Don't Let Soap Spoil Your Hair j When you wash your hair, b care ful what you üße. Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkali, which la very Injurious, as It dries the scalp and makes the hair brittle. The best thing to use Is Just plain inulsitied cocoanut oil, for this is pure und entirely greaseless. It's very : cheap, and beats the most expensive soaps or anything else all to pieces. You can get this at any drug store, und a few ounces will last the whole family for months. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in, about a teaspoonful is j nil that Is required. It makes an i abundance of rich, creamy lather, j cleanses thoroußhly, and rinses out | easily. The hair dries quickly and j evenly, and is soft, fresh looking, i bright, fluffy, wavy ana easy to i handle. Besides, it loosens and takes out every particle of dust, dirt and dandruff. HOW I KILLED Ml SUPERFLUOUS U Hindoo Secret Banished It So It Never Returned After Elec tricity and Many Depila tories Had Failed. I.KT ME HELP YOU ABSOLUTELY | FREE. Until nearly middle age I was sorely troubled by hideous Superfluous Hairs. My face was a sight, with a heavy ; moustache on my lip and a tough beard on my chin. My arms were also heavily covered. I tried one thing after another without success. The electric needle only made the growth worse. Finally, my husband, an Officer in the British Army, secured from a Native Hindoo Soldier (whose life he waved) the close ly-guarded secret of the Hindoo Re ligion, which forbids Hindoo Women to have even the slightest trace of hair on any part of their body except that on their head. 1 used it and In a few days my hair-growths had entirely disap peared. To-day not a trace of it can.be found. I will send tj r\~r— I Free and without Tui c* f 879 obligation to any nf O ' VUf one, full infor ination and eom- piete instructions yty I], j so that you can fol jrli *a \ low niy ex a m pie md completely de- resort to the dang jfa'i | ■ erous electric wasting your money on worthless de pilatory preparations and write me to day, giving your name and address, statins whether Mrs. or Miss. All I ask is, that you send me a 2c stamp for return postage. Address, Mrs. Frederlca Hudson, Aptmt. 441 N. E. No. Main St.. Attleboro, Mass. IMPORTANT NOTE I Mrs. Hudson belong* to n titled family, lit Mi In Kniciish Sflolety: she In connected tdth lending' olYlcinlfl tbere and Ih the widow of n prominent officer in tlie Ilrltlsti \rniy, so yon ran write her with entire confidence. She has opened an office in America for the benefit of sufferer* ! from Superfluoun llalr. Addrenii as above. i Glass of Hot Water Before Breakfast a Splendid Habit Open sluices of the system each ' morning and wash away the poisonous, stagnant matter. J Those of us who are accustomed to j feel dull and heavy when we arise; splitting headache, stuffy from a cold, ■ foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stom- i ach, lame hack, can, instead, both look j and feel as fresh as a daisy always by ' washing the poisons and toxins from the body with phosphated hot water each morning. We should drink, before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a tea spoonful of limestone phosphate in It | to flush from the stomach, liver, kid- j neys and ten yards of bowels the pre- | vious day's indigestible waste, sour bile j and poisonous toxins; thus cleanging, I sweetening and purifying the entire j alimentary tract before putting more i food into the stomach. The action of limestone phosphate I and hot water on an empty stomach i is wonderfully invigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases, j wasto and acidity and gives one a | splendid appetite tor breakfast, and it ! is said to be but a little while until the 1 roses begin to appear in the cheeks, j A quarter-pound of limestone phos- ' phate will cost very little at the drug | store; but Is sufficient to make anyone < who is bothered with biliousness, con- I stipation, stomach trouble or rheuma- ! tism a real enthusiast on the subject' of internal sanitation. Try it and you i are assured that you will look better j and feel better In every way shortly. SAGE TEA DUNDY TO DARKEN 11 It's Grandmother's Recipe to Bring Back Color and Luster to Hair. You can turn gray, faded hair beautifully dark and lustrous almost over niKht If you'll get a 50-cent bot tle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound" at any drug store. Mil lions of bottles of this old famous Sage Tea Recipe, improved by the ad dition of other ingredients, are sold annually, says a well-known druggist here, because it darkens the hair so naturally and evenly that no one can tell it has been applied. Those whose hair is turning gray or becoming faded have a surprise awaiting them, because after one or two applications the Kray hair van ishes and your locks become luxuriant ly dark and beautiful. This is the ae of youth. Gray- 1 haired, unattractive folks aren't want- i od around, so get busv with Wyeth's I Sage and Sulphur Compound to-night 1 and you'll be delighted with your 1 dark, handsome hair and your youth- i ful appearance within a rew days. This preparation Is a toilet requisite i find is not Intended for the cure, mlti- j gation or prevention of disease. " , ™" 1 Hae prwun Mtnsthfng com* people should know. t FRIDAY EVENING, LOAD FROM CARS IS OBJECTED TO Pennsylvania Railroad Asks That a Change Be Made in Its Tariff Rate The Public Service commission today directed :v public hearing be held at tlie Capitol on Thursday, January IS, on the application of the Pennsyl vania Railroad company to amend its tariff rates on bituminous and canal coal so that they shall apply only to cars loaded at tipples. The company tiled the application recently and asked that it be made ef fective on less than the usual thirty days' notice. The application for amendment carries this wording: "The rates named in this tariff will apply only on coal loaded directly in to cars from regular tipples with track connections with this company and coal cars will only be furnished for the loading of coal directly from such tipples." According to officials of the com mission the company in presenting the application holds that the change is necessitated by reason of the car shortage and that it is being called upon to furnish an Increasingly large number of its cars on public sidings for the loading of coal hauled there by wagons. It is also alleged that if the loading from wagons is continued it will further complicate the.car short age. RAILROADS ARE OVER-REGULATED [Continued From First Pago] ALFRED P. THOM i phase of the transportation problem [ | from the period twenty-nine years ago j (when government regulation of rail-' roads was inaugurated, to the present ! day, when "a righteous and enlight-! ened public sentiment is necessary to j a solution of this great problem, which , lies at the very bottom of our business , prosperity." "A harmonious and homogeneous I regulation of transportation is neces-1 sary by reason of economic necessity ! and in the light of the public interest, I and it la now a matter for the Amer- | ican people to decide as to whether i the time has not now come to do away with the repression and correction policy and introduce in its place the principle of constructlveness and help fulness among the railroads of the country." the speaker declared. "American capital," said Mr. Thorn, "by reason of the close supervision of 1 the government is rapidly being driven j in the estimation of the speaker, Into I channels other than railroad, and to! substantiate his statement the fact I was brought out that in 1916 a smaller | construction of railroad lines (less! than one thousand miles) took place than in any previous year since 1840,1 with the exception of the Civil War| period. The speculative class of Am erican investors, who are responsible! for the creation of our great railroad J systems, have been driven away be-1 cause of governmental regulation of| both the revenue and the expenses of) the railroads, and European capital] ia no longer available; there are vast j untouched portions of this country that are undeveloped simply because! the prospect of investing in railroad securities under present conditions is | not sufficiently inviting. Less than 40,000 out of 220.000 miles of rail- j roads can now be run on the ordinary ; business basis of a stock issue with a j 0 per cent return plus 3 per cent for reserve." Mr. Thom paid a flattering tribute! to the Pennsylvania Railroad, to which 1 he referred as "that institution which 1 by the union of the people and the! wisdom of its managers has grown to ] be the envy and marvel of the civilized j world." lie concluded with a number j of interesting references to the way I in which tlie lack of uniformity in 1 state regulations has worked hard-! ships among various states, with the I local reference to the full crew laws; in Pennsylvania and New Jersey as 1 placing a charge which the surround- j ing States have to pay because the j same laws and similar policies do not! hold within their own boundaries. Confirm New Head of. Chicago Police; Allege Ousted Man Got $20,0G0 Chicago, 111., Jan. 12.—State's At torney Hoyna said that according to | the confession of Thomas Costello, one j of the alleged conspirators in the al-I leged police graft ring, the "protection ; money" paid to Chief Healey amounted j to between $20,000 and $28,000 since last July. The appointment of Herman F. j Schuettler as chief of police was con- I tlrmed by the city council. Mayor Thompson's letter of appointment di- i rected Schuettler to "clean out iiume- | diately the corruption in all ranks of the department." Healey, who hopes With the con firmation of his successor to regain his former post as captain of the traffic j squad, broke his silence for the first I time since his arrest and defied his'l accusers to prove he is guilty of wrong. ! "They say I got $25,000," he said.! Why, if I had even one-third of that! I'd retire from the police department." I.OIID IIINMNO DIRS London, Jan. 12.—Colonel Lord George Baillie-Hamilton Binning, eldest son of the Earl of Haddington, died this morn ing at the East Lothian country seat of ; his father. He was born in 1856, en- : teved the army In 1880 and served with \ distinction in the Egyptian campaign in 1882 and the Nile expedition two i years later. He was appointed a tein- ] porary brigadier general In December ! 1915, while lieutenant colonel of the I Lothian and Border Horse Yeomanry. I DIPHTHERIA CLOSI3S SCIIOOI. Because of the prevalence of diph theria in Silver Snrlng township, Cum berland county, the Simmons school, along the State road, has been closed until Monday. It Is said that three of the pupils have had diphtheria. Health : Department authorities were noiiHed. and they ordered tlio schooiliouse closed until Monday. BMB—HHB——I "The Live Store^ January Reductions On All "Suits" and "Overcoats" Every Why should any one store in a city like Harrisburg have | — 5,300 "Suits" "Overcoats" ■me young ma,, the| in stock at this season of the year? young woman who is deter- fa J mined to make good will j| sential quality to develop. BBaßl We'll admit it would seem like I sJibedZ y tZ ad gLuty''of IBHH| quantity to anyone not fa- 1 mind that makes it possible miliar with the tremendous output of this "Live for a person to do and say (• § Store" —lt also takes a lot of courage to say EVERY the right thing in the right fV | I ONE of these "Suits" and "Overcoats" are included in I way at the right time. j® • 1 our January Reductions. Tact is sometimes inborn, rat but it may be cultivated, l"* 1 1 • for tact requires that we Lverywhere you are hearing know ourselves, that we be 1 - -1 ■ J • • • kind and generous in our about the steady increase in prices thoughts towards others, ~and there's no telling when the advance will end that we have interest in and Here's a chance to lessen the cost on your wearing appreciation of others. apparel. Tact makes life easier, happier and more profitable \xr .1 11 .1 C 11 ,i*. • j§3 for ourselves as weii as We expected all the unravorable conditions othpr *- that you are reminded of just as many others did only that Tact is to the nund what we too k advantage of the low prices months ago when we went to the market. salt is to the body. We can Z c^Lr°Zt!t e The result is we have the finest as- | Zvici, tJwUM sortment of "Suits" and "Overcoats" ever shown | place to trade. in Central Pennsylvania and we're going to add many more Q if satisfied customers to this "Live Store" than ever before, because they know they are buying standard merchandise honestly reduced. Every SIS.OO Suit and Overcoat . . -$12.50 I Every SIB.OO Suit and Overcoat . . -$14.50 I Every $20.00 Suit and Overcoat . . -$1<5.50 I Every $25.00 Suit and Overcoat . . _S2I.SO I Every $30.00 Suit and Overcoat . All Boys' "Suits," "Overcoats" At the Shirt - Sale and "Mackinaws" Reduced Every Shirt in Our Entire Stock is Reduced ah D , t r MC •, All SI.OOSHIRTS 79c All Boys SS.UU ouits and Overcoats .. $4.25 50 SHIRTS $1 19 All Boys' $6.50 Suits and Overcoats .. $5.25 All $2.00 SHIRTS $1.59 All Boys' $7.50 Suits and Overcoats .. $6.25 f% $ I*oa ah D >,oca o 1 , MO - All $3.50 SHIRTS $2.89 All Boys 4>0.5u Suits and Overcoats .. $7.25 yqq SHIRTS $3 89 All Boys' SIO.OO Suits and Overcoats .. $8.50 All Flannel and Wool Shirts Included Blue Serges - Blacks all Staple and Fancy Suits All Alterations Free Goods Exchanged Money Refunded ' * l MUM— nil illll 1 ill 1 1 HAKRISBURG TELEGRAPH JANUARY 12, 1917. 15