Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, January 20, 1919, Page 7, Image 7

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    * ■ ■ ■—■ ■ d
"When a Girl Marries"
By ANN LIBLK
A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing
Problems of a Girl Wife
On the morning after Virginia's
tinner I woke to a world about as
•avorless as a cold rice pudding
without raisins in It or cream to go
with 1L
Virginia and I were at swords'
points over an unexplained friend
ship with Pat Dalton. And Phoebe
and I'—where were Phoebe and I?
The child had turned bitter and mo
rose over the nipping of her love af
fair with Neal. In this I dared not
Interfere —partly because I couldn't
risk still moro misunderstanding
with Virginia, partly because I was
afraid to play Providence to the af
fairs of my fickle young brother and
the child who had almost confessed
It was loneliness and lack of other
young companions that had swept
her into Neal's arms.
One thing I didn't believe —and
that was Phoebe's story that she'd
been calling Longley, the florist,
when the maid reported that Long
Distance said Forty-something didn't
answer. Long Distance might
sound a bit like Longley the Florist
• —but the Florist's number was 8820
—and that couldn't be piistaken for
Forty-something, while Fort' Starl
ing, where Neal was training could
easily be so twisted.
I longed to help Phoebe—but
what could I do? As Jim had said,
I'd better keep my hands off his sis
ters' affairs until I'd proved myself
capable of handling by own.
And to what pass had I brought
my own affairs? Less than six
"Three Years Sickness
Driven Away by Tonall
In Less Than a Month
"I lived forty-eight years without
Bny sickness and three years ago I
had a breakdown," says William A.
Ham bright, of 837 First street, and
employed at the Woolworth Build
ing, Lancaster, Pa.
"I doctored in vain, and bought
medicine I thought would do me
geod, but nothing has ever done me
any good until I began to use Tonall
three weeks ago. I never had any
thing to take hold of me like that
has done. * My wife is also using it
and she has been helped wonder
fully. I can dg my work today with
more ease than ever before. I am
using my second bottle and if I con
tinue to make the gain in health I
have made, I will be well satisfied.
The cost the Tonall way is very little
as against what I have paid out use
lessly.
This testimonial was given Janu
ary 9, 1919.
Tonall is sold at Gorgas' Drug
Store, Harrisburg, and all leading
drug stores in Eastern Pennsylvania.
HOW WEAK, NERVOUS WOMEN
QUICKLY GAIN VIGOROUS
HEALTH AND STRONG NERVES
7 A DAY FOR 7 DAYS
A Vigorous, Healthy Body,
Sparkling Eyes and Health-Col
ored Cheeks Come in Two
Weeks, Says Discoverer of Bio
feren.
World's Grandest Health Build
er Costs Nothing Unless It
Gives to Women the Buoyant
Health They Long For.
It la safe to say that right here
In this big city are tens of thousands
of weak, nervous, run-down, de
pressed women who In two weeks'
time could make themselves so
healthy, so attractive and so keen
minded that they would compel the
admiration of all their friends.
The vital health building elements
that these despondent women laclc
are all plentifully supplied in Blo
feren.
Save Your Old
"
Clothes By Letting
Us Dry Clean Them
IN the reconstruction period there will be
just as great demand for goods of all kinds
as there was during the war. Prices of clothes
will remain high. Therefore it is up to you
to SAVE. Our improved and modern method
of dry cleaning re-news your old garments and
saves you the expense of new clothes.
We Deliver Promptly.
FINKELSTEIN
1134 Market St. 1322 N. 6th St.
Bell Phone 1527-W. Bell Phone 1619-R.
'
MONDAY EVENING, BXHRISBPIIO ffiCEGH3aH JANUARY 20, 1919.
i months married, I was already shut
out from the citadel of my husband's
heart—his "pal" now, instead of his
sweetheart. -It was perfectly true
that the first wild love, the longing
that had swayed me, the desire to be
In Jim's arms that had once been
stronger than anything else In my
world, had lost its first vividness of
color and its immensity of feeling.
