" When a Girl " llj ANN LISLE A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problem of a Girl Wife By ANN' LISLE CHAPTER CCCV. For several days following my first meeting with Val's friends, the Pet- Ungills, I did little but proudly as sist Val in showing "the city" to the dear little old lady, I found myself calling "Aunt Mollie" as naturally as If I'd known her since christening days. Jim struck up a great friendship With Uncle Ned, and we six had the Jolliest, most care-free time that lias fallen to my lot In ages. It was temporarily interrupted when Uncle Ned invited the four "children" —as he called us—off for a week-end Jaunt, and Jim had to renig at the last minute because of business. That left me with an unoccupied Saturday on my hands, and bethink ing myself that I hadn't seen Car lotta for ages, I telephoned her and suggested a luncheon engagement. Hardly had we concluded arrange ments when my telephone summoned me to a conversation with some one who felt about me just as I'd been feeling about Carlotta. It was An thony Norreys clamoring for a sight of his long unseen friend. "If Jim can finish an important business deal we're going out of town to-morrow and join some friends. And we've plans for to night. That leaves this afternoon. I'm lunching with Carlota Sturgos. "Want to pick me up for a walk bout three?" "Why are you dooming me to a solitary lunch, Anne?" asked Tony In his delightful voice. "I'd like • completely with 1 Resinol 3 j If you find yourself "left out" || because of a poor skin, and want r a clear, fresh complexion, use Resinol Soap at least once a day. Wash thoroughly with a warm, creamy latherof it, then rinse the face with plenty of cold water. It does not often take many j days of such regular care with j Resinol Soap to show an im ; provement. In severe cases, a ! little Resinol Ointment should | be used at first. All druggists > sell Resinol Soap and Ointment. PENN-H ARRIS GRILL ROOM OPEN BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCH Weekdays, 75f Served 12 to 2 P. M. Evening Meal, $1.25 6 to 8 P. M. Dancing 9.30 to 12 midnight WE again call your at tion to FinkelsteinDry Cleaning Service which is at your command through our 4 OFFICES The growth of our business is directly due to the satisfaction rendered our patrons. 1322 N. Sixth St., Harrisburg 1134 Market St., Harrisburg 110 North Front St., Steelton 1257 Mulberry St., Harrisburg Finkelstein CLEANER AND DYER Harrisburg and Steelton v 4 Offices Both Phones MONDAY EVENING, | nothing better than to join you and that nice Sturges girl for lunch, | provided always that you beg and implore." j "I beg and implore," I replied. "It | will be jolly to have you with us. I know Carlotta will like seeing you I again." 1 After I'd said good-by and had | hung up the receiver, 1 wondered why I'd said thaL As a matter of fact, I couldn't remember that Car lotta had ever mentioned Anthony Norreys since the old Canteen days wnen he dropped in on us so often. i And except ror these casual meet | ing 3 they had nothing in common, xil never heard Carlotta comment on Tony, but 1 felt sure that no one could mind having him brought in to break up a tete-a-tete. On the other hand, Tony had once called Carlotta "a brick." I got to the place of our appointed meeting live minutes ahead of time, but there was Carlotta, over-prompt too. I was so anxious for a glimpse of you, Nancy-Anne, that I came ahead of time, for fear I'd waste a minute,'V she cried eftervescently, dubbing me with a new title to suit her mood and the propitious occa sion. "You dear thing!" I replied, squeezing her hand and hoping she wouldn't mind my dragging in a third without consulting her. "But we aren't going to be all by our lonesomes. IJo you mind?" "Why, no," said Carlotta politely, but with no great show of interest. "Any one you want is sure to be welcome." "I knew I could count on you to be polite and a good sport, tpo," I replied. "But here comes our third man, and he's sure of a welcome of his own wherever lie goes—it's dear old Tony." In the moment before Tony had finished greeting me and had turned to Carlotta I got a queer impression that she started and paled under her crimsoned cheeks. But by the time I turned to address her, Car lotta was just herself again—a lit tle flamboyant, a trifle overhearty, but warmly sincere for all that. "Have you time to let me whisk ! you up the road for a cool hour or two at the inn out on the river bank?" asked Tony. "Please —please don't let me keep The Harrisburg Academy HARRISBURG, PA. Founded In 1784 and chartered In 1809. The Harrisburg Academy has maintained an uninterrupted corpo rate existence. For several years the school has gtaduated twenty-five to thirty young men. all of whom have continued their studies in a score or more of universities and professional schools. The school reopens for its 136 th year of service with the strong est teaching staff and the largest en rollment of pupils, in its history Additional class room facilities have been provided for the increased en rollmenL There will be no military uniforms used this year. Calisthenics and outdoor sports will be substituted in the place of military drill. Budd ings are open for inspection and clas sification of pupils. The prospectus for 1919-20 is sent upon request. September 22, 9 a. m.. organization of lower school. September 23. 9 a. tn„ lower school begins. September 23, 9 a. m., new boys register and classify. September 24. 9 a. m.. Academy ; opens. Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918, International News Service Bp McMai tit' \';ve<°t t o think ] ~ II WHY vwtNT >OO I mow- LET me I t'M ?>orrv I ) the e>uTcnei% ointy 1 r~ J? OP A <OOO EVCOtsE. IN HERE TO HELP r— l EXPLAIN- J V>oKEt>o ~ —-n MOoKE'i WHEN Yog - FOR HOT <ITTIN' ) X ENTERTAIN- J yj 3 HARtjHLV- L I JOVT COULDN'T L HE tOU LEAVE TOUR CANE I <IVE ME HOME A VOL) WORM' ' — 7 c —<ET A WAV THE HE PICKgO IT UP AN' e — ' THAT [ CCUr^ T ON you, but I don't think I'll be able J to go. I've just remembered an ap- ! polntment," cried Carlotta, with more uneasiness than I'd ever seen i her show. . "Oh, but that's a great disappoint- ; ment!" protested Tony heartily, and his words fairly overlapping my pro- > testing: • "I'll eat at a hot-dog wagon, Car- i lotto, before I'll permit myself to be separated from you." "Do you really want me?" she | asked, turning from one to the ' other of us like a pleased child- | Of course we insisted, touched by | the simple, unassuming way in which Carlotta would have endured I a broken engagement rather than | be in the way. But as we drove , out toward the river I wondered a little. Carlotta Isn't the self-effacing sort nor yet the over-sensitive type who always fancy themselves de trop. Was there something on her mind to-day which she'd been par ticularly anxious to discuss with me? It might even concern Pat. I grew a little uneasy as I con jectured and conjured up situations. And in the midst of my silence I noticed how fluently Tony was talk ing. Carlotta seemed to bring him out the way his very friends did. And she was fairly hanging on his words with the most flatter ing attention. It wasn't till lunch was almost over that understanding came to me—then all the little things that had puzzled me for the last hour became suddenly clear. "No, I don't see much of Pat Dal ton any more,"- she was saying. "He's on his feet now—doesn't need my friendship as he did. And the business is right in his hands— that doesn't need any supervision as it did." "You sound wistful," Tony re pied. "Surely you don't think you could ever be useless or forgotten. There would always be a place for any one of your deep sympathies anywhere." "One can so easily intrude," re plied Carlotta, and her voice was wistful Indeed. "But I'm grateful for what you've been saying. Com ing from so loyal a friend of Anne's it means more than I can tell you." And then, like a flash, some words of Carlotta's came back to me. Grim little, sad little words confess ing that there was a man—a man she could love and Idolize, but that she had no right to try to win him and that he didn't know she was on earth, because there was another woman claiming his attention. Something in her intent eyes made me feel that Anthony Norreys was the man—HER MAN to Carlotta. But who was the other woman, the woman who needed Tony? To Be Continued British Interests Watching American Exporters of Coal liondon, Sept. 22. British indus : trial interests view with alarm the gaining of a foothold by American exporters in the coal market of France and Denmark. Industrial disputes in Great Britain have given American dealers an opportunity to obtain huge orders in quarters for merly supplied exclusively by South | Wales mines. American dealers are said to have contracted for the delivery of over 100,000 tons of coal In France and negotiations are now under way for an additional half million tons. One or two cargoes of American coal al ready have been laid down in Den mark as sample shipments, orders for which were placed last March during the strike in England, It is stated. The price was said to be $2.60 per ton lower than the Eng lish price at that time. The iron and steel Industries of England also are said to feel their outlook is not very hopeful because of opportunities afforded American competitors through the curtailed English coal production. BANK IN NEW HOME Tnrentum, Pa., Sept. 22. The National Bank of Tarentum opened to-day for an informal reception and business in its former banking quar ters, which have just Ibeen Re modeled and equipped. ONE our or TEN SO AFFECTED Half-sick, run-down, nervous men and women are as numerous as leaves on the trees In the summer time. Such people, -and you may be one of the nine out of ten that are said to be so affected, feel so de pressed and despondent, suffer from headaches, loss of sleep, dizziness, poor digestion and haven't enon-h rich red blood in their veins to make them capable or self reliant. Are you one of this multitude who are loggy and listless and so nervous that the slightest noise completely upsets you? If you are, you most certainly need something to correct this condlt'on and to brlld you up and make you anew. Tanlac, "Mas ter Medicine" of millions Ip Amer ica, is doing this \ . thinr c ry day. Tanlac strikes t-"lght at the seat of your troubles and brings you out of the very depths of despair -to m'Tshltie anc happiness. Tan lac sold here by all leading drug- "" 1 11 LIBURO TELEGRXPH LITTLE TALKS BY BE A TRICE FAIRFAX The other morning as a street car was carrying a full quota of workers to the marts of trade, something hap pened to the power or the brake, and the car stopped. A pretty blonde girl who had been languidly hanging to a strap immedi ately showed signs of interest, she glanced about the car, studied her im miedate group of strap-hangers, like a .vaudeville artist ingratiating himself with the audience before beginning his turn. She had the pretty droopy type of blondneas that suggests a "second-day rose" which has been wired, lashed to a tooth-pick and made to hold up its head in a brave attempt to give it the freshness it has lost on the florist's counter. She began: "If this limousine has broken down, I am late again, making three times this weak I have got a scowl from the boss. If this bright young working girl don't look out she'll get flred." A middle-aged man looked at her in dulgently, a fledgling in a straw hat smiled. A lady of uncertain age who suggested the cook-book stencil; "bring the vinegar to boiling point" sniffed and the blonde girl's companion with the air of giving a cue answered : "A lot you'd care if they flred you —with your prospects." "Haven't any prospects—my face is at present my fortune." And the girl who suggested "a second-day rose," swung her head around so that every one could see how good-looking she was. "Your face landed your fortune, you mean?" The obliging friend led on. "And my cheerful manners passed it up." By this time the strap-hangers and | those who had seats settled In them with the comfortable expression of peo ple who are about to be entertained. Borne Jaws dropped and some shut tight us clams, according to the tempera ments of their owners. The blond girl continued: Her Point of View "No, it seemed they didn't like mt — I lacked the repose of Vere de Vere— I wasn't sufficiently aloof. I was a child of nature and I liked the movies. 1 said what I thought and I thought what I said." "I didn't know it was oft but say, you weren't marrying them." The lead commented. "Any one who married him, would-a married them and no mistake." The passengers gulped in the broken romance, two or three of them seemed on the point of giving up their cher ished seats for a nearer view of the girl who was telling "the story of her life" in a street car. "Was he stuck on them?" the lead inquired. "Wasn't he though his mother, two old maid aunts and a sister. They were some dried peaches, believe me. DAILY HINT ON FASHIONS A NEAT MORNING DRESS 2912—F0r this, one could choose gingham in a pretty check pattern, or striped seersucker, the trimming could be of plain material in white or a contrasting color. Linen, gabardine, khaki and drill are nice also for the design. The Pattern is cut in 7 Sizes; 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches measure. Size 38 requires 6 yards of 44-inch material. Width of skirt at lower edge, is about 1 6-8 yard. A pattern of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 10c in silver or lc and 2c stamps. Telegraph Pattern Department For the 10 cents Inclosed please send pattern to the following address: Size Pattern No Nanje Address City and State I They were all terribly refined, never talkd about their clothes, their neigh bors, their indigestion, the laundress or how much anything cost." , "Gee, they must have been all deaf and dumb, weren't they?" "No, they'd talk your head off about what they read and what was in the papers. Peace Conference and four teen points and things like that, and they talked about pictures, and art galleries. Oh, they did talk, forever and forever, about nothing at all." "It must have been simply dreadful for you." "It was. I thought I'd forget my American and take to making signs. Everyone called on me, from the presi dent of the Divinity College, that's in their town, down to the girls who used to be in love with him. And I passed remarks on how they did their hair, or how bald they were if they hadn't any to do, and their clothes and things like that and the dried peaches just dried a little harder." Just for One Month "Didn't they expect you to talk any?" "They didn't call that talk and wasn't It funny, they never Said cut it out' or anything like that—but you Daily Dot Puzzle 3 . 2 *3J ' I ! 34. p 3 # 5 • 6 . ..s • Z * ~ • 2 * *ZB 4" 2b 7 . " 25.' . I 8* # **4 *7 / .22, NS/ ' 9 X .Zl X to* X >3 X u • 19 • /jV z# - 4 • JL \ ii Draw from one to two and so o to the end. 11111 l Economy over Butter or Lard' |[|! .... fIH ; 'jj 1 H yN shortening, follow your usual recipes but use I S one-fourth to one-third less Mazola than I I I * n ry^ use Mazola over and over f 11 I IritK/ln* I again to the last drop—it never carries / \ J I J UnLjJLA) '■ odors or flavors from one food to another. / \D/1 |(7 1 || |l apvkz j | FREE The help Q1 58-page Corn Products Cook ■ | I jtfi i|F II 1 I k 1 H experts—and seey to foUow. y Handsomely illuZ ■ flh S J m II I ■■ COOKING VB IJ9 trated. It is free. Write ns for it today. V lvll\ a Jf I I % I ■ Ss a° ,, *s- X l II tflfl CORN PRODUCTS REFINING CO, P. O. Bex 161, New York City \ YflN l/tA M |l II L_JLJL—]L.JI—JL_ j)P NATIONAL STARCH CO., Sale* Representative just felt their disapproval frost-biting you." •flow long did you stand it?" asked the sympathetic friend. "I went for a month, and I canned 'em all at the end of ten days—they were wefcome to have little Alfred hack again. And its the open season for me say isn't this car ever going to get right? Let's walk." And they left the car. And for a moment or two the passengers wore an expectant look, as if awaiting the next on the bill. No one would have been surprised if a man and a girl had arisen from their seats and begun to sing a topiqpl song, with a little dancing on the side. Hut none of the other passengers appeared to have a gift for vaudeville after the mono logue girl left the car, and everyone began to fret about the power or the brake or whatever it was that was holding them up. Finally a woman said to her hus band : "I don't wonder they didn't want her; I'd just hate to have a son Of mine married to a human grapho phono that had to turn herself on in a street car or bust"— The man said: "She'll have an other line of talk the next time the car stops, she'll tell them why she didn't want them, or how her grandfather killed her grandmother—it's all the same to her as long as she gets an audience. "Well, land sakes," said the woman. "It's a wonder she don't get a turn to do on the stage, or demonstrate making coffee or biscuits in a depart ment store or try for a Job on a rub ber-neck wagon where she'd make something oft her line of talk." And the man said: "She isn't clever enough for that." And doubtless the man was right. She enjoyed being a public entertainer, the passengers could not escape her, and had she given them her little turn with more ability, or even industry, she might have got a Job in vaudeville but the stopped car and the ready made audience filled her immediate need for the time being, and she let it go at that. ( The uncalled for monologue explains so much. She was pretty, charmingly dressed, and at first glance highly at tractive, but her craving for attention —even in a public street car,'sealed her fate. She had made herself cheap doubtless that was why she suggested a "second-day rose" to me, even Ire fore she began to entertain the car. Wreck on P. & R. Kills One and Hurts Nine Other Persons Philadelphia, Sept. 2 2.—One man was killed and nine other persons were injured yesterday in a head-on collision between a freight and a passenger train on the Philadelphia and Reading Railway at Acorn, near Norristown. Oscar Petzhold, of Bridgeport, fireman of the freight train, was killed. The passenger train was a local running from T<ansdale to Norris town. All of the injured were pas sengers. None of them was seri ously hurt. The cause of the acci dent has not been determined. POISON OAK Wash with weak solu- . tion of blue stone or lime water, dry thor- JnEar >ugh!y, follow with light appli- rjTfa, :ation of— Vicks vapomjMT ynt (<-. finr, v<- •IA ry . | SEPTEMBER 22, 1919, U. S. MARINES NEAR FIUME American Contingent Lands at Buccari, Newspaper Announces By .Associated Press. Home, Friday, Sept. 19. —The Giornale D'ltalia announces that an American contingent has landed at Buccari, in the Fiume region. The Tribuna announces to-day that a person returning from Fiume stated that General Badogiio, in charge of the Italian troops outside Fiume, had granted a delay of 48 hours to officers and soldiers in Fiume to return to Italy. It was added that the population of Fiume had decided to make an unmistak able demonstration of their feelings at the expiration of this ultimatum Saturday. Women and children and at© @r© mm GRIND Si LENSES fj|l We are not only provided with the latest devices used in the science of Optometry for examining the eyes, but we operate our own fac tory on the premises, affording un surpassed facilities for giving the very best service. R. D. PRATT Eyesight Specialist 26 N. Third St. Sclileisner Building Would You Starve Your Baby? Do not Starve its Lungs Let it breath Fresh Air Keep it out of doors Keep the windows open while it sleeps Watch it grow rosy and fat p Anti Tuburculosis Society of Harrisburg and Vicinity City Library Building, Harrisburg, Pa. men of the civil population were to precede the troops to the armistice line, shielding the troops with their bodies in order to see whether Gen eral Badoglio's soldiers would lire on them. It was added that D'Annunzto had ordered the sentinels on the Jugo slav frontier not to make use of their arms, even if the Jugo-Slavs fired on them, saying: "Allow your selves to be killed: We are here for this, since our sacrifice may lead to the occupation of all of Dalma tia." The Tribuna says its informant added that some French and Brit ish sailors had remained In Flume and joined the Italian movement. Handbags Velvet Velour the popular fall fashion New velvet and velour hand bags fitted with best quality silver and shell frames; .beau tifully lined with colored satin. Some of the bags are fitted with a change purse, mirror and vanity cases. Others with just the purse. Priced at from $5.00 to $lB.OO 1 Regal Umbrella Co. Second and Walnut Sts. s\ 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers