Prepare This for a Bad Cough—lt's Fine Ckeaply and Easily Made, bnt Don the Work Qalckl;. The finest couch syrup that money can buy,—costing only about one-fifth as much as ready-made preparations,—can easily be made up at home. The way it takes hold anu conquers distressing coughs, throat and chest colds will really make you enthusiastic about it. Any druggist can supply you with 2M> ounces of Fines (50 cents worth). Pour this into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar syrup. Shake thoroughly and it is ready for use. The total cost is about 54 cents and gives you a full pint—a family supply—of a most effectual, pleasant tasting remedy. It keeps per fectly. It s truly astonishing how quickly it acts, penetrating through every air passrge of the throat and lungs—loosens and raises the phlegm, soothes and heals the inflamed or swollen throat mem branes, and gradually but surely the Rirtioving throat tickle _ and dreaded cough will disappear entirely. _ Nothing better for bronchitis, spasmodic croup, whooping cough or bronchial asthma. Pinex is a special and highly concen trated compound of genuine Norwav pine extract, combined with guaiacol and is known the world over for its prompt healing effect on the throat membranes. Avoid disappointment by asking your druggist for "2'f> ounces of Pincx" with full directions and don't accept any thing else. A guarantee of absolute sat isfaction or money promptly refunded goes with this preparation. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. Embarrassed by Thinness? Tells How to Overcome Watery fc.cod, Thinness and Wasting. A Salient Extract From Yolk of Eggs in Hypo-Nuclaa* Tablets. Probably three million young men and women are subject to ridicule and ■embarrassment every day of their lives because of abnormal "skinny" arms, limbs and countenances. They wonder why they cannot become plump. The reason is, that nutritive processes need artificial aid until JS'ature catches up. Realizing this, a good physician obtained a salient ex tract from the yolks of eggs, com bined it with hypophosphites, iron and simple vegetable tonics, putting all in tablet form, and this wonder working nutritive-aid is now sold by druggists under the name of Hypo- Nuclane Tablets. One or two packages will prove how quickly they increase weight when taken with meals—if you weigh before beginning. Aiding nutrition brings increased red blood which de posits flesh elements throughout the body and 20 to 40 pounds in a few weeks is no uncommon result. Sold fcy druggists 90 cts., or direct from the laboratory of The Blackburn Products Co., Dayton, Ohio. CATARRH, ASTHMA AND BRONCHITIS VICTIMS ou One It to Yourself to Give thin Treatment n Trial You cannot afford to continue suffer- | ing when a proven remedy is within j your reach. Only those who have fal- I len victims to one or other of these dis tressing complaints knows the suffering ! entailed and how stubbornly they re*ist all forms of treatment. Temporary re- I lief may easily be had but permanent relief can only come when treated with Famous Forkola. The success which has attended the \ise of Forkola in the treatment of I Colds, Catarrh, Bronchitis, Tonsilitis, | Croup and Whooping Cough lias firmly established its value. l,ay aside all I doubt and distrust and do what thou- i sands of others have done. Go to your I druggist and get a small jar of Famous Forkola. Follow directions carefully. You will be surprised and delighted to tlnd how quickly it will relieve you. Your druggist or It. C. Kennedy cai. supply you.—Advertisement. Fat That Shows Soon Disappears Prominent fat that comes and stays where it Is not needed is a burden; a hindrance to activity, a .curb upon pleasure. You can take off the fat where it shows by taking after each meal and ut bedtime, one Marmola Prescription Tablet. These little tab lets are as effective and harmless as the famous prescription from which they take their name. Buy and try a case to-day. Your druggist sells them at 75 or if you prefer you may write direct to the Marmola Co., 864 Woodward Ave., Detroit, Mich. You can thus say good-bye to diet ing. exercise and fat. Kntrust your plating, polishing and art metal reflnishlng work to 11s and you will never be disap pointed. Gold and Silverware Refinished —Replated —brass and metal art work, also <lo oxydiziug and lacquering. Phone us and get our estimate. Bell Phone 2833 Harrisburg, Penna. EDUCATIONAL School of Commerce Troup UulldlnK 13 So. Market Sq. Day & Night School Bookkeeping* Shorthand, Menotypj, Typewriting and Penmanahlp Bell 485 Cumberlnnd 48-Y Harrisburg Business College A Reliable School, 31st Year XiU Market St. Harrlaburit, I'a. YOUNG MEN'S BUSINESS INSTITUTE Hcrshey Building TUESDAY EVENING, THE ENEMY —BY— George Randolph Chester and Lillian Chester Author of "THE BAI.I. OF FIRE," etc. Copyright. 1915. Hearst International Library. Newspaper Rights. International Feature Service. (Continued) Tommy was with the courting party a great deal these days, for he was lonely, and there was a somberness on him which needed much gaiety to relieve it. A change had come over him, and it was due to Ger aldine Benning. Since he had been a very small boy, (Tommy Tinkle had enshrined Geraldine in his heart as a goddess without flaw and without imperfection. Now that she had, with her own hand, shattered that idol into minute fragments, Tommy found an aching vacancy in his heart corres ponding exactly to the space the idol had occupied. So Tommy, for his gaiety, went, quite logically, to the place where there always brooded a somber specter which needed to be fought off with gaiety. By winter, however, the specter had ben driven well into the background, I and only now and then its shadow was seen in the patient blufe eyes of I Jean and in the luminous dark gray , eyes of Tavy; but sometimes, even in ' the happiest moments, an unexpected | word or sight would bring back a ' flash of hideous memory; and this is ' the price of wretchedness, that mem j ory never lets it die; it only slumbers. For the most part, however, there was nothing but joy in the enchant j ed apartments, and the endless cur rent of the river, passing the-cozy little | bay window, semd to be bearing to wards them only ecstasy. That had i been a glorious summer and Fall, J for never were two belles courted , more assiduously than Jean and Tavy | Stuart. There were the regulation | flowers and candy, and drives and picnics, and excursions and parties, | with Tommy Tinkle frequently, and ;in great glee, wielding the baton in this melodious quartette of love. These, however, were only the or dinary activities, provided by a pair of unusually ardent wooers. The great, the marvelous, the over-whelm ing enjoyment was the house of the royal princess! It had been bought, at last, and paid for out of Harri son Stuart's own earnings, a beau tiful little cottage, in sight of the river and within three-quarters of an hour of the city, and with ground enough to build another cottage; spacious lawns between, shaded by towering old trees. And for whom was that new cottage to be built? Billy and Tavy. of course! The plans were being finished, and it was to be erected while they were away for their six months' study of the archi tectural engineering of Rome, and Egypt, and Paris, and almost every where. So it was a very busy Jean and Tavy and Hal and Billy, and there were scarcely enough hours in the day to get through it all, what with the furnishing of the house for the, royal princess and the brain tearing problem of the new honey moon cotttage. For instance, should the billiard-room be just off the din ing-room, or would it be better to have it lead off the library? You see how important that could be, don't you? Then the tiny little pink and gold boudoir. Should it have latticed French windows, or Colonial? A trifling detail? Certainly not: for the solution to that tremendously im portant question would dominate the artistic treatment of the entire house! Of course, the men had business to look after, but the ladies were equally busy at those times, for there were trousseaux; two of them. And such wonderful hand embroidery was never wrought into filmy fabrics as that created by the patient fingers of Jean and the loving ones of Tavy; for now all the skill which had been lavished on the gay little court lady dolls was brought into urgent requis ition. As Jean worked, her eyes gVew constantly brighter, for they were set constantly asparkle by an agreeable gleam from her finger. Oh, yes, she wore a new diamond ring; one just like Tavy's. There was an added dignity on the night Tommy Tinkle presented the blue and pink boxes, for now they were ladies of business, with prop erty in their own names and money to make them independent. Careful and cautious ladies of business they were, for the very next day they bought safe and solid bonds which would yield t.hem a comfortable in come; while Hal and Billy, glowing with pride in this beautiful achieve ment, plunged furiously into work, so that they should not be behindhand when the flood of new commissions i overtook them. There was only one cloud in Billy's happiness; the floating dome itself. The congratulations he received among his fellow members of the pro fession "got on his nerves," and es pecially at the T-Beam Club, where, at his first appearance, they swallow ed their jealousy, and surrounded him with a solid phalanx of hearty good will. The floating dome was not a mere personal achievement; it was a gift to the profession; and for this. Bravo Billy! "Nothing like it!" Billy had all he could stand of obtaining praise under false pretenses. "I only wish I had devised the floating donie, but I can't take the credit for what doesn't belong to me. The thing was in vented by my partner, John Doc, and It's a corker!" "Then why isn't John Doe a mem ber of the T-Beam Club?" demanded jovial old Ainsley Pulham, the presi dent of the organization. "Bring him around." "All right," agreed Billy easily, knowing that Hal would not come for 1 Flashlight Group Photographs I Flashlight groups of Din ners, Banquets, etc., re quire special photographic equipment. Roshon, Har risburg's Leading Photog rapher, has acquired the Flashlight Photographic Kqulpment of the Dough ton .Studio and Is better | fitted than ever for flash j light work. Roshon the photographer 8 North Second St. Hillllilillllliilllilllllilllllllillllllllll WE want every one in Harrisburg who must purchase fur -3 V ■ niture between now and May Ist and who can make it S | convenient to purchase now, provided price inducement is- S | tempting enough, to visit this store during our February [0 Furniture Sale. We positively promise price concessions in Q S this sale that will convince the most skeptical that this will D 3 be the month of the whole year of 1917 for money saving u | values in Furniture. Ea a 15 PEt CENT. ' : " J! of the furniture now on our floors is priced on a basis that existed just prior to the last general advance | [Jj a which took place in the wholesale furniture market. Our old price tags remain on our furniture and in |TJ addition we have made a cut from these prices on nearly every piece of furniture in our store. This cer- Ll tainly is worth something to our customers. This is simply a plain statement of facts. We give our word |£| S that what we have said is absolutely the truth. We will be pleased to have you visit our store this month ■&£ and decide for yourself. g PICTURES ' g S Special display this month of pictures. Those who have been in this store within the past year will [jj not miss this display. See our special for February. Price $1,75. Largest and best pictures ever offered for this price. L 9 I MOWN 4 CO. | 1 • 121? ANB 1219 N. TURD ST. ' 0 □ma [OIIB QQ smmEMUS lamramiiHrciHnua another month; but this was the easiest way out ot it. To avoid further importunity, Billy staved away. During the following week, however, the name of John Doe grew and grew! The floating dome was not a matter to be taken lightly by those who so thoroughly understood and appreciated it; and, moreover, the firm of William Lane had become too important for any factor of its tremendous success to be overlooked! So. one bright noon-time, Ainsley Pulham with a jolly committee from the T-Beam Club, stormed the office of William Lane, and demanded of the snub-nosed office boy to see John Doe. They not only demanded this, but they followed right into the priv ate office of the dignified elderly gentleman with the silver Vandyke. "Mr. Doe, this is the handshaking committee of the T-Beam Club," vociferously announced the gayly shrivelled president. "Get acquainted. I'm Ainsley Pulham. This is Walter Hess, fat but sassy. Henry McCul lougli, The Beau Brummel of the club. Dick Morton, our best little drinker. T. M. Weatherby, famed as a sweet singer. Write us a check for a hun dred dollars, John Doe, and sign this application blank." "I'll send it to you," diplomatically evaded Mr. Doe, pushing back in his mind the painful memory of a dis graceful orgy and an expulsion at the T-Beam Club. When he again be came Harrison Stuart, his first act would be to reinstate himself there; so he would manage to hold off that application blank for three weeks. However, he shook hands pleasantly with Ainsley Pulham. No recognition in the keen blue eyes of Pulham. Walter Hess, a man new in these fif teen years. Henry McCullough. Wry, Henry had been a dapper boy, the I youngest member, in the long past time. Dick Morton; rollicking, care less, devil-may-care Dick, at whose elbow — "By George, it's Harrison Stuart! Dick Morton's voice thrilled with joy. The years had taken the hair from him, "and robbed his cheeks of their ruddiness, and put gold in his teeth, and rounded him with prosperity; but thev had not touched the heart nor the spirit of him; and here was Dick, shaking both of his old crony's hands, and slapping him on the back, and pushing him around to T. M. Weatherby, and Ainsley Pulham and Henry McCullough, for further hand shaking and back slapping and vocif erous welcome. Why, it was Harrison Stuart come back! Stuart, the daddy of them all, the most glittering name in the pro fehsion, the authority, even after fif teen years, on the fundamentals of constructional Iron work! Harrison Stuart! Why, God bless us. old man, there's only a few of us left, but we hold in our hearts and our memories In affection and pride! Ves, they did, in spite of all that he had done, they held him in their memories and in their hearts with af fection and pride; and here they were, crowding around him with such a pandemonium of welcome that the snub-nosed office boy debated ser iously the turning in of a riot alarm. No such disgraceful proceeding had occurred in that office since earnest young William Lane had started to pay more rent than he could afford. "Now you can't get out of It! You have to come!" Alnsloy Pulham, and he was jamming Harrison Stuart's hat on his head, rear side foremost. They backed him into his coat, they jostled him out of the office by main strength, they thrust him into an elevator, and downstairs, all of them laughing and howling like schoolboys, Harrison Stuart laughing with them, though there were tears In his eyes. They crowded into a machine, and whizzed away for lunch at the T- Beam Club! CHAPTER XXXI Honor Upon Honor "The quivering question which agl- HARRISBURG !