Vl rf,v "' TJi ViT7 '-- '7 4V- .. I,k' i I FW i $ ' v : v I. V ?.. ir 1 ' .v m&m$Q ''PVblfo? LEDaki-PHibiVDJWLPJLLLl, WJBUESDAY, OOXUJiJi.lt 1 liut) fLo .v- The Testing of Julia Grant Uy IIAZIX DKYO ItATCIIKMMt Copyright, IBM, by lite 1'ubltc J,eilpcr Company Wherein Julia Discovers IS'cw Phases in Her Feeling for Dan Carson KKAO THIS 1'IKST Dan Carson linvlnir tntil .1 nl in fJrant three weeks before their innr rlnRP tliat lie is In love with another woman, discovers that nltlioitRh j .ttllliTs love for him liaM been the real thing, the other is not. .Itilla In her orrov cIfpIiIpr to plunge into work and goes Into a hospital to take up the (mining there, tier life heronics j-o tilled to the brim with work that she ha no time tti brood,! but jiit a nhe is beeomlng. fettled and some of the agony of mind has left lier, Dan roinen bnek. Instead of telling Tulia the truth he lets her believe that he discovered too late that it ivfiH impossible for him to love nuy one else. NOW GO OX WITH THIS STORY JULIA sat in her little rorni in the hospital and thought over all the things thnl happened and were already making so much difference in lifcr life. There was her aecldental meeting with Don. That meeting with Dan, the muted now. had been nlmoit. unbelievable. That particular night on her way BEADS IMPORTANT FOR EVENING FROCKS I F 1 I i k w m I a ' iTntf I Will if ' iliifl home fiom the hospital nbe had been too buxy with her own thoughts to notice anyone. Ami then ipilte sud denly ami simply, as though it had all been planned mil and must happen eventually anyway. he heard her name spoken, and she wheeled suddenly to meet Dan Carson. Then suddenly, with her heart in a tumult, hc had found herself walking home by bis side. They had reached the Ornnl house; and Mrs. Grunt had lot them in. .Iiillu'lniil gone into the parlor, where the gas was burning dimly, nnd Dan had followed her. .She, was so ijulot. that Ihm felt micomfnrt able. (Juite suddenly, before she had nny bleu of what he was going to do, he had her In his arms. "Julia, " he had said Intensely, "you are going tp takfc me back, aren't you? Oh, I've made a fool of myself. I know It: I'm willing to go on my knees to jnu if you'll forgive ;ne. 1 was craay and I've been nearly mad ever since. I want you back, .lulla ; I never really lovtd any one cIm 1 discovered that too late." When Dan Carson took .lulla In bis arms and pleaded . with her to take him back again. Julia fell every kind of emotion possible but the one she had expected to feel. There was no glory in the touch of his arms around lieu her lips felt cold under his,' kisses and she had drawn back from him in amaze ment. lie had drawn he'r over to the couch nnd they sat down, lie took her hands In his and held them fast forcing her to look at him while he 'spoke. lie told her that be wanted her and always had. thai if she didn't marry him he would not be responsible for his life ; he did not know what would become of hint. Julin's ejes grew wide with horror "Dan," she gnsficd, "what are you Miying?" "I mean it Julia. I've lived in tor ment ever since Hint night. I've tramped the streets trying to decide what to'do. I felt I could not coine back to you and ask you to forgive me, and yet tonight when I saw you I knew, that I could never let you go out of my life again. I wouldn't have killed nil the feeling you had for me. dear. There must be komething left and I'll be patient with you: I'll win it back. Tell me you love me a little." His voice had shook with feeling ami Julia was stirred. How could she I feel anything but love for him, how eould she help forgiving him when he ' I needed her that way? Of course, bIip iviis numb now, it was all so strange. Why. If fhe dosed her eyes she could blot out the months of nfony that she had managed to live through. Here was Dan back agijin, holding her close, tell ing her be loved her. Once she would ivi' riven nnything !n the world to htivt find him plead with her for anything, 3 JWrW m 'W-S . '-BaaaaaaaaaV' HI aaaaaf! .sbbbbbbk win her back without some effort. After a few minutes he had suggested that they go upstairs und tell the family. .Tulla was willing enough, Strange to say she was more than willing: she was eager to go. Slip felt uncomfortable alone with Dan; she wanted time to think the thing out, to get readjusted, to redllze that at last all of her un happiness was over, nnd thnt she could return to the same state of tnlnd that she had been in before that dreadful night when Dan bad sheepishly con fessed that he loved another wobian. Dan slipped Ills arm around her as they went slowly up th dark stairs, and there was but one conclusion to be drawn when Julia opened the door of the sitting-room and the two s.tepped in. Mr. Orant put down his paper and looked up over his glasses anthem. An expression of utter joy crossed Mrs, Grant's face and she took Julia into her arms' without a word. Daii spoke then with a boyish frank ness thnt was utterly disarming. There was an humbleness about his nttitude that robbed the situation of any tense -iness as he said simply: ) "Julia has decided to forgive me and , take ino back. I've been an utter fool, ; and I never expected Tier' to under stand: but she has,' and I'm the hap- plest man in the world tonight." That waj nil nights ago, Julia mused ns she sat they in tier lltue room, and yet she wns still bewildered. miss nuTii cunL hoiinek' Miss Horner will become the bride of Davis Page Smith, son of Mayor Smith, on October 20) The bride-to-be's home Is In Ilurllngton, X. ,1, and now she could not respond. Itut she would after a time; she was sure of that She wondered dully why his kiss failed to thrill her. Dan might have been any one nt all instead of the man she loved. If she hadn't been so cer tain that it was the shock that had de prived her of all feeling she would have been really frightened nt the way she felt. ' Julia did not know herself, thnt was the trouble. She did not know ways of loving and degrees of it, having' bad fix It Is in by deserting the children low! only one man and being by nature, jt, eyM fixcd on material progress, its a one-man woman. Julia s love nd-, h(,art Mt pn motion ln thc clnpire nf .1 .. Ihn.L- nf i..- iif t .,..' matter, it has forgotten the magic of its teach scarcely anything except tbo ugly I art of grow Ing old early. How easy it is, when one tries, to' pick up the fnlry-story of our golden days and its tremendous meanings 1 Every child's Innocent rye Is a mute, Invitation to entoV Its kingdom, to play hookey with the stupid seriousness of our grown-up days nnd become again as n child. "A little child shall lead them" is not thoclogicnl truth, but psychological and physical fact. These little darlings, elves out of some Hyperborean world, with the curly hair and the bcll-llko vblces our chil dren can take us by the hand and re shape the world. All life is a make-believe, and it is only the make-believe world of the kid dles that Is the trne one. They are" the morning of thc world at our door. King- I uviu unit- in icuiuru uj iintvuujt uaiit- ! ward to them. We speak of our children growing up. They never do. They grow down to us. It is we who need to lenrn the magic art of growing up to the children. - llenjnmin Dc CnsBercs, in October tiood Housekeeping. PREMIERS WIFE AIDS DRYS Mrs. Lloyd George Speaks at Glas gow for Prohibition London, Oct. 15. Mrs, David Lloyd George, wife of the British premier, Is taking n prominent hand In thc pro hibition campaign, addressing n meet ing of -000 women t Glasgow yester- day-. . ... . .. ' Dispatches received acre quote oirs, Llortl George as saying that the success of the cilmpnlgn depended upon women. "It l the duty of women to help the victims of alcoholism at home as It was to help the victims of Prussian Ism In Itelgium five years ago," Mrs. Lloyd George Is repotted to have said. "Scotland is on thc evn of n great campaign and next year the eyes of temperance reformers throughout the world will be focused on Scotland. If Scotland Is won the victory will be a great stimulus to the world to do likewise." HelpKeep With Hot Shampoos of YourHair soapra Ml 3nf flit : ttospSJ, Ointtntnt 25 ft M, Talcum 2S BftmrtU h ! ? "Citlair, Ppt. t. U." Last Year's Velour or Bolivia Coat Velvet Suit flAn be made rood new trlfllnr font, our procM restores all S.IIO VIIIII1 WUlJf HMU lUHlCr Id me fabric and removes all traces of near ottrl w,onthr. SchwarzwaelderCo.ioi7-27WoorJst Adjoining tht St. Jamet llotil Wlnt St. Bttwttn IZth 13th IF YOU LOVE Flowert you thould be interitted 4n TUB CBNTUHY FLOWBR SHOP - .Below CAttnut (Tomorrow Hack with Grace Merritt.) nt the hospital A Child Must Lead The human race has got itself into thc cover thnt so often the Jove of n man is the most unstable thing in the world Julia wanted t.o love Don, and be cause she wanted to, she put forth every effort to show htm that she did. And he was satisfied. He thought her lack of response wns due to the shock, and furthermore he did not expect to origin childhood. The human being today knows nil sports, he indulges in a thousand pas times, from picnicking to horse-racing but he has forgotten how to play. The play spirit in us Is lost because we hare got too far away from the henrt empire of the children, who haye CTcry thing to Uach us. and to whom we RILLIARD TABLEQ " made or repaired) excellent work MOISE SCOPPITTI 2211 Chestnut St. Phone Loe. 8049 11 ', .i nmrni rjatin and tulle and n profusion nf beads supply the, material for. this - 7' little' diince frock . ... .. - A Dally Fashion Talk by Florence Koso IF HEADS were suddenly taken from our wardrobe where would we be? Wc would hardly have a frock intact. Our favorite hand bags would be de nuded, our slipper buckled would show nothing but a canvas frame and tbo newest bits nf bijouterie iu -our eolleV tion would be. the cords or ribbons' on which the bends had' been strung, Our hats would be undone and ,in , ninny cases there would be little left of our veiling frocks but u bit of tulle mid ribbon. Such is our addiction to bends In this year of grace, 1010! Which is very interesting iu riew of the fact that bends have always had a strong appeal to primitive folk. Children take to them like ducks to water and n suvage would barter his soul for them. The African gives up tons of ivory for a fqw 'beads. Thc great northern fur trading companies aniuircd priceless sables from the Indians in ex change for such trinketsf with which to decorate coats and belts and headgear. And the story is that Manhattan Island was sold to the whites for a string of wampum ! Perhaps we are only proving that we are primitive ourselves at heart since ye have gone in so strongly for bends iu our clothes. And it is not only the women for you know yourself that the J men always admire most the evening frock that is most heavily trimmed with bends. Satin, then tulle, and then on the tulle c profusion of beads such is the frock shown in thc sketch today. It is , an excellent frock for dancing, since it Is' innocent of thc little fish tail tram that is found on so many of the new I evening frocks and that never was de mised to mnkc dancing easier. Though , want of skirt there is still enough breadth here to make it possible to Hanee without actual difficulty, a point ( in Its favor in n season when dancing Is promised to be even more popular than j ever before. i (Copyrlsht, 1910, by Florence Hose) I Mrs. S. C. Cummings Invites Your Inspection Of Newly Created Fashions in SMART DRESSES AFTERNOON FROCKS and EVENING GOWNS 1305 walnut street Pf i si ii'Tiss rf3Lki: m!? l'.tl!NlLI! -tWitt!!!.!' i, , ! i- ' i, i i ; i : A DUtinfuitid Sirvict LmUl : Emma laKll Every year millions of particular people insist on Munsingwear. Their choice is influenced by the perfect fit, comfort, durability, washabilityand exceptional service of every Munsingwear garment. Don't say underwear-r-say Munsingwear . The satisfaction lasts. fruity flavored