Evening Star Newspaper, February 7, 1928, Page 30

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‘"WOMAN'S PAGEF, Changing Fashions in Umbrellas BY MARY Quite the the usual silk-covered umbrellas, but BOTTLE-GREEN LEATHER WAS USED POR THE SHORT RAIN- COAT AND THE STUBBY LITTLE UMBRELLA TO CARRY WITH IT. there's mo denying that they look at- tractive. Dogs and ducks. not to mention horses and elephants, have served as models for umbrella handies recently and now, having apparently exhausted BEAUTY [ More Fancy Diets. Al the women who ought to reduce and don’t care to (meaning all those who ought to reduce) want some fancy, quick and sure way of getting slim again, without too much trouble. Now, if you are one of these, if you want to check a tendency toward flesh- iness, or actually take off & few pounds, or steadily but gradually go down in weight, and you can't. or don't want to bother with a diet of carefully count- ed calories, you can do wonders on one-day-a-week dieting. ‘There is the rigid diet, plain water, hot or cold. It doesn’t sound enticing, I'll admit, but a day's fast with plenty of water will help cure uric acid trou- skin, rest the one or two pount You mustn't eat it all back next day. though! ‘There is a less rigid diet of skim milk, also hot or cold. Suppose you had a giass at nine in the morning. at noon, at 3. at 6 at 9, and, ‘i you to be awake, at midnight. It you si early, your day's ration is 400 skim milk being about 80 to the giass; if you are a late sleeper, then it's 480, but in either case, it is around 1,500 less than you are eating, perhaps 2,000 less. Now remember that 1,000 calories is four ounces of fat, so & day's fast of this sort may lose you half & pound of flesh. That CHATS MARSHALL. smartest rainy-day outfit I)the inspiration to be taken from the have seen was one that consisted of a short leather jacket with a leather-cov- ered umbrella to match. I really don't know whether these leather umbrellas would prove as generally practicable as animal kingdom, the umbrella makers are turning to the vegetable kingdom. I saw a charming umbrella the other day made unusually cheerful by the ad- dition of a vivid red tomato, There i3 nothing especially appropriate about a tomato—and I should not imagine that | the tomato offered an especially con- | venient sort of handle. Still it s every bit as appropriate as a dog's head. Be- | fore long we may be privileged to choose | our favorite vegetable and the umbrella dealers may have umbrellas with han- dles shaped like parsnips, radishes, car- rots and even potatoe With all these amusing and ple- turesque umbrellas to choose from, and with raincoats that are colorful and becoming, it is no wonder that up-to- date women have no great dread of | ratny days. Undoubtedly the reason | the older women in our families ! have such a depressing aversion to |cloudy skies and watch the barometer | with such dread of any signs of rain is | because of an eamgly acquired rainy-day x due to the unbecoming and | ¢ sort of raincoat and umbrellas | that were in fashion when they were | voung. Perhaps I shouldn't have sald “in! fashion”—the fact seems to be that until recently fashions didn't count in rainy weather, and an umbrella was an | umbrella until it was worn through Now fashions in umbrellas change as | rapidly as fashions in hats. | This week's little dressmaker’s help consists of a diagram pattern for a |slip. By following the directions vou | can make it to fit your own measure- | ments and for the new frocks the slip | |must be nicely fitted. If you would like a copy of the diagram pattern with working directions and a sketch of the finished slip, send me a stamped. self- addressed envelope and I will send it to you at once. BY EDNA KENT FORBES kept this up faithfully, in six months you would hawe lost 24 pounds. Taken that way, it certainly scems worth while, though four ounces of fat or eight ounces of fat may not seem to make any difference. The one im- portant thing is. to keep up any reduc- tion idea you have. Don't do it spas- modically, be faithful to it, if you want results. L. E. M.—Peg C—Try Olive oil or a cream to soften the callous brown skin on your elbows. There is no specitied weight for a girl of 15 years, Ause at this period there are many changes. If the health is satisfactol weight and height need not be cons ered until after the growing period, which would not be before 18 years of age. Undecided—Advice above applies to your question about weight. Consult ltk;e doctor about your swollen, red eye- ids. Reader—Reduce the cream again to oil by heating it. In another vessel heat the amount of rose-water that you omitted when making.up the form- ula. The temperature for each should be about the same and not much high- er than lukewarm: then beat the oiis and rose-water together as you would | & mayonnalse. When heating the cream put it in a bowl that is kept hot by being placed in a vessel in which there is hot water. Never heat either the olls or rose-water by putting them directly over a gas | February resorts. .