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FEATURES. A HANDS CO DE VENIE LUXE. TLY However may be. orative. somethin to have the inst out adding a discordant otherwise pleasing schem: teri Various vised, but none is more satisfactory than the telephone cabinet Cabinets are in high favor at pres- | ent Therefore telephone cabinet| is quite in accord with fashion. Just what shape and style the cabinet es is for the homemaker to de-! Some of these cabinets are ex-| tremely handsome, with hand carving and dull gold ornamentation or! cour there that slip| und the cabinets These may be mer st have backs, and be It is possible to make telephone cabinet at home, if a son is handy with tools. est telephone cabinets have hinged doors of tiny prépor- tions at the back. The transmitter | and receiver a put through this| door when the phone is being attach- | ed. On the door is a round shelf| with beveled edge and knob to hold | the phon urely, and to allow it| to be brought immediately to hand| when this front section is opened, as| it must be to answer a call or make one. The inside of the cabinet has one-half fitted with a shelf, leaving| the other side for the phon book. | The divided side affords a place for pad, pencil, personal telephone book‘ There a tiny incision in’ the| top of the door at the front through | which the cord can be run, if the| door shut and the telephone is| placed on top the cabinet for| greater convenience. A cane-seated | stool stands inconspicuously under| the cabinet, hich is about (hehnli;hli of an ordinary table, perhaps a trifle | higher. Such a piece of furniture is an ad- dition to the furnishings of any room and tdkes up but little space. It would be difficult to imagine a more decoratively satisfactory solution of what to do with a telephone than such a cabinet provides ‘While this model runs convenient cannot be cons Therefore, it is note for to an in- are seats ols ¢ chairs instead a P! The fi slide up into BEDTIME STORIE Explains to Bowser. The future will call blessed he Who frequently doth plant a tree —~Farmer Brown's Boy. Bowscr the Hound likes to g0 with ner Brown's Boy wherever he goes. So, while Farmer Brown's Boy was setting out the little pine trees in the Old Pasture, of course Bowser the Hound was with him. When Farmer Brown wasn't there Farmer Brown's Boy talked to Bowser. “This is hard work, Bowser,” said he. “Yes, sir, this is hard work, but 1 don't mind. You know a thing isn't “YOU OLD FRAUD,” SAID FARMER BROWN'S BOY, PATTING BOW- SER ON THE HEAD. worth having if it isn't worth work- ing for. The Old grown up to brush and brambles and wasn’t good for much of anything ex- cepting berries in the Summer. Tt wasn't even a good pasture any more. But now part of It Is going to be good for something. Yes, sir-ee! These little trees are going to grow and grow, and some day they will be 28 big as any of the trees over in the Green Forest. “When these trees get big there will be a wonderful Green Forest here and the Old Pasture, which hasn't been worth much of anything, will be one of the most valuable parts of the whole farm. Yes, sir, that is just what is going to happen. What men are thinking of when they keep cut- ting down trees and cutting down trees and never planting any I don't know. 1 love trees. It makes me feel badly every time I see a tree cut down. But we have to cut down trees for firewood and lumber. But if every time a tree is cut down an- other to take its place is planted we will always have a Green Forest. This land here Isn't good for any- thing but to grow trees. For that it is splendid. Trees are what Old Mother Nature intended should grow on it. More trees will mean more telephone | dered dec-| always|lower cost. & of a problem to know how |is that cabinets of whatever sort are iments handy with- | the approved telephone stands. an plans have been de-|which originally was Pasture was all! ME CABINET WHEN OPENED MAY REVEAL A TELEPHONE PLACED, AND PROVE TO BE A TELEPHONE STAND money, there are other somewhat similar telephone ‘cabinets at much The idea I wish to stress It is pos: nexpensive ble to imagine one-as and as homemade as that nothing but a soap box! It must be made with an eye to the artistic as well as with careful handicraft. The box should be mounted on’ good-looking, if plain, legs, and have the front side hinged and provided with a suitable door catch. The incision for the cord could be made with a brad awl and knife. When completed the whole article should have two or three coats of paint to harmonize with the color scheme of a roog, or it may be black. The latter would be excellent. The final coat of enamel or flat eggshell varnish should leave the surface as smooth as silk. This could be ob- tained only if each coat of paint were rubbed down with fine sandpaper be- fore another was applied The door and all edges should be “striped,” that is, be given a pin line of a contrasting color (vellow ochre is a favorite tone). A stencil decora- tion could be given to add further decoration. Let me suggest the ad- visablility of going to a lumber mill and having the legs turned, for this would add but little to the price and would take away from the cabinet what might otherwise be a home- made look. cabinet it could brown or other wood stain and then rubbed down and given an oil or dull (egshell) varnish finish. For boudoirs. chambers, etc., there are several ways of disguising tele- phones that are charming. Tall dolls may have skirts or cloaks that com- pletely conceal the _instruments. Painted jig-saw novelties in the form of dolls with jaunty skirts and waists and holding muffs, bunches of flow- ers, etc., through which the transmit- ters protrude, as if seeming a part of some motif, are other stvies. Be- sides these there are miniature screens with the three folds covered with silk in attractive colors and arrangements. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS some of the others thought I was do- ing a dreadful thing when I cut off the brush and brambles and burned them. But they'll like these trees ever so much better. Besides, I didn’t cut off the brush and brambles all over the Old Pasture. I left enough for those who like them to hide In. You know, Bowser, there are sdme places in the Old Pasture where trees can't grow. Those are the places for the brush and the brambles.” Bowser looked up and wagged his tail just as if he understood what his master was saying. He had his own opinion of what Farmer Brown's Boy was doing. Many a time pad Bowser chased old Granny Fox and Reddy Fox through the Old Pasture, and many a time had he chased Old Jed Thumper there. The brambles had scratched him and torn his coat and made him yelp as he tried to get through them. So it had suited Bow- ser to see those brambles cut and burned. Yes, sir, it had suited him perfectly. These little trees wouldn't be in his way. He would be able to follow Reddy Fox up here now with some comfort. So he looked up in his master's face and grinned and wagged his tail quite as if he under- stood everything. “You old fraud,” said Farmer Brown's Boy, patting Bowser on the head. “You old fraud. You haven't understood a word I've said, and you needn’t pretend that you have. Just the same, it is all true. The Old FPasture is going to be a wonderful place some day.” (Copyright, 1825, by T. W. Burges 4 > people who wear fur. “I suspect that Reddy, Fox feathered folks and more of the little Instead of painting the| be given a dark| THE EVENING SPRINGTIME BY D. C. PEATTIE. Adder's Tongue and Bell Flower. A plant with its leaves as beauti- ful as its flowers is the adder's tongue that is now blooming in any rich-soil woods around the District. For the adder's tongue has two smooth leaves that boast a lovely mottling of purple, bronze and green —not showy, but in soft pastel col- ors. Beneath, the leaves are silvery. The flowers of adder's tongue re- semble their cousins, the lilies. Yet there are some who call them, oddly enough, dogtooth violets. Trout lily is another name, suggested, it may be, by the silvery mottling of the leaves, which resembles the beautiful flanks of the brook trout. Sometimes the outside of the pet- als is mottled reddish brown; within they are clear golden yellow. Their half-noddling or horizontal posture is one of their peculiar and endearing charms. There are two kinds of adder's tongue within the District—the com- mon yellow species, with its mottled leaves, and one more rare, whose flowers are white or faintly Iilac and the leaves but little variegated. It grows here only along the Potomac above Georgetown. Much iike the adder's tongue, but of a paler yellow, and with nodding blossoms, are the dainty little bell flowers or corn lilies that often bloom in the same week and close beside the adder’s tongue. They, too, are of the lily family, but their leaves, while not so beautiful, at once identify these plants, for they seem to clasp the stem or even to surround it, as if the stem had grown up through the leaves. Dainty things, these Spring relatives of the lily, that give to flower hunting at this season its flavor of refreshing joy. Sattiday afternoon pop was reeding the paper in the setting room and I started to go in to ask him for a time for the movies, ony I left the setting room door open by mistake and be- fore I had time to say enything pop sed, For the love of Peet shut that door the way you found it, my life is jest ome draft after another erround heer. Being a bum start, and I thawt, G, good nite. And I dident say enything for a wile and then I sed, Hay pop Pop not saying enything, and I was jest going to ask him for the dime and he sed. Wats that your standing on, vee gods the boys standing on one of my new gloves. T dident see it down there, pop, ho- ley smokes, G Wizz pop, gosh, 1 sed. And I quick got off of it, thinking, Jimminy crickits, G winnickers, heck. “ And I picked the glove up and put it on the table, saying, It dident hert it eny, pop. No, I sippose it gave it a good dry cleening and pressing, pop sed Being sourcastic, and jest then a little peece of plaster fell off the ceeling and hit pop on one knee, pop saying, Owtch, wat the confounded dooce is happening now. Benny, wat have you bin doing upstairs? he sed. Sir? Ony a little hammering, I sed, and pop sed, O, is that all, well if you try it again 11l do a little hammering myself. And he brushed off his knee and kepp on reeding, me thinking, G wizz I better not even ask him, wats a use? And I started to go out and then I thawt, O well, I mite as well ask jest for luck. Wich I did, and pop sed, Decidedly not, and 1 went out feeling better than if 1 hadent asked and then had kepp on thinking maybe he mite of gave it to me if I had. MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. A Boy’s Pockets. mother says: contents of a boy's pockets often possess trus merit in their owner's eyes, though seemingly worthless. ‘When my young son's suit has to be sent to either cleaner or laundry 1 request him to go through all pockets and put away for safe keeping anything he regards as valuable, 1 never ruthlessly empty his pockets myself. (Copyright, 1925.) e Coffee Cake. Put into a bowl one tablespoonful of butter, one cupful of sugar, and one cupful of flour. Mix well with a fork. Take out one-half a cupful to be used later, and to this add one teaspoonful of cinnamon. To the re- mainder in a bowl add one cupful of milk, one and one-half cupfuls of flour, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder and one egg. Pour into a shallow baking pan, sprinkle the half cupful of reserved flour, sugar and cinnamon over the top, ahd bake in u 1760 GEORGE T CAME TO THE ENGLISH THRONE, AND ASSUMED A SELFISH ATTITUDE TOWARD HIS SUBJECTS N AMERICA . —« !?ns KING,NEEDING FUNDS TO PAV WAR DEBTS, DECIDEDTO RAISE PART OF THE MONEY BY LANING A TAX DIRECTLY ONTHE COLONIES AND ENFORCING THE NAVIGATION ACTS AGAINST AMERICAN INDUSTRY AND TRADE TN 1764 LORD GRENVILLE, THEN PRIME MINISTER, bEvg.Eb A PLAN TO TAX THE AMERICANS.. a moderate over for about 20 minutes. HIGH LIGHTS OF HISTORY ' STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY, DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Heartbroken Girl Who Let Employer Make Love to Her—What Can Be Done With Lazy, Slouchy Wife?—Shall Oversensitive Boy Be Given Up? [DEAR DOROTHY DIX: I am a heartbroken girl of 20. I am empldyed as bookkeeper in a commercial house, and my employer won my affection by kissing and caressing me, and telling me how beautiful and sweet I was. He led me to belleve that he loved me, although he never actually told me 80 or took me out anywhere, Now he is going to be married to a rich girl and T do not know what to do. Shall I sue him for breach of promise? HEARTBROKEN. Answer: My dear girl, you have only yourself to blame. You fooled yourself into believing that the man was in love with you, because you wanted him to be in love with you, and you refused to see that he was Just playing with you. Thousands of other silly girls are in your predicament. They kid themselves into belleving that men are in love with them because it flatters their vanity. They live on false hopes that they manufacture themselves. They see significance in the most trivial act that a man does. I get thousands of letters from women who write me that they are in love with men who, they just feel, love them, although the men have never said so. Some- times they attribute a man’s silence to his shyness and delude themselves into actually belleving the man is too bashful to speak All of this is rank nonsense. Out of the fullness of the heart the mouth speaketh, and even a dumb man becomes eloquent when he is in love with a woman and wants her. He can’'t keep it to himself, he is just bound to tell her, so don’t put your faith in the suppressed love theory. Don’t even believe a man when he tells you that he loves you, unless he backs it up with a bona fide proposal of marriage and asks you to name the day. As for a man complimenting you, that is a line that every man hands out to every passable-looking woman he meets. It means nothing on God's earth except that he Is trying to make himself agreeable and that he fancies himself a great little jollier ous intentions. all the balance in her conduct indication that He Is probably Nor are kisses and caresses the sign that a man has ser There are not many Josephs among the male population, and of the brethren will kiss any pretty girl who is lax enough to permit such familiarities. Because a man kisses you is no he intends to ask you to marry him. Quite the contrary looking for an unkissed girl for a wife. Dismiss all thoughts of a breach-of-promise suit from your mind. You have no case to begin with, for the man never made any contract to marry you. Besides a breach-of-promise suit is the ultimate limit of sordidness to which a woman can descend. My advice to you is to be a good sport, and when you sit in the game of hearts and lose out not to whine or cry over your bad luck. Learn from it and play your cards better the next time. DOROTHY DIX. “ e e e AR DOROTHY DIX: Iam a marfied man with three children, two of them little girls. When I married, my wife was one of the neatest, trimmest little girls you ever saw and a good housekeeper, but she has got 50 lazy and slouchy that she keeps the house like a pig sty, and is not even neat about her clothing nor the children’s How can I bring her back to her senses, for I don't want my little girls to grow up with slouchy, slovenly habits and to keep the kind of house that their mother does. . DISAPPOINTED HUSBAND. Answer: Laziness is the most incurable of all vices. No reform can be worked from the outside. It has to begin within, In the earnest desire of the individual to change and do better, and it seems impossible for the indolent to make this effort. Their souls are as inert as their bodles and they cannot rouse them I doubt not that you have remonstrated a million times with your wife over her lack of tidiness and the way she lets things go, and that all you have said has amounted to nothing. The woman who is afflicted with that tired feeling to the extent that she will not keep herself looking attractive and her home clean should worry over a few word Your only chance is to frighten her by telling her that you are going to leave her and take the children to some place where they can have the proper attention and be brought up in the right atmosphere But I do not think you need worry about your little girls following in their mother’'s footsteps. Trifling mothers almost invariably make smart daughters. Your girls will soon be old enough to want pretty clothes and have a nice home to invite their friends to, and they will learn to sew and to keep house in order to do it. It is the competent mothers who do all the work themselves and bear all the burdens who haye the inefficlent daughters. At any rate, you have my earnest sympathy, because I can think of nothing more forlorn than for & man to come home after a hard day's work to a home whose beds are unmade and whose floors are unswept, with the dirty dishes in the sink and no good dinner on the stove. As for having to kiss & slouchy woman—tiwat would require heroism. In my opinion, the first cause for djvorce should be just being plain no-account and lazy, and that goes for both men and women. DOROTHY DIX. EAR DOROTHY DIX: My husband and I have adopted a boy who is 13 years old. He is bright, amiable and polite, satisfactory in every wa except that he is very sensitive. He seems to dwell on every little slight. My husband is thoroughly disgusted with him. Says he will never amount to anything, and that sensitive boys become bullies when they grow up. So he wants to get rid of him. What do you think? CONSTANT READER. Answer: Sensitiveness may be either a very finely attuned soul or else just morbidness, but T do not think it ever results in brutality. It may be that you have a genius in this boy, who will reflect great honor upon you and make you proud and famous, so I would deal very patiently and gently with him if I werc you 8 Possibly the boy is overly sensitive because his birth and environment have made the iron enter his =oul, young as he is. He may never have had any one to love him or praise him, or encourage him. He may have felt that people looked upon him with scorn and contempt, and it has made him shrink away from them like a hurt animal. Don't send the boy back if he is satisfactory in every other way. Be good to him. Be affectionate to him. Encourage him. Save him from his curse. And God will surely reward you for as noble a deed as any human being can do. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1925.) Ramble Around South America BY RIPLHY, a pelican, portance. I have watched these big birds flop awkwardly and tirelessly along just even with the water, it seems, and in regular formation, as if under the command of a leader, but I have yet to see one of them catch a fish. That is not true, however, of the piquero (Spanish for “lancer”), as their spec- tacular plunges into the sea from great heights—as fast and true as belng the next in im- Eighteenth Day. MOLLENDO, Peru, February 12.— [T am writing this on the shady side of the Santa Luisa as the old boat glides along the shore. What a dis- mal, dusty view! The west coast of South America is monotonously for- lorn and forsaken. A barren range of mountains parallels a seaside where rain never falls and where there is nothing green or growing. The sea is flat and still and the boat seems to be sliding along on top of it instead of through fit. Yet it is all decidedly interesting. The water may be still, but it is alive—alive with bird life. This morning I watched the guano birds fly out to sea. Hour after hour, in dark, dense clouds, they poured past |from their island roosts near the shore. It is impossible to determine marvel of all who watch them. There is no more remarkable sight than that of a cloud of piqueros flying over a large school of fish called anchobetas. Then the air actually rains birds! Suddenly, as if at a given signal, they begin falling pre- cipitately into the water—hundreds at every moment—until within a few seconds practically the whole cloud an aviator drops—are the constant |, their numbers as they sweep by in long, irregular columns. Robert Cushman Murphy, who is on board and who knows more about them than anybody else, says that some- times he has estimated that a single homogenous colony contains ten mil- lions of birds. The Chincha and Bal- lestas Islands, near Pisco, are black with them, and when Capt. Dexter sounded the ship’s husky horn they arose in such clouds as to hide the early rising sun. The guanay (guano bird)—so- called by the Quechua Indians'since time immemorial—is the most valua- ble bird in the world and has been truly named the “billion-dollar bird.” The guanay is a shag, or a cormorant, belonging to the white-breasted branch of the family, and is probably the most gregarious thing that,flies. There are several others, the alcatraz, of feathered fishers has poured itself into the ocean. It is estimated that these birds are worth $15 a palr—a_fancy price for poultry. But a pair'esf guanays will produce about $1.50 worth of guano per year, besides leaving their progeny to continue the service. The deposits accumulate at the rate of about 43zinches per year, or near- ly 400 pounds per square vard. A few acres of such rookeries con- stitute a fortune, indeed. More than 10,000,000 tons were extracted in 20 years from one small group of islands, representing an average annual ex- portation valued at $30,000,000. Thus does Peru make hay while the sun shines and wax wealthy un- der her Volstead skies. Rain would ruin the industry. A _storm would wash her wealth of guano into the sea. The Policy of Lord Grenville. WERE ANNOYED BY THE KING'S REVENUE OFF ICERS SEARCH - (@ enviuie CLAIMED THAT THE CoLoNIES HAD BEEN FOUNDED FOR ENGLANES BENEFIT, THEREFORE THE KING COULD TAX THEM AS HE SAW FiT. HIS FIRST STEP WAS TO HAVE THE COLONIAL VENUE ACTS RIGIDLY ENFORCED —=—o BE MAINTAINED IN THE COLONIES THIS FORCE 70 BK SUPPORTED BY A SPRCIAL TAX. “THE AMERICANS OBJECTED, SAVING THAT THEY WERE STRONG ENOUGH TO DEFEND THEMSEIVES . THEN,TOO, THEY FEARED THE REDCOATS \WOLLD BE M APRIL 4, 1925. s WOMAN’S I PAGE. What TomorrowMeans to You BY MARY BLAKE. Aries. A qulet and calm animate you during the early part of tomorrow, which will make this period propitious for usual Sunday observances, or for deliberative read- ing. After noon the aspects denote unrest, lack of harmony of feeling and a disposition to go off at a tangent. These influences can be counteracted by a strong determina- tion to refuse to be ruffied, regardless of the provocation. 1f, however, this frame of mind is difficult to acquire, it would be well to seek, for a time some useful occupation or recrea- tion that will engross the mind, and distract the attention from the little annoyances that threaten to disturb your equanimity. The baby that makes its first ap- pearance tomorrow will escape seri- ous sickness during infancy, but will be, during adolescence, subject to one or more grave ailments. Its ability to overcome successfully such at- tacks will depend more on the care and attention its physical condition has received In its early days than on the curative effects of medicines or the ministrations of physicians. Its disposition will be exceedingly cheer- ful and its merriment will prove con- tagious. Many a sorrow will be les- sened by its ready smile and kind sympathy. Its character will be fun- damentally sound, but it will have no particular or special ambition, being perfectly content to fill the niche for which it thinks it is destined. Is tomorrow vour birthday? woman, you are mot a very tented one. You have strong soclal aspirations and the humdrum of a well regulated home, with its® monot- onous round of duties, does not ap- peal to you, thinking you are destined to fill another, and what you think a better, role in life. You possess many attractive qualities, but your discontent, which is quite unjustified, embitters your existence and does not spell happiness for those who are associated with you. 1f a man, you are very self-conscious, and too retiring for your own good. You could achieve much greater material success if you were a little more blatant and not so disposed to efface yourself. You have many sterling traits, but are content to hide your light under a bushel. Your friends however, who know vou, respect an love you, and, although you may not make a mark, the world is all the better for your presence in it. Well known persons born on this date are: Jonas Chickering, manu- cturer; Prentice Mulford, journal- ist and author; Frank R. Stockton, author and humorist; Edward A. tand, clergyman and author; Elmer H. Capen, educator; Alpheus Hyatt, scientist. condition will it a con- (Copyright, 1925.) ‘Parking With Peggy’ Some girls want to grow up and be governor of the State, but most of them would rather just be home treasurer.” Stuffed Nut Peppers. Remove the tops from six green peppers and take out the cores and seeds. Placs in cold salted water, and bring quickly to the boiling point. Remove and drain. Mix together two cupfuls of soft bread crumbs, one cupful of chopped nut meats and one- half a_cupful of well seasoned toma- toes. Season to taste. Molsten well with brown or white sauce. Stuff the peppers, sprinkle with buttered crumbs, and bake for about 30 min- utes in a moderate oven, basting oc- casionally with hot water containing a lttle butter. Food Chopper Substitute. If you have no food chopper, a bak- ing powder can may be used instead to cut tomatoes, cabbage and green peppers. Place the vegetables in a pan and cut down through them with the can. You will find this much bet- ter than slicing with a knife. With marbles, jacks and sldpping ropes Every spring the children play, Keeping still alive the yezrs away. Brrcans BY J. C RENVILLE, DETERMINED T0 IMPOSE ATTAX, ASKED THE COLONISTS HOW THEY WOULD PREFER TO RAISE THE MONEY,BUT RECENING NO SATIS~ FACTORY SUGGESTIONS, HE ADVOCATED A STAMP TAX 10 GO ON ALL PAPERS AND DOCUMENTS — NOT ANTICIPATING VIOLENT OPPOSITION IN AMERICA PARLIAMENT PASSED THE STAMP ACT IN 1765, AUD THE COLONISTS WERE NOTIFED. MONDAY — RECEPTION OF THE STAMP ACT. —@ FOR DEFE! " S8 RICHAR P, WHERE = WILL YOU BE WHEN YOU ARE MIPPLE - AGEP, IF YOU KEEP UP THIS CONDUCT 2 o3 NS | wit CoryRIGHT. 25 ! PUNNO,— BUT | KNOW BUT | AINT ERE Youlll &t — < HORIZONTAL ) = A GIRLS NAME. & - CAVE. 7 - OPPOSITE TO YES., & - PRONOUN. 9 - PEVOURED. 10-OLY FORM OF You. 12 - PORTO, RICO (AB) 13-NEAR. 15 - NIKKNAME FOR ALFREV. 16 - NIKKNAME FOR THOMAS. |15- MO } VERTICAL | 1 -NICKNAME FOR BENJAMIN Z-ROAD (AB.)JELIZABETH 3 -NICKNAME foR —* 4-MEANING ONE. | 5-ONE WHO ACTS 11-TO PEVOUR 12-TO WORKK AT 14- TOWARD, ISOLUTION To |PUZILE 12 82 RNING AB) The Dull Child. Specialists who have giver of study to the minds of children !y tell us that from two to five per cent of them are dull, depending upon |p where you draw the line. I You draw it at those who cannot take the school course but can become useful people, it will be about three out of every 100. Now what is to be done with such children? Usually they are put in the back seat and left there term after term, until | their parents give in and let the leave school. n what? They get a job at something like running errands, or sweeping and dus helpers of some sort to others who have greater power. + Is that all that can be done? Are they to be helped all their lives? Of course they soon reach their earning capacity and it will not support them Many of those dull be saved if they early enough and who have physical helped at once, glasses fitted, ears attended to, noses oleared, throats fixed up, feet comforted and straight ened. If just the physical defects of | the dull “children were treated would help immensely. The Daily ti st th children could were discovered trained. T defects can be e Across. Resting place. Native of North Brita A curiosity Eagerness. . Bird. Careened . Terminate. . In past time. . Weighted. . Basement. ¥amous American general Famous Latin author. . Crafty. Peak of a Buropean mountain range. Having lost freshness. Winglike part. 26. 28, 31. Luminous circle around heavenly body. One habitually untidy. Part of the foot. 32. 33. CARROLL MANSFIELD it s of schoo &th o who gives their class d v sho me to wha goi not Iren as s by then ~hildrer oc d to see them do th are held to th rd they not san and t gathe power graduall Mo b: the developed t with sssibilities celis inte) ater vou are vein that w put hi 1 give personal attention 4 development of childrer care of this paper, inelosing ddressed, stamped envelope for reply (Copyright, 1825.) | Cross-Word Puzzle HE SEEEE &N e et Near the stern. . Contrivance enabling wearer to glide. . Fullgrown individuals. An account or reckoning. . Mexican dollars. Stocking. . Paradise. Down. . College ice Epoch. . Aviators. . Plaything. Salt. . Critical moment Minced form of Sums. . Light boat. . Royal. imall room for a prisoner. . Sharp, flat-bottomed rowboat. Triangular alluvial deposit at mouth of a river. . Takes on fuel. Deeds. Personal appearance. To deliver a sermon. Contemptuous expressions. Evaded. Legendary burlal place of King Arthur. Certain boxing blows. . Insec . Also. Observe. Mimic. . Employ. ‘God's.”