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WOMAN'’S PAGE. Woolen Materials Have Changed BY MARY Dresses of woolen materials aré com- ing back into favor and the number of women who are definitely opposéd to wearing anything biit silk next to their BLACK WOOL CREPE, ONE OF THE SMARTEST MATERIALS OF THE SEASON, WAS USED TO MAKE WEARABLE DAYTIME DRESS. BOWS OF BLACK RIB- gg!)}r FINISH THE NECK AND arms is on the decrease. It is not so much that we have changed as that the woolen materials have changed. The light-weight woolens favored this sea- son are as soft and smooth as silk. Next to wool jersey, there is no material better liked than wool crepe and néever before have materials of this descrip- AUTUMN BY D. C. PEATTIE. Like the French village meérchant, who nightly draws down shutters over the windows of his shop, Nature, as Autumn moves on apace, puts out the lights of Summer, turns upside down or tears open the seed pods, letting the seeds drift down; sees off all the bright- est and most songful of the birds and leaves us, in the boughs and skies, only little hooded brown fellows, stealthy owls and hunger-pinched crows. The rain of gold and orange leaves is over. Already the forces of décay are turning them to mold (no bad fate, perhaps), but still our glory is departed. Even the gentian and aster are hard to find now, lonely by the little rills and Tuns up in the wooded hills. In the ,lrdm folk hasten to put in the last of their Spring bulbs and the already have sown their ardening practice far in Spring. The tidy husbandman tears down the morning glory vine (how gay it looked; how dis- mal now, like Summer resort cottages when boarded up). Against the wall the hard, aromatic, nubbly quinces ripen—or they pretend to. They are never worth anything except in a jelly glass. Up in the hills the paw-paw and persimmon really do ripén, and to that estate they change so suddenly from a tannic puckeriness that, unless kind fate brings you by at precisely the right half hour, you will get nothing tween wormwood and lukewarm mus- tard. Autumn, fragrant, colorful and stirring, 18 almost over, almost it, seems, before it had begun—the short- est and most poignant season of the year, EXCUSES Excuses are of little worth when you in some agreement fail; they merely stir sardonic mirth in those who listen to your tale. You tell & man you'll paint his fenice on Tuesday, when the clock strikes one; and later on, in lan- guage tense, you tell him why it wasn't done. Your grandma had a fainting spell, which made you hustle for the doc; you had to stay till she was well and quite recovered from the shock. Your aunt, perhaps, fell down the stair, while dusting things, or something worse, and_broke some limbs she couldn't spare, and you were bound to act as nurse. There are a thousand standard lies that one can use in such a case, but scorn is in the hearer’s eyes and dour amusement on his face. He may not rant at your expense, but he is say- ing in his heart, “When next I wish to paint my fence, I'll hire an aleck not so smart. In framing falsehoods he excels, but when it comes to keeping troth he does not wear a string of bells, he is a faker and a sloth.” You play this trick at divers times and make excusés good as wheat, then find you cannot earn the dimes you need to pay for what you eat. “He's not reliable,” men say, “his promises are cheap and Joose; when he is hired to put up hay e comes along with an excuse.” And s0 you gain a punk renown that puts | you with the hard luck mobs; all wise employers turn you down when you ap- ly for honest jobs. ‘There's nothing etter than a fame for keeping every pledge you make; the man will lose in every game whosé promise is an empty fake. WALT MASON. Quick Frosting. Remove the skin from one large baked potato and beat until ereamy. Add butter the size of a walnut and beat again. Beat in enough powdered sugar to make the mixture thick and flavor to suit the taste, using one tea- spoonful of flavoring. Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “1 didn't sdy nothin’ lite 16 MEs. ot Y jash 44K6A her to let mé 466 uhe:twmlmmuukanw o " (Capyright, 19289 - MARSHALL. tion been offered in more attractive va- riety. A great many of the new dresses, silk as well as woolen, are provided with a little piping of light-toned silk crepe about the neck. Sometimes there is & collar of the light-toned silk. Alwa this touch,of ht silk ought to made So that it may easily be removed and Tut back into position again, and the clever woman provides herself with a_duplicate collar or m&mg so that when one is taken out be washed another can be put in at once. But whether you wear silk or wool, and whether you weer it with or with- out some such dainty bit of washable silk or lingerie at the neck, you must remember that cleaning bills are neces- sary and that they should have definite consideration in planning your dress budget. Several readers have written asking for directions for doing smocking, which is much used tHis.season not only for children's clothes, but for women's and young girls’ as well. If you would like this week's illustrated circular giving this information, please send your stamped, self-addressed envelope to Mary Marshall, care of this paper, and it will be forwarded to you. | BRAIN TESTS This test involves pairs of sentences; the sentences in each pair express the game meaning, but one sentence is preferable to the other. The object is to pick the better sen- tence of each pair, Time limit, three minutes. 1. (8) I fell into the trench where the wounded soldier lay and knocked over the machine gun. (b) After falling into the trench where the wounded soldier lay, I knocked over the machine gun. 2. (a) With a smile on his face, he watched the dog run away from the cat. (b) He watched the dog run away from the cat with a smile on his face. 8. (a) He was fatally Injured when his car overturned and died an hour later. (b) He died an hour after receivin fatal injuries from the overturning ol his car. 4. (a) When a child, my mother took me to visit her old home. (b) When I was & child my mother took me to visit her old home. 5. (a) After I was injured the doctor declared I was not seriously hurt. (b) After being injured, the doctor declared I was not seriously hurt. Answers. The preferable sentences are: 1, (b); 2, (a); 3, (b); 4, (D); 5, (@) NANCY PAGE Printer Makes Plate for Christmas Cards BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. The three Lacey girls wanted to send their very own Christmas cards. “Can we choose some cards like you and Daddy have?” “Qur cards are expensive, and too grown-up for you girls. Why don't you maké your own?" “Oh, we never could make enough. We know heaps of girls and it would take too long to make a card for each " Their father suggested a way out. Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. November 11, 1861—Maj. Gen. Mc- Clellan’s succeséion to_the chief com- mand of the Army of the United States whs celebrated here tonight by a torch- light procession, a display of fireworks and a serenade at his residence. It was one of the most imposing celebrations ever held in this city. ‘The compliment proceeded from the soldiers of Blenker’'s Brigade, but the rocession was joined by a large num- r of other volunteer soldiers and a great throng of citizens who were eager to honor Gen. McClellan. Thé pro- cession _consisted of about 2,000 infan- try and two companies of cavalry, to= geéther with the citizens. Each man carried a torch in his hand, while bril- liant red, white and blue lights were displayed at intervals along the line. he procéssion _star from the neighborhood of Seventh street and Pennsylvania avenue and marched up Pennsylvania avenue to the President’s Mansion. Entering the White House enclosure by the east gate, the march- ers proceeded past the Mansion and out by the west gate. After marching past the residence of Secretary of War Cam- éron they continued to the residence of Gen. McClellan at the corner of Six- teenth and H streets. Several bands were in the procession and furnished spirited music when halts were made at various points. After a serenade to Gen. McClellan in front of his residence, there were loud calls for him. He appeared for an instant, bow- ed and retired. The crowd kept on call- ing for him to come out and speak, but he did not appear again. Speeches were made, however, by Secretary of Btate Seward, Secretary of War Cam- eron and Gen. Blenker and were receiv- ed_with great enthusiasm. Fireworks were displayed at the Pres- ident’s Mansion, Secrétary Cameron's residence and QGen. McClellan’s resi- dence. In brilllancy and richness they were equal, if not superior, to any ex- hibition of the kind ever given in Wash- ington. The rockets attracted particu- lar attention. As theéy burst high in the air they showed the national col- ors, red, white and blue. But the fin- ést part of the pyrotechnic display was in Layafette Squaré in front of Gen, McClellan’s residence. A magnificent piéce, representing the figure of “Jus- tice” with the national coat of arms surmounted by an eagle, won general admiration. After the fireworks were over the militaty portion of the assembldge marched to its quarters over the Long ‘Brtdge, the soldiers still carrying their orches. OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRIL Heads Up. What a difference good posture makes! How much stronger, abler, handsomer, a child feels when he holds his head up well. We know that if we assume a posture of grief, the mood steals upon us. If we pull down the corners of our rhouths, droop our shoulders and let our hands hang limply, we are mergéd in a cloud of gloom. We know, too, that such moods are not good for us. They leave we do not need that sort of chln’.ln our dally living. What we need [3 tonic cheerfulness, & lifting radiance, a drivln% wer toward success. That is why children must learn to hold their leads high. You can’t hold your head high and feél cheap. You can't lift your eyes to a level above your head and feel weak. Here is what the girls did. Of course, it must be confessed that Claire, the old- est girl, did most of the preliminary work. She was better qualified than her two sisters. She chose three small photographs in profile. Laying a sheet of tracing paper over each face she outlined it carefully. Then she transferred the outline to a sheet of Bristol paper or drawing paper that would take ink. Her father helped her draw ovals around the faces and also draw a spray of holly leaves and berries. The two sisters took turns in curefullg filling in the outlines of profile an leaves with black India ink. Their father inked in the ovals. Then Claire printed the greeting. This was inked in TUE LACEVYS WISH YOV -A VERY MLEP CHRISTMA 1929 with black India ink. Her father told ‘her that India ink was necessary. Other inks would run. This inked drawing was taken to an etcher. He made a plate from the drawing and from the plate he printed the 150 cards the girls wanted. Then they put them in enve- lopes to match and addressed them ready for Christmas mailing. After this hard work they were thirsty. Writé to Nancy Page, care of this paper, inclosing a stamped, self- addres:§d envelope, asking for her leaf let on beverages. (Copyright, 1929.) Trapping the Spirit of Disease, In China when a child beconies ill, a doll is hung before the door of the house. The disease spirit 5 supposed to enter the doll. which in turn is taken down and burned. “New wonderful MELLO-GLO Face Powder stays on longer, does not en- large the p and reproduces a youth- Lifting your head lifts your whole be- ing, body and soul. 80 fm it high and e great difficulty in teaching posture and carriage is tension. fié’fi we tell a child to 1ift his head he im- mtdl.nel{ lifts it on stanchions of stéel. His whole body is tensed and strained. That is worse than useléss,. What we must have is ease, perfect control, har- monious co-ordination. That cannot be had without the right mood. When you want to help a child hold his head up you must first créate in him the mood that lift his head from with- in. Your voicé must havé a note of hope and inspiration, never frritation and despondency. There must be the feeling of rhythm in the atmdsphere, never jerky, high-pitched, nervous feel- ing. Music that calls to the spirit to rise and sing is the best force to us in creating the right mood. ‘That 15 why & stirring march the first thing+in the school day is such & help. A good march played By & musi- cian in the right mood séts a school right for the day. A stirring heéads-up song helps tremendously. Then the teacher takes the situation ih hand, and all day lorg works on the note of heads up. Bhe ought not to have to say “Heads up!” That is too crude an at- tack, and usually meets with resistance. Her work, her presence, her carriage, her voice, her personality, should ery “Heads up!” all day long. 1t is good to stand well, to walk well, to carry one’s self upright. It makes for health of body and physical well being, is greatly to be desired. But the inner reaction is what we crave most for the children. An upright carriage cannot be maintained without thé thought of uprightness, and that thought permectes the whole being of the child. It colors his conduct. It colors him. A