jJiPj isr^^r&eiv<3avJ <3dl iKe R&reJK| jjffifpj "When a Girl Marries " By ANN TiISJjE A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorb ing Problems of a Girl Wife. CHAPTER XXXII (Copyright, 1918, hy King Features Syndicate, Inc.) Sunday was a riot of blue skies and golden sunlight and soft breezes that whispered gay little invitations to come out and play. After break fast my husband hurried off to keep his appointment with a man up state. and Xeal and 1 fell upon the dishes and washed and dried them and gossiped with a vim. "Say, Babbsie, at the rate we're going we won't be done when that husband of yours gets back. Say, lie's a winner! He can have me all right if he'll always treat mfe as white as he did his morning. Lady Evelyn says it 'won't hurt for me to kind of follow his lead once in a while. She thinks he's all right, too," said N'eal, turning mattresses with brisk vigor. • A minute later he added: "I've a date with —her to-day. Say, sposin' you finish your room and I do mine and we see who beats. Otherwise we'll never get through." "Righto, Nealte! Only it's no fair leaving dust in corners," I agreed light -heartedly. Hadn't my young brother just called my husband a winner*' If my boys liked each oth er. if we had our own happy little family group, if Jim found work— then Jim and I would be woven into the very pattern of each other's (Jaily lives, and I would never again have the pang of feeling the "out sider." His old life would slip away into a background of unimportant memory and his real life would date from the hour he had found me. I dreamed as I worked, and little snatches of song rose to my lips. I wonder if every woman longs as I do to be all-in-all to the man she lotesr I must mean everything to my Jim—as he does to me. Quickly and deftly my happy ding ers completed their taskd. "I win. Xeal," I cried, actually hlppity-hopping to the door of the living room. There stood Xeal over by the big carved Florentine chest. Its lid was thrown back, and in my brother's 'hands was the shimmering blue and green robe Tom Mason had—given me. I dashed across the room and tried to snatch the lustrous thing from Xeal's hands. Rut Xeal .turned, twisted it from my grasp and swung the silk high above his head where it winked at me evilly. "Tush, tush. Barbara Anne, why this jtnseemly haste?" questioned ; my brother in a teasing voice. "Give if to me? Give it to me'!" I ' cried. "Come and take it," laughed Neal, 1 sliding across the floor and brand- < ® on Wash Day ffl fiW A>• SPHERE is an easier way out of the R Uf ,1 A hard work and your clothes will ' f W/ljm look whiter and cleaner. Go to your % ea^er ' S an( * 6t a P ac^ a^e °* % BORAX SOAP CHIPS I and make a Soap Jelly in this manner. To ! a quart of water add three tablespoonfuls of 20 Mule Team Borax Chips and boil. Pour enough of this solution into the wash water to B make a good sudg. Then soak or boil clothes | as usual. 1 Don't rub—they will come out snowy white 'h 11 and hygienically clean. & R "Will 20 Mule Team Borax $. "OA■. M > t i Chips will not shrink R "'flll||-|Tll| '(A 1® I woolens or injure dainty h y* W- 1 i! : j fabrics. An 8 oz. pack- £ OVegS3f "1 r ' J age of 20 Mule Borax t -1 h \ Soap Chips equals 25c jj| ip ;1 soap " I NO^r?Hi?CH tN 111 SKI /f' ike Bora* with ike If rj?w ||jf chips that dote the work j ffil ifflißL.. PEALER9 | (j'" di'gestwhatUttl^ou^ - One or two doses VlfStfh. ARMY & NAVY •oJMrjQtok DYSPEPSIA TABLETS |s| will make you feel ten years younger. Best known remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach (■■o and Dyspepsia. ' 25 cents a package at all Druggists, or sent to any address postpaid, by the U. S. ARMY & NAVY TABLET C(X 260 West Broadway, N.Y- SATURDAY EVENING, . ishing the flashing robe above his head. "Don't tease. Neal —give it to me!" ; I cried in exasperation that was j almost tearful. Then his teasing look turned sud ] dently to an earnest one. "What do you want to do with this—thingumabob. Babbsie?" ; "I want to hide it away!" "Hide it! From whom?" j "From myself. Neal." "Sure it's not from your hus 'band ?" i "Neal! What do you mean?" J "I want to know what you mean, • Babbsie—having all this heavy, em j broidered stuff made into some sort j of a dress and hid-den away," said 3 j my brother, sternly. And as I faced the sturdy deter s mination in his young eyes J knew s with relief that at last I was going I to tell the story of that "haunted" * | robe! And when I had told him - j how Tom Mason had made me a > ! gift—an unwelcome one —hut still -j a gift—of that priceless robe, my ! I brother was • fairly furious. He i J stormed out that I must send it back at once, and that he'd fix any cad i j who dared insult his sister by | ■ j forcing presnts of clothes upon her. i , i "Xeal. you're right. You and I I I have different standards. We aren't 1 ! new fashioned city folk, but sim ple. homey country people—and I'm proud of it and I'm going to be what I am as honestly as I can. Nonf. put the robe away. dear. I'll tell my ! husband about it as soon as he j comes in, and then he and I together I will send it back to Mr. Mason." Neal kissed me, hugging me ! tight: i "You need some one to look out 1 for you, Babbsie—some one who understands you. Maybe it's going ito turn out for the best that I | came." j This disquieted me. Did Neal I mean to insinuate that Jim didn't un derstand me? And why should his owning to New York not turn out well ?" I tied his tie, helped him smooth S down the rebellious waves of his i flamboyant red hair and sent him | off to join his "Lady Evelyn." Then ! I got out my mending and stitched I a little ot my love into the criss cross of Jim's socks. At noon I put the roast of lamb into the oven, j At one I began peeling the potatoes i and carrots —a fine hot dinner ; should be awaiting my boy when ihe returned —that would refresh | him and help him over disappoint ; ment perhaps. But there was no disappointment. Even my boy's limp had lost some of it's weary drag, for as he hur j ried in a few moment's later, he ! shouted boyishly that he had a job. |- j "To-morrow Xeal and I start off i : for the workingman's life togeth ! er!" he cried, enveloping me in a | I bear hug. "Litttle brother has noth ' ing on me. I'm inspector in a cap ; I factory. Don't know nothing about j ! caps—or inspecting, but this pays | ! eighteen hundred a year and may : lead right to the presidency." i After our first rejoicing was over. ; I pulled Jim down at my side on the j ! big couch and told him the story of j | the blue robe. At first I didn't dare j ' raise my eyes to his face—the words ; ! came stumbling out in cold panic. 1 I ' sat staring out ahead of me with j cold hands clasped—then, for corn- Up Father Copyright, 1918, International News Service *•* *-* By McManus 'I •* •*••*<* "h | i ysi | MH IMi TTI 1 X r ====z LUCK>, LA-)T NKHT SEE HOW MOCH I - | 1 TVEMT^-OMt- I wors A LOT OF I V . vJSJ f JN • J ii I TwEHTT TWO money PL^, N - * • ... ° J '*'! TVENTXTHRfF- fort, I reached over and seized the lapels of Jim's coat and dragged my eyes up to his. He was smiling! "You aren't angry?" I gasped. Neal had been so very angry. "Angry?" Jim swept his hands down and caught my wrists —he lifted them and laid a kiss in each palm. "Poor little frightened girl— did she think her big tyrant hus band had shut her up in a Blue beard tower?" "You'd let me accept presents I from other men?" X gasped in a whirl. Jim threw back his head and fairly shouted. "Take all you can get—kiddie. That's the law of so ciety. Of course, I wouldn't have you push that to extremes. But the iebe was right here in the apart ment and Tom threw it in as part of the rent. He's rich —it won't hurt' him to be a little generous to us." ' I drew away—offended. Jim's j words hurt me. Had my husband no real pride for me —or for him self?" (To Be Continued) A Friendly Enemy who had coolfed for two generations of Johnsons, could cer tainly make sauerkraui. Crisp, white and to just the' right degree briney, it would have tickled the pa lates of her ancestors in Saxony. It could not nave been improved up on by her old grandmother who had brought her to America fifty years before Also it was one of the prides of the Johnsons' menus—-until some over-zealous patriot sniffed at the once popular dih and refused it. Besides, she told a neighbor, there must be something very queer aboyt a family named Johnson that doted on such a German dish! Then the young Johnsons rose up. * "No more sauerkraut." said they. "Lena is using German propaganda on us." So sauerkraut was interned as a dangerous alien enemy for a week. Then Mrs. Johnson began to think it over. She looked up the origin of the dish. She read the sugges tions of the Food Admtnistation on the subject, and the next evening announced her stand to the family. "In the first place," she said, "I have found that historically sauer kraut is of Dutch origin, rather than German. Also, I am firmly con vinced that it is patriotic to eat it. and foolish not to. Cabbage is now fresh from the garden we have been cultivating all summer. It is exactly the kind of food that the Food Ad ministration 'asks sua to eat because it is home-grown, perishable, and not one of the staples that we have to send abroad. So the next day Lena began to make sauerkraut again. She first cut the heads of cabbage into long, line shreds, and put them into a big jar in layers, with salt sprinkled thickly between She mashed each layer down with a hard-wood weight. After twenty days, she took the jar out of the cellar, where she had put it because she wanted the tem perature of about sixty degrees for it, and she saw that the process of curing was complete, because bub bles had ceased to rise at the edge of thtpjar. That night the youngest Johnson helped himself to a generous por tion of sauerkraut, to eat with his cold meat, and said: "Well 1 guess old Lena and her sauerkraut are all right after all. And besides wasn't it silly to call cabbage German, when it grows right in our own yard?" Miss Elizabeth S. Engle Announces Her Engagement Elisabethville, Pa., Oct, 12, —At a . party given several days ago, Miss i Elizabeth S. Engle announced her | engagement to David C. Witmer, of Donegal Springs. Those present were: Grace Heisey, Shippensburg; Miriam , Enslow. Donegal; Theodora Pearson, j Philadelphia; Kathryn Zug, Donegal; Edna Heishey, Mount Joy; Clara Bolster, Manheim; Mary Carter, Co lumbia; Pauline Garber, Bainbrldge; Pauline Clark, Heishey; Helen Gross, Elizabethtown; Myrtle Binkley and Abram Forney, Elizabethtown. • P. R. R. Operator Chas. H. Wormley, visited friends at Harrisburg, this j week. Mathew Beamesderfer and | family, of Lebanon, spent several j days with Mr. and Mrs. William ' Beamesderfer. Lloyd Murphy an . employe of the Pennsylvania Rail- | road is ill. —Miss Mary Yeager, of j Manheim, is the guest of her sister, ' Mrs. H. H. Heagy at the Black Horse . hotel in South Market street— I Paul Kleffer, a clerk at the Post Of- . lice is ill at his home in Washington ! street. —Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Brandt, daughter aryi son, and Miss Virginia 'Martin were the guests of relatives at Bainbrldge.—S. B. Kieffer and I Milton Kepner are on a trip to Mid- j dletown. —George Eby and family, of j Shippensburg and A. D. Ulrich and family, of Palmyra, attended the funeral of Walter G. Heishey on Thursday.—Charles H. Weidman is ill at his Park street home.—Tillman EberßOle and family,, of Quarryville, are guests of D. M. Reese.—Mrs. J. S. Carmany, of Florin, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Dierolf.—Roy Wormley and Millard Galebach, who had been stationed at Camp Green leaf, Ga.. have been transferred to Camp Upton, N. Y. , HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH I Little Talks by Beatrice Fairfax B.v BEATRICE FAIRFAX Some one—a man, of course— has written a letter asking me to define the difference between an old maid and a bachelor girl. I don't know what the diction aries have to say* on the subject, or | if they discourse .to any extent on ! the space thta sparates these two j states, but to the world at large ithe dissimilarity is as the poles. ! To be an "old maid" denotes a 'state of mind rather than a con dition of single blessedness, and is Iby no means confined to the female I sex. Old maids in trousers and I Derby hats and taking pride in mustaches and pointed beafds in fest our street cars, professions and public offices. The old maid may be determined by a' tendency -.to ossify, or turn to bone, usuallv be ginning at the head, j They are opposed to change of I any sort, they like things to keep ion in the same old rut, because j they had always ben tha't way from their earliest recollections. I The genuine article, of either six, |is more concerned with things than ! principles. A world war may be • raging, nations pershing of starva tion or by the sword, but the real j .ssue of life to the gentlemanly old I maid will be: "Are my suspenders where 1 have them every night?" [And to the ladylike old maid: "is my hat on straight?" ! Their world is bounded on the | north by "Me" on the south by "My I Things," on the east by "What I [Think," andon the west by "What [I Feel About Other People." Some times a genuine old maid marries, but not often; the responsibilit of seeing some one's else shdes ar ranged at what may be an offending 'angle is too great a responsibility. I Better go through life unloved, [unwed, unmourned, than take such [chances. To the simon pure O. M. | there are really no such things as days or the week; instead, there is ["The day 1 go to church, ride in a [Ford, ferry or trolley, according to my circumstances. Monday is my -Monday, but the day I have my [clothes washed. Tuesday, the day I eat the last of the cold roast. Wed nesday, the day my sweeping is done. Thursday, the day I go to the movies or indulge t myself in some such recreation, etc! "In like manner, 1914 is n-ot the year of the world war, but the year I set out my scarlet runners, or had I my front tooth filled with porce- 1 lain." "Prunes ami Prisms Preferred" This self-centered ' product had [ flashes of patriotism, and would i honestly enjoy buying Thrift i Stamps, War Savings Certificates, or even a Liberty Bond or two, but the habit of vniesting in "Prunes and i Prisims preferred" has been formed i and the O. M. cant bear the thought j of risking a change. For very much the same reason your typical O. M. is always an anti-suffragist, for the compelling motive that his or her grandmother was one. Why they do not wear caps and hoopskirts for the same reason it is diffieutl to follow. We have old maids of this type in the Sente, House and State Legis lature. We have always had them, and like the Biblical poor, we shall have them perpetually. The impa tient reformer does not always see it, but these reactionaries are a valuable spur to all forward move ments. They are the pebbles that give | greater momentum to the stream of ! progress. But we think of them I and lament their presence in Tenny- ] son's apt phrase: "A yet-warm 1 corpse, and yet unburiable." Not ] long ago, one of these ran for the I Presidency, he also undertook an 1 unsiiccessful pleasure excursion, at the government's expense, for which a certain club awarded him a, medal i for valor. I do not know the inscrip- ! tion on this gift horse, but bearing i his record on women suffrage in mind, it might have read: "He has not changed his mind -in fifty j years," Some times the old maid is young, ' as years are counted, but as set as a hard-boiled egg in the matter of j convictions. The crown prince of ! Germany, for instance, sees a per- j ishing world waiting for him to set I it straight. The Bachelor Girl 1 The bashelor girl differs frohi the ] old maid in thflt she.is invariably] feminine. We have no bachelor girls in trousers and wearing mus- j taches and beards, as we have old] maids —and all too many of them. "" i The bachelor girl is a spinster, :and us progressive as the old maid I lis ractionary. The bachelor girl ] almost always marries, and if she [does not, it is for every reason but .'lack of opportunity. She dresses 'well, because she realizes that a |good appearance is the best intro duction and while a dowdy jacket may cover a noble heart, she real izes it will obtain slower recogni tion than if its nobility Were mask ed by one that is up-to-date. I The bachelor girl is human, gen uine and refreshingly free from cant. She is never a Pollyanna— glad because an automobile ran over her, and thereby secured her a ride to the hospital—or some such nonsense. The bachelor girls were the first - to avail themselves of the higher education offered to women, and to 1111 the colleges and prepare for the professions. They were the first ot organize units in France and Bel gium to feed the refugees, care for the lost children and nurse the sick, jand they went prepared for these ! duties. ! They did not invade stricken jeountries full of futile sympathy I and inability to speak a word of jthe language. They ha dless of "Oh, you poor dears," and more of "Je pearle.'' They did, the first thing that came to hajid, and they did it mighty well. A famous war cor respondent tells of a group of them, from. Smith College, whom he met in the north of France helping to repatriate the peasant ry. X ntheir wrecked and desolate homes. They stayed by the work till the Huns were upon them, and then applied the torch to the model village that it had taken thou sands of dollars and months of labor to build, rather than let it fall into the enemys hands. And when they did leave, each one of them came driving her own motor truck and bearing in it a load of helpfell natives. One girl actually brought to shelter a troop of terrified dwarfs, dropped from a stranded caravan. Nok she was a bachelor girl, modern, resourceful, humane. An old maid would have said, in reference to the dwarfs: "Haven't you some thing more pleasant for me to drive?" - TO be an old maid indicates a state o,f mind, to be a bachelor girl denotes a state of grace. Thoughtlessness He wore a service pin upon his coat. Every day at the office he told them proudly how glad l he was that his son could be in ttie "fight even if he himself was too old to go. Then that the sugar shortage was surely bringing the war home to us. "The restaurants, you know, have been cut down so that they only serve you a teaspoonful for your offee and about the same amount for your oatmeal. I like mine sweeter, so I've taken to buying it myself. Then I carry it with me in an en velope." There was silehce in the office for a minute. Then one of the older men spoke up. "My son's wife andsthe two chil dren have come to live with us since John went to war. Their mother's preached to themt I guess. This morning little John took just a half teaspoon of sugar on his cereal. I asked him why he did that, for he loves sweets. What do you suppose he said? 'Why, grandpa, we must feed the world!' " Again there was a silence in the office. But the first man was a good American. "I guess you meant that for me, Stanley. I'm not angry, but I think you know that I have been behind every move our government has made." . " know you have. That's just why i couldn't understand you on this thing. It isn't as if there weren't a reason for it. t isn't as if the whole thing wasn't tied up with getting men overseas and sending them food after they get there. It takes ships to get sugar into the country. It takes ships to get sugar into the country. It's just as if you were holding back your boy because you wanted the ship which might take hint over, to go down to Cuba first and get you some sugar." "I see!" "I know your heart's in the right , place, I know you're proud that your j son has gone and that you're able ! yourself to get in a few good licks at home. But we've all of us got to : learn to think in international terms —or else the autocratic empire over there will teach us how to think nothing but German. I know you're not consciously with the enemy. You're just htoughtless—thats all. But have any of us any right to be thoughtless any more?" "I guess you're right, all right. It has been thoughtlessness. But— well, you're right, no one has a right to be thoughtless now. I don't like I my coffee with only one teaspoonful I of sugar or my oatmeal either—but I I guess I can learn if the rest of | oyu and even the childreh can." i To Save Sugar Use fresh fruits without sugar. Cook dried fruits without addi tional sugar; they already contain sugar. Can more fruit without sugar; put up fewer Jams and jellies. Use leso sugar In tea and coffee; you will soon learn to like It better. Avoid such sugar luxuries as can dy, cakes, chewing gum, sweet drinks and sodas. > Use honey, mapl£ sugar and syr ups and i 'other sweeteners when available. Cut out all desserts or other dishes that require much supar, Illness Due to Change of Drinking Water When people go away from home, or for some other reason change their place of residence. it often hap pens that they have a spell of diges tive trouble. Not uncommonly it is due to water. We are accustomed to think of drinking water as if it were always the same thing—a definite compound which the chemist would call H2O, or two parts of hydrogen and one of oxygen. But it Isn't. Much other stuff is mixed with it. For the water we drink was derived originally from rocks, out of which it has dissolved various mineral salts. Among the latter may possibly be magnesium sulphate, which is Epsom salts, or sodium sulphate, which in the commercial form is known as Glauber's salts. As everybody knows, these are medicinal. Of course, water that contains ap preciable quantities of such ingredi ents Would not be potable. But other salts, if one be unaccustomed to them, may disagree with the diges tive apparatus. We are in the Habit of drinking the brand of water ob tainable in cur neighborhood; it might make a stranger sick. So, on the'other hand, we may visit another locality that has water of a composition to which we are unused, and it may disagree with us —for a while, that is. What Westerners call "alkali wa ter" is simply water so loaded with objectionable mineral constituents that nobody con drink it or get used to it. It may not even be utilizable for cooking. Plants, actually, may be poisoned, instead of refreshed, by it. Y. M. C. A. Necessary For Men Who Serve the Nation Through *''f> fnited War Work '•-encies at No. 60 Vanderbilt avenue. New York, excerpts from a letter from (Jorporal James R. Storey, of Comphny C. 112 th Infantry, A. E. F„ writing from Camp Hancock shortly before leaving for France, have been made public. He wrote: "Without the Y. M. C. A. camp life would not be complete, as the whole some entertainment and religious opportunities it affords are readily recognized by every man in Camp Hancock who has taken advantage of them. Personally, I feel I could not get along without the "Y" for the many pleasant evenings spent there will never be regretted by me, and the people at home can rest assured] that they have invested their money] in a paying proposition, for there is not a man in Camp Hancock who hasj not been benefited by attending and taking advantage of its many whole some facilities. Many Visitors in Dauphin Cottages and Bungalows Dauphin, Oct. 12.—Mr. and Mr 3. Howard Bayley, of New York, are occupying the bungalow for the fall months.—Miss Mary Bohner, who was the guest of Miss Elizabeth Poffenberger, of Erie, has returned to her home at Sunbury.—Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Arthur, of Steelton, spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Ben jamin Gruber, of High street.—Mrs. J. M. Shoop, wife of the Rev. J. M. Shoop, who has been seriously ill. is improving.—F. G. McKill, of Kurzen, was the guest of G. M. Kinter on Wednesday.—Miss Minnie Keyser and William Loose, of Selinsgrove, were guests of Mrs. W. F. Rood. —Miss Vorginla Wallis and Miss Sara Margaret Hawthorn took a hike of fifteen miles on Monday with the Girl Scouts, of Harrlsjjurg. —Ralph Shoop, principal of the Dauphin High school, has resigned to accept a position as teacher at the Steelton High school.—A. G. Austin, of the United States Navy, woh has been spending a furlough with his wife at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Makin, has returned to Charlston, S. C.—Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Deibler, Miss Ruth and Wclling- CUTICURA SOAP , ANDJfINT Heal Blisters On Hands, Itched and Nearly Set Wild. "Blisters would form on my hands and then break. Then they would §form large scales and my hands would crack open and bleed. I could almost tear them off they itched so. The skin was sore and red, and my hands were in flamed and swollen, and •• ■ • when I put them in water it nearly set rne wild. "I' bought a cake of Soap and a box of Ointment, and after two months I was healed, the first time in twenty years." (Signed) Mrs. George L. Ogden, 6933 Paschall Ave., W- Philadelphia, Pa., April 6, 1918. These fragrant emollients are all you need for all toilet purposes. l*0Sl leek-Tree br Melt. Addreee poet-eerd: "Cetlcnre, D-a M. .Soetea" Sold everywhere. Sap Sc. <■". and He. Tekom 25c, OCTOBER 12, 1918. ton Deibler were recent visitors at Halifax.—Mrs. Harrison Lebo, of Harrisburg, spent Wednesday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Dill.—Miss Margaret Brooks and Miss Mary ITmberger were weekend guests of friends at Harrisburg.— Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Maurey and Miss Lydia, have returned from a visit to the Rev. and Mrs. George A. Maurey, at Frackville.—The Rev. W. H. Zweizig, who was ill at the Methodist Hospital, Philadelphia, has returned home much improved in health.—Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Culmerry, of Harrisburg, have been spendng some time with Mrs. Cul nterry's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Beidleman. Joseph H. Flte, of Sparrow's Point. Md., spent the. weekend with his family here. —Mr. and Mrs. Frank Zeider and SPANISH INFLUEHZA-WHfIT IT IS AND HOW IT SHOULD BE TREATED Nothing New—Simply The Old Grip, or la Grippe That Was Epidemic in 1889-90, Only Then It Came From Russia by Way of France and This Time by Way of Spain. ' Go to Bed and Stay Quiet —Tak< A Laxative—Eat Plenty of Nourishing Food—Keep Up Your Strength Nature Is The Only "Cure". ALWAYS CALL A DOCTOF NO OCCASION fOR PANIC Spanish influenza, which appeared in Spain in May, has all the appear ance of grip or la grippe, which has swept over the world in numerous epidemics as far back as history runs. Hippocrates refers to an epi demic in 412 B. C, which is regarded by many to have been influenza. Every century has had its attacks. Beginning with 1831, this country has had five epidemics, the last In i 1889-90. There is no occasion for panic— j influenza Itself has a very low per centage of fatalities—not over one death out of every four hundred cases, according to the N. C. Board of Health. The chief danger lies in complications arising, attacking prin cipally, patients in a run down con dition—those who don't go to bed soon enough, or those who get up too early. THE SYMPTOMS Grippe, or influenza as it is now called, usually begins with a chill followed by aching, feverishness and sometimes nausea and dizziness, and a general feeling of weakness and depression. The temperature is from 100 v to 104, and the fever usually lasts from three to Ave days. The germs attack the mucuous mem j brane, or lining of the air passages —nose, throat and bronchial tubes —there is usually a hard cough, especially bad at night, often times a sore throat or tonsilltis, and fre quently all the appearances of a severe head cold. THE TREATMENT Go to bed at the first symptoms, not only for your own sake but to avoid spreading the disease to others —take a purgative, eat plenty of nourshlng food, remain perfectly quiet and don't worry. Quinine, asprin or Dover's Powder, etc., may be administered by the physician's directions to relieve the aching. But there is no cure or specific for influnza—the disease must run its course. Nature will throw oft the attack if only you keep up your strength. The chief danger lies in the complications which may arise. Influenza so weakens the bodily that there is dan ger of pneumonia or bronchitis de veloping, and sometimes inflamma tion of the middle ear, or heart affections. For these reasons, it is very important that the patient remain in bed until his strength returns—stay in bed at least two days or more after the fever l\as left you, or if you are over 50 or not strong, stay in bed four days or more, according to the severity of the attack. 1 EDUCATE FOR BUSINESS I HE Because business needs you and offers splendid opportunities to I B-' the young man or woman who Is thoroughly prepare^. 1 DAY" OR NIGHT SCHOOL H Bookkeeping. Shorthand, (hand or machine). Typewriting, and I K their correlative subjects. ■ SCHOOL OF COMMERCE I llarrlsborg's Accredited Business College IS South Market Square Write, Phone, or CaU For -Farther Information I BEI.L 483 DIAL 4ni ■ CLOSED UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE Watch This Space For Reopening Date daughter, of HartfSburg, spent Sun day with Mrs. feeider's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Putt.—Augustus Brooks, of Newark, N. J. t spent sev eral days with his sister. Miss Mar garet Brooks.—Mrs. Elmer Weis man and daughter, July Ann, were the guests of the Misses Kinter.—• Miss Ruth Shaffer, a nurse at the Pennsylvania Hospital, of Philadel phia, is spending several days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Shaffer. Miss Shaffer is recov ering from a severe case of influ enza.—Miss Ruth Nauman, of Pitts burgh, and Miss Sabra Clark return ed on Wednesday from Goucher Col lege, Baltimore. Md., the college be ing closed on account of inflifenza. — W. B. Corbett, of Harrisburg, was the guest of Dr. and Mrs. W. P. Clark on Sunday. EXTERNAL APPLICATIONS In order to stimulate the lining of the air passages to throw off the grippe germs, to aid In loosening the Phlegm and keeping the air pass ages open, thus making the breath, ing easier, Vick's Vapoßub will be found effective. Hot, wet towels I should be applied over the throat, chest and back between the shoulder blades to open the pores. Then Vapoßub should be rubbed in ov4r the parts until the skin is red, spread on thickly and cover witli two thicknesses of hot flannel cloths. Leave the clothing loose around the neck as the heat of the body liber ates the ingredients in the from of vapors. These'vapors, inhaled with each breath, carry the medication directly to the parts affected. At the same time, Vapoßub is absorbed thru and stimulates the skin, at tracting the blood to the surface and thus aids in relieving the con gestion within. HOW TO AVOID THE DISEASE Evidence seems to prove that this is a germ disease, spread principally by human contact, chiefly thru coughing, sneezing or spitting. So avoid persons having colds—which means avoiding crowds—common drinking cups, roller towels, etc. Keep up your bodily strength by plenty of exercise in the open air, and good food. Above all, keep from colds, as colds irritate the lin ing of the air passages and render them much better breeding places for the germs. Fse Vick's Vapoßub at the very first sign of a cold. For a head cold, melt a little Vapoßub in a spoon and inhale the vapors, or better still, use Vapoßub in a ben zoin steam kettle. If this is not available, use an ordinary tea-kettle. Fill half-full of boiling water, put in half a teaspoon of Vapoßub from time to time—keep the kettle just slowly boiling and inhale the steam arising. NOTE. Vick's Vapoßub is the discovery of a North Carolina drug gist. who found how to combine, in salve form, Menthol and Camphor with such volatile oils as Eucalyptus. Thyme, Cubebs, etc., so that when the salve is applied to the body heat, these ingredients are liberated in the form of vapors. Vapoßub is comparatively new in New York State and New England and a few Western States where it is just now being introduced, but in other sections of the country it is the standard home remedy in more than a million homes for all forms of cold troubles. Over six million jars were sold last year. It is particularly recommended for children's croup or colds, since it is externally applied and therefore can be used as freely as desired without the slightest harmful effects. Vapo- Rub can be had in three sizes at all druggists. 5