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Love’s Embe Adele Garrison”s Abserbing . “Revelations of a a New Sei Dicky Inadverteauly Drops a Picture from His Pocket Katherine was as good as ler word. She drove down {n the car ‘with us to meet Dicky, an innovatiol which drew a puzzled look from Mother Graham, and she kept close Sequel To Wife” ! T felt Katherine's eyes on my | back, knew that they were brim- | ming with mirth similar to that which was struggling for expression in my own face. For all of us know | that Mother Graham would rather 80 to a beach picnic than to almost to my side, giving Dicky no chance’| anything clse. But she also revels in for & word alone with me until din- ner was over. That Dicky was annoyed at her presence in the car 1 saw when he first caught sight of her. His eyes marrowed and he shot a quick keen glance at me. But I ignored the look and began to talk of the beach picnic on the coming Saturday at which Philip Veritzen was to be host. “Beastly bores, those things,” my Lusband growied at the first chan 1 gave him for spcech. “You can Jjust count me out.” 1 knew of course the reason for his choler — my mention of Phillp Verltzen as host. Ordinarily Dicky picnics and prides himself upon his manipulation of the pirate steak which is always the chief feature ot the feast, But I kept a most discreet silence. I knew that no word ot persuasion or expostulation from me was needed. His proposed derelic- tion would be attended to promptly and efficiently without any effort on my part. Indeed, the words were hardly out of his mouth before an outraged howl arose from Junior. “Daddy!"” he shrieked. “You're not going to stay away from the beach picnjet” Dicky's mother took up the re- frain and repeated it, “Qf course, you do not mean a word of that nonsense,” she said severely, “so why do you upset your child by saying a thing like that? He has been looking forward to it for days. You may not care for it yourself—it does not particularly appeal to me either, but I know that it would upset the whole affair if one stayed at home for you know Jim and Katie also go. I am al- ways willing to sacrifice my own in- | clination, and you certainly can do the same.” I Chatterer the Red Squirrel Loses His Tongue alk too much; up with Some folks always The world is cluttered such, —@1d Mother Nature Chatterer the Red Bquirrel is one ot this kind. 1f there is any one in all the Green Forest who really loves the sound of his voice it 18 Chatterer the Red Squirrel. He nev- er misses & chance to use it. No, sir, Chatterer never misses a chance to use that noisy tongue of his. The result i he is forever getting him- self into trouble, or getting other people into trouble. You will femember that Billy Mink was hastening toward Chatter- er when he was discovered and put to flight by Spite the Marten. Chat- terer had known nothing about this, fop they had not been near enough for Chatterer to see them. So Chat- tever had continued to exercise his volce, and he kept on doing it from time to time. So it was that when Spite and little Joe Otter stopped quarreling and each went on his way sbout his own business Spite’s Keen ears caught the sound of Chat- terer's voice. Now, Epite, has a liking for squir- rel. In fact, there isn’t anything that Spite likes any better than he does squirrel. So now he started toward the place from which Chatterer's volee was coming. “I'd rather have that fellow than Billy Min thought Spite. “My, my, just lisf to him! You*would think that if he Tad any sense at all in his head he would know enough to keep still, in- stead of letting his enemies know just where he is. I hope he hasn’t & hole right handy. If he hasn’t he's mine inside the pext few minutes.” Meanwhile Chatterer had discov- ered Sammy Jay and was engaged in his favorite occupation of telling Sammy Jay just what he thought about him. Chatterer's thoughts about Sammy Jay are never pl ant thoughts. These two never hav any gocd to say of cach other. No, sir, they never have any good 1o say of each other. But they do have a lot of bad to say. And they do !a martyr complex and exhibits it upon every possible occasion. Dicky was beaten. I knew that | as soon as his mother began her lit- tle diatribe, and he proved it a sec- ond later by saying in a curiously | choked voice which I guessed i smothered mingled annoyance and musement. “I ought to be willing to sacri- fice as much as you, Mother. I'll go —Junior, if you ever do & think like hat again I'll whack you. You al- | most made Mother ditch the car.” | The threat was fully deserved. My | auacking nerves acknowledged that. For Junior, in his exuberance at hearing his ing his arms, and giving & shriek or |joy. He had jolted my arm with such force that for an instant my hand was loosened from the steer- | ing wheel and I caught it