"When a Girl Marries" By AXy LISLG A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problems of a Girl Wife CHAPTER CLVn (Copyright 1919, King Features Syndicate Inc.) "Terry," I said sharply, when he had finished the story of his tragic meeting with Betty Brice, "you're just what Jim called you—ghost ridden. Otherwise you wouldn't be acting as if Betty weren't—fane.. She's about the most practical, sensible, dependable woman I've ever met—and if that isn't sanity, ( don't know what is." At the sound of my assured, un poetlcal words. Terry looked up with dogged gratitude and relief dawning in his eyes. So I got my thoughts in order and went on slowly as if to a child: "The trouble is that you've never talked it over with her. If you'd gotten it out into words instead of letting it skulk in the back of your mind, you wouldn't have been haunted—yes. haunted—by the fact that the first time you met Betty took you for her dead husband. Have you ever explained it to her the way you did to me?" "About the shell exploding back f me and tumbling down the hill —and the church by the roadside?" asked Terry slowly. "No—l haven't, i just worked it out for myself— how I seemed to be reproducing what she'd heard about Bryce fall ing in his blazing car." "Well —I thought so!" I said, DILL'S Balm of Life (Tar internal and External Un) i. die one remedy that thenM alwaet be on the heme medicine the 11. Innloable when Med externally far Neuralgia, Soreness Sprains, Rheumatism As emergency remedy that yo can •brain sew at your dniggut or dealer is Medicine. Uk internally at once accord ing to directions that come with the bottle far indigestion and internal paint. Uae aa • liniment for rheumatiam, aoreneaa, ctc_, and notice ita goick eiteca. Prepared by The Dill Co., Notintuna, Pa. Alio manufacturer! of thoae tried, rehab! e Dill's Liver Pills Dill's Cough Syrup Dill's Worm Syrup Dill's Kidney Pills Aak year drufjiac or dealer in medicine TKr Uad nattir mlmmjm km** Another Notice About Our New Store In Steelton flf Our new store in Steelton is now open and ready to serve you with the same high grade class of work which you have been accus tomed to get direct from our Harrisburg offices. €| But now it is more convenient for those who live in or near Steelton to bring their work direct to our Steelton store 5O North Front street. €[[ Owing to the increased patronage that we have received from the people of that local ity we deemed it advisable to open this new branch so as to make it easier for you to have us dry clean your garments. Our modern method of dry cleaning not only does the work thoroughly but leaves the gar ments bright, fresh and odorless ready to put on without a moment's delav. €| All work will receive our prompt attention.. Finkelstein Cleaner and Dyer Three Stores (Both Phones) 1322 N. Sixth Street, Harrisburg, Pa, 1131 Market Street, Harrisburg, Pa. ha MONDAY EVENING. very maternally. "Now, as soon as she comes home you're going to explain her —illusion to her. You're going to lay the ghost—brush the clouds away—talk it out, Terry. You are! Anne says so." Terry smiled wistfully. "And does Anne say—Betty is coming home?" "She does," I declared. But more than ever I doubted my own word as the evening wore on punctuated, first, by a message from Carlotta, and then one from Vir ginia. Carlotta had been utterly defeated. She couldn't trace the last phone call from Mrs. Bryce's phone, but she begged us to think up some way for her to help. "She's a brick!" declared Terry again. Virginia's message was meant to be very reassuring. Of course Betty had merely gone out for the Vo cational Education People again. This wasn't the Red Cross at all— it was a government bureau in Washington. If we'd call them by long distance in the morning she was sure we'd get full information about Betty'# itinerary. Terry and I grasped at her the ory and tried desperately to believe it —but somehow we couldn't! "It's getting on for midnight. I'd better run along and let you get a bit of sleep." said Terry, after we had discussed Virginia's theory and how silly we were not to remember that Betty had gone over to the I government bureau and how that | showed we were completely rattled. | "Oh, I won't sleep. I'll sit up and wait for them. In fact, I think I'll ! sit up till about 10 a. m. and wait for you to phone and tell me that the Department for Vocational Edu cation reports Mrs. Bryce in Scran ton, Pa., or Fort Wayne, Ind., or Houston, Tex., and safe on the job" I said, with an effort to simulate lightness of spirit such as I by no means felt. "Jim said he'd be in by eleven surely," I added. Terry looked at his wrist watch and then at me. Curiously enough there was pity in his eyes. In the midst of The Rival of Butter In these days of increasing cost of living, when such a staple food as butter has climbed the price-ladder to around 60c. a pound, it is pleasant to find that the regular dairy product is not the only thing we can spread on our bread and buscuits. Benefit Brand "Sweet Nut" Margarine is the logical follower of butter and has already taken the place of it in thousands of our best families. This new table luxury costs only 350 a pound at Tamsui Tea Co.'a 331 Market St., up 1 flight Harrisburg, where Benefit Brand Teas, Coffees and Grocery Specialities are retailed at wholesale prices. The price seems to be about the only thing that's different from good butter. Try it the next time you need butter and let the family de cide. Look for our store in your town. Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918, International News Service By McManus I HERE'S YOUR' PACK THEM IN THETRUNKS { [ IDIOT-WHAT ARE C|ITTIN' READY I INSECT - MINE ARE SUMMER FURS BR"!"*? '* 1 ' '-v M\FURS-MUM: NICELY-WEAREqoifsjqTO PALn U Y°U DOINCV/lffl F °R 6CH WEAR THAT AT PALM H II WONDER 1' his own agony I could see that he was sorry for me. "It—is later than that, Anne. Nearer twelve " Then Jim walked. On the very threshold he stopped, threw back his head and laughed—a little coarsely, it seemed to my over-sen sitive nerves. After a minute, he spoke: "Well, by Jove, Princess Anne— you're a winner. No lonesomeness in your, girlie—eh, what? So it's Terry now—good old Terry." Then he went off into another gale of good-natured but offensive laughter. Terry crossed the room and seized Jim by the sagging shoulders. "Jimmie—old top—l'm in trouble," he said, gravely. Jim's face sobered and his eyes darkened with -feeling. "I'm here, Terry—and the little girl there—she's been your friend from the first. We'll stand by what ever it is. Won't we, Anne?" "Jim! My Jim!" I cried exultant ly, "I knew It! I knew you'd stand by Terry—that he could count on you to the last " "Thanks," said Terry briefly. "It's Betty—Jim. She's gone." "Gone? Gone where?" asked Jim curtly—in a businesslike tone. "We don't know." • Jim looked from one to the other of us, as Terry and I fairly cho russed our answer. "Well, where would she be but on j her* Job —waking the country up to the needs of its crippled men— Jobs, not bouquets; as my own arti cle tersely put it?" he asked im patiently. "But don't you see. Jim. Betty was back in town last night, came back mysteriously, had dinner with Anne and Norreys, neither of whom got a thing out of her —and then disappears this morning." "Terry," Jim interrupted, "for the love of common sense, don't babble like an old woman. Call up Wash ington in the morning and you'll find Betty's all right Was there a letter for me, Anne—a typed let ter? I was looking for something important. If you'll excuse me for a second, Terry " As I handed Jim his letter, my eyes met Terry's—hurt, baffled, in dignant. Jim had just declared that he'd stand by. Was he ab sorbed in his own affairs, or did he mean to help Terry? (To Be Continued) DAILY HltfT ON FASHIONS ill V mim A YOUTHFUL DRESS 2683 —This could be made up at tractively in castor color velour, with sage green for collar and cuffs. Its distinctive feature is the plastron, which could be embellished with a touch of worsted or chenille em broidery. Serge, duvetyn, velvet, satin, checked or plaid suiting, com bined with some plain fabric, are also good for this style. The Pattern is cut in 4 sizes; 14, 16, 18 and 20 years. Size 16 will re quire 5 1-8 yards of 36-inch material. Width of skirt at lower edge is about 1% yard. A pattern of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 10 cents in silver or stamps. Telegraph Pattern Deportment For the 10 cents inclosed please send pattern to the following ad dress: Size.,... .Pattern No Name Address j City and Btate KXRBISBURG TECBGRXPH Little Talks by Beatrice Fairfax Does the mere consciousness that she is loved content a woman? Or does she long to be dominated are subdued to be loved with an in sistent and tempestuous fury? Does she yearn, in short, for what one of my latest correspondents calls the "cave-man stuff?" 4 It depends upon the woman. There will always be women who will be content with a formal woo ing, and there will always be others whose temperaments will demand that love pursue and overmaster them. To my mind, the young lover who has just written me displays some thing more than the usual masculine insight in guessing what it is that his sweetheart unconsciously de mands. "I am twenty-three,' he writes me, "and have a good position and sal ary on which I could easily support a wife and home. I am in love with a girl who I think loves me. But when I spoke to her of marriage she evaded the question. We have been going about for about two years. "Must I use the 'cave-man stuff' in order to win her? Or give her up? ] But why give her up, my dear young man, when you love her and understand so perfectly what she wants? Unless, perhaps, you are conscious of a defect in your own temperament. Perhaps you yourself haven't yet fully learned what love is. Women Without Temperament. There are plenty of women, un troubled by what we call tempera ment, who are content to lead a cool, formal, external sort of life. They compare their suitors from the standpoint of prudence, and they are capable of marrying a man for whom they have merely a gentel lik ing, because they want to get settled in life. They enjoy the distinction of being engaged and the pleasant fuss of being married, and they delight in settling up the machinery and ceremonial of housekeeping. And they expect the lover to play his part acceptably in this series of rites. But they are quite willing that he shall express all the emotion he has through flowers, candy and jewelry. They are relieved if they find that lovemaking can be reduced to a min imum. Life isn't a drama to them, or a song. It's a business that they want to manage as shrewdly as possible, and with an economical expenditure of emotional strength. But this isn't the sort of girl my correspendent has fallen in love with. He has found a girl who is con genial mentally and who is an enter taining companion and who seems to him fair to look upon. He realizes that he is of marriageable age and that he has a comfortable income. He suggests, politely and consider ately, that they establish a domestic partnership. Perhaps he is just a little light and casual and Incidental in making this sugestion of his, be cause he doesn't wish to put himself in the position of being rebuffed. Why Hasn't He Won Her? But he doesn't expect the girl he has chosen to be light, also. That she should decline to discuss the matter is something he isn't prepar ed for. He knows she likes him. He believes she has good reason to. What in the world can be the matter with her? He gives the matter a good deal of thought. At last a suspicion comes to him. This girl friend of his isn't like some other girls he has known. She has a heart. She has emotions. There is something very real about her. If she promised to love a man, she would mean it. Can it be that before she makes any such promise, she expects to be made love to? To tell the truth, though, he be lieves himself in love; he shrinks from love-making. That is, he'd like very much to kiss her once or twice and give her an engagement ring and cultivate a sense, of possession in re gard to her. But love-making in the grand style, love-making that demands phrases he knows he could never think of, dramatic scenes and serious promises and excessive protestations, and above all, that high-handed way of beating down a woman's more or less faint resistance that he rather flippantly refers to as "cave-man stuff" —well, frankly, all that isn't in his line. It's too much to ask of him, he thinks. Isn't it enough if you ex press a wish to marry a girl? Ought not that to content her? Why need she be coy and evasive? Why need she hold out for something that he hasn't got to offer? Counterfeiting IJOVO. Shall he confess that he hasn't it? Or shall he pretend that he has? That is, shall ho "fake" his love making. Or shall he withdraw from the situation altogether, and when the time comes round console him self with a different type of girl? Frankly, It is a problem. One can't soberly counsel a young man of the easy-going, unemoutlonal type to counterfeit the emotions of a "cave-man," whatever they may be, in order to take the girl ha wants to marry by storm. Doubtless he wouldn't succeed, anyway. Any de ception Is a very poor way of prov ing one's self a lover. The truth is that there isn't any short cut to .the heart of a girl who wants to be wooed before she gives her love. So I am afraid the young man who wishes everything settled in a business-like, five-minute con versation. who thinks serious wooing is a matter of 100 much time and trouble and temperament, will either have to abandon the girl his eye is fixed on and choose a shallower type, or else he will have to wait until Soutter's 25c Department Store Buy Here Not Alone Because Prices Are Lower, But Because Qualities Are Better Tomorrow—Tuesday—One Day Only GREAT ODD PRICE SALE \ At Striking Price Reductions Odd lots of merchandise which must be moved out quickly regardless of any possible loss we must sustain. A mer chandising event that means much to the housewife who seeks to fill many wardrobe needs at little cost. OB® day—tomor row—Tuesday only. I ! At 3c J | At 5c I At 9c |I At 13c I| At 23c 1; 10c value .tamped bag.. 10c and 12% c value .t.mp- vn|ue So|lf , d c 25c value Sterling Silver Fancy Comb.. Me "'" So,,ed I ' ,nen cd Infnnt Bootee.. 25c value Sm „ n S | Ke Belt.. 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Be Sure to Attend Our Great February Notion Sale Everything the Spring sewer will need is here in wide variety and at prices that will sustain the money-saving reputation of this store. • Visit this big event to-morrow. iQ^SOUTTER'S 12 "H 25 Cent Department Store Where Every Day Is Bargain Day 215 Market Street, Opposite Courthouse love stirs more profoundly In him self. And when he does really love, we all know that love-making won't seem the burden to hint that It does now, a thing to jest>about and avoid if one possibly can. All the suddenly awakened "cave-man" will spring to the surface. And all he will ask for will be the opportunity to pursue his swift and determined wooing. Perhaps this will never happen. Perhaps he will never know the deepest meaning of love. In that case, I hope he may find some girl who will demand no more than he can give, and that if their life to gether doesn't prove highly inter esting, it will at least be tranquil. FEBRUARY 10, 1919. , Holdup Club Men and Take Their Money Trenton, N. J., Feb. 10.—Entering the Spruce Street Club at Prospect Heights, just outside of this city, with drawn revolvers, four masked men early to-day held up fifteen members of the club and escaped with $5,000 in money and jewelry. The bandits relieved their victims of everything of value and took all the money in the place. One of the hold up men is reported to have been rec ognized as a former member of the club. 5 Use McNeil's Pain Extermlnator--Ad INFLUENZA WARNING Surreon Gtneral Blu of tha publ'n health aerTlte warm that tha Influenza eoldemlo la by no meant ended and all possible precautions should ba taken. Ctuccrdodine | .1 IN oral sprayed dally Into nose and throat la an excellent preventive. It kills tha farms. At your druftrlsts or by malL 3 alzea —60c or tl par bottle. TINCTURE R EXTRACT CO. 117 Na. 3d St.# Philadelphia