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sessse | MY HUSBAND’S LOVE Adele Garrison's New Phase of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATU BAILY FASHION SENVIOE DISTINCTIVE AIR of |\ of ge flat erepe | listinetion hy This | achieves unigue insert em broidery outlined bl ttons that attach by means of loops [The dreas itsolf, you will notice, is @ an s | wWith & row of FOIIIISTIIINIIPIVIPPNIPIPTIRIPIRIIPVITPIIPRTRIRRIONS | porfectly stralght tube affulr with hand to he rising, held out his “Shall danee ™ for perhaps ten minu YO |y surprise, | found renewed A pleasurahle | whie 1 had not Harey Underwool's verged sharply wife and his Dieky and me Dicky used to hotter duneer in the universe 1 Harry Underw Loand in th days 1 had shared his gpin sep waw perfectly fitted m when dancing with him 1 ways forgot the animosity nga him which generally lay deep in conseionsness He had lost found in the he ox. | 08P danee te e |1 Pt away the prot Qish | MY Puritan was frun e | MY trying to register uggn my n fal rotina, and gave mysclf up to yment of the moment It was upon our fourth floor that 1 beeame eyos following me, rather sub-conseious sen Who is the Masked Person Mared At Madge? od uid liking for sen me asked hat we whieh Harry Undorw member my inordinate food | was sure, and | therefore was not surprised when after an hors d'esurre of anchovies and caviar, the waiter brought elam lowed by oups of steaming clam broth T'he portion of hoth appetizers and cocktails were smalier than the ors dinary and 1 gniged another spes clal touch of my escort's. A dinper he orders has a number COUraLS, but all the earlier ones are curtailod in quantity, while their quility=—and novelty—are aceentuatod REd it was when the came ¢ that My sparkling eyes and that of a benevolent Santa Claus, told pected me espe conteats of the which the waiter were. performing I often wonder thoughts bencath emnity of waiters they serve, ‘That they often per- form their functions with a mental “tongue In the check” I am very sure, The contents of the dish genuine enthusiasm, however, gustatory soul, which found sion in quick speech: “Oh! Roasted escargots!”™ 1 claimed gleeful) “Wherever did | you find them? 1 haven't seen Shy " were concealed by maaks there, and T knew that the one of them were fixed upon me, That w all too shor experic enjoyed sl ife path i that intimate " from vocktails, fols most friey sy there was third Underwood's ike school COurse fow soconds and deliber none firat ether, rom conselenec his » in expressio Sunday me that inlly to silvor-covored served rite what 1he the reverential hefore the dishes me enjoy i or renl %ol are round consel It ation, of was ings, and T furtively turned my h toward the direction from whic hind felt the glanc IF'rom bencath my eyelashes 1 {the dais upon which the performe waited hetween turns, A group dancers whose hrought 1o my expres- T b rx- of rs fn st Harry is Reminiscent “Since the war,” Mr, Underwood supplemented, with a triumphant simle. “Neither has anybody else to ! apeak of. But there's a genuine | I'rench chef in the kitchen here, and wherever there's a Irench culinary exeprt, you'll find snail “Don’t cull them that, A petulant little shudder, the edge of my appetite,” “Pardon He grinned mischiev- ously. jut you ought to have soul above the alphabet, D'ye r member how Dicky and Lil used to glower while you and I reveled in this course?"” ‘I don’t want to," 1 retorted, as T began the delicate task of extract- ing . the tempted roasted morsel from the tiny hot shell. “If I did, 1 should rememher Dicky's com- ments on the dish and probably send half my portion away untasted. “He had some vocabulary, the old dicky-bird!” my husband's oldest friend said reminiscently, and then after a little silence, he spoke ahb- ruptly: “Them were the time, old gal! Them were the time: There was an intonation in voice which, caused me to"look him sharply, Was it possible he regretted the folly which cost him Lillian's wifely comradeship, even though romantic affection never had entered into their union, or was his repining simply a wish for the return of the macial evenings which he, Lillian, Dicky and I used to spend together? “Shall We Dance?” 1 was at a loss for a reply to his apparently flippant little apeech, and took refuge in as apparent an ab- sorption in the escargots. When he spoke again it was to voice some laughable, low-toned comment upon an oddly assorted party of diners near us, and when the course whieh had so delighted me was fin- ished, he gave a direction to the waiter to delay the next course, and I sald with “It dulls i High Hats sion of the jon formal occasions, 180 high, however, and usually some buckle, ribbon ornament | flower that gives it a feminine tou high hat down by 1t is not q Two Shade Two shad: of the same color | used effectively in many frocks, s as a light and deep yellow, or shades of gray or green, Emphasizes Sandalg with colored leather are smart Chiffon Wraps Chiffon wraps are very lovel at they match the frocks with that [they are to be worn ana |trimmed with ostrich or some fi had | | fur, his wh Wide Belt The very wide belt is being ad cated as a relief from the tube fy that has grown quite common. Circular Ruffles The further development of cir lar ruffles and shaped inserts is ings, Use Hot Vinegar You can remov: mica stove windows by washing t} |in hot vinegar, Measuring Molasses To measure molasses quickly, o Tangle Letter from Sally Atherton to James you think I am. Condon, Continued. that you worship, The love part of your letter, dear | pled over and broken Jim, was very poetic and beautiful, my poor human failing, and 1 think my greatest happiness I would feel worse was that I have not become &0 hard- did not know that 1 ened that I could not appreciate it. My eyes grew misty as I read it, and I think, dear boy, that I was a little cnvious—for Jim, dear Jim, T have never had anyone to whom I could talk like that and mean it. 1 don't think I'm capable of it. The utter sincerity of your devo- tion is almost religious in its fervor. That you are a worshiper at a false «hrine, and that your idol is wholly of clay, does not take anything from the sublimity of your great faith. No one, it seems, from what you wrote me of the conversation that | his own, are something she has you overheard, could shatter your |into his head. h in me, | He's a clever Jim, however, 1 have a {and T probably fealing T myself will destr and dine vour trust, much as I want to keep it. T.am not the superwoman that I'm only an into bite me da hout this 1 ‘will be will still be intact. 8o you thought looked at to him? Jim, in the the street, if Jack Pri such thought as that, other think coming. te any one except Sally Atherton He amuses me; his arrogance conceit are 80 colossal, Many, times, knowing Leslie as I do, 1 k the wonderful plane he brings d Jack Pre language he al to chap for shall go I T may be martyred yeara for my woman may do in the assumption exactly what a con — GOOD MANNERS Answerin it. But all g live along do live. Of course 1 tunate that I 1 have schooled think like a man. | myself growing in sentiment, | mediately try to be as sentime |as possible. Men are alwa mental, but they haven't | timent, Women, on the ess apt to he moved tions, but they have | that tenderness 'and o me is sentiment. Jim, dear Jim, don’t think too much, for I'm not worth it, conventional worth goes. 1'm a woman who is dctermined the same, this line as know that it myself to be an Whenever 1 hand, by their e great dea loyalty wh other of ante to do, and just now t that and t ! ne nee i his Vs, ‘old His ine al inst my R | ¥ oRtn tic n. the of ous " hut T always heed the psychie little warn- ond h 1 W aret their ACes 00 eyes of Gossip’s Corner The latest hat is the feminine ver- | men | it has or ich, are uch | two | \dals of white buckskin trimmed | for ¥ when | Mann family doctor when Mr: hich are uffy ivo- rock cu- | no- | ticed at the Paris mid-summer open- | the smoke from hem dip | idol and I shall be top- by % it the | only thing to be broken—your heart | B¢ cott me as though I helonged | of ott has any | Woods lickity split hae an-| pened. 1 don’t belong | and many now own ' + | 2 of ¢ and o th! and retails 1o me as conceptions of | Was made of cloth and stuffed with put that, meh with him again and again, " | dear boy, whatever people may say, |Very hard bump too when she docs! ming a man long as 1 am hard headed, hut | porch of the hous d to find T im. | went ntal '8 senti- much sen- are mo- 1 of! hich me as just to suc- reed, determined to do the thing she | hat thing is to be one of the best known advertising experts in Come again and see me. not to hurt you, but don't me to break any engagements you-—that'a not businessiike. Affectionatery, ™ After the engaged couple has been toasted at dinner the young man usually says something lke this in answer: I can't make a speech and | rou know i But 1 certainly am lucky and you know it.” SALLY the country. try expect for { out | (Cepyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) | “Ha, ha, ha, ha! neck and very short Detachable, but u part of the I8 the wid ry lengthy self-materinl with the It is Jonny sloeves costume sourf of ball but slip of il v edged tons. worn over a the | same the measuring g anl the out yuickly, el or spoon in scalde water molusses will pour Cloar " Muddy Water dy water for lsundrey ant tublespoon cach o ed in hot o elow stie in i and 1 alum horay, dissoly Spots on Remove spots sponging olled with turpentine floors by ng Necdles nevdle Shaep the has becoms hes through Andpaper Wihen machin severnl plec on your dull stiteh novory sewing for in fine Cold Vomls sumn mouths cold shiced et During the negleet to serva cold salads, colil soups and other foods that he prepared in the morning and Kept in the fco hox until needed, do not meats, may Kervosene and Borax To facilitate the washing of dirty clothes soak them in water contain Ing a small quantity of kerosene and borax, Cleans Mesh Bags You ean cloan a mesh lag by | washing it with a soft brush in soap- suds containing ammonia, | white of cgg beaten together, lon soft flannel and polish with an old Bread for Sandwiches silk handkerchicf | The bread you use for sandwiches | shonld at least 24 hours old so | that it will cut into as thin slices as | you desire, | Lasts Longer Lettuce wrapped in waxed and then in a damp cloth for a long time and will | when you take it out at | ‘ = Provide Your house ferns 1 drainage if you put hroken crockery in the bottom of the pot. be Drain rood n ineh layer of paper will last b frosh pienics. Tor soot a To remove wipe it with | kerosene, serves Bindings . Leather hook bindings can he ve freshened and preserved hy the ap- | Old gas mantles, [ plication of equal parts of milk and powder, make excellent silver from clegn cloth woodwork, wet with | 1 Polish crushed to a polish. FABLES ON HEALTH OVERHAUL THE TEETH “Have your tecth Jlooked time when most women have trouble i thoroughly, and at once,” advised the | With their teeth and a milk of mag- Mann | M€Sia_solution can teract the action of acid that gathers fon the enamel of the teeth, “One of the oldest and shop-worn| *“Of course if there is any fallacies is that women should have |ticularly difficult or painful work no dentistry work done while preg- |that the denfist says can be yed |nant. That is a silly and thoromghly |it js just as well to let it go for | wrong idea. Hime, but proper dental at this | "On the contrary time will do a great d g0 to her dentist good feceth after the | her teeth attended a|ended.” | country wear with the all white outfit. | over | was anticipating motherhood. par- care al to period wonian should once and have to. This is a at he Adventures f KaggédyAnn B wfaggedy Andy by Johmy Gruelle Andy fooled | the witch very easily | to take his little away from him. They were all, Raggedy Andy, Rag- ¥ Ann, the nice poor man, the | magic hobby horse and the witch, in | the lovely house on wheols. And the house on along through Raggedy old Munga when she tried green magic book | could see Mit invisible!" 1 “Quick! Catch her one could make witeh they book fly r knew thi | as they h nt along the Raggedy his She las made hor- ggedy Ann cried ' but bhefore any- move to catch the saw little green magic t off the hack porch and Minga had carried it there, watched, the Iittle green whirling over and over pateh Andy f magical self A for was rol deep, doep this hap- whee the when ke | ing It very sad the and did horse and the nice at [ 1oss of s0 Just as the witch was about to wooden hobhy [ snaten the book away from Raggedy | poor man, hut what ] Andy, he jumped right of the| They do nothing, wvindow and rolled over and over|gedy Ann could when he hit the ground, but of course | As quicl thought, Ra | this did not hurt him a bit for he|ran into anotl room and the could they do? o but Rag- Iy ot Ann out nice white cotton, but he got up and | ran into the bush The mean old from the window, Andy thought, “And witch too,” she Wil jump Raggedy will get a So he hurrled and read in his little green magic book just how to make | himself get back upon the front may do without any more compunc-|Porch of the house on wheels when tion than a man, and get away with|the old witch jumped off. I'm going to|the witch jumped from the window just as land went tumbling | against sticks and over atone and over Raggedy is for- | Andy found himse!f upon the front on wheels, were surprised to see walk in just as the old witch out the window, but Raggedy Andy soon