' " When a Girl Marries" lly ANN LISLE A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problems of a Girl Wife CHAPTER CXC. 1 The chagrin I felt at seeing Tom i Mason disappear in the wake of Valerie Cosby was bad enough, but naving Jim see it happen was al most unendurable. The completely unendurable would be for Lane Cosby to leave me alone in the middlle of the floor, partner- J less. Now my lumbering, heavy hostj became vital to me. If I couldnti -old him, I'd have to endure double j Humiliation —in Jim's eyes and inj my own. What I did may have been path- j etic or shameless or funny. I didn't i know then. I don't know now. •I! put my hand on his sleeve and 1 > said to Lane Cosby: "Do you one-step as well as you j waltz?" i "We'll order a one-step for the I next and you shall see," he replied. | That meant a real respite, for I, had the next fox trot with Sheldon.; and dancing three dances in sue-] cession would turely keep me from l appearing the wall flower I was to! any one who was interested in ob-j serving. All during the one-step I waited! for Tom to reappear through the] outer entrance of the grotto—and j find me dancing, not seeming to no tice his defection. He didn't come. The fox trot sounded and Sheldon pranced away with me. It would be just my luck for Tom to come out and find me partnerless. One encore—two. I noticed Jim prowl ing around the room as if in search of some one. The music stopped. Jim came up and took possession of me. "Attentive husband," smiled Shel don. | "I've this one with Valerie, the little imp," said Jim as soon as we I were alone. "Come with me while > I pry her loose from whoever's play- j f ing the devoted." He didn't ask whether or no I had j the dance, but turning he suddenly |f remarked off-hand: "Your getting too pale and thin \' for lavender, Anne. Funny—you j used to look great in it. Guess you'd I better start wearing reds and pinks to cheer you up a bit. Say doesn't 1 Valerie look wonderful in that j r robe ?" v "That's what her husband said."! s T replied too wearily to be as catty) 1 as I sounded. "So you call her 1 1 Valerie?" | L "Sure. Cosby told me to.. He's|fl some proud of his little Val. Can't jl say I blame him. She's one nifty | y little kid." I I Thinking of Valerie Cosby, lan gurous, perfumed, the product of t apt and wealth, looking like a very modern reincarnation of Egypt—oflc OVEN BAKEIi BEANS | off the family j*f ea tl j pocketbook i With meat so high, and not so ; good for us anyway, what a j boon to have a food so rich, so J good, so nutritious and so easily j prepared as Heinz Baked Beansl One of the 57 Varietiea Heinz Baked Beans with Pork and Tomato Sauce Heinz Baked Pork and Beans (without Tomato Sauce) Boston style Heinz Baked Beans in Tomato Sauce without Meat (Vefetarian) Ny r Heinz Baked Red Kidney Beans To get best results use Heinz Pure Vinegar and Heinz Olive Oil in making your salads THURSDAY EVENING, HABBISBURG t&Sff&fi. TELEGRAPH MAY 8, 1919. Cleopatra herself—l almost laughed I aloud when Jim calmly described her as "one nifty little kid." Perhaps the men ot" her day called Helen of Troy a pippin, who knows? By now we had made the rounds of the ballroom, and the conser vatory, but there were no signs of our hostess. "Want to try this waltz?" asked Jim indifferently—so indifterently that he chilled the joy it always is for nte to dance with him. "If you like." I murmured. Just as we swung into position, a hand was laid on Jim's arm. And Tom Mason stepped between us. "No dancing with your own wife, boy!" he said. "Another man's wife is waiting tor you. See our pretty hostess beckoning from yon crystal balcony? Avaunt James and have at you." Jim made off at once. He didn't even stop to say: "Take care of Anne." "Sliarfl we dance?" asked Tom in a tone so different from the one in v nich Jim had invited me to swing" along to the strains of the music, that I felt at once soothed and calmed. "Please," I replied. Not a word was said until this music stopped. Then Tom caught my arm through his and led me off to one of the tiny green crystal hung boxes that made the balcony of the ballroom seem like the In-' side of a breaking wave. I found | a bench of drift-wood and moss, and i Tom stood before me looking down reproachfully: "How could you, Anne? How could you?" he asked. "I sounds like the chorus of a song." I replied flippantly, to hide my own amazing and unwelcome! hurt. "Why did you give away the blue i robe?" Before I could find some j answer that I dared venture to! make, he went on. "When I came in and saw it, I thought you were \ wearing it. That you had relented, had accepted at last the feeling j you always seem determined to j avoid. So I followed the robe—and ! found another woman wearing it." I "And continued to follow her." j It slipped out before I could call j on sober, second thoughts to save me. Tom's face changed— I knew] he had not missed the intimation of• jealousy but he. went onwithout 1 paying any attention to it. "I had called out 'Donna Anna' to her. She seemed to guess whom I meant and taunted me about the woman whose gown I knew, though she'd never worn it. I had to set her right—to save you from her in uendos. That is why I remained so long with her. Who'd want a sun flower when there are fragran,t lilacs in the garden? But why did you treat my gift so lightly, little Liliac Lady?" I got to my feet and held out my hands. "You mustn't! You mustn't!" I cried. "Pou tried to be a friend to Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918, International News Service ~ t '- By McManus If V I THIN< I HAD r~\ yes- \ haye f - ~~~~ ) ~" 1 DIDN'T \ TELL, n HQ BETTER wi YOU NOT TO CO . ___<=p9 AROOtA tNA YOU ANY THOUSAMO NE HAVE YOU 401N4 OURN AROUND THE J Ml HOt>PTAl_ ROLL-IN -PINA- I OH HAND' -i TO DO WITH J? j HOUSE WITH" J YHE YEAR- 1 HAND. H T TWO THOOSANO E ™* , I —~ J V 1 ? p v night. It's just because you aren't —always a friend that I had to give her the robe. There's Jim. I couldn't wear it —ever, because of Jim." "Jim!" Tom Mason laughed, and the liking that was beginning to come crumbled away. "Jim! Well, he seems to admire my little robe. It might have, been a good idea to —try its charms yourself." (To lie Continued.) Jet and Lace Are Being Taken Fron Ancient Trunks Chicago, May B.—Chicago society women are delving into attics and storerooms, unpacking ancient trunks and cedar chests, to uncover glories of past decades in the form of the jet and lace that grandmother wore. For jet is coming hack into its own with the turn of the half cen tury hour glass, and when combined with lace or fashioned in robes of jetted net, produce exquisite gar ments that have a tendency to em phasize or at least give the impres sion of slenderness. They are used much with the delicate Spanish laces or with dot ted point d'esprit. Along with the jet adorned gowns have come all sorts of alluring accessories of the jewel er's art in the form of earrings, combs and other hair ornaments. Recently a Chicago woman attend ed a function wearing a magnificent jet gown over a lace foundation. Every polished black facet glittered and spat fire as she walked or dan ced, the gown adapting itself per fectly to her figure, the despair of scores of women. THE LOVE GAMBLER By Virginia Terhune Van de Water CHAPTER I David Delaine, erstwhile ambulance driver in France, now invalided out Jof the service, was thinking very hard. He was back in "the good old U. S. A." Y'et just now it did not seem very "good" to him. For he was depressed. He had longed to return to his own country —longed for It unspeakably ever since he had learned that he was no more fit for work "Over There." The | bullet that had penetrated his ' ung I had left him too weak far active ser | vice. He had been told to "go home and get some outdoor job that would not be too strenuous." The advice had sounded simple. To follow it was quite another mat ter. When he enlisted he had given up a job in Baltimore. It had been desk work, the kind of thing he must avoid until he was strong again. In the bottom of his heart he had counted on some financial help from his nearest relative an eccentrc aunt—his dead father's sister. She was proud of the DeLaine name, and David was the only one to perpetu ate that name. Aunt Jeanne was queer and very exacting. Her nephew paid ft duty j call to her only as often us lie felt was necessary. At such times she would urge him to look for a wife. "If you marry the kind of a girl I wish you to, I will promise you that you shall be well provided for," was her frequent remark. These words Irritated ber nephew. Not only did he object to having his future planned for him. but he re sented the suggestion that he was was the kind of a man who would make a marriage of convenience. "I do not intend ever to marry at all," he would say, laughing to hide his annoyance. Miss DeLaine would shake her head reprovingly. "You will be sorry if you do not," she warned. The Right Kind of n <• Irl So annoyed had David been fiy these speeches that he had refused to call upon the daughter of an old friend of his aunt's when the girl had to come to Baltimore in response to an invitation from Miss DeLaine. "Desiree Leighton is going to spend a few days with me," Aunt Jeanne had told David. "I am very .anxious to have you know her. She is pretty —the only child of a Wealthy New York man—and he is a widower. Her mother was a friend of mine. Desiree is the kind of a girl I nope you will marry." But the young man was obdurate. While Desiree was in Baltimore he never went near Ills aunt's house a fact that the elderly woman noted with dignified disfavor. Y'et at Christmas and on birthdays she always sent her nephew a moder ate check with which to buy himself a gift from her. It was this custom that had given him ground for the hope that when he returned home, in valided, she would let him have a lit tle money until he had secured a po- Daily Dot Puzzle Ij'j 31 f 3 f t •*> 38 3 3 . •25*^ V ' V> \ to • ,► . 12 . T? 4z '4 . '.® 41. u •*> •• a* : si:, A-Q- 4 . Draw from one to two ami so on to the cud. sition—after which he would refund the amount lent him plus the 'nterest on it. The plan had seemed easy as David DeLaine thought it out while recup erating in France after his discharge from the hospital. He had ci\putfh money to pay for his board and lodgings for a few weeks in a tiny French village. He wanted to be quite well and ready for work be fore starting for his native land. He had written his aunt as soon as he was able to hold a pen. He had told her of his wound ui.d of his wishes. He was glad that he had done this when he reflected that as soon as he got back home he must ask her. to lend him money. He hoped to get a job in New York. Surely the prospects of advancement there would be better than In Balti more. The Terms of the Mill And then, just before leaving France, he had received a letter from his aunt's lawyer telling him that Miss Jeanne DeLaine had died sud denly of heart disease. "She left full directions regarding: her funeral and the disposition of her personal and household effects," the lawyer wrote. "All has been done as she would wish. Her many I friends were generally remembered. She arranged with a meticulous care that everyone should have some sou venir. "As to the other terms of her will. I will tell you of them when you re turn, which, I understand, will be very soon. It is easier to explain a matter face to face than to write about it." As soon as DeLaine landed in ihe United States, he went to Baltimore. He had a brief but honest talk with his aunt's lawyer, who explained the situation as tactfully as possi ble. The bulk of Miss DeLaine'.-, fortune was to her nephew if he married the girl of her choice. t "And that young lady is Miss De siree Leighton, of New York," the lawyer informed David. He made no comments on his late client's eccentricities, althougn he probably had decided views with re gard to them. "And if they marry?" The question was so blunt as to be almost rude. "Everything will go to certain charities designated by Miss De- Laine." David rose to his feet. "It is a forgone conclusion that the money will go to those charities," he said. "I have no intention of marrying— even if any woman would have me— which is most unlikely." I "But," the lawyer reminded him. "the testator named two years after your return to this country as the time allowed you in which to carry out her wishes with regard to Miss Leighton." "Thanks!" was the dry rejoinder. "Twenty-two years would find my decision unchanged." That night David DeLaine went to New York to look for a "job." (To Be Continued.) Advice to the Lovelorn A CASE OF FICKLENESS Dear Miss Fairfax: I am twenty-three and have been going about with a beautiful girl for over three years. We were to be married as soon as Sure Way To Get Rid Of Dandruff There is one sure way that never fails to remove dandruff completely and that is to dissolve it. This des 1 - troys it entirely. To do this, Just get about four ounces of plain, or dinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring; use enough to mois ten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. By morning, most if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of It, no matter how much dandruff you may have. You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop instantly, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive, and four ounces is all you will need. This simple remedy has never been known to fail. CHILDREN Should not be "dosed" for colds—apply the ££s "outside" treatment— JmmL -YOUR BODYGUARD" - 30f. 60ML20 I was discharged from the Navy, but upon my return from Siberia, I called upon my sweetheart, and she told me she no longer loved me. I have called repeatedly, but each time I was informed that she was not at home; until last week I met! her, and asked her to explain the j ■ sudden coldness, to which she replied that she was tired of me. Now, Miss Fairfax, when I am earn ing S3OO a month and in a position j to marry, do you think it advisable for me to try and win her back; as I dearly love her and there never can i be any other? EX-SAILOR. I My dear Sailor Boy, while it may i be difficult for you to realize your | blessings, while smarting under the lash of this girl's strange conduct, you are really to be congratulated on having escaped a girl of this type for your wife. Young women given to these unac countable vagaries seldom make de sirable life partners. I should lose no time in forgetting her as speedily as possible. SHE IS VIOLENTLY JEALOUS Dear Miss Fairfax: 1 was and still am desperately in I love with a girl whom I had courted ! for some time. I knew she loved me. ! too. However, one quiet evening, up on learning that I had visited a friend of hers, with whom she presently is not on good terms, she boldly de- ] clared that she loves me no more. | As time went along, I had sue- ! ceeded in convincing her parents and I herself of my sincerity, and the fact that I visited her one-time friend was due to a promise I had made which I felt I ought to carry out. Well, she confessed that she wrongly accused me of being deceitful; nevertheless, she clung to her decision and per sistently repeated that she loves me no more. G. S. K. ' l After reading your letter carefully, the grocer pays a little more for Franklin Granulated Sugar Franklin Granulated is a quality sugar. Coming packaged it saves the grocer loss in weighing, wrapping and tying—saves the waste of paper wrap ping broken in delivery. And if the grocer sells Franklin Cane Sugars for the same price at which he sold loose sugar, the reason is that Franklin is as economical to him as it is to you. 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