Sure Way to Get Rid of Dandruff There is one sure way that never fails to remove dandruff completely and that Is to dissolve it. This de stroys it entirely. To do this, just get about four ounces of plain, or dinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring; use enough to mois ten the scalp and rub it in gently with the linger tips. Iff morning, most if not all, of your C- l U'*ruff will be gone, and three or Tour more applications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no mat ter how much dandruff you may have. You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop in stantly, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. Tou will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop instantly, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive, and four ounces is all you will need. This simple, remedy has never been known to fail. QUIT MEAT WHEN KIDNEYS BOTHER Take a glass of Salts if your Back hurts or Bladder troubles you. No man or woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which excites the kidneys, they become overworked from the strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisons from the blood, then we get sick. Nearly I 1 rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nervousness, dizziness, sleep lessness and urinary disorders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, stop eating meat and get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any phar macy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast and in a few days your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com bined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and Rti/iu late the kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive and can not injure; makes a delightful effer vescent lithia-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney complications. SHE DARKENED HER GRAY HAIR ♦ A Kansas City lady Darkened Her Gray llair and Made It Soft and Glossy by a Simple Home Process. Slie Tells How She Did It. A well-known resident of Kansas City, Mo., who darkened her gray hair by a simple home process, made the following statement: "Any lady or gentleman can darken their gray or faded hair and make it soft and glossy with this simple recipe, which they can mix at home. To half a pint of water add 1 oz. of bay rum, 1 small box of Barbo Compound and M oz. of glycerine. These ingredients can be purchased at any drug store at very little cost. Apply to the hair every other day until the gray hair is darkened sufficiently. It is not sticky or greasy and does not rub off. It will make a gray haired person look 10 to 20 years younger." If Stomach Hurts Drink Hot Water A I'hnlclan'i Advice "If dyspeptics, sufferers from gas, wind or flatulence, stomach acidity or sourness, gastric catarrh, heartburn, etc., would take a teaspoonful of pure bisurated magnesia in half a glass of hot water immediately after eating, they would soon forget they were ever afflicted with stomach trouble and doctors would have to look elsewhere for patients." In explanation of these words a well known New York physi cian stated that most forms of stomach trouble are due to stomach acidity and fermentation of the food contents of the stomach combined with an insuf ticient blood supply to the stomach. Hot water increases the blood supplv and bisurated magnesia instantly neutral izes the excessive stomach acid and stops food fermentation, the combina tion of the two, therefore, being; mar velously successful and decidedly pre ferable to the use of artificial digest cnts. stimulants or medicines for indi gestion. G. A. Gorgas can supply you.—Ad vertisement. Antiseptic For Catarrh KilU (W Catarrhal Germs and Quickly Cure*. Doesn't Cost Much Stomach dosing will not cure catarrh. To get relief and cure it is necessary to treat with harmless antiseptic and air passages of the nose .throat and lungs. This is done best with antiseptic Won deroil, a simple, herbal preparation tliat is applied at night and cures while you sleep. In addition to its antiseptic qualities that kill the germ of catarrh poison, it has healing properties that soothe almost immediately the Irritated membrane. Antiseptic Wonderoil costs onlv a trifle and you can Ret liberal sized packages for 25c and 50 from George A Gorgas with a guarantee to refund money if not satisfactory. It stops all aches and cures inflammation and pain not only of catarrh, but many other troubles. —Advertisement. iR. D.PRATT Eyesight Specialist FORMERLY at 807 N. THIRD STREET Removed to 26 N. Third St. Schlclsncr Building Use Telegraph Want Ads TUESDAY EVENING, THE ENEMY —BY— GIi#)RGE RANDOLPH CHESTER & LILLIAN CHESTER AutkM *f "THE BALI. OF FIIIB," etc. Copyright, 1918. Newspaper Right!, Hearst International Library. International Feature Service. (Continued) This was Billy's first outing with Tavy and Tavy's mother, his first meeting, in fact, since that wonder ful time, three days before, when he found Tavy in the little park and caught her in