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woMm AN'S PAGE.’ Travel Kits for Short Trips BY MARY . Your comfort In “much depends on the your travel kit. And tiouth you ma traveling very | convenience of | triD. "be able to afford one of the up- MARSHALL. Time comes for you to’start on your | frocks, hats, shoes, etc ¥ lat your destination, WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD, Resistered U. S. Patent Office. and having packed your various to be opened ! vou simply see that the various containers in vour ite dressing cases In which all the | traveling case are filled, that you have Mecessaries for an overnight trip ar conveniently assembled for you, vo e | fresh handkerchie u | lingerie and stocl and your travel a fresh set of ©an at least provide yourself with a |ing pajamas and—your preparations Small bagpr case of some sort in R Which you may earry in compact form THE BLACK PAJAMA SET CHOSEN BY THE _ WOMA WHO TRAVELS. THE ONE BHOW IS OF KNIT RAYO: NDS WORN OVER A SLEEVELESS JACKET. the things you need for the trip. n_when you have your berth the sleeper made up you may have your larger bags conveniently tucked under-the seat. knowing that all you will need is there in the small case that you take intd the berth with you or carry to the dressin; room in pre- paring for the night or in dressing in the morning. ‘The dark-colored pajama suit has come to be the chosen sleeping gar- ment of experienced travelers. It. is made of some sort of opaque black silk, with some bit of color by ‘way of decoration. WHY WE DO The caveman, falling far short of our - standards of living, was mot without “his art. - He decorated the ‘walls of his cave and carved the out- lines of animals on. and bits of ‘wood. - z An appreciation of ' 8 to be an ancient trait. Tt also early in the life of the child, Chil-{ dren are very. semsitive to esthetic situations. Teachers in the Kinder- garten are unusually partjcular about their own dress and personal appear- ance, tests in the n.of the Binet tests comparison.” The holding .three pairs .on a cardboard be- fore the child. showing one pair at a time and saying, “Which of these two pictures is the prettiest?” The normal child of 5 vears has no diffi- culty in making the selection. ‘We may differ rather widely as to what beauty is, but we are moti- vated by what we regard as beauti- ful. There is almost no experience in life that is not influenced by it. The Daily Al WITH | are made. No frantic struggle brush, comb, manicure thin other and your sleeping | somewhere else. Everything is neatly | assembled in a small case. to| [Tuck this box of powder in that bag, | in an-| rments v | All liquids are carried in containers made with | | closely fitted stoppers or tops. | "It ix convenient to have a fairly long jacket, or dressing gown to go with so that if you | vour sleeping pajamas, do mot have a compartment self you may £o e dressing in trim icuous your little dress e in one and your frock that has been banging on its hanger by vour berth all night over your arm. | {used mot only for little girls’ frocks, hut as a trimming to grown-up froc | besides. Usually you find this form of trimming only on frocks of higher | price, but you can easily do it your | el it yon know the tr It you |send a stamped. self-addressed en | velope I will gladly send vou explicit | directions for smocking With a_dia- gram for its use on a smart little | girl's frock. | (Covsrizht, 1927.) THE DAILY HOROSCOPE Saturday, December 17. After the early hours, planetary in- fluences should be helpfu), according | to astrology. which finds benefic as- | pects strong. The day is read as lucky for begin- ning ocean voyages, making for saf ge. The aspects are favorable to the making of plans, for clear vision is supposed to be fmparted to mortals while this configuration prevails. Banks should profit from the sw which foreshadows immense business projects to be launched in the new ar leases and contracts igning of under the day’s as- should be lucky pects. Advertising continues subject to the most stimulating influences, which promise great profit to newspapers and magazines. Political interest is supposed to be quickened by this positing of the stars ‘Warning is given that prejudices fostered in regard to foreign nations may be exceedingly dangerous at this time. The seers declare that wolves in sheep’s clothing are numerous and that certain of them will gain big fol- lowings among the people. Persons whose birthdate it is have the augury of a year in which many favors .come to them. WHAT WE DO THOMSON, Ph. D. “The ‘manufacturers of automobiles no less than the makers of furniture, cooking utensils, as well as clothes, cater to the. sense of beauty. We are & moved by this that we must have artificial color in butter to please the leve. Tt is gemerally known that whele-wheat bread is much siuperior white “bread, vet many still cling the use.of white flour because it looks nicer. . i We all_admire beauty. We .are close rivals of the ancient Greek in our love of beauty. ~We admire beauty because it gives pleasure. The beautiful ‘object is easy to look at. We admire beauty because it is far-reaching. It pervades gvery ex- perience. The eye, with its appreci- ation of line and color, is possibly. the greatest ‘art receptor. The ear, with its capacity for harmony of sounds and musical notes, is a close second and possibly firgt with some people. If we had no senses we should be without any esthetic appreciatiof. Since our love-of beauty is practl- ! cally identical with the pleasant sen- sory experiences, we crave them as we crave life itself. Cross-Word Puzzle {Copyright, 1927.) Smocking has be.n revived and is| S £ 4 . Preposition. . Card game. 20. Adam's wife. 1. By way. of. Wild equine. Articles of furniture According to. Deer of Europe. . Band. . Once again. . Compartment. - . Gamin. . Compass point . Ourselves Man's name. Color. . Falsehood. Edible séeds. . Of. .- Preliminary bet. . Brother of Odin. A state (abbr.). Come back. . Hebrew month. . Latin author. Burrowing creature. . Revolving. . Intelligence . Medicinal shrub, " Central American country, " Collegiate degree (abbr.). . Wing of a house. 39, Finish. 40.Marsh. ~“Southern State (abbr.). . Nickname. B ])evoured. . Beverage. 7. Combining form: within . Dispatcher. " Cook in a certain way. Down. Frankness. Unit. stiteh. > . Unfinished woolen fabrics. Italian police officer. manner, | hand | | When the “ding dong” or “peach | basket” hat was the snewest and a comfortabls | articles one purchaséd on a shopping tour? SUB. ROSA BY MIMI Dogmatic Dora. Dora does not give her opinions on things. She states facts. She never | sa. erful. Didn't you enjoy it?” She announces in a high, clear voice: | “That’s the best book of the season. | Perfectly written, absolutely. true to |life. It's a great book. You haven't |read it. Ye gods! And yet you have | the nerve to say you read.” | This last is guaranteed to wither ! any voung aspirant for a true Dook- |lover's reputation. Dora 1s scorntul, {angry and contemptuous of people | who do not read the coriect hooks at the same time. She is simply disgusted and a trifie amused about the unfortunates who don’t happen to shave her tastes. plain. “What is the use of talking to people like you. You haven't the faintest idea what it's all about.” And with that she flounces herself out of the conversation. She simply will not take part in a discussion where she is not recognized as the Jeading authority on everything. It hores her to :have.to listen to the opinions of a crowd who know noth- ing. That's such a dangerous frame of mind for a little girl who wants to get ahead and have good times, and go about with the rest of the crowd. Even Dora isn't above a love of childish joys. She has her yearnings for a real rush at a dance, a real pro- posal, a real good party But so far, they're passing her by And it's all because of that little habit of hers—she simply won't let anybody else have the faitest opinfon which does not exactly coincide with' hers. She knows she has a good mind. And she figures that with her superior gray matter she can dope things out much better than the other girls. So she takes a high-handed stand on every subject ‘that comes; along. She states firmly her ideas on the mat- ter, and then groans horribly when any one. ventures a protest:. “Why must you disagree?” she walls. . “You don’t know a thing about what we're discussing. You haven't read enough. You're utterly incompetent to: judge. Please let me go on.” ° s Well, there you are. She does it honestly because she believes she has more intelligence than any one else, end can therefore speak as an au- thority, She thinks that with her smecially trained mind she can put people wise to the truth about everything. And to her it seems absurd for them to dis- agree, She'd be astonished if T were to teil ber that she's as ignorant in her way as are all those despised friends of hers. . : For she's ighorant enough not to get the other feHow's' point of view. She’s voung enough not to realize there is any other point of view. Until she gets hep to the fact that her idea is only one angle of the sit- uation she doesn’t know afything. She’s just a conceited kid. Until she can learn to listen to other people’s opinions- in order to help out. her own woeful lack of knowledge, she don’t be anything’ but a ha baked schoolgirl. ‘When you find yourself setting your- self up as an authority on things, be- ware—it probably means that you're growing narrow-minded and woefully ignorant. 2 Also, don’t be taken in by the Dog- matic’ Doras. Don't let them bully you. They and their opinions are usually narrow and bigoted—other- wise they wouldn't be so decided. (Copyright. 1927.) Rich Oatmeal Cookies. Mix together two cupfuls of sifted flour and two cupfuls of the quick- cooking rolled oats, ‘one cupful of chopped raising or dates and onc- hall a teaspoonful of salt. Cream together one-half a cupful of shorten- ing and ome cupful of light brown sugar, and two well beaten eggs and one-half a cupful of sweet milk in which has been dissolved one-fourth teaspoonful of haking soda. If sour milk is used, add one-half a teaspoon- ful of the soda. Sift with the flour three teaspoonfuls of baking powder and one-fourth teaspoonful of salt. After beating up thoroughly, drop by spoonuls on to well greased pans and bake until delicately brown. A big sultana raisin may be placed.in the center of each cake before baking. There are many_varieties of these oatmeal cookies. You may add shred- ded cocoanut or use maple sugar in- stead of the brown sugar and omit the raising and add one-half a cupful of chopped dates. Fruit bars may also be made with this dough, omitting the fruit until later and adding enough flour to make a dough that will roll out. The bread or cake board is then floured generously and the dough rolled thin and cut out with a narrow oblong cutter. Then a cupful of stoned dates and a_cupful of chopped nut meats should be run through a food chopper. This is moistened with a little fruit juice or cream and work- ed into a mass, then rolled out and cut with. the same cookyscutter. A layer of the fruit and nut paste is put between every two of the cooky cut: outs in sandwich style, These are gently pressed together and baked in a hot oven. Chopped figs or Taisins may be used instead of the dates, or jelly or preserves may be used be- tween the two cookics. These are wholesome cakes having good food value. ‘Individual Lemon Pies. In a deuble boiler melt one-half a { cupful of butter, add the yolks of six {eggs well beaten. two cupfuls of | sugar, the grated rind of two lemons and the juice of three, and stir slowly until the mixture is very thick. Add Pronou: Two alike. 10. Paradise. 1 well-beaten egg Wwhites - folded in. Fil individual pastry shells. Cover with three egg whites stifly beaten with a good deal of sugar, and brows & delicate golden color, “Oh, 1 can’t listen to you,” she'll ex-| thing. | muff held all the | : “Oh, T think that book Is won- | 4 cours: [A V| says Freedom Discourager of Matrimony Men Fight Shy of Marriage Because of Cost and Because They Can Have Feminine Society Anyway—Divorce Problem. Why We Have a Bumper Crop of . Bachetars CCORDING to the Goverriment report, the income tax receipts show an alarming Increase in the number of bachelors who are amply able to marry if they want to, Every observer of social conditions must have noticed this same thing, and has been impressed by the fact that marriage, so far as men go, has heen virtually monopolized by boys, and that the only way for a woman to get a husband is to catch one while he is young and foolhardy and before he gets bridal wise and begins to shy at the aitar.. Many reasons can be adduced to explain this decline and fall off in iage, as Mr, Boffin would say, among mén. -The chief reason is, of economic. Youth s the mating season.. It is' the love time of life, the hour of high romapce, when every man’s pulse flutters at'the swish of a skirt, and he sees his divinity In some girl in a white gown and dreams of a cottage built for two. ma There are not many men who are not in love in their early 20s. ~Not many men who would not have married then if they could, but the high cost of living put a wife as much in the luxury class as it did a yacht or a limousine. They could not afford one, and by the time they. could afford one they had lost their taste for matrimony. They had suppressed their love impulse until it was atrophied. ~.They had grown cynical, and ‘domesticity no longer seemed to them to he' worth the price & man had to pay for it. More fatal still, they had become selfish, and their own comfort, their own indulgences, their own frgedom was more alluring to_them than any woman. % Like Mr. Kipling's hero, they decided that, in the:last analysis, “a woman is only'a woman, but a good cigar’s a- smoke.” Also that golf and clubs and good clothes and the privilege of going and coming as one pleases are a_certain and never-failing source of pleasure, ‘while ‘a-wife is a highly speculative risk. . - ; e e . OTHER reason why men don’t marry nowadays is that they-don’t have to marry in order to get all of the feminine society.they desire. And they get it de luxe, so to speak. They get the best the. woman has to give of her freshness. her charm, her sympathy, her wit, her gayety. They get the sweet without the bitter. They dance without having to pay the fiddler. The husband has to stand for his wife's nerves and temper and frrita- bility, for no woman can always be sweet and amiable and agreeable. He has to pay for the charming costumes in which she .looks so lovely and alluring, but the bachelor sees his lady friend only when she is primped and powdered and has put on her prettiest frock and her most alluring line of conversation. He can spend his evenings telling her his tale of woe and having her weep_over his hard luck. Or he can spend hours boasting of his triumphs and having her give him the glad hand. Or she will amuse him when he is dull or play with him when he wants to play. And when he is tired he can ride away, and that's the end of it. The freedom of the sexes is the great discourager of matrimony. In the olden days, when every girl was strictly chaperoned and when no man could get a word in edgewise with her without her mother hearing it or walk across the street with her alone, men married early and often in order to get the feminine companionship that was otherwise unattainable. But what is the use of a man burdening himself with the support of a ife now, when all he has to do is just to pick up the telephone and say: sisten, Sally, I'll be around about 7. I want to tell you about that Smith & Jones deal,” or, “I feel rotten; let’s go fo’the movies tonight.”” And when he goes, Sally is waiting for him all ears or with héer hat on. L URTHERMORE, men don’t marry because they are afraid to. Divorce has hecome %0 common that no intelligent human being can- fail to consider it as a possible contingency in-matrimony. Of course, everybody hopes ‘that his or her own marriage Is going to turn out successfully, but nobody can shut his eyes to the fact that there is a possibility of its being a failure. And in case of divorce it is undeniable that, as the law now stands, the man nearly always gets a hard deal. A man may do-his full duty as a husband. A woman.may fail ultterly in doing her duty as a wife., She may .be thriftless and extravagant. She may be a virago and a nagger. She may be so lazy that she refuses to make a-decent home. She may break up the marriage on any trivial excuse, but when she asks for ‘a divorce, even on the flimsy grounds of fncompatibility of temper or mental cruelty, nine times out of ten the courts will give it to her and force the husband to continue to support her. Now matrimony is enough of a gamble at its best, but it is one thing to take a sporting chance on a fair game and another thing to play with one who is using loaded dice. ‘ So it is mo ‘wonder that the thought of having to pay alimony the remainder-of his life, if his wife should happen to tire of him, gives many a man cold feet when he thinks of matrimony. ‘Women were never so good-looking, so intelligent and attractive as they are at present, but the number of bachelors increases because men are no longer ‘adventurous and willing to take risks. They prefer to play- safe. And also, perhaps, because women have other interests and pursuits than matrimony now and are not m‘g\x!wl‘tgnrfln;rry either. DOROTHY DIX. pyright, 1027.) _ The Sidewalks of Washington BY TmmN FISHER. According to the postal authorities, the public is responding right nobly to the admonition “Mail early and often.” Incidentally, the post office clerks are display- ing a brand of pa- tience worthy of emulation in other lines of business, A motherly old lady persists in go- ing to the monmey- order window when she is really looking for the registry depar t- ment. - A finely proportioned, in- tellectual appear-|\ ing and well dressed citizen, in his_anxlety to re- ones until the 1st, and I'm going to get my money’s worth out of ’em.” He wasn't Scotch, either, * % k% We met a young man .of 50 the other evening who is looking for a country place in - which to retire. From the standpoint of money he has all that s necessary to supply him with luxuries for the remainder of his days. He has burned all his busi- ness bridges hehind him and s going to take it easy. Yesterday it was- our’ privilege to see an elderly gentleman at work. He is 86 years of age, fought through the Civil "War, was _wounded .numerous times, . and: altogether. .has led ' a strenuous life. We refer to Justice Oliver Wendell . Holmes of the Supreme Court. B That a man can have an affection for -a mechanical friend was amply demonstrated at an auction sale of automobiles the other day. A man's old bus.was. put on the block to be “knocked down” to the highest bid- der. When the car ((Tanr was new it cost [ SBND him something like $1500. What he FE-cd got for it is an- % other matter. fe % didn’t want to part with it at' price, but couldn’t turn lieve his arms of steers a course foi 3 the postal ‘savings window when he seeks to have his parcels insured. ‘When will this package get there?” is a constant quection. Dealing with the public is a tense job, requiring considerable tact and knowledge of humans. There is prob- ably no other city in the land in which those having to do with. public com- fort and information are so completély tested as here. A local hotel man- ager told the ‘writer: “Many of our patroris return year after year. ‘In numerous instancés they will request a room which they occupied on a previous visit. Per- haps it was the location or its ap- poiitments. Unless they ‘have re- served it in advance of their arrival, it i8 difficult to accede to their de- mand. We do, however, tfy 1o give them something that will enhance their appreciation of our service. “Then there is the-matter of cash- ing ehecks. You cannot afford to of- back yard. Besides, the women folks of the family in- sisted upon a*? modern vehicle. “That old rattler,” said the owner, ] “has ‘sure earned the right to retire- fend the patron. His check may be perfectly: good, and yet—yes, they do come back sometimes, and we have to make up the deficiency. It is a prob- lem that must be solved and solved with speed. The slightest hesitation on the part of the clerk or manager may be as offensive to an honest patron as-an outright refusal to honor the signature. The Washington police constitute a group of “question-and-answer’” men. Tourists, particularly = automobile parties, invariably seek the cop for information concerning hotels, ga- rages, parking space or camping res- ervations. It is scarcely to be won- dered at when they sometimes “bark™ at citizens. B A man drove into a garage yester- day with a set of 1928 license tags on, the rear seat of his sedan. One of the mechanics, seeing them, asked if the, owner did mot want them at- tached. “No, 1 don't,” was the snappy reply. "I can use my old sometimes it strikes me as funny t hlP of the richness of life I dont see Im working so hard jun for MOon . prowr car I ever owned. Boy, didn't we ‘high-hat' the neighbors when we got it!” We've, been 10 Maine and.Wis- consin in it. We drove our oldest daughter to her wedding in it and last year drove it to Florida and back -without a_puncture, - I don't but what Tl buy it back myself He didn't, though, but he provided n interesting slant on -human_emo- | * ok ok ok | Here's one beiiig told in Washington. { A young woman was employed as a maid in the household, the head of which was a chronic grumbler. The {only cheertul soul was a canary. that isang throughout the day in the {dining room. One morning the | Rrumbler’s wife was onished to see him leave the house whistling. So 4 l ment, instead of this. It was the first | in unusual was this that she inquired of the ‘maid what had so suddenly come over her husband. “Oh.” said the maid, “I threw a handful of bird- seed in his oatmeal.” My Neighbor Says: To remove iron rust, lay the cloth containing the stain over a bowl containing a quart of water and a teaspoonful of borax. Apply to the stain hydrochloric acid drop by drop until the stain brightens through it, then. im: mediately pour hot water through it.. Continue until the. :‘uln disappears, ‘rinsing each ime, 1If polished furniture becomes scratched, rub‘ with butcher's wax and polish. The scratches will soon disappear and the fur- niture will take on a dull finish. Water . stains. on: varnished wood surfaces vanish if rubbed with a cloth wet in ‘water con- taining household ammonia. may ‘he, ved by rubbing in eirel with “a * flannel cloth moistened in turpentine, The STYLE POST is the marker on the road to being smart— Corduroy Felt. It was inevitable that the little cor- duroy cardigan, such a success for sports wear, should be soon followed by a close-fitting hat. to match. The little turban, however, is not real cor- duroy, but felt, stitched in ridges to resemble corduroy. Almost conceal- ing one eye, the turned-back brim rises to the fashionable peak over the other one. The bow of satin or gros. grained ribbon adds to the hat's sprightliness. (€opyright. 1 MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. Truth Telling. T had a talk with my two young- sters, on the important subject of truth telling. 1 made them under- stand that I had been known to tell fibs myself, until I tearned how silly and futile they were, and how I never rested until T had cleared the matter up with my parents, They questioned their father, Avho is their idol, and he admitted having -strayed. from the path of truth himself as a boy, even giving Instances, with-the mor that no lie ever got a person anywhere. When the children realized that it is a human trait to try to shield oneself by lying out of disagreeable. circum- stances, and how heroic it is to-choose the way of -straight —truth telling they were won from the smaller pre- varicating Which had " been worrying e 8O- Gouigrient. 1077.) “Your Baby and Mine _ BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDREL. Mrs. H. E. McG. writes: letters are such a help to me. 1 you please amswer these questions: My boy is 11% months old. He weighs 233, pounds. He has four bottles o milk a day, orange juice, bread nhnr: one piece of bacon fried so crisp tha breaks easily. He usually takes eight ounces of milk at night. i “What is the matter with his diet? He never sleeps a night through. He has @ 3-hour nap in- the daytime but crawls out of his bed and erie: and groans at night. He walks, talks and seldom cries through the day. “Do you think a baby gets cold sleeping alone? 1 have tried every way, In bed with me, and in his own bed. ‘Answer.—His diet fs not what h should 'be getting _at this age., H¢ needs cereal, either: wheat or ocatmeal at 10 and 6. He needs an egg at least three times a week, and vege- table soup.with sieved vegetable once a day. The bacon can be given in the morning and he does not need the extra bottle of milk at night. as much as he needs these other food The baby should always sleep in hie own bed. A band, diaper and warm part-wool sleeping. suit, and a light all-wool blanket and cotton: comfort will make him toasty warm. This i right for your elimate. I am wonder- ing how he can creep out of his bed 1t should have high sides, Mrs, C. C. C. writes: “I have a boy 13 months old who weighs 27 pounds He has been fed on a proprietar: food, and walks and talks and is : happy baby. I would like to give hin cod liver oil. How can I do this? He doesn’t eat very much, takes a times only ahout half of his milk want to increase his appetite. He likes pears and apples, are they al right for him? He also likes his mill cold. may he have it that way?" Answer.—The bhoy is so very large that it is possible he is overfed anc babies of this type ‘have poor appe- tites. Give him only three meals a day. Give him undiluted. unsweet- ened cow’s milk and one teaspoon of cod liver oil a day after meals. Divide this amount into three doses. Pears and apples are better cooked at this age, and sieved. I° the baby has other hot foods at a meal he may have his milk cold, otherwise it is better for him to have the comfort of a warm bottle. Turnips With Peas. ‘Wash, pare and cut a slice from the large end of turnips so that they will stand, and hollow out the inside, form- ing cups. Cook in boiling salt water until tender. Have ready some peas heated in seasoned white sauce, fill the turnin cups with this mixture, sprin- kle the tops with fine parsiey, garnish with parsiey and serve, To make the white sauce, take two level tablespoonfuls each of butter and flour. a cupful of scalded milk, one- fourth teaspoonful of salt and a pinch of pepper. Heat the butter unti melt. d and bubbling, add the flour and mix well, pour in about a third of the milk and stir until smooth and glossy, add the rest of the milk gradually. season and_stir until thick and smooth. Personal Stationery FOR CHRISTMAS 200 Note Size Sheets 1 oo Hammermill Bond. Used Exetusively 100 Envelopes to match. .. Prinied With Your Name and Address Bt sl ALY e coNg NAL STATIONERY . SERVICE 287 rahall’ g e ~Guaranteed pureimperted POMPEIAN g does. FEATURES."- BEDTIME STORIES Farmer Brown’s Boy Sets Trap. You'll find some people must be caught # re taught. Before a lesson ey \® Srown's Boy. @ 1t seems that way. It certainly There are people who cannot be taught ‘a thing so long as they| have their fyeedom and can do just| as they please. They must be caught before they can be taught. | Now all this time that Mr. and Mrs.. Grouse and other little people of the Green Forest were living in such fear of Terror the Goshawk Farmer Brown's Boy, some of whose chickens Ter had caught, watching for a lesson he would not soon forget. He kept his gun handy “If he belonged here it would be different,” said Farmer Brown's Boy, “but hg doesn’t belong here. 1f food is scarce up where he does bel I'm sorry, put that sn't any re why 1 should lose my chickens or why the little ple of the Green Forest should live in such fear all the time. He probably could get a - Hlaow BUT FARMER BROWN'S BOY GOT NO CHANCE TO STING TERROR.