explained how he did it, “Now 1 have been thinking!” Rag- gedy Andy said as Raggedy Ann around some chocolate cake with whipped cream on it and a giass of lemonade apicce. “What have you heen the nice poor man asked, “Escuse me a moment while 1 just how to work the magic 1 wished 2 smile to wo-k, then 1 shall tell you what 1]little red magic have been thinking after 1 work the [gedy Ann returned to Raggedy Andy magte!” | poor man and the hobby Evoryone was very whiile d out her hand to Rag- aggedy Anidy looked through and it was his little little green magie YA} green book ma said, “Here it is! Just wateh me made it the magic_on those two old laughed. Minga and Munga 1ome, the | A= Raggedy Andy =aid this, the tie green magic book was of his hands and the witeh, laughed * like that. His friends him Ann got out her red magic hool. Raggedy passed ok, imtil Quic &he to thinking ?** | her ¢ I turned he read | Whit ghe came fhen with 16 magic of the When Rag- ehe worked book the nice horse, she h Andy quict his | zeds in he work | “1 | me! book com “And right back to I'll bet when just ehe g where in arter they nis dly, | chocolate No one 'on it witches, orld she lost it!" And aughing. our lovely cream the lit- ked of |t w voice the whipped the Minga. Apply | s be taken to coun- | witch will wonder | RDAY, JULY 19, that the 118 me whom soeiety BUPPOSE same quality o imagination which Above 1 rost of thos is pl 1o call outlaws, Is responsible for the fooling of ind when 1 ook upon nation which pos ne any brotulity 1 am not mattersof«fact; 1 am un ars tis Aid the artist 1l with what-oug materigl-minded any imperfoction hody or of th And here bhot back, imperfect of o perstitions who stroked They were at the corner | 1%t avenu | traffic which would permit the street ! thing, 1 little apartment moment 1 ntral Park Woest, o way to attend more Keenly 110 hu thian the in sontn whethor of the spirit wre lont, imper the hump standing of I'ifty-ni waiting th stee hrtak them doing had walked from or Cross wis S smug 1he k) was malntaining on Ccross town on | my iction Mi It ) spring duy, the sort of morning which blustery Mareh re | faith in the miracles Lxactly as a pro(ty girl revives one's faith! 1 admit t my faith been rovived several times this morn- ing. It scemed me that all lovely girls of the universe had placed in Central Park and on Avenue this morning, to tantaliz with thoughts of what might been I, who hated this morning. less love of o 501 AVCN was o balmy fves one Nature |aftor a to the heen the me have the world, loved it Yot it was the hope- s who knows that the mple joys are denied to him. | folt a moisture welling beneath my | lids; my eyes were filmy, Then 1 [ laughed at my sentimentality, 1 had made my choice months ago after years of desperate struggle along the paths of honesty, J had given up the unequal battle and become one of | those who prey | Suffice it t no young girl [ ever harmed hy me—and knowing me might some day her irreparable damage. 1 said in one of my previous memoir like Kipling's cat, 1 walk alone, So, hecause [ in softened moad, as well as becanse T am an artist and a gentloman, T felt a surg of pity for the hunchback, and surge of wrath against the man who stood beside him, IFor this latier person rubbed the eripple’s hump, Oddly enough, although the lout seemed none too gentle, the cripple did not resent the action. Perhaps, poor devil, he had hecome so used to | the brutalities of his fellows, that his spirit had lost its powers resent- ment, Ay or so ago, when 1 had heen crushed by the brutalities of life, 1 would have felt no indignation at such a sight. 1 had then unable to hecome angry at indignities heay {upon myself. Moralists would tell you that I had sinee lost my soul, hut T tell you that T had found it A ago, an honest man, 1 would have sneered cynically; today, a thief, 1 took the lout the ar and threw him across the sidewal L The north and south-hound halted as the lights flickered on tower down the avenue; the poli man blew his whistle and waved the pedestrians to pass over. It was s opportunity, and as my bewilder vietim climhed unsteadily to his fect, muttering threats, 1 merged with the | human tide and gained the doors of a hotel across the street, slipped through its reception-rooms and came out upon Fifty-ninth street, certain that T had avoided pursuit, and not worrying about future recognition As for the hunchback, he had not glanced my wa By extreme caution, T eliminate ac cidents. Before T entered tl tion rooms which were my destina tion, T glanced my shoulder to make certain no offensively right-minded person was guiding upon my trail the man whom 1 had knocked down. 1f a policeman inter- vened in A street-brawl in which 1 was concern it is concecivahle that I might be asked my means of liveli- A question obvious em 1ent, 0 1 entered the auction and took a chair in t an hour passed bhefore | | and then 1 offered fifty dol medioere tapestry. 