Evening Star Newspaper, August 24, 1926, Page 24

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WOMAN'S PAGE €Choice of Colored BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. The color of tissue paper enters de- cidedly into its best household use. For example, black tissue paper the sort to use about metal fabrics. FABRIC AR- .Y IN . THE| IR, WRAP THE X TICLE COMPI BLACK T It tends to keep the luster of the metal in_good condition. = Bags with e kept wrapped at factories are made and in shops. amount of metal thread in the weave of a fabric is small, ck should be the color of the paper | {ncasing it. Remember this when you put away metal fabric bags or a | sories in_ your bureau drawers. Keep picces of black tissue paper ready to wr he things in. Or if the articles | @re carefully kept in hoxes, line the boxes with black tissue paper. It is surprising how much this helps pre vent the metal from tarnishing Black for Metal Cloth. Silver or gold metal cloth shoes or | those with any metal introduced in the threads <hould also be wrapped in | black tissue paper. Wrap each shoe separately before putting In its case or box, €0 that every part of the shoe | is equally well protected. Hats also | should be lightly covered with black | tissue paper if they have metal rib- bon trimming or metal fabric used on AL BEDTIME STORIES Sees Nest of a Fish. Tie difficult to doubt your eves. But sometimes you will find it Wise. —Old Mother Nature Old Mother that not always can you believe what you see. There is an old saying that “seeing is believ ing,” but there is nothing that can be fooled more easily than eyes. So, even though you see a thing, it is somietimes wise to be slow in believ- ing. Reddy Fox felt just this way when he first saw the nest of a fish. He was sure he saw what he thought he saw, but it was so hard to believe that a fish could really build a nest That is just Nature's | way of sayving “I'LL ADMIT LIKE A NEST, THAT IT LOOKS SAID REDDY. | t it was just as hard to believe | what he saw as it was to believe that | his eyes might be fooling him. Grfly-l wing the Gull had shown him that| nest. You will remember that Gray wing had promised he would. He had made good that promise. In fact, it wasn't_more than an hour after he made the promise that he came cir- cling back over Reddy. “Are your eves good?” he called. * ! Reddy looked up-and grinned. “My | eves are always good.” said he. What have you on your mind now, Neighbor Gull?” “That nest I was going to show you,” replied Graywing. “If you'll follow me, I'll show you the nest of @ fish, just as I said T would.” ready to be shown,”! v, and trotted along the | beach, keeping his eyes on Graywing the Gull, who flew ahead of him.| Graywing flew over the sand dunes toward the marsh. Reddy trotted along over the sand dunes. He saw Graywing alighting by a tide pool on the marsh beyond the dunes. It was | & pool that the water never ran out replied Reddy | you | your eves are really good. Wrapping Tissue them. Some housewives prefer black tissue paper to any other tone to use for wrapping about silver which is not in constant use. Blue for White Goods. Blue tissue paper is the color to use about white fabrics. Our grandmoth- ers appreciated this, and their ex- quisite laces and fine nets were care- fully folded in blue tissue paper be- fore being lald away after uxing. The blue in the paper seems to supply the needed tone which darkness produces in value to white. Probablv all of you have noticed that white paint, be- hind doors that are kept open, gets vellower than where the same color = exposed to the light. And this is true of white goods—silks, satins, laces, ete.—when laid away where the light is excluded. Unless wrapped in blue they grow yellow much quicker. Whjte wedding gowns should be wrapped in blue before being laid in the box or drawer. Various Wrappin When it comes to wrapping gifts, the color of tissue paper adds decidedly 10 the attractiveness of the wrapping. Once white was the only tone sanc- tioned by fashion. Now red and green are favorites for Christmas wrappings. For gifts presented on other occa- <ions any color one chooses may ap- propriately be used. Lavender with gold ribbon is charming. Blue with 0ld rose or white ribbon, pink with silver or white and apple green with cilver or pink ribbon are other color harmonies that are pleasing. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Baked Pears Cereal with Cream Ham Omelet Graham Popovers. Coffee. LUNCHEON. Cream of Spinach Soup Whole Wheat Bread Banana Fritters Iced Tea. DINNER. Tomato Bouillon Hamburg Roast. Riced Potatoes Baked Squash Grapefruit Salad Blueberry Tarts. Coffec. GRAHAM POPOVERS Two-thirds cup entive wheat flour, seven-eighths cup milk, one-lalf cup flour, one-guarter teaspoon salt, one egg, one-hall teaspoon meited butter. Pre- pare and bake same as other popovers. BANANA FRITTER Beat four bananas to a cream, add one egg and one cup flour, one teaspoon baking powder, one saltspoon salt and one- elghth_cup milk, or enough to make drop batter. Also add one teaspoon sugar and gne table- spoon lemon juice. Fk in deep, hot fat. Dip spoon in hot fat to shape fritters. Serve with lemon sauce. HAMBURG ROAST. Three pounds ground steak, one good slice salt pork, chopped fine; one egg, one cup milk or more, two crackers rolled fine, salt and pepper. Bake in loaf, same as bread. Save juice, add hot water and thickening for gravy. Bgke one and one-half hours in good hot oven. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS of. Rather gingerly Reddy picked his way through the wet mal grasses over to where Graywing w caiting for him. He didn’t like get- his feet wet that morning. How are your eves?’ demgnded Graywing as Reddy came up. Just as good as they were when asked me that a little while replied Reddy. 1l right,” said Graywing. down in the water where those gr stems are coming up out of it. If u will little ago. e fastened to those stems a round ball.” Reddy leaned over and looked down into the water. “I see it.” said he. “Well, that is the nest of a fish" replied Graywing. Reddy stared very hard. Attached | to the grass was a little round, soft- looking mass about the size of a big glass marble. It seemed to be made of tiny bits of plant growth, fastened together in some way that Reddy couldn’t understand. There was a round doorway. It did look like a little nest, but it was hard for Reddy | to belleve that it was the nest of a | fish, for he saw no fish about. I “I'll admit that it looks like a nest,” said Reddy, “but you haven't proved to me vet that it is the nest of a fish." “Be patfent,” retorted Graywing. “You have been out in the Great World long enough to know that to see things one must be patient. If vou haven't important engage- ment, 1 suggest you watch here a little ‘while. 1 thifik you'll see some- thing that will surprise you and will convince you that this is the dnest of a fish. Huh! You won't have to have patience. Here comes the owner of that nest now. It is )‘r, Stickel- back.” 1926.) English (Copyright Lessons in BY W. L. GORDON. Words often misused: Don't confuse | “aught” and “naught.” “Aught” | means anything, “naught,” nothing. Often mispronounced. Convoy. Ac-| | the few [wnade as follow: THE EVENI Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN “I wish bables could run around as soon as pups, so big brothers wouldn’t have to mind 'em.” (Copyright. 1926.) What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. Tomorrow's planetary aspects are rather difficult to diagnose. On the whole, however, they are negative rather ‘than positive. In the eve- ning they cease to be nebulous and become exceedingly favorable, and conditions are considerably improved by the presence of stimulating vibra- | tions. It would be wise not to at- tempt during the day any unaccus- tomed task, but confine and dedicate vour whole attention to routine work, and “put your better foot forward' and overcome. by concentration, the sense of lassitude that will be felt. The evening is particularly appro- priate for lovers, and the telling of the old, yet ever new, story will bring happiness to you and delight to “the part§l of the other pa Children born tomorrow will enjoy, during infancy, normal health, and ailments from which they will suffer will readily yield to ord nary treatment. Between, however, the period of adolescence and that of adulthood, the signs indicate that, outgrowing their strength, they will develop physical weakness unless this “slipping” ‘proces is caught in tme. In temperament they will, at an early age, display unmistakable evidences of industry and. although not inherently clever. they will plod and persevere and acquire a remark- able fund of useful information. Am- bition will spur them on and the omens speak well for their ultimate Tuture If tomorrow s are ail T s your birthday, your s ther more superficial an fundamental. You know some- thing about a variety of topics, but are not well grounded in any one sub- ject. You are fond of socicty, like to amuse and like to be amused. Your predilection for pleasure interferes very materially, with your succes: along more serious lines of endeavor. You are careful of appearances, and nothing if not_strictly conventional. You are terribly afraid of “Mrs Grundy” and what she might Consistency is not one of your sets and you are erratic and liable to make sudden changes both in plans and opinions. You are more liable to become infatuated t You are demonstrative in vour affec tion to those who attract your fan Jjust as you bitter toward thos whom you cl as enemies. If not already married, it would be poli- tc to defer this until such time as experience has taught vou the ad vantages of steadfastness and loyalty. Well known persons born on that date are: Gardiner Green Hubbard, lawyer; Samuel R. Franklin, naval officer; Francis Bret Harte, author; Edgar Wilson Nye (“Bill ), hu morist; George Lathrope, author. (Copyright. 1926.) HOME NOTES The newest upholstered furniture, of which two pieces arve shown here, looks very much as though it were designed by a man and for men. Its distinguishing mark is the extreme depth of the seats. That is, the space from the back to the front of the seat is long enough o that even the most long-legged man can sprawl in perfect comfort, with the front edge of the seat cushion fit- ting well up under his knees. Some of the pleces have thick back cushions but most of them have trim, straight lines for back and arms. This new furniture is extremely plain for the most part and is usually upholstered in muslin or denim, clear- Iy indicating that it is supposed to be slip-covered. (Copyright. 1926.) Cocoanut Cookies. are favorite when Beat four eggs until These cookies cent noun on first syllable, verb onJicht, add one pound powdered sugar last syllable. Often misspelled. grainery. Synonyms. passion, trepidation, Word study. se a word three| times and it is vour: Let us in- crease our vocabulary by mastering} one word each day. Today's word,! entreaty, an earnest request. “They were obstinate and would not listen | to his entreaties.” Granary: not Emotion, feeling, sense, perturbation. | and beat briskly. Add one and one- half cupfuls of flour and three tea- spoonfuls of baking powder which have been sifted together, then stir in one-fourth of a fresh cocoanut grat- | ed. If the fresh cocoanut cannot be obtained, use the shredded variety. In- stead of rolling the dough out on a board, drop it from a spoon onto a but- tered pan, having the cakes quite a distance apart. Bake in a moderate oven for 15 minutes. This recipe will make about 24 cookies. n fall in love. ' STAR, WASHINGTO. DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Why a Man With a Dependent Mother Shouldn’t Marry Until He Can Support Her Outside Home—Employer and Stenographer. EAR MISS DIX: T am a widow with two sons. One is married to a love- ly woman. The other is about to marry a girl who flatly refuses to have me in the house with her, not because she objects to me personally, but be- cause she wants to live alone with no mother-inlaw around. My husband died when my boys were small children. I supported them and educated them by keeping boarders and roomer 1 did everything for 4 them when they were little and helpless, and now that I am old and helpless it seems hard that I cannot have a place in their homes. 1 don’t want to live with this girl who doesn’t want me any more than | she wants to live with me, but what ‘is to be done? T don’t want my son to sacrifice his happiness for me, and yet will he be happy with a woman who takes this attitude toward his mother, for he loves me very dearly’ A TROUBLED MOTHER. i Answer—The human triangle never offer: as it does when the three sides of it are composed of a man, his mother and his wife. No other situation in life ever engenders such bitterness, such strife, such heartaches and jealousy as is brought ahout by the fight of the | wife and mother over the man they both love, nor is any man ever put in so cruel a predicament as the one who must choose between wife and mother’ For _the trouble is that each side is perfectly right from its own view- | point. Only the woman whose angels' feathers are already sprouting can ever see another woman's side of the question. And angels on earth are few and far between. S Take your own particular case, dear lady. Of course, you are perfectly right in feeling that your son owes vou a debt of gratitude that he can never repay. You think of the weary years you toiled to support him. ‘ You think of the hard and sordid labor you did in that boarding house to keep him fed and clothed and warmed, and to give him the advantages of cducation.. You think of the hours that you have prodded yourself on to your task when you were sick and weary unto death: of the nights you have gone to bed too tired | to sleep. Never once did vou fail your boy. No sacrifice was too great for you to make for him, and it seems to you that in all fairness and justice, as well as in love and appreciation, you should have the warmest place at his fireside, the seat of honor in his house, and that you should be welcomed and cherished | by his wife. You are perfectly right. proposition. That is your due. That is your side of