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WOMAN’S PAGE." THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, 1. €, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1927. FEATURES. THE DAILY HOROSCOPE Tuesday, October 25. configura for to- Although the configuration morrow, according to the reading of astrology, appears rather uncertain, there is a strongly benef pect dom inant. WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Rowistered U. S Patent Office. Tie-Backs of Gay BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. | N\ N \J B Flowers The Sidewalks of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER —~— When Tired - Abthing wil revive you like a cup y ofdelicious tea made Jom It is the inalienable prerogative of jour elders to remind us of *‘the good old days" just as it will be our privi- loge some day to recount to others | the lorious, golden days of 1927, Of | course. in the fuiuve as'in the present, | there will always be a few vouthtui o nit-wits whe will contemptuous v wihil be wonderfully de-| ojyim “wywoll, what of it?” To the veloped by means of new inventlons | gonqiile vouth, howey there is no it is sast, ind a great numbr oF ot g rare as that of sitting at the new patents will he issued in the new | euc o “ane who has lived.” No man vear Lo | Witnesses more of human drama than © Tremendous engineering feats willl o jydge on the bench, and it is be planned and exceuted in 1928, the foqalingiy interesting when one sue 1 among them Will | cocds in’ inducing an ex-judge to look | jumping beans in the window of a rd through the flight of ti shop, No, we are not sophisticates, o Daniel Thew Wright | Wi ede Court of th: - 7 iy for 11 illc-hatted gentieman driving Born at Cineinnati, | fijyver would be a ludicrous sight. | ol habby, yellow-whiskered person mportant economic rotorms. i io. Judge Mhe of Wales will come into| Wright attended Th ¢ i g a $4,000-car might also be tudicrous obje the limelight as nover before, when ) Harte: iw ew vear is well advanced, it is school of that ef | re At any rate, sev-| eral alert plain: | and capt both the 1 { wnd foot hu clothes men of | teams, Later the Metropolit evinced an in force thought so. | s lona | | fog est in ama Here's how it _all| ng ond, wout. The | 190 pound: owner of a dnshine roudster iiled one of his ic health will eome much ¢ a he . for the Winter weight punche t farm_hands from | the flelds and in- an one epidemic. it taking on Corbett e and Fitzsimmons | when (hose stars visited the Queen | structed him' to | City take a house guest ik to Unlon Station. The hired man's chin blossomed growth and was considerable weeding. His hlue overalls arafty cand his shirt fit him it it him. The visor of his cap eling to the crown through good s t Rooscvelt in 1993 { luek and half a dozen fast-weakenimg AL i > day there came to the judge's | stitehes. The car was battioship gray, | < ol this sign|eourt a squint-eyed little fellow, dowdy |red disk wheels and generally speak. | {hELE A AlloEe unprepossess- {ing had what the hoys call “class, | ling. He sat thro session and | Having safely delivered the depart- |veturned the next This con- |ing guost at the station, the hired | tinued for some time inally he ap- |mau siarted back. He had hot proached the judge” and introduced | driven a block from Union Statlon | himself as a Vir lawyer. He said | when two men stepped from the curb | that he w n the procedure |and ordered him to stop, The driver ! of the Moreover, he | obeyed and found himself in the | S f | rh(|||;s Judge \\'rl‘::{ hands of (l.'-t):avtl\'os who grilled him B izn him to a case in concerning the ownership of the ve- | WA the atry charm of th t an indigent prisoncr wus |hicle. Tha whole thing was so lacsn: { room. furnish the bar &ruous that they could not believe tons, ured him that the car had not been stolen. The an opportunity. The | honest hired man insisted that he | unexpectedly in - the | was driving under the owner's orders. ‘ ision. when a prisoner was | Unfortunately he had ne papers of | | brought ints court. The unfortunate | identification, To complicate matters : | fellow pie not gullt the theft of a similar model had been | reported to the police and it seemed | that the driver was in for a warm ses. sion. He finally saw a light in the fact that he was to meet two lady friends of (he car's owner at 3 o'clock nd invited the officers to accompany him to the meeting place and thus ho could establish his honesty. Tha ladies were to be at Twentieth street and Pennsylvania avenue and the | two officers and the suspect drove to that intersection. Once again fute | double-crossed the hired man, for the ladies friled to turn up. This con- vinced the detectives that there was something “phoue. Just as they were