1 acquired at cighty-five, gave a to the at tendant, ordercd the thing sent to my apartment, and settled back in my watch the of the 1 do not think it advisahie be merely a fons: A connoisseur, in instant standing the tapestry proved that | taste along with probahly means of solely tapestry color-scheme again 1 feit time, 1 wanted a home, 1 wanted place where 1 things that 1 had acquired for the of oy wi would even cause have be was a AT year hy ffic the tr ane- over that of | ra rooms Half bid, ot it cheek | chair to rest ceedings that 1 at though ould spectator uc even a smali way, achieves And my an of had mode course 1 had not come here Indeed, ¢ would hardly conform to the my One sentiment of spring- to purchase of the rooms, permanen put joy hecanse it Deliherately 1 dangerous thoughts. nt M busi devotes hour conld acquisition, in t th and Tonged home dismissed ueeess his office these No man « ness if he o sentimen office ness, al hours, and 1 I'or where to study in moonings Were my was here on husi in the have world is onr likely and than articles more apportunits to see possegsed room vale the millionaires of tapestry were minor hose of wealth an auction of tremendons upon the block? And Al Auction Company to a clientele of bargains as my bit ocenrred when they parfs of a great collection Neatly everything priced in the thousands, and did not interest me, Ithough occasionally 1 noted the names and adc of the pur- chasers. And then came the Gerald Gerald w muitimil- vulgar antecedents and who had died a few years ago. months | his widow had fol- lgwed him, and they had left heirs who to rid themselves the miscellancons collection | Geralds had acquired. 1 where put Tnternatio tered are only clse was ssis ewel-bos s a lionaire taste Six of er, vl which could not chose THIE DIEWIEILIEID CASIKIET had | | for \a dealer in gold and jowe [ men whom T intuitively | at acquisition | the | Wame t for most of the | Gerald suitod 1o the than to a pri And n A gold mor otn W A musoum ate hom the studded ment f or held with jowe anetio w5 1 com this i I inehe nd work gree of | expendod | od ux he article wis to wis n work art ot Wide six M 10hg rineh craftsm upon it THE VALK, 1 THREW LOUT ACROSS THE S1DF mboyant, and one readily helleved the auctioneer's statement | that the late Mr, Joseph Gerald had himself superintended the designing and manufacture of the bhox. One also believed without hesitation that | it had cost the multi-millionaire ove ninety thousand dollars, Certainl the precious stones that studded it | were worth at least fifty thousand. | But the very idea that had given | birth to the box was vulgar, It had heen intended to be the receptacle ain jewels of Gerald's wife, | ngered me. Artists in precious metal had been debauched | hy Gerald’s money and forced to prostitute their gifts for beauty in | geous, too iz The thing { order to gratify a milliopaire’s vulgar whim, T wondered that anyone save . who pro- the thing for its intrin- | should bid upon it. But | ald's death had not rid the korld | vulgarity, | The bidding opened at ten thou- sand. dollars, and progressed rapidly to twenty-five thousand, confined to knew were man took alone stamped | newly en- | posed 1o by sic Ge of value, dealers, hand him for riched Then anbther His clothing what he was, a vulgarian, For his coat w cut in the extreme of Broadway <hion: his neckwear was an offense to a gentleman, and the solitaire dia- | mond that gleamed from its silken | folds must have weighed a dozen | carats. He had not horn money: long acquaintance with would have incucated in him least, of the fundamentals of cor- atti His me pigli His eyes, poeping over rolls of fat, were also porcine. His wnted back, and his heavy jaws and jutting chin made him ani- I-like. Another of the filthy profi- rs who had grown fat upon the ferings of the worl Another of | those persons who had risen from the depths during civilization's great con- | vulsion, I con man; ¢ loss a to it fow, heen a reet hlol nose was a forehead s loaths picture the of this me as himself, doubi- Also 1 could picture the pric jeweiry that would go into tha hox, IPor if a man would give six five thousand dollars down to him at the pri in which put his jewels, wh were the jewels themselves worth ? The mere thought made me dizzy. 3 i get my hands upon that hox was filled, the fancies that had put into my mind ta be possible to mo of Young girls whose inviting on the wife Toss it was knocl for a pi could when it spring might those ay eves seemed Atenue today “Sold to said the auctioneer, Slumped down in my chair, fuming with hatred toward straightencd up when |1 name 1'or there who had not heard of M Anderson,” Anderson, 1 ard his W people {nderson. He have become, during the men in My appraisal of him had heen absolutely correct, and my was tickled that o slight matter, 1 had not 1w him anid write My eves followed him and passed were fe was snpposed the o world war, one of richest vanity even in a g0 fo a desk @ cheek #8 he came down the through the door, 1o that the brughed my kne he climbed did not ¥ eseaped a e skirt Mr enormon; came me of nto his car, ow nt how n PLAN BIG OFFENSIVE Official Dicpateh rom Brazilian Goy- ermment Indicates That Tmportant Drive Is On, Burnos midnight Janeiro Aires, bulletin i government the present B by 1. tions Lo of wzilian insurrcetion was acion. It statee re almost federal Paulo the received “Prep for exceuting a gainst the Sao Dense fog dur complete mancuver I3 nment last 12 hours has hindercd the necessary reconned ring, hut the situation le. Presi- dent Bernardes who continues to re- ceive manifestations of support from all parts of the country has issued a estending the moratorium ve is favo | | | i in 1 “the state of Eao Paulo until July 27." SUmmer | ercamed ¢ | ter, | spoons crushed | fat, S (A daily menu for the stout and thin) FAT AND LOSE WEIGHT e v reies, 'y cup 4 tablespoons whole » b coreal water K, " salad, 1 1 eup skim< hread con slice whole wheat milk med Dinner wat stew, ¢ 1 tablespoon tahlespoons holled slice watermelon, 8 One cup lamb Qunees veress with emon julc macaroons Hedtime Total fat 1 0168 gram Stuffed Lettuee Salad e head lettuce, 2 1able. spoons chopped chieken, 1 fa. bleapoon finely eliopped ham, 2 table- spoons mineed ¢ 2 tablespnons ry, shredded almonds, 2 tablespoons boids ed diossing skimmed milk Protein, 2223 590, One eup calories, 1075 wohydrate Iron, (Individy sm the from a firm head and reserve for another salnd. Combine chicken, liam, celery and almonds with salad dressing, sea. son with salt and pepper and fill ‘et with mixture, Scrve on a few 8 of romaine and garnish with sections of orange fiee from skin, Total 169, Protein fat, 1 carhohydrate, 12, 0018 gram Summer squash is one of the vege- tahles you must use sparingly. Sea- it with salt and pepper, but ne butter FEAT AND GAIN WEIGHT Rreakfast tablespoon heart of lettue tiee Py calories, LLH Tron, me cup herries with 1 sugar, 1 cup uncooked up cream, 2 tahlespoons potatoes, 3 crisp pieces ha- con whole wheat muffins, 1 table- spoon butter, hot water, Mid-morning Junch—One large glass lemonade, 1 brown hread and butter sandwich, Luncheon—stuffed lottuce salad, 2 Parker House rolls, 1 tablespoon but- 2 tablespoons strawherry pre- serves, 1 large piece pineapple eream pie, 1 cup cocoa, Afternoon tea—One eup iced coffes with 2 tablespoons whipped cream, 2 cheese-date and nut sandwiches, Dinner—one cup iamb stew, 1 large dumpling. 2 ounces watercress with 1 tablespoon French dressing, 4 table- spoons boiled summer squash, 1 slice whole wheat bread, 1 tablespoon but. ter, 1 slice watermelon, 4 macaroons, Bedtime—One cup whole milk, Total calorvies, 4200. Protein, fat, 1649; carhohydrate, 2085, H192 gram ‘gz Lemonade (Individual) cgg, 1 lemon, 2 teaspoons cracked ice, 1 cup water, Beat egg slightly with sugar. in lemon juice, cereal, 3y 4753 Iron, Reat Pour over two tahle- ice and add one cup cold water. Serve with a sprig of mint in the glass Total calories, 68: carbohydrate, 0014 gram. (Copyright, 20, Protein, 116, Iron, 1924, NEA Service, Ine.) Scholastic Record Tarkio, Mo.—The family of J. F. Withrow of Tarkio has set up one of the most remarkable scholastic rec- ords in Missouri, Light of his 10 children have griduated from Tarkio sollege and the other two are en- rolled there as students, Two of the three sons served in the world war, One son is a minister and another is ving for t same work, The young lady across the way says f t be a by ite one might at least b meneat And shralgiocwand shw b Have you a garage that's empty and bare? Advertise — rent it — garages are rare, USE A .