the The girl's side is this: She is marrying a man she loves, and she wants him for herself alone. Any third party breaks up the intimacy between hus- band and wife. They can have no close heart-to-heart communion with an- other person sitting around listening in. Endearments freeze on the lips. | The moment for confidences pasfes with a stranger present. It takes the edge off every pleasure if an old woman has to be dragged along. { The more a woman loves her husband, the more she yearns to be alone with him, and she doesn’t want her mother to live with them any more than she wants his mother to live with them. i Then the young wife wants to run her home in her own wa From the time a girl baby has her first set of doll furniture and doll dishes, she begins to plan how she is going to have things when she get# married and has a house of her own. It is the one fixed idea of her life, and becomes an obses- sion with her, but she cannot do this if her mother-in-law lives with her. There is no use in the mother-in-law saying that she v that she will never offer advice or suggestions and never criticize. She will. She can’t help it. For running a house is also her passion and she feels that she }tms’fl right to boss her son’s house and say how her son’s money shall be spent. i Il not interfere, or So the girl who knows that statistics show the inlaw trouble is the j cause of more divprees than everything else combined, and who has listened to the tales of woe’of innumerable of her friends who have tried living with their mothers-in-law, is perfectly right In saying that she will not risk her happiness by having her mother-in-law in the house. : And there you are. 1t seems to me that the only way that the question can be solv a man who has a dependent mother fo put off mArrYINE uati he i aier o support her outside of his own hous: b Certainly son’s first duty is to take wants for nothing. and it is a mother’s dut her son's happiness by not insisting on Ii out of that comes only trouble and unhappiness for all concerned. But the most piteous figure of them all is the poor man over whom the two women he loves hest in the world are snapping and snarling at each other like dogs over a bone. DOROTHY DIX. are of his mother and see that she to he willing to sacrifice herself to ng Wwith him when he marries. For DEAR MISS DIX: I come to you with the old problem of the employer and his stenographer. Won't you help me to solve it, please? 1 am 18 and am just as eager for a good time as the rest of my young sisters. My em. | ployer is successful, handsome, young. a Prince Charming, but he has foqu his fairy Princess and has two darling children. 1 am falling in love with him, and he assures me of his affection for me. DORIS. e . Answer—The remedy is plainly indicated, S. Kitbag and leave forthwith, If you wan! 10 save Yoursslt is good. and before you have jeopardized your happiness. N Evidently yvou have not fully succumbed as yet to the charms of your Prince Charming, who looks more like a vellow cur to me than he does a figure of romance, for what any girl can sée to admire in a man who has sa little_sense of honer or common decency passes my comprehension. Tre just for a change, to lock at him squarely, Doris. R Pack up your little Go while the golng Tell me what is admirable in a man who is fai ¥ | a d 4 0 is faithless to his wife wh trusts him, who breaks the vows G0 o {rusts him. who breaks the vows he has sworn to keep before God and man And what is admirable. Doris, in a man wh s i i . a 0 stoops to so low a kK “h.]nlnp. the love of a little 18-year-old girl knowing that he c nI’:‘l’?l‘r:l'c‘lhl'a5 her, and that she may waste the vears of her outh on him in vain s __ Think of these things the next time your employer makes love to you .li];ladl \ho\lv;\'”l find that you will despise him for the n, deceitful hy ]J'll'r;lé i e is. " 1 B g DOROTHY DIX. 1 of 18. T have ‘two beaux. : me for a year or two. v_mother wants me to mar all' T do? EAR MISS DIX: I am a gi he will not be able to mar not care for, but m marry now. What One 1 love, but . ‘The other one I do v him because he is ready to | LACKAWANNA. Don’'t marry any man you do not love, just to be marrying. Don’t let | your mother urge you into marriage hecause she wants to get rid of your | support. Go to work and make your own living, and then you can wait until Mr. Right comes along. . DOROTHY DIX. i EAT AND BE HEALTHY || Dinah Day’s Daily Talks on Diet : The Right Food Is the Best Medicine Nourishment for Children. A dleting experiment was carried out for four years by the Medical Researhc Council in a village home for schoolboys near London. The boys were divided into groups. Some were given a basic diet. Others veceived additional foods. An annual increase of 3.85 vounds weight and | 1.84 inches in height was averaged by the group on the basic dlet. The group which received an extra pint of cow's milk showed an annual in- crease of 6.98 pounds weight and 2.63 inches in height. The other groups, which were given extra ratlons of butter, vegetables, margarine, sugar, cheese and fresh watercresses, made greater progress than the less for- tunate groups on the basic diet. Dr. Corry Mann, the supervisor of the experiment, said: “The effect of the extra milk improved the spirit of the boys and led them oftener into trouble and minor offenses against order. Butter, which improved the children is mental dullness. Boys | whose energies are taken up with | proper interests are never had. It's a safe pet to properly feed boys with milk, butter, vegetables and develop | their bodies and see that they de-| velop a sound mind in a sound bo | Experiments prove that' milk is { necessary for the growing child. But ter, which is a product of milk, growth-producing food. It is rich in fat soluble vitamin A. And®a liberal | intake of this fat soluble vitamin is important to health and vigor. But- ter is easily digested. When it is a | question of economy and the income | can be stretched to pay for elther butter or a quart of miik a day for | cach child, it is best to buy the re- quired quota of milk and use mar- garine as a butter substitute. But ' where it is possible at all the butter should be used, even if it can be furnished to the children only two | or three times a week. The grown-ups can more readily do without it. Fresh vegetables are rich in mineral salts and hold an importa i e mportant place in | D. C. TUESDAY, AUGUST such an unsolvable problem | s physique almost as much as milk, had a similar effect on the behavior, as the butter boys were described as ‘regular little terrors.’” Now, whether Dr. Corry Mann was joking when he said the spirit of the milk-and-butter-fed boys was so ex- 1 do not know. Aside from my belief that the healthiest, happlest boys are the good boys, it is a fact that boys who are properly nourished far out- shine in physique and general all- around alertness boys who are under- nourished. One of the signs of malnutrition in ub®rant that they broke minor rules The important. thing is to properly nourish the children. Wholesome food properly cooked, served daintily and at regular hours is a necessity. If the healthy children get Into mischief, do not cut down their food and make them “quiet mannered and anemic.” Direct their abounding energy to useful ends. Enthusiasm and energy are the marks of vouth. See that nourishing food supplies the youngsters with health. " Readers desiring personal answers to their auestions should send eelf-addressed. stamped envelope to Dinah Day. care of The Star. KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES—Prospects Are Not So Good. DONT L know IT! BUT WHAT CAN T DO Jubi€ ?- T WON HIS COIN AT POKER, SO Tve GOT T A GOOD SPORT AND PLAY TH - DARN GAME EVEN IF HE IS A SHARK AT IT! HE'S NEARLY CLEANED NE A3 GoLF AN’ AAYIN'GOLF AGAIN! WORST GOLFER — HOTEL FoR JOME TIs! EATS - A FEW NORE DAYS OF THIS CROQUET STUFF AND I'lt BE OUT LIKE A LIGHT! GoiLy! ITD L€ To GET THE oL Boy WELL TLL ~ BEAT IT BACK TO THE HES TH'WORLDS % AROUND DURING THER WSIT! [YES JOE RITCHIE THE B SAUCE MAN AND WALTER TRIMM THE Bi6 NEWSPAPER. MAN ARE COMiING DOWN FOR THE WEEK END.WE MUST ALL TOGETHER AND PLAY T AH! THAT'S FINE HR. VAN o - CROQUET 1S THEIR : FANORITE PASTIME. WALTER RIN PLAYS AN EXCEPTIONAL == |GaME® 1 MIGHT Even Say BETTER THAN T PLay! BY POP MOMAND 24, 1926 What Do You Know About It? Daily Science Six. 1. What is vuleanized rubber? 2. What are the advantages of vulcanized rubber? 3. What is plantation rubber? 4. Who first discovered the uses of rubber? Why are Mackintoshes so called? 6. What was rubber first used for in Europe? Answers to these questions in tomorrow’s Star. ‘War Rubber. Throughout the World War the Germans, though cut off from ruhber supplies, were able to produce rubber for their needs: it was a mystery to the allies how they were doing this. The truth is that they were making it vnthetically. Synthetic rubber had been the dream of the chemist for years, but had never been made a practical success, though the theory was well understood. The Germa discovered that it could be made with acetone, a substance that they had always imported from the United States. They discovered that acetone could be derived from the action of & bacteria_that causes the ferment and ¢ of storage potatoes. v, what do vou know about that? wers to Yesterday's Questions. . The codor is found in the Andes of South America 2. The buzzard bird, but rather dead animals. 3. Owls hunt at night. 