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MY HUSBA Adele Garrison ND’S LOV REVELATIONS OF A WIFE AR AA R A AR L A A Al The Natural Question Lillian strangely Asked Madge Knowing that Lillian detosts winded explanations—indeed, she most makes a fetich of tersencss tried to compress to few words my story of Mamis eloaks, which she had Katie into hiding in our attic bizarre sequel in which Harry wood had figured Before 1 fuirly dropped into a chair and cupped chin in her palms in the character fstic attitude so fami 1o for several eternity-like minutes 1 had finished she did not relax attitude, When onE 1 possibl and the wheedled and its I nder had gun she her and After the she finally rose from ehair, looked furtively at mouth, Yes, 1 had not been mistaken Ftched deeply around it were the tiny lines which always indicate mental stress in my Dbrilliant friend who prides herself upon her ability to con ceal her emotions, Only those who Jove her, and know her intimately, arc able to read the secrot of these tiny lines, the only indication her face vver [ 4 that she is disturbed by any problem confronting her, “How long can 1 have that girl out there?” Bhe swept her arm toward the living room where Harry Underwood was guarding Mamie. “As long as you like 1 replied promptly, "I made that plain to her before she came with me. But—you'll find her slippery.” “1 know,” Lillian replied soberly, “put—1I think 1 can put the fear of Allah into her.” “If you can't, the job never will be done,” 1 replied with conviction, perfunctory that 1 knew she had heard me only with her sub-con- sciousness, and she began pacing up and down the room, an emotional outlet she never permits herself un- Jess with some one who knows her as well 1 do. Suddenly she stopped and faced me. “Don't get to worrying over this," ghe said, and there was no need for her to mention Dicky's name, She knew that creeping in sinister fashion along the tortuous path of my thoughts was the insistent little query as to Dicky's possible innocent, chival- ric but disastrous involvement with Mollis Fawcett's only too patent re- eponsibility for the costly fur cloak “This new development of yours hasn’t complicated matters any,” she went on. “Instead, I think it has simplified things, although there's quite a bit of work ahead of me, Still, 4f you can lend me your apartment little longer- & LAllian Is Worried She smiled a bit wanly at me, and 1 gave her the warm ageenting nod which 1 knew was still she wished. That there was some- thing on her mind other than the problém of the furs was plain, and T had a shrewd surmise as to its nature, I was not surprised, therefore, when she gave me a soul-prohing look from her still-beautiful eyes, and asked quietly, but with a curious little ef- fect of breathlessness: “Madge, what do you think Harry's connection with this? does it happen that he is able to make chess pawns out of the des- perate men you described as helong- ing to the gang of bootleggers who nearly did for you? Do you think—" She paused uncertainly, and I fin- ished the question for her and gave her my answer promptly. There never is any use beating about the bush with Lillian. “That he is their leader, T do not see what other conclusion there can be. Do you?” “No—0—0." There wuas hesitation in her manner, something rare with her. “And yet—one never can tell about Harry. He revels in the ‘name without the game' as a melodrama- loving small boy might. “I do not think he ever has re- eovered from the experience he had as the young son of a particularly rigld clergyman,” she said. “As a of the angwer How | SAAAAL LAY O1d Cap hoy, Harry w Colilers and the ¢ shey vontiscated b K When | i 1o sMUEE into the house, overed and ading used but " s dise finished r he socond-hand old things fact that wWas Erown Aroun book loct ail 1) wea unid vo But he o1 always mourned the r found, and onding ol Complery” var din anybody e\er » nd 1 think st things he does are hid 80 hoped, hows wus going stralght know, hut 1 feeling that 1 am for him, and if this criminal of them he could ki A DimesN Har mplex ry has v i . siniled, 1 hizarre 1 1 " he help the responsib mised up with lue I's never wome utterly 1 ean now he Is 1 if moved by some remembranee, down at her hands which letter at which sl when she had from the letter hox the