Evening Star Newspaper, March 9, 1926, Page 30

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WOMAN’S PAGE., Shamrock Luncheons and Suppers BY LYDIA LE BARON A shamrock menu will be found de- $ightfully appropirate to serve at a St. Patrick’s day luncheon or supper and the menu can be adapted to suit the EANDWICH CAN BE _CUT RESEMBL V' 10 TAMROCK LEAVES. necessities of refreshments of a s pler order or an evening party. Green and white will be the color schene. The centerpiece for the table can he e growirg shamrock plant, or, if this is not evallable, green crepe paper shamrocks with stems twisted aboat fine green covered wire can be S0 ranged in a pot of exrth that they re- semble a shamrock plant. Stand the flower pot in a jurdiniers or covered with decorative paper. Shamrock Menu. Cream of Celery Soup Garnished With Shamrocks ckers Cold Lamb in Mint Jelly Creamed Potatoss Bread and Butier Plain Olives Emerald and White Salad Cheess Sticks Shamrock Ice Cream Shamrock Cakes Coffee Green and White Candies. Preparing the Menu Cut little pieces from green pepper skin to simulate wee shamrock leaves. You will remember that these lewves are like clover foliage or the club motif in cards. Put three of these sham- rocks on each serving of the soup. Use gelatin to make the mint felly ‘with the stralned broth from the lamb simmered until it is tender. Remove the bones, fat and gristle and use as Green Peas BEDTIME STORIE Puma and Buster Meet. When equals meat. Why then you s Each with the other should agree —O0id Mothe ¢ Wind. That was a night never to be for- gotten by Farmer Brown's Boy. Yes, sir, that s a_night never to be for- gotten! He had seen Puma the Pan- ther standing in the r e a statue. Then S i he had trut Brown’s Boy hurr hack to sugar house and wakened his father. He was &0 excited that his tongue tripped over his teeth as he told about what he had seen. “And you didn’'t have your rifle’” ex- Hiaoy BUSTE™ EEAR AND PUMA THE PANTHER FACED EACH OTHER “Just think d to get that claimed Farmer Brown. what a chance you mis: a rug id Farmer Brown's pyway, I saw him. Per- time 1 shall be able to s there never will be a next retorted Farmer Brown. But there was a next time, and it happened that very night. It was very late. that there would be no more sap boiled that night. They would hoth o to bed, so as to be ready to go to work early in the morning. Farmer Brown had put the light out and rolled himself up in his blanket, and Farmer Brown's Boy was all ready to ol up in his blanket. He went to the Httle window for a last look outside. ol 0 serve at an afternoon t=a | Farmer Brown had decided | LKER. follows: Season the gelatin with salt, pepper and mint and tint green with vegetable coloring. Pour a little in an cblong mold or a deep pan and when it has set sufiiclently to hold up the pieces of meat cover the Jelly well with them. Pour on a little more of the jelly and proceed us before, mak- ing the top laver of jelly somewhat deeper than the others. Chill and serve surrounded with parsley inter- spersed with shamrocks cut from dill pickles. Or cut in slices just before serving and garnish each serving as | described. Emerald and White Salad. equa! portions of diced apples, cubes and blanched nuts. Lay sp green lettuce leaves and dot with mayonnaise tinted gréen with vegetable coloring. Pistachio ice cream is the correct color for the shawmrock ices. Serve with shamrock cakes made by cutting ake, baked in a thin sheet, into small cakes, using a club or clover leaf cooky cutter. Frost tops and sides with green icing. Adapting the Menu. it the first part of the menu and serve the salad with bread and butter sandwiches cut with the clover leaf | cutter or merely nicked between corn- ers to give a sembla. leat shaps ish the menu as given. kven sim- pler refreshments can be had by omit- ting all but the shamrock ice cream and little cakes and following this course with coffee and candles. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Stewed Prunes Dry Cereal with Cream Creamed Eggs on Buttered Toast Pancakes, Maple Sirup Coftee LUNCHEON inkfurts Potato Salad Rye Bread Mocha Cakes Tea DI ER. Tomato Barley Soup Roast Pork Mashed Potatoes Stewed Tomatoes Lettuce Sniad Apple Pie Cheese 2GGS AND TOAST. Melt one tablespoon butter in saucepan. biend in one table- spoon flour; add, by degrees, stirring constantly, one pint hot milk. add one teaspoon chop- ped parsley and se with salt nd ppe fn six hard-cooked e slices. Poy tered toast and serve hor POTATO Season cold hoiled potatoes that are dry and cut in dice shape, with salt, pepper and vinegar (if vinegar is too sour. add a little water). Cut an onion up fine, also celery it you like, then cut up fat bacon, fry out nice and brown wnd toss this in the potatoes. Coffee APPLE PIE. Peel and slice enough tart ap- ples to fill custard pie plate even full; put them in saucepan with Just enough water to show from beneath top layer. Cook rapidly till tender, but do not cook to pieces. While hot, add three heaping tablespoons sugar, little cinnamon, pinch salt, one table- spoon meited butter and three- quarters cup dry bread crumbs. Let stand till bread is well soak- ed. Have crust ready baked and pour mixture in. Irost with white of egg and sugar, and set in ofen a minute to brown. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS ! Then he called Farmer Brown to come and look, too; and he was s0 excited he could hardly whisper. What do | you think they saw? They saw great !big Buster Bear! Yes, sir, they saw | great big Buster Bear! He was stand- ting up and looking toward the sugar house and they knew by the way his Inose was lifted that he was sniffing | the delicious odor of the boiling sap. They knew that Buster would run a'most any risk to get some of that sirup and sugar. “This sugar house mustn't be left alone for a - minute until we are through sugaring,” whispered Farmer Brown. “1 had hoped that that fellow hadn’t vet wakened up_ from his Winter sleep. Now that he has, we wust keep watch, That rascal would break in here if he thought no one was around. 1 wonder what he would do if he should meet that Mountain Lion." Just then, as if in answer to Farmer Brown, Buster Bear suddenly dropped down on all fours and turned quickly. It was plain that he had heard some- thing back of him.. They could see his two little ears standing up very straight as he listened. In a moment he took three or four steps. As he did so there hounded out from the midst of the Black Shadows a great Cat. It was_ Puma_the Panther. | Rather hastily Buster Bear backed up. | They could hear him growl as he drew | his Tps back, showing all his teeth. | Puma the Panther crouched and they 1d hear him growl and see his long | tail twitch in the moonlight. t _ So, while Farmer Brown's Boy and | his father watched and in their excite- I ment almost forgot to breathe, Buster Bear and Puma the Panther faced each other. Would they fight? Buster {had been long time king of the ,Green Forest,"but here was some one ‘who might be his match. | For a long time neither made a jmove. Then Buster looked awa; Finally he moved off slowly, and in hi appearance there w: {that he had seen any one out of the usual. He was a picture of unconcern. | At the same time Puma the Panther | vanished aguin in the Black Shadows, One moment he was there crouching 1in the moonlight and the next mo- ment he was nowhere to be seen. It was quite clear that neither Buster nor Puma cared to quarrel with the {other. (Copyright, 19261 X The Old French Cowt . Amid this splendor was born France's fame for beauty. Gouraud’s Oriental Cream contributed to this renown thru its use by fa- mous Court Bunfi:u. "~ Gounrau Made in wm-l-‘nu» - Raches Send t0o. for T'rial Bise . T. Hopkias & Sen, New York 37 'THE EVENING STXW, WASHINGTON, D. 0, TUEEDXY, STAROH o, Willie Willis: BY ROBERT QUILLEN “1towasn't a veal story to tell papa 1 still had my dime because T swallow- ed it this morning.” (Copyrikbt, 1928.) n't the least hint | Old-fashioned elegance is personi- fled in this grouping. The spinet escaped the usual fate of its kind, for it was not made into a desk, but reconditioned to serve its original high misston as a musical instru- ment. The mirror was purchased from wrecking concern that was demolishing an old brownstone front It is set in a panel and v adds much to the spa- of the room. The daguerreotypes and the flirty little fan in a row across the back are well and cleve placed, and de- lightfully “In character.” When gentle fingers sweet, tinkly old tunes spinet’s mellow ivory keys. and the twinkling tapers in the many branched candlestick cast their spel the whole room is pervaded with a se- date and dainty gayety that is appeal- ing beyond description. (Copyright. 1926.) coax the from the What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. Pisces. Tomorrow's planetary favorable unil a They then change and, although adverse, are not of a sufli couraging hature (o timism or to engender initiative. During the morning the signs indi- cate that sucoess will attend any lines of constructive endeavor initigted un- der their auspices. In the afternoon a desire for relaxation wiil be sensed and there will be lacking the urge to achieve. 1t is also evident that there will exist influences w will tend to disparagement, not only of your own work. but of that of others. It this ungracious mood is permitted tc become accentuated a critical at- mosphere will be created, inimical to your own interests and displeasing to others. i Children born tomorrow promise, according 'to the slgns, to enjoy an exuberance of good health, not only during the infantile period but through their youth and up to man- hood and womanhood. They will not be free from practically all ailments, but those to which they will be sub- jected will possess only minor im- portance, and enta quences. children sense of injustice, foun tious discriminatioh. T obedient and docile, provided their minds can perceive the fairness of the demands made upon them. Impulsive, hasty action with these children will only bring results contrary to those anticipated. Reason and intelligence will have to be used all the time. if satisfactory results are desired. If tomorrow is your birthday, you have a complex character, and this often induces contradictory actions and warring thoughts. Your natural impulses are good, and show liberality of mental processes, an affectionate and a kind dispesition, and unselfish- ness of purpose. ‘These traits are not allowed free play, as a result of un- ant impulses, which make for in- nce, narrowmindedness and selfishness. You are very industrious and have a keen, far-sighted perception. You are also resourceful, and can nearly always devise sbme way out of a diffi- cult situation. The warring elements of your “make-up” prevent a con- tinuity of policy in your actions, and this condition does not make for permanent or lasting success. (Copyright. 1626.5 HSpects ar Luster Lasts Solarine dissolves the tarn. ith like magic and leaves a high luster that lasts. It’s the only safe pol- ish. *“Buy a can today at your grocer,hardware, druggist or auto shop. . DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Clever But Unfortunate Young Man Who Lacks Good Manners—Is It Sillier for Man of 60 or Girl of 16 to Marry? IDEAR MISS DIX: Why is it that some men of intelligence and high moral character are so hopelessly ignorant of the code of good manners? 1 have a friend who s very clever and who holds a fine position, which he could not possibly hold unless he had plenty of brains. He has_traveled extensively, can talkk well, but his manners are just unbearable. He often subjects me to great humiliation because of his lack of courtesy to me. This is not because he does not respect me, but because he just doesn’t know the little things that count with a lady. What can I do? Please tell m«,'nnd olhtr‘klrhl. what you think of such a man. STENOGRAPHER. Answer: Not long ago, my vis-a-vis at breakfast on a dining car was a handsome, wide-awake young chap, dressed to perfection. But he ate with his knife and smashed every other rule of table etiquette. Evidently this youth was one of the go-getter type of young Americans who, beginning at the bottom, simply shin up the ladder of success. He had had wit enough to copy the clothes of the gentlemen with whom he was associated in business, but it had not dawned on him that it was even more important for him to copy their manners. All during the meal, I kept thinking that I might be a real fairy godmother to him if T had the nerve to lean across the table and say to him: “Son, you are on your way, and you have it in you to go far, if you will learn how to eat as a gentleman does. But if you don’t, you will find your progress barred by your fork and spoon. No man who gargles his soup will ever be asked to represent his firm in places where he will be thrown in contact with people of culture.” And then I might have told him of a case I knew in fwhich just such a clever young fellow as himself had been chosen to be the head of a new branch which a bank was opening. This young man was clever, had unusual talents, knew the business from the ground up, had every qualification for the job. And the president of the bank took him out to luncheon to offer him the place. But after the first course the young man's chances had gone glimmering. *“We couldn't be represented by a man who didn’t know how to eat,” the president said in disgust. ) But I said none of these things to the young man, just as you will never tell your young man of his lack of manners. All we can do is just get out of their way. Of course, lack of good manners is the result of lack of proper training in one's youth. Sometimes & woman does not know how (o train her children. Sometimes she is too lazy to do it. But it is a pity, because manners make the man, as the old proverb puts it, and nothing else on earth will carry one so far. Good manners are a letter of introduction that the world honors at sight. They open every door. They make opportunity. That is why villains are always represented as having suave and polished manners. Any man who is conscious that he did not have early advantages in acquiring the manners of a gentleman as a child should make good his defect by memorizing the book of etiquette, and taking for a model the finest gentleman he knows. DOROTHY DIX. o e e AR DOROTHY DIX: Will you give_your opinion as to whether it is " proper for a girl to keep company with more than one young man at & time, provided she is not engaged to any one of them? J.L.F. Answer: Certainly a girl should go about with as many young men as she can until she is definitely engaged to one. Before a girl makes up her mind to take one man for better or worse, she should have known a large number of men, because only in that way can she be sure that she is getting a husband who suits her, and of whom she will never tire. When a young woman goes o buy a dress, she doesn't snap up the first garment that is offered to her. On the contrary. if it is a handsome dress in which she is investing her whole allowance of pocket money, she goes from store to store, pricing different frocks, looking them over, considering which fires her fancy and has the best wearing qualities. Certainly it is only the part of wisdom for her to shop as carefully for a husband as she does for her Spring suit How girls wers ever silly enough to let men put over on them the custom of ‘“keeping company” is something I have never been able*to understand. It is the greatest folly of which they could possibly be capable, because i gives all of the advantages to the man. G 0 Fe drives all deprives her, perhaps, of making a better match than it is all off. " He hus committed himself to nothing. sed to the girl. Probably he never intended to ask her to marry has only been amusing himself with her. But her chances are She is deserted. with nobody to take her out. or pay her any A girl 1ets one boy monopolize her for two or three years. other suitors away. H X he is, and tt He isn't en him, and ruined. agtention If girls bad any appreciation of their wn interest. they w. 2 jand hreak up the “Keeping Company” Masculine Monopol unh.’\l‘l“"‘l‘fi"‘" wouldn’t think of narrowing themselves down to one marn e popped the question and named the wedding day DOROTHY DI%. EAR MISS DIX: Which do you think is the silliest — the old man the girl of 16 who get married” PERPLED Answer If they many each other, I should say that one was about as foolish «s the other, hecause one will be as miserable as the other. No match of that kind can possibly result in any happiness, because December and May BEve ROLNIRE IN ORI ou mean whether it is silller for a man of 60 to get married, i of 16, sweet 16 takes the cake. 8 Rl LD It isn't silly at all for a man of 60 to get maivied. 1t is a sensible thing for him to do, provided he marries a woman who is in his own age class. But it is a tragedy for a girl of 16 to wreck her life, as she almost invariably does, by marrying at an age when she has not enough intelligence to pick out & hushand, or to deal with the problems of wifehood and motherhood. A girl of 16 who even thinks of marriage should have a guardian appointed to save her from her folly. DOROTHY DIX. BEAUTY CHATS Your Mouth. Keep your teeth young and healthy and you will keep your mouth yvoung; indeed, you will keep the whole lower part of your face vouthful, for false teeth add many years to the expres- sion. The jaw and the lower part of the cheeks are bound to sink in, and this causes all sorts of premature wrinkles to develop, wrinkles that are impossible to eradiate. Brushing twice a day with a good, fairly stiff toothbrush with a lump on the end of it so that the bristles get in between the teeth will do more than anything else to preserve your teeth. A good mouth wash will help, too, but that cannot remove the tartar and food from between the teeth, like the long bristles of a brush. Of course powder or paste must be used with the brush, something antiseptic to counteract the acids in the mouth. A very good idea, if you have any tendency toward acid mouth or acid stomach, is to clean the teeth last thing at night (which you should do always, anyway) and then rinse the mouth out with a tablespoonful of milk of magnesia. If you have acid D BY EDNA KENT FORBES. stomach, thick blood, a tendency to- ward constipation or pimples, swajlow. the magnesia: it is a general laxative 80 mild it is prescribed for babies, and i it purifies the blood. | Another mild mouth wash is made iby taking fwo ounces of the best borax, dissolving it in a quart and a pint of water, which must be boiling, and before it is quite cold, adding a tablespoontful of spirits of camphor. Pour about a tablespoonful into a glass when you rinse your mouth and add about another tablespoonful of water. Or make this stronger, say with one pint of water instead of three; then when vou use it, pour only a few drops into a quarter glass of ‘water. Have your dentist correct real de. formities of the teeth and if you have chiliren have their teeth kept straight and healthy for their future beauty. Fifty thousand nui kani, a musics instrument with sounding box, con- slsting of a coconut shell, are to be made in a Hawailan factory each year. PECIALIZED SERVICES . * . for your SELECTION 1f it’s launderable ther a Tolman ‘service to do it with thrift equalling excellence. The housewife, bachelor or bachelor girl each finds here.a service exactly suited to individual or family requirements. Select a service from these—phone for our immediate call— you'll never need to phone for our delivery, it's always prompt! + Starched Collars and Shirts Tolmanized Curtains Pillows Blankets Family-Finish Sérvice Bed and Table Linens Mackenzie Sized Rough-Dry Service EX Phone Franklin 71 Today 'TOLMAN LAUNDRY F, W. MacKensie, Manager 6th and C Sts. N.W. Franklin 71, 72, 73 1928. SUB ROSA BY MIMI Why Not Be the First? Have you sometimes wondered why one particular girl in your set is always just 10 minutes ahead of all the rest of you? Sally Anne is a marvel and source of wonder to her friends. Ts there a new wrinkle in hair- combs, in necklaces, trick earrings or bracelets? Sally fs showing them on her per- son weeks hefore anybody else has heard of them. Other girls envy her—wish they could .achleve that effect of belng right up to the minute, “Why is it," they ask, “that when- ever we go to buy anything smart and new we always find out that Sally's had 1t for weeks, and already considers it old? How can we get the edge on her so that we don’t al- ways appear (o be copying her styles? Well, if they only stopped to figure things out, they'd realize that Sally is no mystery girl. She doesn’t get special dispatches from Paris as to ;ge latest things to wear. But she keeps her eyes open and she has the courage to try new things all by herself. Honestly, how many of you girls have the gumption to start a new fad? You read the fashion magazines, don't you? And therein you find many new and novel ways of dressing the hair— suggestions for trick accessories and ideas for making your old clothes look different. But do you try any of them out? You do not unless some one like Sally paves the way for you. \When she has made the start, vou are all anxious to follow suit. Only none of you ever achieve her distinc- tign because you're all a bit Iate. Take for instance. the matter of hair. You've been reading for months that hair ought to be smooth and sleelc—that the ears ought to be allow- ed to show. Put how many of you dared to come right out and show your ears, until some one with greater audacity than yourself made it possible for you? This isn't a very important matter, but it shows a tendency of mind that 13 to be deplored. So few of you have the spunk to se- lect a style which is becoming and adopt it for your own in the face of ridicule from those who hang on to old fashlons until they’'re worn out. Yesterday we watched groups of girls clustering about a counter in one of the big New York stores—they were examining with curiosity a new kind of necklace, a plain gold band, much lke a wedding ring. They fingered the pretty trinkets and looked at each other dubio! . Then a tall, smartly dressed woman dashed up and asked the sales girl for three of them. @ been trying to get them for a week,” she an- nounced crisply. The giris watched her as she snap- ped themn about her throat. They did look stunning. And Iimmediately they invested. Others rushed up and soon a new sales girl was needed to help supply the svergrowing demand for wedding ing necklaces. We're all inclined to be copy-cats. a overcome that tendency as 1gs for vurselves—iot wait for others See how much more fashionable and | distinguished you are if you start fads instead of following them. Mimi will be glad to answer any ing directed to this paper provided a addressed envelone is nclo (Copyright. 1826.) hat Do You Know “"About It? Daily Science Six. What are two highly useful to man? 2. What are four stages in a butterfly’s life history? 3. Are the bees that gather honey males or females? 4. Are splders insects” 5. What deadly disease i spread Ly the bite of a fiy 6. Do = ! flies grow larger ones? (Answers to these questions in tomorrow’s Star.) insects nto Eating Ants. A singular method of identifying various species of ants that are found fn this country is that of a well known_professor of entomology in New England. He picks the ant up off ‘the & , puts it-in his mouth es By the amount of cid which nips his nerves of scientist is able to tell what [ kind of ant it is. | v, what do you know about that? | | Answers to Yesterday's Questions. Smallpox , antitoxin was dis- Dr. Edward Jenner in by drophobia antitoxin was dis- | by Louis Pasteur in 1885. 3. In the Spanish War, 5,000 American soldiers died of tvphoid and 469 in battle. 4. Pasteurizing of milk consists of exposing it to temperatures of 131 to 138 degrees F., killing germs without spoiling the milk. 6. Bacteris are plants, not animals. 6. Typhoid is caused by bacteria and is spread in impure water and i milk; typhus is spread by lice, but { the organism that causes it is not certainly known. (Copyright, 19 hold i“”hu b&» " DownN East'. . . out West ...South ... every- where, Chase & San- born’s Seal Brand Coffee is a house- out America. Chaée&Sanbom's SEAL BRAND COFFEE Seal Brend Tea is of the same high quality Making the Most of Your Looks Martha Dennison at 41 faces tha fact that her husband Aas drifted away her her. as hdldren. Arthur and Natalie. i e Mis_attentiona wit realizing the danger in such an atac Perry meets with Natalie and later sees Aer dining out at one of the downtown Aotels. CHAPTER XIV. Lucien Bartlett. Perry was interested in spite of himself. He wanted a glimpse of the man to whom Natalie was talking so vivaciously. Perhaps it was this rea- son that made him curious. The girl seemed to glow and sparkle; he could hear her soft laugh from where he sat, and always she kept her eyes veiled secretly, as though hesitating to show what was buried in their depths “She's infatuated with that chap,” ran Perry's thoughts. I wonder who | he is and what he looks like.” | He resolved .to prolong his meal | until the two at the other table were finished. His curiosity was getting the better of him. and he laughed in- wardly at the absurdity of the thing. What difference did it make to him who was taking Natalle Dennison to dinner? She was a pert little flapper, no different from the rest of the in- sufferable younger set. Perr: never bothered with any of them: they always bored him, and he avoided them for that reason. | Navertheless, he continued to glance | from time to time toward Natalie's | table. She was leaning forward now nd the man with her was lighting her | urette. The flare of the match iilu- | ted her fresh young features, and she leaned k she shook her head, tossing back masses of straight | russst hair. Perry was sipping his coffee leisure- Iy when the two finally rose. man put the er evening around the girl's shoulders, and th as they turned to leave the dining MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. Mary's Own Library One mother say: ve aroused a loving interest for books in my daughter by helping her to start a little library of her very own. A pretty little bookshe! made, and two or three book: own choosing from the family library are enough to begin with. A list of books she wants is kept where the | family may consult it for birthday: and Christmases, so that the Iibr: will have a little help from ¢ and mother. While the shelf is somewhat bare, the ¢ Taay keep her public libr: books there. This will foster a desire for worthwhile and will be an incentive for g them in good condition. North word thtough- m S EasANBORY i i Dear Ann: Here's a little ohesry ton earrings. If a woman face wears them, them as far out on her ble. For if they nestle cheek, they simply define she on ubout bu with a thing should rs a5 possi close to t} the any outline of the face and make it mor- obvious. Yours for cultivating beau room, Perry saw Natalie's companion for the first time. He gasped, almost stra coffee, and then watched they passed oul of the ¢ ngied on his the two as dining _room His heart was filled with conflicting emotions. He knew the him fairly well. He i with one of the cerns downtown an Stock Exchang ing than that was was married an Did Natalie know this, or aware of it? Was the me with Lucien Bartlett or w advantage of her cence? youth and man; knew was connectei 1t that he had two childre was she erely playing s he taking inno The next moment Perry found him self laughing. melodramatic Whatever idea into put such o his head Why, the girls of today were older an:i more experienced than th He would we knew more than the girl were pla would_certainly being burned. Martha ng w know h heir mothers r that Nataile herse did; and ith fire, ¢ ow to av For just a moment Lo had forgotter everytiuing but N vouth. The chivairy in hi alie's extreme im, that fine feeling inherent in the heart of even the most up in him, to protect cynicz! of men atalie from |if she needed protection! | knew all about I the fact of his b no difference to could take ca It so that P self, in the meantim cien ng m her. self for being so absur And yet he found him: ing the girl's face as it before Bartlett had rejoi ad worn a slightly on, and all her features soft and girlish and de! had worn a d & dream that she h lashes when she toward he A} 34 jett? V k Perry kept turning th and over in his mind, not_help wondering if anything about it Mothers knew very s she a le. . had leape: nd he had had a desire danger. As She prebabit Bartlett and rried made ¥y, she aughing at hin : credulous remembe. had looke ned her. | pensive expres had seemed tely sweet in her eves d veiled behind her w Bartlett ¢ love wi in love with h e things ov nd he could Martha knew robab) v not about their daughters in these enlightened days the youn run wild, enforea an blamed the childre (Cop generation w: hile the paren ht. 1 (Continued in tomorro: s allowed to ts, unable to v discipline, sat back and for everything. w's Star.) Lessons in English BY W. L. Often spronounced Pronounce tor-tis, not as “of Often Synonym. gitimate, one Remin “Let me those day he The opened to any woman _in the 1 as in calling e in the reminiscence « legislative door has GORDON. — Tortoise. “1t to mind not Australia Teeth Like Pearls BY EDNA WALLACE My teeth, | employ it. The name Two harmless polis| ify the teeth. antacids, to neutraliz: cause tooth decay. And odorants. daily on my tecth, Now Quindent is presen on all_in one. gredlents ow 1 use ing_else. e m: enough for 20 users. en who wish h vise. orities ad e dentrifice This is th Mail me @ test of Quind HOPPER s countless women 1 t, meaning by Quin- ontains an hers which y Four antisep- and iodine,” to combat germ af- Magnesia and other that ath de- | acl b out || - ted. combin- 12 A iza- supply me ea hey are for 't h of today. Trial Tube_Free F430 ks Shors rice. o0 s | ent .

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