~ THE EVENING The STYLE POST is the marker on the road to being smart. Striped Lapels. Horizontal stripes under a plain col- ored cardigan coat have been pro- nounced as good this year as last by the | the January and Smarter, indeed, for the lapels of a three-quarter cardigan adopt them, too, in groupings closer together. Oyster white with dusty yellow stripes makes a cardigan and sleeve- less underblouse of distinction, with a white skirt. The striped slip- over sweater continues in vogue. 1008 smart women at (Copyright THE DAILY HOROSCOPE Wednesday, February 8. Good and evil planetary aspects ap- pear to counterbalance each other to- morrow, according to_astrology. The closing down of factories in cer= tain places may cause hardship, and even suffering, the scers foretell. “There is a promising sign for adver- tising and publicity. Newspapers and magazines should benefit greatly. Reactionary planetary influer affect literature and art as well dress and manners, the scers forec s will as t. worn | Poetry is to gain in general apprecia- | tion and spiritual aspirations will be reflected in fiction, but crime will con- tinue to flourish and to develop mad and fiendish forms, which will bring inevitable reforms, astrologers foretell. Warning Is given against speculation and all forms of betting, which will become alarmingly prevalent as the year advances. Increase in rheumatic and arthritic maladies is indicated by the stars. Diet will continue to be a matter of first importance. New discoveries regarding prevention of disease will mark 1928, it is prophe- sied, for the vear will be notable for scientific research. Before the end of the century the life span of civilized man may be in- creased at least 20 years, astrologers declare. Persons whose birth date is tomortow may have a perFlexlng year in which members of the family may be difficult to deal with Children born on tomorrow may be inclined to look on the dark side of would be four pounds a month, if you flame or any other kind of fire. The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright. 1928.) ddill THEE diE dddadinil AN Rexinous substance. ‘Toward Bun god. Nodule of earth. Time past. Advance the foot. ind. . K . Bouthern Btate (ab). . Bearch uncertainly. . Three-toed sioth . Printer's measure. . Lie snugly. . Within. . Forviguess enin . Groups of musicians. Betore, Pen name of Dickene, Upon . Whiriwind nesr the Farce Islands Bpigot Reverential fear Invernatonal Hindi ejaen Fromen we'sr Auswer 10 Yesterday's Puzzle. by Fortification, . More destrable. Down. Wertern State (ab.). Openings. . Acknowledged. Devours. . Fired Look out for. Harvest. Preventing poisoning. Part of the foot. Female sheep, Declare to be trus. Bport. Den Cattle, 21, Prefix . A bone 29, Pint (ab). 30, Wing of a house. Wwind of the Adriatie. . Presently, Midday, Vrehy. half, Obstruction e i deb A playing card Through the sgency of. again. _Better m v bake if you Pillsbury’s Best Fl;{l’l' life. Subjects of this sign are usually industrious and constructive, (Convright. 1928.) A Sermon for Today BY REV. JOHN R. GUNN, Man Wonderfully Made. Text: “I am...wonderfully made.” Psalms, exxxix.14 An item in the Scientific American states that the average man's body would furnish fat enough to make seven bars of soap, iron enough for & me- dium sized nail, sugar enough to fll a salt shaker, lime enough to whitewash a chicken copp, phosphorus enough to make the tip of 2,200 matches, magne- sium enough for a dose of magnesia, potassium enough to explode a toy cannon and sulphur enough to rid a dog of fleas. All of which is valued at_about 97 cents Yet how wonderful is the human body. It is said to contain 240 bones, not less than 10,000 nerves, with an equal number of velns and arteries; 1,000 ligaments, 4,000 lacteals and lym- phatics, 100,000 glands, while the skin contains not less than 200,000,000 of pores. It would require pages to de- cribe the eye, the ear, the tongue, the nd, the heart—each being the very clinax of completeness and a David did not miss it when he said, am_ wonderfully made.” However, the most wonderful thing about man is not his body. There is something more o him than the stuff of which he is made. Shakespeare ex- presses it n the words “What a plece of work s man! How noble in re; faculty: In apprebension how like an angel; In comprehension how like a god!” s . Although horn 12 years ago without fingers or thumbs, Caroline Rivett of Bermondsey, England, has learned to write and to do fancy lettering and em- broldery from her own original designs, Answers to Presidents Questions 1—Roosevelt. - 2-—-Both were the sons byterian preachers 3--Mary Todd Lincoln was sald to have refused a proposal by Btephen A, Douglas 4 Fight were Episcopalians, seven were Presbyterfans and smaller numbers belonged to other_denominations. H—John Quincy Adams, 1828, 8- Mrs. Andrew Jackson, 7 nd Johnson. 8- Zachary ‘Taylor. 9 Henry Clay 1n 1824, 1832 and 1844, William Jennings Bryan in 1896, 1900 and 1908 10 Mrs, Calvin Coolidge, of Pres- avor e Jor bread, biscuits and pasuy., : _ | | ptation. | son; how infinite in | l | DF STAR, 'WASHINGTON, ®. O©. DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Does the Unsentimental Girl Who Investigates a Man Really Love Him?—The Young Wife Who Plans to Leave Home for a “Good Time.” EAR MI8S DIX: I proposed to a girl and she sald she liked me a great deal, but “wasn’t sure that she loved me enough to marry me.” 8She has a college education and takes very serlously the theories of germs and heredity. I had a sister who died of a contaglous disease, although I have been exumined by half a dozen doctors and given w clean bill of health. I have reason to belleve that my girl friend has looked me up pretty well since my proposal, and the results were so favorable that if I would again suggest marriage she would say “yes.” But do you think this girl really loves me? Do you believe that a cautlous affection, which must confirm itself in sclence before it admits its existence, is as desirable as a spontancous affection? Is the fact that I question this an indication that I really do not love the girl? We have such a community of tastes and desires it seems a shame we have to negotlate so much. READER. Answer: Doubtless in a real, genuine, bona fide case of the grand passion a man and woman rush into each other’s arms without counting the cost. We can't fmagine Romeo and Juliet stopping to reflect upon the germs they might be acquiring in kissing each other, or Paoll and Francesca debating each other's heredity. or Leander reflecting upon the danger of getting pneumonia in | swimming the Hellespont. And, without doubt, all of us would like to inspire in some other breast a love so great and overwhelming and reckless that it would make the party of the other part oblivous to consequences, and leave him or her incapable of weighing our merits and deciding dispassionately about whether we were desirable subjects for matrimony. But. alas, most of us are as incapable of experlencing the grand passion as we are of singing in grand opera. Nor is there anything about us to make another go erazy over us. We have to content ourselves with both feeling and receiving a lesser affection. Also science, which has made the world a safer place for us to live in, has | likewise made it a less romantie place, and has robbed life generally of its spontaneity. We have had it so drilled into us that we must count the cost of | what we do, that caution has become a habit, and we cannot let ourselves go even when we would. But perhaps the new way of getting married, with your eyes wide open and taking a look before you leap, 15 better than the old way of going at it biindly. The modern marriage may not be as romantic, but it should have fewer bitter awakenings and regrets in it, for, after all, the old “all-for-love-and-the-world- well-lost” theory didn’t work out very well in actual practice. So I do not think | that you should fecl miffed becausc the girl investigated vou before she said b ‘ DOROTHY DIX. .. TYEAR DOROTHY DIX: T am 25 years old and have a baby and a good husband. What I want to know is this: If I leave my husband and baby for no other reason excepl to have a good time. do you think I will be happy? | T have a girl friend who has left her husband and baby girl and a nice home | and she s enjoying herself. She hasn't seen her baby for six months. Do you | think I will be as happy as she is? RUTH. Answer: Unless you are utterly without heart and consclence, you will not be happy. You will be miserable if you abandon your good husband and child. For a while you may have what you call “a good time,” but that is not happiness, | Happiness comes only with serenity of soul, with the knowledge that you are doing vour duty and fulfilling your obligations, and that you arc leading a | clean, upright life. No man or woman who is doing wrong is ever happy. | You may have hectic moments of enjoyment. You may have thrills and excitement. But that is not happine and, in reality, there is nothing so little | gay as what #s called “the gay life Listen to the laughter in those places where wild men and women gather to m merry. It is the saddest sound on earth and the most mirthless. It is the crackling of thorns under the pot. It is the hysterical noise made by people who have to shout and make a noise to cover up the boredom and the desolation that is in their hearts. Believe me, Ruth, you will find no happiness if you leave your good home | and your fine husband and your little baby to seck pleasure. “A woman can't | shut the door on her past and leave it behind her. You won't be able to forget | the quiet and the peace and the safety of your home. You won't be able to | forget the husband you have betrayed, and there will never be a jazz band loud enough to drown out the wail of your baby crying for its mother. DOROTHY DIX. AR DOROTHY DIX: Iam in love with 15 in love with another girl, but she doc: him. Do you believe that when one loves another person deeply el person is drawn to one? Do you believe that what 15 to be will be? P young man who thinks that he n't care enough for him to marry nough, that MARGIE. Answer: T belleve that what a woman wills to be is mighty apt to be, Margie, and that if she has made up her mind to get a man it is about all over except sending out the wedding invitations. A woman who 15 in love with a man does all in her power to attract bim She makes herself as good-looking as she can, and as agreeable. Besidd it flatters him to feel that he is a shelk who can knock ‘em over without making an effort. man has fancied some girl who didn't respond, to find | ts him is so soothing to his vanity that Many a_heart is caught on DOROTHY DIX 1n a case where the that some other girl loves him and wan it is like pouring oil over a wound. So hop to it. rebound e (Copyright, 1928.) PRESIDENTS QUESTION GAMES PREPARED BY THE NATIONAL AMERICANISM COMMISSION OF THE AMERICAN LEGIO! 5. Under what President was the first high tariff adopted? | 6. What President's wife dled the | year he was elected? 7. Name two Presidents who were tallors. 8. Which President was called “Old Rough and Ready"? 9. Name two men who were three times defeated for the presidency. 10. What President's wife once was a teacher of the deaf? Answers to Questions on This Page of Today's Star. How Many Can You Answer? Thirty million or more people Wil vote for President this year. Do you know who have been our Presidents. how they were elected, what they did, why they are best remembered? ‘These fun and good Ameri- S:mz;.";'rflm: and old ‘_‘R“ enjoy and profit by them. Game No. 4. President started the 1. What Panama Canal? | 2, What had Wilson and Cleveland incommon with regard to parentage? 3. What President’s wife was said to have been proposed to by his politi- cal rival? Eloction i 4. To what church have the largest |jjoiion v number of Presidents belonged? i WHY WE DO WHAT W Pros A BY MEHRAY consclousness. . On the other hand, if yon are trying to forget something Why We Forget. | utes. We forgel beeause we want to forget, ¢ the Freudians Prof. Freud tells of a man who un- consciously misplaced the ook his wife had given him because he disliked her. One day his mother took sick and his wife went to care for her This net reconciled him to his wife. ‘The next time he thought of the book he knew exactly where (o find it. Similarily, it 15 claimed, we muke slips of the tongue and inadvertently say what 18 really on our mind, what we would lke to suy If we dared. You break or lose a fountain pen. ‘The Freudians say you did it because in your subconsctous mind you wanted to get rid of the pen Paychologleally, we forget becuuse we do not ember, The process of recall i at fault in some particular Wo recall what ix fresh in our minds and what has fmpresed us strongly. Practice makes perfect Inomemory as an well as In playing ball Now, an unpleasant experience we do not rehearse. We ernse if from our memory. Hence 1L cannot be res- urrected, ‘The “connections” are rust- ed_ont_and_the fmpulse fails_to reach Boric Acid Good But Not Enough is such a v over the tim of plain boric acid. Iris contains camphar, menthol, witch-hazel, boric acid and It make alive and vi- L1 the cor- 3 ucte and und the upper and lower eyeli 1t raliaves soreness and infla; for you, aparkle and WL oy ann hotile of bile, w ealion Vin PEOPLES DRUG STORES by thinking about it you are doing the very thing that will keep you from for- gett This s why unpleasant like to forgel are among the vivid and unforgetable We sometimes forget the familiar name of a very dear friend. The name seems to be on the tip of the tongue, but will not out. ‘This 15 cnse of mental blocking. ‘Two names are trylng to get there on the same track ‘and block each other, so that neither fs successful. ‘The harder you try the worse it fs. 1f you drop the subject for w while the name “pops” into your head the moment the com- petition s removed Forgetting is sometimes an advan- tage, It glves you a chance to cor- rect & mistake, to learn the right way after you have acquired bad habits In playing o ploce of music, i box- Ik, I n golf game or any skilled act’ you are lkely to make mistakes If you could not forget you would &0 right on making the same blunders Abllity to forget makes it possible to learn, o’ many of our | sertences which we would most | TUESDAY, FTEBRUARY 7, 1928.° WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Rexistered U. 8. Palent Office, AV | &% il R When hunting bull frogs at night along the Eastern Branch was quite an industry as well as a sport, and how s were sold Lemon Nut Cake. Cream one-half a cupful of shorten- ing. Gradually beat three-fourths cup- ful of sugar into the shortening and three-fourths cupful of sugar into four egg volks. Beat the two mixtures to- gether, add the julce of a lemon and the grated yellow rind, and one cupful of chopped nuts, and alternately one cupful of milk and three cupfuls of flour, sifted with three and one-balf teaspoonfuls of baking powder and one- half a teaspoonful of salt. Fold in the four egg whites, then one cupful of floured raisins. Bake in loaf pans in a medium hot oven for about 55 min- Cover with chocolate frosting. Family of 12 on World Tour. With his wife and 10 children, Dr. G. Martinez Zuviria, wim as “Hugo West” is one of Argentina’s fnost famous nov- elists, is touring the world. The child- ren range from 2 to 15 years in age and are attended by three servants. Dr. Zuviria has written nearly a score of successful novels, one of which recently won the Argentine government's liter- ature prize of $15,000, and he is spend- ing the money on the tour. He is now in the south of France. and after visit- ing Germany and Spain will tour the United States. Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Farina with Ralsins. Corned Beef Hash, Chili Sauce. Toasted Muffins. Coffee. LUNCHEON. Creamed Chicken with Green Peppers on Toast. Banana Custard. Wafers, Tea. DINNER. Consomme. Pork Pic. Potato Crust. Spinach. Carrots and Peas. Cabbage Salad. Floating Island. Coftee. CORNED BEEF HASH. Mince one and one-half cups onfon, fry until yellow in butter, add two teaspoons flour, cook 3 minutes more, add little stock or meat extract in hot water, table sauce or ketchup. Cook until onfons are done and sauce is thick. Add cold corned beef, cook 15 minutes, add little vinegar and mustard. Serve hot. BANANA CUSTARD. Two eggs (separated), one-half cup corn sirup, one teaspoon cornstarch, two tablespoons cold milk, two cups botling milk, four bananas (sliced), one teaspoon sugar. Mix volks of eggs with sirup and cornstarch, moistened with cold milk. Pour this into boiling milk and cook until it thickens, stirring constantly. Place bananas in pudding dish and pour custard over them. Add pinch of salt to egg whites and beat them to stiff froth, then beat Sugar into them. Pile on top of custard and brown lightly in oven. CABBAC ALAD. Put through grinder (not too fine) two cups cabbage, one large apple, one-half sweet green pepper, one tablespoon onfon, one and one tablespoon sugar. Molsten with salad dressing alf teaspoon salt Picture it! Muffin size and shape. A butternut-browned, orinkly round top. Nestles in your cereal dish as if it were made to order! That's what a Muttet * looks like, And here's what a Muffet is! Whole whoat, cooked, drawn out to a fine-spun, flmy-thin ribhon, wound round and vound, layer upon layer, ta just the FEATURES. WORLD FAMOUS STORIES SILENCE. BY EDGAR ALLAN POE. (ZAgar Allan Pos. 18 ternationally known Amers H heat known and R4 in an in- Jiterary name. for hik poem wtores aw The Maorgiie " “Th the Floties of “The Mawiie of the Red Death.” ete. “Listen to me,” sald the Demon, as | he placed his hand upon my head. “The | region of which T speak s & dreary | reglon in Libya, Africa—by the borders ; of the River Zaire. And there 1 no|"1&ns of the water liies. * An qulet. there, nor silence, [ (o= Aneciig. and Mefe “The waters of the river have a| 'l Moon ceared to totter up safiron and sickly hue, and they flow | ¥27 '0 heaven not onward to the sea, but paipitate | 7Y -and the i % forever and forever beneath the red |20 the clouds hung moth eye of the sun with a tumultuous and | "7, SUnk 1o their et sonvulsive motion. For many miles on | MAined--and the trees coased to rock— either side of the river's onzy bed s a | "N the water iliis sl pale desert of gigantic water lilles, They | 410 the murmur was heard no sigh one unto the other in that soiftude, | {707, AMONZ and stretch toward the heaven their | fiinc, 27K long and ghastly necks, and nod to and | 023" o fro their everlasting heads. rocked to its foundation. And I lay close within my covert and ohserved the actions of the man. And the man trembled In the solitude—but the night waned and he £at upon the rock. “Then I grew angry and cursed, with the curse of silence, the river. and lilies, and the wind. and the forest, and the heaven, and the thunder, and Gold Taher, ) out from among them like the rushing | > ..~ of subterranean water. And they sigh | , “And m one unto_the other, | the man. and ¥ “But there i3 a boundary to their|!error. And. h realm—the boundary of the dark, hor- d from his han rible, lofty forest. ‘There, like the 'Pon the rock an waves about. the Hebrides, the low un-|%a% 10 woice derwood 15 agitated continually. But | llmitable desert | there is no wind throughout the heav- | 1001 the 1ock |en. And the tall primeval trees rock | Man shudderedq | eternally hither and thither, with a g;'a, x"m fled | crashing and mighty sound. And from | th2t T beheld hi their high summits, one by one, drop| ° everlasting dews. And ai the roots strange poisonous flowers'lie writhing in serturbed slumber. And overhead, with a rustling and loud noise, the gray clouds rush westwardly forever, until they roll, a cataract, over the flery v.all | of the horizon. But there is no wind | throughout t heaven. And by the shores of the River Zaire there I3 neither quiet nor silence. “It was night, and the rain fell; and, | falling, it was rain, but, having fallen, it was blood. And I stood in the morass | among the tall lilies, and the rain fell upon my head—and the lilles sighed one unto the other in the solemnity of their desolation. 1 “And, all at once, the moon arose through the thin ghastly mist, and was a erimson in color. And mine eyes fell | camera made upon a huge gray rock which stood by jand f the shore of the river, and was lighted | a5 Sl by the light of the moon. And the Of the rock was gray, and ghastly, and tall— | missle was t and the rock was gray. Upon its front == were characters engraven in the stone: | and 1 walked through the morass of water lilles until I came close unto the shore, that I might read the characters upon the stone. i “But I could not decipher them. And 1 was going back into the morass, when the moon shone with a fuller red, and I turned and looked again at the rock and upon the characters—and the char- acters sald Desolation “And I looked upward, and there stood a man upon the summit of the rock; and I hid myself among the water lilies that I might discover the actions of the man. And the man was tall and | stately in form. and was wrapped up from his shoulders to his feet in the toga of old Rome. And the outlines of his figure were indistinct—but his fea- tures were the features of a deity; for | the mantle of the night, and of the mist, and of the moon, and of the dew. | had left uncovered the features of his !face. And his brow lofty with | thought, and his eyes wild with care,! and in the few furrows upon his cheex | I read the fables of sorrow, and weari- ness, and disgust with mankind, and a longing after solitude. “And the man sat upon t! leaned his head upon his hand, and | looked out upon the desolation. He| looked down into the low, unquiet shrubbery, and up into the tall, pri- meval trees, and up higher at the ru: tling heaven. and into the crimson | moon. And I lay close within shelter | of the lilies and observed the aciions | of the man. And the man trembled in | | the solitude—but the night waned and | he sat upon the rock. “And the man turned his mcnuon] from the heaven and looked out upon | the pale legions of the water lilies. And the man listened to the sighs of the water lilies and to the murmur that came up from among them. And I lay close within my covert and discovered the actions of the man. And the man trembled in the solitude—but the night waned and he sat upon the rock. “Then I went down into the recesses of the morass and waded far in among the wilderness of the lilles and called unto the hippopotami which dwelt among the ferns in the recesses of tne morass. And the hippopotami heard my call. and came. with the behemoth. unto the foot of thé rock. and roared loudly and fearfully beneath the moon And T lay close within my covert and | ohserved the actions of the man. And | the man trembled in the soittude--but the night waned and he sat upon the rock. “Then I cursed jumes of ron-bo { Rut, as Al | the 1 told m side in the shado he most » Bullet and Air in Film *n a 1 zh an el the glass before a second, use of the camera rece IF IT’S Hemstitehing Picot bdging Pleating dery dinz ding, Rh e Work Buttan Covering [ Holes COME TO Brunschwig’s Formerly Oppenheimer’s he rock and | “A sip is the most that mortals are per- mitted from any gob- let of delight.” —A. FEronson Alcott S T'S not quite true, is it? For you can sip delight from a cup of Wilkins as often as you wish— the elements with the curse of tumult: and & frightfy tempest gathered the hea { where before there had been no wi | And the heaven became itvid with t | violence of the tempest—and the rai beat upon the head of the man the floods of the river came down the river was tormehted into f and the water lilles shrieked withi heir beds—and the forest crumbled be- fore the wind —and the thunder rolled and the lightning fell--and the a Tock ¢ right portion for the morning's appetite. Baked. Toasted, both mh-s'.‘ i i .IAinht us a crumpet. Crisp as potato chips, Crunchy! Crumblesinyiiurmouth, Vitamins, calories, bran, too, Butit's the pleasure of eating it that counts!? With cream and sugar —or with fruit added=Muttets for breakfust tomarvow! The Quaker Oats Co., Chicago,

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