.-'W" MKr,r' w .w.rfv.-w J , - ? v 1 EVENING PUBLIC sLEDEK PHrCiADELPHIA', WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 1020 7 13 11 --,:? me STREETS OF LIFE ' By HAZtflj DEVO HATCHELOn Cevvrlpht, JM, tv ( TiMlo lecher Co, Despondency 1 -..,..'. t,ihrr thouoht he WLeke her over to M$ oicn.toov VisMdio irtthoupM bu depriving fkitt OirM Wy." "V. :...,l M mi! Iikf Adventures, With a Purse 'iMioW tnhZheaeeUedon the "'L'mtihe ;& warn. e Jla? . otiW e no trouble aVout ttB,itJever,De,tinJ decided totujeo '!' JJfdand introduced unexpectedly ?., Anne' life Oeraldine Carpenter, ,ntL,ttou icealthV woman. THrouqh i'-& Sewl Dane Grey, the Bl" her girlhood. Of E2w hele new WeiutoVro Kent a 1 VNR wm terrified at her father's ur AYllnn, ThrMigh the- two dreary A,i before the fdnrfral she thought of Sthlng ele. Her- terror amounted .Lost to ft panic; everything seemed illpplng; away fronj her, everything that ,h, wanted In life.- ' The day nfter Aunt Martha's denth, ike ,fc)ped away from tho houao and wnt to tell deraldlno what had hap pened. Geraldlne was sympathetic, Mrry that Anne could not, comb'- as must but' riot deeply so. AntiifoH .with k patt of terror' that If something hiosened .soon to prevent those,, after Zn with the Carpenters, Geraldlne would not care -overmuch. Of course, ,he was over-senslltve: but It helped to tewntuate the general gloom. The day nfter the funeral, Jim Car tlr spoke ncaln to Anne about her B"uvee'youitalked with Bill?" He' said 'he'd be over tonight, we'll i.h,."oRnoR:" Ann protest was almost ' fiat's the matter with ypu," her rather nfkea. suspiciously. . Vothlng. but Aunt Martha's, only Wn cone ft few days. I want to re w!r frorn that first,- I don't want to Sink of my marriage Just now," she "I'euejs you didn't set such a store hy your Aunt Martha," her father re. lumed "She was a eood woman, but he didn't have any time for this pin tflnr nonsense that you're always mcon Si about, with your nne lndy ways, and your white face. Why couldn't I have hid a boy with some get-up and go to blm Inftead of a white-livered girl who can't say her bouI'h her own?' Nevertheless ho said no more about the mnfrlnge. The next day. Anne re tlimed to the Carpenters' after hurry ng through the housework and getting everyliung rcnay 111 n ik" " '' h could get a hasty meal for her filhr "bn she returned that evening. Geraldlne was III with a headache. Sht lay on the cushion-piled couch In her 'sitting rocm, a rose-colored light burning on n. little table near her. a liken robe thrown over her. A tea iron with an appetizing lunch on It wi drawn up near her, but It had not been touched Eftie looked up at Anne fLn(!. "Allc mlle wavered about her moJh 'K Wfls Rood to see Anne again. The amllo warmed Anne, through and through. It was the one thing needed to pull the girl out of her despondency, and In ft second she had slipped out of her outer things. She vanished Into Geraldlne s room and emerged a fow minutes later In a dainty afternoon frock purchased with her own money. Anno,L,a? '""'"ted on this with a dig nity that Geraldlno could not affront. In a mlnuto Anno was rubbing the kinks out of Gernldlnc's head with firm movements of her fingers. It was quite marvelous to wntch tha furwws In Goraldlnos forehead disappear na If by magic. Finally sho looked up at lll?.5.'r,.tnrou&11 drowsy, half-open lids. "That's so much better, you havo wonderful fltrgers, Anne," and then ns tho girl kept her fingers moving softly and rhythmically over her forehead and temples Geraldlne's eyes closed and she dropped asleep. Anno wns glad that Geraldlne was not about as usual so that she could nsk questions. Ever Blnce Ocraldlne had suggested that Anno tell her father the truth Anne had expected to be pinned down with h. question ns to whether or not she had done this and when sho expected to. It sounded so easy to Geraldlne and It wns so Insurmountably difficult for Anne. 8ho was held In thrnll by nil tho experiences of her childhood ; her terror of tho. night, her mother had been brought In from the river had never djed. The memory of that scene was ns vivid ns ever when sho closed her eyes and conjured It nil up. It has been snld by Freud and many other well-known psychologists that ft child'! mind may be definitely turned In one direction through nn episode In childhood, and his entire Ufa may eventually be changed by It unless tin Is confronted with tlin trlith ntirl fights tho thing face to face, conquering! it once nnu lor nn. Two natures were warring In Anno constantly. Her mother's softness and her father's, Iron will. Drought un ns mo nveruK" unuu, puti iiukhi nuve ucen entirely different, left to herself her nature would have asserted Itself and the result would have been a rnre and perfect combination. Hut Anne's will wns still subservient tc her father's and she knew It. (Tomorrow, nn unexpected rail) THIOSB luncheon scs arc a epcclnl, so I hasten to' write about them before they arc all sold.. They arc of n nice looking linen-finish material) sculloticd around the edges wlthf a neat blue edg ing. Tljo dark, blue against the gleam ing white forma n striking contrast, and makes tho dollies exceptionally fresh -looking. The pets consist of thir teen pieces, and nrc specially priced at $1.83. The other day I was going to write about a oulja board, for so many peo ple nrc having lots of fun with them these days, I thought you might, llko to have one. Tho price of tho one I saw was $1.23. Hut today, quite hy accident, 1 came across a tnhlC' of niilja hoards at the remarkable price of fifty cents I Altnough slightly binullrr than the llrst I saw, they arc nevertheless quite large enough to answer till the many important .questions you mny ask, and I feel suro Hint the possession of one will afford yon much fun. . Peter wns being helpful. That is to soy, 1'etcr was helpfully inclined. Adorned in a big apron, and purpose fully grasping nn egg-beater, hn stnrt ed Industriously to whip the vrcutn. Hut my word, you should have. seen that place ! There wns cream spattered from one end to thn other, with n fat gob clinging coyly to Peter's forehead. The really sensible beater Is tho kind one shop has marked at twenty-five !cnts. it consists fli a uecp giasn jar, witn a top. to which is attached the heater. The ton keens tho cream or eggs or but ter in the jnr where they belong, while the shape also enables you to set it in n pan of water, which, as every one knows, is n good thing when whipping cream, as It will never whip until it is quite cold. SCHOLARSHIP IS MEMORIAL P. R. R. Women Who Aided In War Honor Lost Soldiers In memory of three young men of the fro 1 nil t trnfflc ilonnrtmrnt of the Penn sylvania Hallroad who gave their lives in the war. the Pennsylvania Railroad Wnmfiru Division or wnr unlet, de partment No. 3, hns founded ft $0000 scholarship at the University of Penn sylvania. The three men who gave tncir lives were Arthur Dtttton, Hobert Howard Gamble nnd Ernest Kugeno Htlne. The scholarships am given with, the stipulation that they shall be open to. tho son or daughter of present or de ceased employes of the freight, traffic department of the Pennsylvania system, or to the son or daughter of a member nf Department No. 3, Pennsylvania Hallroad Women's Division for War Relief, who wns n member In good stnudlng during the years 1018-11). In addition to announcing the 'fore going scholarship, Provost Edgar V. Smith made public the fact that the firm of George II. McFaddcn & Hro. had subscribed $1000 a year for Ave ycar-j for the purpoio of creating n scholar ship in the American-Scandinavian Foundation. SPANKED HER, WIFE SAYS ' Husband Replies He Was Obliged to "Treat Her Like a Father" Wilmington, Mny 12. Charged in olty court yesterday with spanking his twenty-year-old wife, Henry Little, who is twenty-seven, said she was ir responsible ond he was obliged to "treat her like n father." ' Mrs. Little testified he often spanked and slapped her. She refused to live with him nny longer