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WOMAN'S PAGE.! Short Skirts and Draping Trains BY MARY MARSHALL. queen don't unx- I am inclined to believe that the have b‘enlm.lndl - | fashion of trains used in connection I S B ueenly manner in the recent )y some one g! \'fl%’ short skirts? !mlken 'who make clothes for the well- I have hoard that some of the French | dressed queens. dressmakers who make clothes for such | On more than one occasion Mrs. Saval women as Queen Marie of Rou- | Coolidge has appeared wearing one of mania and the queen of Spain have ”“fid n&\‘rr 1:"1—‘:"‘" ucwhf o ;.—r:'l:: etimes been a little put to it to|dral rt short enougl i o ' be quite smart and with drapery long ‘enouxh to provide a really convincing train at the back. At the last diplo- | matic reception she wore a thin velvet |gown of light blue—the V neckline widely outlined with pear] and crystal embroidery, a strass ornament on the hip and two draped panels at the back that lay two feet or so on the floor. A most unusual example of the new trained gown comes from the house of Paul Carts in Paris—black georgette over black satin embroidered with black pailettes, silver and rhinestones. The skirt is quite short all around. but an overdrapery at the back and one side of the skirt, made of tulle, falls on the floor train fashion. If you were & ine that it would cult to conduct Triangle pockets and _triangle de- vices of all sorts are used on some of | e newest frocks. In fact, the tri-| angle trimming gives & note of newness | to any frock. 1f you want to give & last season's frock A look of newness just add a few triangles. This week's iittle help consists of a number of sketches showing how these triangles may be applied with diagram-pattern | and directions for making. 1 will be | Slad to send this to you on receipt of | vour stamped, self-addressed envelope. | | (Copvrizht. 1828 ) | My Neighbor Says: Clean grease. such as sausage. ham and pork fat. should be saved for frving pancakes. eges. potatoes, etc. When frying doughnuts the bread test is most reliable. Put a cube of bread in the fat. When it begins to turn a golden brown. remove and add another, count- ing slowly up to 70. The bread should then be a golden brown, and the fat ready to use. Wax preparations should be A TRAIN AT AN 25 THE| | used for oak. Oak dining tables, BACK AND SLIGHTLY TO THE| | U LEFT SIDE GIVES A NOTE OF | | when no cloth is used. need con- FORMALITY TO THIS EVENING | | siderable care. Overwaxed tables GOWN OF LAME TRIMMED WITH | | collect dust, and this gets Tubbed EMBROIDERED TULLE. | in until the surface becomes dull. should know how to make frocks that were | truly queenly and still so scant of | iris. Not al' queens would have the courage or desire to solve the problem | as does Queen Mary of England, sim- plr wearing long skirts when practically | "L—Fhum else in Christendom wears ‘em ‘short. PRESIDENTS QUESTION GAMES Prepared by the National Americanism Commission of the American Legion. Overwaxed tables washed. Bread dough may be kept for several days in the refrigerator if a small amount of baking soda is added to the dough. The soda keeps it from souring. HOW MANY CAN YOU ANSWER? Thirty million or more people will vote for President this year. Do you know who have been our Presidents, how they were elected, what they did, why | ther are best remembered? These games are good fun and good Americanism. | Young and old will enjoy and profit by them. Game No. 2. | 1—Which President was richest, ac-| 6—What event precipitated the War cording to his times? with Spain? | 2—What President who fought In the | 7—Which President was once a teacher | tion, married the daughter of | _ at Harvard? H Whlt'umhe’nmmuo! '.hzl ts? > | of a President was brought up a| to three different political parties. Quaker? These and hundreds of other questions about our Presidents are answered in & 40 marebonkier Prements Of the Cmied States.” which the American on has anged to have delivered 10 any reader for 6 cents to cover postage and bandling cost. fontains the official portrait of every Premident, with history of his lection and ic services. Address the Haskin Information’ Bureau. Washingion. inclosing cents in stamps. Answers to Questions on This Page of Today’s Star. The Sidewalks of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. We have just talked to, or rather room on the sunny side of the house listened to. a “captain of industry” who | He knew what my business was. I have | i visiting in Washington. What he said | reccommended that hostelry to scores our younger readers |of le simply because an under- ! “Buccess in busi- paid employe has what we call per | ness” said he, “is sonality. ! largely a matter of “Industry and intelligence are impor- one-guarter per- tant. I have sald that those qualities | sonality, one-half 2are threequarters of & man's success | industry and ap- | But they can mean nothing more some- plication and ope- times than routine. Industry is merely Guarter luck Per. 8 part of the day’s work. Intelligence * sonality is also an important factor. “My business is one of public serv- ice and we choose | ey Who |the efficiency and profits of his organ- | o Lz:enxx‘o; This was simply applied muzl-; - ; | St 9 8o WaKE | “-Yes sir, personality, industry and | w it ‘mm | intelligence will take a young fellow a personality. ?