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WOMAN’S PAGE. "’ Artificial Flower Deluge Is Near BY MARY MARSHALL. Al those in favor of flower-trim- med hats for Spring kindly signify in the usual manner. Those opposed? Apparently ‘the “ayes” have it, for the milliners and designers of hats DEEP PINK BA RAW HAT WITH LARGE MAUVE ROSES AT ONE SIDE. seem to be taking it for granted that the coming Spring is to be a season of flower-trimmed hats. You may not care to wear flowers on your hat BEDTIME STORIE Jack's Bad Night. A careless or a foolish deed To untold suffering may lead —Happy Jack Squirrel. Never in all his life had Happy Jack irre re frightened or mis- in a little tree way from the | mall that there to hide. He t tree because he ox was hiding and would have been ht. but to Happy e the o he w that stood all by its ther trees, a t was no place h didn’t dare aiting for hir Jugh in da was far night was already In the first place it was cold. You rae, t no place in that little tree to Before morning it would b. old Happy Jack was afrai to death if he remained up in t tree. But worse than this éven was his fear that Hooty the Owl might find him. Happy ME FOLLOWED CLOSE BY PETER'S HE| Jacl of those who go to bed With the coming of the Black Shadows He cannot in the night, as some of his neighbors can. So he is afraid to be out after He was bitterlys d Happy Jack cddy Fox d jumped ¢ ried for Green Forest thamped a v tangle appointed. was d been sure that away, and he 1 that tree and st trees of the Then Peter Rabbit had from the bramble- of the Green and Happy Jack had elimbed up into that little tree in a He knew what Peter’s thump- nt. | « Peter could s so disappoint- the cd on ed that he W darlke 4 and 1ddenly the ter- ooty the Owli sounded fro ar at hand that it secemed to IHap; Jack that Hooty must be in the » of that ve tree. Of course In his fright Happy Ja squealed aloud. It was a | 1 Lim that he didn’t. Hooty's wonderful ears would surely have heard him. Happy Jack flattened clf aleng a branch of that little tree and there he clung, both cold and fright. hooted ag: that he ai Moots in. Happy Jack nost fell. Once nkling little like a Black Shadow verhead. Happy He knew that Shadow. He knew the Owl But be- didw't move so and was lying flat o that he looked a part of it, Hooty didn't Btars what s passed Jack held I that wa that it ciuse n alons as if he Happy hoas a wh that wer Anoint nostrils with MENTHOLATUM Antiseptic—cleansing Destroys germs Pimply? WéllA,”Don’tBe Pcople Notice Tt. Drive Them Off With Dr. Tidwards’ Olive Tablets. A pimply face will not embarrass you much longer if you get a package of Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets. The skin should begin to clear after you have taken the tablets a few nights. Cleanse the blood, bowels and liver with Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the successful substitute for calomel; there's no sickness or pain after taking them. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets do that which calomel does, and Just as effec- tively, but their action is gentle and safe instead of severe and irritating. No one who takes Olive Tablets is ever cursed with a “dark brown taste,” a bad breath, a dull, listiess, “no good feeling, constipation, torpid liver, bad disposition or pimply face. Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know them by thelr olive color. Dr. Edwards spent years among pa- tients afflicted with liver and bowel | that tree. yourself. You may feel that a rib- bon cocarde or bow is smarter for the street hat and that feathers are more elegant for the dress hat. You may prefer to wear your artificial flower on the shoulder or hip of your eve- ning frock, or on the lapel of your coat. But there are vnough women, apparently, who would like to revive the old-time custom of wearing artifl- cial flowers on their hats to make this fashion a certainty. Roses and_other flowers, like the animals in Noah's ark, are usually made to g0 two by two on the new hats. We have grown familiar, by this time, with the peaked hat with two roses or gardenias or other striking flowers posed back to back at the apex. As some of the best milllners are departing from the more extreme phases of the chapeau pointu, we find the two flowers taken from the apex of the hat and arranged a little to one side. This seems to be a more becoming arrangement to many Americans. Very small flat flowers are used on many of the.smart hats designed for Spring. A turned-back brim of a Napoleonic hat may be entirely cov- ered with small flowers placed so close that none of the foundation of the hat is to be seen. Crown bands, quills, cocardes and curi- ous stiff bows are also covered solidly with small flowers to trim some of THE EVENING A]tl\wgl'\ the city hurts my ears With whistles, bells and cries There's elways something beautiful On which to rest my CYOS . L iy Wi HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWTON. “Hullabaloo. This term, meaning a great deal of notse, a sort of bedlam of sound cre- ated usually by many voices, Is a good example of the wealth of color and history that is concealed in some of our commonest word “Hullabaloo” comes to use from the Coranach, the funeral dirge formerly in use among the Irish and Scottish Celts. This consisted of several verses detailing the life of the de- ceased and proclaiming loud and mournful accents the loss of those left behind. The cries were called by the Irish “Hulagahue,” and “hululu” and it is from the latter that we have the still popular “hullabaloo.” The Coranach has long ago fallen into disuse. It was superseded until the latter half of the eighteenth cen- tury, when this also began to wane, by the bagpipe funeral lament of the Highlanders. 1In Scotch literature, however, and in references to Scot- land in’ English literature we find mention of the older custom of the Coranach, which gave us the word “hullabaloo.” the new hats. The sentiment seems to be among milliners that the psy- chological time is approaching for more ornate hats, but that the mat- ter must not be pressed. Women really do yearn for flower trimmings, but there must be a suitable tran- sitfon. The pretty-pretty effect must be avolded. (Coprright.) BY THORNTON W. BURGESS see him. What seemed to Happy Jack like a long time afterward he heard Hooty hoot again. This time he knew that Hooty was far away. Still Happy Jack didn’t move. “T'll freeze to death. Yes, sir, I'll surely freeze to death,” he sobbed un- der his breath. And then he heard a little noise right at the very foot of He held his breath. “Are you there, Happy Jack?” some one asked. It was Peter Rabbit. “Be- cause if you are” continued Peter, vou needn't stay there any longer. There is a hollow log over in that bramble-tangle where you can spend the rest of the night. Come down and I'll show you the way. You should have seen Happy Jack scramble down. He followed close at Peter's heels. Sure enough, in the bramble-tangle there was a hollow log. Happy Jack crept into it. And there he spent the rest of that night the most dreadful night he could re- member. (Copyright, 1925, by T. W. Burgess.) (Copyright, 19 AUNT HET Carp Frozen in Texas. A sudden and premature cold snap in Texas caused the death of thou- sands of carp in Texan waters early in December. In shallow lakes, espe- cially, the water froze sufficiently to kill the carp while the perch and cat- fish escaped, only to be caught later. “Pa is head of the house, but he knows not to pester me on churin’ days when the butter won't come.” (Copyright, 1925.) brings. To gratify by Fither of these three women may be you, or someone you know. Tmagine each. In turn, s beling pictured In the mirror above her description. 1t will be to your advantage to read each descrip- tion (numbered 1, 2 and 3) carefully. First (1) in the women who has long been buying “besuty” and preparations for besutifying the skin and complexion. She will find in OlivilO (offered bere free) s luzurious toilet soap that contributer 1o beauty more_than many other preparations combined. in OlivilO is & special emulrion of healing balssms snd: olln that act like a lo- tion, leaving the skia velvety, soft and besufiful. Oli (Ask for FREE a fullsize cake of wonderful OlivilO if you USE THE COUPON Y Your Grocer or Druggist has it in the complaints and Olive Tablets are the immensely effective result. Take one or two nightly for a week. See how much better you feel and look. 13¢ and 30c. crimson wrapper TAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, DorothyDix] If Feeling Toward Suitor Is That of Glorified ‘Iriend and If He Has Capital of Love, Partnerghip Should Be Success. *Do I Love Him Enough to Marry Him?” Disousses Vital Feminine Problem A YOUNG woman is confronted with this problem: A most eligible young man wishes to marry her. He has a fine character, comes of a good family, has a prosperous business, and is madly infatuated with the girl. She admires his many good qualities. She finds him sympathetic and ngenial, and the more she sees of him the better she likes him, but she hesitates about saying “yes" because she does not know whether she cares enough for him to marry him or not. She has always understood that before a woman married a man she should entertain a wild, romantic passjon for him that would sweep her off jher feet, and as she still finds herself firmly planted on mother earth, and able to take a calm and dispassionate view of the man, she doubts whether she loves him sufficiently well to risk matrimony with him. And she wants to know how much love it takes to marry on. All there is in the world, and then some, I should say. Nothing but love Justifies matrimony in the sight of God, and nothing but love enables faulty human beings to endure each other's weaknesses and shortcomings and tempers and moods. Nothing but love robs of their bitterness the sacrifices that every husband and wife must make for each other. Nothing but love gilds the fetters of matrimony and turns them into a golden bond. But just as it makes for domestic peace and happiness, and the general good of the family for the husband to have more money than his wife has, so it is equally desirable for the man to start into matrimony with a larger capital of love than the woman has. For all the circumstances of life tend to wean a man away from his wife. A MAN has his ambitions, his career, his work, his interests, outside of the home, but a woman's world Is, in the majority of cases, bounded by her house and husband and children. Her interests and ambitions are merged In his. She depends on him for her comfort and happiness, and So with her thoughts continually dwelling on him her love for him grows day by day. if there is anything in him that Is lovable. . v There are millions of middle-aged women who live in terror of their middle-aged husbands ceasing to care for them, and casting roving eyes on bobbed-haired flappers, but no middle-aged man is losing sleep worrying over his middle-aged wife forsaking him for a varnished.haired Jellybean He knows he can't lose her. Therefore, the wiss woman nicks out e o husband the man who is cra: about her and who s i < crans puts into the matr partnership an unlimited capital of love. rmaTmunlal When a man and a woman, however, try to decide whether they are in love or not, they should take into consideration their own temperaments. Not everybody is subject to acute heart attacks sentimentally, any more than they are to angina pectoris physically. There are plenty of normal people, who are placid, unimaginative, clear reeing, capable of a great and ablding affection, yet who never see any man or woman caught up in a cloud of glory, who never palpitate or thrill at the sound of a footstep, and who never even remotely dally with the thought of suiclde, or deceive themselves by pretending that they would pine away and dio it they falled to get some eloved one These people are forever measuring their feelings against the standards of Jove set up by poets and romancers, and because they fall short, because hey are lifted up into a seventh heaven, where they see a commonplace man or woman as a godling or a goddess, because their souls are not torn with hopes and fears, they distrust their love, many a man and woman keep waiting on and on for the lurid tion that they will never know to come to themi, walting for the ulous stirring of the waters of their souls that will never happen ause it is an impossibility to people of their temperaments. they TS the deprive some man or woman of the steadfast affection that ey might have given, and rob themselves of thevimighiinavoialys of the love and companionship This is a pity because happy marriages are not founded upon wild gusts of passion that soop blow over and are gone. The madly infatuated are inevitably doomed to disillusion because no man or woman can measure up to an impossible ideal. The marriage that is founded upon respect, upon congeniality, upon liking, is the one that lasts. And in the end every happy marriage comes to be a glorified friendsh It Is the thing that all successful marrlages end in, so why st 1t & wabs thing to begin with? DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright.) While in a vain search of his father in Glasgow, Scotland, Andrew Marcrae, Argentine multimillionaire, met the job when he was destitute, and took the erstwhile employer to the Argen- Olive-EYE-Lo)- Thousands of people in certain sectionsof the United States know OlivilO for all the wonderful qualities enumerated above. They have known it for more than thirty all the toilet uses in the household. Now.we ask tine and gave him an important man who 22 years ago gave him a |position. WOMEN of Three Types Will be grateful for this Invitation ‘This woman is mainly interested in cleanli- neas, and the healthful glow and comfort it toilct soap must pro- duce rich, creamy latber, d 3 Thin wroman is responsible for the comlork ‘health and bappiness of & family. She seeks a toilet soap that & man can use, and that in aleo tenderly eleansi in use on the delicate sldn of the babies and cbildren. She ie aiso in- tersstes] in cconomp. The soap she buys must be £00d, and algo long lasting, All these qualities she will find in OlivilO, a full 10c cake of which she may now obtain FREE, sdditional to the one she ¢ See the ccupon below 10 years—and keep it convenient daily for OU to try it, making it easy for you to do so. Simply take the coupon to your nearest grocer, dll;uggist, or de cl additional full sized cake of OlivilO absolutely free. t store handling Olivilo, pur- 10c cake, and you will be given an ase one re This offer guaranteed by ALLEN B. WRISLEY CO., CHICAGO This is for One Full et Dbtk Just sign your name p;::nhgmm“ and Oquumelduhcn'nmbuy. - Strectand Number ..o pever affiicted with chills, and hectic fevers, because they are not | MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1925. What Tomorrow Means to You . A oo el BY MARY BLAKE. Aquarius. There is a continuation tomorrow of the benign aspects that appear this afternoon, and they show a steady and an Increasing improvement until sundown, when conditions very sud- denly change for the worse. ‘The signs irdicate very clearly thdt until the late afternoon all conservative effort, especially along professional or artistic lines, will. be crownad with success. It is an exceptional opportunity for all engaged in either the legal or medical professions, as research will be facilitated, and that which has been difficult in the past will be easy of solution and accomplishment. In the evening there is .greater danger to be anticipated from your own character than from flaws in well-matured plans. The vibrations are of a sluggish nature, and great self-control must be exercised if dis- agreements and differences are to be avolded. A child born temorrow will healthy* and give every sign robust qualities and strength. Its recuperative powers will not be as great as those possessed by others of an apparently lesser outward show of a strong, constitution It nutri- tion must bé carefully regulated and it must have as much outdoor air as possible. Its disposition will be kind- 1y and it will despige everything that is underhanded or not strictly on the level. It will, in youth, be shy and, as it grows up will be reserved—so much so, in fact, as not to attract others. Those, and there will be only a few, who are able to penetrate the wall of taciturnity and s etiveness will very much appreciate its many sterling qualities and virtues. If tomorrow is your birthday you have a very pleasing personality and are more liable to trade on this to secure your ends than on hard work and persevering effort. You can se- cure almost any chance or opportun- ity by the exercise of your invariable charm and affability. You, however, once your chance is secured, should work consistently and perseveringly in order to make good. You are generous te a fault and have frequently sacrificed your own interests by being more careful of other peoples’ welfare than your own. You have very often discov- ered that people are more ready to accept than to give, and those to whom you have given favors have shown their unwillingness to recipro- cate. A little more industry, a trifle more perseverance, combined with per- slstency and ambition will, with your personality, enable you to attain to almost any height of success, eitber commercial, socfal or political. Well known persons born on this date are: Dr. Henry M. Guernsey, pioneer of homeopathy; Isham G. Harris, former United States Senator and Governor of Tennessee; Fred- erick B. Conway, actor; Augustus P. Cooke, naval officer, prominent in Civil War; Ira Remsen, chemist and former president of Johns Hopkins University; William C. Noble, famous sculptor. be of opyright, 1925.) How much real value stands back of the atocks you are asked to buy! Olnly two long words here, Kids ¥ Goto'it ! WHAT DID_You COME IN ON, AN EMPTY 7 FREIGHT 2 FEATURES. 7 NO, ME LAD, ON AN COPYRIGHT 1925 HORIZONTAL 20- ONE ZI-COLLEGE PEGREE. 22- TAVERN Z3- PRONOUN Z -NEAR TO. 3 -A ROMAN WEIGHT. 6-TO POINT TOWARD. 7 -PRONOUN 8-T0 PEVOUR 9-EPITOR (AB) 10- NOT POWN 11- ORGAN OF HEARING 1Z- ONE 13- HIGHEST POINT. 14- P RONOUN 15- MY SELF. 16-FABULOUS 17-ONE 18- GREAT CROWP z4- 10 z - NAT BIRP 5-To 19- 10 1 Bistory of Pour Name.| BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. O’SHEA } VARIATIONS—Shea, Shee, O'Shee. RACIAL ORIGIN—Irish, also Scottish. | SOURCE—Clan names. | There are really three sources from which the foregoing Anglicized Gae- lic names’ may have come The vast majority nd O'Shees, however, belong in the lists of the descendants of the Clan | “O'Seaghdha” of Corcaguiney and Iveragh in Desmond. This clan was founded by a chieftain named “Seagh- | dha." descended through a few gen- erations from Conaire II, surnamed “MacMogha,” who died about the vear | 151 A. D. In 1095 A. of this clan named “Mathgamhain O'Seaghdba” rose to historical prom nence. There was, Ircland, another however, in clan, the ancient nam { ishe A he wag of the O'Sheas|? D. a chieftain |- tion | brown garefully [soLuTioN 70 FINISH Z5- THUS 26- USED wiITH E(THER SVERTICAL ™ | - BUNDLE ©F COTTON IVES OF AMERICA HALT. 16-TO MAKE A RAIZ UPON. WAIT FOR whick call (Eugene the figures D., in h war with Conn These O'Sheas of the hundred battl were located in Mun Still of the name though less fr s the “O'Shaigh branch of the Scottish n Donal of the Isles, but this r 4 rtened form of correctly rendered 1 versions of Shanna Hominy With Bacon Hominy should same cornmeal all night in a fir t and serve Cut the cold es, dip in beater in hot bacon fat. for breakfast neat sl (AN ) "Hello Daddy-~ dont forgei my /, youngsters , Give the lfi;g-’ltasfingsweetfirphau'e&beneflt. yourself after work drags, Its a great S itte rechener / WRIGLEYS Sealed Tight- Kept Right After Every Meal THE FLAVOR LASTS