6
OF INTEREST T
"THEIR MARRIED LIFE"
Copyright by International Sewi Servlc*
Helen walked slowly from the sub
way station and up the steps of the
apartment house on the corner. She
did not feel well and the temptation
to stay at home and not attend the
bridge party had been almost too
much for her, but she had succumbed
because she knew how hard it was
to fill in at the last moment.
Mrs. Stevens was entertaining, her
annual affair, as she laughingly put
it, and Helen knew that she really
ought to go. Somehow, she never en
joyed as much a meeting of the
women she used to know exclusively
ns the more entertaining and less for
mal people she had met more re
cently.
Helen had somehow drifted away
from the old crowd, for the Bells
and Frances and Anne, with their
hail-fellow-well-met attitude, had
somehow taken possession of her and
she admired each and every one be
cause they did things.
Helen purposely did not hurry. The
women who had come in with her
finished their prinking and went out,
and just as she was about to follow
them a woman came in and began to
unfasten the frogs of a very hand
some afternoon wrap.
"Why, Laura Wilson," she ex
claimed delightedly, "how are you?
It seems just years since I have
talked to you." Helen in her ex
citement had forgotten to speak of
Laura as married and called her by
her maiden name instead.
Laura turned as Helen spoke and
responded to her greeting wearily.
"Hello, Helen," She said not en
thusiastically, "you are a stranger,
and I guess it's my fault. I have
been too busy to know anything for
the past two years or to see any of
my old friends."
Everything Is Different
"I have been going to call on you,"
Helen went on, trying to smother the
little hurt that Laura's manner left,
there. In the old days Laura had
come to Helen in most of her dif
ficulties and bits of unhappiness.
Ileien remembered distinctly Laura's
life when she had been a stenogra
pher at S2O a week and had lived In
two rooms in an uptown apartment,
taking her meals at cheap table
d'hotes.
She had owed Helen then for sev
eral of the blt3 of sunshine that had
come Into her life. Helen remem
bered how often she had had her up
to dinner, and one night in particular
when she and Warren had taken her
1o see one of the seoson's successes.
Warren had been a darling that night.
And then out of the skies had come
I .aura's transformation. She was
going to marry her employer, a man
Your Wife Is Worried When
You Don't Eat
It's no fault of the food, Drink that hot, steam
or the cooking—what ing beverage, fragrant
you want is appetite. with its odors of vege
"ls there anything else les ' s P iccs and , bcef -
I can get you?" says The concentrated com
your wife. bmation of flavors will
v , start vour appetite
Yes, there is. juices flowing; and your
Tell her to make you stomach will begin to
a cup of Steero. It's no crave food, food, food!
trouble. Everything on the table
Drop a Steero Cube in- will begin to look good,
to a cup and pour on Steero is a harmless
boiling water that's stimulant to appetite,
all. Done in a minute. It makes you hungry. ✓
Get a Steero-made appetite for your next meal. / gA
A box of Steero Cubes is only as far away as / U
the nearest drug, grocery or delicatessen store. S Jl
In bases of 12, 50 and 100 cubes. Look for the f J
word Steero on the box and accept no other. I y jj&r\
Let Steero awaken your appetite. / V JmQ
Schloffelln & Co.. Distributors. New York JJ
STEEROF*
CUBES ]gk
M«de by Amsrlosp Kltchsn Products 00.. New Yurie
at Parnxma-Pacifie
San Franciico, 191S Shnplr AM Boili.t Wstsr
BWMHWOMBBaMMMMWCTMyiWiIIIIWIII—IIBIWIHHI—II || |M ll [l> .HUIfIIMKMMMWBBMwJ!
| There's a Differenc
■ A Ta«t difference. Ton may be burning more coal than Is neees- i
£ sary, because you are not burning the kind especially adapted to your
V requirements. #
# Talk the matter over with as—we'll steer you right on the par- i 1
1 tlcwlar kind of coal you ought to be using—and supply you with the
# best heat-giving fuel you can buy. Costs the same—and goes further.
I J. B. MONTGOMERY
W 600 —either phone Srd and Chestnut Streets |
v
Are You Moving or Cleaning House
And Want to Get Rid of Your Old Books?
W• buy all kinds of books anil pay highest rash mine for every
copy. Call at or notify AUHAKD'S OLD BOOK STOHE, UI3 s. Third St
HarrlKburic.
! The Telegraph Bindery
| Willßebind Your
x — 1 i
TUESDAY EVENING, '
Helen knew slightly and who had
great wealth.
The unimportant Laura, who had
worked as a stenographer In an of
fice, seeing only the drab things In
life, utterly embittered more by her
lack of friends than her lack of funds,
was to become the wife of a million
aire, who was to have her own house
on Madison avenue and all the money
that she could possibly use.
It all came back to Helen as she
stood there and looked anxiously Into
Laura's face. Laura had never been
a handsome woman, but she had been
attractive in a way. Happiness had
made her bloom suddenly and as the
wife of the important Mr. Richards
she had very qupickly hcanged from
the Helen used to know.
The two women had tried at first
to keep up a part of their friendship,
but it was too difficult. Laura had
become engrossed with the society life
that took possession of her and, even
though the two had a strong bond In
common, their children, even that
fact seemed to make very little dif
ference. Mr. Richards, who had been
a widower. had one little girl, Joan,
but she was older than Winifred and
the intimacy between the two children
had been forced.
Helen looked at her closely, the
French gown, the look of careful
grooming and the petulant mouth and
tired eyes.
"Laura," she said, softly, "I wish
| you would feel that I am still your
friend, still the same Helen. You can
tell me things, you know, even If we
haven't seen each other in ages."
Laura Thaws a Bit.
"It is good to see you," she said,
drawing a long breath, "and I do
want to tell you things. When can
we have a long talk? Will you have
tea with me to-morrow in some quiet
spot?"
"Why not come up to see me? I
am still living in the same place, and
I'll have English muffins, just as we
used to, and we'll get acquainted all
over again."
Laura looked almost like her old
self as she said warmly, "How nice
that will be, Helen. You have done a
lot for me this afternoon, and I am
grateful, even if I don't show it."
Mrs. Stevens came down the hall at
the moment and put her head in at
the door.
"Oh, here you are, you two. We
are waiting to begin, and I couldn't
remember just who was holding us
up. Hurry up Helen, and, Laura,
what a perfectly heavenly gown that
is! I suppose It is French. It must
be great to have so much money."
(Another incident In tills .series .of
everyday life will appear here SOOn.)
HOOP EXTENDERS
IN PARTY FROCK
Young Girls Find These Quaint
Costumes Pretty For Even
ing Wear
By MAY MAN!ON
8890 {With Basting Line and Added
Seam Allowance) l*ancy Bodice for
Misses and Small Women, 16 and 18
I years.
8884 (With Basting Line and Added
Seam Allowance) Gathered Skirt for
Misses and Small Women, 16 and 18
years.
This is one of the prettiest and daintiest
evening bodices of the season. It is so
absolutely simple too that it is almost
nothing to make. The neck line Is a new
and interesting one and the prettydrapery
over the arms is most attractive. On the
figure, there are no 6leeves but if liked,
short sleeves can be attached to the
lining, also this lining can be faced to
form a yoke if a high neck bodice ie wanted
and when treated in that way, the design
becomes adapted to many different ma
terials, As shown here, net is trimmed
with rosebud banding and the edges of
the sleeves are held together by bows of
gold gauae ribbon. The straight gath
ered skirt is extended by means of wire
beneath the trimming to give a most
fascinating and quaint effect.
For the 16 year sise the bodice wfll re
quire, 1% yds. of material 37 in. wide,
yd*. 36, X yd. 44 In. wide, with Hyd. 18
in, wide for the yoke and sleeves. For the
skirt will be needed, 4H yds. 87 or
yds. $6 or 44 inches wide.
The bodice pattern 8890 and the sHrt
pattern 8884 are both cut in sires for 16
and 18 years. They will be mailed to
any address by the Fashion Department
of this paper, on receipt of ten cents
for each.
80.000 FARMHANDS WANTED
Hard to Find In United States, Canada
Discovers
Chicago, 111.. March 28.—Efforts of
(he Canadian government to obtain
30,000 farmhands In the United States
have met with limited success, accord
ing to W. J. White, Inspector of Cana
dian government agencies In the
United States.
White returned to Chicago to-day
after a trip to agencies in Illinois and
other Central 'Western States.
"Owing to the late Spring, farm la
borers are already employed in their
own localities for the most part," said
White, "and as their wages aro high
we have been able to obtain only a few
thousand of the large number needed."
GENERATJ PKATT RECOGNIZES
STANDING BEAR AFTER 33 YEARS
Carlisle, Pa., March 28. After
thirty-three years, General R. H. Pratt,
United States Army (retired), came
face to face with Luther Standing
Bear, a Sioux Indian, at Los Angeles.
Standing Bear was one of the first
party of Indians to enter the Carlisle
Indian School, of which General Pratt
was the first head and sponsor.
The men met at an assemblage for
the betterment of conditions of the In
dian. Standing Bear, now 49 years
old. was a lad of 12 when he entered
the institution, but his former friend
recognized him as soon as they were
reintroduced.
00 YOUR UK
n m
Because of Eczemas, Rashes, Chap
pings, Etc.? If So
CUTICURASOAP AND
CUTICURft OINTMENT
Will afford instant relief and
j quickly heal even when all else
— has failed. On
retiring bathe
the hands
| freely with
! \Cy. CuticuraSoap
and hot water.
j Dry, and rub
: Cuticura Ointment gently into
! the skin for a few minutes.
| Wipe off surplus Ointment with
soft tissue paper or leave it on
and wear old gloves or soft
bandage during night.
Sample Each Free by Mall
With :t2-p. Skin Book on request. Ad
dress Dost-card "Cuticura, Dept. 14, Bo#
, fcwu _ Hold throughout the world.
HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH
ATLANTIC
i * sg * : w.
ueflj£3ftk
(SPH^y
It did not take much arguing or preaching to convince you of the difference
in gasolines—you felt it in the first clean, sharp explosion, in the snappy
way your car took the hills, in the increased mileage of your Atlantic-fed
motor. Atlantic Gasoline is the accepted standard. You buy it by name.
Not one man in forty would risk getting a mongrel gasoline by asking
merely for " five gallons of gas."
,• ,*r ' • v*
The problem of right motor oil is as important. The Atlantic Refining Company is the oldest
if not more so. than that of the right gasoline. and largest manufacturer of lubricating oils
Your car, with the right motor oil, will show in the world. We have given this problem
an increase in mileage just as surely as you of motor oils study and experimentation that
noted the difference between Atlantic Gas- a plant of less size and experience cannot
oline and the common kinds. possibly give.
Listen: In actual test, cars show as much as The result of our investigations is a group of
five miles more to the gallon of gas when the four motor oils—Atlantic Polarine, Atlantic
right motor oil is used. And increased Motor Oil Medium. Atlantic Motor Oil Light
mileage is only part of the benefits that ai *d Atlantic Motor Oil Heavy,
come from using the right oil. Polarine is the famous oil that
You have practical freedom from carbon. has proved the right lubricant for eight out
your bearings are properly oiled, your • c ? 1 \ s ' ]} 0C ? 1 aS1 !? I Y^ y • conditions
cylinder-walls are never parched. anse th £ de + mand a . n oll u of different consist
ency. Right here is where you turn to the
Friction is what makes your car depreciate so other Atlantic Motor Oils, for among them is
rapidly. You can stop that appalling decline at least one that will meet the requirements
in value by giving real study to the problem of your car under any driving conditions,
of proper lubrication. Ask your garageman which.
Read up on this subject. We have published a handsome and comprehensive
book about lubrication. It is free. Ask your garage for it. If they cannot
supply you, drop us a postal and the book will be sent to you without charge.
\Jr KEEPS UPKEEP DOWN
THE ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY
PITTSBURGH & PHILADELPHIA
Oldest and Largest Manufacturers of
Lubricating Oils in the World
TRAFFIC HAITI'S FOR TURTLE
Driver of Strange Pet Sent to Jail
as Wanderer
Elizabeth, N. J., March 28. —The i
strange spectacle of a man driving a ■
turtle along the street attracted such
a large, crowd In Morris avenue to-day
tliat Patrolman Lawlor arrested the
driver on a charge of obstructing
traffic.
Arraigned before Judge Nahon, the
man, who .said he was John Van, no
home, was sentenced to thirty days in
the county jail. He insisted that his
odd pet go with him.
POLICE SENTENCES
George Dixon, J. Boone and Charles
Stinney, arrested last week by the
police in a raid and charged with lar- |
ceny, were discharged yesterday by '
Alderman Hilton for lack of evidence, i
Peter Lewis, charged with stealing
brass and Junk along tile railroad
tracks in the city, was held under S3OO
b*il for court. Other sentences impos
ed at police court by Mayor Meals yes
terday were: "Davy" I.owe. $25 fine or
ninety days in jail, vagrancy; Edward
Reese, $lO fine for disorderliness; Ar
thur Vaughn, $5 line for reckless driv
ing. Nine of the thirteen held for hear
ings were discharged.
WARN AGAINST PANHANDLERS
The Associated Aid Societies to-day I
is.iued a warning to residents of the |
clt yagalnst a new panhandling game !
which is being practiced by a well
dressed couple who operate after dark.
The story told, which is a straightfor- !
ward one, ends with an appeal for I
small change. Other panhandlers are
at work, according to officials of the I
Aid Societies, and many of them are I
not deserving of aid. Practically all of
the stories investigated recently have
been proven false.
WOOKR SHOOTS HIS RIVAL
Scottsburg. Tnd.. March 28. —In the !
presence of Miss Grace Huffman, a,
high school student, Hardy Robinson, '<
24, shot and killed Ancil Phillips, 17,1
a rival for the girl's favor, at. Miss i
Huffman's home in Lexington, a vil
lage eight miles from here, last night.
Robinson was arrested and says lie
acted hastily. J
REV. MR. lIOOTH TO STAY HERE
The Rev. TV. S. Booth, pastor of the
First Baptist Church, tilts city, an
nonuced that ha has declined the call
to become pastor of the First Baptist
Church, Greensburg. The Rev. Mr.
Booth said that he considers his work
here too important to leave at present.
| Household Economy |
g: How to Have the Best Conch 8
Remedy and Save $2 by
S Mnklnur It at Home
.
Cough medicines, as a rule contain a
large quantity of plain svrup. A pint of
granulated sugar with % pint of warm
water, stirred for 2 minutes, gives you
as good syrup as money can buy.
Then get from your druggist 2% ounces '
Pinex (50 cents wortli), pour into a pint
bottle and till the bottle with sugar |
syrup. This gives you, at a cost of only
54 cents, a full pint of really better cough
syrup than J'ou could buy ready made tor
clear saving of nearly $2. Full
directions with Pinex. It keep* perfectly
and tastes jjood.
It takeu hold of the usual cough or
I chest com at once and conquers it in 24
i hours. _ Splendid for whooping cough,
bronchitis and winter coughs.
i It 8 truly astonishing how quickly it
! loosens the dry, hoarse or tight cough
and heals and soothes the inflamed mem-,
brancs in the case of a painful cough.!
It also stops the formation of phlegm in
the throat and bronchial tubes, thus end
ing the persistent loose cough.
Pinex ia a highly concentrated com
pound of genuine Norway pine extract,
combined with guaiacol, and has been
used for generations to heal inflamed
membranes of the throat and chest.
To avoid disappointment, ask youi '
druggist for "2V4 ounces of Pinex," and
don t accept anything else. A guarante*
of absolute satisfaction, or money prompt
ly refunded, goes with this preparation
The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind.
I* -1
MARCH 28, 1916.
j|j 'jpHE other day a man said to us, "Great
Scott, everybody in Harrisburg must read g
your Want Ad Page. About a week ago, I had g*
fpj some furniture in the house for which I had
j|| no further use and put a Want Ad in the
TELEGRAPH to see if I couldn't sell some §
of it. Well, sir, I could have sold a carload g
of furniture from that one little Want Ad." jgi
jls And this man is well known in Harrisburg «
■—his name is withheld on request. 5S
£§? Hundreds of others are taking advantage
of these little money-savers. Is your attic or
Kg basement overloaded with a lot of useless §
furniture, an old stove, or perhaps a carpet 55
or two? Turn 'em into cash, the Want Ad g
way. Just call 4100 and let us help you word
j|s your ad. It'll cost but a penny a word.
& What this other man has done, you can do,
with a TELEGRAPH Want Ad. ||
■ ___ 1 —Big
Try Telegraph Want Ads