UW ReadiivJ firW?rcei\ aivd all ihc Pf^fl "When a Girl Marries" By AX3 LISLC A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problems of a Girl Wife IUAITER CI.XI-X. Thoebe stood clutching the jade earrings and necklace Dick West had bought her the night before. Her little heart-shaped face flashed cut at me in vivid defiance. and between us vibrated the words she Had just spoken: "Yes, I've changed. -Vnd you can't change me back again. He member thati" I realized the truth of what she had just said. I couldn't change this flaming. pleasure-loving coquette i back to the little Thoebe of a few j months ago—the girl of soft lips and : gentle eyes. I had failed. Jim didn't see the importance of , the enchantment I wanted to work, i nor yet of the evil spell I wanted j to undo. And Virginia didn't even dare to try. But there was one oth- | er who might succeed where we had | failed. Phoebe had loved Xeal once—loved j him devotedly. There was no doubt ] of that. Child love, perhaps, but sin- • cere and true and good. She hid' come to the city lonely and hungry j for life. Friendship and excitement and love were the things she ha J ! wanted. She had asked for my friendship. I could see that now. And I had j been so shocked by Virginia's cold- J ness to me that I hadn't realized j how I was passing it right on to. Phoebe. So Phoebe had failed In her fl.st' search—the search of friendship Then before she could be searching anew for the second th • her youth craved—gayety—Xeal h„ come. And he had brought her the j gift that held in itself the sum of all i her longings—love. ' I could see Thoebe again on the evening of her return with Virginia, ■HHHMBHMMI I Check that cough or cold quickly Extreme and rapid changes of temperature are apt to result in a sudden cold. Check it promptly. Prudent people always have DILL'S Cough Syrup on the family medicine shelf, ready for any ailments of the respiratory organs. Southing, pleasant to take. Take accord ing to directions that come with the bottle. Prepared by the Dill Co.,Norristown,Pa. Also manufacturers of Dili's Liver Fill* Dill's Balm of Life Dill's La Grippe end Cold Tablets Dill's Kidney Fills Aak your druggist or dealer in medicine. The hind mother always kept |*^ — ~ I ll—-^ n S. CALLUSES GORGAS DRUG STORES fUNDERTAKEIt 1743 Chas.H.Mauk * Private Ambulnne. Phone. k , i &S You May Easily Have Three i&jg Hours of Rest on Wash Day THE APEX ELECTRIC Flnrns It for you. If yon unh the old way, yonr health paya. OtherwUe, the laundry collectN. ' KT ™ E APFX E, ECTR,C NEIDIG BROS., LTD. ■ li 21 South Second St. ' EASY PAYMENTS He Will Quit Drinking If You Help Him With ORRINE! OR RISE is a Secret Heme Treatment flint allays tlie craving for intoxicants. For twenty years it lias helped thousands of men and women to get hack on their feet—sober, in v dustrious, happy. Put it in his food or beverages. ORRIS Eis guaranteed to pro- Start notr.' Drink is a dicac (lut . c heneficial results quicklv £id must br treated as such. purchas( . prk . (! „ rolu J lv rp . Help him *r,TCtl„ so tlint long funded Two forms —No 1 In-fore Prohibition comes he ll p„wdcr. for secret Home Trent quit drinking without trouble— luent . No . o ~i lls for Volun . without looking for a danger- tary Treatment. SI.2T. „ pack ous, health-destroying *ubti- ~s. eit her form. 4 packages fair narcotic! Get his nerves $5.00. All druggists or postpaid . in shape. in plain, sealed wrapper. For sale by Geo. A. Gorgas and Dealing Druggists Free booklet n-ailrd In plnln, Healed envelope. TUK OllltlVF, COMPANY, 114(1 - I.lth Street, X. W., WUNhlngton, !>. C. _ _ MONDAY EVENING. sitting on the big couch with one foot tucked under her and peering up to smile a shy "Hello"' As If It had been only yesterday. I could hear Xeal's reply: "1 thought you were Just a kid." And Phoebe's: "I'm a grown woman—seventeen;" How they had laughed together ' then and how happily they had sat side by side, finding each other and forgetting In the joy of that the ; hurt of the thorough snubbing Vir ginia had given Xeal for his pre- ! sumption In calling her "Virginia," | and for his awkwardness In stum- I bling on Pat Dalton's name, j It began that very night, I suppose, i They didn't know it. but even those ; I two young things were reaching out j | to each other with shy, half-guessed ; Icnglngs. I Xeal had brought her the greatest \ gift of all, and Phoebe had forgotten . j the lesser gifts. But seeing her now —avid for excitement and luxury j | and attention—l knew that Phoebe j I had traveled a lung road since the I autumn day when she bade the sol- , ; diet- Xeal a tearful goodby and j pressed her lips to his diamond circ- j ! let as it nestled on her hand. [ Yes. there was one thing for me to j ' do—send for Xeal. I would write to Father Andrew. 1 | ask him to work hard to help Xeal j ' get his discharge, and to persuade i j the boy to come back to us as soon \ as he was out of the army. In that moment the kinship of the ( I Harrisons, in spirit as well as blood. ; 1 was very clear to me. They had ! pride in common and stubbornness, j | Perhaps his sister also shared Jim's i ! need of dominating the one he loveil. j i I didn't know. But of this I was j | certain—Virginia had wrecked ner- \ I self on the reefs of her own pride : ' and stubbornness; Jim and I were j ' drifting into dangerous waters be- | •ausc of these same things. And ; | my Phoebe. My own pride, my own j pride. my own need of freedom, might work enough damage so that J dim and 1 would be shipwrecked too lin the end. 1 dared not think of that j now. What the present demanded \ as • I that 1 save Phoebe. I We had taken the circlet of dia- ! monds from her hand and had sent J ,it back to Xeal. We had taken love ' from h-r. And Phoebe had turned; to the least of her gifts and exalted it to first place. Excitement uas : her patron saint now. and t would I ; wreck poor little Phoebe unless j ■ some one saved her from herself. ' ' Of course I didn't formulate my ] | thoughts in the minute of silence ) | while I stood staring at Phoebe. I j had been thinking and brooding all j through the long morning while 1 ; had waited her to awake. -All that j I came to me then ways the decision I to send for Xeal. To Phoebe X said: I | "That carved jade, dear—do you ; i think you ought to accept such \ gifts?" Phoebe's face dimpled with mis- ! j chief. : "Did you see Shelly's face when he \ held my pretties? My wasn't he j jealous! I'll wager he sends me a , whole garden of American beauties j to-day." j ; "Phoebe!" I cried in real repug nance, "you're playing those men off j against each other to see which will j do more for you. which will send more i wonderful presents." I'hoebe took a sudden impulsive ! step toward me. There was a wistful I look on her face and it seemed to me | ; that she was going to be gentle and j repentant. But what she said at last was: , "You think that! This jade"— i j Then her voice grew impish: "Well think away, Anne, think away. The | necklace cost S2OO and the earrings • SSO. Xow, what do you say to that?" I "Phoebe!" 1 cried furiously, "You | 1 can't do such things. You shan't ac- j cept such gifts from men!" "So"" asked Phoebe suavely, j I "Who's to stop me?" I Then a voice rang out from the i I other room: "Hello, the house! Who's to stop j ! what? and who's to welcome me ; | back to the big city?" It was Xeal! | (To Be Continued.) Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918.. International News Service --J"- By McManus HELLO *lb I 1 ObEO TO f TWO DOLLARS WORTH (_ ( WELL-TOU 1 DON'T TOU NO* 1 COULON'T THE BUTCHER- ] EARN TH/ST OF POTATOES AND ] I THINK IT BEAR TO bEE HOW WELL-bEND ME NUCH MONET FIVE DOLLARS WORTH , , TOO LOOKING I VVOULD BE LITTLE I <ET FOR A b\X DOLLAR IN A WEEK- L, OF LETTUCE- ' [ 0 I I BETTER IF VOU THE MONET- _J STEAK- , ' —— .—, ( ~ > , . VENT TO THE Sr > w4 T ° REf j : f~ jv-/v LIFE'S PROBLEMS ARE DISCUSSED The w'.fe. the husband and the ' vampire lady! There is a triangle as old as time. It is constantly being presented to me. I have at present five or six letters on my desk from indignant | or heartbroken wives, and one from a vampire lady who signs herself ; "Miserable Mabel." The husbands i are discreetly silent. The wife—l will put it in the : singular, for all the letters are prac tically the same in substance —writes me that she i s very unhappy and that her health has become affected through worrying over her husband s infatuation for another woman. She says that this has been the subject of many quarrels between them, and that she has begged him on her knees to give up the siren who is disturb ing the peace of tiicir home. She has two or three little chil dren. and fears that their futures are imperiled as well as her own by , the course the man is pursuing. She , wants to keep her home; she wants to keep her husband's affection, and above all she wishes her children to have the best possible chance in life. Jf there ever was a situation re quiring common sense and sanity of judgment, it is this one. Eliminate sentiment and natural resentment and look at the matter quite coldly, and 1 what do we see? First, that the wife holds all the trump cards. In a duel between her and the siren the siren is quite at ' a disadvantage. By virtue of legality, custom and public opinion, the wife's position is impregnable. Xo matter how desperate the hus band's infatuation —and the more desperate the more fleeting—he is rarely entirely blind to the very prac tical issues involved. He will not lightly contemplate the possible breaking up of his home and separa- | tion from his children. Neither is j he anxious to endure the criticism j and censure of his friends and ac- i quaintances. He is also aware that I the law holds him responsible for I DAILY HINT ON FASHIONS fH 'lil H A PRACTICAL WORK DRKSB 2774—This style may be developed with sleeve in wrist or elbow length. The closing is reversible, —a practical feature of this model. Gingham, seer sucker. lawn, drill, khaki, llatinelette. Galatea and percale are good ma terials for this design. This pattern is cut in 7 sizes: 34. 36, 38, 40, 42. 4 4 and 46 inches bust measure. Size 38 requires yards of 44-inch material. The dress meas ures about 2'4 yards at the foot. A pattern of this illustration mail ed to any address on receipt of ten cents in silver or stamps. Tclcgrnph Pattern Department For the 10 cents inclosed please send pattern to the following address: Size Patterns No.. ? Name Address City and State .........V.....;. ' — ' •' 1 > ' • . HARRISBURG OftJAj- TELEGRAPH the maintenance of his family and the education of his children. Ho will think twice before con sidering tile establishment of a new home with the vampire lady installed therein. It would be an expensive experiment at least, even if love were eternal, and love so rarely is. When we want anything very much, what do we do? Everything in em power to get it. But in cases like these, where the affections and emo tions are involved, it is very hard to follow a well-defined and calcu lated course. Yet. if it could be dene, how different the results might be. how many domestic catastrophes might be averted. If instead of quarreling with Friend Husband on the subject, the nife had laughed at it and refused to discuss ii seriously, she might have made the whole affair seem a cheap and silly escapade. Bhe should never have begged him on her knees to give the other woman up. It made the vamp lady seem too terribly im portant. It also strengthened in him the interesting conviction that he was the victim of a grande l'assion. Suppose, instead of taking it so seriously, she had determined to re gard it as one of those temporary aberrations to which we are all sub ject. it might have quickly blown over. We all make fools of ourselves now and again and we invariably excuse and justify our own idiocy. Then why not be lenient, for a change toward the other fellow's lapses into folly? Of course. It is humiliating for a wife to have her friends comment upon her husband's "goings on;" but why should she gratify their long ings for a sensation and give them something to gossip about? Suppose she would say smilingly: "Oh. yes; it is amusing. T'm glad, however, that he is flirting with any one so harmless. It is just his way. Poor girl, I hope she doesn't take him too seriously." Think how dis appointed the sympathizing friends would be. | The philandering husband in nine eases out of ten does not really waver !in his allegiance to his family. He merely wants a little excitement, a bit of a fling. He wants to dramatize himself to the vampire lady, and tell her how misunderstood he is and how easily he can express to her those deep, inmost, sacred thoughts and emotions he has never been able to voice to any one else. And then, when he is met with tears, reproaches and rows at home, he becomes mulish. If the wife could only bring her self to look at him in the same large maternal, indulgent way that she would regard a little boy who is having a naughty spell and whom scolding and punishment only make naughtier, much trouble would be averted. • As for the vampire lady, she can be safely left to Time's revenges. 1 hey are lying in wait for her. She ll get them. Daily Dot Puzzle 2o 2 e 22 23 -<A ' • ' *. 26 '3 • 8 • 25 •31 '7 • ' 2.fc 18 ' .32 33 '7 * ' 35 ll . lb 4 • 2 • 37 B • ,5 * 3 * 3 1° 5 ! 14 . • 6 33 •11 * * * ® T . *l2. 42 4 ' i *47 . *43 N • 55 7 48 4t • Ma | 54 %5 ° / V'A" 53 • H Draw from one to two and so on to the end. 1 Middletown Special Services in the Churches This Week | Special services will lie held in the : Methodist church every night this I week except Saturday. The saera i ment of the Lord's supper was oto i served at the morning service Sun j day, and J. H. llalhert one of the minute men of the Centenary, and of j the bteelton church, gave a five-mln .• ute talk on the Centenary movement, i in the St. Peter's Lutheran Church I services will be held during the 1 week. Services 'preparatory to the ' , holy communion will he held Wed- , '■ nesday evening. On Holy Thursday I ! the subject for the evening will be I "The Supreme Motive of Oethseiuane, : I I'or My Sake." Friday evening, sub ! ject will be "Forsaken." Service | will be held Easter Sunday morning at 7 o'clock: a (lower service at It'.an •A. M.: holy communion and reception i of members with infant baptism at I i o'clock. In the Presbyterian Church Easter l 1 services will he held Wednesday • evening ami the Itev. Howard Itod ■ gers, of the Market Square I'resby , terian Church will preach and on . Thursday evening the Kev. M. S. j l-'ales. of the Pine Street Presbyter ; ian Church. Hnrrisburg, will have : charge of the services. ' The Junior Christian Endeavor So : eiety of the St. Peter's Lutheran : Church collected during tlie week j seventy-nine dozen of eggs, which I were sent to the Loys.ville Orphan j Home. The annual congregational meeting I and social of the St. Peter's Lutheran | Church, will be held on Monday even ing. April 21. . , William Detweiler, of street, will assist the choir of the Covenant Presbyterian Church. I-lar risburg. in their Easter cantata. "The Easier Alleluia" Easter evening. John Books, who spent the past I two weeks in town. returned to i ISharpsburg. j I William Moore, the Misses Louise. | and Gertrude Moore have returned | I from a several days' visit to rela | tives at Camp Hill and left to-day j with their mother. Mrs. C. V. Moore, j for Chicago, where they will make | their future home. | George fitter moved from the Shen- | ; feld property. Pike street, to the Mansion House in Swatara street. | H. P. Young is quite ill at his home i in South Union street. | The Easter entertainment held at ; the Coble's school house, Lower Swa j tara township, on Saturday evening by the teacher, Miss Myrtle Bauch- I man. and her pupils, was well at- ' i tended. Miss Landis. of, Millersvillo, ] i gave several recitations. | Mrs. F. W. Myers left this morning j i for a two weeks' trip to Landisvlllo ; j and Heading. Harold Martin moved from Xissley ; ' street to Willianisport and his broth- j I er, Charles Martin, moved into the j j house made vacant by his brother. j I The borough council .and school j I board will meet in regular session i this evening. At the baseball meeting of fans held in the I-iberty tire engine house on Friday evening a team was form ed and will be known us the Middle town baseball team and Paul Whar ton was elected as manager, and A. B. Cressler, treasurer. The following were appointed as a linunce commit tee: J. S. McCortl. W. H. I.andis, Sam uel Menear, I.udwig Neer, Ira Gooll, Jacob Malye, J. J. 1-andis and Harry Baumbach. Capt. Frederick Netcher. of the aviation depot left Saturday for Chi cago. 111., where he was called on ac count of the death of his mother. Abner Alleman has broken ground in South Catherine street, where he will erect a six-room bungalow. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Force have moved from the Misse3 Young's flat. South Union street, to the home of Mrs. Force's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Shindle, Nissley street. Wesley K. Raymond, who spent the weekend in town as the guest of relatives, returned to his home at Philadelphia. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Printz. of Philadelphia, are spending several days in town as the guests of the Misses l.vei, Spring street. Mrs. U. C. Steiner, who had been guile-ill at her home at Ann and Union streets for the past several weeks, is able to be out again, and Miss Charlotte Weldner, a trained nurse, who had charge was dismiss ed Vernon Trttch, who had been in the ser\ ice of Uncle Sam for the past eighteen months, and was a member of Troop G, Seventh Cavalry, and sta tioned at Fort Bliss, Texas, was mus tered out of service and returned to the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Tritch, North Union street. Sun day morning. Alonza Tritch, of Newark. N. J., is spending sometime in town with his brother, John Tritch. North Union street. The regular monthly meeting of the Firemen's Relief Association, was held in the I-iberty lire engine house Sunday afternoon. The Middletown and Swatara Wa ter Company lias a force of surveyors at work making plans for the new standpipe in North Union street. TO GIVE EVTKItTAIXMEVr Mrs. Andrew Todd Taylor and her assfstant. Miss Van Doren, of York, will present "The Missionary Clinic" in tile social room of the Pine Street Presbyterian Church Friday evneing, April 25. The entertainment will be under the auspices of the Home and Foreign Mission Circle. SUPERINTENDENTS RETURN Prof. Frank B. Shainbaugh. county school superintendent, anfl Prof. W. R. Zimmerman, ussistant superintend ent, have returned from Philadelphia where they attended the sessions of schoolmen's week held at the Uni versity of Pennsylvania. 38 KILLED IN TWO DAYS'RIOTS Cairo Mobs, With Knives and Hatchets, Attack Ar menians By Associated I'ross. Cairo, Egypt, April 14. In two days of rioting here, ended at noon ion Saturday, thirty-eight persons were killed and one hundred wound | cd, it is announced in yesterday's official communique. Armenians were chiefly the objects of the mob's attacks, and seven of those killed were of that nationality. In rioting in Alexandria three persons were killed and six seriously injured Sat • urday mqrning, while a continuation of attacks on the troops resulted in the killing of seventeen other per sons during the afternoon. The text i of the statement reads: "There was further rioting in | Cairo yesterday. The mob, armed with knives and hatchets, made at tacks largely directed at Armenians. | The police report thirty-eight killed | and one hundred wounded during the forty-eight hours ended at noon I yesterday. The killed include seven j Armenians and four Greeks. Mili : tary measures were enforced and the night passed off quietly. | "Disturbances occurred in Alex -1 andria yesterday. There was a col- I lision in the morning between troops ' and rioters in the Karmus quarter in j which three were killed and six wounded seriously. In an Armenian disturbance in the afternoon the mob persistently attacked the troops who were obliged to fire, killing seven '< teen, including a number of the ring ; leaders, and wounding a number of j others. The public are warned to be I in their houses by 8 o'clock in the i evening. "Five British soldiers, including I two unarmed Indians, were mur j-dered on Wednesday. The troops | were greatly affected but showed j admirable patience. On Wednesday 1 night the Kasr El Ain Hospital i (Cairo) reported receiving 22 kill ed and 47 wounded civilians. A | large proportion of these casualties I was due to mob outrages. Disorder ! ly crowds composed of the worst elc j nients began operations in the quar- I ters from which the military patrols | had been withdrawn at the request *of the civil authorities. They niur | dered and carried out looting opera l tions upon small shops until the ; troops checked the excesses. The j rioters systematically canvassed the ! houses for Armenians, as was done j in the massacres at Constantinople, | and held up pedestrians, forcing I them to prove their identity. The j terror-stricken Armenians took j refuge in the Cairo suburb of llelio i polis, which is almost entirely Euro -1 pean, whereupon the local police ! men and watchmen abandoned their i posts, apparently shirking rcspon j sibility. "The Egyptian ministry (newly i formed on April 9), has not yet for- j j mally met." ' ORDER YOUR COAL | Coal prices will be 50c higher I in the Fail than they arc now.; | This is an absolute fact, and it: lis justifiable as endorsed by ! Governor Sproul, following his, j investigation of the coal situ- j ! ation. i We consider it the part of wis ; dom to at least lay in part of; next Winter's coal supply at ' once. Coal is more plentiful now and of better quality than j it is likely to be for some time I to come. I H. M. KELLEY & CO. |1 N. 3rd St. 10th & State Sts. j & APRIL 14. 1919. Advice to the Lovelorn MI ST CUI RTSHII' HE GBADI Al,f ! Dear Miss Fairfax: Two years ago a friend told me about a cousin. ' About a week ago he Introduced us. • 1 at once took a liking to her, and ia i the evening asked her would she care to go to a dance with me. She told 1 me that she would go, but first I i would have to go to her house. 1 went last Saturday, and after meet- | ing her parents we went to the dance. ] I studied the girl, and upon watching : her actions, she mauc me like her all the more. After the dance 1 told her that I would like to have her come j to my house this Sunday which she 1 agreed to do. The point 1 am trying to drive at is, do you think I should tell this girl about my love for her, knowing her only so short a time? BASILIC. Yours seems to be a highly ro mantic predicament. If you did fall In love at first sight, and can con vince the gill o'l this, perhaps that fact alone will melt her to the point of returning your love. But not many courtships are conducted with such an impetuous dash, and in gen eral it is better strategy to wait somewhat longer before declaring one's love. WON'T TAKE lIKK Ol'T OK LET H Kit GO DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: 1 am a young married woman, and my husband is quite a few years older than 1 am, and since we have been married he has not taken me anywhere. Some of my young girl friends have asked me to go to the theater with them, hut my husband gets mad and says I have I Gunzenhauser's /toMAID JRONAMHK IMBHBHBB BREAD UN ZEN HA USER'S HOMAID bread has the full nourishing qualities of all wheat flour. The loaf cuts better and goes further and pleases all tastes. Ask for it bp name. The grocer knows what's best, because it's HOMAID. Wrapped at the Bakery Sold at all Grocers The Gunzenhauser Bakery 18th and Mulberry Streets no right to go—that when ho gets ready to take nic out he will do so. and in the meantime 1 should stay at home and he contented. Yet he trusts me to go out to business, so why not with my friends whom he knows are nice, respectable girls. WORRIED. It seems to me that every woman who goes to business and earns her own living might be to a lit tle innocent recreation now and then. Try and make your husband see this. Difii't quarrel with him, but try to make him sec the reasonable ness of your side of the case. Whenever you sense a sick headache, or feel a bilious attack coming on, ward it off by the timely use of BEECHfIM'S PILLS. I,Tf t Sale of Any Medicine fai the WorldL Seld everywhere, la Boxes, 10c., 25c MOTHER GRAY'S POWDERS BENEFIT MANY CHILDREN Thousands of mothers ha7C found Mother Gray's Sweet Powders an excellent remedy for children complaining of headache, colds, fever ishncss, stomach troubles and bowel irregulari ties from which children snflfer. They areeasy and pleasant to take and excellent results are ac complished by their use. (lied by mother* for 30 year*, bold by Druggists everywhere, 23 cents. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers