" When a Girl Marries" By ANN 1.151.E A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problem of a Girl Wife [Copyright 1919, King Feature Syn dicate, Inc.] CHAPTER CCXCV. Leaving Phoebe, the uninvited guest in full possession of my apartment, I hurried downstairs and on to the nearest drug store where I sought a telephone booth. 1 called Pat to the Sturges office. Fortunately ho was there and I didn't have to ring the Dalton-Stur- Kcs Construction Company, where 1 might have been compelled to speak to Neal and do some explain ing I was anxious to avoid for the time being. Pat's Irish chivalry didn't fail, and ho promptly acceeded to my request that ho Join me for a taxi drive and a talk-fcst. Delicacy and diplomacy weren't working very well in the case of Dalton versus Dalton. That was clear. And circumstances had pushed mo beyond the limit of en durance. I couldn't bide my time any longer waiting for polite oppor tunities and openings that never came. If I couldn't talk plainly to Virginia. I felt 3 must talk plainly to Pat. So with a do-or-die feeling I hop ped into a taxi and whirled down to Pat's office. Then with Pat beside me, I directed the taxi driver then, without a "by your leave," I opened fire on Pat. "That night, we were at your apartment," he said, sidling up to the thing crab fashion. "What was It you sneaked into your pocket with a sigh of relief, because Jim hadn't seen it?" A perfect leaven- fT**— er for any flour— Wpoc it costs no more than the low Making grade powders and is the best at any price. RUMFORD THE WHOLESOME BAKING POWDER Go buy it today 7 i , Old Pals They all like it. So does the canary and the goat —To say nothing of Mother and Father. GUNZENHAUSER'S AMERICAN-MAID BREAD suits and satisfies the whoie family, agrees with them. A real food. Good to the last crumb The GUNZENHAUSER Bakery | 42§1 100% American J 'Sr. - y. !£ I I WILL OPEN SOON 1 | The Purity Bakery j 204 North Third Street |||j Right Above Locust I' ( 'H if I Something Harrisburg People ,|i jj Have Ifsanted | ;' Very shortly Harrisburg will have a unique bakery shop. X ||jj <1 The Purity Bakery will bake bread in sight, x <1 The bread will be mixed and moulded right mj before your eyes. jili *1 The bakers will work where you will see everything that goes on. You will see -.J the bread made from beginning to end and you can buy it fresh from the oven v every hour in the day. i-i <1 We will bake a wholesome, pure, fine loaf, X putting into it nothing but the very best materials, and this uniformity of quality will be maintained always. ••• *1 Wait for our opening announcement. II 111 p THE PURITY BAKERY | ••• 204 North Third Street I, J ■ WEDNESDAY EVENING, Pat removed his hat. ran his hand characteristically over his gray hair, tossed his head nervously and turned to me with what I feared would be a lpok of indigna tion. Instead he was twinkling. "And what do you think it was?" he demanded, surprisingly. "I thought you'd say 'None of your business, busybody.' Truly I did," I gasped. "I never descend to the obvious," said Pat solemnly. We both laughed and the ice was broken. "It was Virginia's picture," I haz arded. "Warm." replied Pat. But only warm. It was a little miniature on ivory I had painted from a picture in my watch —the only one Virginia forgot to pack up and take away with her." I put my hand over Pat's and we rode in silence, staring ahead up the white ribbon of road that reeled out ahead of us aimlessly. "May I tell him to take the left fork here at the crossroads? Both the other roads lead to the old place," said Pat, suddenly, with the effect of speaking through shut I teeth. "Yes," I agreed, wondering what I had expected to accomplish by i this drive that was torturing Pat. j "Does she know the old place is hers?" he blurted out. | I hesitated. How was I to tell him of the quarrel with Jim —of the pride that had turned to cold fury when Virginia found out that Pat had dared to buy the old estate and put it in her name? How was I to tell him that he hod failed? Yet it was with intentions based on these facts that I had summoned Pat. I had meant to urge him to drop his gentle methods. I had planned to tell him that Virginia was running away and that this confession of weakness gave him his opportunity—if only he would go to Virginia this very evening. Weary from her day of planning for the trip and miserable because Phoebe had defied her, bitterly con scious that both Phoebe and Jim were estranged from her, I felt Vir ginia might yield to a coup and almost welcome Pat. But I had forgotten Pat's basic gentleness with women. A brutal attack might have worn down Virginia's defenses. Then Pat's courtesy to me when I dared too much, made me realize that he would'nt force himself on Virginia. My big idea crumbled to dust be fore my eyes. Second thoughts were sober enough to convince me that at best It had been only a wild idea. The pathos of the little miniature he had hidden from us was to'o much for my resolutions. I couldn ( t try to egg Pat on to forget the chivalry I felt to he paj-t of him. "Does she know?" Pat asked again. "Does she see how I thought perhaps I could make amends this way for everything. "How you must have hurt her!" T countered at a venture. "It isn't like you as I know you. Pat. But you must have hurt her terribly then." "I did," said Pat sadly. "Over and over again. Her pride. Her eager, dominant youth. I didn't understand then what it meant to have the Harrison pride. I didn't speak Virginia's language. I hurt her more than she could stand. She grew very cold then. I began to drink and she shrank from me as from something unclean. She couldn't bear me to touch her. T let her go. I had to. It was all I could do for her." "You let her go?" I asked. "You let her go? Just what do you mean by that, Pat dear?" "What I say," he said patiently. "I couldn't make a woman stay with me when I adored her—and it was degradation and torture for her to feed my eyes on her with the love I couldn't hide." Then I began to see. I felt as if someone had opened a door for me. One more glimpse into the shroud ed room of Virginia's unhappy past and I should know. Horlick's the Original Malted Milk. Avoid Imitations and Substitutes Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918, International News Service - BpMcManus ralilisii TM I-7? E WHA,Tt> that [ ] "bAiO- 'YOUR I' ' 'EK I •YOUR HOu"bE '-KBS Il> THM" f tHWb *LL- I CAN '^ RE ' ST HOW-^ "I must go home." I cried. "I must go home. My ankle l'm tired," I explained stumblingly. Pat was far too chivalrous to question or protest. Jlc had me driven home at once. But I would n't let him take me beyond the elevator, and when I got to my floor, I did a strange thing. I ordered the hoy to take me right down again. Then 1 ordered an other taxi and drove off. It was only live. Virginia might not be home yet. But 1 would wait. I must see Virginia at once. (To lie Continued.) TREATY AMENDED FORTY-FIVE TIMES [Continued from Hrst Page.] securing an early opportunity to reap the harvest," in the adjustment of financial obligations of the war ring countries. The third was in the "unthinking outcry of many excellent people who desired early action and for the most part had never read the treaty or never got beyond the words 'League of Nations,' which they be lieved to mean the establishment of eternal peace." "To yield helplessly to this clamor," declares the report, "was impossible to those to whom was intrusted the performance of a sol emn public duty." Couldn't Get Data Recalling the Senate's responsi bility as equal with the President's, the report recounts at some length the difficulties the Foreign Rela tions Committee experienced in get ting information on the treaty, be ing obliged to send to Paris for maps, being compelled to get "im portant information from press re ports," and having at its disposal few official documents.' Collateral trea ties having a bearing, the report says, the committee was unable ,to get. Of the sum of information re ceived in conference with President Wilson and Secretary Lansing, the report remarks: "The people themselves know ltow much Information in re gard to the treaty was received by the committee upon those two occasions." While criticism for delay lias been aimed at the Foreign Relations Committee, the report points out, 110 action has been taken by France, Japan or Italy. The argument that the treaty speedily should be rati fied that trading with Germany might begin, the report dismisses as "rather faded," and declares the United States has been trading with Germany since the signing of the armistice in increasing volume. The statement that trade cannot be re sumed until the treaty is ratified is characteristic as a "mere delu sion." Price of Beef! "Before leaving this subject," says the report, "it may not be amiss to remark that Mr. Lloyd George has recently made two important speeches expressing grave appre hensions as to the social and politi cal unrest and the economic trou bles now prevalent in England. He seems to have failed to point out, however, that the ratification of the covenant of the League of Nations had relieved the situation which he had described. He was apparently equally remiss in omitting to sug gest that prompt action by the United States in adopting the eo\e nant of the League of Nations would immediately lower the price of beef. * * * "The amendment offered by the committee relates to the League. It is proposed so to amend |£ e text as to secure for the United States a vote in the assembly of the League equal to that of any other power. Great Britain now has under the name of the British Empire one vote, in the Council of the League. She has four additional votes in the assembly of the league for her self-governing dominions and col onies which are most properly mem bers of the League and signatories to the Treaty. She also has the vote of India, which is neither a self-governing dominion nor a col ony, but merely a part of the em pire and which apparently was sim ply put in as a signatory and mem ber of the League by the Peace Conference because Great Britain desired it. Great Britain also will control the votes of the Kingdom of Hejaz and Persia. With these last two of course we have nothing to do. But if Great Britain hns six votes in the League assembly, 110 reason has occurred to the commit tee and no argument has been made to show ~ why the United States should not have an equal number. If other countries like the present arrangement that is not our affair: but the committee failed to see why the United States should have but one vote in the assembly of tho League when the British Empire has six. China Gets Shantung "Amendments 39 to 44, inclusive, transfer to China the German lease nnd rights, if they exist, in the Chi nese province of Shantung, which are given by the Treaty to Japan. The majority of the committee were not willing to have their votes re corded at any stage in the proceed ings in favor of the consummation of what they consider a great wrong. They cannot assent to taking tho property of a faithful ally and hand ing it over to another ally in ful fillment of a bargain made by other powers in a secret treaty. It 13 a record which they are not willing to present to their fellbw citizens or r -> BHWIBBDRO && TELEGR'APH leave behind them for the contem plation of their children. "Amendment No. 2 Is simply to provide that whore a member of the League has self-governing dominions and colonies which are also mem bers of the League, the exclusion of the disputants under the league rules shall cover the aggregate vote of the members of the League and its self governing dominions and parts of empire combined if any one of them is involved in the controversy. "The remaining amendments with a single exception may be treated as one, for the purpose of ail alike is to relieve the United States from having representatives on the com missions established by the League which deal with questions in which the United States has and can ha 'e 110 interest and in which the United States has evidently been inserted by design. The exception is amend ment 45, which provides that the United States shall have a member of the reparations commission bat that such commisioner of the Unit ed States cannot except in the case of shipping where the interests of the United States are directly in volved deal with or vote upon any other questions before that commis sion except under instructions from the government of the United States. "The committee proposes four reservations to be made a port of the resolution of ratification when it is offered. The committee re serves. of course, the right to offer other reservations if they shall so determine," The four reservations now pre sented are as follows: 1 The United States reserves to itself the unconditional right to withdraw from the League of Na tions upon the notice provided in Article 1 of said treaty of peace with Germany.' "The provision in the league cove nant for withdrawal declares that any member may withdraw provid ed it has fulfilled all its interna tional obligations and all its obli gations under the covenant. There has been much dispute as to who would decide if the question of the fulfillment of obligations was raised and it is very generally thought the question would be settled by the Council of the League of Nations. The best that can be said about it is that the question of decision is clouded with doubt. On such a point as this there must be no doubt. The United States, which has never broken an international obligation, cannot permit all its existing trea ties to be reviewed and its conduct and honor questioned by other na tions. The same may be said in regard to the fulfillment of the ob ligations to the league. It must be made perfectly clear that the United States alone is to determine as to the fulfillment of its obliga tions, and its right of withdrawal must therefore be unconditional as provides in the reservation. '2-—The United States declines to assume under the provisions of Article 10, or under any other article any obligations to preserve the ter ritorial integrity Or political inde pendence of any other country or to interfere in controversies between other nations, members of the league or not or to employ the mili tary or naval forces of the United States in such controversies or to adopt economic measures for the protection of any other couutry, whether a member of the league or not, against external aggression or for the purpose of coercing any other country or for the purpose of intervention in the internal conflict or other controversies which may arise in any other country, and no mandate shall be accepted by the United States under Article 22, Part I of the treaty of peace with Ger many except by action of the Con gress of the United States.' "This reservation • is intended to meet the most vital objection to the league covenant as it stands. Un der no circumstances must there be any legal or moral obligation upon the United States to enter into war or to send its army and navy abroad or without the unfettered action of Congress to impose economic boy cotts on other countries. Under the constitution of the United States the Congress alone has the power to declare war, and all bills to raise revenue or affecting the revenue in any way must originate in the House of Representatives, be passed by the Senate and receive the signa ture of the President. These con stitutional rights of Congress must not be impaired by any agreements such as are presented in this treaty, nor can any opportunity of charging the United' States with bod faith lie permitted. No American soldiers or sailors must be sent to fight in other lands at the bidding of a League of Nations. American lives must not be sacrificed except by the will and command of the American people acting through their constitutional representatives in Congress. "This reservation also covers the subject of mandates. According to the provisions of the covenant of the league the acceptance of a mandate by any member is voluntary, but as to who shall have nuthority to refuse to accept a mandate for any country the covenant of the league Is silent. The decision as to accept ing a mandate must rest exclusively within the control of the Congress of the United States as the reserva tion provides, and must not be dele- even by inference, to any per sonal agent or to any delegate or commissioner. The Monroe Jtootriiie " '3—The United States reserves to itself exclusive the right to de cide what questions are within Its domestic jurisdiction and declares that all domestic and political ques tions relating to its affairs, includ ing immigration, coastwise traffic the tariff, commerce and all other domestic questions, are solely within the jurisdiction of the Unitod States and are not under this Treaty sub mitted in any way either to arbitra tion or to the consideration of the Council or of the assembly of llie League of Nations, or to the decision or recommendation of any other power.' "This reservation speaks for it self. It is not necessary to follow out here all tortuous windings, which to those who have followed them through the labyrinth disclose the fact that the League under cer tain conditions will have power to pass upon and decide questions of immigration and tariff, as well as the others mentioned in the reserva tion. It is believed by the commit tee that this reservation relievos the United States from any dangers or any obligations, in this direction. Last Reservation "The fourth and last reservation is as follows: " '4—The United States declines to submit for arbitration or inquiry by the assembly or the Council of" the League of Nations provides for in said Treaty of Peace any questions which in the Judgment of the United States depend upon or relate to its long established policy, commonly known as the Monroe Doctrine; said doctrine is to be interpretated by the United States alone and is hereby declared to be wholly outside the jurisdiction of said League of Na tions and entirely unaffected by any provision contained in the said Treaty of Peace with Germany.' "The purpose of this reservation is clear. It is intended to preserve the Monroe Doctrine from any in terference or interpretation by for eign powers. As the Monroe Doc trine has protected the United States, so, it is believed by the committee, will this reservation protect the Monroe Doctrine from the destruc tion with which it is threatened by Article 21 in the Covenant of the League and leave it, where it has al ways been, within the sole and com plete control of the United States." PERSHING AND THE FIRST CAPTIVATE N. Y. [Continued from First Pngc.] the flag-decked streets of foreign ; capitals. Never in the city's history had such a multitude of spectators' turned out for any pageant. It was j a holiday for the metropolis, and i the broad avenue was banked from ! the far end of Central Park to Wash- ! ir.-gton Square with dense masses of i humanity. Myriads waited for; hours under leaden skies, when they i knew they had little chance of see ing the procession. Every window nnd every roof along the way was packed. Countless thousands were • banked in the eastern edge of Cer>- tral Park and at least 100,000 sat in ! the city's grandstand and those ] erected by speculators. Army of Heroes For Pershing it was the culmina- I tion of a long series of scenes of, adulation. He said he wns over- j whelmed by the reception given him j vhen he set foot orr the shores of! Manhattan on Monday, but, even 1 that paled into insignificance com-' pared with the frenzied greeting that was his to-day. He was the; commanding figure in an army of heroes. As the stern-vlsaged warrior, sit- j ting on his horse like a centaur, rode ; through the arch which spans the | avenue at One Hundred and Tenth 1 street, there rose a cheer'which vol-' leyed to the trees and crags in Cen- ] tral Park. It was the beginning of; an ovation such as few Americans! have had. Human throats could i voice no louder welcome. Proud of the gallar.-t young vet-' cruris who marched behind him, the j Commander rode slowly down the, avenue before hero-worshiping mil-, lions. The bronzed men who fol-' lowed were -worthy of all the pride'; their chief could feel. Their regi mental flags had never known de feat, and under them 5,000 men had died in France. More than 1,500 j fell on the field of Soissons and al-j most as many more on the Meuse and in the Argonne. The grim roll 1 of casualties is longer than the ros ter of the division. Thousands Pay Tribute Countless thousands of Americans, flushed with the pride of victory, paid tribute here to-day, in what probably was the city's most impres sive military spectacle to the nation's leader in the World War, General John J. Pershing, Commander-in- Chief of the American Expeditionary Force, and to the far-famed First Division. The sun-burned Missourian, look ing as fit as a youthful Indian despite his 59 years the soldier who said to the shade of Lafayette at his tomb in Picpus: "Lafayette, we are here!" and whose Army of 1,250,000, the largest force Of Ameri cans ever to fight on foreign soil, turned the tide of possible Allied de feat into victory to-day led down Fifth avenue 22,000 men of the] First Division in a procession which stirred the blood of every spectator. Guard of Honor Leads Ahead of the bronzed veterans, mostly "regulars" who had been 1 abroad nearly two years and a quar ter, and whose fighting was the ad- | miration of every Poilu and British 1 Tommy, was General Pershing's guard of honor, a regiment of 3,600 ' men picked from all seven of the American Regular Army Divisions in France. This unique contingent, I known as "Pershing's Own," and composed of two companies from each regiment of the division rep resented, the companies in turn be ing formed of one squad from each company in the regiment, was a special feature of the parade. The troops In line represented 4 7 States of the Union and several of the insular possessions and among the marchers were more than 4,000 "old time" doughboys whose only recorded home is the United States Army. Trudging along under the weight of full combat equipment, every pack in place, rifles clean and bayonets gleaming in the sun, the lighters presented a picture of ag gressiveness and force. From 110 th street, where the parade started, to the Washington Arch, where it dis banded, the throngs along the curbs kept up almost tumultuous cheering. Flrctl First Shot "There comes the Stxth Field Ar tillery!" someone shouted. A few moments later this famous organiza tion, Battery C of which on October 23, 1917, tired the first shot at the Germans, came into sight and was wildly acclaimed. As the parade passed St. Patrick's Cathedral it was unexpectedly halt ed and General Pershing dismounted and crossed to the reviewing stand where Cardinal Mercier sat with Archbishop Hays and a number of other church dignitaries. The cheer ing rose to a deafening volume as the famous soldier clasped hands with the heroic Belgian prelate. Car dinal Mercier had been given a tre mendous reception on his first arri val at the reviewing stand, but the cheering which arose as he stood up to greet the American commnn der-in-cliief made his previous wel come seem feeble. Delegations of home folk from Southern New York, Connecticut, New Jersey, Delaware, and Eastern Pennsylvania, whose 2,700 sons or kinsmen were in the First Division, were on hand to do them honor along with the men from other sec tions of the country. Many of these lighters, members of the 18th In fantry, wore the French fourragere, the red and green cord signifying that_the Croix de Guerre with palm I Individuality I | In the Home— 1 % "pv O your Cur- P § I J tains, Dr a- H other 'Hangings jjpl L= = MII p g- reflect a welcome |f|jf lIIM to your home? Do Hjfi irlp your friends ever 1: \ H ||| g mention your dec- Km I j£nrj~ |j' Y clined to j|| H finement of j^iir = friends by the ~ g gr measure in which >|| —■ they appreciate the better things in life. Their homes ||, reflect their individuality. ,S f | i O meet your ideals in home decoration, have you ever vis ited our Drapery Department? It will be a great help to g you, we are certain, and particularly right now, when our K |a Fall stocks are complete and crisp and fresh. 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