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WOMAN'S PAGE. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTO) JUST HUMANS D. C., SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 21, 1925. FTEATURES. By Gene (:al'l'l LITTLE BENNY © McQwre Newsmaper Srndicate SUB ROSA i BY Uses of Mirrors for Decoration The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKEI MM Ll L (Copyright, 1925.) Last Sattiday opened, h saying, Speshill for opening day, creem soda will be given free the new drug store| ving a sine in the window a ice with Idle Gossip? There are few people more unpopu- lar, more universally derided than the town gossips who go about spreading each and every perchase. slander and malicious rumors at every Me thinking, G. And I quick went door. i g home and ma was up in her room tak- Kven the greatest scandal lover | |ing: things out of one draw and. put among onr fair sex has a twinge of ting them in another, me saying, Hay contempt for the professional zossip. ma. do vou need enything from the The decent. sensible. fair-minded girl drug store, Im going erround that of today wiil shut her ears to the way. = ; ugly insinuations of the scandal-| /v ves I do. I need a Jak of coa monger on minding her own creem and a packidge of Fsmeralda busines face powder number 6, hers the money, But she won't shut ma sed justifiable criticism which may Is that all, are you her to understand a man who need enything elts? I haps almost a stranger to her Wy let me see, ves ! whom she has heen attracted. milky magnesia and 5 two cent stamps. | IUs fairly diffienlt to determine un And I went to the new drug store | der just which head some remarks and bawl the coal creem and took a | may ‘fall. ’ | chocklit ice cream soda, and then I| Perhaps the hest rule | wawked ervound the block and came that you must consider the s back and bawt the Esmeralda face the criticism hefore you can powder number £ and asked for a whether it’s nasiy zossip or straight <trawherry fce cream soda. the man plain truth. saving. Wy. vou jest had one dident If an old friend of vom von? and me sayinz. No. I had chock comes to vou and tells vou frankly | iit_and 1 wt something elts, that Arthur J.. on whem vou've had | Well. [ can stand it if you can the rather a ecrush. is running avound | man sed. And I ate the strawherry with girls of questionable reputation ice creem soda and went and stood and that vou're getting vourself in bad | outside a wile and then came back all round by heing scen in his com-, and bawt the milky Geala - and pany—then pretiy safe in di- | asked for a razberrs ice creem soda. gesting this information and waihing the man saving. My s is your Arthur J. very carefully father a doctor If. however, an older . No. 1 sed, and he sed, He awt 10 he decided taste for Jane—If 1 Would it ‘would save him some bills. And 1| proaches you with a complacent smile | You Do? ate the razberry one and went out and nd purrs softly. “Ms dear, 1 do hope | 5 s . ' came rite back and bawt the stamps | vou know that Arthur J. is giving that | Sap—Th* Same as You and asked for a orange fce creem soda. | dful Hopkins zirl a rush: vou real- | Jane Wretch! the man saving. Nuthing doing, we : ought not to be seen with hin so | = {Consrzhl. 10350 don't give them awav with postage Crawi Bt much when he zoes out with sich stamps. vou'll haff to write 1o the | !9 Smelk : dreadful people.” vou must her ears to help | a per- | and to | sure vou dont sed, and ma sed I want a bottle of | wirce of | decide | motner's jest vou're | | wonian with a | hady siories ap Mere to Pa of th® Picture. What Across, arrangzemen placing any creaence me it a hour And T dident arange fce |14, Tantalum (@abhbr.) el in her tile creem soda 1l a Iater wen | 16. Entrance. S Some women love gossip for it my sister Gladdis came home and {15 Prefix meaninz azain sake—t will add a little he 1eked her if she needed envihing at | Is in debt A cole 1 dittle there, until the most innocent the drug store and she needed a Para Chojcest Anditory escapide omes a highly i <e lip stick number 7 and a bottle of City in Italy 10, Southe ffai. And it such women vou amo nale polish. me getting the City in Vermont 12) S must beware- it is their advice and orange ice creem soda w the liy heir stories of your friends which vou stick and another must distrust i Live. hocklit one with Perforaled the nale palish effect beinz This mistrust of dident have not, however e D e Negative iaie) \Wrecking by Letter?