Evening Star Newspaper, May 13, 1921, Page 33

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FEATURE PAGEY - Bull-Dog Drummond Sketches from Life BY CYRIL McNEILE (“Sapper™) A Novel of Mystery, Love and Adventure. (Copyright, 1921, by George H. Deran Co.) (Continued from Yesterday's Star.) ldifferent see Carl pic matter. “So you mean to hand me over to' form." do said Pete: the police, you? slowly. “I gee no other course open to me.” isuch trifles as I’ replied Drummond. “It will be v]uw'fl'llnuzl' a cause celebre. and ought to do a lot| “Are For a while they were pied with matters ing oakum. ou glad I answered vour ad- take. v Judge w To .y o | Boxer. Bear, of 1'fe out tn the gatned chlef and experic wun Htthe ! this | there were ny them hims just wonderful strolled poc | who i quit eterson and to edify the public.” vertisement inquired Phyilis at The sudden opening of the door'length | made both men look round. Then “The question is too frivolous to de- | Skunk be Drummond bowed, to conceal a smile. serve an answer.” remarked her hus He stamped “Just in time he re- band sever, Sop asider marked. ! | “But you aren't sorry it's over? poasde The girl swept and con- fronted Peterson “What has happened?’ she panted. “The garden is full of people whom T've never seen. And there were {wo men running down the drive covered with weeds and dripping with water.” Peterson smiled griml “A siight setback has occurred dear. 1 have made a big mista mistake which has prov auick stopped demanded t nd once past th a piece of pa Hugh's feet, and the soldier, which he isn m movement, d at her tenderly again the man to analyze, Your life u revoir, my friend: only au | Fve stood 811 the t it just wonder [yon I am gz to. | 1 at the piece of bark auntered | neat writi the ground t this time he dropped | Assuredl Boxer oniv ianghed r on the path, just at Hy be dust tey With “a | hardly | with 1 looked | Copyright, 1921, by T. covered it of his w el have underestimated shoe. The girl hadn't seen the! ng. kid" he grinned. | Capt_ Drummond ion: but then, as girls do after I've had the best appe- | live T shall always reg such remarks, she was thinking of , tizers the old pot-houss produce.” | hundred tiny fragment not kill_him the night other things. 1dly Hugh watched the | “Well you're very greedy. Where's | © t ploring in this house.’ sauntercr disappear in the m i th assumed Fearfully the girl faced Drummond: wded part of the espla | elordom. old thing. | ain to Peterson * she demanded then she turned a “Where's Henry “That again am profound Peterson. “Perhaps Ca can enlighten us on that “Yes. marked Drummo Henry h an_accident drove from the last night"—ihe girl gay Peterson steadied her wi e had words—dreadful for a long « would be bet ¥ it flar words. In fact I'm not sure even now that it wouldn't be safer in the lonw run &t “But _where is he?’ said the girl, through dry lips “Where you ougit to he. € swered Hugh gr cr later. you w He pressed the wall. a on the gar dropped nervous li ceiling by arms, was the Lakington watched it his from the hed to his of Henry feet sulleniy a vase ered Peterson. “Did 4 Drummond. “Ha the bath he got \ when he ran siderable pain device covered shuddering swung from * with more * she eried two of the n some- | e broke off and stared | At A man sauntering past To all appearances he wns a | taking r | front known seasi 4 cted to honeymoon 3 vet was he? Hug anft'y; he'd got euspicion on irain. “Don’t vou think they’ll be sent prison?” ‘cried the g “They may be sent right enough. but whether they arrive or not is a for ther by 1 through is largely made up of er: Siom:s St BEDTIME: Boxer’s Second Great Mis- HORNTON W. BURGESS. iy WEuk his nl‘m! that he would drive you experienc You the runaway mon of Buster arning that the lessonr| Great World are | ;| P.O. TRUCKS TRAVEL “"ACROSS COUNTRY " IN ONE then if} e would | stopped and stared ut He was both surprised But he realized voung and < wavs of 1 i £ 1 | 3 ¢ who 1 | Now. you know | wr than Jimm | 1 | Lenizd made | throueh | e 1 don’t know wha | I don’t want 1 | is mor { who vou If there | beeties his lare m wiil e, better for you ‘I don't see the g pickinz |t 1 Ret real angry oasum. Lot a4 afrer | d one paw diner Ti run to the top | of the headiand | With i say. but Aifference to | m A staved behind to | t sav growled Boxer id a man nodded | is no affair of vours { nv Skunk, just as vou I don't somehow | ~Heard the news? he inquired that doesnt make any 1ts not his| said Hugh. “Wha hap- | me 1 don't what vou 11 Mother = volit Peterson the _girl | must he n 1o the vou i name lose po gronnd | he commanded | My © #s vou live nuden ce feom “Make me to make me & Boxer's second great mistake w. jealon sweethear! a love-letter? s ol | little | vou @ lesson vou | Now get off that| Again Jimmy stamped a moment there came on to his ment vou. Tl Not exactly And | a look which. happily for his two - their eves met. | «'s peace of mind, she failed to ! Here's to hop kid: here's 10 hop: | he said, apropos of nothinz. | tray mearby b paper torn into oK. (THE ENT e Sewing pleasure is increased greatly by this feature alone, of the Willcox & Gibbs Electric Automatic. You may change from light- est to heaviest threads or from the sheerest to the heaviest ma- terials, or back again, and the automatic tension simply adjusts itself—there is nothing for you to turn or regulate. Furthermore, there are no bobbins to wind. These conveniences, and the silent steady running of this finely built, portable machine will indeed make your sewing hour delightful. Why not, this very day, tele- phone us to show you this machine in your own home, without The tension adjusts itself obligation? Or plan to sce it at our store. And then you may - buy it on easy payments, if you wish. Willcox & Gibbs Sewing Machine Co. 702 10th St. N.W. Main 8232 FEATURE PAGE. Quick Bread. =1 Spring Fads. For every cup of sour milk used add one teaspoonful of xoda and one- | L — half teaspoonful of salt. Mix the milk.| Grosgrain ribbon and milan straw soda and salt thoroughly, add enough | combine to make charming hats flour to make & stiff dough and d circular skirt, worn over a the dough from a spoon into greased fitted underskirt, is mutfin pans. Then touch the top of the .mu s with a spoon dipped in melted fat, bake in a t oven. —_——— Strawberry Dessert Salad. Mix toge slippers o Il heels, twinkling with bril ther one cup of sifted confectioners sugar SEmauVRREONR A0 Ehine Ik poa et and the juice of one lemon nd in Freach b ' G- U.S. PATENT : six slices of pincapple in nests of let |tuce hearts. s E (Copyright, 1921, by the International Syndicate.) slices of ora uits are of t pint of apple weave the dre DAY OF DELIVERY WORK ON MAIL. ! mistakes. He had made one groat | mistake when he thought that be- N cnuse Prickly Porky the Porcupinej Deard. T. C. Mem- was slow and seemed awkward m-d“’”’ Some foike !stupld 1t was not necessary to treatjllke fiEures, but 1 do him with respect. 1t had been a most POt Care g0 much for | | patnful mistake. And now Boxer was|them all In ail. but 1 : abonut to make u second great mistake, | Ceriainly heard wome. opeane ¥ am quite as great a mistake a8 th L Yieed he the satce. serve hot and pour | poin . | This little strangsr in black of jthe posat over the sauce. Garnish with parstey. | shaped eve | white had politely usked him to step| iRt ] aside There w u piece of bark on {to find out fur “ i | the ground just back of the cub aml n Travel Club unk, for that is who it “;“ | members just how th might be sume 39 . <l waia v Yoy ibie w thing the ov- H. G. WELLS writes to ! rmy Skunk is very fond uf‘uvum--n: “post omite G | Vs And | was er hud that vers marning (1 PIERREPONT B. NOYES— e oudness of fat beetles |fainiy | and at mention of them he w they kee u i fliled with a great desire to have it i cevr - , [ more. " ‘This w S 2 ] Your valuable little [ ook, which {no 3 tever. And hiel e po an i I admire and endorse warmly wal su | - that Boxer made 1 i | mistake of thinking st poli ! wus caused by fear. You know peoj | who .A'rdul are inclined to be Ve . [Bolite 1o thore ther fear. B ner 1 GET your facts about the Rhine- s de i | land and the Ruhr from authori- tative first hand—READ “WHILE EUROPE © | WAITS FOR PEACE” By PIERREPONT B. NOYES American Rhineland Commissioner Visits ixcovers the tri Travel poxt offic Retting than one lndred combing ke in Wash miles every d hundred miles Cashington ma M m dunior down the | Lach « and ington