just as it | was dangerously swerving. “You had better whack yourself,”™ his mother commented icily. “If you hadn’t excited the child he never | would have jumped like that.” “Step on it. Let's go home,” { Dicky muttered to me in a tone In- audible to his mother and I obeyed him to such good purpose that we were at the farmhouse before Moth- er - Graham had completed tne “firstly” of her sermon on discipline. Dicky hung his overcoat Lall, first taking from an {that I saw a square piece of paper | 1ying at the foot of the stairs where ;he bhad dropped it. I picked it up for later delivery to him, and turn- | ing it over looked into the pictured | face of Edith Fairfax, Copyright, 1928, Newspaper Feature Service, Inc. My, but that was an exciting racc through the trectops he knew it. That one chance was to Bet into a hole in a tree, a hole so small that Spite couldn’t get into it and so deep that Spite couldn’t reach in and ge hold of him with his. clawa. My, but that was an exciting race through the treetops! Chatterer knew just where that hole was in which he would be safe. Some of the trees were not as near together as he could wish for, but he didn’t | hesitate; he raced along out to the end of the branch of one tree and leaped madly for the nearest branch | of another tr2e. Once he missed and | sailed clear down to the ground. | Spite didn’t try this jump. Heyturn. ied and, like a flash, ran down the itree. By the time Chatterer was rear the top of the next tree Spite was at the bottom of it starting up. (Copyright, 1928, by T. W. Burgess) The next story: cape,"” The most common mistake In mixing concrete is too much water per unit of cement. Jumps Around Like a | Two-Year-Old--Little father's decision haa | is most enthusiastic over our beach | jumped up from Dicky's knee, wav- | in the | inside | pocket a packet of letters and pa- | pers. It was not until after he had | run upstairs to wash before dinner | | fore Sue Cain's secret marriage to | Pat's has just been put on | market and that he is thinking of “A Terrible Es- | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 1928 READ THIS FIBST | Lily Lexington, spolled ’onlyl daughter of the Cyrus Lexingtons, | jilts Stanley Drummond, & rich bachelor older than herself, to mar- ry her mother's chauffeur, Pat France. Her family and friends drop her instantly, and she goes to live with Pat in a little flat near his parents’ home. | Pat has invented a new kind of piston ring, and he and his friend Roy Jetterson, rent a tiny shop | where they manufacture the new | ring. Pat works three or four nights | a week, not only in the shop, but, helping in Roy's garage, and Lily | finds life very dull and uneventful. | However, she still is in love with | Pat and s very jealous of his for- | | mer sweetheart, Elizabeth Erts. | One day Lily meets her friend, Sue Cain down town, and she asks I her to a party. Lily wants some new clothes, and appeals to Staley, who gives her his own check to pay for | them. Florence France, Pat's sis- | ter, is bookkeeper in the clothes shop, sees the check, and later on, when Lily and Pat quarrel, she tells Pat about it. | Lily goes home to her father's house to find that he has had some | business losses and that her mother | and she will have to do all the housework and economize a great deal. Staley is devoted to her, but Lily begins to long for Pat. She, goes to see him and he thinks she | has come because ofa newspaper article on the automobile page that told all about the La France piston ring. Lily has not even seen the article, and says so, but he does not believe her. Elizabeth Ertz is at the apartment, apparently helping Pat with his housework, and al- though Lily sees her there, she docs not question Pat about her. She goes home and tries to be content- ed with life there. On the night be- | Jack Eastman, the pair and her- selt go with Staley to his house to | “celebrate” the event. Staley tells her that a better piston ring than on the| putting some of his money into the |new company. Lk | Following a dull evening with | { Staley, Lily, in motoring home with Sue and Jack, is in an auto acci- dent; Jack is taken to a hospital. Everything among her old friends | seems to go wrong. She is in mo mood for the lawyer Staley brings her to obtain a divorce from Pat France. When it is decided to name Elizabeth Ertz as the corespondent, , with a qualm of conscience. goes to Pat's mother to make & clean breast of the plot. | Pat coming in, hearing of the at- ! tempt 1o drag in Elizabeth Ertz's name, defends her. This makes Lily | furious. She'll name the girl. Burst- ing unceremoniously into Staley's office, Lily finds his secretary flirt- | ing with him. Lily goes to the fash- ionable Paris Lane restaurant, therc to pour out her woes, sobbingly, to Sue Cain, now Sue Eastman, | . e (NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY) CHAPTER LVI | Sue, who was as hard and bright as new nails, stared at her with dis- gust and surprise written in her snapping dark eyes. “For grief's sake, brace up!" she said, in a tone that was itself brac- ing. “Everybody in the place will be looking at you in a minute.” And Lily did brace up, casting a | furtive look around the restaurant to see if anyone had noticed that she had broken down. | But no one in the restaurant had. l All the beautifully dressed wom- en, with their beautifully waved hair, their flower-like skins, their | dieted bodies and expensive clothes, were busily chatting over their non- fattening foods. ‘ They were much too interested in themselves and their own affairs to be anything but briefly curious | about anyone's: else misery. | “And Sue's just like them,” thought Lily, bitterly, as Sue pushed her own vanity case across the table cloth and told her for the love of Moses in the bull rushes to fix uni her face and go on with her alli- | gator-pear salad. She's Jjust as selfish and cold as she can be.” Sue was humming “Blue Heaven™ to herself, and looking out of the window between puffs at a long gold-tipped Russian cigaret. “What on earth ailed you? Going ito pieces like that?” she asked, | when Lily had dried her eyes, put | on fresh lipstick, and picked up her | lad fork. *“I should think you'd be tickled to piece because you're getting rid of that no-good husband |of yours.” Lily sniffed delicately. “I am,” | she said. | Well, she was, in a way, she thought. She was glad to be out of the stuffy little flat, with its wash- ing machine and its ugly furniture. She was glad to be here, with | Staley's lilies of the valley pinned upon her breast, orchid perfume that he had given her scenting her | handkerchief, monogrammed cigar- Money Lov It was from Staley Drummond As she said good night to Sue at the curbstone a motoreycle drew up beside the car and the boy ran up the step with a letter in his hand. | “Special delivery,” she heard him | say to Mrs. Lexington, who opened | | women who would. Nice looking, al- he door to him. She was turning the envelope ver and over in her hands by the time Lily reached the front hall. “It's for you, dear,” she said, in such a pleased tone that Lily knew it was from Staley Drummond be- | fore she touched it. 8he tore it open. And she read it standing there in the hall with her mother reading it, too, from over her shouider. | 1dly did not care whether she saw it or not. Sometimes it scemed to her that her friendship—or love af- | fair or whatever her alliance with Staley was-——was much more inter- esting to her mother than it was to, herself. Her mother seemed to be 80 wildly eager for her to marry Staley, and always had been. | “Poor boy,” she said now, as she hegan to read the letter. ‘What did you do—surprise him when he was | holding hands with his stcnogra- pher, or something like that?" Lily nodded, her eycs on the two paragraphs that Staley had writ- ten: “Darling, if you'd be a little | more kind to me I wouldn't do that sort of thing. However, it was noth- ing that needs to bother you for a minute. I let Miss James go with a month's pay in advance to prove to you that I mean this. “Please let me see you tonight. T want to tell you about a certain piston ring company that I bought today for next to nothing. You will be interestel and, I think, pleased, perhaps. Best love from | D.” The telephone rang while Lily | finished the letter, ... The sentence ' about the piston ring company that Staley had bought secmed to leap up at her from the pag: 8o he had bought Pat and Roy | Jetterson out ! But how could they | have become so discouraged in & few weeks that they would scll out to him? Perhaps they got a lot of money from him— 8he found herself actually hoping 80, for Pat's sake, “It that's Stale: | | | | she called to! Mrs, Lexington Without raising her | eyes from the letter, “tell him I can't answer the phone, but that I'm expecting him to come over here tonight.” e i While she was having dinner with | her mother and father at seven, Ito, | | Staley's trusty Jap servant, arrived bringing a big box of flowers from bis hot-house—blue and pink hya- cinths, tulips, jonquils, datfodils, all the flowers of the spring that was just ahead. Stanley could even buy the springtime before it came to other people! By the time he arrived the living room was bright and perfumed, and | Lily, in a pale pink dress that she had bought at Angouleme's, where he had told her to charge anything she needed, was sitting on the davenport reading a book he had sent her, and smoking one of the monogrammed, gold-tipped cigar- ets. Mrs. Lexington might he doing the dishes in the kitchen alone, un- aided. Tomorrow morning Lily, in a folded house dress, might be dust- ing this very room in her