\Y2o(V)en jSggJnreßea v& Their Married Life By MABEL HERBERT URNER BY MABEL HERBERT URNER "No, miss, she hasn't come In yet," Brawled the colored boy at the switch board. By the loudly-ticking nickel clock an top of the switchboard it was now five minutes after six. Laura had laid six, but she had probably been detained at the office. Helen went over to the heavy carved pak chair beside the heavy carved oak (able which were intended to give an |iir of pretentiousness to the marble hainscoted, white-tiled reception hall. It was one of the countless new apartment houses in the Washington Heights section, and large enough to boast of both elevator and a switch board boy. Musingly Helen watched the people us they came In. Laura had said that many of these apartments were rented out in separate rooms, which accounted for the number of women, evidently clerks and stenographers, now coming home from their work. Many of them looked middle-aged and all of them looked tired. A few went first to the switchboard to ask if any one had called them up, but most of them went straight to the elevator, a pathetic admission that they expected no calls. Then Laura Wilson entered, flushed and hurried. "Oh, I'm sorry to have kept you waiting—but I couldn't help it. Mr. Richards asked me to take some let ters at the last moment, it always happens when I want to get off early. Here's the elevator now." On the eighth floor, Laura unlocked a door at the end of the corridor, and they entered the narrow hall of a typi cal seven-room flat. "You see, I've the distinction of hav ing the kitchen," as she led Helen into a room Intended for a kitichen, but cleverly converted into a bedroom. "Oh, how quaint!" Helen sank on ♦he edge of the couch, which took up the space meant for the range. The Advantages "I could get the small bedroom for the same price; but I've more places to put things," nodding at the china closet and shelves. "Running water, too," drawing back a chintz curtain which concealed the sink. "But who fixed it up so cleverly? Are these your things?" "Oh, no, she furnishes all the rooms but I put up this curtain and the one before the ice-box." "The ice-box!" laughed Helen. "What do you use that for?" Drawing back another curtain, Laura opened the refrigerator. Two hats graced the compartment visually filled with a slab of ice. Be low, instead of milk and butter, were ehoes and slippers, and one shelf was neatly piled with stationery. "Well, that's certainly an ingenious use of an icebox." "And the linen closet in the hall goes with this room. Theyve taken out the jtftlyes BO T can hang up my clothes. isn't this better than any dingy, 'tHlrd story back' in a smelly boarding house?" "Unquestionably." Helen's tone was emphatic. "But isn't it more ex pensive?" "No, ,lust about the same. This room is $4 a week, and my meals cost only But we'll have dinner before I tell you about the meals. Oh, wo must hurry; things are never so good when you're late." While Laura freshened up Helen looked around with keen interest. She thought of the many women liv ing alone on meager salaries in dingy furnished room houses —surely this •was the better way. The covered washtub beside the sink was used as a dressing table. And now as Laura started to fix her hair, she drew the electric light, which hung by a cord from the celling, over to a hook beside the mirror. "And I never had a decent, light or a. mirror in a boardinghouse," when Helen praised the contrivance. "Oh! Im much more comfortable here than I've been ever since I came to New York." As they went out, Laura proudly opened the door of the bathroom. "Isn't that a lovely bathroom? And the telephone's right here in the hall. It would all be Ideal,' with a sigh, "if It wasn't so lonely." "Is It lonely here," asked Helen sympathetically. "Lonely! I've been here two months, and I don't know a soul. But let's not talk about it. I've been obsessed with loneliness lately." A few moments later they were seated In the small basement restau# rant of the apartment house across the street. The low ceiling and the mission tables gave a rathskellar look to the place. The Dinner "They've two dinners here," Laura took up one of the soiled mimeo graphed cards. "With the entree it's llfty—without it thirty-live." "Well, since you insist it's your din ner, we'll have the thirty-five," de cided Helen firmly. "That's what you have when you're alone." Laura demurred, but Helen was de termined, and it was the dinner with out the entree—soup, roast, salad and dessert —that was ordered. "Tell me more about your apart ment," pleaded