rest of the o upon the table when she « living room, but unobtru- | hiad kept this one, 1 did not need the sight of the heautiful, old- tashioned chirog to know the writer, although the script was fam- | fliar to me, | Robert Savarin had penned the letter which L &l A she still clutehed the looked gazed 5o intently the mall had laid hy wee Her Own Weird” That the old, old conflict hetween Lillian's heart and her “Don Quixote of a conscience,” as Dicky dubs her supersense of justice, was being waged savagely T did net need extraordi- nary divination to know. Her mask was down hefore me, land the face bent toward Rebert Savarin's letter was twisted with un- happiness. She had not yet read it, hut that it contained an eloquent ap- | peal T was sure—an appeal that she | would find hard to reject. ! Her shadowed face made get the rancor T had felt | Robert Savarin for his attitude toward Lillian's govern- | ment work—an attitude which T sus- | pected had beer® responsible for the | |apparent estrangement between them | and turped my wrath toward | Harry Underwood, guarding the girl, | [ Mamie, in the living room, and await- ing the result of our conference. | | Why, T asked myself angrily, hav- ing once gone out of Lillian's life, | |could he not have remained out of it, instead of turning up at this in- | opportune moment to give her ten- | |der heart and sensitive conacience |2 chance to question their responsi- | bilities for his deeds? | With feminine inconsistency, my | | anger waxed hotter with the remem- | brance that it was utterly unrea- | sonable. Harry Underwood had not | sought Lillian out. It was to provide | | me—and my errand—with safe con- | duct to New York that he left to their | {own dangerous devices the unruly and | | treacherous men comprising the gang | | of bootleggers of which he, to all ap- | pearances, was the leader. | But where Lillian’s happiness concerned I cannot be fair, any mor than T can find more than lip jus- | tiee for anyone who, innocently or | otherwise, causes unhappiness to ihicky or Junior, and I rashly put my choler into words, “Responsible for him!" T echoed her words, scornfully stressing the | pronoun. “Responsible for Harry Underwood! Really, Lillian, T don't want to think I've been mistaken in my estimate of our mentality all |these years, I always have given yon | credit for a level head crammed full of common sense, but a speech like that g “Makes you think it's knobby and filled with mush instead?” she in- terrupted with a wan little smile. *“I {can't blame you for your strictures, | Madge, for 1 probably would say the | same thing to you, were our problems reversed, And don't mistake me. I ,am not so foolish as to blame myself me for- toward unexpected | is s Letter from Leslie Prescott to Leslie Prescott, Care of the Secret Drawer, Continued. "“We are never tinued Ruth. “We have moments of ecstatic satisfaction, but they do not last. Yet I think that every one, man or woman, must have a companion spirit who is more or less an afinity of one'swoul, in whom one is sure of sympathy and understanding. Ifoth men and women get this in a tor or lesser degree wives or their husbands marriage makes yokefellows “l was ever, was prevish almost brutal, outbursts were made in his actio though at the very mi able was a subtle that he had me inta some kir daily life, the same did not » 1 have so one in all the 1t is to look after Ruth, 1 did no fdea that you “I didn’t want 1 belicve it have been mars arated through '« standing.” “Are you sure ter Burke, Ruth “No, I'm not T kne m satisfied,” con- from their Happy man unhappy, woman or a and Harry, He sometime not with happy first six months exacting and I know now that these iti and temper times to justify himself n regard o me time t made ism al- m ey yo com Sure that would that W Brsides you, ms griedd who stood by me when 1 teal enlitary alter out 18ar, he was the ona ed friends most, T could go on living| without him, however, just as I went| on living without Harry; and you know Mrs. Browning said: Unless yow can die when the dream | done | fear to call it loving. Oh wild which only of the Walter are the never “I've never had emotional thrills people s of love, T tingled | finger tips when he touched | Indeed, I did not feel this | in his arms and| lingeringly when he left. | t grows warm and I| feoling Fatisfaction when his impassion love words any for most deelare symp to my my arm. when he kigsed me Yot my 1 read to me It says took me h 1 | ogl he am his on what for 1 divine to me." will depend it and what he thinks, 1 intuitive thoughts he cor “What with the ehop | when you give " 1 asked help- esely | “That is a bridge we will not crows till we get to it,” an 1 Rnth with | Then she changed the | ly, as she always does wishes to & more thought have been talking about. | “1 gaw a good deal of friend, | | aliy Atherton, while gone, She's a looking ercature in tha 1 never | known who secr nt unto he without being v cgotistical i don't like her, “No, 1 don “Why not?" “1 am not sur like but 1 it L Emile i jeet ahrup when she ¢ to what we you you wer queer way of hers, . W woman £0 Kuf- par R#th Ath of a frirnd to & £in he 1924, NEA (Copyr NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, JULY 5, 1024, I nonest him 1 was for ow Har 1 think nough 1o te shortcomings he would you, 1 stralght through the years whes his wife He has told many times," 1 nodded a gratif watior And my con ect of he who left m I nodded the be I kept at ne, with | struck o i assent emphasis, 4 she the at cor on I icnce 18 separation remember asse 1 eould not spea the remembrance of that time, and t grave affrent whieh | Harry Underwood had given the wem- | an wha had by him se faith- fully, alwaya me & choking clear the our sul for stood gives sensation Rut I am not sn need me *he certain that thar pa went on, doesn't W orse ever now 1 1 felt for her amade me The rut 1 yon, b you are you asked he wants ed perceptibly, and with quick contrition 1 eried out Oh, forgive me, Lillian! 1 " she that love 1 didnt mean it that way Hush, ehild!" Don't know speaking through for my happiness? 't everything you in a duty=- o “You have a duty to only one in world,” 1 retorted de. | terminedly ‘with the feeling that 1t might be months hofore 1 found Lil- | lan again off guard, which her trous | bled indecision uncovered to my gaze, | and that I must make the most of the opportunity, “That person Is your daughter Murion, And if you think her happiness would not be bet-'| ter conserved with- 2 I was glad when she cut short my | sentenge, for, iriously enough, 1 found that T was not half as en-| thusiastic In pleading Robert Savarin's | cause as I feit 1 ought to be, The | strong, vibrant image of Harry Un- derwood in the next room came per- sistently to my mental vision, It was a8 though the undeniable fascination | which he has for all femininity was affecting hoth Lilllan and me, even though our common sense vigorously snid tenderly you're only f me, fear it happiness know, There pers | won the | protested, “I know, Madge,” Lillian said | firmly, “everything you would say, and much that you would leave un- uttered out of considération. But I| must ‘dree my own weird’ no matter what the consequences. At any rate, 1 can decide nothing toda There is much more urgent business on and | than either Harry's welfare or my hap- piness,” “Are you not going to read your | letter?” T tried one last appeal, | “Not now," she said decidedly, but | 1hands of 1 noticed that instead of lowh she tugked it inte and left it there, resting against heart, while she turned toward the ving reom where Havey Underweod awalied her laying &t her dress, toh Ping Matehing sets of eollar and @ pine are very practical, sincg ! vogue for separate collars -ng eufis requires something of this sort uff h Mosale Varvings Earrings formed of mosaics of very small bits of g are very novel and pendants of the same formation are equally se, Flowers Popular Noutonnaires of sweet peas, forget. me-nots and eombinations of amall flowers are worn on all the tailleurs and the eoat dresses, Felt and leatheg are being com- bined in millinery, crowns of felt be. ing joined to Jeather brims, or eutout offects of felt showing the leather be- neath are popular, Taffeta Dresses Taffeta drosses are being advocated for young giris, and they are made most attractive by bouffunt skirts and crisp organdie collars and frills, Paris Novelty novelty from Paris is tha use of black and white serge and china buttons on a sport dress of buff chambray, A Test for Jelly Jelly is done when & very little poured from & spoon forms a single large drop and breaks quickly away from the spoon. Gray Popular Gray grows in favor since it shades after washing chiffon press it while combination that is so popular, Ironing Chiffon After washing chi on press it while #till damp with a warm but not hot fron. Sun Aids Keys The keyboard of a piano should not be kept covered all the while, since exposure to sunlight is one of tha best preventives against yellowing keys, Stains on Steel Rub stains on steel knives with a cut potato dipped in scouring briek. FABLES ON HEALTH' ON BLOWING NOSES Dirty might be found upon the Mann children, par- ticularly after they had been playing | in the strets and back yards. | This was always more than a lit- | tle annoying to Mrs. Mann, who | tried to teach them to Kkeep their noses clean. . | And like most mothers there was ona thing she could not tolerate: | that was the picking of the nose with their fingers. Alas this is not noses generally a (eonfined to children and, hesides be- a practice disgusting to most | people, is most unsanitary. Many infections have resulted, Children playing about, paying lit- tle attention to what they handle suddenly jab a germ covered finger in the nose and send them into the body. Also few people blow their noses properly. One nostril should he closed by pressure of the handkerchief and each nostril should be bhlown sepa- rately. There should be no more force used than is positively necessary, as serious troubles have risen from this cause, The Adventuresf KaggedyAu Gruelle Bp au Ka%gedy Andy ' LyJo wmy “First Minga the Witch bothers us, then her sister Munga the witch both- ers us!” Raggedy Ann said 8s he watched Munga rolling away in the nice little house on wheels, “Aha!" Munga cried, "I am going back after Minga, and when we re- turn, my! You'd better watch out, because we shall take the magical hobby horse and the two maglc hooks ¢ from you!" Dear me!” the poor “What had we better do, Raggedy Ann?” The poor man was a nice person the Raggedys had found sit- ting in under a tree in the deep, deep woods and they had given him a lot of lovely pan cakes for breakfast and had let him ride with them upon the | man eaid, | | | a pig, or a rabbif, or anything | do that, 1 “You can leave me here! man said. “Indeed!"” Raggedy Ann “And have the two mean old witches return and work magic on you? 1 should say not!"” “Huh!" the nice poor man “Who's afraid of two mean old witches? Not me I can tell you! I'll thump them on the heads,jfhat's what I will do!” “I guess you don't about magic, do you?" asked the poor man, “Not very much!" the poor man re- plied the poor replied. said, know much Raggedy Andy hen T guess you don’'t know that mean old witches can change you into else have very Andy wish, if charms!"” they Raggedy they may magical said “Dear me! T didn't know they could zgedy Andy!” the poor man said wouldn’t be any fun if they changed me into eomething be- | sides my very own self!” | and “If we only had a nice little wagon harness, you could hitch me up 1o the wagon and the nice poor man | Raggedys rode upon (2 Jetoms Groatte “You don’t know much about magic, do yon?" Raggedy Andy said. roof of the house on wh “Mean old Munga the thrown mud in the lovely soda water fountain!” R dy Andy | S0 we can not have ice cream | Maybe we had better get up- | back of the magical hobt and have him carry us as he can way through the Mingza and witch had | ice eream sodas th Torse on fa leep | deep, Munga wnods hefore turn! “But a1 hobhy s not arge enouzh to carry the poor man and us too!” Raggedy Ann eaid. | the m hors | around | the little house on wheels, lickity split {4na out upon the front porch, waving while you back!" could ride in the wagon, my horse suggeseted. “Oh! That's the ver) gedy Ann said as she got hook. 1t only took Raggedy Ann moment to find out how to make a very vely little wagon with red wheels and a nice set of harness, Then Raggedy Andy and the poo man hitched th hobby horse to the nice new wagon, They had hardly finished this when the hend in the path came h thing!" Rag- out / her magic a ind ghouting for the Rag- witchag their arma gedy to wait, were the two Minga and Munga. did not wait to have the witches work magic upon them, They hopped up- on the hobby horse's back and the nice poor man got in the wagon. “Giddap, hobby horse!” Raggedy Andy and the hobby horse, pulling the little wagon behind him daghed away down the path, leaving the houge on and the two howling witches far behind, eried wheels | e Clhuib | the But the Raggedys | | | | REGIN HERE TODAY, The war left John Ainsley, a man | of education and breeding, unfit for work He becomes a master erook, “To prey upon thieves (that shall be my career,” he deeides "Feor thief is pobbed, where may he for redresy?" Ainsley visits the Jardin des Nym- phes in Paris with two American ae- quaintances, A tall, white-haired man is pointed out to him a8 White Eagle, The White Eagle, it appears, is a brilliant erook whe never has fallen into the elutches of | the law The White Eagle is In the leompany of & gross, vulgar-seeming man and woman, Ainsley suspoets that the White Kagle is manipula- ting a swindle He finds out the names of the man and woman-—then leaves his friends and returns to his apartment, NOW GOYON WITH THE STORY I find that one thinks hetter in | bed than any other place, Un- dressed, then, with cigarettes on @ stand beside me, T pondered the | strange relationship which I had seen evidenced tonight, fance between the White Eagle, a notorious though unpunished erimi- nal, and Mr, and Mrs, Josiah Higgins, of Cincinnatl, Ohio I wondered that T had not [ nized the Higginses at first glance, £ti11, the photographs of them, which had. appeared in the American and Enropean press, had evidently heen {retouched to a degree, not instantly recognized paid proper fribute to glory hy immediately their names, Who in the newspaper reading {world haa not heard of Josiah Hig- | gins, who had been a multimillionaire hefore the war, and who was now | popularly reputed to he worth at least a billlon? Statisticians had { estimated how many times his for- ‘tune, if reduced to dollar bills, would | girdle the globe, how many times it wonld rebuild the Pyramids if re- duced to silver coins, And other gtatisticians had solemnly affirmed that it cost thirty thousand dollars to dress Mrs. Higgins for breakfast, and at least a million and a quarter properly to clothe and ornament het for dinner. Their extravagances had hecome a matter of international awe. Also the queer parsimony that accom- panied their extravagance was known to all the world, hoasted that he never gave a dollar | to charity, and that he never money., They tipped outrageously, but Higgins haggled with his waqrk- the faces, 1 the Higgins fdentifying ! men, and was probably the most cor- | | dially hated employer in America, They had assailed the gates of fashion in New York, and their re- buffs had become histo! They had | failed to impress Mayfair and Higgins proudly | lent | recog- Copyrhn oif Omeeyed Mem | ital look | | became profuse and sincere the | What was the basis of the acquain- | | not read this morning's Cri de Paris And if T\had | the | | Faubourgs as well as Fifth avenue, | but they were in a fair way toward ercating a fashionable society of their own, if fashfon he judged, as it fre- | quently is, by the amount of news- paper space accorded it. And this couple talked confidential- IL\‘ with such a person as the White | Eagle! The thought of blackmail | entered my mind, but I dismissed it {at once, If the White JFagle had been threatening the millionaire, the | manner of each of them would have | partaken of strain. No, they had been talking business. What business? business could exist. between the White Eagle and Josiah Higgins? 1f Higgins had had a son or daughter who could have become entangled in some underworld affair, 1 could derstand that the White Eagle had been called upon for aid. ut the couple were childless. | If Higgins were as foolish as he was charitable, I could have guessed at a solution of the problem that puzzled me. I could have imagined that the White Eagle was surrep- | titiously disposing of stolen goods to the millionaire, But Higgind was too sane to indulge in that sort of shady barter, if he were not too honest. I tossed upon the bed; I fumed and fretted and smoked a score of cigar- ettes, Somewhere in this relation between the criminal and the million- aire lay an opportunity for me, if only T had eyes wherewith to see it. For whatever the relation between Higgins and the White Eagle, it must be something underhanded, even though I could not guess, why the millionaire should descend to such a matter, The White Eagle was a crook; a crook does only ecrooked business, whether his partner honest or otherwise, Thot is axio- matic. ~ But where in the axiom lay a profit for me? I awoke with a headache; slept little, and that little had interrupted by dreams in which the | White Eagle took a fortune from | Josiah Iliggins, while I looked on, | powerless to abstract the [ from the so-called supercrook. | 1 tried to ecat hreakfast; hut the | combination of too much wine and too little sleep had killed my appetite. | T was nervous, restless, and so I went {for a walk, 1 crossed to the Left Bank, wandering aimlessly, my mind | intent on the puzzle, solution of which I felt meant profit to me, and finally found myself in the neighborhood of fthe TLuxerboug The walk had cleared my had, and appetite had come to me, I walked on to Ioyot's and ordered hreakfast. Food put me n a more philosophical frame mind. After all, T might be deluding myself; Higgins might have made the acquaintance of a notorlous crook imply for the sake of the thrill that some people gain from such an ac- quaintance, At any rate, it did not behoove me to wear out my nerves in imagining problems that, having no existence, could have no solution. And yet 1 was a flections; for ter all, they simply coifessions of my own in- ability to meet a situation and make |it yield a profit. | Deepite my resolutions, | think no more of Higgins and the | white Fagle, they were both in my mind as, turning a corncr into the Rue des Saints Peres, 1 collided with What 1 had W then, to be | been | fortune | of | hamed of these re- | e| possible | | my eyes filled with tears. un- | Somes Roche 1004 NEA Sewice Inc a group of people standing before a doorway 1 muttered an Aapology, stepped back, and neted that the pers son of the group with whom 1 had inte most violent contact——he had fallen to the ground--was.blind in one eye, 1 bent over swiftly, and helped him to his feet, My perfunctory apology Reeing that he was poorly dressed, 1 ven- tured to offer him a coin He seized it greedily, and 1 would have passed on, only that I noticed that the rest of the group were all blind in one eye Other groups stood across the street, in the strect, and farther down the narrow sidewalk on which T stood, And I noticed that every single one of them suffered the same affliction; they were all blind in one eye, I suppose that my was reflected in my man to whom 1 had gratuity hughed at me “Monsieur is amazed, yes? 50 muny of us is strange?" “Is this & hospital here?" T asked, pointing at the building before which we steod, He shook 1yis head it is the home of a pa afflicted such we, amazed horror face, For the presented the To see “No, monsieur, on of all the Monsieur has I shook my head, and he thrust into my hand a copy of the paper, folded back to expose an advertise- ment, I read it lamely in my fal- tering French. Translated, it ran: “A gentleman whose son, having lost an eye for France, bore his —_——— THEY WERE ALL BLIND IN EYE. wound proudly, despite his affliction, until his death by accident recently, wishes to honor the memory of that noble son by kindnesses to those sim- ilarly afflicted, The gentleman will devote part of his large fortune to the founding and maintenance of a ciub for one-eyed men, 1t will not be limited only to those who lost their sight in the war against the cursed Boche. All men who are without the sight of one eye are eligible to the priviieges of the club, Those interested are requested to apply to Number—, Rue des Saints Peres, be- so typically I'rench in sentiment, and It was a charity a trifie too bizarre for Ameri- can taste, but its kinduess would ap- peal to the generosity of any country. I placed another coin in my infor- mant's palm, and hurried away from the grotesque scene, But at the first corner I stopped, turned, and stared after a man who had passed me. It was the White Eagle; and all my interest in him, which had evaporated while I read the strange advertisement, condensed and flowed back into my brain. And then interest became amaze- ment, for he entered the house be- fore which the groups of blind men stood. Immediately upon his en- trance a servant came to the door and beckoned to the unfortunates. Iive minutes later they were all within the house, I waited outside, at a convenient carner. Somehow or other I could not helieve that this grotesque ad- vertisement contained all that was of intevest, Of course, crooks are no- toriowsly impulsivé, given to streaks of extravagant generosity. Neverthe- less, 1 waited, One by one, the blind men hegan to emerge from the house, All of them seemed happy, as though in- eredible good fortune had come to them. Finally the man whom I had tipned appeared. 1 accosted him, and he heamed upon me, “Ah, it is my generous American!" “Well, did you join the Club?" I asked. (Continued in Our Next Issue) To Polish Gold Nou can produce a brilliant polish on gold or silver by covering it with a paste of sifted whiting and am- monia, and permitting the paste to dry on the silver surface, Then brush off with soft brush and polish with chamois, Poland Bank Withdrawing Marks From. Circulation Warsaw, July 5.—The Bank of Po- land has published its balanag sheet for May. The bank's asscts are $14,- 000,000 gold, $36,000,000 ‘in foreign currencies, and $23,500,000 in com- merelal securitic Liabilities show 000,000 of bills in circulation. or the time being marks are also in eireulation with the zloty bills. The | total amount in circulation, zlotys and marks, is $72,500,000. As from June 1 the government began to withdraw mark bills with a view to having only Zloty bills in cireulation by July zloty bills in circulation. (A Daily Monu for the Stout and Thin) FAT AND LOSE WEIGHT Hreakfast—One-half eup rhubarb, 2 small pleces erisp gluten toast, hot water Launcheon—One eup clam bouillen, | 1-2 eup steamed spinach with 1 hard. | boiled egg, 1 whole wheat roll, 1 eup | of akimmed milk, Dinner—Two thin slices cold lean roast heef, 1 new potato with 2 tahle spoons white sauce, 2 tahlespoons car- |rots and peas, 1.2 head lettuce, 1.8 | pineapple ple, Bedtime—0Ope cup skimmed milk, Total calories, 1182, Protein, 201; fat, 268; carhohydrate, 623, Igon, |.0188 gram, | Pineapple Ple, One-half cup grated pineapple, 3-4 cup sugar, 1 cup pineapple juice, 2 tablespoons cornstarch, few grains salt, 1 egg. Cook sugar, pineapple and juice for |twa minutes, Stir cornstarch to a |smooth paste with a little cold water, Add to fruit thixture and cook, stir- ring constantly until thick and clear, Add yolk of egg well beaten, Turn in- to a baked ple shell, cover with the “white of an egg heaten until stiff and dry with one tablespoon sugar, Brown in a moderate oven, Total calories, 1805, fat, 330; carbohydrate, N066 gram, Protein, 1214, 61; Iron, EAT AND GAIN WEIGHT Breakfast—One-half cup stewed rhubarb with 12 raisins, 1 codfish and potato puff, 4 tablespoons egg sauce, 2 hran muffins, 1 tablespoon butter, hot water, Mid-morning lunch—One cup whole milk. Luncheon—One cup clam bouillon with 2 tablespoons whipped ecream, 1-2 cup steamed spinach with 1 hard- boiled egg and 2 tahlespoons mayon naise, 2 whole wheat rolls, 1 table- spoon preserves, 1 tablespoon butter, 4 tablespoons steamed cherry pudding, 2 tablespoons whipped cream, 1 glass fced tea with sugar and lemon. Afternoon tea—One cup orange juice, 2 peanut butter and whole wheat bread sandwiches. Dinner—One cup créam of aspar- agus soup, 2 slices cold roast haef with 2 tablespoons horseradish cream sauce, 2 new potatees with 4 table- spoons cream sauce, 4 tablespoons buttered carrots and peas, 1-2 head lettuce with 2 tablespoons French dressing, 1 dinner voll, 1 tablespoon butter, 1-6 pineapple pie, Bedtime—One cup whole milk. Total calories, 3971, Protein, 467: | tat, 1594; carhohydrate, 19811, Irom, .0201 gram, For Chandcliers brass chandeliers by spong- ing with hot vinegar and salt, then wash in soapsuds and polish with | flannel or chamois dipped and moist- {ened with a bit of oil. Clean Bathing Suits | Bathing capes and suits and pa- jamas for beach wear are made of rodier fabrics with crude patterns. THE YOUNG LABY ACROSS THE WAY | | | | ] { Bl Basinces in politics T il b appoted th i office except from motives of pure political expediency. ~ GOOD MANNERS™ 1 Waits in | | On an exceptional occasion, such as paying a visit of condolence or inquiring for a convalescent, when the question as to whether he will be received is necessarily doubtful, & gontleman does not take off his coat | or gloves but waits in the hall or re« ception roocra with his hat in his Lhand.