eavd cdl iKe fergaKi jj^^j " When a Girl Marries" By ASK LISIE -j A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problems of a Girl Wife . BY ANN LISLE CHAPTER CCLII. Copyright, 1919, King Features Syndicate, Inc. Before the little enamel clock on my desk had marked off five min utes. Jim returned. In those five minutes I had hurried out of my wrinkled uniform and was sitting, wrapped in my new orchid negli gee, brushing my hair, when he limped wearily into the room and flung himself down on the chaise lounge. Not one of those minutes had been marred by jealously of Valerie Cos by. I felt a glorious certainity that Jim was mine and that Val couldn't touch him. I wasn't jealous. So I was happy. Jim's first words jus tified me: "Some one ought to tell Val to cut out her Egyptian-urn, Russian dancer, baby-vamp stuff." he said grinning at me ehummily. "She overdoes it. What's the point of all this heavy incense and shut-up rooms? Me for the clean outdoors. Come over here and give a fellow a sun-bath in that soft hair of yours. Lilac Lady." With a little bird singing in my heart. I went to him. And so. for got to tell Jim about the dinner with Tony and Carlotta. How could I think of anything as distant and impersonal as friendship when I had my own boy and his love? When I remembered again, a few days later—it was because some thing happened to knot still closer the threads of my friendship with Tony. This happened the day I had a luncheon appointment with Virginia. So, in order to keep the afternoon clear for her. I started off bright and early to get my mar keting done and to take my auto mobile lesson. I'm getting so I actually dare drive the little car right through traffic, and soon I suppose—l'll be brave enough to whirl about the shining roads with out my young instructor at hand to guide and to admonish me. When I arrived at Virginia's, she greeted me with this announcement: "Tony is having lunch with us. Anne. Isn't that a nice surprise? He has a long letter from Betty You Can Entertain Economically Delicicnis Homemade Root Beer Than lc a Glass tVhen you serve sparkling, cool glasses of homemade you snon become well known. You find that peopla like to drop in for a chat, and enjoy a wholesome glass of Homemade Root Beer. Root beer made from Hires House hold Extract is just as pure as it is refreshing. When you buy Hires Household Extract, you know that you are getting no substitutes nor ar tificial flavors. It is made from the juices of barks, berries, herbs, and roots, sixteen in all. including such wholesome woodsy things as birch bark, wintergreen. ginger, and nard. The best part of it is that jg is not only surprisingly economical, but it also is very easy to make. All you need is a bottle of Hires Household Extract, sugar, and a yeast cake. And that one 25c bottle of Hires Household Extract makes forty pints or eighty glasses less than lc a glass! Get up all those old bottles which have been collecting down the cel lar. If you haven't corks for them, you can get some Hires specially air-tight bottle stoppers from your grocer when you buy your Hires Household Extract. Once you have some of this deli cious homemade root beer, you will never again be without it! K That Summer Skirt Should Be Dry Cleaned Nothing gives to the Summer Skirt the freshness and /\V Y\ smartness of a / /VV thorough dry 7TL cleaning the \ j ' \ Finkelstein way. jMJMA I *j; Besides, it pro- J longs the wear by eliminating : S^fll the dirt. Clean _JCD clothes last : longer, naturally. Our dry cleaning process means complete reno vation with absolutely no injury to the fabric and at the same time is odorless. - Promptness a Specialty FINKELSTEIN Cleaner & Dyer 3 Stores Both Phones Harrisburg Steelton MONDAY EVENING.: to read to us. It's to all three of ; us. I wanted to join Jim to run 1 up for lunch too. But he's had a letter from Terry and said he's try | to subsist on that and your report I of what Betty has to say." "And didn't Jim mind Tony's j being here?" I ventured awkwardly. "Why should he?" retorted Vir- ] ginia absent-mindedly, then her J voice thinned as she went on, "Phoebe's joining us. I won't per- j niit any more mopping. There's j the bell. That will be Tony. You ! go off and receive him, while I rout that child to join us. She's a great j care these days, Anne." I found Tony pacing up and down Virginia's big music-room. He ■ came forward with his left hand ■ held out in greeting and with that i radiant smile of seeming to well j up from his very soul. "Anne!" he exclaimed. "And such a happy, glowing Anne! It's a joy ! to see you like this, little friend." I "I am happy," I replied. "And \ Betty?" "Is brave." he said. "Braver than ! we know, I think. For she might j be so happy with that fine lad of j hers—if it weren't that her pride I is on the rack. It takes a homely \ old uncle-to-the-world like me not j to mind a little extra spoiling of his j beauty. Our Betty's too lovely to j be maimed. Youth ought to be per- | feet." "It's so brief," I gasped through j the choke in my throat that came ! whenever I thought of our proud i Betty with a useless right arm. 1 Then Virginia came into the room. , bringing a little gray, overcast imi- | tation of the Phoebe that had been. ' Tonys greeting was so kind and ; warm that it flashed across my mind ! that perhaps he could help Phoebe | —perhaps he would know how to circumvent Evvy. "March straight out to the din- | ing-room," ordered Virginia as the j maid came to the door to announce I lunch. "There's a cheese souffle that j waits on no man." "And now for the letter," com- j manded Virginia, leaning forward i expectantly as Amanda removed the j empty plates and prepared to bring j in the next course. "I think we're | probably hungrier for that than for I any more lunch." So Tony read Betty's letter aloud. It was gallant and gay .like our Betty, and sweet and whimsical ,too. But we all felt the note of sadness that cropped up now and then in spite of Betty's best efforts to give us merry descriptions of the in teresting things they were doing and seeing. As Tony came to one para graph I found my eyes traveling of themselves from him to Phoebe. She was leaning forward with her hands clasped on the table and her eyes propped wide and round and fast ened on Tony's face. "Terry's such a dear," read Tony in his wonderful voice. "Of course this must come to you with the shock of a news-beat. How could you imagine I thought so? Well, I married him with the idea of hav ing a super-excellent husband. And I've got also a marvelous ladies maid and a gentle critic. He fastens up-growns superbly for the one handed, and doesn't examine my raven locks critically when I do them up all awry. "I'm a lop-sided, left-handed creature. But I look at every double cylinder woman I see and remark to her though she mercifully doesn't know it —'Poor old dear, if j you had the hands of an octopus or a centipede wouldn't you give every blessed one of them for a blesseder person, like my Terry?' . . . Dear pals o' mine, I have you and I have love. Don't ever grieve about anything I haven't." Toony stopped a moment then, while Virginia and I fumbled for handkerchiefs. In this minute Phoebe stumbled to her feet her face bleak and gray. She faced Vir ginia for a moment and then turned Bringing Up Father Copyright. 1918. International News Service * - - By McManus 0T !LJ !! ©& 1 • P and ran from the room, flinging back a little cry: "Let me go. Please let me go." Virginia's face pinched in at the nostrils and whitened for a second. Then she turned to us with a suave word of explanation: "She has a headache. I shouldn't have asked her to get out of bed. Just forget the little episode, will you please? And now, Tony—won't you go on with Betty's letter? Brave, splendid Betty—we must, all stand by!" Tony looked at her gravely for a moment "We have also to stand by the people who aren't brave," he said without any special emphasis. Then he went on reading. And my mind followed a little girl who was trying hard to be brave. What was she doing alone in her room? Who was going to stand by her? To Bo Continued. DAILY HINT ON FASHIONS j||| LADIES' APRON DRESS 2884. —Here is a simple, easy to develop model, good for seersucker, gingham, lawn, percale, drill, linen and khaki. The pockets may be omitted. The pattern is cut in 4 sizes: Small, 32-34; medium, 36-38; large, 40-42; extra large, 44-46 inches bust measure. A medium size will re quire 4% yards of 36-inch mater ial. Width at, lower edge is 2 1-8 yards. A pattern of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 10 cents in silver or stamps. Telegraph Pattern Department For the 10 cents inclosed please send pattern to the following address: Size Pattern No Name Address City and State the steam and dirt of housewoTk —all spell ruin for good complex ions But the regular use of Resinol Soap, with an occasional applicationof Resinol Ointment, keeps the skin so clean, clear and fresh that it simply cannot help being beautiful. All druggists sell Resinol Soap sod Oint ment. Why don't you begin using them? fiARRISBURG TELEGKiPH WILL PUNISH MURDERERS OF JOHN CORRELL Carranza Promises to Omit No Efforts in Their Prosecution By Associated Press. Washington, July 21.—The Mex ican government replying to rep resentations made by the United States in connection with the mur der of John W. Correll, an Ameri- j can citizen, and the attack on his wife near Tampico recently, has stated that it would "omit no efforts in the prosecution and punishment | of those responsible for a crime j so odious." • | The attack on the Correll family occurred near Colonia, about 30 miles from Tampico, late in June, j His assailants, reported to have I numbered about 50, also maltreated his wife and slightly wounded his son. Bulgaria Willing to Have Problems Settled by Peace Conference By Associated Press. New York, July 21. Bulgaria is willing to have its problems and disputes settled by the Peace Con ference under the principles en unciated by President Wilson and the Allies, accor.ding to a cablegram from Constantine Stephanov, leader of the Macedonian colony in Switzer. land to H. L. Bridgman, publisher of the Brooklyn Standard Union. Mr. Stephanov is an American citi zen and is professor of English literature in the University of Sofia, Buffalo. Man Who Made Fortune in Spectacular Plays, Is Dead in England London, July 21.—1t is learned that Imre Kiralfy, organizer of pageants and spectacular plays, who died at Brighton, April 28, left a fortune of $2,000,000. It is stated that he realized a total return of $22,750,000 from the colossal pa geants he produced mostly in Amer ica and abroad. One pageant shown at the World's Fair at Chicago, brought in about $1,000,000. A state ment issued here says this is the largest total of receipts in the his tory of the opera, drama, spectacle and pageantry. Mitchell Well Known Among Legislators James G. Mitchell was one of the prominent figures in Pennsylvania State politics and exercised a wide influence among the Legislators as senator from the Jefferson-Indiana district. He served two terms and was chairman of the committee on appropriations, where he adminis tered things in pretty vigorous fash ion. In later years he was elected a member of the House from Jefferson and was frequently heard from. He was an uncle of Lex X. Mitchell also a legislator from Jefferson county. BOSTON' STRIKE ENDS By Associated Press. Boston, July 21.— -Car service on the lines of the Boston elevated sys tem was resumed to-day after an interruption of four days. The car men who struck on Thursday at 4 [ a. m. as a protest against the delay | of the War Labor Board in adjust i ing their grievances, returned to the I duties at the corresponding hour to-day, with the assurance of an eight-hour day and increases of pay up to 62 cents an hour. They were receiving 48 cents and has asked for 72 Vz cents an hour. CADETS REACH FRANCE By Associated Press. Brest. Sunday, July 20. Two hundred and seventy-five members of the West Point graduating class arrived here to-day, on the United States Army transport, Leviathan. The cadets are to make a tour through France, returning to the United States about September 1. AMNESTY FOR SOLDIERS • By Associated Press. Washington, July 21.—Complete amnesty for all soldiers, sailors and marines convicted by court martial except those whose offense would be a felony under federal statutes, was proposed in a bill introduced to-day by Senator Chamberlain, Democrat. Oregon, and referred to the military committee. BIG MILL BURNS By Associated Press. Sernnton, Pa., July 21.—The Xy hart- Flour and Feed Mill at Peck vllle, Pn.. was destroved by fire to day. The loss is $30,000. Bolsheviki Refuse to Release Imprisoned Natives of Sweden Stockholm, July 21, The Bol shevik government at Petrograd re fused to release five members of the Swedish legation at Petrograd, re cently arrested, it was announced here to-day. An official of the Swedish foreign office said it was his belief representatives of other nations at Petrograd probably would be arrested. The members of the Swedish legation arrested were two men and five women typists. Sweden pro tested but the Bolshevik government replied the arrests were based on violations of law and that the plea of diplomatic immunity could not be recognized. Answering a renewed protest the Bolshevik government said only three persons were ar rested. Wage Readjustment Is General Along Schuylkill By Associated Press. Reading, Pa.. July 21.—The read justment of wages of puddlers on the basis of $10.75 a ton has been generali throughout the Schuylkill Vallev since the Reading Iron Works ] settled on that basis. The previous rate was $14.37. At Birdsboro the E. and G. Brooke Iron Company started up the puddl ing department of its rolling mill to-day. The men will receive the. same wages as paid for similar work by the Reading Iron Com pany. At Pottstown the Glasgow Iron Company posted notice to-day of a readjustment of wages. It will be based on the Iron workers' and em ployers' agreement reached at the recent conference in Reading when the puddling rate was changed to and August, and then a sliding scale $10.75 a ton from $14.37 for July on basis of the market. Young Slayer Is Extradited From N. J. By Associated Press. Trenton, X. J. July 21. —Governor Runyon to-day honored the request of Governor Smith, of New York, for the extradition of Edward E. O'Brien, who was indicted, together with Edward E. Paige, for the murder recently of Gardiner C. Hull, a New York stationer. O'Brien, who is in the county jail at Free hold, X. J., will be taken to New York this afternoon. An affidavit accompanying Gover nor Smith's requisition, sets forth that O'Brien confessed to commit ting the crime. Mr. Hull was as saulted by being beaten over the head with a hammer on the night of July 11, and died the next day. Two days later O'Brien was arrested at Avon where he had gone to see his mother. Paige was captured In Philadelphia. Would Make It Unlawful to Possess Liquor in Private Houses; Some Objections By Associated Press. Washington, July 21.—An effort to have a provision in the bill making it unlawful for a person to possess liquors in his own dwelling was ex pected to be a storm center of de bate to-day in the House when con sideration of prohibition enforcement legislation was resumed. Some members were said to feel the "drys" had gone about as far as is was wise to go, as to make the legislation too drastic would only bring it into contempt and thereby defeat the end to which the prohibi tionists were working. Sullivan Member of House Is Dead Word reached the city yesterday of the death of Representative Frank H. Ingham, member from Sullivan county. He died from heart disease, having collapsed a short distance from his home. Mr. Ingham was a lawyer living at LaPorte and was a graduate of Cornell. He was born in 1872. How to Look and Feel Bright in Hot Weather When depressed by the heat and you want to freshen up for the afternoon or evening,- just bathe the face in a lotion made by dissolving an ounce of pure powdered saxolite in a half pint of witch hazel. You will find this more refreshing than an hour's rest. As a wrinkle-remover the saxolite lotion is remarkably successful. Its action is almost magical. The deep est furrows, as well as the finest lines—whether due to age, illness, whether or worry—are immediately affected. Enlarged pores are re duced, flabby skin is "drawn in," facial contour is improved wonder fully. The simple ingredients of course can be had at any drugstore, and you need not hesitate totry the lotion, as It will not harm any skin in the least "LIFE'S PROBLEMS 1 I ARE DISCUSSED By Mrs. WlLsok woddrow. i Th e cleverest of us are going t 0 be | cheated no' an d then; the wisest > of us will wake mistakes in our ' estimates of Persons with whom we I are thrown; the most generous of us win occasionaly find our con- j fidence abused. These being facts, ! they might a® well be accepted with- | out too much heartburning and re- j sentnient. A woman has written me a let- j ter in which she relates an un- ; fortunate circumstance, where, I through an ac t of friendship on i her part and acting in all good : faith, S h'e J'et found hereself the ! loser in money, i n se lf-esteem and | in her faith in her fellow beings. "I shall never again trust a man or woman," R ' lo says, and it is no , doubt a very natural remark for i her to make- But in trying to carry out such j a vow she will tind that she in flicts more punishment on herself' than on those who have wronged i her. she will virtually Penalize j herself, f o r sh e will have to shut ! herself oO mPletely off front the j world and to live in an attitude of i continual suspicion. She will em- i bitter and narrow her life until it • will be imP oSS 'hle to make or re tain a ny friendship whatever. Life is a matter of g' ve and take, and we've g ot to take the good with the bad, the sour with the sweet, and make the best of it. A nian once told me of a meth od oy which he kept h is faith in his fellows. It happened that when . he Was a young man , and follow ing the advice of a n the all-thrift I mentors, he set himself to lay up a i hundred dollars. Three dollars a week was all he j could spare front his earnings, and ! each of those three dollars meant ; something he had given up f or the 1 sake of savins '"'hen he Anally completed the | amount, he felt as if he owned the ; earth. If represented the founda tion of success in ijf e to him. Then J his best friend asked him to lend hini the am promising to pay It back within a certain time and with interest. The friend lost the money, j however, and to this day has never i returned it. Yp t in spite of this dlsiliussioniz- j in£ experience, the man again and with the same self-denial, a little | sterner, this time, saved up another ; hundred. sooner had he done so than 1 Keeps Jersey Corn Flakes Fresh MOISTURE from the air will not pene- taste as though they had just been packed. trate the triple-seal Jersey Corn T , . . Flake package. The Moisture is kept , 1 hey retain their cnspmess m milk and and the original flavor of the flakes is do not get soggy. At the first spoonful you k e Pt in. They are always crisp, brown and recognize the delicious natural corn flavor, uniformly delicious. " Jersey Corn Flakes relished by every mem ber of the family as a real delicacy as well as Jersey Corn Flakes are never a dis- something good to eat. the Jersey Cereel Feed Company break the triple-seal. They always look and mrti Learn the Jersey Difference —Ask your grocer for' Jersey Com Flakes I Tie Original Thick. Com Flakes 11 * ■ IT HUaLmpyrw -.-Mp ■ M ~r '' '•'"TTjp" JULY 21, 1019. | he learned that a girl whom he had | known all his life was making a ! j terrific struggle. Then ensued an j ' equally terrific struggle with him- ! | self. b'n the one side he had reason ; !to believe that his treasured hun- ; ] dred dollars would tide the girl over j i an especially rough place and en- , ! able her to get on her feet On the j ! other hand, he could not fail to re- j : member his first experience in loan- | I ing to the apparently needy. How- j 1 ever, in the end, he insisted on the j : girl taking his money. i She justified his belief in her, for 1 I she did get on her feet, and stayed j I there. She repaid the money, and ! ! also his generosity with her eternal i gratitude. And he, in turn, grateful j i f°r his restored faith in humanity, ; ! dedicated that hundred dollars to , • ar >y one in need. i He Has prospered and grown rich ! | since that time and has given large | sums in charity, but he says that j ! nothing ever given or gained has | i yielded him one-half the happiness i i that does that hundred, which he 1 1 keeps always loaned to some person [ | struggling In the mire of circum- | ; stances. Time and again it has helped a I lame dog over a sti)e, set some j one up in business, given a man or j a woman a chance, or has kept ' the wolf from some door. He as- | serts that it has rarely failed to j come back, and that he can never j measure the returns of good-will it has brought him. It has sweetened and broadened | | his life in ways he never dreamed j Possible, given him friends in un j looked for places, and has shown i him qualities he would never have ! suspected in those he has thus I learned to know. He is very positive ; and unswerving in his belief that : the good far outweighs the bad in • this world. Some one has said that all we I i ca n carry out 0 f the world with j i u s is that which we have given away. | It would have been the easiest J way for this man after his first ; i disappointment to have accepted j ; the point of view of the woman j j who has written me, and to have j I resolved never to trust any one, ! • man or woman, again. But he was ; hig enough, and generous and clear- I i sighted enough to have intuitively j grasped the fact that such a belief strongly held would eventually bank- j rupt him in money, in friends and 1 j in everything that makes life worth : while. He might have been playing a hundred-to-one shot in his second venture, but he staked everything on his belief in human nature, and it won. It's a perfectly safe game. iou will lose now and then inevitably, but you will win many, many more ! times than you lose. Japan's Crown Prince to Wed Princess Najako i Tokio, July 21. —Announcement has been made of the betrothal of i Crown Prince Hirohito with prin | cess Nagako, the eldest daughter of Prince and Princess Kuni. Prin -1 cess Nagako is sixteen years old and j a student at the Peers' School. It is expected that the Imperial wed ! ding will not take place before sev eral years. Coffee Whenever You Want It As Weak or as Strong as ! You Like It ! Do vou like vour eolTee very strong and black? Or do you prefer a fra i grant cup of golden brown coffee? i With Hires Instant Soluble Coffee | you can make the strength to suit j your own individual taste. Here is i why: Hires Instant Soluble Coffee is a I delicious blend of the finest Java and i Mocha coffee in a powdered, soluble form. It is a percolated coffee made from the finest grades of fresh I roasted coffee beans with the water I taken out. When you add hot water you instantly have coffee as origin ally made. Or if you like iced coffee you can have it, for Hires Instant Soluble Coffee dissolves in ice water, ' too! j Gone is the nuisance of the coffee ] pot! No longer need you bother with empting grounds and disposing of egg ! shells, nor do you have two or three I cups left over which have to be I thrown away. There is no throwing | away more coffee than you drink! | So convenient is this coffee, and at i the same time so delicious and well \ flavored that 66 2-3 per cent of all ' the trench coffee contracted for by j the American Army in France was i Hires Instant Soluble Coffee. ! A small can of Hires Instant Solu • hie Coffee is equivalent to a pound of I the best Mocha and Java coffee. The low price is due to the fact that with | our exclusive process we extract 100 j per cent, more juice from the bean than you can in making coffee in the I old way. Get it at all stores. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers