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HINGTON. D. €. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 5. 1926. FEATURES, | ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT THE MILLION DOLLAR WIFE BEDTIME STORIES "% 5w JEAN PATOU ENTERTAINS THE By HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR. Foolish Old Mother Who Forces Her Son to Wait The End of Danny's Ride. the boat gently scrape in the mud. nti E 1 . The man laid the oars d with wuch Until After Her Death to Be Married. Theres mothine Fortune eer can s | 10 A W S SIS SO, R FASHIONABLES AT TEA over twice—that is, it felt a did. Danny felt himself being ! Danny Meadow Mouse was having a | up. Anyvway. the boot was being, | funny experience. 116 certainly was. | picked up. Danny, who had been part He was hiding in a rubber boot where | way up the leg of the 1,.»-1:'?.' tumbled AR MISS DIX: T am engaged to be married to a man who is 33 vears' he knew he had no business to be.ydown inte the foot of it. Then same. | ’r:?rfi lll'n y\rtulntf 4 his mother, who is 75, that he would never marry as | The rubber boot was in the fiottom of | thing began to come inside the hoot | long. as she lived. Now I am not efish nor jealous of her, for 1 think th |a rowboat and the boat was being [ It nearly filled the l:mv ; It \_«,.;\ V(!n i is mothing more heautiful than a son’s love for his mother. but it is horribie man's foot, though Danny didnt know {o me for us just to sit and wait for her to die. My flances mother is well | I'),(:::'ix 01;1\:“m,.n was putting the rub. off “and has seven other children. Do vou think that our happiness boot on. i ol slxnfllr:!m;\';\'aparr?flrsd to her selfish desire to keep her son with her? T am With a little squeal of terror lvx.rwna willing that she should come to live with us in a home of which I am started up. He met the thing that . but 1 am not willing to go and live with her. Please tell us was coming dowry into the boot. but o do? PUZZLED. | he kept right on.” It was a bare foot and a bare leg. Danny started up that hare leg Then things really did_happen. Danny heard a wild vell. That boot flew off and overboard with a splash If Danny had heen in the hoot still he would have gone overboard with it: but he wasn't. He just about up to the knee of that man's lez. The instant he saw daylight Danny made a frantic jump. So did the man. The | man stepped on Slippery Slim. Danny went over one side headfi toward the bank. He made a very tiny splas You wonldn't have heard t if you had been there, be was a bigger splash at the The bi or splash was the n ackward out of the boat on the ather side. Slippery Slim the Iel hadn't -Z61d" Mother. Nature. | | | | i What Makes a Girl Popular? } e s At Which the Modern Viewpoint of Accessories is Freely Discussed By dyes which assures even their sheer- SARAH VAN RENSSELAER est quality hose of having amazing durability. To add to this wearing OTHER than a presentation at | o jity Kayser hose has the ex- the Court of St. James, there’s | ., ¢jye «“Narvel-Stripe"* featurethat no event of fashion that looms quite | | o ents garter runs that cause such 50 brilliantly on the horizon asa tea | pavoe And the pointed “Slipper at Patou's. Everybody who is any- body attends—from royalty back to royalty. His bizarre setting enthralls a few openly and everyone secretly. It bespeaks the modern spirit —this salon with its walls in brown cloth, double curtains of ivory taffeta and asilverscreen that is a striking back- ground for his black satin furniture. It vies for attention with the suave modernity of the gentleman himself. Answer 1 think vour position is entirely right and sensible, and that vou should marry at once. A selfish, monopolistic old woman has no right | to thwart the liv nd wreck the love dream of two young souls. and such a | promise as such a mother wrings out of her son is hetter broken than kept Of eourse, the old lady justifies herself by saving that she won't live | but that is as may he. In these days of the prolongation of life, | old. and it ix quite on the cards that she is ood for another 10 years X which would effectually blight your romance and rub a1l of the bloom off it. ‘ For a long engagement is the most nerve.wearing experience that a man and woman can go through, and even when it ends in marriage its thrills have been o long discounted that both parties feel that it is a sort of anti-climax a foollsh old woman she is. and how little does she know her when she sets her death before her son as something fo he ird to! She makes his happiness, possession of the [ WitAT TIF setting up his own home and having children of his own NI n human if it did not make t she lives, But w own interest eagerly looked fo woman he loves, hi | depend upon her dvinz. and he would be mor SAID DANNY NEW. going ved. But || tow. S0 Danny stayed in the hoot g : ; ; h‘Hl\ hl; ened to the gurgling of the water | had been given a long. long Jift toward 3 and wondered wh Zoing to hap. | home. A§ for the man—well, never But it's here that style is made. next. Even now he didn't under. | mind what he said Here that style is throned. Here that o even if they were not alive. Meadow Mouse that ever li him wish her dead and bezrudge every hour rowed up the creek man who | given him good footing at ! " . - 1 A e b miote wWotld Her Hon;Tove her, | 124 been Hanin hoat were | per m was well named. A bit out of place in these bizarre ow muel ser would she be, how mue re would ;S e | ee or four | wel 3 o ater ol e ; i 1 Rt ene wonia Fealishar oL he trgea mi V5 magey. (08 il ot Elnmagand heee OEM(OUR | went (S map IR0 Uhe wateeiont s [sdsroundings) atitentaral nejendlia] n > hav it ane unmed i (o maues 1cery was those eels that kept | ether sic at. . : | she were willing to mak personal sacvifice for his happiness. and it she | papng in thate haot. Peep the Sand. | What the man said Danny never | dowagers with their charming and [ welcomed ‘\‘ny‘, ’-":N;xyl‘_ R nl::‘l‘“:‘”:r 1'” pved hee himself for his mothers | PIPer had told Danny that eels were | knew. You see, he was o seared that youthful “entourage,” who dote on s [ welfichness, and it wili be folly to give in to it, so let the wedding |0t SHAKes. but wove f l‘:p“”".l‘.‘,“',‘,', e i N i Tiia |y the cutey costumes and the young i*v"”* v . take no chances. He didn‘t like heiv | thonght he was the most abused || things with their elderly admirers in 1 old children and have to bo | same. They | e | et to be merely spoii | treated as if they were spoiled children. And the results are th if they are made to behave themselves and their demands nable bounds Many old peo; he wasn't. for, unknown t i . e " o " s {are far happi A TITTLE FUAR CLUTCHED AT HER HEART. HAD HE CEASED ([re far hap wa TO LOVE HER? - - " s " : . 5u are also quite right in saving that v 1l receive your mother Silatli R . . - " RS e inntch = 1aw ‘.:“< 1,;"“‘ g “"‘:u LR ”‘“'N_‘rmmd""""“I’“‘:N’_ "¢ | stand that he was beinz taken in the | (Covsright. 1026.) style is talked. Here that style is oy St i ¢ hGaEaRe “ 2 YOR c ¢ very direction he wanted to travel. i e P Betty Ames murses James Cornell|hibit and kissed her again and again. | her household. e 1 T DOROTHY DIX. S50 ke, 16 Rad hadlGRl ope SR Swedish Biscuits. {] lived and breathed. #hrough pnewmonia and they fall in | After all, what did the old ring mat- D Tove. Dr. Amos Craig is in love with | ter if it would help Jimmy? He wz know anything about hoats. He didn’t Betty and is hurt at the news. Jim | her own-—her very own. Tt was What other qualities must a girl have to make a boy fall for her besides | S1W AnvEhns ahout Hodts < L |t whilethat ane level tableate - o the Rind of man aeno is aneays | marvelous thing to be able to help | being pretty and well dressed? Why can some girls get anybody they w evenyicnow ihe wasiinia bodte Bubilie hile hot one level tablespoonful of || ground among the guests clothed in E s . 4 HLR L - Lk ‘| did know he was in a bad fix. sugar and one teaspoonful of salt. ' PR f Iking about what he w chen | him out of a difficulty, and she was [while other girls cannot get any boys at all? SALLY, ROSE AND DOT. S : 2 s talking about what he will do when et I'll get out of here the first chanee | Lot cool, then add onc-third of Patou’s latest originations—which ened peep outside the boot. He didn’t JAR DOROTHY DIX: Will you please answer these few questions? Scald one pint of milk and add to The mannequins loll leisurely \he ma. his “willion.” and Retty | privileged indeed. It was only T eot’ ho € i i wonlt wisle i new silhouette or a new soon realizes that she must learn to |she had always thought of her ring Answer: 1t s undoubtedly greatly to a girlis advantage to e pretty and | oo ihouEht bannv. “L WOt Waste | cupful of water and flour to mal ‘";mds“ce' h 5 ,; dress smartly as well as like the peo- | 45 a_symbol, a link that hound her | wop dre: these alone Will not make her fopular with boys. She must | o\" near to one of those two-legzed | S0ft batter. Cover and lat rise un color or a new fabric treatment. To- to him. But she mustn’t allow her- | pave in The beaiit self to get fanciful and womanish. |yt they soon tire of her and She must he glad and prond of a |amuse them chance to help him. Then she remembered her sug ul but dumb makes a_hit at sight with men, forsake her for some givl who can interest and creatures. I'm afraid of them. The | full of bubbles. then add a small cu day's slim silhouette makes exacting only one I'm not afraid of is Fasmer | ful of Iight brown sugar, one-half demands on the poor mannequins— rown’s Boy. and 1 know this isn't | cupful of melted butter, one-half a they live very much like jockeys to rmer Brown's Boy. I wish those [ cupful of chopped raisins, half an | keep down their weight ple he docs. She is somewhat at a Toss amona the smart people who are his friends, and, although she is d zied at the future he ps talking of constantly. she is puzzled because Rges. And while nien like to be seen out with a girl who is well dressed. they e i A, - ' ke does not seem in any hurry to get | o0 U\:;V‘ lhr" &=t 'rh“d .<‘v‘ul h re. [ soon weary of one who is nothing but a Daily Hint From Paris, and whose il “;‘;:("}' ']‘_‘i"-':“l:|1'h'l'"|‘-'(§:£:j QLS o b »'«‘-n and o Heel”*—another Kayser feature marricd. In order to e awith him |fusal. Her cheeks burned. How could | prajns cut on the bias and shirred in the middle. L Pl ol e, MO INSIouE or gl . . ., | gives to the ankle a slenderizi she have brought herself te do such a jef among the qualities that attract hoys are good nature and lfnaetier SIS ONIBEE IR L a_ stiff dough, roll out, cut with a “Slim, slim, you must be slim, = 2 morc. <he gives up all night cases. has | thing when he needed money so getting ready to do? small ecutter and place on buttered | yme distance apart to rise. || demands Paris. If you have this effect and graceful line. kindliness, What we call good-he: are almost univer: Ally popular Fer rricnds seem to fecl that she rvted girl | ! The two-legged creature w - badly? How could she? pans at : changed. At the Thanksoiving dance sl ST = SRt rowet g : | ;i i b e (Continued i tomorrow’s Star.) OHeloh thenot: ionniny = sl NI o S SR e o T Saol e L _He had 1 i l,w; A W [;un light, b and dust thickly virtue your worries are over—but if My attention at this point in my brings Betty home, as Jimmu has i means brilliant, yet she never lacks for dates, and wherever she goes she has nE R svieh g 2 you haven't, the whole world seems | 0 oo waq attracted to a ver Been, caited to Washington. In_ the| = [ crowa of hoviand givis around her. 1 asked a bo the reason of this and - S— e to be your slave to design fashions | 1 o ’ tari he tells her that he loves her and | I rIer 7 \NY | he repl h. we are all crazy ahout Sally, because she is so sweet, She l‘ fl |” “ i w||‘| i Al m‘” i mm : ovely mannequin who strolled by Winscs her. Natwrally she is Jurions i NS | never < anvthing mean or catty about anybody, and she is the sort you it LA R Hfl1 iyl 1] that will make you appear so. Sheiin'w tailovad costiiitier b tittes ] The nert day she is to meet Jim's | can depend on. There is nothing in the world she wouldn't do to help you > me in i ) = simplicity but of marvelous chic-- if you needed it.” “And color. Study your type, madame, and wear the most alluring color.” The whole world of fashion listens! g train, and is uncrpectedly called on a | ense, arhich she refuses. Her con- | science troubles her and when she goes to the station Jim is not on the| yo traina Later ke comes up to her | apartment and telis her that a slump | ahooptet A tells him it doesn't matter. and sug- |5 \C gests that they not await any longer to be marricd. He refuses and tells | but the most interesting thing about it was the fact that her gloves— hosiery and bag matched. | Then a girl to be popular neads to be able to do things. She must know 7 — [ how to dance, or clse sha won't be invited to balls, and the better she dances imkins and Leroy | tha piore cut-ins she will have. She must know how to swim or else she will wawking along Jest | o joft out of the swimming parties. She must know how to play golf and and all of a sudden | tennis and a good game of cards, or else she will he left behind when the ed, G. look, bergler. [other youngs And it fs hugely to her advantage if she Meening some man trying to get in | can play the piano or some other kind of mus strument. It is just a house with a doorkey and not be-| sary for a girl to know how to de parlor tricks well as for her fo have YOU can depend on Chase & San- born’s Seal Brand 5 ' Coffee as offering and Puds Shooster 1w & “Yes, yes, they must match,” de- Not any one color dominates the | o eeq exacting Paris. mode—but all colors do. I was secretly amused when I thought of Well, Kayser “Chamoisette”* Rer that he has a favor to ask. e iy | - vioUicieRiERiEn. - : e [ han With « mreen cap on, Leroy say- i fhaps Infanivenie ouchin o n e lon ihavaRalio i Ewered O the most in flavor, glovesmatch Kayserhosiery—butnot E SR XY 5 i . thats rite. if he reelly 1ived second question. as far as it can be answered. strength and qual- in color only—in quality, too. They there he would have the rite key, But why some girls can get any man they want and other girls can g The Favor. and_enyways nobody but a bergler |none is one of the unsolved mysteries of the world DOROTHY DIX. win- | wouldent w ap like that. L look like kid, feel like kid and cost half as much—and they wash per- ity, whenever and Jim's brown eves were v - Ang as they looked into Betty's biue | Sure, thats rite, look at him shak- | FYEAR MISS DIX: Is there any way a fellow can find out if a girl lkes wherever easil, i ones. Ho smiled at her tenderly as|ing the door trying to brake the lock, him or not? Not that T wish to get married right away, but T would just _— you fectly and as easily as a handkerchief. he spoke. % I sed. ¥ i like to know. This question is important not only to me, but to others as drink it. - “Well, you see, it's this wav.,” he| Lets ask him questions and see wat | yell, as she goes out with other fellows as well as me. G. AND 3. You've no idea how good an began. “As I told you, I'm fairly up S Puds sed. Wich we wawked - Pt et ionel against it just now. I plunged rather | 2d started to do, Puds saving, nmver: | iilhere inlonly bne s Eo PRl oUE s hether aigiz] Sitor ot (Chase&Sanborns merican feels when abroad —going heavily on a tip I got from Arrow vou trying to zet in, Mister? | onnot, and that is to ask her. But it doesn't seem to me that a man has the | from opening to opening—to find endth. Of course it’s not his fanlt| Are you trying to be funr vight to put this question to her unless he means business and is ready to SEAL BRAND that & home firm is as much abreast that I lost: these things happen. But|man sed pop the question to her. T need some ready money. much | Sounding like somebody that dident . as | can get. 1 was wond if you|[wunt to answer a honest question, It may be a sop to his vanity to have her tell him that she loves him, but would let me take vour ring. It {and ns fellows winked at each other |it isn't giving the girl a square deal. and certainly no honorable man should won't be for long. perhaps not more|to prove we was rite, me ing, | drive all of a girl's other suitors away unless he not onfy is willin supply than a few weeks and perhaps not | Wats a matter, mister, aint enybody | their place, but is in a position to do so. 3 that long.” | home? Betty's white W drew into Aw. go home and tell your mother puzzled frown raised her she wants vou. the man sed. of new things as Kayser is. COFFEE Seal Brand Tea is of the same high quality Even in the Kayser “Italian” * silk underwear it has been fashioned to | give the much sought slim silhouette. - , Cut to cling to the contours of the the color chart of Kayser hosiery for body with the exclusive “Marvelfit™ to Just remember that a girl's youth and heauty are her capital with which she expects to establish herself in life. and if you let her waste them upon f and looked a Dewilds Being snother sispicious anser, and | vou. you have robbed her of her opportunity for making a good marriage. o T i s Being nothe SR s o) FakinEs epTiEEhciaag f‘”"r[[ i FJ]”‘ i L‘,;‘u‘q‘ fall that T had just seen, forithadall | goo¢ra that gives better fit and Then Jim was draw * into his | mist (Copsright, 1926.) i CEE_ i lnhmum {] the colorsthat Patou wassponsoring. longer wear. Of course, all Kayser arms and holding her as if she were 0. 1 jest keep my horse heer, the i A child, 1lis arms were very com-|man sed | —— | How Kayser was sofar in advance of | 1 jerwear is made of “Italian”* silk forting. “You don’t know how it| Being the most sispicious anser vet . 3 . (’%}444 '4'4'4'4 - the dictates of the openings was a that is all pure silk and pure dyes. makes me feel to have to ask vou|Wich jest then some lady wawked up Puzzlicks mystery to me. This business of S Y thi I_wouldn't hurt You for the|the steps sayinz, For goodness sakes, L bei head of thi 1| hril world. But if you felt you could do | Howered. if you do et that key Pl 2te Liniericky eing ahead of things always thrills May T suggest to you that you ) me—and Kayser always is, ' dr it would help me more than you | fised yowll have the whole ho now. 1 know how yeu wome aken down, why vour axually at- ambitious about the sentiment of a . g Sninh this, but 1 thought per Meening us 3 fellows. | understand | And she Ioft him in with her key. | Proving we was mis MOTHERS wear Kayser hosiery, gloves and underwear to be smartly and well costumed in the important acces- sories to the mode? oung man named —! Tiad one constant alm—to go —! A cyclone once —3— His town most in —4— And they found him perched on a —35 Even in quality they're ahead — the first, the standard, the very best obtainable. All Kayser hosiery is made of pure thread silk with pure | *Trade Marks Reg. ©J.K.&Co.,1926 Make This Test of White Enamel Yourself d what he meant. You want to pawn it?' Her voice was unsteady. He Title of courtesy sometimes given ; ring. e ,. ;‘“:‘ bea \:y(‘flui" gorgeous in a e . I -y gentlemen. " | * that? She kv 3. Forced a current of air through. 2. things, but sc s had | 5 i 4. A pair, R ‘ 5 % S e : Baby’s Quilt. 5. UY a can of Farboil Enamel Paint, put it on a strip s C. J. R. of Pittsfield, Mass., who is one of the best little “Puzzlick™ fans, forwards this limerick with the | observation, “Well, at any rate, you can’'t deny that he achieved his am- | bition.” That he did will be apparent when you have completed the limer- ick. The answer and another “Puz- zlick” will appear tomorrow.) Yesterday's “Puzzlick.” A wise man exploring the Nile Said: “The Sphinx is no doubt all the style, But yonder there be Other ruins, 1 see And Ull peer amid those for a while.” One night in 1889 Mrs. Wesley W. | Tower of Waterbury, Conn., los! | power of speech without any | cause. ow, after 37 3 | speech has returned to her & | teriously_as it vanished nearly four | decades ago. ple sneal darting ri ses them | 5. A kind of steeple. 1 | lest any one There was some thing dis it. and to| think of her r handled by some dreadiul oll man who would Peer at it und paw over it made her =hudder. How could she ever we r in. It wouldn't meun the same 10 her. Jim's voice was breaking in on her thoughts. Oh, no, dearest, nothing as bad as that. 1 could borrow money on it from a friend, put it up as collateral, i vou know what that means. Then with that money 1 would be able to + ¥etrieve my losses. But if you have any feeling about it, if it's going to smake vou unhappy, tell me. I thought you might like to feel You were helpi e out of a situation, that's all.” Betty's face cleared. How fo. ly | tentimental she was and how side by side with any other white enamel that you may have. See for yourself why experts say this is the whitest white enamel that has ever been made. Compare its hard, thick surface, its tile like gloss, that washes like a piece of porcelain. Watch it after 2 or 3 years, and see why we say that Farboil e Enamel Paint wears like iron. These are facts by scientifically achieved and thoroughly proven. A Por Beantifl Walk . % Just in! Paris Fall Styles in T ®. 0 e Uderthings busly she was b - .. ! : 5 Jogsiyaha was venaving | ‘ d Do not confuse it with ordinary kalsomines or q she said | One mother says: | i’ 2 e T After T had appliqued the colored & water paints. Because Farbo won't rub off. It ; ] it wou! { gingham animals on the baby's quilt v, , A h " Paris style and Kayser “Of cour: A found tha hey looked rath flat. | ' . . . bt e e o givesa deep beautiful tint to the walls of every room quality, an invincible e, I slit the under part on the side just enough to stuff a in the house. It comesin thir- téen lovely colors and white ° and goes on right over the old v ¥ wall paper. Y Y T couplet in these under- things, assures style plus economy for the smart Miss or the more con- servative Matron. The exclusive Kayser “Mar- pulled the ring from her finger and |lifel dropped it into his palm. She saw | wrong Nim stow it away in_his vest pocket, | little cotton in. When the quilt is but when he i at her " [lined the place where I drew the slit ingly she smiled brightly. {up does not show, and these raised | e i “You're a brick. da and fi are much prettier and give an member this always. There are ppearance of softne: yany girls who would stand the t. (Copsright. 1 and act like sports. You're ene in a million."” | The Towers of Silence are He drew her to him with more pas. erections in India and Persia nstomed to ex- | reception of their ¢ { Makes Women— "ce “Alluring—Every Hour in 24” ] § 3 unathan e vy ‘ To be always dainty—check offen- | f;’ velfit”* feature makes sive perspiration body odors in a| |B@ o | simple, convenient, thorough way. | |B w k 1 them betfcr_fimns and Try this! Wash or bathe with ex- | [Rg e make only longer wearing. quisite Chex Soap. Instantly—every | |Bg First-grade paints trace of body odor is gone. Allur- i |ing charm follows for 24 hours. Y by 7 | The most cleanly may offend—be- $ | cause the skin pores help rid the [N/ If your dealer can’ ! can’t supply | system of waste; more so when | Y Vi L other climinative organs are shug- | | K3 ,f""[”“’"P"’Z"I“I’i P‘S"’"’,"' | ?, we gl tel 7014 where | And the insidious thing is, we may | R4 to get them. | never suspect it, and our dearest T friend won't tell v Y r v | Chex ains a_la M i [1sne cxtme sacinian A E FARBOIL PAINT COMPANY | diecoly Dreventing - ecomposition of =Kin | BALTIMORE : MARYLAND Lo over, 1000.000 cake in the o |} AT ALL LEADING STORES You ;L:x‘mm' ‘s the wonder soap of the Y *Trade Mark s Y T i .‘:E.:f:."‘...’i“&""-h’:“‘i‘é.‘m“’dr’h“z".‘.fz L e e e B BN AN AR A - e T T A T e i 2 e o . » counieis. " 2 :