makes is is several than the distaice from W Franciseo st otfice men m new 1 wha un t has much it i oa eirel that is what but (The American business man who practically organized the RHineland Commission ) Know eh truck u and. of cou kind of mile Truck ow same of 1he s where tr mobites are used and at any time 1 just what the one city On sale at all bookstands Ivory Jelly With Fruit. Soak one ource of gelatine in cold nodissolv THE MACMILLAN COMPANY . Publishers New York An vo "Washingion Is There Anything Wrong With the Girl of To-day? with A” that she stands for in sweetness, modesty, innocence, in danger of hecoming extinct ? was she re no hetter nor worse than the “up-to-date’ in turn will become “the old-fashioned ¢ to a later generation? It is even possible, as a smal’ but impressive minority would have us believe, that the gitl of today has certain new virtues of inkness, sincerity, seriousness of purpose,” I'ves on “a higher level o l morality,” and is on the whole “more ¢! -minded and clean-lived” than her predecessors According to the - York American. there is a statute pending in Utah “providing fine and imprisonment for those w hu wear on the streets skirts higher than three inches above the ankle. The Philadelphia moral gown. with its seven and a half inches of level” as one visitor called it, would cease to be moral in Utah if this law goes through.” In various other states legislation has heen passed or is being drafted to regulate women's dress that is almost as drastic as the Utah law Lt and ' rl—who. Is “the old ashioned girl” Or active throughout the n the part of women. \ number of organizatioms are unusuall country on the rumul that there is an unus \nI amount of immodest dressing and conduct v t The Young Woman's Christic conducting a national campaign among high school girls, and lhrungh its press department supplies newspapers with material which appears under sue h suggestive headlines as “Working Girls Respons've to Modesty / 'n\(al “High Hecls Losing Ground in France”: and “It Isn't What the Girl Does: 1% Just the Way She Does [t ete. THE LITERARY DIGEST, by way of gathering national sentiment on the whole question, lately addrest : circular letter to-the religious editors of the country, to lh [vr(\n]( nts of colleges and un versitics, and to the edi tors of college papers, asking for their opi lax standards which have been freeiy made throughout the country. These replies | heen u-"«“nrfl with material on the same subject collected from newspapers and magazines in THE DIGEST office. and the results are presented in an flv interesting article in the May 14th issuc. It includes several unique ions showing proper a mq-m'rv styles in dress, how the fox-trot is danced in London, and specimens of advance summer models that will be worn in Paris, London, Vienna, Brusscls and N York this summer, THE DIG w Other news-articles’in this number of T that will be sure to interest you, are:— The New Partition of Africa Why Germany Must Pay Taxes To Be Shifted, Not Lifted Gecrgia Declares War on Peonage Canada’s Experience With the Sales Tax Rifts in Red Russia Spain Retaliating on “Dry” Norway “Unsettling”’ Upper Silesia Rearing Human Thoroughbreds Boys to Reforest Louisiara An Unvaccinated Country To Make “Bad Lands” Gcod Lands The Menace of German Films The Poet Laureate of Nebraska The Nation-wice Battle for Movie Purification A 10,000 Acre Gift to Missions How They Made Temperance Easy in Finfand A Week in the White House With Harding Reviews of New Books Best of the Current Poetry Topics of the Day Numerous Interesting Illustrations, Maps end Cartoons United States Senator Miles Poindexter says: “T find The iiterary Digest of very great value, in fact almost indispensable, as a means of Tt particularly useful in its digest of foreign public opinion as it finds expression in papers and keeping informed on live current questions within the entire great field which it covers. is magazines, and T have had occasion more than once to make use. in the Senate, of its digest of such foreign comment May 14th Number on Sale Today—Newsdealers 10 Cents—$4.00 a Year ‘Tis a Mark ot Distinction to Be a Reader ot The Literary j Digest

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