12 MEfoMen rtgynreßfivs WHEN A GIRL'S IN LOVE . By DOROTHY DIX ■ An anxious youth asks me how a man can tell whether a girl is really in love with him, or Is Just flirting. Why, bless you, son, it Is as easy as falling oft a log. A woman in love is the most give-away pro position on earth. She couldn't deceive a blind baby if he didn't want to be deceived. The signs and symp toms of the tender passion break out on her like the measles, and are so apparent and unmistakable that it doesn't take a diagnostician to rec ognize them at sight. He who runs may read, but—and Stick a pin in this point, son—in judg ing Whether a girl is ki love with yoil ®r not go by the way she acts, and fiot by what she says. Words are cheap. Especially with the female sex. Put no faith in them. At lovers' perjuries, they say. Love laughs. He must have conniption tits of mirth over women's vows of devotion. They are so often sugar-coated lies that men's vanity leads them to swallow whole. Therefore, pay no attention to a girl's honeyed talk. It's the bait the little spider has set to lure flies into her parlor, but keep a wary eye out to see what she does when you're about. Do not be misled by the warmth of a girl's welcome when you go to see her. or the fact that she calls you up on the telephone,, and invites you around If you fall to show up with your usual regularity. This is simply business. Custom does not permit a girl to go out and pick out the one man in the world she likes for a hus band. The Very First Sign Her only chance is to gather all the men she caij about her in the hope that among the bunch there will be the one particular HE. Also to be a belle, to be admired, gi\es a girl the reputation of success In her little world. Hence she plays up her smile of joyous greeting to every man who comes along. It's just one of the moves in the game and has no per »'M.VN OF THE HOUR" AT THE PALACE William A. Brady, well-known thea trical producer, presents in motion pic tures one of the fcrcatest successes of the American staKe in "The Man of the Hour," by Georgre Broad huift With Robert Warwick In the title role of "The Most Beautiful Dance We Know Of" Say Mr. and Mrs. Castle Of the Newest Modern Dance That All Will Dance This Winter Now for the first time adapted for the home. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Castle explain it, in pictures, step by step, the same as they will teach it at Castle House, New "York, this winter to the most fashionable society. It is IN THE NOVEMBER ISSUE OF The Ladies' Home Journal Fifteen Cents a Copy, of All News Agents Or, $1.50 a Year (12 issues) by Mail, Ordered Through Our Subscription Agents or Direct Boys Wanted to Deliver on Routes. Apply to Our Sales Agent REDSECKER BRINSER, 102 S. 2nd. St. Harrisburg, Pa. THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY Independence Square*.Philadelphia Pennsylvania FRIDAY "EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 23, 1914. » sonal significance, though many men i never lind this out. The first unmistakable sign that a 3 girl gives of being in love with you, t son. is when she begins to prefer the back parlor to the theater or a dance. , As long as a girl wants you to be for s ever trotting her around to some place l of amusement, she regards you merely i as a pleasant means to an agreeable f end. You are her opera and supper i ticket, so to speak. t She may find you entertaining, 1 agreeable, congenial, but she isn't in t love with you. When she does fall in . love for keeps she begins to prefer the - lamp turned low in her own home to r the footlights, and her idea of a per t fectly thrilling and exciting evening is ' one spent alone with you. So when t Mabel begins .to show symptoms of staylng-at-home-ltls you may rest as sured that you have made a very con siderable dent in her little heart. 1 The next way to test a maiden's real affection for you is to try her on i a monologue about your early youth, i This Is. Indeed, an acid test of undy > ing affection, but it is one whose virtue i can be relied upon. No other human being except a man's mother and his i wife will ever stand for the reml-. niscences of when he was a freckled face little boy and hid the cat under : the bed. Therefore if Maud does not yawn in j your face when you spiel along about . your youthful adventures, and if she i eats up the stories of your schoolboy | days, you may pop the question with | the certainty that she is yours for the A Matter of Observation Next, observe a girl's demeanor to you when you take her out If you would ascertain whether she is ij) love with you or merely stringing you along until the right man appears on the Scene. If she is always urging you to spend money. If she is constantly handing out hints about flowers and candy, and if. when you take her to a restaurant, she orders the most ex pensive dishes on the bill of fare, there's nothing doing so far as you ; are concerned. She's grafting what she can get in the present because she does not expect to be interested in your future. On the other hand, if a girl is in : love with you she's always wanting you to save. She'll suggest the movies as a substitute for the theater, and thinks ice cream plenty good refresh- the picture, the play has been produced in five acts. It is a Kraft story where in a young man who has made a for tune for himself is elected to the office of mayor of New York City. Crooked politicians try to Ret him to sign a bill granting railway franchises to the com pany headed by the father of the girl the mayor loves. He, however, sees In ment on a festive occasion. She has mercy on your pocketbook, because she is hoping that someday It ill be her own, and that the mpre economi cal you are in the present the sooner you will he able to marry. Take heed also to a maiden's con versation on domestic topics. As long as Sallle scoffs at the kitchen, and acorns the sewing machine, and calls babies brats, she Isn't in love with you, or any other man. But the minute a girls falls in love she is converted to domesticity, and she begins to take an interest in housekeeping and to try to learn how to sew. You'll find no bet ter test of a maiden's sentiments toward you then to take her up a good cook book Instead of the latest novel the next time you go to see her. If she dlsdalnfullycasts It aside, it's « tip to you to hold your tongue: but If she immediately becomes absorbed in reading the recipes, go ahead with out fear and tell her about that little flat with exposed plumbing and a papier-mache wainscoted dining room that you've been looking at, and that would make the cosiest sort of a nest for two. Then There's Your Health I And here's also another sign that never fails. Observe if the girl is wor ried a\)out your health. it doesn't | make any difference whether you are as husky as an ox and never had an ache or pain In your life. Every I woman who loves a man believes him | to be a frail infant, incapable of tak ing care of himself, and who can only be kept alive by her tender solicitude. And she is firmly convinced that he is liable to be run over by a street car or lost In a crowd unless she worries over hi"i. So take heed as to whether Gladys Oieraldine insists on your wearing rub bers and muffling tip your throat and keepln gout of a draught and giving up smoking. If she lets you go out Into the rain without an umbrella, and doesn't make you telegraph if you ar rive safely as soon as you get to | Philadelphia, she's not in love with you. But if she telephones to know If you got home without being kid naped—then, son, begin pricing wed ding rings, for she's made up her mind to take care of you through life, and the first thing you know you will be giving her a legal right to do it. By these signs and token may the temperature of a maiden's affection be accurately gauged. the bill a true steal and refuses to sign. He almost loses the girl, but finally wins not only her, but his tight as well. In addition to this film there will be shown a two-reel picture, "Ix>ve and Baseball." which features Christy Matliewson, the famous pitcher of the New York Giants.—Advertisement. 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P THE UPTOWN SHOPPiWC CEHTIR a ante e dt he wearer of iMW I " <SKT A TRANSFCR I an ej so or Laßiene wnmnenn qi c ° rset - u *^Mf ■ H w p # 1 give you satisfaction ILjL^U & THIRD ANBBROiD O bring k back ' Rev. Lisse Gets Letter Giving German Side of War Controversy To the Editor of the Teiegraph: Dear Sir: I have received a letter directly from Germany giving the Ger man side of the war question and I would very much like to see it publish in the Telegraph. The letter is signed by a hundred or more of the best known men of Ger many, including university professors, directors of educational institutions, and others of the highest standing throughout Germany and the world. Some of the signers are as follows: Emil von Behring,' professor of medicine, Marburg; Wllhelm von Kode, general director of the Royal Museums, Berlin; Professor Adolf von Harnack, general director of the Royal library, Berlin; August Schmidlln, pro fessor of sacred history, Munster; Wilhelm Herrman, professor of pro testant theology, Marburg; Anton Koch, professor of Roman Catholic theology. Munster. The letter in full is as follows: "To the Civilized World!" "As representatives of German science and art, we hereby protest to the civilized world, against the lies and calumnies which our enemies are endeavoring to stain the honor of Ger many in her hard struggle for exist ence—in a struggle which has been forced upon her. "The iron mouth of events has proved the untruth of the fictitious German defeats, consequently mis representaton and calumny are all the more eagerly at work. As heralds of truth we raise our voices against these. "It is not true that Germany is guilty of having caused this warj. Neither the people, the government, nor the Kaiser wanted war. Germany did her utmost to prevent it: for this assertion the world has documental proof. Often enough during the twen ty-six years of his reign has Wilhelm 11. shown himself to be the upholder of peace, and often enough has this fact been acknowledged by our oppon ents. Nay, even the Kaiser, they now dare to call an Attila, has been ridi culed by them for years, because of his steadfast endeavorers to maintain universal peace. Not till a numerical superiority which had been lying ip wait on the frontiers, assailed us, did the whole nation rise to a man. "It is not true that we trespassed in neutral Belgium. It has been proved that Krance and had resolved ! on such a trespass, and it has likewise been proved that Belgium had agreed to their doing so. It would have been suicide on our part not to have been ■beforehand. "It is not true that the life and property of a single Belgian citizen was injured v y our soldiers without the bitterest self-defense having made it necessary; for again, and again, not withstanding repeated threats, the citizens lay in ambush, shooting at the troops out of the house, mutilating the wounded, and murdering In cold blood the medical men while they were do ing their Samaritan work. There can he no baser abuse than the suppres sion of these crimes with the view of letting the Germans appear to be crim inals. only for having justly punished these assassins for their wicked deeds. "It is not true that our troops treat ed Louvan brutally. Furious inhabi tants having treacherously fallen up on them In their quarters, our troops with aching hearts, were obliged to fire a part of the town, as a punish ment. The greatest part of Louvaln has been preserved. The famous Town Hall stands quite Intact; for at great self-sacrifice our soldiers saved It from destruction by the flames. Every German would of course greatly re gret, >if In the course of this terrible war any works of art should already have been destroyed or be destroyed at some future time, but Inasmuch as in our love for art we can not be sur passed by any other nation. In the same degree we must decidedly refuse to buy a German defeat at the cost of saving a work of art. "It is not true that our warfare pays no respect to international laws. It knows no lndiscipllnod cruelty. But in tne east, the earth is sntured with the blood of women and children un mercifully butchered by the wild Rus sian troops, and in the west, |ira- Dum bullets mutilate the breasts of ox r soldiers. Those who have allied themselves with Russians and Serv ians, and present such a shameful scene to the world as that of Inciting Mongolians and negroes against the white race, have no right whatever to call themselves upholders of civiliza tion. "It is not true that the combat 'against our so-called militarism is not a combat against our civilization, as our enemies hypocritically pretend it is. Were it not for German militar ism, German civilization would long since have been extirpated. For its protection It arose in a land which for centuries had been plagued by hands of robbers, as no other land had been. The German army and the German people are one, and to-day, this con sciousness fraternises seventy millions of Germans, all ranks, positions and parties being one. "We cannot wrest the poisonous weapon-—-the lie —out of the hands of our enemies. All we can do is to pro claim to all the world, that our enem ies are giving false witness against us. You, who know us, who with us have protested the most holy possessions of man, we call to you: "Have faith in us! Believe, that we shall carry on this war to the end as a civilized nation, to whom the legacy of a Goethe, a Beethoven, and a Kant, is just as sacred as its own hearths and homes. "For this we pledge you our names and our honor." REV. H. F. F. LISSE, Pastor of German Lutheran Church, Herr and Capital Streets." MAJESTIC To-morrow, afternoon and -evening Vogel's Minstrels. Monday and Tuesday, with Tuesday matinee—"The Kound-Up." Thursday afternoon and evening "Freckles." Friday, afternoon and evening—Bur- lesque. ORPHGIIH Every afternoon and evening—High- Class Vaudeville. COLONIAL • Daily—Vaudeville and Pictures. THE MINSTBEI. FIRST PART Johh W. Vogel. manager of the Big City Minstrels, which comes to the Ma jestic, Saturdny, matinee and night, Is an enthusiast In his business and is thoroughly posted as to the origin and growth of the popular style of amuse ment he purveys. Said Mr. Vogel to our special commissioner: "Away back in 1843 (to be precise, February 6), at the Bowery Amplthea ter, appeared the Virginia Minstrels, four in number—mind you, four—that was a lirst part combining banjo, vio lin, bone, castinet and tambourine. E. P. Christy, who has often been called the father of polite minstrelsy, intro duced the dress coat ilrst part, and the really excellent parlor concert was emulated by all of Christy's competi tors. Writers who dwell rovingly and reverently over the past, are wont to dilate enthusiastically over the days, or rather nights, of the Bryants at Me chanics' Hall, Broadway, when they announced, Jerry, Dan and Nell Bryant and thirteen star performers, and the orchestra sat on one side of the stage and played for the acts of the olio on the other side."—Advertisement "THE ROUND-lIP"' In addition to Shep Camp, Harold Christie, John B. Mack, James Asburn, John Walsh, Edwin Varney. Gertrude Pern', Maude Williams and Kuth Cop ley and the other principals in Edmund Day's Western drama. "The Round-Up," there are twenty-five cowboys from the cattle ranges of the Southwest and twenty Indians from Arizona who figure conspicuously In the battle scene in the third act of this play. This company, totaling 135 people, will present the largest production ever made by Klaw and Krlanger hore at the Majestic Theater, for two nights, beginning Monday, with a special popular mati nee on Tuesday.—Advertisement. "FRECKLES" A. G. Delamater's beautiful scenic production of "Freckles." dramatized from the famous novel by Gene Strat ton-Porter. author of "The Girl of the I.imberlost" and "The Harvester," with special music and song numbers by the celebrated Viennese composer, Anatol Frledland, will be the attraction at the Majestic next Thursday, .mati nee and night.—Advertisement. , ORFHKIIH Since high-class vaudeville camo to Harrlsburg we have seen Jugglers of about every shade and hue. Some of them had comedy antics included with their tricks. some of them were "straight" jugglers, to use the real theater vernacular, and after having seen all of them we Jilst promised our selves that there was little left In this line of amusement that could really hold our attention. A juggler to close the Orpheum bill, sometimes Jugglers of national reputation, have experienced that Harrisburg audiences would start to leave the theater about the middle of their performance. But this is not the fate of Miss Lucy Gillette, pro gramed as "The Lady From Delf," who holds the last person in the audience until the curtain has dropped on her very last feat. The curtain rises on her act showing a Dutch blue setting, representing the interior of a Holland kitchen. Miss Gillette Is seen at her fireside, knitting or something similar, and soon she is doing a mighty clever Dutch dance. To everybody's surprise the act turns into a juggling turn, and Miss Gillette juggles everything in sight and in a manner that is indeed interesting to say nothing of Its be ing sensational. "Tile Lady From Delf" is pleasing, quick in action, and her feats are marvelous, and one is gone through right after the other, without ever a miss. The artistic staging of her act. together with her pleasing personality, do wonders toward making the most of her extra ordinary talents. Miss Gillette is one of the clever cards grouped about Lew A Point o ' F # d t r J0 Beans are extremely nutritious —in JKt fact, one of the most nourishing foods For this reason, and also because of their economy, beans should often m Wagner's I This is very important, for, remember, ■ ' 1 it's the food that you digest and not ■|||m the amount of food you eat that ■ !fS nourishes your system. I You can be positively certain Hi 4B\ of quality when you buy any ■ \ "Wagner" product, for quality ■ 4 has been tnq, cornerstone of this I ■ \ great house for 32 years. H „• (No. i, Luncheon | >.* ' Thrum lixmi: | No. 2, Family '' Look for the blue-band label. ■ Wk HV MAR™ WAGNER CO. Hft BH lUh j Dockstader, also Johnny Doole.v and Yvette Rugel in their nonsense and song, and a number of other clever vaudeville hits.—Advertisement. (Oi.OXIAi. Those who delight in artistic musical acts And a treat indeed in the act of the Three Musical Ellisons, offetlng a picturesque musical novelty as the leading feature of the new bill that came to the Colonial yesterday. The Ellisons are virtuosos of a variety of musical instruments and in the hail' light of the stage they give a musical performance that must delight lovers of exquisite harmony as well as ad mirers of artistic stage pictures. James Kennedy and company are offering a. comedy playlet called "Jack Swift" that is laughable throughout and the other Keith hits include Mahoney and Tre mont in songs, comedy and dances call ed "At the Department Store;" the Aerial Barbers, sensational athletes, give a thrilling performance in mid-air. To-day's program In moving pictures is maae up of an Interesting arary of first run licensed films.—Advertisement.
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