But that didn't mean that I'd
stopped caring. Jim wasn't the
perfect hero I had once thought him
—but he was still my man. How
ever he failed me, however he hu
milated me or disappointed me, Jim
was my man. He had my heart and
my faith and my first loyalty along
with my first dreams. I hadn't taken
them away. He had Just handed
them back to me very politely, say
ing as he did so:
"You let me go my way—and I'll
let you go yours. We'll cut out a
bit of the lovey-dovey stuff and act
like good pals." .
There was no getting away from
it—l wasn't ready for this. I felt
humiliated, lonely, lost—repudiated.
Not a wife any longer.
I got through the first long hours
of the morning somehow. But when
the phone rang, I hurried to answer
its summons with Joy and relief at
any break in the black-linked chain
of my dreariness.
"Mrs. Harrison?" asked a voice—
rich in every note —"This is Carlotta
Sturges. I've Just had a note from
'Lootle' telling me to report at the
canteen with our unit to-morrow
morning at nine. I don't -need you
to explain. I can read between the
linea Oh, Mrs. Harrison—please
don't make me say it all over the
phone. Won't you meet me at the
Clinsarge for lunch? I want to see
you."
"I'd love to—but I don't believe I
can" —I began.
"Oh, please, please! If you've an
other engagement, won't you post
pone It? I must see you. You've
done so much for me. Please don't
fail me now. Won't you come?"
There was a note of pleading In
that warm, luscious voice of hers—
{i note that brooked no denial.
"I'll come," I said, and we bade
.
For Skin Torture*
Don't worry about eczema or other
skin troubles. You can have a clear,
healthy skin by using Zemo, obtained
at any drug store for 35c, or extra large
bottle at $l.OO.
Zemo generally removes pimples,
blackheads, blotches, eczema and ring
worm and makes the skin clear and
healthy. Zemo is a clean, penetrating,
antiseptic liquid, neither sticky nor
greasy and stains nothing. It is easily
applied and costs a mere trifle for each
application. It is always dependable.
The E. W. Rose Co., Cleveland, O.
If you are ambitious, crave suc
cess in life, want to have a healthy,
vigorous body, clear skin and eyes
that show no dullness, make up
your mind to get a package of Blo
feren right away.
It costs but little and you can get
an original package at any druggist
anywhere.
Take two tablets after each meal
and one at bedtime —seven a day
for seven days then one after
meals till all are gone. Then it you
don't feel twice as good, look twice
as atlracUve and feel twice as strong
as before you started your money
is waiting for you. It belongs to
you, for the discoverer of Bio-ieren
doesn't want one penpy of it unless
it fulfills all claims.
Note to Physicians: There is no
secret about the formula of Hlo-fercn,
it is printed on every package. Here
it is: Lecithin; Calcium Glycero
phosphate; Iron Peptonate: Mang
anese Peptonate; Ext. Mux Vomica;
Powd. Bentian; Phenolphthalaia;
Olearesln Capsicum; Kola.
Bringing Up Father - Copyright, 1918, International News Service -*- -fiy McM
II I I I " JIM a -A
JITT' Cl( ' VE OE°c?olS°T T Hr K j 1 KNOW A ] 1 ' dL-=- iEE HO\y 1 X HELLO* HOLD | ••
iW ■SL WE 6HOOLOCC I MAN ONCE L. *; * T ° F A FEw TOOLL4IT THE MOCH MONEY ! HAVE THAT OLD JOB OF MINE WW
fl&g-f.£ TO PALM__J J t HAT HAO ~L NEED BEFORE -J REST OF THE ,i,- IN THE BANYAN' fj OPEN At) \ THINK I'M ( 1
<£&*, Ki W; BEACH- I INFLUENCE WE J I THiNCb VHEN || LET ME HAVE IT- V 40IN'TO <0 To > fnl
ENCOCH T°< |T ME <IT OOVri
each other goodby and clicked tip
our receivers after arranging to meet
at the Clinsarge at one.
So an hour later I found myself
again entering the tiny foyer of the
little chintz-hung restaurant where
I'd met Pat Dalton for tea a fort
night before.
