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WOMAN’'S PAGE. Games to Add Jollity to Halloween BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. S — 2 CHILDR! DELIGHT IN Ills(‘lr ST e THE PRANKS OF HALLOWEE PARTIES. . There nre scores n? tricks that go with fTalloween festivities. Some of Them for parlor ®ames, anj need to be modifled. inetance, Lobhing for apples is sloppy work thaf must be done in a kitchen where water an the floor §s not objec- tionable. But even then those who do the “bobbing likely to get thelr clothes wet yhout the neck. So why not try to et a good bite from the apple In a different and almost as elusive a way? Let us adopt the trick. Tut a large rosy apple in the aeat of a chair. Tie the hands of the player behind his (or her) back, and watch the fun. The b ple will slip and slide about. especially on a leather or wonden seated chair. If the arple falls off the seat the y r's turn is done. She cannot touch the apple except with her mouth, and iting it s “no joke”—it is so difficult, t all the objectionable element of the water s avoided. It is not so hard on the teeth, elther, an apple hung up b are vather rough cord. Magie Mirror Fortunes, Eve fortunes in one form Magic mirror fortunes thing. T shall not tell you how these are told, for then a'l vour friends who read this paper would know and that “ would spoil the fun if you were en tertaining. But if you will write me Just as soon as you read this and ask or another. for magic mirror fortunes, and send | # selfaddressed and stamped envelope T will send them with full directions, post haste, for Saturday. Don't delay, for T cannot promise to get them to ¥ou unless you mail your request this very night. Hiding in the Cornfield. Here is a new game for the Hal- loween party. For it y u must have For | ring to bite | ¢ Halloween party must have | are just the | l(hroo or four cornstalks, the kind { that farmers cut down after all the corn has been harvested. These are many fet hizh and have long frond- like leavés branching out from the | stiff stalk. If vou cannot get the | vou can make them. U } dle or an old broom h | broom part sawed off, for the | Wind this with green crepe paper, rou do this wind into the stem rond leaves. These are jus trips of the same green crey | paper tapered to :u point. Throuzh the lengthwise center there must be a length of green covered | &lued in place to mak: | up. At the top of the “stalk” fa: | number of fringed and wired piec: | ight yellowish brown paper tissue to resemble corn tassles. Rules of the Game. One player is chosen to be blind- folded. Six plavers stand at intervals | around him to form a broken circle, each one holding a cornstalk before him. The blindfold player wanders in this “cornfleld” until he comes to {one of the “stalks.” He tries to find | | up the arm to the face, and so guesses the player, whom he must call by name before the leader counts 10. he is successful, the two players change places. If not, the hlindfolded player wanders about until he does find one of the six that he can name correctly. . Each person should have a chance |to be “it” and the hostess (or the | mother, if the party is for children) is the leader, does the counting and the blindfolding, for which a large silk handkerchief should be used. Those { who have hidden behind the corn- stalks change with those who have not had turns after each person is blindfolded and takes his place in the center of the group. EAT AND BE HEALTHY Dinah Day’s Daily Talks on Diet The Right Food Is Coffee, Ham Sandwich, Pie. Time: 12:30 every day. Place: Any soda fountain, cafeteria, restauran Characters: law: ator, sales The Great geems to be Rich man. peor man, tenographer, telephone oper- irl. ‘American lunch order “I'l have a ham sand- wich, a_cup of coffec and a piece of pie.” These ingredients are rapldly devoured, most of the time the coffee heing used as a “flush” to flood down the gulps of ple. After months of this type of lunch, with not much improvement in the Breakfasts and dinners eaten, the vie- tims wail: “I don't know what's the matter with me. I'm so tired all the time—don't seem to have any pep.” “Gee. but T have indigestion. Evervthing I eat seems to bother me." Tha ham sandwich, coffer and pie :nch {s a good example of pouring ries into the system, but of df siy slighting the essential min i vitamins. Containing h not balanced by min- cause an acid condl system, with resulting Also, such a ity. protein, even if it 1son, ham ople to digest tion of the Tunch lacks The ham Tut has a larg " n ham.” havder for nu than {s lean meat. amount of iron and lime. but could not be used as a source of these min- eral salts. Coffea vields no food value at except in the cream und sugar flavor- ing it. Being only a stimulant, the effect of “picking one up’ soon wears off Coffea is ofte: tlon. Tioth tea an nfe achl. Experiments huve this interferes with the di starch. White bread and w in pie ure chy. The {The Cheerful Cherub At times life seems all struggle 2nd confusion, But dont anget another world is near: The world of thought that we can 2]ways enter Where e\"eryfl*\lng 1s rexsoned, calm ¢ and clear. /\3 Y A Gl \ all, source of indiges- coffee contain tan- tion of rte flour ation ains a small | hown | the Best Medicine 1 Under no cf liquid be U cumstances chould an; sed to wash down food; varticularly starchy food like | wiches and pie. Starch must have | the action of the saliva in the mouth for proper digestion. 1If the starch is rushed down to the stomach without being properly mixed with sal lies like a lump in the stomach. Because of the condition of saliva and proper chewing of his Jim Brown may more easily digest the starch lunch than Sam Jone: But Jim Brown’s health would fare better if he were to take a salad sandwich of wholegrain bread, a glass of hutter milk or his lunch, instead of the ham sand- wich, coffee and pie. The lunch sug- sested would contain less fat-making foods than the great American lunch order, Or Jim Brown could have a plate of vegetable soup, wholewheat bread and butter, a generous combinaton vege table salad (raw vegetables preferred) and baked custard. If Jim | hit food, | | he could have a cup of tomato soi | a salad sandwich on wholesrain bread. and a fruit sherbert which he should | eat slowly. Or he mig picce | of fruit for dessert on hi back | to the office. Readers desiring personal answe; their uestions should send self-addressed stamipid | envelope to Dinah Day, care of The Star. | Clues to Character | i | | BY J. 0. ABERNETRY. i | The Creative Type. All persons of creq tive minds are round in form. | we shall see that possession of creative power always is known by | the rounded form of the body, head. the eyes, the nose, the |and limbs. Whenever in the find one feature which presents rotund appearance, be it the | ear, the nose or the lip | feature ¢ e more { ergy in part of t or depre Tt is well known th best adapted to the tone or sound. A round dicative of o e dr Is reception ose the hand holding it and from it feel | | fury 1t | of 80 much starch and the tannic acid | of the coffee may bring on indigestion. | | sand- ] | I f | i | | expect them, and { not | muct hink wire sewed or | inued e frond stand | | at femiy | ofr | forzive | defin!tely uncomfortable and impatient, weet milk, and an apple for | { i | fir la | pal” is the i pedal @ lever f | times and | compa is in- | rounding upper lip indicates greater | { procreative + flat. thi \ round. avidence of o gre 1 one that gether with I tion bility lip. red, and capacity ing lower lip < ability 1 and less taste for flavors, are disciosed by a good s . red under (Covyrisht rou p. 107 e of many pa 12 movement to equip | { houses with first aid outfits has ! | started. than srown must | eat his lunch at the soda fountain, | n ot ed, | THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, SUB ROSA BY MIMIL Rudeness. There a few things a woman has a perfect right to do—such as nting, changing her mind, buying > Those are little no one a have come to leges are ed, th be no great trouble over then lHowever, womer ther One 1 ave taken urto ¥ new rights, ced delusion in minds of ny women is that they b ect right to keep a man waiting | vond tue appointed time set for h: afid have nele dares to . but take their o getting any- sweet to meet h od Heaven late to v Betty, et John aren’t you | " we asked | at powder- | / fashion “You're teaing ! it 10 past | already. “Well what with her toile a man. Men for women. But they're They are not rudeness on it”” She went on| calmly. *He’s only | supposed o wait | not D to wait. | and for | one— whom | a show or da e—unles: The business of | 0 minutes in unily living room lady fair, is dis- <y they'r Unpunct lutely unaveidible spen weary hotel lobby or th waiting for a tardy tasteful to any man Phere is no meed for any girl to 1ha s away with this brand of discourtesy. The time has (4 when she can depend on the 1et of her being just a girl to insure goodnature in the face of her con- Bo; treatient. ne whim: slight pettin the dams to that kind of v smile tolerantly nd caprices, laugh —but they can't 1 who makes them ticking off the weary minutes until she makes her appearance. Let me tell you I've had more than one man pour an angry tale into my ear about the lack of courtesy in the sweet voung thing who strolls in 45 minutes late, and doesn’t even hother aking an excu Men stand for that once or twice, but they resent it like They 'don't think it's cute. think it's extremely rude and ill- bred. There isn't one of you girls who wouldn’'t go to any lengths to prevent its being thought that you lacked in social etiquette. Yet vou give your- selves away as being ill-mannered and boorish when you make no attempt to keep a date on time—and make no apology for your tard Mimt will be 1o answer any inquiries directed to this paper provided a stamped, addresesd envelope is inclos (Copyright. 1926.) SONNYSAYINGS FANNY Y. CORY. is comin’ an' what you drandma sended me.some by distaess! 1926.) ilercen My pumpk (Conyright Lesson: BY W. L. GORDON. Word sour in English : “Principle” faw, rule. “Prin L in runk or importance. Often mispronounced: Magazine, Ac- cent the last syllable, not the first. Orten 1 Teddie ito the foot). kind, graclous, compassionate, mpathetic. | word three Let us in-| mastering Today’s word ting to- He lived simplest way spellec sell); | Synonyms: Gent ane, benevolent, merciful, tende Word ' study: it is our vocabulars word each day. itible; capable gether; congenial; suitabl in a small co . in th ble with his work VWillie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. | was fig him use | he | Ameri THE MILLION , D. €. MONDAY, DOLLAR WIFE By HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR. G OVER THE BED WHERE BETTY WAS LYING. Betty Ames nurses James Cornell through pneumonia and they fall in love. Dr. Amos Craig is also in love with her and is hurt at the ne Jim is the type of man who is always talking about what he will do when kes his “million,” and at St. Martin’s Hospital the nurses call Betty the “million-dollar” wife. Al- though he seems to have plenty of money, Jim is in no hurry to get mar- ried, which puzzles Betty. At his re- quest she gives up night cases, which, of course, curtails her income. In spite of this fact, Jim expects her to be always smartly dressed. At a dance Dr. Craig shows his love for her openly and kisses her in the tari on the way home. Naturally, Betty is furious, particularly as his love - for her scems more unsclfish than Jim- my’s. Jimmy keeps postponing the time for their marriage. At first he sets June, and then changes his mind and goes abroad. He is to return in September. but again the date is post- poned, and in_the meantime the strain is telling on Betty. CHAPTER XLIX. At 9 o'clock the next morning Amos Craig with a rather worried-looking Janitor, climbed the stairs of Betty's apartment. With a duplicate key the door was unlocked, and Amos stepped inside. The next moment he was bending over the bed where Betty was lying. He put his hand on her shoulder, but she did not rouse. Ifer chee were flaiming with color and under her lashes her eves were half open and glazed with fever, With brisk efficiency, he took out s thermometer and with her slender < fingers counted her pulse. | apid, and when he | removed the thermometer from her mouth the slender threadeof mercury showed 103. Stripping a blanket from the bed, he lifted the girl in his arms and wrapped her in it. The next moment he was carrving her downstairs to the St. Martin's ambulance, which was waiting. e had known when Betty morning that somethir had happened. She I absent from a case in ence with he At the hospital in one rooms with the narrow, beds. where she had Betty tos#ed restlessly on her pillow From time to time she would babble incoherently, and Dr. Roberts and Dr. Hunt, who were consulting on her e looked srave. They had both 1t the girl woull have e was com- t her heart The strain put upon