"When a Girl Marries" By ANN LISLE A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problems of a Girl Wife — CHAPTER CXU i Copyright, 1919, King Features Syndicate, Inc. By the time the famous black vel vet curtains had fallen on the first act of the most brilliast musical suc cess of the season 1 was as miser able, bored and disgusted as a woman j could be. Now and then, for fear people j would notice how out of it I was \ 1 made some comment to Phoebe or Mr. West. A brief answer and then ! they returned to their interest :n the stage and each other. No one spoke to me unaddressed. 1 felt as if every one in the theater must; be noticing, and, noticing, must be , saving to every one else "What a dull, stupid, unattractive i woman that one in gray chiffon ... „ . „ >w. THr. rtannla I*. h.r i seems to be. The people in her | party don't notice her if they can 1 help it. They must be bored to ■ death by her." My mouth seemed to twist of its i own accord into the queerest grim aces. and I kept struggling to quirk • | it up at the corners so it wouldn't , look as if I were unhappy to the I \erge of tears. When the curtain fell it was no better. I buried myself in my pro- j gram and turned the leaves over; and over again with absorbed at tention. but what I was reading I ! couldn't have told. Suddenly Evvy's voice which had | been keyed low. rippling along with throaty little gurgles meant only j for Jim's ear. rang out in husky challenge: "Bored. Donna Anna." It's a shame | that your cavalier is so late. It isn't ■ like Tommy, either, where a woman —like you is concerned." Every one chuckled at the elab- I orate point Evvy made of hesitating ! when she had seemed almost to sug- i gest that Tom was gallant to all j women, and then swung her barb j into a sort of compliment to me. ! My face burned, but before I could! reply Evvy went on: "Oh, here's Sir Thomas now. What ! will you give me, cousin mine, for j the privilege of hiding away cozily here in the back of the box with your—Donna Anna?" "Hello, every one—every one hello!" spoke up Tom Mason gen- j Satisfaction for the ff I sweet tooth. I ? Aid to appetite and | i digestion benefit g | and enjoyment in j JfK | lasting form. j ; The Price is 5 cents. I 5 ■) J WfBBBSa i / /\\ SEALED D \ /HA TIGHT PJI : \\J |H M rr |o|HsES§ri i \l// I 1 kIjUHb! Flavor i • . TUESDAY EVENING, t BAJEmiSBURG t&m & TELEGRAPH MARCH 11, 1919. . ially. "My, we are cozy! But 1 say, Jim, don't you want the choice place | up in front for the last act? They j say there's a wonderful dance." "Jimmie wouldn't reprive his i wife—or a guest—of a chance to ! see that dance to the best possible j advantage for the world," gushed j j Evvy in her strangely husky voice. | Again everyone laughed. There, was such a knowing note in ! Phoebe's mirth that 1 just ached, j : remembering the dear little girl j i Neal had loved, only a few weeks ; before. i "Well, I'll swap everything you j or the stage have to offer for one | I friendly smile from our hostess," j 1 said Tom easily as he took his place | \ in the nitherto empty chair just back ! lof me. "Glad to see me, little lilac j i lady?" j I Jim's name for me—the name I j 'scarcely ever heard now! Yet it: j seemed to me that 1 was glad to ! hear it now from any lips, although j I am ■ sure that I would have j thought it sacrilege for Tom Mason 1 to use it so Snort a while as an hour j before. ! "Glad to see me, little lilac lady?" I !he asked again bending closer, j | Then suddenly I noticed a woman | j in the audience looking at me with i interest—as if I were a person to be iieckoned with. A minute or two I befor e in sending her eyes across j her box they had ignored me —the I I seeming "fifth wheel on the wagon." | ' Masculine admiration has a way of j I winning for a woman the recogni- ] j tion belonging to a "somebody." To b e undesired is to seem undesirable ] i—a nobody. I had never dreamed I would do j it, but now I flashed a glance that j was almost grateful around at Tom > ' Mason. j "I am glad to see you." 1 sajd in ! amazement that this could be true j j The rest of the evening was like : ia new cook's first griddle cake—j raw and doughy on one side, almost j j burned on the other. Tom Mason's warm devotion i saved me from being what my sen-1 ! sitiveness—or jealousy—feared, an j object of pity to all observers. But ; ! nothing could make it really "pal- I : atable" to me. When, at our after- j I theater supper. Evvy languished! Bringing Up Father Copyright, lnternational News Service - J*- By McManus ILL THROW ME HAT | ( CAJS v,., K ru--t- ! . [ PARDON-e>OT TOUR HAT AND li®! ITT 11/ /- -s"~ OOT THE X MAccif AN- ,u r ? NOST HA.VE, FALLEN OUT THE 1 \ wai ft / OU^JT EN '° | ■ through the waltzes with Jim — | whose ankle generally protected him from being ranked as a danc ing man. I tried to comfort myself with twinkly little fox-trots with Tom. It