and was' granted 11 summit order of SIB n week. Little also admitted slapping his mother-In-in w. . He said "too much inothor-lu-law" was responsible for all his troubles. '-?' Jenklntovyn Choral Society The Jenklntown Chornl Society, un der the dirsrtion of Bessie Kille Slntlgh, gave its nniuinl spring concert in the auditorium of the Ablngton High School, Inst night. Assisting soloists wcro Leslie V. .Toy, baritone, nnd Hertrnnd A. Austin, cello. Mary Nock Mnlpnss nnd T.ticlen A. Austin (insisted at the piano. The chorus, composed of more than thirty women, sung with u tine under standing of their .songs. Ocean City Masons to Dine Ocean City. May 12. Ocean "City Lodge, No. 171. V. nnd A. M., will cel ebrate Its twenty-third anniversary with a dinner nt the RIscayuc Hotel Tuesday evening, May 23, m "because it fits tMunsingwear fits and covers the form like .an untroubled conscience. -The summer gar ments for men, women and children are so sheer, cool and light in weight that you scarcely know you have them on. There's a right size for everyone, tall, stout, short or thin. Don't say1 underwear say Munsingwcar. the satisfaction last f f m 'For their learning be libdral. Spare no cost; for by such parsimony all is lost that is saved." William Penn Bryn Mawr College asks you to invest five dollars in the future of your children You are starting accounts for them in the savings bank, providing for them in your wills, striving in every way for their material advan tage, but you are failing to make proper provision for their education. We ask you to invest five dollars in it. $,( V S5- 1 t I 2 WSl 1 1 "" 1 '"" tf 1 . Pi Ini k 1 few3 li icis.p' MMim S.f Ml 11k 'when "delicious and re- k4I y freshing" mean the most, & JL Tho Coca-Cola Company lfJy, ATLANTA. OA. ! :- 'fe, i Education is Americanization Education is assimilation; education is preparedness for citizen ship. The next generation will be just as good as the men and women who teach them just as good as the combined influence of home and school. There is no limit to the sacrifices that fathers and mothers make for their children, but there is a limit to the personal sacrifices that they should ask teachers to make for them. We have passed that limit. Bryn Mawr wants to pay her professors decent salaries not extravagant ones. No state in the country is so much a part of American history, so rich in historical associations, as Pennsylvania. . Bryn Mawr wants to establish a chair that will teach American History with special reference to our ideals and institutions. She wants you to stand behind her in her efforts to prepare your daughters to meet the problems of their time usefully and understandingly. She wants you to help her to send forth in the future, as she has in the past, well trained, well-equipped women of high purpose and character to teach your children in the schools and the colleges. Bryn Mawr asks every Pennsylvanian to buy a little liberty bond a five-dollar investment that will free the college from some of the lim itations that are restricting its usefulness. It carries no coupons, but 100 per cent interest will be paid to your children in education. Education in America is for all the people, and its endowment should be by all the people. Sign on the dotted line for five dollars, or for multiples of five, and send the money to c The William Penn Foundation of the Bryn Mawr Endowment Fund -lla-.HM.IM ''" jMyiw m. iiisyJ, The William Penn Foundation 1524 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 1 ' I wish to have my name enrolled as a subscriber to The William Penn Foundation at Bryn Mawr College, and I enclose $ Name . Address - Make cheques payable to The Willam Penn Foundation 'MMM MM ., . SSM. M-UPf-. This advertisement was paid for by an alumna of Bryn. Mawr College 'mi I; ?; -I .1 ! '; V x t$ 1 1 Ml. r 'h .'".n 1 -'i .., 1:1 ;- J! t a r ! IfrAh "&, . LIr -g" I - TliiW"" .... wis , . t , . w t , Sjl . t; '' ':.,? ,. ) .,cv;J' w. .lir.M BBBIBBMSWB1VIRPHSSBSS-S1