"W/ien a Gir/ Marries" r ✓ • By ANN LISLSS f A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problems of a Girl Wife l CHAPTER CUV Of course I couldn't tell the brave little sick-a-bed bride either of the i things that were worrying me. She j couldn't know that 1 was haunted j by fears for her and her arm. And J she might—in her unselfishness— be ( alwavs as much agitated by a hint of i the ugly situation hanging between j Jim and me. So I put her off. "I'm just a little choked with Joy over the results of my matchmak ing." said I. "And since I can t dance j a jig in a sick room. I have to cry j a little. Don't begrudge me my fun. "Bless your heart, nice person, I d , never begrudge you anything but j uniu.pplness and worry!" answered j Betty. | Then I knew 1 was a pretty good , play-actress, and with a little feel- ■ ing of triumph over the way m> j make-believe had saved Betty pain. I stooped very tenderly to kiss iier , good night. Her well hand caressed j "'••FHendslilps a big thing—and vorv precious." she whispered. "You've proved it, Anne dear. And I am grateful, and proud and very very happy." i I called down a tearful little blessing on Betty's head and hurried I from that room of peace and love | back to the things I felt were lying , in wait for me outside. "Hurray, Annie, we're going to j motor up to town after all!" said j Kidney and Rheumatic Trouble Stop After Taking Four Bottles of Nu Vim Mr. George W. Taylor, of 2025. North Twenty-fifth street. Philadel phia, said: "1 have been in bad, shape for months and always, working in a draught. I caught cold and it settled in my kidneys and; was compelled to get up four and | five times during the night. A ' so my stomach gave me a great deal ot I trouble. My food would not digest j and gas would form and cause me a lot of pain. With my rheumatism \ I suffered a great deal and, of course, j I had doctored and taken medicine, but never any great relief —until I j got lipid of N'u Vim. Since then I j have improved. M.v kidneys are in fine shape. I haven't had a rheu matic pain since my first bottle ot'j N'u Vim. I am now on my fourth j bottle. N'u Vim has done more for, me than any medicine I ever used, i and gladly recommend it to others."! N'u Vim is sold by George A. Gor- ' gas, 16 North Third street. no hands touch Franklin sugars The sugar flows into the machine loose— it comes out packaged! Every package is tight, dust-proof and full Weight. To be sure that yours are the first hands to touch your sugar, order Franklin —whether it's Granulated, Dainty Lumps, Powdered, Confectioners or Old-Fashioned Brown—it is of the highest quality, absolutely pure and clean. The Franklin Sugar Refining Company "A Franklin Cane Sugar for every use " Granulated, Dainty Lumps, Powdered. Confectioners. Brown B - • mm HI Mir =■' 3snamnG M FRANKLIN Writ! CANE SUGARS *-!S2S~A . r THURSDAY EVENING, BXRHISBURG TE3LEGICSPS STARCH 27, 1919. all the EslTmKi jjjPj| Jim when I Joined him and Terry iu the main hall. "Terry's send ing us up in his car, which we H send back to him to-morrow. Bully, isn't it?" "Would vou mind going by train?" I asked uneasily. "We'll get there so much sooner, and I m tired and nervous. You're a brick. Terry, to offer the car—but 1 don't feel as if 1 could stand jouncing around (lark roads half the night. I—l want to get home." "Nonsense, Anne. Suppose it does take a couple of hours longer in the auto: isn't that much belter than sitting in a stuffy train with all the commuters?" Jim's tone was impatient.* Ordi narily 1 might have agreed with him. But now it seemed to me that 1 couldn't bear to be shut up in a limousine alone with him for the long hours it would take to drive home at night. 1 knew that we ! would inevitably come to a discus-] sion of Anthony N'orreys and Jim's, command that I see no more of this j good friend. And I was too weak to endure any more. I wanted to postpone the crisis T ' felt we were approaching. 