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Quicksands of Love ‘Adele Garrison’ s New Phase of Revelations of a Wife —— What Happened to Katherine's Let- ter from Hal? Lilljan, left me rather abruptly, and I knew that she was going in order that Katherine might not be hampered by her presence should my little kinswoman wish to tell me of the letter which so patiently had upset her. “Let me know 1f there's anything T can do this week. I can take Mary off your hands for a couple of days at least and show her aroynd New York.” “And you probably the busiest veman in the city!" I exclaimed No, thank you, I think we'll ge without turning you into a cicerone, But I'm giad of the sug- gestion. I think I should enjoy seeing New York through your e as young and enthusiastic Mary's.” “How do you know I wouldn't also?" Lillian demanded with ap- parent huffiness, but I laughed knowingly. “You would, but wide-eyed school girl by your side, I yeturned. “You'll need all your time and energy when Marion's va- catlon comes, without wasting any of it on Mary Harrison. She’s my particular job, anyway, although undoubtedly I shall have to call on you for aid and advice many times after her advent. But as the chil dren say, I'll ‘ay off you' as g as 1 van.” “Do you know you're a mighty zood little egg,” she said abrupt tenderness, and then she was gone, and I, alone in the big room, was left to my conjectures as to the contents of the letter which Kath- erine had taken to her room. It was fully half an hour after Lillian's departure before Kather- ine came down again, outwardly calm and composed. But even through the skillful cosmetic touch- with another es which she had used I could de- | tect the traces of tears and of the emotional storm which had swept hel ‘Has Lilllan gon surprised “Yes,” 1 answered. directly after we had discus Harrigon's letter. Mary will be in a day or tw I 4o not think she heard my ref- erence to the letter from Mary, for all her mental processes were fo- she asked “She went ed Mary re The Urchin That Was Different By Thornton W. Burgess Be not content with what you know; | Add to it; make grow. —O0! your knowledge Mother Nature. If the little people of the Green Forest and the Green Meadows and the Seashore didn't do this, they wouldn't live long. Every day each one of them learns something new. they are never satisfied with the knowledge they have. They want to add to it. So it Skynk and Reddy Fox were continu- ally finding out things on the sea- shore, The had discovered the Green Sea Urchin, a Prickly Porky of the s They had discovered that it was a sort of shellfish, although it didn’t look {n the least like anything they had ever seen before. Graywing the Gull was very good about explain- ing. He told them that there w another Sea Urchin called the 2 2 “Follow me and I'll show you a live one.” Urchin, which has longer 't quite g0 big as the Green Sea Urchin. And he told them that there {8 another member of the family called the Stinging Urchin, larger than the two, and black. Soms of the spines are quite as long as those Prickly Porky the Porcupine, and if th prick y one they sting. But it was who found family. He member of found it of Reddy Fox him ther me didn’t know family it w whe In he HER OV JUDY GETS A THRILL m very glad your brofher is I sald. “T think he should re for the settlement.” am sure he thinks so, too, Judy.” sald Joan, “for I have never known him to come to town before. Of course, he must go to Mr. Elkins with us. T am now going to the grain to meet him and take him di- pectly to the housc. Will you meet | us there, deat? “But, J 1 Jnstrated, “it your brother ts coming no one will want me, a comparative stranger, | s ¢ be 1 was that Jimmy | | me? What would T have done wi |cused upon her own problem, |unusual thing indeed for my self- effacing little kinswoman. l “Isn't that like Lilllan?" she sald warmly. “She guessed that I needed [to talk to you, and too of the da an. ‘gu‘ ence eit ed, ‘u: “I think she | 1 her own to s troubling you. It ations if I tell | zing | elope | suffused with erimson, and with an 1t she letter from dress and held it out to me “I was sure you knew it was from ' aid. “Read It! Yes," her {15 | you to. 1 took th folded it | naturally not intended fo my sur 1 fo |dith expected | tarewell {1oved s0 a “I wish you clo t without wish her have recelved will be relucta this wit felt at my eyes. Hal Mere- would see this e woman he 1 show this to your letter gan natu to . 1 know to write ct t that you to me at L You am going away for will not he that But al am—-no, T must it now. When I r ing straight to you, nind nor my deterr n the slig wherever I en write I am com- neither my time ays, 2 and itest degree. “Good-by. was no signature, and that Dr. Meredith was chival- erine from the s accidentally ged T knew | rously guarding Kat | possibility of some o coming acrosy the letter and linking | Klll)\(’!'!)u»‘ ‘When | | his name with hers. But |was even more punctilious. |1 handed the letter bgck to her, {she put it in a metal bowl standing ‘imhk upon Dicky's smoeking 2nd applied 2 lighted matah to it | (Copyright, 1926, by ' Feature Service, Inc.) | tound was not a live member of the family, but was simply the skeleton of one, and it didn’t look at all like a Sea Urchin. He found it on the sand. It was round and flat, quite thin, and on the upper side . was rounded ever go little. On this up- per side was a pretty pattern in the shape of a star, What it was Reddy didn't have the least idea, At first he was minded to leave it and for- get it; but this was no way to do, and he knew it. So he looked about for Graywing the Gull. He felt no which | 4, Sit down, and | drew the | t to| “and 1| vou | and share | a year. | om me during | ation will be Y| thought for anything or anyone but table, | Newspaper | into the saddest, yet m sure that Graywing would tell him | or Graywing out the things what this thing seemed to know all a on the beach. wing was sitting on a rock way out in the water. Reddy barked sharply. Graywing heard him and came flying over to what w nim what he had found. “That's 1eer thing,” sald Reddy. inquired Graywing. » anything queer about It's nothing but a Sea Urchin.” “ A what?” cried Reddy. was, sec a it aright. a Urchin,” replied Graywing. it used to be s That is what is left of i ¢ me and I'll show you a live flew slowly along, 100k- ing down. Presently he alighted on a rock on the edge of a little pool. fere’s one,” sald he. Reddy went over and looked down in the water. This didn't look any more like a Sea Urchin than the 1g had; but he could see hat it was alive. It with spines, but these spines were so tiny and fine that they were al- most like silk. This one was mov ing along, for it had suckerlike fe As a matter of fact, it was what is called a Sand Dollar, Some folks 11 it Cake Urchin. It is a real Sea I'rchin and a close eousin to other Urchin Reddy had seen. Not even Graywing, wise as he is in ways of the beach, knows every- thing about it. Graywing didn't know that an indelible ink may be made by pounding up a § in water. o, v o1 know some- thing that neither Graywing Reddy Fox have yet learned by T. W WAY . and must |38 much trouble not a compa my business By the r. Your are and companion. r. with | Of of nses, ex- | CArTy [hay fever season. ¥ ! , be all right?"” “I am afraid it will be too much, Joan, You know I haven't had any eperience in business managering. “My dear Judy, do you not know hat alread services have been worth miore than five thovsand to out you In the case of Barry and Lela,” sald Joan earnestly, “T must the trouble, Reddy showed | “rl For a | minute he didn't think he had heard | and cut in halves, removing ceres was covered | and Dollar | Editor Journal nor ‘ Burgess) | Posed by Flo Kennedy run now, dear. half past ten. Before I could say any more, Joan rung pff, and I knew I was in for it. 1 knew my presence at that private business conference, which con- cerned the settling up of the Mere- dith estate, would act wupon Mr. Robinson as a red rag would upon a bull. He probably would mete- phorically try tp gore me to death. 1 expected he would think I was a modern kind of Nemesis which followed him around to mentally torture him. And that is just what he did think, he told me later. But 1 was so concerned in another mat- ter at that time that I had no | myselt. | I had to hurry with my dressing, and so went off without my break- | And taking a taxi 1 got to he gates of the wonderful suburban home of Josiah Elkins at the very moment t Joan drove up with her broth I had ched the pavement in front of the gates when {I heard her call. Turning, I looked st fascinat- | r seen In & man’s ing eyes I have eve face. | Joan got out quickly and ru over and pulled me towards the “Judy, this is my broth exclaimed. John, you will Dean as T do,” she said he man sitt in looked me stra did not move. The sion on his face her: sneering exp! I will never for; BC though he was hating himse for taking an int in me, and his mouth became a narrow, bit- ter line as he murmured my name. \Menus for the Family | BY SISTER MARY BREAKFAST — Chilled | poached eggs on milk toast, graham toast, milk, coffee. ‘ LUNCHEON—Creamed onions on toast, rye bread and cheese sand- ‘w ches, radishes, apple saude, ginger gooldies, iced choe ol R—Planked s and t and cabbage salad, fruit hole wheat bread, milk coffee. If you are not the possessor of a | k" but col te investing ne keep the suggestions in | |mind when making your purcha | Choose an o plank in pre | ence to any other wood. Do not buy a plain plank. A plank made with grooves leading to a shaliow | well at one end insures one against ‘(hv» loss of any juices or gravy. Planked Sausages and Apples Heat plank until comfortably | ol melon, crisp te kei ‘| warm and rub well with lard or oil. | Hea Choose good sized apples. in the oven until smoking hot. Wash | | Arrange apples with cut side up on‘ the hot plank and in the center of | h apple place a small sausage | hich had been parboiled for ten | rinjtes. Prick sausage in several places with a sharp fork. Put into | 1 hot oven o under the broiler rath- | from 'the broiling flame and | til the apples are tender and sausages brown and well done. When ready to serve arrange molds of hot boiled rice at intervals around the plank. Make a depression in the | top_of each and fill with 1 table- | spoon catchup. | | The f a plank makes it pos- use of sible the whole to cook meat course on one and serve | samrencm BY NINOX-““M! CONDITION—A skin that is be- coming flabby and reveals pores, DIAGNOSIS—Caused by loosening muscles and degenerating tissues. TREATMENT — You need some e skin. After horoughly with | a good cl . g0 over the surface with a piece of sterilized cotton dipped in witch hazel. An- other excellent astringent is made by adding a little lemon juice to Both remedies are FASHIONS By Sall;\MUgrim Woolens in Modernist Patterns Are Favored for Top Coats and Sports Costumes The modernist trend in art is re- flected in many of the new dress patterns. Silks and chiffons printed in daring, futuristic designs have re- placed, to a certain extent, the more conventional flower and dotted motifs. In woolens, also, we find the use of diagonal and geometric figu is type of design being particularly favored for tweed top coats and sports costu While the pattern of the tweed coat sketched today is slightly sug- gestive of modernist art, it 4s by no means extreme and is an excellent medium for a rough, informal type of fabric. The backsround of the material is a soft, light tan and the stripes are in brown and copper tones. Contrast is afforded by the long collar and cuffs of beaver and t side panels on the lower portion. Here the stripes are used vertically and the pockets trimmed with nar- row bands of plain brown' cloth, The hat is dark brown suede, trimmed with a pleated gros grain band in front. The tan woolen of this top coat is striped in brown and copper tones.. The collar and cuffs are beaver. La Bolero i One of the outstanding detalls of the mode presented in fall, 1 collections is t of the bolero | Cured-»- | BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN | of the American Medical Association and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine. It sometimes de- persons to This dese is possible the hay fey pollens. sitization usual- ly should begin 15 or 16 weeks be- the time when the symptoms ind end about a week before. n extensive experiment, it was | i that one-fourth pa- | nts thus treated re free {from hay fever symptol ctically free, one third had only about 25 per cent as much trouble | as previously, and another one-| | fourth had not more than onc-half | previously. Inject Pollens Another method s to begin the descnsitizing before the usual time et of the symptoms and to the process right through the A third method | consists of four or five injections of | small amounts of the extract after the hay fever has set in. The latter | method s not especially approved, | since it injects pollens into the sys- tem of a patient who is already suf- tering from pollen. In the treatment, about three drops of a dilution of the extract, so to | begin | fou of the ed one,fifth | | given iHay-Fever— an(i Asthma Can ée‘i the | Fishbein weak that it will not cause a re- action of the skin, is injected under the skin of the upper arm. At five days later, preferably seven, an- other injection is given, the amount of material being increased gradu- from week to week so that the patlent feels no il effects from the treatment, except a slight local swelling. No Il Effects By this gradual increase the per- son develops in his body a tolerance to the pollen and a resistance ainst it, 8o that by the end of the treatment, if it is successful, he does not feel any ill effects from breath- ing the polle . in the air, Treatment during the symptoms, as has been is not as succesful as that before the time when the symptoms come on. It has been found that many per- sons are sensitive not pollens of plants, but react with symptoms of asthma to the eating ot protein substances from various toode. In such instances, the physiclan also makes :. skin test of the pa- tlent to determine his sensitivity to food substances, and the patient will galn much relief by avoiding those foods in his diet after the exact sub- stance has been determined. large | least | only to the | THE PETTER | (Ilustrated énd Copyrighted By Beatrice Burton Author of “Love-Bound," “HER MAN” by Joh nson Features, Inc,, 1819 Broadway, New York City) a good time and plen t 20 she fails in her and takes a job in Lillie auty shop at a tiny salary. t time she is having the one real love affair of her life — with ¢ Gaines, an ambitious young o wants to marry her. gement ends when Tony € go out with other them make love to her. h rs that he is going a girl ontana, where ne to live. She tries not to Merry's older v Kaufma ster, mar- her rich em- her widowed e Dale and a Mr. e house as board- nny, the youngest s r, elopes with Derrick Jones, who lives next door. Through Cassie Merry Erskine, a wealthy get meets Bill | bachelor, She engaged mes en- e case of Le sweetheart of | , Bill drops nd marries an aux for Merry. Fi sh e kind of an 1 George Leet, a lor who can't support hi 1 mother dies. Tony breaks into print when he becomes the attorney for the s Mrs. Ruck, whose murder trial ha ally comes | understanding timid bache- a wife until i 4 3 the whole country agog. The day | |Tony wins his case his mother dies | Moms decides she will go to the fun- eral and Merry says she will go, too, | |noping that she will be able to catch a glimpse of Tony that day. She is taking a week's vacation, before go- | ing back to business school to take |up her old career. The beauty shop |1 no longer satisfies her. | | She bre with George Leet all larm away and ran upstai {at once, unable to bear to him [ While wes dabbing her eyes 1 she s t this is | with cold water she heard the front i has, chow, taken |door-bell ring. A moment his old place in her heart. | Moms came to her (NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY) | Her face was rigid with CHAPTER LXI tion Jinny and Derrick came over for | supper on Sunday night. | They never came near the house inless Mr. Hef r happened to ay on business, for Jinny still 1 her step-father as much as | [she had on the long-ago day when | she had eloped with Derrick, to get y from the hou hey came all th “You could jolly those hi time,” Les said, enthusiastical Mummy’s apron string, and such a oody-goody, besides, I'll bet you thing that curfew g in his t at nin o'clock. But Merry pushed the comforti: every nig we 01 ter Purcell's do she snapped. “Of To think of him daring to to this hou: He s to see you on business. O I wouldn't have let you know he s he She and grily porch | Merr the Dbatter flower in Ire: d w bad st “Hello, Sweeticums,” he icked the ash from his-c the floor de the p ool. py and full of energy. But there were | “How's th utttul Doll tonight. tired lines in her face that betrayed [His eyes admired her. | |how she burned the candle at both | ftital Dol ‘staved: baoic| ends. at him calmly. “T couldn’t be | “We were out until 3 ter,” she answered solemnly. | |night, playing poker, said you came to see me on busl |erry, with a vawn. |ness. What kind of bus | was after supper, and the two he sat down on the old {of them were in the old sitting- (hair sofa under the lamp. On the | room where Jinny was playing the |very edge of it, as if she meant to | haunting half- jazz music |stay there only a minute or two. that Mr. Heffli once for-| But Les crossed the room and iden her ever in that ted himself beside her, use. What kind of business?” he re- “You'll never g who — Was |peated, looking at her closely, over at the Smith’s pagty, Merry,” |«well, pretty good business, I thin |she said. “Muriel Kaufman and that {1 have a job for you, if you want | handsome husband of hers. My soul! |j¢ But he's a lulu. Why didn't you mar- | Merry raised her him? He was about you, He went on. “You w I told | nerve! com w be ay tramped downstairs E: slammed the screen door as she went out to the and the twins once mor Les sitting piano. He coat lapel his usual way from the side, where they lived in a new bungalow, and they brought their two-year--1d twins with them |—Derry and Merry. A girl and a {boy like as two rosebuds, with lue ey At twenty- inny looked | rs older than She was just always, and just as snap- nd a d his d dash Wi as and said, d fl onto slim ¢ o'clock last =aid to she horse- vage ger 1 to a play eyebrows and |y cr wa | Merr, |ers under the soft |dress. She hardly gave |Cabby Marsh a thoug |was full of the one thing it had {been full of, all day long—the [thought that Tony Gaines was com- |ing back to town and that she would |have a chance to see him. Just to only shrugged her should muslin of her Murlel and | . Her mind | t haT" you I'd gone into the clothing busi- women's clothes?” Merry nodded briefly. ‘Well, Lillie Dale tells me that you've quit her. And T've heen won- Qering if you wouldn't like to take a job with my firm up in Canada. | Selling women's clothes. You could | lde it, you know, with your looks see him— —Girl, you've got "em!” Even though he was married, ‘ even though eight years had passed, | it was going to be Heaven to see him again, for a minute. Heaven— and Purgatory, too. “Muriel's beginning to look as tough as shoe leather, and she drinks like a fish,” Jinny remarked. Then she went on ginging at the top of her voice: “I'm wee-1d about animal crackers—animal crackers! —a-a-animal crackers— She stopped suddenly, “Gee-gosh, T'm sick of that thing. That's all they sing over the radio,” she said, and began to sweep the keys with the first soft chords of “How I Miss You Tonight.” A sentimental bal- | |to Jo,” when he spoke again. lad, with a cloying sweet melody. | But Jinny how to sing it. | “Y'see, Baby, most of the buying lis done by men” The explained. had no voice to boast of. It «rhey come to the factory to look low and throaty. things over before they order. And What she did have was the nat- |yoy could gell 'em. You could jolly | al gift of an artist, She knew how ;"fim long, and sell ‘em every time " to make her listener feel the pathos A bright look eame into Merry |and the heart-break of the thing she (face. It was a danger signal, but was singing. Lester Purcell did not know that. All at once He had known the old Merry down over hert Locke, who knew how to Kiss and |vellowed keys to “jolly” and to show a fellow a splashing sound. |good tim But he did not know this ‘Play iz one who sat beside him, with her Merry |green eyes burning in her love sterical volce. face, and her lips smiling. She look- mournful thing!” ed just as she always had looked, to Her throat was quivering like a bird's throat, and to Jinny’s amaze- him, “These birds who nent, she put her bright and shin- [come for a good time, too,” he ling head down on the dark wood of |said, taking another puff at his [the old piano and began to cry. cigar, and then dropping some more Jinny began to put two and two |ggh, down upon Moms' “body together, afd thought she had the |Brussels” carpet. answer. | ey're mostly old married men “I suppose you and George Leet |who think they're painting the town have had a rumpus,” she sald. |red, if they take a good-looking girl She knew that George Leet had | u out for dinner,” he expand- |been coming to see Merry every |ad, “That's their idea of a thrill — | Sunday night for two or three years. |and you sure could give it to 'em! |This was Sunday night and George | You're a darn good sport, and a darn was not here, Of course, that must |good looker, t0o.” he the reason for Merry's tears! ‘ And the thing he had said to her ed. That the was the only way Jinny |—that she was a good sport, a hall- could explain it, | tetlow-well-met for men buyers in around the slender, bowed should- | She saw herself suddenly with ers. “Don't cry. I never could un- Lester Purcell's eyes. As a jolller His voice was tinged with a kind of reverence as he spoke of her beauty the beauty that somehow | was finer and more compelling than | it had been years ago. You got the world beat on looks, he said, He was sitting v close to Merry now — so close that she could feel his breath on her cheek, and she drew away. “You could model clothes while you were selling 'em. You wouldn't have to go out on the road like I do. You |could stay right thers at the faetory, | land T'll bet you'd be a knockout at the game." Merry was just opening her lips Merry's hands came | and crashed on the with a discordant for the love of 1 in a sharp, “Don't play that some come to buy, mon words—sickened Merry. Poor Merry. She lost every man, “Never mind, Merry,” she said |a clothing house — sickened her still derstand what you saw in George |and a petter — a thriller. The kind sooner or later. She must be hoodoo- aloud, and put a comforting arm |more. Leet, anyway. He was tled to his [of a gir) that a man asks out for ,‘ | went back into the His words—his cheap and com- | rds along, and sell 'em every ly dinner, to drink with him tertain him. A jolly good A pal — for traveligg men! Before she spoke, she looked for a long time at Les Purcell. Once upon 2 time a figure of romance clothed in the ) agic ~that night n her on a I the shining st How far she had come since that night, when a man had kissed her for the first time! How many Kisses she had had — and how little any of them had meant! She had been “easy” and cheap and common. And this wes the end! This — to e Lester Purcell tell her just how * and cheap and common he thought she H “You go tween her teeth. He made the mistake of laughing. She him by his shoulders, and drew him to his feet with the s stren, Half s to en- sport! to him. A girl, of irst Love he had Kkissed h 1 1 an- ront said quietly, half pushed him out of the room, beat- | ng on his chest with her little fists. Pushing him out and in the hall he got away from her and flung himself out of the house and down the front steps to the yellow taxicab that waited for him in the street. Still shaking and quivering, Merry room that wa filled with the smell of his ecigar smoke. On the floor lay the little flower had had in his buttonhole. He 1 stepped on it when it fell from he h his coat. Merry stooped and picked it up, looking at its brol crushed petals. ade her think of herself—that , crushed, soiled flower. 's me HER SEX CAUSED 0SS OF TITLES Il She'd Been Boy, British Woman Would Have Had 12 Duches of wealthiest had been been the and two that of London -~ If the Montrose, one of the women in Great Britain, a boy she would have holder of ten British ottish titles, including | Scotland’s premier duke, The Duhcess Was Lady Mary Douglas-Hamilton before her mar- riage to the Marquis of Graham who succeeded to the dukedom on the death of his father, and theres fore is now the wife as well as the daughter of a duke, her father having been the Duke of Hamilton, Land owned by the Duchess in- cludes Arran, the wildest and most pleturesque island on the Clyde, and the Easton Park cstate in Suffolk, and rentals from which amount to 27,000 pounds a year. The Duchess was one of the first women to undertake the duties of | master of the hounds and is an | enthusiastic deer-stalker, havingas | many as 20 stags to her credit in |one season. She is a bold horse | woman, and is