Evening Star Newspaper, May 27, 1926, Page 50

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regions. breathless point in his story he—well, P Now what do you know about that? | he might as well have said “to be 3 . He actually BY HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR CHAPTER XXVIIIL Jean Ains’ey and Conrad Morgen elops. They are e0 much in love that they d6 w0t “atop 10 consider the consequences. end it isn't until atterwaord that Jean disrovers her otherinaic must Hve weith them. Mrs. Morgan has_ t o dialike 16 Jean. which riokes it very difieult. Conrad has o siscer Florence. whom Mrs. Morgan is constanily e. tol'ing. - A% @ matter of {net. Floren is hored with her husband ond is car: tng en a fiirtation with Merron Thorn The Trysting Place. To return to Merton and -Florence, since the night Jean had seen them in each other’s arms they had been more careful about how they conducted themselves when others were present. However, they continued seeing each other several times a week. Some- times Merton would come to the house for tea, but more often they would go driving, sometimes alone and some- times with another couple. Merton’s attack of conscience had been shprt lived. There were very few attractive women in Hamfijton ex- cepting at prom time, or when the col- lege gave a dance, and Florence was very attractive. The fact that she was a married woman added to the ex- citement of the game. It wasn't un- pleasant, either, to be looked upon by is fraternity brothers as a gay dog. He rather liked it. and then, too, the fact that Florence preferred him to other men equally attractive gave him ® sense of power. Of course, he reasoned that there was no harm in it. Florence was not # child: she knew how to take care of herself and was probably no more verious than he was. It was nothing more than an .interesting flirtation, one that would terminate with his graduation. In the meantime, what was the use of worrying? i With Florence, however, it-was dif. ferent. Merton's apparent eageérness to see her had started a vague hope in her heart. As the days passed she forgot to think about the difference in their ages and began to believe that he really cared. If he did love her, it meant escape from Hamiiton, escape from the life she detested. And if he didn’t love her now she would make him care. One thing that worried her was the thought of having the thing kmown. Jt would never do to have a college scandal, and besides it might ruin all her plans. That was one reason why she saw Merton outside of the house, nor would she let him call for her in the car. It was too conspicuous. The Grange lived just two doors away, and MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. Our Wonder Game. One Mother Says: One of the amusements which my small son enjoys is interesting and instructive to him and takes but little of my time. When I am sewing or doing kitchen work, such as washing dishes or preparing vegetables or per- haps me itting on the porch, we wonder, “How high is the tabie>” “'How long before the rosebud will be How long before the rosebud will be out?” “How long does it take to walk to the corner store?”” and many other questions that make him use his thinking cap, yet also keep him amused. plenty of PEP . toeat means plenty of - for work. ‘THME PEPPY BRAN TOOT e ] . WOMAN’S PAGE. Making the Most of Your Looks BY DOROTHY STOTE. FEATURES. SDAY, MAY 27, 1926. THFE, _EVENING. STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, .T PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIM BRADY, M. D. What Do You Know About It? - Dally Science Six. 1. Why was Jongitude 0° s Wri D a was em ..mgl G Xni Dear Ann: °“°"",{‘; Lraverm The “wrn Left-Handed People Write. gap::'?'thlu-"“ o it i) mf.?fi.'.’,‘y..','l"h.".';a .Pnpl::::; too Buying Golf m;:e'. Friples 23.“"":2'.:‘" :- [ :-‘.:ani: 5 & Wwhere it does? Approximately one among every 26 4 2 You may not play golf,"and still = A figured Summer silk is cool and %, What European capital is | | Abproximately one Swong hearental training and example maY |mutch, thats the trubble with them, | o, gy wear the costume. Golt | bofic, 0% because unless they are smart when made appropriately. This | | in the same latitude with Wash- There are many theories which pur- | ness—most parents prefer the right.|W® Waist half our lives in bed snoring.| clothing is comfortable, serviceable | ghapeless and loose fitting. little trock on the left is such a good | | ington, D. C.? Pport to account for left handedness, hang and teach the chiid from the| Well you cant be refefring to me, | and good looking. Golf hose espe- | “'3ELt®) CNG 1200 TOUCE ) o ) -3. If you drew a stralght line | |5n4 there are several methods or tests | first to use the right hand. But how . . | clally have come into. general favor | made with fancy or contrasting t choice for the woman with & short | | from New York southward, | |70 QSR TI0 CYSR e ot handed- | come some children Hersist obstinate. | ilyum; Because T dant snote & DA | o luge. OF coutse thay a03 fo the eeet 62 The waist and broad hips, for notice the | | through what part of . South ness in an individual who may have|ly in the use of the left hand even|gerl, ‘ma sed. 4 Your own golf hose should be light | hose, and often you never see them long:walsted effect and that slenderiz-| | America would it puss? '~~~ | |been trained to use the right hand in | though their parents are right handed | ° T s speeking figuratively, pop sed. [ In Weight and made to withstand | because as many men wear their Ay s te wen ok " m“"; .:':: it ;’““ 2 "“""f concerning the relation or lnfl‘:lencaflf one way and a woman buttons hers Z,;'fi";,: 1:::.1 -’;hc‘;‘:nr?o;xgle with 6| are the best. They are certainly the | when you're shopping. Fancy knits ‘waistll panel, and the result left handedneas upon personality, edu- | the other? And why can neither tell | 0.6 'and have all that exter time to in- | 1ongest wearing and most suitable for | are expensive and you have to pay 1s simply dist . forties?” s s cation, temperament and other factors | off hand which way he or she buttons M rough wear, and they will wash well | for noveity effects. Shop wisely and idn "::‘m csatieh e 6. What are the “tropics” a8 | |of life, and I should like to present | his coat, but must look at the coat 1% mier Do seds . o 1o |if You treat them considerately. Buy | examine the fabric of the hose before Ak understood by geographers? | |some of these theories and observa: | to see? time shaving in the morning, its a| them loose fitting, because they'rs | you look at the pattern. .. materials. LETITIA. Answers to these questions in"| |tions here and invite readers to sub‘| "¢ hgndedness s merely a matter of | mystery to me how & man can take so | bound to shrink. An extra half aize | For Summer you can buy golf stock- (Copyrisht, 1926.) tomorrow's Star. mit any observations about left hand- | papit haphazardly acquired; it would [iong to shave and still have eny face | Or_larger is desirable. ings made of silk and wool. They are . edness which may seem of interest.| o/ be difficult for @ feacher to com- |10t te tol] the tale. ma. sed. How.| Practically the same buying points | very light and cool, and they.give sat- We'll make it a symposium or &n|pe g child to change from' natural . TIl set the alarm clock for you | 8Pply to -hwsband’s and children's | isfactory service and wear. Cotton So-Called Temperate Zome. open formum, and Tl be secretary | s handedness to right handedness, | wueite If your 1eely wunt (o try It, sho | BOI hose. For Summer wear lght | and wool mixed golf hose rarely giva merely. Who knows—I may learn| .. would it be a matter of any. par. sed. > colors are coolest, and loose knitted | satisfactory wear, and they '‘wash We think of the tropics as reglons | something. ticularly. importance But there -are | I hate alarm clogks, their. inventions | liose are most comfortable. The dark, | poorly. Cotton-and-silk golf hose are of excessive heat, and we are pleased | nat most of ws are right handed 18| good reasons to believe. that