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WOMAN’S PAGE. THE - EVENING STAR, WAS HINGTON, D. C..SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 1926. FEATURES. - 1 1 MENU FOR A DAY. . ~ . SUB ROSA DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Red Tones in Current Fashions & BREAK \I%;I' i e BY LYDIA LE BARON WAL 5 . Cooked Cereal with Dates z g RON WALKER. BY MIML Settli z 3 e S Baked ‘Beans | BY MARY MARSHALL o ettling the Mother-in-Law Questiton by Sharing Frankfurts - Dangerous Friendships. he T r NTiee 1ot . Hot Brown Bread There are American women who | claret and wines are ail reds with a Geoste a e ks napa iy the Burden—Why Miss Bighteen Isan Eove Doughnuts. _ Coffee. | have never heard of the name of the | slightly " purplish tone. ' Sometimes o) J, s Pl s - it e 5 = celebrated ¥French smak Cha- nel red is combined with a light- e e i et and Not With Any Special Boy. IR el, who will talk glibly this Summer |er shade ot wine, and claret of Chi up-to-date advice. She knows that = ki < Reast Chicken, Currant Jelly .:"'],l:'.;‘..v\;v..f‘m'”""'b Coniblidd Wit s i:'z”ifim:s& \::)rul ‘r’(;:‘“;:v‘;:z‘tigl‘é‘cx‘cl‘:t.l‘:n‘l DEAR DOROTHY DIX: Whom do vou think the mother-inlaw should live L Gy H | For Autimn wear we shall doubt. I will sympathize with her, nd Lettuce Salad sce much of these winy red with, her own daughter or her daughter-indaw? My mother-inlaw has Tomato perhaps more than v lke. But the fact that the shades will be popular ought not to keep vou ring them if you really Orange Sherbet Coffee You see, her Teddy is far away in{lived with us ever since we have been married, and it has been eight miserabl the South. He's gone fer months | unhappy years that but for her would have been happy and peaceful. She and at the end of that time he'll re- |0 disagreeable that her own daughters cannot get along with her. and so she SOTP turn complete with a glorious fortune. | is foisted on me. 1 have to do all my own work and have smaller childre CrabLMeat: Salad becoming. The important They will then be married, have Sev-| than they have, and T feel that it is their place to take care of her. What Paikor House Rolls thing is to be a little ahead of the eral children and be thoroughly con-{your opinion? MRS. X. -l;l_firl I,P;.'_hm 3 erowd rather than behind the crowd ventional. In the meantime Georzie Answer—Tt is certainly her daughters’ duty to take care of their mother Washineroriole | Téa is left at home to prepare for the |part of the time, and thus relieve you of the strain of having to endure c asmine ¢ Whion yoo o etk for great event. She Is, she assures me, | tinually a disordant element in your home. That will get upon anybody's HOT BROWN BREAD. Summer frocks or for advanced Au not hard to look at and @ great many | nerves in the end and break down any morale. One cup molasses, 2% cups tumn frocks, suits or coats you will men have found difficulty in looking The selfishness of human nature has no more vivid illustration than is sour milk, 2 level teaspoons find three colors pre-eminentiy popt at_anything else when she is around. | shown in the way with which families deal with the problem of the old soda, 1% cups corn meal, 1 lar. There will be black, either aloy Now she works on a newspaper and | father or mother. It is only in rare instances that you see each of the sons cups graham flour, 11& cups hours or with blue—green—and Chanel red | | i, 1 adopting any popular color. | | i | i | | | | | a most awfully attractive man hasland daughters accepting their responsibility and shouldering their share of white flour. Steam 4 or some other dark wine tone. Nauvy asked her to go out with him, al-fthe burden. Generally, the most amiable and easy-going or the mest con- (without letting water stop hoil- blue still finds favor among a certain . though he's seen Teddy’s ring on her | scientious one of the children is appointed the family goat and mother or | | ing) then let it hake & hour in disceiinating minorty o Kvance and finger, and knows that she's bound to | father wished on him or her by the others oven. Serve hot the United States, but all thousht i be another’s one of these days. Still This virtually ruins the life of the victim, who must endure, day in and - e I [ that it would win back its one-time { he protests that he doesn’'t want any { day out, year after year, the fretting and querulousness and nagging of an DELMONICO POTATOES. | opuimtly Haw v hed—at fease foe sort of sentimental attachment be- fidle old person who. having nothing to do and no interests.of her or his own, _ Melt 2 tablespoons butter, stir | ttiethire: betng. . tween them. He wants a nice girl to | takes out his or her discontent at life by never-ending faultfinding. Yet no| f in 11: tablespoons flour, 1.3 tea- i (Coyrizht. 