1 wasn't j ready for it -yet. It meant too much for both of us to l>e approached in tiredness and nervousness. It must | be faced calmly—in the light of day. and quite without bitterness or the seething emotions I felt to-night. "Well, Anne, what are you moon ing about?" asked Jim with irrita tion that tried to play at being Jocularity. "Answer the question before the house—isn't riding up in a luxurious limousine better than huddling in the train with the com muters?" "Commuters don't go back to the city at this hour." I protested, "and I'm not dressed very warmly, so even in a limousine I'd be cold, since they don't come neatly steam heated like our trains." "Have it your own way. Women always do in the end, as I'm bound vou'H find out before long. Terry, old chap." said Jim, giving in with a little tiourish. "Oh. 1 can think of worse fates than being henpecked bv my sister Anne here." began Terry lightly Then, as if he just couldn't help it, his voice took on a serious tone: "And I've more than half an idea that Betty's way would be mine." "Sure! You've half an idea. But you haven't been married very long. Terry," laughed Jim. "You'll get the other half of the idea later— and it will be a little different. Do you mind if Terry gives us a lift to the train. Mrs. H.?" "I'd minij if he didn't send us down in the car," I replied. But he'll be supping with Betty about the time we go." "That's right, and we were invited to supper also. Musn't miss out on Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918, International News Service By McMania, PROHIBITION WILL -bOOts BE I 9 1 I OON ' T UKE ,T- DlO TOO ) TES COME )* X. WILL YOU <0 AND TXZX < Lu Lje!?'! <* I 1 that, because there's no use drag ! ging a tired girl to a hotel—nor yet I asking her to get a midnight feast," ! said Jim with real thoughtfulness. : the thoughtfulness he shows when | ever he thinks of it. Terry's good-bye to me warmed | the cockles of my heart. | "Sister Anne, the way you've j fought for my happiness is about the fiinest, whitest, most generous thing that's ever happened to me! I | love you for it almost as much as ! my little wife in there loves the ! best woman friend she's ever had ! Remember, we'll 'always be right | there when you want us." j "I'll remember it," I said, j Then we had to hurry through | our supper, the good-byes to the j Matron and the Head Nurse and i Miss Moss, who clung to me like an | unshakable little vine at parting to j dash over the roads to the station ; and finally to embark on the train [ for the city without tickets and just ! as it was pulling out. j "Look where your stubbornness i has landed us!" fussed Jim. I'll bet | we don't get chairs." I "Who wants chairs for a little s ride like ours?" 1 asked. "The i coaches are good enough." I "Oh. are they? Well, I'm through I with the things that are cheap, hut I nasty. I don't like smelly coaches ' and I'll warn you now that if that's I the best we can do you won't see 1 much of me, for I'll ride in the | smoker." | "I don't mind." I said wearily, j Jim stared at me incredulously for a moment. I could see that he was trying to figure out how any woman could help minding a ride alone in a stuffy coach at night. Once per haps he might have credited me with complete unselfishness and considera tion. Now he laughed shortly as I diagnosed the situation: "Well, the 'honeymoon' is over! We're said and bored old married couple for fair, Mrs. H'." To Be Continued. LIFE'S PROBLEMS ARE DISCUSSED i I was at the home of a friend. Her I schoolgirl daughter came bursting ! into the room with the volcanic i I breathlessness of fourteen. She i paused long enough to give me a . I hurried greeting, then flung a pre ! cipitate request at her mother for , i permission to join a party of girls , ! who were going skating. I The Mother frowned. "Oh, I think ; not, today,' she shook her head. ( I "But why not, mother?" pleaded ! the child. "All the rest of the girls ! arc going. And it's perfectly safe." I An interchange of arguments fol- j < | lowed, in which the girl easily car- | .ried away first honors; for there was t ; j really no valid reason to deny her | I request, and I could se e that my [ ! friend was simply trying to bolster i , !up n untenable position, j Justice, 1 regret to say, though, seldom plays much part in the dis- | ! putes between parents and children, j | and the mother exhibited a mounting j | annoyance. I "That will do," she broke in at | i last. "I said. 'Xo,' and that settles ! I the matter." [ "You can always do that." I heard ' | th e girl mutter as she turned away, j | her face clouded, her lips quivering I |in disappointment. "Saying, 'Xo,' is! i the best little thing you do." j Of course, I didn't interfere so ! 1 long as the girl was in the room, | j but after she had left I ventured j j on the strength of old acquaintance | to ask my friend why she had re- j i ] fused the desired permission, j "The reasons you gave," I said ! i "were too weak to impose "on any- ' j one. least of all on the child." She flushed. "Well," she admitted, I "I suppose I should have let her go, [ I hardly know myself why I said j 'Xo,' but having once said it, I had I to stick to my guns for the sake] of discipline." I knew why she had refused. It' > was not the first scene of the kind ' I that I had witnessed in that house, j ; In fact the daughter had voiced the | I exact truth when she complained ; i that saying "Xo" was the best lit t tie thing her mother did. My i , DAILY HINT ON FASHIONS j - JUST C(: >M FORTABLE J MODEL FOR A HOUSE WORK | DRESS 2485—The fulness of this dress is | held in at the waistline by elastic or | a drawstring, but it may be gathered I under a belt if preferrejl. The sleeve may be finished in wrist or elbow I length. The right front is shaped at I the closing. Percale, drill, gingham, j chambray, linen, lawn, repp, poplin I and galatea may be used for this model. The Pattern is cut in 7 sizes: 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches, bust measure. Size 38 requires 7% yards of 27-inch material. The dress meas ures about 2%. yards at the lower edge. A pattern of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 10 cents in sliver or stamps. Telegraph Pattern Department For the 10 cents Inclosed please send pattern to the following ad dress: ' size Pattern No Name - Address „ City and Btata friend is one of those people whose first reaction to any idea is always negative. And having expressed that char acteristic reaction, she is compelled with her children, as she says, to stick by her guns—for the sake of discipline. 1 wonder! Is that vaunted disci pline fetich of hers worth tlie sense of quivering injustice she is contin ually planting in her daughter's soul. • the incentive she is constantly giving to mutiny and deception, the loss of confidence she is piling up? She is not singular or unique in any respect. The world is largely' made up of people with a negative reaction. That is the reason why all great inventors and reformers and men of new ideas in any direction have had such a tough row to hoe. With almost any of us the first im pulse when any new proposition, scheme or suggestion is presented to us, is to shake our heads. "Learn to say, Xo!" is pounded into our youths as a precept of shin ing virtue. And yet the negative forces, the stand-pat contingent of humanity have nevei*~advanced civili zation by a single inch. "Learn to say, Yes," is a doctrine that is of far more value. It is the affirmative spirit, tlie calm, unflinch ing determination of daring souls that has always set this great world spinning down the ringing grooves [of change. | Xot that lam urging a weak and ' unconsidered yielding to every new ["ism" and every untried suggestion 1 that is put forth by wild-eyed vision ! Aries and dreamers. If we were to follow that ccurse we would all soon [ be starting out to dig gold or bore I for oil at the foot of the rainbow. I merely plead for the open mind. [ The man from Missouri is the ideal person to deal with, provided there | is behind his "show me" a willing- I ness to concede and agree, not a stubborn rampart of dissent which I only dynamite or an' earthquake can remove. I plead for the tnind that is really open—without the string of an already settled "Xo" attached to it. And in the meantime, with a world that is largely conservative in its mental processes, and is inclined like my friend to say, Xo, on the first impulse, without hardly knowing why it says it, I will give you a hint as to the best way to meet the negative reaction. In dealing with a man or woman of the "negative reaction" type, tt*vr giv e them a chance to say no. i'lan: "your seed first. Let the idea take root in their minds and become fa miliar to them. Then argue against One Treatment with Cuticura Clears Dandruff AH j Soan 3>. A SO, Tn'.rxrrn 28, Samnlg fwrh r-o* of 'C*tt'-n*-* IVnt 1, Eoitoß." ' | Good Feet For Sale | The scientific treatment for the feet is to use an astringent that reduces the gorged blood vessels and overcomes the puffed, swollen condition that causes burn l ing, aching, perspiring and is also the cause of corn* and callouses. Just spend twenty-five cents for twenty-five dollars' worth of foot joy. Get some Cal-o-cide from your druggist and use it in a warm foot bath—then you'll know the answer and will start telling your friends. The tiny plasters that come with the Cal-o-cide 1 settle the matter of corns,— Adv. ~wMT Dr. Edwards' Olive T ablets Get at the Cause and Remove It Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the sub stitute for calomel, act gently on the ! bowels and positively do the work. People afflicted with bad breath find | quick relief through Dr. Edwards' Olive . Tablets. The pleasant, sugar-coated tablets are taken for bad breath by all who know them. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets act gently but firmly on the bowels and liver, stimulating them to natural action, clearing the blood and gently purifying the entire system. They do that which dangerous calomel does without any of the bad after effects. All the benefits of nasty, sickening, piping cathartics are derived from Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets without griping, pain or any disagreeable effects. Dr. F. M. Edwards discovered the formula after seventeen years of prac tice among patients afflicted with bowel and liver complaint, with the attendant bad breath. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are pure ly a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know (hem by their olive color. Take one or two every tiight for a week and note the effect.> 10c and 25c per boot. All druggist* | it, or, at least, point out the objec tions to the course it will critaii. | This inevitably arouses the combat ; ive spirit on the part of the other ! person, and by leading him into ar gument makes him such a champion of tli e idea that eventually he regards the suggestion as having come from { himself. In other words', you use his very I "negative reaction" to gain your ends. It is a method often used by ! successful promoters and book agents. Had her little daughter used it with : my friend instead of exploding her | request like a bomb of TNT, I am | sure she would have gone skating. Program For Concert to Be Given This Evening The concert to be given by the Pennsylvania Concert Com - any under the leadership of Ira I* Behney. in the Technical High School Auditor ium this evening will be largely attended if the advance sale of tickets is any criterion. The program to be presented will include: ° Hail ls Ye F ''ee, Ernani-Verdi, Jhe Company; "You and r. Tenor solo, \\ ard-Sieplu'iis, j. p. Gibson; i " ,len tlie Boys Come Home." Parks I The Company; "One Fleeting Hour," j Baritone Solo, Lee' C. X. Jackson; | Heading, Romancin, J. w. Riley, Or. IJ. W. SheafTer; Quartet, "The Ros jar>, Xevin, Messrs. VV. Gibson, Moy cr, Smith and Byler; "A Dream | Fancy," Tenor Solo, Marshall, F U jSwarner; "Rose of My Heart, Bohr! • 1 he Company; Monologue, C. X. Jack j son; "Invietus," Bruno Huhn, The Company; "O Trusting Eyes," Bari- I tone Solo, Gartner, R. C. Smith; Vik . ing ?ong, Coleridge-Taylor, The Company. SI SI'E.VDS GERMAN PAPERS t obicnx, March 27.—The morning and evening editions of the Coblenz Gazette were today ordered suspended for three days by General Dicknian for criticising the allies in connection with an article on developments iij Hungary. This was the first offense of the newspaper, the editor of which is Dr. Karl Mehrmann. Ladies' Apparel of Unusual Style, Character and Workmanship We say "unusual," because we have assembled here this season the creations of the best designers and manufacturers jt in- the country houses of established reputation who have Lhr A sought representation for their lines in this store for some " Believing that the people of Harrisburg and vicinity want the utmost in style, character and work nanship, we have pro- If* I JII Prw-^f vided assortments that surpass any of our previous efforts. I '// f i Ufyr And they have been priced most sensibly. There's a real treat in store for you here come, make jj /- 'ft 1,7 j/j comparisons and be convinced. I I •? / 11^9 Suits, Coats, Capes, Dolmans Dresses, Blouses and Skirts f' Ks - * —Modest in I'ricc Pretentious in Style $l.OO and $1.25 $5.00 Silk Poplin Skirts Washable Satin Camisoles s (Friday Only) (Friday Only) 69c $2.95 Just 25 in the lot Made of washable T satin, flesh only, lace and embroidery New Spring models in navy, black and (Umit-On. to a customer) "upc, sash and novel,y patch pocket. $ 10.95 Wool Plaid $lO All Wool Crepe de Chine Skirts Poplin Skirts Bloomers (Friday Only) (Friday Only) \ qr Jf)Z.yo yv.xo (Limit „ j pair to a New Spring box pleated T * customer) models in a wide range of New Spring models in Made of excellent qual colors. navy and black only. JjF . georgette crepe in J flesh only, Buy Here I 1 # LJ Buy Her® and You j adieS w You Buy Wisely g FOURTH ST. . IBIG COAL PIERS | ON SCRAP HEAP ; Massive Trestlewoi'k at Greenwich Point is Torn Away I*lillnilel|iliin, March 27.—Greenwich coal piers—a landmark for genera j tions in South Philadelphia—are be ; ing converted into 5,000,000 feet of 1 lumber. j For many years these masses of j wooden trestlework were an Import j ant factor in the commerce of this 1 port. Coal by the hundreds of thous i ands of tons, for foreign and eorst | wise shipment, was shot from pier • heads into waiting bargj or vessel. ' The old coal piers with their forest j of huge timbers, have oeen replaced | by the Pennsylvania Railroad's new j mechanical car dumpers, which can handle 25,000 tons of coal a day. Where the coal pier* now stand the city will in the future build a new and spacious municipal pier, while further south the railroad company will build other and modern coal piers. Demolition of the Greenwich coal piers, agreed upon by the city and the railroad is part of the broad plan of port improvement. I Yon uant a diploma from thin achool and a credential from the National Association of Accredited Commercial Schools of ti U. S. The IIKStT In Business Education Enroll Now# School of Commerce The old. Reliable, Standard, Accredited tSollege. Troup Building 13 S- Market Square. Bell 455. 43U3 Send for Catalog or Representative. Garments of Quality 7 I TO UIVK THIRD TALK j "God—How Known" will be thes | subject of the third address in I series of Lenten talks to be giveril | by Dr. Gcerge Edward Reed in thai j assembly rots*- of the Central Y. M. A. Friday evening. The general subject for the series is "A Young j Man's Difficulties in Matters of Reli | gion." Supper will be served and th I talk will follow. A SHAMPOO WORTH TRYING | It is not necessary to shampoo ; your liair so frequently if it is en tirely and properly cleansed each, i time by the use of a really pood ' shampoo. The easiest to tise and ! quickest drying shampoo that wai | can recommend to our readers i* one that brings out all the natural i beauty of the hair and may be en j joyed at very little expense by dis solving a teaspoonful of canthrox, which can be obtained from any druggist's, in a cup of hot water, This makes a full cup of shampoo j liquid, enough so it is easy to apply j it to all the hair instead of just to j the top of the head. .This, when ■ rubbed into tlie scalp and onto every ' strand of hair, chemically dissolves ! all impurities. It is very soothing i and cooling in its action, as well as | beneficial to both scalp and hair, | After rinsing out the lather so cre I ated, you will find the scalp is fresh, I clean and free from dandruff, whils the hair dries quickly and evenly, . | developing a bright luster and a soft J fluffiness that makes It seem very I heavy.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers