Om oil Ike RsrftiKj Ij^Pjl " When a Girl " ! By ANJf LISLE A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problems of a Girl Wife CHAPTER XXIX , (Copyright. 1918, by King Features Syndicate. Inc.) "What's that husband of yours 1 been doing?" demanded a voice from the doorway. I looked up from the eggs I was frying, and there stood my brother, i looking like a neatly scrubbed and tremendously overgrown young cherub. "You mean my eyes?" I smiled, j "It's the eggs—they sputter so I : always look weepy." Conversation between Xeal and: me always was rather sketchy. In i the old days we understood each ; other so well that we frequently; skipped a mental step or two, and j then sometimes we had to go back and unravel the "skipping." Said Xeal, truculently: "Nothing of the sort, Babbsie. j I've seen you fry eggs before, j What's he up to to make you cry?"i "It's just that he's so_ wonderful." j I cried, "You wouldn't understand —: he's so generous it hurts." "Hurts who? 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BELL 485 , DIAL 4308 > , .. , " * , • p';' SATURDAY EVENING. HXHJUSBtrRG TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 5, 1918 By now wo had progressed to a corner of tho refectory table, and Xeal was revelling In raspberries and eggs and toast and cream fla vored with coffee—all of which he mingled with royal disdain of the proper order of procedure. I handed Xeal sugar for his ber ries, salt for his eggs, butter for his toast and then took up the thread of conversation, using it as a clue to lead me precisely where I wanted to go. "About your coming to New York, Mr. Hyland—now. Just how did that happen?" I asked. Xeal waved a piece of toast in a large gesture and flourished a spoonful of raspberries as he re plied: "Say, Babbsie, I've got a swell job —simply swell! Your little old fox isn't so slow. Who's the chap said our town was a good place to come from? Well, I came young—early —pronto!" It seemed to me that Neal was overdoing things a bit, so I decided to overdo them a bit also and to in sist on a reply. "Xeal, you haven't answered me yet. Why did you come?" I demanded. "Babbsie, you haven't lost the trick of frying eggs. You flopped them just right. Why did I come? For thirty dollars a week!! Are you answered, madam? Maybe you don't think thirty dollars a week is a swell salary—maybe you don't!" "What did Father Andrew think I of your coming?" I demanded. "What would he think of it with i you in town here?" questioned Neal in turn "Why, of course. Father Andrew wouldn't mind," I said thought fully. "He'd expect you to stay right here with us and he couldn't help being proud of your earning so much —thirty dollars. Neal—for a baby like you." Xeal rose majestically and frowned: ' "I'm twenty-two, Anne. They think boys of twenty-one are men— 'old enough to go over and rush the Germans. And I've been working I' in an accountant's ofticq at home every summer since I was fifteen. You' know that. I've had a good job at home, too, since I got out of ihigh school three years ago. Eigh jteen per wasn't so bad." "Eighteen a week out home would | go almost as far as thirty here." ] I said, wondering if Neal wouldn't] be better off at home. "Well, you know I paid in eight I a week for board Babbsie. What] are you going to charge me? II should think about fifteen, the wayi prices are in New York. Say, this j is a swell room—and a swell couch. I I've struck It rich." Suddenly I realized that Neal took ' it for granted he was going to stay ] with me. What would Jim say? "Listen, dear, I want you to re main here just as long as you're comfortable —but I'm not going to! take money from my own darling! kid brother," I replied firmly. "Well. I like that! Say, Babbsie. j didn't I pay in eight per at home?! | Don't turn this little old fox loose! j in New York with too much cash— l 'he might buy himself a gold brick ] ] Say, sis, let's toss up a penny who! • washes the dishes. The winner! ] dries them." As we finished the work, Neal looked around with a complete air of possession—of belonging. "They paid me a week in advance sis," he suddenly said. "Here's my first fifteen. It's .worth it, Babsie. My, but you know how to flop eggs ! —and your coffee—yum— yum!" "I can't take it, Neal money from my little brother!!" Neal forced the bills into my hand. "Can the sentiment, sis. It's all right between us, but I'm not going ito sponge on that husband of I yours." "I won't take your money," I said | stubbornly. "What did father say i about your plans to pay me?" "Father said nothing." Neal loked down at his feet. "He didn't know I was coming. I got my job and lit out —suddenly." "Neal!" I cried in sudden fright. "Why did you do that?" "Now, Babbsie, I answered you long ago. Why? For thirty dol lars! To get mixed up with the big city and kind of get lost in it I want to live here, with your ex- Lieutenant and you and all your at tractive friends. Don't ask so many I questions, Babbsie—l tell you I've ] got my reasons all right! > Ar6 ydu going to be a good spo'rt and let me stay?" Neal's young face wore a look of deadly earnestness. I realized that it meant more to him than I knew to make his home with Jim and me, and I realized also, with cruel abruptness, that I must take his money. Ii "Neal, I won't ask you to tell me Bringing Up Father - Copyright, 1918, International News Service Z?y McManus * • I • bY <OLLY- | WHERE l*b <RO<AN? 1 ' WOULDN'T &"Y - I WONDER 'd" C=SSS=2 JUST At> SNEAKED OUT • 1 I I - OOT r ru IVOZLOVEPtTO _J TE U.XOO - VHERE THE! )j> - I'VE > - <ROAN AND / [MI VWIK'E.'MAC'OE —x 1 DtrsTT WOORE'b f| f : If LOOKED EVERY WHERE "To MOORE PHONED to TAKE. r-J VSTY Ui ' FORt ™' l li° F y "% : ~~~ 1 f If*-. ! -■ —"————————————— anything you don't want me to know. You shall stay as long as you like and I'll let you pay me ten dollars a week—but—but —l'm not going to tell my husband I'm tak ing pay from you. If you want to stay you'll have to accept my terms." Neal began to bluster: "You want me to let that husband of yours think I'm sponging on him, do you? That's ,not fair—l can't be I put in such a position." "Then you can't stay with me, I Neal." Neal's eyes met mine challening-1 ly. Our glances clashed for a mo- j ment and then he looked away. "All right," he said at last. "This is the safest place for me. I'll do' what you say, Babbsie. Now, why: don't you call up that little Mason I girl and invite her over for lunch?! Work begins to-morrow and a fel- i low might as well enjoy life while! he can." There was something in my! young brother's voice that worried me. (To Be Continued) Advice to the Lovelorn ACQUAINTANCE WITHOUT INTRO DUCTION DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: A girl friend has asked me to write ' you and inquire whether it would be I wrong for her to accept an invitation | from a soldier whom she knows only • by sight. She lives near a camp and i j has to pass it every time she goes to business. This soldier is always out side. waves his hand to her and she waves back. The other day he called I her over and asked if she would care . to go out with him some night. She I said she would let him know in a few, days. C. R. I I thoroughly disapprove of ac- I I quaintances made in this informal I 'manner, and if your friepd intends to i accept the soldier's invitation it would | I be better to go out with him in a i party. This may seem very dull and j formal, but conventions have been i/i --• stttuted for the protection of women j and they would do better to abide by ] them. HE IS SARCASTIC , DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: • I have been going about with a ] young man for some months, but ; I lately he acts queerly, at other times ! lie can never do enough to please me. How can I find out whether he really cares? DOWN-HEARTED. Nothing could be a greater mis take for a girl than to allow a man j to set the pace for all the moods, ! and then become wretched or joyous • accordingly. Have a little independ ! ence of character and when he acts cool and sarcastic, be indifferent, if j you are incapable of being cool and j sarcastic yourself. I am afraid you j have shown too" plainly that he Is in ! dispensable, and he Is accordingly ! putting a value on something of ; • which he is sure. : "UNCERTAIN, COY AND HARD TO j PI.EASE** J DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I am a young man and dearly love | a voung girl working In the same con- I I ce'rn I do. The young woman in ques- j 1 tion is a problem I find impossible to ! solve. I have asked her out numerous I j times, but-have always been refused. If I pay attention to any other girl she says I am forsaking her. Natur- I ally I stop talking to the others and I go' back to her. but the same indif-. ference starts all over again. What do vou think I should do? A CONSTANT READER. I think you are entirely too concilia tory to make any deep and lasting i impression on so capricious a girl as , the one you describe. I should not only j talk to "the others." but I should take I them to some of the places of amuse ! ment she declines to attend with you. j And If this did not bring her to her I senses I think I would try to find an other girl less "coy and uncertain." CONSIDERING HIS OWN HAPPINESS DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: A has been married to B for a num ber of years, they have had two chil dren whom A loves dearly. Recently ! a woman came into the man's life whom he loves much more than he ever loved his wife. He feels that he cannot live without the other woman, and yet if he leaves his wife, he fears he would ruin the lives of his chil dren. What should he do, sacrifice his own happiness dr that of his chil dren? AN INTERESTED FRIEND. The man you describe seems to be entirely wrapped up in his own selfish ideas of happiness, and to be shirking the promises he made in marriage en tirely. In breaking up his home he would certainly be ruining the lives of his children and it is doubtful if he would get any real happiness out of marrying the second woman. This has been tried too often and almost invariably has proved to be a failure. These grand passions have a way of wearing thin in this work-a-day world. He might be happy for a little while, but the one home built on the wreck of another seldom offers any real happiness to anyone concerned. QUESTION OF ALLOTMENT DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: About five years ago my husband deserted me. and I never heard from him during that time, but when the first draft was called I wrote to the War Department in Washington, asking if my husband had been draft ed and they wrote by return mail that he had and was in France with his regiment. Now, Miss Fairfax, don't you think I. as his wife, am entitled to his allotment? Kindly -advise. READER. It would seem if you have never been divorced that you are entitled to an allotment, but I do not know | what the rule Is In the case of separa- | tions. Write to the War Risk Insur ance, Treasury Department. Washing- I ton, D. C. Wiconisco Students Go to Albright College Wk'Onlnoo, Pa., Oct. s.—The fol lowing town boys left this week for Albright College, Myerstown, Pa.— Ira F. Keiter, Edward Selp, Howard Miller, Clayton Peters, Irvin Shadle, John Kensinger, Clarence Kissinger and Charles Messner. —Mary Davis and Annie lies spent Thursday in Wllliamstown.—Andrew Dodd is vis iting her son, Hiram and family at Allentown.—The Rev. and Mrs. A. W. Warfel returned home after spend ing several days at Philadelphia.— John J. Long and daughter, Ella, are home from a visit at Philadelphia.— Blanche Selp has returned to Mont Alto, after visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Seip.—Mrs. A. J. Bauer is visiting at the home of Mrs. A. M. Botdorf.—Mrs. Leroy Kaufman, of Tower City, spent sev eral days in town.—The annual Ral ly Day services of the Methodist Episcopal Church will be held to-mor row. The Rev. E. E. Dixon, of Coh ranville, will conduct the services both morning and evening.—Fred Kinley, of Atlantic City, N. J., is vis iting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John C. Kinley.—Mrs. H. C. Sheafer is spending several weeks at Philadel phia.—John Coleman left on Satur day for Harrisburg, where he has se cured employment.—Mrs. Curtis Hen sel is spending several days at Phlla 'delphia.—Charles Laudenslager has 1 returned home after visiting his daughter, Clara at Reading.—Miss Edna Speary, of Millersburg, was the weekend guest of Miss Elma Keen.— Mrs. Ida Romberger. of Elizabeth ville, and Mrs. Charles Koppenhaver, jof Lykens. spent Saturday evening. I with H. A. Koppenhaver and family. . Enthusiastic Reception to I Loan Party at Millerstown j Millersburg, Pa., Oct. s.—When the j special train carrying Dr. Bagnell and party of Fourth Liberty Loan Boos ter arrived in Millersburg Wednes day noon they were given a rousing reception by a great crowd of peo ple and the blowing of the factory whistles. The band heading the pro cession marched to the pavillion in East Park, where singing, music, in troductions of soldiers who had seen i service in France and other excerises were carried out. Dr. Bagnell gave a spirited talk on the gaeat war and of the great necessity of buying bonds of the Fourth Liberty Loan.— Community services will be held in the Methodist Episcopal Church to ' morrow morning at 10.30. In the ] evening district superintendent Dr. | George W. Bickley, of Philadelphia, | will preach. After the preaching ser- I vices the third quarterly conference ! will be held.—Miss Fay Long has j gone to Philadelphia, where she will i train for a nurse in the Methodist ' Episcopal Hospital. Lieutenant i Brown Bradenbaugh, of the Quarter | master's Department of the United States Army, with headquarters at | Norfolk. Va., was home on a visit to j his parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Brad i enbaugh this week. Lieutenant I Brown returned from a trip overseas j several weeks ago. Daily Dot Puzzle IP* 4o * 4 '. • " 39 ' „ 35 3® • *42 .45 _ . ~ 27 . 2 ? '4--= — • 3o* 21. \ — i • V -=£T \ - 5o S3 £ *2.® Vi 5 . _ • lO'S . 52 4 '%t ■ - B4 ' .7- " . 1 • . - 5- |fe. . • ® O c — .1 / "~\ ° ' -S yh j "" *' I Drkw from one to two anil so v to the end. Church Suppers Church suppers can be very g6od things from a food conservation standpoint. Perhaps the least waste of food is accomplished by the ca feteria system where each helps himself to the food which he de sires. By this time most people are pretty well trained not to take I things which they will not eat. These menus come from the Unted States food administration and may be helpful: Baked beans and brown bread, escalloped potatoes au gratin, bar ley or oatmeal muffins, cabbage sal ad, apple sauce, ice cream, (other sweeteners than sugar), cake, (vic tory (lour). Sliced cold meat creamed pota toes, cornmeal spoon bread, buttered carrots, string bean pickles, floating land custard. Potato and meat pie, green peas or baked tomatoes, victory bread and butter, cabbage and pepper sal |ad, baked pears, oatmeal cookies. Advice to the Lovelorn BY BEATRICE FAIRFAX SHAM, SHE MARRY AGAIN? DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: It seems always the young that ask and get your advice; please spare a few minutes for one that has passed her youth. lam an American woman some years this side of the half-cen tury mark; I have been'twice widow ed, have children grown and doing for themselves. Would you think it selfish if I married again?. Not that I have anyone in mind, but I ask the | question because I love my home. Love to do for someone near to me, [ and as the children grew up, they left, and I am lonely. I am a good housekeeper, good cook, dress neatly, and make my own clothes, too. Like books and music, but do not care very much for society. I do not want simply to have my fu ture assured, as I am capable of run ning a boardinghouse profitably. I want only a home and to make one for others. E. M. B. As your children are grown and doing for themselves, I do not see hdw you would be shirking your maternal duties in marrying again. Indeed, after re-reading your list of qualifica tions as a wife and housekeeper, it would appear the height of selfishness for one so gifted in these require ments to remain single. IMPROVES ON NATURE DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: Am 17 years of age and a young man has asked me to marry him. My mother deserted me when I was nine years old and two years ago I heard she died a widow. My friend says my father must be dead, too, as her death notice specified widowhood, therefore, I would need no one's consent to marry. Do you think this young man has a right to tell me what to do? 1 use paint and powder, lipsticks, cold cream and have my hair cut on the side. And I shave my eyebrows to make them arch. My friend says youth is beautiful and needs nothing to improve it. I told him other girls do these things and if I can't do as I wish, I don't want to marry him. He I tells me he does this for my good, as I have no mother. M. B. | Your letter strikes me as a bit too I flighty for one considering the serious step of marriage. You seem to think life is arranged on the plane of a "beauty parlor" and so it is for some women, hut they are not the women who count. My sympathy is entirely with the young man. He must have extraordinary forebearance to be wil ling to marry a girt who does all these thing to herself. I should think he would feel as if he were courting a figure in a hairdresser's window. I INSISTS TOO MUCH ON RIGHTS I DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: | Mr. A and Miss B. are engaged. A. , has an appointment to call on B. at I 2 o'clock Sunday afternoon and B. |is aware of Al's cbming. Shortly be | fore that time B. is requested by a | married sister to accompany her in her automobile to visit a cousin. ; There Is no reason at all for going ' just at that particular moment, as no : previous appointment was made by either B. or her sister. B. is per ! suaded to go and leaves with her 1 sister in the automobile. A. arrives I at B.'s house promptly at. 2 o'clock. 1 He is informed by B.'s father that she left a request for A. to meet her .at her cousin's. B.'s father also i states that if A. wants to, he can go and meet 8., but if he prefers, he can wait until B. returns. A. depides to wait until she comes back. 1. Was It good manners or proper for B. to go away under the circum stances? 2. Was it good manners or proper for A. to remain at B.'s house and await her return? M. M. It would appear from this letter j that both these young people are too much inclined to stand on thel? , "rights." To maintain the amiable relationship that Is necessary fot; I people who propose spending their ; lives together it is better to think more of concessions and less of | "rights." ! B„ to hold strictly to the letter lof the law sliould have informed ! A. she was breaking her engagement, j but doubtless felt that she knew him i well enough to take this little liberty, i It was entirely optional on A.'s part i where he should spend the interven ! ing time, though he might have been ! sufficiently acquiescent to do the ] thing B. suggested, and call for her. The entire matter seems to me un worthy of contention or ill-felling. Why not forgo' üboiit. gtart CVCV ojcajfti, A. M £. Suburban Notes y BLAIN Mrs. Kate Bower is visiting friends ; at Philadelphia and Camden. N. J. Mr. and Mrs. J. Stewart Koons and Mrs. F. A. Davidson, of Newville, j Cumberland county, paid a visit to their son and daughter. Professor and Mrs. W. C. Koons. Miss Ethel Wilt, of Lancaster, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Wilt, of Jackson township. MILLERSTOWN Mrs. Annie Eckels and Miss Sarah Rickabaugh have gone to North Caro lina, where they will spend a month. Mrs. Daniel Yeigh, of Thompson town. was a recent visitor at the home of her daughter, Mrs. William Kowe. Miss Mary Kepner has gone to Al lentown, where she will visit her brother, Harry Kepner. and family for several weeks. Miss Helen Rebok, a student of the Shippensburg Normal School, and sev eral girl friends spent Sunday at her home here. Miss Kathleen Thompson has gone to State College, where she is a stu dent. Mrs. Hanna Rounsley is visiting her daughter, Mrs. J. O. Charles, in Eraaus. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Page attended the Bloomsburg Fair on Thursday. V. B. Yabb moved this week from the Thomas Kremer property, in Main street, to Newport. SOLDIER IX GERMAN PRISON Gettysburg, Pa., Oct. 5. Mrs. Alice Smith was made happy by the reeoipt | of a letter from her son, Earl Smith. I a prisoner in a German camp. He ! tells her he was captured on July 15. 1 and that he is well and happy. He is i held at the prison camp at Darma | stadt. BIG SWEET POTATO , Gettysburg, Pa., Oct. 5. E. J. j Bucher. of Cashtown, grew a sweet | potato in his garden that he classes ' as a small one, which, when put on the scales weighed four pounds and I three ounces. To Keep ■|Hr Blankets Clean and Fluffy nl 11l f \\l ASH them with 20 Mule Tearn Borax Soap Chips. I |i !0m ▼* The Borax in the Chips takes out every paSrticie ' 1 jjy of dirt without rubbing; and leaves them like new. Will m not shrink or injure woolens in any way. And the anti- W septic propei *JS of the Borax cleanse hygienically. 1 f For general laundry use * m BORAX SOAP CHIPS. J(j| should be used in this way for best results: J||flHm Make a Soap Jelly by dissolving three table spoonfuls of 20 Mule Team Borax Chips in a quart of boiling water. Add this to luke warm wash-water and work the blankets in this solution without rubbing. Rinse in warm a '' water, pull put and shake well. | An 8 ox. package of 20 Mule Team Borax Soap rj tf Chips equals 25c worth of ordinary laundry soap. 1i It's the Borax with the Soap that does the work, | Nine Cans of Small Fish Are Placed in Creek Pillow, Pa., Oct. s.—Frank Sny- j der and J. A. Laudcnslager received j nine cans of fish from Corry on ! Tuesday which they placed in the | creek here.—The campaign for j clothing the last seaeral days under the auspices of the Red Cross was ' very successful. —Merchants will I close their stores every evening at j 6 o'clock, except Saturday.—Holy j Communion services will be held in i the Lutheran Church on Sunday, | October 13.—Mrs. Dr. Enirick and ! daughter, Gladys, of Shamokin. ] spent several days with Mrs. Emma i Raker.—Mrs. Omega Bowman and ! children are spending several weeks I with her parents} Mr. and Mrs. John I Xoblet.—Mrs. Henry Fetternian, of j Allentown, spent several days at the i home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sny- I der.—Margaret .Snyder left for Har- . risburg, where she will take a | course in the School of Commerce. ! ARMY OFFIC ERS HURT Gettysburg, Pa., Oct. 5." An auto mobile, containing a number of of- j fleers from Camp Colt, on their way to i York, was overturned at a grade in the road where the Western Maryland Railway crosses Orange street, in New ! Oxford, last Saturday evening. Lieu- j tenant Noilon has his left arm frac- j tured and the other occupants were , all somewhat less seriously injured, j The car was wrecked. The driver ex- j perlenced some trouble with the ma chine before the accident and was j in search of a garage, which explains ■ why the car was driven off of the J route of the main highway. * j BISHOP CONFIRMS CL.VSS . t(rttx*bnrg. Pa.. Oct. 5. The Rev. | •Pflilip R? JlCDevitt. D. D., Bishop of I the Harrisburg Diocese of the Catho lic. Church, paid his first official visit! to Fairfield last Sunday and after high I mass confirmed a class numbering ! twenty-six child "en and six adults. STRAWBERRIES IN OCTOBER Gettysburg, Pa., Oct. 5. George Hummer, of New Ox'ord, picked more than a quart of the everbearing va riety of strawberries from the patch in his garden last Saturday, almost Ithe end of September. On Juno 1 he picked forty-three quarts from the I same patch and every week since | that time the yield has been from one j to two quarts. What Gorgsia Mnkrs Gorges Guarantees When you feel the Grippe coming head it off with 0-paac Knocks a Cold Overnight Quickest Remedy for the GRIPPE Small Chocolate Covered Tablets—Easy to Take 25c the Box GORGAS' DRUG STORE 16 North Third St. Pennsylvania Station 5
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