cheerful spirit is a mighty force for good. It makes the body sing and lm:in frees the muscles and nerves and all the associated organs from ten- sion. PFreé a child of tension, establish in him the habit of heads up, and you lasting happiness and success. The out- side man reflécts the inner one, and the inner one strengthens and sustains the outer one always. Heads up! DAILY DIET RECIPE NUT DRESSBING. Pecan meats, 1 tablespoon: walnuts or almonds, 1 tablespoon; lemon juice, 5 tablespoons; salad oll, % cup; salt, !z teaspoon; paprika, 1, teaspoon. Serves five or six portions. Cut nut meats very fine or ‘rut through grinder or even pound to & paste and beat in remaining in- lients. Good on plain lettuce earts. DIET NOTES. mcfie furnishes protein and fat. uch lime, iron, vitamins A, B and C present. Can be eaten by adults of avéragé or under weight. ful bloom never obtained from other ys Gurla Andre, beautiful otress, A new French MELLO-GLO unpar- al ness, purest powder madé—its eolor is tested. No more shiny noses with MELLO- |GLO Face Powder—Advertisement, us weaker mentally and physically, and | haye 8ét thé foundation for his ever- | §oF straight lines to raised is this tweéd ensemble with tuni¢ top. Margot uith, wifé of the former British peemier, has asserted that she had mafy nal experiences of “un- traceable communication and tele- pathy,” 4nd she adds, “I think that peo- ple who sét themselves against all this side of life are excéssively stupid.” She set herself, however, against pro- fessional mediums and ‘“expensive seances.” IL 18 interesting to find from Her autobiography that she had an experi- énce approximating that of Mrs. Abra- ham Lincoln, who, as a girl, predicted that she would marry a man who would become President of the United States. Margot Asquith, or, s she then was, Margot Tennant, relates that she once told the Duchess of Devonshife that she had always propheciéd that she “would marry a primé minister and live in high political circles.” 8he did indeed mlrr&flarbert As- quith, and it never will known How much of his distinguished career was ov"tln: to his brilllant and discerning wite. Most interesting perhaps of thé hap- rnmn in which she was concerned hat may be said to come under the heading of psychic phenomena was that one relating to her sister, Laura. Laura was an immensely fascinating personality, clever, subtle, discerning, sympathetic, and Margot Asquith says of her that “she left a deeper impres- sion on the world in her short life than any one I have ever known.” This she attributes largely to the fact that Laura “had to a greater degrée than other ple, a true spirituality, & fe ing of intimacy with the othér world, and a sense of the love and wisdom of God and His plan of life.” This statement assumes 1 sig- nificance when it is remembered l'n'xect-k:a n with the untimely death of ura. Laura Tennant me the wfe of Alfred Lyttelton on May 10, 1885. It was an ideal love match and their brief xtnluln;ted life was one of complete elicity. In April 6f the following yedr a baby was expected. Because A: close relationship of Laura an irgot—in spirit as well as in blood—Margot was sent into the country so that she might not be impressed unfortunately, if Laura should undérgo any extreme U on® departing, Margot t _to Upon dej 3 fgot wen! Laura’s home to say good-bye. She found her sister in a mood which she describes #s “unusual.” Laura had a premonition of disastér. She told Mar- t: Tiam il da i o b 7 3 tnted ot thAt their mother nad had 2 children. sald Laura, “but I am sure 2 kno"" I will die.” On April 17, while riding to hounds in Gloucestershire, Margot was struck We challenge the world Tune b Monday White House Coflse R gt PARIS.—Molyneux 18 one of the few designers who refuse to. sacrifice belts. The nearest he comes to the pulled-in vanlsume Psychic Adventures of Noted Men and Women Margot Asquith’s Sister Predicted Her Death. i BY J. P. GLASS. “ 1 KNOW,” SAID LAURA, “BUT I AM SURE I WILL DIE" on the head by the bough of & tree and %‘“h“"ede tl zoncuuhml of the m‘- 5 e néxt day a telegram arrived, L?lun confined—a 0g\'fy—mul doing well.” On the following Sunday bad news followed. A letter said that Laura was very {ll. Monday came & note telling Margot t0 g6 to London. The physician tréating Margot for- bade her to take the trip. “You'll get erysipelas and die,” he said. His words were useless, She set off for London in the earliest possible train. ‘hough she arrived days before Laura’s death, her sister was uncon- selous and never filzed her. In- deed there séenis to have been but a momenit in thé closing phase, when the poor young wife was recalled to those about her. Openinig hér eyes, oné night, and turn- ing them on Charteris, another sister, she said, “You are hedvenly.” 8l passed out the next morning, shortly after dawn. The story requirés & few more words. On the day when Laurh told of hér premonition of death, Margot, though reassuting her, suggéstéd thaj they kneel and pray that whoever died first should come back to thé other and tell the truth about the next world. They did pfl{.‘ But Margot Asquith says that after Laura's death she never heard “from her or of her.” (Copyr 1029.) S ity 4 A grain élevator to be erected at Prescott, Canada, will cost 00,000. .| eve Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Mothers expect too much of small children. One gathers from numerous instances that their chief expectation is that the child will be quiet and con- ténted. “Now be good, and sit stilll” Being active would seem, in view of of bliss, but the small child has merous stages to go through before he arrivés there. Being active is as neces- sary to him as breathing. ‘The paréent oL Sl any -amount of spanking, 6| rp other method an anhno; sorts to is ineffectual. ~ She should be thankful that this is so, for 8 languid child who is willing to sit etill is the one who should worry her, not his active brother or sister who is “into” mccnfiy I saw a mother driven to the point of tears—tears of anger and fatigue—in her futile efforts to kee, an 18-month-old boy quiet. She sai with eyes raised to Heaven as witpess of her seriousness, “If I ever get out of here, T'll never bring this child back again.”” After an hour on such futile efforts one of the attendants took this child in hand, gave him a féw tongue depressors from the clinic supply to bang on the bench, and he fell to bang- ing them with as much fervor as he had shown trying to run away. When thesé had outlived their interest wé found & paper and pencil for him. He scratched and scribbled with immense fervor and not & “peep” out of him. His mothef grelthed her first long breath in an 0uf. ‘We wonder why mothers expect the impossible. We hear of children—small, small children—who are taken to church and expected to sit erect and quiet for a service of an hour or more. We see children taken calling and ex- pected to keep hands off, and sit on mother's lap and listen to adults chat- ter. If they rebel, as they usually do, they are called naughty children and not so infrequently punished. ‘What do mothers expect? Certainly the impossible. They should provide themseélves with some simple toys that can be held on the lap—crayon and paper, blunt scissors and some paper, a few blocks to be built into a simple Yamm—-n thin n a handbag and will destroy the utter tedium of sitting still. If the child gets “wiggly,” take him out, let him run up and down until he is over the restless stage and ready to sit again. This arrangement is so easy that we wonder it never occurs to these unimaginative mothérs with their in- evitable boxes of crackers or bottles of stale milk, black looks and ready hands. Good Chicken Pie. Use two cupfuls of left-over diced chicken that you have on. hand. This with the addition of four pork chops will make a chicken ple that will serve six people generously. First, sprinkie the chops with salt and saute them slowly with two slices of onion, then remove them and make a gravy by comblnln? one tabléespoonful of flour with the fat in the pan and adding one cupful of chicken broth to it. Any left- over gravy may also be added. Add more salt if needed and a little pepper, nrika, Worcestershire sauce an itchen bouquet, cut the meat from the chops in pleces the same size as the diced chicken and combine the two meats in & deep buttered baking dish. Meanwhile cool mfler of an inch thick in watér for 10 minutes. Ar- rangeé one pint of cooked string beans on the meat with the potatoes ovet them. Cover with a crust brushed with white of egg and bake for 20 minutes in a hot’ oven. Puree of Navy Beans, Soak one pint of navy beéans over ?:gx dntn.w m'en :zld ono“axlnon. oné ot, a sprig of parsley, a little T Sy X spoonfuls of mutton ngs. Boil for 30 minutes & mod: erate oven for an hour. Remove the onion, carrot and parsley and press the beans through a sleve. Add one table- spoonful of butter, and salt if neces- sary, and reheat. Similar purees may be made from red Ridney beans, split or lentins,* Serve with mutton ps or roast. My Neighbor Says: 1f you like the flavor of cloves, try adding a féw whole ones to the fat in which doughnuts are fried. If a little shrédded coconut is lgflnkled over afly plain pudding, it will give it the appearance of of an egg is instead of water when making a mmfl:d plaster, it will hot biister e skin, To brighten pewter; soak the pleces for a day or two in one quart of water to which & plece of potash the sizé of & nickory nut has been added. Take the pewter from the watéf, rub it carefully with a cork dipped in oil, then polish with a chamois skin and whiting. When pewter has once been cleaned, it may be kept bright by washing it with hot water and soap. Which Skin Fault Is Spoiling Your Beauty? 7 Common Skin Faults Chapped Skin Blemishes fold ores Cmnl Sallowness Oilifiess For New Skin Beauty Use a Healing Toilet Cream ~Say Scores of Nurses MONG the million and & hal womeén who are now using this new kind of toilet cream, there are thousands of trained nurses, The: re enthusiastic —they tel] their riends to use it. Their training has taught them what the skin neéds to keep it healthy and béautiful. Science how re¢ognizesthat many of the common skin faults come from tiny hidden poisons that lurk unseen beneath the skin, Blemishes, foughn large pores, coarseness and many other beduty-destroying flaws aré now traced to tHese in- visible poisons. : Ordinary éare is not énough, Soaps and creams that merely cleanse urface fail to reach these in- the s sidious poisons. An antiseptic cream is necessary — a gréaseléss healing cream that will sirk int® the skin, combat poisons, keep the skifi gertii- free, healthy and beautiful. As snow-white and dainty as the finest beauty cream, yet as power- fully healing asan old-fashioned skin remedy, Noxzema Skin fh can be used as a powder base or night cream, Undef its soothing, healin medication, skin tfoubles vani quickly and your skin becomes clearér, smoother, lovelier. Noxzema Cream i8 on sale at all drug and department stores, £ NOXZEMA - | mas features must that can be carried | 38 four small potatoes | and cook in a mod- | FEATURES. MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE BY MOLLIE HOLLYWOOD, Calif., November 11 (N.ANA)~Hard days for the little prodigies of Hollywood. It's nearing Santa Claus time, but they're all per- plexed at having seen Santa on the lots ‘where they're working, some of them in the very picture they are in. Ohrist- be made several months before the holiday season. “Sonny Boy” was hit prett;mmtd by this, He'd been reared on the theory that the one and only Santa appeared on tOhrlstrnn“ :;: wt‘.“{‘he you'd blsen pretty good al 'Oug! year. 'm- aginé his :erplexny at seeing a rotund Santa walking on the lot and speaking in the volce of his friend, Charles King. There were explanations. Sonny Boy listening mvely. Then, sidling up to , he g m'x‘\!.y. Charlie, have you any drag with the real Santa? ‘Cause if have I wish you'd slip him the ides that I want & pony and cart for Christmas.” Perhaps the most consistent com- those who are kind o writ u:kln. has done for the celluloid love scene. Almost all my correspondents say— and rightly—that love is gone from the screen, that love demands silence. And the new technique seems afraid of si- lence. (There are such things as ground noises, by the way.) I began to watch love scenes more closely since my friends about the coun- try called my attention to them. They were wordy, in a stereotyped and uncon- vinéing They didn't catch the audience by the throat. And, what is more, the kidders of the audience began to ply their art once again. This bore is ever present in the movie theater, and needs but a touch to get into ac- tion. But, bé it said to their credit, they seldom kid a fine scene. At such times they forget that.they are past masters of a very cheap gift. Then I chanced into a little theater where the Moore brothers were playing in the first picture in which all three, Tom, Owen and Matt, have appeared. A casual enough story of a gangster and a cop and & young ambulance driver, played by Owen, Tom and Matt in_the order named. . But I have never seen in talkes or out of them such & delicious love scene Tom Moore gave up. It was & vi- ghette of deliclous young romance, ex- quisitely and subtly done; sheer comedy played with a laugh but informed by 2 world of temderness; light as thistles down, yet carrying underneath the most tremendous emotion. When you can juggle emotion in this wise you are &n artist indeed. this the most fascinating voice with just & trace of Irish-English inflection, a charm that is unquestionable, and the fine, sure technique of the artist who has come up through long, bitter years of silént picture training. Here is- a potential star for light, sophisticated comedy that would make new talkie records in the colony if he were rightly cast in the proper sort of a vehicle. A sidelight on a few lives of Abraham Lincoln aré thrown by D. W. Griffith, who has been reading blography prepa- ratory to shooting his famous Lincoln film: “The Tarbell Lincoln I found im| sible. Karl Sandburg read it and wrote a magnificent thing. Lud- wig read Sandburg, went over to Ger- many, and with a couple of secretaries wrote still another life of Lincoln.” talkie well. She had her voice insured !for a million dollars—an excellent idea. | It makes évery one fell that something very rare must be concealéd there to | warrant such extravagant protection. | ‘Whether theré is a there, the feeling of value s established. ‘There has been so much gossip about Mary Pickford's reactions to the first talkie madé with hér husband, Doug- | 1as Fairbanks, that it bécomes a touchy | | subject to handle | which to give a straight report. e consensus of those close to the family |is that Mary Pickford is not énchanted x;'trh her part in “The Taming of the ew.” It will have a London pre- miere, which is also a wise idea. If London approves, Hollywood probably will follow suif it I am betting on New York to stand on its own feét. Adolphe Menjbu faded from the scéne with his beautiful blond wife, Kathryn ?&mr. l?ng sifice. There was much anfare of trumpets over his départure, #0 I need not go into that. The studio says that Menjou's pogt‘l’l:;my was vest- ed almost entirely in jpéan releases and that this became too hasardous in & day of talking pictures. Add to|* Herndon wrote a fine "“po:; d ' Abraham Lincoln. Corinné Griffith survived her first MERRICK. mfln thea nmln local hoods re! ve it. It m “Be- 1 remember aright, but have been named “Seven Reels of Birthday. Cake.” Lon after illiness and & brisk Chne‘im the b on the public, Genties want him to talk. sicker man than the public this may be his. last venture. (Copyright, l”"..v:r) m&-m News- JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in English. BY JOSEPH J. FRISCH. WHO READS SEVERAL NEWS-| DA| PAPERS, BESIDE A NUMBER OF ADVOCATE TWO SUNDAYS A 3 WEEK [N THE PROPOSED -mmu CALENOAR 9 “Beside” means “by the side of; apart from.” 1t should not be confused with “besides,” which means “ih addition to.” “Besides & number of books” 18 the cor- rect form. We say “I sat beside him"; “he was beside himself with joy"; sides this, we have more in the house.” The verb “advocate” (ad-vo-kate) means “to suj or recommend publicly”; as, ‘“‘ne advocated a large navy.” Theé noun “advocate” means ‘‘one who recom- mends or su] & cause”; as, “he was an advocate of a large navy.” o Residences now being erected in S‘h!lmghll, China, are semi-foreign in style. delicions jusi Try a handful of Rice Krispies right out of the red-and-green package. Golden bubbles of flavor that melt in your mouth! Serve for breakfast with milk or cream. Rice Krispies are deli- cious in a dozen different ways. Children are wild about them. At your gros cer’s. Oven-fresh. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. RICE KRISPIES ‘Theé last Jannings picture shot by THE MIXING TWO-THIRDS TAKES PLACE IN The superior results achieved with Rums ford dre due 10 its two-thirds of ite ONE-THIRD TAKES PLACE IN THE right flavor! The right texture! Th degree of lightness! Tb:‘%uflitiu you moot. Hfilf sire in your ¢akes and by perfect leavening. else but hot breads are ereated Leavening with Rumford can’t be tfect because Rumford is :noym that its leavening action _takes place in the perfect proportion every time. Constant laboratory control in the manufac« ture of Rumf quality in évéry ean, insures uniform strength and Giye your family the benefit of healthful e A LR ing the advan leavening. Next time er Rumford. ect ! you order grocerie THE RUMFORD COMPANY, Evecutive Offsts, RUMFORD, R. 1. RUMFORD ALL- PHOSPHATE BAKING POWDER THE PRRPEET -rwo-wags LEAVENER