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~ Madge Regrets Her Trait and Summons Lillia My fantastic impression of some secret understanding between Lil-| lian and Lee Chow man “Steve, Chinese had enginecred | cessfully, vanished as quickly as it | had come. When I glanced again at | them Lee Chow was standing with hent head in his usual attitude of | humble attention and Lilllan was | lying back upon her pillows with eyea closed as It infinitely weary “Thank you, Lee Chow.” she said. | ous Acts | the | th su concerning escqpe whose Just ‘You have done very well Jeed. | Go home now, and be ful to | keep out of the way of Mr. Eld-| ridge if he should happen to come | back this way — which T don't think he will.” | “All ri"" Lee Chow responded. “1 remember,’ and then he padded softly out of the room, while Kath- | erine bent over her patient anxlous- | ly, with me close beeide her, Lil-| lian opened her eyes and smiled up | at us, “Im all right, you Toolish Fan- nies,” she sald, “or shall he when | I've had a nap” Then her eves rested on me with an inscrutable expression which unaccountably set my nerves to jangling. “Well, Madge!" she sald. “You turned the trick, didn’t you? He's| cheated justice all right, but at| least you and yours are safe.'” T fought back a little shiver, for the phrase ‘‘cheated justice” struck me most unpleasantly, Suddenly 1 found myself longing to be alone, and was thankful indeed when Lil- 1tan finally dropped her queerly ap- praising eyes from mine and sald wearlly: “Now, it you girls don't going to sleep.” 'You can wager your canary's chirp on that,” Katherine retorted. “But not till you've had an alcohol rub. You're going to get ready for a good snooze, not a piece of one. | Madge, will you send Katle up In| five nlinutes with a glass of hot| milk?"” | “I'll bring it up myaelf,” T re. turned. “'Katie and Mother Graham are quiet, so—"" “We'll be careful not to stir them up,” Katherine finished smiling, as| T hurried out of the door. Madge Faces Her Soul | Resolutely T barred every thought | from my mind save that of carry- ing out Katherine's request. Loom- mind, I | erack | ering | might NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1025 ing before me was a reckening with my soul, but 1 postponed it until T had prepared a tray with the hot milk and a plate of the ealty ers Lilllan llkes, After deliv. samo to Katherine 1 fled to Dicky's room, ocked the door and taced the thing which 1 had dene ‘Cheating -justice!” Lilllan's phrase, uttered with apparent advertence, had plerced my de- fences — and my pretences — as velin thrust Stripped bare of all shielding drapery such aa the desire to protect my idolized in. little son, my husband and my mother-in-law from the shame of wing kinship with a criminal made naked truth stood public, the ugly before me, 1 was virtu a traitor to my government, the government of secret service T onee had . Blinded by the agony whose \ of the dread of disgrace to my loved ones, 1 had furnished the means for the eecape of a murderous Sl criminal. Worse still, I, uncon-| Two, three and four-letter words sciously but none the lesy surely, : Predominate in this puzzle. Lut just had appealed to Lilllan's sympa. the same it's a goat getter. thies until she a sworn officer of .- HORIZONTAL the government, had connived at| I+ Plavhouse. my activities. 7. Inmate, 13. Strects. “I Thought You'd Wake Up" It Lillian had been well T knew that ehe would have been adamant, 14.Metal in rock. 16. Apart. not only for herself but for me, Her | 17 SKill. llness, however, had weakened not |15+ To attack. only her body but her nerves and [ =1 A Pin or plug her spirit — and she had been an | 22 Father. casy vietim to my maudlin selfish- | >3- To liberate. ness. 24. Chore, For T could call it by no other |25 3.1416. name. Tt was given me in that mo- Otherwlse. . To loiter. ment to realize how many crimes are committed in the name of hya-|3!. Contraito. terical sacrifice on the altar of To attempt. “protecting one's own.” And the Deverage, spirits of generations of Puritan To plece out To originate. . Envoys. . Preposition of piace. ancestry rose to condemn me. Long before it was time for Lil- llan to awake T had settled my course, but T waited until Katherine | 44 Mother. told me that she was awake before Correlative of either. I went to her. Then, tortured be- |46 Toward. yond endurance, T knelt by her bed. | 47. Wages. “Lillfan!” I said. “I cannot en- (3% Unity. . Prepared soup cont. . To linock. . Sailor, . Hodgepodge . Noted, Distinctive theories . Measure of arca . Snare. . Schedule, . Neuter pronoun. dure it! T have been mad to let you S§he put her hand over my mouth and smiled up at me. “I thought you'd wake up before long,” she sald. Copyright, 1925, by Newspaper Feature Service, Tnc. LLTTER FROM LESLIE COTT TO THE LITTLE MAR- QUIS. CARE OF THE SECRET DREAWER—CONTINUED, hen, little Marquise, my dear mother said to me something which impreseed me very much. She sald: s Men, my have a most in- convenient faculty of being able to leck up disagrecable problems in | some parts of their brains, and to forgetting them until they are ready to work on them again Naturally having sealed all these up in water- tight compartments, they do not want to have some one either open- ing them again or hammering on the outside in hopes of getting in. “This is very different from Teslie. We women must he a mulling over our irritating 1f worries, while very often we forget all about the pleasant things of which we might he thinking.” I have found this all so very true Little Marquise. Very often T find myself thinking the most unhappy thoughts, when if I would just stop to reason, I would find that T have mors than most people have, to make me happy. The pearls have been found, Little Marquise, and I am almost sorry, 1 shall never wear them again, unless T tesl differently about them than I do now. I frankly writhed with hor ror when Jack opened the ns ays le ase and poured those jewels into my lap. 1 saw looking at me two lovely girls ght ot for them. m My who T am sure be hers tn ismlousy cniminated hen me wearing the pearls that given me, and she never got over it | . Child, . To burden Devoured. . A standard of perfection To soak flax. More recent, . Middle point (pl.) Everlasting. oven when he gave her a more heau- VERTICAT, tiful string. And poor little Zoe,| 1. Acrobatic apparatus who never really had a ehance, died | o, Hourly, hecanse she wanted to preserve for To devour me and my children those foolish| 4. Paid publicity white, waxy beads, | G oo, They are too horrible. 1 never| 6 Resembling a rose want to fook upon them again. Little | 7. Negative, Marquise. Jack take the chil wants me to S, Makes 9. You and me To tear. Expert Military hodics . Sun god. Mateling dishes lace e s 3 e 20, To place or set down 23. Common spore plant 25, Parrot, 28. Mechanics as distinguished from dynamics, ‘ Second note in scale . Correspondence . Residence of a mandarin Heron. . Door rug. Ta sunburn. Age 42, Godiess of dawn 47. Serving as a warning of danger. 45, Went hy. 49, Taflors, 40, To manage a machine Shike. Girls having the same parents . Part of verb to he . To earrode 7. Ventilating machine . Perind. . Minute obircts Part in a drama To loan. Two fives, Muisieal note 5. Reverential fs 5. Preposition 8. Deity dren and go away for a while, and T have almost decided to do g0, T find I must get the children away from their grandmother Preseott When she heard. however, that ¥ was thinking of going and taking | them with me, she nearly raised the roof. To tell you the truth T wish ! T could go away and stay long'| enough to pry her away from this | place, Yes, T know it sounds terrible or | me fo wrlte this, but Jack's mother | is simply impossible. One moment she is the most abused woman en carth, and tha next, she imagines herself a queen and is trying to run Tart and spicy condiments are de- licious with meats and should have la place in cuphoard, Moat of these €\ery WOman's preserye relishes are made the whole househald. Tt I'm out |USINE small amount of scvcral fruits for an afternoon T come home fo|&nd vegetables and since a little ot find my children demoralized and | the finlshed product goes a long way my servants ready to leave, Why fs|!aT8¢ quantities are not wanted. it that old peopla must make an ed watermelon rind is always much trouble in a household? good-and - uses.material that would ordinarily be thrown away. Spiced Watermelon Rind Three pounds rind, 1 pound sugsr, 6 cups vinegar, Tack's mother has everything vorld that in she agks for eveept where lier wishes interfore with my servants or children, but she will not 2 cupsiwnter, & fable; be happy. and neither will she 1af [SP0ONS whole cloves, 2 tablespoons any one eisa be hapny. and there vou |Eroken afick cinnamon, 2 teaspoons are vowdered alum. (Copyright. 1926, NEA Service. Tney | Trim oft the pink pulp and grecu ) Kin of the melon rind and cut into Tomorrow — Tetter from Tegje | P2rrow strips. Add alum to 1 cup water and pour over rind, Add water to cover, cover with a plate and lot stand twelhe hours. Heat to the hoil- Prescott to the Little Marquise, care of the Secret Drawer—Continyed. Little Two Eyes eSSy e e | — _—— !ing pointand let simmer fiftcen min Sory of “One Esn, Two Eyes, apq|U€% Drain and plunge ino e et ot med es. AN water. Let stand until thoroughly . SR e cold, about two hours. Drain and e o d1have lqry between towels. [Put sugar water and vinegar into preserving | 5 kettle. Bing to the hoiling point and - : the elsters [aud the spices fled in a checsecloth 15 L the house (1ag. Boil until mixture becomes L aV0B syrupy. about twenty minutes and il bk of i id prepared melon rind. Sitmmer N ng moe {until rind is transparent and tender I d be fou T Into sterilized cans and seal No o while hot € Tro Eyes anew from wheass the | Gooseberry relish is an old-fash- G She notieed that it |1 at adds much to pla the 1 the | Gooscherry Relish 2 e 4 of ree quarts gooseberries, 1 quart w ' | 3 cups sugar, 3 more cups o cups salt. 3-4 pound NS 0 fer und powdered ginger, 1- St peppers, 1 1-2 pounds ( i o aeire n g0l isins, 1 cup mustard sced SRR ety tall green, underripe gl o 3 Put into prescrving ol A > ttle with vinegar and bring to the it ng poir Roil five minutes and ) emotve from the fire. Let nd until g 5 Lte Seoa) \ cool add sugar, remain- ) ir r. salt, onions led and h G Uity Jeppers finely chopped : e el mustard sced, ginger and 3 AR s. Add holllng water or vine Ilitors. 1 it too thick and bring fo the ing point, stirring to thoroughly 1EAD THE HERALD CLASSUUED Thie Gateriitea S aratand ADS FOR BESULTS Apple Chutney rts of chopped green aj les, cup salt, 3 1-2 cups dark rown sugar, 3 medium sized Span onfons 4 green ginger | Reliet abrolutels SUaTATNEe L amon A i L for two trial samples, directions, 1o 1-2 pour less raisins. 1 1-2 ICAL CORP. N CHLORO CHEM 8LOOMFIFLD = and chop salt and sugar In 1 1\11\'g=r Add remaining inzredients and cook, stirring to prevent turn- |ing until apples and onions are |tender. Pour into sterilized jars and |seal | Whele cloves may he added if wantad | Spiced Grape Catsup One quart grapes remoyed fron stems. 4 cups hrown s 2 cups vinegar, 1 fablespoon allspice, 2 |tablespoons cinnamon, 1 tablespoon cloves, | teaspoon nutmicg. seant toa spoon cayenne pepper, 1 teaspoon |salt | Wash zrapes and put in prescry- {ing Kettle with just enough water to prevent hurning. Cover and bring slowly fo boiling point. Remove cover and simmer until soft. Itub through a colander. Add rest of the |ingredient boll until thick, T spices are ground. Constant stirring is necessary to prevent stickin When the consistency of tomato o into sterilized Sup pour bottles and Pepper Relish | Six gr PEPRETS, 6 red peppers 12 1-2 cups vinegar | move stem ends and ot {peppers. Pour boilthg v o |shells nd f minutes. ¢ Drrain and cover with cold water Drain and chop very fine. Put into proser ctile with onion. sugar salt and simmer until tender. Tt will take about thirty minutes. Pour into glass jars and seal R BTElishestn] e stored in a | \dark place as will fade the colors. l ROLLER SRATING NG Afternoons. TAERY EVI Alse Satardny I She took her cup and went over to sit down de Dorls. "I hear you have a lttle hoy." she sald. I § wish you had brought him with yon" Mrs. Mears langhed, and arised | one emall hand deprecatingly . B [ “He's a darling, but I'm a perfect B R BY M AAYRES | wreek after 10 minutes with him s 0 1 always leave him at home, H B [ 1oves I o 100, \h.-i..“\:;n:;.n\l\;" i ol BEGIN HERE TODAY: puzzled sort of look on his face | ) Thelr eyen met V’H“‘ ALY L} Ui # Peter Lyster has lost his memory “Im afraid you really have for-| “You mean that you won't?" Ly-| ot likes i1 said Arnott; he N from hell shock on tha swestern | Eotlen about being & country girl” | ster asked I spoke rather indistinetly as i i front. Upon hia return to lLondon | he said, presently. | Nan laughed then — a little reck-| pouth was tull of cake, "Peter he falls to recognize Nan opened her ey | 1ess laugh hulle re they conie ) t Nan Marraby, the girl to whom ‘s what it must be Yive ‘Perhaps some day.' she said. | (To e Continued) ed he became engaged before going to | Mever turned glddy before how rhaps—son 1y | - ————e wlai I'rance. Nan has returned to her [ Silly of me Lyster took off his cap andl y feat home, due to the death of her step-| She pushed ler halr back from | brushed the halr back from his e mother. to take care of her three |her forchead | forehead PEO) young stepbroticrs, She s still in! And now, having made an ex-| "I shall hold you to that prom WWorl touch with ibition of mysclf for the sccond [ise.” he said tor Joan Endicott, in London, who i time,” she sald, “I think I had bet-|{ The morning bro ! [ i expacting her hushand on leave ST | ARG LTOT T 0N B | fer who told her that Peter and a fel- | lderful Tim had S low officer. | | parently all was sunshine. | Tlev John Arnott, were spending their | “I haven't really time to write at | v and lrave at the home of Arnott’s wid- | ' %0 she began her letter, “Tim | K e owed sister not far from the Mar- | is fidgeting round, hezging me to IS 5 appe raby estale. Nan i3 jealous of Ar-| go out with him. but I thought 1| § 73 » ol nott's sister, and very much dis- | Suaht Sate ol lalyonta: nalo Gl ACH I ) 4 “Ae pleased with the attentions of | saw how happy T am. 1 am woewr 9.4 . 3 and Harley Sefton, a money lender, | the pink blouse you made, and Tim | 2 i inY who claims to have been a friend of | says he has never seen me look #o | % »op) °r's hefore he went away. Pefer pretty. The time is flying — a whole % The also failed to recognize him when dny gene already. Nan - Tim says 3 . they met n Jias told Nan that t he thinks the war will be over | g ! both her father and Peter owe him this year, but T can't lielp ng fo T great sums of money hat he only says it to comfort ; | Nan is walking through the |1 think of you a great deal | woods near her home, crying over | wonder how vou are o fate, when she meets Poter, She if you have seen tries to explain ‘her tears and soon | Lyster or Mr. Arnoit comes quite flippant with NIRRT N e Man Who T'orgot.” They have walk- L little faken with yor! M cd back to the fi surrounding ou such a lot, and 1 | the Marraby estate when Nan os- cama here afior you | presses a doubt of her lity to Leavenden, h | vault the stile isa i ) NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY I | “It's such a long time since 1 an‘t ¢ ) ‘ ‘ Jived in the country. that T've for orld. 1 told Tin alont wiat i | ing ¥ con- gotten the v to cilmb a stile, a ral U sport Nan eafd, her heart s hammer- sympathet ! of hrown le, banded ing in her throat is toa sho I IEluSeligclad sson] “The hest way {8 to give me your ;“”‘V t ; : hand stand on the top bar and | him he wonld rather know tha e e S e inmp.” he declared. “Give me your wd found some man to look o Bt BT i hands.” G plags Lo Le Kind (o me. than to ii"] !M‘ "'i an was sure that he must s} i me lin py all oy | S 2 that she was trembling, but he foc “My brother has spoken about you | 11 it s nd o I i) ‘Now — one, two, three ST Nan toreed the |otter I o AV or go home. or there will he alwas so like Joon ot e ctinipekly fhird tine, aad you. know what peo-{almicss telvinlitios, ) i by Takisg Lydia E. Pinke stood above him el ey ¥ ahout the third time?" pprehonsively It th g s e R bl B e e ham's Vegetable Compound | tight, with their half-laughing g0 back and Hyve with her a ! LRI { emharrassed expression Miss Marraby will you ftell She ros Joan's very | s Angeles, Cal. - ‘1 cannot give too | His cap had got pushud a little to M0 something?* he asked. hint about John Arnott | muchpraiseto Lydial2. Pinkham'sVeg- one side, an obstin lock of Nan was brushing a dried S etable Compound | hiair which &he remembered never from her slec O a s s o Al e el 0| forwhatithasdone would lie down and behave had “Will 1" she echoed fiippantly. | g o0 | forme. Mymother A | struggled out and Jay across his | “Why. of course.” She rajaed her | T 4 . e | fl_\'cltt_nmewhpn | foechead, pidine Wi & eifiularly byes fo e face. “Wihat Sl 1 eha| BUDNES hiiEiR (108 Tnoekiiins | wasagirl ldyears \ e e L jrs i he aftermoon when she | old, and since then | Nan looked at him, and sudiden it Peter was grave heapsliakcaviiniva npitiegroudran il I_Iha\'vl taken it M e S S RS IR et S e T cston the 1 looked oul of ‘\;\?n feel run ki her window curiously, then the own or tired. I out and the whole world to he when T met you.” he said s it took it for th y Smmine e iher SHetswayua I ALITILE Rt whirled hy overiicad ihlnol seiitoRhurichaehs Al iagiiish et (‘ ree) Al and wonla Mayekiallbn Bl etz Rt 1Te S al Wit hi i Ls iz s CLLMEON RUIOh D OIS SEEL i“?“‘;’ Al PR et SR e i bl el L ke HNR out of the car: he turned to| wo babies were or his upholding hand. ings; it flashed away like a "R < ) born for I suffered “Oh1" she sald, weakly. “Oh, I'm [shedow in the moonlight, Nan |8l¥e his hand (o a woman in llack. | FithimE back and falling watehed it mechanically tho | isslstar NG nitold fharstlf had spells as if my heart was affected But in a moment s arm was fever in her veins scemed to haye| She rushed to the head of thel gnd if helped mealot. The doctors wround her, and she was safely be- {od; her face looked very young and cailed 1o the hitle maid-| - told me at one time that I would have side him on the soft grass. in the pale light. | vou dressed? — Mary—are| to have an operation. I thought I He kept his arm ahout her for | Lyster came a step ne | el | wouldtry ‘Pinkham’s, ‘as] callit,first, "o L moment made her stand with “Tell e he said again, i wits an enormions veliel to get | In two months 1 was allrightand had | her back to the stile. There was a| “I can't.” said Wh. 1 cant A0 snsweroin the aflicmatives she o no operation, I firmly believe ‘Pipk- * <A instructions over the ham's’curcdme. Every one who saw - - — = | s me after that remarked that I looked “Some people are eallin 1| sowell. T only have to take medicine them i the ving room occasionally, not but I always keep a I will be down in a minnte — oh, | eoupleof bottlesby me. Irecommend and, Mary keep the boys ont of | it to women who speak to me abont | the way and. for heaven's sake, | their health, I have also used your minid that the eake doesn’t burn— | native Wash and like it verymuch. " it's in the oven ™ | 0ULD, 4000 East Side She 1ni her hair iy how | 0s Angeles, Cal. ¢ s &hook s she fasten- | . Many letters have been received Vn e raat from women who have been restored “1 don't know why on carth iy | health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg- s e e | etable Compound after operations ; 4 | aave been advised. 1 ling traitorously as she nt down the stairs, e s e c———— ‘ter, Asks (1 Mistah Buzzard it from way up in the blue, bin The drawing room door R but that's as near it as she closed. and Nan stood for a moncn By Thoraten W. Burgess ver has heen.” | outside You shonld have seen Peter's face | When sl she went into the that is not put to fall. He was more puzzled than room th s a little flnsh in he has no real escuse. cver and of course this meant that | cheeks, but she smiled composeidly he wias more curions than ever. e | enough e went forward Peter Rabbit knew that OF Mistah Buzzard was| Arnott was standing staring at a m the fruth. He knew that [ pieture, He who round s the Curosity schlom s pol As & when OF Misteh Buzzard said that [ deor opencd He hegan a clumsy in rule it is impolite, It leads folks to she was not on the Big Mountain | troduction. but hie sister cut him ! do things that the wounldn’t other I never 1 bheen there, it was ex ort wise drcam of doi amon artly so. This being so, why of | 1 L rd osa much of Mis the people of the 1 Forest and conrse that nest must be somewhere | 1t there dsn't any need {the Green Mea litt e there in the Green IForest, All that v be formally introdieed b N lit is a law that where a 1o had gained from O Mistah Buz il She gave Nan her S0 NI e the business of nobody but t own ard was the knowledge that he had ors of that home. To ask any one suessed rightly in thinking that O shoken of yo N Iw 3 B l Where their home is is very impolite | Mrs, Buzzard was sitting on cggs T Re ew agnehc alsam el that these eggs were not over | . = Peter Us curiosity had on the Big Mountain. That was| Ninie Nayenta Desll’oys Halr GrOWlh | become too flow u mere something but oh dear how hi& hut her cheeka felt hot | matter of impoliteness to stand in | curiosity had grown! He thought he seemed to vead e —-FOREVER (he way of trying to tind ont what ‘knew all akout the Green Iforest 18, for he said suddenly | he wanted to know. So he sat him- |If any one had told him that a per for came. alon e Prominent scientific and health gne «olf down at the fool of the fall, [son ns big as Mrs. Buzzard could pe spotted your ye AL ‘J:"f»\"flf"“»“,“,'h,",'“’. oaf- | dead tree on which OF Mistah Buz- hide her nest so that he couldnw’t|yne road and insisted on g BN Dl ot delighted 1 1 take his wnd walking home with them the fiperfious hair roote, Dath or Vuzzird.” | Ma Topping little G N EARM AT Ny lav Mrs. Buz faren't they? They wo 0 so_easlly in the privaey of nest {much to me, hut 1 o mass. without ador, | or Mista I down all ¢ T N _ Ty el t Deter. “Brer Ita said e, ? cyes - tly 1itts out busincss is that of yonrs? ‘Peter was always fond il Ir. root and a ul the e to look a lit dren” she said, unthin ihe tkin clear, white and beaus @ \hamed. 1 don't suppos Arnott’s sister Yooked cki suffer the embarrassment of Buzzare “that it You know Mr. Lyster well?™ & hair ane day o Get iy mine. The asked, in famt surp S AR 1 ¢ A nest “I ON, no — at Ie \ iair o easts you nothing. Sold | X Know stammercd and " all good dealers such as 3 looked appralingly Dannally 1 He rushed into ti s | “Miss Marraby m 5 A { when we've been once ¢ “ H : | He followed Nan fo the tea-ta an vour head of B [ “T say. let me help” he wrged IREaySi y e | lirer Rabbit” said he, “what busi- | ! ‘!"“:q':;“‘(“" o Boltnmiont s ke 1 nge—tne bex 1 i reckon 1 1 \d passing ps aad 128, E re 2 sl ness is that of yours? St b e : AT : 1 her vo'self.” ad it, he would have said that that | 1Y Across the room; she wes o smcemmeieeret Will you me if 1 guess was impossible. But it had been | SHghtly-built woman, r below lone. He knew where the nest of | average height extremely his | where the nest of Redtail the Hawk | was inordinately proud. 4 £y AN {was. He knew where the nest ot | “Will Mr. Lyster be c {) g ‘ yo ! jrer " | Hooty the Owl was. He knew where | then?” n asked presently 4 i 1 e you the nest of Plunger the Osprey was. | tried hard t ke her question \ s & s rig It certainly scemed that Mrs. Buz- | pear casual. but to the other woman | ¥ 0. zard must have a nest as big as any | there was a sort of suppressed eag- I Peter jumped up and of those nests, yet he hadn’t bheen | ernees in her voiec | edly. “All right, Mista$) Buzzard." 1o find it. “He didn't say,” she answercd he, “that’s fair cnough. & You 1 will find said Peter Yes | sweetly. “They all turned off into e 1 almost know 1 know where (sir, 1 will find it if I never do an-|the woods. I shouldn't troubic to t ne at is T almost know |gther thing." keep any tea for them.” re to look for it. My |(Copyright, 19 . W. Burgess) | “It's no trouble,”” Nan said. “The | is over oW the Big = 1 boyy will be hungry. angway.' | The next story: “Peter Tries All| “I'm not going to lke her," was| 0 Buz- (the Old Nests." | the dismaycd thought in her heart. LS 1 more than ever | “And she isn't going to like me N = 3 R G b e e (LT @w Lt Ah reckon OF| BOBBED HAIR lcoks wonderful| She was ashamed of the instinct: | r dene visit the with the tiny tint of Golden Glow |she liked Arnott well enough to victor Reco 3 lone look down |Shampoo.—ad\ wish to like his sister aleo ‘Y