XfcfcMen r^pJnreß&sT^ "Their Married Life Copyright by International News Service. (Copyright, 1914, International News Service.) Helen took the suit, with its hanger, out of closet and hung it on the chan _ delier to examine it critically. After • all, she might have bought something more to her liking if she hadn't been forced to shop in such a hurry. She \thought resentfully of the hurried trip to Carrie's that Warren had insisted upon her taking and the consequent hurried shopping for whatever she and Winifred had needed for the cooler weather. If she had waited for the later models she might have bought something with fur collar and cuffs. The suit was a pretty one in the popular shade of brown that was dis played so much in the store windows. The coat had a velvet collar and wide velvet cuffs in the same shade, but Helen, who had secretly longed all last Winter for a coat with fur col lar and cuffs, looked at it now with a dissatisfied air. She should have waited for the later models, unless— "a brilliant idea had struck her. Per haps she could utilize her furs for the purpose. Warren had given to Helen a hand some set of lynx two winters ago. The neck piece was large and could be used for the cuffs as well as the •collar. Helen jumped up with the excitement of the thought. She slipped the collar piece over the brown, it looked lovely but per haps after all the black might be a liftle too dark for it. She had spoken to the saleswoman about fur on it when had bought the suit. Per-1 haps if she called up the fur depart ment. or better still, went down they would tell her whether or not It would be advisable to use her lynx on so dark a shade of brown. In the elevator of Craft & Ordway's Helen noticed a woman with a suit on much the shade of hers. There was a cuff and collar set of golden brown fur which made the suit look several shades lighter, and was almost becoming. The woman wore a brown hat with a touch of burnt orange, anil the effect was smart. Already Helen was becoming to think better of her idea to cut her lynx fur. How glad she was now that she hadn't cut into it herself. The elevator stopped at the third floor, and Helen stepped out and walked leisurely to the fur depart ment. Again she was undecided as to what to do. If she did not use her lynx there was no probability of her having the much desired collar and cuffs, for the simple reason that she couldn't afford to buy more fur. She began to wish that she had stayed at home. The woman in the brown Buy the Beans You Can Digest Easiest All the meats that we eat are nutritious, but some meats are easier to digest than others. Beans are also one of the most nutritious and economical of foods, but you want to find out v whose beans you can digest the easiest Wagner's Pork and Beans Bear in mind that we derive nutrition only from the food we digest; therefore, since we know that beans are ex tremely rich in nutriment let us eat the easiest digested kind. No food products in the United States have a better reputation for quality than Wagner's—they have stood the rigid test of the public for 32 years. Try Wagner's Pork and Beans—they make mighty fine eating. Three tizet: No. 1, Luncheon ; No. 2, Family; No, 3, Full Dinner. Look for the blue-band label. MARTIN WAGNER CO. Baltimore, Md. r DO YOUR OWN SHOPPING" "Onyx" ||| Gives the BEST VALUE for Your Money Every Kind from Cotton to Silk, For Men, Women ui Cbildna Any Color and Style From 25c to $5.00 per pair for the Trade Mirk! Sold by All Good De*',cm.A Wholesale Lovd <3* TdyloV NEW YORK FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 30,'1914 suit had made her discontented. "Something in furs?" said a brisk little woman, coming up to Helen and noting her perplexed expression. "Perhaps I can help you decide, madam." "I should like to know if you think lynx would look well on a dark brown suit for cuffs and collar." "We have something here that could be used for the purpose; the widest fur we have which could be used without cutting. You wanted something by the yard, didn't you? That would be the most practical thing, 1 should think." The saleswoman was detaching a long strip of brown fur from the bun dle. 'This is the very best skunk, madam, twelve-fifty a yard. Beauti ful on a brown suit, I should think." The fur was just the right width and a beautiful color. Helen won dered if it would be too extravagant to buy a yard. She could put the fur on herself, to save expense, and the suit would look beautiful with the brown fur. "Would a yard be enough for col lar and cuffs?" she said Anally. "I should think so; let me measure. Do you want a stand-up collar or the other kind If you want a stand-up collar I should think that you might get It out of a yard. However, to make sure, you'd better take a yard and a half." Helen was thinking rapidly. She could take off the velvet collar of her coat and line the fur with it. If she did that there would be no lin ing to buy. "I don't need another half yard," she said finally, "a yard and a quarter would be plenty." Back in the apartment at last, Helen tossed her things carelessly on the bed and hastily pulled the fur out of the wrappings. There was a breath less moment while she measured the fur around the collar. Yes, if she fulled the cuffs in Just a little there would be enough and the velvet could be used as an interlining with the satin outside. She would be able to do the job herself without any trou ble. Helen hummed a gay little tune as she hurried into her room for her work basket. What fun it would be, almost like having a new suit, and she was sure to like the suit twice as well, too. That in itself was enough to soothe her conscience if she had felt at all extravagant. After all, she could always make the extra expense up to AVarren in some other way. (Another Incident in tills interest ing series will appeal- on this page soon.) THE LAST SHOT By FREDERICK PALMER Cs(xrl(kt Mli by Charles Scrlbaer*s Soaa. [Continued] C.„. ||. The Last Shot. Hflss Galland!" Blinking as she came out of th darkness Into the bright light, wit" a lock of her dew-sprinkled dark hat free and brushing her flushed cbee) Marta saw the division chiefs of th Browns, after their start when Lar. stron spoke her name, all stand a the salute, looking at her rather thai at him. The reality in the flesh o' the woman who had been a comradf in service, sacrificing her sensibilize for their cause, appealed to them bp a true likeness of their conceptions o' her. In their eyes she might read the finest thing that can pass from man's to woman's or from man's to man's. These were the strong men of her peo ple who had driven the burglar from her house with the sword of Justice. Their tribute had the steadfast loyalty of soldiers who were craving to do anything In the world that she might ask, whether to go on their knees to her or to kill dragons for her. "I may come in?" she asked. "Who if not you Is entitled to the privilege of the staff council?" ex claimed the vice-chief. The others did not propose to let him do all the honors. Each mur mured words of welcome on his own account. "We are here, thanks to you!" "And, thanks to you, our flag will float over the Gray range!" She must be tired, was their next thought. Pour or Ave of them hurried to place a chair for her, the vice-chief winning over his rivals, more through the exercise of the rights of rank than by any superior alacrity. "You are appointed actual chief of staff and a field marshal!" said the vice-chief to Lanstron. "The premier says that every honor the nation can bestow \y yours. The capital Is mad. The crowds are crying: "On to the Gray capital!' Tomorrow Is to be a public holiday and they are calling it Lanstron Day. The thing was so sudden that the speculators who de pressed our securities in the world's markets have got their due—ruin! And we ought to get an indemnity that will pay the cost of the war." Seated at one Bide, Marta could watch all that passed, herself unob served. She noted a touch of color come to Lanstron's cheeks as he made a little shrug of protest. Then she saw their faces grow busi nesslike and keen, aB they gathered around the table, with Lanstron at the head. They were oblivious of her presence, immured in a man's world of war. "Your orders were obeyed. We have not passed a single white post yet!" said the vice-chief Impatiently "As the Grays never expected to take the defensive, their fortresses are in ferlor. Every hour we wait meam more time for them to fortify, mort time to recover from their demorali zation. Our dirigibles having com mand of the air—we had a wireless from one reporting all clear half-way to the Gray capital—why, we shall know their concentrations while they are ignorant of ours. It's the nation's great opportunity to gairi enough provinces to even the balance of popu lation with the Grays. With the unre mitting offensive, blow on blow, using the spirit of our men to drive in mass attacks at the right points, the Gray range is ours!" Marta scanned the faces of the staff for Bome sign of dissent only to find nothing but the ardor of victory call ing for more victory, which reflected the feeling of the coursing crowds in the capital. Though Lanny wished to stop the war, he was only a chip on. the crest of a wave. Public opinion, which had made him an idol, would discard him as soon as he ceased to bo a hero in the likeness of its desires. She saw him aloof as the others, in preoccupation, bent over the map out lining the plan of attack that they had worked out while awaiting their chief's return from the charge. He was taking a paper from his pocket and looking from one to another of his colleagues studiously; and she was conscious of that determination in his smile which she had first seen when he rose from the wreck of his plane. "This Is from Partow: a message for you and the nation!" he an nounced, as he spread a few thin, type written pages out on the table. "1 was under promise never to reveal lte contents unless our army drove the Grays back across the frontier. The original is in the staff vaults. I havp carried this copy with me." At the mention in an arresting tone of that name of the dead chief, tc which the day's events had given the prestige of one of the heroes of old there was grave attention. "I think we have practically agreed that the twa individuals who were in valuable to our cause were Partow and Miss Galland," Lanstron remarked ten tatlvely. He waited for a reply. II was apparent that he was laying a foundation before he went any fur ther. "Certainly!" said the vice-chief. "And you!" put in another officer, which brought a chorus of assent. "No, not I —only these two!" Lan -Btroa replied. "Or, I, too, If you pre fer. It little matters. The thing Is that I am under a promise to both, which I shall respect. He organized and labored for the same purpose that she played the spy. When we Bent the troops forward In a counter attack and pursuit to clear our soil of the Grays; when I stopped them at the frontier—both were according to Par tow's plan. He had a plan and a dream, this wonderful old man who made u« all seem primary pupils In the art of war." Could It be that terrible Partow, a stroke of whose pencil had made the Galland house an, inferno? Marta wondered as Lanstron read his mes sage—the message out of the real heart of the man, throbbing with the power of his great brain. His plan was to hold the Grays to stalemate; to force them to desist after they had battered their battalions to pieces against the Brown fortifications. His dream was the thing that had hap pened—that an opportunity would come to pursue a broken machine In a bold stroke of the offensive. "I would want to be a hero of our people for only one aim, to be able to stop our army at the frontier," he had written. "Then they might drive me forth heaped with obloquy, if they chose. I should like to see the Grays demoralized, beaten, ready to sue for peace, the better to prove my point that we should ask only for what is ours and that our strength was only for the purpose of holding what is oure. Then we should lay up no leg acy of revenge In their hearts. They could ne v er have cause to attack again. Civilization would have ad vanced another step." Lanstron continued to read to the amazed staff, for Partow's message had looked far into the future. Then there was a P. S., written after the war had begun, on tho evening of the day that Marta had gone from tea on the veranda with Westcrling to the telephone, in the Impulse of her new purpose. "I begin to believe in that dream," he wrote. "I begin to believe that the chance for the offensive will come, now that my colleague, Miss Galland, in the name of peace has turned prac tical. There is nothing like mixing a little practice in your dreams whtle the world is still well this side oi Utopia, as the head on my old behe moth of a body well knows. She had the right idea with her school. The oath so completely expressed my ideas —the result of all my thinking— that I had a twinge of literary jeal ousy. My boy, if you do reach the frontier, in pursuit of a broken army, and you do not keep faith with my dream and with her ideals, then you will get a lesson that will last you for ever at the foot of the Gray range. But I do not think so badly as that of you or of my Judgment of men." "Lanny! Lanny!" The dignity of a staff council could not restrain Marta. Her emotion must have actiop. She sprang to his side and seized his hand, her