"Have you ever been here be
fore?" asked Carlotta, who was
waiting when I arrived and who
swept me promptly to a little win
dow table she had evidently re
served.
"Only once," I replied. "But I like
it —I must come more often."
"Who brought you—not Virginia
Dalton—ryour sister-in-law?" asked
the girl with an eager abruptness
she didn't seem to recognize as
rude.
"No," X said quietly, calculating
my effect, because, I felt the need of
knowing the reason for her eager
ness. "No, not Virginia, but Pat."
Carlotta's high-colored face.went
pale.
"Pat," she said—"Pat! , . . Shall
we order? A cold egg first and
then some chicken Cllnsarge with
souffle potatoes and artichoke hol
landalse. Does that please you?"
"That sounds delicious," I agreed.
"I don't know much about the
cuisine here. Pat and I came to
tea."
I surmised It was cruel to drag
Pat Dalton's name back Into the con
versation, but I felt that for the
happiness of Virginia and Pat—and
perhaps even of this too vivid, too
alive, too generous girl—l had best
be cruel and gain the knowledge that
might some day help them all.
"What a good sort you are, Mrs.
Harrison, to get me back into our
lieutenant's good graces! Why, I
shouldn't be surprised if you were
to get good old Pat back into the
arms—of his—melted Iceberg," mur
mured Carlotta, looking at me
search lngly.
Then I realized that I was deal
ing with a clever girl—a girl as
anxious to get information from me
as X was to "interview" her.
(To be continued.)
William B. Mettch Is
Reappointed as Inspector
William B. Meetch, 1620 North
Second street, for many years a
■ember of the board of prison in
spectors, was reappointed for a
three-year term by the court. Mr.
Meetch was first appointed a prison
inspector in February, 1889, serving
until April, 1898, when he was ap
pointed warden of the county jail.
He held this position until 1902. In
January, 1903, he was appointed in
spector again to fill an unexpired
term, and the following year was re
appointed for a full term of three
years. Since that time as his term
expired he was named again and
has held the position for five con
secutive terms.
SHOT IN RIGHT %EG
Frederick Smeltzer, 12 years old.
1009 Cumberland street, who was
shot in the right leg yesterday, was
reported at the Harrisburg Hospital
this morning to be greatly improved.
According to the statement he made
to the hospital authorities, he was
shot by a boy companion when he
refused to allow him the use of his
skates. $
"I SUFFERED
SEVEN YEARS"
Was Eventually Cured by Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound.
Philadelphia, Pa. —"I suffered for
seven long years with a lame
back, lrregular
itles and pain. I
m&TijL had one phy
slcian after an-
W jgl other but they
did me no good.
VTv 1 rea <l about Ly
\ \\ips, dia E. Pinkham's
r I l VtsM; A Vegetable Com
■Ly/ Wat T pound and gave
vSt I a trlal an< l 'O
-. 1\ 1 a short time 1
111 benefited and
am now feeling
l|W/ | fine, and without
'IH 11 i weakness or
H HI 11 pain. Many of my
(I 'III 111 I friends have also
W/lm Htm i taken Lydia E.,
/ W jll Pinkham's Vege-
JIUI 111 table Compound
and been helped by It."—Mrs. Mar
garet Ness, 1846 E. Hazzard St..
Philadelphia, Pa.
Women who suffer from displace
ments, IrregularlUes, inflammation,
ulceration, backache, sideache, head
aches or "the blues" should r.ot
rest until they have given this fa
mous root and herb remedy, Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,
a trial. If complications exist, write
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co.,
Lynn, Mass., for special suggestions.
The result of its long experience is
at your service.
THE HEART BREAKER
,A REAL AMERICAN LOVE STORY
■7 VIRGINIA TERHIINE VAN DE WATER
CHAPTER XXIX
(Copyright 1919, Star Company)
Except when Honora gave her di
rections tq the taxicab driver,
neither of the Brent girls spoke dur
ing the trip from the railroad sta
tion to their home.
Honora glanced frequently at Mil
dred, but the younger girl was
gazing straight ahead, her lips set
in a hard line. Once Honora pat
ted the tightly clasped fingers, but
as Mildred gave no sign that she
felt the affectionate touch Honora
withdrew her hand and made no
more advances.
She was very sorry 'or Mildred,
yet perhaps it was well that she had
seen Tom Chandler in his true
colors.
Katie opened the door for the
girls, greeted them effusively and in
quired if they would not like some
thing to eat. Honora appealed to
Mildred, who replied tersely that she
wanted nothing. Then Katie re
turned to the kitchen and the sisters
went on into the lighted library.
Here Mildred's tense attitude re
laxed. Throwing off her hat and
jacket, she turned upon her sister
with the demand:
"Well, you saw it all, didn't you?
Now I suppose you're satisfied be
cause the other exclaimed. "All I
the things you claim about hlrh are
true!"
"My dear," Honora protested,
"don't talk like that!"
"Oh, I don't know how I'm talk
ing!" the othe exclaimed. "All I
know is that Tom has tried to make
a fool of me, but I'll show him
that he can't!"
She began to walk up and down
the room, while Honora stood
watching her, uncertain what to do.
Suddenly Mildred turned upon
her. "Well, haven't you a thing to
say? Don't stand there as if you
were afraid to speak!"
"I am not afraid to speak, Milly,"
was the calm rejoinder. "Only—l
do not want to hurt you."
A Probable Solution
"You won't do that —for I don't
care! Tell me what you think."
"I think that perhaps Tom Chand
ler—and the girl, too —had been
drinking."
"Perhaps," Mildred suggested,
sarcastically and with a harsh
laugh, "she had been having a sli
ver fizz."
"Perhaps she had," was the un
expected rejoinder. "A man who
would give you such a drink as
that—pretending: It contained no
intoxicant—would certainly grlve It,
or something stronger, to a girl
who—well, to a girl like —like the
one we saw him with awhile ago."
"You put me in a class with her,
do you?" Mildred demanded.
Honora perceived that mincing
matters would do no good. So she
changed her tactics abruptly.
"Mildred," she said, sternly, "If
you weren't so much excited I
would not excuse that speech. As
It is, I advise you not to repeat It.
What you saw to-night was not my
fault. I am sorry for you—that is
all I can say and all I will say."
Then it was that Mildred Brent
burst Into tears.
"Oh, I have been horrid to you!"
she exclaimed, "I know that! But
I am all upset. You can't under
stand."
"Why can't I?"
"Because you. don't know the
things that Tom has said—how
things were between him and me.
The very last time I saw him he
Insisted that he cared for nobody
but me, and that he wanted me to
give him Just as much df my af
fection as I could. He said he would
teach me to love him more than
everybody else in the world."
"But you don't?" Honora re
marked. t
There was a note of Interroga
tion in the statement, and the other
answered it.
"No, but I came pretty near it—
at least he thought I did. And I
let him kiss me, and I kissed him
back, too."
Honora bit her lips to keep from
speaking what was in her mind.
She was indignant, yet compassion
ate.
"I'll show ihm!" Mildred ex
claimed violently. "Now I know
whether I'll take him or Arthur
Bruce. I'll take Arthur, if only for
the sake of spiting Tom."
Not Love at All
"But It won't spite him, my dear,"
her sister said, "unless he loves
you."
I'll make him as uncomfortable
as he has made me," Mildred de
clared.
"Then you don't love him at all,"
Honora commented. "He has hurt
your vanity, Mllly, not your heart.
Be glad of that, dear."
"I'm not glad of anything, yet,"
Mildred protested. "But I am going
to be glad when I've made Tom
Chandler squirm. And I'll do it! I'm
going to send for Arthur to-mor
row."
"Do you think" —the question was
ptit tentatively—"that you are quite
fair to Arthur?"
"What do you mean?"
"Do you think it's quite fair to
him to use him to punish another
man? He has been,your very good
friend, Milly. And he cares a great
deal for you. You know that."
The look of anger on the young
face gave way to a smile of grati
fied vanity.
"I know he does. If you could
see the way he looks at me you'd
know it."
The recollection was already
soothing her lacerated Canity.
"And do you love him, Milly?"
Mildred laughed. Her mood of
bitterness was gone. "I guess per
haps I'll decide to," she evaded.
"Anyway, I'm going to send for him
to-morrow. And now let's talk of
anything except Tom. That painted
and half-drunk girl is welcome to
him. They are two of a kind, I
guess."
(To be continued)
DR. BECHT HOME
FROMTHE FRONT
[Continued from First Pago.]
one of the best instructors he had
ever had.
Battlefield a Ruin
"No description in words is ade
quate to picture the ruin and de
vastation that have been wrought
in France," said Dr. Becht, "One
must see it in order to realize how
completely the ruthless Hun looted,
smashed, burned and killed along
the bloody path pf war. After four
and a half years of fighting back
and forth over four million acres of
arable land, the very soil has been
poisoned and pulverized. The once
large and beautiful forests of North
ern France have been reduced to
areas of blackened and mutilated
stumps. One may travel mile after
a certain section and
find only heaps of shattered stone
and plaster where once stood towns
and villages. At some places the
constant shell fire has ground • the
walls to powder and the melancholy
sign by the roadside Indicates: 'This
was the site of such and such a vil
lage.'
Shapeless Ruins
"Belleau, Torcy and Veaux in the
neighborhood of Chateau Thierry,
are shapeless ruins. The city of
Rhelms before which the enemy was
held at bay for four years, was so
shelled by artillery fire that twelve
thousand of its fourteen thousand
homes have been destroyed. The
Rheims Cathedral, 'that shrine of
history where the bones of kings lie
and where every stone speaks of
saints and heroes and a thousand
years of worship," is a total wreck
except that its two majestic towers
still stand mute witnesses to the
frenzied fury of the mad Hun in his
vindlcitive assassination of the very
glories of architecture. At Lens out
of eleven thousand buildings not
one remains, not even a wall re
mains standing.
"Within a few miles to the north
of Rhelms are the abandoned am
munition dumps, trenches and dug
outs of the Germans which had been
evacuated but recently. Some of
the rooms thirty feet under ground
had been hollowed out of the soft
chalk formation and were fitted up
with reasonably modern convenien
ces.
"Some of the most complete dug
outs were seen in the St. Mlhiel sa
lient. These were tunneled into the
mountainside and the ceilings arch
ed with corrugated or elephant iron.
One section consisted of officers'
quarters. A large room gave evi
dence of having been used as a club
room. There were bay windows ex
tending from under the overhanging
mountain, jwlndow scats, book cases,
closets, comfortable lounges, in fact
there seemed to be no lack of facili
ties for comfortable living. In sec
tions where the Germans held the
territory for a long time, dugouts
were lighted by electricity and in the
neighborhood of the dugouts large
garden areas were cultivated which
gave fresh vegetable subsistence.
The completeness with which the
A eiEAR COHPIfXBN
Ruddy Cheeks—Sparkling Eyes
—Most Women Can Have
Says Dr. Edwards, a Well-Known
Ohio Physician
Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17years treated
scores of women for liver and bowel ail
ments. During these years he gave to
his patients a prescription made of a
few well-known vegetable ingredients
mixed with olive oil, naming them
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets. You will
know them by their olive color.
These tablets are wonder-workers on
the liver and bowels, which cause a
normal action, carrying off the waste
and poisonous matter in one's system.
If you have a pale face, sallow look,
dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, head
aches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out
of sorts, inactive bowels, you take one of
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets nightly for
a time and note the pleasing results.
Thousands of women aa well as men
take Dr. Edward's Olive Tablets—the
successful substitute for calomel—now
and then juat tokeepin the pink of condi
tion. 10c and 25c per box. All druggists.
German carried out his plan of con
structing substantially, preparing
thoroughly providing adequately for
his own welfare is only surpassed by
the diabolical and ingeniously , and
bestial completeness with which he
planned for systematic devastation
and destruction.
