r BIG TIMBER By BERTRAND W. SINCLAIR ~~ i Copyright. 1916. kjr UttW, IMM 6 Co, I J (Continued.) "You haven't tried to play the game," he answered tensely. "For months you've been withdrawing into your shell. You've been plank ing your chains and half heartedly wishing for some mysterious power to strike them off. It wasn't a thing —marriage, I mean —that you hold lightly. That being the case you would have been wise to try making the best of it instead of making the worst of it. But you let yourself drift into a state of mind where you —well, you see the results. I saw it coming. I didn't need to happen in this afternoon to know that there were undercurrents of feeling swirl ing about. And so the way you feel now is in itself a penalty. If you let Monohan cut any more figure in four thoughts you'll pay bigger in the end." "I can't help my thoughts or, X should say, my feelings," she said wearily. "You think you love him," Fyfe trade low reply. "As a matter of Tact you love what you think he is. [ dare say, that he has sworn his af 'ection by all that's good and great. Rut if you were convinced that he iidn't really care, that his flowery jrotestations had a double end in .'lew would you still love him?" "I don't know," she murmured. 'But that's beside the point. I do ove him. I know it's unwise. It's i feeling that has overwhelmed me n a way that I didn't believe pos sible, that I had hoped to avoid. But —but I can't pretend Jack. I don't i .vant you to misunderstand. I don't .vant this to make us both miserable. [ don't want it to generate an at mosphere of suspicion and jealousy. [ never cheated at anything in my ife. You can trust me still, can't r'OU?" "Absolutely," Fyfe answered with >ut hesitation. "Then that's all there is to it," j 'he replied, "unless—unless you're < •eady to give me up as a hopeless | LIVED 75 YEARS IN SO Good Blood and Strong Nerves Assure Ripe Old Age A man is as old as he feels; a wo- Ban as old as she looks; and both are ts young as their blood and nerves, mpoverished blood will give a man >r woman of fifty the sallow, pallid romplexion usual at seventy-five rears of age. Study your face in the mirror. If ou lack the ruddy glow of health and lie physiclcal vigor that is yours by ight, look to your blood and nerves o correct the trouble. DR. CHASE'S BLOOD AND NERVE TABLETS are not a "cure-all," but a mtural compound of Iron in a most ictive and condensed form with other ilood and nerve builders that go right o the seat of the trouble. Your trength is gradually but surely built ip without any harmful stimulation. It is interesting to watch the steady rain resulting from the use of DR. 'MASK'S BLOOD AND NERVE TAB LETS. It is urged that patients weigh themselves before taking this emedy and then watch their increase n weight from month to month. For sale at all druggists—Price ilxty cents.—Advertisement. | It's Real Econom | 1 Women's Winter Coats Now 1 IB ... ES! jgj It's a delusion to imagine that prices will be any jgb lower than they are right now. Materials are none too jgjj i§j plentiful and practical every day manufacturers are quoting higher prices, so that the woman who buys a BH j Coat now secures a price advantage, together with JOB Jlf t^G C^°'Cest se^ect i° n ' impossible later on. Exclusively styled Coats of Bolivia, Soft Wool Velours, [S3 Pom Pom, Silvertone, Broadcloths and Kerseys in Green, raj ® rown ' Taupe, Beetroot and Mouse, at |=j=j jflGHnffiStA For the Woman Who Wants O/r HISINBI* to Buy a Coat For j| | IJkX Smart, stylish Misses' and Women's Coats —full belted |Pj 0 w*\ moc l c l s shirred and pleated backs—with great, soft warm ppj a c °l' ars °f Kit Coney, Raccoon and self materials—many of I§B ft ' them^ljned —all the wanted colors. Most remarkable values |§B B New Arrivals in Children's Coats §3 ijl (• <r Coats to keep the little lady warm. Cheviots, Velours, Kg $ tThk I fancy checks, Broadcloth and Velvets in beautiful youthful si w L ~ —* models. $7.95 to $22.50 g 1 WOMEN'SSWEA TERS FOR FALL and WINTER WEAR 1 || Every day marks the arrival of something new in Women's Sweaters—Shetlands, j|| En Germantown, Combed Wool and Angoras—in all the newest and most desired shades. Jj|j ■si See the new "Slip-on" Sweater. - . f&] H $5.00, $8.50, 1 Eg _ I THE'GLOBE j FRIDAY EVENING, Bringing Up Fath Copyright, 1917, International News Service By McM I / —r —— * ——— tt i • "i JLCC-S-FOTJ LOOK. WELL-ILL TELL ' XEP-ANO E' SRE'SAHTTLE DON'T VJORFOT- JL<,£<B • R WORRIED- IV U 7 *LONE? CANE IN WITH HK> WIFE HOW DID WIFE PV ONOE , THM - I 1 ' 1 1 flB; case and let me go away and blun der along the best I can." "I haven't even considered that," ho said. "Very likely it's unwise of me to <fny this —it will probably an tagonize you—but I know Monohan better than you do. I'd go pretty far to keep you two apart—now— for your sake." "It would be the same if it were ny other man," she muttered. "I can understand that feeling: in you. It's, so—so typically masculine." "Xo,' you're wrong there. dead wrong," Fyl'e frowned. "I'm not a self sacrificing brute by any means. Still, knowing that you'll only live with me on sufferance, if you were honestly in love with a man that I felt was halfway decent, I'd put my feelings in my pocket and let you go. If you oared enough for him to break every tie, to face the em barrassment of divorce, why, I'd fig ure you were entitled to your free dom and whatever happiness it might bring. But Monohan—h—, I don't want to talk about him! I trust you, Stella. I'm banking on jour own good sense. And along with that good, natural common common sense, you've got so many j illusions. About life in general and about men. They seem to have cen | tered about this one particular man. I I can't open your eyes or put you |on the right track. That's a Job for | yourself. All I can do is to sit back j and wait." I lis voice trailed off huskily. Stella put a hand on his shoulder. "Do you care so much as all that. Jack," she whispered, "even in spite of what you know?" "For two years now," he answered, "you've beep the biggest thing in my life. I don't change easy. I don't want to change. But I'm get ting hopeless." "I'm sorry, Jack," she said. "I can't begin fo tell you how sorry I am. I didn't love you to begin with"— "Anr! you've always resented that," Ihe broke in. "You've huggd that ghost of a loveless marriage to your bosom and sighed for the real rom ance you'd missed. Well, maybe you did. But you haven't found it yet. I'm sure of that, although I doubt if I could convince you." "Let me finish," she pleaded. "You knew 1 didn't love you; that I was worn out and desperate and clutch ing at the life line you threw. In spite of that —well, if I fight down this love, or fascination, or infatua tion, or whatever it Is—l'm not sure myself, except that it affects me strongly—can't we be friends again?" "Friends! Oh, thunder!" Fyfe ex ploded. He came up out of his chair with a blaze in his eyes that startled her, caught her by the arm and thrustj her out the door. "Friends? You and I?" He sank' his voice to a harsh whisper. "Good ! Lord —friends! Go to bed. Good ! night." He pushed her into the hall, and j the lock clicked between them. For' one confused instant Stella tood! poised, uncertain; then she went into j her bedroom and sat down, her j keenest sensation one or sheer re-' lief. Already in those brief hours emotion had well nigh exhausted her. To be alone, to lie still and rest, to banish thought—that was all she desired. (To be continued.) HARVEST HOME SERVICES Shiremanstown, Pa., Oct. s.—Holy Communion and harvest home serv ices will be held in the United Breth ren Church at this place Sunday. The Rev. 11. C. Kottler will have charge of the services. Rally Day will be observed in the Young People's Chris tion Endeavor Society of the church Sunday evening at 6 o'clock. A spe cial program will be rendered. WAR RECIPES c—cup; t—teaspoon; tb —table- spoon. All measures are level, and flour is sifted once before measuring. *■ YEAST BKICADS Coriimeal and Wheat Bread % c milk; % c water; yeast cake; Hi t salt; I tb sugar; 1 tb fat; 1 c cornmeal; 2 c wheat flour. Pour milk and % c water over corn nleal, salt, sugar and fat. Heat gradually to the boiling point or nearly to it and cook for 20 mill* • utes in a double boiler. After cooking, add flour, cool to lukewarm, add yeast mixed with rest of water. Mold, let rise over night. Shape into a loaf; let rise again; bake 4 5 min. in moderate oven. —Farmers' Bulletin No. 807. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH } All's Well That! ij M Ends Well !j BY JANE McLEAN "YoL don't say so, my boy?" | said bluff, good-natured Mr. Rivers. , "I'm proud of your choice and I'm j Klad it is going to be Rose. Your mother and I had hoped that you and Rose would settle down some day." "She the only rirl, returned the younger man. "The only girl I ever thought of seriously. Of course, there are always a lot of girls a fel low likes to flirt with and have a good time with, but Rose is different. "You bet your life she's different; no foolish notions about her. She'll make you a happy man, Dick." "It's great to have you talk this way, dad." "Well, it's great to feel this way, j boy, and just to show you how I feel about it, I'm going to buy you young folks the Summers' place for a wedding present." The munificence of his own gift so pleased the older man that he did not see the peculiar look on Dick's face; neither did he notice Dick's lack of enthusiasm. If he thought anything at all about it, he put the boy's attitude down to gratitude that could not be properly expressed. In the Edwardes' bungalow across town Rose Edwardes was telling her mother all about it. Rose had no father, but Mrs. Edwardes had been left so well off that the girl had had every advantage. It had been the desire of the mother's heart that I Rose should one day marry Dick Rivers, the son of an old and treas ured friend, and now that the girl had actually said that she and Dick were engaged, happy tears filled the mother's eyes "I was afraid for a time there," Mrs. Kdwardes confessed. "You j seemed to like Jack Quimby. And, of course, I couldn't say anything. I knew that would bo the worst thing in the world for Dick." "Oh. you foolish old dear," bub bled the girl. "Jack never had a chance. I just played with him to make Dick cross. There never was any one else for me, mother." And the girl hid her head on her mother's shoulder. "Well, dearest girl," Mrs. Ed- S wardes said finally, "I want to give you something handsome, so 1 shall buy you youngsters that lovely En glish house down by the quarry for ! a wedding present." Rose, who was about to say some thing, suddenly stopped, and her mother, without waiting for her daughter to express her thanks, went on talking about it. "I have always loved that place," she confessed, "and now I feel that I can invest in it and come there to see you." And the girl was forced to mur mur words of gratitude while her own heart was heavy. Half an hour later out in the moon-flooded garden of the Ed wardes place two young people met, and each plunged into the subject nearest his and her heart. "Dick, mother is going to buy us Daily Dot Puzzle i • • ft' 60. 47 . 52* 54 *7 ] a -n 47 JSS *l9 •20 i 4fe *2l 4V .22 .43 23. ,24 4i. . 31/ ,2t> 40 3? * . 37 Draw from one to two and so on to the end. tlie English place by the quarry," she begun despairingly. "She has always wanted that pia<?e for her self, and now she is going to give it to me. What are we going to do, dear?" "That isn't the worst," Dick said gloomily, "Dad wants to buy us the Summers place." "What, that a<vful stucco place i with the terraces?" exclaimed the ! girj. "Why, that's worse still." "I don't think it's any worse in a way," began Dick, "that old place your mother is so fond of .needs all Who Got the $ 50,000 Bribe J * As on Former Occasions?" i lie Bernstorff revelations show that Germany had an elaborate system here a few months ago tor influencing our Congress, and as the New York Times remarks, "If Germany was spending money to organize disloyalty within the United States when she was at peace with us, she most cer tainly did not become high-minded and stop it the moment she went to war with us." 1 hat part of Count von BernstorfFs note in which lie asks permission of the Berlin foreign otiice lor authority to pay out up to $50,000 j n order, as on former occasions, to influence Congress tinougli the organization you know of' in the opinion of the Boston Transcript ''gives us a good 1 lead tor inquiry into and effective prosecution of some of the traitorous societies that were doing Ger- Imany s work and getting paid for it.' Ihe general belief of editorial observers, however, seems to be that the mysterious organization referred to by Yon BernstorlY operated by bombarding the legis lators with telegrams. Senator Wadsworth, of New York, declares that "about the time Bernstorff sent that message I received four hundred telegrams in "one day." 1 ho leading article in 1 HP, LI TERARV DIGEST for the issue of October 6th, covers the whole subject of the spy s} stem that has been unearthed in America and gives expression to the opinions of representative newspapers and individuals throughout the country. Other very interesting phases of the world's news in this number % arc: Puncturing the German Peace-Balloons While German Diplomats Softly Answer the Pope's Peace Proposal and Write Vaguely of Peace Through Other Channels Revelations of German Duplicity Are Adding to the Ranks of Their Enemies. Mr. Burleson to Rule the Press Kerensky Told to "Act or Perish" China Calmly Goes to War Peace No Nearer Men, Not Advice the Need of the Farmers Are American War Airplanes Too Slow? A New Dam Stoves for the Pocket How War Affects the English Intellectuals American Singers for the Metropolitan Our War-Songs and Catchwords Opera Germany s Sins Indicted by a German Disloyal Authors "Battling Bob" Under Fire How the Y. M. C. A. Follows the Flag Personal Glimpses Where the Churches Stand on Patriotism Many Interesting Illustrations Special HOW TO RECOGNIZE THE RANK AND SERVICE BRANCH OF OFFICERS AND MEN IN THE ARMY A very timely feature in this number of "The Di- in which an enlisted man serves is revealed by the gest is a full page of illustrations showing the dis- color of his hat cord; the difference between the of tinguishing marks of the United States Army uni- ficer's leggings and those of the enlisted man. By forms. Ihe insignia of every rank and branch of the consulting this page you need no longer be in doubt . rmy is shown the officer's shoulder straps, chcv- as to the rank arft branch of the army service of the ions, specialty marks, collar devices. I low the branch soldiers whom you meet on all sides. October 6th Number on Sale To-day—All News-dealers—lo Cents *jr The irv f Mark of \ I lIIC § • jfi literary Digest FUNK 8c WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary), NEW YORK kind/of improvements." "Mother thinks it's picturesque," sighed Rose. "Oh, Dick, when we wanted the little white house by the river. Why they'd never consent to our living there, after such magnifi cence, but I do want it so badly." Dick was silent for a minute, then he said stoutly, "And we're going to \ lmve the little white infuse by the j river. Why should we live in houses j picked out by our people? We are j going to live our own lives, and we ' ought to begin to live them as we 1 choose." "I know dear, but they'll be so hurt," said the girl hopefully. "Not if we tell them together. They're both in the library now, let's go in and assert our independence." And hand in hand, like two chil dren they ran across the lawn and into the big dim library. The Sum mers place was the show place of | the town, and the English house was of dreams to the tivo who wanted to I live there, its very humbleness picturesque. But the little white | house by the river seemed the house •spelled home. 1 OCTOBER 5, 1917 Thousands Will Avoid Annoying Catarrh This Winter A Little Precaution Higlit Now Saves i Vntold Annoyance You who have been afflicted with i | Catarrah. know that with the first j signs of cold and damp weather the I disease will promptly return, and re main an unwelcome guest as of yore. i Why not save Yourself the suffer | ing and inconvenience which your I experience tells you is in store for I you. Avoid the folly of waiting until the diLease has you within its grasp again. Proper treatment is worth a great ; deal more right now than later. Ca tarrh cannot be permanently cured by local treatment with sprays, douches, ointments, washes, etc. Science has proven that the disease , is in the blood. I That is why a thorough course of S. S. S., the unequalled blood rem j edy, does so much good right now. This remedy goes to the very sourco of the disease, and by purifying and cleansing the blood, eliminates the germs of Catarrh, and drives them from the system. Begin this treatment to-day, and you will be thankful for the wonder ful relief you will enjoy this winter. S. S. S. is sold by druggists every where, and has been on the market for more than fifty years. Be sure and get the genuine S. S. S. Our Medical Director will gladly give yon expert medical advice about the treatment of your own case, without charge. Write to-day to Swift Speci fic Co., 223 C Swift Laboratory, At- I lanta, Georgia. 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers