IIIPI Readkcy ail ike |4P|Pf " When a Girl Marries" By ANN IJSLE A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problems of a Girl Wife Copyright, 1918, King Features, Inc. CHAPTER LXXXII When I arrived at the Cllnsarge restaurant and found Pat Dalton. waiting in the tiny foyer, I discov ered that we had the place almost to ourselves. "Handsome Pat" laughed: "Everyone comes to this little restaurant for dinner but the world wants jazz bands to put a kick in its tea. So you see, I've put you wise to a wonderful place to come, Mrs. Jimmie —after the hon eymoon glaniour wears off." "It won't wear off," 1 began in disgust, and then I remembered a recent sermon on fact that Father Andrew had delivered to me —"I'm i pretty sure that I'm at least ster ling, and I know my boy is pure gold." "Gold wears better with a little alloy, airs. Harrison," laughed Pat Dalton cynically. "I came to you because I honestly thought you needed help. Do you?" 1 asked stiffly. "I need it badly," he began sim- i ply—then laughed in his reckless j fashion—"and I'm needing a sup of \ tea —as well." But when I followed Pat Dalton j into the tea room he insisted on drinking cocktails, while 1 had tea. ! "You shouldn't" I began. Playfully he shook his linger at j himself. g "Bad boy, Pat —all the ladies lec- ! i ■ Gentlemen A Word With You About Shaving "p"! 1 fHEXyouhuy jrllfa Safety Ra h "v !n| tor, buy a cake * v 7 j y|| of Cuticura vi "ffv II ■■Soap and yif II shave the Cu- L ticura way, the I hcalth >' up-to-date 6 way. No mug, no slimy soap, no perms, no free alkali, no waste, no | irritation even when shaved twice daily. One soap for all uses—shav ing, bathing, shampooing. Abso lutely nothing like it,not to speak of its value in promoting skin purity, skin comfort and skin health. Larg est selling skin soap in the world. IV Cuticura Toilet Trio 1W Consisting of Soap. Ointment and Talcum are indispensable adjuncts of the daily toi let in maintaining skin purity and skin health. Bringing these delicately medi cated emollients in frequent contact with your skin as in use for alt toilet purpoaes, tends to keep the akin, scalp and hair clear, sweet and healthy. 25c. each everywhere. i HAPPY NEW YEAR Let us Dye Your :■ Garments in the New Liberty || Shade It's going to be the popular tone this N season and the first wearers of the new JJ Liberty Shade will have the pleasure of 11 | being in the first rank of fashion's best j Consult us about this class I "J of work at once. We are II prepared to do it now. IT'S NOT YOUR HEART; IT'S YOUR KIDNEYS Kidney disease Is no respecter of persons. A majority of the ills af flicting people today can be traced back to the kidney trouble. The kidneys are the most import ant organs of the body. They are the fllterers of your blood. If the poisons which are swept from the tissues by the blood are not elimi nated through the kidneys, disease of one form or another will claim you as a victim. Kidney disease is usually indicated by weariness, sleeplessness, nervous ness, depondency, backache, stom ach trouble, pain In loins and lower abdomen, gall stones, gravel, rheu matism, sciatica and lumbago. TUESDAY EVENING, turo you—especially all the Harri son ladies." Then his face hard ened, and he went on in an ugly, reckless tone: "Mrs. Jimmie —you can never be handling a real man with coldness and preaching. Now about that young brother of yours" "I thought you brought me here to talk about yourself," I inter rupted. "I did. But first there's this to say. I've seen young Phoebe come up from a kiddie. I've known Eve lyn Mason since—since Jim got out of her clutches." "You think Jim had a lucky escape?" I interrupted with an un easy laugh that masked my strug gle for composure. "Well—l was pretty close at hand when she—snared Jim. Boy and girl they were. He didn't know what love meant—and she tried to teach him. The money smash —and his wanting to go into the war — wore his decent way out. But if I know Evvy—she'll try to get even. Your brother and Phoebe —may be her way. I'm looking like a cad — but with a woman like that little cat, nothing a man can do to save a—blessed baby like Phoebe is too much." I "Thank you," I said. "I appre ■ ciate the splendid way you're break. I Ing through your reserve —to help Ime about Phoebe and Neal. They • are only—good friends." "All right lf that's what you want me to think. But don't let Evelyn Mason get her claws into the boy—she'll scratch deep. I know." Something.in his voice made me wonder if Virginia's hatred of Evvy was all on Jim's account. Had Evvy Mason any part in Virginia's estrangement from Pat Dalton —had Pat Dalton any part in the broken engagement that had taken my Jim from Evvy and saved him for me." Pat Dalton's voice cut across my thoughts with the curt suddenness of a whiplash: "Mrs. Jiinmie, I'm no altruist —I didn't bring you here Just to tell you about Evvy." "I can guess that," I replied, smil ing, with a sudden feeling of liking for this man who was twisting and warping the thread of his life so miserably that even I could see some of the knots and breaks. "I want to know if Jim feels friendly enough to see me now and then. I've always kept up with him. I'd like to see a bit of him." > "I've never heard Jim say a word against you, Mr. Dalton. But do you think, in loyalty—to Virginia, he could be —friends with you?" At last the forbidden word had been spoken. Virginia's name lay between us like a challenge. Pat Dalton took his nervous fingers from the stem of his glass and laid them fiat on the table before him. For a moment he sat with down- All these derangements are na tures signals that the kidneys need help. ou should use GOLD MED. . , Hw L rlem Oil Capsules Immedi ately. The soothing, healing oil stimulates the kidneys, relieves in flammation and destroys the germs which have caused it. Go to your druggist today and get a box of GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Cap sules. In twenty-four hours you should feel health and vigor return ing. After you feel somewhat Improved continue to take one or two capsules each day, so as to keep in first-class condition and ward oft the danger of other attacks. Ask for the original Imported GOLD MEDAL brand. Three sizes. Money refunded if they do not help you, , , .. . Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918, International News Service - By Mcllani 6T C,OLLT- I ,T H JOt>T ONE WAVE OF bKi I V/ANT '! °° N,T ASKOE • THEREt> 1 NOvy * TOUR. ) IU ) | I MUST <IT 1 HAND AND TOO bEE THl* YOO TO COMt M Pkh mhf IMO rjfl MOtSEX tIH IT FOR HAND - I THINK TOO T W cast lids staring at them. Then he looked out on the avenue. His blue eyes roved everywhere but toward my face. "Virginia," he said. "Mrs. Jimmie, what does she say about me?" 1 gasped. I wanted to 'soften the truth. But there was no way. "She has never spoken of you to me," I replied. "Jeanie never mentions me? Jeanie—well, I might have known that she wouldn't. Have an ice, Mrs. Jimmie? Really not? All right then—check, please." And my tea with Pat Dalton was over. Gravely at the door he put me into a taxicab, and stood with gray head uncovered until we had rolled far down the street ,and I couldn't make out his figure any longer j through the little window at the i back of the cab. Witn an air of finality he went' out of my life. But I know that , I've not done with Pat Dalton. And j I wonder if Virginia is finished with ! him." (To Be Continued) ' Misprinted Bill Is Both a "Five" and a "Ten" Wankegan, 111. Mayor Pearce has a federal reserve bank note he can call either a five or a ten dollar bill, but he's not sure how much it's jvorth. Pearce, when relieved from his strenuous duties as mayor, conducts a pharmacist's shop here. And he employs E. A. Hartke as an assistant pharmacist. The latter took a bill In trade the other day, but does not reenll from whom. When the Mayor proprietor au dited the cash that night he found himself many times bewildered. In fact, he had his doubts about him self after he counted it four or five times only to find himseslf hort five dollars, then ten dollars to the good and again five dollars short. In vain he counted. Finally Pearce scratched his head and pawed over the bills carefully. Suddenly he discovered a bank note with a ten dollar design on one side and a five dollar on the other. It developed the bill, genuine enough, is one of four misprinted at the mint in Washington. 'But the banks who made the disclosure could not determine whether the note was worth *2.50, $5, $7.50, $lO or sls, so the officials at Washington have been asked to decide. Lax Divorce Laws Scored by Judges Atlanta, Ga. —Going strong to the end of the year, Atlanta's record for divorces in 1918 is nearing 1,000 and is now 200 more than the number disunited in 1917. Several court judges have scored the lax laws mak ing separations easy in Georgia, demanding stricter laws covering di vorce. RECOXIZE BOY UN "MOVIE" Macon, Ga., —"There he is! That's John!" shouted Mrs. John Hughes, **vho with her husband was watch ing a • Hearst-Pathe picture at a movie here. The parent were over joyed when the picture of their son. Sergeant John H. Hughes, Jr. of the aviation service in France, was thrown on the screen and they "saw him," though hef is thousands o miles away. Daily Dot Puzzle •8* ZZ ' 7 • 2i* 3 5 "7 . . 2 •*X 6. •I6H 2 ° 4 l . *25 I 55 #l4. ,2 2 . 6 •52 • 2$ • 5 ' s * • 5o • • * 4ft . .31 42**40 % .32. 4fe * 43. V 35 33 • * • *34. 45 3b h 37 Draw from one to two and so on to the end. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH ©MAKING THE MOST OF ~ OUR CHILDREN \) A Series of Plain #By Ray C Beery, A.8., M.A. ®r President of the Parent* Association. Children very easily fall into hab- | its. And habits once started are al ways hard to break. It is obvious, ; then, that we should bo continually . on guard against the beginning of habits that are not desirable. But even habits already started can be changed In a comparatively! short time if we pay special attention to the matter and use proper j methods. To illustrate, let us take a Very simple case. A father writes to me: "Will you kindly suggest measures required in the follow ing case? Boy age two years. Has habit of throwing papers and other articles from chair or table. No amount of coaxing or punishment will in duce him to pick them up. He always puts his toys away where they belong but takes special delight in throwing papers on the floor and refusing to pick thehm up. There certainly is a remedy, but we have failed to find it." Give your two-year-old son a spe- i cial lesson on tho point of picking; up papers. Put a chair near the table, and before the child comes into the room scatter. papers all over the floor around the chair. Have no papers at all on tho chair or I table so that all the child can do is to pick up the papers off the floor ; if he does anything with them at i all. I bring the child in and ap j pear to be very happy and enthusi- I asttc. Exaggerate your motions as you reach down and pick up a pa i per or twb and lay them neatly on the chair. Have this chair near enough to the one on which you are' sitting that in case the child should make the least move toward the pa per on the chair, you could give him a little shock by saying quickly, "No, no!" and even taking hold of the offending hand and putting it down with emphasis if necessary to keep him from touching the papers which LIFE'S PROBLEMS ARE DISCUSSED By Mrs. Wilson Woodrow. "Dear Mrs. Woodrow Please print in your column your opinion of the following circumstances and what you would do if you were in my place. "I was married ten months ago and my husband and I went to live In another city. He was very good to me, but I was lonesome. I am an only child, and I missed my mother terribly. We stayed there four months, but I was so miser able that I made my husband give up his position and come back home. "It seemed impossible for him to get located here. I don't know whether he didn't try hard enough or whether luck was aguiust hiui. He had left a very good position and he seemed discouraged because he couldn't get anything like it here. I gave him some money, a few hundred dollars, a part of which we lived on for three months. At the end of that time he left me. "A few days ago he came back. He told me that he had been in a hospital suffering from a nervous breakdown. He had drawn the rest of the money I haa given him to pay his doctor bills. He realized his mistake and begged mg on his knees to take him back. "My mother says that she can not trust me to him any more, that If he left me once be would do so again, that he stole my money, in other words, he was a thief, and would do anything. She used to love him, but now she hates him, and I don't blame her. He was a man who was very well thought of; every one who met him compli mented me on my choice. "He was always very kind and affectionate to me, auu i auored him. But now I din't know what to do. There is .1 good position waiting for him ;|B soon as he comes from camp— forgot to say that he is in the ansy. "I ain afraid to afsk living with him again. What s4an i aot Shall I forgive him? D<* you think he deserves it? Woul# I be risking my future happlnesf to live with him again? ThoughJhe is heartily sorry for his act. can I ever believe him and trusiynm? Thank- | you have put chair. Simply prohibit that action altogether. But encourage the least little move ; he makes toward picking up a pa per from the floor. Smile and say, ! "Good! I'hat's right." If he slams it down on the floor again, do not ! pay the slightest attention to that act. If he puts the paper on the j chair or table, say very loudly "Fine!" After he does this the first time, i call his mother In from the other room and say to her enthusiastically! when she enters, "Jlother, Harold, put the paper on the chair, YES, I sir. Isn't that fine?" This will en courage him to pick up other pa pers and place them on the chair or table and when he does, each time, snille, show great enthusiasm and mnko him think he is having a won derful time. For a few days while you are just teaching him the new habit to take the place of the old, do not allow papers to be on the edge of the table i when you are very far away which j naturally would serve as too great ja temptation for him. You can give ; him special ' drill by having your ! chair near the paper on the table I so that if he starts to reach for it, ] you can aoid it, firmly lodging the ' suggestion that he is not to take • papers from the table. But when he isn't looking, put some papers down ; on the floor again and suggest that ! you are anxious to see him pick them j up. Then approve him lavishly. In this way you substitute a good i; habit for the bad. The common tendency on the part : of most parents in dealing with a ■ similar case is, to continually put fi papers and other things out of the , ; child's reach. This method has the ! . effect of driving deeper in the child's ! mind the suggestion that he is bad] about throwing things and as a result' ■ he naturally wilf row worse instead . \ of better. (Copyright, 1918, by the Parents! i Association, Inc.) ing you for your advice, I am sin cerely, C. L." I read this letter, gasped, and then began at the beginning and read it over again. My dear C. L., are you angry with your husband oecause ne oared to be ill on your money? Careless of him, perhaps, but one ones not have much time to weigh and con sider fine points of cltquette when overtaken by sickness. Should you forgive him? It seems to me the question before the judge and the jury is, Shall he forgive you? Haven't you any idea of the square deal, or has an exagger atedly fond and foolish mother convinced you that the square deal belongs in the "scrap paper" class? What was your idea in marry ing? To live the life of a pet Pom or Persian, and doze on the hearth rug, and be fed with dainties? Did it ever enter your head that DONT FUSS lIT If SIM MM Musterole Works Without the Blister—Easier, Quicker There's no sense in mixing a mess of mustard, flour and water when you can easily relieve pain, soreness or stiff, ness withalittle clean, white Musterole. Musterole is made of pure oil of mustard and other helpful Ingredients, combined in the form of the present white ointment It takes the place of mustard plasters, and will not blister. Musterole usually gives prompt relief from sore throat bronchitis, tonsilitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, headache, congestion, pleurisy, rheuma tism, lumbago, pains and aches of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet colds of thechest (it of ten prevents pneumonia). 30c and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50 tho contract of marriage involved responsibilities on your part as well as on his? You were aware that your hus band's business compelled a resi dence in another city. If you couldn't live without your mother, why did you not look that fact in the face before you leaped instead of afterward? But, according to' your statement, you accompanied him to your new home, and there proceeded to make yourself and him miserable. Finally, you forced him to abandon his position, en tirely unmindful of his wishes, his prospects and his business career. Then, as a sort of a salve, you con tributed to the partnership a few hundred dollars on which vou both lived while he looked for another Job. He became ill and was forced to go to a hospital using what re mained of the money to pay his necessary expenses. Therefore, you accuse him of being a thief. He might in turn call you one, since for a mere whim you de prived him of his work, not to men tion hope and happiness. Now you ask me it you dare en trust your happiness to him. I should think he would be asking To Our Customers and Friends With best wishes for your pros perity and success for the coming year, we extend to you the Greetings of the Season and assure you of our earnest desire for a continuance of the cordial rela tions existing between us. Respectfully, Soutter's 25 Cent Department Store The Christmas Savings Society Of The EAST END BANK Is Open Until January 4, 1919 * Larger in 1918 Than Ever Before DECEMBER 31, 1918. himself very seriously If he dared contemplate a life spent with you. My dear girl, wake up! Don't let your mother live your life for you, and take possession of your mind and form your opinions. Bo a real woman, and not a stilly, little toy. Confidence Men Get $2,000 Liberty Bonds St. Louis, Mo., —The timeworn box trick cost Tony Maccki, of this city, $2,000 in Liberty bonds. Mac cki, who runs a lunch stand, said he became acquainted with a young man named."Hugo," The two had planned to buy and operate a chain of candy stores. Maccki was introduced to an older man, an al'eged gold mine operator, who asked Maccki to take care of SB,OOO for him. Maccki, to show his good faith, drew his money from the bank. All the money was sup posed to have been put in a black box and given to Maccki to keep until the men returned. When Mac cki's wife became suspicious, the box was opened and two $1 bills and pieces of newspaper were found IIOG WEIGHED 712 POUND Kcyser, W. Va., —The largest ho* ever killed in this section of West Virginia dressed recently weighted 712 pounds. The meat will tiring more than $l5O. ooid* t n w IW imi Mi aba fMknftfe bOrtlk George A. Gurgus Drug Store, Harnshurg, Pa., •* *• tw a bos of fe. WmdM nnV- Killt gonna and heoiaaoremombmnoo. UM thia fragrant hrating antiaDtic craam to stop aneez toesad break up• cold ina kurp\ 23 abo. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers