Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, August 06, 1918, Page 5, Image 5

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    IjjPf Readiivj all ike EsrsviKj ||lffifj|
"When a Girl
Marries"
By ANN LISIJS
A New, Romantic Serial
Dealing With the Absorb
ing Problems of a Girl
Wife.
——————————^——
CHAPTER in
The quaint little bluebirds and
chaffinches of our chintz hung room
se&med to nod. to nod to me friendly
'.tshion as I hurried Into my ipongeo
motor coat and prepared to desert
'.hem <or my boy.
be happy again. Princess
Ana*.* 2 could almost fancy them
saylu*. "the long evening alone with
your lover under the stars. Your
■face -wUI be cool with the mist from
the sAa, and he'll ki It and call
vou Sweet! Sweet!"
I shut the door of our happy little
room and ran down to the greater
happiness for which I longed.
There stood Jim on the veranda,
bending over "Betty Bryce" with that
deferential little stoop of his broad
shouldered and his six-feet-one. which
always make him seem to be protect
ing and guarding the woman to whom
he's talking. He looked up.
"Here's my little t\rl, Mrs. Bryce."
Mrs Bryce held out a >*lkn, gracious
hand—it was perfectly manicured,
beautifully kept, but Just below the
knuckles there was a great gash-like
red star.
"So this is our Jimmy-boy's 'Fairy
Princess!' All the good wishes in
the world, dear Mrs, Harrison, Jim
mie is one of the finest, and we knew
always that his Princess would be—
peaches and cream and sweetness.
You'll let an old friend be Informal
enough to say that, won't you?" Per
haps it was meant to be charming—
but to me it sounded patronising. And
it hurt terribly to find out that Jim
had not made up the "Princess" just
for me. but had talked to Mrs. Bryce
about his sort of girl he could love.
Why had Jim done that? Men talk
| ~\7~OU can easily keep it as
X i odorless and sanitary as
j| a cooking dish with a little
jwp
LimE
1 Sprinkled in empty can sod an
5 garbage it disinfects aod de
fi odoriaes and prevents the
I breeding of disease germs.
Ai mil fiood grocßra aod
drufaZtat* —IS onort
I The Mendleson Corporation
L New York City 1
TRAINED HELPERS HAVE LEFT THESE GOOD POSITIONS
TRAINED HELPERS MUST TAKE THEIR PLACES
WAS IS
Bookkeeper Training for Aviation Corps
Stenographer In Nurses Training School
I Cashier Over There With Marines
Stenotypist With Y. M. C. A. in France
Accountant In Officers Training Camp
File Clerk Doing Red Cross Work
Secretary Yeoman in Navy
Not one bit less urgent than the needs of Civil Service are the needs
of Business. Millions of men and women have Riven up good positions
in Business to heed their country's call. Millions must take their
places. Here again is your opportunity to do a patriotic service and
Join the Nation's productive forces. Not only is it your duty. It also
Is your opportunity; for never have salaries been so high or chances
for advancement so plentiful.
SCHOOL OF COMMERCE
Central Penanylvanlu'* I.eadlnst and Accredited lluslne** College
Troup Building 15 South Market Square
Bell 485 SN\i> KOII CATALOGUE Dial 4393
Which Will You Like?
Her© are two coffees. Both are very popular for their fine
flavor and rich aroma.
Which will you like? Try a pound of both and see.
Golden Roast Coffee y 30c lb.
is a well-blended, richly-flavored coffee. Every pound Is
cup-tested to maintain Its Rood quality. A coffee for par
ticular people. As good as most 35c coffees.
Old Favorite C
la popular for its fine flavor and economical price. Pour
cents is saved by packaging It In stOut, moistureproof bags
lined with glasserlne. As good as most 30c coffees.
