I" When a Ctrl Marries" Bj ANN LISLE \ New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problems of a Girl Wife SBgf CHAPTER CXXXII BBiyright, 1919. King Features gjggk Syndicate, Inc. I won't borrow another cent from said Jim meditatively. you let mo. ask Mr. Xorreys Hrt us have the money for a day s*wo?" I ventured. was just waiting for you to my making a fool of my that way," said Jim in a trem- Hg voice and with an expression UK made nie feel as If he'd struck Hhony Xorreys. Guess I'll call West. He may know some- about the delay in the ■^H^ks." Jim was getting in touch Mr. West, I forced myself to the situation in which our morning of riches found us. (pH seemed to bo in financial straits. I than any we had faced in our! days. There was a check] (§§■ thirty-five hundred dollars to: Sturges Construction Company| must be met that very day— in the bank we had seven or) dollars. We had no more' tliaix comes to people whose' account has never been more; two or three hundred dollars time. were facing grave difficulties we were not facing them spiritship of comradeship and Jim brushed my suggestions as if I didn't count, and nothing was worth considering. Hie stood with his hack to me he telephoned and he talked so that 1 didn't get a word of he was saying. When he away there was a crease be- bis brows and he was mum |Mg to himself as if calculating - - - - I remembered iff I I I ' H'andruff causes a feverish lrrlta ■< of the scalp, the hair roots loosen and then the hair out fast. To stop falling Hr at once and rid the scalp ot particle of dandruff, get a ■all bottle of Danderino at any j ■ r store for a few cents, pour a j in your hand and rub well into I sca'p. After several applications , fH dandruff disappears and the hair I out. j I Kaufman's I I Big 1 110 Day I I Bargain I I Basement b [ Sale I I STARTS lj I Tuesday I [M orning raj Details (u m This Paper || Monday Can't sleep! Can't eat! Can't even digest what little you do eat! . One or two doses U/iW ARMY & NAVY OMfDYSPEPSIA TABLETS *• will make you feel fen years younger. Best known remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach ■■■* and Dyspepsia. 25 cents a package at all Druggists, or sent to any address postpaid/ by the U. S. ARMY & NAVY TABLET CO. 260 West Broadway, N.Y. You " "nt .. diploma fr.>„, this school and n credential fr..m •he National Association of Accredited Commercial Schools ot the V. S. The BEST In Business Education Enroll Now. School of Commerce The old. Reliable, Standard, Accredited College. Troup Building 15 9. Market Square. I Bell 495. Dial 4383 Send for Catalog or Representatlre. MBHlttaiMHMMMhhicaMriaiMiHßflllhui SATURDAY EVENING. Habbisburo TELEGRAPH MARCH 1, 1919. Readmcf all ike ferMjy how joyfully he had gone to work i as inspector in the cap factory and with what devotion he had brought ( nie the first fruits of that work, earned by the march, march, march all through the long hours which | tortured his lame ankle. That had been for me. But this wealth Jim had won in a stock transaction seem ed to be all for himself. Even though I knew I was risk ing a snub, I had to venture a question: "Is—is everything all right, Jim?" I asked. He looked up with a start. "Everything? Oh yes! If the boy comes fast enough, that is. They're sending it by messenger. A certified check. Dick West just got his. Hope the kid hurries." "You couldn't telephone the bank j that funds are on the way. or the ; Sturges Company that you'd like | them to hold up the check until to j morrow?" I asked, i "I could not!" retorted Jim curtly, I "If things break right I'm in vel | vet. If they don't j He shrugged his shoulders idly, j But his manner wasn't "idle." It I had that tenseness I hare seen come 1 over him, when he is waiting for the turn of a card, the fall of the dice, the finish of a race. And when he tried to light a cigarette three matches in succession flickered out in his trembling fingers. Jim puffed furiously for a second or two, and then he turned to me with an air of command. "You've dusted every blamed doo-dad in this room six times. Xow get rid of that fool cloth and sit down a minute without fidget ing. I've something to say to you—■ might as well get it off mv chest now. At Jim's mere tone a choke came into my throat. It was so cold, so aloof. I <tid a s he hade me. put away the dust cloth and sat down, but I chose a chair opposite him, not a cosy perch on the arm of his chair. Jim narrowed his eyes and j studied me through a cloud of' smoke. Then he plunged into the! very middle of his own thoughts. Anne, from now on I'm going to! insist that you be decent to my! friends, just because they are my friends and without waiting six; months or so to make up your mind I to it. There are such things as! tact and diplomacy in the world, though you don't seem to realize It. I Dick and Dorris and good old Tom | have helped me over the first ditch. ! Xow quit snubbing the.ni. I'm going I to be rich and I'm not going to have you handicap me by acting snippy to the folks I need—the folks who are my best friends," he added I in hasty correction. "You're thinking how I didn't! make friends with Betty at first, i and how fond of her I am now " I! replied thoughtfully. Now was the time to get Jim's! point of view, to re-establish myself j as partner and confidante as well as' wife. Even if Jim hurt me a bit! I thought I could manage to take it' like a good sport and try to elimin- | ate the faults that were driving us' apart. Jim caught me tip at once: "Yes. I'm thinking of Betty whom you seem to adore now. But still more of Jeanie. And Phoebe, j The kiddie adored you at first hut you froze her. As for Evvy, I feel; that you've almost made an enemv i of her. I "It won't do. Anne. I'm going to j the top. And my wife must be a diplomatic wife, not one I have toj explain and apologize for. You'll i have to change a bit. Anne If! you're coming along with me. I! need a wife who'll do me proud, not ! queer me. A real top-notcher, a clever woman, not a tactless wife' who insults my friends one day! and gushes over them the next." I felt my hand fly to my hot I cheeks, and the breath come in lit-! tie gasps from my parched lips at l the insult of Jim's words. Had his first success swept him already, where I could not follow •him*?; Was I going to lose Jim? Lost him—not to any of the women 1 had feared, but to wealth I'd never even dreamed of having? To Bo Continued. Influenza and kindred diseases start with acold. J Don't trifle with it. At the first shiver or sneeze, take CASCARAE? QUININE Standard cold remedy for 20 yeara—ln tablet form—safe, aure, no opiates—breaks up a ccld in 24 hours —relieves zrip in 3 dayi. Money back if it fails. The genuine bos has a Red too r 'itb Mr Hill's picture. At All Drug Stores. F TIUQIUQ LJ P F dthcr -• ~ Copyright, 1918. International News Service - _ •. FIJ JS'lcT. CUIUS r l '"'' N (i cant practice L w •^iir iri, r ; 'T ,i n —v— -==— '' 0 MAKING THE MOST OF. ~ OUR CHILDREN 4/ A Series of Plain By Br C >!■;, A.8., HA Frcsidcnf of the Parents Association. T' To be sure, it isn't exactly fun to take niedictne—especially if it is very bitter. It is natural for a child to try to avoid it. . > f medicine will help the child, it must bo given and the mother should learn how to give it least amount of friction. 'We coaxed and coaxed and then persuaded," writes one mother. Finally, we • held his hands and poured it down. The child strug gled and resisted with all his might, i am afraid that for years to come the taking of medicine will be asso ciated with extreme unpleasantness. Please give me some advise on this problem." In the first place, too much at tention has been placed on the mat ter of taking medicine. Coaxing and persuading should never be done. The least that Is said about taking medicine the better it will be. The proper way is to get the med icine ready without saying anything to the child about it. Since your child has an undesirable impression associated with a bottle of medicine, pour the proper amount into an at tractive cup, so the child will not know the medicine came out of a "nasty" bottle at all. Some time later you could play "Doctor," using water as the "med icine," which would help to take away the feeling of unpleasantness which he now associates with the sight of a bottle. Suppose you now are ready for the child to take the medicine. Set the little cup on the side of the table where it will be handy. Next, go into the room where the child is and play with him about a minute. Then, take