"When a Girl Marries" I llj ANN LISLE A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problems of a Girl Wife C/I AFTER CM I. j "Jim and Anne are staying down | -—to see Terry through the* long, i lonely evening. But I'm ready to start now. Tony, if you and the Rev. Dr. Plympton are." said Virginia smoothly. I was grateful to her for the | savoil* faire which enabled her to disguise the fact of Jim's unwilling ness to share a ride with me as passenger in Tony's car, and in an other moment I was even more | grateful to Tony for the interprets- i lion he* put on Jim's attitude. "That's fine of you. lad—tine!" he j said. "Terry's a mighty good friend ! of yours, and I'm glad to see he j gets loyalty as good as he gives." | "Loyalty's a queer bird." replied j Jim. nonchalantly. "It sometimes t gives a man things he doesn't want j -jobs, for instance, that smack of I I'hsritv And ihp sr.rt of charitv I Hit 111 \ . .Mill lilt: Mill Ul UlUlli; | that makes Anne and trie stay and l'urce our society on Terry whether | he wants it or not. Oh, yes! Loy alty forces a lot on a man he'd rather not take." There was no mistaking: Jim's 'meaning, his intent to make clear to Anthony Xorreys that lie knew ul! about the plot Terry had con cocted to find him work in the Xor reys office when Jini had so sorely | needed work. Jle was flinging clown j the gauntlet. Breathlessly 1 wait-I RELIABLE METHOD OF HAIR CARE Hair is by far the most conspic-] nous thing about us and is prob- j ably the most easily damaged by bay or careless treatment. if we| are very careful in hair washing, we will have virtually no liair trou bles. An especially fine shampoo l'or this weather, one that brings out all tlie natural beauty of the: hair, tliut dissolves and entirely re-1 moves all dandruff, excess oil and: dirt, can easily be used at trifling! expense by simply dissolving a tea- j spoonful of canthrox (which you I can get at any druggist's) in a cup of hot water. This makes a full cup of shampoo liquid, enough so it is easy to apply it to all the hair instead of just the top of the head. This chemically dissolves all im purities and creates a soothing, cooling lather. Rinsing leaves the , scalp spotlessly clean, soft and pliant, while the hair takes on the glossy richness of natural color, also a fluffiness which makes it seem much heavier than it is. After can throx shampoo, arranging the hair is a pleasure. I You want it diploma from this school and a credential from the National Association of Accredited Commercial Schools of the I 11. S. The lIEST In Business Education Enroll Now. School of Commerce The old, Ilrllnblc, Standard, Accredited College. Troup Building 15 s. Market v Sqnare, H licll 485. Dial 45113 I Send for Cntnlog or Representative. { worlctxx aov skip I liix.es these combined. witlv rit conslilule' ' kiyk-orxde foot we2>r. Tke of &. of our Pk ■• i * /~ ~\ J I 1 IXTV oxroras , orx Ike iiivOversity lifkt welled. sole \ will coiwuxce one tkaft tkese cjiisdifuxfions trulij exist (n 'ke ootweau purchased tkis skojS. Benson* >r(ced. *t Nine Dolkrs. t llta&~(Duet Si/oh 226 St. / • v . 1 TUESDAY EVENING, HXRBISBURG iSSftt TE3LBGKXPH ~ MARCH 25, 1919. ied through the silent seconds that I ticked off before Tony replied: I "Look here. Harrison. I'm mighty ' sorry that you got a garbled ver sion of the situation that time you j helped me out by learning account- | ing and coming into my place so Kred Harper could be released to tight. The little girl who told you I wasn't big enough in her soul to j want her man to go and fight. I "She wanted me to claim his ex- j i emption. You helped me send him I off to do the right thing, and she's j [ a better woman for it. though she | doesn't know it yet. You did a line , i thing and stood the boredom of it | | like a soldier." "That's your version of it! Big | I words, Xorreys. But you and Terry j ! managed to make a fool of me," re- J ] torted Jim curtly. I "Will you come and have lunch j | with he to-morrow and talk this j lover —get it straight" asked lony | patiently. "Can't!" muttered Jim. "Busy" Tony studied him for a moment. | He made no further attempt to make j friends on his own score, but as lie turned to go he ventured a good word for Terry. "Maybe it was a blunder, Harri son. Again. 1 say I'm sorry. But I'm glad of one thing. You don't ! misunderstand Terry's part in it — j his friendship and loyalty. Have ] you said good-bye to Miss Moss and | the Matron, Vee "Yes," said Virginia, who had been clinging closer and closer to | my arm as we two stood witnessing the clash between Jim and Tony. ! Now she loosed my arm and went ! over to Jim. She seized both his | hands in hers and drew them to gether, crushing her palms tight about them. Then she turned and smiled at me for a second—wist fully. It came to me, even as she turned back to Jim, that Virginia | was struggling to ,tind courage, i "Jlmmie," she said, "You've stood |by me through thick and thin j whether 1 was right or wrong. No j girl ever liad a better brother, i Well, I—wanted to stand by you That whole tiling of getting you into Tony's office was my idea. It was my idea, Jim!" Jim pushed her away roughly Then 1 got some notion of how much courage it had taken for Vir ginia to speak as she had. She needed Jim, he was her best friend. She knew, better than any one else, his arrogant temper, h!s capacity for bitterness. And she was invok ing them for the sake of putting Terry and Tony—and me —right With Jim. "And now that every one has bearded the Terrible Tyrant in his ! # ' ' - ——— - Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918, International News Service By McManus JIACb * HOW COME OUT - I WANT TO £>EE IF COME OP HERE-1 WANT ) f WHY DIDN'T "frit 1 L. I A ™ ~ OUNO Ice*®™ Ntm.Rxw.H Jk Sr?Se TO . - J W >' j den, don't ' you think you'd better ' be starting along for the Big City'.'" j ' j asked Jtm coldly, loosing his hand ; • from Virginia's. "Your minister 5 friend looks as if he'd said good -8 ; bye very thoroughly to Miss Moss." : ' "Jim—is that all you have to say to me?" asked Virginia in a low j ' voice, as Anthony Norreys, with a j ~ brief handshake for me and a nod •to Jim, turned to call the Rev. Dr. Plympton. e , j I have a gosd-bye to say to you. answered Jim lightly, i But Virginia and t both realized 0 that there was a seething volcano 1 under the ' calm surface of his words. And the good-bye kiss she t gave me bespoke understanding— s even if it was understanding of an - unhappy sort. t "Jim!" I gasped, after they had i gone, "you've hurt Virginia!". I half expected him to turn on e me in a rage, but instead it was a a drawn, tired face he showed me as he replied: J Yes—l've hurt Jeanie. By Heck, a Anne, it's that Norreys! Everything 0 he. touches turns poison. I won't ■. have him touch you. I,won't have it, 1 1 tell you! I forbid"— I For a moment my throat con t traded so 1 couldn't speak. 1 | winced and shrank away as if from j v] a whip-lash. Then in a sort of icy I i* j calm, I found my voice again. - | "Jim," 1 cried, "we must have this j p out here and now. I'm not a child"—- | I. i "Hello, nice pals!" cried Terry's, •. ! voice from the doorway. "Miss Moss y and the doctor just came to turn me - I out. And she whispered that you two 4 1 had waited to help me through the t I evening. The evening—away from I Betty. Friends like, this—Jove, it s I makes life worth livin!" s I To He Continued. r RATIO REDUCES Washington, March 25. Oom | modity rate reductions were order- I ed by the railroad administration on a number of articles of machinery and their parts for export through Pacific reports to Japan, China, Australia and the Philippines from Missouri river territory and east ward. The reductions are specific and are said to range between 15 and 75 per cent. LIFE'S PROBLEMS ARE DISCUSSED j X was walking up the street with a man who is, a born pessimist. He couldn't see a ray of sunshine any where, and his dark predictions con cerning the future would have mJlde your blood run cold. "But you must admit," I argued, j •'that everywhere there are signs of | a marked impulse toward Joy and I beauty." He immediately pointed out three j women who had just passed us in j ! j succession. They were shuffling j i | along in the painfully narrow skirts j | of the moment, and they would have i ; I looked stout even in flowing gar-j j ments. I "Are those evidences of it?" he | asked. "I wasn't referring to the personal 1 ■ (and particular," 1 said hastily: "nor j I was 1 talking about a trained apple- I j elation of art, but that instinctive j feeling for beauty which was ex- 1 J pressed by the old Eastern philoso- J pher who said that if he had two I loaves of bread he would sell one and buy white hyacinths." "It's always men who say ful things." lie remarked. "But women feel them," I replied. "Who compose the greater part of the audiences at theatres and con ceits?" "It's just because they have more spare time on their hands," he said. "Moct of them go just to fill in their idle, unoccupied hours." "Fiddlesticks," I answered. "It's always begging the question to state dogmatically that the motives of peo ple are. thus and so." "But men," he insisted, "have al ways been the great, creators of art, literature and music." "I won't stop to discuss that," X rejoined. "I'll just be dogmatic like you and slate that women are the great appreciators of beauty. Who ever saw a woman that wasn't fuss ing over some kind of a plant, even if it was only a spindling