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WOMAN'S PAGE. Possession of the Kindly Spirit BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. Five different persons made reply in | as many different ways to the qu t them by a teacher in aaye. The question was. THE _GOOD - HEARTED HELPS LITTLE FOI CHILDISH TRAGEDI the finest thing to possess said that to have the ability to fore- see was the finest pe on. It cer- tainly was an envied person who was reputed to have such an ability. An- other said that to have a good e) was best, for this typified a contented and generous spirit. Another id a good companion was most desirable since friendship was a wonderful thing to pos: Another declared that a good neighbor was, in his estimation, the thing most to be craved. And the fifth man said a good heart was above every other possession most precious. The master told the last that he had spoken truly, for this would include the others. A man with a good heart would be liberal and contented, warm friendships, which, natu; bespoke a companionableness wi one’s neighbors, and be wise, which was the attribute of the person who could foresee events and their signifi- cance. One man BEDTIME STORIES Cubby's First Snow. Nothing el hrill can by b AR Ry S —Cubby Bear. was looking at his first snow. It was the day after Thanks- giving. Cubby had had a wonderful dinner which Farmer Brown's Boy had brought to him over in the Green Forest. He wanted to follow Farmer Brown's Boy back home. but he wanted even more to take a nap. You know a full stomach makes one sleepy. So, after following Farmer Brown's Boy a few steps, Cubby turned aside and sought a warm, sunny spot where he could curl up and take a nap. When he awoke jolly, round, red Mr. Sun was just going to bed hehind the Purple Hils, but no one could see this, for a great bank of clouds hid Cubby “MY GOODNESS!” HE E CLAIMED. “JUST LOOK AT MY FOOTPRINTS.” Jolly. round, red Mr. Sun. And it hid the tops of the Purple Hils, too. At first Cubby couldn't think where he was, Then he remembered. For perhaps five minutes he sniffed around, picking up crumbs left from that feast. Then it was getting dark the wind blew cold and Cubby began to wish thdt he could find his mother and sister. But he hadn't the least jdea where they were, and so after wandering around for a while he de- cided to spend the night where he had spent the previous night. It was a snug, comfortable place in a hol- Jow in the base of a tree. He was warm and sheltered there, ‘ubby slept all night. He didn't awaken once. It was broad daylizht when at last he did awaken. lle peeked out from his hollow. And ancient “What is 1t does seem a pity “a good-hearted per htly in indi hearted person that this phrase, [ son.” has come to be held 1 | this generation. But it merely cates that words waver in meaning While the substance for which they stand rer ns the same. The father the mother, the neighbor, the com | panion. the child, the person. who ver he be, who has a good heart, i kindiy, nerous, liberal, etc., an the family life that cen s about such fine attributes is sure to be a noble and lovable one. One reason why used with a hint that it is apt to indicate a ness that “rushes in whe to tread.” | aie. however, sarful of blundering tion implies The person who has a wenuinely heart a mi tering angel, always ready to do what- ever lies within her (or his) power to smooth way to comfort those who | are miserabl to help little folk over | childish tragedies at soon pass by | with their kindly sympathy, to give a i listening ear to tro les that must be today the term is condescension is n impulsive ngels fear arcely quota- hat an, st st given vent to some one lest the men tal sufferer be overwhelmed | Responsive. ch a person is e with them who do rejoice ght how few per Mothers are able [ And t as quick to “rejoi Have you ever the ‘ sons really do th to do it with their own children to a | remarkable degree, for to them the good things that happen to their chil | ave as de as thos takes e feeling to enal others over at or small that bring them The person who has a is responsive. She is as when to be ad and as she relptul. Appiness. ! good heart | auick to discover enter into anothers rej is to realize when sympat WHAT, WHY AND WHERE . In what art did the ancient Peru- vians excel? . Who are the Mayvas? ‘Who were the Mohaves? . What are Samoan houses? . In what sort of houses did the 1a- waiians live bofer the coming of the white men? Answers. 1. They produced some of the finest | handwoven fab ever made, using | cotton and vicuna wool 2. The ancient inhab; nts of Gua- temala and atan, who had de- veloped an advanced civilization dur- ing the first thousand years of the Christmas era. They were rthest advanced, culturally, of any of the New World peoples, but their civiliza- tion practically had disappeared when the first whita men came. 3. Desert Indians of southwestern Arizona. The men wore cinctures and the women skirts made from the in- terior bark of willow and cottonwood. They were a slightly agricultural people. . Elaborately constructed frame- tied together with cord and set on platforms of bowlders. They were thatched and partitioned with palm leaf mats. ~b. Grass-thatched houses * grouped in small villages. hibits of all these people can be seen in the Division of Ethnology, New National Museum.) E BY THORNTON W. BURGESS then his eyes flew very wide open indeed. You never did see so much surprise in a pair of eyes as there was in the eves of Cubby. When he had gone to bed the earth had been covered with brown leaves. As fas as he could see there had been hrown leavet Now there wasn't a brown leat anywhere, At least, there was none to be seen. The ground was white. Do you wonder that Cubby rubbed his eyes three times, then sat and simply stared? By and by curiosity got the best of him. He reached out and touched this white covering. It was cold and a bit wet. Cubby drew his paw back hurriedly. But after a bit he ven- tured to reach out and touch it with his tongue. He took a little of it into his mouth and it became merely water. Cubby was more puzzled than ever. He didn’'t know what to make of it all, Presently Cubby heard the sharp barking of Chatterer the Red Squir- rel. Then he saw Chatterer frisking about under the trees. It was quite clear that Chatterer knew all about this queer, white substance. And it was also quite clear that it was harmless, for there was Chatterer scampering across from the foot of one tree to another. Cubby stretched. Then rather gingerly he walked out. 1t certainly felt queer, but it was not altogether unpleasant. Cubby waiked a little way and looked hack “My goodness!” he exclaimed, look at my footprints! I can't without leaving a print.” And right there a great thought came to Cubby. If he made foot- prints like that Mother Bear and his sister would bs making footprints too, and all he had to do was to find those footprints and follow them. (Covyright. 1927.) ust tep Creamy Rice Pudding. Wash one tablespoonful of uncook- ed rice, add one quart of milk, one- third cupful of sugar, a pinch of nut- meg or cinnamon, one teaspoonful of salt and one-half a cupful of raisins it desired. Tour the mixture into a good sized baking dish. Cook in the oven slowly for two or three hours, stirring frequently. If allowed to cook slowly the milk thickens to a creamy consistency and the rice swells’to sev- eral times its original size. If double the quantity of rice is used, the mix- ture does not require such long cook- ing, as the rice in swelling thickens the liguid more rapidly, but the prod- uct is not so cr FORTY-TWO YEARS VWAS HINGTONS FAVORITE | And so we see the high place that. | tion | in olden times was given to the good It has always seemed to {on THE EVENING MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDR| Indian Beads. My children save seeds of squa pumpking and dry them in the sun When they are quite dry they bring them in and spread them on news papers. With their water colors they paint the beads in gaudy colors and ma 1s of dots or circles on the flat When they are strung waxed threads they make hand- some ornaments for an Indian chiet princess, in games and theatricals at the children devise. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. e de: surfaces. T was sitting on Mary Watkinses frunt steps tawking to her, and she started to look over her homewerk and x little hunk of paper flew, out of her spelling hook and started to go down the street, Mary Watkins saying, O goodniss sutch a wind. 11l rescue it for you, dont worry, I sed And T started to run after it feeling like a brave knite in olden days, and jest wen I almost had it I tripped over a shoe per in frunt of somebodys house and fell down and scraped a big hole out of one stocking showing most of my knee, thinking, lleck, gosh shang the luck. And the peece of paper started to blow down the street with me still after it, and my hat blew off and land- ed in the gutter, and there was a lot of water running down on account of the street cleening men leeving the fire plug run up at the corner, and my hat started to sail down as if it thawt it was a boat, and 1 quick ran after it and grabbed it out and the top of it was socking wet, being cleen water hut that was the ony consolation, and | then I looked for the hunk of paper agen and it was laying in the middle of the street as if it was waiting for me, and as soon as 1 reeched for it t blew away agen, and I made anpther grab for it and cawt it, ony jest then I slipped on =something slippery and nded In a setting position in the middle of a mud puddle, being the ony puddle in the street and the water not even being cleen for consolation, and 1 took the paper back to Mary Watkins. and she sed, O my goodniss its all_derty and muddey, throw it away, I reely dident need it enyways. Me thinking, G wizzickers good nite, and Mary Watkins sed, My goodniss look at your cap and look at your stockings and the back of your pants thank you jest a same but my good- niss you can't stay heer looking like that Wich T dident, going home feeling werse insted of better, proving its all rite to try to please peeple as long as your willing to take the consequences. . Perfect Cranbeiry Jelly. Perfect cranberry jelly depends upon several fine points in the making. First, you must use the right amount of hot water, two cupfuls to each quart of berries, no more. Second, vou must boil the cranberries rapidly until they burst, but no longer, or you will destroy the pectin that makes the jelly “jell.” ‘Third, press the fruit through a fine sieve rather than through a colander, to remove seeds as well as skins. Aliow two cupfuls of sugar to each quart of cranberries. Add it to the strained pulp. Cook about a minute, or until the jelly sheets from the spoon. Mold in smail howls holding about the right quan- tity for one meal. Cranberry jelly runs after it is cut. For this reason it is more attractive to place a fresh mold on the table at each serving. Cranberry jelly keeps well. Tt will save time to make up ahead the sup- ply for a special occasion. o Scalloped Salmon. Melt one tablespoonful of butter in a saucepan and add one heaping ta- blespoonful of flour, and stir until melted and mixed, but not browned. Remove from the fire and slowiy add one pint of milk until smooth,” then return to the fire to thicken like cream. Add a litle salt, pepper and paprika to suit the taste. Remove the saimon from a one-pound can, re- move any bits of bone and skin, and separate the flakes of the salmon with a fork. Now butter a pudding dish, add a layer of bread crumb: then a layer of salmon, and cover with the dressing. Lastly cover the top with crumbs and bits of butter and place in the oven for about 20 minutes to heat through thoroughly and brown on top. The size of the haking dish will regulate the num- her of layers of salmon to be used. Solutions of Today's Word Golf Problems. DATE, DARE, WARE, WART, WAIT. DAWN, DARN, DATA, DAT FACT. Cultivating a Schoolgirl Complexion By VILMA BANKY Never touch your face with any but TRUE complexion soap HE first rule in modern skin care is to keep the skin clean and pores free of accumulations. Use wder and make-up all you wish. ut never leave them on overnight. That means soap and water. But it means, too,a TRUE COMPLEX- 10N SOAP only. A soap made for skin use. A soap made to protect and beautify. Thus, largely on expert advice, millions use Palmolive Soap; touch their faces with no other. It is made of cosmetic oils. It is made | IWORD GOLF—Everybody’s Playing It BY JOHN KNOX. Go from DATE to WAIT in four shots. It's not amusing when the taxi is waiting, too. Go from DAWN to DARK when the alarm clock goes off. Go from DATA to F'ACT in four shots. TLet's hope the questionnaire learn that there is a difference hetween the two. Print your strokes here DATE in two shots, It seems shorter than that | boy DAWN DATA DorothyDix Child 1las Right to Be Brought Up in Peaceful Home, to Lxpect Companionship, Dis- cipline and Personal Liberty. | Lists Duties of Every Father and Mother What Should Children Exrpect From Parents? WWHAT have children a right to expect of their parents? They have a right to expect to be well born, to have good, clean blood untainted by disease. They have a right to expeet that their parents will give e bonsideration to thelr heredity as they would to the pedigree of & dog. They right to expect that their parents will give them a (l‘s.'hnm.. chance in 1 7d not predestine them before they are horn to he the victims of weak and sickly bodies and jangled nerves or diseased brains. 2t up in a peaceful home, where their mstant quarrels hetween their parents Y v plastic minds warped hy their being reared in an atmosphere of e, "Neurologista assert that men and women who are reared in happy homes very rarely have a nervous breakdown, no matter what strain they are called upon to enduce. Children have a rizht to he b voung lives will not he embittered hy e the children of disgruntled parents, who grew up In stormy households, that fill our sanatoriums. The police tell us ey mearly all of the young criminals of hoth sexes come from unhappy res where the father and mother are always fighting. Therefore, children N are brought into the world through mo volition of their own have & Neht 'to expect their parents to sink their personal differences and provide {hem with an environment in which they can develop into normal human beings. Children h It iz the men and women who ar ave the right to the two parents that God them. They have A right to & mother's love and tenderness and to a father's strencth and Wisdom. They have a right to a mother’s petting and a father’s guidance. “They have a right to a mother to hear their teach them how to aveid the pitfalls that the devil lays for them. Deprived of either parent, the child has only half a chance to win out, and so whether fts parents are affinities and soul mates or not. he has a right to expect them together and do their duty by him until his vital need of them is over eee (CHILDREN have a right to expect companionship from their parents. They have & right to expect that,their parents will not turn them over, as soon as they are born, to gervants to he reared, or chuck them out on the Siroet to fend for themselves like stray Kittens. The first few vears of a ohild's lite are the formative ones that determine its whole future, and “hildren have a right to expect that their parents will at least give them a teer in the right direction and not trust their fate to ignorant hirelings or chance. 1t is only in the cradle that intimacies hetween parents and children are formed. It is only through pillow fights and making doll clothes together that companionship is established between parents and children, and fathers and mothers get to look into little hearts and souls and see what is there. Fvery child has a right to expect its parents to get well enough acquainted | with it to understand it and to he a friend that it can go to n an hour of need. Children have a right to expect their parents to bring them up properly. Nearly every failure in life, nearly every conviet hehind the bars. nearly every drunkard in the gutter, nearly every girl in a brothel, nearly all of the whining, vish, discontented people in the world can point to their parents and say: “You did it. I am What you made me. For who are the failures but the grown-up spoiled children who were never made to do anything hard or taught habits of thrift and industr; Who are the murderers but those who were never taught to control their tempers when they were children? Who are the drunkards but those who were permitted to indulge their appetites as children? Who are the girls of the street but mamma’s pretty, petted, spoiled darlings? Who are disgruntled hut those who have been brought up to believe that the world owes them a living and that they should he exempt from all the trials and tribulations that ordinary mortals must suffer? Children have a right to expect that their parents, who are older and wiser than they are and who have seen more of life than they have, should teach them the rules of the game. They have a right to expect their parents to teach them to control their tempers, their appetites and their passions. because thereby alone may they achieve happiness and success. They have a right to expect their parents to teach them habits of thrift and industry, hecause that is the road to prosperity. They have a right to expect their parents to teach them how to get along with people, to teach them good manners, because the boor is always hopelessly handicapped and outclassed. R HILDREN have a right to expect their parents to prepare them for life, to make them wise about the dangers to which youth is exposed and the fatal follies into which adolescence can pitch. They have a right to expect their parents