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How to Keep Clothes Looking New BY LYDIA BARON WALKER. Fine and Sheer. 1t is well, for instance, now that long sleeves are in high favor, and the materials used in the making are often delicate and perishable, to treat them gently. If sleeves are full and | of & stuff that crushes readily, avold esting them heavily on a hard sur- -e such as a table or wooden chair arm. When so doing there is a_tend- lency to stran the lace or flimsy fabric at the elbow. Or if a coat is of Summer tur or hs decp cuffs of fur the pressure will crush it and the marks will remain a long time. How Creases Come. e caveful in the way you sit down. Many a frock begins to look mussed after having been on but a little while, just because the wearer sits down on a series of tiny folds in the fabric. Creases result which seldom come out entirely until the dyess is Unless one remembers when pwn to lift the coat of Sum- mer fur which i fur will not oniy i vi i | but it will wear out more quickly | than it would otherwise. Be Careful of Scarf. arfs this season are more di- aphanous than ever, and while this characteristic makes them peculiarly attractive, it also makes them more perishable. They will not y put” as heavier ones will, nor will they Care in the wearing of one's clothes can be exercised without sug- gestion of fear that they will get hurt. 1t is a mistake to act as if one were any TRY MU YOU 8 TO AVOID CREASING AND ST CLOTHES WHEN T DOWN. ohliz an ed to be particular. This gives impression that the garment is Leither o new 'that one is conscious of newness while wearing it, else that its cost is rather high for purse, and consequentl article must be made to last as possible in good condition. withstanding these things, At least appear to be unaware of one’s clothes, Reasonable precautions can he in a that seems so casual as not to be noticeable. PERS its or one’s Not one should taken way BY WILLIAM - Hypothyroidism. Shortage of “iodin in water of sows sometimes accounts for hairless pigs. Michigan farmers failed in wool growing until they learned to provide an adequate lodin ration for the sheep. Salmon and trout raised in ish hatcheries, fed liver. kept in crowded tanks or pools, suffer greatly from zoiter. The goiter js prevented by the regular addition of minute traces of iodin (in the form of an iodid usually) to the water the fish live in, or by feeding them regularly hashed sea fish. Lake Erie pike and bass are often found to have goiter. Goiter is_notably common among children and adolescents in the Great Lakes region, in_the upper Missouri, and Yellowstone Valleys, and in east- ern Oregon and Washington State. In some cities in these goltrous re- glons most of the school girls present gigns of goiter. It Is due to iodin deficiency. The food, water, air or medicine fails to provide the essential amount of lodin for normal growth and heaith. All the fodin in the world came originally from the sea, sclen- tists assure us; it is all going back to the sea, apparently. DPeople suffer- ing from iodin deficiency disease had better hurry up and get their iodin before it is all gone from the soil, water, vegetable and animal food- stuffs. Even now it is poor picking in Spokane, Grand Rapids and Akron. Frankly T am just stalling alons, wondering how I'm going to tell about hypothyroidism without infringing upon the quack and nostrum business, which is largely providing people with evmptoms. But 1 promised, so here goes. When I mentioned the hairless pigs BEDTIME STORIE Speaks His Mind. Farmer Brown's Boy keeps a watch- ful eye on the Smiling Pool. He has many friends there and he likes to know what {8 going on. Little happens @t the Smiling Pool that Farmer RBrown's v doesn’t find out about Eo the d fter the arrival of Mr. and Mrs. Quack, the Mallard Ducks, rmer Brown’s Boy paid them a visit. Now the Quacks and Farmer Brown's Roy had been the best of friends the vear hefore. Yes, sir. they had been the best of friends. rmer Brown’s Boy had fed the Quacks every day, and the Quacks had never thought of fiyIng when they saw him coming. But now it all different. Mr. *“IT'S UNFAIR; IT'S DREADFULLY UNFAIR,” MUTTERED FARMER BROWN'S BOY. and Mrs. Quack took to their wings long bhefore Farmer Brown's Boy was anywhere near the Smiling Pool. Their eves are keen. They had seen him coming across the Green Meadows. Farmer Brown's Boy saw them jump into the air and watched them fly swiftly over the Big River. “My, but they are scary!” exclaimed Farmer Brown’s Boy. ‘It means that they have been shot at so much that they are afraid to allow a man any- where near. I suppose I've got to tame them all over again. It is a shame. Yes, sir, it i8 a shame. 