|Bl| Re^diiv^fir^^raeivtdl iKe KnvaKi \ "When a Girl Marries" < By ANN LISLE £ A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing i Problems of a Girl Wife CHAPTER XLVIII (Copyright, 1918, by King Feature Syndicate. Inc.) "Jim, you aren't going to—put any money on these races, are you?" I whispered anxiously as our car crept into a long line of motors moving slowly by the green fences, behind which was the Hardegrift Motor. Cup Race was to be run. , "It's a great day, Anne, and I ex aect to have a bully time—so no lectures," laughed Jim with boyish sweetness intended to take vje sting from his words. I didn't. I had to do a little reso le winking of both eyes bdfore I risk opening them on the tur ._ail of the scene about me. Up a white ribbon of road we crawled in oui maroon car. And there, under the direction of uni formed police, we were suddenly re leased from the tortuous slowness' of our approach to the field and went darting through the green gate J Into a swarm of tightly packed I cars. Overhead airplanes were darting , about —dipping and whirling and circling like giant dragonflies. Every where there were droning and buz zing and the warm sunlit air whistled all about us as it blew in with a fresh tang from the sea. It was the first time I had gone to a great automobile race, and my heart raced and sang with the won der of it all and of course I wanted to share my feelings with Jim. But when I turned to slip my hand into DORA SHELDON HAS NEW VIEW OF LIFE Carlisle Resident Declares It's Like a New World to Iler Now "It looks like a new world to me nowadays," says Dora Sheldon, of Carlisle, Pa., "for I am at last able to wolk in comfort after suffering such misery for so long. "For a long time I have been af flicted with a swelling of my legs. "I tried this, that and the other medicine, but none of them did me a particle of good, and I was in despair when I read about Tanlac helping some one who was afflicted much as I was. "I began taking Tanlac and In a few days I noticed that the swell ing was going down and soon it dis appeared entirely. "Now I have no signs of any swelling and I feel wonderfully im proved all over." Tanlac is now being introduced fcere at Gorgas' Drug Store. Tanlac is also sold at the Gor gas Drug Store in the P. R. R. Sta tion; in Carlisle at W. G. Stephens' Pharmacy; Elizabeth town, Albert W. Cain; Greencastle, Charles B. Carl; Middletown, Colin S. Few's Phar macy; Waynesboro, Clarence Croft's Pharmacy: Mechanicsburg, H. F. Brunhouse. The genuine Tanlac bears the name "J. I. Gore Co." on outside carton of each bottle. Look for it. RHEUMATISM LEAVES YOU FOREVER Deep Seated trie Aeld Deposits Are Dissolved anil the Rheumatic Tol nqa Starts to Leave the System \\ itlila Twenty-four Hours Every druggist in this county is authorized to say to every rheumatic sufferer in this vicinity that if two bottles of Allenrliu,, the sure con queror of rheumatism, does not stop all agonv, reduce swollen joints and do away wiih even the slightest twinge of rheumatic pain, he will gladly return your money without comment. Allenrhu has been tried and tested for years, and really marvelous re sults have be.it accomplished in the , most severe eases where the suffer- ' ing and agony was intense and pite ous and where the patient was help less. Allenrhu relieves at once. Imme diately after you start to take it the g.,od work begins. It searches out the uric acid deposits, dissolves the secretions and drives rheumatic • oi son out of the body through tlif kidneys and bowels. It's marvelous how quickly It acts Blessed relief often comes in two days, and oven in cases where the Idft'ering is most painful all traces disappear in a few days. G. A. Gor gas can supply you. || JOIN OUR CLASSES NOW I SPECIALISTS IN EACH DEPARTMENT I SCHOOL OF COMMERCE i m Harrisburg's Leading and Accredited Business College It! Cft TROUP BUILDING 15 S. MARKET SQUARE H Bell 485 Day and Night School Dial 4393 Write, Phone or Call—Send for Catalog ■ A Representative WiJl Call Upon Request -• - s: - •' : • -1- I'tffiiiii"ii ywtfiiMauiiaim . ±m. || |j II tTWIITHHIII I IB—■ Absolutely Ho Fain js K'J'-' - {A My latest Imprortl appll- Jw a tires, tnolndtag as oxayaea- a. Am I laed air apparatus, makes aJS >rg I \n£, Miinctlng and all deatal .py A? I "k oualtlvely palnl-as k pKESKfcfIS and Is parfsetly harm- .W .rN Jrn leas, dps na Pall set •( EXAMINATION FREE AT Registered AdhV "J I®* 1 ®* dally B.SO * - *? OradMta XT a—day and Saturday, ttu d Sartadaata A R ALW V J* aa. m. m , BELL PHOFtB U22-R. S m mast ticiuii op if S 328 Market SL g (Om the Hah) f HARRISBURQ, PA. it duat hurt a ait I TUESDAY EVENING, Jim's he had been pushed ahead of me by the jostling