to put into their hands some weapon with which to fight the battle of life, to teach them some trade or occupation by which they can make an honest living. Children have a right to expect that their parents will grant them the supreme right, in the end, to live their own lives. No father and mother have the right to pick out their children’s husbands and wives for them or decide upon their careers. ety butterfly in her vouth is no reason Because father John should be The fact that mother was a so that daughter, who is a highbrow, should he driven to partie has established a prosperous grocery it does not follow tha put behind the counter. By some miracle old hens hatch out swans bear temperamental geniuses, and it is the child's right to follow his star whether this leads him to a carpenter shop or the judge's bench. There would be fewer failures and more happy and contented people if children were permitted to do what nature intended them to do instead of what their parents want them to do. and humdrum men and women Most of all, children have a right to expect love and understanding from their parents, and the pity of it is they should ever fail to get either. DOROTHY DIX. Throat Sore? Be Careful! Results in 2 Hours A sore throat is dangerous. 'A new discovery, GERM-ORAL, will clear your sore throat quick- ly and kill the disease germs. » Sore throat is often the start toward tonsilitis, laryngitis and there is always the danger of it going down into the lungs. Be Prepared, Get o Bottle Today Goum-Oal For Sore Throat At Peoples Drug Stores and All D Boric Acid Good But Not Enough We recommend Iri Eye Bath, because we know it is such a vast improvement over the time-honored eyewash of plain boric acid. Nut Loaf. Ona and one-half cups pulverized nut meats, one cup evaporated milk, one teaspoon poultry seasoning, one- quarter teaspoon pepper, two cups stale breadcrumbs, one egg, one table- spoon minced onion, onehalf cup water. Mix nuts with breadcrumbs and then add the beaten egg. Stir in the poultry seasoning, the minced onion and the pepper. Add a sprinkling of | salt if desired. Combine the evapo- rated milk with the water and stir into the mixture. Let stand for 20 minutes_and_then pack into a well- greased bread pan. Bake about three- quarters of an hour in an oven of 3 degrees F. Serve with tomato sauce. Make the tomato sauce as you would a cream or white sauce, using strained tomato juice (canned) instead of milk. RRists. ® 1927 Fanchon Beauty, Features Wash the face gently with Palm- olive. Mas- sage its balmy olive and palm oil lather into the skin. Rinse with warm water; then with cold. That is all— it's nature’s rule for keeping that schoolgirl complexion. N Do that regularly, and particu- larly at night. Note then how much better your skin in even one week. GET REAL PALMOLIVE Get Palmolive today. Costs but 10c the cake. Use no other on your face. But be sure you get GEN- UINE Palmolive. Crude imftations, represented to be of olive and palm oils, are not the same as Palmolive. Remember that and TAKE CARE. Iris contains camphor, menthol, witch-hazel, boric acid, and pure distilled spring water, all sterilized and put into sealed sterile flasks. Iris does three definite t for you. It makes your eyes sparkle and look alive and vi- vacious. It cleanses the corners, the tear ducts and under the upper and lower eyelids. It relieves soreness and inflammation. If you will try one bottle of Iris we know you will realize its virtues. of “our_stores instructed 1o fund vour money if you are not thoroughly pleased. ~ Both the 50c and “the $1.00 wire come compl for one purpose only —to protect and beautify the skin, fevt “The Palmolive Hour” Bronde: The Palmolive-Peet Co., Chicago, U.S. A with handy eye cup. Try Irls today. PEOPLES prayers and a father to| DRUG STORES t WRC ,"l‘;“pmmw _STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C.. TRIDAY. NOVEMBER 25. 1927. A Sermon for Today BY REV, JOHN R. GUNN. Out of the Furnace. Text: “Then Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego came forth out of the midst of the fire . . . nor was an hair of their head singed, neither wer their coats changed, nor the smell of fire had passed on them. '—(Daniel, iii. 26-27.) Out of the fiery furnace into which these young men were cast, for sake of their testimony for come one of the world's acies of heroic faith, heroic and heroic sacrifice. Many of the world's greatest hless ings and heritages have come out of | the fiery furnace of trial and affliction. | Pascal, the great writer and pres er, never knew what it was to have a day without pain aftter he was 18 vears of age, Richard Baxter wrote lasting Rest” while he furnace of suffering. Pasteur, who discovered the « for vabies, lived 27 years after a p Iytic stroke and did the very work of his life in this period Prescott, the historian, lost one of his eves, and though he could scarcely out’ of the other eve, he wen through at least a hundred volumes of musty literature to get his facts, | Lord Nelson in his early life was a weakling, and through his life was handicapped hy physical infirmities Milton” adise Lost” was born | in_the furnace of affliction. anny Crosby’s 6.000 hymns came singing out of the furnace Most of the things that are good have come out of furnaces—some sort of suffering t makes men | strong and courageous and self-sac rificing. The furnace often proves to he eur hest chance to hecome something worth while and to do something worth while. (Copyricht. 10 HOME NOTE * BY JENNY WREN, cour ints' Ever- | alked in the | hes Distinguished decorative acces sories make a distinguished room, and | unimportant, unlovely ones can quite ruin a room which would otherwise be beautiful. The lamp and flower holder shown here are extremely good-looking and it would be hard to imagine a modern living room in which they would not be at home. For this reason they | can be h 1y ommended the Christmas gift seeker. | The lamp is a reproduction in pew ter of a ship's lamp of ancient whal ing days. It ie made rigid, however, | instead of swinging in its frames as the old lamps were made to do in order to accomodate themselves to the roll of the ve ; one of the new since it looks exact box The flower holder was desizned es pecially to accommodate flowers with long staltks. It is of modern tole, and comes In a variety of colo to The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle FEATURES. (Copyright 1927.) 1 5 Across. . Slides. Willow. . Brown. Exelamation. Mount (ab.). Back. . Out of. 8. Confusion. . Sw River. . River in Livonia . Dispateh bearers. Strikes, Flotilla. . Get up. Helped. . Haiti. . Engineering degree (ab.). . Belonging to us. Finish. “our (Roman). ft. ingland State (ab.). . Lieutenant (ah.). . Southern cuckoo. Peered into. Masters. Stalk Loos Within. Cushions, Boot Arabian sultanate. Male deer. . In case that. . Notable period. . Cook. . Like. . Note of the scale, . Wing of a house. Prefix: again. Three-toed sioth. Postscript (ab.). Compass point. yourself! Spatter or spill coffee, tea, grease, ink, iodine or ar, rol on cloth. oak half in any soap and half in warm Duz Oxygen Suds. Squeeze the white, rich Oxygen suds through the stains. Rinse. Compare results! Like “white magic” Duz Oxygen Suds dissolve out grease, grime, and all stains. Duz works gently . . . softens and re- leases the dirt. Whitens and purifies like air and sunshine. Duz will not harm dainty things or fade fast colors. Makes clothes last longer. Softens and whitens the bands Note of the s Part of N. Y, Nickname, In a hea New | Spanish President o Thus Unadulterated. ote of the scale. 51. Metric unit. Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle. old cars to friend: them over to deale; Your worst spots, streaks and stains wash out like magic in Duz Oxygen Suds NOW’.’ A new discovery puts Bub- blinLOxygen into soap—revolution- izing all laundering. As Duz dissolves, millions of oxygen fied soap bubbles (too tiny to see) seethe and churn, darting through every fibre. Duz grime and dirt. Never again need you worry about spots and stains. Duz is safe as the air gen Suds do things no other soap suds do.Wash out zll stains—whiten sterilize. Also dissolve all grease, you breathe. ‘Won't harm fabrics or fade fast colors. Fine for the hands and for dishwashing. with oxygen . . . to be cleansed and puri- ... in the same gemtle way Duz Oxygen Suds cleanse and purify your dainty things. DUZ Oxygen Suds— “All in one operation” 1 Wash out spots, streaks and stains 2 Whiten 3 Sterilize 4 Won't harm dainty things Remember—the Oxygen in Duz is the same oxygen you breathe. Just as the blood comes to the lungs to be “washed” No other soap makes Oxygen Suds DUZ is superior for washing machines 5 Won't fade fast colors No Boiling! No Rubbing! No Blueing! Write for liberal package . . . Free to thrifty women. e TR Automobile owners of Poland are giving up their custom of selling their and are turning to dispose of.