1 suppose it 1s all right to have a shooting season, but when Ducks have been so hunted that weeks and weeks after the close of the hunting season they are as wild as ever something is all wrong. I understand that in some places the law allows a man to kill twenty-five ducks, and do it day after day for more than three months, That sort of thing may have been all very well when Ducks were shot for market, but now that they cannot be lawfully sold there is no excuse whatever for killing so many. I don’t know how anybody can eal] it sport. Sport lies in glving the other party a fair chance. I'd like (o know what chance a Duck has when a hunter can fire six shots at him with- out reloading his gun. The more 1 sea of hunting the leas T see of sport. 1t's & wonder to me that Mr. and Mrs. Quack have lived to get back here trom e Sunny South. 1 think Il ONAL HEALTH SERVICE the feed or | stand the same amount of cleaning. “Therefore, avoid letting them get on the floor or ground if you stoop over. Holding them up to prevent this can be made an attractive gesture not at all suggesting that precaution Is the motive. Laces and Frills. As for frills of lace, net or chiffon that fall from the wrists of many new style sleeves, it certainly is worth some thought to keep them from get- ting soiled or mussed. By the arm a little higher than usual and curving the hand down from the wrist when taking food from a dish, for | example, the frill is protected in a zraceful way. When putting on a coat_or wrap. if the frill is caught lightly with the tips of the fingers and thumb it can be drawn through | theusleeve without injury and perhaps | without even crushi : to care for garments at the time of } wearing so inconspicuously that it is not noticeable, or else do it so grace- | fully that it is attractive. BRADY, M. D. and the lambs that grew no wool to speak of, I rubbed my own coco pen- sively and wished somebody had told me 30 years ago to take a little nip of iodin once a week or so. I pos- tively decline to give the slightest in- timation or assurance that any poor gInk_can bring back his hair by taking iodin, but on the other hand I can assert with the most rigid scientific ac ‘racy that an adequate jodin ra- tion, essential for the normal growth of tne hair, and one of the dread hypothyroidism symptoms I am so | reluctant to admit here is a “lifeless” | state of the hair; it grows poorly, falls out excessively, loses its luster and tends to turn gray or fade before the victim has attained mature age. I have just taken 2 miles of oxy- ®en on the hoof tryinz to fizure out a way of describing hypothyroidism in the few lines left. and I have returned to my desk healthier but not wiser. | In fatt, I may.as well knock off and | call #t a day. The end of a perfect day for me. Tn other words, a day without work. I notice that is the w the mason, carpenter, interior decora- tor and other honest workers do. What's an hour or two between | friends? Keep your hair on as well as you can until an early issue. I'm going to explain this thing if it -takes a | whole page—in easy installments. Better make sure your subscription is paid up for at least a month ahead. The -glad tidings in one of my little | talks may prove of unestimable value to you. Testimonial: A RBaltimore man who thought he was laid up with inflammatory rheumatism was de- lighted to read in my column recently that there is no such condition. ; (Copyright, 1926.) BY THORNTON W. BURGESS go back corn.” So Farmer Brown's Boy trudged back to the barn and got some corn ‘This he took over to the Smiting Pool and put in the water where the vear before Mr. and Mrs. Quack used to feed. “Probably they’ll think I'm trying to bait them the way some of those | hunters do,” said Farmer Brown Boy. “I really don't see how we have any ducks. No, sir, T don’t. Men talk about being fair minded, and then will put out food for ducks day after day until the ducks get into the habit of coming to that particular place. That is baiting them. Then some day, when the ducks think that they are perfectly safe and come flving in to get their usual meal, they are met by those terrible guns in the hands of the hunters. That Isn't my idea of hunting at all. I don't know how any one can call it sport. And it's just as bad when the hunters use live ducks to call the wild ones in. That is_treachery.” He carefully hid, and then possessed himself in patience. Now, patience brings its own reward. After a while to the bharn and get some holding | Strive elther | * THE EVENING goin’ to tie these sticks on ver vou ken walk. No to hurt me worser legs, dearie, so don’t ery—it's goin ‘an you.” ' 6. (Copyrizht What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. Aries. Tomorrow's planetary aspects somewhat during the early hours of the morning. They become tavorable thereafter and continue so tor the balance of the day. Nothing tnvolving change or novelty should be essayed until after noon and only duties of a routine nature should re- ceive your attention. Later on, how- ever, ‘the s ugur ultimate suc- cess for an involving construc- tive effort, and engineers and in ventors will apparently be specifically favored more than others, although the inspiring influences created by the »d aspects will prove beneficient to nd all. It is an excellent oppor- for marriage and the astro- 1 indications point to happiness and enduring love. A girl bow tomorrow will not dis- play at birth any evidence of the pulchritude which she is destined to possess in later life, but she will en- joy an uneventful infancy and will grow up without experiencing any ical setbacks. A boy, on the - hand, will be weak as a baby He will, however, if given proper nu- trition, attain physical normaley in early youth. In disposition both boy and girl will display a striking simi- larity. They will be evasive, erratic, and more selfish than considerate, A good, wholesome environment will possibly correct these unfortunate tendencies, but some strict discipline will be needed to effect a complete cure. If tomorrow is your birthday, the signs at _your birth denote that you rossess the qualities of leadership, al- though you will generally he associ- ated with a forlorn Kope. Your judg- ment is not as good as_your master- fulness is compelling. There will be rothing disagreeable about your per- sonality and, if your vision were a little clearer, vou could “many won- ders perform.” Although not excep- tionally intellectual, you, possessing a retentive memory, have digested, as a result of your experience, much gen- eral information, and can talk well and clearly on a variety of topics. Unless mated with one born in June or November, your home life does not hold out much promise of success or contentment. Well known persons horn on that date are: David Rittenhouse, astrono- mer; George W. Greene, author; Walter Harriman, soldier and gover: nor; Howell E. Jackson, jurist: Irving R. Wiles, artist; Mary Pickford, actress. are adverse (Copyright, 1026.) HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN. Just how much a small pool can be made to add to a garden plot If it 1s properly landscaped is well demon- strated here. This very tiny mirror of mature had its humble origin in an old barrel, which was sawed in half and set into the ground. The water in it is stag- nant, of course, belng replaced only as it evaporates, but a family of gold- fish keeps it from becoming a mo- squito incubator. The edge of the barrel is covered by a rim of concrete and around that is he saw Mr. and Mrs. Quack coming in from the Big River. They flew high, and they circled round and round, still flylng high. It was some time before they ventured to drop lower. Farmer Brown's Boy knew that if he lifted so much as a finger they would be away again. That was because they were so suspicious. It meant that they had learned that it is never safe for a duck to feel sure that things are as they look. It meant that they had been shot at so much that they trusted nothing, not even the dear old Smiling Pool, where they so often had been fed. a circle of red bricks. All around the bricks there is a bed of impudent pansies, and the garden walk proper, also of red bricks, completely encir- cles all- Simple, isn't it, and yet it gives the garden a touch of originality and beauty that is most enjoyable. (Copsright, 1926.) Clues to Character BY J. 0. ABERNETHY. And when at last they did drop down and alight in the Smiling Pool they were still suspicious. They had discovered the corn, but it was a long time before they ventured near enough |to pick up/any of it. Farmer Brown's Boy knew exactly how they felt, and he didn’t blame them in the least 1“It's unfair—it's dreadfully unfalr,” I muttered Farmer Brown's Boy. stars fill the shy, Shining stendfast and .far, How lovely to think That we live on Temper Like April Weather. Social temperament is indicative by the prominence and activity of the organs of nutrition and life force. ‘The heart, lungs, stomach, liver and bowels, when strong, give depth, breadth and width to the body. ‘The chest is large and full, showing owerful lung capacity and “large. eadedness.” The abdomen is rounded, the limbs are plump and tapering and the hands and feet are small in pro- portion to the body. The neck is short and full, the shoulders are broad- ened and round. The cheeks and lower part of the face are well filled out, the forehead square and broad rather than high; the expression easy, frank, good-natured or self-satisfied. Persons of this temperament are fond of good things to eat and drink, and are extremely sociable. It is not the temperament of hard work or close application. Others may work or think, but the social type will gather the fruits and have joy in this life, though often he pays the penalty of excess. In temper he is variable, like April weather—provoked and easily pleased instantly. This type is noted for prac- tical common sense. You will find he is generally happy, has a keen sense of humor, is easy-going, optimistic, sympathatic and strives to make the best of everything. (Copyright, 1926.) STAR. WASHINGTON, D. DorothyDix] The Best Match Is -When ‘a Girl Marries an Ambitious Young Man Whom She Loves and Pushes on to Future Greatness. C, Gives Advice to Mothers of Marriageable Daughters Making a Brilliant Match MOTHER writes me that she has a beautiful young daughter, and she wants to know how she éan obtain for her a husband who s rich and 00d ond highly placed in society. She says that she is determined to have her daughter make a_brilliant match, Alas, dear lady, I am no miracle worker. If I could tell mothers how to make brilllant matches for their daughters I should not be doing news- paper work. I would be Presiderit of the United States, elected by the unanimous feminine vote, and lending money to Henry Kord. Every mother’s wish is for her daughter to make what is called a fine match, for her to marry a man who can give her automobiles and diamonds und a perfect devotion; a man who stands ace high both in the church and in Bradstreet’s, who is as domestic as the house cat, yet a brilliant figure in society; who is young and romantic, yet who will never turn his eves away from his wife. How to secure such a paragon for her daughter i that lie on the knees of the gods. ®he can only hope and pray will come her way. one of the mysteries that luck that she can do’ to bring about the result she so much desir even count on the help of the girl herself, for girls have such a contrar, of falling in love with the men who suit them instead of the ones of whom mamma approves. There's literally nothing Of course, from the mother's standpoint, they do these things better abroads In those countries, where marriage is a business proposition in- stead of a heart throb, custom and convention permit mother to go out and hustle up a husband for her danghter, just as she would 0 out for any other good thing. s - WEDNESDAY n Americ obtaining . however, the most that a managing mamma can do toward husband for her daughter is to put the girl in an attitude to receive the blessing, as old-fashioned Methodists used to s .. HE can add to the girl's attractiv . eness by dressing her up. She can lure eligible young men into the house by means of feeding them up and making the home an attractive place for them to come. daughter about to places where men the hunting is best where the game is plentiful. a dowry with the girl, as a chromo is She can take do congregate, on the principle that 1f she's rich she can offer given with a pound of tea. But this is about all that a mother can do in this country toward marry- ing off her daughter, and it isn't much. *For the American man Is seldom mercenary, and he's so shy that when he sees a woman throwing her daughter at his head he ducks and dodges. ‘The daughter should make a brilliant match It is only lamb from the hardships that she has known. that she had to do, and and grasping as it seems. soft girl hands from the hard labor is something not a little pathetic in a mother’s desire that her For in reality it isn't as avaricious her yearning to save her little ewe She wants to protect the to save the tender feet from the thorny path that she has trod. 1t should console these mothers w! to what they think are fine catches that virtually no such man daughte: ho have no way of marrying off their exists as they see in their visions of the kind of a man they would like to have their daughter marry. The man who can give his wife a fine establishment when he marries is, ninety-nine times out of a hundred, either old enough to be her father or else he is a gilded youth who is marriage as lightly as he does a flirta .. cylinder car and point lace an for money. We've all seen many girls make married voung fellows who had in poverty. inherited fortunes. these same fortynes take wings and fly away and the brilliant match end | Every day we read of some such match ending in divorce, be- selfish and spoiled, and who regards tion with & chorus’ girl. P . have all seen many young girls married to rich old men, but we've never seen such a marriage a happy on § diamonds to satisfy a woman's soul the most miserable women in the world are those who have sold their It takes more than a six- and outh so-called brilliant matches when they We have also cause a_youth which has been passed in self-indulgence doesn't fit a man to stand the trials of matrimony. The mothers who are disappointed that their daughters are marrying poor young lawyers and clerks instead of rich men will do well to consider this fact—that these poor voung fellows are likely to be the big men of the future, while the brilliant nobody of tomerrow. catch of today is almost certain to he the It is hardly too much to sav that, In marrying in our young America, a ! girl has to decide whether she'd rather be poor and struggle along with a man when she’s young and be prosperous when she's middle-aged or be rich and splurge when she is yvoung and be proverty-striken in old age. To my ability and industry and pluck, and mind the good match is when a girl marries a man who has whom she loves well enough to he willing and glad to work with and help push on, and who makes every day a romance for her more thrilling than any novel. 3 That kind of a marriage is the brill worry about finding suc if it is done at all, (Copyright. a husband for the girl. nt marriage. and mother needn't She'll do that for herself DOR . el DOROTHY DIX. iOur Children— By Angelo Patri School Streets. The streets through which the chil- dren pass to and from school become a part of the educational system, whether you will or not. It is time a bit of attention be paid to them. Many of them are dirty, piled with tubbish, unswept, muddy or dusty ac- cording to the weather. Many of them are ugly, ash cans sit about, broken boxes and old tin cans litter them, flags flap from wires or poles or the branches of trees. Many of them are unattractive, the store windows are dirty and the stock faded and un- changed from year to year, the paint has worn off to the fraying boards beneath, ugly as can be, the whole procession. Nor is all the instruction of the street negative. There is sure to be a billboard or two with pictures of shootings, captured maidens, bloody battles and agonizing deaths and a hold-up or so scattered between out- rageous beautles.® It is from these that many a child learns to read. The dramatics and the color stimulate him to desire to know what is going on and he reads. The corners of the busy districts are decorated with young men who ought to be working at something useful, cleaning up the streets and putting on a goat of paint here and there for instance, burning up the rubbish heaps and planting vacant lots. Their energy ought to be di- rected and there is a big fleld here with few laborers. - Motor cars have made the streets dangerous to life and 1imb. Nobody walks and everybody rides except the school children below high school age and some of them are forced still to use their legs. The police do their best, a very good best in the big citles, but strained to the vanishing point in the smaller towns, where the budget does not permit the assignment of men to keep the streets safe for chil- dren. B ‘Women can vote. Their vote, how- ever, is something that ought to begin a whole year or two or four before it is delivered at the polls. It won't count unless it is cast for a construc- tive program which is symbolized by the candidate for office, the man or woman trained and Informed as to the needs of the situation they are to meet. It seems to me that streets are a department of civic life peculiarly close to housekeeping, and therefore a place where the women ought to func- tion immediately and nicely. All it needs is a standard of cleanliness, an organization under intelligent leader- ship, a working budget and a desire to make the streets one of the great educative forces in the lives of our children, the clean, lovely, useful avenues of life they ought to be. If the women of the town do not want to undertake the task they can prod the men who have undertaken it into action so that they will clean up, gather in the stray cats and dogs, the idlers who infest the corners and the lonely places, sweep and wash and plant and sweet n the streets through which children must pass on their way to school. And that, of course, is every street in the town where you happen to live. ¢ Mr. Patri will give personal attention to inquiries from parénts or school teachers on the care and development of children. Write him in_care of thit paper. inclosinz self Adressed. " stamped envelape for ey (Copyright. 1026.) fHistory of Pour PRame BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN, ASHTON RACIAL ORIGIN—English. SOURCE—A locality. Until the final and complete list ot tamily names has been made up, and each has been traced definitely to its source, it will be an open question as 1o whether there is a larger number of family names originating in Eng- land which come from localities or from the given names of the fathers of the original bearers. ‘Here s an addition to the list of those which have been developed from place names. It is not possible in the individual case to assign the exact locality fram ‘which the family name of Ashton de- veloped. There are so many Ashtons, and in addidon there were probably more places whose names since have been chenged. ‘This name, so far as can be ascer- tained, has been quite regular in its development. Originally it was pre- ceded by the “de.” or perhaps in, some cases by the Saxon ‘“atte” (meaning “of”" or “from” and ‘“at the”) and was used in conjunction with a man's given name simply to distinguish’ him from others of the same given name. It was a very natural method of differentiation to refer to the place from which a man had come or the place in which his dwelling was located, providing that place was not a large enough com- munity to house others of the same glven name as himself. (Copyright. 1926.) The Public Demands "SALADA" seen - APRIL 7 LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. 1926, After suppir I was studying my home werk and wishing 1 wasent and the fellows started to wissle for me outside and F looked at pop and he was smoking and thinking, and T sed, Hay pop, can I go out with the fel- lows a wile, they ixpect me. Have you finished your home werk? pop sed. Yes sir, . Wich I had, partly, and pop sed, Very well, Ill heer you your lessins. Me thinking, G. And I sed, All rite, heer me my histry. Histry being the ony thing I knew. and pop sed, Im the manager of this office, 11l heer you your joggriffy, lets have your list of questions. Wick I gave them to him and he sed, Ware is Japan? il T sed. No, Japan, pop sed, and 1 sed, In the eastern hemispheer. In other werds, its still ware it was, pop sed. Wat are its boundaries, thats wat T wunt to know, he sed. Do you meen the boundaries of | Japan? T sed, and pop sed,-1 blecve 50, but if you'll jest have a seet III wire the main office and make sure. Meening certeny the boundaries of pan, and .1 sed, Well in the ferst place its not a island so it cant be in tirely serrounded by water. And in the 2nd place K8 not a proi bition country so it cant be intirely serrounded by licker, pop sed. Now study vour lessins and stody them rite. he sed. Wich I did, being a little easier after the fellows stoped wisseling. MODE MINIATURES Shorter shingles—shorter skirts— and now shorter bloomers. Brief af- falrs such as professional dancers wear—these are now being shown and BY HAZ Martha Dennison at 41 faces the | fact that her hushand has drifted away from her, as well as her two | | children, Arthur and Natalic. She | meets an attractive bhachelor, Perry | | Macdonald, and accepts his attentions without realizing the danger in such | an attachment. Arthur is infatu- | ated with Mimi, a dancer, and Natalic | hatf in love with Lucien Rartlett. a | married man. Mimi is deceiving Ar- | thur, who is growing suspicious of | her, and Perry, who first becomes interested in Natalie throuoh a desire to protect her, ends by falling in love | cith her. He realizes that the situ- | ation is embarrassing because of the known as the “follies set.” The vest | attention he has paid to Martha and is likewise short and slashed up each | he goes to her and tells her the truth. | side. Martha is naturally stunned by the Won't the younger generation adore | news and in the meantime John | them, and with warmer weather they | Dennison, who «n the past has paid will be comfortable as well as mod- | little or no attention to his family, ish, and that's always a happy com. | hears news that disturbs lim bination. ! They are made of glove silk and because they are cut so very short the price of each garment is corre- spondingly cut. MARGETTE. CHAPTER XXXINX. Where Arthur Was. Hardly aware of where he walked or ate or slept, Arthur had been wandering about the city for two days. The events leading up to his disappearance had heen highly matic. Arthur had borrowed money to buy Mimi the coveted siip- per buckles, and fortified with the | gift he had gone up to Mimi's apart- ment late in the afternoon to present | them to her. He had elimbed the twa flichts of | stairs leading to the apartment with | hope high In his heart. Mimi would smile upon him. she would be her old | self again, and he would be reassured because she would tell him over and over that she loved him. in her soft-| ened mood. he might even bring up the subject of marriage, and twik | time she might listen. Afterward he would stop drinking and be a man because everything would be all right and he would have no more reason to worry. At the door of the apartment he stopped and listened. There were voices inside, and light laughter which he knew was Mimi's. With - on his lips he pressed the electri | Plants or Animalst and waited for the door o be opened. It would seem at first that it should | His ringing of the bell was followed Dbe easy to tell the difference between |immediately