New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 16, 1926, Page 10

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AT MRt P28 o O £ Seena s oo — . . et e e NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, AUGUST 16, 1926. - - - T T SRR 7 5 A 7 {loped with hard cooked eggs, cclery |hearts, Boston brown bread. crisp . ' j§] [nut cookies, iced cocoa. Qulcksands of Love The Beauty Doctor By Beatrice Burton B|.0"ohu sance: vaked macurons Nt b aciionis New Phase-of ’ NINON = R Author of “Love Bound,” {buttered green beans, escarolo with - o French dressing, tutti frutti ice, HER MAN” {sponge cake, graham bread, milk, L 4 - Reve]atlons 0/ a Wi[e s R : " (Wlustrated and Copyrighted by Johnson Features, fuc., 1819 Broadway, New York City) i"“"[f:l»ug LSS e o erved the lobster sauce suggested Gallant Moments in Madge's Life |J0 the script, absolutely on my own e : 4 2 4 . P | in the dinner menu, but they may As a Working Girl. But his next words set me right on | " : e — have the halibut without the dress- All my pride and pleasure in my that point. | g gl AD THIS Flu g new position took wings at Philip | “I shall wish you to report here | i 7 y 4 Marry: Tiocke piétty: axid gy xa The dinner dessert can be strained Veritzen's apparently innocuous twice a week while you are work- % her nickname, is a born flirt, S |before freezing, and used as a really question, “Can you draw?” I knew |ing upon this particular phase,” he o 3 v the kind of girl who has no ambition |delicious drink. The pineapple must that I had no artistic ability what- said, ‘and either I or someone re- | . : beyond having good time and |be cooked with the water and the ever, and long association with the | presenting me wil go over things g 4 plenty of heaux. AL 20, she falls at diic8iaqubeed i ralE I BlieEskalofh: successful young illustrator who was | with you. Will Monday and Thurs- . ; 4 : % 1siness school because she won't | Tuttl Frutti Ice S my husband had printed the fact |day morning at eleven o'clock be tudy. Then she takes a low-salaried Two cups shredded pinsapple, 2 indelibly upon my mind. But I had |convenient to you?" 4 _ b in Lillie Dale's sittle beauty shop. cups granulated sugar. 1 cup or- St bodont (hat drawing would bs | ‘With {ERIEy BT Ranti oy ) oa ) E , Byt tinis oies e el i ange juice, 1-2 cup lemon juice, 4 one of the requirements I had to |from quirking into a smile, as I ) ; 5 first real love affair of her life. The cups water, grated rind 2 oranges possess .and T was not able to keep red what he would say should ey % 1 Sy an in the case is Topy Gaines, a :\nvrl.nln»k"x‘v‘)'ov:”g:r;sm\"\::l):t:;\/;h;:;:r:}. rind of oranges and lemon. Bring to the boiling point and boil 8 minutes. Strain. Combine pineapple, orange juice, lemon juice and sryup and turn into freezer. Freeze and serve with a “dip” of strawberry pre- serves. This can be frozen with or with- out stirring, pack in three parts ice to one part salt. Always use ice cream saft. (Copyright, 1926, by NEA Service.) my chagrined disappointment out of t query at ts i R serions young lawver who wants to what Lillian calls my “transparent 11 him that the v ? Y marry Their en ement ends face.” vould net be ; 4 en Tony learns that Merry goes I was furious both at my nvenient for me . 4 ont with other men, A vear later my distinguished employer when I Veritzen Kisses Madge's Hand Merry hears that he is going to mar- laughed lightly in ‘hey will suit me perfectly.” T 4 . R AR R ment ot what he saw ir irmured, and he reseated himself 4 / sl “Don’t be frightene . i <. pressed the button and i Moms, Marmy's Twidoned molher: “You won't have to ¢ is- lonna-faced girl again ap- 4 takes Lillie Dale and a Mr. Heffling. tler or Corot. But can you dra ed er into the house to hoard. Mr. Hef- well enough to make accurate appointment for Mrs. Graham § 3 ; Pinwer heging it conrt Moms i Lhis coples of — say picturescof weapons, |at eleven o'clock, a week from next L e R e 3 &, : 5 or articles of dress which vou may |1 day.” he directed. and