XfcfcMen isaJ nxeßgs tvS r~ "Their Married Li{e Copyright by International News Service. . ! t (Copyright, 1914, International News Service) "Main floor, madam. Ties? Over to the left!" And Helen stepped out of the elevator and made her way to ward the counter at the other end of the store The day had been warm, but there were some things that were absolutely necessary, and Helen had ventured downtown In spite Of the heat. One thin* that could not be postponed was a birthday present for Warren. She had started out ahout 10 o'clock with a vague idea of buying something that would be a real surprise, but nothing seemed to appeal to her in the light of a difference and she had almost decided to buy a tie and go home, the heat was so intense. The crowd was terrible. Helen had imagined that the stores would be almost deserted, but already the cursious weer on the lookout for the first glimpse of Kail styles, anil every department was tilled with a crowd of rushing, chattering women. Helen reached the ties and looked at several in the case before asking to have any brought out. There seemed to be a monotony in every thing. Even the ties showed nothing original. Perhaps there were some put away. Anyway it would do no harm to ask. "What can I do for you, madam?" asked the clerk, coining up at that mo ment. "Something in ties? Perhaps you have seen something you like in the case. Have you looked around?" "Yes. but I don't like any in the case. Have you anything else?" "Nothing but what you see, madam. How do you like this one?" bringing out an atrocity in blue and green with an undertone of purple. "These are j the very newest things; all the men are wearing them." "No, I didn't want anything so de-] cided. If these are all you have 11 won't talke anything." The clerk put, the tie back in the case and regarded ! her coldly as she walked away. She Decides to Rest Before Resuming ller Search She decided to rest a few minutes; before trying anywhere else. She; would go to Thirty-fourth street and ] have a soda. That would be cooling | and give her time to collect her j thoughts. Perhaps Warren would' like something in the way of jewelry. : although she was perfectly sure he ■ had everything he needed. On the corner she encountered aj huge crowd—something had evidently i happened—-but she hurried on with out stopping to see what it was. In | the cool little candy store, with an | electric fan buzzing soothingly away overhead and a frosty drink before her j on the little round table, Helen felt so much cooler that she decided to' stay down and look at draperies. They ! would have to have the living room j done over in the Fall, and. after all,, there wasn't so much time left before ' Warren took her West. She gathered up her things to leave j and was sauntering slowly hack to- ] ward the shopping district when some 1 one behind her said laughingly: "How much longer are you going to make me follow you before you turn around?" "Louise! What are you doing down- i town on a day like this?" "I might ask what you are doing. 11 should thinlr you would lie so furious! that you hadn't stayed up at the j Bluffs that even a hint at cooler | weather would hardly tempt you out to shop." "What about yourself? Aren't you planning to stay in the city all sum mer, just becaitse Boh can't get away?" "And aren't you buck in the city when you might have stayed where you were. just because Warren couldn't, stay?" mocked Louise. Helen laughed. "Well, anyway, I have a perfectly good reason for being downtown. I want to get Warren something really nice for his birthday. By the way, won't you and Bob come up for din ner that night, if you haven't any thing else to do?" "Delighted. I can't think of any thing I'd rather do. Bob and I are looking forward to the Fall, when we. can go to housekeeping. Of course, everything is simply fine where we are. but I do want a home of my own so badly!" 1/Oiilse Tells of the Cnnd Points of Her Husband "T do hope you can settle some where near us. It must be fun to plan to have everything new again and to lie really starting out in life." Helen Absolutely No Pain S' WTi My latest Improved appll < anoes. InfliKilnp an oxygen- * WiWl l*ed atr apparatus, makes extracting and all den- S «.0 , aV tal work positively painless and is per- S O A* 1 S fectljr harmless. \ _g\ _^r | (Age no objec- EXAMINATION / "£ 2! FREE / «.0^i L ~ alloy cement 50c. X » x Gold Crowns and Registered S A S Bridge Work, $3, $4, $5. a 22-K. Gold Crown ....$5.00 Gradnnto V S Office open dally 8.30 «_ A udtf.nf. SA* X- S nv to •p. m.; Mon., Wed. Aasla *» nto S V 7 S and Sat. TUI 9p. m.; Sundays m. to 1 p. m. ~ B " U ****"* >32»H S £ • EAST TERMS OF~ X S PAYMENTS AMmA /lib Market Street TOver the Hob) / Harrisburg, Pa. n dm>*« Burt a Bit I PAIITMN I Whmn Coming to My Off/oe Be uAU I lUll ■ Sure You Are In the Right Plaoe. HPil often lies in the brassiere. Hundreds of thousands!* women | ■BESS®? wear the Blen-Jolle Brassiere for the reason tliat they regard | IKB » •» »» necessary as a corset. It supports the bust and back ■ ■JMAMB and Rives the figure the youthful outline fashion decrees. A>lf£M T >re the daintiest, most serviceable WMr X_3 fc /nil rig. garments imaginable. Only the be*t of materials are used—for in «■& nnA « CIFDCC 1 f 1 " 1 "' Walohn", a flexible bon- I V W, TT*.. . in* of jre.it durability—absolutely I ■ JCTjV ttf'M rustless—permitting laundering without removal. IJLVI - iTliey come in all styles, and your local Dry Goods dealer I IflfK ■ will show them toyou on request. Ifhedoesnotcarry them, I ■ V"?R/ U«'l he can rasily get tliem for you by writing tons. Send for ■ *" t'' l "howing styles that are In high favor. I I U , IIJL£i kSO Warren Street Newark, V. J, I HV . •©• ~n WEMHHHHHHHBHHMijIHV TUESDAY EVENING, i said this wistfully, but Louise was so I eager to speak that she hardly noticed i Helen's ma nner at all. , "Oh, Helerv" she went on. "Bob is such a dear. Do you know, he actu ally tries to make up to me for stay-| ] ing in the city. As if such a thing] i were necessary. But he always comes! home with plans for week-end trips and all sorts of nice things. Be tween you and me, Helen, he really' spoils me." I Helen tried to smother the little envious pang in her heart. Whenever I she saw Louise it was there, no mat ter how hard she tried to reason it I 'away. Surely she ought to be the| happiest woman in the world. What! i had she to wish for that she really' ought to have? And then that little voice would whisper maridingly: "You miss the little first thrills, the little attentions that you once took as a matter of course, but which are lacking now."; Did she regret anything? Would: she liave anything different if it were possible for her to pick and choose? ! Nothing but to have Warren a little] i more considerate of her feelings, a i i little more loverlike, a little more like 1 the man she had married, who, al-j though he had always been more dic ! tatorial than Bob, was at one time just I i as tender, just as attentive. They had stopped at the store [ where both did nearly all their shop- i l'ing. "Do you mind going upstairs with | ine. first?" said Louise suddenly. "I i have a definite thing that 1 came' i downtown to get, and after that 1 can ; help you with Warren's present, if you j ; like." A few minutes later they were get-! I ting off at the sixth floor. "Bob is going to let me be really j I extravagant for once. I don't let him [ | spoil me like this very often, but I I have been wanting this set for ages. | It's for my own little boudoir," she ! explained, "and it's a tea set, pale I yellow Limoges. Here it is, isn't it j ! sweet?" And Helen found herself, ! picking out cups and saucers and a j tiny cream jug and sugar bowl, while j I Louise added a lemon dish and a j tloner. "If you don't want to shoot, I can! An example—the law! There's nc other way of dealing with him! Give the word!" he said to Dellarme. Stransky laughed, now in strident cynicism. Dellarme still hesitated, recollecting Lanstron's remark. He pictured Stransky in a last stand In a redoubt, and every soldier was ae precious to him as a piece of gold tc a miser. "One ought to be enough to kill m« If you're going to do It to slow music," •aid Stransky. "You might as well kill me as the poor fools that yout poor fools are trying to—" Another breath finished the speech; a breath released from a ball tha* seemed to have come straight from hell. The fire control officer of a regi ment of Gray artillery on the plain, paanning the landscape for the origin of the rifle-flre which was leaving many fallen in the wake of the charge of the Gray Infantry, had seen a figure on the knoll. "How kind! Thank you!" his thought spoke faster than words. No need of range-finding! The range to every possible battery or Infantry position around La Tlr was already marked on his map. He passed the word to his guns. [To Be Continued] ELECTED INSTRUCTOR Special to The Telegraph Annvllle, Pa. .Sept. 16.—Faber E. Stengie, a senior at Lebanon Valley College, was elected as instructor in physics in the Annville high school to succeed Miss Tlippinrr, who removed to Shippensburß. Mr. Stengie will continue his work at the college. His iioxae is in OberliQ. , m i (Buy Now and Save Money Everything to Furnish the Home and Clothe the Family From Head to Foot at a Saving of Almost One-Half Our enormous stock, our unequaled buying power, our inexpensive location enables you to furnish the humblest home or the most elegant mansion at great sav ings. Four large stores filled with new up-to-date stock and everywhere the price tickets proclaim wonderful economy. You can furnish an extra room with what you save in buying at this store. Whether you wish to furnish modestly or with highest grade Grand Rapids furniture, you may select whatever you want. Pay CASH if you wish or have your bill charged. No Club Fees. No interest added. No embarrassment. No red tape. No inquiries made of your neighbor, landlord and friends. We are 44 years in business and know how to run our busi ness without annoying our friends or patrons. How is the old Range doing? Better Kitchen work no longer drudgery if get the new one now. , you have one of these. Let us show you this Cabinet. The world's best Range S2O, $24, $25, $26, S3O, S4O and up to $55. Fully guar- KITCHEN A 4/% - &A T? anteed. No charge for pipe or setting CABINETS I H f"A juS up. Repairs always on hand. FROM t AV t Two Great Specials For To-morrow 42 pieces of handsome gold band Dinner- *1 AO A 10 nnart Pnr*. ware; worth $4 to $5, for f I.TO A 1U 4 uaf 1 1 are Aluminum Preserving Hk, Guaranteed Pure Alumi num, full 10-quart THIS SET CONSISTS OF THE FOLLOWING: size for 6 plates iy 2 inches. 1 large vegetable bowl. 6 plates 8% inches. 1 large meat platter. C B 6 desert dishes. 1 cream pitcher. 6 butter dishes. 1 large bread plate. ______________ 6 cups. 1 gravy bowl. 6 saucers. 1 celery dish. None Delivered at Kach Set packed securely In separate crate. Broken pieces replaced. this Price. Home Gately & Fitzgerald Supply Co. Family Furnishers j. 29-31-33 aad 35 S. Second Stre«t Clothiers Our Location Mean» a Great Saving to You Former City Newspaper- Man Chosen to Head Big Publicity Dep't. Frank Wert, a son of Professor J. Howard Wert, this city, and a former city editor of the Patriot, has been made head of the publicity department of the Mahoning and Shenango Rail way and Light Company, of Youngs town, O. Mr. Wert resigned from the city editorship of the Patriot nine yeard ago to take over the news desk of the Baltimore News. Prom there he went Vm±MW*T T TERE'S a mighty good MlllSr Catsup, because it's tflp Ll| made of mighty good materials. r A e » choice tomatoes, flavored with pure spices. Mi Wagner's Behind every Wagner product you buy is a reputable house of 32 years' standing whose iff business has been built on fine Quality. f I lllKfJ I B°y *t your |TOCfr J « Look for tho blue-band label. SEPTEMBERS, 1914. to Philadelphia wh«r« He had been tn the service of the "Bulletin," the "Evening Telegraph" and the "Ledger." In discussing Mr. Wert's appointment the current Issue of "Electrical Re view" says: "Frank Wert, of Philadelphia, Pa., where he was engaged In newspaper work, has been made head of the de partment of public relations of tbe Mahoning & Shenango Railway & ■ Light Company, at Youngstown, 0... succeeding In the capacity H. T>. Man ning, assistant to the president, who has found his double duties too heavy by reason of his frequent absences from the city In connection with .his work In the latter position. Mr. Wert was formerly engaged in newspaper work In Baltimore and Harrlsburg. and Is admirably qualified for the work of maintaining amicable relations between 1 the company and the section which It serves." Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Bffeot May 14. 1114. TRAINS loave Harrlsburg— For Winchester and Martlnsbnrg al 6:03, *7:60 a. m., *3:40 Pi m. For Hagerstown. Chamber-bur*, Car lisle, Mechanlcsburg and intermediate stations at 8:03, *7:50. M1:SI *. m. •8:40, 5:32. *7:40. *11:00 p. m. Additional tralna tor Carlisle ta4 Mechanlcsburg at »:48 a. ao, 1:11, 8:87. 4:30, 9:80 a. m. For DlUsburg at (:01, *7: M end •11:68 a. m.. 8:18. *3:40. l>:83 and 0:80 p. m. •Dally. All other trains daily except Sunday. H. A. RIDDII^ J. H TONGA. O. P. A. 5