geranium in an old tomato can? The florists would go out of business if it wasn't for women. Whoever heard of ai man buying flowers to send to an- j i I I ; 1 j . ; DAILY HINT ON FASHIONS i A PRETTY - MER WEAK ] 2473 —This will be pretty for fou ! lard, for taffeta, satin or organdy, i gingham, chambray, crepe and voile. ) The bolero is finished separately. ; The gathered skirt is joined to an j underbody that may be of lining. The Pattern is cut in 3 sizes: 16, ilB and 20 years. Size 18 will re quire 5 3-4 yards of 36-inch ma terial. The skirt measures 2 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 •end pattern to the following ad dress: Six®.. Pattern No Name Address City and Stata. j - - Ji other man. unless the other man was dead? They buy flowers for women, because women love them and won't be without'them. "If a woman was cast on a desert island, as soon as she had built her hut of bamboo and thatched it with palm leaves she would begin to con sider how she could get the maxi mum amount of— decorative effect from sea-shells and cocoanuts. "Look at the roonjs lived in by women. They are always decorated in one way or another. The effect may not be pleasing to all eyes, be cause good taste is rare. But whether for good or whether for ill, they ex press the Impulse toward beauty of the feminine personalities Who live in them. "There is an unappeased hunger in women for beautiful things. They want them for themselves, for their homes, for their children. And this longing for color and joy in our lives becomes more and more apparent. Consider for instance the outdoor pageants which are a growth of re cent years and which commemorate the local history of a State, a. city, or a town. Then there are the still more recent block parties, where a street is gaily decorated, the traffic is diverted from it in the evening, bands are provided, and every one dances. "These express the growing de mand for a carnival season. And there is a constantly increasing de sire for more music in our lives. It was augmented by the "canned" mu sic, which few of us would now be without in our homes. "Community singing, which grows more general, is another indication of our growing appreciation of mu sic and of its importance in our lives. "All of these straws show the course of the wind, and the wind in this case is a national impulse to ward joy and beauty: for he who sings and dances and delights in color is never a grouch or a kill-joy. ."Another of the signs of the times is that the health of the poplation will be safeguarded as never before, and the health and welfare of cliil [ dren will be of first'lmportance. We I have seen the marvelous results of ! physical training in our drafted : boys. it is to be hoped that this i training' in some form or another will continue to be a part of our edu cational system and that girls will i be generally included in it and thus share its advantages." Whether the pessimist believes It or not. all the indications are that this world is in process of becoming a nicer and ever nicer place to live in. OUCH! CORNS! LIFT CORNS OFF Doesn't hurt a bit to lift any corn right off with fingers V A ra 0 c Drop a little Freezone on an Ach ing corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then you lift it right out. It doesn' pain one bit. Yes, magic! Why wait? Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of Freezone for a few cents, sufficient to rid your l'eet of every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and calluses, with out soreness or irritation. Freezone is the much talked of ether'discov ery of a Cincinnati genius. Advice to the Lovelorn IM'ATIATDII WITH Sill.Oß i Dear Miss Fairfax: j We are two friends vim arc both j in love with a sailor whorn we met jat a dance about two weeks ago. He seems to love both of us and '! we want lo know what to do. We • j have been friends since childhood I : and don't want to be angry with each I other. Now Miss Fairfax, we read l I your advice every night and thought r : you could help us. What shall we i 1 do? A. B. X. and A. D. F. ■ | A. B. X. and A. D. F. can you not t j see, my dears, that a man who seems ! to love two girls equally well, ean : | not love either one genuinely? And 1| do you not think that a life-long t ' friendship is too valuable a thing to ■ be sacrificed for a temporary infat uation? That it is but an infatuation, • I am sure, because to truly love a f person you must know his inner self, s And surely you cannot have become genuinely acquainted with this young i sailor ladie In such a short time. r And did you ever stop to think t that his uniform may lend hinv'HII 5 added attraction? Deny it as we may. j our feminine hearts delight in a trim . j uniform and many a girl has been :• I so fascinated by the khaki and Xavy - j blue that she has forgotten lo take •' a careful look at the wearer. Are , j you positive that had you met this 1 \ man In civilian garb, you would have i i honored him with more than a single ; j glance. Above ail, if this disquiting Jackie ? eventually shows a preference for j one or the other of y.ou, do not be 1 ■■■■■■■■■■■ Garments of Quality t Triost Veseroino n e Without the least bit of exaggeration, we promise to you this Spring some of j the most desirable apparel it has ever been our pleasure to bring to Harrisburg. v Thfere is a reason for this. We have gone into the markets this year and bought i from the best designers and manufacturers in the business houses who have s been seeking our business for the past two years —houses whose garments we t have been studying, and believe lo be the utmost in style, quality and work £ manship. That our judgment in selection and pricing is right, is evidence by the daily favorable comment we receive on the part of those who inspect our display. There is a real treat in store for you here. : Suits Dresses j- Serges, Puplins, Dakar- 1' Wide variety of models in dines, Tricotines and Silver- 'W ' J M ' A every shade, in serges, Jersey, tones in every wanted shade, ,j S i nfl > s '" < poplin, taffeta, crepe and in many models ranging ! Dm meteor, crepe de chine, geor from the strictly tailleured to C• 9 j\' /• \ l\\ gettc. etc.. in conservative the extreme, \I I 1 and elaborate styles, $22.95 to $69.95 U f $6.95 to $39.95 Capes & Dolmans J i Jg|| Coats Capes and dolmans in fffT Coats in serges, tricotine. serges, tricotine, velour and i, / j J<£ J poplin, and velours, half and ; crystal cloth, all shades, j\ / j Hues, $12.95 to $69.95 A \ $14.95 to $39.95 Blouses I Skirts | Woolen fabrics in serges, poplins, and Dainty conceptions in Georgette in flesh, plaids, aAT white, taupe, French blue, tea rose, in plain, tP~re/0 XO *bXUt/D embroidered and bedded models, S ; lk sk i rts in poplins, taffeta, silk faille 1 _ and baronet in plain, stripes and plaids, $3.95 to $18.95 $2.95 to $12.95 Z":;ladies -2 I Buy wisely 8-10-12 S. FOURTH ST. ForLe " mm m so foolish as to let it spoil your friendship for each other. Being angry would not better matters at all. Remember thut selfishness al i ways brings sorrow and the loss of I a friend is a loss indeed. | TRAXSFKRRKD TO VAVY Philadelphia. March 25. The superdreadnaught Idaho, the larg- ! est lighting ship afloat, went into i commission as part of the United j States Navy at Camden, N. J. Cap- ! tain IJ. Kaiser, representing' Admiral C .P. Hughes, commandant of the j Fourth Naval district, handed the! j receipt for the great ship to H. A. 1 j Magoun, vice president of the cor poration that built the vessel. < OLD AGE STARTS WITH YOUR KIDNEYS . ' Science says that old age begins with | j weakened kidneys and digestive organs, j i This being true, it is easy to believe j ' that by keeping the kidneys and diges-1 | tive organs cleansed and in proper work- j ing order old age can be deferred and! \ life prolonged far beyond that enjoyed] ) by the average person. For over 200 years GOLD MEDAL! j Haarlem Oil has been relieving the weaknesses and disability due to advane- I ing years. It is a standard old-time home remedy and needs no introduction. GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil is inclosed ill odorless, tasteless capsules contain ing about 5 drops each. Take them as : J you would a pill, with a swallow of j water. The oil stimulates the kidney | Use McNeil's Pain Exterminator--A4 HARRISBURG THIN PEOPLE Bitro-Phosphate should give you a small, steady increase of firm, heal thy tlesh each day. It supplies an ! essential substance to the brain and nerves in the active form in which [it normally occurs in the living i cells of the body. Bitro-Phosphate replaces nerve waste and creates I new strength and energy. Sold by: druggists under definite guarantee of results or money back. [notion and enables the organs to throw | off the poisons which eanse prematura I old age. New life and strength increase as you continue the treatment. When ! completely restored continue taking a j capsule or two each dav. GOLD MED- I AL Haarlem Oil Capsules will keep you | in health and vigor and prevent a return j of the disease. ! Do not wait until old age or disease have settled down for good. At the first sign that your kidneyß are not working properly, go to your druggist and get * box of GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules. Money refunded if they do not help you. Three sizes. But re i member to ask for the original imported GOLD MI'JDAL brand. In sealed pack- I ages. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers