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THE SUNDAY STAR. WASHINGTON, - Christmas Holidays BY MARY MARSHALL. ORE and more with the younger Reneration Christmas is com- ing to be a season spent as much as possible out of doors. Nor frosts, nor cold. nor smow. nor winds nor Winter thaws have terrors for the modern D. 0. DECEMBER 19. Bring Busiest Season for Qutdoor Sports honors. | wears them on eold days has influence “Pony. calf. kid, caracul, antelope, | in their faver in England—and with leopard, krimmer, heaver, muskrat. sur exaggerated love of royalty, dsubt- civet. opossum—both American and | less will have here alse. Doctors wiil | Australian—and sheared lamb™ are | soon be recommending them to women the pelts named by a fur expert as he- | who must go out in all sorts of ing suitable for the Winter sports coat | weather and who insist on following | this season. You may even see some | the fashion for thin stockings and low 1926 _PART 5. the raccoon ccat take all young sportawoman, who thinks of the Christmas holidays as well an the Summer holidays as a season to he xed in outdoor sports. And the son why she has no fear of the Inclemencies of Winter weather is in great measurs becanse the modern voung sportswoman —foolish though her elders may helieve her te be dresses to suit the sport and the weather. For hockey and skating she wears clothes that are light as well as warm. For skiing her ensembles is moisture-proof and snow-proof, as well as cold-proof. She scorns the sort of bundling up that women used to endure when on comparatively rare occasions they skated or went tobok- Eaning, and the makers of modern Winter sports attire wisely her with clothea ingenioui give protection without perfectly free movement. Women no longer need feel that in order to dress sultahly for sports that were once enjoved only by men and hoys their clothes need to look at all mannish mascnline. De signers of sports apparel have re. cently succeeded in making clothes for skating, skiing and other Winter sports that are entirely feminine and at the same time quite as well suited to cold-weat] athletics as anything that mere man ever wore. Fven trousers and breeches no longer suggest the once exclusively masculine garment and before long we may forget that the time ever was when it aesmed a trifie un- womanly to wear them. They will then seem as eminently feminine as | they do in China, where straight | Tong trousers seem the most de corous garment any woman can wear. Many of the skating costumes dis play short pleated skirts worn over matching bloomers. A warm, light weight jacket, usually belted, is worn above the weolen stockings which, usually of striking design. add to the coziness of the ensemble. Warm leather boots are sometimen worn for ekating. For skling and other so-called Alpine sports the sort of trousers known as Jodphur hreeches or just jodphurs are inereasingly, popular. An interesting prted costume of this sort is made ellow and blue checked waterproof woolen material. That ix the jodphure are made of this, while the belted jacket is made of hlue wool cloth shot with vellow. A close-fitting muffler eollar i of the checked material, and lttle turn-back “cuffa” at the ankles of the hreeches are of the plain vel- low. Jodphurs, you may know, are shaped something like men's riding breeches, but they extend down to the ankles, fitting closely over the calves. Sometimes they button down the leg. but nowadays they frequently display the new patent fasteners. It is interesting to note how fre- quently shades of bright yellow are used in the new Winter sports things, and black, providing it is combined with some bright color is more in evidence than ever before for this'| purpose. Sometimes long trousers that are too baggy to be called jod- phurs are worn for skiing. One voung woman will wear trousers of thia sort in black waterproof material, with the ends worn inside the high- Mced boots, and & rather short double- preventing =7y breasted jacket of the same material —belted, of course—goes with the costume, the pleated skating skirt, but a really better plan ix to wear a pair of the new knitted knickers which are a nevelty of the season. These are Bloomers are usually worn beneath | at A NOVEL SPORTS SILHOUETTE IS ACHIEVED BY THE BLAC( SUIT FOR SKIIN GLOVES AND CA TO AT IS A B TUME_ WITH JACKET EDG EDGES THE BFE closely knitted around waist and hips. with ~ gradually increasing fuliness through the thighs. They terminate the knmees, where the fullness is | graduated Into a tight knee band. | These may be bought to match the | knitted sweater. The task of making | a pair of these skating knickers for Puzzlers Get Ready for Christmas. BY CECILLE LYON. P Mysterious packages hidden in closets—sister Mary offering to dry the dishes twice in the same day— little Willie hegging for opportunjty to run errands—what could it mean except that Christmas is just around the corner? And Willle and Mary have saved their pennies and together are buying presents for Mother and d. These Are From Santa Claus. | GUESS THESE THREE PRESENTS FOR DAD | 18, slave; 20, owe: 18, 29, Drudge. To be indebted to. - . Confliet. ~ Vertieal. . First number. . Descriptive of the far northern region. Title of this puzzle. Consumed. Handle Consclous of. . Beneath. . To put a 1lid on. . A distant point. Answers. . Dad’s gifts are: pipe, tie, scarf. . Gift, gilt, goid, sold. . Santa Claus. 4. The word diamond holly, elf, v. 5. The words in the Cross Word puzzle are: Horizontal—1, top: 4 6, n it: 8, elk: 10, ape; 12, we: 13, rob; 15, ca 8, be: 21, war., is: h, hoe, | didn’t thoroughly understand. aware; 14, below; 15, cover; | parents, just easy and sinfully over- | indulgent? (Continued from Third Page.) l as easy a victim. He thinks of how the train compares with the first one his dear old dad gave him. In fact, he I8 %0 taken up with it that he has | to see how every part of it works Wouldn't pay to buy something he | He al- | most forgets that the salesman has | other people to sell besides himself. | | He, oo, is lost in admiration—which | is, of course, an emotion not calcu- lated 0 hinder hix buying. | The sale of more than $200,000,000 | worth of toys annually in this country is enough almost to make one philo- sophical. Are we so prosperous that a luxury industry can increase its pro- | duction 1,500_per -cent " | FEven for a luxury industry that is a phenomenal, an almost unheard-of growth. Or do we love our children | #0 dearly that nothing but the best is | £0od enough for them? Or are we, as | 20 vears | Maybe it is that we are Care Will Prevent Every boy and girl wanta to live. No youngster wants to he crippled or injured. But gvery day in the vear lota of children are killed and injured while playing in the streate and right in their own homes, Last year about 21,000 boys and girls under 15 years of ‘age met untimely deaths, Automoblles alone killed about 7,000 | Change “gift" to “sold” In four | moves. (In changing one word to | another, change one lstter with each | move, forming a new word each time.) | Concealed in this sentence is a well. | known Christmas character: “1 haven't seen an pleasant a clause | in a text hook for some time."” | s | Make up this word diamond, built around a Christmas decoration: | H o HOLLY Y | PN ¢ | +'s addition to the Crose Word | Puzzle 700 has no legs! Nor fur, but | atrong #kin, and he creaps—what Ik o7 This Is Number Four Vertinl.‘ | watchdog. | Definitions are | Horizontal. | . The peak. . Moving bus. . Negative. . Indefinite pronoun. . Animal. | n voung people. some little playmate who was acci- dentally killed or injured as a result of plaving in the streets, | should he used only by vehicles. Boys and girls often get killed and | injured by falls, Sometimes they lean too far out of & window or over a bal- cony. Often they are in too much of a hurry to get down to thg street and fail downatairs Onee in a twhile they trip over a tov left upon the floor. A & many youn| Stories About Our Pets. Some Ear! A Chinese spaniel and a bull ter rier are two peta belonging to Eleanor Chew of National City, Calif. She has namad the spaniel Peggy. She is only 1 foot long and her ears are 31 inches | long. Her halr ix vellow and white in color and her aves are large and black. She can wink her eve, speak for her dinner and shake hands. Spareribs Ik the hull terrier. He has four white fest and & white chest and the rest of hix coat Is dark brown. Fleanor says both of her doge are very friendly and make fine compan- fons. She has rbad about hirds, cats, ponies and 'moat every other kind of Animal for a pet, but she prefers hav- ing a dog. Eyeshader for Dogs. ngt a mongrel” is the way James | F. Hixon of Ashe Grove, Mo, de- scribes his pet, but he certainly does | wonderful playfeliow and He can ride in Jamer' coaster wagon and, to protect his eves from the sun, James has bought an eveshade for him to wear. James found his per wandering around the streets near his home and decided to take him home and make A pet of him. He xays that hix dog is a dandy make » | swimmer and they have great times in the Summer when they go bathing. This Rabbit Eats Tee Cream. Gordon Mclvor of 8An Diego, Calif., as & gray bunny for a pet. | weighs 16 pounds. Gordon says that Perbaps you know of | which | killed as a r | pistols and ers’ are|dying too seon. He | Accidental Deaths. burned or #oalded to death. They get too close to bonfires. Playing with matches has caused the death of thou- sands of boys and girls. Upsetting something that mother was cooking on the kitchen stove has been respon. | sible for many burns and scalds. Many, many tots have been over- come a8 & result of plaving around gas stoves, which should be avoided by children. Too many voungsters have heen It of toying with guns, volvers. Drownings take the lives of hun- dreds of little folk every Summer. | Any boy or girl who can read this | newspaper is old snough to learn how | to swim. | " Drinking from hettlas containing | poicona has resulted in young people | have many good times together. | kes to eat greens of any kind. | This is a very unusual bunny, for he | |loves to have Gordon bring him ice | | cream. S oy | Used Carrier Pigeor [ | Betore the invention of the electric | telegraph carrier pigeons provided the fastest known means of transmit- | ting messages and were even used hy | | mate enjoyment Iinglish stock brokers to get early re. ports on the market. | | The carrier pigeon fs useful hecause of his accuraey In returning to his home and the speed of his flight. He | | must be carefully trained over a long | period. Pigeons have heen known to | message as far as 500 miles in | During the Franco-Pruseian | War they were used by hoth armies | | to carry ‘messages. but the invention | of telegraph and wireless soon led | their abandohment. Cause for Thanks. [ “Mamma, today the teacher asked | me if thers were any more at home i me." | "“And what did she say when vou {told her you were the only ehild?" ! ““She sald, ‘Thank heaven! Sy one day Anything to Please. WATERPROOF GABARDINE SHOWN ABOVE. THE SCARF, P ARE OF GREEN WOOL. NEXT EIGE HOMESPUN SKATING COS- SHORT PLEATED SKIRT AND WITH ANGORA, WHICH ALSO JIGE FELT HAT. yourself to match your sweater would not he difficult if you are clever with the knitting need! 3 Although the fur ecoat ix seldom part of the sports costume in aetion, some sort of fur or leather top coat is most desirable to don befors and after ontdoor athletics in cold climates, TRIS GREEN KASHA SPO! %fi HAKHI'#(_ ANC nc‘g WHEN WORN WITH !RO#E CHECKED STOCKINGS, NAR. ROW_ BROWN BELY AND BROWN AND GREEN WOOLEN GLOVES. 86 vou will prebably #8e the Winter sports girl wearing thé smart fur coat in Which she sat as a spéctator at Autumn foot ball games. The list of turs apprepriate for this coat has heen much extended. No longer does | | perfectly waterproof. | of bright np-to-date girl wearing a “huffalo” | coat—which is said to be the warmest of all furs. For Canadian furriers | are again able to mecure bison skins from the surpius stock on government | preserves | Leather and susde coats are aome. times worn instead of fur, and some of these are light enough to he worn as part of the sports ensemble. Suede coate are now treated so that they are A striking Eng- lsh skiing costume that one voung | American will wear for Winter sporta during the helidays consists of a pair llow cloth knickers or four pluses and a heited short coat of black leather lined with yellow. A turtle-necked yellow wool sweater is worn beneath the leather coat. The new pullover gaitérs, with | ornate turn-down teps make very at tractive Christmas presents, and it is quite possibie te make them at home if vou are at all adept at knittink. | Almost any woman wonld appreciate | | 8 pair of these, for they are worn for Winter. sports, for the street or for | | motor wear. and are so easily pulled | on and slipped off that they may he | worn outdoors and left off inside with | out_difculty. | The fact that the Duchess of York The term vegetable plate. nas be- |come a0 familiar that some house- keepers are apt to think of a plate | meal as composed only of vegetables. It I& quite possible to modify the idea &0 that a plate meal may be made up eontaining hoth meat and vege tables. Such a plan saves consider- able labor and time. One word of sug- gestion: Before beginning to plan a meat and .vegetabls plate remember that there are a goad many individ uals whose appetite i8 really seriou interfered with if they are confronted with & plate abselutely full of food. These persons may easily find them- selves eating the same quantity of food before the meal is over, but it will taste so much bet it they are allowed to help themselves. that one makes a plea for consulting the fam- fly's taste in this matter. Fven when & meat and \"Kelahhl plate is served as the chief dish of | & meal this thought may be kept in mind. Pertions of both meat and vegetables may bhe arranged so as to be slightly smaller than those ordi- narily served. This makes a much more appetizing looking plate and the eater is apt to pay the cook the com- pliment of asking for a second serving. Now about making up meat and vegetable plates. The aim should be. it possible, to introduce an element of individuality. Merely to place a slice of meat and potato and a few vegetables on a large dinner plate will not accomplish the desired re- sult. Selecy the meat and the vege- tables carefully so that they lend themselves, first of all, to a common service of making the meal both pala- table and nutritious. Think next of the matter of color and do not have potatoes or rice and a light vegetable accompany a veal chop. There are shoes. For severely cold weather yeu may prefer the sort that are high enough to cover the knees, but for the most part women like the turndown sort that rasembies golf hase. With short skirts & few inches of stocking shows between the top of the weolen gaiter and the skirt. Spattees i the mame by which many call them They should be knit falrly tightly on fairlv fine needies, because it is necessary to have them hold their shape over the ankle. Either fine wool or a silk-and-wool yara should be used, and if possible t. should match in tone or coler the freck or coat with which they are to.be worn. There are some pleasing heather mixtures that go well with mixed tweeds. A colored yarn 18 wsually Introdiced in making the faney turn- over top and the eolor should he chesen to agres with the color of the Accéssorias worn. If you Wear a gray tweed and fur coat. with green felt hat and a green purse, then vour apatess should he of gray heather varn, with a faney tep of gray and green. And vour stockings sheuld be light gray. (Conyright. 1928.) Meat and Vegetable Plates several devalopments of this idea pos- sible and it is worth study. e Chops lend themselves ideally ‘o meat and vegetable plates. They may be French or breaded or served with bone removed according to the | part of the animal from which they are cut. A duintily browned lamb | chop with a puffy baked gpple stuffed with nuts and raisins, delictously xlazed mweet potatoes d a baked tomato will make very appetizing combination. The possibliities are, of course, endless, but the secret of suce cessful meat and vegetable plates iy to remember always the surprise eles ment and to get away from the overw standardized combinations. Individual Duck Pies. Make a rieh ple dough of two eup- fuls of flour to one cupful of lard and a pinch of sait sifted with the flour. . Cut the lard into the flour. Add just enough ice water te make a stiff dough. Roll Into a cvlinder shape and place in the refrigerator while preparing the salt. Evervthing must be ice cold. Chop some left- over duck meat, two onions, a clove two potatoes, &' sprig of nd a Mitle of the top ends of celery. Season with salt. pepper, thyme, curry powder, paprika and marjoram to taste. Bind with a well beaten egg and a little gravy. Now roll out the dough and line gem pans with it, which have heen larded, and half fill each pan with the duck mix- ture. Put on an upper crust with a hole cut in the center of each top crust. Bake a golden brown and serve with gravy made of ‘the cooked heart, liver and gizzard of ‘the duck chopped fine, thickened with milk and flour and seasoned with a little salt and pepper. $ U. S. Toy Output Shows vietimized by the clever manufact ers. Have all of them put their heads gether and. like Robin Hood's men, Aeliberately planned with their ingemi. ous inventions to despoll our pocket- hooks? Or do we buy toys for the children in the same spirit that we magnanimously take them to the cir- cus each Spring? There has heen more than one little chap without a chance to enjoy his toy train Christmas day because his daddy was g0 husy showing him just how it ran; more than one little girl who sits at anything but the nearest and most advantageous position while her mother explains all the furnish- ings of the doll's house. Of course, the lesson in interlor decorating was | undoubtedly valuable to her, the ad- monition that she must never let tha cobwehs gather in the celling above the fairy stalr steps a valuable stesr in the direction of good housekeeping. But the child’s opportunity for inti- had to await the mother's precepts, *xoxox PEEP in on Mr. American Man and his Family Christmas morning. There'll be no telling which are the ehil- dren, if you go just by faclal expres- slons and interest in the toy You'll have to go by size to pick out which ones are not the children. But for the child, there is one bright outleok. He outgrows his toys; he losea in- terest in them, but not quite a0 seon as the grown-ips. - And therein.lies the only difference. Yes, we do buy toys for our children for somewhat the same reason that we take them to_the circus, What are the characteristics of these intriguing playthings? Do they have a significance ' bevond that ot mere amusement devices for chil- dren? A few vears ago, A Frenchman, M. Leo Claretle, wrote a. very clever hook on the toys of his native coun- try. He wrote chipfly from the view- point of an antiquarian, a collector and a psychologist. Beginning with the fifteenth century, he showed hew in each age the French toy always reflected the spirit and characteri of the times. He showed how the his- tory of French wars can be traced by the increasing popularity in certain periods of the toy roldiers, gune a cannong, For Instance, Louls X1V, ax a child, had a set of toy soldiers modeled of gold, costing 25,000 francs. The dollx, their toflettes, their houses and furniture reflected the typical styles of the day. At one time a maiden mounted on a horse was a popular toy; at another time the toy guillotine. " Instantly we think of the Aaye of Joan af Are and of the im- pulsive and proud Marie Antoinette and the French Revolution. Doer the Ameriean tov manufac- tured today reflect the spirit of our timea> We are great manufacturers of automobiles. The Eurepsan thinke of us, particularly, as ‘‘nene so poer to do” without at lsast & car of a well known make. While there are those who deny any réal culture, the 18 mewhere found a better or more widely extended educational system. What other nation boasts sn Edison and the type of inventive génius that he aignifiea? Our great factories, with their tremendous mads ‘produc- tion, their almoat total eéliminatien of hand laber, typify this as the me- chanjcal and industrial age. Our electrical appliances are legion, in- cluding éven the presumably usele: cocktall -shaker. It pays te jum the price of rubber, because we can pay, and we buy the most. Foreign- budgets from theé speils of tour, and they tell us that tha Amer- fcan woman i the nfast well groomed and well dreased woman in the world. The gate receipts of a weorld eéries show our irisatiable fongness - for sports. How does the American toy rofisct théme tendenciea” s * % ¥ * . LMOST 6ne-fourth of the toys mahufhctured _in * the " United States in 1926 were Wheel goods,-in- cluding doll carriages and cart locipedea and tricycles, Autgmobiles, express wagons, scooters and thrée- wheel play cara. The: b‘wneel goods, er which they are modeled. The: all grades of tov automobiles, from & of that of & “well known 1o that of the car that takes the chance of having you “Ask the man who owns one.” They have all the accessorfen from the windshield cleaner te the spare tire and the tail light. Te stimulats thelr sale, auto- mebile ehowa are held, and wee he- tide the fond parent whose offspring scorns any model below the $150 grade. The industry is also Adivided into passenger cars and trucks, with passenger cars, In the toy industry, prt‘doomlnliln[ at About the same ratio. Tove of an educational mature, in- cluding construction sete, games, building blocks, spelling beards, draw- ing »e painting outfits, materials for art werk, such as medeli in wax or making of flawers, have 'nlnen» Big Gain ed a high state of artistic develop- ment, and in many instances have become & part of school equipment. ‘Even pencil boxes of a fancy exterior, with a full .equipment of pens, pen points, writing pencils, pencil sharp- eners, colored crayons, erasers and rulers, have maintained a popularity which the small boy will explain to you is due to maiden school-teacher aunts who helieve in giving children something useful. These, however, are | not so popular with a certain class of occasionally disobedient children who have learned that rulers can be put to another use besides that for which they were originally intended. Toy tool sets, carpenter outfits, sewing machines and typewriters refléct the present pronouncéed trend for voca- tional training. Fvery year sees the patenting of a number of games predicated on cur- rent important happenings of the vear. Often these are particularly instruc- tive because of the knowledge of hia- tory and geography that can be gain- ¢d through playving them Many of the mechanical toys, as in the case of the toy automoblle, are faithfully copied after originals. ‘There are wrecking trucks, dump trucks, steam shovels, sand cranes, the chain bucket type of coal pocket, erectors, motion picture machines, airplanes, farm implements, sewing machines and typewriters. Toy amuse- ment park devices are another specialty. Glant roller coasters, aero- speeders and whiz boats with winding attachments display all the speed and hazards of the originals. Other mechanical toys, exceptional for origi- nality of design, illustrate certain balancing principles and principles of construction. These toys portra amall way the trend.in our mechanical and industrial development. ‘The electric toys, particularly elec- trie traine avith all their equipment, are most ingeniously conceived. There Are ma designs_ of locomotives, freight cars and Pullman coaches, with illuminated ohservation plat- forms: rallroad cranes, electric sema- phores, power stations and signal towers. In fact, these traine have everything but a full set of pas sengers, including the drummer, the deaf old lady and the young child traveling alone. As an example of one device, these trains go rushing along over tortuous tracks: a light flashes for a crossing; a bell is heard ringing its warning and the speed slackens. But here the inzenuity of the manufacturer weakens, for no automebile comes dashing over the crossing. Evenings are rather chilly this month, and you can have a lot of fun some night by guessing riddles. Here are a few to give you a start, and you probably know many more. 531. Why is a Chinese the greatest curiosity on earth? 532. Why are a gravevard and a fish aitke? 533. If a man fell in a barrel of whisky, how would he die? 534. How do vou keep ants out of the house? 535. What do you do when you ecp that you do not do when vou are | awake? 536. What's bought by the yard and worn by the foot? Teasers to Add Some Brain Grooves. 537. 1f it iw 96 In the shade, what is it in the sun? 538. When is an egg lke & small | car in an auto race? 539. What kind of pine do people never use? 540. What has a tongue. can go | into the water, but never drinks? Answers. 531, Because he has head and tail on the same end:. 532, Because they are both full of bones; 533, In good spirits; 534, Don’t let them in; 538, Snore: 538, Carpet; 537, Het; 538, When it is beaten; 539, Pin feathers; 540, A wagon. The Artist’s Error. ‘The feet of the ducks should be webbed. gl ol Easy. “Where have you been, Zachariah?" ““Bean putting a bridle on my hor: Fibenezer.” “How'd you git the bit mouth?" 7T waited tiil he yawned.” in his Try This One. Willie.” Certainly, T can carry a tune, pop.” “Well, carry that one you're whis tling out in the back yard and bury it.' Helptul. “What ' was that man giving the elephant to drink?" Moving 75-Foot Paim. JFOR more than 30 vears a glant palm tree stood guard before the entrance of the old Southern Pacific Railway Station at Los Angeles. A new building was erected on the old site and popular sentiment demanded that the tree be saved, although the rail- way people had determined to chop it down. The wreéking train used by the railway was finally put to work and the big tree was hoisted ahoard a car and sent to the exposition grounds, where it remained the rest of its days. It was the second time it had been moved, it originally took root beside the harbor 20 miles from the city. It was brought to its second home when that part of the country was part of & ranch. s 5, Lucky. Teacher—Perhaps FEdwin can give Napoleon's nationality. Edwin—Course T can. Teacher—Yen, Corsican is correct. Who Hasn't Heard of Them? * Teacher—Who were the thresa wise men? Dull Pupil—8tep, Look and Listen. A by iR Very Appropriate. Customer—I want & pound of coffe in the bean, please. Clerk—You'll have to go upstairs, madam. This fs the ground flcer. Must Have Bnn" Tured. , advertis- Friend—You have nerv hls a fire sdle. Where was the fire? Storekeeper—Right here in the store. I fired two salesmen last week. “Camphor.” “Why campher?” “To 'keep the meths out of his trunk.” GOOFEY MOVIES. GOOFEY Movies PRESENT FLAMING ICE" PART THREE BY FRED NEHER oo wurmes cans up N SRARCH OF DAY NIGHY BELL~HE NORTH JUET 4S KNOU) THAT THE MIGHTS WERE X MOAITHS LoAK: - [ NOW HE B TRYING TO GET MR.SOLAR, ‘ CARRYAKER OF THE SUN, AMMOOK AND STARE, 7O LOAN MIAA SOME LIGHT SO THAT L& CAN CONTWIVE IS SRARCYH FolR DAISIES Mill over the tabl Burns—That makes it & pool table., Film Fu IO GIVE YOU A WHOLE BASKETOR SYARS BUT IM AFRAID YOU'D ¥ 0 n for Young Folks. WATCH FOR Nexr week's THRILLING ADVENTU RS~ | evervhody liRes his pet. When his | friends pick him up. the rabbit does not try fo hite or scratch them. Many | | persons have told him that they would not like to have a hunny for a pet because rahbita are not playful, but Gordon says he plays with his pet and Intélligent animal . Artiele. Warden—What's your name and oc- cupation? Prisoner—My name is Spark. I'm An electrician and T was sent up for assault and battery. Warden—Hey, Gerard, man & nice dry cell give this