Thoy were all in a bunch to- | gether. People mighty seldom mar-1 ried in their school-day crowd. It | was like marrying in one's own fam ily. He seized his brushes, and I tackled his hair with impatient vigor. It was stubborn to-night. Tommy Tinkle was with Geraldine more than he, and nobody ever thought of marry ing them! "I think I'll go along," said Stuart, as Billy joined him at the table; and there were traces of imps dancing in his dark grey eyes. His hair had been black when he was young. "Eh!" gasped Billy. "Oh, all right. Why don't you?" The imps disappeared instantly. "Not for one year from the night I threw the glass in your fireplace," he said: "the first night I saw you intoxicated. But I'm going far enough to look at the house, if you don't mind. I've kept myself from that long enough." He did so. He located the entrance. He had Billy point out the windows; and then the young man went into j the house, and shut the door behind him. There were three windows in that room, all brightly lighted; but, from j a near viewpoint one could only see the ceiling. From across the square, dim, old eyes could make out but little detail. At about half-past eight, a curly head appeared in a window. Tavy! She sat in a rock ing chair apparently, but she did not rock much, except as the chair sway ed with the vivacity of her conver sation. A tall figure came to the window ' by and by. This was at nearly nine. Billy! He stood up, for quite a while, talking, and from that characteristic tilt of his head, occasionally laugh ing. ' He sat on the window ledge af terwards. At nine-fifteen there ap peared a third figure at the adjoin ing window; a woman's figure, with soothly drawn hair done high on her head; and the head was bowed slight ly. but not much. Thank God, not much! Jean! Oh, thou good and faithful Jean! Thou true Jean! Thou Jean that has suffered, and borne, and waited! Oh, may all the blessings of heaven and earth be thine, thou Jean! May there be happiness enough, in thy days yet to come, to efface, in part, thy misery in the weary years that are gone! Jean! Jean! She peered out intently into the night, as if in her soul she hoard that passionate call. It was cold out there, cold and damp. "Why, I thought you'd gone home!" wondered Billy, when he hurled him self through the door, at half-past ten. "No, I've been walking about the square," returned Stuart calmly, though ho was shivering. There had been much pain in that lonely vigil, but there had been great happiness, too. He had seen them both this "day, wife and daughter; beheld them with his own eyes; and they were safe, safe and well! "Rotten raw out here," commented Billy, with an uncomfortable feeling that ho had been cheating Stuart. Somehow, he felt guilty that he was able to go through the door, while the man who had the natural right must stay outside. Young Lane had a most troublesome conscience. How ever, ho could pay part of the debt and ease part of his guilt. "I've some great news for you!" he exulted. "You'll be able to watch them for two hours and a half Thursday night. I'm going to take them to the the ater! We'll sit in a box, and I'll get you a seat which will give you the best possible view. I've a bully pair of folding opera glasses!" CHAPTER XII Geraldine .Makes a Hun of Kiglit "Hello, Billy! Glad to see you!" and Geraldine's voice dripped with honey. Billy Lane blinked. He could not believe in his luck! Why, nil his worry had been wasted! It was not necessary for him to square himself for having failed to attend Mrs. Wil ton's dance. It was already done. | There wasn't a word, not even a frown or a cold, chilling glance! Wasn't Geraldine Penning just about the best girl in the world! Sweeter ever day! Or had Tommy fixed it? Good old Tommy! "I'm glad to be seen." Billy was as happy as any boy who has escaped a scolding. He shook Geraldine by both hands, and, drawing her arm In his. strolled back to the billiard-room, where he set up the balls for their occasional game. "I'll have to stop double discounting y.ou, Geraldine. You've been beating me too steadily." "Single discount then," she gaily accepted. "It's a tremendous com pliment, Billy, to have you object to the double discount." She banked I her ball, and laughed as it came back to the rail and nestled there. "I've been making all the boys play with me, and particularly Tommy and Daddy." "Particularly Tommy!" emphatic ally declared that young man, loung ing in from the library. "I've play ed billiards so much that I walk bent." "Get a cue, Tommy," ordered Ger aldine calmly. "You have me to beat for the bank." j Tommy Tinkle took a cue and chalked it, and banked and lost, and I sat in one of the high chairs. | "Give an account of yourself, Billy " ;he suggested. 'Why didn't you get out to Mrs. Wilton's? I told Ger : aldine that the l'annard excavation fell in." "I didn't believe you," laughed Geraldine. "You've fibbed for Billy so much that I've learned to double discount you." She made her first shot coolly and accurately, but her thought was only perfunctorily with the game. (To Be Continued.) JANUARY 5, 1917; CHILDREN ENTER THRIFT CONTEST School Superintendent F. E. Shambaugh to Invite Entrants in Campaign Dauphin county's )J.l ). 11l school children will / yj\JjT\d I>e i nv 'l ,e d by Prof. I = F " Shambaugh, county superinten 'T < l en t to participate in the nation-wide thrift essay contest ■rf J which is being con -I^lo tlonal Educational I Association and the American So ciety for Thrift and circular letters to all the teachers are now being pre pared for mailing early next week on the subject. Cash prizes totaling SI,OOO will be awarded and in addition to the mone tary awards special medals will be presented in each county. Details of the contest will be embodied in Prof. Shambaugh's circular letter and every child in the county will be urged to take part in the wide-spread plan to promote a spirit of thrift in the na tion's children. A feature of the essay contest plan is to have the win ner red his or her thesis at the coun ty teacher's institute. Annual Reports Tuesday. Both the city building and the paving and asphalt repair plant and improve ment reports by Building Inspector James H. Grove and City Commis sioner W. H. Lynch, superintendent of streets and public improvements will lie submitted to Council Tuesday. Chief Clerk Joseph W. Ibach is com piling the data for both. Hear of Ancient Mortgage. The Dauphin county court has fixed 10 o'clock Monday, January 8, for hear ing all about the ancient mortgage that was given by John Shaeffer to Henry Ford on the South Third street property udjoining the Rustic Dairy Lunch room. This is owned by Mrd. Henrietta J. Corbin and never satis fied so far as the records show. The mortgage was given April 15, 1796 and Ford paid a hundred pounds in gold for the property. The legal presump tion is that the mortgage has long since been satisfied and if nobody appears January 8 to object, the court will direct the lien to be marked satisfied. Letters on Train Victim's Estate. Letters of administration of Isaac Cohen, the junk dealer who was killed a few days ago by a train at Millers burg, were issued yesterday to his widow, Sara Cohen, and son, Benja min Cohen. J. William Bayles, clerk to the directors of the poor, was granted letters on the estate of Mar garet Geesey. I OLD-TIME COLD f ) CURE-DRINK TEA! j vjci a. attuui iJu.c*9u will see that they con tain morphine, heroin, codeine, chlor oform and other dangerous narcotics which should only be taken under a doctor's orders. You are safe when you take Father John's Medicine be cause it is pure and wholesome, free from dangerous drugs and alcohol and has more than sixty years' suc cess in the treatment of colds and throat troubles. < V.WVA-.V.W • ■! FOR A BAD COUGH < ? Here is a fine old-fashioned f r recipe for coughs, colds or ca- / r tarrh trouble that has been used J 1 r with great success. Get from < your drug Ist 1 oz. of Parmint { (Double Strength) about 75c. ? f worth and add to it % pint of hot ? f water and 4 oz. of granulated J 4 sugar. Tiiis will make a full half J" e a pint when mixed. Take one if tablespoonful 4 times a daw J £ No more racking your whole , r body with a cough. Clogged nos- J 5 trils should open, air passages of J your head clear up so you can J Dieathe freely. It is easy to pre- J £ pare, costs little and is pleasant J * to take. Anyone who has a stub- J £ born cough, or hard cold or ca- J £ tarrh in any form should give ? c this prescription a trial. Ji f / Legal Notices OFFICE OF The Board of Commissioners of .Public Grounds and Buildings, State Capitol Building, Harrisburg. Pa. SEALIiD PROPOSALS will be receiv ed by the Superintendent of Public Grounds and Buildings until 2 o'clock P. M„ Tuesday, January a, 1917, for fur nishing the labor and material required in installing two Electric Freight Ele vators in the new main building on the State Arsenal Grounds, located at Eigh teenth and Herr Street, Ilarrisburg, Pa. Each bidder must iile with his proposal complete specilicatlons of the equip ment he proposes to install. The Boara reserves the right to accept or reject any or all bids. SAMUEL, B. RAMBO, Superintendent. In the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County No . 241, Juno Term, 1916 Mary V. Kreiling vs. Michael Kreiling. IN DIVORCE To Michael Kreiling: YOU are hereby notified that a hear ing will be held in the above-stated case at the Court House, in the City of Harrisburg, Pa., on the 29th day of January, 1917, at 10 o'clock A. M„ at which time and place you may appear and be heard, if you think proper. ALBERT J. MEHRING, Attorney for Libellant. NOTICE NOTICE is hereby given that pursu ant to a resolution of the Board of Di rectors of the Harrisburg Chemical and Paint Company, a special meeting of the stockholders of the Ilarrisburg Chemical und Paint Company is called to meet at the general offices of the company, 917-919 Hemlock Street, Har risburg. Pa., on the 26th day of Febru ary, 1917, at 8 P. M., to take action on approval or disapproval of the proposed Increase of capital stock of the said company from $15,00(1 to SIOO,OOO. WILLIAM. C. MORTON, Secretary. RALPH J. BAKER. . Solicitor. NOTICE Letters of Administration on the Estate of William A. Bothwell, late of Harrisburg, Dauphin County, Pa., deceased, having been granted to the undersigned residing in Wormleys burg, all persons indebted to said Es tate are requested to make immediate payment, and those having claims will present them for settlement, to MAUDE H. BOTHWELL. Or Administratrix. R. S Care, Attorney. |ForSale at a great sacrifice to the owner 1701-170(1 N. 'I lllitl> STREET Apply to S. FRIEDMAN HEAL ESTATE KVXKEL BUILDING "CLASSiFIEQ BUSINESS DiHUijrOttt IUIAUS >UC MA.W A.\u nubau AO ULI ill ii. ArtlltelMl Limb* and Truaaea Braces lor all deformities, abdominal supporters. Capital City Art. LjujU Co ills JuaiKel St. UoU Phone. Irencli Cleaning and Ueli| f, Goodman s, tailoring and repairing, all guaiuntced. Call and deliver, ftoii V'lioiitt iZVo, liOSft IN. ol&th St. Fire Insurance- and lteal ItiaiaM I. E. tilpple—Fire Insurance— Kutl F.. .ate —Kent Collecting, Ix6l Market dt, Bell paoue. Photographer Dauahten Studios—Portrait apd Com. merclui XIU N. Third tit bell