1026.) o dance with and ride with and play |one need be unduly sacrificed if each of the sons and daughters took turns| | spoon salt and 3 teaspoon - : tennis with. at taking care of mother or father. white pepper, then add sradu- “ ; Georgle hasn't a_thing to do t Of course, Mary says that she is too busy to take care of mother, and | | ally 1 cup hot milk and stir and S »\ LITTLE BENNY u Summer and she just yearns for a |Sally says that her husband is perfectly furious all the time mother fs with | | cook until creamy, Have ready N i few good times. Surely there's no |them, and Tom's wife can't get along with mother at all, and Sam’s wife 1% cup grated cheese, 3 chopped | | | \ disloyalty to Teddy in her attitude. | insists on living at a hotel so mother-in-law can't stay with them, and so it hard-boiled eggs and 1 quart | | | b She ‘doesn’t care for the new man, |is left to poor Jane or Bob's wife to have mother all of the time, while the sliced cold cooked potatoes. Put | | | BY LEE PAPE. iy Jim, at all—only she’s pleased that he| others pay her a flying visit. And the other children ignore the fact that | | these ingredients into buttered | | | : wants to take her out—pleased that [ mother is just as much their mother as she is Jane's or Bob's, and that she dish in alternate I read- f S T her companionship would make him |aggravates Bob's wife just as much as she does her other in-law: ing each layer with little of [REICH waaamihing FarERInLG happy. Is there any harm in her But in all the world is there anything more pitiful than these poor ol sance and seasoning with salt | with his feet up, and I sed, Ha § stepping out with the good-looking | peoble whom nohody wants, unless it is the poor young people who have thei: and pepper, cover top with but- FHODCR ¢ - stranger while Teddy works away in | happiness destroyed and the peace of their homes wrecked by the old? tered crumbs until llave vou noticed it? pop sed. the Southland? Yet nobody is really to blame in this terrible dilemma in which thou well browned Meening wat did T wunt. and I It's so hard to tell you the truth, [$ands upon thousands of families find themselve: S Eno i sed. Would it hert me eny If Georgie, and not sound conventional _Mother is not to be blamed because she is “set in her ways" and full of Beat volks 3 eggs with 11 | smoked e and stuffy. At the very first word of | Prejudices and peculiarities, nor is she to be blamed because she feels that she T \'mg' tafec and | Tt would hert vou plenty, and then . common sense you're going to turn | has a right to run her children’s homes and interfere in all of their affairs and ko Sl it et | 1a_hert you some more pop sed. Vour back on me and niff. Still you {advise and admonish them continually i o o | well does it hert you? I sed. ask for a truthful answer and here | _ Nor is mother’s daughter to be blamed for not wanting mother to live Lt e i ctpe fone P e | On the contrary it dves me good. T, with her when she sees that mother keeps her husband in a constant state of | | WaIRt Wi & CUDS FOUE (e = | pop sed. It keeps my thawts in cir- ? Your relationship with the big |irritation and is driving him away from her and breaking up her home. AR et U Lo e | culation and makes my fingers and i bt wn:evelinewconisc il in aliprob: "Nor is the daughter-inlaw to be blamed for not wanting to live with a | | I WILE (e LR CAOTOEEIT glls,.\ aracefil, wile so. on the other ability lea ¥ i ,¢ | mother-inlaw who is a continual thorn in the flesh that torments her past o e | | hand, have so few thawts at your SIMPLICITY 1S THE KEYNOTE TO BEAUTIFUL DECORATION e o e aiance: Gl LG L | age that there is no traffic problem The ; s e e ; y BR darn good thing to be avoided, even The only solution of the difficulty is for the children so to divide cut s and boke Ib roand t | | connected with them, and besides, i room beeutiful fs iwhat every |can So over the woodwork. “Greamfipion fao hive to ieive up ‘a ot of | mother’s Ho that leachi willihave a rest from Her nagsing. Ot befter stil ekl Lol il { smoking wou d stump vour growth, e T P e e e s B would it be to establish some sort of old ladies’ home de luxe, where mother | SHHERY BECEEER CReliaiint S8 1 | -| he_sed. i i or of any room that Is hers to dec-|can show the daughter how to use | ™5, WSS 1he, TG N 1m not | could he boarded and only pay visits to her children. It seems to me that it | | jiious, ‘or raspberry jam. One | | | Well wy wont it stump vours? [ vate. - Fortunately, <he can have the |a piece of heavy cardboard @an old | | Gn L ATCOREIS IE ver this | would be a far happler fate for the old women themselves to have a home of | [ oy ‘contributor writes that | | cl | sed. advice of her mother. but it Is wise |hox cover, with the edges cut off. will || 58 1 {hat vou're untrue and | their own in which they know themselves welcome than to know that they | | Je'uses u darson plum and ap- \J I have none, T meen T have mine, or the mother to let the daughter |do perfectly well) to avoid getting the | fan seevetly, that vowre umtrue and |, o ;ving with their in-laws who don’t.want them. DOROTHY DIX. T e | ana wen you' reetch the heizht of make the place which is her own as [paint on_wall or floor or window | fickle. that you think of him as a i JAS dUHE COREEHET SHCNCOYSEITIE CLARET-COLOR COAT WORN | 3 feet % and a half inches, wich you definitely an expression of herself as|panes. The cardhoard should be theart at all. You may top with frosting made this | | WITE PRIN FROCK OF | will proberly do on your 1st herth- possible. 1t the daushter has little |held flat against the wall above a |have the most loyal heart in the | TIZAR DOROTHY DIX: I am 18 years old and I am in love with a boy way: One teaspoon butter. 1 | | WITHL ~DRINI C | 5w ke wilk be ail rite foriyou {0 idea of interior decoration she will |baseboard and close against the wood | World, but oh, these Summer cven- That is, I am in love with him when I am not with him, but I am ng teaspoon flavoring, 1 table- | | ® e | sit down quietly and smoke i cigar Liave to experiment. Few persons ob- | while painting any pargcular portion, { iDgs! These moons and these auto [ in Jove with him when I am Wwith him. I don't understand this, do you? S s D T lof Chanel red. It Is as weil known | to see if it makes you sick. pop sed Ject to doing this. So give the child | Lay the cardboard flat against the | rides and these wonderful dances with Answer—I certainly do, Mary. and. take it from me, you are in love with gar until just thick enough to oW fa Lanecin green. It will go down | Wich jest then ma came in sayini, a loose rein and watch results. wood of the baseboard on the floor |# Wonderful dancer—and those dullllove, hut you are not in love with the boy. j ) Jozsadi andipuy ongcan. cold. M he history of costuming along! Willyum ‘I bleeve thats vour 3rd S iatsnous 30 Mhcoorati when painting the lower part of it. |letters from Teddy, who never seems Every girl goes through this experience. From the time she is 14 or It never hardens. You can add | | & W8 LAEN L NG Poiret twill. | cigar this evening, now Willyum 5 Treatment for Spots. fo know flow o e ssemtime st years old she begins to think about love. Out of her dreams and her fancies | | 2 teaspoons cocon, If desir ‘houzh Chanel’s -name has be. | havent you eny control at all after It may he that the daughter really [ gpo oo on MO 108 9P Stronger girls th and her imaginings, and out of the stories she reads and the plays and the L conie itichet to (hls rioh: velfie rell. | wilt/the ductet ned® knows more of modern schemes and |, SUOMA BBV daub o r}"""l et on | tor the old pros stuff. pictures she sees, she weaves a beautiful and wondrous garment, and she tries i ot actually originate the fash | G, pop. 1 sed, and pop sed. Now fdeas for interior decoration than 1hv§\mh aiole vh“’l“““‘ hml’;""h"“.\ run yourself rizht out of your pleas- | jt on every good-looking youth that comes along. T ~ jon. No one dressmake d. These | dont start another argewment 111 let miother who B Kept ooms in about | With 2 clean white” cloth. It should | ant romance into a new entanxlement | o Sometimes it seems to fit as If it had been fashioned for that particular HOME NOTES | | Snes o mtaneoty a8 succes. | you £0 out for half an hour if you the same style of decoration for vears, | Snirely disappear. |If the oil "f“h_" with Jim. And oh, the misery and {one. Very often she has to alter it to make it do. Lop off some good quality | sors to the deeper hois de rose tones | promise to come hack without heing While it is a mistake to mix decora i" et 3 _‘,‘(“};‘ 3 ""q!“{l)}" o \{\11 woe that comes with a broken en- [ here and widen it out with another quality there to make it go on at all. And —_— [ that have prevailed for two seasons | called in 20 minnits, in other werds | tions by introducing elements of one | [ MMMEBAICly WHE cornstarch or tal-} gagement. Honestly it's the worst | generally after a little while she decides t it doesn't become the hoy who is BY JENNY WREN. Fpace v e ood tones were | ixpect you back heer in one hour era that do not harmonize with those m.nl. ) _"‘ o e fl",“:" ‘1‘"-»:"‘ ll«_fl"l-* moment of a girl's life—when she [ wearing it, so she grabs it off him and folds it up and puts it away in her hope | deep. soft red on the vellowish side | at the latest of unother, it still s possible to blend | PTpre brushing off, and there is ittle | realizes that she's got to give the air | chest to wait for somebody else to deck out in it. lof the scale, while ths Chanel red,| Wich I was. periods when adroitly done. If changes eared from such a spot to the old faithful whom she's loved But all the time her mind is filled with the thoughts of love, for she has | Unusual architectural effects always : are to be made in main rooms of a Paint or Paper. all her life. fashioned this beautiful robe that she is just dving to give away. The danger | add sparkle and distinction to a room. house hoth mother and daughter to. The entire wall can be painted or Suppose you don't fall. That's not | to her is that she is in such a hurry about it that she won’t wait for the | This little gas grate, designed for a Al [ gether can study them and their fur- | papered by the girl if she is strong ng that Jim won't. If you're as |right man to show up, but hands it out to the first passerby. small study or Ledroom, is unique in nishings before deciding definitely on | enough gor the undertaking. Mother [€asy to look at as vou claim, nothing Now, by dear. the real test of love is not absence, but propinquity. Tt is | that it has wooden doors which can be puschases or on revisions. I is when | can aid Yecidedly when so much of a | could be more natural than ' hopeless | easy enough to love anvbody who i far away and whom vou can invest with s ks the room to be changed is the daugh | is undetaken. Full directions for | assion on his part. Then vou've got |all the imaginary charms and virtues of a hero of romance, but it is a differ i e - ter's only, that she should be permit- | papering a room will be printed should |{all the mess of letting him down and | ent matter when vou see a person every day and cannot help but perceive all BY HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR. ted to have just what she wants as a | enough requests come in for me to |hurting his feelings, too. his faults and blemishes and have your nerves rasped by his irritating little | scheme for the interio; know there is interest in it. The| Platonic Summer friendships, with { ways and mannerisms. il g 18 always been |a oked into those dark. pene- e s i |work requires definite methods of |the fiance far away are dangerous You see, the trouble with matrimony is that it Has to be lived at close (et Ao ch. e R aliean s Con o e bebindithcie (otibiscanel) Ifor ell Spent. | cutting the paper, trimming.the edges, | things. Just playing around w range with a man whom vou have got to sce unshaven and cross and tired [gectstomed tovidigncds, 48 (F8 AR te gl e G 6 ihar & AlTe g S | ' i play round with | s Because sie is ine perrienced, | glasses. Once more she looked with When suggesting that_a daughter |applying the paste andg fol and | someone else’s sweetheart won't make | and grumpy, and unless you love him well enough to love him even that way, |l e osition as | admiration at Mary’s hands, la fix her room to her liking or when hanging the paper. The easiest kinds | Jim any happier nor vou, in the end. | then you are not in love. lighe & farcen (ot g ol |G | hariea s ariay Vel ha ana talatec ek acceding to her request to do so. it | of paper to hang should also be (Covyright. 1926.) Don't think you are in love with any man until vou feel that-vou would [Madye el Wil SonEs s " n|How powerful they were. and de- must expected that some outlay |chosen, and there are definite styles never let him get any farther away from you than the length of your apron [rery veautiful and rich woman. e s menian will be needed. If means are limited | to_consider. : string if you could help it DOROTHY DI | ke fomityy are Richard: Jona's hs- |penduble and full of sirensth. ~ this outlay may be small in dollars | In one article it is impossible, of What Do You Know SR Cabtol il Bt il [ d L ora I oS and cents. but Jarge in the child’s |course, to give more than a few rules G = TV DI Frerais & Gieation over Wi ’ . i secutes Leila with his attentions and [TICT SHE AL BEETHS T R *own efforts. Paint will do much to [and hints for the room beautiful, but About It? | I i e, e m\m‘m‘.\:"\:‘w‘“;i«h;}@»{;'le'l o |3ona amscs nersclf by Muniliating O e venew the freshness of an interior. | others will be considered in future = oM 2 o SION QLRI o necue Lo n S the girl. Richard, who has learned | Leila smiled a little wistfully. Any girl who can wield a paint brush St i Daily Science Si itjneikedpgigocd campany e havs agfect (hatyoun dedibi oI (o DDAl {fong ags that Mana docs not tove i, | net. e % . REB VN . heaing by pitving Leila and then dis re you s W Mrs. Kingsley . Where is Baffin Land? Answer—1I think that you should be allowed to have the car two nights a e T e Dy N Who was Sir John Frank- | |week. Yinally comes to the conclusion that| Mary's heavy dark brows went up. n BY THORNTON lin? - = Yauilmow, ithe gentleman Wihio pays the frelght ant buye S cashad s Jhe must have Leila and makes up his | “Tell me about it,” she said quietly, W. BURGESS . Where did Hendrick Hud- | | right to use the car most of the time. so you must give vour father and the tined. 10 mareu her. To his amaze- | “unless you'd rather not * e I SOn e other members of the family their innings. But every boy likes to have the use e e wermucs him scornfully and | Leila told her story from the begin- % Where is Dr. Irederick | |of @ car nowadays, and it keeps him satisfied and contented at home to have |t S ienarges her. " During | ning. She told of her duties for Mona, : : ; 4 i Cook now? (tmatpleasre, Tt arenTa: et AbEe cior it all this time Mona has been amusing |of Barry's persecution of her, culmi The Little Driller. to Jimmy Skunk. “Come over here If 5. Who discovered the South BOtiplay falr, Soft, WIth yoUL patents. | Don v abiie your prlyiicge ) Dont | herself with Fonald Cameron, a young | nating in his proposal of marri Nouh mud souil nften be suprised | FOU WARE fo see one of those hole-) § Puie? take the car anywhere vou father wouldn't take it. Don't ask any girl to bachelor who is very muek in love |and Mary interrupted he mble falk ¥on have deanise | makers at work,” said he. | giinbes | Wilmerios Slown Jithe §] 8| Tk nERontivoWwaUId I AR (B yonE Bl erRwersial s andid it tide - = \with her. She has been leading him | “The Kingsleys are very rich, did Old " Mother Natur | For once Jimmy Skunk actually North Pole since Peary plant- too far or too fast. =~ i > . closed to conceal the opening when the | o, "itnout any serious intentions., | you stop to think of that?” T e ks BUITied. When he got there Gray-| | o the fing there? I hope your father will let you use the car twice a week and that, having | ozs are not lighted. Also, as the little | 30 04" 0% ouse party on Long Island | Leila’s face went scarlet. her gray 3 v Stunl i observing, He has |G Showed him @ clam, and on the e Hhere? e auestions | |agreed to do so. there will be no more arguments on the subject, and that no- | qoors are gavly decorated the DUl singuse sty Ok e ity vl 3 learned to use his eves. IUis an ex-| gl o the clam was what Jimmy A BTORaR S St body will ask you where you arve oing or when you are coming bhack G dash of color to the roon B R to oo Guay 1oith M or| “¥ee, T thousht of that. When I thing to be whserving. —Some | Cifica‘y small ‘snail i g H The privilege that is accorded freely comes with a double grace. And | tiny bricked hearth is quite in keeping | M7 ME 0 00 @00 T80 o™ ohe | first came to you 1 might have mar- folk can o along : never see any SN o anereal e boys are good enough sports to play fairly with a father who deals gen > gel esi: LI Cpd Lo : . - by . D o ) - 1 are id Graywing B with the gene design. finally makes up her mind to go. d a man like Barry for his money thing, vet have perfectly ood eves.| .phere's one of those hole-makers. 1 Those Goo'-Goo’ Gum Drops. Sl i DO DD The idea of using @ gas grate in. | /190 e " |1 might have closed my eyes to the They have good eyes, but they do not| pava an idea that he has drilled his : ne: stead of A wood or coal burning grate = Pl Gl Ll il o ow e : Jome the | 10l and is living on that clam now.” | | ”"mh‘!}u mn:\hf“";”lr“: i the Esk e e = in a bedroom is an extremely practical CHAPTER XLIL T might’ of couise, T don't really 3V, dn his wanderings along the | Tjginmy just simply stared at Gra s sometimes thought of as a mythi- he enchantment of an open i TG S > beach, Jimmy Skunk had noticed one g You see., he thoushi that Gras. | €4l habit of Arctic explore like ie a I'OSS- or uzzie cannot be so lightly dismissed in | The New Leila. Lt R R thing that he suw frequently. That|wing must be telling him . stc putting salt on a bird’s tail. - Gum- a.living room, but where the aim is e A LU AL 5 e or an oyster shell| pui Gravaving didn't <eem to be ok | AFOPS. or some other form of sugar, (Copyright. 1926.) to provide a little extra heat quickly [ To return to Leila. on the n Leila nodded slowly. “Yes, I've ¢ With @ tiny perfectly round hole in{ing. “Why, that’s nothing lm;’ % | Actually are most welcome to Eski- for dressing, the gus grate is unex- | that she had left the Kingsley house, | changed. You ean't imagine the thrill ft. e saw this so often that he be-|snail™ Jimmy exclaimed. “ 1 mos, who ordinarily get no sugar colled and requires a minimum of |she had gone back to the cheap hotel 1 .'i""' out “r‘lx!ll‘ first week's wis Cortainly 10sa snail. Who said it |t all. and are born, apparently ~with T | ; | where she had staved befores She| Mary smlled. "“Are you ready for [ wasn't?" retorted Graywing. i T '.;‘““;' inereplne (Lot aasie h:"dllmrmf”1 B w‘|hd\‘x el T Ravenitt compuateain I B e enati i w in | reason back of it, the same being of the feeling of sick depressio ] col d the « anstiae s cant make Holes 1ot one tump of susar or one gum- [She was sure would be hers, once but T thouzht T might take a e fan oyster shell” declared Jimmy jdrop will, by 1 demonstration, What Tomorrow Means to You| | <he ent red one of those dreary | .\![iviv‘v‘cr“\\hxl.;l 1 i finishing. ) 1" 0h, can't they exclaimed Gray. |Fse your bodily temperature. ~This AT |rooms. ‘But strangely enough, she | Mary was silent for a moment as | wing: " “Well, perhaps the snails | MUSt feel pretty nice north of the | was not nearly so miserable as | though deliberatin something. Then | vourre mcquaintedtwith ean’t, butichisi|iATctic clxcle. Wt on (hese blazing Lt i o s A T e xpecicn feryTnuDhsucaents R CEHEyES one “can He venched over and [hot Summer dava people will drink e e TG TR unhapps, but 16} Keen L e i . {picked up the little snail. Sure 5 L - 1ce &l melting o anetary aspects are | Was Jargely hecause of the discover: o o ke to come in | enough, right where the snail had |ifthe mouth and having no internal eomOT O D etively favor. | she had made ubout Richard here as my assistant? The agency been was a little round hole in the ::fle‘w:l), suulxmmd with sugar which .!‘C"X'PQ D Tey! Arel In: Qvery sense ap- | ckedtfor hiM, and she was sure is gro) Ing(l:mtl I need help. I could clam shell. As a matter of fact, this [ fses the blood temperature ust as able. ey I n ahsorvances and | cared for her, and yet they could |Eive you $30 a week to start, more little snail is called “The Oyster |MUch in the good old U. S, A. as propr o R ar There will | never be anything to ‘cach other. It |later if you work into the position as Drill.” And all the ovstermen hate At the North Pole. = recreations of a Sunday, ere Nn- [ was horrible, tragict “And vet she I think you ili | it, for next to the starfish it is the| Now what do you know about O b e intieitles, but there | hadn't wanted to fall n love with| “You mean it:" Lelia's volce shook |ovster's greatest enemy. It has a the e xperianced 2 feellng of con- | him. It had been the last thing in 3'40”1&”;-" \_ulu = lly mean that T | aueer little tongue covered with tiny, | Answers to Yesterday's Questions, fontment and self-satisfaction, all of | the world that she had expected. | couid be worth that to yor | sharp, horny teeth, and with thix B oy ' B i i ey v promote and| _Aside from her unbappiness about | Mary grinned broadly [ tongue it drills the holes. Then it [ 1. The Magvars are the true Hun- hich must inevitably promete 50 | this, she discovercd to her amaze- | MY dear child, I'm not sentimental J sucks up the oyster or the clam from | S3rlans. perhaps related to the Huns OBtaE OO It i ‘ather | ment that she was no longer af! and I insist upon competency. If [ B [nsine theine of old, but not closely akin to any: ning, the aspects ~become rather | Ment thaf sBe s Bo Johser o At thInR Youi SWere Wotil e B > ClobveE o sther 'n Europen o g 3 this time, care must | of life. ¢ € ony g = . A Ak | S as Sl Bl e e T clouded and. 2t o hastiness. or im- | to fight her battles, she no fonge, shouldn't mention it. You've broad mixture of a Slavie with & Teutonie pulsiveness, as one ill-considered | that terrible fear of the future. 1 s LG hll*:"\ you ¢ < . 3 people. Word or act may mar ‘s’ day that|Her cxerlerice with tho Ieingsleys | St MO FH oped. Le T WISH YOU WOULD. MR, GULLL Puzzlicks 3. The Finns are not Scanadi- should only be typleal of tranquillity | {Cushened her, made bet selbrolams | ™ ™ e had once before, Leil SAID JIMMY. navians as is often supposed. It is and peace. SE e St OF pasut | stripped off her glow (ol G zzle-Limerick: not clear to what race they ar 4 G rrow® will, ac- | ance about getting work. She hadn't | Stripped off her gloves and held out e 22l it clea at ra v are re- Children born tomorrow” will, ac Ut Be AL Dl il il L Pty RS > o i aan v lated. {cordme to ihe signy, emloy an ex- | complsted hiee coutse in stenoeraphy | 1 oiuieul, but as Al s d some one or something had made Minnehaha was kneading the —1— 4. Modern Greeks have some of the S inrell mensute of pulchtitiae) ana| ands typewriting, ibut .evan: now she [ 2689 (U1 hucias EElE stared idown each of those round holes. He spoke | Unexpectant of sorrow or blood of the old Greeks, but it is Glthough during infancy their phy- |felt that she had prozressed far |Gl i€l SHE Fealized with a little about it to Graywing the Gull. | The papoose began —3— altered by admixture with the many A iton tiily causs uecasional| eB0ush (o be alils to vet & posttisn aa | SWOCR (RAE Shey. (oo, had Sadurfioe “Oh. said Gravwing, “that hole| And the breadpan, n —4—, | barharic races that invaded Greece |\ sloal OnTd ansity, the astrological | {ypist. The thought thrilled her. She |3 Shange, Th »“‘:f“’:';’,.”’l';[;,"‘};"‘; was made by somebody who wanted | Criished the Indian corn in her —5—. | iy the dark ages and with Turkish Indictions point to the nttainment |ACUUAllY had a tradet " ey ha to et the clam or the er inside| 1. What one usually kneads. blood. of physical normaley long before he next morning, she went again ifi6 el Yoniwon'c indithose 2. Calamity. 5. The relationship of the Turks to they reach their 'teens. In disposi- | to Mary Brandts office. Once more [ (Continued in tomorrow's on big ovsters, but you will find a lot| 3° Crying. other races is uncertain, in color | ey They will have great charm, |She sat beside Mary's big oak desk (Conyright. 1926.) of small ovster shells with holes in| 4 Descending rapidly. thes are white, but they came from which will enable them to “get away” | the: s k around a bit, I thin 5. One of the digits of the foot. Certral Asia and may have Mon- c] at would provoke pun- | e oS I eSMr. Gull,” saia|Plcing the right words, indicated byel (5 SET fo e ey Motk s will ‘not, mar, their general cleanli- | i wish vou w 1d, Mr. Gull,"” said i ® COrres « | to the relationship of races, s lan- s: h d goodness of ac- | 2 the numbers, in the corresponding . ness of thought and good o mmy. 1 wish you wou Ushould | (10 nd voull see why Minnehaha | Kuage overflows racial barriers by | 1. Make speed. Large wading bird. if tom, Mor will it destroy their gener- | Slojy of the U. S. A b ke to see the fellow." 5 i d. Therell be another “Puz. |cohauest and commerce. . 5. Highway (abbr.). Declare to be true. ous ‘and affectionate impulses. They AT T “Allr b 0 lliae fitie emsweritolthi | (Conyright. 1926.) I f“g“" fleven: ;\ 1;;"8 m‘-‘ i will Le fairly sfudious and always | BY JONATHAN A. RAWSON, JR. wait a fe tes and I think T can D : | S R 12, Always. >refix meaning three. + et Siiie to db-well att| 4 . one, here Monday. show a laudable desire to do well a ¢ find one i ! i {13. Basl Thus. asks intrusted to them. | . s ; Gravwing flew « beacr Just Yesterday's Puzzlick. | Appetizing Eggs. 15. ’(;np;"l] _:g‘ Dixeni {;rnamsilim_hmko A i sirow 16 your HbAidEY, | Hessians to Get a Hint. riente \prividnes and immunitics of forth he Al the time looking ) There was a young housewife of Ay 1f your children grow tired of eges 15 08 4 T dck. Render harmless. nuveRdn dspienstve dnpton PHILADELPHIA, August 14, 1776. | will provide for every such person 50 Acivh- v s wonderful eves of|Whose husband's homecomings were | prepared in the usual ways give them e e valie. D retis or aeing et z‘}:,';.[ry‘r‘::tr‘l:‘xx'(\"n:_\angxx‘l(;l’fllcfl‘: e | —We now have in New York Harbor | acres of land, to be held by him and i Aefe s Uins miho 4 B Gy heias her ch their school lunches later on. Beat Ornamented with beading. with steam. - Your shoulder. You seem to labor|some 10,000 newly arrived immi. | DS heirs in absolute property. oves. Presently he alighted on| 11ad he danced on her chest Bsie Feighted down 3 3 : 10 a Congress concelves that such for- e e Oy o tamaeC 0| 'She'd have felt ‘quite at rest up one egg for each roll and season st i clshited coNt: under the impression that every one's| grants. They are of German extra o the beach close to the water's edge, he'd he AL alle ol heat, I Ralt and i into Suffix denoting little. Chain of rock. D P aninst vou, and. that neces- | tlon, being subjects of several power. | €iners would choose to accept lands, &na called in that harsh voice of his| FOF at least she'd have known he was | ith salt and ‘eppers Ture tnte b Run away. Personal pronoun. g compels you to always “dor | ful lords or princes who have sold |liberty, safety and a communion of ! there. e o et Tk bt vunto Senior (abbr.). Pound (abbr.). i bine iilor " NN iost antis i) TharS T e et | 004 Taws and mild government in a ) L el A O |2 biate and Spread with any lefi-over Drain off. Olive drab (abbr.). ey who, under other conditions, | Englana hitve thus coffie; not | STANTEY whera many:of thefe frionds H [Pkt A o e vitedt oh e T am. Part of a number which does not | TATY, Who. WNCET O €T ou are al- | as peaceful St ren of Ui | are already happily settled, rather Lessons in English | {Sprinkie with minced parsiey or [32. A metrical foot, divide it without a remainder. [ \WoUt R FINT COST Vi ana forget | erty, like ourselvcs and our ancestors, | than continue exposed to the dangers = = e { olives, roll up like a jelly roll and 3 nickname. An issue on a point of law. that “we are our.own fates, and that | but as warriors bent upon taking our | 10 S, 1008, A¢ ) "':d'_:‘h\;;}x asainst 1 have 2 bottle of old | | Wrap in waxe 1pe; Having the power of fluent ora-| Was 4-11\(('.}\»0(‘ 'rvlq\y,rflm\ln::. our own acts are our doomsmen. liberty away from us. They did not | {EWEE e 60 I O h::n:::"r‘rm-d:‘l:: T BY W. L. GORDON. | oy ; 1\..::(.!2;;?';"'(‘11“»\» You are not, however, easily dis- w to l’“u' on .~]nrh an mmnl:. for'slavery, 1t fnvites (He Heastans red glass. i i e ) ot couraged, even though your pla They proba iberty as much}, "o diqer that if they viols . . % i Collegiate degree. Disport. Pten oo vrone, You ate aspling. |asiwe dol . We never harmedithiem, | 0 SODACEE ShgE 1 Sy Vidate cvery I have 2 little smooth } Words often misused—"T feel well” 1~'\-nj development. Preposition. versatile, and at all times arbitrary wished to. If they knew awhat :"‘jl”:j"""'“) ":;“"L:;‘lj::f"}}jr;:"{\'}h,"*",":f; < is preferable to “I feel good.” Conjunction. Support. allectuall; »u are neither giant we fighting for, they might be tnsured it oF (Rei e 5 silver guene- | often mispronounced — Decorous. | |——- Food seized hr\' o fl'vl heast Morning (abbr). I e o kowledge 1%, how- | fighting with us rather than against | o ’:‘{{f"l" SR ':‘l'n‘r\ ”::“:;; - . ronounce de-ko-rus, and accent ¢ | he year of the reign (abbr.). O] sta (abb e s 8 s 1 they know is ths pir lords | (P . e By | eace ime hac polished Riheralfjproniuneatde ks, And accenttonijE A e L = Mg gt ol over. of too seneral a character to| us. All they know is that their lords | {1t GO URCEG | (0, GheY, ceape Y second syllable is preferred. ey Drunken revel. Last Indies (abbr.). Serve as a very valuable asset. Your |and princes have the yower to sell | (St 85 S TR Woo, be R ot flowmg past, Otten misspelled—Discrepancy; ancy. IN i{:“\f"rtlscn'""‘- . (BEE) reading is desultory, but, if you could | them ,;;i,w)l’rlk:'!* and have sold them | bo by him again sold to do the : l l\ ancy. A e tert B 17 “‘]’. hatlanes concentrate on one subject and| e i ety " Why | drudgery of some other enemy to the s waves polish pe onyms—Intellect. mind, under- | | A con abbr.). {47. Idle cha 5 master it, vour chances of ultimate | harbor ill will toward them? e Of TRskIng: L standing, reason, sense, conscious| | — iigh priest mentioned in the |48, Division of the calyx of a flower. | {U000E0 Lo N3N0 Giemented. ! not welcome them and invite them to and bits iness, intelligence M L o ’ | 60- “Lubricates. Well known persons born on that|live among us in o et Word study—"Use word three | [ 56. Tree with lemondike fruit. | 51. Species. | date are: Mrs. John A. Logan, editor| Con nd it has today perfect Rice With Pimentos. she o % times and t is yours.” Let us in- A 58. Run scored at cricket upon a | Small pulpy fruit. land author; ‘more, actress:| 4 plan designed to make it more | ) 5 Ged 4 crease our vocabulary by masterinz | (7 missed ball. | Capital of a South American |y B poet-priest;. Willis | tractive to these immigiints to till| Doil one cupful of rice in salted one word each day. Today’s word:| [N Part of a flower. | country. B. Hawkins, journalist; Edna Ferber, | our soil than to fight our <o water for 20 minutes, then drain and Oppressed; . downtrodden. It is an ) '{h;\i \\';nmn:' game (in cards). | One khu‘ndlred and one (Roman). | \liter: Walter Hines Page, editor ‘7w;nnllnl-v-; nmv".-,‘“xu y‘v..u p | place in 2 baking dish. Mix in one oppressed race.” znd of a prayer. i Greek letter. 3 ? eigners who will leave the arm leantorie ¥ T Locality. Perod of time. auidipich s [nis Pritannic majesty in America 2" Of ground pimentos, onefourth = e Al Raise up. . A high explosive. R and be e members of any of these | pound of grated cheese and all the Women in New York factories| [y Endures. Rrother (abbr.). More than 400,000 women are em- | States: that all such persons shail be | pimento juice. Season with red pep- mate ool 't as much pay as xhel Indefinite artlele. Father. e {plovel n the Japanese raw sill: in- | jotected fn ‘ha frec exercles ..'hvahr ner, ,.-,K-n ;v{d paprika. Bake In a slow Gulevad v Pusirg. | religions and be invested with the oven for 30 inutes. B wan worhess