6 OF INTEREST TO THE WOMEN || "THEIR MARRIED LIFE"| CatrrlfU kf Mtnaatial *"»» »•**!•• Helen was sick with dealing with t-he soul oroblems of other people. She longed for peace and the mono tonous grind of everyday life. Any thing domestic pleased her. It seem ed thrilling to sit at home by the hour and sew or just read and be lazy. She and Warren had never seemed so con genial, and her former psychological longings were forgotten—swamped, in fact—by the near tragedy of Laura Richard. Helen wondered after It was all over how she had managed to use so much tact and foresight In help- In* Laura to manage. Warren's opin ion was nil, of course, but secretly he was proud and amused at Helen's diplomacy and the way it worked out. "I'm surprised." he had snorted, "that Laura had sense enough to fol low your advice; she is such a fool about most things." "What makes you think she is such a fool?" questioned Helen, her pride at the veiled compliment hardly no ticed in her sudden loyalty to Laura. "Why, I can't do much for a wo man of Laura's disposition. I al ways told you that she didn't have any sand." "But, Warren, I don't agree with you. If she hadn't really had plenty of character she would never have carried the thing through as I ad vised her to do." "She simply did it because you have the stronger character and domi nated her through the entire affair." "I don't agree with you, dear." "Well, I still maintain that men cau't as a rule do anything for wo men of that caliber." "But Laura is considered to be stunning. And she dresses extraor dinarily well." "Yes, but any woman with an ounce of vanity and tha wherewithal to buy good clothes can manage to dress well." "Well, what Is your argument. Warren? I'm trying to understand what you mean amout Laura." "It's not alone about Laura, it's about any woman of that type." "Of what type?" "Of the whinning, melancholy type." Warren Is Pessimistic "But Laura doesn't whine and she isn't melancholy excepting when t-he is unhappy. No woman can be cheerful when her husband deserts her for another woman." "That isn't the question. Nothing would make Laura a happy woman. She just naturally mopes. Why, you remember when she was working in Itichard's office and you used to have her here so much? Every time I came in for dinner and saw her I thought I was attending a large-sized funeral." "But you were always nice to her, dear, and I did feel so sorry for her." "Yes. but what I am trying to get st is this. There are plenty of wo men in the world a great deal worse off than Laura was at that time. She was earning {2O a week, a livable '■wage, if not an abundant one; but she fav nothing to be thankful for. Think of the girls who earn $lO and man age to scrape along and be cheerful •about it, too!" "I know, dear, but I don't see that .Just because there are other girls ■worse off fhan Laura was why we S a ll ow Skin For the relief of these common ills which afflict so many men and women, Beecham's Pills are a remedy without an equal. Sure and speedy—safe and thorough—they quickly strengthen the digest ive organs, settle the stomach and relieve distress caused by undigested food. They act friendly toward the liver, regulate the bile and have the desired effect on the bowels, without weakening. The of mny Medicine in the World '* Constipation, indigestion and sick headache disappear after a short course of Beecham's Pills. The skin clears, the eyes brighten and appetite returns. Beecham's Pills have enjoyed public confidence for over sixty years. A family remedy that prevents and corrects many house hold ills. Get a box and keep it in the house. The pills will soon prove their worth. Safe for young and old. At All Druggists, Directions of special oahte to women mre with eectry box | There's a Difference In Coal M A vast difference. TOM may be burning more coal than Is neces- V *ary, because you are not burning the kind especially adapted to your % requirements. # Talk the matter over with na—we'll steer you right on the par m tlcular kind of coal you ought to be ualng—and supply you with the M best heat-giving fuel you can buy. Coats the same—and goes further. I J. B. MONTGOMERY # 600—cither phone Srd aad Chestnut Streets TUESDAY EVENING, couldn't be just as sorry for Laura. I wnow that I should have been mis erable living in a 2 by 4 cupboard and having no friends." "You wouldn't be miserable, be cause It isn't your way. Any woman can make friends." "You don't understand." protested Helen. "You don't like Laura and you won't be fair to her." "I em speaking from a man's standpoint, that't all. I know that those temperamental women are dec orative enough and mysterious enough for a man when he wants to kick over the traces, but when he wants to settle down he wants a woman of the de pendable type, who will sing a tune around the house and darn his socks rather than write a poem to Adver sity." Helen laughed merrily. "Oh. Warren, you are so funny. Laura couldn't write a poem if she tried." "No. but she likes to moon and look mysterious and wear strang-looking house gowns." "I think they're attractive. Besides, there are plenty of women in the world who are temperamental who have a million men cra*v about them. They are the women who keep their husbands lovers." "For Heaven's sake, don't tell me that you have a secret longing for anything of the kind." Some Valuable Advice Helen did not reply. She was thinking of how often she had wished for Frances Knowles' strange charm or for the ability to be something be sides being domestic. And here was Warren defending the domestic wo man and frankly making fun of the other type. "And I want to tell you one thing." he said, looking up from his news paper suddenly. "You've been a darn ed sight happier lately than you have in a long time. I don't know what has caused the change, but I have noticed it. and you want to keep it up. It's great stuff." "I didn't know that I had been any different." "Well, you have. I have thought several times that you were discon tented and leaned more toward the uneven life that Frances and the Bells live. That's all right for them, not not for us. I can imagine that Frances Knowles would lead a man a merry chase if he happened to marry her." Mary put her head in at the door at this moment and asked if Helen would come out and show her how to make that new dessert. Helen rose enthusiastically and followed Marv out into thp kitchen and was soon engrossed in the fascina'tng problem of whipping cream and chopping iigs for a new pudding that she had heard of. Warren fol lowed her out after a few minutes, a thing he rarely if ever did, and stood and watched her. "You like to take a hand once in a while, don't you?" he said. "She's pretty fine, isn't she, Mary? Sup pose we take in a show to-night. Helen. I feel just like It." And Helen's nimble Angers flew even faster as she flushed with pleasure and thought how happy she was. (Another Incident in this attrac tive series will appear here soon.) BECOMING LINES IN CHILD'S FROCK Basting Line and Added Seam Allowance in Pattern For i Little Girl's Dress By MAY~MAh! TON 8993 (With Basting Line and Added Seam Aliowance) Girl's Dress, 8 to 12 years. Fullness that is held by smocking it exceedingly smart just now, and it it very pretty used for girl's dresses. This one is made of natural colored pongee with trimming of pongee in red, and the smocking matches the trimming in color. It is a very' useful frock as well as a smart and a fashionable one. for pongee is a durable material and washes successfully, but the model could, of course, be utilized for the cotton and linen materials with equal success. Tha box plaits that outline the front edges and the box plaits at the back give ex ceedingly becoming lines and the novel arrangement of the belt is interesting. For the to year size will be needed. 5*4 yards of material 27 inches wide, 4 yards 36 or 2yards 44. with yard 3b inches wide for the trimming. The pattern 8993 is cut in sizes for girls from 8 to 12 years. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper, on receipt j! ten cents. Five Middle Western States Will Hear Col. Roosevelt Speak on Americanism ! New York. April 18. —The middle, 1 west will hear several speeches by! ! Colonel Roosevelt the latter part of i this month. His itinerary is now be- j ling laid out. It will take him into Till-; nois, lowa, Michigan. Nebraska and! i Wisconsin. | Colonel Koosevelt's first speech will | be before the Illinois Bar Association lin Chicago April 2S. His other rates have not yet been definitely arranged. ! On April 27 Colonel Roosevelt is to address the Methodist preachers of ! this city on preparedness. He will; | leave the same day for Chicago, j The colonel will be at his New York j | office to-morrow, and expects to con-| fer with several politicians who are in-' terested in bringing about his nomina tion by the Chicago convention. In' j his Western speeches Mr. Roosevelt ! will speak upon preparedness, Mexico j land other subjects already mentioned; ; by him in his declaration of principles. I ; CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS The United States Civil Service Com- I mission announces the following ex j aminations to be held in this city on | I the dates named: May 17, laboratory aid (male), as- | | sistant in dry land arboriculture i ; (male), assistant in poisonous plant i investigations (male), shop appren-1 tice (male), instructor in patternmak ing and foundry work (male), ento mological inspector (male); May 17-18. heating and ventilating engineer and draftsman (male); June 7-8, printer (male and female). Further Information concerning the above examinations may be had by addressing the secretary, Board of Examiners. Post Office, Harrisburg. TO HOLD "LOVE FEAST"' A Methodist class meeting will be held to-morrow night in the Stevens Memorial Methodist Church at 7.30 o'clock. Seats will be reserved for all official members and admission will be by ticket. The Rev. Dr. Clay ton Albert Smucker, pastor of the church, will speak on "What the Love Feast Signifies." Music will be fur nished by the church choir and the male chorus. | 800 STRIKE IN SHELL FACTORY Sharon, Pa., April 18.—Employes of the shell department of the Standard Steel Car Works at New Castle went on strike yesterday. About 800 men are affected. The employes claim the company violated an agreement made when a strike was recently settled. Officials assert that the works will close indefinitely and all orders trans ferred to the Butler plant. A SUGGESTION FOR SUMMER VACATIONS "Along New England Roads," by William C. Prime, is published this week by the Harpers. This book of leisurely travel in New Hampshire and Vermont has been reprinted to ' meet the demand for a work that has never failed to charm. The writer ' who traveled extensively in foreign | lands, states his belief that there is no country which better repays the : traveler than that lying near the J White and Green mountains. His style | is like the manner of his travel by car ! riage: he every now and then to i descend, to pick a flower, to talk to a laborer or country pastor, to watch | boys fishing, to tell stories of rural j life or to praise the beauties of New | England scenery. NAMES COMMITTEE Arthur Koplovitz, J. Fishman and M. Klawansky have been appointed on I a committee by President W r agner | Hoffman of the Harrisburg News j hoys' Association to make arrange ments for a "Newsboys' Day." HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Ue Social Urates Story No. 1 Little Monte Carlo Plot by Georqe Bronson Howard. Novelization by Hugh C. Weir. Copyright Kalem Company. t Continued from lratrrdaj.l He laughed delightedly and fell Into step beside her. Here was something n®w, he thought— A real chorus girl who wasn't hungry all the time. At a boarding house she atopped. 'I live here," said Mona. "Thanks lor seeing me home!" "Can't I come In?" "Oh. no!" she said, pretending to be shocked. "Xot—tonluhM" He laughed, well satisfied, as she hurried in. He did not know that she only waited in the vestibule until he was out of sight. For several nights Mont let Holbrook walk "home" with her, but she de cltned all invitations, and she would never yield to his requests to permit him to enter the hiuse when she did. As she had been certain would be the case, the difficulty he was experiencing proved simply an added attraction. " hen he found she would not drop into his hand, like a ripe apple, he re doubled his efforts to win her. "Oh, he's getting very enthusiastic!" Mona told Mary. "How about your plan? Have you really got one?" "I certainly have!" said Mary. "Look here! I've been making a few little purchases." And she took Mona into their spare room whero several packing boxes had been placed. Mona cried out In enthu siastic approval at what they revealed. A roulette wheel—all the other para phernalia of gambling. "We can turn this apartment Into a perfect model of a gambling house at an hour's notice," said Mary. "I think that is going to be the proper way to hook your little friend." "Well—he's awfully careful—he doesn't care for gambling himself," said Mona. "He's told me eo." "You like it, though, don't you?" "Ah—l see! Yes—l'm craay about It! Mary—l believe you're a genius!" "Don't be too sure—there's a wise proverb about not counting your chick ens before they're hatched, my dear! I haven't worked out the details at all yet—l thought we'd better act. in a case like this, on the spur of the mo ment." "I think so too. Well—there are a few things we can decide. Suppose you turn up at Curate's on New Year's Evel I think he may persuade me to have supper there with him that night!" And. to his delight, Mona did yield to Holbrook's pleading to that extent. She had foreseen that he would make a special point of .'-i aaalataata are leatlita, who hava ka4 a vaat aaianat af expert- K '>'* ™ UKmr " c( •** therefere are able to reader the very beat af aervlcea. P kVHkm' i • --ir alflca la equipped with all the aaadera appllaarea la arder ta IE A do palaleaa dentlatry. H 92 •' V i'ffiHanra. H :3Q A. M. to BP. M. Claaed on Snadaya P > J: s i - • ] yinvs "pea Maa., Wed, aad Bat. Kvenlaga La til IP. M. DR. Dentist 1 OTEB 818. Bell Phone. Braach OSleeai Philadelphia aad Headla*. Gtraaa Spakea LADY ASSISTANT. APRIL 18, 1916. usually precedes a professional career by setting up shop in Hopewell. They found that the town had no drug st'ore no hospital and no trained nurses; but they were not daunted. With S7OO which they managed to borrow, they founded a very sketchy drug store, and a still more sketchy hos pital. Now the drug store carries a heavy stock and the hospital boasts I eight rooms and several nurses. The drug-medical hospital company has a capital of about $20,000, and its prac- I WAKE UP FEQM FRESH AS A DAISY Get a 10 Cent Box of "Cascarets" for Your Liver and Bowels. To-nfght sure! Take Cascarets and enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced. tice brings in about S6O a day. The enterprise and success of tliesa young men is typical. Lawyers, en gineers, and newspapermen have had equal success provided they had ingenuity to create the machinery ofl their professions out of the raw mate rials, and the courage to practice them among a lawless people. One of Hopewell's newspapers gained 2,600 daily circulation in two months. The j editor-in-chief sleeps on the floor of the office and sends his copy to Peters burg to be printed. Let, Cascarets liven your liver and clean your thirty feet of bowels with out griping. You will wake up feeling grand. Your head will be clear, breath right, tongue clean, stomach sweet, eyes bright, step elastic and com plexion rosy—they're wonderful. Get a 10-cent box now at any drug store. Mothers can safely give a whole Cas caret to children at any time when they become cross, feverish, bilious, tongue coated or constipated—Casca rets are harmless.