10 \po(V)en V& "Their Married Life Copyright by International Xows Scrrico. "There's froing to he an entertain ment in town." volunteered Carrie as she came down stuirs and found Helen embroidering in the living room. "Suppose we all go up—the children will e>njoy it and it won't hurt them to be out late for this once." Helen looked up from her work. "But. Carrie. Winifred is too young to go to an evening entertainment of any kind. She has never beexj any where, and besides she isn t so strong as yet. Her operation was only per formed about three weeks ago!" "Nonsense. Helen." with the brisk assertlveness that always character ized Warren's sister, "the child would have a good time. You can't expect to keep her wrapped up in cotton wool all her life. Just look at my chil dren. I don't worry about them and they are a credit to me. Jane," to one" of th'i servants who was passing, "did Arthur put his coat on when he went out to play?" "Yes. ma'am, X put It on him my self." said the maid, pausing as she passed through the room. "Children are a care." said Carrie, sighing as she turned back to Helen, "but to return to the subject, you'll lot Winifred go to-night, won't you? I agree with you that it would be bad as a general diet, but just this once; the boys enjoy having her with them. I've often wished they had a sister. Helen hated to be firm on a matter that she thought on\y right, for the reason that Warren had always wanted her to be friendly with Carrie, and if she did anything now, just as things were apparently running very smoothly. Warren would be sure to blame it entirely on her. "I wish you wouldn't ask me to do it. Carrie. J know it would be bad for Winifred. The night air is so cool now I would so much rather not. Helen was clinging to the bare chance that Carrie would not insist upon her doing what she was sure was a wrong thing for Winifred, but Carrie had no idea of giving in to Helen. "If Warren were here I'm sure he would sav that you are acting fool ishly, Helen. However. Winifred is vour child and you have a right to do as you see fit regarding her wel fare. As long as you think it would j be wrong to allow her to go. we shall ( all remain at home. 1 told the chil dren that there was to be an enter tainment. Xo doubt they will be dis appointed. but then that isn't of any consequence." "But. Carrie, that isn't necessary. Tou go and take the children and let me stay home with Winifred. Or per haps Jane would stay with her until we return and then I could go, too." "I promised Jane that she could go with her cousin and I wouldn't hear of your staying home alone. We'll all 'stay home and the children can go to j bed as usual." "Very well. Winifred may go if her j staying home is going to Interfere with your plans, Carrie; but I hope that In | the future you won't plan anything that may include Winifred at night, or j 1 shall have to refuse to allow her to ) go at all!" Helen could not refrain j from adding this, and Carrie flushed. That she could never be very j friendly with Warren's sister 1m- i pressed Itself on Helen with renewed j emphasis. "I suppose you and Louise see a I great deal of each other." Carrie said ( ♦inslly, changing the subject now that i she had won Helen's consent to her I plans. "I haven't seen her since she ; and Bob were married, but I'm pretty sure I could never care for her. Her actions at the hospital at the time I Prescribed by C FN. doctors for SSL/" J V. nineteen years. Heal your skin with Reshol NO matter bow lone vou have been tortured and disfigured by itching, burning, raw or scaly skin humors, just put a little of that soothing, antiseptic Resinol Ointment on the sores and the suffering stop® right there! Healing begins that very mfi>- nte, and in almost every case your skin gets well so quickly you feel ashamed of the money you threw away on useless treatments. Rerfnol Ointment and Reainol Soap irv I •old by all druggists. Merehaata * Mlnera Traaa. Co. DELIGHTFUL TRIPS "BY SEA" BALTIMORE TO JACKSONVILLE and return H33.M) SAVANNAH and return KR.OO BOSTON and return S-0.00 Including meals and stateroom ac commodations. Through tickets to all points. Fine steamers. Best service. Staterooms de luxe. Baths. Wireless telegraph. Automobiles carried. Send for booklet. W. P. TI'RNER, G. P. A., Baltimore. Md. EDUCATIONAL Enroll Next Monday DAY AND NIGHT SCHOOL Positions for all (iriuliuites SCHOOL OF COMMERCE 15 S. MARKET SQUARE, HARRISBURG, I'A. Harrisburg Business College 329 Market St. Fall term, September first. Day and night. 29th year. Harrisburg, Pa. MONDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 12, 1914. that Bob was elck wer« absolutely unwomanly." She paused, as though she expected Helen to say something at that point, but Helen went on with her sewing without raising her head. She remem bered Carrie's scathing remarks about Louise that day at the hospital, but she was determined to ward off any further argument with Carrie If she possibly could. Helen SUIIMU Up for Her Friend Ixmise "I remember that you were the only one of the family who stood up for her." went on Carrie, determined to bring up unpleasant topics of the past. "Was it because you really ap proved of her actions or because you wanted to go against us?" Helen thought that she might have said that it was because she knew how it felt to be heartily disapproved of by the entire family. That War ren's family had never liked her had always made her unhappy because she felt somehow that it vaguely in fluenced Warren in his treatment of her. Several times when they had been angry Warren had brought the fact home to her in a way that hurt, and aside from the real genuine liking that she had for Louise was a deter mination to fight for her rights In the face of any opposition that the family might bring to bear against her. "I never saw anything unwomanly in Louise." said Helen finally; "the fact of her being at the hospital with Bob was a very naturai thing, that I understood perfectly. I think it had a great deal to do with Bob's present happiness." "You think Bob Is so happy?" queried Carrie. "I never thought Louise was the kind of a girl who could please Bob." "Louise is the only kind of a girl who could make Bob happy, because she is the only girl In the world who could hold his love,"' said Helen with the knowledge born of her own short comings In her heart. "I thought her too independent, too careless of conventions," said Carrie, still unconvinced. "But, It was because she loved Bob, Carrie, not because she was foolishly running In the way of public gossip. I admire Louise more than I can say, and I have grown to love her dearly." "Well. I mustn't stay and gossip 1 here all morning," she said, getting up quickly "I haven't done any of my ordering. How about veal cutlets for lunch? I wonder what the children are doing." "There they are." crossing to the window: "now I wonder what the boys have done with Winifred's hat. There she Is putting It on; she saw me look ing at her. Children are always get ting into mischief if someone isn't continually watching them!" '"Winifred ought to come in now," said Helen, glancing at the clock: "she has been out for over an hour. I do hope she doesn't take cold from go : ing without a hat!" "They're going around to the back." ! said Carrie. "Jane will let them in ; through the kitchen. Do you know, I Helen. 1 believe I'll ask Bob and j Louise up for a week-end some time. ; I don't like to feel as though I'd mis judged her." Helen was silent for a moment. She ! wanted to say how nice that would I be. but she felt that Carrie had a mo- I tive of some kind behind the thought I that had prompted her to speak of the subject now. "I'd like to see if Bob has changed any." Carrie went on. "You know, ! Helen, you might have done a lot with Warren if vou hadn't always given in i to him the way you have!" Another instalment of this lnterest j ing series will soon appear. I A History of 7,000 Years From the First Pharaoh of Egypt to the Present Day The first authentic records of man kind are dated nearly 7,000 years ago. From that time until the twentieth century man has contrived to leave some record of his doings and his say ings so that his descendants might know who and what he was. With these records before him. Larned traces the life of mankind in its con tinuity—that is. the life of human society. In successive generations, by a survey of history—not only of naked events —but the forces, movements and influences by and through which the man of to-day. and the life he is now living, have come to be what they are. It requires a genius to do this. And Josephus Nelson Larned, author of the famous History for Keady Ref erence, is conceded by all scholars to ihe a genius In historic writing. His History of the World, now being dis ! tributed by this paper, is his latest j work, the result of many ears of re j search and study in the field of his tory. It is as accurate as a photo graph and an entertaining as a novel. To one who has never read history it ; is an education in itself. To those who have read the ordinary school his tories. it is a revelation. That it should be in the home of every reader of this paper goes without saying. 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"Makers of Honest Scales" v . H . n n +* XX 40 North Court stree, , c 313 Telegraph Bidg. Keystone Motor Car Co. J 4 f HMi-rlsbura. Pa. 310 Market Street FOURTH ANI» BRIDGE STS. Bell Phone H43 1019-1025 MARKET ST. aa R. P*. REYNOLDS, Sales Ageat. Robert L. Morton, Maiager, » >- < :n thought rela tively Immaterial but und been found ■shrewdly placed nntl their rulnerab.. ity overestimated. The thunders o' batteries hammering them became a routine of existence, like the passing of trains to one living near a railroad. The guns went on while tea was be ing served; they ushered in dawn and darkness; they were going when sleep came to those whom they later awak ened with a start. Fights as desper ate as the one around the house be came features of this period, which was only a warming-up practice for the war demon before the orgy of impending assault on The main line. Marta began to realize the immen sity of the chessboard and of the forces engaged in more than the bare statement of numbers and distance*. If a first attack on a position failed, the wires from the Gailand house re peated their orders to concentrate more guns and attack again. In the end the Browns always yielded, but grudgingly, calculatingly, never be ing taken by surprise. The few ol them who fell prisoners said, "God with us! We shall win in the end!" and answered no questions. Gradually the Gray army began to feel that It was battling with a mystery which was fighting under cover, falling back under cover—a tenacious, watchful mystery that sent sprays of death Into every finger of flesh that the Grays thrust forward in assault. "Another position taken. Our ad vance continues," was the only news that Westerling gave to the army, his people, and the world, which forgot Its sports and murdprs and divorce cases in following the progress of the first great Europenn war for two gen erations. He made no mention of the costs; his casualty lists were secret. The Gray hosts were sweeping for ward as a slew, irre istible tide; this by Partow'a own admission. He an nounced the lods of a position as promptly as the Grays its taking. He published a daily list of casualties so meager In contrast to their own that the Grayt thought it false; he made known the names of the (tilled and wounded to their relatives. Yet the seeming candor of his press bureau included no straw of Information of military value to the enemy. Westerling never went to tea at the Gallands' with the other officers, for It was part of his cultivation of great ness to keep aloof from his subordi nates. His meetings with Marta hap pened casually wiirn he went out Into the garden. Only once had he made any reference to tha "And then" of their Interview in the arbor. "I am -ttl'-s for you!" he had exclaimed with the thing in his eyes which f.V loathed. To her it was equivalent to saying that she had tricked him into sending men to be killed In order to please her. She despised h r -rself for the way he confided in her; yet she had to go on keep'ns his confidence, re turning a tender jriar.ee with one that held out hope. Ph? learned not to shudder when be f;;o!:e of a loss of "only ten thousand." In order to rally herself when she j;rew faint-hearted to her task, she learned to picture the llnee of his face hard-set witfi flve agalnst-three brutality, while in coin fort he ordered multitudes to death, and, in contrast, to recall the smile of Dellarme, who asked his soldiers to undergo no risk that he would not share. And after every success he would remark th.it he was so much nearer Engadir, .mion cf the main line of defense whose weakness she had revealed. "Tour Engadir!" he came to say. "Then we shall again profit by your Information; that is, unless they have fortified since you received It." "They haven't. They had already fortified!" she thought. She was al ways seeing the mockery of his words in the light of her own knowledge and her own part, which never escaped her consciousness. One chamber of her mind was acting for him; a seo and chamber was perfectly aware that the other " c [To Be Continued] LOOK YOUR VERY BEST CUTICURA SOAP And Cuticura Ointment, both fra grant, super-creamy emollients, will promote and maintain the natural purity and beauty of the hair and skin, the first requisites of beauty. Samples Free by Mall Cutleura Soap and otntraent toM throughout tin