Evening Star Newspaper, May 4, 1925, Page 28

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FEATURES. ‘ilet Initials for Reader to Crochet. BY LYDIA LE Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Sliced Pineapple Dry Cereal, Cream roiled Bacon. Graham Gems. Coffee. BARON WALKER. LUNCHEON. Corn Omelet. Hot Roils. Raisin Bars DINNER. amb Stew with Dumplings. Toiled Potatoes. String Beans. Apple Tart, Coffee. GRAHAM G One pint of graham meal, 1 cup of flour. 1 even teaspoon of soda, 1; teaspoon of salt, 1 ta- blespoon of sugar, 2 tablespoons of molasses, 1 egg, 1 tablespoon of thick sour cream and enough buttermilk to make a Stiff hat ter. Bake in iron zem pan: This makes 18. CORN OMELET. Mix 1 ecup of (strained) with well beaten eggs, 1 teaspoon of cream, and i salt and pepper to season. Have | | a sheet-iron frying pan hot and i buttered Pour in the mixture and shake and tilt the pan until it is evenly cooked. Roll and serve on a hot platter. APPLE DART. Pare, quarter and core § ap: ples and put them in a buttered baking dish. Add 4 tablespoons of molas 4 tablespoons of brown sugar, 1 teaspoon of lemon juice, 1 teaspoon of ein- namon, 'y U poon of nutmeg, 1 tablespoon of butter cut into spoons of water rust with nd moderately hot.oven Tea. canned corn bits and 4 table wer with a rich pie ¢ its for the steam to escape bake in a Jideas | self-willed child's spirit and develop the inferiority complex in it by Comments on Modern Child Training Methods |B0r0fhyDix Although Life Has Changed Since Dad’s Day, Human Nature Isn’'t a Bit Different, and His Children Ought To Be Spanked as He Was. "THROUGH the death of a_daughter-in-law two grandchildren of tender age were recently committed to the care of a friend of mine. Having brought up a family of fine sons and daughters, this intellizent and energetic woman naturally thinks that she knows something aboutgrearing children. But her | do not meet with the approval of the undisciplined and pampered | modern youngsters. “Why, grandmother,” they exclaim continually to her, “you have such old-fashioned ideus about things! You are trying to rear us like children were reared in dad's day!" To them dad’s day is archaic and grandmother’s time is prehistoric, for in those dim, benighted ages children were made to mind. They were expected to be humble-minded and self-eftacing, and not to speak until they were spoken to, Nobody had thought any more then of a child's right to self-expression than they thought of the radio. Nobody then expected a child to monopolize the conversation at dinner any more than they expected to talk to Europe by wirele: Nor had it entered into the mind of man that you would break a making it behave and inculcating a respect for law and order in it : Parents still put their faith then in spanking instead of moral suasion a means of regeneration. and fathers and mothers still ruled their families instead of the household being bossed by a babe in arms or girls and b in their teens A et e truly. Vastly different admit that they can do nothing with their 10 or vear old children, and that they have no authority over them; when children monopolize the-conversation; when mother and father only the use of the automobile at such times as Johnny and Susie are not joy-riding in it: when mother can only weep when Mamie t off most_of her clothes and goes to a dance. because she can't stop her from doing the thinga that shock her: when callow boys and girls tell their fathers and mothers where to zet off instead of listening to their advice; and when youth doesn’'t even pretend to have any respect for age. when 12 the have STRANGE state of affairs from now, » wonder that the youngsters of today, observing the untrammeled | freedom of their generation, think that the homely virtues that were drilled into their parents are old stuff, and that it is just as foolish and out of date to be taught to obey and to be self-deprecatory as it would be to | to play croquet and ride a high-wheeled bicycle But vhat the modern child and modern parents do not seem to realize HOME-NOTES A very effective method of accenting ! the architectural value of a door and {at the same time of enriching the A BESIDF PAIN FILET INITIAL UPON AN EXQUISITE It is the little fouches about one’s home and person that tell whether or T t individual a lover of the tisti There are many things that, may be well done without a suggestion of artistry about One ay haps sleep as well t that has not the delicate diwork pon its hem, as dry upon a towel t proclaims itself useful without be. rnamental, rest s head in the vtime as comfortablly upon a oir pillow_the cove which is un- dorned t there sense of lux jon which comes when ifvin ich has been those who would have d individual touch ex cted, and paper an hei in a sense han pplied of th filet il i eade ocheted A and “B are nd from vgeir appear zathered what style f all the let T »n of the Gothie ttering, selected for its dignity and ACE. d modified to give the lacy nce requisite to filet. That clear is much in its favor. This iture is one which any housewife vill appreciate who has linens laun- ered away from home. A clear inj- 11 upon he “‘pieces” she sends fs e way of marking them and’ insur- 1g them against loss Show Up Well. are large enough to how up wi when inserted in a large ticle, such as a bedsheet or towel. lither’ of these household necessities » given disfInction by the insertion of s exquisite filet piece. The lower wo initials today max’ b artist has chosen It is an adapt e it The initials up may prettily with e hand wide lace a narrow crochet have bordered Set. st room set is made as follows, initials: Two hand tow 2d: one hath towel, with oss-stiteh: a face cloth and initial if desired est Room = the filet rimm in o ed initial h picot PIECES bou- | it{ | color interest of a room is the newly vived vogue for painting designs in »or panels. This decorative device was widely favored in France and Italy during the eighteenth century. Now, as then, SENT TO THE LAUNDRY, TOUCH, HELPS TO INSURE THEM pillow slips initialed and hemstitched, | | sheets likewise adorned. Boudoir pil- {lows of linen add charm. They also { may bear the filet initial inserted in the center, whether or not the pillow cover has any other handwork upon it 5-4 | For Traveling Cases. Traveling cases made of linen are very useful, and an initial upon them | may be considered a necessity. For the bride-to-be this is a very accept- | able gift. and one less likely to be| duplicated than many other things. | A flat piece linen serves the | foundation. Pockets of the same ma terial are sewed upon it. They may | be bound with linen or finished with a picot. The pockets shouid be of the size and shape carry comb | and brush, hairpins, powder and other articles of the toilet. The case is made to fold or up and tie. A filet initial should be inserted so that it will he conspicuous when the case is folded. rol For Door Fanel. Among the other wses it attains the greatest success in to which | rooms with plainly treated walls these filet Initials may be put is as| If it is impossible to have desizns an insert for a door panel A Y‘rllhé‘*x':]"'“'fl"'l on the doc yery often col coarse linen thread is advised for the |[ored prints can be framed in the making. Reticelli or evelet work may | panels with good effect. Or. as here | border the fabric square or rectangle | flower motifs cut from wall paper can | |around the initial. It is not neces.|Dbe used. These panels were painted |sary that the panel bear any other|dull green before the bright-hued e e | lowers yere pasted on. The effect is | The use of crocheted filet is nmu.,{qummw in keeping with the room’s {lar for underwear. In this event ase | AMeTican’ colonial furnishing. a very fine thread and needle 'in the | (Smynshs 20202 { making. Only a very fine filet is! suitable for such delicate fabrics as | | those used in lingerie | | Other Letters. Groups of the specially designed | filet initials, of which these are the| s ppear from time to time. | | Directions for their making, after | | they have been printed, will be sent| A curious name to indicate the size | to any who desire them and accom- | of a sheet of paper! And in it is hid | pany “their requests with a self-ad-|den an interesting tale. | dressed and stamped envelope. Loose| As a measure to increas | stamps and postea will not bring | needy revenues, Charles I of the directions e initials “A” and | made patron: of the privileze *are now ready. Requesis should | manufacture paper. And as proof of be directed to Lydia Le Baron Walker, | the fact that the paper was made un this paper der the auspices of the crown it hore HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWTON. “Foolscap.” IN THE GARDEN As Reported hy Flizabeth Urquhart and Edited by Luther Burbank. arms i Under Cromwell. Parliament decreed | that the old royal heraldry should be | replaced by a fool's eap and bells. | And though this was later repealed. | the change was made and the paper | WITH BURBANK | Lilies. Mr I n 30 vears ago Burbank be- the native Pacific coast amc themselves and with a umber of promising foreign species nd varieties. The crosses of the first ere wholly successful and satisfac sy, but n lily could be ossed with any of our western lilies and this was in accordance with the neory that the limits of affinity had cen reached with the foreizn species hich made cessful crossing im ossible. It easy to persuade Mr. Bur ink to talk about the lilies—his heart 1d been in the work and his beauty- ing soul had rejoiced in the glow =, fragrant creations which grew der his hand and opened for the st time hefore the eves of the world One could but “recall the line \ thousand vears in thy sight is but < vesterday’ when listening to the iet. gentle e telling of the work 50 years. here had heen no for vears of selecting ossing and_ reselecting, of continu us work and hope. but never of uragement. In his own words. nk an my thot many yves a hese Mr 1ts be imagined after of patient care and walking among these lilie: dewey morning, I looked upon new forms of heauty on which “Parking With Peggy” ““The co-ed who used to he concerned ~ith that schoolgirl complexion now levotes her time to those schoolgirl complexes.” used for governmental records was } called “foolscap.” And the title -has remained, applied now to legal sheets, , other eves had mever gazed? A new {world of beauty seemed to have heen found and a full recompense for all the care bestowsd upon them iisho sopsanil 1alls Jhisys ibesn’ssup: And not just a few hundreds or thou. | Planted by ather watermarks sands of these lilies, but thousands of g oy bulbs of each variety, and halfamillion | bulbs vet to unfold their petals for | Pthe first time—and several pounds of hybridized lily seed planted each sea- | son! It seems all on so stupendous a | scale of work and experiment ardly to be r . vet all so quietly | and simply told—all in the day's work, | the year's work, the work of a life- | time given up to creating new forms {of beauty and grace. Many questions were there seemed no end to the fascinat- |ing subject, but Mr. Burbank never | tired of telling me of his lilies. There were plants six feet high with bright vellow flowers, growing beside one perhaps only six inches high with dark red flowers. some with upright flowers, some with nodding blossems, | and with leaves varying from light | to dark green and growing in new | and unexpected ways. | ‘These hybrid lilies are the resuits | of crossings selected for vigor, hardi- | ness, rapid increase and fragrance. | and in producinzg them a broad foun | dation has been laid for endless varia tion. 4 I could not help thinking of the fragrance—the “composite fragrance,” | las it has been called—of all these | { 100,000 lilies in hloom! And. indeed. | everything seemied to have been being though asked and ! | | | One Mother Say Under my Kitchen table is a hox | of baby's toys with a top on hinzes This 1 covered with blue and white | oilcloth like that on the table. This |drawn on a gigantic scale—the pol-|is easily wiped off when sticky fingers {lination, the planting of the sveds by | make unsightly marks, and it fits into | the pound, the growing of tens of |the color scheme, not at all spoiling thousands of plants—and then the|the appearance of the room. size of some of the hybrid lilies. {Copyright, 1925.) 1 have hardly dared to deal in fig ures, fearing error, and yet Mr. Bur bank mentions thousands ‘as thouzh they were hundreds and stresses more | the strangeness of form and curious | variations than figure: | “One seedling,” he said, “which | grows only 10 inches high, produced | from 20 to 40 blossoms on each of | the short stalks. One small lily bore 28 flowers, while another with eight stems from the bulb bore over 300 buds and flowers.” (Copyright. e 2 = r Caramel Cake Filling. | Mix three cupfuls of sugar with one and one-half cupfuls of fresh sweet milk, and -one_tablespoonful of | white corn sirup. Put on the fire to boil but do not stir. Now take one-half a cupful of sugar, put it in a small pan and set on the stove. Shake occasionally but do not stir, It will gradually turn brown, then melt into a golden liquid. - Keep it at this stage by removing to a warm place on the stove. When the sugar and milk have bofled until a-table- Egg Savory. spoonful in a saucer will cream, re- B SR | move from the fire, and while still Mince four hard-boiled eggs fine, | FUONT T0qy o ramel liquld, beating | mix with one dessertspoonful of flour, | rapidly. Add vanilla and almond ex. one of finely minced cold ham, one| lf{:lshfln‘?"heal \lndl]fl creamed. | B welenrnishnieTanit the filling curdles when the cara | of finely minced parsley, a tablespoon- | , o} js"aqded it is because the milk | ful of sweet cream, a tablespoonful | was not fresh, Use evaporated milk of melted butter, #nd one raw egg.The | if not sure of your supply. If the whole should then be well beaten to. filling curdles, ~ strain it through | zether. formed into balls, dipped in|cheesecloth, and you can use it. If legz and fine bread crumbs, and | the caramel lumps instead of mixing, plunged in hot fat in a frving basket | it is not hot enough. It muft be a to fry until a golden brown. Drain|thin liquid. If cooked too long, a and serve very hot garnished with |little cream will make it spread onm crese, cake, | | | is that, wnile we have many new mechanical inventions that have changed the outward conditions of life, life itself remains the same and we have the same old human nature. We haven't improved on that we haven altered the immutable law of cause and effect. In dad’s day he had the trotting horse, and the side-bar lancers, and the church sociable, and only the more prosperous had electric | lights, and we were still gasping over the marvels of the telephone, and | phonographs were wheezing. Now we have high-powered cars, and jazz, and | cabarets, and all-night clubs, and petting parties. and wireless telegraphy. and the radio. But what we sow we siill reap, and the wages of sin is still death. | e | "THERE is no modern invention that saves the hoy and girl who go wrong | from being punished just as bitterly as they were in dad's day or grandma or great-grandfather’s day. The boy who drinks prohibition a and buggy. and the booze gets even more soddenly grunk and descends even more quickly to the | gutter than did the sot of pre-Volstead days. The proflizate youth who | wastes himself and his substance on wine, women and song finds himself | feeding on the husks amid the swine, just as prodigal sons have always done. [ Nothing keeps the girl who dallies along the primrose path from bruising her feet on the stones and crucifying herself. .Shame is still the portion of the wild women who flout the convention of Society i And honor and riches and the respect of one’'s fellow creatures are still the reward of clean living, of sobriety, of self-control, of thrift and industry. | Such being the case and still paying dividend ill teaching them to ¢ dad’s day? ' Dad was taught obedience. which is respect for law and order father never had to get up in the night and bail him out of a he has had to do his son t the old stand the matter with < they were in the old virtues still doing business in happiness and prosperity, what's iren and still bringing them up and dad's | police court as Dad was taught self-control, and made to do things because it was his duty to do them He was taught to speak the truth and deal fairly He was taught to deny himself. and had the habit of industry ingrained in him. and it h: made of him good citizen, a A hushand and father, and prospe man Doubtless the way that dad was reared does seem old-fashioned now, hut it brought results that modern rents do not seem to be getting with their up-to-date methods DOROTHY DIX. (Coprrizht, 192 The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle 1925.) (Copyright, Across. City in Florida. Away. Concurs. . A worthless lemving. Girl's name. Encountered. Father, A church @bbr.) . Printer’s measure (plural). . A collection of facts. Atmosphere. . Five-sided figures. Domestic animal. Devoured. . A possessive. . Railroad (abbr.). . Behold. . Greek letter. The upper part. By means of. Projection at the top of a building. | . Entrance. Small aquatic_amph! . The figurative use of a word. . Floor covering. Postscript (abbr.). Man’s name. . One (indefinite). Street (abbr.). . Cult Come in. EfMuence. . Butwark. . A letter. Put in place. Member of a mixed tribe of Luzon . Grow old. Southern cuckoo. Island in the Mediterranean. . Painful spots. . Perform. eat in a church Conjunction. 37. Engineering degree (abb: ibians. ). s Puzzles. | " Good Beef Stew. Cut one and one-half pounds of | skirt steak into three-inch pieces and | brown on all sides in a tablespoonful | |of hot fat. Cover with three cupfuls | of water. When slowly boiling, add | seasoning to taste of salt, pepper, cel- ery salt and paprika. Simmer slowly for an hour, add one stalk of celery dices and 10 small whole potatoes. Ten minutes before the stew is done |mash six small fresh tomatoes and |add. Thicken the jujce with flour and serve with the méat and potato. Serve with hot baking powder bis cuits, Answers to Yesterday 2 - Prune Savory. Stone eight prunes carefully. Blanch eight almonds and put them in a fry- ing pan with a little butter, and stir until very lightly brown. ~Sprinkle with salt and cayenne pepper and in- sert one in each prune. Remove the rind from four slices of bacon and cut each slice in halves. Smooth with a knife, place a prune in the center of each piece, roll up, run a skewer through them, and fry or grill until the bacon is cooked. Turn often. Serve each on a crouton of bread ar. ranged on a hot dish, and garnish with parsle Prices realized on Swift & Cnmg-ny sales of carcass beef.in Washington, D: C.. for week ending Saturday, May 2. 1825, on shij ts sold out, ranged from 12.50 cents o 22.00 cents per pound and averaged 16.44 cents per pound.—Advertisement, | me to do and give it THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, MAY % 1925. It started to look like rain Sattiday | morning, doing everything but thun- d'I thawt, G. I better hurry up and ot out before it starts to rain and +a makes me stay in. Ari 1 quick started to put my cap on and ma called down stairs, Benny are you going out now? Yes mam. Im allmost out. T sed. Well I wunt you to carry these papers and magazines down the celler, ma sed All rite, as soon as 1 come back, sed O nao. on the contrar: you g6 out. ma_sed. Aw Ge, ma, holey nick I sed Wats your hurry, have you a ter ribly important ingagement? ma sed es mam, I sed, and ma sed, Wat is it? and I sed. Well 1 told Leroy Shooster T mite see him outside hix house this morning, and if I aint there soon he mite not wait. Wat a terrible clamity that would be, come Tite up heer and get the papers, you can do it in 3 trips, ma sed Wich T did it in 2, on account of me being o strong for my size, ony 1 dropped the ferst load twice and the 2nd load 3 times on account of carry ing too meny and going too fast at the same lime because I didn’t wunt it to start to rain before I got through, and I thawt I better clime out through the celler window for safety sake in case ma mite think of something elts for re chance to and ma put her der smokes, G win ain before I got ¢ hed out of her window and saw m saving. Benny come rite hack in the house this minnit and cleen up after vourself. theres papers ali down the steps and through the hall like 4 regular trail, now you herd me, no arguments please. And T quick ran in agen and started to pick them up thinking. G whiz darn sh shang the luck. Ony it dident rain after all and the sun came out looking if it has bin out all the time Proving it dont allways rain COLOR CUT-OUT HANSEL AND GRETHEL. More Hard Times. 1t was not Yery long untii times be- came worse than ever at the wood- cutter's home. The family had only half a loaf left when one night the children overheard their parents talk- ing. “We must take them farther into the woods this time,” said the wife. The father was very sad, but he was forced to agree that they mus the children. When his parents were asieep Han- up to go out and fill with stonex, ax he had done but his stepmother had iocked and he could not zet out Here is pretty littie golden-haired Gretel. Color her bodice hlack. leave her apron and collar white. but make the of her ragzed little dress green. pocke hefore the door My Neighbor Say: Grease stains on leather may removed by applying_hen- or pure turpentine. Wash the spots afterward with well- heaten white of an egg or a good leather reviver. To determine whether a cake fs baked. press gently on the top. If the impression of the finger springs back the cake is baked. Should the imprint re- main, the cake must be re- turned to the oven. When cutting up jelly squares use ‘a pair of perfectly clean scissors that have been dipped in cold water. The jelly can be cut into much smaller pieces than when a knife is used, and dissolves quicker. 0ld pieces of velveteen should be saved for polishing cloths They will answer the purpose of chamois for plate-cleaning, etc., perfectly. ““A place for everything and everything in its place” is the watchword of a good house- keeper, and the kitchen in this respect needs more attention than any other room in the house. The table should be placed near the fire, so that there need be no running back ward and forward when cook- ing. Close to the table should be a cupboard, holding salt, spices, vinegar, flavorings and all the little ndds and ends that one constantly uses in cooking. Around the sides of the cup- board should be hooks to hold cups, spoons, eggbeaters, nut- meg grater, etc. Paint brushes are as good as new if washed in hot soda water and soft soap. be zine 1 love 1o lie awake st night With not a flur\g te hear or see. That's <hen I get acgurinted with TRe utter stranger hnwn as me. ™ CAwy jest before | OMAN’S Ramble Around BY RI PAGE. South America PLEY. PueNTe del INcA Forty-Third Dgy. 1LOS ANDES, Chile, Nch 8.—It t midnight and here I am out the patio of the Hotel Sud-Americaln trying to write by the flickering of a kerosene lamp that is perilously suspended from the porch ceiling by a strinz. 1 am afraid to go 10 bed. My room is full of strangers. Ma should not say my *room: rather | their room. This hotel station and is official stopover place for passengers en route to Buenos Airex over the Andes. | is always overcrowded. I was crowded out But I have many 1o blame blame Germany it the overnight only myself and rothat. I always good is still being done At Llai-Llai. pronouncad like a pup velps when you step on his tail—the train from Santiago joined the train cominz through from Valparaiso; and I joined with Hans Steinke coming | through fro Bavaria. That ix what 1 blame myself for. Hans spoke gzood enough English and better Spanish, 1 hope. “Vell, vell! he was always ‘you like th America, hah sprechen Spanish? Ho! no matter | Chust stay by me sit und I say any anything for you. Vell! vell— " Hans is @ tanner and he was tell- ing me the hide and hair of the busi {ness when the train pulled into the inky blackness of the Los Andes sta ion. Suddenly—like a storm at it began raining pandemonium A mad scramble for rooms in the Hotel Sud-Americano. I was bounced about on the wild Latin waves as baggage | was thrown out of car windows and off the platforms. 1 saw running away with mine a him, only to bump head softest part of my hig Ge Vell! vell’” he said 1 lost vou vet. Chust stay ind 1 et you a room eter 1ran af ng int ‘man friend thought 1'd by me sit Yah as 1 gladly lobby. The had heen One took a m transterred this om clerk was the station hote tryin to handle a True to Its Name. The Great Warld knows no worse disaster. Than letting Fire be the master —Old Mother | Fire is called the Red Terror by the {little people of the Green Forest and the Green Meadows, and they could | not have chosen a truer name. The very smell of it carries terror to the little people in feathers and fur. Lit- tle timid Whitefoot the Wood Mouse is no more frightened at the smell of smoke than is great big Buster Bear. So it is not to be wondered at that Jimmy Skunk hurried home as fast as he could when he discovered the Red Terror just starting beside the road | through™ the Green For He felt that if he would be safe anywhere it | would be at home under the henhouse in Farmer Brown's harnyard. ¥ N his | “IT'S THE RED TERROR! CRIED JIMMY. see he knew that Farmer Brown and Farmer Brown's Boy could and would fight the Red Terror if it should come that way. Just before he reached home he met Mrs. Jimmy and the children starting out. Jimmy stopped them. Mrs. Jim: my looked at him in surprise, for it was clear that Jimmy was frightened land Mrs. Jimmy could not recall ever having seen Jimmy afraid before. “What is it?" she asked $ “It's the Red Terror:” cried Jimm: “It has started to eat up the Green Forest over there along the old road, {and you know what the Red Terror is when once it gets started. Keep the children.at home. 1t will not he safe for them to go anywhere tonight, for there is no knowing where the Red Terror will go. I've hurried as fast ias I could so as to get here before you ! had led them somewhere where the | Red Terror might come. I'm quite out of breath, my dear.’ Meanwhile Mrs. Jimmy looking toward the Green Forest. first she could see no signs of the Red Terror, but while Jimmy was talking she saw a thin streamer of smoke rise above the treetops and grow darker and larger, until in a few minutes it was @ cloud. Then in turn she be- came filled with the same fear that had driven Jimmy home so fast, and she headed the chiliiren straight back for their home under Farmer Brown's henhouse. All this time the Red Terror ‘had been growing from a wee fire in the dry leaves, where a burning cigarette had been thrown from an automobile, to a flaming, hungry monster that was spreading along that side of the old wood road, but was unable to jump across it to the side nearest Farmer Brown's. Fortunately, there was little wind and that was blowing the other way. But how it did ea up every- thing on that side of the road! It ate all the dry leaves on the ground. It climbed up the bushes and burned off the leaves and the bark. so that while it left them standing it left them dead, dead and black. It climbed a pine tree faster than | ever Chatterer the Red Squirrel could do it, and almost as quickly as you can draw your breath the beautiful green top had disappeared. had been eaten up, and the Red Terror had leaped across to the next tree. It was beginning to snap and sputter and growl. And the smoke began to hurry had been light | BEDTIME STORIES At A NARAL BRIDGE W TE ANDES like ) surging mob I form in line turn in a case | mill around. talking. My bi their proper instead they pushing and man_friend al n the Not had ns, I thousz this and fellows ht myself the like he and kindly Another I went the ‘Finis,” he said entually—as he agreed 1o pu with three others bres they were. here 1 trying Hans. He I'n find him, T tid. 1 od later that her in the meot ve him that he had re for serap of paper had pres thought I missed =0 I never met anc German the ser me vom k myself. A special courtesy up in the room 11 hon im. down the to write he lam 1 Santiago, any atio, ing should never wa There was a of a town you born in if you ¥ by far the 1to do over. It charming place that I have vet oriental is upon. Santiage is tropical; and it is completely sur ded by the towering, snow-capped Andes. I had my ticket bought Buenos Afres, but I was tempted more than once to tear it up as some dark-eyed senorita smiled an ve i smile into my soft along the Plaza de 1 had dinner last San Cristobal me of t feet Kkerosene have left zood wonldn't had the _the mind whole kind heinz thin; most town is come It elus and Ar night at the The view Jread 1.000 rin; ce-work memory: and The Virgin below in still sparking in my wingz features of hilltop—a colossal statue 70 feet high th from San ¢ n blessir the on more the Santia istretched icht wher at night one that lingers despite the depressin flickering of the kerosene istobal, arms zlorious mp ov ead BY THORNTON W. BURGESS ahead of it and warned the little pe ple in feathers and fur that the Red Terror was loose and that they must fly or run for their liv | And some there were | the warni tion to fly | ful fear rushed tow from the Red Ter! growling more and more angrily | the growl had become a roar ue to its name and spread terror in directions, and the terror was the | sreater because night was epproach ng and many of the little people knew ot where to go or what to do And all this terror and all this u n was caused by the carel { throwing of a cigarette from an aut mobile Jimmy Skunk knew, for he h; seen who, receiv eir drea stead of away de (Copyright. 1925, by T. W. Burgess What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKF Tomorrow’s noon. a preva conditions ntinuation of during the latter and they counsel fort alonz any lines of a constructive nature. After the planetary | aspects become rather unsettled. and, | although they are not definitely ad verse, neither are they favorable as earlier in the day 1t will be well | provided it is practicable, to ‘‘stop, | look and listen.” In the evening vi | brations are stimulating and will have |a marked effect on the emotions pecially those related to love and af { fection. This is an excellent oppor | tunity for putting your love to the test, as the signs clearly indicate re- | sponsiveness. | Subject many ailments in its early infanicy, a child born tomorrow will require more than ordinary care and attention. Once, however, this | ticklish period is passed, it will be normally healthy and strong. ‘em peramentally, it will be very self willed, and have a compelling but not necessarily attgactive personality. It will, from babyhood and on through life, always know what it wants, and will be ready to go to szreat lengths in order to attain its desires or sat isty its wishes. It promises to excel in study and will be an omnivorous reader. with a very retentive mem ory. It will not make friends readily or easily, but will have an ideal home life. You. who were horn on May more visionary than businesslike success has not singled you out its votary, if vou are engaged i humdrum occupation. You are well equipped to handle evervday af fairs, but seem more adapted to shine in literary or artistic lines of en deavor You have a strong predilection for | good clothes, and are more than or dinarily vain of your personal ap pearance. You absorb flattery, and have a great craving for social stand ing, rather than for the intellectual pleasures to he derived from good so. cety. You have very great ambition but are too adverse to plodding (o realize your hopes and dreams. Your disposition is a happy one, and your affections are deep-rooted and in spire reciprocity. You are easy to get along with, and your home life is happy and contented. Well known persons born on this date are: Frederick A. P. Barnard, educator- John W. Draper, chemist and physi ologist; John B. Stetson, merchant and philanthropist; Hubert Howe Bancroft, historian; William Potts, author; Elmer Gates, inventor and scientist. are those part azgressive until noon. . are and any not (Copyright, 1925.) i The cost of broadcasting, figured on the actual cost of electricity con | sumed. is ahout one cent for fifteen minutes. | Less than 1 per cent of the esti mated original deposits of soft coal in the United States has been ocon- sumed. . /

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