6 \£?oMen Young Married Couple Should Live in Their Own Home By Beatrice Fairfax "I am engaged to be married to a man who is a model in every way but one. That one thing is that he doesn't seem to think that I am like every young girl who expects to get married—and have a home of her own. He wants to live with his par ents and seems to take it for granted that I am going to do so. I think a young married couple should live to gether in a home of their owfl. But Hie subject simply does not interest him." writes B. E. M. And she hits upon the fundamental desire of every natural woman—to have a home of her own. The home making instinct is almost as much a part of womanhood as motherhood itself. Given a tiny hall bedroom in a shabby boarding house, a girl will find a souvenir fan or a draggled arti ficial flower or a battered photograph to decorate the place and make it more home-like. Wherever you put a true woman she wants a little cor ner that she can infuse with the at mosphere of home. Man basks in this atmosphere once it is produced fop him, but he has no idea at all about producing it for himself. Now B. E. M.'s fiance has not the same desire lor a place of his own that actuates her—in the nature of thinKs he has to lie true to his sex and like comfort and convenience, but not need the feeliiltr of possessorsliip of his Lares and Penates that his wife needs. It may be that he thinks it the part of economy to take his bride to the home were he has always been comfortable and happy. Or it may be that he has an idea that liv ing with his people will save his bride from "tedious" efforts at housekeep ing. He simply has a certain mascu line obtuseness as to the feminine in stinct for home-making. But however kind and considerate his parents are. and however happy lie has been in his own home, he ought to build a little "nest" of his own if he can possibly afford it, unless his parents are. in any way dependent upon his contribution to their house hold expenses. In the first place the old truism holds: There never was a happy household with two mistresses in it. Js'or yet is there quite room in one [lf a ] I > '' : | ! ] : The velvety smoothness, tlie ; j rich flavor of our coatings, : ; are obtained only by even, "j j steady grinding for 36 hours! *! " I FItESII HOUR •' • •}!' i 1 i! f ' #f Our Sales Agrenta in Harrisburgr arc © • J, H. Boher F. J. Althouse Cunningham's ii|i: . ;!i \ |||lj j g "y fer ' 5 OCO0 ' Huylers Candy, is supreme j|j|j11 » U Absolutely No Pain «H||fg9KpM My la teat Improved appll* -J ■noes. Including an oxygen- v * Ired air apparatus, makes S k. 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Latest 1»H European Official Map (B oolora) —Portraits of If European Rulara: all atatlatlc* and war data—Amy .Navy and Aerial Strength, Population*, Area, Capital*, Distance* between Cltlea, HI a tor lea of Nation* Involved, Prevloua Deolakve Battles, History Hague Peaci Conference, National Debt*. Coin Value*. EXTRA 2-color CHARTS of lttve Involved European Capital* and Strategic) Naval Location*. Folded, with handsome cover to flttka pooket. FRIDAY EVENING, WARRISBURG TELEGRAPH MARCH 19, 1915 out their ideals perfectly indepen dently. Now, the bridegroom's mother and fathep will want to go on in their own home as they have always done. And the bride and bridegroom will want to develop their lives along cer tain lines that will interfere with and be interfered with in turn by the ideals of the already established home. Always a Certain Friction. There is always a certain friction in adjusting yourself to constant asso ciation with a new personality. Bride and bridegroom must tit their per sonalities to dwell together in har mony. And they can best do this in the environment of a home that they have built with mutual interest and pride. If they go to live with the family of either there is all sorts of additional strain in adjusting them selves to households that are already established and running along in a certain ordered way. Building a home and planning to make it ever and ever more a happy nest gives bride and bridegroom a closeness and identity of interest that brings about happiness in marriage. l>ove and liking are not based entirely on caring for each other; caring for the same things plays Its part. And in making a home a young couple comes to possess something that is theirs and that they share with mu tual anxiety and mutual pride. A little home of your own is a won derful place for the babies that you long to have. In this nest your chil dren grow up in the happy freedom of childhood that you want for them, and you train them in the way you want them to go with no interference from any other authority. The little bride who has a home of her own has a legitimate outlet for her energies and interests. The home gives her things to do and to plan and keeps her from seeking some, way of "killing time"—in doing which she is likely to annihilate her peace of mind and most of the peace in her vicinity. Real marriage is based on homo and family. To deny yourself one may be to lack the other. I advise all young couples to make their bwn little home. Runaway June . By George Randolph Chester and Lillian Chester. Copyright IBIS, by Serial Publication Corporation. "I wouldn't risk it." And the pretty nurse puckered her brows. Suddenly "I'd like to make you a little present." her face cleared. It was as if the sun had popped out on a'rainy day. "Yes. I can! Mrs. Wade is ou dutjr tWs morning. For a minute I thought it was Miss Simmons." "Isn't she nice?" and June's round eyes softened sympathetically. "She's an old cat!" The pretty nurse ■was rery vehement about it. "Mrs. Wade's a dear, though," and, hurrying away, she brought the "dear" right back. Mrs. Wade was a smiling woman smiling lips, smiling eyes, and it seem ed as if her hair smiled—but she was dubious about the uniform. "It would lie a radical infraction of the rules," she declared, with an ab surd attempt at severity, "but we'll ask Dr. Kemert not to tell." They all three laughed at that, and within a few minutes June was in i\ stiff white uniform, with a prim little cap on her head, and was walking se dately into Mrs. Villard's room. She paused on the threshold. Gilbert Blye was there! As he caught sight of her June saw the glow of admiration leap into his black eyes. She half turned to go iu her embarrassment, but Mrs. Vll lard stopped her. "Come here, you pretty thing.'' she called, and as June shyly came to the bedside Mrs. Villard laughed, and Blye joined her. Dr. Hemert came in and expressed j his profound astonishment at how j grown up Juue looked in a uniform and tweaked the frink ear lobe which ! peeped from beneath the trim little j cap. The bead nurse and the nurse ! with the pink cheeks and the phenom enally thin nurse crowded in to ad mire June; then Dr. Kemert scattered them so that Mrs. Villard should have some rest before her next bandaging, and he took June with him for a j round of the wards. He gave her a ! thermometer to carry so she should ! look useful as well as ornamental. She came back from that round of the wards rather thoughtfully. She had seen so much pain and sorrow and suffering, wan children and wan moth ers and wan men who should have been strong, and in the light of all their woes her own problem seemed foolish and insignificant. In Mrs. Villard's room as June ap- j proached the door she heard voices, imong them Orin Cunningham's. She turned away and went across the hall to the room where the injured chauf feur lay. lie was in considerable pain, the pretty nurse said, but he lay there smiling, with great cheerfulness upon his roughly molded countenance. "I guess I'll be laid up for a week or ten days," he stated, with a grin. "That's n long time to be confined in Has Fine Action in the Blood Does Real Work in Cleaning Body of Impurities. It Is to tlie Rkln that blood Impurittei •re driven by Nature. And It Is In the Rkln that S. S. 8., the famous blood pur ifier, has Its most pronounced Influence. For It Is here that you see the results. S. S. S. Is none the less effective In the Joints, glands and mucous surfaces In driving nut rheumatism, overcoming bolls and ridding the system of catarrh. The purely vegetable Ingredients In R. S. H. aro naturally assimilated but they enter the blood as an active medi cine and are not destroyed or converted whtle at work. It Is this peculiar feat ure of 8. S. 8. that makes It so effective. It stirs Into action all the forces of the body, arouses digestive srcrctlons, stimu lates the blood circulation to destroy dis ease breeding germs. Upon entering the blood 8. 8. S'. is carried throughout your body In about three minutes. And In a brief time It lim any blood trouble so under control that It no longer can multiply. Gradu ally new flesh Is formed In all broken down tissues and tbc skin takes on the ruddy glow of health. He sure and get 1 bottle of 8. S. 8. today of any drug gist, but avoid all substitutes. Around the bottle is an Illustrated cir cular that fells you how to obtain spe cial free adrlce In quickly overcoming (erlous blood dfcioVders. 8. S. S. la pre pared only by The Swift Myuclllc Co., 5!l Swift Bldg., Atlanta, ila. n narrow little room," sympathized June. The head nurse brought her bit of sunshine Into the room. "How are you feeling?" she asked. "Bully." "Then you can probably stand a pleasant surprise." smiled Mrs. Wade. "You have a visitor." "Oh:" The sunshine left the rough ly molded face, but the grin was back in a minute. "Say. tell her the doctor says I ain't to be talked to long. And can't one of you nurses stay here to make it strong'*" His grin was so con tiding that the head nurse grinned back at him. She (vas a woman of much experience. "Of course you must not be talked to very long." she agreed. "And you should have a nurse with you to take care of you." She looked at June a moment; then her eyes twinkled. "I think I'll leave this one." "Much obliged." And the man turn ed his cheerful grin to Jane, who sat down primly at the head of the bed. The man sank back wl>cu the head nurse left and looked as feeble as he could, llis nurse was smoothing the pillows when the door opened, and theno came in a large, heavy jawed womau, with a long ostrich feather on her hat, half a dozen cheap rings on her fingers and two buttons banging loosely on her coat, one by a single thread. "Well, 'well. Joe!" she said in a heavy roice, and she stared at June. "Didn't I always tell you you'd get it?** She bent over and kissed her husband as a matter of propriety. "Hurt you much?" "Something fierce! - ' huskily murmur ed Joe and half closed his eyes. "Tough luck!" said the woman. "You wouldn't take out that accident insurance 1 wanted you to, and now 1 suppose I can starve." "Oh, well, you ain't done it yet!" ob jected the man, his tone losing some of Its feebleness. "I guess you can get along till I can get out of this. I give you every cent I ever make." "I guess that's a lot!" And the wom an sat down with a thump. "Thirty dollars last week." "And how much the week before?" "Well, it was a rotten week." And the man turned his eyes toward June, who looked steadfastly out of the win dow. There being no help from that quarter, he proceeded in helping him self. "You got enough to run you for ten days. You know you have. Come on. Alice, be sociable." "Oh, I can come on all right, and I can be sociable all right, but sup pose you don't get out of here in ten days! Then what do 1 do? Starve, 1 guess! Say. how do you come to be in a private room?" She looked at June and sniffed. "And with a private nurse?" "The good sport that picked us up put me here." The woman surveyed the bare little room. There were no curtains at the windows, no upholstering, no softening graces of any kind on the white enam eled fittings, but it had an immeuse su periority, the cause of which she could not fathom. It was absolutely clean, and she paid an unconscious tribute to that phenomenon. "Why, it's better than I got It at home!" she complained. The man turned his head over aiid back again, but he said nothiug. "Say," the woman went on. "the fel low that spent the money for this room and the private nurse would have done better to let you go in the public ward and give you the money for your wife!" June, at the window, moved impa tiently. "Nurse." said the man, "can you get me my pants?" June opened the door of the tiny while enameled wardrobe in the corner and brought out the man's trousers, handing them down with the tips of her thumb and forefinger. The wo man took them and deftly ran her hands iuto the pockets. "Seven tifty-five," she reported and clicked the money into her purse. She hung the trousers in the wardrobe and shut the door. "That'll help a little. Did you get your pay for this drive?" "Not yet. Alice." "Well, you tell me who it was, and I'll go after it!" She had turned from the wardrobe and was regarding a tray which stood on its folding .stand by the wall. She lifted the napkin. "My God!"' she exploded. "A hot house peach! And you didn't eat it all at that! You know what I had for my breakfast? CofTee and sinkers and hash! And here you are living on the fat of the laud!" "Looky here. Alice!" The man had raised up In bed. and there was a twitch of pain at the corners of his lips as he stretched out an oil black ened forefinger. June whirled from the wipdow with n snap of her big eyes. She still car lied the thermometer which Dr. Remert had giveu her. Now she thrust it in the man's mouth, put n hand at the back of his neck and gently forced him down. "The time's up.'' she crisply told the woman. Her voice was low and soft, r.nd the visitor puzzled afterward as to how it could be so effective without shouting. June went to the door and opened it, aware that the eyes of Joe were fixed on her In undying gratitude. The woman looked doubtfully at her husband, but the figure at the door was so inflexible that she succumbed So discipline. See Runaway June in motion pic tures every Monday at the Victoria Theater. The pictures each week por tray the episode published In the Tele- Bra ph the week previous.—Advertise- Jtunaway June will lie shown in mo tion pictures every .Monday at the Royal Theater. Third street above Cumberland. Be sure to see them. — Advertisement. , - (To be continued Monday.) IWemcn's "Tfc f \ Stores in m Shoes $1.50 IV V>/ Penat. 1 Clean-up of S A S ® \\ omen'* 1'.'.00 to M~M Real Shoe Makers | I U/..1, V« I »l.0» Winter J T? CSI T«• <7 Shorn. Include all iy\ 217—MARKET STREET -217 <*» 1j SPRING FOOTWEAR i I Through our wonderful foresight of picking the leading ad- || vanced styles, we are now prepared to show all the popular 8 Spring Styles at our usual low prices. Call and see them. j IJBW omen's Gaiter Boots I MB At Three Very Special Prices IS One of thr dalntleftt ntylea ever produced: tin* !>l 11. IT Al( \ I.AC'K CaAITIOIt ROOT. WV ■ - The inoMt popular model for Spring:; the fad of all well-dremied womrn, SIMIJA tit. I .*f iV Hdk and comfortublc. Are made *vlth patent vamps and fncluKM nnrt SpanlMli heel*. (*§ 1M Kann, gray, ulate and black cloth t<»pn; all ftl/.ea; al*o button modeln. % Spring Shoes for Men § I $1.95 $2.45 $2.95 oil enn near the liewt ntylen and <iualltlcn and nave money by buying; here. ® Wc are now Nhouluis all the advanced Spring; Style* in button, lace or Kiifcllfth / " 'XJI model*. Tan, patent and dull leather*. .Many rubber moled 10IIICII.MII modeln, all | Girls' Shoes Boys 1 Shoes 1 . New Spring Styles— \ Boys* Dress Shoes— Comfortable and «erv Ie e a 1.1 e / \ Snr |„ B aty lea that will plraae any GS £K "«■**»•» all the new S|trln K atyle.«. I .'/ \ JB\ / A boy. \nd the wear will pleaae the W? ® Patent and dull leather* and vfl- \ Wfti'./ 1 J / parent*. Patent nnd dull. Ilutton vj vet*, cloth or leather top*? all wire*. \ VV- ]j J / or lace. ItcKulnr value*, at Y A 1 r s..so W fr. . * UBO 1 || Sturdy School Shoes — /vMf I Calfskin Shoes— Yb<S A wale of girl*' serviceable. ell- L. \ft fi 4 , , A7I inade. Mi-hool ..hoe*, patent nnd dull MSg Jffiat yV \ r " , I r « k, 1 " «l»nera with M ft »l"^7a"iue/!,t 0 "" Vuernp "Tne°.: ir C> <M 98c Dillsburg Postmaster's Term Will Soon Expire Speciol to The Telegraph Dillsburg:, Pa., March 19. —Within the next two months the term of the Dillsburg postmaster will expire, and as Mr. Altlund, the present postmas ter, was appointed under the Repub lican administration four years ago, a change is looked for. There are a number of Dillsburg men who aspire to the office and activity along this line is increasing as the time for the appointment draws near. PRIZES rem BEST STORIES Special to 'l'he Telegraph Annvilie, Pa., March 19.-—Jacob Shennberger won first prize for the best story given at the St. Patrick's party held by the Clionian Literary Society on Wednesday evening. Frank Morrison, a former well-known ath lete of Steelton, won second prize. Beech-Nut Beans with Tomato Sauce * lid KSkjss I M iup, Peanut Butter you ■Bk'T/d |T ——T>si jgBK know the flavor given to foods by the Beech-Nut I j : ) jfu I Beech-Nut Beans are 1 lIL 1 a Beech-Nut Delicacy (|| 2 j Bjjft) and at that, they cost no more than the ordinary . », e , .. ~ beans of commerce. Just the finest of hand-picked beans, grown in _ .. New York State-with delicate bits of pork, Tell VOW flfTOCer tO like the famous Beech-Nut Bacon blended , « , with rich Tomato Sauce, or "Home Style" (plain), send you a can or these as you prefer. In the new Beech-Nut can. J 1* * D Three size*, 10 cent*, 15 cents and 20 cent*. deIICIOUS DeanS* Uj Makers of America's Most Famous Bacon Beech - Nat Bacon % $ BEECH-NUT PACKING COMPANY, Canajoharie, N. Y. K (7*i Bean Plant at Rochester, N. Y. 5* WAR YICTKKAN CEI.KBItATES Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., March 19.—Henry Walbitrn, Northumberland, celebrated his seventieth birthday anniversary yesterday. He was a car inspector for the Pennsylvania railroad for twenty years and had an enviable re cord in the Civil war, doing special ser vice at Fortress Monroe. He partici pated in no loss than twelve battles and was never wounded once. STUDENTS SAVE FURNITURE By Associated Press Annville, Pa., March 19.—Yesterday afternoon the large farmhouse of Henry Millard, one mile North of this place, was totally destroyed by lire, caused by sparks from a burning brush heap in the rear tu the house. Most of the furniture Vas saved by students of Lebanon Valley College. The house was occupied by the fain lily of James Yingst. j '' 'DON'T'TAKE* HLOM¥L ' ' f Jnstead of dangerous, .salivating Calomel to liven your liver when bil ious, headachy or constipated, get a 10-cent box of Cascarets. They start the liver and bowels and straighten you up better than nasty Calomel, without griping or making you sick.— Advertisement . SWAB STARTS JAII. SENTENCE Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., March 19.—Mark E. Swab, found guilty of aiding and abet ting In looting the county treasury to the amount of $19,427.38, arrived here to-day from Elizabethvillo after giv ing his wife, 16-year-old daughter and mother, whom he was supporting, a fond farewell. He is ready to serve his sentence of two years and nine months in the county jail here.
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