his arms; and Billy, for all his happiness, was grave and thoughtful, too, for he realized that he was merely allowed to call, not rqally desired; that is, by one of the ladies. He felt keenly that he must be on his good behavior, so he auto matically remembered, now and then, to smile at Mummy Stuart and speak a pleasant word; but this was difficult. Tie was very fond of Mummy Stuart; but he had been separated from Tavy for so long; and love is selfish, as it must always be; and mothers have lived their lives; and the world is for the young! Was there ever such a place as Woodbrier, where the wild flowers tangle in the grass, and a choir of birds sines, unceasingly; where soft breezes come to ruffle the surface of the glossy little lake, and whisper wonderful secrets in the swaying blanches of the trees; and where all the food and drink is nectar and am brosia,' when one is a Billy and has a Tavy by his side. What was that which sparkled and glittered and danced, with a thou sand flashing colors, on Tavy's hand? The ring: It was placed there, in the enchanted pink and gray parlor, just before the start for Woodbrier, but with the distinct uniJerstanding that it was the symbol of Billy's strength, and that when Billy's strength should vanish, the ring should vanish, never to return! Such an easy condition that, by which to place a ring of such glorious significance on the finger of such a marvelous girl as Tavy; and now here was the ring, 'happy, too, it seemed, catching the blue of the sky and the green of the leaves and the red of the charming motor-bon net and the gold of the sun, and all the other countless tints and shades from far and near, and darting them in all directions, as if it were a foun tain of sparks. Mrs. Stuart, watching Billy and Tavy, and seeing how happy they were in each other, relented a little of her grimness. He was a fine-look ing young fellow, manly, wholesome, honorable, trustworthy. Could it be possible that her own bitter experi ence had warped her judgment and made her harsh? Perhaps. It was not unlikely. Billy might turn out to be entirely safe, and, if so, little Tavy would be happy all her life, and that was all which was to be de sired. At any rate, he had his sec ond chance, and he should not be cramped by unsympathetic reserve. That is not the best help which an anxious and eager young man can h SY e ' one who is sturdily bound to do right, one who, clear down in the honest heart of him, wishes to de serve approbation. So Tavy's mother, having had plenty of time to think all these things, while the lovers were with many words saying nothing at all to each other, at last seized on one of those instants \fhen Billy paused to look at her and smile politely. She leaned forward, and there was a dell cate flush upon her cheeks, for the settling of things and the ride had done lier good. •Til have to confess that I have these little outings, Billy." I here was not much more needed to make young- Lane's happiness com plete and unalloyed. That was the first genuinely friendly word Tavy's mother had said to him; but it was not the last. She was very pleasant indeed during that wonderful dinner and when the odd lanterns were lit and the sun had faded away, and the song of the birds had died in sleepy goodnight chirps, and there were Headaches Yielded to Master Medicine Suffered With Them for Years And Could Get No Relief Until He Took Tanlac NOW FEELS LIKE NEW "I suffered for years with chronic heatiaches," says George Stewart, a porter at Kresge's, who lives at 1124 Herr St., Harrisburg, Pa., "and al though I tried all sorts of drugs and medicines I never could get more than temporary relief until I started Tan lac and that chased my headaches like a dog chasing a cat. "I suffered a lot from indigestion, too, my appetite wasn't good and somehow food didn't appeal to me very much maybe because I knew that whate\ er I ate would disagree with me and cause me hours and sometimes days of intense suffering. In fact I felt regularly down and out. 1 seemed to ache all over, par ticularly in my back and shoulders and 1 couldn't seem to get a good night s rest but used to wake up in the morning feeling as if I couldn't drag myself through the day. "But Tanlac's great stuff for It fixed me up in two shakes of a lamb's tail. Headaches and every other ache just melted away; my stomach woke up and my appetite came back and I can now pull up to the table and eat with the best of them. "And sleep! I sleep like a log and wake up in the morning fresh as a daisy. Fine medicine that Tanlac— everybody ought to use it for what ails Uliem." Tanlac, the famous reconstructive tonic, is now being introduced here at Gorgas Dru* Store, where the Tanlac man is meeting the people and ex plaining the merits of this master medicine. Tanlac Is sold also at the Gorgas Drug Store in the I'. R. R Station. i HOW TO GET RELIEF FROM CATARRH I If you have catarrh, catarrhal I deafness, or head noises go to your druggist and get 1 oz. of Parmint (double strength), take this home and add to it '4 pint of hot water and 4 oz. of granu lated sugar. Take 1 tablespoon ful 4 times a day. This will often bring nulck re- > lief from the distressing; head T noises. Clogged nostrils should I open, breathing become easy and T the mucous stop dropping Into <> T the throat. I It is easy to make, tastes 1 pleasant and costs little. Every i one who has catarrh should grive I this treatment a trial. You will I probßbly find it-is just what you t need. ! stars in the glassy little lake, and soft music from somewhere around the mysterious leaf-hidden corner, why, Elysium could offer no advan tage ov.er Woodbrier! Then there was the ride home, back through the magic forests, and the elfin roads, and the fairy streets, to the enchanted apartment, where Mrs. Stuart was thoughtful enough to al low the enchanted couple a long, blissful hour all by themselves. Only once did Mummy Stuart break the pleasant let-bygones-be-bygones spirit which she had assumed for the young man's benefit, and that was when, on bidding him goodnight, she held his hand for a moment and looked earn estly and wistfully into his eyes, and said: "Remember, Billy, never again; never!" And Billy, with his whole heart and his whole soul and with all his pur pose of high honor in his eyes, re peated after her; "Never again, never!" When Mrs. Stuart had gone to her own room, she wondered at the tre mendous amount of laughing and whispering in the pink and gray par lor. Young people just on the verge of blissful unknown seas were given to whispering perhaps, but not to so much free and joyous laughing; but not many young people in their cir cumstances had such an amazing secret to hide from a mother. Their entire hour was spent in talking about the perfect house which was to be bought and furnished, for the home coming of the royal princess. And that was nearly the whole of the bur den of the love making. The very next day Billy secured Tavy for a drive, all by himself, and the first place they went was to the office of William Lane, where they secured, %vithout a particle of coaxing, the company of a distinguished look ing elderly gentleman with waving hair and a neatly trimmed silver Vandyke, and a far-away suggestion of imps in his dark gray eyes, and a nugget of joy in his heart so big and so bright that it glowed right up through his countenance. A ridiculous thing transpired, when they were all three in the car. Billy had a list of houses; but so had the distinguished-looking elderly gentle man; but so had Tavy! And whose list did they go to see first? How loolish it would be to answer the question. That was a glorious afternoon, too, an afternoon of boundless happiness! Of course, not one of the houses was quite good enough for the royal princess. They never are, on the first day, but there were other days to come, days of just such tremendous enjoyment as this. Two nights later, there was another big secret for Tavy to keep. Tavy and Mummy Stuart and Billy went to the theater, and she knew exactly , lo , ok> away in corner under the balcony, for the distinguish ed-looking gentleman with a pair of folding opera glasses, who stared at Thn 1 ? i al i throuh the show. That was the hardest secret of all to keep, for Tavy could not forbear ? nd nodding to the distin guished-looking elderly gentleman whenever Mummy Stuart's back was and once she waved her hand uo ? £ a doßen times she as nearly caught, and altogether it m ? Bt en J°> ab 'e. exciting and ecstatic and nervous evening she had ever passed! Part of the joy of It too was that Billy was constantly on pins and needles for fear that she wou?d be discovered, and once or twice he 7l OS L° n th point of usin sheer foice to keep Mummy Stuart from looking steadfastly in that direction It amused Tavy to see him so busy davs lTe aS a-n 6d t( ? being busy these flajs. He was so busy, in fact that not until a full week after his rein n£„ e t me i1 t , the en °hanted apart- Gerafdine Carry lhe good news to Before going out to the Benning house he telephoned, and when he arrived he found Oeraldine in the quaintly screened summer-house at the end of the pergola, dressed in something light and fluffy, and sug "S.ir"?;." 10 " ot ° " ardcn or hands she held out to him. "Tavy took me back!" Ny "Yes, so Tommy told me." She was s " el sympathetic with his happi ness smiling with pleasure at his good fortune. "Tommy says you have to behave, though," and she laughed Billy WerC a splendld Juke on m r"° U T. bet I * d .°* or u ' s a " of with . lle sat . in the hammock be side het, and rumpled his hair, a way he had when he was excess! velv hap py or excessively worried. "Ger aldine, I m the luckiest fellow in the world. I have such splendid friends my business is good, and Taw is positively the most beautiful, the most charming, the most •• all about if interrupted Geraldine, with a laugh which the £ J* r u not stop to analyze. If he nit "t£ Ul<l haV ® fountl the ulle it, t orn ay you are only taken back on approval " "That's putting it." He was quite cheerful about it. "But that's the same as unconditional, for there's no danger of me doing anything to make them send me away. Why. Geraldine. a y y * there's no chance that I could make a break! She Is the cleverest, the sweetest, the say; hasn't she the most wonderful Gerald inn scarcely heard him. She had been pondering deeply, but when strncUon Cttmo out ° r her ab " "ies, hasn't she? You're not drink mKiMK at all, are you, Billy''" "Not whisky," he replied, with a shake of his head. "I'm afraid of it If I were to get a taste of it, I'd drink all there Is. Why, Geraidine, I've even wanted it! I've had to fight it; and If I ever get drunk again, I get back the ring for keeps." Again Geraidine fell into a brown brightly. Presently she lo °ked up "By the way, Billy, I nearly forgot. I was going to give a party for Taw and you, when you interrupted the program. Suppose'we make it the seventeenth?" CHAPTER XXV The Gayest Xight of Tavy's Ute How can any one In the world be so fluttenngly happy as a Tavy Stuart, and contain it all? Why, this is her . , IT/ 11 part >': a "d such a partv it is. Jhe big Benning house blazes from every window and, wherever one goes there is the buzz of gay con versation, the sounds of gay laughter the strains of gay music. Tavy wants lo say that it is like a fairyland, but lliat word scarcely seems adequate, for she lias seen so many fairvlands of late, and this is so much bigger. BXRRISBURG TKLEGFUiPH j[ Qyfmericas Greatest light Six"* | I Q/Trnericas Greatest 'Light Twelve" Haynes 191Y models advance at least SIOO on February Ist —there will be no further changes in models Other "Sixes" have already No motor excels the Haynes advanced The Haynes, at the increased cost, will repre- Weeks, even months ago, other ent an unparalled investment. For this is the makers raised their prices. One man- "iod*l which for three years has been so success ufacturer of "Sixes" has advanced "to !y minor refinement., prices nearly SBOO in nine months for A „ JJ® :^ e L^ t ' fH hl ? h peedoto r actually ; j i /\,L i ■ • • develops more power than anv other engine of ■ the same model. Other cars bear higher equ ,i bore and stroke (sj< in. x 5 in). With *- prices today than purchasers of similar changed gear ratio, it will give yon sixty miles models paid but a short while ago. P cr bour tllcn "snake along" at under a mile The H.y„ m .y bebought £££ S^SS^ZST^wir"fc?S lo! th< same money that it cost about standing start ill teren and one-half seconds, and a year ago. But this unusual oppor- pull yon through hub-deep roeds for miles with tunity ends at midnight, January 81st. uut <>Ter-heating. Higher costs for 1917 materials force Mind you, we .peak of the regular stack US, on February Ist, to increase our Haynes motor —the very same motor that you prices at least SIOO. will find bene * th hood - Worth S3OO more by present ou can a^or d to run a Haynes standards Thousands of times in the past two years the , , , , . , . astonishingly low npkeep cost of the Haynes We have bwn urged onmaiyr tides to advance " Ligh t Six" has been demonstrated. 8,000 Hayne.pr.ees I*oo or SBOO. men on w h , h mj , #nd , are have told us Other makers are doing it. The rule. The big, powerful, beautiful Havne, actually Hayne. always ha. been too low-pnced for the the economy record, of the smaller car*, quality you put into it. Haynes ears, even at SSOO more, are a bargain when you laok over Sam* jf Ipast 11 HO rim the field and .ee how other ear. hare jumped 00 th ® in price." 1917 Models "No" has been onr reply to all uch urging.. A few day. remain until February Ist. Then We have refused point-blank to take advantage the price for the identically same Haynes which of rising costs as an excu*e to boost' our prices your dealer offers you today, will be at least more than necessary. SIOO more. I For the time being the additional amount which What few thing, may be bought today at the we shall add will corer our increased costs, and same prices which prevailed about a year back? we shall use the same quality materials, the same What other latest type "Six", for example, enn skilled workmanship, the same care as heretofore. you still obtain at the old price? Is it not worth while to investigate the local performances of Haynes cars during these neat few days that yon may decide prior to February Ist on the purchase of one, rather than to pay at least SIOO more for the tame car a little later? THE HAYNES AUTOMOBILE COMPANY, Kokomo, Indiana The following prices advance at least SIOO on all orders placed after January 31st: "Light Six"—Open Cmrt "Light Tttxdoe"■—Open Can rt*e-|>ammecr Tr+nv Car l mwfmn Tonrtac Car - - . - - |i Konr-pammicr Soadater - - - - - IMS F N rpmmrkMMw - - - . - *os S*en pmmbsw Toartßf Car .... IMS S—•a-pafnf ToortoyQr ..... mm Closed Cars 'ty \ Clo—d Cart Swton SUM trmt Sxni.piim|vMu ...... mm Sm>-a*Mcr Sedan ...... tTM a a s. '■ t. I MM MILLER AUTO CO. jg , 68 S. Cameron Street BELL PHONE, mo