|long way. You must add, however. & l{m'l“‘ smount { azsh of luck or what we call ‘the ¢ of intelligence, & breaks’ I place personality first, be- | proportion of luck, an agreeable DET- | cayse that is what a young man sells sonality, and & young fellow will 80| nimself on. He may possesc all the in- tegrity and ability in the world, but i he lacks poise or a manner or what- ever you will call it, Le seldom gets by the reception-room door. ;z;nmy we misjudge a man and dis- | cover that about all he has is person- | ality and nothing else. In that event | we try to place him in another depart- ment and help him find himself.” These are words of wisdom from a man who knows his “Bermudas.” N a chap in his forties who is generai| manager of a big institution, because he discovered a system by which a pay | roll was relieved of 20 ment. In many | far “Whnat is luck? When I was & lad 1 worked for & man who owned s small v store, one of those places with piug wbaceo' signs all over the| Most of our Ve and farm ‘et front something in an egg and worth of candy for it then & traveling d drop in, or s representat Usually which, we would tell v trade’ when they came in “Our business grossed about $25,000 e year, including our buuer and egg exchange Washington is singularly free from | street beggars. Once in a while some tellow down on his luck acc likely | | looking benefactor. Yesterday morning | a well attired Lone fellow am- led along at the writer's side requested ¢ o take hi Laurel. He didn't resemble & pro- fessional better in the alightest, Per- haps that is the renson why some charitably inclined | soul probably gave | him the fare W Laure) | Incidentally, this recalis the story wld & beneficent | eldrrly lady who observed & man selling | wd pencils in the street. A placard | wrned with & string around the pen- il merchsnt’s neck proclaimed, I am | |biina” The man's eyes were masked | Iy dark glasses concealing his spparent | |afMiction. Moved by pity, the lady | td' d u nickel inw the unfortunate’s rand . The coin wccidently missed it | destination snd rolied w the street | whereupon the “blind man” hastened after it and picked 3t up erra Woud | | The indignant vietm of the hoax ex- | wiin b converns Cwimed, “You eonscienceless wrewh, 1 | the Joreover, it had an n, for 1L was sent to Mr e 1 expressd v thal stimulste e He was a traveler, u man He wld us sbout Cri- er, Bouevard snd the 1 had resd s yeurs later 1 went v Ch O0U. 1 gt & Jub there figure came inv the head of Yue Brm. He wes the ‘Grummer’ One day 1 sum- et the courege Vs spesk W him wrd recalien i country wiere I worked e 1old e that | of one of the | v | coming vear, which holds promise of prosperity. will be intensely ambitious. ~ THE EVENING STAR, THE DAILY HOROSCOPE Sunday, February 5. Contrary plane! inftuences rule tomorrow, accord astrologers, who counsel rest and quiet through the day- light hours. Preachers may find congregations un- responsive while this configuration - vails, for egotism will be pre t under this direction of the stars. A positive attitude of mind should be maintained for there will be a tend- ency toward depression and pessimism. ‘The churches will benefit 'Mfl{,enln the coming year, 1t is foretold, for t will be a revival of general interest in religion. Scientists will become Interested in investigating the unseen world, it is foretold, and there will be revelations There is & sign presaging growth of oratorical attainment and the seers foresee the rise of American preachers, who will attain international fame. If the stars are rightly read, the re- action from the reign of gross material- ism will bring marvelous spiritual awareness. Tomorrow should be a day fairly fa- vorable to the aged and their counsel should be sought. The moon tomorrow is in a sign making for increase of wisdom and caution on the part of the people. France and the British Isles are to be swept by terrific gales of wind that will do great damage. In a time when floods are afflicting | the lands denuded of trees. large areas of timber will be destroyed by fires as | well as winds, the seers foretell. | Seismic shocks in China and (ndia | will add to sufferings in both these dis- turbed countries, the seers prophesy. Persons whose birth date is tomor- row may have many changes in the WASHINGTON, D. Fashionable Folk by cJulia Boy: Children born on tomorrow probably | They should ! safeguard their sight and hearing. | 1Copyr 19280 ! NANCY PAGE " “My Heart With Raptnre Thrills. ete., ete BY FLORENCE L3\ When the breakfast gong sounded | on Sunday morning it was accompanied | by Nancy's cheery ‘“Merry sunshine, folks, come on down to breakfast.” | First they saw the orange, cream and | green table that Nancy had set up. The daffodile looked as brave and glyl as if they were dancing on the hills The orange juice in the tumblers| picked up the daffodils’ color. Thml came scrambled eggs with crisp little | sausages, golden corn meal muffins, | squares of yellow butter and orange! went with the clear amber | marmalade of the coffee. | Nancy's scrambled eggs were worth for. In fact, folks once begged her to used one tea- cream for R and a shake | ked them over hot | | Mother begins by the white and yolk so that the white became pearly flecks in the golden mass. | When they were well heated she added | the butter. She seasoned them to taste other instances this fellow increased | Scrambled eggs go on cooking after | from getting conceited. Many parents feel it their duty to always they are taken from the heat, so she took them out of the boiler while they were still a bit soft. This brought them to the table creamy and rich. Would you like a rec too? Write 1o Nancy Pag inclostng 2 stamped sel for her sandwich leafiet (Covyrisht, 1928.) Willie Willis BY ROBEKT QUILLEN “You can’t trust women Teacher made me stay in at recess yesterday for throwin' a paper wad, an' I've took her seven apples thiy year.” . Copyt Two hundred milllon recetvers would in the world within the ares of constant reception o hear broadcasting, accord- ing W & recent estimate. Answers to Presidents Question Game. 1—-Washington. He was one of the rich men of his day. 2—Monroe married Elizabeth, daughter of Capt. Lawrence Kortwright 3—~Washington and Madison 4—Twenty of our Presidents owin Wist business Wr"’hl you were blind Oh. 06, ma'm,” returned the man | L' ot Wing | s “BUL that sign says that you are,” | piea the lady heatedly 17 "No, ma'm " said tie reciplent of her sympathy, “I'm not blina.” “Then, how dare you nquired the woman | U'm Just substituling for the regulsr “bhind man’ whie he's over at e movies s pure Juck re- wear st 1 was flat- | s Coulf tn | Because there 15 Wwo much silk being | e until e | offered i the vorld, Japanese spiners in the Bast where | Lave decided L cither close down for & 1 oof sop ¢ MHe month or \ sesl one-Afth of theh sveu rememered (et 1oprelenied s | coson Wollers. A have been lawyers 5 John Quincy Adams was & Federalist & ftepublican and a Whig Fillmore belonged to the antl-Masonic, Whig and crican parties at different » The sinking of the batteship Maine by an explosion 1 the hiarbor of Havana John Quincy Adams taught thetoric there Five were named James The Greenbck party nom- tnated James B Weaver Dolly Madison. Her first hushhnd, John Todd, was also & Quaker be necemsary Lo enable il the people | DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Why It Is a Crime to Write Depressing Letters. Should Men and Women Consider Each Other’s Health Before Marriage? EAR MISS DIX: I am 25, & school teacher away from home for the third year. 1 have met with success in my professioft, but I am naturally inclined to be overconsclentious and timid. Now here is my problem: My mother is of a very strict, puritanical and pessimistic nature, and she continually writes me letters that take every particle of courage and hope out of me. She warns me against doing things that would be just as obnoxious to me as they would be to her. When I tell her of any compliment I have about my work or personality. she disparages it and tells me to beware of flatterers, or that people are trying to get something out of me, and she never ceases to prophesy that 1 will be a failure and never amount to anything. One of mother’s letters plunges me into despair for days, and I wonder if I would be justified in breaking off the correspondence with her? ‘WORRIED DAUG! Answer: Why mothers should be so much addicted to dipping their pens . in tears when they write letters to their childrer nobody knows, but the gloom complex seems to be a maternal attribute. I know many men and women like you who dread to get a letter from mother, because it reads like a chapter of the Lamentations of Jeremiah. | saying that she and father are getting old and they haven't much more time to live and that it is cruel hard that they should be separated from their children, for whom they have sacrificed so much, but that young people are so full of their own plans and that they don't think of their poor old nts. Then she goes on to tell it old Mrs. Jones dying and old Mr. Smith having been paralyzed and Mr. Brown having lost his money. Mother writes of the whole disasters of the countryside, with never a word of any good luck having come to anybody. And the curious thing is that mother's talk doesn't drip with woe. If you had been with her she would have been as chirpy as a sandboy and wouldn't l‘t‘h‘ or di upon her have thought of complaining about her health or latter end. It is only her letters that are sodden with tears. For mother has never realized what & crime a melancholy letter is. It is a crime because what any one writes in a letter carries so much more weight and seems so much more final and definite than what one says. —_— . When people tell us their troubles we judge their suffering by their food and their clothes. and going about the ordinary business and amusements of life we take It that their affiictions are not overwhelming. But when they write us of their sorrows and we cannot see that, even while they are telling us that their is thfking ahead of your job. I Know | water. stirring them cnough to break hearts are broken, they have got out thelr vanity cases and are using the lipstick, we worry ourselves sick with sympathy, belleving them to be utterly crushed. Of course, when your mother writes you making little of the honors that have come your way, it is because she has some distorted idea about kee] you | everything their children do in order to keep them humble-minded, and this has done more than any other one thing to fill the world full of fallures. Because if we cannot do all we think we can do, we certainly cannot achieve any more than we think we can do. Our belief in ourselves is the measure of our success, and it is the parents who continually warn their children that they can never do th | never do that who kill ambition and effort. Perhaps ! mother how she discourages you and kills all your faith in yourseif, refrain from writing you such «pr_-u!u_m:on DOROTHY D:An MISS DIX: Should men and women consider each other's health before they marry? I was keeping company with a girl, but I noticed that she was of the sickly type and I broke away from her. ter a close friend of mine married her. Now he is spending all of his earnings on doctors' bills for her and it is driving him ne. He claims he gets all the loufih breaks in life, but I claim he should have considered her health before he married her. M. D. D. | Answer: A year or two ago & questionnaire was sent out to a large number | of colleges for both men and women and to the Y. M. C. A. and the Y. W. C. | and other organizations of young people asking them to enumerate the gqualities | that they considered most desirable in & hutband or wife. And in every list | health was the first thing demanded by both men and women. It was put above | ‘ood‘w looks, intelligence, moral and domestic qualifications, wealth or soclal | position And this was right, because practically the whole success of marriage depends upon health. A man’s ability to make a living and & woman's ability to make a comfortable home depend upon their health. Whether a young couple prosper or not depends upon their health, because they cannot save if they have the drain nr&ifiknl:u, Whlll‘h s the most e:polec thing in the world, upon their purses. ether people are easy to get along with deal upon their health. e ¥ W he aln pmdru Y | If a man or woman gets sick after he or she is married it is the duty of the | his or her affliction endurable. Bul certalnly & man or woman is foolhardy | who picks out a delicate person o marry. DOROTHY DIX. e | l EAR MISS DIX: Which Is worse for a boy—to be raised In a fatherless | nome or %o be ralsed In & home where he sees his father drunk? adores his father and his father idolizes him, so that 1 feel that Il‘l‘nu?(‘lyb:o: sin to tear them apart. But I had rather see my boy dead than following in his | father's footsteps. My husband is not a continuous drinker. | Job and makes a respectable living, but everv so often he will stagger in drunk | My parents beg me to come home. Shall I go? A MOTHER. No. Don’t break up your home because our | oceastonally. You will regret it If you do. s Your parents urge you to come home, but when they realise that they will | have to support you and your boy they will make your : upon them and that will be bitter to ym{ o076 i | Don't be afrald that his father's example will infl 1t will have the opposite effect. ‘The boy il See thia' defeol | &'u‘:"l?nfi"il‘. loves and it will horrify him. There are no such rabid teetotalers as the children of drunkards, Our parents are oftener & warning to us than they are examples. DOROTHY DIX. (Conyright 2 iy 1098 ) !Aflfl Julce of one-half lemon and the | minced parsley. Good on fish. DI NOTE Recipe contains fat, lime, fron, vita- mine A, B and ©. Oan be calen by children over six and by adults of aver- age or under welght. Maitre D'Hotel Dressing. Butter, one-half cup Lemon Julce, three tablespoons. Minced parsley, one tLeaspoon BERVES 4 TO 6 PORTIONS Work the lamon fjulce into the but- | ter. Add the minced paraley, Or meit butter without burning, take from fre. Found in ataxicab last July, a valu- able diamond and emerald bracelet I In & loat property office in London awalting a clalmant, 0., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4. r Al husband or wife to cherish the invalid and do all in his or her power to make | He holds a good | and then 1 go through an agony of doubt as to what is best for my son’s sake. | husband gets drunk | 1928. SUB ROSA The Going-Out Craze. “What's the matter with me?” asked Mons, “You know I used to be as popular as any girl who went to school with me. And I had nice boys 'o‘glly around with, too. Every one of them came from & good family and had good manners."” “Well, you're still popular,” I re- minded her not without malice. “Yes, I'm popular, but with whom. Why, I can't bear the boys I go out with now. They drive me crazy. But T've got to go somewhere. I've got to have some fun. I'm not going to stick at home every night of my life. I can’t bear it. Only I know as well as you do that the boys I see now are pertectly terrible. They're s dizzy crowd, and I long to get out of it. But how can 17 What's the matter? Why did I lose all my nice friends in the first place?” It does look like rather a mystery, you know. Mona's really quite nice. She isn't wild. She doesn't in the least care for the usual attractions of & wild party. She's pretty, s wonderful dancer, sparkling and witty. When she first came out every man in the town seemed to be crazy about her. What caused | the slide down? | Well, despite these virtues you see | Mona is the victim of the going-out | craze. She's wild for excitement, for night clubs, theaters and dances. Something in her blood demands con- stant entertainment and excitement. ‘That's what started the trouble. The | nice boys in her crowd after taking her out once or twice thought it might | be pleasant to have a quiet evening at_her home with her now and then. Steve called her up one night and asked for a date. “Love to go any- where,” Mona assured him jubumtly,‘ “My feet are just itching for a dance floor. Where shall we go?” Steve hesitated, “Thought maybe, we'd have a quiet evening in front of | the fire,” he suggested. “Last night's party wore me out. I want to get home early tonight. And yvou ought to get some sleep, t0o, young woman.” { “Oh, Steve,” Mona dismayed. “You | don't want to stay home. Why, I'm | just in the mood for a toot. Do let's | dance somewhere.” Steve gave in, but when he finally reached home in the wee hours, with an aching head and weary feet, he decided that Mona was too strenuous for him. Also too expensive. If he couldn't ever expect to see her except at con- siderable expense and much waste of enewly and sleep he wouldn't see her at all. All the others came to the same con- | clusion sooner or later. That's why they went their way. Mona found that the only companions who would agree to every-night, all-night parties were the dizzy young rounders who hadn't jobs anyway, so didn’t mind about sleep- | ing late in the morning. What's to be done? Mona ought to give herself a good rest. She ough! | really to try to break herself of this | going-out habit. It's as bad a habit| as tobacco or drink—it fastens on one just firmly, and always wreaks dire results. If she will just try to train herself to stay peacefully at home a couple of evenings & week, she may break the | habit, | Once she’s broken it, she won't have | | u'm;hle getting the nice boys back again. { | | || Your Baby and Mine | BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Mrs. E. M. writes: “Is it necessary | | to handle babies as much as some | | mothers do> 1 like babies, but the | | prospect of having to jiggle them up | and down in order to make them strong does not appeal to me. It seems to me just an excuse when mothers say ‘You | can't expect a baby to grow if you let him lie still’ Babies who can be letti quiet when home should not need to be held all the time when they are away |from home. I had a niece visit me ) | who was a very good child. but she | was not very strong. A voung, husky | baby I know won't be still a minute unless he is being romped with. Which | 1s the proper and effective way to rear; children?"” Answer: “The mother who says & baby cannot grow if allowed to lie still | has a slimmer of the right idea, but | she puts her idea into practice in the wrong way. Children do need freedom to exercise. They need short clothes | which do not hamper their limbs, they need to be put on wide beds and not kept (unless asleep) in cribs too small | for them to be able to turn or wave their arms, or in other ways give their muscles necessary exercis Otherwise they should not be stimulated. To hold & baby on one's lap and excite it by jumping it up and down is definitely bad for the baby. The whole world is such an exciting place anyway for a | small baby that if he has not been spoiled he can find the most riotous entertainment in just waving his arms and legs and looking at the thousand | and one things within his vision. A | mother who constantly holds a baby | artificially stimulates him and gets him to expect more and more of this sort of activity. He will be far better off. far healthier and less nervous if he is allowed to exercise by himself, provided | he has the place on bed or floor which | will give him this opportunity. WHO REMEMBERS? | BY DICK MANSF Rexistered U. 8. Patent Ofice. When “Bow" Hickman was & well known character around town and &/ | versatile enterta Answer to Yesterday's Pusale. FEATURES.’' BEDTIME STORIE Some Tracks in the Snow. Who reads the signs doth knowledgs Eain That others often seek in vain. —Reddy Fox. ‘When Reddy Fox left Peter Rabbit in Johnny Chuck’'s home Reddy hurried back to the Old Pasture. How he did! hope that no one had seen him when | he had tried to walk Peter down and | Peter had so cleverly fooled him Reddy’s pride was hurt. Yes, sir, Reddy's pride was hurt. From the Old Pasture he went over to the Green Forest and finally came to the Laughing Brook. This he started Hlasy ™ “JERRY MUSKRAT IS USING THIS SPRING-HOLE _RIGHT ALONG,” MUTTERED REDDY. to follow down toward the Smiling Pool Now, in the alder swamp on the of the Green Forest, where the Laugh- ing Brook made its way out to the Smiling Pool, there was a spring, and edge | BY THORNTON W. BURGESS one important discovery. “Jerry Musk- rat is using this spring-hole right along,” muttered Reddy to himself. “There ere his footprints over there; there is the mark of his tail and there |is a place where he has been sitting | down. Now I would almost, as soon kave Jerry Muskrat as Peter Rabbit wouldn't be quite sc %, out he would be very fiifing. And, after all, | when we are hungry it is something filling that we need and want. Jerry | must swim over here under th This spring-hole will B | Yes, sir, this spring-zane bear | watching. Gf course, it would be useless | to try to steal up on Jerry. I must be hiding close by when he climbs out of the water.” Reddy sat up and looked thi very carefully. “Ha!" said last time Jerry came out he we to that clump of alders. He should | have been more careful. His tracks in | the snow tell just what he has done. | Now, if I had been hiding jus® back of that clump of alders I would nave had Jerry. What Jerry has done once he may do again. I'll have %o look into this. Perhaps the next time that Jerry comes out and visits that clump of alders he'll get a surprise. He may not think it a pleasant surprise, but I will. What a difference one’s point of view makes. My goodness, what a difference one’s point of view makes! I wish I knew what time of day or night is in the habit of coming out. isave me a lot of weary waiting. I make some inquiries. Perhaps some one has seen him and knows what time he | comes out.” | (Cooyright. 1928.) SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. where that spring was there was open | water, save in the very coldest of the cold weather. This spring-hole, for that is what it was called, was a good place to watch, for it was visited by various little people. So it was toward this spring-hole that Reddy was making his way. As Reddy drew near he moved very carefully. Every two or three steps he| would stop to Jook and listen, standing as motionless as if he were carved from stone. When he was where he could get a full view of the spring-hole a feeling of disappointment crept over him. No one was there. No one was anywhere about. Reddy felt that he, had stolen up there for nothing. that care he had taken had been wasted. Now, the snow over there was soft. Whoever walked in it left a track Reddy’s own footprints might have been followed all the way down the Laugh- ing Brook by any one who was inter- ested. Even so small a person as Teeny- weeny the Shrew left his footprints. So Reddy was using his eyes to see who t | else had been over there recently. When he was near enough to the spring-hole to see clearly all around it used. “It will be just as well not All | The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright 1828} . Metric unit. Swedish coin. . A State (abbreviated) Annoy. . Prevent. . Insect. . Comy point. E Am-&'er compass point . Southern State (abdreviated) Yaore. Cuts. Valuable wood. EXists. . Printed notice. . Says., . Bog. A State (adbreviated) . Monkey . Letter 8. . Like. . Tantalum (abbreviated) . Alderman (abbreviated) . Hard fruit . Right (abbreviated). . Prefix: into. EL S4. Maiden loved by Zeus. §5. Stream. §6. Mistake. Down. 1. Go away. 2. Female monster. 3. Negative 4. Nickname, 5. Herds 6. Turn aside. T. Not out. '9 Goddess of earth Engine. 47, Cuckoo. 48 Plaving © S0 Teutonic god. 31. River Rutler-Flynn Paint Co. endorsement of this Since 1845." woodwork. Rogers Brushing “No Llustre” Wall Fun voom walls PLEN Lacquer Interior Gloss Finsh--for wite Y OF PARKING SPACL When you buy paints or varnishes at the , You are protected by a double guarantee—the reputation of Manu- facturers known throughout America—and the firm—"Found Reliable Nationally Known Products which you | will always find satisfactory. \ “81" Floor Varnish—for floors and S AN 1wk s aad datwe Franklin 131