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Her Career on Her Boy? That's the That Agitates Madge. Katherine slipped her hand inta the curve of my elbow as I told her that she woluld have ample time ta answer my question between tl Rouse and the gate “Come along then,” she s hut if your query is what I th going to take more time ti tnterval vou've named. llowoier, let's get clear of the house. I'm not going to the big road, anvway, I in the other direction. I'm goi the hill back © eves with that vie to tramp up house, rest my w and then go on down the wood road for a mile or so. “I'll go out to the first wili tree beyond the barn,” T said, nam- ing & boundary which we st for Junior when he was smaller. “Then Katie will be able to call me if Junior needs me.” “Her voice will reach farther than that,” Katherine said with a #r and neither of us spoke we reached the tree and upon the grass beneath 1 1 Apple “So you think vou know what I'm going to ask you,” T said. “Practically sure of i, she re- turned. “It's the inevitable que of anyone confronted with vour problem. You want to know whetier vou ought to stay at the farm witl Junior this winter or go to the ¢ to live coming home only end ou'd have been fuel for a hon- tire it you'd lived in Salem a couple of centuries ago,” I told her. *You've named my question exactly T hope your answer will be as de- eisive. “It's going to be,” aid em- phatically, “although T don’t know how pleasing it is zolng te be to you. 1 say, g0 to your work by all means. Your staying wouldn't he of any bensfit to Junior u the present eircumstances. In fact, to speak plainly, you would add only another complication to the difficult " she situation I shall have to manage this winter.” Involuntarily T stiffened. T defy any mother to listen with absolute calmness to the dictum of nurse teacher that she a her child. Then, as 1 amused twinkle in Katherin I knew that purposely phrased her answer in provocative fashion. is “Hook, line—also sinker. that e laughed. “DBut, serious- ., I mean what I've said, Love’s Awakening By Adele Garrison only my 1+ fown you I'm sure.” we mad should ta this year o itzen's or: keep hands off of that yowre entitled to the | | I closed my lip. tightly and pressed by finger aziinst them he- | t locking v hunds in my lap. Katl Taughed hshtly and then plunzed directly imto clearly clipped | “In t ! she said, “ther vothing for vou to worry ihout in Juni 1 sical condition, He's comin 4 endidly—the | 1y selves upon time 1 to be a Hereulean t from bei could : wreck promisi may Jun 19 sh Yo wre Ve w. BURGESS That good for me is not for you, And the reverse is often true Old Mr. Toad Old Mr. Toad v having a feast He felt like gee, he had ing Pool a lox was there he b in the You now that he had a chance to fill his stomach with those ants, he ntend- ed to make the most of it. Cubby Bear had been fri Farmer Brown's lioy low Wing the Ilicker Toad did not feur I Boy. They were the They have always been friends, Farmer Brown's Boy ied Old Mr. Toud a1 sat o 1 Blm. ‘Tha a handy zue o yours, Old Mr. Hoad,” sald Farmer Brown's “That certainly 15 a handy tongue.” Toad eaid notl of his tongue tou ant disappearecd lowed. Then he look er Brown's Boy and | Peautiful €olden #ppeared. Old same 3 chuckled. “That is what food Yo Farmer Brown that wa Prese &ot up Old Mr. T person person small edition of ( that his skin tonk being coscred w : claimed O!4 Mr, oad 1 Have you | “1 ha : replicd for t you B Mr. Toad for 1 kytoes B tor”” “Farmer plied O1d M of work know to dc “For gnod work haue er Birov ou s Toud, “there a worms and bugs in garden that would thinge growing there if for me. Of co 1 don't ed Old Mr Farmor Browr spoil the gree s2y that 1 eet all of ! certainly do helg W ' '] £ame up?” . . this com [ 7t 1 should have lans for willi the 11 says the of vour |ONCE OVERS The Heart Story of a Steadfast Woman s tor it will smooth Iy rumpled feathers, wyal of my t to know to me. When t that of Junior in Philip \ 1 resolved you tor | | A | charg ny work iz ve ke e | Pt your re L been ove 1 said 1 ¢ S| he | rly so scrious as ¢ winter out here Tandy, I hope I won't ] ord. It's goin to keep him no doubt, u, but yowd be a 1© winter was acquired the your mother-in- | zet mine from her | i v different | A trained nurse | 1 and ur hority om- | over ) resent it other the ulti- S i Mother vou go to something ilar prob- vou love the work Tl take y ted author | | | AN the unkeyed letters are |bunched in the centter of this | puzzle. Solve Nos. 25 borizontal and 6 vertical and you've climinated all of them, Horizontal To scold constantly. Pertaining to form Battering machine, To grow old Genus of grasses, including the To be in debt Constant companion, pped 0 stroke lightl Type of narrative Legal rule, Esisted Type of Heron Melodious poetry auto body steel-headed pin Bursts Verbal Cata's foot To challenge Male human heing Amount at which a valued with taxation is to person refere ol Devoured Musical drama. Almost a donkey Guided Small tea box sheltered place Vertical of necke. 1s with wonder ce Toud suldenly the | |4 1 clung | I do it,” said | up on Frozen, Geographical drawing 1aped figure, areheaded, Conscious Rythm. Desert beast of burden Marked with stripes. Pecan lattles Quirt. among nations 2 a weathercock 1o the nose rock cavity To fend off. Hug mythical bird Inprofessional Menus Wof ll;e }amil y Strawherries Ty cereal, toast, —Cold sliced meat loaf, tapioca pudding, r—Roast loin of lamb, spa- Vil dhs new peas in eream, mint jelly Y T f. > r hes and olives, orange e v “oteh cookics, milk, cof- the: “ic with dinner ariety. rve a cirsp i1 cake with an i ous process Bf rolling and : cookies in hot weather seems werth while. This cooky ttully easy to make and well to have on hand for crgencies Buteerscotch Cockfes. Thres.fourths cup butter, 2 cups light brown sugar, 2 eggs, % t spoon cream of tartar, 1§ teagpoon la, 3% cups flour, 1 teaspoon nilla, % teaspoon salt. for to s onally thered Recistered U, 8. Patent Office ose you when you’re married.” “Lawdy, no, I can get a husband any old time, but I can't get a job as soft as this.” Four Unkeyed Letters [LIVIE] TMIA[RINTETZTSTAG| [T 1 {6 lolTFAATLTAT €| [NToITTelsT] T7ID[R[o|w[N] (] I IMIEINIHBTElT] T 17] | [TalPFEISTEIW[EIRE TETR 1] BARGOE G WREEN L7 JA] CIo{AITTE[oF TM[oINIA[D] ] Cream butter and beat in sugar, Add eggs well beaten. Mix and sift flour, cream of tartar, galt and add to first mixture. Add vanilla. Form into a long roll ahout 2 inches in diameter and let stand n ice-box lover night. Cut in thin slices and btake in a hot oven. | (Copyright, 1928, N Service, Inc.) | | Woman Traveler Tells“@i Africa Says It Is No Longer the | Dark Continent. New York, June 15 people no longer are strangers %o the Africans and traveling in the | Dark Continent has lost much of its |discomforts, reports Miss Alice | O'Bricn of St. Paul, Minn. | “The picture of Africa as an un- | explored wilderness is a hoax,” she said here upon returning from an eight months' tour of that conti- “nent. “It was the Srcatest surprise of our trip. I don't belicve there s a black man, woman or child in the country who hasn’t talked to white people. “Airplane service, raflroads, au- tomobiles and filling stations stand side by side with so called ‘canni bals' and elephant trails. It is pos- !sible to travel straight across Af- |roca without leaving commercial transportation. | “Even on the foot trails peopls Itravel in tepoys or chairs carricd | by four native boys.” | "Miss O'Brien's party, including | Benjamin Burbridge, game hunt- er; Blair Flandrau, Mrs. Grace ! Flandrau, authoress, and C. E. Bell, photographer, toured Africa from west to ecast, entering at Matadi at the mouth of the Congo river and coming out at Mombasa. Thelr pur- pose was to obtain motion pictures nd to gee the country. The greatest danger ca:.e with the overturning of a canoe in the Aruwimi river when the party ate tempted toshoots the rapids. The canoe was presscd against a rock |by the force of the water and the apants perched on its side for 25 minutes until they were rescued by 50 natives. Influer which attacked them in the Congo forest, ten days from a doctor, was another danger. The most difficult thing how- |ever,” said Miss O'Brien, “was to |keep up our morale and spirit in [the terrific heat of the Ituri forest. | Throughout the whole trip we boiled our water for 20 minutes |daily and we took five grains of |quinine every day for Sive months.” (P—White o By C. D. Batchelor Bright Colors For Men Who | Go Down to Sea For Swimming BY CURTIS WOOD New York, June 15 (P—Bathing suits for the stronger sex have div [ed right inte the style class of Iclothing this year. | If Mr. Man knows his strokes, he [ will swim this summer in a novelty | bathing suit that, by its color an aesign, could be mnothing but this | season’s model. | For the plain old black or navy {blue suit has been relegated, so- cially spraking, to the aged gentie- men who still hang their clothes on {a hickory limb but no longer go near | | the water Striking Design Bathing suits this summer have a flair for design, first of all. They answer that incessant call for some- {thing new. One glance at them proves that mien are getting clothes conscious. Mortised stripes, checks, jazzy lightning flashes of crimson, orange, bright blue, vivid green across white, {tan or a dark background will bring flife and dash to beaches this year. | Prison stripes are quite the thin |So are collcgiate ones. These ar | graduated lines of color on a con- trasting background. Then there are some that have tricky dizmonds, | ganize socictics for the prevention of blindnss and conscrvation of vision will be interviewed by Miss Lleanor I Brown, tary of. t | National Socicty for Prevention | of | (lower center) is plain Karl Figures In Royal Triangle The marital affairs of former Crown Prince Carol of Ru- jmania apparently have cost him his title in the courts. Carol { Princess Helen (left), asking for a divorce because he deserted ther for Magda Lupescu (right). Michael (upper center), son of the royal couple, is not involved, i for now he belongs to his country, rg—stomy @ e S Karaiman in the petition of The custody of little King Sight-Saver Opening Drive A hable moire grows formal! It is used for cvening gowns, for Start World-Wide War | hostess gowns, for ensembles and % separate coats. Here is Eve Le Gal- on Blindnes: ’ licne in the picturesque costume of apricot washable moire she wears e B T, Valuable ex- in the first act of Hedda Gabler. Pleated chiffon forms a side insert, over which the moire is laced. erience gained 1 anized war on America in an blindness during last 20 years will he made avail- | able to the rest of the world at the | International Conference of Social | Work in Paris July 1-13. Delegates 10 the conference from European and *other countries in which anovements arc on foot to er- s in who will offer the United $tates, | suggestions based on | complishments in country | h rescarch and public ednea- S A NEW FABRIC HAS ARRIVED SOCIALLY | | | i i polka dots, checkers and so on. in | STl i / | Plack-white, “black 4 = R Sadey b e ; ! color combinations. The exnnifl s Sami e e SN e 4 | modernistic onecs with broken geo- 0% M LI A FEEEE TR § | metric patterns woven into them. | \E0E IRV BELIAERE causes, ! . Miss Brown saic \ addition, the | Loe Bun Bahs eves of hundreds of thousands more | . | The newest thing in bathing suits| (V15 €} Ao of thousimis m i is the “legh model, Of course G AsRIBa e . i % [it is @ misnomer. The trunks are ; Tl e 1 | shorter than the outside, which prevention of b e way an elongated | 'i(;?,}.‘; “flo,?,’,‘; s vy e il frequency of blindness from e i bithies' sore oy his been reduced This suit. fs cut much decper fn PEPIS. SOT ekt s b the armhioles and neck and with is | 1Y 80 POr eont iy the Unitod States very short lengti gives a much bot-| BUTE LIS HEEE B doata. THils b ter break so far assunbaths are(D¢°R made possible through wide- concerned than the oM style suit. A |[epread w0t peninh Tkt dropeiin | fine all-over red striped pattern on | mm:‘ \;‘”‘" ’*““r ‘n’"h ! tan is one of this new style. s R e it R It looks as if most men preferred re buing carrid on | — ‘ the lighter upper and dark shorts | ¢ i Nolistaviong ke is % | type of suit .with a belt for decora- | ! L 1o determine fac- tion. Some of these have tricky ".;"‘ ”L"]'”:\F\UIV trachoma. Great eallsm eede | | bandings, among which one suit m‘:" i Ix“:r ’|’u !H\w \L_wm'n ‘m, ‘ eream has bright, penetrating green | i deyo oguchi, ha | tt | 1attice work design across the bot- ;:‘”‘""i‘l'f‘*’“"'l "'; RRockefeller Instis | n me atters, {tom of the shorts and the top of (U1 Tor Aledical lu:'. ;-n :‘,\A: ‘l’n g the shirt. | Nox i not quite finished b : - Monograms are appearini for dec- | 105k when Ju. dicd recently |There Is Too Little of It In | | oration. Soma are round, diamond | e of the most serious prob- v i | | shaped or other decorative shapes, |l°Ms confronting workers in th Sex Education, [ This sort of personal touch gects MOVMENt to prevent Llindness in —_— i better and better, this country at present revolves | mhere should | Hora-daaatlant around the numerons and compli- |ind heanty tavght in sex education, | Upper left 1s a new “legless” suft n(!r.mvl eye hazards in the dangerous | yceording to “Mother” Stoner, Dr.| el stripes on tan; below, Iatticed | Industrial occupations. 1t s estin Winifr clevilin Btoner; motea | work in glaring bluc Mvens a crea €1 thot 15,000 American men and | fominist and mother of the prodigy | sult; right, Richard women wiho arc blind today lost | winifred Stoner, 2nd ‘ !m two-plece | Arlen chooses prison st irlpcs and black shorts. Few Pointers For Parents and Where and Why. Serve only juice, pulp or fin | truits until the child has learned to chew well. Teach you child what he learns with the least resistance and in the | end, says “Children, the Magazine | for Parents,” the sum total of his knowledge will outweigh what he | would have learned under a stand- ardized course in what the neigh- |bor's children his age know. Watch his natural aptitydes and develop them, If there is something he must learn but cannot grasp, wait. Try the same thing on him later; there will come a time when he will learn it casily and thorough- 1y. Some children do not memorize | easily; to force them to is a ner- | vous strain and harmful. But the same child who cannot memorize |even simple nursery rhymes may | have Infinite patience and use real intelligence in constructing a bridge of merit or making an intrica | block design of artistic qualitie | When you take his time and nervous and mental energy to learn som: | thing you think it would he mice for [ him to know veu are diverting his efforts from their natural and more important channels. Families who hav {lar home play evenings will uret | you that “Tne family that plays to. gether stays together.” Once every week or two father, mother and the children have a “date” after sup- I per. Lessons are studied In th nfternoon or the night before. Gam! story-telling and stunts make up the evening's fun. Some- times there is an old-fashjoned can- dy pull. Queen Victoria, who ruled from 1837 to 1901, had the longest reign of all English monarchs. {Hints of How and When | adopted regu- | their sight through industrial acci- | could teach their| “If parents | dents. | ehildren almost from the cradle to “The National Society has been | glorify the function of scx, it would articularly active in encouraging | (liminate the distressing sordidness tlishment - of pre-school eye |that darkens the lives of so many clinics ind special - sight-saving | millions,” Mrs. Stoner contended. clusses for children with, defeetive | ““Instead of letting children think vilon. DBy means of an interesting |father and mother have their love game in which the children is called | the letter * imagination of !¢ to regard ed ani- |1 the sly, children should be told | whole truth of life and the| aty of creative instinct. upon mal, the pre-s clinic tests | “Children should be taught how | Ithe vision of who are [important health and the care of | unable to re their growing bodies is. Their| Need ¢ towards life would | sweeter, Life today | vhole attitude and lishts be cleaner and conservation of vision. that is be- ing carricd on in this country. \i Venture. study by the League of Red Cross| Societics revealed that the num- ber of blind persons in the world | Petroit, June 14 (M—A theater |owned and operated for the people of Detroit is projected by a group of Detroit women. Eventual success of the plan, they say ,will result in | one of the first popularly owned | civie theaters in the United States, | is about 6,000,000." WALST | Mid-summer geric to top coats from 1lin- | ¢ taking cog- | nizance of natyral waist-lines. The | | newest summer coat is a tweed s Jessie Bonstelle, actress and redingote. | managing director of the Boustelle | USRS T | Playhouse here, is engineering the i POLKA DOT lscheme. Madame Clara Clemens, The polka dotfed metiff 45 run- | Gaughter of Mark Twain and wife | | rampant. New chiffon un. | of Ossip Gabrilowitsch, director of | | dics, cut like men’s shorts and the Detroit symphony orchestra, is shirts, have bandings of scarlet |active in the enterprisc. and white dots for trimming | , A five-year leasc has Dbeen ob- i |tained on the Playhouse by Miss CULOTTL SKIRT | Bonstelle and is being held in trust | An ensemble of pink Kasha {until a theater fund is raised by at and angora gEweater has @ popular subscription. Subscribers pink siik culotte skirt that has a will receive reductions in prices at| button-on panel front to hide the the box office and will be granted divide. other privileges. The theater will — | be managed by a board of directors NOVEL GOWN |who will serve without pay, with | A fignred chiffon evening gown, |Miss Bontelle as director of pro- in pale greens and orange, has a |ductions. waistcost effact of taffeta in ex-| A resident company, with guest aetly-the some eymn end pattern. 'stars appearing from time to time, have been provided in 300 | has all too little i ism in it I saving classes throughout | rly marria T think, make | United States where children with | for saner, morc moral lives. And | | defective vision -may receive an |1 am convinced if children were education. Until a fow year: o 1 t to regard sex in the Aght| it was necessary for them to af- | way, there would be better morals, tend classes planned for children |more carly marriages and greater with normal it or schools for | happiness the blind. To adequately provide e for all the public school childry st with _seriously deteetive vision in | | Jetrolt omen {the Unitea s there should bui | jat least 5000 -of the &pecial 2 e Project Theater “Health authorities in aeveral | | other countries have expresed | great Interest in the work for the |y Operate It As a Civie will be installed. Cooperation eof the Detroit board of education fa counted upon in emphasizing the value of the theater as an educa- tional force. SPEECH READING TAUGHT Cleveland, O., June 15 (R—A spe- cial course for teachers who wish training in teaching speech reading !will be offered at Western Reserye, university this summer by the Ameg. ican Federation of Organizations fog Hard of Hearing. Fashion P—laque the The little beret is revived in the new yachting theme in women's shions. This one is of navy serge embroidered with a white anchor, FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: 20 U8 paY. ©1228, 8V wea scvice. . The sheriff may not be an elee trician, but he attaches many e radio,