<3dl the RMVJKI ijjPjPf - ' I Life's Problems | Are Discussed BY MRS. WOfiOX WOODROW While on a brief visit to another rity a friend obmine introduced me to a girl who nad for a number of years been studying the art of gem-setting. - She had pursued it, because of her love for it and be caues she possessed a special ap titude, but with no idea of using it commercially. Then her father suffered a series cf reverses in his business and lost wlmost everything he had. It was: necessary for the girl to do her ehare in supporting herself and as sisting the family, and naturally she fell back upon the craft to which she had given so much study, i Her work struck me as beautiful end unusual. An adorable pin of •unique design and set with opals captured my fancy, and I expressed rny admiration. Back in my mind' ■was the determination to have it,! if it broke me. "It's nice of you to like it," thei girl said. "I think the design is attractive. But it seems awfully i presumptuous in me to be actual ly starting out to sell my work, j When I see the exquisite things thati are done by real artists, my attempts [ look painfully amateurish. I am very far from possessing the skill! find finish I hope to attain." Now, please bear in mind that she liad something to sell. I- was a chance customer, who admired her •work and had every intention of buying some of it. But this wasj the psychological effect of her words. A faint chill came over me. I hesitated and looked at the pin again, this time more critically. It was a pretty thing, but it was not This Frees Your Skin From Hair or Fuzz (Toilet Tips) The method here suggested for the removal of superfluous hair is quick end certain and unless the growth is extremely stubborn, a single appli cation does the work. Make a stiff paste with some powdered delatone and water; apply this to the hairy surface and after about 2 minutes rub it off, wash the skin and the hairs are gone. To avoid disappoint ment. be sure your druggist sells you delatone. America's Best Drinking Coffees ANGLE, SILVER AND V. S. HI.ENDS They are sure to satisfy or 1 money back. Be a booster for one of these favorite blends. Saturday Special One Pound Baking Powder and large Preserving Kettle 50c Come Early as Supply Is Limited Harrislmrg's Popular Tea and Coffee Store Grand Union Tea Co. 208 N. SECOND ST. Both Phones. Quick Service, j Bay Thrift Stamps THE GLOBE \ / A MAY SALE JS|J||| of Women's Fashionable y raHli Coats . A sale of the greatest import to well-dressed women | Übecause it involves the same exclusively styled, superior | I hand-tailored Coats for which THE GLOBE has always | JH*fc' i \ No garments bought specially for this sale. j ; mm |J U Coats at $22.50 Heretofore Values to $28.50 l! nl collection of smart full belted and semi-belted styles of wl I B>l Il\ Heat^ er xtures —Burclla Cloths—Coverts and Gabardines !1 ii lill C° ais ai S 2B - 50 Formerl y Values to $55.00 | K Stunning coats of Wool Velour Gabardines and Serges in- |; gSi'il B |,> fl eluding blacks—some belted models, form-fitted and semi-loose |j ;| effects—unusual collars to harmonize with the particular style || ' Coats at $34.50 Regularly Values to $45.00 R\ A wide range of semi-fitted models with inverted pleated backs |: V. —man-tailored collar styles double-breasted and half belted | models—Coats of Tricot Cloths —Coverts—Gabardines Wool ; \ elours and English Whipcords. || I Women's and Misses' Sweaters $6.50, $8.50 to $12.50 No well-dressed woman's wardrobe is complete without a new Sweater. Beautiful creations in all the newest styles and weaves, including the popular Middy in the long | models and some with purling at waist—Angoria trimmed. ' 5j I Women's Leather WOMEN'S COAT SAI/)N\ Sleeveless Jackets f Puttees SECOND FIXJOR J J: <> The newest and 8 For motoring. motoreyr-Mnjr nil -g smartest outer gar. i; iinl horseback riding. Best f r, / 'f „ monts, of Jersey and X quality cowhide $8.50; block f ft £} V ff#|#f Cr Velvet SH.SO to l>a(ent leather 515.00. \ FRIDAY EVENING, B ringing Up Father *•* . Copyright, 1918, International News Service *■* By McManus VOO OUCHT TO I „ | NO INDEED- My WE V/UZ. lik-C 1 ~"| JOVE I'M i5eM * MUSEUM I WEWOIftOTH THWHEN WE <T3UT MOW MV P] *HAPPV THEM - YOU'RE * DIE'.! h* -THINK ALIKE:: nWT MARR, Ed . fT| WIPF TUIMV-C, I 1 - - .. ' i'lizOZ- I especially cheap—not cheap enough I jto wear once or twice, and then j [ throw aside. And, like any other [ I purchaser, I like to get my money's ; J worth. , Still, if the workmanship was| ; crude and amateurish, why. I pre-! j ferred to consider the matter a little; | further. I would rather pay a few; t more dollars and go to an establish- \ | ment where I knew I was getting J the best. I am not an expert on j jewelry, and I had no way of gaug-; ing the merits of the ornament. So I decided to abandon my whim and j not buy at all. She lost a sale and I did not get aj pin I really wanted. I was no lons,-; er in the purchasing mood. Now. I lon looking back over the matter, 1 think we were both foolish. I think, too, that I should have ig- i ] nored the fact that I was a stranger: to her, and then and there should] have told her frankly just what she I had done. She might have consid-j ered me officious, but if she had any i sense at all she would have thank-j ed me and have profited by the ex perience. I I ought to have said to her: "Youj have made a psychological blunder j this morning, and if you continue to j repeat it you wiH certainly land in' the ditch of failure. That self-de-i precatory attitude is fatal to sue- j cgss. It is far better to be bump-! tious than too humble. "If you do not consider your work j I worthy you have no business to be | trying to sell it. It would also be : stupid of you 'o attempt to do so. I I For you can't fool all of the people j • .-til of the time. And you would sooner or later have to retire igno miniously from your particular ; field. "But if you have a real aptitude for your work a!id have wrought: RUPTURE EXPERT HERE W. S. Rice, the Rupture Specialist of Adams, N. Y., will send his per sonal representative, ' Dr. K. C. BRANCH TO HARRISBURG I to supply the needs of any who re i quire home l:eatment for rupture. Anvone interested should call at Bolton Hotel, and receive free infor mation and examination. It. will cost I you nothing unless you want to be j properly fitted. Dr. Branch will have i a full line of Appliances for all forms I of rupture, including special supports for use following operations. If in need of a Special Appliance, call and i have your measurements taken and I tind out what you need, i Thousands report having been cured bv the Kice Method at a very slight I cost. Don't fail to find out just what I can be done for you. It will cost you ! nothing to investigate, i Remember the date and place, May 17, 18, 19 and 20. and don't let any thing keep you from seeing Dr. I Branch while you have the chance. | It will mean a great, deal to you. ] faithfully and sincerely and it pleases I | your customers enough for them to j j be willing to pay a good price for it. j \ you should dt> everything in your i j power to increase their interest and ! ' enjoyment in their prospective pur- j ■ chase. "When you saw that I admired J ; that pin. you should have called i I my attention to the excellence of ! j the stone. You should have point j od out the originality of the design, I ; and have told me an interesting lit-1 j tie story of how you got your ideaj i of it, or from what famous piece it; j was copied. You should have en-j j hanced its value in my eyes in every | | possible way, and have sent my away i I both pleased an'd proud that I had j managed to secure it." In a sale there are two persons; I to be considered, the buyer and the i i seller. If the seller is indifferent' j and uninterested the buyer departs 1 | with his purchase dissatisfied and ; ! discontenfed. It has lost value in hisj I eyes. And the next time he starts; lout on a buying expedition he will: i go to another shop where ome in terest and enthusiasm is in I supplying his wants. I really do not know which a pur | chaser resents most, to have articles i ; languidly laid out before him as if the salesman or saleswoman were too I | bored to care whether they were I \ bought or not, or to be hypnotized by a false show of enthusiasm into , huying inferior things. Either one is, ! fatal. ' Every situation which we encoun -1 ter in this journey of life has its psy i ehology. Upon our grasp of that '| fact depends our success or failure. [ The subject is,worth all the study we can bring to bear upon it. , "Church of America" Is Presbyterian Plan Columbus. 0., May 17. —An or ! ganic union of all evangelical j churches of the country, under the name "The Church of America," will : lbe one of the most important over- 1 ' j tures presented to the General As | sembly of the Presbyterian Church j North, which opened here to-day. Xo obstacle is in sight to prevent ' S the General Assembly from voting , I in favor of a reunion of the Xorth .| em and Southern branches of the | Presbyterian Church, which have I been separated since the Civil War. WORKS .VXD SLEEPS WRAPPED IX FLAG Springfield, lll.—Because he is al- I! leged to have refused to make dona tions to the Red Cross, J. W. Ryn- ' .! ers, a grocer of Athens, is selling [! his goods with an American flag i j wrapped about his shoulders. Ryn ! ers was visited by a delegation of | citizens and compelled to kiss the I flag. The emblepi was wrapped | about his shoulders with orders that he sleep in It and wear it. • feLAJRRISBTTRG TKJLj:.vsltr^ THEFOUR OFHEARTS A SERIAL, OF YOUTH AND ROMANCE By VIRGINIA VAN DE WATER ■V I CHAPTER LV | I (Copyright. 1918, Star Company) Mr. and Mrs. Livingstone had i ! tickets for the theater this evening-1 Therefore, soon after dinner, the I, oar came for them and they went j away, leaving Cynthia alone. "Ton will not be lonely, however." ; I Mrs. Livingstone remarked, smiling- I ly. "For the Prince Charming will be ( here soon. I know you and he have jmuch to talk about these days, for ' • the wedding is drawing rapidly near. . j And under such conditions youns ; people find their plans a never-failing i subject of conversation." J The face into which she looked did j not flush. Indeed, the matron fancied : | tor a moment that it had slightly. Cynthia was peculiar, she j reflected. She. Mrs. Livingstone, ; would feel easier when the wedding was over. She had worked hard to ! bring about this match. She was | sure, of course, that it would come j off all right, and yet the prospective' I bride appeared so unenthusiastic and | non-committal. \ Cynthia, left to her own devices, I walked uneasily up and down the j drawing room, then strayed into the j library. The Are was not lighted here, for the evening was mild. The , shaded lamps made the room very [ attractive and cozy, but she did not j sit down. A spirit of restlessness possessed her. j She went out into the hall and • glanced up the stairs. Was Dora. I awake? As if in answer to her : question, Marie. Mrs. Livingstone's maid, appeared in the door leading to the rear of the house. "Miss Dora's bell's Just rung." she remarked. "I'll go up and see what she wants." Cynthia Goes "Don't bother, Marie—-I'll go my self," Cynthia said. "If she wants you. I will ring again." "Oh, Cyn, is that you?" Dora asked as her cousin came into her room. "I rang for Marie just to find out where you were." "I'm glad I came instead of Marie, then," Cynthia rejoined. "Do you want something to eat, dear?" "No," Dora answered with a lit tle shudder of disgust. "Mother made me take some toast and tea before I went to sleep. I have had a long nap, and my head is better. What are you doing this evening?" j t "Nothing just now. Gerald is com ing later, is there anything I can do for you before then?" "Yes," Dora admitted. "Come and sit down here in the dark hy me and talk to me. I'm awfully for lorn." "Are you sure I won't make your head worse?" Cynthia queried. '["Your mother wants you to keep ;; quiet." ; i "You will not make my head ; j.worse, and I don't care what Mother ; wants," Dora retorted. "What she ! does not know won't hurt her. And ! i she won't know you have been with ; | me." • ; Cynthia drew a chair up to the ; j side of her cousin's bed. "I am '; sorry you have been suffering so, I j dear." she sympathized. ; | "Oh—Cyn—it's not my head that ; j hurts!" the girl exelaimed. "It did 1 I ache, I acknowledge. But that was > | only because I was so unhappy. I ! | may as well say it frankly—for I let Daily Dot Puzzle A ( vail* .v* ) W W so v I N \ V 59 34 N 28# fit . i *ij *55 25• . 3r J A *22 cT I 8 • • <•*. 3 4 .41 17. 4 . Z 5 * 16. • • <5 .45 to • * M4*s. i • 7 C ! ? > • • .9 I 13 . .11 4 ?KA 47 ' \ • # • 48/ 49 56 5. H, * & s ,' m '"jp Draw from one to two and o on I to the end. myself go this afternoon, so you * know all about it. I don't want to get married, Cyn." j "Then why do you?" Cynthia asked calmly. "You know why!" the girl burst! ' forth. "Father and mother expect j it. So does Milton." "You don't love Milton." The words were not accusatory, i i They were more like the simple statement of a self-evident fact. l>ora Agrees With Her "No, I don't," Dora agreed. "I used to think that I cared enough about him to marry him—but now i I know 1 don't. Something—l can't tell you what it is—has changed - my whole viewpoint. I have put it from me, and laughed at it, and mocked at it —and now it has turned j upon me and torn me to pieces. Oh, Cyn—what shall T do?" "Tell Milton the truth, Dora. That is the honest and fair thing. You would do him a foul injustice if you were to marry him without loving him. Why, Dora —it would be a sin." "How do you know?" Dora de manded. "You love Gerald—and no wonder—but if you did not, would you tell him you did not?" There was a long silence. Then Cynthia spoke. "Dora—l would have to. If a man married me without loving me I would never forgive him." Dora's hand sought hers in the dark and gripped it tightly. "Do you mean that, Cyn?" "I mean just that, Dora," Cynthia insisted. "But if a man broke off his en gagement to you because he did not •l<rve you, would you not hate and despise him?" "Not if he told me the truth," Cynthia replied. "If I were very much in love with him it would hurt. But it woulfl not ruin my life as it would were I to marry him without loving him." Another silence, broken at last by Dora. "I'have made up my hind," she said in a low voice, "to tell Milton the whole truth. And, Cynthia, do you know, I don't believe it's going to hurt him much. I—l—well, I have seen men in Milton was never like that. "No," after a few minutes of thought, "I am sure it will not hurt htm. But" —with a sudden catching of her breath—"think of what father and mother will say! They will be furious. I feel as if I were a little girl who had disobeyed my parents and must take my punishment ,not as if I were free and twenty-one. Oh, Cyn, I am frightened. They have set their hearts upon my mar riage to Milton, and the invitations for a double wedding are all en graved—and everything!'" Before Cynthia could speak there was a knock at the door. "If you please. Miss Cynthia," Marie was saying, "Mr. Stewart's calling." To Be Continued. SOLDIER'S SHROUD NOT TAKEN FROM PENSION London —Mr. Hodge, in Parlia ment, emphatically denied a sugges tion that when a soldier is killed in battle the cost of the blanket in which he is buried is deducted from the widow's pension. The idea, he said, was a shocking one, and its circulation was disgraceful to those who made it. OPTICM V W] CLUB Pay While You xCear thorn You Can't Afford to Neglect Your Eyes If you LOSE your EYESIGHT through NEGLECT, if your eyes are STRAINED, if your eyes have a defect in them—it should be CORRECTED. And the 300NER the BETTER. The longer you delay the more DIF FICULT will be the remedy. We offer you all the advantages of OUR OPTICAL CLUB, which is NOW OPEN. Don't let cost stand in your way. You have 1 at your command the BEL ; SINGER SERVICE —the high est type of optical service—and all work is fully guaranteed to be SATISFACTORY. We want to help you. We will correct your eye troubles. CONSULT US AT ONCE Evenings by Appointment Belsinger 212 -Locust Street Next Door to Ckrpbeom Who Should Eat 1 the Substitutes, We Or They? There -is a scanty supply of wheat in the world's bin. Somewhere the deficit must be made up by cutting down consumption, or, if necessary, by doing without until the new har vest shall bring in more. Shall the housewives of the allied countries be asked to accomplish this? Or shall America's homes assume this war time responsibility? ' Shall we say to those women in FYance: "You are used to burdens ——— BuyW. S. ■*■■■■■ Beautiful Summer Frocks For Afternoon, Sport and For Graduation or Con- Street Wear firmation Most Charming Final Clearance of Blouses Spring Suits of the season in the new arrivals of -j. "1 Fine Embroidered Voiles, Hand Em broidered and Beaded Georgettes, and Crepe de Chines, and in Wash-.. Values to $39.75 able Silks. A group of the smartest models of the sea tj. • ,t • j son—in tan, gray, Pekin, Copen, navy and Especially pneed at black-sizes 16 to 44. 1 .49 to 2. 95 to 4. 95 to 10. 95 ° thers ?19,95 to $24 ' 95, equally reduced - SATIN COSTUME OQ Q r Ladies Bazaar Blouses SUITS AT Ot/'^ Ladies Bazaar Values 9 Values to $75.00 Wonderful Selection of Sport and Wash 1.24 tO 3-95 SKIRTS 4-95 t0 14-95 Of Baronette Satin, Novelty Silks, Khaki Cool, Plaids, Checks, and fine Cotton Gabardine, Tricotine and Ramie Linen. Over 1,500 Skirts to select from. Waist bands 23 to 42. 2 They Emphasize Ladies Bazaar Values 0 ladies Bazaar * 8-10-12 S. FOURTH ST. Harrisburg's Garment Institution MAY If, 1918. 1 and sacrifices after three years of it. You go ahead arfd take on this one, too"? Or shall we look upon this neces sary readjustment of diet as the very smallest of war burdens and gladly spare them this? Who can do it with the least in [ convenience—they who are depend ent on precarious shipping foe their cereals, meats and fats, or we, who have plenty of non-wheat grains I and an ample amount of other sub stitute foods'.' Who can do it more easily—they who are paying SIOO to $135 a ton for coal or we who still have, in comparison with them, cheap and plentiful fuel? Who can do it more easily—they whose incomes are reduced by war or we who have money enough to pay the increased cost of the wheat, substitutes? Who can do it more easily—those women of England and France who are in the fields and factories, car rying on the work of their men, or we who are still in our homes? Upon your decision depends their efficiency in this war—our war. NO ADVANCE IN PRICE CHILDREN Should not be "doted" for colds—apply "ex (ft tern ally"— I Tjs K—p * Little Body-Oujtfd Horn* "Sr 25 c*—'soc—sl.oo 9
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