" When a Girl Marries" Bj A.\\ LISLE A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problems of a Girl Wife CHAPTER CXLIV ' It was barely 8 the next morning when Terry telephoned, but 1 was already dressed and waiting. • Ready to start, Anne? I've had Tony on the wire, and he's sending 1 round the ear; so I'll be over lor you directly—say, halt an hour. | Righto?" , : ••Righto" 1 answered. 'I m read> now. Will you pick up Virginia oir the way over?" "Tony was jolly decent about it, Anne. X put him oft going and lie , said he'd make it right with A ir ginia," Terry hesitated. "Betty 11 • want you, but I don't believe in | taking down a crowd until we, ;. ee — how she's coming on.' j I didn't argue about that with.J Terry. First, because it would hat e wasted time, and still more because j 1 was proud he had chosen me to I go with him. Alter putting up the -eceiver, 1 hurried into the bed room and packed a few things in a week-end-bag. I had an idea Betty, might need me and that 1 d better tie prepared to stay with her. As 1 stowed things in my bag it came; over me that Jint and I had been separated only once during our married life —the time he had gone, to Washington—and then he had left me. not 1 him. J \n impulse of curiosity stirred mo. X-low would he feel when he saw me ; packing? I was answered in a; minute or two. for Jim came in from the bathroom, shaven, looking boyishly clean and sweet and not a bit like the stormy man who had quarreled with me the night before about Anthony Xorreys. •What's this? Who's going, awav?" asked Jim. waving the. towel with which he was drying, his hands, a process he seemed al ways finished in some place other than where he had started it. "T thought Betty might need me., and I'd better be prepared to stay."; 1 explained, and my heart started to thump as T spoke. "Betty?" Jim scowled. "T thought, 1 forbade you having anything to do with the Norreys." Forbade!" That word again—l dared not discuss it with Jim now. instead T asked with what I thought was good-natured ridicule: "You didn't —ask me not to have anything to do with Anthony s car. did you? He isn't going. Only Terry and me" — "Onlv Terry and you?" answered Jim with relief —and no conscious ness that T had elaborately avoided the use of a certain word. "Where's: Jeanie? Isn't she just as anxiousl to get Betty as any one else?j What's the grand idea in snubbing her?" My heart seemed to do a tiny, somersault —suppose Jim were to be as anxious to spare my feelings as he was always to save Jeante, • ny hurt—how very fine that be. Then T forgot myself, our quar rel. my desire to coquet with Jim over my coming absence, the hurt of having hint think always of his sister instead of me. For today I didn't count. This day was Terry's He \ .is taking me along to help Ladies Perfume Your Skin With Cuticura Talcum Antiseptic, prophylactic, deodoriz ing, fragrant and refreshing, Cuti cura Talcum is an ideal face, skin, fcaby and dusting powder. Conve nient and economical, takes the place of other perfumes for the person. A few gTains sufficient. One of the in dispensable Cuticura Toilet Tfio for keeping the skin pure and sweet. ' Soap, Ointment and Talcum 25c every whare. Sample each free by mail. Address poet-card: Ceticw., Dpt- 6F. Balm." i Hoffer Flc before-the-w now being grocers. Mak made breac The Be On the SATURDAY EVENING, him 'find the happiness he had longed for since the day Betty first came into his life. 1 went over anil laid my face against the rough cloth of the coat Jim had just slipped into. "Dear." I said, "your Terry loves Betty. Xo man ever cared more. And. as you said once, she's ghost ridden. remembering the husband you don't think was worth it. Terry has talked to me. as if 1 were his sister. And now he wants me to come with him. He thinks 1 can help. Perhaps I can. Betty has told me a little, too. Oh, I'd love to see them happy!" "They deserve it. Xone more. By Jove, 1 hope Terry Wins out!" agreed Jim heartily, his hand stray ing across my hair and resting there tenderly for a second. "Pack up all the things you'll need and stand bv. I'll miss you. though." "Will you, Jim?" 1 whispered, snuggling closer and laying my head close to his heart. "Sure will! But. say. Lilac Lady, you'll need a piece of change. Here —let me get at my pocket." So that moment was over. I had to go to my packing. "Here's twenty-five. Think its enough?" asked Jim. "It's loads. Have you plenty left'." 1 asked. "Well, ra-ther!" Jim showed me a fat roll of bills, and strangely enough I remembered the day when lie had divided with me the five dollars that was all he had in the world. I would only take two. but after he was gone there was the extra dollar fastened to mv pin-cushion and a scrawled note "To my better half." 1 wondered if he would give me "the better halt"' of all he had now? My packing was scarcely finished when Terry arrived. He insisted tiiat 1 have niy ootTee and toast before we started. Terry couldn't forget to be thoughtful and kind even when he was burning with eagerness to start. "Now my bag and a paper to wrap' the jar of chicken 1 made \ esterday, and then we re off. r said after I'd gulped down the last bite and swallow. Terry took my hand itt both of Irs. His eyes seemed to lay a warm caress on my face. "You —little bit of all right!" he said, managing a husky laugh. "Planning to stay—thinking of her!" Jim stood watching us in amaze ment —then 1 saw admiration dawn in his eyes and a startled sort of respect. Without minding Terry at all. he seized me in his arms and kissed me again and again. "Don't stay too long!" he whis pered. Jim saw us off to the car. and as he stowed me in carefully, 1 won dered if this glimpse of Terry's ro mance would revive ours. Terrv was wondering and ponder ing. too. As we started, he put his fears into words: "I wonder if Betty'll be as glad to see me as old Jimmie was sad to see von go?" To be Continued.) Immense Resources in North Russia Remain Undeveloped Vladivostok. March 15. Im mense resources in fisheries, lum bering and coal mining await de velopment in the sea of Okhotsk and the island of Shaghalien. Golos Primor.va in an article pointing out the need for improved shipping and transportation facilities in that northern region says that with only nine seagoing steamers avuitabhj, witrt an aggregate capacity of 52" tons. Xikolaevsk, the center of dis tribution, exported 36.000 tons ol fish last year. The crying need ol the industry is more ships, accord ing to the newspaper in question. "The commercial fleet," continues the paper, "must be made ten oi twenty times larger. The coastline of Kamchatka with its rich fisher ies. the Sea of Okhotsk as well as the coal producing regions of Shag. halien use Xikolaevsk as a centei for distribution. To meet the re quirements a commercial fleet oi 20,000 tons is necessary. There is enough timber available to supply all Europe .and there is enotigii iron to supply local needs. REED TO GRAPPLE WITH WEST Fulton. Mo.—Jake Reed, Fulton mat champion, will wrestle Fred West, lowa heavy weight champion, here Thursday night. West will wrestle in lowa on March 21. 's Best >ur ar quality sold by all e good home -1 by using st Flour Market Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918, International News Service - By McManus BT will luyve nothing to do with either j scheme until the question of the "swell wedding" is settled to her liking. She is willing to compro mise to this extent, if the impetu ous young man insists on a June wedding and will not pay for the chiffons she will agree to be mar ried on credit and return to her job . and work till the sartorial spree is } paid for. Now I am all for girls working ! after they are married —if it is j necessary. X applaud them when they lay up treasurers in the bank ! to help buy a home, or a place in j the country for summer vacations, or even an automobile, if that hap-j pens to represent "Paradise Now." But to plod to and from an office j for nothing more inspiring than to j pay for an old-fashioned wedding | gown, yellowing in a trunk, repre sents a degree of folly that hitherto ' has escaped my notice. Unsuitable for the Girl And what could be more unsuita ble for a self-supporting girl than such a wedding. Think of a sten ographer—ra profession demanding! intelligence, too —putting herself in j pawn for a'couple of years to l'lay i at being a princess Pat for aj couple of hours'. And think, of the derision such an j affair would cause especially if the t bride after,the honeymoon returned ; to the office to pay for all that j folly of white satin and rainbow j tinted chiffons! ' In the meantime, I suppose she j would be perfects willing to ac- j cept such domes 0 ty as tlye fur- : nished room' and ne quick lunch j afforded. Apparently she saw 110 I horrors in having one's vagrant fancies for "beans and 1 ' "Wheat cakes 'n hot dogs!" shouted j down to the accompaniment of clat- , tering china. 