UJPII all the forhiKi |P^| "When a Girl Marries" By ANN LISI.B A New, Romantic Serial Deal ng With the Absorbing Problems of a Girl Wife CHAPTER 11.VIII I awoke to a new world on the morning after Jim and I had agreed to be "pals." It was a cold and gloomy world in which I didn't know how to find my way, but Jim seemed perfectly at homo In it. He read his paper all through breakfast and marched oft with an indifferent 'so long' that chilled me to the marrow. For a moment I stood stock still, hurt and resentful. "He doesn\ need to carry things quite so far," I whispered to the empty room. Then I rushed across the room and pulled open the door that had Just closed after Jim. The hall was emp ty. And in sudden reaction I won dered what I would have done if Jim had bom there. Trembling and weak" 1 sank down on the couch and gave way to the tears of utter weakness. "Anne" said I sternly to myself at last, "you have always wanted to be friends with Virginia. Now you're on the verge of that very thing. Doesn't it cheer you?" It didn't. So I tried again. "Anne, Virginia understands Jim. and she is pretty shrewd. Have you 110 pride? Do you want her to guess how things are between Jim and you ?" I didn't. So I had to brace up. And j there was an added motive now to make me long to win Virginia's con fidence and friendship. I might be afraid of having her | discover how things were between Jim and me. but. on tlie other hand, Jim adored his Jeanie rtnd by some twist of fate she might be the means of righting things between us again. Ho, with an eye to Virginia's criti cal glance, I tried lo make myself very line for our luncheon and after noon together. But I had 110 clothes in which lo make myself fine. When 1 married I had the simple wardrobe of the average girl who earns her own modest living, and since my marriage 1 hadn't bought a thing. T spent so much time trying to get a good effect from my simple old blue serge and a vest and cuffs borrowed from a half-worn blouse of honey- j colore 1 georgette, I was late in spite i of the fact that I took three cars in order to make the cross-town mile and a half Virginia lives from us. 1 "You're late!" was her greeting. "Phoebe's out —as usual. Now let's sit down with our hats on so we'll be in time for a matinee. Or don't j you want to go?' "Oh, I'd love to! I haven't since I ' was married. I'm sorry to be late, 1 Jeanie, but the cars were so slow"— ] "Cars?" Virginia lifted her ques ||Heal Itching Skins ' With Cuticura AH druggist* Soap 2.". Ointment"' k 50, Tnlcnm 8-unrlo paoh free of "Chtlcura, Dept. E, Boston." Doing His Duty "For two years I suffered agoniz ing pains in my stomach, belching up sour and bitter fluids and gas. Tongue always coated. Doctors were unable to help me. The first ■ lost of Alayr's Wonderful Remedy made me feel 100 per cent, better, ' and 1 am now feeling better than at any time in my life. I deem it my duty to advise other sufferers." It is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the inflammation whicti causes practically all stomach, liver and intestinal ailments, including ap pendicitis. One liose will convince or money refunded. George A. Gorgas, 11. C. Kennedy and Clark's drug store. "Every Day Is Starting Day" lAt the S. of C., but the Best Time to Begin is NOW This will be the time when thousands and thousands of young men and women throughout the United States will enroll in one of the many Accredited Business Schools of our Country. They will enroll for intensified training in Commercial Work, because the year 1919 will demand more than ever before, people who are trained to do one thing well. It will be the year for those who have STANDARD TRAINING. This is an Accredited School — We have a Standard to follow (Clip tliis and send it in at once for full information) I; School of Commerce 4 Troup Building 15 S. M irket Square Cut out this coupon and send it to us now I Gentlemen: Please send me complete information I about the subjects I have checked —also the correlative branches. Typewriting Secretarial Civil Service Bookkeeping Shorthand Stefiotypy I > Name Street or It. I>. No I City Slate twesday EVEyi>|G, t'ening yebrows. "You have to take tlirco to get here. Goodness ch'ld, why didn't you came decently in a taxi ? "Why I never have;" I said sim ply "Tim >u began, then. Jim docs. Atnaml 1 ' II you get Drysen on the wire at d- tell him I want iwo good seai.- • the new French eomedy. Or i- tie • something else y 1 d rath er sc. vi-ie?" "No; 1 d !ike to see that if you think it' gout'. I've only bee 'to the theater twice —recently," I continued, still in the same mood for revealing what 1 dared, and so avoiding dan gerous topics. "We'll sit down and have our grape fruit while Amanda's 'phoninv." said Virgin 1. "I'm glad I thou - o of a matinee It won't do for yo to get] rusty <>n the theater—every r you 1 meet will be talking about th latest success. We must go to a itineei at least nee a week." "I'd love to be with you. nnle, I to hav a ottet -a-week eng.' tent. I It seems so nice and 'girlv Hut I don't believe i can afford a matinee' so often " "Anne, tave you any Idea what ; you can afford?" asked Virg in tently . "What do you incane, Jean;.' "Just 1 minute," said Yrginia. j "Here comes Amanda. Wei \man da?" I "Two good scuts in the fot 'tit row | —three dollars apiece. Mrs. l ilton," I reported Amanda, as calmly if six , dollars f< r ntalinee seats w part 1 f her regular scheme of thin "Fin* - !" replied Virginia. Now. serve lie salad with tile ftb-i and then order a taxi for tcn-afb-; wo." Virginia's serene extra an< e ra her startled me, yet 1 foiim my self • njoyitlg the atmosphere : lux ury and well being with wh 1 she was arrounding us both. H IJenly she leaned across the table ad re newed the attack: ".tune, is that the sntne lit! • blue serg. dress you wore the fir t time you eatne to the Hochumbou call for t'hnebe and me?" "It is." I replied a bit lit' isiiy. | "Dot" it look shabby?" i "No. but 1. think you might ,c .1 nui'T, smarter .one. Don't I hurt, I doilr. Von look charming;. 1: that j was i -Bond I.v st it Jim won down : tc IV tiy's wedding. Bondly "sn't ;tttrn out n think under seventy-live j dollers. . . Dnu you see the p unt?" I "Sauce for the goose?" I replied J trvit : to laurh flippantly. | "Not exactly," Virginia sit lior head "But men like their • s to ' look smart and to be i* tot with j things lit her women are— 1 not i theii wives? Jim's n.iturallj -ner ous- don't let him change, a id lon't spend you .whole allowance on the | house and noodles for your t i! !e." | • Then with an ugly shock t e real* : izatiou ranio to me that I lit tin I allowance Onee in the 1 ML .ago days of povertv ,'lm -had gl.cn me the full of his month! heck front Hahlah's —all nis asau"d in come. But since then he ha; never ofTeta ino a regular sum. In t un | willingni. ito usk fox money and to i introduce he commercial poii" ; into '•: lII' ma liage, I had a tiled without tuestion just what h chose . to e . e luc i As v ifc ttil sweetheart Iha trust jed J I'S 'ne rosily. ! artier and pal, could I k fur I raj ruler share in our ne* pros , pei I'l > Be Continued.! Allied Missions in Budapest Released . .Paris. April I.—The I-Yencc Hrit | ish and Serbian missions white, were ] in Budapest when the Hungarian | revolution broke out. have ved Jat llaigradc. They were imp uetl i in their living quarters, b 1 not I sent to jail. ringing LJp Fdthsr Copyright, 1918, International News Service - cJVlan.Ll£ NOWSj ME. CHANCE. I'M "SAFE. IF I T1 HEY!! OE4 PARDON- V YOU'LL FOROT r r\l ■! 1 TO SNEAK OUT WHILE f,|T A MR. - BUT YOU S | H J?t \ \ THt^E CURT * ,h^! r\ r S ßcsor ME hands 99 ' l | ° NNfoobE i LIFE'S PROBLEMS ARE DISC US SEP . "My dear Mrs. Wood row: Please can you help me or- tell me what I is wrong? "I am a woman twenty- I six years old, have been married 1 I since 1 was sixteen, and have a I 1 child eight years old. "I hare a very comfortable home; and a husband that 1 know is the] llnst in the world, r have so many blessings —and yet, in spite of them i all, I am discontented. I feel so useless, and my life is j I so monotonous and empty, 1 feel : stifled. 1 know 1 should be satis- j | lied and contented, but the more I j i try the more restless and unhappy 1 j ! seem to get. "I want so much to lie free and , to get out in the world to sink or ! swim for myself; but I have the I child to think of, and it doesn't seem j j fair or right to do so. 1 feel like I it caged bird. Everywhere 1 turn '■ i find bars pushing me back. "I know every one in this world ! hits their own problem to solve, but sometimes others can help us. Must, I solve mine alone, or can you aid me? Is it my duty to stay where I I am, or to give tip my home and be free as 1 long to be? Please, Mrs. I Woodrow, advise me if you can." [ Let us look at the question from | all sides, and study its possibili : ties. Suppose, for instance, like Nora in "The Doll's House," you walk out and shut the door behind you? ] There you are: free. "Now what ' are you going to do with that free ' dom ? You are out in the big world, which is quite indifferent to the fact of your either sinking or swim ming. The big world asks but one i tliing—results. You may have friends who are able to help you start some under ! taking; but "pull" only goes so far. 1 At tlie last, you've got to stand on your own merits, which means your inherent fitness for whatever you have undertaken, your capacity for steady, hard work, your power to meet disappointment after disap pointment and come up smiling and i undaunted after every hard knock of fate It would lie very humiliating, you i know, to "fiiv" in your enterprise, jan dhave to crawl back and knock on tlio door you have closed. Your 1 husband and child would by that time have adapted themselves to 1 new conditions, anil have learned to DAILY HINT ON FASHIONS A NEW AND SMART JUMPER STYLE x 2773 —This is an attractive model for combinations of material. The guimpc of lawn or butiste and the I dress of challio, albatross, voile, silk, j or serge, would be very effective. The j dress closes on the shoulders. The guimpe may be made with the sleeve I in wrist, or elbow 'length., j The Pattern is cut in 4 sizes: 6, 8. jlO and 12 years. Size 10 will require Ilia yards for the guimpe, and 2?i ! yards for the dress, of '27-inch ma terial. A pattern 1 of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt qf 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 j... Address •, City and State HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH do very nicely without you. Your return might seem a rather unwel come intrusion. It is life you are living, my dear, not melodrama. Do you know what is the matter with you? You are track-sore. That is an expression used to de scribe the moods and tantrums of a race horse When it gets tired pounditig around and around the track. Jts trainers then give it change and rest —turn it out on pasture—until it gets back into form. You are going through a psycho logical experience. I,ife has been too easy for you. What have you been doing all those years of your married life, front sixteen to twenty-six? Just pottering around, I would be willing to wager. You have "the best husband in the world," which means that he has given you every comfort and an unvarying devotion: and your child is evidently not a cause of anxiety to you. Therefore, having nothing in the world to bother about and being a healthy, normal individ ual with no outlet for your imagina tion, you have manufactured wor ries. Mentally you are in the condi tion of it perfectly well person who is confined to bed, when he wants to get up and exercise his limbs. You w.ant to exercise your unused faculties. You are suffering from one of the cruelest diseases in the world, boredom. There is only one cure for it—a real interest in life and hard work. Your letter shows that you have time to burn. Occupy it . Ask yourself what you really want to be or do. Perhaps you have ro mantic dreams of the stage, or of becoming a motion picture star? You are not young enough. Per haps your inclinations lean toward business? That would require actual business ability and a great deal of training. The obstacles must always be considered. Hut when you have decided what your interest will be—and >ou need one —work at it, drudge at it, ac quire proficiency. You will thus discover many things about your self—whether you have the capac ity for genuine concentration, whether you have the quality ot perseverance, whether you really prefer to be "free." Yet, why leave your home to make this experiment? Some hours spent away from it each day would be good for you no doubt; but why a definite break? Your child needs you, so does your husband. Do you imagine that anywhere in the world you are going to find an affection like that which you consider cast ing aside, anything that will make up to you for the spontaneous, whole-hearted love of your own child? Idle dream! Why do you not go away for a time? Why not make a long visit, and by the change of scene get a truer perspective on your life. Then when you return, get busy. Do not drift any longer. Put your time, The ONE NEEDED Glistening china, gleaming silver, snowy linen, and Tetley's,—a perfect picture 1 And no wonder, —a steaming cup of Tetley's cheering fragrant tea will always add the right touch to the otherwise perfect meal. With a cup of Tetley's deep colored, soft flavored Orange Pekoe Tea in your hand, for instance, you find a new meaning in tea. And its comfort and cheer will help you enjoy that dinner or luncheon. \ All of Tetley's Teas are gathered from the world's finest tea gardens, and are carefully and skilfully blended. They have a different flavor. TETLEY'S TEA ' your thought, your heart into some j work, and you will come to laugh I at the discontent and restlessness i front which you now suffer. Advice to the Lovelorn IS lIKR IjOYKR TOO OI,l>? * DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: Both my parents are dead and an uncle and an aunt are my guar dians. They object to my marrying a man of thirty-three because of his age, but he could give me a com fortable home. I am twenty-one j and love hint enough to be happy ! with him the rest of my life, but j my guardians refuse to hear to it. I Your judgment will be greatly ap i predated. A CONSTANT READER. A twenty-one-year-old girl should be mature enough to make up her ' own mind in this matter. You real ! ize, of course, that you are past the | age of legal guardianship, so I sup | pose you mean that you are guided I by the advice of your aunt and uncle j through the affection. The fact that i your lover can "give you a com fortable home" doesn't seem very important to me. His being thirty three need not make bint ineligible, 'fbe real question is: Are you in love with him? I suspect you arc not. Daily Dot Puzzle ! ft———mmmmmmmmmmmmmmt—■— MH—BßM mm 18 *• C 10 • ' . V .iz '7 it li. • 21* —-X 23 • • • p, to / 7 ? *4- f ' * s I * 57 5b 25. * l ' .3 • fe- 4- .54 oL. • 2fe • fel ' 3 -feo | ' z.B /// ... 16 7 • / 42. • • 3l 44- • 3° 31 I'Ao V 3 • .33 . 41 , 50 // SB* 35 ' . / / 3b . • 31 3fe 37 . • 55 52 • Draw from one to two and so on to the end. i Oldest Advertising Agency Celebrates Philadelphia, Pa., April I. —An j | important and interesting milestone | | in the history of American advertis- > j ing will be celebrated in this city | next Friday evening. April 4. The. j oldest and largest advertising con- ; I cern in this country—N. W. Ayer & j Son—will mark the fiftieth year of ] the founding of its business. I Dating back to 1 869, N. W. Ayer I & Son has passed through all stages j |of the development of advertising. I ! To-day, with advertising at its high- I jest point, this firm as a leader in ad- j ! vertising thought and progress, more j j than ever typifies its famous motto, I "Keeping Everlastingly at it Brings J ; Success." ! Men distinguished in many ehan- ; ] nels of the world's work will honor | ' the celebration with addresses j .% i High line of quality that has been maintained here and * mi//T\ the same low prices that always prevail, our store of- V\ fers you this season garments that will meet approval rfj n\i \ from every angle character, individuality, quality fU \\[ j and cost. AJL^' Here are a few suggestions at special prices for Wednesday only. 'f? 40T GENUINE HEATHER- J I BLOOM PETTICOATS 14 J/y\ Special for Wednesday only; one to a customer, : M\ $1.19 Y Our regular price, $1.95. j ALL-WOOL SERGE ALL-WOOL \\U AND JERSEY DRESSES SERGE CAPES . \\ In one lot for Wednesday only. Spc- Coat front, braided collar and 1 ( .j.j] " belt. Special, U- $9.95 $10.95 Jjf j Our regular price, $24.95. J' Values up to $24.95. , CREPE I SUITS DE CHINE 0F AND ' TWEED A WV GEORGETTE MIXTURES €4MLX BLOUSES fatocd mo Spccia| P ' end, 1X / Whitc "J' 1 j) 'j a " slzes - Special, $l7-95 JZNJ'- 1 $2-19 Our regular price, $24.95. Jff\\ ■ L 1 ' * Our regular price, $2.95. *" X"* LADIES BAZAAR B "' Y X™' Wisely 8-10-12 S. FOURTH ST. For Less. APRIL 1. 1919. World's Work for April. It is the j result o fthe intelligence and indus- i try, which enables each of us to | produce more than we require of ' some particular thing and exchange | | it with some one else for another i filing that we require, and of which I the other person has produced a su- j ! perflulty. Fundamentally, prosperity j j depends upon a multiplication of hu- | man needs and increased power to supply them. It has always followed great wars, because the belligerent people are i hungry, and unclothed, and need j more, and because the inventiveness and organization, that have been de ! veloped in the struggle, make in- I creased production, at a lower cost l than the normal, possible. I THE MOST DANGEROUS OF ALL DISEASES No organs of the liunian body are so | important lo health and long life as the : kidneys. When they slow up and corn | mence to lag in their duties, look out! I Ilnnger is in sight, j Find out what the trouble is—with ; out delay. Whenever you feel nervous, j weak, dizzy, softer from sleeplessness, I or have pains in the hack, wake up at j once. Your kidneys need help. These are signs to warn you that your kidneys are not performing their functions | properly. They are only half doing ! their work and are allowing impurities to accumulate aud be converted into uric acid and other poisons, which are causing you distress and will de stroy you unless tiny arc dnyeu fioiu your system. '^F ace Wrinkles From Feet'v | Your own doctor will tell you that tho i nagging misery of sore feet has an irri j tating effect on the nervous system, which, } of course, effects the facial muscles and j will eventually leave its mark in the way i of wrinkles about the eyes, forehead and I mouth. End the foot misery and watch | the effect. You say "Sure, but how accom | jilish this?" Well, any drußgist will tell you I there is nothing to equal the Cal-o-cidc foot j bath. In fact, its results are remarkable, giving immediate relief from aching, burn | ing and perspiration. Cal-o-cide costs only ! a quarter a package which also contains j little plasters which are said to remove tho most stubborn corn. It is surely worth ' trying, even for comfort. —Adv. Get some GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules at once. Tbe.v are an old, tried preparation used all over the world for centuries. Tliey contain only old-fasliioued. soothing oils combined with strength giving and system-cleans ing herbs, well known ami used by phy sicians in their dailv practice. GOLD MEDAL Haarlem (til Capsules are im ported direct from the laboratories in Holland. They are convenient to take, and will either give prompt relief or your money will he refunded. Ask for them at any drug store, lint be sure to get the 'original imported GOLD MEDAL brand. Accept no substitutes, lu sealed packages. Three aizes. 7