•fgr^Sroeiveavd <3di iKe RMVJKI tPPH " When a Girl Marries" By ANN LISLE A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problems of a Girl Wife Chapter XVII (Copyright, 1918, by King Feature Syndicate Inc.) This morning brought me the first letter I have ever had from Jim! The very moment the tiny white triangle peaked under the door I dashed off the covers, pattered across the room in bare feet, and fairly yanked in the welcome mes senger. It had to be from my boy; 1 had never a doubt of that. For an hour I had been lying awake, with my heart in a tumult, waiting for that letter. Of course I kissed the address he had written; of course 1 held the envelope close to my heart for a moment in happy antici pation of that other moment when I should read the words my lover had written. With trembling fingers I opened the envelope and read: "Thursday evening. "Sweetheart Dear: "Wish you were here with me, as Washington is well worth seeing. It is sizzling hot, though, so maybe my little girl is better off in New York. "Ant so busy I don't have time to eat. The board will convene to morrow. I don't know what the outcome will be. but am hoping for a good appointment, even if not in the aviation. Will stay over a day or two if need be. But will surely be home some time Sunday. "Betty happens to be here, see ing about her camp welfare work. She knows a lot of the big men and is helping me pull wires. Of course I want to fly, but a captaincy in the artillery would not be so bad, as that would take me to France. Betty will put me in touch with some of the 'men higher up.' So hope for the FEET WOULD SWELL Kidneys and Stom ach Were Out of Order says Mrs. S. Green. 2551 South Elev enth street, Harrisburg. "My stom ach was bad. after meals would bloat and had pain, was nervous, had rheumatism and pain in back and limbs. "My feet would burn and swell, could not sleep at night, in the morning I would feel stiff and sore. Sanpan changed all that and I am well once more." Sanpan is being introduced at Keller's Drug Store, 405 Market street. Harrisburg. 1 ■ : ' v ' •■•■•■•'■' ' . -jftjf The Harrisburg Academy A Country Day and Boarding School For Boys AIM OF SCHOOL— MILITARY TRAINING— A trained mind In a sound b °dy All boys will be required to take actuated by high principles of Uv- m jiitary instruct!"? and drill. A '"S- competent, experieoced military UKTUOI) man will be in chars 2. Boys are taug3it in small classes; each pupil is given undivided per- EQUIPMENT— -1 sonal attention. _ ... „ , , . ~ One of the finest school plants in MAslEKs— the East. Junior School building 1 Are chosen from the experienced unexcelled. Seiler Hall for older 1 teaching Alumni of the best Uni- boys the most modern dormitory j versifies in the United States. in Pennsylvania. DEPARTMENTS— Junior and Senior Departments OPENING — provide care and instruction for School opens September 23. 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Market Square = Bell, 485 Dial, 4393 fl| SAiukdaY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH SEPTEMBER 7, 1918. best. When I have finished this letter am calling for Betty, who is giving a dinner to a couple of the big guns and yours truly. Guess things will break to my liking. "Pray for me. Princess Anne, "Devotedly, Your Husband." I stared at the letter in unbelief. Then I read it again slowly—the first time I had whirled through it in a breathless rush to know just what my boy was doing. Now I read care fully word for word, hunting for what 1 had missed—something hid den between the lines perhaps. It was not there! Except for the "sweetheart dear" and a half dozen words at the end, that letter might have been written to—a man or maiden aunt. And this was my .first love letter from Jim! I sat down on the edge of my rumpled bed and stared in unbe lief at the sheet of paper in my hand. It stared back at me malic iously. Then bitterness and suspicion sw.ept over me in great waves, en gulfing my disappointment and hun ger for some word of love. How did Betty Bryce "happen" to be in Wash ington? I turned cold with terror. Betty had a way of "happening" to be where Jim is. I hated that woman. And yet, when I had lain awake waiting for my husband's letter had practically decided to take Betty's apartment. She was Jim's friend; she should be my friend too. I would be generous enough to ac cept her generosity. It would de light Jim—of that I was sure. But now Jim's letter! Cold hatred of Betty gripped me agafn. She had everything—money, beauty, fredom to come and go at will, power—the power to help my husband achieve his desire—while I —1 stood in the way of that desire. Suddenly 1 laughed at my own heroics and said to myself: "Anne, you little fool! Suppose you did want to take the Bryce woman's apartment—how could you. Jim has the key. Jim is in Wash ington—with her. You don't even know where Betty's apartment is.; Suppose you found the address in the phone book, could you persuade anyone to let you it? Automatically I got up and went over to the telephone directory— Betty's name was not listed. "That much is settled," I said to myself again and again as if it were the password to some magic way out of my misery. And then suddenly I saw the way out. With what I told myself was clear logic, I decided that since one path was closed to me, I must take the Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918, International News Service *—* By McManus ' ' * "I VHtCH slmt vni ii 1 1 TTi C"TI im HERE-JAME OH- FR-A 1 foA QLI FINO ,T * L >- THERE: /T> V J N hello " other. I