Harrisburg, Pa. and grander, and finer, than every thing she had ever dreamed! Everybody is so nice to Tavy, too! There is always a dozen or more of the boys and girls around her, and their admiration is frank and sincere. Dimpled little Dolly Parsons has fal len dead in love with her fresh young beauty, with her delicately tinted complexion, and her luminous big dark 'eyes? and her black curls, all enchanted by the simple little white chiffon gown, with its sleeves so ab surdly short that they are scarcely any sleeves at all, just like puffs, re vealing her beautifully tapering arms, and her graceful neck. So dimpled little Dolly, who is fair and fairy-like, clings to Tavy from the minute they are introduced, and the two smallest young ladies at the party sweep every thing before them, and are the center of a jolly group wherever they move. Geraldine had planned a merry little trick. She had intended to post all her friends to surround Tavy through out the evening so that the newly engagod couple should not have a clianco for a word with each other, but Tavy had arrived, with Billy, be fore she had time to carry out that idea, and now it is quite unnecessary; for Tavy had become instantly popu lar, and Geraldine should be highly pleased. In fact, she says that she is, as she passes the door of the danc ing-room on the arm of Billy. "I'm so proud to introduce Tavy to The Quinine That Does Not Cause Nervousness or Ringing in Head Because of its Tonic and Laxative effect, LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE can be taken by anyone without causing nervousness or ringing in the head. It removes the cause of Colds, Grip H Headache. Used whenever Quinine is needed. —but remember there is Only One "Bromo Quinine" That ie the Original Laxative Bromo Quinine This Signature on Every Box j l£*£*o. Cc>. S/• £fo-crvE^- our friends. It hasn't taken her'long to win them." If there is in this a covert hint that Tavy has been forward, or pre sumptuous, in charming all these friends of their so quickly, Billy is as unconscious of it as he is of Ger aldine's stunning Egyptian costume, old blue and gold, with a glittering dark tiara in her burnished copper hair. It is the handsomest and most becoming gown at the party, and yet Tavy's simple little frock of pearl white chiffon seems to be startingly effective. How fortunate for Tavy. "Isn't she stunning!" says William Lane, not the least bit jealous that Tavy is constantly surrounded so that he cannot get near her; and clear across the room, as her big eyes look toward him, he sends her a wave which is so .redolent of pride that the Egyptian young lady hurries him on past the door. She doesn't have so many opportunities to enjoy Billy as she used. Here comes Tommy Tinkle, his familiar whimsical grin much in evi dence, and he edges into Tavy's chat tering bevy, and surveys her triumph in huge delight. "My dance, Ringlets." He has a nick-name for everybody, has Tom my. "It's the Moukowa," and he and Tavy have their own sly laugh over this announcement; for Tommy and Billy have been up to the en chanted apartments every night for JANUARY 23, 1917. : the past two weeks, teaching Tavy all the latest dances, and the Jloukowa ' has been the most difficult to learn, i because it is the ugliest and least i graceful. "Are you having a good lime?" asks Tommy, as he leads her out on the : floor. "Blissful" she happily confesses, and a little fluttering sigh attests . how profoundly she means that word. "It is well," approves Tommy. "May you never be less happy than to-night is the wish of your true friend, T. TinKle. To be continued in our next. Now watch that tricky skip step at the turn, for there wo start to Moukow." "I suppose you're not oven touch ing pink lemonade, Billy." It is Ger aldinc, in the supper-room, and she pauses at the buffet where stands a great bowl of purple punch. "If you mean this stuff, I'm not fond enough of it to drink enough to hurt me," laughs Billy. "What's in it?" "Goodness only knows," smiles Ger aldlne. "Father made it himself, and it's probably weird." She hands him two of the cut glass cups, and he ladles the punch into them, hands *■ ! - I'm your friend at all times and you can call on me for a nickel. My name is KING OSCAR and you can find me most any where. Just try me! > JOHN C. HERMAN & CO., Makers > < 11 Gcraldine her glass, and tastes from his own. "Practically a beverage, not a drink." I-Ie tastes it again. "Rather refreshing, though." He empties his glass and sets it down, and, for lust an instant, there is a flash in Ger aldine's eye. The drink is quite harm less, but it leaves a pleasant little tang on the tongue, which promotes thirst for more. Aiyl this is what Three-B Benning considers an ideal requisite in a punch for young folks' parties, since gallons of it would not make a headache. (To be continued) FOR THROAT AND LUNGS ITUOBOIUV COUGHS AND MIDI ECKMAN'S ALTERATIVE •OLD UY ALL LICADING DRUGGIOTI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers