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E i e shadow of Edith Pairfax Falls | Acroes a Happy Moment in : Madge’s Life. 1 “How about it, old dear? Up to the well-known shell-like cars in work, or can you spare me a min- ute? * Dicky’s veice held its old pro cative drawl as he came out on thr upper veranda where I was 1y 1 found myseIt thrill o that tc ing note, once so frequent ing his tones. but conspic sent during the mo trangement. I3 when he had 10 captious n gloricus duys of lat I was grateful to DIicky for not ciliation promiscd opportur careless comrad , wasall he had repeated 1 me upon th I knew caress. myselt to com the terrible unfui lriven me frov M s urgent. I'm sin g an inventory of Marion's ecloth- g and room furnishings for Lillian, | co copy- She and Marion and 1 are going | picture of her husband in daily pro- shopping in the city some day this| fessional intimate, association with week, for the seamstress in coming | a woman who loves him, fs either on Menday. But 1 have all the after [ not in love with him, or possesscs noon to get o | far more poige than is my portion. Dicky's t citous. “I'd forgottrn 1 Sure of that 8 =0 near the time for the back to her school.” 8D Do you want an oath or an af- | e firmation?"* 1 la toone side # g him, Vv ave several weeks | yo this list, it can be finished any today or tomorrow." “Well, then.” Dicky squarred his | ag, #houlders as if ha had some arduous | o, tack to face, “do you realize that|at ime | e somebody else hesides Marion has to | from behind me came the explana- &0 back to school. and that we've | tion | | &ot to plan for i7" | “Do you mean Junior" I parried { Mr. Undcgrood. “You sire rang the hastily, for I knew only too well the | bell in the center of the target that | problem he twas bringing me for | tin #olution, and 1 was distinetly not ! Co ready for it. “Why he hasn't-——-" LOVC’S Awakening Steadfast Woman By Adele Garrison my voiee, that 1 would have nceq in | 1 my typed sheets | real that you haven't been lazy. swung around fac-| You've simply n lavishing all 2 ur time and strength for weeks on before the opening » aud as for Harry Underwood. No wonder you're The Heart Story of a “No, 1 don't mean Junjor,” Dick | etorted, “although he enters into | he thing of course. But I mean me. and you, yourself, also Mary | rest of the family. The | umer's almost over and I've done | ss work in the last two months| | | i th in I've done in vears. 1It's piling p into a mountain. Ede sys I'm ing too la out right. to live and she's 1ped © end on her lately, and T've ot to get into the to. And that| how, when, ! wzain! T bit my lips to| 1 eommnient for ky to suspect the 1 at his reference | ax. At any rate, T told | ¥, I need no longer! i any fergnee of | ird my husband 3. ran- r which {uickening iy pulses | 1 as much jealousy of our old nd and Dicky’s partner in his agazine venture, as had that long past moment when she ed me stormily and told me she loved my 1d far be «t 1 did | i en there ‘ s to convin lousy—not 1 uncasines: < professional association with b ¥ exper nse told me my hush 1 his emotional indifference to her. But the woman who can iy had ’ ) | mplate unmoved the mental 4 on her,” | he sanie note in “I suppose it iy id. trying to get t eaking of a musculine office asso- e, “But I think she ought te hind in your work.” “Shut up!” Dicky whispered sav- ely, and for the fraction of a sec- d I stared at him, too astonished his rudeness td be angry. Then “Right you are, Lady Fair,” satd e pPyTight, 1928, Newspaper Teature Serviee, Ine. THE SCANDAL GROWS, By Thornton W. Burgess, Of things that sprout and swiftly Erow, A scandal leads all that T know. Old Mother Nature, While all the birds of the Old Or- | chard were doing their best to drive way Black Pussy the Cat, Sally Sly the Cowhird was chuckling to herself. She had slipped into the ne of Sweet Voice th Vesper sps | 1eft an egg with the three that wers | | already in the nest. and shyped out again without being scen. She didn't | Horizontal stop to join the o Ariving | Mprehing ceremoniously Black Pussy away. It flew Naked away to the Ol Pasture, wlere she 11 To place fn line Joined some others of ber family. | “yugt youdet me get in there my | 12. Wooden pin. When af last Black Pussy hod| “dear, and. I'll sottle the matter |13: Exclamation of inquiry. sneaked out of the Ol Ore of this ege” 15 disuppearcd nier DWn's 16. Yielded. arn, all the 1 folk return- a very tempting butterfly. Tt had |7, od to their lior #uess how A when she look: covered four g the three she ha she knew what had new egg was half ag rhaps you can | pass imir temptation was more than he could |21, printed alaehood. ulked. sed very near 1o Redeye and the | g tes tocateh it. When he had re- | Devoured. furned he hadn’t noticed that there |24, To imitate. was an extra cgg in the nest. Mrs. |27, Exists, The four ten-letfer words and four eight-letter border words fea- | ture this puzzle. Completing the puzzle will be a matter of minutes {after these elght words are solved. To question. I Sne—What a glorious, giorious view. He—Yeh, but is it worth the six [60Ts [TTo NI CTATCTi[PTH] U WUANE 0EODR D 00 DNNDECRE [0 [BlolwilLTe [VIETRIllP[R o] [AlLTETe IRTETONNS TR INETAR[s IR IWHTATL €] E.EEEE B30k U jofTTo} notifications o sist. He had chased that butterfly {22 Correlative of either, | and it had taken him a couple of |24, Tiny golf mound Jancer ams o Over Exertion of hers Redeye would have noticed, but 28 Appurtenances " cricd v Redeye didn't 29. Instinctive discernment Ty The day after Sally Sly had Im- |20, Silkworm. | o c Give " posed on Mr. and Mrs. Redeye, Mr. |31 Common divers birds) | Harriet Hoctor Gives oh dear! Now I suppo. bave and Mrs. Sunshine the Yellow 32, Collcetion of facts, ! Advice 1o raise Sall s 4 W arblers were the victims. Blacky |34, Patd publieity. 3 Nothing of the s lared (the Crow had visited the Old Orch- 35. Tip. ———— Sweet Voice, Usua s no and there was strong suspicion . The brother of one's er or| Give Mttle children the proper zentler person that & but that he was looking for cggs. The re- mother. 4 : ow he epoke fiir of wilt was that all the feathered 201k |35 part in a drama. [ Kind of exercise or give them none the sort!” b ared ag Just [had turned to drive Black away. It |30 Respected. at all s the advics of Harrict Hoctor vou let me t i, was then that Sally Sly made the Vertical |urima-ballcrina of u Ziegfeld pro- and T'll settle the mattor lis (zil j0st of her opportunity. Sally i8| 1, Pertaining I'll kick it ou I'll kick it ou “But you might and kick out or leciared ti Tl do. | nay it was of no us; 10 ary Of course, the new through the O1d O 1 and ody was indal, ves to talk ov mut they couldn cision us to what should | wwhile all tie friends 1 shiors ‘ 1e y has passed— roof hing if not an opportunist. chuhch, cright, 1928, by T. W. Burgess) | 2 Sun god. to dignitarics of a | yction, | “Let you daughter have dancing —_— 3. Wing part of a sced, |lessons, if you can afffford it," Miss next story: “A Good Turn by | 4. At variance. | Hoctor suggested. ‘Interpretive danec- Brown's B 5. Writing fluid |ing will make her gra al, give her fam e 6. Point of compass. | 7. Augured | 8 rlet, 10. Deity. 12. fuspension 14, Secrets, LAPPER FANNY SAYS: i |18, Night prec ira, You and m fruit, topped w Instead of creamed sauee 8. Inspired reverential fear. . Musical drama. | sturdy if properly backs of niuffin tine, Fill with fresh | | CREAME ‘ poike and help her physically. ‘But, if you want to gi body the proper ehance to develop as nature intende do not. 1 I ugh st from a support. |¥ou put her th ous ac- rohatics unfil she has attained her 16. To act deceitfully. full growth. | ‘ Sding i Dol “Twists and torns and cartwhe s | {are all very niccfor the agile young |19, in Ly bisected angle {20. Directed proceedings as at a|Woman to perform. But not for the meeting. growing youngster. Her spine is like Tapestry. [ sapling. It can grow straight and matured. But, if overtaxed, it can grow knotted and . Rolitary. twisted.” Very thin sheet of metal. Miss Hoctor, barely out of her Card game. teens now, was 14 before she took Social insect. [up ballet and interpretive dancing. Beor, | Of this she said: | sbreviation for “pair.” “Danc is lke any other 7 | knowledge. If taken zradually and standard of ty {steadily, it becomes a beautiful part { 5 2 l'of one. 17 forced, it is apt to cause | aly y somne kind d | FRUIT TARTS | atmormality of sowe kind and ti 5 body may never recover from the cf- ‘ When baking pie, leave enongh (o o (1ic ot erencrtion crust in the fee-box for a hateh of | T Lk Va7 tnrts. Cook the crust over thel wospN OUT.SHOOTS MEN Bosl gland, May 15 (®)—Mrs, L. S—~Alton, British sportswoman, | made a better score than any of TR the men contestants at the Nation. D ASPARAGUS !al Rifle assoclation’s meeting here, using milk fo make £he scored a “porstnle” at 200 ur. cook yards. 500 varde and at 600 veards, ith whipped cream or |y for asparac vou want to zet a good slant in as little water as possible. and | thus registering 105 points, or three house painting do it from the nuse this Ad 'and scasoning 4 thickening, hutter.|more than tha hest score made by |any man e her little | ! | deaths in 1927, By C. D. Batchelo:| Typhoid Fever |Washington Finds Senator Deaths Declinel Reed and His Wife Really Falling Off In "Mortality Are Suited to Each Other In 81 Cities. BY DR. MORRIS FISHEEIN Editor Journal of the Amerier Medical Assocfation and of Hy. &ela, the Health Magazine. The Journal of the American Medical Assoclation has Just made available its annual report on deaths from typhold fever in the large! cities of the United States. The death rates from typho!ld fe- | ver are an index to the sanitation of |the community, particularly as re- |1ating to food supply, water supply, jand the dispesal of sewage. Eighty-one citizens in the United States of more than 100,000 popula. Uon are concerned in the annual {summary. The New are particularly free from typhof fever, New Haven «nd Springfield, in 927, being without a single ty- oid death, Exanmination for Carriers In Providence, R. I. 2 child two | | months of age died of typhoid fe.| | ver. Its father had had typhoid two | years before and the mother aud {two other children were found to be | typhoid carriers. The typhotd car. er 1s 2 menace to every healthful person in the community. After a case of typhold fever occurs in s | family, other members should be ex- |amined and it a carrier is found, | proper sclentifie measures should be | |taken to rid him or her of the bac- teria, Paterson. N. J., and Yonkers were without a typheid death in 1927, For Yonkers, it was the second consecu- tive year without a typhold death | and the fourth such year in its his. | tory. Yonkers ia the only large city in the United States with such a rec- | ord. Richmond. bits? year aince 1913. Dinner — Baked ham and pine- the fruit covering it. 1¢ fresh pine. apple is uged it must be allowed to Asparagus Crcam Salad Two bunches asparagus, 1 cup | water, 1 slice onion, 1 whole clove, 3 slices carrot, sprig parsley, 6 cel- ery leaves, 13 teaspoon salt, 1.4 tea. | 4 tablespoons cold water, 1 cup whipping cream. Cut off cnough tips of aspara- gus to line mold, making them the exact height of the mold. Cook {to water in which asparagus was throngh a sieve. There should be Britain’s Record In Great Britain out of ¢8 large | Bervioe | delightfully natural she doe: cities, 13 did not have a single ty. Menus of the Family Phold fever death in 1934, i provement in American conditions, | which BY SISTER MARY. Nevertheless the total typhoid fe. 3 : | Breakfast — Orange julcs, cereal, | ver rate for 76 of the Targp citics| o td dinner on time. Mra. Reed | gy ao, tHen 80¥ man he knows. cream, crisp broiled bacon, coddled |of the United States during 1827 ggs, toast, milk, coffee. was under two per 100,000 of pop- Luncheon — Stuffed onionw, let- (ulation. Thin is the lowest rats!and won't Jet *yim: tuce sandwiches, jellied prune and |ever reached in the history of our|As someone once | nut pudding, milk, tea. country, apple, steamed rice, asparagus|since 1919 from 20:58 per 100,000 eream salad, fig pudding, milk, | population to 1.96 in 1927. England cities . had ne typhoid ‘anton, Chilo, and| Kansas City, Kansas, are slso on| this honor roll. Seven cities, there- fore, out of 81 had clear records: the largest number in any single | showing Reed i3 as much of a dramatic per. | ™'}l mean to il that there is still room for im-|®onality as her fire-cating husband, | TD€ Senator n i dq MRS. JAMES A. REED. | BY ALLENE SUMNER |Man’s wite can make or break him. | Staff Writer for Herald and NEA [Her intimates say that while she's most Washington, May 18—Mrs, “Jim | SVeT¥thing with thought of what it different man when he talks about his wifc. He saying a lot. | Aiadiah has said he'd rather go fishing with Mrs. Reed can make “Jim” come “The fish always bite better,” the senator explains, “because she knows enough to keep quiet at the right reels 1o her own copper wire with a | | 12-pound trout quivering on the end, help a speek. cno put it, Mrs. Reed | 2oly {13 the one person able ‘to be “Jim" 3 The rate ehows @ steady decline| Recd's wife and not be flattened ot |, TOMOrrow Eranicetan by the job.” | den. It the| I the Reeds should sign a four- coffee. 1910 typhold death rate still pre- t Either fresh or canned pineapple | vailed in the United States, there on Pemnsylvania avemge {he begin. g g can be used with the dinner ham.|would have heen 66,202 more argare an, er The meat zhould be cut from two to | deaths from typhoid last year than|come, too, and three inches thick and baked with |actually accurred. ey e e F umiture BUg ; | | lost . Th B Busy this Year g i bt it spoon paprika, 1 teaspoon gelatine, | Harmful Beetle Attackinggcroch:-fing Tapestried Furnishings. Washington, May 18 (®—A little |in boiling salted water until tender. | bUg that was first noticed in Wash. Remove from wilter and cool.'Chill | ington in a chair that came from | | nntil needed to line the mold. Scrape {the White House has started its| piq |remaining asparagus and cut {n Apring program of destruction of short lengths, Add with 1 eup water | mohair tapestried furniture, Dr. A. E. Blaek, of the burcau of cooked. Tic onion, clove, carrot, par- | éntomology in the Department of nd celery leaves in a square | Agriculture, reports that his spring | |of cheesceloth and add to asparagus. | correspondence s chiefly from [ Cook until tender. Remove “bouquet | housewives who look with dismay ni” and press asparagus with the [upon the wilted davenport and the water in which it was eooked |chair cushions. “This insect, commenly called about 1 cup. the furniture carpet Beetle.” Dr. | Soften gelatine in cold water for [Black says, “was first noticed in ifive minutes. Dissolve over hot wa-|America fn 1811 by the American | ter. Add to asparagus puree and stir | Muscum of Natural History in (until cool. When mixture begins to | some apecimens of curled hair frem thicken fold in cream whipped until | furniture that came to this country {firm. . Turn into a mold lined with |from Russia. {the asparugus prepared for this “It made its appearance in the | purpose and let stand until chilled |nation's capital in & chalr that had |and firm. T'umold onto a bed of let- |been given to the ezecutive man- |tuce and serve with French dress- sion by the Turkish governmene in |ing. 1915. Since that time it has be- [ This is « (salad to s extremely attractive |come a serlous pest, and s particu- unmolded on a large |larlx bad this spring, judging from | platter at the table. the number of requests our office | it i | Paris, May 18 (#—Madame Chan- tal uscs chavron weave jersey with ja maroon and white zig-zag nat'eml {for a simple dress. The collar and | | cuffs and sewed.on belt are of brown | [relata, which looks Iike miede, Over | the brown collar 8 a smaller onc :chi (Copyright, 1028, NEA Service, Inc.) [ has had for remedies. “The adult beetle can he located |during its flight from Mareh to {June, when it leaves the furniture ,and crawls about the furnishinga and windows. The brown, white and yellow scales that cover its body make it conspicuous, though s but a quarter of an inch long.” Thorough fumigation of the en- tire house er the particular plece ...y sho of furniture affected is suggested | by the bureau as the best means | of combating the destructive pest, Fashion Plaque year lease for the big white house | ning of March ¢, 193¢, “Tom" would . . show the “best minds” what a real southern break. Clves Oplnlons fast or lunch of hot corn bread, southern fried chicken and baked {ham and waffles can be. 3 “ “Tom” has been the Reed’s major {Discusses Why of Volun- domo for 80 many years they've all tary Motherhood.” for “Tom" | “speets I'se here for life.” Mrs. Recd fosters Tom's talents in d painting which tells | the story of a woman as interested Healthier mothers, better-cared- for children, and happier marriages are benefits that would accrue from & universal knowledge of birth con- (in the pleasure and ambitions of | tro, according to Dr. Margaret those about her as n her own. | Sanger. Married 40 Years { "The {dea of birth control eoming Mention Mra. “Jim" Reed into the poverty-siricken mother 1s Washington and any listener will | the most important factor in her [T overworked life, When her babics you ever see such hair?” come too close together in the years The hair in question ix as golden as ' of her young motherhood, she is not | honey, though Mrs. Reed boasts of {abla to get her tull strength. {her 40 years' marriage to the sena- “She cannot give them the proper tor, care,and attention her heart longs It was the golden lhair and pansy to give, {blue eyes of Lura Mansfield that| "It she has three years at least |started the Reed courtship back in | between the births of children, life |Cedar Rapids, Ia., in 1885 when | will be different for her anq her “Jim" Leed was just a successful at- | bables. She should be well and {torney and even his bestMriends | strong and normal paychologically— {didn’t dream that he'd be tooted for | fully recoversd from the astrain of the White House some years later. | bearing one child before sha has “Brilliant, beautiful, companion- | another. able and dressy” are the most fre “Finances also should be con- quent adjectives of description thrust cred before the family is ine upon Mrs. Jim Reed. She loves|creased. There should be méncy | bright colors in both het house and | enough In the bank to carry them |clothes. Just now Mrs. Reed f{s|all through any emergency® that | brightening up the new homey house | might occur. : | bought in Kansas City with cheery| “Increasing the family should be | chintzes and drapes. | &, voluntary thing because the chil | They may in Washington that the dren that arrive thet way are | Reeds are the most perfectly com- | Wanted children for whom prepara- | panionable couple in official life, | !ion has been made and for whom y “Jim” Reed is & movie fan. No- the family budget and family health | body knows whether Mrs. *Jim” | Provide”. | really is or not, hut she stands in {line in the movie quene with *“Jim” Daughter Opposes Father {at the opening of most every new | AsA 4 5 film and even. they say, doesn't| s Attorney in Lawsuit scold if “Jim" comes home late jor! Cardiff, Wales, May 18 (P)—Mise dinner and cxplaing he just K May Williamas, -vear-old barrister jdropped into a movie house on the |acted for the plaintiff in & eivil suit | way home trom the senate, |in which her father, Gordon Wil- ! Senator “Jim" has his library and | liams, a Cardiff attorney, appeared p” in the basement of the | for the defendant, new Kansas City brick home on! The cass, which was heard in tha |Cherry street. Here “Jim" putters|county court here, concerned pos- jaround and Mrs. Jim lets him put- | sezsion of a shop, and for more | ter, going off to & bridge club or| than an hour father and da: ghter some party of her own which she carricd on a legal duel ovep the in- | knows would bore the scnator to| terpretation of the act deafng with | outbreak. . | the disputed question. Mrs. Reed loves pretty clothes. She | Following the usage of the esurts, is said to be one of official Wash-|each referred to the other s “my |ington’s best-dressed women. She ' friend,” and Miss May sent the | doesn’t buy just dresses and coats|court into a titter when she gravely |and hats and shoes; she buys com- | contended that, after her presenta« plete costumes; a green hat meansa | tion of her case, “my friend on the |Breen or beige dress, bag, shoes, |othcr side cannot possibly suceerd.” | coat, ete. The senator sometimes up-| The judge, however, thought ctha braids her for what he smilingly call | erwise and ruled for “Dad,” but he “Lura’s extravagance,” but they say | complimented Miss Willlams on the there isn’t a senator in Washington | able Wgy she had handled the caee prouder of his wife. for her client, Mrs. Jim Reed is very popular in| R — Washington. They say she makes ~ TROPHIES FOR VOTERS ¥ any party a success. But she is not ton, Pa., May 16. UP—Trophies at all impressed by the official ®0- | for Pennsylvania Business and Proe clal whirl and indulges in only those | fessional Women's clubs that gt official social occasions which are al- | out a 100 per cent vote at the eoms most obligatory. ing spring primaries have been ofe A Charming Hostess | fered by the legislative committee of When she gives a luncheon or din- | the state federation, ner for officialdom, however, it fs| perfectly done, they say—caterers, | SHRIMP SALAD orchestra,-flowers, the right people | pice a sour apple to every twq next each other, the right anecdotes, | cups of cut shrimp and one of cele & famous “Jim” Reed party. ory and you will have s satistying Mrs. Reed used to say “all of Jim's tartness. friends are my friends.” They pay | {that nowadays she fs eultivating PAIST ODOR A slipper of pale green crepe de | friends of her own, perhaps believ- | An onfon cut in twe and placed ine gains individuality because of |ing that “my friends of ~hite cotton pique and there are its original shape and trimming of | friends. re Jim's in a newly painted roem will ab. all unmind- [sorb the oder of paint in & few She s not 'white pique turnback cuffs. | emeralds linking vamp end eaddle. |ful of the truth that any public bours.