1 don't believe unless these young people change their point of view verv materially that there is much 1 chance of their finding happiness together. Perhaps if the girl : worked a few years longer she I would grow to value the refuge of , a home and all that it means to The Tired Business Woman as well as The Tired Business Man. Of course, if she were in love she , wouldn't give a snap of her lingers ! for these yard-stick specialties that , now loom so important on her hori- 1 zon. the pots and the pans and the curtains and the rugs for the new home might fill her mind with roseate visions, but the wedding panorama—of rainbow-clad brides- , maids and satin-garbed pages. ! not lo mention the borrowed 1 veil that would go into print as an j heirloom —-no. I hope she won t 1 marry John, hut wait for a possible j Bit-hard or Henry, who will make , her see how superfluous these things j really are. Americans Cheerfully Pay High Prices in France; Natives Groan Pi\ris. M"arch 15.—Americans are) cheerfully paying the exorbitant! prices charged them for necessities) in France, while "the natives pay! and groans declared an Associated) Press correspondent who has been] making an investigation of JQrench j high cost of living. Three Ameri can newspaper men recently paid: 12 for a taxicab ride that the taxi- 1 pieter showed should cost about 70 • cents. A meal without wine fori the three 'hungry cost $2O. j The following figures show the, difference between prices now pro-! vailing in I-'fance and those of the' ante-war days Butter $2 a pound against 20, cents before war. eggs $2 a dozen j versus twenty-two cents and vege- 1 tables ranging from fourteen to fif-j ty cents a pound could be obtained' for four, live and six cents pre vious to trie war. Cheese has ,ad-| vanced frort. forty cents to ninety,; coffee from forty cents to $1.90.1 •Meat has advanced three hundred! per cent., chickens which were sixty cents are now $2 and very; slim birds at that. LINGUISTIC UPS AM) DOWNS | "Did you call Edith up this morn ing?" "Yes, but she wasn't down.' "But why didn't you call her! down?" "Because she wasn't up." "Then call her up now und call her down for not being down when you culled her . up."- -From the Boston Transcript. 0 MAKING THE MOST OF - /-J OUR CHILDREN V/j ——Mi A Series of Plain Talks to •By Ray C. Beery, A.8., M.A. President of the Parents Association, For a child's own future good, it' rfor no other reason, he ought to be i i taught early to show appreciation of j things other people do for him. Of course, when a child is young, j he not only is selflshly inclined but ! he cannot look far ahead; lie thinks 1 I only ol" liis immediate pleasure or! satisfaction. Often, when a child discovers thut j lie cannot secure favors by demand- I . ing them, he gets a peculiar sense of i .satisfaction from repeatedly doing j jso, but the parent who allows him | :to do this is doing him an actual j ! injustice. i A child should be so trained when ' 1 lie is young that when he leaves' I home, it will be easy for him to get ; j along with others in tlie world in- j stead of difficult. l*t us take an example. A mother ' writes to me: "What can T do to get our 5-year- | j old boy to appreciate things? When- | ever anything is given him, he will J say (l don't like that, why didn't you get something else?) lie isn't satisfied with the stories we tell or the games we play. We do so much ! for him, r can't see why he is that I I way." You have been trying to do too ' much for this boy und this may be' See CALORIC Exhibit At the Auto Show No Matter What Kind of a Building CALORIC Pipeless Furnace Will Heat it Thoroughly Whether it be a home, a church, a bank, a factory, a public or a private building, the CALORIC will heat it thor aoughly. The larger a building, the greater the saving of coal. The great waste of coal in large buildings is due mainly to inefficient heating appartus. To get at the root of this trouble, you must begin at the furnace. Many makes of fur naces are very costly to install, and are made with elaborate heating arrangements, but in actual working order they do The CALORIC Pipeless Furnace is easily installed, costs very little to install, and saves 35 to 50 per cent, of your coal. Have our representative call on you. He will be very glad to give you full particulars about the CALORIC and show you the CALORIC in operation in any of the 1 35 