it 18n't | of the devil, an alarm clock would | fUZzy hose are only suitable for cool [ made for women, but a serious. defect to call our regions the temperate zone. |..ommonly attributed to habit or train. | such a simple matter. + |'start the day rong for enybody unless | Weather wear. Camel's-hair hose are |is the fact that the silk threads cut As a matter of fact it might better | j,o " ¢ habit or training be the ex- (Copyright, 1026.) he had the nerve of a fireman, pop | Warm, but they feel so soft that|the cotton ones. * |be called the Intemperate zone. No|,ignation, then right handedness isan | * sed. many men and women prefer to sacri- Golf hose are really economical, be- |such extremes of temperature are felt | j,gtinct. ' Physiologists have recently 3 Well my goodniss, Willyum, you |fice coolness in order to get this won- | cause they save you appreciable sums in either the tropics or the Arctic |jroved that instincts may be developed Pal‘klll Wi th P cant ixpect the little berds to hop on | derful texture. 9 on regular hosiery. They are built for regions. The coldest region in the by training. The kreat Russian physi- g Wi eggy Vour window sill and sing to wake you | _ YOUr own olf hose should be'made | endurarce, and it almost always pays world, the North Pole not excepted, 18 | oiogist, Paviov, trained a number of Up, In this pracktical werld, ma sed, | With ops that extend well above the | one to indulge merchandise which a region in the interior of Siberia, And | white mice to answer the dinner bell. |- and I sed, Tl call you at 5 o'clock if | knees. Firm reinforcement at the [ combines rugged service with novelty the hottest reglons in the world, the | It required 300 lessons to train them you wunt me to, pop. top hems is desirable. All golf hose | attractiveness. deserts of Arabia, north Africa, and|to know and respond to the call, that Jest try it and ses wat happins, pop jour own Southwest, are not actually | is, their feeding and the ringing of sed. Im going to get up exm.'",y in the tropics, while the average Sum- | the bell were combined 300 times be- tomorrow morning by sheer force of mer temperatures of a large part of | fore the mice would run to the feed- caracter, a man awt to be strong America are far‘in excess of the aver- | ing place when the bell rang. The minded enuff to wake up at watever age maxima of the tropics. This is|next generation of these mice learned hour he chooses and then get up. I'm not to say that the heat is not “felt” | to respond to the call of the bell after going to go to bed at 10-o'clock to get more in the real tropics, but it 1s & [only 100 lessons. The third genera- 2 8004, slatt; he sed. matter of record that it gets both hot- | tion of the mice learned to do it after Vich he 8id, and Sunday morning ter and colder in the temperate zone | 30 lessons. A fourth generation 1 got up about 9 and looked in pops and changes more violently from ex- | learned after only 10 lesson room and he was still asieep, and I treme to extreme in the Uinted States| 1 suspect Prof. Paviov is a skilled itatted (o oall i and) e eeds You thin in the tropics or the "Arctic|author. When he arrives at this Better not, Bgnny, 1 tried to geé him up 2 hours ago and he almost took m: hed off. ’ > So I didn't, and pop got up about half pass eleven. . o continued next month."” Answers to Yest@rday's Questions. | said, “The last generation which I saw before leaving Petro"r':a Iur_;.\;fl igTes i the lesson after five repetitions. The e e et e i ttie | sixth_ generation will be tested ater Florence was well aware of the fact |though just after the great glacler (MY return. T think it very probable that Elsle did not like her. Then melted the ocean level must have been | that after, Bore, tne & MAw EL0S thers was that catty Mrs. Jefferson khigher than before. lace on hearing the bell with no who lived next door. She was the | 2. The Great Pleistocene Glacier is)Dlace on Mesting wife of the astronomy professor and the most recent event of importance |PTRVIOUS WSSORT. o000l patioy the worst gossip in Hamilton. il L AR delivered in America in July. 1923. She did not worry so much about g e newest mountains of our con- = h o o with his head in the clouds anyway, |MeXIfo. | ldest mountains of America |, INStNCts are the result of educa| “Dad savs the best demonstration | water, adding a few drops of Kitchen lpqlt was unlikely that Mrs. Morgan = 4. e A lm‘?‘; ';“;"’ - "r‘l“" hanmn or training. Darwin would have |of the horn of plenty he knows of is|bouquet to color. Garnish with slicee :1?213 : .”:;M;ugf“’:tg: fi?‘:} hlle:; E‘u"n”anpms",;“;q chain and the | peen delighted with these experiments | the neighbor's loud speaker.” | of orange round the dish. . she would never tell. Florence could 5. Florida and Louisiana are the have banked on Jean's loyalty, and most geologically recent States of the yet she knew that her young sister- | Union. 1. There is no geological evidence of Roast Duck, Orange Sauce. Put three small onions in each duck and roast brown. Remove and discard the onlons, arrange the ducks on a bed of cress on a silver platter, and pour orange sauce around them, which is made by adding the strained juice of in-law disliked her. The Middle ‘West was under the The times that Merton called at the 'ocean in Cretaceous times. house for her he usually brought an- (Copyright, 1926.) other couple with him. The man was Andy Patterson and the woman was a | Mrs. Eldredge, who lived on the out- | skirts of the town. Cynthia Eldredge | was a widow who had for some reason continued to live in Hamiiton after her husband's death. She had an in- come of sorts, and because she was | young and attractive took rather an’| Eczenia active part in the college life. She . entertained the boys a great deal and r D e T i was rather frowned upon by the more | very renson. that like asthma and i conservative element of the town. She |fever, hives, and others of this 1k, managed to have a Eood time. Mow. |the exact reason’is sometimes difficult 24 h‘,m. 40 Uis &y Seitte Dt ?n | to discover in particular cases. Most faculty affairs. Florence liked her. | aueon wi mot urs g arat, healing ¥y s v . and that diel Comthia had %o hecount ta ne ene | 20N responsible for ft.” musc be o - . 2 |altere efore any cure can be perma- ::_‘:”“orld‘ She was her own mis- gent. There are two types of eczema, e rv and moist. It attacks both well Rg';‘e 2‘,2',‘;."‘}::c;"c}';"_"‘}f‘ffim:«':‘d dl‘l {fed and malnourished children and of was rather a long walk, and as she | corioe Hifte e SUCh cases would be walked briskly along she lamented the | ¢ jo pomqre fact’ that they did mot own & car. |nursing mebe anais corg Daby Is s They could perfectly well afford It on | {he cavse may 11 in o wnrion breme Richard’s income. but he thought it & | millc and thag 1 R meaxt foolish extravagance. How little he | fanmiome what onger Intervals between foolish Sxiravagance. How little he feedings and the use of bolled water to be in love with her. But Merton, | oo o nursing may help. 1f the {9ere,in love with her. But Merton. |huby is bottle fed the formila needs interested, how different he was! She |ini LE.ane Liere seems no way to do was going to see him that afternoon. | can cur e or he e TinE, (On® g‘::hhtl:d arranged to meet at |angd see if this-makes any appreciable " (Copyright. 1926.) improvement in the eczema. If it does . » ’{;ml.dthe :u‘ll;’ contents may be re- g . uced materially and watch this re. (Continued in tomorrow’s Star.) actlon for a week. Tt is a matter nure‘b; orh!n;l‘::’ to discover what ele- ment in the is acting as a poison HOW IT STARTED | [(c'the baby and cansing this moleor o be thrown off through the skin. When bables do “‘outgrow” this it is Your Baby and Mine BY M\'.I'l"l.l MEYER ELDRED. BY JEAN NEWTON. evidently becauss by constarit feeding of the offending element they have Scissors Cut Friendlhip. bullt up a resistance to it so that it no langer affects them. This, to my “I'll give you a cent for them,” said | notion, is a hard-hearted thing to do, the recipient of a pair of exquisite |as children suffer immeasurably be- s ;s 2% gold embroidery scissors. cause of eczema and no amount of “Hardly,” you would say, “an ex- |trouble should be too great to take change to absolve one from reciprocat- | which offers them a chance of reljef. ing”; but it was not intended to do| Healing salves should be made use that, Tt was just an attempt to evade |of to allay the itching and these can 4 the law of lore, to live up to the letter | best-be applied on a linen cloth, which 7 while violating the spirit. For it is [in the case of the face or hands, . b 9 4 3 2 ‘ written or rather cut into the pages should be cut to fit. The face covering |. of superstition that a gift of knife or | may be cut like a mask with holes for { 3 G scissors cutteth in twain the love or |eves, nose and mouth, the salve ap- friendship between him that giveth |plied liberally and the whole tied on . i . . and him that receiveth. by two strips of cloth goin, m— " Among the middle classes during [and over the ears. The hfnd.‘m‘i:dg a 1 erCnCe ln a or § the reign of Elizabeth in England, the | covered with small bags of the musiin. nxnnle for ‘B’Ioddlnth gifts wndl’pllr :t }tvnlefrt;hoglg n:;' be used on those . : o scissors. ose who ventured into the | parts of the body affected with ec: e s bonds of matrimony were bombarded |as this makes it dry and still :x at ha-s ca tured erlca With scissors as a bridal couple today |itchy. Use oil to clean those parts, : = is with candlesticks and flower vases. | Sometimes eczema persists. for -years > ; M Let us hope they were good dodgers! | 80 that it is useless to de d b The purposs of this gift was to arm |to do the work. Ry ; the prospective husband and wife | As for letting babies of 4 ; . : . C . with a weapon for severing the knot | propped up in chairs, with pilions. : To almost every one it comes as. 2 surprise—that extra should it become painful. In the lan.|am all against {t. When a baby's tOl.lCh Of m !]l: ’ tiC]J ne ;'wh .[dh hzs swiftly m ’: th 'II guage of the day: back is strong enough to support him, “Fortune doth give these paire of |he wlll sit up alone without pillows. b p : knives to you. . and for just that length of ti 4 ) Y H . i R ethiows it it |l et ome ot otk 3 blend by far the largest sclling coffee in the world: ; untrue.” force him. = A, 2 i r.: 1;1 efimi( ron"tg‘;ehenhsiblehln the - - . . 4 ight of this knowledge that the gifts 2 llll'w.‘d hm ml - of scissors should have come into dis- i Medium ¥°n¢y Maker. For yeats lts, fi > SOOd‘ncs was y to 5 repute! e story of a oty 12 . e (Copyrieht, 1926.) neither read nor write. (hevend s a few connoisséurs and families who made good living . . —_—— ing her own name), vet who made 2 3 an art. Today'it has pleased more people than any other coffee ever offered. for sale. S 2 . 1$250,000 as a clairvoyant in A Bibles for Chinesé Army. | has been brought to ght in the syt Eight thousand Bibles written in |of a will contest in London. Chinese have been purchased by the SN P A S | The news of that unexpected diffetence in flavor has 3 traveled rapidly throughout the entire country from New Yotk to Los Angeles and from Mobile to Minneapolis. In -'a'long list of America’s greatest cities, Maxwell House Coffee is the first choice above all others. A fiew cxperience, 2 new pleasure is offered to you and 00K for Gorton, same of Amari your family in.the riré taste and aroma of this blend. Look mn.:ie‘l;.hfily‘;!z..fi ; . - Yout grocet has Maxwell House Coffee in the famous ¢ bl T B . o blse o Check-Nesl Cofios Compap, ghele Houe : Gorton. Pew Fisheries Co.; Ltd. - | : e . ; & : ororis | It has pleased more people than any Gikm | other coffee ever offered for sale Chinese national army for distribution | | OOK for Gorton, name of Ameri- Carpets,drapes, upholst are quickl p:?en:ed witl Energine. ‘out it on the spot. Rub with a ccloth. Re- " | . * sult:fabric clean and bright. Ei comes in handy cans. noodor. 35cat - drug A e % " - 3 A i ! I ; . b : ;

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