Bigg oil ilv? EmiKj jj^PjPf " When a Girl Marries" Br ANN LISLE A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problems of a Girl Wife Chapter CI. I awoke with a quick Jerk. All the details of my ugly quarrel with Jim tho night before came trooping back to my mind In a mass. Almost before I peered over the cover? I knew I should find Jim's bed empty, but at the actual sight of it my heart began thumping with emotions of anger and pain. Anger triumphed. With set lips and heart as tightly folded against any gentle feelings, I got up and set about preparing for my bath. For the first time since our marriage I found myself uncom promisingly angry with Jim. Gener ally I took sides against myself and saw his side of things. But now it was different. Simulated or real, his Jealousy of my friend Anthony Norreys was outrageous, unforgiv able. In my sore heart I suspected that it was because he knew he had given me so much cause for jealousy and distrust that Jim had jumped in and acted as if I Jiad offended him. "He heat me to it!" I srtecred to myself with terse and pungent wrath. I did not go near the living room until I had finished dressing and was ready to set the breakfast table. Then, at sight of Jim. I stopped and braced myself against the rush of my own feelings. He had tumbled down among the cushions of the couch like a tired child. And he lay snuggled into a closs heap, warming his knees against the cold by folding them almost up to his chin. I got a cover and put it over him. Then, because I couldn't keep the tears from my eyes, I folded my lips tighter than ever; my own tender, traitor emotions must not betray me. Jim woke at sound of my stirring about, muttered a good morning and disappeared into the bed room. When he appeared again he carried his hat and overcoat. "Won't stop for my breakfast," he said, avoiding my eyes. "Oh, Jim— you'll be sick—take your coffee"— Resinol will clear that blotchq complexion mq dear We always look for sound advice fvom oar elders. Experience has taught them what the young have yet to learn. If you are a sufferer from skin troniJes that lower you socially, that rob you of your p; per standing among your friends—be ad vised by those who have Jrd experience, and treat your skin with Resinol Ointment. Those red, blotchy patches and unsightly pimples are quickly red xed by the soothing medication of this ( naent Perseverance with Resinol Ojnt You might try all kinds of bread but in the long run you will come back to HOLSUM BREAD. This much we are sure of—there can't be any better bread than HOLSUM and we doubt very much if there is any as good. The regular quality of HOLSUM BREAD has made thousands of customers —and will continue to make them. Holsum Bread Sold At All Grocers We do not deliver to houses direct from the bakery. < SCHMIDT'S BAKERY 13th and Walnut Sts. '• - - ' .i* ■" ; • •- . • • ' ' / ' v " ' - T > • •' • " • • • ; ' ■*, ' • ?- • ' V . . / '■- 1 ' , MONDAY EVENING, HJtRRISBURG tdSßfe TELEGRAFBi .FEBRUARY 3, 1919. I began. Just then the bell rang. Jim stepped back and I answered. At the door stood a little boy with a big package. "Collar, Wesson and Company," he announced in a piping child's voice. "Collect eighteen dollars and sev seventy-flve cents." "Collar, Wesson" —I began— "I didn't buy anything." "Ain't you Mrs. H. H. Harrison?" piped little Mercury again. "Yes." "Well, it's for you, all right. Col lect eighteen dollars and seventy-five cents." Then I remembered. It was my Canteen Uniforms and the caps and aprons, I had ordered tho week be fore. "Jim, will you let me have twenty dollars?" I asked—hating to break our silence with a request for money. "Havent* it," he muttered. I turned back to tme boy. "We don't seem- to have the money, this morning, son. I'l have to rush around to the bank and cash a chreck. Can you come back later?" "Not to-day, Ma'am. Against the rules. Be back tomorrow. Better have the cash then —cause we only make two or three stops like this," said the boy, his wizened young face wrinkling into a worldly-wise grin. "I wouldn't have asked for the money," 1 explained, closing the door and turning to Jim with an check doesn't seem to reach as well as it used to, and I've only a dollar or two left till the fifteenth of the month, when the next one is due." Jim laughed in cutting fashion. "Sure, I know," he twisted out of the side of his mouth. "The minute a man begin to earn a bit of money his women folks blow it in. I sup pose you expect me- to make good your bluff to that kid about having a check cashed. Well, I haven't any spare change myself. And eighteen seventy-five for uniforms to wear Bringing Up Father -Copyright, 1918, International News Service - By McManus I HURRN AND <.ET OREtsSEO LC 1 1 VO ° WA I YOU llf IT'S A NICE [ (j HOPE YOU'LL EINJOY THE I " " WE ARE <OINi TO THE MEAN! Ev EN\N<,- * N) DINNER - eY THE WAX THE. 1 I ' v SMITHS FOR OINNER 1 H<SJL TO MRS I HAVE ,T-AREH-TIS V/HAT PART OF TURKEY UAOChJ , . | °J HAREtvf! I ' to that silly canteen is sheer non sense." "But what can I do, Jim?'.' I cried in a sort of panic. Jamming his hat down on his head with a gesture of nervous fierceness, Jim lunged toward the door, crying as he strode past me: "Do anything you jolly well like. Only don't nag me any more. I can't spare the money, I tell you. It's just like a woman to go whim pering I around about some fool clothes she doesn't even need when her husband's all tired out and has his mind full of really important things. 4 This Jam who was snarling and snapping at me didn' tseem any one knew. I gathered myself for an effort to banish .him and to bring back my own husband. Forcing myself to forget for the moment our ugly scene of the night before, banishing my own haunting sus picions, I urried across the room, placed myself between Jim and the door, and laid my hand on his coat sleeve. "Jiml'l! phone and tell them i don't need the uniforms. I can make, the one I have do by washing it my self between my days of service. Don't go without your breakfast. And don't—dash into business ven tures without consulting your—part ner." Jim stared at me for a moment sulkily. Then the old look came into his eyes. But he smiled, and flung down his overcoat. "You're a pretty good scout, Anne —about some things. Now we'll drink a peace-cup of coffee and keep, off ticklish subjects. I'll put you wise to my business plans in good time —be working on 'em again to-night while you're cantecning. Only remember one thing. I'll stand for no gallivanting with Norreys." ' A lump came into my troat. An thony Norreys was coming to the canteen tat very day. Must I re new the quarrel I had just glossed over? Must I tell Jim? (To be continued.) Declares Red Cross Saved Hun Prisoners From Starvation By Associated Press Washington, Feb. 3, Interesting details of life in a German prison camp were given In a report to the Navy Department by Chief Gunner's Mate James Delaney, of Maiden, Mass., one of the first men of the United States Navy to be captured by the enemy. Delaney and four other mem bers of the armed guard of the steam ship Campana were taken prisoner August 6, 1917, after their ship had been sunk by the U6l. With Delaney were: Boatswain's Mate Kay Roop, Boyne City, Mich:; Gunner's Mate Charles I* Kline, Reading, Pa., and Seamen William A. Miller, Chicago, and Fred S. Jacob, Pittsburgh, Pa. Delaneey declared in his report that packages from the American Red Cross saved him and his companions at the Brandenburg prison camp from starvation —the fate that befell hun dreds of Russian prisoners. THE HEART BREAKER A REAL AMERICAN LOVE STORY By VIRGINIA TERUDNE VAN DE WATER Chapter XXXV. One of the peculiarities of a selfish person is that when she has made a loved one acutely uncomfortable she is willing, even eager, to be on friendly terms. And she feels that tender words and blandishments should eradicate all memory of harsh anl unkind awow wafftsamfk fafb and unkind speeches. Therefore, when Honora Bitant burst into tears after telling her sister what she was determined to know, Mildred felt that she could afford to be magnaimous. "Why, you poor dear!" she ex- j claimed, springing from the bed and j switching on the electric light, "I did not mean to make you un happy! Are you so wretched at the thought that