M Readiivj oil Ike E\i\siKj jffiffjj " When a Girl " By ANN LISLE A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problems of a Girl Wife CHAPTER XVI ((Copyright, 1918, by King Features Syndicate, Inc.) I don't know what It was—friend ly and fine, as Tom Mason's hand clasp seemed to be—that impelled me to insist: that I must return to the Walgrave at once. I managed to do it so casually that he took no offense at my sud den haste and insisted on escorting me on my homeward journey. Aai he remained jolly and friendly even ■when I askea for the refusal of his apartment foi a day or two. "I'd like to talk it over with Jim" I confessed. He smiled in big brotherly fash- Ion: "Nice little old-fashioned wife. Of course vou shall talk it over with ' Jim." Then still with courteous and im personul friendliness, he took me to the desk and waited while I got my key. The clerk handed me a . sealed hotel envelope. "Captain Winston has telephoned twice and wished you to call the Army and Navy Club as soon as you come in," he said, with some thing very like a sneer. Then he added, "Your friends are not letting you miss the Lieutenant too much, are they?" Perhaps he was only over anxious Stomach Misery Get Rid of That Sourness, Gas and Indigestion When your stomach is out of or der or run down, your food doesn t i digest. It ferments in your stomach and forms gas which causes sourness, heartburn, foul breath, pain at pit of stomach and many other miserable j symptoms. . , . Jli-o-no stomach tablets will give jovful relief in live minutes; if taken j regularly for two weeks they will turn vour flabby, sour, tired out stomach into a sweet, energetic, per fect working one. You can't be very strong and vig orous if your food only half digests. Your appetite will go and nausea, dizziness, biliousness, nervousness, sick headache and constipation will follow. 1 Mi-o-na stomach tablets are small and eusv to swallow and are guaran teed to banish indigestion and any or all of the above symptoms or money back. For sale by H. C. Kennedy and Sill leadimr druggists. Best For Washing Sweaters YOU take no chances when you wash sweaters with 20 Mule Team Borax Soap Chips. They cleanse per fectly and without injury because Part Borax and pur* soap are the only ingredients in BORAX SOAP-CHIPS Sweaters washed in a luke-warm solution of 20 Mule Team Borax Soap Chips will not shrink. They will be soft, fluffy, and hygienically —, | cleaned because the Borax purifies them of odors and dirt f which woolens absorb so '• To get bet remlta make a map Jelly by diaiolving three tablespoon- s^iLli (ula of 20 Mule Team Borax Soap $1 Chip* in a quart ot boiling water flp me 'Msf 'f' aod edd to wash water. After oleaos- jj SJWjf; ing, rinse swester in warm water, ijjrl Tie a ' flil 4 pull out, shake thoroughly and dry jT i IP® in tun or air. An 8 oz. package of "t 20 Mule Borax Soop Chipa equal# 2'je worth of ordinary laundry toap. It'i Ik* Borax mntk iht Does Your Husband Drink? Druggist Tells How to Cure The Liquor Habit at Home Free Prescription Can Be Pilled At | Any Drag Store And Given Secretly H. J. Brown, a Cleveland man, was for many years a confirmed drunkard. His friends and relatives despaired of ever redeeming him. His sister sought the best medical men in Kurope in the hope that she might find something which would cure him. Finally she was recommended to an eminent chemist, who gave her n private formula (the same as ap pears below) and told her how to use it. She had it filled at the drug store and gave it to him secretly. The results were startling. In a few weeks he was completely cured. That i was over eight years ago and he has no touched a drop since. He now occupies a position of trust and is enthusiastic in his efforts to help oth ers overcome the liquor habit. He | feels that he can best do this by mak-ti fug public the same formula which cured him. Here is the prescription: Go :o any first-Class drug store and | get. Prepared Tescuin Powders. Drop I THURSDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH SEPTEMBER 3, ISLIB. to offer a guest "every possible courtesy!" But his officiousness brought home to me very poignant ly the fact that I did not want to live in a glittering big hotel a day longer than I must. As soon as I got to my room ) called Captain Winston and found he was giving a dinner for some officers and their wives that even ing and wanted Jim and me to come. I could not bear the thought of see ing happy married folk together— while my boy was already long hours away—and planning to go still fur ther from me. And X blurted out the truth. "You poor little lonely lady! The dinner is off—positively! My friends are all a sporting lot. No swank to 'em. They'll let me give the party another night and comfort the bride to-night. Not a word. Mrs. Jimmic. Husband's matey looks after the lit tle lady to-night." And he did. We had a beaui.ifui time. * * * A delicious dinner seasoned with wonderful tales of a.y boy's days in the Royal Flying Corps. Never had I felt closer to Jim. To Captain Terry Winston I was not a womar. to admire, but a sister to protect—above ah the wife of nid "matey" ' sacred • • He made me understand the glorious urge that sweeps the flying man to his conflicts above the clouds. I felt in tune with Jim's desire to go hack to France —I was reconciled to my sacrifice. That dinner with Captain Winston on the roof of the Val briggia gave me a vision of what a soldier's wife must be * * * I comprehended. He told me of the new chivalry c.t' womanhood the war was calling to life. Captain Winston spoke rev erently of all womanhood, a,.d then there came one woman's name. "You've seen the scar on Mrs. Bryce's hand. . That woman drove her car down a road the Huns were shelling— shrapnel got her when she was limping a poor Tommy inio her aianuiauce. * * * He stopped speaking abruptly. I couldn't tell whether the reserve ot the Britisher had put a period to his reminiscences or if the emotion of remembering what he had known were too great—or if he had sud denly realized that he was speaking to Jim Harrison's wife! What was my husband's relation to the beautiful woman who had one powder twice a day in coffee, tea or any liquid. It is harmless, taste less, odorless and cannot be detected. You can use it without, the knowledge of anyone. A lady who recently tried it on her husband reports: "My husband was on a spree when I got the powders and he usually stays drunk from three to four weeks at a time. After putting the powder in his coffee for four days he sobered up and has not taken a drink since and says he is through with it for ever. He also complained that whisky did not taste the same. I shall not tell him what did it, but I am grateful for this help and I shall recommend it whenever possible." Note A leading druggist, when shown the above article, said: "Yes, tescum is a very remarkable remedy for the drink habit, it is harmless, wonderfully effective snd is having sn enormous sale. I advise everyone who wishes to destroy the liqdor habit to give it a trial." It is sold in Har- Msburg by J. Kelson Clark and other druggists. Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918, International News Service *-* By McManus >t>NT THE ME.W MMO bHE'b A,fl WE ARE CO>N< OOT I r- WELL EE e>ACK.! XOU MNT SONNA _ —— WONDERFUL THANK DREAM -A ™ ™IT or J J"HE EVEN tN<5 JO o/ W MIO-NKjHT- LEAVE Ml? ,N o/ staked her life in the same struggle that had called my boy overseas? * • * For a second Captain Winston had lifted the curtain, and then, with an air of reserve, he dropped it again. We had an evening of big—im personal—emotions. One accident, cruelly personal, marred it. When I came to the desk for my key there again was the insolent clerk, and talking to him was a familiar, over-dressed, white-haired figure, Mrs. Varden. "I see you got the Captain all right, Mrs, Harrison," said the clerk. At the sound of my name Mrs. Varden turned. "Oh—good evening" —she purred, focussing her lorgnette on the British officer. "How nicely you do manage to while away the lonely hours, Mrs. Harrison. Well, I suppose our Jimmie knows how to amuse himself, too. A soldier's wife has to be very adaptable." "Captain Winston is my husband's best friend,' I said, introducing him because there was nothing else to do. He was frozen stiff, as the Eng lish often are when they recognize lack of breeding and tine feelings. That annoyed Mrs. Varden fright ! fully. "I see I am intruding. You two I young things want to finish your tete-a-tete," she said at last with I unmistakable malice masking as I knowing friendliness. ! I insisted on going up in the ele i vator with Mrs. Varden. But she managed to convey to me clearly ! her sneering opinion that I had done I that to gloss matters over. I have made a malicious enemy, and she thinks she has me in her power. The lunch with Mr. Mason was unavoidable —unless I wanted to make an absurd scene, and act like an evil-minded person. To refuse to dine with Captain Winston would have been an affront to my husband's best friend and a matter of real hurt to Jim. And yet Mrs. Varden is ready to twist it all into a ma licious tale. Her smile. Just like that of "the cat that ate the canary." tells 1 me that. She made me promise to breakfast with her to-morrow morn ing, and I felt compelled to accept. I simply will not let that cruel old woman sneer at my Jim. or pity him. or think that his wife consoles herself readily for his absence. Jim is my world —my man —my life ' itself. That she could never understand. And I won't try to be little my love by explaining it to her. But one thing she must un derstand. It is this: Jim Harrison's wife is too completely satisfied with him ever to beware of another man as a man! I shall breakfast with Mrs. Var den. She must respect Jim—and Jim's wife. But after breakfast I cannot endure another hour in this sneering evil-minded place the home of such women as Mrs. Var den. But —where am I to go? (To Be Continued) How to Conserve Canning and Packing For Win ter's Use Explained in Detail lij National War Garden Experts. JAMS Wash fruits, put in an enamel pan and add only enough water to pre vent burning. Cook slowly until the fruit begins to thicken and for each pound of fruit add twelve table spoons of sugar and one teaspoon salt. Continue cooking, stirring with wooden spoon until the desired con sistency is obtained. Pqvr into sterilized glasses and seal With hot paraffin and cover of metal or paper. If some under-ripe fruit is used, ! a more jelly-like product is obtained. The National War Garden Commis sion will gladly answer any questions written on one side of the paper and sent in a self-addressed, stamp ed envelope. Sugarless Dried Apple Sauce An excellent apple sauce can be made without sugar and kept for some time If placed In a crock or glass Jar with open mouth, sealed with paraffin as jellies are. Wash apples, trim spots, but do not peel; cut Into quarters and core. Put into saucepan with very little water and cook down until they mash easily. Crush to a fine consistency, spread on large platters or clean mixing board, protect from flies and in sects by cheesecleth or wire net ting and leave in the sun to dry until the surface seems sealed. The mixture should be spread thin so that the sun penetrates it and drys it out. Two or three days will be sufficient if the sun shines brightly. When dry, cut in squares or with a round cut ter to fit size of the Jar to be packed in, and pack one layer on top of another until container is filled. Melt paraffin and pour over the top of container to seal. THE KAISER AS I KNEW HIM FOR FOURTEEN YEARS By ARTHUR N. DAVIS, D. D. S. (Copyright, 1918, by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate) (Continued.) CHAPTER XIV The Crown I'rlncc—uiul Others I first saw the Crown Prince pro fessionally in the spring of 1905, a few months before his marriage. He was then twenty-three years old. He was in the uniform of a German army officer but looked more like a corps-student except for the fact that his face was not marked with a scar from duelling, as is usually the case with most members of the German fraternities. He had a habit of placing his hands on his hips and his coats were always flared in at the waist which, with the sporty angle at which he wore his cap. gave him a swagger which was quite for eign to the rest of the officers of the army. He was of slender figure, which was accentuated by his height. He was nearly six feet tall. He came into my office, I remem ber, with a copy of Life in his pocket. He took it out and opened it and showed me a cartoon of him self which apparently caused him considerable amusement, and which, he said, he intended showing his family. There were two beautiful rings on his left hand and he wore a wrist watch, although at that time wrist watches were used almost exclu sively by women. He seemed to be bright and quick, but by no means brilliant. Perhaps the quality exhibited by him that impressed me most on that first visit was his excessive nervous ness. He trembled all over. It was plain to see he was dreadfully afraid of pain, and he evidently realized that I had noticed his condition. "I suppose the Crown Prince and the future ruler of Germany ought to be brave at all times," he re marked, "but I just hate to have to go to a dentist!" He was to be married on June 6 to the Duchess Cecille of Mecklenherg- Schwerin, and he talked of little hut that coming event. He asked me if I had seen any members of the Court lately, and I told him that the Kaiser's Court Chamberlain, Count von Eulenburg, had been to see me the previous day. "I'm not surprised he has to go to the dentist; he eats too much!" the Crown Prince declared. "He can't expect to have good teeth; he's always eating. As for myself, I eat very little. I want to remain thin. I hate fat people." I corrected him regarding/ the Count, remarking that he happened to have the most wonderfully pre served teeth I had ever seen in a man of seventy years of age. In deed, the Count was in splendid physical condition and looked at least ten years younger than he real ly was. The Crown Prince and I did not get along very well at that time. Apart from the fact that he was such a physical coward that it almost impossible to work on him satisfactorily, he seemed to have no idea of the meaning of an appoint ment. He would agree to be at my office at 9.30 and I would plan my day ac cordingly. At about 10 he was apt to call me up to say that he would be on hand at 11, and he would ac tually arrive about 12. This hap pened several times, and I told him that I couldn't have my day broken up in that way. After seven or eight visits at that particular period, I did not see him professionally for some ten years. Shortly after his last visit to me in 1905, Princess von Pless told me that she had just met him and had told him that she was on her way to my office. "Well, I hope I'll never have to go to a dentist again as long as I live," he had declared emphat ically. "I hate dentists'." As far as I was concerned, I was not at all sorry that he felt that way about my profession, because his visits were more of a liability than an asset, but I did rather regret that I was apparently to have no further opportunity of studying the possible future ruler of Germany more Inti mately. In the years hat followed T saw the Crown Prince many times driv ing through the streets and at public functions, but I did not come in close contact with him. I remember seeing him once in his car as he was about to enter Brandenburger Tor on his way up Unter den Linden. The familiar sound of his father's motor caused him to draw up to one side and stand at salute until the Kaiser had passed on ahead. It was Just an illustration of the force of mili tary discipline which was bred in the bone of the Crown Prince. He simply did not dare drive up Unter den Linden first, knowing the Kaiser was following him. While the Crown Prince seemed to respect military requirements, he paid little attention to the civil reg ulations. He was the depair of the traffic policemen and the taxi driv ers and private chauffeurs, as wore also the Kaiser's other sons. They all insisted upon driving around safety zones to the left instead of to the right and usually came within an ace of colliding with ether cars. The Crown Prince was a reckless driver at best. On one occasion he was going so fast through a city street that his car climbed the side walk and crashed into a lamppost. His car was smashed but he escaped injury. - I saw him on several occasions stop his motor or pull up his horse for the purpose of giving a coin to a child or a seedy-looking passerby on the street, a form of ostentatious charity which appealed very strongly to him. Among other qualities which he inherited from his father was a love for posing in public, lie never altowel an opportunity to pass to make a favorable impression with the people, and one read almost daily of his various activities. Hither the representatives of the German press must have been omnipresent or the imperial press agent was un usually efficient. On one occasion, when still quite young, the Crown Prince rode his horse up the hun-' dred steps of the Palace at Sans Souci, not a particularly difficult feat, but the newspapers and maga zines made all they could out of it. Although I did not see the Crown Prince again professionally until 1915, the Crown Princess came to me in 1913, and from that time on paid me more or less regular visits. She was a woman of great charm and intelligence, and although she was more Russian than German in her ideas, .ana for some time after her marriage was rather generally criticised on that account, she soon became extremely popular and to day is very much admired by the German people. In her youth much of her time had been spent on the French Ri veira and she had found French as sociations and customs more to her liking than German. When pre paring for her nuptials she spent more time in Paris than she did in Berlin, most of her shopping oeing done in the French capital. The complaint was freely made that a French trousseau was hardly appro priate for the wife-to-be of a Ger man Crown Prince- These adverse criticisms were soon lived down, however, and the Crown Princess became a great favorite in German Court circles, to which she brought a youthful animation and esprit which had been notably ab sent before her advent. She was one of the most demo cratic and informal of my royal pa tients. I remember one day when I was working on Princess Hatzfeld, we heard a loud "Hoo-Hoo" from the anteroom. The Crown Princess had heard that the Princess Hatz feld, who was a great chum of hers, was in my office and had followed her into my place unannounced. On another occasion, I had lust finished my day's work and was writing a letter when a dog ran into the room. 1 walked out to ascertain who had let the animal in and found that the Crown Princess and Prin cess Hatzfeld had walked into my office. Desiring to make an ap pointment for the following week and passing my place, they had stepped in for that purpose in the most informal way. The dog, which belonged to the Crown Princess, had found its way Into my room to an nounce the arrival of his royal mis tress. f * Sulphur Vapor Baths J KruseSystem The body being in a reclining position in the cabinet Insures a perfect relaxation of the muscles and nerves, thereby enabling the person to absorb a greater quantity of the sulphur vapor into the system, which is the principal factor in the elimination of the secre ing one to breathe pure fresh air while the body is subjected to the tlons of the body. The head Is entirely outside of the cabinet, allow* waves of warm sulphur vapor. These features alone are worthy of your consideration and investigation. AWARDED GOLD MEDAL AND INTERNATIONAL DIPLOMA AS MOST PERFECT BATH IN THE WORLD Parlors 207 Walnut Street Bell Phone 2341. Harrisburg, Pa. Second Floor. The Princess Hatzfeld, I may men tion, was an extremely intelligent and beuutiful young woman, and be cause of her Intimacy with the Crown Princess, I took a keen inter est in the views she expressed from time to time. Her mother was an American. When she called on me on one oc casion after the war had started, I repeated to her the gist of a conver sation 1 had had a few days before with her father, Excellenz von Stumm. He informed me that lie had been trying to convince all Germans of influence that it would be a serious mistake to annex Bel gium. "From morning to night I have been trying to teach our people some sense," he had declared. "With the history of Poland and Alsace- Lorraine in mind, why should we take more responsibilities on our shoulders by retaining Belgium? The Lord only knows we have our hands full as it is. I don't see and I never have seen how Germany can possibly win this war!" "Your father seemed to be very pessimistic regarding the outlook," I told her. "The sad thing about it," she re plied, "is that father is,alwuys right! I never knew him to make a mis take in judgment." When the Crown Prince called to see roe again I was surprised to find a considerably change in his general appearance. Although, of course, he wus ten years older, he had aged more than I would have expected. There were lines on his face which made him look older than his tnirty three years. In the outer world he was gener ally expected to be one of the lead ing spirits of the military party in Germany, but among his own people he was not credited with sufficient ability or influence to be much of a factor. Indeed, within the past year he had been criticised rather se verely in army circles for his indif ference to the crisis in which his country was involved and for not taking the war seriously enough, and from all I was able to observe of him during the visits he paid me after the resumption of our relations these criticisms were wel' founded. The newspapers, however, which were naturally inspired, always brought his name to the front when ever the army he was accredited to made any successful showing. Just as they did in the case of the Kaiser. I noted that the Crown Prince seemed to be vitally interested in his personal appearance and in other trivial things which one would have thought he might very Well have ig nored in those serious times. He was still as fond of jewelry appar ently as he had ever been, two new rings which he wore affording him much satisfaction. He showed me a new wristwatch attached to an elastic-linked bracelet, of which he seemed to be very proud, and asked me what I thought of it. It was more on the order of the wrist watches worn by ladies than of the military style which is favored by army men. He talked about a new two-seated roadster which he was driving and was very much elated over a n\v raincoat he was wearing. In fact, before he left that day, Princess Au- gust Wilhelm, her sister, Princess J Carolina, of Schleswig Holstein, and I several ladies-in-waiting had assem bled in my salon to wait for him, and I when I was through with him, he I put on his new raincoat and walk | ing into the salon, strutted up and j down in fro.it of the ladies, inquir- I ing how thov liked the cut of his | new coat. The war seemed to be | about the last thing on his mind. During his various visits to me I tried to draw him out a little on dif ferent aspects of the international situation, but the ideas he expressed were not of much moment. "The Allies think we will run short of man-power," he said on one occasion, "but we've got two million jouths growing up and we'll soon be able to put theniin the war. There's no danger of our running short of men, but. really, I wish it were all over. This war is a lot of damned nonsense, you know!" He talked as if the two million growing-up youths of Germany were created for the Hohenzollerns to use as they pleased. Another remark he made whi -h indicated how sadly he misconstrued the epoch-making significance of the great war in which the whole world was involved was quite character istic. (To Be Continued.) =im ini ini inr==inf===ini—i—ihi lac——icn=; 308 Market st. frl _ Dainty Under garments K I i Attractively Priced— V\\ The September Bride )( \l surely ought to make it a \\ point to see our wonderful ™ display of dainty, exquisite Silk Undergarments every thing is here to complete the trousseau —Crepe de Chine —Italian Silk and Satin Bloomers, Camisoles, Vests, Union Suits and Gowns — all modestly pricecl. Our recently enlarged Underwear Department is busy these days supplying women who want that "something different and better" and at easy prices. Remarkable Values in Lingerie of All Kinds ENVELOPE CHEMISE of pink and white nainsook—dainty trimmings of in sertion and ribbon, at (1 OC SI.OB, $1.59, $1.49 and *P X BLOOMERS of pink and white nainsook QO —excellent value at $1.25 and vOC GOWNS of crepe, batiste and nainsook "1 —white and pink—beautiful styles at.... *P **o *7 * NEW BILLIE BURKE PAJAMAS of | pink batiste —very popular at vit/0 .iii i i , IPhilliptne Gowns $2.25 Up Hand embroidered and ribbon trimmed—the choice of women folks who appreciate simplicity of style and quality. i . ■ . Silk Petticoats at $3.98 Complete color range of the new dark Fall shades— unusual values at the price. See these. "I FELT LOGGY AND NERVOUS" HE STATES Cur Inspector Thought His Heart Was Going Bad and Nerves Were Upset TANIiAC FIXED HIM UP "Tanlac sure is the real stuff," said Grover C. Broderick, a car in spector who lives at Lemoyne, Pa., near Harrisburg. "It fixed me up in great shape when I was all gone to pot and I feel fine now all the time. "I tell you I was worried. I felt so dopey all the time and I thought my heart was going back on me, for it used to have a queer way of jumping and thumping and every now and then it would miss a beat and I'd feel weak and faint. "My nerves were very, very bad and I was troubled with shortness of breath that seized me at the slightest exertion. "Tanlac fixed me up—no more heart trouble, no more nerves, no more shortness of breath, nuf sed." Tanlac is now being introduced here at Gorgas' Drug Store. 7