slippy come-sloppy way. But tonight she |ing her breath. | ning. By Beatrice Burton Author of “Sally’s Shoulders,” “Honey Lou,” “The Hollywood Girl,” Ete. beat jerkily under his coat. His mouth fastened on hers hungrily, | insistently, and he kissed her until she was out of breath. Hating herself, she let him do it 1t she did not, there were other luring women like the little blond secretary who had sat upon his desk. And she wasn't going to lose him now. Now that she had lost Pat and his love through her asso- ciation with him. .... Oh, no! “I'm going to take him now,” she thought. “Him and his money— even if I've lost the only love that cver came to me, that's no reason for giving up this chance to live de- cently again.” The heavy perfume of the flow- ers in the room swept up to her nostrils as she leaned against Staley, close-held in his arms. They scemed to tell her just how well he did live —not only decently, but luxurious- | ly, with his Japs and his beautiful rooms and his hothouse, where | spring bloomed for him ahead of | everybody's else Spring. | “Staley,” she said, dreamily, “you | have the greatest power in the, world when you have money, | haven't you? Tell me what you did to Pat and his piston ring company? You bought it for next to nothing, you said. But what is your idea of ‘next to nothing'? o She waited for his answer, hold- | “If he gave Pat very much money | for it, he'll probably marry Eliza- | beth Ertz the minute I get my di- vorce,” she figured out, thinking hard. “I hope Pat's just about flat broke."” g | She did. She found herself hop- ing and praying that he wouldn't have a nickcl to bless himself with when his dclts were paid. She knew that he had debts. He had borrowed on everything, even his life insurance, to swing the La | France piston ring. (TO BE CONTINUED) Life's Niceties Hints on Etiquette 1. If a girl sits nearest the door when returning home in a taxi, should she open the door and get out first? Is there any general answer for this type of question? 2. Are people tussy about such little things nowadays? The Answers 1 Always allow a man to ¢ the little attentions he feels owes his partner of the eve- 3. Yes, the best people are as careful of little courtesles as ever, How and Why THE COMPOSITION OF DENTIFRICES By Ann Alysis Now that we have looked finto Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of Iliness BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine The meat of fish is essentially the same as that of other species. It yields more gelatin than other meats and has less extractives and less of the red coloring matter of the blood. Fish is digestible according to the amouat of fat that it contains, and this varies greatly in different species. For example, salmon, which is rather rich in fat, is not so digestible as oysters, trout, bass and bluefish. Content of Fat The mackerel, the pompano, the shad are about between the salnion and the codfish in their content of fat. Oysters and shell-fish are an excellent food, since they contain not nearly so much at as other fish but are somewhat richer in carbo- hydrate. Clams, crabs, lobsters and shrimp are similar to oysters in their eat- ing qualities, However, many per- sons are likely to be sensitive to the protein substances of these shellfish who are not sensitive to the oyster proteins. Oysters and lean fish are digested and leave the stomach about as rapidly as poultry and lean beef. On the other hand, fat fish, lobsters and crabs may be compared with goose and pork in their indigesti- bitity. Supply Jodine Shelifish, such as oysters and clams, provide the dlet with a lib- eral supply of jedine. All of the fish oils are relatively rich in vita- min D. Since all of the oyster or clam is eaten, except the shell, the con- sumer gets much more vitaminic material than when he eats the muscle meats of animals, Menas for the Family By SISTER MARY Breakfast—Stewed dried apricots and dates, cereal, cream, scrambled eggs with potatoes, crisp toast, milk, coffee, Luncheon—Potato soup with cheese, toast sticks, banana and pea- nut salad, brown bread and butter SUALP THOUBLE SEVEN_YEARS Hair Came Out Badly. “My scalp was dry and covered ith pimples, and my hair came| out badly. It fiched so badly that I could not sleep, and when I scratched it, it caused soreeruptions| 'which later scaled over, My hair, fell out 8o that I had little to comb. I had the trouble sbout| seven years. **1 sent for & free cample of Cuti- cura Soap and Ointment and after, a few treatments I could see an im.