POMPE1AN OLIVE OIL "always fresh" Serve It With AH Your Salad Sold Everywhere 1220-22-24 A Completely Satisfying Collection of Dresses For Informal Wkar Smart frocks of Georgette, Tricotine, Tricolctte, Satin and Duvetyne, ranging from the severely practical street model to the more elaborate "afternoon" gown. Price are astonishingly moderate. $39.50 to For Emning Dress Dance frocks and dinner gaarnc gorgeously derel oped in laces, brocade, nets, chiffon, velvet and iridescent beads. In all the wanted evening shades; and in all degrees of elaborateness. $59.50 to $225 Anlong Its Friends Are Big Users Who "Repeat" Year After Year The Perfect Water Paint because it gives uniform satisfaction and splendid results wherever used hard, durable finishes on all solid inside surfaces at a pronounced saving over other paint. Let vs prove it to you. Write for EREE sample for testing arid list of big users. White nnd color. By thfc bbl. (about 325 lbs.; 7c. lb.; smnller quantities, 8c lb. Special price to contractors. . 2-Lb. "Household" Cartons -t-tr DEALERS 20c JOHN C. OETERS,-Mfr., 1242 N. 31st St. Ikeiii ew Ki M JP0RT5 5H0P Specially Priced Sports Suits, $45 Fine quality Tweed, Coate full lined and handsomely tailored, Riding Habits, $38.50 Cravenetted Oxford Melton Cloth. Sport Slilrta Top Coata llntu ISO SOOTH 16th HTKKKT Kthcl 51. TaIor Bella V. Aim! Ine.Aris4ocra4 of Molorclo THE Ifissel Urban-Sedan departs from the beaten path in de sign, finish and appeal an exquisite harmony of body re quirements, aristocratic appointments and artistic accoutre ments, characteristics of individualized body building. This new model, the result of exhaustive experiments in body designing and construction ingenuity, strikes a new note in motor car design and mechanical excellence. The glass partition behind the driver's seat drops out. of sight, turning your formal Urban Sedan into an .informal Touring-Sedan. Mounted on the Kissel custom-built chassis, the result of thirteen years of brilliant automobile engineering achievements replete with those features that combine efficiency in performance with economy of operation. The new Kissel custom-built motor is of the high speed and high efficiency type, developing 61 H. P. at 2000 r. p, m. dynamometer test. Production is limited. GRIEB & THOMAS D1BTJIIBVTORB 306 N. Broad ii'iiji i.i -ii. -1 1 flismi r. n n m , srmtah. r-- Wr? ,p 5K9l1fflMid! 3 4 FKKNCII IMrOBTED 5IODKI, of Duvetynev Smart Ap parel for the Woman Who Values Individuality f IsjWf.lfrri rMi ,V ' Lift iiigw ' ' ' i ."-' - jjiiMmfc an I, BaaaalJB-.v?rsSannBV IBbL''-. aaaBhT7?aa1 aaaaaaaaWaaaaaaalaMirilM aaaaaaaalaBaaaalSaWBHaaBattPaMlsamBa 1: ' " '. ; jaaaaaV W'"'vKBRS9HHHiHBD9HBaaaH Ajntt.inHtws . wrm in 1 1 ii"i-ifflBk VBaaaaaaaaHVBBaaSawK3t9sBaaaaaaaEH9aaSlsa saaaaaiaaB aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaWa3BPBnBBaa SBaaaaaaaaaaVaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaa2aaEa9FJpBl Jk 1-JtTKwe"" iisssaaaaaaiaaalaTaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaallll1 ? f . 'to Jl' ""ftV. v'4;w W are aceentlni order on this axeeptlonaUr atUae(l model, ilmme.llale rfllsla A. .1.. . j o-..-.. .vllk .II.VMf rfimnitnUhl. .nt KKt aa. w .--- vV in, IWVUDPr OVQItH. . w. .--y --- .-w.- v. vvjcp aDOV V Ji , srtu t 9 ; 'if,;"'" "Z - A Ok! I Forgot- .1 Startling discovery of a little girl who purchased everything her mother told her to hut finds that she has forgotten Wilbur's Cocoa. a- Note Always remember Wilbur's Cocoa as a' food drink that is pure and nourishing, and en tirely free from harmful stimulants or substitutes of any kind., Remember the name. iti . v A O 1919. Ey H. O. WILBUR"& SONSlNC.T Phila., P. iwiitfWHWjf.i r rin WrwWiTilltwiWBia iH .1 kV J , ' K' ", . "u t X s, ' ti . ' mSii i&uxi ivr.i,,-ii ' a,x , i"V..fA !..j. I,- . .K.niSKS , i M :1 . xi a VS1 -&! 13 i! -" fi w ki.w ! ii t maiTii rMinaai i i i -!. i--Jif.AkH!'. iv. tiivi.... ..-l ."a..
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers