NURSING AS A CAREER FOR WOMEN By JANE A. DELANO Director of the Department of Nursing of the American Red Cross Training schools for nursea offer the American girl graduated from high school a chance to continue her education at small and sometimes at no expenso to her parents. From the first day of her training she is extending her technical education and acquiring a distinguished pro fession. Some of the best training schools charge a nominal tuition fee. There 1 are also many schools of excellent i standing where not only is the stu- I dent nurse at no expense for tuition or for board, lodging, uniform and j laundry, but where she is given a small sum to cover equipment ex penses. This practical consideration Is making it possible for many hun dreds of young women to become trained nurses. In all of the best schools reason able working hours and attractive living quarters are assured. The life is healthy, simple, regular and fullj of interest. The young women of ability, grad uating from a good school, imme diately on tbe completion of her course, steps into regular profes sional life. Her work is ready and waiting. Opportunities for advance-1 went are steadily increasing, in ad-1 ministrative work and public health and hospital nursing. Hospital training prepares one for' mapv kinds of public service and at i the same time it is perhaps the best 1 LEMON JUICE TAKES OFF TAN ! Girls! Make bleaching lotion ? if skin is sunburned, j tanned or freckled Squeeze the juice of two lemons Into a bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best lreckie. sunburn and tan lotion, and complexion beautifier. at very, very small cost. Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will supply three ounces of Orchard White for a few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day and see how freckles, sunburn, windburn and tan disappear and how clear, soft and white the skin becomes. Yes! It is harmless. Special—tf Carter's Little Liver Pills You Cannot be A Remedy That Constipated Makes Life and Happy Worth Living Small Pill I oil • c Genuine bears tig nature Small DOM % B A pARTER'S IRON PILLS many colorless fscea but will gTeatly help most pale-faced pople | WEEK-END SPECIALS 1 FVA7T r i n Highest Grade, High Priced % AQg |i Refr j /\ —-J ys-.p-si Our trade demands H >|^A'.Wt r——^ 1 -jn the highest grade Re- j§ j 'HI ' 1 \IWj/o ] „" , ' —* l frigerators and for that || |g 'j| -j f [||"l reason we n° n c else 1 g II'! i 11 * 3 Wise folks have long g |3 //. fi . * Wv11! 11l A tt * L a R° discovered that a = B m *' J * "'Vvil WS ] 'fo. S CHEAP Refrigerator is 1 //1 * U iljli I 'f" ' most expensive in the || (I. * ""M-U ill I ! Choosing a thorough- || p ( //.j l\\ j,j | j I H NssSl ly dependable, ice-saving f| m '■ j V I J ||| I i —-ill" [jH Refrigerator is an easy p Is? '?fl"Mil iTy ' r 1 1 y n I JP you want the BEST at g| i the LOWEST price. M 7ffr Piflßff _ The Refrigerators of- I 11 fered below are odds and 11 18, ff ends which were left aft- j|| § w_ er heavy early season selling. Special No. 1 Special No. 2 * Special No. 3 | Side-icer Refrigera- Side - icer Retrigera- Side - icer Refrigera- *55 tors porcelain lined tors porcelain lined tors lined with one- = H —9O lb. ice capacity —l6O lb. ice capacity piece porcelain—l6olb. M special at —special, at ice capacity, special at M I SSO S6O SBS I I North Market Square lillillMiStotlilllll^^ FRIDAY EVENING. Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918, International News Service '•/ *■' *•' By McManus I'LL BET A * WONDER WHAT I L 5?T 4 ToI H,NK J TIMES I THINK t THINK ( ~~ J1 r— HUNDRED DOLLARS N^E IT"S BOTH"* I r~ MOTRIN' /fWflM'ii J) J \JJ |P THE "ZXSZS?" E^- L 4; ' ) f THE MATTER J F . J i L THINK I'M S MY NOWC? I L___J I fc, V>TH HER f -fj N R: | JIS? TEMPER!? j ' training a woman can have for home! and family life. The American Red Cross and the! Council of National Defense have been appealing to young women of< the country just graduating from high school and college to take up! the nursing profession as a patriotic! service, filling in the ranks of service! for those who are released for mill- ; tary duty. Training schools have expanded to accommodate greatly increased numbers of student nurses, the enrollment this year being over' '2O per cent, greater than the year! before, and undoubtedly they will have to expand still further follow ing this year's graduations. MEN AND VICTORY DESSERTS 1 Dessert after dinner isn't the most j important thing in life in these days, j but it is important enough to deserve serious attention. The woman who j arranges her meals with a view to ! avoiding the use of wheat and other j foods that we Americans must re- I frain from eating in order that we I may send them to the soldiers ! abroad, must redouble her efforts to • make the. meal attractive. More than that, she must even more than I in normal times, exert herself to make sure that every part of the j meal is real food, serving a real food purpose. The man has his part to play also Even a favorite dessert is a smal thing to sacrifice as a contribution to the world's struggle to maintain liberty and economy. If the woman J ought to work out new desserts, or! alter the old ones, the man'ought, 1 if neccissary, to learn to like them.! And that is the situation exactly, j If it is a part of the wartime duty! of women to change their marketing, j their menus and their cooking, it is also the wartime duty of men to ! change their tastes and adapt them- 1 selves to the substitute desserts. There are plenty of desserts that can be made from the various cer eals, such as rice puddings, corn-! starch desserts, Indian pudding with fruit, and many delicious steamed puddings made from some of the! Victory Cereals. A good pudding will prove a sat-! isfying solace to the most omnivor-1 ous pie-eating male in captivity. The I following receipt is a Victory pudding' that has been tried out on the mere j male with gratifying success: cup molasses 2 cups milk 1 tablespoon suet M cup rice 1 teaspoon cinnamon I teaspoon salt This may be cooked in a double 1 boiler or in a flreless cooker for two' hours and a half. It can be varied! by the use of raisins or nuts, or! both, and a little orange or lemon 1 rind adds to the flavor. Serve with cream. New Insignia Adopted For U. S. Air Service WaahinKton, June 14.—Adoption of a new collar insignia for the Army Air Service to distinguish it from the Signal Corps was announced yes terday. The design consists of a pair of horizontal bronze wings similar in shape to a colonel's insignia with a silver two-bladed propeller placed vertically on the wings. The insignia will be worn by offi cers and enlisted men of the mili tary areonautics service and of the bureau of aircraft production. The hat cord selected for enlisted men is green and black. WHEN VITALITY IS LOWERED Take Horitford'pi Arid Phoupbale Excellent for the relief of exhaus tion due to Summer heat, overwork, or worry. ' Cooling and refreshing.— Advertisement. HAR-RISBURG TELEGRAPfI LIFE'S PROBLEMS ARE DI By MRS. WILSON WOODROW "I've worked hard for the greater part of my life. I've got all the money I want, and now I'm going to retire and enjoy myself while I'm still young enough to do so." He said this very earnestly indeed. "I give you just six months," I replied, skeptically, "and you will be back in harness again." "Xot on your life," he answered, with more emphasis than elegance. "I was not talking about my life, but yours," I returned. "You will enjoy the rest for perhaps two months. Then .you will begin to get terribly restless and then acutely miserable. When jfou drop what has been as absorbing interest you leave a vacuum. You can't fill it with what are to you trivialities. You have been in the thick of things; you can't be happy in the thin of them." He didn't believe me. But he was back in his office in three weeks. That is human nature. I have a letter from a woman who was left a widow with two or three little children and without means to support them. Before marriage her profession had been that of a trained nurpe, and she took this up again in order to provide a home for her chil dren and give them an education. The children are now grown and have established themselves in life, and they urge their mother to give up her work and let them provide for her for the rest of her days. Her friends all advise her that this is the right and proper thing for her to do. But she is having a struggle with her! own inclinations. She writes: "I feel that I would like to earn some money now for myself while I am still in my good years, and thus I can also help in keeping up the home. Am I right in wanting to help myself, or is it my duty to do as my children wish? I think this sort of question lies before many mothers. When we have brought up our children and given them a start in life we would like to go on with our work and not be de- i pendent on them. Would you advise I me>to give up nursing and try to get! some other work which I could doj at home? I am worried, but I want to do the right and best thing." The word "duty" is customarily used as an excuse for making our selves and every one else miserable. It has been so long ground into us that we must distrust our own inner voice and trust some one else's outer voice that we hesitate to follow our own leading. Here is the case. This woman's grown children are naturally anx ious to repay their mother for the sacrifies she has made for them dur ing childhood. The best way they can repay her is to let her arrange her own affaire in her own way, un hampered and unhindered by them. But in their anxiety to make her happy they are more or less in fluenced by the criticisms of their friends—the people who either in- Daily Dot Puzzle 3 4 55 53. * •-/ 57 • 56 57 • or 6. •5% 51* 67 V * V ■,L • * 7 ? 65 64 ?25 •. 43 • *4- .27 *23 ♦fl* 28 * 22 47 * "3, •* ? • ? , Ab 3o ° ■ *33 38 37 45 * * *54 3S •36 *lB 44* *35 *l7 43 *4© • 4j i 1 * * '. 5 . . •* \ I , • • • IO 2 4 5 T. 9 • "A" is for Auk. tho' the Great Auk no more Is seen at its nesting ground On the sea shore. Draw from 1 to 2 and so on to the enfl. sinuate or openly tell them that it is a disgrace for them to continue to let their mother work at her time of life, and that it is now their plain duty to see that she enjoys a com fortable idleness for the rest of her days. It sounds well. In spite of her own inner convictions, mother listens with one ear. Then her friends begin to buzz in the other ear. They tell her that she is growing old; that her work is too much of a strain on her; that she is entitled to take her ease; that now is the time to rest and enjoy all of the things that she has never had time for be fore. This .too, sounds alluring, until mother has leisure to sit down and commune with her own soul. Her own soul tells her that she "would gain these benefits at a price—the price of her independence. She doesn't feel old—she doesn't want to be a chimney-corner ornament. She is interested in her work, and she is used to earning and spending her own money in her own way. She Sees a chance to save some, to invest it. or perhaps to indulge in some pet extravagance which she li;is not per mitted herself in the past. Wc all have our pet extravagances, just as we all have our pet economies and even to those who look upon us with fond and uncritical eyes these seem —well, if not exactly criminal — extremely foolish. So, since she could haj-dly ask her children for money to spend on what must seem to them sheer waste, she must deny herself these satisfactions. The fact is, we don't want to be made happy. The great majority of us want to construct our own happi ness charts, Happiness is always an adventure. We want to find it our selves. When some one catches the bluebird for us and brings it to us in a nice cage and we have to smile and seem overjoyed, we are really anything but pleased. We realize that it isn't much of a bird after all, and we never did care for "feathered songsters" and that it's going to be an awful bother to take care of, and that if the cat should get it, why, "we should worry!" Advice to the Lovelorn BY BEATRICE FAIRFAX A STEPMOTHER DKAR MISS FAIRFAX: Some years ago a wife ran away and left her husband and two babies. She asked for a but he vow ed he would never give her one. I came into his life and he has de cided he wished a divorce. He is 26. I, 21. My mother tells me I can never love his little girls, ages five and two, and I must see this man as little as possible until after the divorce is granted. My inner self tells me as I love the father so can J love his chil dren. My heart tells me I can rear these girls to think I am their mother and love them as my own, if I ever have any. B. L. Of course, any woman with fine in stincts can learn to love two little babies who have no one else to mother them. I like your attitude tow&rd the children of the man you love. These children are not an obstacle to your happy marriage. I dare not advocate divorce, because I might know onlv half a story and might be the mean's Less Than a Penny a Plate Dromedary Tapioca makes dozens of dainty delicious desserts quickly, (or less than a penny a plate. No need to soak it before it is cooked—it is ready for "Instant " use. Try it today. Mrs. Kate Brew Vaughn uses Drome dary Tapioca, Dromedary Daiet,and Dromedary Coaxmul in her lecture demonstrations. Tk HILLS BROTHERS Coapwy Naw Yrk of breaking up a family for the third side of a triangle. But when a mother deserts her husband and children and states frankly that she wants to be free of them, then the "other woman" in the case need never feel that she is a thief of love. I think your judg ment is really quite right, and I am delighted with the way you have fig ured out your problem. While he is seeking his freedom you must do nothing to make him feel free to treat you with any lack of respect or to jeopardize your own good name. When the wife sees you ready to take the position she threw away she may be bitter and ugly. You owe it to your 555! Quality Gflf/nefifsBWBHHIB Clearance of Charming Suits •4 fx that are distinctive 12.95 to J,Z. 95 5(5 0 -f a I 7 „ Values 25.00 to 45.00 \J .cfO LV/ A. / .&0 Splendid sport and dress models. Suits Of fine fancy voiles, organdies and ging that can be worn the year round now priced hams . finely made in the pret tiest styles cre lower than the present cost of the maternal, , ... T ~ . in tan, gray, navy, black and in brown ated this season " . J un,or or g andie dresses ' checks. Sizes 16 to 46. * sizes 13 to 19, are included in our showing. P Wonderful Blouse Values Georgette Blouses Hand-embroidered and beaded in the newest styles. The kind you pay $6.00 for elsewhere. Voiles 1.95 V Embroidered, lace trimmed and lace insertion, of fine quality voile and organdie. The styles and fine make will meet with your enthusiastic approval. , Tub Shrunk Wash Skirts 1.24 2.49 2.95 i Of fine white gabardines, tricotine, white satin cloth and pure linen, in the newest and most becoming styles of the season. See these splendid skirt values before making your skirt purchases. ]adies Bazaar 8-10-12 S. FOURTH ST. Harrisburg's Garment Institution JUNE 14. 1918 self, my dear, to take care of that self. DENOUNCE CHAIN I.ETTERS The chain letter plan "for the pur pose of founding a special hospital in France for treatment of wounds in the face and jaw" has been dis approved by the federal authorities, according to announcements issued by the Pennsylvania Committee of Public Safety. Federal authorities announce that they are opposed to all chain letter schemes. NO ADVANCE IN PRICE ASTHMA ~ There is no "cure** fw but relief is often __ brought by— R-llih, \ W- : "T ■ L ""' Pody-Guurd tnYo.r 25c—50c—$1.00