"When a Girl Marries" By ANN LISLE A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problem of a Girl Wife CHAPTKR CCCXXXIII. (Copyright, Ik's. King Feature Syndicate, Inc.) At an unearthly hour the morn ing after I chaperoned Neal and Phoebe for their weekend at the lake, my phone woke me. It was a long distance call from Jim, who had just gotten near enough to civilization again to speak to me. "I'm taking tke train to come back to you, deat, in an hour," he explained. "Hut 1 wunted you to | know, so you'd keep the evening open for me." "Don't joke. You've a guilty conscience because you didn't write," 1 replied, trying to be jocose ; so I wouldn't be reproachful. "Are ' you rested? Did you have a tine time?" "Yes," irritably. "Only don't hold I me up—because I've an Important message for you. Call Neal and tell him to catch the eight forty-five— same train I took. Pat's here and will meet him. There's some prop- j orty to go over—and, besides, Uncle j Ned and I aren't keen to leave Pat up here alone, and the old gentle man has to come back same as 1 do. Neal's not to miss It. Impor- ' tant." "But Neal cant come." I protest- : ed. 'He has plans. There's some- j thing important for him here." j "Neal must come. He must, I say. i Tell him" Then Jim's voice burned off, and the connection was broken. Phoebe stirred uneasily in her i sleep: but I had to wake her. be- I cause I knew well enough she'd I never forgive me if I didn't get her I up in time to see Neal off. Again a whirl of dressing, and j coffee, and farewells, as Neal came 1 in to breakfast with us and then I whirled off to the station, unhap- I pily, but like a good soldier. When > he'd whispered a warning to me to ' keep silent, he and Phoebe hurried I off. Then I sat about unpacking and ' ordering my household for the day; I and in the midst of everything Tom i Mason phoned and pleaded, beyond I note in these smart new pumps , © i ||B (j "Isn't she attractive? A casual remark, but what a compliment! It f tells of thoughtful attention to the smallest de | tails of dress. , The choice of dainty slippers to accompany your costume —whether simple or elaborate, is I | one of the very important things to consider if | j you would create such an impression. I ORNER'S BOOT SHOP i 24 North Third Street. laj • !' X. THIRD STREET | Save l / 3 on Your Fall Outfit 1 Every woman who is interested in beautiful clothes §1 will be interested in knowing that scores and scores go ."■§> of our customers have saved 33 1-3 per cent, (represent- Sh 's> ing the middleman's profit) on their fall apparel by gH >M purchasing from us direct, for we maintain our own big go yg factory in New York City. gg -g \ ou, too, may make this saving on your Fall outfit g by selecting any Coat. Suit or Dress in our big stock of §§ fsg charmingly tailored garments. ' Do away with the middle man entirely—buy direct! £§ .g Read Our Specials for Saturday 50 Coats at 33 1-3 75 Dresses at 33 1-3 || H „ Per Cent. Less Per Cent. Less M 15 WOO v.rtone r Co a a n t d >3 *erg e and Wool Velour §S H " 0 0 ° Va "'" s f " r " $31.50 Valuea ?or S *21.00 |jj U>6 20 Silvertone and Silver Tip ' ' " &S vjQ Bolivia* SO Tricotine Dresses tip $60.00 Values for ....*40.00 $42.00 Values for *25.00 bg} fty 15 Bolivia and Crystalcloth 20 Remarkably Smart Satin $3?) HS> „ . Coats and Crepe de Chine Dresses OS ,|V $88.50 Values for *30.00 $39.00 Values for 2ti.00 || 35 Suits at 33 1-3 Per Cent. Less 13 Serge and Wool Velour I 20 Sjlvertone und Tricotine /ftp Suits Suits JvQ $43.50 Values for *20.00 1 $63.00 Values for *4l 00 '*33 FRIDAY EVENING, my powers to refuse, that I lunch .rwith him. *i "Is it a guilty conscience?" 1 | asked myself, us I taxied down to | the appointed place, i I was soon to know, for directly i the lunch was ordered and the | waiter off attending to it, Tom I plunged in: j "Why did you skip out of the I dining room last night the minute J you caught sight of me. Donna tAnna?" There was an eouivocation ready to hand, and I took advantage of ! it. "I was waiting for Phoebe and Neal, and just as I got to the din ing room door, . Neal appeared Moreover, I was glad to avoid you j for fear you'd be hurt at me for not chaperoning your party and i then chaperoning another." _ j 1 "Do you know me so tittle?" asked Tom reproachfully. "Do you j actually think I demand explana- I tions of my friends? Apt 1 petty?' "Indeed you're not!" I lion- i ; estly. adding mischievously, "that's j 1 not one of vour faults T. J. M." "Got plenty without," he replied, j with that disarming frankness of his. "But why did you skip without j a howdy?" "I've told you." "You have—no't! Because if that | was it. why didn't you come back i and §ay a word or two —instead of i avoiding the dining room so long that I took the hint and skipped hack to the city without trying to ! see- vou?" "Please don't ask," 1 begged. | hating to get right back into the I role of administrator of other peo- I pie's welfare —and fairy—god j mother. j "Anne Harrison are you misin \ terpreting my friendship for the little Condon girl?" demanded Tom. "Forgive me for this—but you j force me to say it. You introduced j us. She's your friend, isn't she? j Now. why under the sun should you I avoid me—or her —when I take her I out to dine?" "To?? you will have it. T thought ' you wanted—to be nvo'ded. You're Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1919, International News Service - By McManus IF I'M 4LAO TO HEAR I'M AWFULLY ) IF TOO HAVE II YOUR CROUNO'a [ I'M T TOO To bEE >T FlßtiT- vr— ZT~\ fi ) '* U I I'LL DRORIN TO bEE HEARD tlO COME AND iSU KfflV " 1 V ° U Vther men's wives—an unworthy i I d dating into playing. I didn t know any other. Y'ou startled me almost awake. Val Oosbv fol lowed up. though differently." She. cased me along and then turned on me with some ugly truths. But it sr* only recently I've begun to realize—and have tried to make up. I'to been reaching out after some- I tning different." 'T>o I deserve to hear this?" I ! asked. ! "You deserve all the credit for I waking me. I'd like to confess if you've the patience to listen. "If you're sure you've changed"— I began uneasily. "I know it!" said Tom with con viction. "I vaguely knew when I gave little Daisy Condon a good job because she was a friend of ? ours. It was an expression of my grateful friendship for you. I made myself hand her a bigger salary than she'd have demanded. And when I saw that she was unhappy and lonesome, I set out to give her the seri of good time she crated and didn't get because the people she knew hadn't the means to .af ford it I'm doing the decent tiling by young Daisy as a tribute to you." "Thank you, Tom," I replied . humbly. "I apologize lor letting the I city and its cynicism get me so that i I doubted —doubted your motives." "You're sure now?" he asked. "Yes,'' I said, since he had -auked peif I was sure of him rather than of Daisy. And I forgot the "vening when she, at least, had "avoided" me. "That's good. Great. You musn't i ever doubt me again!" came from a i satisfied and complacent Tom. "And . now I want to make a dinner date. ' I want to have you and Jimmie and Mr. Haldane and that wonderful j Miss Warren down to my place for ' one of Mrs. Hill's bang up home dinners some time this week. I I •hink that way of entertaining will! please the old gentleman." "We've never had a meal at your i own home." I murmured—actually 'liinking aloud. Tom didn't seem to sense the i unguardedness of that, nor its im- I plications, for be replied with self- ! ! DAILY HINT ON FASHIONS JOl5 ' A NEW AND SYLISH COSTUME 3015—For this design, brown serge ! and moire were combined. The j blouse is mounted on a lining, which | may be omitted. The lacings on ! blouse and skirt, muy also lie onnt j ted. J The pattern is cut in 6 sizes: 34, j 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust I measure. Sizo 38 requires 6 3-S i yards of 44-inch material. Width of [skirt at lower edge is about 1 D-S yard. A pattern of this illustration ; mailed to any address on receipt of ! 10c. in silver or lc. and 2c. stamps. Telegraph Pnttcm Department For the 10 cents Inclosed please send pattern to the following address: Site Pattern No I Name j Address | City and State •#,. ! ■ "-N EJtSttUSBtTHG TELEGRAPH THREE PROMOTED BY BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY VICTOR L. C. HASSKARL, H. C. Kunkpl, division superintendent of plant of the Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania an nounced to-day several changes i n the Bell organization. Victor L. C. Hasskarl, construction foreman of the. Bell Company of the Harrisburg district has been promoted to district superintendent of plant at Wiillamsport. Mr. Hasskarl entered the employ of the Bell company in 1903 and since has held various positions of responsibility. He has been located in Harris burg since 1915. In June, 1917, Hasskarl entered the service, enlisting with the First Telegraph Battalion which later was the 406 th and was composed entirely of Bell Telephone men. C. B. Ziegler of this city has been appointed construction foreman to succeed Mr. Hasskarl. Announcement was also made that R. O. Demming, of Williamsport, had been transferred to Harrisburg as superintendent of methods. Mr. Demming is a former Habrisburg boy. ! revelation which somehow left me | puzzled: | "I'm not much of a homebody. I Probably would'nt have you there l now—if I weren't so dead anxious | to get in right with that fine old | gentleman of the fine old school." To He Continued. The Beta Phis Meet at Masquerade Dance The Beta Phi Society of '2l gave a masquerade dance, in honor of the Society of '2O, last evening, at St. 1 Paul's Church, Second and Emerald j streets. The dance was chaperoned j by Mrs: Silks and W. P. Stuart. Refreshments were served to the | Misses Winifred Tripner, Mary Rose, 1 | Ruth Marks, Evelyn Snyder, "Polly" j Long, Margaret Brown, Doris Stuart, ] ! Vivian Showers, Dorothy Rankin, i | Ida Myers, Elva Myers, Amy Botts, ! ; Florence Burtnett, Evelyn Dußree, Edythe Hockley, Homer Balsbaugh,! Donald Brinser, George Myers, Curt! | Tripner, Timothy Euker, Gilbert i ' Mattson, Eugene Walter, William j Euker and "Budd" Lingle. Miss Georgia Bailey ' Takes Aeroplane Trip; j Miss Georgia Bailey, of Ardmore,! j who sailed from New York, Septem-J iber 17 enroute to Paris, where she; I will take a course of study at the j ISorbonne, has written, to friends in j I this city tel'ing of her first flight !in an aeroplane. Stranded in Eng- | 'land on account of the railroad] | strike, which affected the shipping; I facilities across the English Channel," j Miss Bailey and her party boarded a huge Handley-Page plane, were lock ed in and comfortably ensconced in wicker chairs, and in four hours had made the trip from London to Paris. TO HOLD ANNUAL BALL , The Eightli Anniversary Ua'l of 1 the Hebrew Wbmen's Benevolent So- I ciety will be held at Chestnut Street i Auditorium, Wednesday evening, No ! vember 12, with the Sourbeer-Meyers | Orchestra playing for the dancing. A INDIGESTION A | At once! —"Pape's Diapepsin" corrects your Sour, 1 Gassy, Acid Stomach—Relief awaits you! ! You don't want a slow remedy j when your stomach :s bad—or an I uncertain one—or a harmful on"—! • your stomach la too valuable; you j mustn't Injure it with drastic drugs. ; I When your meals don't lit and you feel uncomfcytable, when you belch' guses, acids or raise sour, undigcsc-: od food. When you feel lumps of: Indigestion pain, heartburn or head-" ache, from acidity, Just eat a tablet' ' ' fjfr-n £;' 'ift Himnlk - , .^|^ ' : ■ • ■ ■■■-..: ' ,' '■ ~ " "■ Says Churches in Northern Tier of State Are Dying Philadelphia, Oct. 24.—The Rev. ; Dr. George T. Donehoo, of Couders ! port, speaking at the executive meet j ing of the annual session of the ! Presbyterian Synod of Pennsylvania ! here, said the churches in the north j ern mountain section of Pennsylvania I are dying. "There, in the most civi , lized State on earth, native-born : Americans live and die in condi tions unbelieveably wretched," he j continued. "Yet wo talk only of doing aid and mission work among Armenians, Syrians and other war stricken countries. Let us help i these, our own peoples, first." His statement followed an asser | tion by the Rev. John Harvey Lee, i Philadelphia, to the effect that the ! synodical home mission committee, with a bank balance of more than i $19,000, bids fair to have an over flowing treasury und no work to do. Gasoline Production Increases in Canada I Calgary, Alberta, Oct. 24.—Gaso- I line production from natural pas by ; I the absorption method, practiced I successfully in the oil fields of the ! United States, has been introduced in i j Alberta and in view of the vast 1 natural gas deposits of the province, ! promises to develop into a large in i dustry. The Hope Engineering Company , of Ohio has installed a plant at the I Dingman natural gas wells near Cal . Gary and is producing from 15 to 20 '! barrels a day of high-grade gaso i line. Operations have been carried ]: on only two months, but the venture i is declared already to be beyond the experimental stage. ! This is the first time the absorp | tion process of making gasoline from natural gas has been attempted 'in Canada on a commercial scale. "I The method is a combination of • ■ whut is known as the horizontal and t vertical vaporizations. 5 MEMORIAL PARK ADDITION The Suburb Unparalleled.—Adv. | of Pape's Diapepsin and the stomach ; distress Is gone. Millions of people know the magic lof Pape's Diapepsln as an antacid. They know that indigestion and dis ; ordered stomach arc so needless. The relief comes quickly, no disap pointment! Pape's Diapepsln tastes , like candy and a box of this world famous indigestion relief costs so : little at drug stores. Ptipe's Dia-1 pepsin helps neutralize the stomach! 'acids so you can eat without fear. . • • " .. ... . . . V> --. . a^M^^ : V#VVV • ' - - •v : v v - wi'i l !S^W >:v f ; : • 4 " * % ißfc- ll9iK sii Mfik^ R. O. DEMMING Says Country Faces Huge International Financial Problems Atlantic City, N. J., Oct. 24. —The United States faces the problem of extending by next summer approxi mately $2,000,000,000 in interna tional credits to the war-torn coun tries of Europe, Dwight W. Mor row, of J. P. Morgan and Company, declared in an address on "The Prob lem of International Credits," be fore the International Trade Confer ence here last night. He said that the people in this Country would have "to produce and save" to aid in this big financial plan. European countries are not com ing to the United States seeking charity, Mr. Morrow said, but they are "asking us in our strength to co-operate with them in their strength to rebuild and restore their productive capacity." Winter Needs at Lower Prices —Robinson's Way— This is the reason we have so many friends—our satisfied customers have found our merchandise of good quality and marked at Lower Prices. Of course, the low rent and small operating costs have much to do with this. Three Good Reasons For Shopping Here Saturday Coats at Twenty-nine Ninety Plain Velour, Tirrseltone, Kersey and Tweed Mix- ft* gy /"i/"Is H tures. Coats taken from our regular assortment .w X ~T *yf / iPjafflh. now marked from $35.45 to $45.00. V * Mb Suits at Twenty-three Ninety Only by seeing these marvelous suits can you appre- ft* f) O f\ /Ti Rwmil elate the generosity of this offer. They are plainly tailored, 1 Jgf# hGRHi belted or novel cut models, in all the Fall colors. v ■■ L/ •*/ t/ Wfi Dresses at Nineteen Nintey M Serges, Trlcotines, Jerseys, Taffeta, Silk and. (t* -f V f Messalines. A dozen or more of our good B $25 to S3O models. -* 47 V / A f i f \ f \ / s MEN'S UNION LAgIES' BLACK OUTING LADIES' SILK LADIES' | SUITS COTTON HOSE FLANNEL HOSE VESTS Heavy weight Regular 25c we fghf,°in stripes In navy ' cor ' PANTS ribbed union value, in all sizes. and plaids, 35c dovan ar.-d black, Winter 1 suits, in gray Very 1Q p and 39c OA all Club, have sent out cnvdfl of invita tion f -r an informal l'.jtl-.oween daito*. Thursday ovehlnf, October 30, .n Frey's Hall, Front and Pine streets, Music will be furnished by "ThC Syncopators" of this city, which piomlsca a tine dance program, j 'lids club is composed of the sinm • members giving many delightful so- I cini entertainments riu 1 dances last winter. 9