didn't work. But I no longer felt an actual aversion for the men—even in the blue robe was ■ forgotten until he recalled it at part ing. ■ "We've had a happy evening, ! haven't we. Donna Anna? Much I I better than - last night. You're j looking even sweeter than you did I then." I "Well, for an interior decorator, j you're easily fooled!" I laughed, j "I'm wearing the selfsame dress I j wore last night." "I know." he said seriously, "but I it's suitable tonight. Last night you should have worn the blue robe. | Aren t you ever going to—make me ! happy by letting me see how lovely | you are in that?" We were at Evvy's door, Phoebe was in another taxi with Dick West, i Jim gone to see Evvy safely inside I her house. For the moment Tom , and I were utterly alone. He seized ; my hand ant', carried it to his lips, I and as they burned against my palm 1 the old distrust revived. "I'll never wear that blue robe | Won't you take it back. So won't , Won't you take it back?" 1 begged. I'T'll never take it back. So won't you wear it?" he asked. There was a serious note under all j all his lightness of toned was sorry for myself sitting there ignored by my Jim, while he bade good night to Evvy. Suddenly, X was also a little sorry I for Tom Mason. (To Be Continued I GERMAN REBELS SLAY SOLDIERS [C'ontiniiPtl front First Page.] | berg, suburb to the east of the city. The Spartacans are reported to have [ large depots of weapons and am munition in Liehtenberg. Govern ment troops sent to Liichtenberg Sunday to protect the post office and police stations were annihilated by the Spartacans. Spartacans Murder All the soldiers and i>olice offi cials who were not killed during the lighting for the post office and po lice station or who did not escape from the buildings were murdered by the Spartacans. Many were tor tured and killed in the streets. At least one woman was among the victims of the Spartacans. The po lice archives in Lichtenberg were burned and 80,000 marks were stolen from the post office. It is be lieved more than 130 persons have been killed in the present uprising. Summary Executions Regan Fresh reports of Spartacan atroci ties have resulted in an order from Heir Noske, minister of defense, that all found opposing the govern ment troops with weapons would lie shot immediately. Many Spartacans were captured during the morning and summary executions began at once, the order of Herr Noske be ing welcomed by the embittered government forces. Armed civilians stopped a Red Cross ambulance to-day and killed and wounded all the persons in it. Another band of Spartacans clubbed two soldiers to death and killed a householder who attempted to in terfere. The government military com manders anticipate it will take at least two days of steady lighting to break the Spartacan resistance in the eastern part of Berlin —to cap ture Lichtenberg and the suburbs of Kopenick. Weissensee and Rum melsburg. The communists, with help from the criminal and hooligan elements, continue to offer stout op position and the government troops naturally are making slow progress in the street fighting. They are tak ing no prisoners. MEMORIAL BRIDGE TO BE WORLD'S GREATEST [Continued from First Rage.] 'Now we have something very good, but couldn't you do a little bit better for a little more money,' and again the surprised architect and designer, unused to that kind of talk, agreed they could and the bridge as you see it in model at the Capitol and in drawing on the waals of this room is the result." "These men." said General Sny der, "have expressed to the board ( that no place in the world is there a bridge that can be compared with this, and here he expressed the sen timent of his fellows on the board that the State can afford, and will afford, to erect here the finest strue ure of its kind anywhere." Mr. Grciner Speaks Mr. Greiner said he was not en gaged to design the bridge but to look after the engineering and—the unseen parts of construction that if they were not right would leave the structure weak and unstable. He agreed with Mr. Snyder in saying that the viaduct will be the finest in j the world. "There v are others more elaborate and more ornate," said he, "but there will be none to surpass this in inherient beauty of line and design. It is our purpose to get a full dol lar's worth for every dollar ex pended in beautiful substance in the erection of this structure." Mr. Brunner's Adderss Mr. Brunner, one of the noted ar chitects of the world, addressed the meeting at length, going fully into the plans for the park, the office buildings and the bridge as outlined, using a series of drawings to illus trate his remarks. He Said the bridge is the result of collaboration between himself and Mr. Greiner working harmoniously to the same end. Mr. Brunner went fully into the. details of the great development, as recently pictured by the Telegraph and decsribed by his at length and said that it is his thought and the thought of the members of the Board of Public Works thatthe improved park shall not only provide a fitting setting for the Capitol, with addi tional office building sto be erected to meet the needs of the State, but to beautify Harrlsburg and provide in the center of the city a great rest spot and playground for the people,' together with a plaza for public I demonstrations, inaugurations and | other State functions. He complimented Harrisburg on what it has done in the way of parks, and said that the Capitol i Park will be a ctty park in the city,) Just as our country parks are suited' to their surroundings. He expressed' his gratification over the good feel-i Ings that exist between the city and ! the State and said that the Board! of Public Buildings and Grounds bad' said to him: "Mr. Brunner, in de signing the x>ark extension do not thnk of the State alone, but make a beauty spot for Harrlsburg as well." f That being the case, he continued, it Mis up to Harrisburg to do its part In 1 the widening of streets, the regula tion of building, the changing of f street lines and the zoning of the territory about the Capitol to pre vent the erection of structures that would mar the beauty of the de velopment. He pointed out that the proposed i | | bridge is the first soldiers' and sailors' I memorial worth talking about in the United States that has got beyond the ! talking stage and is nearing construc tion. He said that the bridge with its ; memorial pylons containing the names of the soldier dead, would be unique to Harrisburg, because the conditions here . i are peculiar in that they permit of a [ | great public park being connected up . j with a most beautiful bridge. He out | lined the eare with which the ap proaches have been designed, one from . Cameron street and another from Royal > terrace, for the benefit of Hill people. . and said he felt sure the city would do s its full share. i Mr. Brunner said he had never known ■ a situation like that here, where the t city and state authorities are in such ! perfect harmony, and he was pleased to announce that he had been author j ized to go ahead with the park develop ! ment plans and those for at least one [ oflice building. He predicte(%*ltat in a short time Harrisburg people would he gin to see the ideas embodied in the sketches he presented begin to mate j rialize and take form. The meeting was followed by a con ' ferenee of state and city officials at 4 . o'clock this afternoon in the office of i the Governor. T. B. Donaldson to Head State Insurance Office Thomas Blaine Donaldson, of Philadelphia, long active in alumni affairs of the University of Penn sylvania, will probably be appointed insurance commissioner of Pennsyl vania late to-day. Mr. Donaldson has been connected with the Insurance Department ever since the Tenor administration. | When the code of insurance laws was enacted in 1911 Mr. Donaldson i was named as special deputy com- I misstoner in charge of winding up j of companies and assoeiations which had been doing a shady business or become insolvent and* uncovered a i ! chain of concerns which were put out of busiess by the courts. | The commissioner-to-be is a close j I personal friend of the Governor and 1 nn authority on insurance laws. He j | graduated from the university in . j 1 899 and was for years active as an ' officer of the general alumni so ciety. Mr. Donaldson is a relative of Wil- I liam M. Donaldson, the banker of ' this city, and well known to many; Harrisburg people. Legacy Cheats Poorhouse; Beneficiary Was on Way Scrantoii, Pa., March 11. —While! on his way to the electric railway j station to take a car for Clark's; I Summit and the Hillside Home yes- . terday, Harry t'ongdon, 32 years old, l dropped into the post office and call- I ed for mail. He was given a letter: fiom an aunt in Syracuse, which ap- | prised him that he had come into j about $l,OOO willed by a relative who died recently. When Congdon received the unex pected fortune he had 12 cents in his pocket and a one-way ticket to the poorhouse. The same letter which notified him of his good luck also contained an invitation to go to Syracuse and make his home with his aunt. I - i Washing Won't Rid Head of Dandruff j The only sure way to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely. 1o do this, get i about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon: apply it at night when retir ing: use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. Do this tonight, and by morning most, if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more ap plications will completely dissolve j and entirely destroy every single sign or trace of it; no matter how much dandruff you may have. You will tind, too. that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop at once, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any' drug