| ) July 12, 1927, Use Cuticura %0 clear your skin. BPSLIMnS i s o, b ‘Cuticars Shavias Bt Bher Quick safe relief aching, You forget you ever had bttt o by Dt Scholls | Zino-paés Pus ons en —thes pain (s gonel sandwiches, ginger eookies, mlilk, tea. Dinner—Boiled corned beef, browned cabbage, eggplant fritters, apple ple, milk, coffee. Sometimes it's amazing how much casier small folks find it to drink milk if a cookie accompanies the beverage. Plain cookies, not toe rich nor highly flavored, can be given to small four-year-olds with a dish of stewed fruit or glass of milk in place of an elaborate dessert planned to please the adult members of a family. Eggplant Fritters One eggplant, 2 tablespoons flour, $ tablespoon: pepper, eggplant in slices about 1-2 inch thick. Pare and cook in boil- ing salted water to gover until ten- der. It will take abdtit 20 minatesr Drain thoroughly agd mash. Blir in flour, butter and pepper. Mix well and add egg well beaten, Fry on a well buttered pancake griddie. Brown first on ome side and then turn and brown on the other. Allow :bom 20 minutes to cook the frit- lers. 1 egs. butter, spoon Cut (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Ine.) You'll never %1 ‘The long center word and the two nine-letter border words form the key to this question puzzle. HORIZONTAL ‘Who wrote *“The Compleat Angler” (a fishing idyll)? ‘Who is the president of Harv- ard University? To hasten. To recede. English coin, Foot of any animal. Domestic swine, You and me. 1 s. 11, 13, 15. ‘CANADA D “The Champagne of Ginger Ales” | | ‘u. R : Bog. V.8 Pt Lucien Lelong uses a sunburst of tucks radiating from the left side of the blouse as the entire trimming for an afternoon dress of biege crepe de chine, A few stray tucks appear on the left side of the skirt, and the right side is cut to fall in easy folds, which vanish at the hips, where the dress hips. Long Center Word e dEE 2dE AEE wrote “Commentaries on 1l Laws of England,” one of (i most important of all ‘law books? Who is the ambassador from Norway to the United States” Small skin tumor, Feminine pronoun, case. ‘Which of our senators has his home in Birmingham, Ali- bama? Title of courtesy. 16. possessive Green Capsules End John OI(I Scout! Falsehood. Tiny device used in golt. Age. dearly love to call czch other names. When they get to going it is a good ets from him filling her cigaret case that was a gift from him, too. Iwas the old Lily of burnished hair, |yems jour mouths and found how nature delicate clothes, polished nails, and Allied by kindred. has colorcd the teeth in varying . Half an em. deal like the pot calling the kettle black. Just now Chafterer was working himself into a great rage nd fairly making his tongue 1l mmy was making no reply an this made Chatterer angrier than : no eyes nor cars for anything <1 Chatterer was enjoying himself cnjoying himself. Robber!” he ind over and over hief! Thief! sereamed, Over and over n iled Sammy “thiet” and * And then, right in e very middle of a word, he lost his tonzue! He did so! If his tonguc boen cut right out at the roots hie couldn’t have lost " it any more completely. A shiver ran over him, It wa hiver of fright. For just & second he was so frightened that he couldn’t move. Then he started off through the trectops. My, my, my, fterer did run and jump! all sorts of chanees, And behind Chatterer, also ning through the fres came Martn. Chatterer had seen him just in the nick of time. Now, Spite can travel through etops quite as readily as Chat- how ¢'F He tool run- tops, te the only tarer, and he can make even longer | Number ° as directed you are not | jumps from tree to tree. Chatterer a4 fust one chance for his life, ana Fair Dept. Store Offers 5-Day Trial On Money Back Basis. There's nothing in the world that brings such quick and complete re lief from the pain and misery that makes life almost unbearable as those tiny green capsules known from coast to coast as Allenrhu r 2. : than one man and woman whom horrible carrving down to helplessne uf- fering the torture of the damned— | oo g can testify to this. All you have to do is to take one tiny capsule each hour for the first ten hours the next directed. In spite, however, of all the claims | tp, for Allenrhu Number 2—in spite of the remarkable tained by others these little gresn capsules must prove themselves in your parficular case, son the Fair Dept | druggists everywhere have been av- !thorized to make this guarantee: If after taking one full bottle Allenrhu ma | satisfied—go hack money. and get His Rheumatic Pains | rheumatism has been | day one every two hours for 14 hours then take as results ob- . For that rea- Store and good your ( looking at the whole thing,’ “Oh, I'm all mixed up, Sue,” she went on, after a minute. “I know | I'm going to get this divorce all right, but somehow I don't feel right about it.” | | Sue was impatient. “Oh. no one | ever feels right about anything.” she answered. “Look at Jack, for in- | stance. He didn’t want to marry me lon the very day we were married. He said so. He thought we were both too high-tempered to get along | well. Don’t be silly, Lily Lex- |ington. You made a fool marri and you have a chance to marry a prince like Staley, whom you have married in the first place. Youwre mighty lucky, so why sing grief?"” Why sing grief? Lily kept asking herself that all |the way back to Monfpelicr road in warm, early dusk t some- how smelled of the spring, that was so0 close at hand. Here she was back kind again, ready to be freed the hrilkant marriage had expected her to a year a She was able fo do that. It was almost the among her own 1 fo make that everyo ! make almos lueky to be like a miracle, “And that's way TI keep she promised herself. luxurious easc. When the bell rang she went slowly to the door and opened it, blowing blue cigaret smoke through her nostrils and never saying a word of greeting to Staley. She had made up her mind that she w: put him in his place that night. But the minute she saw Staley | she was sorry for him. He looked | so down-at-the-mouth that he was pathetic, and his eyes pleaded with her like the eyes of a nice dumb animal, or a small hoy who has been bad and knows it. | “I suppose you suspcct me of all kinds of wickedness now, don't | you?” he asked her when they were | sitting before the fire on the old, flowered damask sofa that was not |so gay and bright colored as it had been in the days when Mrs. Lexing- ton made the servants fly around the house with scrub pails and whisk brooms. “Just because my secretary was sifting on my desk—" “And rumpling up yonr hair and holding your hands,” said Lily, and, suiting the action of the word, she began to rumple up his hair with her soft little fingors. She saw his did it, and a w pen she glint come into his eves. Suddenly his arms went ‘round her and he held her so close to him that she could focl his heart as (in all their lustrous beauty. tints and shades of pearl to match our varying complexions, we shall proceed to the consideration of ways and means to preserve these jewels The dentifrices used at present re of three kinds, pastes, powders nd liquids. All forms are on the market tn infinite variety. Chalk, pumice stone, cuttlefish | bone, magnesium carbonate and white castile soap are the cleans- ing and polishing ingredients usually selected for tooth powders. Not all appear in any one powder. To what- ever cleansers have been chosen, aromatic oils, such as peppermint or wintergreen, or a fragrant powder, such as orris root, are added for flavoring. The ingredients are then thoroughly mixed. By the addition of honey or simple syrup to s powder tooth paste is made. addition, most pastes contain dered soap. Ligquid dentifrices vary in ula, as do the others, hut 1l contain soup, glycerine, and fragrant antiseptic oils. glycerine, tooth In pow- form- almost. aleohol You're Growing As Thin As A Rai He used to be such a manly look- ing fellow with good features and a fine figure, but now his meagre flesh hardly covers his bones—He 18 hsolutely skinny. Pretty tough on John to have his friends talking about him that way, but the health resorts and the moun- tains are populated with just such Jonhs who kept getting thinner and thinner without trying to help them- selves, That's why every underweight man and woman should take advan- tage of McCoy's generous offer. McCoy takes this ironclad guarantee. If after tak- ing 4 sixty cent boxes of McCoy's Tablets or 2 One Dollar boxes any | thin, underweight man or woman | doesn’t gain at least 5 pounds and feel completely satisfied with the marked improvement ig health— your druggist is authorized to return the purchase price. | A fornia, farm near San Fernando, Cali- is devoted to the raising of cactus apples, used for making jelly na candy. The name MeCoy's Cod Liver Oil all the risk—Itead | Frost bite. More fastidious. ‘Wand. Elm or maple. To plece out. Os. Eucharist vessel. Any flat fish, Standard of type measure. An ointment. Point of compass. To moo. At what castle in Holland does ex-Emperor Wilhelm of Ger- many live? Also. ‘What is an eighth part of an ounce? Unit. Nimbus, Which is the “Lone Star” state? What is the practical unit of clectrical capacity? VERTICAL clamation of surprise. Portion of the mouth. To rip. Point of comp: What is the pound ? Lumber. Tablets has been shortened— just sk for McCoy's Tablets at any drug | ore¢ in America, Unit of work or cncrgy. | Minor note. 12. What famous English lawyer abbreviation for | Tiny green vegctable. To steal. Similar to an ostrich. Curse. Conjunction. To put on. A greater quantity Cry of a dove. Wrath. East Indian plant. Solid paraffin. Kailor, Mother. Excla ion of laughter. Exclamation of laughter. Answer to Yesterda: [SITIE AL [SIHTT TOTATGTE] [PIEIRIMI\ [TISFT1 [RIE]S] AINJARIDIEL [ | [HEIS[TIIMIE]D] uENw nNEE 83 [RENSIN/AIPIITIORIE] [ JONMAN] T IDJINIA[PIS] [FIR| [GIAITIEISIML [O[P]S} MEEE BERE DEE [EIVICIRIVIMRIAL IMIEIN]T! GIEIA[SIOININRIAT T [S[E[S]