about to take the suspect into custody the bewildered hired man managed to prove his identity and was to look o iking down Fifth | released. ~The moral is that only # avenue aitired in a Yes, they | $4,000 driver should drive a §4,000 car, R —— O S WORLD FAMOUS STORIES ROBINSON CRUSOE'S CANOE BY DANIEL DEFOE. would. So would we. Only vester-| day on (i strect scores of Washing- | ton sophisticates turned to gaze at a touring party of four women and one | man who emerged from a New York | Each of the tourists worc carried a_camera and THEGuYWHO InNvenTED THIS OUGHTR BE here is a sign rend as favorable to those who buy, but forbidding for those who sell A halt-brock farther down the street, lored man, wearing on his head a crown of Indian feathers after the fashion of Big-Chief-Mud-InThe-Face, attracted the attention of dozens of people. | There are always three or four per-| sons fascinated by a plate of Mexican | | ! | soers pro | be currie i defe I En women will att tiention, it is prognostics A inds for greater political liberty and HAT HAKES) CEM JUMP® and Australia will enterprising men and || United States, it the th Afri ma of S women if he ave min uses | You have picked the best of all when ycu choose the When the hydrants having “push tops” caused a fellow to exert every muscle in his body to get them started, and how they'd clatter when running. and children may be pe- ble to dis e in the 1 they should safe- wd lungs, ansit will con Wright studied ti Law School and scon after he first assistant attorney of Hamilton 7 he was electe milton County Court of Com- the youngest man ever to | o the bench in Ohio Te was | to the Pederal bench law at the guard the thre Deaths due to rapid num Improved Lawrence May Oil Burner lj[“HERE are a score of reasons why—but they all sum up into one—EFFICIENT and SUFFICIENT. You have never heard of an IMPROVED LAWRENCE MAY falling down on its job. They are absolutely perfect theoretically, mechani- cally and practically. These 37 years as heating and plumbing experts make us competent to judge. The experience of every user is the same— SATISFACTION ALL THE TIME. Heating with oil is a great convenience—and with the IMPROVED LAWRENCE MAY it is a great economy of time, labor and money. It's very simple; operates without gas pilot or auxiliary pump, and burns the cheaper grades of fuel oil. All of which spells SUPERIOR. A test is the thing—let us give you a demonstration—and you can see for yourself. The Biggs Engineering Co: Experts for 37 Years in All Types of Heating and Plumbing Exclusive Distributors of the Improved Lawrence May Oil Burner 1310 14th Street North 3925-3926 H with a week's i it in need of Your Baby and Mine A the o | mon Ple ose hirth 1+ yonr of ad BY MYKTLE MEVEK ELDI In view of the present popularity of lactic-acld milk as an infant food. | it Is always surprising when mothers | write frantically to discover if it is really all right to feed their babies this sour stuff. 3ost mothers have | an unconquerable fear of putting acid | and _milk together, even in the same | meal, and now they are told that the | acid should be put right into the milk. | One can understand with what inward trembling they perform the ceremony. When plain milk enters the stom- ach it is attacked by the acids pres-| ent there and “curdled.” That is the | natural process of digestion, and so sLen a baby spits up soured milk it | 1sn't because there is anything wrong with the milk, but because it - | ready undersoing digestion. Lactic acid s ohe of these agents of diges- tlon. and so in order to save the stomach some work and labor we help |1t along by putting the lactic acld in the milk. Milk may agents b '| HOME A B G ARDEN OF FLOWER D CHIN HE BLOSSOMS OF THESE CURTAIN TIE Jhro | haled befc in con FROM AN IMAGI PERCALES COME > furniture is he ul in de e i i Quer we-lez tablo detie 1V conc is shown here. heavy luffet, tion of ti ors. | OF tiie usu The curtain tie-backs which T shall, anout @escribe today niight have come from | dollar. the garden of “Mary, Mary. quite c A blanket-stitch finish Is put to the trary,” for they give the appearance| hem cdge after it has been drawn up of blossoms “all in a row.” The verse| making the effect of a flower conier says “marlgolds,’ and, indeed. one{ more pronounced, especially if It is could adhere to the rhyme strictly, and | done in yellow. The effect of stamen with pretty effect. on white “or pale | and pistil is given to the inner portion | green curtains in a chamber where|of the circle thus made by a pretty these shades harmonized. distribution of French knots. i They are conventionalized posies of the sort most at home in a picture- | book garden—that Is. until they are plucked for use at a window. They can have a perfectly arbitrary color scheme. And