homes in Har- You can heat Read This rooms <,v \ Testimonial Letter I register" \ Save 35 to 50 Percent of yy Your Coal with the V v Fuel THE ORIGINAL PATENTED PIPELESS FURNACE \ Always Telephones: \/ v Bell 4927 Dial 2451 CALORIC FURNACE CO.. 32 W. Court St.. HARRISBURO, PA. the principal course of his present habit. I When you are pluying some game j for the benefit of this boy and lie ! informs you that he doesn't like it. just very calmly drop things for u i moment and ask him the simple ; question. "Do you want mother !to ulay this game ' with you • any longer?" if lie says, "no," just | say. "All right," and leave hitn im i mediately without further words. [Take up reading or something else • and do not allow him to persuade i you to come back—at least for a time. If he teases you. say "I might | play with you a little later: 1 am I busy reading just now." If he ans | wers your question by saying "Yes." I say to hini. "All right, then, let us \ play it happily and have fun." I A child likes to command others j and if others allow him to do so. he ' becomes very much spoiled and it is | not good l'or him. Some mothers do not know when 1 to draw the line and most of them ] make the mistake of catering too I much to the child. Some children | indeed are very clever at giving their . mothers just enough encouragement II in their catering to keep them at it. Parents should demand that their children audibly express their ap preciation of the slightest act of 1 kindness offered by another person. MARCH 15, 1919. Set the good example before your i | children of appreciating things your- | 1 self. Call attention'to this thing and j jthat which pleases you. Join your ! child in doing little acts of kindness i j for others. Talk much about the j j kindness of other people toward you. i | Your child will then begin to ap- ! ! predate favors bimself and he will ' j show his appreciation. (Copyright, 1919. the Parents Asso-' ciation.) i lIIS NEAREST RELATIVE ( j A recruit in one of the cantonments, | j wheu called up for examination was j ! asked: i "What is your nearest living rela- 1 \ tivoV" "What do you mean, 'relative.' mis- i tor'.'" returned the recruit. : "oil. I mean your nearest living I kinsfolk." I j "Wal, that's my aunt you're talking 'bout." ! Several other questions wer an-1 I swered satisfactorily, when there ! came: "in ease of death or accident, who: j shall he notified V" "My mother." immediately from the : selective. "But you told me just a few mill- ; tiles ago that your aunt was the, nearest living relative that you have," i objected lite officer. "You asked me who was m.v near est livin' kin was. didn't you? Wal. Aunt Hz she lives jusi two miles | from where 1 been livin.: mother lives live." From the Pittsburgh Clirou- > iele-Telegraph. I lon want a diploma from tlilx school nnd n credential from I i H the .Nntlonul Association of Accredited Commercial Schools of the H H l'. S. The BEST In lluslnexs education enroll Now. | School of Commerce I The old, Itellulile, Standard, Accredited Callese. i B Troup Buildinc 15 S- Market Square. B llell 485. l)lal 4303 B P Send for Catalog or ltepresentntlTe. [ ; HEX'S HATCH I'ISH EGGS | The Chinese have a novel way of j propagating 11.-h. The spawn Is eare- I fully collected from the surface of the | water, and when a sufficient quantity has heen obtained they take a number lof hens' eggs. the contents of which ; have been carefully emptied through a small aperlunv and reiitl the shells | with spawns. The holes are sealed tip and the eggs put under the broody hens. The hens are allowed to in cubate the eggs for a certain number lof days, when the eggs are again j broken and their contents put into 'water that has been previously i warmed by the sun. In a very short j time the spawn hatches, and the young fry are then kept in pure fresh water until a sufficient size to he put: into the ponds. At one time a con -1 siderahle business was done in , style of spawn hatching.—From the ! Indianapolis Times. WHY'HAIR FALLS* OUT { I Dandruff causes a feverish irrita j tion of the scalp, the hair roots slujfik, loosen and then the hair j comes qut fast. To stop falling i hair at once and rid the scalp ot ' every particle of dandruff, get a ] small bottle of Danderino at any j drug store for a few cents, pour a j little in your hand and rub well into ■ the scalp. After several applications 'all dandruff disappears and tlie hair stops coming out. 5