Take this advertisement
dp 7 " to your grocer. Get a ';
( I pound of both these good ——
*.■ fc coffees. Then see which " k
you like best. , '
| Harrisburg, Pa. /
TUESDAY EVENING,
Bringing Up Father *—* Copyright, 1918, Intenrational News Service *-* *-* *■* By McManus
L jjjy DCMOU w°"o 1 | CERTAINLY M H /CN A IZT j
1 MR?" here io no?- 1 * n E , think J soon " I I HEWim /££
j En " i y
i of love to women who suggested
love to them,
i An Onvrnrd Struggle
I struggled to get out of my slough
of despond and to find an answer
i for the beautiful, gracious woman
who still held my hand In her slim.
! scarred one. But I couldn't find
words. Mrs. Bryce filled in the Jfap
Jim's friend wasn't awkward like his
' wife.
I've a splendid idea if your little
Princess dosen't mind. We've a big
limousine here and only Miss Moss
■ and I to rattle around in it like tw*
old peas in a much-too-big pod. We're
going over at Long Beach to meet
some of the boys with whom you and
- my poor Atherton went across in 1!I15.
I Wil you come, Mrs. Harrison? Jimmie
i surely has still a place in his heart
for his old pals—and perhaps we can
! dance a bit."
She swept us along with her to her
limousine. It was a great monster of
- battleship gray with a wonderful or
chard in her green coat with the
purple cushions frajning her. I won
ered if she. were as cdld and unat
tainable as she looked, warm and
sweet as she seemed when she spoke
to Jimmie-boy."
Miss Moss was ipitsented—a dull
little persson with soft gray hair, an
apologetic voice and a chinchin that
wabbled like the gelatine we used to
have for desert at my boardinghouso
Wednesdays. There never was a more
I (/olorless, flavorless little lady—some
how she made me think of a poached
egg.
Another Lilttle Jnr
After a drive that seemed to me
| hours long, I oould see lighted hote-ls
| and hear the ocean —a great roaring
creature, and a murmuring Jriend
I like our little bay.
| "Jimmie-boy, you and I have a
I lot to talk over, but that will 'Walt
; until we get to Towers —by—the—
| Sea," Mrs, Bryce smiled. "I know
that you and little Princess will want
I your first glimpse of the place in a
| wheel chair for two. So Miss Moss
| I will go and meet Jack and Tommy."
I wanted Just that —'but why
1 couldn't Jim have suggested it?
We parked our car back of the
hotel and Jimmie and I strolled hand
in-hand up a little slope to the
-Boardwalk," made of cement! We
found a wicker rolling chair and a
grinning darkey to push us.
Jim sat close to me his strong mag
netic fingers over mine, his shoulder
touching my arm. For a little while
I forgot Betty Bryce and my aching
wonder of what part she had played
In the long years of Jim's life that
were unknown to me, Thp sea was
not unfriendly now. It rose up to
great s/lrges' like the beating of my
heart t|at yas so happy because Jim
was clo'Se, close and contented to be
alone with me. A little wisp of my
lialr blew out and In the'shadow Jim
caught it and held It against his lips.
I felt almost as if I w*re folded in
his arms. His voice had the deep
caressing notes it s'eemed to hold for
me alone.
"Little Anne, little Anne! Tou're
wonderful and mine my little
Anne!"
The sea sang It over again for him.
Then suddenly his voice changed:
"Time's up, girlie, we must go In
and meet Betty and tle boys."
My heart sank. I wanted to be
alone with Jim—to hurry home to
our little room of bluebird chintz. I
dared not say that.
"I —I—Jim, you'll be ashamed of
me, I didn't think we'd get out of
the car, and I'm wearing a little tan
linen morning dress that's mussed."
"Keep your coat on. You don't
care for dancing anyway," returned
Jim careleesly. He reacts so quickly
from his moments of high emotion.
I can't.
"Wliy didn't Jim say he could never
be ashamed of me? 7"
"Walt a minute! I want to ask you
something. Tell me about Mrs.
Bryce."
"She's a beautiful and charming
woman I met In France but, child
aJlve, we haven't time to go Into that
now! Why didn't you ask before?"
Why hadn't I asked him before?
Because I had seized our beautiful
happy hour alone as If we wore
never to know another like It. I had
been unwilling that even a word of
Betty Bryce should intrude. And now
I must go back to her, aching with
a longing to learn what she had been
to my husband, for I know Jim —
know that no woman who was "Just
any woman" could ariluse and hold
this Interest in my Jim.
(To Be Continued)
Daily Dot Puzzle
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Can you finish this picture?
Draw from one to two and so on
to the end.
Sister's Advice Soon
\
Brought Health Back
Famous Remedy Worked So Quick
It Was Like Magic
"If it hadn't been for my sister,
I'd have still been the same miser
able, woe-begone being that I was a
few weeks ago," says Henry W.
Bossier, an ironworker, of Blandon,
Fa.
"My stomach had ali gone to
pieces, but when my sister told me
to try Tonlac, It sounded good to me
and it proved even better, for it
worked in such quick time that It
was like magic.
"Now I've got such an appetite
that I can hardly wait for meals
and I eat what I f>lease and enjoy
every bite. I oertainly urge all
stomach sufferers to try Tanlac.'*
Tanlac is now being introduced
here at Gorgas 1 Drug Store.
3&S& TELEGRAPH
Life's Problems
Are Discussed
BY MILS. WIIASOV WOODROW
In that greatest masterpiece of
literature, the Book of Job, there Is
a description of the day when the
sons of God appeared before him,
and Satan came also.
"And the Lord said unto Satan:
Whence comest thou? And Satan
answered the Lord and said: From
going to and fro In the earth and
from walking up and down in it."
Satan did not particularize fur
ther regarding his activities, but
just as much as he admitted has
always struck me as the complete
description of the ideal life—"going
to and fro In the earth and walking
tip and down in it," with ample leis
ure to observe, to draw deductions
from those observations, and to put
one's finger on the motives that gov
ern the actions of the people.
No matter what the object of
your observations may be, whether
it is a human being or a work of
art or an abstract science, its real
interest lies in the fact that it can
be viewed from various angles.
For instance, suppose an editor
nsks a writer to give him a fiction
story on a certain theme, the writer
first decides from what angle he will
handle It, whether he can get the
most out of it and gain the best ef
fects by treating it humorously or
seriously.
The old saying that there are two
sides to every question Is only half
true. There are always many sides
to every human story.
This Is occasionally brought home
to me in various ways. Several
months ago I got a forlorn little let
ter from a mother telling me of the
unhappiness her daughter caused
her. She said the girl was clever and
held an excellent position, but that
she was always Irritable and ill
tempered at home. I published this
letter with some remarks of my own.
and very soon received a letter from
the daughter, which I al3o inserted
in an article. •
She gave the other side of the
story. She explained that her duties
were exacting, and that when she
came home in the evening her
mother ceaselessly plied her with all
sorts of questions in regard to her
work. It would not have been so
difficult to bear if the mother had
been content to wait until she had
had something to eat. And, in addi
tion, she said, she could not Make it
understood that she was not at lib- 1
erty to discuss her employer's busl- i
ness affairs. There you get the
same facts from two different angles.
I have recently had a similar ex
perience. I saw an account in a
newspaper of a man who had made j
an affidavit to the effect that he
was a nervous wreck from too much
ved tape and iron discipline in the
home. It struck me a.* such an un
usual and amusing plea to present
in divorce proceedings that I used it
in one of my articles as an illustra
tion of the horrors of efficiency car
ried to its nth power, and which,
according to the published affidavit,
e< en attempted to regulate the cat's
appetite.
Now the other angle of the sub
ject has presented itself, as the fol
lowing letter will show:
"My Deal Mrs. Woodrow: I read
your articles every time I see one.
I like them awfully well, and I think
you've taught me a lot about a good
many things; so now I am taking
the liberty of setting you right about
something, and I fancy I am not
wrong in thinking you big enough to
take it in the spirit in which I write.
"I am referring to your recent ar
ticle o.i erliciency. I give you due
credit for saying at the start of it
that you haa only a reportorial note
to go on. Put didn't it #strike you
| as a little bit silly for a man to ad
mit his inability to cope with the
| petticoat tyranny he so graphically
i pictured in his defense? Would it
I tie possible for any one to waste
| mucn sympathy on a masculine spec
i imen, over six feet tall, who didn't
have the gumption to regulate his
affairs instead of running away from
them?
"As a matter of fact, this wife is
very far from the able tyrant she is
made out to be. She is just a poor
little sick, miserable bit of a woman.
And be very sure, my dear Mrs.
Wocdrow, the "persecuted husband"
has* not drowned his worries by
plunging into the battlefields of Eu
rope. Are you a good enough sport
to write another article on the sub
ject of men who are neither fish,
fowl nor good' red herring; who ar#
neither upholding their honor at
home nor following their country's
flag abroad?"
THE SPORTING INSTINCT
■ An orator at a street corner told
I his audience of the blessedness of
humanity, and while he was speak
ing two little dogs strayed into the
middle of tho crowd. "Now." said
the orator, "here we have an object
lesson thrust right into our hands."
He turned to a sturdy youth. "My
little man, if these two animals
were to fight, what would you do?."
An impressive silence settled upon
the crowd while the unwashed
youth studied the problem. "Well,
guv'nor," he safd at length, "I think
fd. bat an the black "uni"
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
I —J
THE RAILROADS
To the Editor of the Telegraph:
The government has taken over
the railroads, let us all hope it will
"facilitate the faster movements of
freight in all directions, in such a
critical period.
Every railroader in whatever ca
pacity he may be, should do all In his
power to help the U. S. A. in its
great undertaking to stop this fear
ful war and establish peace to the
world.
It is war time now, when even the
laws of equity become void, and the
grab of whatsoever is deemed neces
sary, regardless of ownerships. It is
war time when the savage races
show their acquiescence with their
rulers by their war dances.
We are civilized and cultivated, we
show our adherence by our open
hearts and open purses.
"Fear not ye railroad workers, the
U. S. A. is just in all its dealings,
they have already given you a token
of their views and good feelings by
increasing your wages, it readily
realized that to get the best work
the men must be paid sufficiently to
enable them to live comfortably and
appreciate their position.
The government has guaranteed
dividends fully equal to those earned
in recent years, to the stockholders
of all the railroads It has taken
over. This is of course only justice.
Now, great judgment and caution
must be used by the government for
It seems their intentions are to con
solidate and combine all these form
er separate railroad interests which
through the Ingenuity and hard toll
of their respective chiefs which has
taken years of mental and physical
work to accomplish.
These great concerns have always
been keen competitors. Now if the
government is going to retain these
properties well and good, but if they
are ever going to be returned, none
of them must be deteriorated in
value for if to-day any preference
is shown by passing the business of
one concern whether freight or pas
senger, etc., etc., under the direction
and management of the other (their
former competitors), it would natur
ally deteriorate one and 'benefit the
other and here you have the core of
the serious problem and one that
will be mighty hard to mend here
after.
Among our best railroad officials
and workers there has always exist
ed a kind of dominating and master
feeling which will be hard to elimi
nate, take any center where this
competitive element has been going
on for years and to-day by the pro
posed consolidation and condensation
of all these interests it will mean
that at some centers one side will
have to close up and go over to the
other, with a feeling that one side
has won and the other lost, yet this
unity of interest is intended to get
the best out of each concern and to
save expense.
Every individual with a glimmer
of Godliness must thank God for
having given the world the United!
States of America through which in-j
strumentality peace of the world i
will be again restored and guarded j
and end of this terrible enemy the
kaiser, his Hohenzollern bunch and
his allies will be quenched and eradi
cated forever.
With God's blessing and cheers fori
our great country, our Army, our|
Navy and our statesmen, let us ail
with clenched teeth go to it and do
our bit to help in this great cause
1 ntented heart, for the sun
T!FrDFFCDRMS!
Freezone is magic! Corns lift
right off with fingers with
out pain
Hurt? No, not one bit! Just
drop a little Freezone on that touchy
corn, instantly It stops aching thjen
you lift that bohersome corn right
off. Yes, magric! Costs only a few
cents.
Try Freezone! Tour druggist sells
a tiny bottle, sufficient to rid your
feet of every hard corn, soft corn,
or corn between the toes, and cal
luses, withou one particle of pain,
soreness or Irritation. Freezone Is
the mysterious .ether discovery of a
Cincinnati Kenln*.
will again soon be shining, although
it is stormy just now.
BRUCE GREEN.
1814 Green St., Harrisburg;, Pa.
"THE GREAT A L>VENTURE"
To the Editor of the Telegraph:
Under the above caption an edi
torial appeared in the Telegraph, of
January 3, of the present year, con
taining some great truths so tersely
expressed that some of those sen
tences have been recurring to my
mind ever since.
Some of the thoughts of that edi
torial will bear repetition again and
again. Here is one of the gems:
"The lad who wants to enter the
Army now has in his mind's eye the
Great Adventure of all time. He is
imbued with the spirit of the Knight
of the Holy Grail and of the Crusad
ers. He wants to have a part in liber
ating the world from the grip of
autocracy, and to cheat him of the
opportunity would be to rob him of
an experience that in the years to
some will be to him a priceless mem-
UfHlHfcLt STORE OPENS AT 8:30 A. M. —CLOSES 5 P. M. r fM/M!TEIM
| Three Tremendously Important Events 1
In Full Swing Tomorrow, §{
|s ~i vt , ijy
I 350 Fine White Washable Skirts 1
|j Start a Most Extraordinary Sale Tomorrow, Wednesday B
' Lot 1. Women's & p| jffl
i fliii t6 <,UC rtS ' Z6S tl ' j '"'l jjsjf 0
|0 Up to 36 Waist Measure J
m tarl — 3l I
j / I ft AU well-tailored Skirts, smart, new styles, with '] I BSfr. jvl
IjJI , H I | !j big pockets, and all sizes up to 30 waist. We can- I"--.-? i_.iijj
jl / I not emphasize the value any more than su<-h a \rr~r~f IS
j ■ / I !| iow price as 35c can. Be early. This sale means Uir-irH I **jj
1 /I i Lot 2. While $ 1 .95' tot 3. 100 ' P* |
hj /j I Gabardine | White Wash % \ I 9
if. I j SKIRTS x SKIRTS I /
lyy rj Splendid" style assort- Mercerized Gabardine, J
$ Jjfli S po'cTet 'slashed Sati " Trlcotine. Rig $Tf g
/ / // TP pockets, medium and nar- Pearl buttons, taped but- /VI B!?
I 1J \ \ row belts—regular and ex- tonholes, wide and fancy / \\
UJ \ \ tra sizes, 24 to 35 waist belts, fancy pockets—ail \ \
r measure. One of the regular and extra sizes 24 Vj L'l
wi greatest skirt values in to 38 waist measure. Val- Si
rU town. ues to $5.95. Ifsll
300 Smart Wash Dresses. d*o QC HO Nobby Sport Suits. <fc O /I C
*5? Values to $6.95. Your pick $5.00 value. Take your pick (II
hi] v Ginghams, Satin-striped Voiles, Printed Voiles. Two styles with sleeveless iackets—one t v l
W Plaid Voiles White voiles. Not all sizes of all with sleeves. One model has colored jackets wfth ill
styles, but all sizes. Newest .models for women white skirts. Another stvle has plain white Wk LM
nil and misses. Some for extra large women. ets with fancy skirts. Ail sizes to 44. g§j
•S* ' SlFf-OVH ll.nilll jll
M =*T KAUFMAN S =AT KAIKMtxs IS
1 500 Voile Waists Our 10 Day Festival of |j ij
I Exquisite New Models-All Size, Muslin Underwear
hi All Grouped Together m is
Ivj - Jjg is fast re\ealing to the people that economies hi
tSI RpvarHlpcc nf Thpir M 9 JM 1 1? th * sc 'J" 08 ,an besl be secured by going to Mil
h|l ivegaroiess 0I 111611 3B #1 Kaufmans first and saving the time and £§j
iSI _ _ WlB # B worry of shopping around.
tJ\ Former Prices - All ... . _ . , ij
li „ , , —~z —jr—" A Wednesday s Lots Are Attractive
® h e -—7TTT npp ' y or a ong me ese ces 111
SG There are plain-tailored and lace-trimmed | |J
models to choose from. Large and small col- _______
1 SS. v " y "*"• Two Big Lois of Envelope Chemise-: |
"~ l Nainsook Envelope Nainsook Envelope nil
hj $1.85 Fine Voile Waists -l *1 A maS!: and ml p B ret7i?y
S Take Your Pick at D 1•I T" Sale p l'| e " n ' v - med - aie t
New effects In the collars, cuffs and JS £ .JJJ UIC hi
trimming. So good are the values you ' |[U
should buy two or more Waists at this _____^^^ t IS
PI Crepe de Chine Fine Jap Silk Two Big Lots of Gowns—
Kll WAISTS WAISTS V, Nalns " ok • Night* Crepe and Nain- IS
" " 1 " 1 " n n IJ I J Gowns, lace and em- sook Gowns, prettily Kll
LMi White, flesh and ajll' "All sizes, all colors ■l^?. ider i' . trimmed - trimmed and well
the new shades. Tour land fiesh and white. iour made. Choice, IS
pick in the Sale of any;, gome of the choicest 1 A£* Kl
JIM at only /models in the Sale at
| $1.94 j $1.64 — ===E= ———-J I
10 Georgette and Crepe de Chine Waists Bloomers, Extra Special
Clever models for afternoon and street Made of satin-striped Voile, jyell made,
wear. AU colors, flesh An mm * superb quality. A limited num- r\ f\ IS
JUJ and white. All sices .. Tr ber In the sale. Tour choice. •• O C
' I H - I FLOOR *i ■<■ MI KI.OOI
'AUGUST 6, .1018.
| ory and to Ills children their great
| est heritage.
"Have you over seen a party of
Civil War veterans foregathered for
a 'camp fire' or reunion? Their Great
Adventure was the liberation of the
slaves and the salvation of the
Union. Honors and experiences in
abundance have come to them in
later years, but their service with the
Hag Is the great outstanding feature
of their lives."
Now I feel like adding to the
above this one thought, that the
"Grand Army of the Republic" has
been a very prominent contributing
factor in the grand, spontaneous up
rising of the American youth of to
day. These young men who by the
million are now beneath the colors,
have been accustomed, from their
earliest years, to seeing the solemn
processions of aged G. A. R. veterans
on each Meitiorial Day and at the
funerals of comrades. They had come
instinctively to view with reverence,
almost with awe, the men who had
dared the bloody track of battle to
keep our nation undivided. For more
than half a century the G. A. R. has
been a constant, tangible lesson of
patriotism to the youth of the land.
J. HOWARD WERT,
MEMORIAL TREKS
To the Editor of the Telegraph:
Your suggestion of memorial trees
as an appreciation of our boys In
the service Is generally commended.
May I suggest that those who in
tend planting trees this year or any
time during the war have the tree
liear the name of some local soldier.
It would serve as a memorial and
be beneficial in other ways.
Harrisburg is in need of much
tree-planting and I believe the idea
of naming the trees In honor of the
boys who have gone into the service
will appeal to most patriotic citi
zens. It might be well for organiza
tion of tree planting committees it
every block to the end that we may
have a general movement along this
line. CITIZEN.
Cuticura Heals
M Itching Burning
Skin Troubles
All (iroreiHto* Ror> 25, Ointment 25 and 50. Tnlrnm2s.
Sample ench fr P of "Outicara, Dept. S, Bogioc."
5