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By C. D. Batchelor| Teaching Art to Wounded Soldiers Started Ethel on Road to Success ) . The Heart Story Love’s Awakening s....civom Seepn ercer By Adele Garrison ‘Madge Confides Her Fears Regard- contained her bank ook and check ing Mary Harrison to Lillian | book. 1 know because 1 picked “On Mary's account?” Lillian |them up and put them m my own echoed. I hastily told her of Mar- hag where they now ion's talk with me which had made tell you that 1 feel like i me: réalize the deplorable condition | “A combination of yeggman and of Mary's wardrobe. 1 kept bhack, |pickpocket,” fimshed with a howaver, Marion's generous impul- {grin as I hesitated. “Knowing vour sive offer. to share her own new | Plymouth Rock brand of conscicnce, things with Mary, for it had (been I am able to supply the simile given me as a confidence | without any trouble kut it my opin “Dicky has gone out to ci 1on is worthy anything fo you— check,” | said, “so that he can give 1607 1 anterrupted, with empha- Mary enough money for an enjoy- |sis able shopping trip of her own. But y " she el “that I don't see how he can get back in | makes 1t easier to tell you that 1 ten. minutes. There's no bank that think you've done the only possible ke knows &0 near tne station.” E. Ordiarily, of course, it ‘ “He doesnt nesd a bank with [® unthinkable for vou to p ! L) Harry m tow,” Mr. - Underwood +t them, but vou're in loco ; wife said. “That's the reason Dicky Parentis von know, which = some- . ( took him alons. Harry has the most i Latin for “locoed par- > | MEET ME bizarre acquaintances i every nook | know.” as T put up my : 7 914 / and corner of the eity, some of them |hands in laughing protest—-that's | | EXCUSE ME - M ¢ [ overR AT jlaw-abiding, other he . opy n A toas we s an awful | | BUT IMUERY, 5 3 4 7 §70A/Y5f0'?" But everp one of them., from a hut it h ens to fit in this| | L AND 9 . s LUNCHEON 4 el speak-easy proprietor to a zuraze iranted fhat Mary is one of |\ Y A | 4 \ Hays, whose cartoons “glorifying owner is always able to flash a roll | the des test in o the \ CANNCT 60 : - the American flapper appear daily of bills, and Harry's credit 1= zil- | worl ed t e h B T y in The Herald. is recognized as edged with every one of them I'm 1 1 that I America’s outstanding woman news. a lot easier in my mind for y e ful fas et she h o Y paper artist. fopmntlan: Thewll e hack. pr DroNed BEr SR iEsaaninle 2 Any such statement makes people and sot annss G LY tor ey ! R missR Al § T / curious. The successful -woman -i® don't mind waiting. The child g n leviation from | 1 ;: I even in this modern day enoush of shabby, now I think of it. What do [the nor n her part Al S vou suppose she's been spending her oy th I faltered tions when they meet one. TR LRl in G Le BUBHTECRn a0 How did she do it? Is she “just” ow. T have it'" s L put them where she can find a home and family. too Could we I'll wager you the without suspecting that you do it? What is her recipe for suc- ¢ s Mary" & had them.” Ly e cess? fruit cup that it's Mary's ¢h kfbae ad t er lhan ameaded e R she's worrying over instead of her ou be able to decide that later. notebook. She's afraid somehody | But as to being ‘justified’ my dear MARCGARET I ) glamourous as the best of them. To : he's | medieval WL You GO HEAVEN'S & ) Le sure, from the time she could will look at it and see where sh medieva ncer on the point of a JLL == HELEN DONT) Seld & Dhason S84 e piterel § | ¢ 1br1e neec — 1 ething Iy / > b‘;"sff:::,',"d‘ el R o L BRI s e D [hE i | 3 { 267 1y and her family, of course, thought my res:ntment. then remembered |shall fake yoi fo the nearest mental THEATRE 3 k { | wiee were s her dogs and cats and houses and | cyperjence at its funnieet. and her!at 5:30 each morning and whers h q\ / \ Y trees “looked just like real ones. gorgeous color Sunday magazin: | she stays all day i And when Ethel was in school in | pagag ara seen by millions of plopl“] Ethel was right in the midst of Billings, Montana, where, by the | g,y her syndicate work when she was way, she learned to ride a horse, A Playhouse Studio | married. She had a honeymoon, she was art editor of the school an-| Byt what about Ethel herself>” 'furnished a flat, later on moved and nual and way probably commis- |agiy the Ethel devotee furnished a house, had a baby, huilt sioned to draw all the tunny faces| —yye|l, Ethel is a real girl. Her and decorated a studio, and las of “Teacher” on the blagkboard, |name for the past four years has|never missed a day with her draw- Lo Kansas City, Mo,, July 25.—Ethel what a tower of strength Lillian |clinic for examination if you don't wiTH ME § had been in the rescue of Mary | grasp this Heaven-sent opportunity TONIEHT ~ s frem Jack Leslie. Tt was only her |to find eut what the child is up to due to share the little knowledge 1| Here are our men, back before the had. [time they set. I'm ready to die now “I'll not take your wagér.” I said. I've seen a miracle.” “for I happen to know the flat case, y ht. 1928, Newspaper Dicky's gift. which she dropped B Service, Tne And she learned about liars from him, by the time she was through' high |heen Mrs. W. C. Simms of Kansas|ings. She is a real feather in the school Ethel Hays was very sure that she was going to be an artist. A Matter of Hard Work But if you'd told her then that every day, year after year, one of Mo. And there is wee Bar- bara Ann “Babs" Simms, who poses for her famous mother. Ethel has a playhouse studio in her back yard to which she reports feminist's cap, though she denies that she herself in one at all “It's just a matter of doing the jjob for which one is fitted and which on= loves best,” she says. her drawings would appear in near- p—— . jtor Journal of the American | moreover, she would be one of the 0 \ ! The epidemic of septic sore throat| ¥or Ethels like that, the kind of ...--.//.... - that occurred recently in a Massa- | &irl who hoots and: even snorts at 7. chusetts city attracted national at- | bonnets doffed to her own abilities. Unknowingly we often tell occurred regularly in this country | But to get back to that career of No. it wasn't selfishness: It was 770 7 2 sore throat handles the milk | for there were several brothers who ered that secret in the Green For- How Infection Travels the ‘Los Angeles School of Art and pleasant surprise. | all of the milk from that cow will | plctures—never dreaming that I Forest, looking down as was his | «f won't tell Mre, Engle” said he the other milk and It pasteuriza-| Then, as every girl with ambi- I ant nb was seliing her break- | To prevent such epidemic, [ League. But she was still ~making 3 Iy a thousand newspapers, that mil- .LI;ITLE BOY BLUE.. ealt lnts lions of people north, south, east X N and west would call her “Ethel" H Y D " I Y l_l =z ind follow ner work from day to|1 1AVE TOU @ LJOllIE In Tour Ilome: Modical Assoclation and of Hy- | nighest salaried artists in the coun- Two Babies Interest King Eagle / tention not because of its rarity, but| “Just a.matter. of settling down The secret that we guard so well / because of its proportions. and plugging! Anybody could do for many years: in fact, there|“Ethel's." She persuaded her fam- cases the difficulty is due to the | study arf. Ethel thinks that's about quite the opposite. You see. from somewh-re in the chain of han- | rather liked horseback riding with est, he hoped to give Mrs. Eagle 7 | A cow may have its udder in- | Deeign where, as she ‘now recal King Eagle had been sailing high = i 7 be infected. When the milk 8| was no pretty picture painter,” says habit. Presently he discovered Mrs. | tion fails, the epidemic may attack | tion does. Ethel went to New York, fast at the time. The sight of her . dairymen should not permit any-|charcoals, water colors, roses, land- Life's BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN day with eager interest and that, % ....'4/ , geia, the Health Magazine try, Ethel would have hooted. By Thornton W. Burgess N\ / Mrs. Lightfoot 3 N\ ) % Epidemics of sore throat have |it who will!" she'd tell you. o There was one secret that King e .-.%(///////"- agle had discovered in the Green - < 7/ :-(m‘:ar‘:v".;(a:;:‘::iz“:wre:h:; hm‘x:i‘l\fi 4/////'//" 74 7 /5 /’/////’//// fact that a person with a septic | the biggest job. she ever put over, the moment that King Eagle discov- | dling before its delivery. their kid sister. But Ethel went, to AnA the.twa babies in their nest a T | fected with the getms and then [she learned how to paint “pretty in the blue, blue &ky over the Green g i(fl“l cted this milk is mixed with [ Ethel. | Lightfoot the Deer. She was alon ey 7 |every one who drinks the milk. studying for three years in:the Art reminded King Eagle of something. Niceties |one with the slightest sore throat|scapes, still life, never dreaming “Let me see,” said King Eagle, [to milk cows. handle the milk in|that it was her “funny bone” which talking to himself. for there w no W, | None of the words in this puzzle [R] any way, or ke at all concerned | would make her famous. one else to talk to up there in the HINTS ON ETIQUET .| Ihas more than six letters. There with the care of the pails or milk Then the war came. Ethel had blue, blue sky, “it is about time | lare no unkeyed letters. utensils, suspectod for a long time that there ibat Mrs. ighttost should. have Sibiisnital Once an employe develops 8| was something bigger in the world babies. 1 wonder if it can be that| 10 Mo didve Back: | 2 IsTAlo’l s O sore throat he should - stop work | than painting blue iris in crystal she has them already, but has hid- ;i 6. Consisting in form only. 2 |at once. A sore throat may not|lLowls, and now she knew. She drop- Aon them. aivay somestere, My, my. § T LoD an A s 6 Tro {only be the result of infections|ped her paint brushes, enrolied in a my, my, how good one of thost Tk nc 40 IKBEL VoL Bve another by substitu- | . 4 | vith these germs, but of infection | Red Cross course, passed her exam- young fawns would taste! I dom't | s " proner feknosledsment . of an tion. A L | with scarlet fever or diphtheria, | inations, obtained her passport, and | paris, July 30—No salon is com-[tall, slim blonde. want 1t for myself, but one would in(roquction* 2. Genus of ecls. 8] Z {two other discases that may be|was all set for Europe. - Bhe went plete these days without a doll of | Another amusing Lenci creation certainly make very tender and deli- | 3 }i5. does one acknowledge an Ran away to marry. ERIERY 0 y home to tell the' folks good-bye. |some description. It may be one of |is her bar lady. She is the only cate meat for Mrs. Eagle to give to | i, oquction” 15, To aisplace. Precautions While home she saw a newspaper |those pert damscls complete with |ultra-medern touch in the entire the children. I think Il hang | Tho Answiors 6. Freighted. Before heginning his work, the|plea for art instructors for govern- |turned-up nose and reddish blonde | show and she is very charming. She around for awhile and keep an eye! 1. (Only 1o royalty do presenta- Insurgent millier ~ should waush his hands|ment hospitals. hair, or the supercilious sort that|is perched, in an eminently modern on Mrs. Lightfoot.” Uofe daite pinge S Presentas g Organ of sight thoroughly, and it will do neither| It wasn't bhecause Ethel feared |gaze past you with a haughty starc|pose, on a bar stool, complete with So King Eagle did this very | * avar 9. Typical genus of mol: { him nor the milk any harm if he mal de mer, but because she saw |But dolls in general are very much | short skirts, long slim legs and boy- thing. He appear o just float| & wNoa, amils, shuke hands, and A sprite. FOR SUNBURN will wash them frequently during | here a chance to help win the war |in favor with the “elegante” and no|ish hob. She is quite a favorite for around way up in the blue, blue | o' iuse about amy polite thing, Db \ cource of expense that gocs |¢ Milking process. This servesjand also stay right on in her own|modern drawing room is considered fancy dress. : eky. Apparently. he vasn't doing | «uch as “How do vou do, £ Cavity CHTRG Joye oYXl - darnban | Lo only as a protection for thefield that she switched from Red |complete without one. anything special or watching any 5 Acute. S uim e cdicants for sunburn, | Milk and the consumer, but also Crossing 10 art Instructor for Uncle| This craze of grownups has given f h F i the doll a new dignity. The dolls Menus ol the amlly one in particular. But all the time | or the cow. am. B manwzed o feeh Mra: Lightifoot After milk is collected for ord The Chuckle Girl = Fodion ik . ? ith which little girls play hav For some time Mrs Lightioot | &1V* individuality 1o a home are: a The Lencl flapper-at-the-bar sits on a high stool smartly dressed in a lively green felt frock, with a pet dog under one arm, a cigaret in her niouth. Reminiscent of the '60s, s the demure little doll that presents a symphony of pinks and greens on a background of snowy organdie. Her hat is green felt with pink flowers. A little colored boy and an al- lizgator complcte the picture When, and only when, is the | | wording “may 1 present” used in | introductions? ORIGINAL . Upright shaft. If none of -the special lotion: g Fragrant smell. lare available, cocoa butter could Common century plant he used and s a splendid protec- Extended musical compozition. | tion ngainst sunburn, Falls into line, o Somic orig 2 ories which . s zed. The milk is heated to a|as aide to Uncle Sam. They called | 7 . % BY SISTER MARY seemed to be concerned only w '\l“""‘-‘ se mandarin coat ‘hum; on a | |sufficiently high temperature 10 [ thege girls who taught the soul-sick ::,Z':"n:;::. 'd';l),‘ I:(o: ::::m(?;: r,;:,( Breakfast—DBlackberries, cereal, Eotting hor breakfast. $he was grag. | WAl OVCE & mantelpiece: 4 coroman- e kill the germs of disease. and it | hody-sick veterans how to draw and | suppose it is all a part of the cream. creamed dried beef with ing on some tender plants and 00 B AlCguE o e To return to some ancestra JS Wil St i By > for at|who mad.: funny cartoon posters for | march of feminism. The smart lit- | Loast cubes, toast, milk, coffee. yolng grass in & liftle opentug n |0 C; DIAiea of mewters ailasy Busan, i} S () least one-half hour. hospital _ wards, “Uncle Sam's | g p e el = ‘ ¢ s the Green Forest. After evepry hite |00 1he type that stands on the floor, Mkl 5 Nincty per cent of the milk used | Chuckle Girls.” And ‘Ethel Hays' tle Parisienne of Nfihl or nine years| Luncheon—Rice 1oaf_u|(h stuffed in the dining room: a Cape Cod fire- CRnjlgEes o TUNTEL in the large cities of this country | “Chuckle Girl" was most mmom’fi has acquired the ‘“ensemble” idea, ! tomatoes, lettuce with French dress- is now pasteurized. In not one of s too, and her dollle has a dress to!ing, blueberry ginger bread, milk, “:w‘mlll .ks,or_s«m‘i;- v ;hxr:“;l il m;'mm r—Steamed fillets of flouns |1hat occurred in 6 and 197 o1 ¢ . | was pasteurized milk at fault. i An Ttalian woman, Madame Lenci, {der, buitered potatoes, spinach, | first started making dolls of felt with |hcarts of romaine and cucumber the long willowy limhs and paintel'sutud. batter scotch bread pudding, faces. which are very popular hcre.|miik, coffee. They are really works of art. It 18| When serving lettuce to chile simply marvelous what results Ma-|qron male the dressing with lo dame Lenci has attained just by us-[of olive oil and use just enough ing colored felts and paints, but col- | lcmon juice to make the dressing laborating with her are some very pleasant to the taste. Shred he accomplished Italian artists. It is|icttuce very fine and be sure thi or two she would lift her head to look this™way, to look that way, |IEhter: in Halian scttings, a demi. R e ; dohn on a window ledge or a mock cars to catch every Merry t PLEERELIEG SE eI drtinictal, Even from way 1 OILCLOTH DRAPL oL S —_ blue, blue sky : i ent and charming for | - AeCirl - MMER A that sh= was nervon 2 e curtaing on dressing House ferns have a hard time watched her King Bagle s ¢ nd for window drapes ar "" ""'"I"j; { in summer. Put them into the all sides in the grass for haby Deer, | SOnIe ' W little polka dot- MblcHLLCEE e wer bath about once or twice for the ditile spotied fawns that are] wd ar T . 4 oilcioths. Cupola k. with a light spray of cold | the pretiicst bahies in the o | They coms Jly colors and Clay.thouse . - playing on them. This is as Forest. Rut not a glimpse of one 4%, Of course o, without e et h fetive as outside rain in re- did he get, + t v froni their erase. freshing them. & Aifter a/schile Mis oot went | frames L ) - Emi el f;"‘,‘:"'l,:‘t“;“’ "';:":‘;::‘: they who paint the varying expres-|cvery particle is coated with the down 1o' the 1a peE L HDUEA ENO0C ¢ L0 SAcNa I F o ‘ed |gjons on the dolls’ faces and who|dressinz. This applies particue iRl Then b Meadow . FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: |some of Ethel's drawings to him.|gecorate the boxes, animals and oth-|larly uf thin little mk, “lrn need Estimated perfect score Within an hour the editor had talk- | o toys which make the nursery of plenty of easily digested fat in solf. 3 / e ed with Miss Hays on the phone at (sqay such a happy place. | their diet. ¥ To be promoted in school the government hospital in Dayton, | Madame Lenci's newest venture| Itice Loaf with Stuffed Tomatoes § 8 1 | where she was. finishing up her |5 iy the realm of fancy dress. She| Two cups cooked brown rice, 8 o sound 5\ war work, and asked her how #00n | j0s concelved the idea of dressing'medium sized onions, 2 green pep- Satiated il é o she could begin work with The|grownups to look like dolls. She|pers, 1-2 cup chopped walnut Dimmer | v . Press. s ; undertakes to make a dress similar | meats, 2 tablespoons butter, 2 to- | Ways Months afterward Ethel confessed |1 that of any doll in her shop and | matoes, 1 cup cooked green peas When he loo i AL Aira | ] To prevent 3 € that she thought sbe wus being of- |the notion has met with tremendous |2 cups cream sauce, parsley. Lizhttoot he gof e ¥ -1 Examination ¥ t fered a lay-out job, meaning a |syccess, especially for fancy dress| Peel onions and remove sced that h Imost torze ) Female horse w touching up of photographs and a |gances on board Atlantic liners. She jand pith from peppers. Mince ol wings spread. I \ < I : : To donate | making of borders for them. uses chiefly soft felt and muslin or [ions and peppers and cook over & foot were 1w Ye ] 35. Animal similar and of : But she came. Within a week |grgandic. A woman can have a dress [low fire in butter until tender. Saie as Ui iires 1 the whole city knew Ethel. 8he|representative of any period, perfect| Add to rice with nuts and mix and pr i : | of a vircle and a girl reporter did a picture [in every detail, and at the same|thoroughly. Pack into a well bat- where they come from K { # S ! J featurc stunt a day. They inters time carry a miniature of herself intered mold and stcam forty min- Bagle « 1 | . FRUIT 1CES i viewed .and a “drew” every celeb!|tne shape of a doll. | ute Cut -tematoes in haNes be sati . ne loa (nai < are casy 1o make and rity who came to town. They climb- Dress Like Your Doll crosswise without peeling and thera | : ; | = ! better than them 4 ed church steepley and went down| The crinoline period is by far the stcam twenty minutes. Slip off tamily &l 5 Z y 2hits in summer. DBottled Y in diving sbits. They rode speed | most picturesque 'n this line and al- [skin and scoop otit seeds. Dust ¥ usable, if one hasn't ) boats and broke ice in the lake in|though the general silhouette is the |with salt and fill with hot buttered pherrics, or other fruils > Aungust 1. A order to go in swimming. Ethel's|same, countless effects can be ob-|peas. Turn out rice loaf onto a L is often the only trim- | B | girl drawings were a city fixture. tained in the use of various color- | hot platter, surround with prepar- — \ing on yrze summer hat. A | NEA Service realized that here ings. There w for example. in|ed tomatoes and pour over cream SUMMER BREAKFASTS Redfern model is of pale tresh cran | was something more than a local |the charming little Lenci shop in|sauce. Make very hot in a hot v petites often fail in the | straw. Ieboux makes a two tone stunt. This girl artist, they knew.|the Faubourg St. Honore the other oven and garnish with sprige of had a universal understanding of (day. a regal lookirg lady doll dress- | parsley to serve. human nature, its griefs and joya. |ed in a billowy ruffled dress over| Any left over cooked vegetable, Comb of a cock Vertical To rebroadeast To destroy by slow inte Long metal tube, all. At Camp Lewis and government hospitals at Denver, Johnson City, Tenn., and Dayton, O., she taught and entertained sick soldier boys. And by the time this work was end- el she Knew without a doubt that she found her line—funny pen and ink drawings, featuring the modern American girl. Meanwhile she took a correspondence course in drawing. The director of this correspon- and moved slow |x sir, there "D, 8 i I ot hot «day breaktasts are punl clutron nky. hand sewn. Al one of t . e ! wortant. ¢in some wavs. | heavy el i Yteb is made of | ! r 1 hor 1 «d fruit drink first. chil- | small sitve with a its high spots and low spots, which | which was placed a bright scarlet |such as green or wax beans an be (Cor T 4 XA \ iren ke " hot cercals and milk. ! clust . 2 4 Premet is why today Ethel's pictures, .her [long-basqued coat, complete with a[used in place of the peas suggest- The ne en K 5, T . ¥ frt Juic is mice, for a|combin ads with green Pity the poor chiropractor. He|“Flapper Fanny” and her larger|scarlet marquis hat.. This travestyed. 1= Fooled 1 “u t | Change from oranges. | enes. never bets anything but back pay. |drawing or some phase of human |would look perfectly charming on & /Copyright, 1928, NEA, Service Ine. ©1928, Y MEA SEAVICE. tRC.