when L ; | Merry's voungest sister, Jinny, who ? i s : run across in yvour researches? If . sone he smiled en- 4 s el D ATl o hcsie i ek : Y 3 . abesslage o SO aTig you cannot, say so frankly, and I'l g at me / 10 Iive next door Wwith his parents. . '| # L ¢ FASH]ONS send someone around With you who That disposes of all our affairs,” : : Chssies tha ola st i sial ! thns siem s S 2 | ean.” he said, stressing the pronoun r rich employer, Morley Kauf- ¢ ’ *® v S ilgris I arew a long breath of relief, for |slightly. “Now tell me, when do you Posed by Flo Kennsdy They Gtiirell Gonstaatlyi bt ; - By Sally !dg"m 1 always had been a fair copyist, ct your niece, Miss Harrison? y s Cassie her soft easy ¥ although of originality or ability to e is your niece, is she not?” CONDITION—Strained, or tired eyes Y sketch from nature. I possessed no| “No, my husband's” I answered. DIAGONIS—This may come from working in insufflcient or unaceus- | Through Kaufmans, Merry whit. “A hought she was yours.” | tomed light t Erskine, a wealthy “T can copy accurately any simple | There was a subtle let down in| TREATM An eyewash is excellent for clea v . o |hac Thew hacomeren sasen (bat thing like that which already ha voice, and I knew with an age- | eves, Diluted boracic acid is helpfull occasionally, or merely in water eps putting off the wedding. been drawn,” I assured him con- |old feminine instinct that he meant | may be used. It is well not to do much for your eyes without consulting |Then Merry begins to go about with tidently. me to understand Mary had lost a | an oculist, since they are so very delicate. After a ride in the dust, always | Cabby Marsh, who is the fiance of «] want drawings of everything.” [certain interest for him because she | wash your eyes thoroughly, with the lids closed, and remove the dust from | Morley Kaufman's sister, Murie “Then when vour week of rest |was not my own kin the eyelashes, and cleanse the eyeball with water or boracie acid in an |And when Merry gets herself tangled has passed, take this script, and “When is she to come to you?”| eyecup. For a cinder or any foreign matter in the eye, an eyecup bath is [up in the divorce case of her old visualizing the characters, accouter [he asked. “I was given no set date.” | also advised. au, Les Purcell, and his wife, them in illustrated descriptions, fol- “She gave none to me,” I told him. Muriel tells Bill 21l about it. He| lowing Bladner'’s minute directions |“But I am expecting a letter from = Toir Irops Merry like a hot cake and wherever you can. Go very minutely |her almost any day. announcing her |jjit1e praver, “Giod grant that Lela |swer to an advertisement in which a |Marries another girl into details, and {llustrate with |arrival. The term of school which |,14 the child would malke up to this Fox i t i e g One afternoon, a year later, Mer- eopies of picture when possible, Tf |she agreed to finish was ended last | oor Jittle rich girl for her poverty 7 NPeie BiT o CGentieman ry fs just starting out for a drive there are no illustrations, ma week."” lta Tovar Q@ Why does salt cause ice to|Vith Cabby Marsh when they meet descriptions especially comprehen- “Then no doubt she will write to I was glad that Joan was voung, 'melt? Muriel. Muriel, wild with jealousy, | sive. We have & young wizard here {me also.” he said rising. T guessed |tor 1 was sure that this episods \e freczing point of water, |Lells Merry that she is “the kind of [table was a ruler and she slipped it |as the car started the slow climb to in the office who can draw anything |that my time for .dismissal had |\oyjq only broaden and sweeten her - e other Niia e, eon- | €Yl that fellows take out on the sly.” [between the baseboard and the Overlook Heights. “Maybe I don't| from description. Remember, I do |come, and also rose. He held out|jjfo in the end, that she would make siderably lowered by dissolving in it {She adds that Cabby wouldn't be|wall and went to work. Little rolls |look much different, but I feel shop- not wish just one type of costume \his hand and bending over mine, |some other man a better wife and lsubstances of any kind. Seawater on |5¢en dead with her, if he were with jot dust, like gray micc, cameworn somehow.” for each character. I want drawings |swept it lightly with his 1ips in the |, g up is children to more splen- account of the solid in it (salt) will |is own crowd” and Merry knows |tumbling out, and then, suddenly, | She thought once more of Cassie or description of everything which |foreign fashion. But there was in the | 3iq paryrity, o : 5 degrees to 6.6 de- |that it is the truth. For Cabby ad- \the ruler stuck. who, without any doubt, had hid- he or she could have worn in that |gesture a faint recurrence of the Y Nodked af Tarrs Waa it thettrlck ) srdes dnstoad ot g& 5. the |Mits that, while he is going to mar- Merry pulled it out, and slipped it (den the letter fron her. And her period. Then from that mass of |hting which I had noted more than [,¢"ya candle light, or had the gaunt |freczing peint of pure water, Mixing |V Muriel, he is more than willing to |down behind the base-board once face was set to the mood of hatred material we can select the ones |once in his eyes and voice and man- |qrawn lines really ironed themselves salt with ice, thercfore, is equivalent |Bave @ little fun with Merry and jmore. as she started up the gravel drive which will be most effective.” |ner, and I went home faintly [gu¢ of his face in wHich I only saw |to re-combining water and salt, and |BirlS like her in the meantime But once more it stuck. Some- that wound through green lawns to I caught my breath. It was a [troubled but also thrilled. pathetic apeal. My hand stole over |the pure ice, which freezes at 32 | (NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY) |thing was holding it there some- |("assie’s proud house on Overlook tremendous task, this which he had and rested on that one of his which degrees is melted because the freez- CHAPTER LVII thing that felt like a wad of paper. hill. outlined. T wondered if I were ml (Copyright, 1 Newspaper |was lying listlessly on the table. ing point of a mixture of water and |, The morning . of Merry Locke's Al at once the ruler brought it (TO BE CONTINUED) carry it on as he had wished me (o, 2 s Bervice, Ine. | " “Come, I said, “let us all go back |salt is not 33 degrees but 26,6 de- |tVenty-elghth birthday was a day |forth from its hiding place. It was| The next chanter of “The Petter,” |she never was to forget so long as a wad of paper. A folded wad of a vitally interesting one, tells how | all our cares because tomorrow,you | Q. Is there any state in the She lived: i Suivioys Wil & fwo cony atanty fug| Colln “oxtlaiuen " e Lftes feen know, s another day. Another day |Cnited States where a license tag for | 1t began as ordinarily as a day ja special dellvery stamp on it! Tony, and what Merry did. Do you which promises to be full of respon- |automobiles is not used? |can begin. VMN'r_ mouth began to tremble, (think she wrote Tony Gaines DI A derk Mg e e et st R She up in bed, yawning. Then |Without looking ct the handwriting the next chapter. | “Where do you rn all this?" Has there ever been a no hit, |[suddenly she remembered that on the envelope she knew what it |asked Joan, “One to look at you no run game played between teams [PAPCrhangers were coming to paper |was - the special delivery letetr would think t you thought of |of the National and American |the hall and the downstairs.sitting from Tony Gaines! The letter that i AR e S iy room had disappeared so mysteriously, so e e e e e e Your Health | have know ;\ you I have ]qu!’vml from Q. What is the correct use of the bed, "l“d .N(:H)f\l”l 1“{0“} HETELEO Shaking all over she got up from o Bi6l OF Bhoté iy B e BUA BElvers My Gnd Har that she remembered that this was her knees, and went up stairs to her How to Keep It— A shimmering Gown for Formal my own understanding more than| A, “Lay" is transitive, that e ‘l‘lrilhdn). Her twenty-eighth o“rlv_'hr:nm; o e Causes of Illness Evening Wear Features Two A e Il iaRatha B 16 sl BT e Pnr Rt aa bl “ | birthday! ere she opened it and read it— e = Have vou also loved and lost?” rto lie, to place. An example of the |lcaned close to the mirror and on a summer night, eight years ago. BY DR. HUGH 8. CUMMING mming. A Useful Tongue (scalloped -shells, round shells, long |she said as she:looked at me quizzi- |corréet use of lay is “He lays the [100ked at herself in the glass The letter that could_have changed | Surgeon General. United States A it shells, all sorts of shells. All the |cally. table.” “Lie” never has| 1he sunlight from the windows her whole life, if someone had not Public Health Service By Thornton W. Burgess shells that were at all twisted like a | Jerry's hand tightened upon mine. lan object. It means “to rest,” {o ré. |beside her poured ~over her In a folded it up and hidden it then, be- | Milk probably is' the most fm snail shell, he called snail shells, It| *I don't know, Joan,” I sald hon- |main exiended in. a prone position. |yellow flood that found few flaWs hind the old warped base-board! portant of all human foods. It con- 8ome folks can always find excuse |was one of these little shells that he |estly, “whether I have ever loved or [Example: “He lies down,” means “to |In her face. r | hemreap Tony had written, and fains nearly all of the elements To put their nimble tongues to use. |discovered belonged to the Oyster [not. If it is a sudden passion that |rest,” to remain extended in a prone | The twenties do mot write Very Merry shut her wet eyelids as she which the body requires. Tt caries —O0ld Mother Nature. | Drill, It was hard work for Jimmy |makes one feel that one cannot live position. Example: “He lies down. much history on a woman's face, |loked at the word: It was almost man through the first vears of his — to realize that the queer little fellow |separated from the other, I have| Q. YWhat is a “gold bond?" Is-it |and except for the little tired lines jlike hearing his voice say *dearest” |life, and in later * vears it and its A tongue is an exceedingly handy |that lves in that little shell could |never loved. And not having loved, |more valuable than other kinds? |at the corners of Merry's eyes, she close against her products make up a large proportion thing to have. Probably you have |possibly drill a hole through an |I cannot have a fecling that I have| A. Both the interest and princi- |looked much as-she had looked| It was a minute or.two- hefore of his diet. \en she was went she could see again o read, through | A mixture of milk from several discovered that. You use it in talking | oyster shell. But Graywing the Gull |lost.” bal of gold bonds are payable in ¥ ] | E & e I can't believe I'm really twenty- 'the blinding tears that flooded to cows is much more sonstant in its | (Limming covering the long close- eight,” she said to herself, her own her eyes. chemical make-up than that from a | f111Ng bodice. This consists of tiny and you use it in eating, and which |haq shown him one at work on an Jerry dropped my hand, and rising gold. Any kind of hond may con- oyes meeting the gay, deep ones in | “Dearest, I am. going away in a single animal. For this reason. com. Ihinesiones and crystals in a dec- is the more important of the tWo oyster, and he had with his own [we all went down the piazza steps tain that provision but its value as uses it is sometimes a bit difficult | eyes seen the hole. out into the moonlighted garden. |an investment does not depend upon n z U i i hin ] to tell. There are tongues and| wwhat did he do it with?” cried | (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, |its being a “gold” bond. the mirror. “First thing I know I'll few days. To Billings, Montana, |posite milk is to be preferred for in- | Ofafive design of — bunches —of tongues. There are tongues we wWant | Jimmy. Tic) Q. 1s it illegal to publish income |be an old maid. whore my father's old friend. Jhdge [fants, Ordinary milk containg §7 | Srapes. To further the effect of to run away from, and tongues we | “His tongue.” replied Graywing. 4 s AT nd vy She laughed at the thought, and Bannerman, is going to take me in- per cent water. leaving only a pos. Drilliance, the grapes ‘are outlined like to have near us. | e o e it rotorted Jim-| Tomorrow — A Queer Coincl-| . The Revenue Act of 1926 for- |then wondered if ahe ever would |to his law office. I've hoen Walting isible 13 per cent for food solids. | With a delicate tracery of silver You will remember that Old Mr. |y, dence. bids the publication of income tax | married. George Leet was still [to hear from you, and as your Most state law now require that | thread. Toad has a very handy tongue, a | Tat doesn't make the least bit St B coming to see her every Wednes- mother, no doubt has told yu, ‘I've milk sold must contain at least 12 In addition to fhis gleaming hind-side-before tongue, as it were. |o¢ gitference in the world,” replied o "S¥hat are the colors of the |day and Sunday night, as he had been | called at the house twice. Tets not per cent solids. ornament, there is a dep border on Jimmy Skunk had seen him use this | Graywing. “He did it with his University of Chicago, the Univer- |coming for five years. be fools any more, Merry.. Let's get | Milk with less than this amount is | the skirt of ostrich flues in several many times, and always it had seem- | {oneue just as that big fellow over | sity of Tilinois and the University of orge never would marry while imarried now, today, and go to Mon- not necessarily jmpure; the buyer toncs of light green to harmonize ed to Jimmy one of the most wWon- |tpere hores through shells with hi Minnesota? his mother lived. He said so. He had tana together. : : TONY.” simply is not getting his money's with the absinth shade of the chif- derful tongues in all the Great | yoneyc a0 REL L are respectively |ONlY enough money to support him- erry sat still, still as _a statue, worth, o World. But he found that down on| rThe hig fellow that Graywing “Maroon,” “Orange and Navy Blue" |8¢If and her,Foor George. _holding it in her hand. The boyish | Tat is the most valuable part of | As a result of hte elaborate trim the seashore there were tongUeS ;i cant was what Jimmy would have ) A 14 Gald and\ Marogn | “But T don't belieye 1'd marry impulsive letter that the boy, Tony. whole milk. It is present in the form | ming, the sithouette of this gown i quite as wonderful as the tongue of | sajied a giant snail. It wasn't a giant Q. Who led the National baseball [ him even it 1 had the chance, “L’h had written eight years before. She of an emulsion — tiny particles of it | straight as far as the hips. An at- Old Mr. Toad. To be sure, you|gnay, but what is called a Giant ) Ie e i N faann AR aE T ry thought, as she picked up a l-xlixkv wondered if the grown man, who held in suspension — giving milk its | tractive feature of the upper por- Whelk, having a coiled or twisted " Rogers Hommshy with a per- |and began to finft out her yellow had married fn Montana, ever normal color. These particles are | tion, the deep oval decolletage of shell, and being the largest of the | > centage of .403. ried. thess | NOUENE OF that letter now. IChe |surrounded by thin albuminous | the bodico filled in with narrow ellfish of this kind. T & Lo Q. How many pissengers were i W S e thought of that last night he membranes which prevent them | straps in harness effect. Do you mean to tell me that that T HEY 5 carried on all railroads in the United |42¥8. She worked all day, an 2 he |had spent here, in this town, Prob- |from uniting. If milk is heaten, these | The slippers are opera models of great big smail ~over there! said | » 2 States in 10242 Epadi F”r":g“l“"l"'; :";‘”m“l'fld iy ::'l‘n‘ waiting for her to telephone nembranes are broken, the fat par- | green and silver brocade, orna- . throug] ster | 51,067,086 when noth ut 3 aga- | him, cles stick together, and butter is | mentec arrow b i Jimmy, an bore through an oy ri - . .“3:'41“ ;lix“r population of |ine or Vogue Icoked good tol HEr Seddenly, with o it whlmpse \':m"m;. ick together, and butter is ‘\‘:‘r”]"vj with narrow bands of sil- led. "That's fust| [ Greece and of Athens? How many |Were gone. She had a card at theing cry, she turned and flung.her-| A number of substances called § ¥ | public library, and she took out two selt across the bed, .shaking with |proteins, of complex chemical com- | , I addition to a delicate grape design in brilliants and crystals, “SHOPWORN—THAT'S WHAT I AM", SHE THOUGHT BITTE to the city and try and sleep away grees to 27.5 degrees. charming model for the vari- ous occasions throughout the sum- mer that require a formal type of evening gown is the chiffon model skefched fo This is smart from the standpoint of " both line and trimming and, in addition, is typi- cal of the note of elegance prevail- ing at present The most salient feature is the aywing 1o it a nean to say.” said he. “He | Greeks are there in the United ’ S hat T mean to sa | 5 B or three books a week. terrible sobs. Shaken with help- position, furnish an important food has a ribbon-like tongue, the surface sl TEETE States 3 A Al E 5 5 el o o e ohich 18 covered with a great QUESTIONS ANSWERED e population of Greece is| She liked stories about married |les grief. Crying as ~she had 1ot |found in milk, although they supply this pale green chiffon evening number of very tiny teeth, and h 01T A ot Athens. 800.701, |life best. Or stories of adventure. cried for eight years, and Knowng only about half the energy supplied | [Tock 18 trimmed with a wide bor- Dores through oyster shells and clam Aecording to the lnst census there |The other kind, the books about [asshe did it, that it was t0o late by fats. The principal protein | der of shaded ostrich. shells. I you live around here long | Zif 28 P8 T g were 221,768 Greeks In the United |the love of a man and a girl, she to cry now, casein, known as curds in sour milk. Copyright, 1926, (EFS) nough, you'll find that a lot of these | BTIINE the Question (BIIOE i on never read. They made her un-| It may have been a half hour slhumin and globulin are other pro- O o the boach | New Britain Herald, Washingtor ™0 ¢ ¢ 1o e and depth |Dappy and restless aftersard that she began to Won- |feins present OO tner (hings, just as s | Burean. 1322 New York avenue. | i, Kentucky Caverns? She didn't know why. But she |der who had put the letter there. | Milk deprived of its fat stil is a |n the Daysflf uurrul-efathe[s Rictoaaein Green Meadows and | Washington, D, C., enclosing two (™ ™ g jiicky Caverns of which |learned to leave them alone, just 86 ) where she flad fbund it. good food, for proteins are always e Green Forest. Oysters and clams | Cents in stamps for reply. Medical. |50p pave been explored, including |She had trained herself not to think | It was perfectly plain that it had |present, When milk spoils, these ele- | When America was young, the ¢ Took to be safe when they have | leBal and marital ad¥ice cannot be | \raymoth Cave which is the largest, |about Tony Gaines. __|not fallen there. It had been folded monts undergo changes and may, | Wise pioncer women learned —to have & vertical depth insome places| She never thought abou him any twice and then stuffed down behind [yhen taken Into the system, cause | gather, in woods and flelds, the rem- | You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by —_——— O L ln closedl, but they are not.” | Biven. nor can extended research The Whelk Jimmy and be undertaken. All other questions |heiween 500 and 600 feet. The cay. |More. That is, hardly ever. the baseboard. The blackened jjjness. But when milk sours by the | edies the Indians used. From the S IR Hkehl Anow thiem. fo. hallodug were 16oKing atia syhat 1na will recelve a personal reply. Une ooy on 500 and 00 feet. The cav- | ™ But that morni £ something hap- |creases showed exactly where it had usual factic acid bacilll, it is an ex- |rafters of colonial houses hung Sireting Tl yoii sean thsen andinp Channeled Whelk. 1t Jimmy | signed requests cannot be answered. | 5040 square miles in Kentucky and (Pened that filled every e ',‘m: been folded. cellent food, especially for adults. | great bunches of gried roots and one told vou what they serc. But |had looked a little further he might | All letters are confidential—Fditor. | Tennessee. ? forner of her mind and heart and | Merry sat up, wiped her eyes, ettt | herbs. From these, in time of sick- Swabia | ey gain, after eight and lived over the long-ago night in | v . & Sk The work thew ¢ he | have found the shell of the Knob- | . Q. What is Pola Negri's latest |Soul Wwith him, again, 3 g ness, the busy mother browed rem- when I st e vark they dif, he have found the ol o e of lit-| @ Wheres President James K. | ity 0 RSN |1ong years! | her memory. No one had been in the o Hadles eatt Hior fathily: p(znmy:’-a’“” B B O s e oni tha Al A st poaer | EoTB nuricd & A. “Good and Naughty.” She {s| "I Wish you'd stay home today |house that snight but herselt and Menus for t’]e Fa”"ly From roots and herbs, Lydia E. Iver since Jimmy had first come lobs on the Shel ¢z cocoons of | A: In the grounds of the statel, o roiing o now special, “Hotel |and help me” Moms &id to her: | Moma and.Jinny Lnd Cassie. Pinkham, a descendant of these o the seashors, he had | tly e e ¥ wnt Jimmy |capital at Nashville, Tennessee. His | ot |over the ) urried untidy breakfast in |* Nome, of course, had not touched o sturdy ploneers, made her Vegetable do e ooy 0 nad ot gronily el A o ke [P0 was moved there in 1543 from | "0 docs n person attain |he Kitchen. “I ought to wash all|the lotter. She had liked TonY| Breakast — Stewed pruncs and |Compound. Tor more than half a cs fastened upon |the old family tomb in the yard of gy} growth? the woodwork before e | Rneg, » apple cause, rolled oats with thin |century this dependable medicine the Polk Mansion which stood at| , &ay il o e |hangers come. And T'll never be able | yinny — all at once. something | oo “poctoec b dd® Y™ | Hag heen taken by women with very the corner of Vine and Union streets time varies with individpals, race |t0 do it. alone. A that Jinny had said that night flash- crisp broiled bacon, whole wheat | satisfactory results. Q. What does Rhea mean? Is it | o1\ “sox. The average American | S0. instead of starting off to the leq across Merry's mind. Jinny had |\ooqt milk, coffee {35558 Han hlned "oihar somen he name of & boy or &ir beauty shop with Lilll said that Cassie had been looking at | "yyncheon — New potatoes scal- | why shouldn't it help you?.—adit. I “I dont’ believe it,” retorted Jimmy he had seen » the shells of land 1 ittle disc contained #nails and o resh water mussels, sometim 1 ol W, Burgess) eashore und woman attains full growth at 18 ; i Ao . Collar Made | A+ It 18 a girl's name and comes | ‘e "of age; the averago American |Went upstairs and put on an old jthe letter, while she sat beside the o) Aol size from the Greek. Rhea was a mytho- s {blue calico house dress that had (aple, waiting for Morley Kaufman. hells. rough shells, 8 h " ¥ male between 18 and 21 years. i . Rl Bt b logical goddess, daughter of Uranus | ¢, Tow many churches are there |once belonged to Helen. Of course, Cassie 1ad hidden the let- ( i z ‘All right; here 1 am,” she told |gari e and G5, that i Heaven and ;' {riited States? S A. In 1916, when fhe last cen- |Moms cheerfully, when she went| «J'il never.forgive her if she did!” IT'S FUNNY Q® Will you give me the titles of | ¥ 0" "0 o4 ire was made, there |downstairs. “Where will T begin? | perry declared. Yes, .hat's what it is—our Washington Buareau's latest bulletin, motion pictures in which Betty | core 203,432 church buildings T don't know whether Yl be sMy}, Thatafterdoon atifouriocloctdhe entitled WIT AND HUMOR: It's filled with jokes, toasts, storles Compson was direc by her hus- | \which is the hottest place in |§00d at this kind of work or not.”|gas on her way to Cassie's big house and conundrums, old and new. It'll give you a laugh, or help with band, “James Cruze?" the United States? |*"To Moms' disgust she put on a pair |on Overlook Heights. and apt story at a dinner or banpuet. Fill our the coupon below A. “The Pony Express" ° . Greenland Ranch, Death Val. |of red rubber gloves. | All day she had gone around the and send for it: o Garden of Weeds” and “The Enemy | joe californin where the temper.| *1 dom’t know how you cah work |house, doing her scrubbing, with a Glll Of TOdaY Sex.” loyi, QALIOTES culier he 1emper- |, those things, Merry Ann Locke,” | ta0a like white flint. CLIP COUPON HERE ature rises as high as 134 degrees. H . Q. What is the value of a United | Tnie pinea 18 about 400 feot below |she said severely, “but do your| 'ghe sat in a corner of the street JUDY LOOKS AHEAD ard hoy — a body who had per- [States silver dollar dated 1504, fil- |goo" jovel |best and use plenty of elbow grease. |car, watching two or three, young T looked across the table at Joun haps loved her as much as he was |let head, large cagle? ¥ g - | You can start in with the front | flappers across.the aisle. Cute JOKES EDITOR, Washington Bureau, and saw that her face was trans- capable. One who had not really A. A leading coin dealer offers Balsa wood is the lightest wood | hall.” he {voung things with shingled hair and New Britain Herald, figured and 1 understood that she. meant 1o make r unhappy, but [a premium of from $300.00 to |y o™ [ yiohiar than cork, and| Merry carried her pail and an |painted cheeks and bright eyes, 1322 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C. o \,Al'mltfl of clean sloths and a bowl |~ “They're nineteen or twenty—just cuble | AXNIN 1 soap into the hall and |about the age I was when Tony I want a copy of the bulletin, WIT AND HUMOR, an] en- close herewith five cents in loose, uncancelled, U. 8. postage A : W 1 e y e Merry ing of maternal responsibility with- |bringing to himself that which he |for girls oy B B wrote this letter to me, Juanita, Mercedes M_‘JL-—S' It was the fir ¢ time she had ever |thought, holding it between her stamps for same: I out which any woman's love was wanted at whitever cost A. Lucila | dross. Because had had that mother |Carmen, Lolita, Pacita, Luz Car- ’, liried to scrub woodwork in her |pands. “I wonder if he'd still like NAME I knew instinctively that what she |feeling | that she would for- |melita and Teonora | ABYSCOLDS |ife, and like all beginners, she me if he,could see me now had just passed through had broad- |give him come to look upon his| Q. Will hens lay eggs without a are soon “nipped in the'bud” | M29¢ quite a job of it. | "she ¥hew she ~vas as pretty as ADDRESS P X a . - he flock? . | The space be he wall and |ghet had been. The flappers ened and deepened her character. jwife and child as something |rooster in the flock “ " " | The space between the wall and ghe' ever ha “‘"‘"‘" "”‘"5 by use of— |0 o5 hoard that ran around the | now and then stole an ad- (o} 10 Lk SRRV WO SRR 7, TR and that now that Barry was gone |which he had given her to pet and | A. They will lay infertile eggs | £ pund, |every i i aoed there would come o her some time |care for. [that will not produce chicks. Tnfer K s | floor was filled with dust, After try- | miring glance <t her. For all their L SRR A Sl in'the near future, when the hurt| Tt was her great mother tender- |tile eggs, however, are best for food ling to wash it out Merry decided IB!vomh. she was better lookyng than ( ) was but a scar, the knowledge that |ness which poured itself out on| @Q What form of salutation VA PORUB }m- seraping it out |any of them. ! | after all hio bad only been & way- |something unworthy, and 1 prayed & |should & letter have that is in an- Over 17 Million Jars Used Ye: In the drawer of the kitchen| “But I've chang ahe thought, 4. N st B too. had the great thrill and that her jone of those weakling hunian beings | 00 for this coin. ; walghn bBly 3 povnds " per love had always contained that fecl- |whose firsi thought was for the| Q. Whatare some Spanish names | oo \when new. The Balsa tree . | set to work.

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