| living up where he belongs if hel tried, but it is easier for him to get a living down here, so he h: come down. If I could just sting him a few times with shot he might | But Farmer chance to ‘“sti was too smar a terrible gun when he one. He knows just how far it will shoot. And, | though™ he is bold. Terror is enough not to run too great a So it was in vain that Farmer Brown" Boy tried to get near enough to Ter-| ror to sting him with shot from that terrible gun. He had put in small shot, for_he didn’t want to kill Ter ror, for Farmer Brown's Boy dislikes to_kill anything. It was in vain that Farmer Brown's Boy watched and waited to teach Terror the Goshawk a lesson. Finally | he changed his plans. hat” fellow | is too smart for me said Farmer Brown's Boy. “He is too smart for me to get a shot at. I've got to out- wit him some other way. I'll trap him. That's what I'll do! TI'll some traps for him! If I can onc catch him it will put an end tq a| lot_of trouble \ So Farmer Brown's Boy set about| his plan of trapping Terror the Goshawk. - He recalled that several times he had seen Terror sitting on top of a certain telephone pole, where | he was safely beyond danger .from | a terrible gun, but from which point | he could watch the chicken yard. “That's the place,” Brown's Boy. “T'll set a trap right on_top ,of that pole.” , So Farmer Brown's Boy got out one of the traps with which he used to catch muskrat. He climbed to 3 Terror | He knows| Just to smell the sp plump plum puddi BY THORNTON W. BURGESS |the top of the telephone pole and there he sat and fastened the trap Then he turned two or three chick- ens loose in his chicken yard, for he had been keeping them shut up o’ {late. He. himself. with his terrible gun close at hand. sat down just within the barn door. where he could . “Now, Mr. Goshawk,” saic f 1 know anything about you r ways, you are going to get the greatest surprise of your life Sooner or later you'll see those chick |ens. " You'll come over for a look around to see what the chances are for catching one. You'll alight on that telephone pole, and your eyes will be so full of chicken that you will not see that trap at all. If 1 catch you today T shall be surprised whether today or tomorrow, I'm ing to get you. I just feel it in my bones. I this trap doesn’t work I'll set one:or two over in the Green | Forest. ~ We've got to get rid of | you, and that is all there is to it.” Crabmeat Cocktail. For each person to be served allow one-third cup of shredded crabmeat | tcanned or fresh may be used). Mix 1 well with the cocktail sauce made as | follows. One-half tablespoon chili sauce or pure catsup. tywo drops tabas. three drops table sauce, one-half tablespoon lemon _juice. one-quarter easpoon celery salf. Mix all ingred- s together quantity makes h for an individual service 1 small cocktail glosses. AFFLICTED WITH CONSTIPATION 30 YEARS Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN brought relief in two weeks! Read Mr: Weller’s sincere tribute to the power of ALL-BRAN in re- lieving this dread disease: “I have been constipated for the last 30 years. Have taken stuff from all.over the world witbout any result. A couple of weeks ago I got & package of your ALL-BRAN. Have taken two 'spgonfuls with sugar and milk at every meal and ever since I am not constipated any more.” 2 G. WrLLzm South San Franciseo, Cal. Constipation leads to_more than forty serious diseases. Don’t let it begin its deadly work on you. Headaches, pimples, spots ore the eyes, dizziness—all are tell-tale symptoms. Kellogg's ALL-BRAN is guaran- to relieve constipation. Eat two tablespoonfuls daily—in chronic’ cases, with every meal. Kellogg’s is 100 % bran—100%, effective. Delicious with cream or milk—and add fruits or honey. Use in cooking. Served and sold every- where. Made by Kellogg in Baf Creek. Recipes on pacl said }'armeri M « ALL-BRAN icy stcnn: from this ng sets your appetite off on a rampage. And, oh, how Ius- cious it is to taste! Raisins, citron, suet, and spices from the Orient are blended with a skill acquired through CT”Od@ by all the years since 1855. Richardson &Robbins To Users of Percolators Seal Brand is offered especially pared for use in percolators. ¢ bris out the finer, fuller flavor of the coffee. Ask for Seal Brand Percolator Coffee. Sul Brand Tea is of the xme.hi(h quality -