&£&£& TELEGRAPH tates me is what will Tavy wear?" This was the greeting of Tommy Tinkle, as ho entered the enchanted pink and gray apartments, with a roll of evening papers under his arm. "Where?" Tavy stopped embroid ering a violet on something which looked suspiciously like a yachting collar, and Jean Stuart came hurry ing in from the adjoining room with an embroidery frame in one hand and a work basket in the other. "Tom my Tinkle, where!" "To the banquet." Tommy aggra vatingly sat in the bay window, with a nonchalant appearance of not mean ing to give any more information un til it was dragged out of him. "What banquet?" "At the Hotel Nabob. Pleasant weather, isn't it? Looks like snow." Mrs. Stuart laughed and sat down opposite Tommy. She came into the parlor every time she heard his voice, for fear he might say something funny and she not hear it. Tavy took a deliberately painstak ing stitch in her violet, and affected as great a degree of indifference as Tommy Tinkle. "A little warm for snow, don't you think?" she drawled. Another pain staking stitch. "Still, it was snow ing this time last year. I like the snow, don't you? Tommy Tinkle, if you don't tell me all about this ban quet, I'll scream!" "Then I'll wait until you do," and the aggravating Tommy lit a cigar ette, "Oh; 1 might add that the ban quet is to be given by the T-Beam COLD rain driven by a pierc-" tfSßi ing wind chills you to the ILWJBMiI! marrow and starts the l|||||l twinges of rheumatism in that old spot or perhaps a new one. ||fT®f Exposure starts the pains and aches, but Sloan's Liniment stops them— and so easy to apply too —it penetrates quickly without rub- \ bing, cleaner and more con- II \ venient than plasters or mussy ointments, it does not clog the ""■■MPW'PHr"" pores or stain the skin. liffTTtT 1 L *"*! Stiff joints, sore muscles, that |]| grippy feeling all disappear with 'ft jjjj the application of Sloan's Lini- : jc| II VII VI ri k gu ment. Rheumatism, neuralgia, ill 111 11U I■k I ■ |f: lame back, cramped muscles, Club." Ho cast a sly glance in the i i direction of Jean Stuart. She had ! • dropped her embroidery frame in her I lap, and was gazing at Tommy with | quiet patience. She remembered the j ] T-Beam Club! "There will be just i i a few guests in the ladies' gallery af-1' ter the coffee, and I'm wondering if j Tavy wHI wear one of the new trous- j seau gowns, or just a regular frock.' l Oh; I might add that the banquet I' is to be in honor of Harrison Stuart." ] "Tommy!" cried Tavy. "They've ' found him out!" "Everything. They know that he ' invented the floating dome. They know that he's Billy's partner. The 1 T-Beam fellows came up to the office ! and got him. while Billy was out. 1 They arranged for the banquet on the way to the club. It's a week from ! to-morrow night. So the newspapers | know it; and now, Tavy, you have a regular daddy." Mrs. Stuart was half laughing and I half crying, but Tavy was clapping her hands. : "So they're glad they found Daddy!" she exulted. "Glad? They're crazy." Tommy j handed them the roll of afternoon j papers which contained just the first i announcements of the tremendous | sensation. "Now, ladips," and Tommy i flourished his cigarette, "trust r ' i lam your friend. I hurried up In i to beat the reporters. Billy \ a | handling them at the office, and Burke, at the apartments. Harrison I Stuart is hidden.' I thing there is u! reporter in the hall by this time," JANUARY 30, 1917: and, sure enough, the doorbell rang. "Disappear," he told them. "The romance is Billy's. It's as good as the little daughter who was burned in the theater fire, but not so hor rible." To see Tommy Tinkle handling re porters and guarding the ladies in their retreat would have been a joy, and it would have been a revelation in the art of sympathy to hear him tell how Harrison Stuart lost his memory for fifteen years, through a fall from a roof, and wandered all over the world, under the name of John Doe, until he was brought back to mem ory by the sight of his old friends in Billy Lane's office! (To be continued) DROPS DEAD AT WORK Sunbury, Pa.. Jan. 30. Henry Sherry, a hunter of wild game, who had unusual skill, dropped dead while at work as a plasterer here Saturday. 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 — JBT rmrnr— —■ — r —ntnm An amount you can easily set aside month by month will make your wife independent. Any life insurance agent in Marrisburg will be glad to explain the details of opening a Premium Savings Account, which will make it easy for you to take out enough insurance to give your wife an income when you are gone. THE LIFE INSURANCE MAN IS WORKING FOR YOU —LET HIM TELL YOU WHAT HE KNOWS. Mechanics Trust Company Third and Market Sts. HARRISBURG, PA. WAR VETERAN DIES Milton, Pa. t Jan. 30.—George W. | Swengel, aged 79 years, died at .liis home here yesterday. He was a Civil War veteran and is survived by a daughter. There Is more Catarrii In this section of tfte country than all other disease* put together, and ! until the last few years was supposed to bo ! Incurable. For a greut many yeurs doctors pronounced It a local disease and prescribed local < 7emedlcs. and by constantly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced It lucurablc. Sclenca 1 has proven Catarrh to be a constitutional disease. ; aud therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hull's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J, Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, Is the only Constitu tional cure on the market. It Is taken Internally in doses from 10 drops to a t^aspoonful. It acts . directly on the blood and mucous surfaces o,! the system. They ofTer on hundred dollars for any case It falls to cure. Send for circulars and ! testimonials. j Address: F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohic. | Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Fill* for constipation. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers