" When a Girl " By ANN LISLE A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problem of a Girl Wife CHAPTER CCLXXV. Copyright, 1919, King Features Syn dicate, Inc. "I can't, Babsie, dear— l can't. Don't you see that I can't?" begged Neal. I was sitting in his office, where I had gone at Jim's bidding to tell Neal that Virginia was implacable and that the only way for him and Phoebe to find happiness was to take it in spite of her. The great idea—the inspiration of the night before —was no longer attractive to me. But to Jim it looked like the only way. And his whole gambling instinct fought for it. But Neal was refusing to avail himself of the permission Phoebe's brother had sent him. Refusing to carry out this "bless you my chil dren, o. k.'d in advance, elopement. His attitude roused me, first to curiosity, then to normal, human stubborness. "I'd like to know why not?" I asked indignantly. "Are you in sinuating that Jim and I would want you to do anything that wasn't perfectly all right?" "Babbsie dear—as if I didn't know my big sister's sweet, cjean heart i by this time! But I can't sneak around to the back door of the , Harrison establishment and drag j Phoebe out through the kitchen. It | isn't good enough for my little sweetheart. She's only—a baby, sister dear." I caught Neal's hand in mine as he spoke. To me he has always seemed "only a baby" himself." But his feeling for Phoebe was all a man's love—sturdy, strong and pro tective. It made my heart ache to think that Virginia's blindness wanted to deny Phoebe such a love as this. Aloud 1 said stumblingly: "Laddie I love you more than I know how to say. You are so chiv alrous to all women—so blessedly chivalrous. And where Phoebe is ; concerned you're adorable. But"— | "But me no buts, Babbsie dear, i Phoebe's worth waiting for. Vir- I ginia can't hold out. We —care too j much. She'll come to see that after a while, and she won't deny it." I "Jim will be furious. Every one j is defying him," I said uneasily. j Neal gave my hand a reassuring ; squeeze. "Jim would be furious if it came to a showdown and he couldn't give Phoebe away at a lovely flower decked altar," he said. 1 pictured the occasion. Then I shook my head. "Not without Vir ginia. No matter how seriously Jim and Virginia may have quar reled. when it comes to a formal wedding she'd have to be there. The Har. .son dan feeling would demand that. Jim can't give Phoebe away at the altar when there's no chance in the world that Jeanie will ever consent to her going there with you." "She'll have to consent," said Neal, stubbornly. "I'm not going to have my little Phoebe's Wedding anything but a flower-decked, beau tiful thing. 1 want her to have it to remember happily always. I want her to have only happy things to remember from now on." "All right," I said meekly, trying to adjust myself to the various and Buy Your Coal Now . Coal Shortage Coming —Says U. S. Fuel Administration Labor Shortage Impends —Says U. S. Secretary of Labor Car Shortage Predicted —Says U. S. Director of Railroads Better heed what your Government officials say: We are telling you the situation as we know it. More over, everything we are saying is based upon official statements of the highest Government authorities. Fifty thousand foreign-born miners are returning to Europe. There is virtually no immigration; consequently the men cannot be replaced. Their departure means a reduction of fifty million tons in the coal output of the year. It is true there are millions and millions of tons of coal in the ground, but it takes labor and expensive equipment to mine and prepare coal for the market. The fact that there is coal enough in Mother Earth to last several thousand years will do you no good when you need some badly next winter. No one could foresee the suffering and hardships of the terribly severe winter of 1917-1918. No one can now say that next winter will not be equally severe. A'word to the wise is sufficient. United Ice & Coal Co. Forster & Cowden Sts. 7th & Woodbine Sts. 6th & Hamilton Sts. 7th & Reily Sts. 15th & Chestnut Sts. i 1 " " ; i-a^— —, SATURDAY EVENING, varied masculine viewpoints with which I was compelled to deal. At that moment in strolled Car lotta Sturges, more flamboyant than usual in a shiny black sailor and a skirt of black and white plaid, topped by a black velvet sport coat. Her hair haloed out from under her sailor. Her color flooded up to it. Her gold bags tinkled at her side in a most unbusinesslike manner. "Howdy, Anne! Hello, kido!" she cried, heartily. "They told me over at the other office you were looking for some documents in evi dence, and as I was traveling thence and thither, I brung 'em with me." She flung a fat package on the desk as she spoke. Neal seized it eagerly, and Carlotta, motioning him to his chair, cleared a corner of his desk and flung herself upon it, to perch there nonchantly. At once Neal fell to studying his pa pers. Carlotta turned to me, say ing in a stage whisper: "Got a luncheon date with broth er or hubby or any one?" "Not with me," said Neal, look ing up with a grin. "Nor yet with Jim. We've an engagement of our own and very important matters not i for mere femininity to hear will there be discussed. So Babbsie's as ! ! free as air, 1 was wondering how | I'd find her a partner so she I wouldn't be mad at me for my lack |of attention. I'd thought of Pat— but here's partner provided by Fate." "Pat can meet us, if you like," said Carlotta with what struck me as a completely proprietary air. ] "Shall I 'phone him?" Again Neal looked up with his grin changed to a frown of per plexity. "No—better not," he said. You two girls go it alone." "All right," said Carlotta amiably j "I'm tickled to death to have a visit with Anne. We don't seem to have i many get-togethers these days. I'll ] run out to my desk and look over | the mail and you blow for me when j you're ready Anne." j The moment she left the office Neal looked up anxiously. Coming 1 I very close he stooped and said in a j low voice. j "Anne, you remember Jim's dream |of buying back the old Harrison place and my difficulty in finding out anything about it? Well, I've a full list of—particulars now. Guess why I had so much trouble |in running down the present owner?" "Why?" I asked, and then added eagerly. "Now it's all clear sailing for Jimmie. That's why you want to lunch with him, isn't it? He will be happy." "Will he?" asked Neal. His tone chilled, my enthusiasm. "The old Harrison place," stam mered Neal abruptly. "The old home where I think Jim had once hoped to see Phoebe married is listed in—is down with title clear and plain. Babbsie, to old Harri son place is Virginia Dalton's prop erty." "Virginia!" I cried. "Virginia— but how?" "I don't know," said Neal. "But I think. I see. That's why I told you I might have to talk to Pat." To be continued. Bringing Up Father -;- Copyright, 1918, International News Service -* - By McManus THE LOVE GAMBLER ! By Virginia Terhune Van de Water CHAPTER XDIV. I Copyright, 1919, Star Company. 1 During the ten minutes which elapsed before David De Baine ap peared in answer to his employer's summons Desiree tried to knit. At last, when she had dropped five stitches in as many minutes, I she laid down her work. "Father," she began. "Yes?" Her father looked at her ! inquiringly. "What is it, my dear?" "1 was wondering," the girl con i fessed, "if you would mind telling i Smith that you want him to take | the place of butler to-night?" Her father laughed. "1 declare I you look scared at the prospect!" |he teased. "Certainly I'll tell him if you wish. But, my child, you I will have to give him full instruc tions as to what' his duties will be." • I "Very well, 1 will," the girl I agreed faintly as she heard a ring ]at the front door. "Tell Smith to come in here," Mr. ' I Leighton said to Annie when she ! | announced the chauffeur's arrival. ) "Good morning, sir," David said i j in acknowledgment of his employ i er's greeting. Then, with a glance lat Desiree —"Good morning. Minis I ! Beighton." David Astonished Briefly, Samuel Beighton ex . ! plained the predicament they found I themselves in, ending with— j "There is but one way out of the I difficulty, Smith. It is that you act ' as butler this evening." David started violently, taken completely off his guard. I "I—l—sir—you mean me?" I Desiree glanced warningly at her father. if Samuel Beighton saw this glance it annoyed him instead of moving him to drop the matter - then and there. "Yes," he said testily. "That is : what I mean. Surely you would not I object to helping Miss Beighton at a time like this! It is not much to ask, but if you feel that this is not TTAItRJSnUR Gr TELEGRAPH | your work I will pay you extra for your time this evening." David flushed with vexation. "You misunderstand me, sir," he . said coldly. "X am willing to do ' I any work that Miss Leighton de j sires." "Then why did you appear so , startled at my suggestion?" the older man questioned. David De Laine was now thor oughly master of himself. "I was surprised, sir, and very uncertain as to what kind of a but ler 1 would make. X can drive a I car, but 1 have not had practice in ' ! passing dishes." : I His smiling explanation brought I an answering gleam to Mr. Leigh ' j ton's stern face. "So that was why you seemed so I put out, was it?" he said. "Well, X guess you'll get on all right. Miss ; Leigthton will tell you just what your duties will be for the evening. But, lirst of all you must hire a ; dress suit." "X have one, sir," David began, ■ then checked himself. ' But he was too late. His em ployer had heard what he said. 1 "You have a dress suit?" he re ' peated. ! | "Yes, sir." De Laine must think ; i fast if he would not betray him- I self. "That is—X know where I can I get one—from a friend —that is— ' without hiring it at a public place. ' | Excuse me, sir, if I say so —but X ! do not just fancy the idea of wear : I ing a suit that's hired and has been ' worn by people of all kinds." Out of the Woods 1 "I quite understand your reluc- j I tance," Samuel Leighton admitted, j "Are you sure your friend will lend j ' I you his suit?" ' ; "Yes, I am sure he will," David 1 | said. "He's a willing kind of chap j : I —and he has no need for his suit | these days. He's changed his occu- | 5 pation," he added byway of ex t planation. t "Oh, X see he's given up the > waiter's job," Mr. Leighton ob t served. "Then if his clothes tit you, ' get them by all means. If you have ; to hire them from your friend, let | me know ho wmuch they cost." "I don't think he'll charge me 1 | i anything, thanks," David replied. i Samuel Leighton was not an im- I aginative man, either did he have i the intuition peculiar to women, i Therefore it never occurred to him I that David was concealing anything from him. But Desiree was sure that David I ■ was keeping something back. Why ; had he said at first that he had a j j dress-suit, later speaking of it as I belonging to a friend? Perhaps he had been a butler be | ! fore he went into the service. If so, he was very foolish to be i ashamed of it. There was nothing I 1 disgraceful in it. Yet —she could I not think of Smith as a butler. But she must think of him in that capacity now —for it devolved upon I her to explain to him what his | duties would be for this evening. | Her embarrassment lessened as ! she talked to him about the prep | arations. The refreshments would i not be served until late in the eve ning. The cook and Annie would j bring them to the pantry. Smith and Annie must pass them to the 1 guests in the dining room. When she had assigned his duties 1 to him Smith made a request. I "Miss Ijeighton," he said, "I will Ibe glad to wait on the table. But might Annie open the front door I for the guests?" Desiree was puzzled, but she agreed to this arrangement. "Thank you," David murmured. "I might make a botch of it, you know, i "I never thought Smith diffident," i Desiree mused when he had gone. . It seems strange that he should | object to opening the front door to admit people whom he does not know. I suppose it is some whim of his, and I am perfectly willing to humor it, since he feels about it as I he does." To be continued. Oticura wr" and W/ Mil iM AH Treatment for pimples and blackheads: At night smear them with Cuticura Oint ment. Wash off in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water and continue bathing a few moments. Treatment for dandruff and itching: | On retiring rub Cuticura Ointment into ' partings all over scalp. The next morning i shampoo with Cuticura Soap and hot water. Repeat in two weeks u needed. Sop 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcum 1 25c. Sold throughout the world. For sample each free address: "Curie urc Lab oratories, Dept. 23F, Melden, Mese." I BV*Culicun Seep ebsvee without mug. !i , . "7" , s I Scientific Discussions by Garrett P. Serviss BY GARRETT I'. SERVISS Here are two questions to which I the asker says he can get no an- I swer: (1) "If a vertical line to York be extended through the earth adnade to project from the other side, will this projecting line be a vertical line?" (2) "if a running siphon oe placed under the receiver of an air pump, and the air be exhausted to one-tenth, how much more slowly I will the siphon run than when uu- I der full atmospheric pressure?" I I cannot undertake to answer a'l ! questions of this kind, but only i those which, like the above, involve ! broad principles and facts which it i would be useful and interesting to j everybody to know. They are of I the nature of the mental food on i which Isaac Newton nourished the j beginnigs of the mightiest scientific • intelligence ever developed by a hu- j man being, as when, for instance, I in his boyhood, he undertook to j measure that force of the great tent- j pest that roared over England on I the day that Oliver Cromwell died | by jumping first with the wind and j then against it. (1) A vertical line at. New Yoik j extended straight through the earth i would not except by a miracle of chance, be a vertical line at the point where it emerged. It would be vertical if the earth were an abso- j lutely perfect sphere, of uniform i density throukhout, because then a i line which was vertical at any point. ] on the earth would be vertical at i any other point, since all such lines j j would necessarily meet exactly ot I ! the center. But. the earth is only approxi- j | mately a sphere, or, more nearly, j an ellipsoid, with the line through ; I its poles of rotation serving as the i minor axis. Or it may be called an ! oblate spheroid i. e., a solid re i sembling a sphere, slightly flattened at the poles. In truth, the most careful inves tigations of the earth's shape prove that it does not perfectly accord with any regular geometrical solid. The consequence is that lines which are vertical to its surface at one point may not be vertical if trans- I ferred, without change of direction, Ito another point. In other words, such lines would not all pass through the center. Then, too, the direction of the. plumb line at any place on the . earth is not determined solely by the attraction toward the center of | gravity, but in part by the centri- J fugal force due to the earth's rota tion, and this force varies with the | distance from the equator. More- j over, the substance of the earth's j interior is by no means of uniform [ density, and variations of density | cause corresponding differences in the direction of the plumb line. i There are places where the ! plumb-line falls as much as ten i seconds of arc aside from the po sition that it would occupy if the rocks below and all around were of ; uniform density. Some of these cases are very puzzling, indicating the existence of surprising centers of local condensation, or masses of strangely heavy material lying at no great depth below the surface. There is a place on the coast of Scotland, in the County of Banff, where the mysterious local attrac tion is so strong that the romantic j Daily Dot Puzzle •52 4o • ! 53 •51 ' • • • 1 54 W 38 " to § 55 u ' 37 ; *i 7 • # 2*. 53 • 3 5 IA. 57 58* • 12. *1 ~o J *53 * 8. D 4 Ox 15 $ • *7 v \* 3 ' * % 3 " M * 3 ° 17* ~z- •4* V .5 •! 18- \ - .28^^ '2-7 \ X s " -25 \ 23 • Draw from one to two and so on !, to the end. * imagination might picture a vast \ pocket of solid gold, as big as a mountain, lying just under the rocky shell. Every great mountain, or mountain range, and every ex tensive tableland draws the plumb line aside. All these causes of variation in the direction of the vertical are the source of fundamental trouble for astronomers and geodesists, of which the ordinary public never hears. One of the most important things for the astronomer to know with exactness is the location of his zenith, or point directly over head, which, of course, is deter | mined by extending the indication I of the plumb-line to the sky. I On this depends the determina tion of latitude on the earth. But I if the vertical is misplaced by some j unexpected side attraction all Hie i delicate calculations based upon it, j are vitiated. Few imagine the in j finite pains, the measureless in t genuity and tho tireless application j required to furnish us euriotis j minded human insects with tiie ' really remarkable amount of knowl edge that the best specimens of our fussy little race have accumulated about the spinning globe on which we live, as well as about its inac cessible celestial surroundings. (2) Since the action of a siphon depends upon the ratio of the pres sure of the atmosphere to the weight of water to be raised to the ! top tho tube, if either of these elc- I ments is altered the limit of height I at which the instrument remains ef -1 feetive must vary proportionally. I If the pressure is reduced to one • tenth of its normal amount, the | weight of the water remaining the I same as before, the siphon will j cease to act at one-tenth of the I former height. The velocity of flow j is governed by gravity, and varies ! in proportion to the square root of j the height, or "head." In a perfect i vacuum the siphon would not work !at all. In ordinary circumstances j the maximum height to which the water can be carried is about thirty - | three feet. j A cashier has to be quick-witted I I ' ■ l AX and wide-awake. And she i I >/ A/I • can't be unless her body is rightly j JUfj j nourished. You may be a cashier j m\ or have any other indoor job, but I Lii, " 0 0 "Whatever you do, eat Krumbles." ; \ Krumbles is made of all the wh: t grain- I '"''Uij j IC(Vrl]f llßlOfl^S bran, kernel and all. It gives you every bit of I J 3Dff U | j BR\l I U the good nourishment nature puts in wheat. ; Ifp.i ' We cook it, shred it and toast it, so that it ! khi- ; ALL WHEAT IS ready to eat just as it comes to you in ; %R| ; _ _ RAT our "Waxtite" package, which retains the I WcL READY TO I delicate aroma and rich, tempting flavor jL f i _ " _ ■ Krumbles has when it comes crisp and hot i c ; HAS THIS M from our ovens. Ibi > V®" A m I Ask your grocer for Kellogg's Krumbles— i AS A{nOvfltiGJ J I the only Krumbles made. ' \Jf A' Krumbles is made in the same kitchens as i Kellogg's Toasted Corn Flakes. ' ■ ri I ECUO TOASTED CORN ELAKE CO. | f..,,. r^ AUGUST 16, 1919 Advice to the Lovelorn I.ONESOMIC at fifteen I am fifteen and have no friends, as I am not allowed to go out in the evenings with anyone. 1 seem to lie thrown aside by everyone who comes to my house, and as they are grown up young men and girls, they go out, leaving me behind. Will you please tell me how to make friends with the girls and boys at home? LONESOME. As you are rather young to go out with the others, why not spend your evenings in preparing yourself for tile good times in store for you in a year or two. if you read a bit and keep your mind alert you will be twice as attractive as if you were stupid. You could take up music and make a good musician of yourself. As you know, music is always in great demand among young people and you would find in several years that you were well repaid for the time spent in prac tice and preparation. Another accom jplblnncnt which most girls overlook • is cooking. Girls who can make really ' j good candy and delicious little calces I i are very much in demand, and so few j girls take the time or trouble to learn I j how. If you start in now to learn. I something of this kind. I am sure the time will fly by and before you know it you will be the center of attraction. And for the times when you are not busy with things of this kind you will find that with a good book and a few apples you will never get lonely. NOT MUCH TO GO ON DEAR MISS FAIRFAX. I am deeply in love with a man ten ' years older than I am, who I see fre IHarrisburg's LEADING and ACCREDITED Business College SCHOOL OF COMMERCE GIVES WHAT YOU WANT STANDARD Courses approved by the National Associa tion of Accredited Commercial Schools of the United States. Bell 485 Enter Any Time Dial 4393 quontty. I often see him speaking t another girl. 1 used to take walks with him of an evening, but I feel that I T am forcing myself on him. I have I given up all the boys I know for thia man's sake, yet he doesn't seem to I care. The other day I asked him if he would take me somewhere, as all my friends were going, and he answered very decidedly "No." HOPEFUL. I am very much afraid from the tone of your letter, all of which I have not given, that you have very little to be hopeful about in the case of this young man. You were very foolish to give up your boy friends on his ac count. A lIIItTIIDAY GIFT TO A YOUNG MAN* DEAR MIPS FAIRFAX. I have been going about with a young* man for six months. The young man's birthday is in a very short time, and as I received a birthday present from him, I would like to know whether it would be proper for me to give him anything. ' A CONSTANT READER It would be perfectly proper for you to give the young man a birthday present. I would suggest a book, which is always an acceptable pres ent and would be appropriate in this case. HAY FEVER relieved and pre vented by new discovery and inven tion. Those who suffer from annual attacks can avoid same by consult ing the MAX-HEIIJ Demonstrator at Gorgas' Pharmacy, 16 North Third street.—Adv. 5