crowd, and I caught a glimpse of him holding Evvy In front of him and steering her by her elbows, so she was free of the mob that was bruiting about me as it surged along. "Alright, Mrs. Jimmy I'm bring ing up the rear, and Betty's on the flank," sang out Terry's voice just as I was ready to get panicky over the strangeness of it all. Then Betty's hand found mine, and together we three came to the box where Jim and Evy were wtming and there Sheldon and Neal pres ently brought Virginia and Phoebe. There wasn't room for all of us, | but of course Evvy and Sheldon i weren't allowed to go to their own | seats, and again Evvy sat with wide i blue eyes focussed on my husband, i and quivering red lips murmuring to him, while her little right hand i beat on his arm with determined j | insistence. I wondered if the airplane flying [.overhead caused the wild glint in [ I Jim's eyes—or whether Evvy's words j had power to move him so. Then Jim rose and cried reck lessly: "All right, here's to your I hunch —the eight-to-one shot!" And ho darted out of the box. Evvy smiled complacently, settled j her furs about her and turned to I Xeal. "Jim's gone to put his money up j on the Yankee kid, Grayson," she I said. "You'd better chase after a 'bookie,' too, lad" i But Phoebe laid her hand quietly j I upon Neal'B coat sleeve, and my j young brother remarked indifferently j j that just watching was enough to j i give him heart disease even with ! out having to worry about his sal [ ary. Whereupon Phoebe fed him | a caromel with an absurd little i material air that made even Vir ginia laugh, and I had to laugh also, like one of a chorus. But I did not laugh again during the long hour I waited for Jim to return. At last he came and sank into the chair beside me, just behind the one in which Evvy sat. He leaned forward gripping the top of her chair and whispered to her. And now the droning airplanes were I sinking to the level green at the hot- | torn of the "bowl," pit-boys and I repair men were darting about in i their little dug-outs along the in ner circle of the track, and the j grand stand there on one sector of the irim was leaning forward to a man watching the giant cars wheel into place, while the drivers and mechanicians groomed them as lov ingly as if they'd been high-strung race-horses to nuzzle against the hands that had trained them. Then the crack of a pistol and thunder and lightning seemed to burst upon us, as with popping of ex hausts and the heavy droning of engines—the great cars started on the hundred mile race that would take them fifty laps around the deep concave of the track. When the cars reached the far side of the field the grandstand rose and, peering field glasses, shouted that Wetmore, the favorite, was lead- Claims Dandruff Will Cause Baldness If you have dandruff you must get rid of it quick—it's positively dan gerous and w'il surely ruin your hair if you don't. Dandruffy heads mean faded, brit tle, gray, scrafgly hair that finally dies and falls out —new hair will not grow—then you are bald and noth ing can help you. The only sure way to abolish dan druff for good is to destroy the germ that causes it. To do this quickly, surely and safely, and at litile ex pense. there is nothing so effective us Parisian sage, which you can get from Kennedy's Drug Store and good druggists everywhere. It is guaran teed to banish dandruff, stop itching scalp and failing hair, and promote a nejv growth, or the cost, small us it is, will be refunded. Parisian sage is a scientific prep aration that supplies all hair needs an antiseptic liquid neither sticky or greasy, easy to apply, and delicately perfumed. If you want beautiful soft, thick, lustrous hair, and lots of it by all means use Parisian sage. Don't de ay—begin tonight—a little attention IOW in.-fures abundant hair for years to come.—Adv. Bringing. Up Father - Copyright, 1918, International News Service -/- -*- McManus IIF ANf OF FRifnds S Til OH'. I (jOPPOSE j( NO INOECO -JUST THERE'b A FRIEMD OF I ("TTTZTT i I JAMES" WHAT 1 •Ti ! fl I COE'3 Tw'b J\j yougmsw* | ing and "the Frenchman" had nosed ahead of the gray car. Crouch ing low we saw them whirl by in that formation again and again— ten laps—fifteen Wetmore the Frenchman—the gray car. Back in the ruck the Yankee kid drove, half hidden behind the heel of his low hung cream-colored car. At the eighteenth lap he had come to tenth place. At the twentieth he was eight. Then the gray car skidded, slowed up, and panted to the pit edge, where the repair men jacked it up and all in a minute or two had put on a new wheel and jerked off ono with a flat tire. At the twenty-flfth lap with the race half over, —the Yankee kid whirled by in sixth place. Then Jim loses his hold upon the top rung of Evvy's chair, and turned to smile at me. He was wan and gray. I laid my hand in his and he crushed it fiercely for a moment. Then the pressure of his icy fingers relaxed and he hunched forward again, hanging over the top of Evvy's chair. And then like a young demon that Yankee kid drove by again and again—annihilating space in the roar of his throbbing engine and whirling wheels. He was third. He was drawing up on the Frenchman again—and the flag waved for the last lap—and with a roar the cream colored car dashed by and out on the track beyond the tape the win ner. Ewy turned and smiled full in Jim's eyes. "Did you play for place or to win?" she cried in a tone that fairly glittered out in crispness unlike her usual purring huskiness. "To win—as you told me. That was a real hunch, little Ewy. And now for your reward. Name it! Nothing's to good for you—partner. X can't thank you Jim's voice came in husky gasps; then it trailed off. His face was gray arid his mouth twitched. For all the warmth of the sun which still rode high he looked cold. Ewy gave him a slow glance from eyes that veiled themselves languorously in closely curtained lashes. Her voice dripped honey as she murmured her answer: "Jimmie-boy, you must take your little partner to dinner." To Be Continued 18,000 Yanks to Start For Home in Few Days London, Nov. 19.—The first Amer ican troops to depart homeward as a result of the signing of the armis tice will be 180,000 men, stationed in England. The American Army expects to start the first shipload of these sol diers within a week, and to have all of the 180,000 on their way back I to the United States ten days later. Plans for clearing England of American troops are incomplete, but it is desired to remove these men immediately 'as some shipping is available for this purpose. Most of the 180,000 men are helping the Brit ish air force. Belief is expressed at army head- j quarters that few Americans will be left long in England, as it is thought that the hospitals in France can care for future needs. SANTA CLAI'S FIGHTERS American Army Headquarters, Tours, France, Nov. 19.—The Ameri can troops participating in the expe ditions in Russia byway of Arch angel and Vladivostok are equipped in the most complete manner to re sist the northern cold. They were fitted out by the United States Army Quartermaster's Department in Eng land and France with white sheep skin parkas, which are slip-on over coats resembling Santa Claus outfits. Don't Suffer From Piles A a Matter It Ton Believe an Opera* tlon Necessary, Send at Once tvr a Free Trial of Pyramid Pile Treatment- Try Pyramid first. It will glre quick relief and has saved thousands from the knife. A free trial will Good Look WllKoot Good Health Aro An Awful Disappointment. convince. Send today or better still, get a 60 cent box of Pyramid Pilo Treatment at any drug store. It Is the right thing to do. Do it for your own sake, to stop itching, bleeding or protruding piles, hem orrhoids and such rectal troubles Take no substitute. FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYRAMID DRTTO COMPANY. *67 Pyramid Bq tiding.. Marshall, Mich. Kindly send me a Free sample of Pyramid Pita Treatment, In plain wrapper. Name . ................... . Street City ..State... HXRRISBURG ftfWWH TELEGRAPH 0 MAKING THE MOST OF- A OUR CHILDREN U A Series of Plain Talks to Ray C. Beery, A.8., MJL President of the Parents Association. (Copyright, tho Parents Association, inc.) "Chester Is so peculiar about eat ing," said "a mother as she started to put a piece of meat on Chester's plate. "He won't eat bread—he won't eat potatoes—about the only things he will eat are lean meat, pie, etc." She didn't need to say any more she told the whole story In a nut shell. The very idea of saying this before Chester is wrong. Why, of course, Chester doesn't like bread. Hfs mother said he doesn't. If he wasn't sure of It before, he cer tainly 1s now. Suggestion has a powerful Influ ence upon behavior. As parents, we ought to make it our daily ally In stead of our enemy. Let us take a case just reported by a parent. "I have much trouble with my little boy three-and-a-half •ears old at the table. He will not eat what we set before him. He will take one mouthful of • something, and then remember some toy he wants to play with, and leave the table, and I can't get him back. How shall. I man age him?" Devote two or three minutes' time with the boy, just before he sits up to the table. In playing with him and co-operating with him in a way to put him in a very friendly attitude toward you. Then when you go to the table, let him understand by your calm but firm attitude that he Is to eat what you set before him. Put before him only a very small hit at a time and simply expect him to eat it. So many parents have the habit of asking the child If he does n't want this and if he doesn't want that. But this Is a mistake. Chil dren of this age do not know what their bodies need. Very often I find boys who refuse most anything un less It Is rich or tastes sweet like candy. LITTLE TALKS BY BE A TRICE FAIRFAX Common sense is steadily making its way into the home. In particu lar, I am thinking of the changes it has brought about in th 6 average husband. Shall I give an instance of what I mean? The married man of to day doesn't pretend that he cannot wash dishes. When it's necessary for him to help out by doing so, he cheerfully envelops himself in an apron, turns on the hot water faucet and goes to work without any affectation either of helpless ness or of being imposed upon. And to my mind this Is a very great advance In sensible family co-operation. I want to help it along. The Old-Fashloned Husband Just recall for a moment, byway of contrast, the old-fashioned hus band. Ho flourished, many hundreds of thousands of him, until a very few years ago. He had a long list of virtues, as we all know, but he was still very much tangled up In all manner of Inherited notions and prejudices. He believed, for Instance, and his wife never dreamed of questioning It, that any form of housework was debasing to masculirio dignity. This Idea was strengthened by the associated belief that men were by nature unfitted to handle mops, brooms and dishcloths, and that they were also In these respects un teachable. I suppose no Individual man could be blamed for believing these things. It was simply the way they were all brought up, Man's Dignity at Stake So, when one of them happened to be In the room where any of these household arts were being practised, where a tired, over worked woman, was eooking or scrubbing or washing dishes, it was the old-fashioned husband's prac tise to look the other way. There absolutely were no circumstances In which he would offer to help out. It was the sort of thing a man didn't do. And a man's supreme obligation was to be manlike, Then somebody Invented a for njula which certainly protected hus bands a great deal and may also have given some Imaginary relief to overworked wives. It had to do with what was called the division of labor In a family, The husband , But the big trouble with asking the child what he wants Is that he takes advantage and gets to think ing that unless he wants a thing badly, he doesn't need to take It even though his parents command it. Therefore, it is better not to make it a practice to keep asking the child what he wants. Bo especially careful not to seem to put too much attention on the boy at meal time. Very many children are spoiled from this cause. And It is still worse for a parent or any adult to make remarks at the table about what the boy likes or dislikes. Have an understanding with the other members of the family that no one Is to comment upon the child's behavior either at the table or between meals. N If you want him to like bread, of course, you could use suggestion to advantage by giving him just a very little for a few meals and then starting to tell others In his pres ence that he is a great bread-eater. A boy tends to live up to his repu tation. And you can make use of this fact just as easily as to let It work against you, if you use sugges tion in the right way. After your boy once gets down from his chair, do not even allow him to come back, much less coax him to come back. Start him in the rlg.it habits immediately. If he doesn't get enough to eat before he leaves, see that he has some nour ishing food that he especially likes at the next meal. Treat this boy as nearly like others at the table as possible. Keep him very friendly by playing with him but maintain an attitude of deliberate flrptness as to the way you want him to act at the table. You may see little progress at first unless you are a very keen observer, but this policy consistently carried out will effectively solve your prob lem. earned all the money to support the family, people said, so it was only fair that all the work inside the home, care of the children, housework, sewing, washing and other light feminine tasks should fall to the wife's share. This sounded plausible, and in some cases it worked out fairly. But in many other families the truth was that the husband worked his eight or nine hours a day and then rested, as any of us would pre fer to do, whereas the wife and mother was continuously on duty for twenty-four hours a day and for three hundred and sixty-five days in the year. So this kind of "division of labor" hadn't much to recommend it, from the woman's point of view. I must repeat that these men were not .monsters of selfishness. It was simply that they had al ways looked at things in a blind way, and nothing in tho world is harder to overcome than this sort of blindness. It may be that Borne of them went fishing and camping now and then, and during those in tervals cooked, cleaned and scrub bed with perfect efficiency. But such accomplishments as these were carefully packed away with the fishing tackle. Romemberlng all these things, I feel that a highly important mile stone was.reached when men first came to see that they could help out a tired woman In a bit of house hold drudgery without suffering the slightest loss In manly pride and prestige and all the rest of It. Domestic Ignorance n Disgrace I doubt whether any human being really llkoß to wash dishes, and I can see no reason why women should like It any better than men. But It is cortainly a disgrace for any adult not to know how to wash dishes and not to stand ready to do It whenever, for the moment, that may seem to be one's Job, And this Is a husband's Job now and then In almost every home that I can think of, Homes where all the drudgery la performed by servants are numeri cally few In proportion to the rest of the population, And even In that class of society one hears Idle women with frightened faces each other where the servants of the future are coining from, be cause the servant supply 1b giving out. i But in the bulk of American homes the work has to be done without outside help. And there is usually more of it than one woman can do alone, particularly if she is an intelligent mother and takes con scientious care of her children. This is what the presdnt day hus band has come to understand. He may feel tired at night when the evening meal is over. But it is a fairly Bafe guess that his wife is still fflore tired. So, without stop ping to-prove this question one way or the other, he, in a perfectly cheerful, matter-of-fact way, helps her get the kitchen In order be fore either of them sits down to read the evening paper. Modern Domestic Partnership After all, it's so much friendlier to divide the drudgery, whether ; one's wife is overworked or not. And it gives two people who are theoretically domestic partners a chance to talk things over after a day's separation. It's a good rem edy for that habit of domestic silence that sometimes overtakes worried men and tired women and that is such a blight upon family •t " Announcement: To help meet the needs of the Wrigley's has discontinued the use of tin foil , as a wrapping for Hereafter all three WRiGLEY flavors will be sealed in air-tight, pink-end packages. your choice, of fla vor. Three kinds to suit all tastes. SEALED TIGHT—KEPT IHGHT Be SURE you get Wrigley's— The Flavor Lasts! 5 NOVEMBER 19, 1918. life and childhood happiness. I be-| lieve homes are Infinitely happier i places since husbands and fathers j agreed to. forget some of their ut-1 terly useless masculine dignity and to take a share in family life like sensible, practical human beings. Then it must be a relief to men not to have to pretend any longer that they can't do certain useful things that women have always done. It is true that the pretending hasn't been all on their side. Wom-| en have had to petend they couldn't drive nails, which is quite as absurd as the idea that men cannot wash dishes. But it is no longer "un ladylike" for a woman to do any useful thing she may want to, any more than it is "unmanly" for a man to help his wife at home. The world is really growing up a little. We are getting rid of ever so many childishnesses. Roys Trained to Help Mother Mothers who have realized for themselves what I have just been pointing out are naturally educat ing their boys in a new way. If a twelve-year-old girl is expected to help her mother prepare the vege tables for dinner, her thirteen-year old brother is not supposed to sit still and watch her. He has his own task, which he takes as a mat ! ter of course. It's Rood for his I hands to learn dexterity and It is j good for his soul to learn thought ! fulness and unselfishness and it is good for the family happiness to have everybody In It take a share of the work. Should men ever help with the i housework? Isn't that an extremely old-fash ioned question? And wouldn't all the sensible, happy homeß of the i present day answer it overwhelm ; ingly in the affirmative? Cuticura Soap IS IDEAL ——— For the Hands Snap Se., Ointment % k Tatoom 80. Sample each mallei frw by "Citoim. Pop*. K. Bootno." ASTS3IWA p " There la no "cure* MHgiL but relief U often brought by— I ialfJ NEW PRICES—3Oc, 60c. $1.20 7