what. say you. should govern it? It may be that the scraps in your piece bag make the decision. | The pretty scraps can be made into| tie-back flowers in colors and species which would defy the most experi- enced botanist to name. So we will name them ourselves, and call them after the rhyme, “Mary, Mary tle. backs,"” One does not need to be*a very ekilied needlewoman to devise a charming pair of these curtain ac- cessories. They are made of circles of various colored washable material, such as dotted percale, figured cotton #oods, flowered prints in small design with leaf-shaped pieces of green to provide follage. the size of an American halt ved Inste h to_defend the ted the judge to mit him to confer with his elient. Jdge Wright aerced that he should have all the time he wished, and could spend the entire day at the Jail with ne Qofendant, if uwecessary - In the micantime the prisoner was appiaising e attorney. carefully giving him the ‘up_and down. nally he turned o the Judze and said, “Judge, if I've 120t to have this feliow efond me, m going to plead gu * Ok ok ok | A well known New York columnist | ins:sts that his city Is so sophisticated that no one would even turn around he acldiled by other esides lactic acid ANl kinds of experiments have been made to see | what acidifying agent Is the most successful in_helping to make cow’s miik er for the human infant's stcmach to digest. Lenton juice | (eitric acld), vinegar (acetic acid) and hydrochloric acid, all acids which are found normally in the stomach and are part of the digestive process. have been used with success. There are two wuys of making lactic-acid milk. The firat is by sour- ing it artificially with a Bulgarfan brcillus tablet, which makes a milk that none of the disadvantages of sour milk because It is free of harm- ful bacteria. The second method is by adding lactic acid, drop by drop. to sweet pasteurized milk. Either method is all right. I order, then, to make the milk still more like | mother's milk, from the standpoint st one On it are a| of the baby's digestion, we add some 0ld lacquered tray and a | sugar to it. Finylper cem (-or: sirup silver teapot ! Retoe, was bom i London about | gered me, for T had only two hands, | —that is. ‘corn sirup which has an room are ek e 'c;| two arms and two shoulders, and “""1;" R i e added sht pow they were only a puir all together, | t? it=I8 the R S . rk 1s so alchly ¢ The outcome of it was that I figured eI et et o e e ey Le aimosg wellow, A Wit Amtons | It would take me, working all alona | 120tic acld better than swest milk, be carpet nearly covers the Sitnat of | 18 1 had 1o do. some 10 or 12 years | CaUs0 of its ease of digestion and be- and floor-length drapes of white arition of | t0 get my handsome periagua into | S3Use, not being diluted with water, grounded chintz, sp d with small a smaller quantity of lactic acid will red flowers, hang contain more food value One can't | the water. give a baby whole sweet milk with- ‘The French knots appear to. be| merely for ornament, but In reality | their usefulness is indispensable, as it is they which - secured the flow: ers to the tape to which all are fas tened. 8o it is that, after you have drawn from five to eight clrcles of £oods into the semblance of flowers You next blanket stiteh thie outer cen ter, then pin them to the tape and lastly, put on the French knots. Important Point, After deciding of what length vou wish the tie-backs to be, have flow ers enough pianned to cover the por- tlon visible from the inside of the window, then consider the putting of a few green leaves of foliage as finish where the flowers end. A mnovel and attractive touch is to | { make a butterfly of your most color- | | ful fabrics and fasten it so that it will {¢ | appear to be resting upon one of the | i flowers in the “Mary-Mary” tie-back Flowers. | Celluloid rings are sewed to both enas of the tie-back, and a larger al lowance of tape is made at one end than the other. The longer length of plain tape comes on the under side A word to the wise who prepare early for Christmas. These tie-backs make choice nd are suitable for | Many Know This simple daily rule for guard- ing their schoolgirl complexions By NORMA SHEARER table, with fretted apron | handsome old “The walls of th: plaster, tinted a The wondwork mooth | blue o \hi : PO e | el i uccounts of The flowers ave circles cut nearly twice as large as they will he when finished. They are made by turning in & wee hem on the right side and sathering. Draw the thread so that the material cups, leaving the center uncovered. Have the open portion lor ever Plague Mra, ¥ Robinson Crusoe, shipwrecked, marooned on a desert istand and h Sing! and T Otie s| There I had worked more than I cold. If your skin is inclined to be no ed add up, faced with this BEDTIME STORIES Empty Briar Patch. For emptiness none anywhere Can with an empty home compare. —Peter Rabbit. It seemed to Peter Rabbit, sitting on the edge of ihe Old Pasture, that ths Black Shadcws would never start to creep out from the Purple Hills. That was because Peter was impa- tient. But at last jolly round, red Mr. Sun slowly sank to bed behind ®he Purple Hills, and right away the Black Shadows started out across the Old Pasture and the Green Meadows to the Green Forest. The time had come when Peter might safely start ®cross the Green Meadows to the dear BY THORNTON W. BURGESS live most of the time,” and then he round his teeth with jealous rage. | ., He had moved carefuily before, but | it was mothing to the way he moved | now. He would take one step ut a time and then stop to look. listen and smell. Gradually hé approached one favorite place of Mrs. Peter's after finother. ~He didn’t find Mrs. Peter. Neither did he find any signs of a strange rahbit. Gradually it came Over Peter that there was a queer air of loneliness about the dear Old Briar Patch. Tt was just as if the Old Briarpatch was deserted. But that couldn’t be. Never had he known little Mrs. Peter to leave the dear Old Briar Patch alone. It had heen hard enough work to get her to leave it Everyday Law Cases When May One be Held Liable For Giving Wrong In- formation? BY THE COUNSELLOR, luable con arrive in c Malone, gnment of goods New York on nd it was n r the consignce, Thomas W ; have the goods stored until he could dispose of them. Accordingly he arranged for the Tidp Express Co to place the goods upon their arriv in_one of its warehouses on the dock. The con: desiring to protect the goods of the express company ¢ the goods were stored, stating that he wished o insure them. One of the em- ployes looked into the matter and in formed him that the goods were stored in Warchouse A. As a matter of fact, windows. | i i been living there, by the use of his | wits and _natural skill with his hands, | 2 for almest three years. In this third | o vear he contemplates has seen on the othe idland. and although he reach it. he realizes the sible nature of such a des nearly L and [ * ited | O However, [ far s cannibals. lost ship" up on the and tr to move fashioned llers, ail no avail. Sight of it nerves him to| attempt to make a hoat or a canoe of his own, which he & out to carve from the trunk of a tree. T felied a cedar tree (as Robinson Crusoe wrote in his journal), and | question much whether Solomon ever had such a one for the building of the ] iple of Jerusalem, it was 5 fee 10 inches in diameter at the lower part mext to the stump, and 4 feet | 11 inches in diameter at the end of | 22 feet fter which it lessened for a be find. nearly bottom of the island with crudely | kis lon; | is lon it | " | 1 n in some land he | 2 boat out of the trunk of a tree, and side of his | tho trec res to|ls im. | spelled pi therefore well named a dugout—and thore it stood, a perpetual monument to my folly recalled that my hopes had it wi t disappointment, and the. peri- gua could not be moved. With my wn hands I had contrived to fashion Lad net even been hollow, as with the periagua (mow gus), the Spaniards call ts or cances. 1 had dug it with my poor tools, and it was usaal urh bes uw for as long Ve to remain on this island All my dreams of reaching that tlor shore and all my hopes of es- 1ping from my island were now dashed I had toiled in vain for ¥ a weary day and week, and all I had to show for my pains was ightedness. s 1 might aked upon that long labor I} rried me ugh that task, and 1 had kept at h such absorption that I had ever had any opportunity for brood- ) my lonely fate in all that cut upsetting him, but many bables ean take whole lactic-acid milk. It s an excellent milk to use when the child has intestinal troubles, as the lactic acid acts an a purifying agent. Censidering its many advantages, one hopes that mothers whose bables are on lactic-acid milk wiil allow their fears to be set at rest. Before using anv artificial food for a baby it is ential that the mother consult her Goctor as to its advisability. Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. THERE is no harm in rouge and powder, make-up of any kind, beauty experts today agree. But never fail to take them off each night at bedtime if you would avoid clogged pores and blackheads, other imperfections. That schoolgirl complexion comes from one simple but important rule. And millions follow it each night in gaining clear and radiant skins. Wash the face gantly with Palmolive. Massage its balmy olive and palm oil lather into the skin. Rinse with warm water; then with naturally dry, cold cream. *’h rule for keeping that schoolgir} com- plexion. But be sure you get the real Palmolive. A soap made solely for gpe purpose: to safeguard your skin. X beh Get 10c Palmolive now. Use no other on your face. with unproved soaps is a folly. Good complexions are too priceless for that. The Palmolive-Peet Co., Chicago, U. S. A. Our New Feature— apply a little good at is all—it's nature's years of soap study stand nd it Experimenting with him for a little excursion now and the Of course, she might be out at a sweet clover patch a little way from the edge of the Old Briar Pateh. Peter decided that this must be the case. Still, all in all, there something very strange. e hadn't intended to run the risk of meeting little Mrs. Peter by visit ng her favor- {ite places. but he did it He went | through eve little path in the Old | Briar Patch, and there was no strang rabbit there. Neither was little Mr Peter there. The dear Old Rriar Patch was empty. save for his cwn presence. (Covyrizht. 1927.) while. and then parted into branches. It was not without infinite labor that 1 felled this tree; T was 20 day: hacking and hewing at it at the bot- tom; [ was 14 more getting the branches and limbs, and the vast L wling head, eut off, which I hacked and hewed through with ax and hatchet and inexpressible labor. After this, it cost me a month to shape { to a proportion and to something ©Old Briar Patch He didn't waste any time. He sim- ply made sure that the way was clear, ard then away he scampered, lipperty- lipperty-lip. He didn't go straight to the dear Old Briar Patch. He circled around so as to approach it from an. o her direction. You see, he didn't want .. wke a chance that little Mrs. leng time. T could not help thinking that the prisoner in his cell with the hope of escape to brighten his days is not really imprisoned, for he lives in that hope. I gazed again at the canoe, and my forlorn attempts to get it to the water. It was indeed hopeless. The shore was so high campored with the posi- tion of the canoe that at the upper end | of my proposed canal I would have| like the bottom of a boat that it might | had tc cut it at least 20 feet deep. So| swim upright as it ought to do. It|at length, though with the greatest cost me near three months more to| resluctance, 1 gave over the attempf clear the inside and work it out so as|left the canoe where it had alwa, to n.ake an exact boat of it. This I|Sto0d. and set about other things that did, indeed_ without fire, by mere mal.| MY- itland existence compelled me to let and chisel, which I had saved attention: to. other few tools from the ¢ the dint of hard labor 1l 1 had broueht it 1o be a very hand. sore perazua, and biz enough to have entried 8 enty men, and consequently hig h 1o have car- vied me and all my cargo. Vhen 1 had gone through this work T was extremely delighted with it. The boat was really much bigger than ever I saw a canoe or periagua that was made of one tree {n my life, Many a weary stroke it had cost, you may be sure, and had I gotten it into the water I make no question but 1 should have begun the maddest voy- age and the most unlikely to be per- formed that ever was undertaken, lut all my devices to get it into the water failed me, though they cost me infinite labor. too. It lay about 100 yards from the water nld not more than that, but the first incon- venience that I found was that it was uphill toward the creek. T confess that 1 had never thought of that until T eame to Jaunch my new canoe, Well, to make the best of that first wpotnurent. T resolved to dig into! urface ot the carth and so make ivity or incline. This I began with great enthusiasm, and it cost me a prodigious deal of pains (but who ¢ grudged pains who bes his de. ince in view to spur him on to or?); but when this was through and this difficulty | rcome the situation was still much | me. For I_could no more stir | t canoe than 1 had heen able to | dze the ship’s longhoat that had | cen east up on the distant shore i it appeared later, only half of the goods were stored in Warehouse A. The other half was stored in Ware. house B. Warchouse B was destroyed by fire and Wickford was unable to collect insurance, as he had informed the in- curance company that the goods were in Warehouse A. kford brought suit ¢ iny for having given him | incorrect information. i The court held the express compan liable, qualifying the rule as follov “Not ‘asual response, not every idle word. however damaging the it, gives rise to a cause of ~ “Rightway” Service A different kind of service—same as the Wash- ington Laundry is a different type of Laundr Papa talked to Mamma about her new hat today and his volce sounded like it does when he calls me Wil liam.” E are constantly planning for greater efficiency—and “Rightway” Service is a long step ahead—rendering a real service in handling the family washing. “Rightway” takes all the body lothes, houschold linens, cte.