Helen, as the waitress slouched off. "Who is it that sublets those rooms?" "She's a Mrs. Winston—a very nice woman, too. She began by renting out the roins of her own apartment after her husband died. Now she's leased four apartments In our build ing." "What do they lease for? Seven rooms, aren't they?" "Yes, sixty-five a month —they're all the same. You wouldn't think she'd make much renting the rooms fur nished for four dollars a week, would you? But it's only the kitchen and the small bedroom that she rents for Sthat. She gets six and eight for the thers. But she has to keep them all lied to make anything." "And she furnishes service—or do you take care of your own room?" "Oh, no, she has one maid that takes care of the four apartments. It's be coming quite a business —this leasing apartments and renting out rooms. It's taking the place of the old board inghouse. I know half a dozen girls who used to live In downtown bourd inghouses—they've all moved uptown and have a room in some new apart ment." "I suppose that means the passing of the hall bedroom," mused Helen. "And yet there was always a. certain romance about the idea of a girl com ing to New York and living In a hall bedroom." "You wouldn't think that If you ever lived in one. It's only Interesting in a magazine story. Oh, do you see that woman Just going out? She has the room next to mine—the dining room. She works In a broker's office, I think." "You haven't told me about your PWDKRTAKBBg RUDOLPH K. SPICER Funeral Director and Embalmer nr. waiuut at B«ju rkum* TUESDAY EVENING, work. You are still with Neel' & Richards?" A Faint Hope Laura sighed. "Yes, and there's no chance of advancement there. They think sl6 for a stenographer is a mu nificent salary." "But you're more than that—you're Mr. Richards' secretary!" "That's why I'm getting sixteen. The others only get twelve. But there's a possibility,' her face lit up, "of something very wonderful by the firstof August.No, I mustn't talk about it —the things I talk about never hap pen, and I'm superstitious about this. I feel that if I don't tell a soul —I may get it." "Then don't tell me," understand* lngly. "But I do think fate owes you something. You've worked hard since you came here, and haven't " "Haven't accomplished anything." finished Laura bitterly. "I came to New York confident of a literary ca reer, and I'm only a stenographer in an advertising house—and living in a kitchen," with a note of scorn. "But you're still young " "How much longer will I be young —living as I do? I'm so lonely I al most die. The boardinghouses were lonely enough, but you at least met people at meals there—living this way you never meet any one. I dread to come home in the evening—I hate so to eat alone!" "I know," murmured Helen,"it must be hard. I'm sure I. wouldn't be as brave about it as you are." "It's not bravery," with a shrug. "Haven't any choice; that's all." When they left the table, in spite of Laura's protests, Helen succeeded in getting the check and paying it. "It's almost nine," she reflected, as they came up the basement steps to the street, "and Warren gets in on the 9.30. I'd love to go up to your room again—but Im afraid I won't have time." Laura seemed disappointed, and Helen felt her depression as she walked with her to the subway. "Now, you're to come and have din ner with us very soon. You say you hate to eat alone—yet you haven't dined with us for months." Laura shook her head. "I'd rather not go anywhere just now. I've been too depressed lately to make a very good dinner companion." "Then that's just why you should come—and let us cheer you up." "Cheer me up?" bitterly. "The last time I dined with you I came away with a fit of blues that I didn't get over for n week. Can't you see," al most angrily, "that when a woman's alone and unsuccessful, it isn't par ticularly enlivening to spend an even ing with another woman who has a wonderful home and a husband—and everything that makes life worth while?" This was a viewpoint that Helen had not considered—yet it was one that she could understand. As she whirled home in the sub way she pictured Laura going back to that lonely room. She had escaped the sordid discomfort of the boarding house, but she had not escaped her loneliness. Would she ever escape it? A woman alone in New York—was there any solution for her loneliness, except a husband and a home of her own? NORMANDY COLLAR ON THIS NEW BLOUSE Very Smart and Very Attractive and It Has a Bow at the .Neck 5244 Blouse for Misses and Small Women, 16 and 18 years. WITH LONG OR THREE-QUARTER SLEEVES. The blouse with Normandy collar It a very new one, very smart and very attractive. _ Thij one is made from organdie which is the latest cry and which makes the daintiest possible blouses. The model can be used, however, for any seasonable material, thecrfpe dechine that will be worn all summer quite as ■well as the cotton and linen ones. Cotton crfpe makes up most attractively and is extremely smart and the voiles of the season are unusuallv attractive for there are a great many shown in embroidered figures as well as the plain material. The combination of the raglan sleeve at the front _ and the kimono at the back is especially smart. This blouse is all white but touches of color are fasttionable and white voile or cotton crfpe for the blouse wit-h the collar and cuffs of yellow or cerise would be charming or the blouse could be made of color with trimming of white. For the 16 year size, the blouse will require 2% yds. of material 27, \% yd*. 46; yds. 44 in. wide. 1 The pattern 8244 is iut in sizes for 16 •nd 18 years. It will be mailed to any •ddress by the Fashion Department of this paper, on receipt of ten ceuU. Bowman's sell May ilanton Patterns. Old methods of piano selling versus the new and how"lnterest" figures in it Copyright, 1914, by Martin McCarrlck, Inc. We say in this co-operation piano sale—"A 350 dollar piano tor 248 dollars and 75 cents and NO INTEREST." Do you know what that phrase "NO INTEREST 1 ' means? We will tell you. It means more to you than you would dream of. Through the REGULAR WAY of selling pianos you Now contrast the REGULAR method of are interest "on top" of the priceofthe piano selli ianos with THIS CO-OPERATION . Thus—if you buy a piano for 350 dollars you do not pay 350 dollars: You pay 350 dollars and INTEREST. PLAN. Let us make this plain. In the first place, on this plan, a 350 dollar T-»T ou were to bu y a pi an ° on the USUAL piano does not cost you 350 dollars or anywhere PLAN for 350 dollars. You were to pay, say, 20 dollars nMr Hnllar* down, then 10 dollars a month ANI? INTEREST AT 6 aoiiars. . PER CENT. A 350 dollar piano costs you, DURING Now, here is how this figures out: THIS CO-OPERATIVE SALE, 248 dollars 350 dollars less 20 dollars (your first payment) leaves an d 7 5 cents —giving you a clean cut saving, at a balance of 330 dollars. the very start, of 101 dollars and 25 cents. 330 dollars divided by 10 dollars (the monthly pay-, T j ri_ <• » ments) equals 33 months, the time in which you pay. Instead of having to pay 350 dollar in 33 6 per cent, interest (average) on 330 dollars for one months (the usual terms) you are allowed 45 month is 82% cents. months to pay 248 dollars and 75 cents. 33 months multiplied by 82% cents equals 27 dollars and 23 cents TOTAL INTEREST. Do y° u see the difference THIS makes? 350 dollars (price of the piano) plus 27 dollars and 23 On THIS CO-OPERATION plan VOU are YOU T™?Y q p U AY 37 1 d ° ,lara ana 23 WHAT given 12 months LONGER TIME in which ,o Now, do you see what "AND INTEREST" means? Pay 101 dollars and 25 cents LESS MONEY. It means, if you buy a 350 dollar piano on the OLD As t0 the "interest"—there is NO INTER METHOD of selling pianos (and 99 piano houses out of EST to be added to the price, every 100 employ this method), and pay for it at the rate of The price is 248 dollars and 75 cents and NO 20 dollars cash and 10 dollars a month, and keep your pay- MORE There i<* MO TWTFPTTQt Mn ments right up to "the letter," that your piano will cost you ™"to ko r INTEREST or NO NOT 350 dollars, BUT 377 dollars and 23 cents. EXTRAS of any. nature to run the price up You pay 27 dollars and 23 cents INTEREST. higher than 248 dollars and 75 cents. You pay 27 dollars and 23 cents EXTRA, or 27 dollars Or, putting it in still another way—24B dol the lano ° VER AND ABOVE the " mar ked" price of i a rs and 75 cents is the OUTSIDE price. When Three little words in your contract "AND INTER- T" !T 248 d °" arS and " CentS y ° U haTe EST" look harmless and sound innocent enough, but in a niS P a ymg. case like we have just cited, they mean 27 dollars and 23 There are no 20, 30 or 40 dollar EXTRAS cents "tacked on" IN ADDITION to the "marked" price. "cropping up" to be paid afterwards J.H.Troup Music House 15 SOUTH MARKET SQUARE, HARRISBURG, PA. 15 South Hanover Street, Carlisle, Pa. C. S. FEW DRUG STORE, 205 South Union Street, Middletown, Pa. SENATOR PENROSE PREDICTS LANDSLIDE [Continued from First Page.] make votes for them. "The Democratic party In Its plat form at Baltimore pledged Its unquali fied support of the civil service as well as the exemption from tolls of our coastwise ships passing through the Panama Canal and a number of other measures ,all of which it is impossible for me to evert touch upon. The meas ure which our Democratic friends laid most stress upon and considered of the most vital importance was that of tariff reform, and primarily for this purpose the President called the ex tra session of Congress. Immediately after the assembling of Congress Pres ident Wilson assumed control of both the Senate and the House of Represen tatives and, in due course of time, there was written upon the statute books the Underwood tariff bilj. This bill, as we all know, was passed by the use of the party lash, public pa tronage, and the Democratic caucus. While I am thoroughly opposed to this method of legislation and can not con demn it in terms too severe, yet, after all, the effect of the legislation Is the all-important proposition to consider; and let me here Incidentally call your attention to the fact that in this very first bill the Democratic party pledge to uphold and support the civil service was violated In that It does not pro vide that (he appointments for can-v --ine into effect the provisions of 'he bill shall be made from the civil-service lists, which consist of experienced per sons, all of whom have passed satis factory examinations, but in the bill they provided that the appointments may be given to political followers whose only recommendation and qual ification is party loyalty, who may or may not have the necessary ability to perform the duties imposed upon them, and are certainly without experience. The Democratic party not only vio lated this pledge In this law, but in a number of laws that were passed later was this pledge repeatedly violated. Currency Bill "The next important legislation en acted was the currency law, and this bill we hope will be workable and an Improvement over our present system, but if so it is a question how much credit should be given our Democratic friends. The bill as it passed the House was positively unworkable and would not and could not be put In force in that shape. The Senate after prolonged debate amended it by striking out all after the enacting clause and present ed an entirely n«w bill, which was lnrjrely copied from the Aldrloh bill. 1 Its foundation, Its framework, and in HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH almost all of its vital parts it is a transposition from the Aldrich bill and an adaptation from the report of the Monetary Commission.. At the instance of Mr. Bryan the flat money men many unsound provisions were first in the bill, but most of them were taken out before It became a law, largely due to Senator Root's criticism and en lightened public opinion. Some of its most valuable features were Anally taken from the report of the Monetary Commission, which the Baltimore con vention had thoroughly condemned. Let us hope that this law will prove an im provement over our present system when it is finally put into effect. "I have not time to refer to all the unfortunate and absurd legislation en acted. t shall not even dwell upon the appropriation of $35,000,000 for the building of a railroad in the frozen and frigid north on the glaciers of Alaska, except to say that this appro priation is over SI,OOO for every white man, women, and child of the mixed population of all nationalities, many, if not a majority, of whom are not evsn citizens of the United States, and to 1 say that this is only the beginning and will require not less than three times this amount before the work contem plated is completed, if it ever will be. Panama Tolls "I shall not now refer to the reasona why President Wilson has reversed himself as well as the Baltimore plat form on the proposition of the Panama Canal tolls. You will remember, be fore the election in all of his public utterances, the President insisted we must have free passage through the Panama Canal for American merchant vessels, giving a number of reasons and thoroughly approving without reserve this enacted legislation. Now he comes to Congress and asks us to repeal that law, and says: " 'Reverse your action without rais ing a question whether we are right or wrong, l^or — „ "He says— "'l shall not know how to deal with other measures of even greater delicacy |M| Your complexion need* H DAGGETT & RAMSDELL'S ■ PERFECT COLD CREAM FfjSl UMJ by the elite of New York Society for twanty-tkreo years and still their ri3s tarorite Imparts health and baauty ta theskin, smoothes *way the aula of Time, gSHB brings Nature's bloom to sallow cheeks, d'scourecee Bg|| by*its"daiij Unm ud wrinkles. Improro your look* IBSjSESSiJ^BBk Wp fv tubes 10c., 2Sc., BOc. In jar. Me., BOc., 85c. SI.BO, M @9 When you lnnl*t upoo D & R you ret the best cold cream In tb* store. j and nearer consequences if you do not grant it to me in ungrudging measure.' - "I shall refrain to dwell on this sub ject at this time. Tariff I.rslHlatlnn "Let us take up the subject that is perhaps of 'nearer consequence' to most of us. Let us see whether the Underwood tariff bill has been the cure all it was promised it would be. Let us see what the effect of this legislation has been. Has it resulted in increased opportunity for the wage earners? Has it reduced the high cost of living? i Oh, I know when I touch on this sub ject that I shall bo classed as a 'ca lamity howler.' We are told that to refer to these conditions will injure business, yet it Is a fact that the Dem ocratic party, through Its platform, through Its press, nnd through its ora tors, has for sixteen years in continu ous unbroken chorus howled 'calamity.' Their tales of woe make the lamenta tions of Job sound like words of praise. They condemned the tariff laws enact ed by the Republican party as the most Iniquitous and obnoxious pieces of leg islation ever written upon the statute books. Yet, during all the years they were in force we enjoyed the great est prosperity of any country on the face of the earth and in the history of ' the world. Their calamity howling did j no harm, because everyone was pros-1 poring: but finally, through persißtent j yet inconsistent effort, they raised a doubt In the minds of some whether after all they should not be given an opportunity to put their theory into practice, and to-day, amid the gloom of the family circle of the unemployed and silence of closing mills and dying flres for the first time in twenty years, they preach prosperity. They tell us there is no business depression and then with true Democratic consistency say times are getting better." Deputy Attorney General William M. Hargeat and E. J. Stackpole spoke briefly on the back-to-the-party trend that is now so evident. Mr. Hargest devoted considerable attention to the MAY 19, 1914. failure of the Wilson administration and Mr. Stackpole urged a "welcome home" for all those who had strayed from the party reservation In 1912. Among the others who spoke were Augustus Wlldman and J. W. Swartz, candidates for the Legislature In the city district; Daniel L. Kelster, City Commissioner William H. Lynch, ex-Mayor E. S. Meals, City Chairman Harry F. Oves, Ed. M. Housholder, vice-president of the club; William D. Block. Mr. Pavord and Charles E. ■ "I am an old man—and many of my troubles m m (never happened,."—ELßEßT HUBBARD ■ rpHE white hair and wrinkled faces of our busy men and women tell | of doubt, fear and anxiety—more than disease or ar;e. Worry olava . . . ? J"™? 8 7? tem ~ eo that digestion is ruined and sleep baniahed. What oil is to the friction of the delicate parts of an engine— DR. PIERCE'S (golden Medical Discovery Is to the delicate organs of the body. It's a tonic and body builder-because it ' V !T J'/\° rOU9 action assists the stomach to assimilate food—thus enriching the b.ood, and the nerves and heart in turn are fed on pure rich blood. "K, ?' starved nerves for food." For forty years •'Golden ' ,n q orm has K iven great satisfaction as a tonic and Now it can be obtained in tablet form—from dealer* in medicine or send SO one-cent etampt for trial box. Write R. V.Pierce,Buffalo. ■ £*. PIEHCE'S PLEASANT PELLETS ® Relieve constipation, regulate the liver. ————— _ an< bowels. Easy to tafce as «—<7. * Coal Is Cheapest and Best Now ! To buy coal now la to buy It at the cheapest price for which It can be obtained during the year. And then you gain In quality, too, for the I coal sent from the mines at this time of the year may be thoroughly . screened before delivery, a difficult matter in cold weather when frost | will cause the dirt to cling to the coal. So to buy Montgomery coal now Is to buy the best quality of the beat coal at the lowest prtoea. Place your order. J. B. MONTGOMERY Both Phone* Third and Chestnut Streets 1 - M. • „l Pass. One of the features of the evening was an address by the "Spirit of Rev, Carter," an excellent take-off on thai eccentric character, by George Barnes, An orchestra played popular airs and guests sang during the Intervals ol the speechmaking. The dinner was arranged by William H. Hoffman, chaiman, Hiram Eisenberger, Joseph Baumgardner, Thomas Edwards, Harrs F. Oves, E. M. Housholder, W. D, Block and Ashton D. Peace, 9