unusually popular |among all classes in the hunting | field. | | Rotary Plan for Women Bucnos Alres — The formation of women's organizations in the | principal cities in Argentina with virtually the same aims as Inter- national Rotary clubs {s being |urged by Senora Carlotta de la | Pena, of Rosario. | She believes that clubs of Argen- |tine women, organized along simi- lar lines, could accomplish much toward “forming an intelligent | patriotism and promoting civie | pride and good fellowship among | women in hte interior cities of the republic.” Rethberg's Bob in Opera | Chicago — A chance to try the effect on an audience of her blond |curly bob instead of a heavy blond | wig, as Marguerite, in Gounod's | Faust, is the ambition of Madame | Flllsabeth Rethberg, of the Metro. | politan and Ravinia Opera eom- she had been | { chemistr; ly country road under | be- | | { | Dt | | | ithey no loager need feel ti panies “Bobbed hair has been univer- sally recogmized, says Madame Rethberg. “so why not let one nat- urally equipped with the color of hair required for the part, appear in a bob instead of a ponderous bralded wig?” Back of the desire to appear with her own hair exhibited, is the fear all artists are said to feel — that their wig may some day slip or fall off and create consterna- tion, confusion and ridicule. “I would like some day to sing Marguerite without a wig and 1 sure that no audience would offense."” Tradition seems to demand the artists of the opera fulfill mediaeval mode of the scene to the last detail. Few are endowed by nature with tresses appropriate ic the occasion, but ene striking ex- ception is Madame Tanaki Miure | the Japanese prima donna, who ’ In the new opera in English pro- duced here last winter, Madame Miura took the name part of Nami- ko San, costumed and coiffured as in her girlhood d: ta that Che-Che San in Madame Butterfly 1. absolutely true to li Queen Mary No Flier London, Aug. 20 — Queen Mary has never been up in an aeroplane, and; what's more, says Her Majest “I'm not going.” The king has never flown, either, but both are fond of attending air meets as spectators. The queen is not a good sailer, and avers that she would fesl far worse if she went up in an aego- plane or airship. The queen was opposed to the of York joining the Royal A force but this objection was over- come by the fact that it was not necessary for the Duke, in his posi- tion, to do much actual fiyine. Many More British Women London, Aug. 20 — The latest registrar-general's report shews there were nearly 2,000,000 more women than men in England. The review says that in June of 1924 the population of England and Wales was estimated at 38,764,00 5,000 being males and ,201,000 fema First Women Dentists Constantinople . 20 — Turk- ish women have for first time entered the fizlds of dentistry and Turkey's first women ntists, Gourra and Chadie Han- oums, have just r ived their 8i- plomas from the Stomboul School of Dentistry, and four women this month received degrees in chemistry frem the Unive y of Constantin- ople. Berlin Dancers Show Charleston More Favor Berlin, 20 (A—The Charl ton is ju ginning to assume pro- portions of a ball room craze in Berlin, one year after being import- ed from the United The Dancing Masters’ has announced that the reserve i dancers has at last been broken down and that by “Charlestoning” v are perform- ug. ocfation putting on exhibition ance Th lar on t bers of youth « too popu- 1 mem- new cipi- anded or be cathen 1l that ¢ Charleston is none stage. Five hu Wanderv ation, ro tated when tl that Mi wickl W “thrown out” for doing dance.” Sheuts “Do you art?” filled the theater. fist fights developed. Police sto the show and cleareg the theate Only # few more shopping months before Christmas. SHADOW CLOGCK JOHNNY was playing in the woods. He was really not very far from home, but he couldn’t see his house nor any road nor fence. Mother had told him to come home about five o'clock. But Johnny didn't have a watch. He was using a tree-shadow for his cloek. “When [ came here just after lunch,” he said, “The shadow of the tall Fir-tree was resting close beside it. “Now it has stretched itself «away over to the Oakitres. . . . and | just think Johnny must *“S Jobany did