—Il.ong Fngagements., ! e the nny ellect bl e T vou to refuse 1o - » dinnir (ireek letier listen to valuable advice from { monnt of of good taste and sense. EAR the | is silent until 1 feel that 1 can If your good friend comes to with an unpleasant story about new girl chum you've acquired, don’t | shows interest in anvthing. He wdoptthe attitude that all unpleasant | live with some one with glaring criticism ie slander I 10 good to ask him to be cheerful. 1t only irritates hin Ask yourself whether the good ! 1 would never have the heart to leave him hecause he is of such a sensi friend may not be trusted to be de- | tive” unhappy nature, and I could not bear to hurt him: but 1 am myself of cent enough to refrain from slander— | a highly nervous tempersament and it tells on me dreadfully. 1 am at the end | and whether it’s probably not for your | of my tether. Can you offer any advice? MYRTL {own good t vou should know ihis | mirror doubles | disagreeable truth about your new ornaments or flowers bhe- |l acquaintance Toleranc and breadanindedness do | | not admit of any tale telling or idle | Your Lossip. that like the They do admit. however. « justifi- | cheery and (all of able eriticism which may henefit sc the house girl who has fallen in with the wr And t He i« kind of people whose nay is It yvour And on own and sive mer part. rooral Two Weddings Prescribed for This Case—Can the ! Divorced Wite and Mother PPrevent [Further Shexe sip must aloft DOROTHY DINC 1 dive hut he is the with a her has always heen very maost vith imaginable. He upright trying person to live searcely stand it. and rarely smiles: seldom has many spleadid traits, bt T would rather fauits than this death-in-life existence. It does | COLOR CUT-OUT Incursions Answer to Yesterdav's Pn 5 8, [ MILES STANDISH. ~|0 MIRRORS MAY WAL HEIGHT TO JEASINGLY FURNITURE. AND SEEM TO ADD | Part of the face quals in rank O'min o~ 1 » 00 Mirrors are Pown. n decoration They iy be nsed t the event the mantel value of them Answer: 1 think have let v morbid and that you should 1y 1o look at it What is vour brother vou wself zet the from # sane standpoini grievance” iled down, it amounts to only the fact is not s v. talkative, hail-fellow-well-met sort of 4 chap, up type. Youtwould like him to be breezy and aregular little ray casons Person hetween S0 that | To and Man's nickname and Staff of sunshine around International lanz e Printer’s measire veu Auditory per things Spawn of fish son don't dismiss him W & Note of diatonic = the epithet “Nasty gossip. e Weigh the matier carefnlly in Well, my dear, the man cannat heip wre. He is built that way o ind whether the informa®! With a_pad n his lips. and he can no n chatterer than he veceived doesn’t come un. | ©an a beautiful. tall. shim movie hero. Probably he would like and heading of “Cold, Hard Truth.” | What we call the life party, hut he eannot. Spell quiries directed 10 o Zi0| <omewh size 1o a room act ved to hrighten They may ctorial Effects. used 1o enlarge the size of A room should he hung without anv uction before it, so that its entire nzth reproduces a part of the room This makes the reflection appear to 1dd just <o much more space and en-| large the room thereby. If the mirror reflects another hall. a stretch of lawn or a view from a then. not only is space but vistas of heauty are added. Clever interior decorators | nse looking glass reflectors ingeniously | to produce pictorial effects and vistas The home decorator does well to fol (Conyrieht such leads i Adding Light to Rooms. HOME NOTES mirror is hung in a dark cor artificial RY dark corners A vou village ve an appea of £ mHEOE ips and jokes Mes oz m fecting vistas, v in small ms ) obs : oy iy rease the vith no a repressed. silent sort. whose plific vea is wdditions. or superfie want to throw tdm o offol show the of heizht duce tretment that must and N ns o 3 flowers b ment him. informant is a reliahl ves and makes vou | 0> Mmir > > 0040 " 0m DU~ the ot and bling - o p room or a erential beautiful window ming that t ve a fee Jrnit 0> o | l,v iz THE WIDOW" BY HAZEL DEYO BATCH ve h oand pr Eal e e hecome eviet ion von've to e zay in correct decoration er the and be not made mixer of eve Since ided tnd them atch is re More have mirrors suct N possi Brovided lities in Probably sou are entirely wronz in thinking he is s because he does not babble or wear the smile that does not cd I have | even known people to make a mistake of thinking that such persons were | stupid. Nothing is farther from the truth. If men and women are silent it | is no sign that they are brooding over secret sorrows. On the contrary, one | lof the reasons why they don't talk is zenerally because they are thinking | more interesting things than they would get in the ordinary chit-chat with And it is the peonle who are forever talking who have | sl and depressed | placed correctly must the light in such a way that it flected 1o give the effect desired over, their should not be ob- If a vious, but they should be so incorpo- ner to brighten it, the necessity of rated into the scheme of the room having it catch the light that reasons are lost in beauty of window by day and some effects. it by night fs rapidly understood Over-Mantel Mirrors. n order to bring about the desire effect, the looking glass can seldom he but rather at such zle that it light eahonts have BUEpOse Fay Carson is mot attractive to men. She reads a book ertolling the charms of a poung widow, and she decides to masquerade as during her vacation. With a vardrobe stock of nating tricks is quite the popular oirl at the Poppu Inn. but pression on one Dean Hamp | thoug e were ¢ nwield not JENNY WREN. ane fasci- Tendte her fon and a she What yvou need in vour house is « A quiet chap like vour brother is not likely to hu Ve {can help him to one. Chum up with some big. stronz. whelesome. hum. many | €l with & langh that is hung on a haie trigger and who can do the talking then. | for two. and make 5 mateh between her and vour brother 1 Then zet married some man w loves the his {own voice whe will the tront door i eveninz and n a monolozue in oing on when von fall asleep at nishi. Twn should not DOROTHY couple of perfectly good weddings himself up a wife, hut you It always pavs to s in interior fixtures rather to he slow in adopting them. for investment is sonnd that vears lonzer. Henr ve. hear ve this is the newly discoverad vogne in side-wall lighting fiviures. The smart are showing anticipate fash than s most e iiving and dining reoms is hecanse it provides another ity to reflections 1o Piease note that it is ove the mantel mirror in | really in the corner welcome | gistance from the a QPPOFUN- | enx the aren th rous just she seem any im- nse 1age, mean dow M ~. vourself to e sonnd « ton. In weantime she is are now in difference. The mirror s the mantel. hnt is an entirely separate riicle of furnishinz. There is a dig mity ahont these mirrors that is lack inz in the mirrors introdnced mzantels, where 18y seem to he Ajuncts, ofien poorly vecent vears there heen a tendeney mirrors as windows e Vo when the introduction of a window ether wetter off and happier wonld distinetly add 1 atrractive-{ [ I T ; Ll ness of the interior. The i : : TMIss Dl m divided into panes. and has draperies D' Iv\'m e into as if a g e ov ow o ome is due A | nl ‘t"erq"L"‘-';"::;ilv’v '\\I:‘nr'i ‘» 1 ;n‘\ rE ;‘,‘\ appeal to work n for what she can get ont of them. N she has her rach take a trai it el et il i Rees W clutches on another man, who has a wite and children, and T am considering discorer e & a conservatory abloom writing 10 him and telling him just what kind of woman she is | Gelllne it the stile of th: Ayl St L e oL the Toou part of my sorrow is the effect my divorce has on my son. He ix 18, EnON SAIE o the oMmE BiG S s e e ]»1 reflecting vistas | developed a recklessness that he never had before. He refuses t 3 =l al cha Such treatment, how church with me any more and savs, “Father went to church, and look what | ¢of 1t W8S SPeS Srant e Feturie | i | | Or it may he lonz and narrow and | ever, is dificult unless handled by a | s f : divided into sections like 3 trypiteh. | trained person. The mirrors cut in 1?‘.?.11{3#’24".{".1 e cmbittered B s con. What o 1o TROURLED, " | Killed at all: i had gl been @ mis- T people plan to s i dau in the Re Tnek ) apend the ind her Den. -4t Fay's ror and there is n v treat <hops Taa Sy 0 Mea people like vonrself ar ther live 1o Kshires DIN vom ninz spot thew separate the De suogestion ass s Lroken-hearied. divorced woman. My rscrupilons woman who nses hey My The Captain’s Return. The bridegroom started and siared as if a ghost had appeared. Trem i bling and frightened. the bride, Pris. | and has) oiy. hid her face in his shoulder 80 0} por it was Miles Standish. returned and in her ca knees the place e rocky ledoe er- Sibie reak would anyway possibility ness to ventures out on a tending over a hundred-foot preci- pice. CHAPTER XXX, The Second Break. the sickening realization of her As she crouched th went hurtli Was her Or again the s son H in the mirror may be a quaint oves simulating window panes are take ald colonial type with a historic equently used for over-mantel mir- an Ttalian looking rors. Sometimes the s have wee characteristic Italian frame. In 1 or glass ornaments in them @am‘lME STORIES The Hunted Hunter. The hunter ne - At Answer: You can clear vour conscience by writing to the man and warn. give me” he said 10 John| o ihardiness Fay had once more ing him against the vamp. but 1 do not think it will do any good. An in.|lden. “Allis forzotten between us | joced her eves and stood weak and decep s cube s fatuated man is deaf to all reason. and, of course, this siven will tell him | #X€ePt the dear. old friendship.” | jremblinz. clinginz to a tree at the rible penalty Jizht-he that vou are jealous and mpted by motives of revens ‘Then. turning to the bride. he wished | Gige of the mountai Her head was ed a \fter When a married man gets to the place when he lets a woman drug his Ner jov and smilingly said. “I should eelinz and the whole world innocent honor 1o sleep with her painted lips and choke his sense of duty and responsi. | h#ve remembered the adage. “IT to resound to that awfnl roar bility with her white arms he is beyond all helping. He will not heed the W#nt a thing well done. you should | waters far helow e 1 red-light danger signal of another man's home in flames. He ignores every |40 it yourself., the Devii's Den. but what a price warninz, and nothing but his ewn bitter experience will ever wake him up, | Great was the people’s amazement. | she had paid for her curiosity! Ax but greater still their rejoicing to | she had theught to trinmph over the have their heloved captain back once | athers: more safe and sound. They crowded I must make around him. all talking and 0ld herself over Honing a the happy off style throt rair she being with glass me piece of n had hurt masquerade, and all had hoped miration and a seemed she no one hy BY THORNTON W. BURGESS found | to gain by it was a tention thinzs th And then miser she If some. Curious how much more power evil women® Strange how easily they can lead i 3 | folly! Strangest of all. how plastic in thei terns of many desi < instead of !h“\'l—:\ih they befool the most eynical and suspic eleciric candle sconces we have grown Yon are right in saving that the =0 familiar with in the last few yvears. ' children. Kven cold. nnimaginative statistics show that They are now correct and fashion-' state that the great hody of the yvounz h diums that able for living room. dining room and | reformatories are the children of divorced parents or bedroom, as well as for porch and | strife. hall. Pairs may be used on either | side of a window, doorway, wall panel | or fireplace, and single lanterns are lalso much in demand. They are, of course, selected to harmonize in period with the room which they are to grace. women sometimes have tellizent men int hands strong men than good unimaginable hecome, how afraid.”” thought the hunter But in this he was mistaken. The truth was. Prickly Porky knew too much to he fraid. He knew that hunter wouldn't shoot him S0 he kept right on with Lusiness. whnich strip the from that tree But if that hunter thought there was ne one about he was mistaken ie himself was being hunted. He lidn't know fit. but it was so. The little people of the Green Forest know that it is easier to avoid danger when vou know where danger is. Even that he would just tramp around as| Buster Bear himself was eager to silently as he could and trust 1o luck | know what that hunter was about, so that_he would surprise some one else. | as soon as he had recovered from his fright Ne hegan to hunt for that hunter He began by moving silently | i hig circle until the Merry Little Breezes tickled his nose with the man | seent Then he made a face all his teeth, growled to arted 1o follow up that his told him that he enongh fo that hunter, Lightfoot the Deer did very much | {the same thinz. only he stole forward to where he could see that hunter and what he did and at the same time of Bnster Bear's way S the thickest and darkesi thickets, Exclaimed erept along as only a Cat can, watch- 15 cectaniof ing every move that hunter made. ote—That the. ola man: had a Sammy Jay followed silently through | clever reason for his eccentric actions he tops of the trees and Black; will be plain when the limerick has fhe atier ahd over she sta & enonzh ques- but they wonld he Search bride | 43 5 trails and What TomorrowMeansto You | - cieariv - rhe i wld he forks she and pine She began to lonz for Jack’'s face ar the couraging laugh. Of course, Jaek would be the one to find her: he would be myre a i than anv of ’h”v“‘hfl\ \ ayv could not help realizinz that cared more, Did she care for hin Did she return his the Fichtfoet the Dee her was handke had placed heaps of stonse cones e o on worst effect of a divoree is upon Rad and police rec il prisons come from homes of the | and =zvoom slipped She Fadi their new home ind —— The elder's suii is hlack, lined with vellow 1905 nnnoticed rked his was to Rl inen The hunter had little poplar hnnt for Buster Bear, and startled hy Buster that* he had forgotten to shoot, knew that he not at all likely to have another chance that day or for many days. Hunting for Buster Bear now would he a waste of time ) he decided started out to the then had whe hark s BY MARY the cape J = W plainiy e heen =0 an. BLA (Covyrizht MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. And even when the children do not go actnally wro the diverce of their parents scars their souls. They are disillusioned, bitter, their faith | wrecked in all that is good and fine and noble in life. | Older people know how to make excuses for temperamental weaknesses | of character, for temptations. Their experience of life has taught them that | | there is so much good in the worst of us and so much bad in the best of us| 1825.) ‘lhnl we may well 8how mercy to all of us. But the voung have no such! | tolerance = They are hard in their judgments, and unforgiving “PUZZLICKS” | they condemn. And personally 1 have never known a parents who seemed to have any respect or reverence f Puzzle-Limericks. showed It nself and | spn eccentric old man of —1— is such a terrible thing for a boy scent until | gjwayve hought “children’'s size” was near > he sizht af aspects ] X sound of his en Tomorrow’s planetary are not so actively favorable as those of today, but they are not by any means adverse. They rather denote calm- ness, instead of exuberance: modera- tion, rather than exaggeration. They will prove exceptionally propitious for the exercises and recreations of Sunday. and much will he zalned by peaceful relax: There is one brief period d the day, he- tween 3 p.m. and 5 pm.. when it will be expedient to refrain from discus sion or argument, as at that time the indications point 1o adverse and acri monious conditions. 11, however resolutely decide that such influences shall not mar yeur ions, the day will prove to he one of “rest and gladne Children mg infancy, he normally though they will be subjec variable “ups and downs’ existence. Owing to the recklessness that will characterize them, great vigilance will be required. on reaching | their “teen: to avoid the Jus (Copyright i Marking Rubbers. They do child of either one not pity ieeling divorced her heart ¢ dezree? vefully. but at uzht Jack no slightes pulses A friendis she did she mizht grow The 1t thrill of She emation stirred he or girl to grow up without the re Ked she e straints of home influence. and without heing able 1o honor its father: and its mother. that I often wonder that that thought alone does not keep a man from listening to the songs of the siren, no matter how sweetly she sings. | [ can never —3-— DOROTHY DIN. | i | love him 10 care. 1. him. b ve sprang A miracle. I .1 the trail up sometime should head like A Dpes shn tall When I'll need them.” he - 4 (TR “seconi childnond comes quick. good | [YEAR MISS DIX: You do ot avor suddenly on long enzagements A LONG Why? AGED GIRL. ing ing save hey hat gk E out en ment ta her ness —5 her nat 1o worry, that 1. City in eastern New York. she mizh loved him herself a row will, dur- healthy, al- to the in- | She of a baby's | peered intn <he strained her sound of a friendly ominous rear of falling waters, but she could hear noth It was then keep out Answer: [ do nol favor long enzagements hecause it sp L S and morigages the fiture. A short engagement is probably the happiest time of a woman's life. It is full of circling wings and romance and thrills. A long engagement | wears all of this out and gets to be a strain on the nerves and the emotions. It is filled with heart-breaking anxiety and hoping and planning that come to nothing. s the present she raised lttla and hes the shout ahove th the zloom ahead nf ears hoping for in order “HE DOESN'T KNOW ENOUGH TO RE AFRAID.” THOUGHT THE HUNTER, Perhaps he mizht get a shot at Yawler the Rob Cat or at Reddy Fox or Lightfoot the Deer. He would pre fer Lizhtfoot ready for instant through ach foot So. with his gun that hunter moved Groen Fovest. He with the nen the set down Zreatest eare so as Ay twis and snap it e taol Trush should against him and make kept his ears open for every lit e sound, and his eves peered sharply in every divection. I was hunting B only & good hunter can hunt. From time he tesied the wind so always blowing toward way his scent would of those he w care that ne soray a noise He wE 10 keep it him. In that not he carried to any hunting for. But with all his care he saw no living thing at which to shoot. It was just as if there were no little people in the Green Forest. It was as still as only the Green Forest can be at 1imes. Not even Chatterer the Red Squirrel appeared to scold him The only person that hunter =aw was Prickly Porky, and as the hunter said “he didn’t count. Prickly whky was in the top of a small poplar tree eating hark. and he hardly stopped Jang eneugh to look down at that pinter e enough to be don't know ~ { Crow perched in the tops of high trees | from which he could see some dis- | tance through the Green Forest. In {a way they were all hunting that hunter. They were keeping track of him so that no one would unsuspect- | ingly give him a chance 1o use that | terrible gun s There were times when that hunter { had a feeling that he was being watched. He ditin't ‘know why he had that feeling. but he did have it Then he would stand still for the longest time and listen with all his mizht nd look with all his might. But with all his listening and i his looking he heard and saw none f the little people Not even the little birds came near. him By the time he vreached the edge of the Green Forest he actually was feeling lonesome. It was a relief to hear sammy Jay suddenly begin to scream at the top of his lungs: ““Thief! thie thief! thief!” gt was Sammy's way | of ietting all the other people in the | Green Forest know that that hunter was leaving the Green Forest and there no longer was need to hunt | him. | | To Fringe Celery. | Mo use for garnishing, cut some pieces of celery into two-inch lengths. For this purpose the stalks shonld b | quite thick hut tender. Fringe each | [end to within a fourth of an inch { from the center.. Drop into ice water containing a slice or two of lemon and let stand wuntil they are curled, If wished, fringe ona =nd only. been completed by placing the right words, indicated by the numbers, in| the corresponding spaces. The an- swer and another “Puzzlick” will ap- pear on Monday.) Yesterday's Puzzlicks.” who warbled in mezzo < in debt so; A singer Declared, I am alway My runs and my trills Could pay all my bills, And. would—if 1 didn't forget so." The Cheerful Cherub| Oh, do you remember, a Few years ago That young generation that worried us so ? Well, now they are aging and settled, poor things— Be calm, worried critics, for Time clips all wings. natural relationship between a man and woman in which they have indefi- nite claims and rights upon each other; in which they have many of the restrictions that matrimony puts upon them without the security of matri- mony. riage which may have become distasteful to one or the other of them before the time comes when their vows are to be fulfilled. before their wedding day arrives. engagement, and only marri let all other choice. Pistory of Pour Name BY PHI VARIATIONS — Carpentier, penti RACIAL ORIGIN—Norman-French. SOURCE—An occupation. These family names are predomi- nantly English, but not exclusively so. They may also be French, or else a changed form of developed after ingland as an alr name. th The explanation lies in the fact that the terms for the trade it was French “Charpentier” spelled at Tt is filled with jealousies and suspicions, because it enforces an un- 1t puts a mortgage upon the future because it commits them to a mar- |One Mother Says: Many long-engaged persons have really 1ost their taste for each other Many a man outgrows a girl during a long | her asa matter of honor. And many # woman | rubbers in school s the man she has heen engaged 1o for years because she has | chances go by for him. I uniil you are ready the child’s name upon each piece. mary (Covsright. 1927 A then make vour | DOROTHY DIX. Far better to wait to marry (Covyright. 19253 Lessons in English hrought it inte England be noted that this form tween the modern and it is to half way be v Snglish spelling of Carpenter and the French Carpentier (recently renowned through fistic prowess of one who bears it). Apparently the Anglo-Saxons, before the advent of the Normans, did not regard carpentry in any sense as a specialized trade, for there are mno traces of Anglo-Saxon names with the same meaning as Carpenter, and, in- deed, there was no really parallel term for the occupation in Anglo- Saxon. Among the Normans, how- ever, there were carpenters who were specialized and skilled mechanics, and also “joyners” and quite naturally se were two trades which developed pidly in the period of the feudal castle building which followed the up. setting of the Saxon government and the “colonizinz™ tacties of the Norman conqueror: TRy Words often misused: Don't say took it off of the table.”” Omit “of. Often mispronounced: Offend. nounce the o as in “of,” mnot Often misspelle Note the “ve.” Synonyms: Credulous, gullible, con- fiding, overconfident. ‘Word study: “Us times and it is yours. Pro- as in CARPENTER. Char- a word three the French name it importation into ady formed family pressing one thing and meaning an other. “His ironical replies to every represents German jewelers claim they can pay her than Angln-Saxen the way it time the 'No mans while the workers are fghting for a the 19 cent wage. Stick a piece of adhesive plaster in each rubber or storm boot and then { write with indelible ink the initials of There will be no more swapping ..({ Dyeing (coloring.) Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today’'s word—ironical; ex- ‘ A : Shelby question denoted extreme bitterness.” | date are: Shelby only about 16 cents an hour for labor. danger of accident they will be lovable, although difficult, in their exuberance, to restrain. They will disregard advice and “rush in where angels fear to tread.” to this aptitude for taking chances, no safe prognostication can be made of their future. They will either become | abject failures or brilliant successes They will never he mediocre. If tomorrow is vour birthday you | take rather too serious a view of your | duties and responsibilities. No power has thrust upon you the obligations of correcting all the wrongs see and imagine! The as an attitude causes your amusement, while it entails on self needless worry and anxiety. It would be more tactful to remedy the weaknesses of yourself rather than tn stretch out others right. A “busybody appreciated or courted. You are serious-minded, with a limited sense of humor, very studious, and your preference is for the higher type of literature. You are careful of appearances, cautious, conventional and methodical. You could make your- self popular and well liked, if you ‘would learn ‘the art of minding your own business and letting other people mind theirs. Well known persons horn on that M. Cullom. Senato James C. Nicoll, artist: Revere F Weidner, clergyman: Robert A. Howe, astronomer: Mand Morgan, harpist: Howard Brockway, pianist and com paser, friends vour- is never (Copyrizht. Temperamentally, | owing | umption of such | with the hope of putting | that she noticed that the place was growing darke A heavier gloom seemed to hang over evervthing, making the place more sinister and forbidding than ever. The shades of afterncon were falling. the sun was creeping lower in the West. [Here where the trees grew so close and the mountains towered on every side the dark would come sooner than it wonld in the open. Wauld she have to spend the night in this frizhif wanld they find her hefor then? And if they didn voul she in desperation piece of falling and the place. o t come try th only ta feel the ledge herself falling the icy Devil's Den down precipiee into waters of rushing (Continued in Monday's The first bird in history to make a phonograph record was an English nightingale trained for the purpose and then set at libertv. THE ORIGINAL CHOCOLATE SYRUP Choc-O-Lishus Milk Shakes, 25c 12-07. can Icing, Sundaes,