" When a Girl Marries" By ANN I.ISLE A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problem of a Girl Wife CHATTER CCCXXXI (Copyright, 1919, King Feature Syndicate, Inc.) For onr week-end Jaunt Neal se lected a pretty little lake iesort about sixty miles from the city. By now my ankle was in good condition, so I insisted on running up in my car—packing him and Phoebe in the rumble seat, while the baggage was distributed between the running board and the place next to me. Driving up the steady grade that leads into the hills and to the lake of our destination occupied me pretty much. But it didn't keep me from worrying because the morning hadn't brought the expected letter from Jim. Nor, on the other hand, did it keep me from realizing that I'd have been a prig to insist on stopping at home to watch each de livery, with the longed-for letter in view. Phoebe's happy voice floated to me from the rear. It was full of laughs and ripples and trills—the bird-like happiness of youth was in it now, instead of the tense and tor rifying woman's eagerness in which she berated the fate and the family that denied her to Neal. All through the happy day I re joiced that I'd come with the chil dren. And yet there was an ugly uneasiness In my mind which would not down. In the afternoon I called up m$ apartment to see if there was any mail. But the operator reported that no one answered, which might Evorx Home / \ player Piano, with, its pleasure, and joy, and revtfulriesj, and refinement, skoulcL be in every Rome-, kowever Humble. Excellent playery can now be at low co.st. YOHN BROS. 13 N. 4th St. Across From Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart lf Comparison Convinces / then— v Walk-Overs f A will be your choice r Upon the grade of a shoe depends its price. Upon the quality \ of workmanship and material depend the grade. 1 f Bearing these terms of explanation in ~ mind if you will select any Walk-Over shoe and then compare it with a shoe sold ( elsewhere at the same price— f V you'll note a big difference. rI j ' L I Walk-Overs represent absolutely the most for 1 ® / \ I the money you pay no matter what grade you I * • / J ( The Shoe Illustrated / V A beautiful model In Patent leather J t j \ \ vamp with Pearl gTay kid button top. I /\ The long narrow vamp and plain toe ! A • j are most stylish. The shoe is finished I 1 1 with a leather Ix>uis heel and welted ■ W | $12.00 % I Other patent leather models are / priced from nine dollars upward. Only One Store in Harrisburg \ i; Over 800 l Skop i $ 226 Jj J* | hTLrrist>u:rg * Jv M " rUt IS A WEDNESDAY EVENING be put down to poor service, and might mean that Hedwig and Angy had taken advantage of my absence to take an afternoon off. After a dip in the lake, Phoebe and Neal had got back into walking togs and gone for a stroll through the pine woods. When they hadn't returned by seven, I added my un easiness over this to the fact that another trial over the toll wire didn't give my apartment, and, tick ing this to my general disquiet—the "hunch" I'd felt about coming—l worked myself Into a frightful state of nerves, Seven-flfteen, and still Phoebe's room was quite empty. So, flinging a cape about my evening finery, I went down to the veranda to while away the tantalizing hours of wait ing where there would be coming and going to distract my mind a bit. Hhrdly had I settled myself in a big wicker chair when up to the porte cochere drove a car, and out stepped Daisy Condon. The car it self, evidently driven by its only oc cupant and not piloted by a chauf feur, then went over to the parking place. Daisy teetered about on the steps a minute before she vanished into the inn. I sat still, making no move. It seemed that she must have seen me and preferred to pretend she hadn't. Perhaps she still wanted to avoid me- because of that ugly situation between us, namely, the theft of my ring. Perhaps this evening In par ticular Daisy wanted to avoid me. Without waiting for the other ce cupant of the car which had brought Daisy to the lake, I got up and drifted round to the side door of the inn. The clock in the quaint little living-room registered seven,- thirty. Dusk had given way to darkness, and my uneasiness over Phoebe and Neal had given way to actual worry. I made a trip up to my room, but still Phoebe's—which opened into It—was empty. And Neal's—down the hall and around the corner—■ still failed to respond to my knock ing. "Now, be sensible, Anne," I told myself. "They may have gone off the path and lost their way. But to think that any harm has come to them is silly; and to imagine for one Instant that they'd drag you out here and then elope is melodra matic. They're Just lost, and if they CATARRH VANISHES Here In One Trrntmgnt That All SulTerem Can Rely Tpon If you want to drive catarrh and all Its disgusting symptoms from your system In the shortest possible time, go to your druggist and ask for a Hyomei outfit to-day. Breathe the air of Hyomei and let it rid you of catarrh and chronic head colds; It gives such quick relief that all who use It for the first time are astonished. Hyomei is a pure pleasant antisep ic, which Is breathed through the nose and throat deep Into the head and lungs; it soothes the sore In flamed membranes, reduces swelling and quickly heals all inflammation. Don't suffer another day with ca tarrh; the disease is dangerous and often ends in consumption. Start the Hyomei treatment today. No stom ach dosing, no sprays, or douches, no dangerous drugs or narcotics. Ab solutely harmless. Just breathe it —that's all. At H. C. Kennedy and leading druggists everywhere. Bringing Up Father - Copyright, 1919, International News Service By McManus I HELLO- MON*HAvN -WATbI I MV\-LOVA | R*V A "VF ~ "1 . HOW LON<, , QK , 1 sJUL J™E MATTER*XOU LOOK roOCHJOO- NO OATb OFF HAVE TOO BEEN fjti ; A *vlj 0 ° I OON'T *TART I • r KP" > TIRED- FROM °* •• B| AN'ONLV A, „ WORK Its' _J>i !, E It 0 UNTIL tomorrow; aren't back by eight you must send out a search party. Of course, I didn't want to do this If it could be avoided. It would mean publicity and a fuss, which the whole Harrison tribe would go miles out of its way to avoid. Time dragged on, toward eight and as I sat in the lobby, where I could watch both front and side entrances, I had a great struggle not to go all to pieces. Phoebe and Neal had left me before five and had promised to be back in time to dress for seven o'clock dinner. What could have happened? Suddenly an inspiration came to me. Probably Daisy was with Carl Booth, who was due back in town Just about now. Nice old "big brother" Carl would know Just what to do. I'd go to the dining-room door, and if he were there, I'd have the waiter take me to him. Suiting action to thought, I hur ried across the lobby and to the very door of the dining-room. Just as I got there something made me turn, and there in the lobby stood Neal, looking sadly scratched and bedraggled. But he was alone. No Phoebe. I turned and ran to him, but not before I had glimpsed Daisy and a masculine figure I identified with a feeling of distaste and dis trust. It was Tom Mason—not Carl Booth; and that put an altogether different complexion on what I had Just been regarding as merely a Jolly little dinner party. When I reached Neal he seized my wrist and pulled me out into the shadows of the verandah. There cowered Phoebe—a sad sight, in deed, with her pretty white clothes all caked in mud. "Oh, darling! Are you hurt?" I cried, darting forward to gather her in my arms. She giggled reassuringly. And Neal, motioning me away from her dishevelled figure, explained: "I'm a dub woodsman. Lost the path. My poor darling tumbled in to a stream I didn't notice in time. Wrap her in your warm cloak, please, Babbs, so no one sees her like this, and mind that she has a warm bath and doesn't take cold. I want you to tuck her right into bed—and I'll send up dinner." "Not much!" exclaimed Phoebe, with surprising vigor. "A warm bath and clean clothes'U set me right in no time. And the same for my boy. Will you starve, Anne, ijf you have to wait on your truants another half hour?" "Not I," I replied with great re lief, as I followed Phoebe into the inn and up to her room. Once there HXimiSßtrßG TEEEGK3M I insisted on giving her a strenuous . rub-down and on dosing her up a. bit against her taking cold. Then 1 laid out her clothes and went to J see what I could do for my Neal. For all that I helped them, and | they both hurried as fast as ever they could, it was nine before we got down to the dining-room. It was still crowded with motor parties, but when the captain piloted us by the table where Tom and Daisy had sat an hour before, it was empty. I wondered if they had seen me and had fled. I wondered (To Be Continued.) Arbor Day will be observed on Friday. Increase your property value by planting trees. DAILY HINT ON FASHIONS A DAINTY AND BECOMMING GUIMPE DRESS. 2726. —The guimpe may be of crepe, lawn or silk, and the jumper of poplin, repp, serge, gabardine, silk or velveteen. The sleeve is nice in wrist length, and pretty in elbow length. Brown poplin could be used for the dress, with smoke color crepe or silk for the guimpe. Blue serge or silk with white batiste for the guimpe is also pleasing. The pattern is cut in 5 sixes: 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 years. Size 8 reguires 2 1-2 yards of 27-inch material for the guimpe, and 2 3-4 for the dress. A pattern of this illustration mail ed 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 Daily Dot Puzzle SI 32 as • . • 34. 29. £o ' 33 *>' • .3, • 3ft 27. •4l 42 • 43 25 • 2 .' . *24. 44 22 , 23 • 3* # 2o *2 4 37 . 45 37 * a 7 * • * 47 48 J • to 8 , 4g / * IA 12 • *5O yf IB 14 57 S* . • st> ,#7 " 5 • & 58 • 53. Draw from one to two and so on „to the end. LITTLE TALKS BY BE A TRICE FAIRFAX "Of all the blind luck!" says Jones bitterly. "Here I go plugging along and doing the best I can every minute of the day and it gets me nowhere. Then Billings stumbles across a man who has a formula for redeeming metal scraps, he backs the invention and makes a fortune. Of all the blind luck!" Does Mrs. Jones strive to dissi pate her husband's bitterness by suggesting that there's something positively thrilling about living in a world where such miracles can occur, and that if such good for tune merely happened to overtake Billings—who isn't to hope? Or does she philosophically re mark that Billings probably kept his eyes open and was around just in time to see his chance, and that if her own Freddie will only keep on plugging, probably he'll manage to see his chance too? Does she wrest from the other man's success the human sympathy that's hers for the taking? The chances are she does nothing of the sort. She's perfectly free to gather in her bit from the Billings' success, j Hope. Encouragement. Generos ity. Strength to go out. But she doesn't. Instead she adds her crumb of bitterness to what her husband feels and they extract for themselves from the success of Bil lings the following items: Jealousy, Malice, Discourage ment. Of course, I like to think about the ethics of situations, and the ideal side of things appeals to me. But in this particular phase of hu man weakness, '.ay sense of effic iency is affronted. There's so much waste and inefficiency to envy that it seems one of the chief stumbling blocks to human progress. Let's return to Billings. Probably he had foresight and shrewdness, and he must have done a bit of saving in order to have the money to get into the game when he saw his chance. Wouldn't it be possible to share his joy and the fine glow of his for tunes by just rejoicing and letting generous enthusiasm hold sway? The electrical spirit that runs through mobs is always ready to communicate itself from person to person. Why miss it? The other day it was given me to read a book. ' A masterpiece. The man who wrote it is beyond his first youth. And there is to his credit long years of a big job well done; a routine job of long hours and the sort of effort and concentration that the average man would say "took everyhing out of him." Besides the job there have been other books. And now the masterpiece. As I read the exquisite phrases lovingly turned, as I steeped myself in the atmosphere as fragrant as a lane set in balsam woods and as pungent and clean, I shared the triumph that is coming to the author. For the moment I was up lifted to the point of having as my own part of his joy of achievement. "What do you claim it gave you?" asks the Cynic. "Don't tell me that you weren't a little jealous? Don't tell me you didn't wish you'd written it?" Well, Mr. Cynic, I will tell you all of that. The only emotion I was conscious of at first was joy. It was beautiful to vision the triumph com ing. It was inspiring to feel that the glorious expression of a fine per sonality was set down in love and honesty, and was clearly to bring acclaim, appreciation and the hon ors that are due to genius. Then the meaning of it all added itself to the joy I felt just because some one else had done the big thing for which all of us strive, and so Inevitably some must strive in vain. So my heart and soul and mind joined in saying this to me: "Here's success. It has come to reward honest striving, big ideals, a longing for growth. "Here's beauty. It Is written here on these pages because the man whose work they are has loved beauty always and has set it on the pinnacle it deserves. "Here's good workmanship. It has come after years of effort. And it always does come to the man who will work hard enough. "Here's a beautiful contribution to life. And a human being has STOPS HEADACHE, PAIN, NEURALGIA Don't suffer! Get a dime pack of Dr. James' Headache Powders. You can clear your head and re lieve a dull, splitting or violent throbbing headache In a moment with a Dr. James' Headache Powder. This old-time headache relief acts almost magically. Send some one to the drug store now for a dime package and a few moments after you take a powder you will wonder what become of the head ache, neuralgia and pain-. Stop suffering—lt's needless. Be sure you get what you ask for. made it. ... What man has done, man can do." If there isn't a wonderful Inspira tion In the success of some one else life is a drab affair with nothing in it to beckon us on and up. And we don't think that, do we? Russian Red Cross Gets American Supplies By Associated Press. Archangel, Oct. 22.—American Red Cross supplies valued at four and-a-half million rubles have been turned over to the Russian Red Cros3 for use and distribution in Northern Russia. The goods consist princi pally of food, clothing, medical and hospital supplies. This stock was on hand at the time of the withdrawal of the Amer ican mission, following the "departure of the American forces from the Archangel area. In making this gift, Major D. O. Lively, of San 112 Pownd Sack of jj Hoffer's Best Flour I For For | I Thursday Thursday j I j fmmwi , 1 1 and mxi and 1 1 Friday Friday a 1!U Every housewife in Dauphin county will be interested [| © in this announcement. j|j This is the most popular flour being sold in Harris burg today, a tried and true product that is wanted in k|l Jn! every home in the city. > W is This sack of flour will be sold on Thursday and Fri- [jjJ nl day, October 23 and 24, for to every customer who n) s* buys $lO.OO worth or more in our store on either one of ;§I 1 jjU these two days—we desire to be ac liberal as possible, n| and in that light we permit you to make the $lO.OO pur- j|| Is chase up in small amounts from various departments [[g H throughout the store, or you can make one purchase, as. 1 || you see fit. jsj . j|j It's up to you to take advantage of this unusual offer— ia I THURSDAY With Every $lO.OO 1i I I AND lit n 1 jl FRIDAY Purchase of Merchandise X X ! |j (pnly one to a customer) UKI r OCTOBER 22, 1919. Francisco, Red Cross Commissioner for Northern Russia, directed that the Russians follow the same regu lations of distribution as observed by the Americans who spent one year in this district. ! ASPIRIN-A Talk) I Take Aspirin only a* told by "Bayer'' * ■ • | it X The name "Bayer" identifies the ache, Toothache, Earache, Neural- | J ❖ true, world-famous Aspirin pre- gia, Lumbago, Rheumatism, Nen- • tft ecribed by physicians for over ritis and for Pain. t > £ eighteen years. The name "Bayer" Alwaye say "Bayer" when buy- J \ J means genuine Aspirin proved safe ing Aspirin. Then look for the | by millions of people. safety "Bayer Cross" on the pack- • • X In each unbroken package of age and on the tablets. \ \ T "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" you Handy tin boxes of twelve tab- J J + are told how to safely take thie lets cost but a few cents. Drug- < X genuine Aspirin for Colds, Head- gists also sell larger packages. \ | •£ Aspirin is trade mark of Bayer Manufacture Monoaccticacidesttf of Salicyficadd . • One Way To Be Happy. "They seem to get along very) well." "Yes. She makes her plans sat they Interfere as little as possible with her husband's golf engage* nients."—Detroit Free Press, 5