by a dead silence inside plants and animals. Are not animals | the apartment. The silence was some- things that think, and have blood, | how ominous. and move aboyt, while plants are rooted in one spot, have sap and green coloring matter, but no sensations? But there are animals iike corals that are always rooted in one spot: only the higher animals have biood, and as { for thinking, the ldwest animals have no brains to think with but merely respond feebly to stimuli, and there are plants that do as much. Many plants can swim actively around, not merely drifting but actually oscillating forward, and not all plants are gree the mushroom is such an example. In short, a difference is not discoverable except that animals never breathe off oxygen and plants do. There are even certain organisms known as slimemolds which by all definitions ap- pear to be plants part of the time and animals part of the time. Now what do you know about that? Answers to Yesterday’s Questions. 1. Diamond is the hardest gem. 2. Carbon Is the hardest chemical element. 3. Tin is-the softest of the common metals. 4. The graphite. 5. Sand will scratch glass but a pin will not. 6. Platinum is harder than silver. (Copyright, 1926.) —————— “When T asked Jean what would It is considered a sin among Mo-|prevent chapped lips she said, ‘Walk- hammedan women to cut their hair. ing home.’ What Do’ You Know | About It? | SR { Iy Seience Six. i 1. Was Darwin the first evo- i | 1utionist 2. What theorles of evolution have been advanced since Dar- win's_time? 3. Did Darwin say “Men are descended from monkeys?" 4. What plants are supposed by evolutionists to be highest in the scale of evolution? 5. Are animals supposed by evolutionists to have arisen from plants? 6. Who was a co-discoverer of Darwin's ideas with Darwin? Answers to these questions in tomorrow’s: Star. Parking With Peggy “lead” of pencils is really EL DEY | roughly Arthur could almost | FEATURES. Making the Most of Your Looks BY DOROTHY STOTE. Dear Ann Provided she he not the woman whose hips are much larger than her bust will find this vest frock a good offset to a big hip line. The vest, of course, should be of a light and the frock itself should be ck, in order 1o give the best effect. Yours for knowing how, LETITIA. 1026, too short color (Copyright DAUGHTERS OF TODAY 0 BATCHELOR teel it pressing on his eardrums. and after a moment or two he rang .the bell again. Footseps at last. light footsteps thar he knew were Mimi's. And then the door was opened a little way Mimi herself was peering out at him She gasped a little, drew hack, and then still holding the door only a little afar, she forced a smile to her face. “(, Arthur. I'm sorry, hut I ean't let you in just now. 1'm not dressed. and I'm just about to jump into the tub.” Arthur's thoughts, which a moment before had been serenely confident, teemed suddenly with suspicion. “Are you alone?” he asked thickly b indeed,” Mimi returned glibly “If Francine were here, T'd let you come in and wait.” A hot fury suddenly possessed Arthur, and yielding to impulse he pushed forward. forcirig Mimi to let bim into the small hallway. His one alization was that she had lied t him. He knew that shy was not alone in the apartment. Somé one was with her, they had laughed and talked to gether, and Arthur was determined t« ee who it was Mimi made a frigtened little gesture as though to prevent him from going into the living room, but almest he pushed her aside. The next moment hé was standing at the living room door. A man, who had been sitting at small table, rose slowly to his feet and stared Inquiringly at Arthur. On the table were the remnants of tea some cups and saucers. a plate «f eakes. Mimi had followed Arthur inte the room. and although quite obv Iv frightened was trving to make the hest of the sitmation. She attempied a casual Introduction, but even as she did this she zlanced at Arthur, won dering what he would do next. He hud been drinking as usual, and wher he had been drinkinz he apt to be ugly. Mimi did not want to give her new admirer the idea that Arthur had any kind of hold over he She forced a laugh that sounded |rather shrill, and at that moment Arthur turned and looked at her. His | eves were blazing, his mouth drawn |back from his teeth. Instinctively | Mimi drew back from him. She was suddenly terrified. | (Copyright. 1926.) | (Continued in tomorrow’s Star.) In social intelligence women are claiming to be far superior to_men e '1. eshies Cold Cream. %o BE CARRIED in the motoring, lnvelm‘, sports. Handbag Satractive e T 0F Zin Bomer* 1% At Laading Department and Drug Seores Always Succeeds d food—no and uniform NO guesswork—no spoile waste—no worry—but perfect results always because Rumford is uniform, dependable, sure. Use RUMFOR The Wholesome BAKING POWDER