could no longer stay at the Walgrave. I had no way of reaching the Bryce apartment—therefore I must take the Mason studio. I leaped into action at once. As a beginning, I canceled my break fast appointment with that dread ful old woman, Mrs. Varden. Then I telephoned and asked Mr. Mason if I could have possession of his apartment that very day. It had be come necessary, I said, for me to alter my plans since my husband would be delayed in Washington un til Sunday, and it seemed better to act on my own judgment than to pile up expenses at the Walgrave, which wasn't run on a schedule suited to army incomes. I talked like a titled prig in my struggle to have logic and business efficiency rule me and drive out emotion and hysteria. Mr. Mason's voice came back over the wire with a queer, vibrant' note in It. "You little brick! Think of de ciding like that! Jim will be de lighted I'm sure. What brought you round so suddenly?" "Nothing—l just felt that I ought to decide and so 1 thought the thing out logically," I said wondering at the little quaver in my own voice. "You sound tired. I don't want you to get worn our moving all by your self. I'm going to phone Evelyn to come up to town and help." "Oh, I don't need any help—l can manage alone," I said, wearily. But I was glad when Tom Mason insisted. i "This time Evvy shan't fail you. I'm going to phone her right off.' You wait where you are until you hear from her. Have you had break fast yet?" There was no real interest in Mr. Mason's tone * * and the man was nothing to me. It mattered to him, though, that I might be tired and blue and in need of help. It mat tered to him—and Jim was over in Washington with Betty Bryce. "Of course, I will be very grate ful if Evelyn can come. But if she can't don't you worry about me. I'll manage well enough; I'll just pack our things and taxi down to the, studio by noon, if you can have iti ready for me then. But I'd be so happy if Evelyn could meet me there," I concluded, acknowledging to myself at last how much I need ed a woman's friendship—a wom an's help. Then I hung up the receiver and stared about the room. On his smooth, untouched bed lay Jim's I seized it fiercely and tore it into tiny bits. From the bureau where it had fluttered in a white shower, a little scrap winked up at me mali ciously. On it was written one word; "Betty." (To Be Continued) How to Conserve Canning and Packing For Win ter's Cse Explained in Detail by National War Garden Experts. JELLY MAKING Fruits to be used should be sound, just ripe or slightly underripe, and gathered but a short time. Wash them, remove stems and cut large fruits into pieces. With juicy fruits add just enough water to prevent burning while cooking. In using fruits which are not juicy, add wa- i ter until two-thirds of the fruit is covered. Cook slowly until the| fruits are soft. Strain through a bag made of flannel or two thick nesses of cheesecloth or similar ma terial. Write to the National War Garden Commission, Washington, for a free canning booklet. Send a two-cent stamp for postage. Instead of sugar, use three-fourths of a cup of corn syrup to one cup of fruit juice. Boil the juice to one third of its volume and add the corn syrup. Boil rapidly. The jelly point is reached when two, drops run to gether and fall as one from the side of the spoon. Skim the juice, pour into sterilized glasses and cool as quickly as possible. Seal with layer of paraffin and a cover of metal or paper.. The Com mission will gladly answer any questions written on one side of tlie paper and sent in a self-addressed, stamped envelope. READY FOR COMPANY cellars—* J gg This scene will be duplicated any where in the (J. S. A. this winter, and company may stay to tea, if your shelves are full of canned goods. Free hook of instructions on canning and drying may be had from the National War Garden Commission, Washing ton, D. C., for two cents to pay postage. THE KAISER AS I KNEW HIM FOR FOURTEEN YEARS By ARTHUR N. DAVIS, D. D. S. (Copyright, 1918, by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate) (Continued.) He was a pleasant enough fefiow. but his wife, who was also Ms first cousin, being a niece of the Empress, was extremely sarcastic, although not particularly brilliant. She was a very beautiful woman; in fact, ?he| was the most beautiful of the Kai ser's daughters-in-law, somewhat too stout. She talked English to me invari bly until the war, but after that she spoke only German. She was con stantly carping about the way Amer ica was acting towards eGrmany and she made such outrageous state ments that I was led to remark on one occasion: "From the way you talk. Princess, one would think that America actually started the war!" She never spofce of America after wards. She always seemed more or less interested in my child, and once, when she recognized the child in the Tiergarten she stopped and caressed her—which made our nurse the envy of all her associates ever afterwards. I saw Prince August Wilhelm and his wife two days before I left Ber lin. They were the last members of the royal family I saw. I didn't men tion the fact that I was going away, because I was'afraid right up to the moment that I landed on Danish soil that something might be done to prevent my leaving. Prince Joachim, the Kaiser's youngest son, and one of the last of the royal family to visit me, remind ed me very much of his eldest broth er, the Crown Prince. He was tail and slender and would have been very good looking but for a receding chin which tyas very pronounced. He had as little respect for public opin ion as the Crown Prince, and while the U-boat Deutschland was on its way to America principally to bring back a carg% of rubber, the supply of which was exhausted in Germany, this sixth son of the Kaiser was driv ing around the country in a big car using up enormous rubber tires, while rubber was worth its weight in gold and many cars for the army were supplied with plain iron wheels. This Prince was the only member of the royal family to get near enough to the firing-line to get shot. The injury, which he received while at the eastern front, was only a slight wound, but it was enough to start him limping through history. It was such a superficial wound 'hat 1t couldn't have caused him one-half as much pain as it gave the royal family pleasure. The fact that one of the Kaiser's own sons had actually been wounded and shed his royal blood in active service was something that the in spired press will never stop crowing over, but by just what accident the Prince happened to come within range of the bullet has never been disclosed. Nevertheless, he received the Iron Cross of the First Class, or, as some one who realized the signifi cance of the incident remarked, "a Daily Dot Puzzle ,4 °\ * 3l ! : '• *3B /' 2 so ; / C. ! ( 44* w . 3fe i l ( 7 d! 6 47 '8 * \ • 5. *4 3 \ *23 i* * t r. \ 5 \ • 12 * * / ft * k . \ V' l,9 ,jjv 50 15 * * , 7 What have f drawn? Draw from one to two and so on to the end first-class Iron Cross for a second class wound." Certain it is, as Mr. Gerard so clev erly pointed out at Carnegie Hall, the safest risk any insurance com pany could write would be a policy on the lives of the Kaiser's six sons, and. he might hav.e added, the Kai ser himself might have been thrown in without adding much to the com bined premium. As he limped into my office, the young Prince—he is now only twen ty-eight—remarked: "See what one of your damned American bullets did to me!" "How do you know it was an American bullet?" I asked. "The Russians have nothing else." How the Russians ever got a chance to reach him if he were even half as afraid of their bullets as he was of dental work, 1 can't conceive. All the time he was in my office he kept nervously twisting a front lock of hair. I tried to draw him out on politi cal questions, but he showed no in clination to discuss them. "I know nothing about politics,'' he admitted. "It would be better if a great many other people paid less attention to them." He didn't im press me as knowing much about anything. I told him on one occasion that the people were complaining of the food shortage. "They have food enough," he an swered. "The best thing they do is to complain! Don't they complain in America? The fact is they ha"e too much to eat, anyway. They I don't know what they want." | The Kaiser's only daughter, Prin cess Vctoria Louise, was the fir c t of her family to come to me outside of j the Kaiser. Very peculiar rumors were circulated about her when she was a girl, and they persisted right up to the time of her marriage. It was said variously that she had a qleft palate; that she was tongue tied; that she was a deaf mute; that she suffered from other physical de ficiencies. I was very much interested to find, therefore, that none of these rumors had the slightest foundation. She was a most charming young woman, always acting most graciously to ! ward me. She reminded me of the | Kaiser more than any other of his children. Shortly after the war ' started I asked her how long she I thought it would last. "It can't be over too soon for me," she replied. "I have a husband and six brothers in it, you know; but I'm afraid it will last a long time." I On one of her last visits to me she came with her husband, the Duke of [Cumberland, who said he would like ' to speak to me privately. I I took him into an adjoining room. I and he asked me not to tell any i member of the royal family that he had been to see me. I was rather surprised at his re quest. but of course agreed to com ply with his wishes. "You understand, don't you? Not a single member of the royal fam ily!" he repeated, as he kissed the i Duchess good-by and drove away, j The mystery of the incident was cleared up a few days later when an j opera singer who had been a guest 'at Braunschweig, the seat of the i Duke of Cumberland, told me that ! while he was singing at the local | opera house there there had been a I great demonstration in front of the Duke's palace. The crowd demanded I that the Duke return to the front at I once. "Our sons and fathers have to ; fight!" they shouted. "You've been [ here too !,ong. Go hack to the men j at the front or bring them back I home!" | Evidently the Kaiser had given his | son-in-law explicit instructions to I keep out of the public sight, and ' the Duke didn't want it known tnat he had disobeyed to the extent of calling with his wife to see me in Berlin!" CHAPTER XV The Kaiser at Army Headquarters To what extent the Kaiser is re- I sponsible for the failures and enti tled to credit for the successes of his armies in the present war, I am pot in a position to say, but if he did not actually direct the military pol icy, he at least kept closely in touch with everything that was go ing on. From the very beginning of hostilities he lived the major part of the time at the Great Army Headquarters and was in constant j consultation with his military lead ers. Knowing the self-confidence he possessed and the high value he placed on his own judgment in all things, and especially in military matters, I am inclined to believe, that he took a very direct part in the councils of the General Staff, and it is most unlikely that any major move was ever made without his sanction. I can imagine the dramatic scene that would follow if anyone at these army conferences was presumptuous and bold enough openly to oppose the Kaiser'B plans. Within the past few weeks, in a reply which he sent to a congratu latory telegram from the University of Cologne, the Kaiser is reported to have referred to himself as "the supreme war lord." and it is hardly likely that with such notions of his own importance he would bow much to the judgment or experience of any of his generals. I had several opportunities to see the Kaiser while he was at the vari ous Great Army Headquarters. In the spring of 1916 I received a long-distance telephone message from the Great Army Headquarters, which was then in the palace of the Prince von Pless, at. Pless, to the effect that the Kaiser wanted me to go there. I was told that the Ober- Hofmarshallamt, the head court chamberlain's office, would arrange for a pass and give me the necessary instructions for getting ,to head quarters, and the following day one of the secretaries called and gave me all the details. On the trip down to Pless I was able to make better connections than had been anticipated and got in at 2.10 a. m. instead of 6.15, and the consequence was that no car was waiting for me at the station. The place was very dark and I had not the slightest idea where to go to spend the night. The station was apparently located in the open country and there wasn't the least sign of life in the vicinity. I knew, however, that the village of Pless must be within reach and hoped to find some sort of hotel there. I ap plied to the stationmaster and he aroused one of his men and had him show me to a little hotel, the On Your mW Silver Anniversary— /////// The gleaming silver that you now prize j j so highly; will it still be mirror-like on your U silver anniversary or tarnished and stained. W I You can keep it in perfect condition easily with Vl MULE TEAM BORAX j U Just wash it in water in which Borax has been dissolved. Il \\ It will keep it looking just as it did in the jewelers window. I VXV For old silver too. The dirtiest silver can be cleaned jfj \w\ with a minimum of effort by using Borax. Rust and dirt spots vanish like magic. , /////n vim, TRYIT TODAY JMy 20 Mule Team Borax has SZsX/yyY one hundred ■" J | | Hotel Fuchs, in the adjoining vil lage. A barefooted boy with a candle in his hand came down in answer to my knock on the door and he gave me the best room the place afforded. Telling him to wake me at 6.30, I turned in without even having reg istered, but the awful bed and the smell of the old room' allowed me little rest. (To Be Continued.) Advice to the Lovelorn UV BEATRICE! FAIRFAX SH AM, SHE ACCEPT HIM f DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I am deeply in love with a young man four years my senior who is soon to sail 'for France. Do you think it prudent for a girl to engage herself to a man who might come home a cripple and be a burden? I shall al- . ■ways care for him deeply, whether lie is crippled or not. F. L. I don't think, in spite of what you believe, that you would always care deeply for your soldier boy even if he came back a cripple. There are indi cations in your letter that you would find it considerable of a handicap to have this kind of a husband. Unless you are so proficient in your own par ticular line of wrok that you make enough to help maintain the family, or unless you have some money, the risk appears to be too great. There are cases in which girls love their soldier sweethearts, so deeply, that one feels they will manage, somehow, even if their earning ca pacity is not great enough to put them in the financially independent class. l>ut these girls are not considering in advance if it would be prudent to run the risk of having such a burden aij a crippled man on their hands. They care enough to assume that risk. A CHANCE MEETING DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: Some time ago I ran into a young man on the elevated station platform and I excused myself from doing so. A few times after that he smiled at me, but now he does not look at me any more. I should very much like to meet this young man, who is about 19 Can you suggest anything for me to do?. M. K. I do not approve of acquaintances made in the way you suggest at all. and if the young nian has apparentlj lost all interest in the accidenta' meeting, there is nothing whatever for you to do but to ignore him. SHE MAD BETTER WAIT DEAR MISS FAIRFAX! I am going about with a young man and we are very fond of each other. On returning from the theater one evening he asked me for a photo graph. Will you advise me whether it is proper for me to give one? L. F. I believe I would wait until I knew the young man a little longer that six weeks before giving him nij photograph. Doubtless you both in tend to become engaged, and why not wait until then before giving him your picture? > | Let Cuticura Save Your Hair On retiring, comb the hair out straight, then make a parting, gently rubbing in Cuticura Ointment with the end ot the ■ finger. Anoint additional partings until 1 the whole scalp has been treated. Place a light covering over the hair to i protect the pillow from possible stain, ' The next morning shampoo with Cutl. cura Soap and hot water, Sample Each Free by Mall, Address post, card: Cuticura, Dept. 19G, Boston." Sold everywhere. Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c, 5