her of this kind d never been 11 his experi- of those white iron erved so ofter ited by the f wits weak. ! dn't reported for duty that| | haa been too much and she had | broken under it. From time to time as he could take it, Amos looked in on her, and it seemed to him as he stood by her bed looking down at the sweet flush- ed face on the pillows that if she died everything worth while in life to him would go with her. He loved her so! He asked only the right to serve her. Why couldn't he have heen the man to bring that look of radiance to her eyes? Why had she fallen in love with Jimmy Cornell, who had done his best to break her heart? Life was so strange. He had sked for nothing but this one woman nd she loved another man. It hardly emed fair. Dx passed and Betty lay in her row white bed while the fever aged. « Every one in the hospital was eager to do something'for her. She had a day and a night nurse and the best specialists in the city at her dls- posal, but she was consclous of noth- ing that went on about her. The nurses would come and go, tip-toeing into the room and standing beside the bed with wet ey while she raved in delirium or & E quietly that it seemed she must be dead. And during all this time, a great liner was cleav- ing its way through the ocean on its way back to New York. Aboard it was a gay young man named Jimmy Cornell. He was a great favorite among the other passengers. Some vs calling upon him for a fourth at bridge, or for deck sports or for a jolly companion at cocktail t e men spoke of him as a “good " and were alw: slapping him on the back affectionately. The wom- en inveigled him into light flirtations. Nothing that amounted to much. Jim- my was never serious. Just an in- dvertent touching of fingers on a moon-flooded deck, or an arm across the back of a deck chair. Jimmy never went too far, and neither did the women expect him to do so. But the sea air was conducive to flirting and he enjoyed it just as he did every- thing else in life, He radioed Bett two days out. He to meet him and to wire him immedi- ately at his expense. When he did | not hear from her, he was puzzled but not at all frightened. Ile took for granted the fact that the message might have gone astray and sent an- other. Even when this, too, remained unanswered, he did not worry. She would be at the dock to meet him. He hoped she would be wearing something | smart. She did not always dress as he | would like, but then he would change | all that as soon as they were married. | How her eves would light up when he told her they could be married at once! when the ship wa (Copyright. 1926.) (Continued. in tomorrow’ 150 YEARS AGO TODAY Story of the U. S. A. BY JONATHAN Long Island Turns Tory. BROOKHAVEN, L. L, October 2 1776 —Long Island’s Whigs, frlends o 1 frecdom and enemies of the British King in his attempt to enslave the American_States, duced by the British tr allies to a s ion to the Crown. are turning Tory, including many where the patriot cause was strongest before General Howe gaineil posses- ion of Long Island. The sgeneral ed in the fol- h was ¢ by Commit- ¢ of Suffolk: umittee of the Count assembled by Hon. Y., and the territories depending thereon in Amer- ica, do hereby dissolve ourselves, and ct the orders of and totally re- em; revoking all nder Congress, ops and their Whole towns tee of the C “We the Suffolk, bei the celle will p; s ‘gpon your T hoping that er conduct 1 to protec f the Province Committee, s clemenc s by our f sy plea W1y to the 1s cned by the or JOH the statement of for months W Congre: ew York conv It now r Th tee which upporting P d the the patriot party. | self completely and b from ( Similar the rord nting: Hampton have been re-| e of complete sub- | sued | A. RAWSON, JR jand Southold, and probably by many | other towns. Not & few of the prominent citi- zens who have thus turned traitor to the Amorican cause outwardly are well known to have taken this course as the only way to retain their homes and farms, without which their families would be course be des- titute. Refu to bow down hum- bly to the King's agents at this time would mean only the loss of all their property. For a time it was hoped that Connecticut would send over mi- litia which would help the Long sland militia to stand off the Eng- lish invaders, but that hope has van- ished, because Connecticut needs every able-hodi home on account of the British advance in that direc- tion and the many demands upon Connecticut from Washington's army for milit supplies and various | forms of Remove the bones from a fore- quarter of lamb, excepting the leg bone, from the inside end of which a picce should be sawed, so as to make | a shape more like a duck. From the ide end saw off pieces, 8o that the a4y be left to represent the ape the removed blade bone, trim the point end and insert to repr: :nt the tail. Stuff, sew, and skewer, cover the parts representing the head und tail with well greased paper {and tie into shape. Roast in @ hot oven for two and one-half hours, bast- inz oceasio with melted butter. Remove the string, paper, and ske place on a se nish’ with potato bays, cucumber, parsely and KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES—The Woman of It. YoU LoOX SORT of WORRIED JULIE. HAS ANY THING T wRoNG AT THE i 1Ll SAY So MA! THAT LITTLE BLOND GiRL OHRISTINE AND HAD AN AwFUL DATTLE! SHE wWONT FOR HEAVENS SAKE SuLiE! WHAT S 1T ALL ABoOUT? wWry! SHE Ace NE OF TRy ina TAKE HER FRIEND AWAY FRONM HER! ISNT THAT RidDicvLoUS MA? SHE'S GOOFY ¥ ISNT 1T BOY DINNER GETS 3 SHE INTRODUCED HiM TO ME LAST WEDNESDAY AND JusT BECAUSE HE Took HE To 1 DID SEE HIn NEXT DAY, BUT ONLY FOR THE LiiT? You SE€ THAT EVENING SHE ORE .—— OF COURSE AGAN THE LUNCHEON — BY POP MOMAND AND THURSDAY EVEMING HE TOOK ME To A Swow! BUT 1 ONLY SAW Hin FoR FIFTEEN MINUTES ON FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ALL WE DID WAS TO GO TO A/MOVIE AND HAVE A FEW DANCES LATER !!! AND NOW SHE JAW IM TRYING TO TAKE HIM AWAY - \TS SO FOOLISH, ISNT T HA D OCTOBER 25, sked her to be sure | ng dish and gar- | 1926. l Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Vegetables Not Liked. Mrs. J. K. writes: “I would like to ask some questions about my 18- month-old baby who weighs only 21 pounds. She has been cutting teeth all Summer; do you think this would keep her from gaining? She seems to feel good and is lively. I keep her out of doors as much as possible. When she was small I had her on a schedule, but when I weaned her she stopped gaining so well. She will hardly eat enough vegetables to sat- isfy her appetite, but she drinks a big glass of milk at each meal. She sleeps all night without waking. Would you print a recipe for preparing coddled egg?"” gfinswer—The combination of heat and teething might very well act to keep a baby from making any start- ling gains, but it is unusual for a child to make no gains at all for six months, whatever the reason, if the diet is sufficient for its Meeds. T imagine that yoy are depending, like many mothers, fon milk instead of realizing what a child's development after the first year must depend on a general mixed diet, plus milk, but not entirely milk. So many mothers say. do, “the baby is getting all the milk he will drink,!” feeling satisfied that with Ilots of milk he is sure to get along all right. That is only because mothers have been so educated to the advantages of milk that they for- set that there are other foods of im- Jjust as you portance for second-yvear feeding. Cereals, eggs or meat, fruit juices and vegetables are essential to a per- fect diet, and with this diet milk is a necessary addition. Please write for the leaflet on wean- ing and feeding and correct the child’s diet. I am sure this correction will insure a proper gain in weight. Put an egg Into a small deep sauce- pan of boiling water. take off the fire and cover. In five minutes the egg will be like jelly. This is what is called & coddled egg. But be sure the water is deep so that the egg is well covered. e Worms Again. Mre. L. G. S.—I doubt very much if the boy has worms. At any rate it is not a matter to guess about, be- cause of any particular symptoms, as children with worms often show no svmptoms of them at all—but to sat- sfy yourself have an examination. Perhaps the boy's evening meal is too much for him. Bread and milk and fruit sauce, or well cooked cereal and milk, with a glass of milk to drink makes the best possible “supper” for a child of 233 years. The restlessness is probably due to indigestion caused by too heavy an evening meal. One of the many leaflots Eldred On the care of babie S Tnfhieted wiih weme Ayl TSR 08 R N inclose a stamped. self-addressed offered by Mrs. includes a’qis: ch_children be- No. 8. anc envelope. DIARY OF A NEW FATHER BY E. DICKSON. Sunday Afternoon. I certainly had news for Joan I night. Yesterday, being Saturday, | the ghost took his weekly walk down at the ofiice, and my envelope had an |extra $10 in it, with a note from the | boss, saying here wis a raise and he | hoped the baby and Jogn were getting | t ialong well. Sometimes I think I like that guy. | Joan is a smart kid. She said we'd put $5 each week into a bank account | for the baby, and the other $5 we | probably would need because of our | | increased family. That's $260 a vear | for the baby, or $5,460 when he | plus all the interest. I'm going to {the bookkeeping department tomor- row to figure it all up for me. There was a special delives from each of our families v Joan's father wrote that now we | probably would find out what a lot | of trouble we had been to our parents, and he felt sorry for us. That's his | idea of humor. When I reached the hospital this | i morning Joan was taking a nap, so | I went down to the room off the office, where 1 waited the morning the baby | | was born, for a smoke. There w: ! another imminent father waiting, and {a bit we introduced ourselves, and I | thought I would try to reliéve his {mind a little. Told him it would not be long, and everything was bound to | be all right. He laughed loudly, and , I know, we have had five This business of putting out a help- ing hand sn't all the copybooks say 816 9th 3128 1 N. You might be surprised to know that the best thing you can use for coughs, is a remedy which is easily prepared at home in just a few moments. It's cheap, | but for results it beats anything| else you ever tried. ually stops ||| | the ordinary cough or chest cold | in 24 hours. Tastes pleasant—chil- | dren like it. Pour 214 ounces of Pinex in a pint bottle; then fill it up with | plain granulated sugar syrup. Or | | use clarified honey instead of sugar || syrup, if desired. Thus you make a full pint—a family supply—but (’outifi no more than a small bottle of ready-made cough syrup. And as a cough medicine, there is ‘really nothing better to be had at any price. It goes right to the Bpot and gives quick, lasting re- lief. It promptly heals the mem- branes that line the throat and air assages, stops the annoying throat ickle, loosens the phlegm, and soon Jour ‘cough stops entirely. Splen- id for bronchitis, hoarseness and bronchial asthma. Pinex is a_highly concentrated compound of Norway pine extract | and palatable guaiacol, famous for; bealing the membranes. To avoid disappointment ask. your druggist for “215 ounces of Pinex” with directions. Guaranteed to give absolute, satisfaction or_money re- ?; funded. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. <A Sl N D p | FEATU RES. Making the Most of Your Looks BY DOROTHY STOTE. BEDTIME STORIE The Empty Egg Crate. Onpo Il find, 15'%ery tate of mind Nature. unity, ‘much —Old Mother What Old Mother Nature means by that s that most of us have opportun- ities a large part of the time, and fre- quently do not see them at all. It is the one who acts quickly, both in see- ing and doing, who makes the most of opportunity and practically always finds opportunity. It was doing jus this that had brought Danny Meadow Mouse so far on his long journey. As you know, time and again he had been SO AS HE RAN HE US SHARP LITTLE EYES OF TO THE BEST ADVANTAGE. HIS in a very tight place, but each time he had seen opportunity and had made the 'best of it. Now, Danny was on his way to market. He didn't know it, but he was. He was in a bag of potatoes on a market truck. So, for the first time in his life, Danny was having an automobile ride. e had ridden in an airp! torl: motor truck. Danny Wi sn't enjoying that ride, because he didn’t know where he was rfed to, and he wanted to go those potatoes in that bag were not at all comfortable However, they furnished mething to live on, and that was being c: home. Then, too, as a bed. something to be thankful for. but 1 have been in before, and T come out all not going to 1id Danny awfully tisht places guess thing will right this time. I'm until something more It was a long time before anything happened. You see, that market gar- den where Danny had crept into the bag of potatoes 7 many, many miles from the town where the mar- It was very earl just at daylight, i rolled into the m and the men | d @ bad tri oes was unloaded. But st long. Shortly afterw was opened und Danny time He nped out he red the operied the ow it never Know whe that the when hi: it wasted man who had to go In a strange This market was :, of course, Danny dodged in and out between the bags of potatoes and between the boxes of other vege By N Covyrizht. this simple rule in skin care. Follow it for one week —note the improvemcnt that comes ECAUSE all the world seeks! natural skin loveliness today, | natural ways in skin care now have supplanted the artificial ways of yes- terday. Thousands of the pretty complex- | ions you see and envy are due to the | simple rule in skin care given here. It has brought clear complexions to | more women than any other method | known. ! For your own sake, try it, if only for a_week—just 10c for a cake of soothing Palmolive, used in this way: THE RULE ... AND HOW TO FOLLOW FOR BEST RESULTS Wash your face gently with Palmolive Soap, massaging it softly into the skin. Rinse thoroughly, first | with warm water, then with cold. If your skin is inclined to be dry, apply a touch of good cold cream— that is all. Do this regularly, and particularly in the evening. Use powder and rouge if you wish. But never leave them on over night. They clog the pores, often enlarge them. Black- heads and disfigurements often fol- low. They must be washed away. Follow these rules day in and day out. Your skin will be soft and lovely —uaturally colorful and clear. BE SURE YOU GET THE DIN or Coughs, REAL PALMOLIVE De ot use ordinacy soaps in the ZD THOSB ne, and he had ridden in a mo- . and now he was riding on a don’t know what's happening to bag of po- | didn’t | rd the bag | no | s0 suddenly | Dear Ann: ‘When the crown of a hat is in circumference than the fac neath, the result is most unflattering, as you can see by the right-hand sketch. It should be larger in order to offer pleasing contrast. Yours for pleasing everybody. LETITIA (Covyrizht. 1926.) BY THORNTON W. BURGESS tables and fruit, looking for a place where he could get out of sight and i feel reasonmably safe. le was the more xious to find this becanse in his first jump out of that bag he had seen t, and he knew that that cat would be looking for him. At firet he could find no place where he felt safa in staying. He knew he couldn’t keep up dodging all day. So as he ran ke used those arp little eyes of his 1o the very best advantage. He was look ing for opportunity and he didn't in tend to miss it. Presently he came to a sort of hox At least, he thought it was a bhox There was a lot of stuff in it whick looked if he could hide under it Danny didn't hesitate. He climbed Into_that box in a hurry, and he had hardly gotten in when the cover was shut. Jut the one who shut it hadn't seen him climb in there. What he was In was an empty egg crate. That is, it was empty of eggs. It had in it merely the cardboard divisions fo holding the eggs. For a long time Danny lay there and listened to strange sounds that frightened him. There was a great deal of noise all about him. e nothing happened to him. That erate wasn’'t touched. It was late in the day before any one paid any attention to that crate. Then Danny felt it being lifted. It was carried a short distance and put in a small truck. A little Iater Danny heard the chug-chug of the motor, and once more he was oft on his journey. (Copyright. 1926.) October first marked the disappear ance of the German language from the &chools throughout the South Tyrol, which has come into the hands hap- in the | an easy matter to | entirely | is your aim ORMA TALMADGE 1026, by P. 0. Beauty Features.) | treatment given above. Do not think | any green soap, or represented as of alm and olive oils, is the same as | Palmolive. Remember that \>efm';d Palmofive came, women were told, “use o | soap on your face: Soaps then were judged too harsh. Palmolive is a beauty soap made for one pur pose only: to safeguard your com plexion. 60 years of soap study stand behind it. Millions of pretty skins prove its effectiveness beyond all doubt. It costs but 10c the cake! —so little that millions let it do for their bodies what it does for their faces. Obtain Palmolive tuday. Note what one week ofcits use bnilgs ‘}:ou. Th)e Palmolive Company (Del Corp. * Chicago, Iilinoia vy