—giving them that thorough washing for which the Washiugton Laundry is famous— and irons them, with only the excep- tion of an elaborate piece now and then, which may require your finishing touch, Of course, not our de luxe finish; but excellent work. For ex- ample, instead of the- bath towels coming home flat as a pancake, the nap is fluffy like new—with the “Rightway” finish. When the bundle is returned—prac- tically everything is ready for use. All done—and you haven't either to worry with the work; nor about the cost of it. (Covyright, 1927.) Today in Washingion History > correct in- mshin betwee h that one ¢ s has U Bt to rely npon for information, and the tuty to give such infor erature fs 1epeated that | saviple of human 1 of 4 thing without ook R co whether the final aim is really possible- -humorously excmplfied in the familiar act of comedy, that of a man's painting-himself into a_corner. This incident of Robinson Crusoe's cance is one of the most appealing hu- man touches that Daniel Defoe chieves in his famous story. It car- ries the conviction of reality—it is not only plausible but it has the magic essence of something that really came to pass.) BY LEE pAP her BY DONALD A, CRAIG, Pop was sitting out on deck tawk ing to Mr. Bingam, being Mrs. Bing ns husband, and ma came out’say ing, Willyum I dident know we had a whole bottle of Dr. Jargons toothwash, in fact T dident think we had eny; but | wat T wunted to say was, it taists very { peculiar, T wonder if enthing could of appencd to it, I think I better throw it out, Yee gods. off, pop Coffee Cakes. m together one-half a cupful of shortening and two cupfuls of light brown sugar and add the beaten yolk: of two eggs and the white of one exg, Stir thoroughly, then add one cupful of coffee infusion alternately with two ano_one-half cupfuls of pastry flour. | Drop by spoonfuls into gem pans and bake in a rather quick oven. Remove from the pans and scoop out @ bit of - cake from the top of each and fill onful of orange mar. Make a white fiosting, using the whipped white of csg Lol one | cupful of granulated sugar to the soft, | tirm. ball stage and oour over the stify whipped white of the egx and beat up. When it begins to stiften | str In one-fourth cupful of shredded ceocoanut and spread this on the sides of the cakes and sprinkie some cocoa- nuw over the top. October 24, 1820.—By a city ordi- nance, enacted today, a roadway was opened on_the eastern side of what is now Lafayetie square, from Penn- sylvania avenue to H street. This roadway is now Madison place. Jack- son place had been opened two years before. Both roadways were gravelled at the expense of the city government. (The square continued to be an open common until 1826, when the work of levelling the ground and fencing it was beguh.) The admission of pay pupils to the public schools was forbidden by an- Banana Fluff. other city ordinance enacted todav. whites. three. and it was directed that the schools Sugar, two tablespoonfuls “shall consist entirely of children Bunana. one large ripe. whose parents are unable to pay for Vanilia, half teaspoontul. tultion.” Maraschino cherries, four. October 24, 1849.—It was recorded in SERVES FOU! the National Inteiligencer of this day SERVES FOUR PORTIONS. that Pennsylvania Avenue—"The _Beat the egg whites stiff. Add va-|Great National Broadway of the nilla. ~ Add mashed banana and beat | Metropolis,” as one writer called it— untl fluffy. Add sugar and beat | had for seven years had the distinction again. Put on ice to keep cool and to|of being the only street in the Na | keep from discoloring. Can be pre-|tional Capital lighted at night. Con- pared about one and a half hours|gress had been restive about the heac of time of serving. Serve in|streetlighting expense. In 1844, two herket cups, decorated with a cherry. | years after providing for lamps on DIET NOTE. Pennsylvania_avenue, when the lights Recipe contains large sugar content, wero confined to only a part of the i b0 rge sy Avenue, It had been provided that the I was resolved not to give up even| ({1°.A0d iron and vituming A, B atd|jumps should be lighted only during vet. Next I measured the distance of | - Could be given to average or kround between the canoe and the | Could be eaten by adults of average or tho sessions of Cangross. Although some attempts at lighting streets had water, and 1 decided to cut a dock, | Under welght. . U . Which'is to say that I meant to dig a been made prior to 1830, the limited vesoutces of the city about that time canal and o fleat the canoe to the resulted in the entire abandonment creek and to the sea, Seeing that 1 could not bring the canoe down to the | With i Gingersnaps. of street lighting, and for more than 1ith my relation Heat one cupful of molasses to the | a decade the streets were dark. Final- water, T determined, if possible, to| | bring ‘the water up to the canoe. | 3 hoiling point and pour it over one-|ly, in 1842 Congress appropriated to 1t. 4 ¥ @ e Well. T begun this work, and Tisether three and one-fourth cupfuls |posts and provide lamps and oil on (S e belt"S ot S sobetenie.” it | Sty ca e Se e iy oo nied Was ngton Laundry spared no pains to get it rapidly un- | of flour, one-half a teaspoonful of | Pennsylvania avenue from the Capitol 0 5 L § 102 have done. Every step or two he|its all rite. | . [ en it When I began to enter | buking soda, one teaspoonful of salt, | to the White House. b d Streets. West 1021 | 3 hen I bega | 7th an ) pped to listen. Constantly he used | Its absilutely marvelli upon it In good earnest 1 culeulated |and three teaspoonfuls of ginger. Add & 1022 that wobbly little nose of his. Helam sed. { how deep the canal must be dug, and [to the first mixture. Place in the Prices realizsed on Swift & Compan! Momber National Laundry Owners® Assaciation found nothing to indicate a strange And him and pop sat out on deck | how broad it would have to he, and | refrigerator to chill 86 that the dough | it ¢ e aimed on | Washineto A - y | sk oy, Octoner . Joz7: | I “ft must be,” thought Peter, “that | together say@ng things to make ench the slowness with which I was com- ' may be rolled without the addition of | for ‘ending 32, T 1na o 20 to"bea ana [Ble=rlo| e |al =]t B0 HE STOLE WHO HAD NO BUSI MIGHT HAVE ONF = “LR“‘ my 3 star conyack el | d, ‘and ma sed, Willyum | Potts now I think vour dredfill, | thawt vou promised me not to try to| smuggle that in. Nuthing of the kind, T meerly sed| Id empty the bottle, and so I did, T emptied it into an empty Jargons bot- | tle, pop sed, and ma sed, Then now | Ive gol something elts to worry about we'll all be in fule before we get home Youve done a lot of travelling, Mr. paths. He hesitated before entering | Bingam, dont you think the customs it. He looked and he listened, and he | men would notice conyack in a Jar used that wobbly little nose of his, He|zons Toothwash hottle? she sed. was looking and lstening and smell.! 1 dont know. Id haff to examine it fng for that handsome young rahbit | before I could pass an opinion on a he had heard about, and he fairly | fire point like that, Mr. Bingam scd #look with jealous anger. But he|and pop sed, All rite, come on down heard nothing and saw nothing andito my cabin and we'll examine it. smelled nothing to indicate that a| Rite O, Mr. Bingam sed. strange rabbit had been there. Then| And they went down, Mr. Bingam Peter slipped into that private little [ having a red fuce and being about 4 path and slowly and carefully made!and a half times as fat as pop, mak. his way farther into the dear Old|ing them both look funny wawking Briar Patch. My, how good it seemed | together, ma saying, 1 do hope Mr 10 be back there! Until that moment | Bingam ' will try to discourrage him Peter had never realized how fond he | from the idcer, its a crazy thing to do was of the dear Old Briar Patch. He[and Im sure if the customs men dis just longed to run about to every part [cover the conys: they’ll get redicu- of it as fast as hix legs could take|lissly sispicious and make me declare him. But he was too wisc to do that. | all my white kid | You see, he didn't want his presence’ Pop and Mr. Bingam not coming | there known. 59 he stole about as %k for about a hour, pop ng | ono who had no Lusiness there might well with the werld, Bingam says | Lands | JAILY DIET RECIPE Peter might sce him. She knew that | he had xone up 1o the vld Pasture to ¢ live, and it mizht be that she would keep watch more or less in that direc- tion to see that he didn t come back. A# he drew near the Old Briar Patch he was very careful ir. his move-| .ents. He stopped grequently to look | and Msten. At last he reached the en- | trance to one of his private litte Rightway Service is the ideal service for 12¢ a pound. | | | You'll be very happy sending your clothes to us if you'li visit the laundry and see under what splendid conditions the work is executed. Entirely different from anything you've seen. The world is just the same old plice No mztter how 1 view it — My troubles mean there's something wrong A type of service to meet every need—and every purse. E 7 oot 0 [c——[0lee———]al——[a| | | Mr. Bing tul he 18 over In that part of the dear Old other laff pelled to throw out the earth as I extra flour. Roll very thin, cut, and on shipments old our.” ranged n 0 #3.00 cents ber pound and averaged Welar Batch whore Mrs. Pete likes to I dont know”ow mutch longer, cut it away, This computation stag- bake in a meaium oven for 10 minutes. i7.00 ‘Ceats Der DOUNArmAGVErtisomont, |