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LOVE'S EMBERS Adele Garrison’s Absorbing Sequel “Revelations of a Wife” Beginning a New Serial: Lalian Makes the Great Producer Very Uncomfortable Philip Veritzen is not an athlete. Indeed I fancy that he takes only enough exercise to keep himself in fair physical condition. Lillian, on the contrary, since her long and ter- | rible iliness, has adhered to a rig- | orous program of exercise, While walking i a favorite diversion of | mijpe. 1 think nothing of a five-mile hike. It was therefore a refinement of cruelty for my friend to set the pace for the great man upon the hunt for driftwood which she had proposed and keep going until face was red, his collar wilted, and his usual natty grooming generally | spoiled. That his pride was touched and that he would not falter as long as two women were sharing his tramp, we saw, and I wondered how long Lillian meant to keep up Ler vendetta. Once I snatched the chance when he was a few feet from us, and put the question to her. “Till he begs for mercy,” she said with a vicious little click of her teeth. “I've got that old goat at just the length of rope I want him, and he's going to trot for awhile, belicve me. The only sorrow I have | is that he doesn't know why I'm doing it to him. He probably thinks T'm just indulging my own Kitten- ish spirits. But I'm avenging Noel today, and I've got a long score. Look here! You haven’t any idea of giving the old hyena an easy way out by quitting yourself, have you? I you h u might as well order the ambulance for yourself right now."” “Y am with you to the bitter end.” Y told her laughing, *but take care | that we don't have to treat a c of sunstroke.” *“I'1l risk it,” she said, but I caught her stealing a furtive glance or two | at Mr. Verltzen's flushed face, and I | think ahe secretly was as relieved as Y when at one of our trips back to the fire, our arms laden with drift- wood, Katie announced that she was By Thomton W. Burgess ‘Whitefoot’s Discovery Discovery has a thrill its own, Especially it you're alone. ~—Whitefoot the Wood Mouse ‘Whitefoot the Wood Mouse was exploring in the Old Orchard. Jie was. sitting on one of Farmer Brown's bee-hives just at the edge of the Old Orchard nearest Farmer Brown's dooryard. He hadn’t been able to get into the hive. There was some wire over the entrance to it. | It had been put there to keep out just such little explorers as Whi foot. And Whitefoot wanted to ge into that hive more than he had ever wanted to get into any plac before that he could remember. As ‘he sat there on top of that | hive he saw that there were a num- | ber of other hives. “Perhaps I can find one that I can get into.” thought he. “Anyway, it won't do any harm to look.” 8o Whitefoot continued his ploring.: He climbed all over ex- the did the mame thing to the third hive, with no better results. 'The his | | He climbed all uext hive and was disappointed. He |14l €13 Lnilk, “full oop,” and tlat we were to be ready for dinner in half an hour. With a hurricd word of ‘excuse, my employer walked away from us in the direction of his car, and Otto, [ who had been helping Jim, hurried after him. When they returned a few minutes later, the famous pro- ducer looked as if he had been freshly vzleted, his collar had been | chang=d and his clothing restored 10 |a surprising degrec of its original | nattiness. “It's a wonder he wouldn't bring | his make-up box along and lend it to us,” Lillian muttered, but T no- ticed that she was careful he should not hear the taunt, and guessed that {she considered she had goaded him | sufficiently for one afternoon. The otl driftwoud gatherers were back, and we all made our- selves comfortable hollows in the sand in preparation for the feast, There were beach chairs for those who wished them, and Mother Grae ham, of course was given the choic- est, most sheltered seat where no smoke would blow across her, but |most of us preferred to sprawl in |the sand. Three fires were blazing. One of them had been made of the first driftwood, and’ when it had burned long enough to satisfy Katie's eritt- cal eye, it had been permitted to die down. Then the embers had been {raked a bit to one side, and new potatoes in their jackets had been | carefully buried in the hot ashes, the embers raked back, and another fire built over them. On this was a huge iron kettle of clams, while a |similar kettle filled with boiling | water was hung over a second fire, by the side of which rested two big | coffee pots, and a heap of “roasting | ears” of young sweet corn. And like !a priestess preparing a sacrifice, Katie squatted before the third and largest fire, intent upon the broiling of the “pirate steak.” Copyright, 1 Feature Sc Newspaper vice, Tnc. over the next hive was disappointed Menus for the Famllyw BY SISTER MARY BY SISTER MARY Breakfast—Canned cherrics, ece- cream, serambled eggs with dishies, it muffing, coffe fourth hive was just like the others he had tried to get into. But on the | fifth hive he found when he tried it | that the wire covering the little { trance was loose. Yes, sir, it was | loose. Whitefoot went to work with teeth and claws. He gnawed away i little bit around the entran He | tugged and pulled at the wire and it became more loose. All the time that he was working his nose fold him that there were just as inter- esting things inside that hive as in- side the first onc. Tut while he worked he kept a watehful eye open for Hooty the Owl or Spooky the 8creech Owl, and it was well he did Just In time he saw Spooky comir through the moonlight. Whitefoor whisked around underneath the hiv and there he clung. Spooky pussed on withont sceing him “Tt only 1 can get inside can hang around all he muttered Whitefoot, us< jie te work at the | fow minutcs e a place that he eould squerze h. Jnst he stopped. It was dark in But Whitefoot diin’t mind th was used to moving ahout Aark. He stopped 1o find ont eould by means of his 1 the first time he had ¢ side a bechive, He k home of bees. His nose that. His nose fold hin was a great mass of bees | #ee, he had been in which becs were i the smell of honey bees. Also ha knew thaf, summer it wonldn't Tt sible for him te enter th winter the could enter in safety “I'd like to live | Whitefoot to himself Ploases returned doorway. Tn a inside there He the he er hes that bees were asicep 1y to eat right at hand a would ever. r think of for me here. When war comes T can move out. T b do it. Yes sir. T bel All T need to do is to in the back here and build fortable nest. All those hees are the top: they won't bother me all. The dead ones will b good eat- ing and there are alwava dead ones Yes, sir, this is the place to epend the reat of the winter. T wish T had come over here earlier now.” (Copyright, 1928, by T. W. Prges) e mext story: “Whitet Hml. Luncheon—Naked vice, and nuts, stewed tomatoes, jellied fruit salad, milk, tea, Dinner—Bre tatocs with 0 veal cutlets, po- | steamed spinach | pickled . coffee, | au gratin, lard lemon pic Baked ¥ Two cups cooked rice, 1 cup nut ts, 1-4 pound mild chees: tablospoon butter 2 feaspoon salt, 1-§ spoon pepper, paprika, walnutx, almonds, Dra- pecans or hickory nuts a4 separately or together. aluionds shonld Dlanehed 1 cooked, ¢ beets, mi 1 cup tea- e v into add. | Life’s Niceties Hints on Etiguette —_— The Answers numerable as points, corded for cmphasia. Fegistered U. 5. Patent 0ffice This type of puzzle.comes easier if the proper words are solved first. In ‘ this instance try Nos. 11 izontal; and Nos. 14 and 16 vertical. HORIZONTAL To s ain. Trees having small, white flow- ers. Having only onc eye. Fixists. Like a nephew Sun god. Nuts is House Bad. Soft-boned North To value, To eject. Fairy An grasn. Mambranons bag. Writing instruments. 1 g Native Instrnmental duct. Morindin dye. PPortaining to the Deity Kills by o rocommence, Atluntic fish, | energetic . or {enacious stoni Ve i . What iwo lette afternoon tine Ag Afre Subject as of thought or talk. Deadened as sound. Lixclamation as of sorrow. Constant companion, Measure of arca. A political division of a nation. Crowned. Various. Train of attendants, Fearful, Pecled, Portion of the Corded cloth. White of cgg. Smooth silk fabric. Unit of weight for precious stones Pertaining 1o the sun. Back of the neck. Tardy. To drink dog fashion. Sheltered place. 3 -hold. Abbreviation mouth. for “strect.” [STAMISTOINJIST [T]o/ollw/OE] mmm [BlUIRINCINP] L 7] O SAENR0E €F (EINLAIMIETL| BEI Blfi!film nmmnm . BEAUTY How and Why gracetul finger hich foilow the beautiful r head. She xperinen this dign her fron her 1 tour of 1 to try the result that ment raised wil'ing “ith the Arrange- Flie finzer wave is made by the hand of the and fuw ©5 endless opportunity 1o bring individuality and personality. There vaves for the rather cute one or fvo to hreak bair line of the ometimes the at operator, ms) ant he girl he many or o the i3 all that is needed lacking in a hine, study With the aid ind mirror, and upon the nest visit fo your wive the opee i demonstration of the it followed NEA S s of enrve temiples It the e of itter operator s tistic vourscl coml on of your torite lwanty shop fe pract [ erviee, HALP-CA lemon colored chif- frock picks out the decoration 1o feature that extends over just © front and bact Somie frocks 80 this spring £ that one suffice. A green and printed has twa one-inch foz one white. the placed for does nat are mer- | Ine. | Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of Dlness BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygela, . the Health Magazine 1t is generally belleved that people require much less food in hot weath- er than in cold, because the amount of heat required for the body is less. On the other hand, the heat produced in the body is regulated by physical means and the amount of heat in the body is controlled largely by the amount of heat lost rather than by that taken in. Since we wear clothes,’ our bodies live constantly in @ temperature about 90 degrees F., so that the amount of heaf necessary to warm the surrounding atmosphere is rela- tively small. In the tropics, one does not at- tempt to diminish the amount of heat produced by the body in order to adjust the balance, but rather to increase the loss of heat from the body by wearing thinner clothes, Clothing Adjustment In the same way, when one gocs 1o a very cold district he requires more heat to keep his temperature up to the normal level. He does not produce this heat by cating much more food, but by wearing clothes that prevent heat loss from the sur- | face of the body. Indeed, the overfilling of the stomach to produce an increased mount of heat would be a scrious | crror. Of course, the foods of per- |sons living in extremely cold clim- |ates are those that provide the larg- | est number of calories, Thus the Eskimo consumes great |unantities of fat. As is emphasizea |by R. Hutchison, even the milk of the walrus in Arctic regions con- |tains 40 per cent of fat, ko that its | voung are supplicd with an abund- |ant and compact source of fuel. | Keeping Body Welght | A celebrated German investigator lof nutrition named -Ranke found |that he had to cat as much food in |summer as In winter in order fo keep his body weight, even though his inclination to cat was much less {in Tot weather than cold. If he disregarded his inclinations (and ate enough fo maintain his hody | weight. his health suffered, so that [he believed that a slight loss of | weight in summer months was in- I evitable and quite desirable. | On the other hand, investigators | attribute the ad effects on | health to the fact that he had eaten too much protein food. These in- vestigators emphasize that foods for the summer should avoid those thar | will make fuel rapidly and largely, |especially fats. strongly white | - = 1.6 © )50, Lt WEA SERVICE, WC. No_ matter what you drive, it's lalways a detouring car. his | AUSTRALIAN WOMEN ARE SEENING JoBS Say They Prefer These in Preler- ence to cmm. London, Feb. 25 UP—University women in Australia operate garages, do farm work and many other tasks involving manual labor, but their part is not prominent in public life, believes Miss Edith Thompson, president of the All-England Wo- men’'s Hockey association. She has returned from an Australian tour with an English club. Houdehold duties leave no time for municipal work, she says. “Women go to college as a matter of course when they leave school,” Mis Thompson observed, “and many of them become doctors. In Mel- bourne women physicians are doing important work in the municipal in- fant welfare centers. A hospital there and one in Sydney is run en- tirely by women.” One of the most active women Miss Thompson met was Miss Janet Bage, a university graduate, who has a garage in Sydney staffed entirely by women. There is not a man in the place, and two women mechanics remain on duty all night. “I can only conclude,” said Miss Thompson, “that in Australia, where most professional women marry and have children, and the domestic problem is even more*difficult than at home, life is too crowded and hectic for further activities.” URGES LOVE GLASS LIKE ANY OTHERS Latin or Gresk { and Dr, Iee R. Scarborough. Seminary Hill, Tex., Feb. 25—The chair of love, a college course teaching the young how to love properly, is the proposal of Dr. Dor- othy Scarborough. Dr. Scarborough, novelist and in- structor of English and short story writing at Columbia university, was here this week visiting her cousin, br. 1 Scarborough, president of cal seminary. Her idea would younz idea how though married. Dr. Lee Scarborongh not necessary to teach of love, “The problem in schools Keep ‘em from it.* he holds. Dr. Dorothy replies that minis- ters encourage marriage and get fees; they are opposed to divorce. | 1 why shouldn’t it be their | duty to teach them the art of lov- " she asks, iveryone loses falls in love, and have xome instruction in the %el- {ence of keeping one's head cool, land heart warm, it would be most helpful. Tt isn't a matter of keep- ing Tonse, but of ‘cach keeping qualities which made them lov- ahle hefore marriag: be to be happy says it's the young is to his head when he if we could |'Rl\'l'lll LD!'I' | The printed coat over plain ma- Iterial in the frock is one of Paris’ | interpretations of the mode. Black shadowed chrysanthemums on white background’ makes the coat of one white frock. WHITE JADE iade kid pumps and san- dals will be worn this summer with white Jdresses. White jade §s an off-white of soft heige tone. White YOUTHFUL MOD Expressing the vogue for vouth n costumes, the jacket and jabot combination is gaining popularity. vy blue taffeta and cream lace one charming interpreta- S \I'Ll‘lll IT S \LAD A variation of the usual grape- fruit salad may be achieved by us- ing watercress, sliced grapefruit and French dressing with Roquefort cheese. LINED DRAPES It your window drapes are of some medium weight material, lin- ing them with sateen in matching shade or the shade of your walls | @ives them luxurious weight, Thinks It Should Be Taught as| {the so-called Lucretia | tional | ment establishing the equal of men and women within the ter- ‘|carry eut the conditions Dr. Dorothy Scarhorouzh (above) | to teach the | - SUCCESS THWARTS HER AMB!'I'ION A St ‘All her life Aileen Stanley, American vaudeville and revue has dreamed of receiving a royal permit a leave of absence;’ summons to sing before WOMEN'S ADVISER SAYS TREATY SUFFICIENT Washington, Feb. 25. (M—Ratifi- cation by the United States and any other country of a treaty recogniz- | and | ing full equality between men women would make unnecessary Mott consti- amendment proposed in belleves Miss Alice tutional this country, Paul. The treaty was advocated at the Pan American conference in Ha- vana by representatives of the Woman's Party, of which Miss Paul is advisory chairman and which proposed ment. Bince a treaty is as much a part “equal rights” amend- {of the fundamental law of the land | as any legisiation con- agree- status passed by gress, Miss Paui said, an ritory of the signatory nations would abrogate any discriminatory legislation already in cxistence apd’ would make posaible the en- actment of federal legislation to of the treaty. is also supporting the | FOR EQUAL RIGHTS Paul said, however, her group would continue to work for the constitution amendment and that it might be passed before the treaty can be ratified. She sald the rcal purpos: of the treaty is te help the status of women in coun- tries less advanced than the United States. Miss Muna Lee, member of the National Women's Party in Porto Rico, says that thanks to the unit ed efforts of the women of North nd South America at the Havana onference the equal rights move- ment is well launched in South America and nine delegations to the eongress are solidly pledged te support it Legislation which the Woman's *Party opposcs as discriminatory in- cludes laws for different hours for men and women or any la which are framed on “a Bex basis.” Some of this legislation is supported by other women's organizations as protcetive of women and creating an actual rather than a theoretical equality Dhetween men and women in the industrial world. Miss Spring Green The important kerchief collar and girdle idea is cleverly Japted in this blouse of crepe de chine hor- dered with darker geeen. LAPSTIC] New. York, I what the luhmn.lblv \oung man will wear this scason—a. lipstick. Joscph E. Polit who made a tour of all that smart for men in | Europe, rald so0 upon his return. He predicts that the ¢ will soon become popular in America, and the wise boys will start now with advance les from their sweeties. Another Suit tol Albert Tolleson, once Exie ‘e, Indian of Fame, Okla., again lis defending her half-million dollar | fortune in court. Some time ago she paid $7,500 in an alienation | indgment. Now Mrs. Leona Mclne {tosh, another ¢ woman, is aske ing $200.000 from Mrs. Tolleson, charging the fheft of her husband! ions. Chiffon hosiery, in opal mauve, is a new-comer. Tt answers the auestion of whit to wear with the new purply siades of silks. MAN WHO'D WED NEEDS 330 A WEEK, $900 IN BANK, ECONOMIST DECLARES Denver, Colo., Feb. 24.—(P—Un- leas you have $300 in the bank and an income of $30 a week, don't get married, adviss G Warfield, dean of the Uni y of Denver &chool of commeres An income of $30 a week, the aconomist. believes, just enough to “got b on, but the must be a prospect of increasing this amount. “When the wife must go out in the business world in order to help her husband support their family, mothernood is defeated,” he de- clares. In no instance docs he advise marriace unless there is a savings acceunt of $300, be spent just because marriage has at last been attained, but to be|more kept as a nest gencies. “A _couple must have this ©egg against emer- nest an amount not to | old folks if need he. This is cows ardly. Marr is a challenge { hey had better recognize or leave | atone. | “Newlyweds should not demand {50 much. They want a car, a Juxe | urious apartnient, theater tickef | ana fur e ANl this requires & | large income. So they both work |and foregn the happmess of mars | vied life 1o save for these luxuries | that not £o important. 1f they wait to marry until they can atford | these things they are doing an une Postponement. of the possibility of e | marr happin 1 Dean Warfield belicves that at {the oldest a man should not be than 27 and a woman not | nore than 24 to insure happiness | in marriage. “Marrying young and striving te egg. With not a dollar ahead, a|achieve together forms a comrade. person is a tlave to money worries, and love slavery. will Many young folks marry not easily survive | stronger ship in accomplithment that than waiting three or fou years until the income is $50 a4 depend on fylling back oa the | $60 a week.”