store. It is inexpensive and I never fails to do the work. FATHER HELPING ALL HE CAN "Two of my sons arc In the war. I am doing all 1 can to help my | country, as well as Mayr's Wonder ful Remedy, which I can thank for 'my present good health. I suffered j 5 years with most serious stomach I trouble and bloating. Am reeom ! mending it to all sufferers." It is a 'simple, harmless preparation that! I removes the catarrhal mucus from' ! the intestinal tract and allays the! I inf animation which causes prac-1 [ ttcn.lly all stomach, liver and intestl-j nal ailments including appendicitis.' One dose will convince or money refunded. H. C. Kennedy and Clark's Medicine Store. Women Engineers Form Trade Union l.ondon, March 11.—Women en gineers, one of the discoveries of the war, have banded together in the Woman's Engineering Society, a I trade union, which was decided upon j what the women term a "forward" I movement. | The women, who are doing tech j nical work in government and con- I trolled factories, as well as in pri vately owned institutions, want among other things: Admission to the Amalgamated Society of Engineers, to become members of institutes of civil en gineers, naval architects, iron and steel and other bodies now closed to women, to serve on the boards of universities, and to become eligi ble for technical branches of the higher civil service. "Women have no desire io take men's places," is the way they put their position. "But there will be need for engineering products throughout the world, and there will be work for women as well as for men." COMII,ETE INVESTIGATIOX Further investigations into the cause of the Heaton freight smash up last week, are being conducted on the scene of the accident this after noon. II HJV p Meat: Russia and the Allies jjl Russia crumbled away and failed the y|[ Allies largely through lack of food, accord- I ing to an American eyewitness. | With plentiful reserves and resources virtually untouched, her people starred at 1 | home and at the front because there I was no adequate organization to place food where it was needed. If Animals on the hoof were shipped thou- $ sands of miles to the various fronts, wasting llt transportation facilities required for other ' I purposes. They arrived shrunken and ema- J j ciated, to be killed and dressed amidst filth a and confusion behind the lines. Half of those II brought from Siberia, it is said, perished on . the way; many more were unfit for food. / || On the other hand, the American packers turned •| 1 live stock into meat in large sanitary plants located in the producing sections, and shipped the product under refrigeration so that it reached the trenches in France , in perfect condition, without waste. j/ Says Our Authority: "Had such facilities for cold storage transportation been available to the Russian supply committee as were placed at the disposal of the quartermaster of the United States by Swift & Company, there might have been a different story concerning Russia's part in the final drama of the war." A large-scale packing industry would be an asset to Russia, in war or in peace, as it has proved to be to the United States. The cost of this large scale industry in the form of profits is only a fraction of a cent per pound of meat fit Swift & Company, U. S. A. 1 Harrisburg Local Branch, Seventh & North Streets F. W. Covert, Manager -d. Prices in Rhineland i Will Remain High For Long Period j roblenz, March It.—it will be 1 many years before prices In the J 1 Rhineland will fall to a pre-war level, according to German econo - j mists, a view shared by officers of ■ the Third Army of Occupation, who j have been detailed to study the sit uation. Since the armistice was j signed there has been a general in -2 i crease in prices with but few execp " tions to show a downward trend. j j Reasons given why lower prices I are not to be expected are the in s crease in the cost of raw materials, the higher wages demanded and the g eight hour day. Q H You unnt it diploma from till* achool nnd n credential from H ■ tlie National AHKOIU t ion of Accredited C ommercial Schools of the H I 11. S. The REST In lluNineNN Education Enroll Notv. School ol Commerce I The old, Hclluhle, Stnndurd, Accreillted College. r , Troup ntilldlng 15 S- Market Square. JH" . H Ilell 485. Dial 4503 Wi 9p Send for Catalog or Representative. M 7 TAKING STRIKE VOTE j Newark, N. J., March 11.—A vote jof 4,500 employes of the Public j Service Railway Corporation, oper j ating traction lines in Northern New Jersey, to decide if they will strike to force recognition of their union was begun last night at headquar ters of the Amalgamated Associa tion of Street and Electric Railway Employes of New Jersey. The re sult will not be known until late to-night, as the polls will be open until this afternoon. Use Cuticura Soap To Clear Your Skin AH