Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, October 28, 1916, Page 7, Image 7

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    OF INTEREST TO THE WOMEN
"THEIR MARRIED LIFE"
CaprrlfM fcr ■■iirutloaal News IrrrlM
"Warren, am I In fault or what is'
the matter with the Browns?" Helen
*fcked one Sunday morninpr as they
lingering over breakfast.. Of I
late Helen had installed a new re- I
gime and they all slept late on Sun
day. As a general rule she and
Warren were out somewhere late the :
night before, and Mary was only too
glad to have the extra time for rest, j
Sometimes Helen sent her away
for the week-end and got the sim
ple breakfast herself, and this week
Jlary had gone away with Nora and ;
Joe, and the baby and Helen and j
Warren were alone.
Warren looked up from his cof
fee absently. "What was that you
said?" he asked and grinned sis Helen
shook her head at him. "Well, you j
know how hard it is," he said de
fensively, "when a fellow is interested
in the papers."
Helen could not help smiling as she
looked across at Warren. Somehow
lie looked so youthful and boyish in
his bathrobe without a collar. They
always ate breakfast in negligee.
"Oh, about the Browns," he said a
moment later.
"Then you did hear?"
"I gtiess I must have and it just
bccurred to me. Well, what makes
Jo:i think that they don't like you."
"I didn't say that they don't like j
me, but now that you speak of it, I
don't think they do. Mary said a i
queer thing the other day after we
had them here to dinner."
"Humph," sniffed Warren, "do you
lake stock in what your maid tells
you?"
"Mary isn't an ordinary maid, and
fe'hat she said she simply told me j
because she likes me."
"And what was that?"
"That she didn't think that the :
Browns cared for me."
Warren threw back his head and !
laughed. "What a ridiculous idea."
"But think it over, dear, they j
never let us hear a word from them !
Rll summer, and no matter how hard
I try I simply cannot feel friendly J
as I used to toward them. They make
me feel as though they were holding
me away."
Warren threw down the paper at
last as though he were really inter- !
ested. "I don't like to remind you of
It," he offered gallantly enough", "but
perhaps they don't approve of me.
You know Phil Holmes told them all
>bout the ride with Miss Wilcox last
>ummer. I
i Possible Reason
"Xonsense!" Helen returned, to I
d'hom a bringing up of that subject
r lncomparable in Flavor
pure in ingredients, appetizing and
H healthful, Lea & Pen-ins' Sauce has •
I been the standard for 4
I generations. g£ JF
1 V The only original Worcctterdiire Sicca Sj
! Send postal for free kitchen hanger containing S
100 new recipes
LEA & PERRINS, Hubert Street, New York City S
MBBBMnnmiiiiißßßommnanMßmMMßßMmMmndl
this room its so
bright and chQQrful • ™Bp ; : T
"The 'C.E-Z' Gas Lights make it so
comfortable and cheerful for sewing
or reading, and their white, well dif
fused illumination shows up our fur
rniture and decorations in just the .
right tones and color values."
THE "C.E-Z"
fits on any upright fixture, with your
present glassware. :
75 <* an up, according to equip- |
ment.
r c Harrisburg O 1
| Early Coal Buying Advisable |
C It's the part of wisdom to buy your winter supply of coal now.
Once the frost and ice and snow of winter get busy, it's pretty 1
! difficult to keep the coal free of dust and dirt. Summer-mined
caol by the very nature of things is cleaner, the screening we
give it insures practically a complete absence of dust and dirt.
I Phone your order now. (
J. B. MONTGOMERY
600—Either Phone. Third and Chestnut Streets 1
Use Telegraph Want Ads
SATURPAY EVENI\ T G, ttXRRISBURO flfijftg TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 28. 1016.
'meant nothing, now, that she had
'decided to banish it from her thoughts.
Besides, Warren had been too sincere
|in his repentance to give her any
| doubts on the subject, and she was
willing to be happy just as long as
he treated her as lie did lately. "No,"
she went on. "they don't approve of
me; that's it."
"Well, have you any theory about
i it?"
"Yea—they think I'm fussy. You
remember how I complained of the
accommodations at Shelter Island
' last summer ?"
"We all complained."
"I know, but the Browns were
hosts more or less, and 1 suppose
they thought I might have been more
of a sport."
"Well, why do you let it worry
you?"
"Because it brings me to the sub
ject of friends in general, and friend
ships, and what 1 think the word im
plies, and what I think other people
want it to imply. Besides. I was aw
fully fond of the Browns. 1 liked
them from the beKinning, and I think
they both have simply splendid
traits."
"They have; Bill Brown is a line
fellow."
"Well, then, don't vou see that I
am awfully disappointed. It's so
seldom that one finds people who are
real'y congenial, and then something
is always sure to tprn up. 1 never
can tind friends in this world who re
spond to my friendship as 1 would to
theirs if they needed me. Xow, it
wouldn't have made a bit of difference
to me what the Browns did. If I
liked them and wanted them for my
friends, they just couldn't get away
from my friendship. That's what a
friendship is for; it shouldn't wobble
at the first signs of misunderstanding."
"Well, I'll venture to say that no
one of us can claim many friends
of the caliber you suggest."
"I can, a few, because I have tested
them. And you know, Warren, I'm
not a bit the kind of a woman who
can be contented with a lot of ac
quaintances that cannot be trusted
to weather a storm. I want a few
good friends, and I shall be perfectly
happy."
"You're luckier than some," War
ren commented. "Your friends seem
to cling pretty closely to you. Just
keep right on being a friend, and
you can't go wrong. It works every
time." And Warren, with this piece
of philosophy, went back to his coffee
and rolls.
(Watcli for the next instalment in this
popular series.)
LAPELS ORNAMENT
ALL THE POCKETS
Straight Lines and More Ful
ness Marked Features of This
Autumn Costume
By MAY MANTON
8783 (W ill Basting Line and Added
Seam Allowance) One-Piece Dress for
Misnjs and Small Women, 16 and 18
years.
This is one of the smartest of the
Autumn frocks that could be shown and
also one of the simplest. It is cut in one
below the yoke and it is held by means of
the
it also i 3 available for indoor use. It
could be cc-pied in serge or in gabardine
,1 or in broadcloth or in wool poplin or in
any material of such sort, and the licit
could be made of leather or of the trimming
fabric as liked. Kmbroideries are being
much used and often they provide the
fashionable bit of color. I3ark blue serge
would be pretty with the pocket laps and
the_ upturned straps on the blouse em
| broidered in such colors as Chinese yellow,
j red and blue, and in simple conventional
designs.
For the 16 year sire will be needed, 7
yards of material 27 inches wide, 4%
1 yards 36 or 44; the skirt is yards in
j width at the lower edge.
: The pattern No. 8783 is cut in sizet
! for 16 and 18 years. It will be mailed to
any address by the Fashion Department
j of this paper, on receipt of fifteen
! cents.
' Hens Evidently Had
Taste For Literature
1 Quincy, Mass., Oct. 28.—Rivaling at
j least, if not transcending in import
ance, the famous question asked by a
! former King of England as to how
I the apple got inside the dumpling, is
.the question that Mrs. Sarah C. Wil
liams, of Cross street, would like" to
have scientists, ornithologists or any-
I body else answer.
Mrs. Williams broke open an egg
; after the egg had been boiled. In
side she found a piece of newspaper.
| about half an inch long and an
' eighth of an inch wide. There were
in few lines of print on the paper,
| but the print was upside down. Mrs.
Williams, however, could make out
these words. "To be known," and,
! underneath, 'go to." The egg was in
1 crood condition and the printing -rt-as
legible, except that it was upside
j down.
Mother of Nine Gives
Birth to Girl Triplets
Buffalo. X. Y., Oct. 28.—There are
(three new members of the family of
j Mr. and Mrs. William Brand, of 507
South Division street, to-day. triplets
having been born this morning. All
are girls. The "first infant arrived at
: 6.30 o'clock and weighs nine pounds.
! The second was born at 7 o'clock, and
| weighs seven pounds, while the third
girl was born 15 minutes later. She is
| a wee mite, weighing only four
i pounds.
1 There are ten children In the fam
i ily now. The number would have
i been twelve, but two have died. Dr.
Alexander Mulki, of 869 Swan street,
j who was the attending physician, said
1 the mother is doing well and that each
| of the new baby girls gives promise
lof being well and strong. They de
-1 voted most of their attention to-day to
: (jrying.
MCSICAIiK BY ZION CHOIR,
Hummelstown, Pa.. Oct. 28. To
morrow evening the Zion Lutheran
choir will render a musicale, under
the direction of Mrs. .1. R. Martz; or
ganist, R. P. Campbell. The program
includes: "Softly Xow the Light Is
Fading." Miss Helen Shoemaker and
Miss Barbara Hummel; bass solo,
! Richard Earnest: anthem, "The Lord's
Own Holy Days," soloist, Miss Maude
Baker; organ solo; tenor solo, "The
Lord Is My Light," George Karmany;
1 trio. 'Praise Ye." Mrs. Martz. Mr. Kar
many and Mr. Earnest: chorus, Gloria
i in Excelsis.
MIXERS' RENEW STRIKE
Sliamokin, Pa.. Oct. 2 B.—Yesterday
the Xorth Franklin colliery of the
Philadelphia ana Reading Coal and
Iron Company was up, 800
employes going on strike because a few
miners insisted on entering the colliery
without having United Mine Workers
buttons.
FIRE AT HIGH SCHOOL
1 . Waynesboro. Pa.. Oct. 2 B.—A fire
I was discovered in the big coal bin In
j the basement of the Waynesboro high
j school building yesterday morning, but
, • wus put out before much damaKe was
I done.
MAYOR FIXES HIMSELF
Allentown, Pa., Oct. 28.—Mayor Al.
I L Reichenbach, author of the local
, traffic ordinance, made himself a de
. fendant at police court yesterday for
' violation of the law and imposed r a fine
, .-of |lO upon himself.
In the Realms
!■ of Amusement, Art, and Instruction, j
THEDA BARA IN "ROMEO AND JULIET"
Scene from William Fox's magnificent picturlzation of Shakespeare's
immortal love story "Romeo and Juliet," that Is booked for the Colonial
theater, Monday and Tuesday. The picture Is in seven big parts and will
be presented 011 the regular program, without any advance in prices. Theda
Bara and Harry Milliard will appear In the leading roles, and will have tho
support of an all-star cast.
OKPHIH M To-night "Bringing Up
Father in Politics."
MAJESTlC—Vaudeville.
COLONIAL—"The Jungle Girl."
GRAND—"The Flower of No Man's
Isanti."
REGENT—"Duloie's Adventure."
VICTORIA—"The Hark Sildnce."
If you have followed the fortunes of
Jiggs Malioney, the fortunes of "Bring
ing Up Father," George
"BriiieinK MeManus' famous car
tip Father toOn of the same title,
In Politics" you will no doutft be in
terested to know that
Manager Gus Id ill will offer a new stage
version of the cartoons, entitled "Bring
ing L T p Father in Politics.' It is a musi
cal comedy in three acts and will be
the attraction at the Orpheum to-day,
matinee and night. In the latest pro
duction, Jiggs has numerous adven
tures. The run is rampant from cur
tain to curtain. The action is spirited
and not a dull moment is permitted to
creep in during the three acts.
"It is an interesting experience giv
ing concerts," said Mme. Gadski, in a
recent interview. "You
Gadski and would be surprised at
Her Programs what they want to
hear in the South and
West. As a matter of fact, they insist
upon the same class of program as
those I give in New York. They say
they want to hear the classic works.
"There are three of us, I think, who
are responsible for this change in the
smaller cities —Mme. Sembricli. Mme.
Schumann -lleink nnd myself. The mis
cellaneous concert used to be the rule.
Fince we have ben giving recitals of
classic songs it has become the •ex
ception."
This greatest singer of Wagner ap-1
1 Ifoigr Babyfr HgjJtthl
S k best guarded by regular Bowel M
j Where a strict watch is kept, M
X healthy children are found. E
jffl develop minor complaints C
B MAKE A HOUSEHOLD NECESSITY OF 1
1 MRS.WINSIOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP!
I IT IS ABSOLUTELY NONNARCOTIC 1
fm m ~ I AND DOCS NOT CONTAIN OPIUM, MOIRPHINE |
S I NOR ANY OF THEIR DERIVATIVES V Eg
It soothes the fretting Baby,and reeves the tired Jp J
3|fl FOR SALE IN EVERY CIVILIZED COUNTRY. JS
Oar bwldet the Baby", contains valuable information
> | pears In the Orpheum Theater, this city,
j Friday evening, November 3. llor con
cert here is tell opening number of the
| Friday Evening Musicale Course, which
' Is under the direction of Gayle Bur
lingame.
The story of "Mother Goose" deals
with the nursery rhymes of your child
hood and in fancy takes you
At the back to the time when you
• Majestic hadn't a care in the world.
For the first half of next
week the Monolula Sextet will head the
I bill. Lovers of good music are proni
. ised a distinct trent. Completing the
: ] bill are: Gordon and Day. in a vaude
; ville novelty; Kennedy and Burt, pre
senting a comedy skit entitled "Engag
i ed—Married-Divorced:" DeWitt, come-
I dian, and Gordon and IClnley, in a song
and dance offering. Don't forget Hal
lowe'en Night at the Majestic. Patrons
are invited to attend in masquerade
costume, and prizes will be given for
' the prettiest as well as the most fan
tastic costume.
| "The Jungle Child," the latest Tr'i
i angle play that was presented at the
Colonial Theater yester-
I "The .lunicle day, will be shown the
I Child" nt last times to-night. The
the Colonial picture features Dorothy
Dalton, and is a weird
tale of a Spanish girl, reared in the Bra
zilian jungles, who later marries an ex
; plorer, whose life she saves. Here tin.
action of the story is transformed from
the picturesque tropical Brazilian
jungles to New York City, where, amid
luxurious surroundings, \the story is
continued. A picture that cannot help
hut please and interest you. A new
Keystone comedy, featuring Mack
Swain, called "Ambrose's Rapid Rise,"
will be seen on the same program. Mon
day and Tuesday. William Fox will pre
sent Theda Bara and an all-star cast,
November Victor Records
I
out to-day
/COMPREHENSIVE i s
£ the November Victor
|iM Record list. Many of the
Jh||Wjl l)l|Sk J most prominent Victor ar
/'f) / t ' sts are rc P resent ed and in
vfly // selections which will meet
/ .^^^7' tl,e a PP rova l °f the public.
// ■ i J n addition to those listed
below there are selections
£rf?"~ by the Royal Marimba
I' y j Band; Pietro; Six Brown
' ' Brothers and many others.
|
Hear These
in the
Rothert Victor Booths
8857:8 of two popular melodies, Sweet
j i Sine Me to Sloop, a popular (Jenevieve and When You and X
American Ballad, miner by Gluuk. Were Maggie.
A dreamy violin obligato by Zim- IBi:>n
ballst; a string quartet accom- Tho p cer less Quartet and Henry
Paniment. Burr each have a selection on
87201 this reocrd. When Uncle Sammy
Wlierc Is My Iloy To-night, the e-R-T-Y^ 0 Ba " d
familiar old gospel* hymn, is
Homer's contribution for the 18121
| month. Two E. T. Paull marches played
• j 18130 by Conwa y' s Band. Battle of
.. [ * the Nations and Napoleon's L<ast
, I A double-face McKee trio record Charge.
"
Vletrolas I7OTHERIT
312 Market Street
: L__— _
in a special seven-part screen version
of Shakespeare's masterpiece, "Romeo
! and Juliet." Theda Bara has been seen
I many times in many different roles, but
| it is doubtful if this superb actress has
I ever appeared to better advantage than
she does while interpreting the role of
the fair maid, Verona, in this picture.
The picture is in seven reels, but will
be shown on the regular program at the
usual prices of, adults, 10 cents, and
children 5 cents.
! The admirers of Clara Kimball
Young: will be afforded but one more
opportunity of seeing
I 'The IJnrfc. her in the powerful play,
Silence" "The Dark Silence." Ad
tlie Victoria mission 10 cents to
every part of the house.
; For Monday and Tuesday, we shall pre
j sent one of the real photoplay sensa
tions of the year in "The Knwritten
| Law," featuring' Beatrix Michelena. It
is a wonderful drama that bristles with
intense situations. Climax follows cli
max with gripping continuity until the
story reaches its big culmination. "The
I'nwritten Law" is a picturization of
Kdwin Milton Royle's famous stage
play with which practically the entire
7
| world of theatergoers are familiar. For
| Wednesday, E. H. Sothern, the peerless
English actor, in the Hint of a series of
three pictures for which the Vitagraph
( ompany have paid Mr. Sothern SIOO -
, Admission for Monday, Tuesday
and Wednesday: Adults, 20 cents lirst
oor; balcony, 10 cents; children. 10
cents.
"Dulcie's Adventure," shown at the
Kegent to-day only, could have been
written for no one but Marv
Miles Minter. "Dulcie," the
Regent child of the. charming and
Today eventful story in this produc
tion, is precisely Miss Minter
This newest picture of Mary Miles Min
ter has its opening scenes in the Sunny
Southland, where "Dulcie" lives, a poor
lonely white child in a vast desert of
i pickaninnies and "pore white trash,"
| with whom she is not allowed to asso
! ciate by her two spinster aunts, because
iof her claim to dead and gone an
cestry.
I "Her Vow Fulfilled." Tn this, the next
ito the last episode of "Gloria's Ro-
I mance," shown to-day, Gloria learns
the truth about the murder of Freneau,
her lover.