exultation mixed with penitence over the way she had wronged him and Partow. Their self-contained purpose had been the same as hers and they had worked with a soldier's fortitude, while she had worked with whims and impulses. She bent over him with gratitude and praise and a plea for forgiveness in her ayes, submerging the thing which he sought in them. He flushed boy ishly in happy embarrassment, inca pable of wrirds for an instant; and silently the staff looked on. "And I agree with Partow," Lanstron went on, 'that we cannot take the range. Th» Grays still have numbers equal to ours. It is they, now, who will be singing 'God with us!" with their backs against the wall. With Partow's goes my own appeal to the army and the nation; and I shall keep faith with Partow, with Miss Galland, and with my own ideas, if the govern ment orders the ariny to advance, by resigning as chief of staff —my work finished." *•••••• Westerling and his aide and valet, inquiring their way as strangers, found the new staff headquarters of the Grays established in an army building, where Bouchard had been assigned to trivial duties, back of the Gray range. As their former chief entered a room in the disorder of maps and packing cases, the staff-offlcers rose from their work to stand at salute like atone im ages, in respect to a field-marshal's rank. There was no word of greeting but a telling silence before TurcM "Wo've Come for Westerling." spoke. His voice had lost Its parch ment crinkle and become natur&l. The blue veins on his bulging temples were a little more pronounced, his thin fea tures a little more pinched, but other wise he was unchanged and he seemed equal to another strain ns heavy as the one h* • ' [To Be Continued] NEEDLEWORK GUILD MEETING Shippensburg, Pa., Oct. 30.—Yester lay the annual meeting of the Needle, vork Guild of Shippensburg was held n the Church of God. Twq programs vero rendered. The annual exhibit •vas the largest and best ever made In its history. I Don't Wait Until After Election To Buy That 1 | New Stove. Jack Frost Says, "Buy It Now" | ♦♦ This big helpful store will assist you, no matter who is elected. You want to sl' be comfortable, "local option or not local option." £ * H Let us save you from $5 to $lO on the purchase of your stove and give you the 21 world's BEST stove. The stove that burns the smoke and gases and saves on your * ► tt coal bills. No better stoves made; few near as good. Prices as low as ordinary J cheap poor stoves. H Every stove sold on a positive guarantee from makers and ourselves. No it charge for pipe and setting up. Full supply of repairs on hand for all stoves pur- & chased here. n You Can Have Your Bill Charge If You Wish H |l RANGES $18.75 to $45 EGG STOVE HEATERS,SI.9B to $7 ft S STEEL RANGES ... .$36.00 to $55 OIL HEATERS $3.98 to $7.50 tt XX SINGLE HEATERS. .$ 7.50 to $25 tt tt DOUBLE HEATERS, SIB.OO to $45 PA YAS YOU GET PAID ff ♦♦ ————.^Jf j| Specials in Overcoats and Warm Winter Clothing for the Entire Family tt H Home Gately & Fitzgerald Supply Co. Family ff g Furnishers 29-31-33 and 35 S. Second Street Clothiers H x£ s S |. Our Location Meant a Great Saving to You tt tttttttttitttxitttttttttttttttttitttttiutttttttttttttttttttttttttttxttttttttm Parts of Submarines Shipped Into Belgium By Associated Press Amsterdam, viu London, Oct. 30, 7.30 a. m.—A dispatch from Sluis, Holland, to the Handelsblad, asserts that parts of several submarines have been sent from Germany by railway to Zebrugge on the Belgian coast, where they will be put together and the boats then sent agains the British fleet off Ostend. Strict secrecy, ac cording to the Sluis correspondent, surrounds the German movements in Belgium and all railway communica tion to Zebrugge is interrupted. Clcycle and motor traffls is also for bidden. A map in the- possession of the German commander at Bruges shows a straight line from Maria Kerke, running south, beyond which no civilians are allowed to go. Belgians Lose 10,000 in Defending Coast By Associated Press London, Oct. 30, 3.29 A. M.—The correspondent of the Daily Mail in Northern France, dealing with the enormous sacrifices and the devoted courage of the Belgians, says: "Over 10,000 htve been killed or wounded, which is a quarter of their whole force operating in the coast battle. They have been defending a slip of territory from Dixmude to Nleuport, a region hardly bigger than a big German farm." NEW BARN COMPLETED Special to The Telegraph Sunbury. Pa." Oct. 30. —A new barn to replace a structure destroyed by fire has just been completed at the Central Pennsylvania Odd Fellows' Or phans' Home, east of Sunbury. It is of frame construction, L-shaped, with one wing 80x40 feet and the other 80x4 5 feet. It cost approximately $7,500 and the expense was borne by the lodges in the district, which made gifts of money toward It. The Hair Easily Made Beautiful and Attractive Beautiful hair, thick, fluffy, lus trous and absolutely free from dan druff Is not so much a gift of nature ns a matter of care and proper nour ishment. Hair is like a plant—it will not grow healthy and beautiful unless it has attention and proper nutriment. Parisian Sage, a daintily perfumed liquid that is easily applied, tones up and invigorates the hair roots and furnishes the necessary nourishment to not only save and beautify the hair, but also stimulate It to grow long, heavy, soft, fluffy and radiant with life. When used frequently and well rubbed Into the scalp, it will simply work wonders. Just one application stops itching head, removes dandruff ■ and cleanses the hair of all dust and , excess oil. I Since Parisian Sage, which can be i obtained from H. G. Kennedy, or at_ any drug or toilet counter, never dis-' appoints, it is no longer necessary for any woman to be liumilated because of thin, streaky, faded, lifeless or un attractive hair—and pretty hair, more than anything else, helps every wo man to retain her charm and youthful I appearance.—Advertisement. Annville Girl Bride of Wrightsville Businessman Special to The Telegraph Annville, Pa.. Oct. 30.—A very pretty wedding took place yesterday after noon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Chrlsteson, when their daugh ter was united in marriage to Ralph P. Wilton, of Wrightsville, York county. The Rev. B. P. Daugherty, pastor of the United Brethren Church of this place, performed the ring cere mony. Mrs. Wilton is well known throughout the county and is very popular among the younger social set of Annville. She attended Lebanon GIRLS! GIRLS! YOU MUST IRf THIS! DOUBLES BEAUTY OF YOUR HHIR For 25 cents you can make your hair lustrous, fluffy, and abundant e ?—Y es'. Certain ?—that's the joy of it. Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluffy, abundant and ap pears as soft, lustrous and beautiful ns a young girl's after a Danderlne hair cleanse. Just try this moisten a cloth with a little Danderlne and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt or excessive oil, and in just a few mo- SMWk Absolutely No Pain My latest Improved appll :] anccp. Including an oxygen- * M air apparatus, malcea k lKwsßß?tf extracting and all den- * M .Ciy' _^r tal work positively <\ s painless and la per fectly harmless. S I (Age bo objec- EXAMINATION > teeth *5.00 rnpn x * r Bold lllllngs 81.00 r Klifj • % \ J Fillings In silver 1 « ■ alloy cement 50c. X ~x Gold Crowns and Registered S V\> Bridge Work, $3, sl, »5. S 22-K Gold Crown ....$5.00 Graduate T Office open dully 8.30 a. X m. to 6 p. m.; Mon., Wed. Assist* jita 4/ ▼ and Sat. TUI 0 p. m.; Sundays, X Y X lO t. m. to 1 p. m, S Bell Phone 3322R S kP 0 S ~EASY~TERMB OF FAYMKMxa |MNn '(Over the Hub) X Harrisburg, Pa . it ma«*« Hurt « ait PAIITMM I When Coming to My Off 100 Bo (iHU I lUli ■ Suro You Are In the Right Plaoo. Valley College. Mr. Wilton was for merly burgess of Wrightsville, where he is now engaged in business. Tho couple will reside in Wrightsville. EN GAGKMENT ANNOUNCED Special to The Telegraph Dillsburg, Pa., Oct. 30. —Announce- ments have been received here of the engagement of Andrew Bender, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Bender, to Miss Beatrice Teall, of Glenn Ridge, N. J. Mr. Bender is a graduate of Lebanon Valley College and is now a member of the faculty of the Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh. ments you have doubled the beauty of your hair. A delightful surprise awaits those whose hair has been neg lected or is scraggy, faded, dry, brittle or thin. Besides beautifying the hair. Danderlne dissolves every particle of dandruff; cleanses, purities and invig orates the scalp, forever stopping itch ing and falling hair, but what will please you most will be after a few weeks' use, when you see new hair line and downy at first —yes—but really new hair growing all over the scalp. If you care for pretty, soil hair, and lots of It, surely get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderlne from any drug store or toilet counter and Just try it.—Advertisement. 13