hold of his hand, swing it as you smile and walk into the other room. Do not say anything about the cup; just let hint look at it all he pleases. Make all your move- DAILY HINT ON FASHIONS 1 A SIMPLE PRACTIICAL MODEL 2359—The busy house worker will readily appreciate the good features of this design. The front closing makes adjustment easy. The sleeve may be in either of the two lengths portrayed. The dress is a one-piece model, with the fullness confined un der the belt. The Pattern is cut in 7 sizes: 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust measure. Size 38 requires 6 yards of 36 inch material. The skirt measures about 2 3-8 yards at the foot. 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 j City and State. j ments slowly. Set him up in the i chair beside yours. Smile as you deliberately reach for the attrac ! tive, little spoon with your right ; hand, and then take hold of the cup : with your left hand. , lilt the cup and get the contents ; by putting the spoon inside the cup. | Immediately put the spoon to your } own mouth, taste a little from the i tip, and after doing so, nod your head las if to say, "Yes, it tastes just | right. Then with an extremely j slow and deliberate movement start the spoon toward the child's mouth. Make it appear as if your entire attention are on the spoon (watch ; ing to SCO that it doesn't spill) but j in reality, you should govern your action by the child's reaction. If j the child shrinks back, stop the movement immediately but pretend 1 simply to bo watching the spoon ; more carefully; when the child looks ] at the sp >ou, then move it toward his mouth. Sit near enough to the child that | you do not need to pause to slide I your chair over. When the spoon is vciy near the child's lips, say in a low voice, "Robert taste it." The moment vou get the tip of the spoon to his moutn, empty the eon tents and say "Swallow, that's right." Don't say. "Yes. it's too bad. I know it's nasty. But it will make | Bobby well. " As a matter of fact, j Bobby at two and a half years is influenced only by your suggestion Ithat it is very, very disagreeable j (which coincided with his immediate i experience) and he will shy from the j causal circumstances the next time. | The better way is to take hold of i the child's hands, let him down semi | roughly and with a big laugh start j him to the window and point out i something of interest. Then play with him another minute or two. jßy thus applying the principle of substitution, you direct his mind to other things and. as a result, the very minimum attention is placed upon taking the medicine. (Copyright, IP 19, Thompson Feature Service.) Vassar College Is Free From Debt By Associated Press Pmiglikecpsic. N. Y„ March I. Announcement was made by Presi dent Henry N. MacCracken, of Vas sar College, this morning that the institution is free from debt, around half million having been raised, and the alumnae of the college having succeeded in contributing $150,000 by February 28. Their gift will be met by an equal amount from an unnamed friend of the college, who offered to contribute $150,000 last fall if the alumnae would do equally well before March 1, 1919. 7 : Daily Dot Puzzle *73 40 -5 v 5 . a 1 14 *57 * sb IB 9* .* 53 54 * 55 " 8 ,* 0 * •51 £ A * • b 7 •S 4 S .BO . . * *4) *V " * 4t> © 38 33 • JO '>• , 47 4o 30. *37 2q • fib *'• ~ -si * 0 • 33 23.. *2fe SZ ' . .25 *3 .24- Draw from one to two and so on to the end. LIFE'S PROBLEMS ARE DISCUSSED Schemes, schemes, schemes! Everybody has one, some people dozens of them. Maybe, it is some great, far-reach ing project like that dream of em pire which Cecil Rhodes held in South Africa and which he made come partly true, or it may be noth ing more pretentious than a plan to paper the living room. It may involve millions of dollars and ,the welfare of thousands of peo ple like one of the great business combinations, or it may be concern ed solely with yourself. It may aim at the Presidency of the Un ted States, or at a five-dollar raise in salary. But whatever it is—great or small, "world-moving and world-shaking," or of purely personal consequence— it is to you the most important thing in nil creation. It is really our schemes that keep us alive, for they are the vehicles that carry our hopes; and when hope is gone life is gone. A scheme may founder, it is true, but seldom does it fail that another appears in the oiling and bears quickly down to res cue the endangered cargo. Usually the transfer is promptly effected and we sail blithely on with scarcely a backward look toward the old liulk as It sinks beneath the waves. Your scheme may be either a means to an end or the object sought itself. Its progress is invariably the same; it comes first as a suggestion really born of your longings and aspira tions, but usually appearing so un expectedly that you hail It an inspir ation. It may be the idea for an in vention, a story or picture; It may be the clue to some discovery or the solution of a baffling problem; It may be a plan or measure of strategy for use in business, politics or social life. Your first sensation regarding it is one of unalloyed delight. For the moment you see It overcoming all your difficulties and landing you on the top wave of success. You can sympathize with the old Greek math ematician who In similar circum stances leaped from his bathtub and ran unclothed through the streets, shouting "Eureka!" at the astonished •passers-by. ' Then doubt begins to creep in. You | fall to wopderlng whether it is pos sible of accomplishment. You turn it inside out and examine it anew. You ! study it from a different angle. • You ! weigh and test it. Sometimes you are completely discouraged, you feel I like chucking the whole thing in the ! gutter; but generally you keep on. i And if you do keep on. if the sug gestion survives this stage, then it j becomes a regular "scheme"—some- j thing that you would die for, and to which your whole heart is wedded. It absorbs all your thought and al your interest, and overshadows li importance every other activity. Naturally, since your mind is s( full of the subject, you want to/talk about it. You feel that everybodj else should be as interested as you are. And that is the rock on which many a promising scheme has met disaster. The one safe rule for a scheme in process of incubation—am I getting the metaphors mixed? Hardly; since we all know that to drop an egg upon a rock does spell disaster, es pecially at the present price of egg —the one safe rule, then, for i scheme in process of incubation is Keep it to yourself. Why? Because to state a belie of opinion inevitably provokes ai argument. People will either agrc or disagree with you, and as this i a cynical old world, Judging entirely from results most of them will take the negative side. The disingenuous will say, "How splendid! You an sure to succeed," and then will eithei try to steal your idea, or else wi! DON'T FUSS MH MUSTARD PLASM 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 with a little 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 the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). 30c and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50. sneer at you behind your back and label you a visionary and dreamer. The outspoken ones, nine times out of ten, will seek to dissuade you. They will emphasize the risks and hazards you must undertake, and re cite a dozen harrowing tales of fail ure. They will pour a flood of cold water on your ardor with their gloomy prognostications; and your ardor and enthusiasm, if you but realized it, is your main dependence. There will come a time, no doubt, when you must discuss details with others; but be very sure that it is to the right persons you give your confidence. To talk for the mere pleasure of spilling your thoughts, or in a spirit of boastfulness can do no possible good and may do a lot of harm. And there is another and even stronger reason for silence. It is psychological, and 1 have never been able wholly to explain it; but I know that it is true. So long as some unaccomplished purpose, plan or project is held in the mind, it retains all its potential vigor. It will grow there and de velop. But let it be revealed or made public and immediately it loses both In quality and force. It Is like a jar full of hydrogen gas where the stopper has been left open and the volatile contents have escaped to form new combinations or to mix with the surrounding atmosphere. Some traces of your idea may remain as some trace of the hydrogen may be lert in the Jar; but Its virtue is gone. I know a man who has fathered a dozen good financial schemes In the pxst five years. There Is no three times a day j£*qually good for breakfast, witH luncK and at dinned Sealdsweet grapefruit will help you to conserve grains, .<;;• meats, etc. —their health-giving qualities will make you happier and stronger. They need no sugar and never should have much—many persons prefer them with salt, .. ' •> <k "Grapefruit most valuable of the fruits" - states widely-known stomach specialist Dr. William Gerry Morgan, widely-known stomach spe cialist of Washington, said in an interview: "Grapefruit is the most valuable of all the fruits for the great majority of people. If properly eaten, grapefruit will ultimately reduce; the acid contents of the; stomach." Good dealers sell Sealdsweet grapefruit and give away Kitchen Calendar®Chart Most good fruit dealers sell Sealdsweet grapefruit. Yours can supply you and will if you insist that he do so. Ask your dealer for Sealdsweet Kitchen Calendar and Chart, and if he doesn't supply it, write us for one. F3aSSSwBA \ ana TAMPA, FLORIDA igHK Oranges and Cooperative, Non-Profit, Fruit Growers' Organization. Grapefruit Lj s>//% . //-/ <■/. Sesldsweet oranges are the real thing buy them a 1 UJjMI / r 3 ti Sr ani ' c "i°y their juicy aweetneaa and delicious flavor. keep well. -A-JeabUwut-dituu* | doubt about their value, because other men have put them across and made money out of them. But the originator never made a penny. Ho eth his words." It's as true now as It was three thousand years ago. CHICKEN THIEVES BUSY Mercersburg, Pa., Mar. I.—Several nights ago thieves helped themselves to twenty-five chickens belonging to El lis Trogler.—Charles S. Karper was a recent visitor to Penbrook and Harrls burg.—Miss Florence Miller Is visiting her sister. Mrs. David Shatzer, at Greencastle.—Wesley Wise, of Claylick, was a recent visitor here.—Miss Mary Miller, of Philadelphia, is visiting at the home of Eric K. Plough.—Mrs. Wade Shaffer and daughter, Dorothy, i are ill at their home on East Seminary street.—Mrs. Nettie Fleming and son, George, have returned home after | spending some time in Shippensburg and Cliambersburg.—Miss Maria Hioster, of Millmont, has returned home after spending the winter with friends at Washington. D. C.—Mrs. H. B. Krebs and sons, John and Douglas, were at Cliambersburg recently.—Mr. and Mrs. "Doc" Xeiman, of Germantown, are visiting in the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Wilson.—Jonah Myers of Welsh Run, spent the day with his son. D. Emery Myers.—Dr. J. G. Rose, pastor of the Presbyterian Church here, is at tending the New Era convention, which is being held in Philadelphia this week. | —T. O. Bradley, recently discharged j from the U. S. Army, is visiting friends In Virginia.—Mrs. Mary Parker is visit ing her daughter, Mrs. Sue Diffenderfer, of Williamson.—Mrs. Mary Shoemaker is visiting in the family of A. li. Mil ler. —Seth Hoch, farmer and stock deal er of Williamson, was a visitor here recently. GETS MEDAL FROM GENOA By Associated Press Genoa, March 1. The 332 nd presented with a gold medal in rec ognition of American intrvention on the Italian front. The presentation was njade on beha'.f of the city of Genoa'. Senate Committee Favors Release of Wires on December 31 By Associated Press Washington, March I.—The Sen ate post office committee yesterday reported favorably the resolution of Chairman Bankhead providing fop termination of federal control of tel egraph, telephone and other wire utilities next December 31. A slmila* resolution is pending in the House. "ADJUSTO" [i Plant Support I for Tomato Vines, Roses, Hydrangeas, ' I Simple, =•s** Adjustable, Unbreakable. The "ADJUSTO" Plant Sup port is undoubtedly the best sup port on the market. The stake is hard wood painted green and the hoop is of the strongest wire also painted green to prevent rust. It is adjustable to any height. It is a permanent equipment; can be nsed year after year. With ita aid you get hardier flowers and better fruit for very little cost. I Aak year dealer and If he can not supply yon write ue tedmy. THE FORREST SEED CO. Cortland, N. Y. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers