jfteadiixgfir^£rciei\andoil the ESIWIKJ Pl^Ps "When a Girl Marries" By ANN USLK A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problems of a Girl Wife CHAPTER CCXVII. "I don't like the line of the neck. Cut it an inch lower. No; a little more. Fully two inches. I don t care if Mrs. Dalton did think it was right the way you had it. I don t like it that way and I'm wearing it. The voice came to me across the unroofed partition that separated one fitting room at Wickhams from its neighbor. It was a voice so full of irritation and ill-controlled nerves that I actually didn't recog nize it as rhocbe's until she said "Mrs. Dalton." At that angry use of Virginia's name an impulse came to me. Fortunately I didn't ignore it. "Phoebe," I called, "I'm so glad you're here. This is Anne. Will you do something for me?" "Of course what can I do for you?" replied a carefully leashed voice. "Run in here and tell me how you like this brown lining for my tan cape. I'm not a bit sure of my own judgment. So I'm lost. Come find me, will you?" In a minute or two Phoebe came into my fitting room. At sight of her I fairly ached for the .pretty child she was six months ago. Her oval face is actually pointed now and her eyes are far too big and black shadows lie under them. There isn't that ugly splash of red on her short-lipped, baby mouth any more, but their own coral w For Burning Eczema V - a Greasy salves and ointments should r.ot be applied if good clear skin is wanted. From any druggist for 35c, or SI.OO for large size, get a bottle of zemo. When applied as directed it effectively removes eczema,quickly stops itching, and heals skin troubles, also sores, burns, wounds and chafing. It pene trates, cleanses and soothes. Zemo is a clean, dependable and inexpensive, antiseptic liquid. Try it,as we believe nothing you have ever used is as effect ive and satisfying. > The E. W. Rose Co., Cleveland. Ol TELEPHONE YOUR ORDERS FOR CLOVERDALE GINGER ALE Freidberg's nVsTKmcnms Hell 2212 Second & Cherry Sts. Dial 155111 Prompt Deliveries Both Phones I RINGAN'S I Sliced Bacon 1 | and fresh eggs make a real man's || I breakfast delicious! | Prepared Under U. S. Government Supervision |j| Cartons || lIXJEW YORKI THE GREAT METROPOLIS LOW RATE EXCURSION t!T See Brondnsyi Pennsylvania it ■ I 111 Stntlon; Central Park; Hiverslde 111 a\ W w W Ilrlvet Grnnt'a Tomb; Metropoll ■ tan Art Gallery; Fifth Avenue; a ROUND • ■ Ilrooklyn Ilrldges anil get a ■ TRIP glimpse of the grratrst city on War Tax I the Amerlcnn Continent. 5,4 Cents | ————— Additional Sunday, June IS SPECIAL THROUGH TRAIN Direct to Pennsylvania Station, 7tli Avenue atul 32d Street Lvs. Harrlsburg .... 6.00 A. M. Lvs. Elizabethtown ... 6.29 A M " Steelton 6.06 " " Fiorin 6.35 " " Mlddletown .... 6.15 " " Mt. Joy 639 " " Conewago 6.23 " Returning, leavea New York 0.40 P. M. See Flyers Consult Ticket Agents PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD ■ ■■' ) MONDAY EVENING, is pone from her soft lips. So for all the bravado of her over-decollette dance frock of rose-colored taffeta, Phoebe looked like a frightened child as she came and stood in my door way, and not like the vivid, sophls cated society woman she had been aping for so long. I managed to keep from saying a word about the neck of her gown, though it had evidently been just right as Virginia liked it —an inch or so higher. But there was no use in antagonizing Phoebe over a dress that could so easily be filled in with tulle. The gap that had lain between us for so long couldn't be as easily filled, and I didn't pro pose to widen it now. For slim wistful-eyed Phoebe in her gay dance frock brought an atmosphere of mystery and of danger into my fitting room. I felt she needed help. Mine, perhaps. "I'm lost without Virginia," I said, baiting my trap carefully. "I don't begrudge her the day with Bettg what to do. I never can tell if things are becoming or not. You'll decide for mc, wont you, dear?" I know you have splendid taste." "Of course. I'll help you, Anne," replied Phoebe with a nice, young air of importance. After I'd deferred to her judg ment carefully at every point, I made my next plea, and Phoebe didn't guess that it was her own nervous, jumpy manner and her tired little voice that inspired it. "Please, don't doom mo to lunch ing alone, Phoebe. I always feel so awkward going into a dining room all by myself. You'll be a dear and even break an engagement if you have to, won't you." "I'll lunch with you, Anne--I couldn't bear to be alone either," said Phoebe with what seemed almost like a flash of gratitude. That encouraged me to go on and try to find some way of giving her the help I felt more and more con vinced she needed and couldn't ask for. Right through clams and eggs, benedictine and asparagus vinai grette, Phoebe baffled me, however. The sense that she was In trouble came to me more and more strongly. Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918. International News Service - By McManus <,REA,T THAT CLUMPY 1' V W I Y °° WORM-HOW TUTT DON'T LIE TO ME" II Ji-I , |||| |( ~NOW WE ARE FDfM HAC TuiT DtDXOUDREA< WELL-IT SHUT UP -TOO f BE < 0"—U! EVEN - YOO FOOL MAS BROKEN TH'S fITIV THAT VASE? WAS UKE NEVER TOLD THE J e\W. BROKF THF but it seemed as if I v werc doomed to fail as I had failed when I tried to help Phoebe and Neal to find each other again. That thought frightened mo so that suddenly I gave up my policy of being tactful and clever and leading Phoebe to ask for help. Instead I learned across the table and spoke out Just what was in my heart: "Phoebe, I know there's something troubling you. Won't you tell me?" Phoebe's mouth tightened, and her eyes took on the remote look I had learned to dread in Jim's. She was going to slam the door of her mind in my face, 1 could see that. "Oh, Phoebe!" I cried. "I'm so— useless. No one needs me. Won't you let me. try to help you?" Phoebe studied me for a moment, as if she were sorry for me, as if she sensed what my partial revela tion meant. Then she gave a quick, reckless laugh, and reverted frankly to her own troubles. "I might as well tell you. I've got to tell some one. I guess you can be trusted not to give me away. Here it is, Anne. I'm in debt. Ter ribly in debt. And I've no one to ask for help. I can't ask for more of the money Pat pays Virginia. I take too much of that as it is." As the sentences jerked out, I had I a sense of relief. The dear baby! j She'd been buying too many pretty | clothes. Fortunately I could help j her. 1 had a bank account now, Jim j gave me five hundred dollars when | 'terry's stock boomed and I opened a checking account. My first check would go to Phoebe, and maybe it would bring me her friendship. Some of my relief must have gotten into my voice as I replied cheerfully: "Oh, so that's it! We'll soon fix that. I've a bank account now, Phoebe, and I'll be glad to let you have a hundred—or even two," I 4 added at sight of her face, still stark and unhappy. "A hundred? That's very good of you, Anne." Phoebe's voice was colorless. "But that's not onough." I fairly gasped. For a second I hesitated. Then something in Phoebe's wide, frightened eyes com pelled me and I knew I must give her all I had. "I've five hundred," I said quietly. "You shall have it all, dear." Phoebe lifted her hands to the edge of the table and clasped them tight so the knuckles showed white, like her face. Then in a strangled voice I could scarcely hear she gasped: "Five hundred dollars wouldn't help me, Anne —it's not enough." To be continued. With Jobs Found, the Problem Is to Fill Them New York, June 9.—One thousand good paying jobs in tailor shops are open for one thousand good tailors, and no matter where the good tailors are located, whether on the Pacific Coast, the Middle West or the East or in France or Germany, so long as they are members or veterans of the American army, navy or ma rines, all they have to do is to apply to K. of C. employment headquarters at 413 Lexington avenue. New York city and they will be put into touch with the good Jobs immediately. Peter W. Collins, Knights of Colum bus employment and reconstruction director, in command of the Knights of Columbus army of over 37,000 job hunters, returned to New York after a tour through the Middle West and points in the West, and strted that the Knights of Columbus Job can vassers were meeting with large re sults in their efforts to find work for returning service men. Daily Dot Puzzle leSL 35 4z 33* 3© 40 *• # £ ai • sz 45 •64 - 5l • So* • 45. 53 * ,5o 23 47 3 (o 12* • •z *a i - •' *>. V v * 5 \Y . v * • *ls 24 for A •" zf " 7 A (V 21 to 3 Draw from one to two and so on to tlie end. tTARRISBURG TI^EGRAPII LIFE'S PROBLEMS ARE DISCUSSED Uy Mrs. Wilson Woodrow . Did you ever stop to consider the I things you say? Just take a day— I any old day will do-—and keep tab , on yourself. The results will be a j surprise to you. Unless some unexpected windfall j has tumbled down from the blue j into your lap, or that long-expected j ship of yours has at last sailed proudly into port, you will iind that you have indulged in a good many | more negatives than affirmatives. Here are a few samples: "I am I not feeling well at all." "Nothing \ good ever happens to me." "I was j born unlucky." "I am getting poorer i every day." "Everything is going j wrong." And so on indefinitely. j It is easier to think of our woes j than our blessings, easier to talk I about them; and so we do perpetu- j ally. You may say that you do not be- j lieve in mental atmospheres, but in fact you do. On Christmas or New Year's Day every one is going about with a smiling face and wishing you merriment and happirvess. You feel the inspiration: your spirits lighten. Insensibly you respond to the gen eral gayety, and send back the good | wishes you receive with the best will in the world. Or, as may happen, you are with some one who is naturally harmo nious ar.-d light-hearted. Does it often fail that presently you dis cover you are looking at your own affairs in a more rosy light? We cannot ask everything of the world and give it. nothing. That is greedy. And the biggest and most precious things we can give are cheerfulness and courage. In pay ing that debt, too, we are greatly enriching ourselves; for no matter what our own particular difficulties' are, there is always a way out. Some one had a genuine inspira tion when he said: "There seemed nothing to do but go to the wall; so I went to the wall, and there I found a door." The first letter which I opened this morning was written almost en tirely in negatives. "I am a poor little girl who needs help," it ran. "I am only nineteen and the mother of a beautiful baby. But my husband objects to my ever leaving the house, even to take the air. He has plenty of good clothes and goes out every evening, but he says I do not need clothes, as I don't go anywhere, and that anyhow a woman's place is in. the home and she should stay there. If I complain, it makes scenes. lam a fine stenog rapher and earned a good living be fore I was married, but now I am the unhappiest little mother in the world." First, my dear girl, stop thinking of yourself as a "poor little girl," and an "unhappy little mother." You are unfortunate in that you have married an exceptionaly stupid man, who is also a petty tyrant. But even the stupidest person may have a few facts beaten into his head, and petty tyrants may be tamed—al though not by those who consider themselves weak and helpless. You are not a slave. You are a I married woman and a mother, and the law gives you certain definite rights. The law requires your hus band to maintain you, and to sup port and educate his child in a man ner commensurate with his earn ings. As a human being, food, sufficient clothing and a roof to shelter you are not the only things necessary to your well-being. Air, exercise, congenial compan ions and a certain amount of recrea ! tion are equally important factors in keeping up your health of mind and body. . Then take them. Stop weeping and wailing and imploring your hus band to give you as a privilege that which is yours by right. You are not a poor, little helpless creature. You are a woman who has made a good living, and can do it again. There is the door in your stone wall. Dont have scenes. Have one big one and get it over. No one minds occasional gusts and spatters of rain; but we all take notice of a big thun air. Suppose your husband had a dog IB B There's Great S ati sf*act-i oi\ m krvowirv<2 "the child ly ervs health arvd. ei\- joyiwervt are beirvd provided for tvherv you. <£ive -tKeiw POSTUM as their hot table drirvk lg Pi which was a valuable animal. Would j derstorm, and it certainly clears the he keep it tied up continually? Far from it. Instead he would arise betimes in the morning to give the dog its run befoie he wer.-t to work, and he would do the same thing when he came home in the evening. Are you not worth more than many dogs? Stop thinking of yourself in nega tives. Look at the affirmative side of your problem. You are young. You are able to make a good living. You do r/ot have to accept for either ! yourself or your child the conditions under which you are living. Announce your position, there fore, and stand by it; and the proba bility is that your husband, being a bully and consequently a coward, will speedily alter his attitude. Convince Americans Irish People Want Republic the Most Dublin, June 9.—The net result of the visit to Ireland of three Ameri can delegates representing Irish so cieties n America apparently has been to convince the American visit ors that the great majority of the Irish people desire a republic and nothing else. Another apparent ef fect has been to convince doubting sections of the Irish people that the DAILY HINT ON FASHIONS TO ' ZBS6 I j ! A DAINTY "BIT" OF LINGERIE 2856—This pretty "Nightie" is nice for linen, nainsook, dimity, crossbar muslin, crepe, washable satin, cam bric, batiste or silk. It may be em broidered, smocked or decorated w.th ; ribbon. | The Pattern is cut in 6 Sizes: 4, 6, |B, 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 10 re | quires 2 5-8 yards of 36-inch ma terial. A pattern of this illustration I mailed to any address on receipt of I 10 cents in silver or stamps. Telegraph Pattern Department For the 10 cents Inclosed please j send pattern to the following I address: | Size Pattern No I Name j Address I City and State establishment of an Irish republic is practical. American visitors dealt with De- Valera as though he were a real president and when Frank Walsh, one of the Americans, announced that he had reason to expect that a "safe conduct" would be granted to en able be Valtra and Count Plunkett to go to the Peace Conference, the Sinn Feiners were jubliant. The Unionists passed resolutions and set all the wires working to check any possible relation between Premier Lloyd George and the Irish republicans. Advice to the Lovelorn Dear Miss Fairfax: I am a young man of 19 and am in love with a young girl of seven teen who lives at East Liberty. I met her while on a short visit there. Since that time I entered the serv ice and day after day I wonder why she does not write. Before my en listment we corresponded daily. She was much opposed to my entering the service, and sent mo telegrams, telephone messages, and special de livery letters begging me not to en list. "But I did not want to be a slacker. So I entered the Navy. Since that time she writes to me but once a month. At present I am home on a 48-hours leave. My ship sails for Brest, in the near future. I am heart sick to see her and can think of nothing else. My position in the Navy requires a clear head and I am fall ing fast in holding it. Now please. Miss Fairfax, tell me what to do, only don't tell me to forget her as that is impossible. Respectfully, E. L Dear E. L.: My dear lad, have you written to the girl and told her just how you feel? If you have and she has given you no explanations of | Try A Cold H bottle of this 51 REAL Jill I Ginger Ale H For imparting flavor and tastiness to Ginger Ale, nothing can take the place H/IiIIImII of genuine Jamaica Ginger—it costs more than the red pepper ordinarily used, but #//7/f/M// |f| it's worth the difference. That's just one /■II ||lll|| Mlßßllj H reason why you'll like 19 1 ' A OELICIOUS - HEALTHFUL AEVERAST 8 gloverdcil e c^ie ■ Q GINGER ALE aa..fj-wa 8 "It Doesn't Bite" -IsJEEEG® H CONTAINS NO CAPSICUM \HIGHLY CARBONATED CLOVERDALE GINGER ALE IS || fUVOMD WITH StNUINt'jAHAIC* ll made and bottled right at the celebrated iuuN" D i? T °„7uwtT*eLt™ U u6* L " ,u '! CLOVERDALE Springs at Newville, Pa. ., OOVEROAIE H.NWAIWW*, H We use this famous mineral water exclu- I < &&veXda&&jk f uny ( 4&' I Lg sively because it gives real health value I v * Si and tonic properties to this beverage. >LAWT i* *"">• 1 BALTIMORE. Mo.. U.S-A^ CLOVERDALE GINGER ALE also contains pure cane sugar syrup, lemon and aromatics — from start to finish, the best is none too good* il I PJ Treat yourself to a taste of its flavor today — you'll II be glad you got "acquainted." 11 I I H 111 Order a Case Today—Serve It Cold ————— ~~™" Wbole.nle Distributors Ml Each bottle of CLOVE.ROALE, GINGER l!vn, Ilurtnrtt Co. ■| ALE contains two full-sized glasses, and is sold in Wltmun-Sebwurs Co. ' H cases of 24 bottles each. You can buy it by the - • rvblltcrg. case or the bottle from leading grocers, druggists Distributor B and other places where good drinks are Sold. For carllsl# II || Drink a Bottle ofCloverdale Every Day Lg JUNE 9, 1919. her actions, I should simply stop w-riting to her. In addition, any girl who would beg a man not to enter the service does not deserve a mo ment's consideration. How you, a wearer of the Navy blue, can waste your time and thoughts on a girl who has shown herself to be so ut terly selfish, in e"ery respect, is .. mystery. Brace up! Don't say, "I can't forget her." Instead, determine /\ Skin Comforts [ : ,i Found la l/j/Y? Cuticura The Soap to Shave, Bathe and Shampoo, the Ointment to heal \ These fragrant, super- creamy emollients soothe M il and heal eczemas and )\ rashes, stopitcbing, clear A / ) the-skinof pimples, scalp of dandruff and f $7/ ] the hands of chaps j\ /] and sores. Also for j cuts,wounds,stings / ofinsects,sunburn / \ or windbum. •bar* wtth Cotlcera I L I / | Soap Tha Healthy. Up- L J to-Date OmtUnrm Way. \ M Nonrag.Doalimysoep. no germ*. no tree aJ- kali, H> wuU, no irritation ereo whenahavad twice daily. One aoap for ail OMI - sharing, bathing, l shampooing. Don bias rnor efficiency, not to speak of value in promoting ekm parity and health, doe to it* delicate, fragrant Ootirorm medication. Koap, Olutmer.t, Talcum £fec< each. Sold everywhere. to put her out of your thoughts at once. She is not worthy of your friendship. ' ~ \ Make the Home Beautiful With a Table Lamp Use these beautifully harmon izing lamps on your piano, near your bed, in the sitting room and the dining table. We have them in a large assortment of styles and sizes. From $3.50 to SSO DAUPHIN ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES CO. 4iM-43 MARKET STREET Huri'isburg, Pa. John S. Z rnsser, President 7
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