" r BAD BREATH Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets Get at the Cause and Remove It .Dr> Edwards' Olive Tablets, the sub stitute for calomel, act gently on the bowels and positively do the work. I People afflicted with bad breath find Quick relief through Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets. The pleasant, sugar coated tablets are taken for bad breath py all who know them. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets act gen tly but firmly on the bowels and liver, stimulating them to natural action, clearing the blood and gently purifying the entire system. They do that which danfeerous calomel does without any of the bad after effects. All the benefits of nasty, sickening, friping cathartics are derived' from Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets without grip ing, pain or any disagreeable effects. Dr. F. M. Edwards discovered the formula after seventeen years of prac tice among patients afflicted with bowel and liver complaint with the attendant bad breath. Dir. Edwards' Olive Tablets are pure ly a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know them by their olive color. Take one or two every night for a week and note the effect. 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. Get the Habit of Drinking Hot Water Before Breakfast Saya we can't look or feel right with the syctem full of poisons. Millions of folks bathe internally now instead of loading their system with drugs. "What's an inside bath?" you say. Well, it is guaranteed to per form miracles if you could believe these hot water enthusiasts. There are vast numbers of men and women who, immediately upon arising In the morning, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of lime stone phosphate in it. This is a very excellent health measure. It is intend ed to Hush the stomach, liver, kidneys and the thirty feet of intestines of the previous day's waste, sour bile and in digestible material left over in the body which if not eliminated every day become food for the millions of bac i teria which infest the bowels, the quick result is poisons and toxins which are then absorbed into the blood, causing headache, bilious at tacks, foul breath, bad taste, colds, stomach trouble, kidney misery, sleep lessness, impure blood and all sorts of ailments. People who feel good one day and badly the hext, but who simply can not get feeling right, are urged to ob tain a quarter-pound of limestone phosphate at the drug store. This will cost very little but is sufficient to make anyone a.real crank on the sub ject of internal sanitation. Just as soap and hot water act on Ihe skin, cleansing, sweetening and freshening, so limestone phosphate and hot water act on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. It is vastly more important to bathe on the inside than on the outside, because the skin pores do not absorb impurities into the blood, while the bowel pores do. Two Carloads of Pea Coal Thereby hangs a tale! Coal is so scare that they are paying a premium for it in some quarters. We placed an order for 30 • carloads of Pea Coal. In or dinary times this order would be filled in a jiffy. Not so to-day. For instance in 6 weeks' time 2 of the 30 carloads ar rived. There arc no cars to haul it. Is coal scarce? Are you prepared for real cold weather? You'd better get busy with your coal order. H. M. Kelley & Co. Office. 1 \or tli Third Yard*. Tenth and State EDUCATIONAL School of Commerce Troop Building IS So. Market Sq. Day & Night School Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Stenotypy, Typewriting and I'ranianihly Bell MS Cumberland -IV-* The OFFICE TRAINING SCHOOL Kaufman Bid*. 4 S. Market 3a Training: That Secures Salary Increasing Positions In the Office Call or send to-day lor intereetlna booklet. "The Art of Getting Alone In the World." Bell phono 645-K. Harrisburg Business College A Reliable School, 31st Year til) Market St. llarrUburg, Pa. YOUNG MEN'S BUSINESS INSTITUTE Hershey Building FLORIDA "BY SEA" Baltimore to JACKSONVILLE (Calling at Savannah) Delightful Ba|| Fine Steamers, i.ovr Karen. Beat Servlcn. Plan Your Trip to Include "Finest Coastwise Trips In tile World" Illustrated Booklet on Heuuest. IIKHCHANTS * MIMCK* THSSS. CH. W. P. TUHNKK, . P. A. Ualto.. Use Telegraph Want Ads MUJNUAY EVENING. THE ENEMY —BY— GWRGE RANDOLPH CHESTER & LILLIAN CHESTER Authon of "THE BALL. OF FIRE," etc. Copyright. 1915. Newspaper Rights. Hearst International Library. International Feature Service. (Continued) Amid that storm of distress there came the insistently recurring question in Tavy'e mind; why. oh, why? How could this disaster have fallen on her! What had she done to deserve it? Why could not Billy have escap ed this terrible deed? She could scarcely believe now that he had done it. It' was all so unreal. It was not like him! There must have been some cause, or Billy would never have done this of his own volition. No sane human being could will himscif to descend to this hideous fall from his god-hoad. Perhaps lie had been ill. That hiust be it! There could be no other explanation, unless she chose to think of Billy as one of de liberately besotted tendencies, who i preferred to sink himself in gluttony, j That thought was absurd. Billy had never voluntarily put himself in this condition, and If it had come upon him involuntarily, lie was more to be pitied than blamed. That was a startling thought! One which dried her tears and stopped her sobs. It Billy had been unfortunate, if this aftliction had been brought up on him against his will, he had need ed her sympathy, her tomfort, even her aid. And what.had she done! She had let him go without a protest, she, who had sworn herself to him, as sincerely and as whole-heartedly and as sacredly as she would upon the day when they would kneel at the altar and ask the blessing of God upon their union! She had stood su pinely, and allowed to be removed from her finder the symbol by which j sh*. had bound herself to him, in love, and truth, and eternal fidelity! Inj his hour of direst need, she lii.i been traitorous to Billy; and now she I heaped self-reproach after self-re proach upon her own head. She did not blame her mother. She was just in this new agony. Her.mother's in stinct of protection, that same instinct which had shielded Tavy so tender!/, and yet so vigorously, through all these years, had led her to guard her daughter promptly and decisively l'rom this new menace; but her mother had not known. She, like Tavy, lad been stunned oy this unexpected ap parition of poor Billy. The only guilty one was Tavy! She had permitted the ring to be taken from her linger. She had allowed Billy, her Billy, whom she loved with all her heart and with all her life, to be sent away alone, into the night -r- Where? "Mother, I've been wrong! I want Billy! We must find him!" Jean Stuart looked at her daughter pityingly. She had held her tongue Countless Women find— that when suffering from nervousness, sick headache, J dizzy spells and ailments peculiar to their sex— nothing affords such prompt and welcome relief, as will follow a few doses of BEKHAM'S PILLS A proven women's remedy, which assists in regulating the organs, and re-establishing healthy conditions. Beecham's Pills contain no habit-forming drug —leave no disagreeable after-effects. They are— Nature's aid to better Health •' Sdl Vl. t* VIM arc with mir bra. Sola nirjrwkwb la boa**, lOt, 25c. !/ ~ " A ti'dty UNION MADE THOMAS P. MORAN V. 1 I GEORGE H. SQURBIER k FUKERAL DIRECTOR 1810 NsHh Third Strati ISuh-eji loud Clean I Keeps the Skin Soft and Velvety In Kough Weather. An Kxquisite Toilet Prep aration, 25c. UOKUAS' Dltl!G STOKES 1Q N. Third St., and I*. It. It. station __ CLASSIFIED BUSINESS PIKEGTOrtIT llii.tua kut UMI AAU tVUMUii TO Ufe.l lUKn Artificial Lliuln and Trusses Braces tor all deformities, abdoiuloai supporter*. Capital City Art. Luuio Co. i ilk Market St. Hell flione. ('reach Cleanla* and U>elng Goodman's, tailoring and repairing, all guaranteed. Call and deliver. Bell phone lautyj N. Sixth St. Klre Insurance and Iteal fcisiats J. E. Ulpple—Fire Insurance— tteal Ks _ate—lteul Collecting IX6I Market St. Bell pnuue. Tailor* George K. Shope, Hilt Tailor. 1241 Mar. keu Kali goods are now ready. Signs and Hnamel setters I Poulton, :iO7 Market street. Bell phone. 1 Proinot and elnvlent service. HARRISBURG flffifcflfl TELEGRAPH through all this time, knowing, out of the ashes of her own buried past, that Tavy must light this first battle by herself. Silently she had followed, step by step, through all the mazes of Tavy's reasoning and her emotion, and she had been prepared, for the heart of Tavy had been her heart, for this conclusion. "I hope you may never see him again," she said. They had silently been putting away their plteously i wasted iineries, but now she drew j Tavy into a chair and sat before her. | "Tavy dear, the time has come when ! I I must myself deal you a blow which J I had hoped always to spare you. If ; I did not know what I know, J would j say, too, that we should iind Billy, | and take care of him, and save him : from ever again falling u victim to that loathsome disease which gripped him to-night; but no young man who could, under any circumstances, arrive at the state in which Billy presented himself here, is worth the appalling danger of saving. He is not worth the absolute sacrifice of any beautiful young girl's entire life." Tavy half rose. She made a move as if to speak, but her mother silenc ed her with a gesture. Jean Stuart's face had lost every trace of its health ful hue, and there was a greenish cast beneath its gray. Bitter lines, erased by tifteen years of patient sweetness, had sprung out of their old hiding places around her nose and mouth, and into her eyes had come that spir itual deadness which follows the ruth less mangling and crushing of the soul. It was a face the commands ; of which were carried out by awe; land Tavy sat back in her chair, with i a vague horror of something worse to come creeping into her mind. "Tavy dear. I am going to destroy, because I must, a pride which I have fostered in you for iifteen years. I am going to destroy the noblest ideal of your life, up to this time. I am going to strip the veil of hero wor- I ship from the name you most revere. ' I am going to tell you the story of a ! drunkard. I do not know if he is living or dead, but I loved him as j you love Billy, and I shall still love him when I die; and that drunkard j was Harrison Stuart, your father!" CHAPTER XVIII Ucraltline, The Comforter The round moon slipped down out i of the sky and sank behind the Jersey ! hills, and with its disappearance | came blackness, except for that faint, vague trace of glow in the western I horizon. Up from the sleeping city ! there came now the plodding and the | rumble of the very earliest stirring of 1 drowsy life; huge, dim wagons drawn I by stolid thick-necked, heavy-rumped, ! big-footed horses; a. lonely elevated j train rattled and clattered in the dis ! tance with sharp clearness, and pre sently another, the intervals between | them growing less as the darkness deepened. A far-off clock chimed the j hour, a policeman's shrill whistle, the ! sound of running feet, silence again; then long, slow, dragging minutes. In i the east a faint radiance began to appear, not a streak of light, but a : lesser blackness, and with its coming, | the bent figure in the window j straightened and sighed. The standing i figure, at the window in the other end I of the lounging-room, moved. "Hadn't you better go to bed, sir?" ' Burke extraordinary tall and spectre j like in his heavy striped robe. "No, I think not." John Doe, his | voice quiet, full of patience. "The | nights are still a little chilly. Burke." "Yes, sir." The hint was enough, j Burke touched a match to the paper | and kindlings in the big fireplace, and, |as the flames leaped up, the first i light since midnight came into the big ! lounging-room. and revealed the old , man as still dressed, from pumps to j white tie, just as he had been when jhe came in from the theater. It had been a very dull show, and the fold ing opera glasses still lay on the table. They had not been used. Box A had been empty! Burke looked at his watch, then he went into the pantry. Presently he came back with a tray, and stop ped at the mantel. He set up a glass of the green liquid, and stood and looked at it a moment, then he crossed to John Doe with his tray. "I thought you might like a cup of hot coffee sir." "Thank you." The old man drew a tabourette beside him, but his eyes were fixed on the glass of green liquid on the mantel. Neither of them said j anything more. Burke set the tray : on the tabourette. and went back to | his post at the window in the far end iof the room, leaning, in tall ease, j against the casing, and ' gazing som berly down into the street, with its j long perspective of lonely lights. The dawn was advancing now; there ; was a dull red streak in the east, al most sullen in its heaviness; there | was a mist in the air. It would be a ■ gloomy day.' John Doe sipped at his j coffee in silence. j There was the click of a key in the i latch. Burke straightened instantly | and turned. John Doe set down his I coffee. The door swung open, and i Billy stood, for a moment, framed | against the dim light of the hall. His i liair was matted upon his forehead j with the dampness of the night, his i cravat was awry, his face was hag : gard, but his eyes, though there was I a hollowness about them, were clear and steady, and his mouth was lirm. He swayed as he stepped into the room and closed the door behind him but it was from weariness. He walked across to the table, and, as Burke strode forward to meet him' he handed over his hat and gloves' and let Burke divest him of his top i coat. "You haven't been sitting up all j night, Hal?" His voice was husky, and there was a deadness in it which fitted j with the deadness of his eyes. He I reached for a cigaret. The decanter 1 GIRLS IN SCHOOL OR AT BUSINESS who are delicately constituted, who have thin blood or pale cheeks, will find in SCOTT'S i EMULSION a true tonic and a rich food to overcome tiredness, nourish f their nerves and feed their blood. Start with SCOTT'S to-day—and say "NO" to substitutes. TUTjME'lHflll.lT TT I 11 1 ANNA HELD says: The boys in the trenches expressed such a preference for Adams Black Jack Chewing Gum that I forward some every month. was in front of the matches, and he j moved it to one side. "Yes, I couldn't sleep. 1 turned out the lights and went into the bedroom, | but J came back." He had risen rom | his chair, and stood gazing at Billy' in wonder, a half light of Joyous hope , in his face. "Vou didn't go to the ! theater." "No," and a spasm of pain crossed j Billy's features, as the sudden real- I ization smote him that he had fore-1 ed a night of misery on Hal, as well i as on Hal's wife and daughter. He j lit his cigarette arid glanced at Burke. That handy man, broadly de- ] lighted, took his glass of green liquid I from the mantel, and left the room j with a light footstep, every tousled ! red hair on his head alive with his I gratification. Billy was sober; cold sober! Billy rose, and walked slowly over I to the mantel and leaned upon It, ! staring down Into the lire, the old ! man studying him in anxious silence, j "It's all off, Hal," he said, in the I even, dead tone which had come out of his night of miserable wandering. 1 His hand hung limply by his side, i "I went up to the house to-night— drunk!" "Billy!" The hand closed stiffly, and then it opened again. He compressed his lips and compelled himself to steadi ness. There had been no reproach j In the old man's voice. Billy had been j prepared for reproach, prepared to i accept it l'or his Just due; but lie | had not been prepared for that tone j I of pity. "I went up there after nine o'clock," jho went numbly on. "I stood In the j doorway, drunk. They were ail dress ;ed for the theater. Tavy's mother gave me back the ring; then she closed the door." j "Jean! Jean!" The cry burst from I the old man's lips as if he had been I seared by sudden lire. Again Jean had met her grizzly enemy face to 1 face, again she had been pursued and [tortured by that ghastly demon which 1 i had wrecked and embittered her life!) | His whole thought, in that llrst real j ization of the picture, was for her. ! ] Then for Tavy, Ills little Tavy, with | the big glowing eyes and the glossy j black curls. Even to her this hideous monster must show its loathsome face! I "She was dressed in white, pure | white," went on Billy, in that nion- I otonously inflexible voice; "just soft ' and clinging white, with no adorn : ment around her beautiful white neck: i I had selected a string of pearls which I had intended to give her for a wed ; ding present." Again he closed and opened the hand which hung at his | side. "Her black curls were caught' In with .t band of lilies of the valley." I "And Jean?" Even now Hal dwelt with eager hunger on the visuallza- j tion of her, on anything which would . | bring a new picture of her to his! ! mind. "All In black, Hal. She was very I beautiful." There was u long. lons silence ba JANUARY 15, 1917. j tween thorn, then, with u sigh, Billy went into Ills own room. There wore days liko this), days of numb Buffering, in which neither ] man talked much; The blight which : had fallen upon them all was too big and too devastating for words to ; case. Billy rose early, and worked I hard, and spent his nights at home : with Hal and Tommy; silent evenings i given over to fits of brooding and to j stolid application. Hal was revising ! the proofs on the new book, and Billy brought home, each night, some ! drawing on which he could toi! when j the moment came In which he must ; not think. Tommy, voting them both deadly bores, merely sat, the most of I the time. Billy had made no attempt Ito see Tavy, he had made no effort at futile apology, he had written no I despairing letters to be returned, and, j day by duy, dull despondency settled | upon htm, until the need of comfort, more than Tommy could give became desperately imperative. It was then that he went to see Geraldine. What a blessing it was to have a i good. steadfast friend like Geraldine! j She greeted Billy with all the old 'gaiety, and all the old, frank fond . ness, and she listened In sympathetic CASTORIA For Infants ami Childrm. Bears the The Kind You Haw Always Bought . ' j patience to his tale of abject misery. | When he had finished, she laughed; ' j and he had not seen in her eyes, nor • did he see now the glitter of her sat i isfaction and the dreaminess of her i speculation. He could not divine how < eagerly she had waited for this mo j ment, longed for the opening. Sh® ! had known positively that it would i come? 'j ( "It isn't a tragedy, Billy," she heart ; | ily assured him. "Tavy's too sweet a girl to hold out against you for so slight an offense." "Slight!" Billy was horritled. "Why, ' 1 don't believe you realize yet, Ger . aldine, what I did!" "Why not? You did the same thing here." Billy knotted his brows. It wait the samo, wasn't It? Exactly. Only somehow It seemed vastly different. Not being able to express the differ ence, he gave it up. "You don't know the circum j stances." he soberly told her. "Thera i are reasons why Mrs. Stuart will never II forgive ire." (To be continued) 5