4. When birds peck holes in fruit trees they sometimes do the trees a slight mechanical injury, but they ar really beneficial hecause they puil out the bark-tunneling beetles and eat them. 5. Cuckoos build poor nests. Meadow larks lay eggs a harmful as it eats is not useful, in the (Copyright MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. 1926.) A Screen Keeps Baby Out. | Long 1s To keep my biby out of the kitchen hen I am cooking. I take a wide screen from one of the windows and put it in the lower part of the kitchen Baby can thus play behind not ‘under my feet when I He is safe and he is happy hecause he can see me all the time (Copnsright. 1 Mother tact’! enildren as is as essential in raising thorough khowiedze care they nire. s wh chapter (s devoted to Jut st in the booklet. 100 Ideas which, on Srom_The St 410 South Dearl “Puzzlicks” Puzzle-Limericks In —1-— of Summer The sheik departs But does To our The —1 he never = out ions of a month et to remembor Frow ibiitses. -This uzzlick™ is a little different and a trifle more difficult. | ‘Thehe’s a play on words in connection with—1—, for the single word in the first line becomes three words in the #ifth line, though with the same pro nunciation. “Can you figure it out?| If not, look for the answer—as well! as another “Puzlick™—tomorrow. Yesterd: ic There was an old fi Who owned quite a rooster; But when it grew old It had to be sold It could no longer fight as it used to. (Copyright. 191 Worcester famous game | Nathanael | countered | York FEATURES. Making the Most of Your Looks Dear Ann: Now. a panel that is too broad is Just as disastrous in its effect on a stout figure as is a narrow panel, be cause it calls attention to width There is a happy medium, depending on the proportions of the individual. Yours for consulting mediums, LETITIA. (Copyright, 1026.) 150 YEARS BY DOROTHY STOTE. AGO TODAY Story of the U. S. A. BY JONATHAN A. RAWSON, JR. Putnam to Oppose Howe. NEW TORK. August 24, 1776.— Gen. Israel Putnam today took com mand of the American forces on Long Island because of the iliness of Gen reene. Gen. llowe will recall Gen. Putnam person who proved himself mos efficient in the affair of Bunker's Hill. Gen. Put- nam will recall Gen. Howe as the person whose redcoa took Bunker’s Hill only after three attacks, when the American ammunition wa 1y gone. Something of the may happen again on Brooklyn Heights very soon. But Howe has now three advantages which he lacked at Bunker's Hill. He has a larger army, he has a na which, by ing the kEast Ri could t the American forces in two. and he has the lesson which he learned at Bunk- er's Hill in r pect to the dangers en in approaching American reastworks before the American pow- der horns are empty Gen. Washington between works in F that the me sort divided the s here and the He still conside of 20.000 men on be only a feint to attack on this landing and may draw attention from city. He has sent six rvegiments to Long lIsland since the enemy came ashore. These men went off in high spiri nd the general has informed Congres: that is effective and capable of duty manifesting great cheerfulness on the eve of battle. He dispatched a messenger today to Gov. Trumbull of Connecticut urging him to send 1,000 militia to s the British upon their flanks. and to pre vent their securing the stocks of cat- tl ‘With the same purpose the New convention has sent Gen. Na thaniel Woodhull to drive off live stock and destroy forage which might fall into the hands of the enemy. Not u detail in the plans for repelling the in vaders is escaping the general's per sonal attention. His appeal today to ¥ i i ~ BLEMISHES yield to its antiseptic action. Permanent de- fects are concealed by a subt le film of adorable beauty. A pure skin of exquisite lovelihess is yours thra jts use. Made in White - Flesh - Rachel Send 10c. for Trial Size Ferd. 7. Hopkins&Son, New York GouRrauD's LoRENTiL Creav Spaghetti is Tony’s main- stay, Heeats it three times every day, With sauce aad with . u:d now if you o e REL day | that the whole of the Army | | Gov. Trumbull is the only hint t he is not realy for attle. ages his soldiers with words of fer otismm, hour hono; nd the s N will depend soldiers men, tishting fe that slavery 1 that of your n acquit yourselve: | given th pendin | pat The which the Army country cers and < entire- | enter- | | & | ‘Iss ar | prayful | and me is ! fun, too! |AB such he im Meanwhile he encour id st is fast a d wouching on stceess of this of our bleeding you are fres Ssings of i that the b posterity if like men.” % looks quite a lot more m) din' to have fun, and nice ICED "SALADA" TEA Really satisfies your thirst U111 has Remember, offi- will be vour portfon vou duo uver one—I bet hiin l

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