"One night was spent in the
citadel at Verdun. The underground
part of the citadel consists of tun
nels about fifteen feet high and
range from fifteen to twenty-five
feet in width. The aggregate num
ber of miles of tunneels is about fif
teen in which more than seven
thousand men can be quartered.
The city is surrounded by a ring of
forts and some of the most desperate
fighting of the war was for the pos
session of these. Fort De Vaux was
taken and retaken a number of
times. For miles around this fort
evidences of fierceness of the
struggle are unmistakable. There
is scarcely a foot of ground that has
not been upturned by shellfire. In
wood and field and by the roadside
are shell holes, large as the cellar
of a small sized house. Large areas
of the landscape has the appearance
of having been churned into brown
foam.
After Verdun
"Leaving Verdun we made our
way north along the Meuso in the
Argonne region as far as Mont
faucon. It was in the Argonne for
ests that the most recent and some
of the fiercest fighting of the war
took place. It was in this section
that the 28th, the Pennsylvania
Keystone Division and the 79 th
largely composed of Pennsylvania
troops won slnal distinction for gal
lant and meritorious conduct.
"Though the salvage battalions
had covered this section, yet every
where were grim evidences of battle.
"Helmets, rifles, bayonets, scab
bards. haversacks lay in the fields
and by th© roadside and occasionally
dead horses added a hldeousness to
the somber gray landscape.
Praise For Army
It is prabable that no army ever
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contained a finer body of men than
those who represented the states on
the battlefields of France. These
doughboys have won the highest
praise not only from the Allies but
even the enemy attributes to them
superior fighting qualities. No one
who has not been in France can real
ize what hardships they have en
dured. The rain, tho mud, the slime
are, of course, only incidents, though
disagreeable ones. In the higher test
on the battlefield they showed ini
tiative and dauntless courage. The
only adverse criticism I ever heard
concerning them, and that was even
complimentary, was that the Yank
was too anxious to get on to the next
line and acted as if the barrage were
a thing to lean upon. The Ameri
can people have every reason to feel
proud and will surely be grateful for
the splendid recor dthat the men
of the army have made."
Dr. Becht after being in France
for nearly three weeks succeeded
in finding his son, Howell, a mem
ber of the First Gas and Flame
You Need Not
Suffer From Catarrh
But You Must Drive It Out of
Your Blood to, Get Rid of It
Permanently.
You have probably been in the
habit of applying external treat
ments, trying to cure your Catarrh.
You have used sprays, washes and
lotions and possibly been tempo
rarily relieved. But after a short
time you had another attack and
wondered why. You must realize
that catarrh Is an infection of the
blood and to get permanent re
lief the catarrh Infection must be
driven out of the blood. The
quicker you come to understand
this, the quicker you will get it out
of your system. S. S. S„ which has
regiment, which was
to proceed to Brest to embgJst_X®^!
the States.
Look out for Span^ 3
ish Influenza. *
At the first sign of 4
a cold take
CASCARAE? QUININE
Itnlirf cold remed- tor ]0 yaare—L. tabled
[ottt—aft, mun. 10 opiataa—break, up a cold
In 34 houra—relieves aril li- ? dare, ü—
bus 151* amn The lunula® t .hail. Red top
with Mr. HlU'a pictr. . At All Drop Star .
been In constant use for over fifty)
years, will drive the catarrhal pbi
sons out of your blood, purifying*
and strengthening it, so It will carry
vigor and health to the mucous"
membrances on Its journeys throughit
your body and nature will soon re-,,
store you to health. You will be*
relieved of the droppings of mucous'
In your throat, sores In nostrils, bads
breath, hawking and spltUng. d
All "reputable druggists carry.
S. 8. 8. in stock and we recommend'
you give it a trial immediately. 1
Thv chief medical adviser of the fl
company will cheerfully answer all
letters on the subject. There Is no
charge for the medical advice. Ad-n
dress Swift Specific Company,
Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga.
7