I am going to get engaged'!" "Why should that make mo un happy?" demanded Honora, drying her eyes. "Because it will lead to our part ing later," Mildred explained, sur prised that her sister had not con sidered this evenuality. "But, even so, we will see a good deal of eacll other after I am married." "I had not looked forward as far as that," Honora remarked dryly. "It seems d bit like counting chick ens before they are hatched, Milly. You are certainly anticipating rather fast, aren't you?" "Then what made you cry?" Milly insisted. "I was tired, and you were so utterly unreasonable and jealous that I lost my temper!" Honora retorted. "Since you must have the truth, there it is!" Not an Idea, a Pact. "I jealous!" Mildred scoffed. "What a ridiculous idea!" "It is not only an idea, it is a fact," Honora rejoined. "You are not jealous now, because I have told you once more how Arthur feels about you. But you were jealous this morning when I got a letter from him, and again a while ago when you learned I had gone walk ing- with him. It was not until I informed you just why he wrote to DAILY HINT ON FASHIONS ill |l !1 1 * I ♦: yS w A COMFORTABLE WORK UNIFORM. 2614—This is just the thing for housework, canning and other du ties, which require ' practical and comfortable attire. The style is a one-piece model, with its fulness held by the belt at the waistline. The closing is effected at the left side. The sleeve may be in wrist or elbow length. The Pattern is cut in 7 sizes: 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 Inches bust measure. Size 38 requires 4 7-8 yards of 4f-inch material. The cap, cut in medium head size, will require 6-8 yard. A pattern of this Illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 10 cents in silver or stamps. Telegraph Pattern Department For the 10 cents inclosed please send pattern to the following ad dress: Size Pattern No Name Address City and State. ■•.. L— 1, me, and just what he wanted to talk to me about that you conde scended to be civil to me." "Why, Honora!" Mildred "ex claimed. "How cross you are!" "Yes, am," the other acknowl edged. "And I have cause to be. You do as you please, and tell me only what you want to tell me. Yet when I pursue the same course there is a row." "I did not row—only I was hurt, because I had thought that Arthur was more fond of me than of you— and then all at once he behaved as if he wasn't." "You did not trust him enough to believe in him when he wrote your sister an innocent note!' Hon ora accused. "Oh, Milly—that is a poor way to begin life with a man you are supposed to love." Mildred laughed. "Oh, well, you see, I don't really love him yet, but I like him better than any other man. And he likes me so much that I guess I'll learn to sare for him." "Then, if you do not love him, I do not see why you should be jeal ous of him." "Perhaps ' I'm a naughty little doggie in the manger," Mildred laughed again. "Anyway, since Ar thur's coming to-night, I'Jl dress up and look nice for him." Which she proceeded to do, hum ming a little tune to herself all the I while. Honora changed to her gown 1 and went down to dinner with the dreary certainty that she would spend a lonely evening. All signs of Mildred's annoyance were gone, and she chatted persist ently all through the evening meal The girls were just sipping their coffee when there was the sound of wheels outside, and a moment later steps were heard on the front porch. A Warm Welcome. "I declare if here ain't Mrs. Hig gins!" Katie exclaimed, running to open the front door. Honora greeted the new arrival enthusiastically. "Oh, I'm so glad Daily Dot Puzzle Isjg '•% I 1 • \ • 2o ly | I \ ,9 *>! , | ,8 ' / i. 5 ♦ 5 jf • \J if •*7 J H •q I' 17* 13 • * 35 15 # 10 30 * ' ,l V' • 44 42 Draw from one to two and so on to the end. NO MORE CATARRH A Guaranteed Trrntcnont That Has Stood the Test of Time Catarrh cures come and catarrh cures go, but-Hyomei continues to heal catarrh and abolish Its disgust ing symptoms wherever civilization exists. Every year the already enormous Baleq of this really scientific treat ment for catarrh grows greater, and the present year should show all records broken. If you breathe Hyomel dally as directed it will end your catarrh, or It won't cost you a cent. If you have a hard rubber Hyomei Inhaler somewhere around the house, get it out and start it at once to forever rid yourself of catarrh. H. C. Kennedy, or any other good druggist, will sell you a bottle of Hyomel (liquid), start to breathe it and notice how quickly It clears out the air passages and makes the en tire head feel tine. used regularly should end catarrh coughs, colds, bronchitis or asthma. A complete outfit, including a hard rubber pocHet Inhaler and hottle of Hyomel,' costs but little. No stomach dosing:. Just breathe it. Soothing and healing the inflamed membrane. you are here!" she said, kissing the matron on both cheeks. "I have missed you ever so much. But what decided you to return so soon?" "I got homesick," Mrs. Higgins confessed. "So I hurried up all my affairs and caught tho six o'clock train to Fairlands." "That's the train Honora and I took yesterday," Mildred com mented. "It's awfully slow, isn't it?" "Yes," Mrs. Higgins agreed. "But I did not mind." Honora regarded her sister mu singly. Was it possible, she won dered, that Mildred was already in different to the recollection of the vulgar love-making she had wit nessed on that train twenty-four hours ago? Yet the child had seemed quite overcome by the sight—and now she was as light.-hearted as if it had never happened. "You're looking very stveet and pretty all dressed up, Milly," Mrs. Higgins was saying. "But, Honora, my dear, you are paler than usual. Don't you feel well?" "I have a little headache," Hon ora evaded. "I had one before dinner, and Honora hadn't. Now I've lost mine, and she must have picked it up," Mildred declared merrily. Her manner was gay, as if dis appointments and trouble were un known to her. "Come in and let Katie get some thing ready for you to eat, dear Mrs. Higgins," Honora urged. "I had supper before I left Hart ford." the matron said. "But I would like a cup of coffee. I think I will take it up in my room, where I can rest, for I am tired What are you two going to sit upstairs in "I am going to sit upstairs in your room and have a good talk with you," Honora answered. "Milly has an engagement. Arthur Bruce is coming to see her." "That's nice," Mrs. Higgins smiled. "I'm glad." She did not say why she was glad. It might have been because Milly was to have a eafl from "that nice young man." Or it may have been because she was to have her fav orite charge to herself for a whole evening. (To Be Continued) FAVOR TEACHERS* INCREASE. ..Lewistown, Pa., Feb. 3. Mifflin County school directors in their thir ty-first annual convention Saturday passed a resolution indorsing the teachers' 25 per cent, salary increase bill which is before the state Legis- February Furniture Sale Our usual semi-annual sale ushers in greater values than ever before. Over a hundred factories have contributed their products to make it a success. Quality as well as beauty are in evidence and every article is backed by our guarantee as to style and dur ability. That livingroom of yours can be made more attractive. Your library can be converted into a thing of comfort and beauty. That space between the windows can be developed into a cosy corner. Your kitchen can be made more practical. Every room can be reconstructed with little expense. Come in and see what we suggest and at how low a figure. THE HOFF STORE Fourth and Bridge Sts., New Cumberland, Pa. ✓ Both Phones • Auto Service . m _ ITT' -JtD'llr—rll-1118 * ■■ lature. Reports from several school districts in the county showed that Real Economy In Fuel LONG FLAME FURNACE COAL jf£| : Will Save You Money Looks like Anthracite Coal, ignites easily, but does not burn out quickly ONE TON OF LONG FLAME • will give you as much heat as two tons of anthracite or two cords of wood. After using this coal you will not care to use any other kind. Price $8.85 Ton £° 9°?' Crd Half Load, $4.70 J. B. MONTGOMERY BULL 600 THIRD AXD CHESI'NUT STS. DIAL 2345 the school janitors are receiving more pay than the teachers. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers