m House WIFE and HER ACTIVITIES Silver blrches that seem to listen, Leaning, aslant. Their long trunks glisten. Touched by nature, the magic tinter, Pale harp-strings for the winds of winter; Which, swaying, hold exquisite traces Of delicate twigs. like filmy laces On the amber sky, where sunset lingers. Hemlocks pointpwith grave, dark fingers Where gleaming Vega, pale amethyst, Iecps near the zenith, her ancient tryst. —Blanche lfihlting Keysner. _ A successful gambler has win- ning ways. You never become poor taking good fldVlC€< Many a good-natured lawyer becomes a cross-examiner. A man may return,-—and still never make a come back. Too much contentment is al- most as damaging as too little. The time for doing something useful ‘is during leisure hours. . Every bookkeeper should al- matrs be able to give a good ac- count of himself. Some people seem to commit a crime lust to get a chance to sign l. confession. The telephone, like life, is just what you make of it-a. blessing or an affliction. ,0ne of the most annoying peo- ple is the man who cannot under- stand what you cannot explain. GOLF ENSEMBLE IN SPONGE-BAG CHECK Among the surprises in fashion- able circles in Cape Town, S. Africa, is a golf outfit which is a positive sensation. As yet, only a sample suit has arrived. It may be considered a triumph. or a sartorial _‘ impertinence. The outfit consists of . .< shirt, shorts, cap, jacket and hose i: - all to ntatch in a daring sponge bag check, Shorts for golf are not quite an innovation, and they strike one as being ideally sensible wear for hot weather. But whether such a strik- ing design of a check will become popular h a. doubtful point, says one authority. Dating. Don't knot the end of your thread» when basting. Start by making two stitches in the same place. This will hold the and of your thread sufficiently and when you pull out your bastings there will be no for- gotten knot to make holes along the lines of basting. ‘ r. Keeps Them Better It k safer to pull your gloves over the hand when removing them and not tug them off at the finger- tips. ‘This latter method breaks the stitches and spoils the shape of the gloves. No Tangled If the new spool of cotton your sewing machine rattles around and tangles, cut a piece of cloth larger than the spool and put it on the post under the spool. This will keep it steady. A Check-Up A check-up of theamedlcine cab- inet should be mode each month in order to replenish the neces- ‘sary drugs and sundries that it should contain. If this is not done periodically Lthere is bound to come an emergency when some medicine or dressing is needed badly and we find it has all been used. ' Medicine Glass - Medicine should never be meas- ured in sooonsfitliey vary so much in size. Every medicine closet should be equipped with a small marked glass made especially for this purpose. PIE TIPS ' When making we dough, keep all. the materials as cold as possible, and handle lightly. Do not use too much water. Sprinkle the plate with flour before laying ycur crust in it. Whcn you have put in the filling, mver with a top crust. which has been slashed to lct out the steam. and press the edges tight to keep in the juice. A few dots of butter. atop the unper crust. will make it flakler. .Put the pie Into a verv hot oven and bake until the cruel. is set. then reduce the héht and flnlslf baking. If you have a meringue instead of a top crust. bake it slowly and well. Trv using merlngues instead of up- per crusts on some of your fruit piesPake these in a crust previous- ly baked and use cooked rather than raw fruit. war-m mm can ' .. g rs nouoair on: WIIITI ram can: f" The recipe laellow is for a white 8'" ‘t Cr"~. which may be baked 3."! in "vanes. although it won't y.‘ Ql-eo as lrng an a rich. dark cake. bnrnsi _ _‘_ _ ETGHNG cocoanut, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 2 tea- . '*-— spoons vanilla. ’ I know a hill Where B- Dllle "68 Cream butter and gradulally beat P3119188 in sugar. Sift 1-2 cup flour over On a. rocky ledge in a grove of pineapple, raisins, citron and cher- bkchesv - ' rles and mix well with a fork. Be sure each piece is evenly coated with flour Sift i-2 cup flour into creamed butter and sugar mixture and beat well. Beat in half the orange juice and add another half cup flour. Mix and sift remaining flour with salt and baking powder and add alternately with remalnlnfl orange juice and wine. Add pre- pared fruit, nuts and cocoanut and fold in whites of eggs beaten until stiff. Add vanilla and turn into one large loaf or two small ones. Line pans with two thicknesses of heavy waxed paper and bake in a slow oven for 2 hours. The temperature should be 325 degrees l“. Cool and cover with fondant- frostlng and decorate with candied cherries and thin slices of citron cut and arranged on the cake to look like a holly wreath. Some people prefer this kind of cake without an icing. TONDANT-TROSTING Two cups granulated sugar, 2-! cuo waiter. 3 tablespoon light "-1 BYYUP- . Put sugar, water‘ and corn syrup in a sauce pan and stir over a low heat until suszar in dissolved. Cover and let boil three minutes. Remove cover and wipe off crystals that form on the sides of the pan with a piece of cheoscloth dipped in cold water. Put in theremometer and boil until it registers 238 degrees F. u! until a few drops tested in cold cold water" form a. soft ball. Con- tinue to wipe off crystals as fast as they are formed, but do not stir ru Repmove from fire and let stand until cool. Stir with a wooden spoon until white and creamy .'I‘hen turn out on a marble slab and knead until smooth. Put into a bowl and cover tightly. Let stand at least twenty-four hours. Flavor with rose water or vanilla and melt over hot water . Spread smoothly over cake. _______-_-___ WHY BAD EGGS FLOAT AND GOOD ONES SINK A good way to test an egg is to place it in water. If it sinks, is o; good egg; if it floats, you had better not try to eat itfor you'll find lt has been soiled. A fresh egg consists of the yellow yolk and the white albuminous matter surrounding it. 'I'hls sort of egg is heavier than water and will always sink if placed therein. But a. rotten egg is very different. In such an egg, the yolk and the albumen have changed and have been split up into gases. The con- tents of such an egg are, therefore, much lighter in weight. In fact, they "weigh less than an equal volume of water; hence, an egg in this condition will invariably float if you place it in a pan of water. _.___..____€___ NEW COIFFURE T0 WEAR. WITII PILL-BOX HATS This winter's funny little hats- lots of them literally not much bigger than the proverbial pillbox -—have been a problem not only to the women who must wear them to be smart, but to the hairdressers as well. Frequently more of the head is exposed than is covered by the hat, and the sleckest, smartest coiffure can be blown to rulnatlon after a five minute's walk on a windy day. One Paris dress house and several hat makers have tried to solve the problem with mesh nets to cover all but the front part of the head. The famous Antoine has tried to solve the problem by inventing an- other new colffure which ls pat- terned this time after the classic Grecian curls and is suitable for both day and evening. ‘This is how he does it: Short hair is parted on one side of the head and brushed straight and flat from the part. Small strands of hair are made into ringlets (about the size o! a quarter) and are coiled flat back against the head. Single ringlets edge the forehead as for as the temples where the ringlets become thicker. At the back of the head where the hair .is longer. the rlnglets cluster even more ecply and thickly. __._._€____+ NEW SILIIOUETTE One of the season's new evening silhouettes is the sheath-like gown topped hv a full swagger coat. _.._____________ WOMAN OPERATES ‘FERRY ON COLUMBIA: RIVER Picturesque and ramshackle cable ferries dot the upper reaches of the Columbia River, at Lincoln. Wash. But none is so unusual as the one manned by a woman. The crude barges, powered by the current of the river, are clumsy, heavy and difficult to handle. The task of , ' the -uu.e craft across the river here is capab- ly taken care of by Mrs. Imogene ‘Bnlcolm, the only woman ferryboat operator on the Columbia. _ Mrs. Iialcolm. an attractive me- dium-shed woman, expertly guides the craft by a wheel much bigger than herself. ' The woman operates her ferry the year around. Ber cargo, for the most part, consists of transporting cattle across the river when they arc brought out of the mountains to pasture in the more verdant lowlands. ATTRACTIVE GAINIBII _ I08 HAM STEAK Spotty wsy"to oarvahm leak is lilacs tolanaund with CANADA'S sTlNDARP "Oh, hull, K8. . What 1H tb 0fFRI$HNE$$ world :3 ygu doizig up at this tlm: _ M .. WWQUM-‘TY ~11‘ gdont know what um it u." A CHAPTER I Kay stared at the telephone booth emblem as she had never soon before; and thou she want in and with a steady resolution called Chick Rautcul- When he answered, aha said: "Chick?" “Yes. Who's this?" "Kay Brannon, Chick." she said, and bar voice abook a little, so that he heard it. "Anything the matter?" ha asked quickly. ‘ And Kay wet her llpl. “You laid once if I ever wanted to go to work, I might get a job 1n your office," she reminded him. ~ not speak, and he laughed, in an What Will‘ l uncertain amusement. “Trying to We Do With ' , ma me, Kay?" » l5 - Year-Old DQfQth Dix . ,1, M‘ "No." she mo. She hesitated. told Daughters? _ y with Bo l him then steadily: "No, Chick! I'm ' - y‘ \ in deadly earnest. May I come in » i _1 "u" "."°.r°""""..... " y y, era's an B He protested: "A Job?" She did shed —- is not. our foreign policy or my door portune tion. step out grinding day until after coming to. wanting their wisdom teeth, ,, odness Sadie or Lily or Gwendolyn Hit-IT)’. And Sadie with their tears, ing them in depriving them of all the means well, but she is terribly things have changed. She just isn't maids of i9 or 20 when mother then that they didn't know how kept at home for fear aren't that way now! capable of taking care not letting her go to places still young enough to enjoy herself. apron strings. So the argument goes, to "set out," as is too early for a girl that her thoughts only too well that in reality, as ped to protect herself as a lamb in a. But it is a condition and not a have to deal with theories of family played out, and even mother cannot in a society whose rules have all pleasure goes on the boys place. .. . malady, because she idealizes every ‘way to make girls take boys calmly is and get each othersnumber. commonplace mortals they are ticatlon as their mothers were at 20. in their work. Times Have Changed and Mothers Need to Recognize This When Dealing With Their Young Daughters Believe it or not, but the most acute problem the one that provokes the most fights and causm the how m balance the budget, but whe- ther 15-year-old girls shall be permitted to have dates. Every day the postman fairly staggers to me to help settle this burning ques- . Mothers by the hundred write that they don’ or Lily or Gwendolyn. mere babe in mother's eyes, yet she wants to won't permit of a martyr. Mother considers l5 entirely too young for a. girl to think didn't go out alone they were 19 or 20, and the privileges of grown-ups before ever they have cut only knows. from going out when Maud and Susie and Polly are off to the movies and fraternity dances with Tom, __..__._'._ and Lily and Gwendolyn of the cruel and inhuman because they have the misfortune to be only l5. Of old, all of 41 or 42; and ed and behind the times in her ideas; and she just doesn't know how Maybe, writes Miss Fifteen. girls didn't have dates until they were old was young. to take care of getting lost, A girl of 15 knows her of herself, and there isn't any sense in a. mother with the boys and have some fun while she la and it makes a girl look fldic." for her mother to keep her tied to ner with much to be said on the mother's side and something to be said on the girl's side. to the older generation will agree with the mother in and interests should of being preoccupied with matters of in spite of itlfteenis ignorant of the world as a babe unborn, the modern youngster. We have to scrap many of our discipline in handling them. changed since she was a girl. Hence to positively forbid a girl of‘ I5 to let her go occasionally to the movies or a lad is simply to precipitate a worse evil than the breaks down all confidence between them. Nine times out the girl a liar and a cheat, because she does not meekly give up the she craves. She flu: about spending the night with a blind dates with strange boys. her parents will not let come to the house. So. inasmuch as you cannot keep your young daughter-from playing with the boys, in a world that is full of the male species, it is the part of wisdom to let her amuse herself with eye rather than sneak ofl with some unknown to an equally unknown Another thing is that every 15-year-old girl is boy-crazy, and if her parents refuse to let her go around with romance and imagines herself in love with every ‘that. makes Tom, Dick and nothing to get excited over, Finally, girls at l5 nowadays are as old in worldly wisdom and sophis- care of themselves than the old-fashioned girl was. So when Sadie and Lily and Gwendolwn claw for their night out now and then, and the right to Bo with the Boy mother is wise if she doesn't clump the lid down 0n them too hard. DORUITIY wrong, I'll come out," be oflercd. “In the morning. or tonight, if you want ma." "No," she said. “No, I'll come in. This is business, Chick. To your office. May I?" "Why-yes, I guess so," he as- sented doubtfully. "But I'm not sure we can find a place for you." “I'm going to make you find a place for me," Kay told him des- perately. She tried to laugh, man- aged a. mirthless sound. “If you don't," she said, "I'll have to so home to Carvel, so you just have to. Good night, Chick! I'll be in at in America today - most tears to be "u" can olonaoaaqllo under his load o! letters which im- v m :1 Rantcul, when Kay appeared at his office in the morning, heard her with sympathy; but he tried to dis- suade her from her design. "You've no experience.” he . pointed out. “You're not even plain steno- grapher. And — Carvel‘: your home, andyour people need you there!" - . She insisted desperately: "I know it's selfish and hideous of me; but I can't go back. I simply can't! I've seen too many girls‘ do it. Girls like Emily, lovely and intelli- gent and-they go away to college and then come home and wait and wait and by and by they marry- grocers. If you don't hire mo, I'll be a waitress. or a clerk, or any- thing! But I won't go home!" "You're an idiot, you know." he said almost angrily. “I know it. But you've told mo I've sometimes helped you. Try me, Chick. I'll be good She persuaded him at last to speak to his superiors; and once committed, he pleaded her cause wit sufficient conviction so that she as given a. chance. So Kay wrote home that she was going to work in Boston; and Mrs. Brannan accepted the news without protest. Kay had a nonoommlttai letter from her and wrotc in reply: "You sound as doubtful as Mr. Rantoul did; but in spite oi you do with their Sadie She is only i5, a t know what to the boys. And when mother it, she regards mother as a tyrant and goes about with the air with about boys. Nice girls with young men in her what the younger generation is Nor does she know how to stop Dick and write, with the paper blistered wsy their mothers are treat- for no other reason than course, poor Mother she is old-fashion- joys of life modern. Maybe girls were so dumb of themselves and to be stolen. But, gosh, things strayed or way about. is perfectly Anyway, “All the girls are doing it, wish I knew stenography and typ- ing; but so for I've just been study- ing things that Mr. Rantoul is working on. For instance, the Ori- ental silk Company wants to adver- tise their stockings, and I'm sup- posed to find out why women buy a particular kind of stockings, and tell Mr. Itantoul. His idea is advertise that these stockings won't run; but I don't think women care whether stockings run or not. We don't buy stockings for utility; not nowadays, with skirts as short as they are. I think I'll suggest that he tell the Oriental people to put some sort of scent on their stock- ings, perfume them. I believe that would be new. and amusing. "But anyway, that's the sort of work I'm supposed‘? do. Itmtun, too; and t era e perq es, ‘fiend and Mother. I have a dozen pairs of their stockings to wear, for in- stance, so I can Judge their merits in actual use. Then Mr. Rantoul sent me out to walk along Tremont Street the other day, with a man about thirty paces behind me, to watch and see how" mariy men turned their heads to look at me after I passed by. 8o you'll prob- ably see a big advertisement: "Thir- tylone percent of all the men she passed looked bats at her when she wore Oriental Silk." I don't think it was altogether the stockings, though! “I'm supposed to be Mr. Rantoulk Naturally those of us who belonB principle. Fifteen We feel the old phrase used to so. instead still be those of childhood sex and sentiment. boasted sophistication that she is. and as little equip- lioffs den. theory that confronts us when we The heavy parent role is assume that she always knows best to have any dates. and to refuse school party with some nice One parents fear. It of ten it makes She meets on the street, corners the boys you know and under your them they simply aggravate her plmply faced youth into a hero of hobbledehoy. The only associate freely together and Harry the for them to SMALL ToWN WGIRL i BY, BEN AMES WILLIAMS though it WQIQ I flflDI' b both, I'm a working woman now. I m work. The studio was also a living- room. It bad ample closet space; and two couches. by day, became on ying twodt-birds of the rent “ ause it's home and onloc both for mo." aha pointed out. "And I ‘ _ .__ couldn't moi-u it without you. Kai." _ The studio proved to be a popu- lar gathering place. Genevieve had scores of friendswso that for months Kay was in a constant lurprlse at WW1 QIWYWHY- their number and variety; and Sally Rico vegetables! Hays and Helen Ripley and Mamy d° 1°!‘ """m1§‘ Bingham and m other girls whom swam. ch11 l Kay had kno moat ntimataly at KEY “W11” m Wellesley liked to come in for tea. usually escorted by youngsters of their own age- ‘Then there ware half a dozen men who liked to take Genevieve to the theater, to a. foot- mu game, or some other festivity; and when two of them offered invi- tatlons for the same occasion. Genevieve usually appealed to Kay to handle the overflow. “You're doing me a kindness." she always insisted. “If I leave them footloose, they'll wander into strange pastures and I'll never sec them again. Keep an eye on them for me till I want them, Kay." So they were seldom alone in the evenings; and it was increas- ingly hard for Kay to awake at the fit time in the morning, to be at the office by nine. Genevieve was not tied down to any definite hours; but Chick Rmtoul expected Kay to be prompt. and to stay as late in W! the afternoon, or even into the ave- nlng, as he might require. Kay confessed to Genevieve, one night after they were abed, a faint disappointment‘ in his attitude to- wards her. "Chick used to come out to ace ms when I was at Kollesloy," she said. "But he never comes here. I thought it would b0 fun working with him . . . ." Genevieve told her wisely: "Child that’: the first lesson you learn. There are two kinds of working girls. Some work at their Jobs, and some work at their men. Chick R-antoul has a level head on his shoulders. So long as you were an outsider, he could play around with you; but now you're working for birn, and if you don't. earn your pay check, he'll mp you. Of course, he did fire you, he'd probably start giving you a rush again, if that's what you want?" “Of course not!" Kay insisted. "Not in love with him, am you, kid?" Genevieve asked gently in itmakeamolo college," she said- Holen RAPIBY- Dane. told me last week over for the Yale Kame- be a peach, or Emily liked him as much as gave her a then he never And than there w So she married George!" "And that," Kay agreed "is why I made vol, ever, positively." Genevieve lookcd iy- "Who's the “No one." she pro aha remembered. “They must be as asked, in one of these pauses Ripley?" _ -he's so different now, I al- ways feel guilty or something; feel as if he were angry at me." But if Rautoul, Olliiillig of office hours, paid her no least attention, yetKayhadnonceclt/obelonely. There were always ' Gonevfeveb friends, whom Kay made her own. She said to tho older girl one day: "How many men do you know, for Heaven's sake, Genevieve? There's a new one every week!" _ Gmevievg laughed. "You ‘don't know the half of it, yet,” she con- feséed. “You've never even met Paul Drake, or Mat Conley. He's the movies now. Or Luther Perins, or Bob" Ddkin, or Ed War- Ihnlly." than lust my pooh-pooh. "Heave at him." Genevieve mwllffllmlli- where they may!" to her letter again. any?" "So man opl have" Gene- y pe e ' "Yea. Hello, Helen." vieve agreed with a dry humor. “Being heard of is Bob's specialty. He's a cousin of mine. His father's my uncle. You know, Doctor Da- kin, tbs brain man." Kay did not know. “I-Ie outs bullets out of brains as easily as you sharpen a pencil," Genevieve assured her. “He's a peach, really! Retired now. of course. Just consult-s. and occa- sionally operates on a king, or someonp equally important. Bob's in with Doctor Fabre. in the Clinic." She added, half angrily: “He'd be a good man if he settled dowrrto it. Doctor Fabrc told me so. But Bob's wild as a hawk. If he's not cutting out some woman's appendix in a. hospital. he's practising a little pri- vate oateopathy. CHAPTER. 10 Dana's hare?" you did about him; “He was supposed to come to a party where I was once." Kay re- membered. “But he didn't come!" "He never docs," Genevieve as- sured her. And she said wistfully. m. Md,» m. m. were bot. "on ,, mmfd n, - Ge vlava pro I m“ ‘we "They have such What would we if there were no spite 0f herself. “Sh: was in love, when she was in "You know It was her brother. I've never met him. Helen that he's oomiflfl Ha must wouldn't have ‘she did..Ha rush down here, followed it up . . . . a boy up there. a Tech man. Bu he moved away. sflmLv. Chick Rantoul give me a job. I won't go back to Car- at Kay shrewd- OBW lurkin! in Car- vel to devour you?" she asked. Kay shook her head mlrthfully. ted. "Ob, yes," ‘There is. too. A named Elmer Redford. climbs telephone poles and splices wires and things. If I ever wens back, he'd marry me before I could say scat! He wears overalls, and rides a motor-cynic. and has pliers and screw drivers M11811!!! all over him. I'll bot he sleeps in thmnlj‘ bad u cracker crumbs, in bed," Genevieve agreed. "I wouldn't marry him, either." Kay spilled and went on with her letter, careful to say nothing which might wound Emily. She was par- ticular not. to mention the fact that Dane Ripley would be~~ in Boston presently; yet since Helen had told her he was coming. Kay had been conscims of a lively curiosity about tbh man. Once or twice while she wrote now, she paused and sat u thoughtfully silent; and Genevieve “You say you've never met Dans "That's funny." Kay protested. "That you should ask that! I was lust thinking about him; wondering whether I would see him while he's the darkness; and Kay laughed 510m], ~ here. Helen is one of my best "Of course not!" she repeated. friends, of course. She was furious with him for the way he treated And she tossed her head faintly. "I'd like to meet him." she declared- "I'd Ilka to make him fall desperately in love with use, and O! til-Eh’,- tush, or something, and leave him smelling!" JAvahed at her own words. “Only I don't suppose he's the grovelling kind," she confessed. "u: tho crupE mu "He's taking Sally Hays to the 89-1110." Kay said and turned back She had not the least axpecta- tion that her thought might, be. come a reality; but on the Friday ren, 0f‘ . . - . "I've heard of Bob Dakln." Kay nisht below the some. Helen Rip- admitted; 1w telephoned her. "Kay," Helen told her, “you know Kay laughed softly. "Bo still, my beating heart! ' ab: exclaimed. “Yul, you told mo he was coming." "He expected to take sally to um game," Helen explained. "But she's coma down with the mumps, ‘Kayfi’ Th9 mllmlil?" Kay cried, amus- ed. "I thought Sally was too sophis- lewd for anytblnc so muons!" ‘ u. hvnutly." Helen insisted. "Isn't that tho world's worst? But of course she can't go to the game. and tbs minute I. knew it, I thought of you. Dana's not so bad. Kay. don't blame you for feeling the way but he's a but Ha I THE cooks comvzn CARROT CUSTABD if cup sugar 3 cups scallbd milk 3 B886. beaten aUBhtIY 1 cup fine bread crumbs i cup grated or ground raw car- rota i6 teaspoon grated nutmeg ‘A teaspoon vanilla ‘>6 tcaspon salt Method: Dissolve the sugar in n‘ scolded milk. Add the beaten Qggg, the bread crumbs, the grated! carrot, ‘and seasonings. Pour into indivi- dual custard cups or into a. largo baking dish and place in a pan con- taining one-inch hot water. Bake in a moderate oven until firm, gm.“ one hour. This tastes vary like g cocoanut pudding. ' BOSTON BROWN BREAD ‘A cup molasses ‘A cup brown alga $6 cup corn meal 3 cups graham flour 1% cups white flour ii teaspoon baking powder I. cup seeded raisins \ 2 cupo sour milk 2 teaspoons soda ‘i6 teaspoon salt Method: Mix all ingredients to. getharinabowLAddti-lasourmilk in which soda has been dissolved last. Pour into a well greased loaf gm andbakcinaslowovenlorona BIA FOAM IAISIN IPICI CARI 2 cups sifted cake flour 8 teaspoons baking powdar lld teaapon salt ¢ teaspoon ‘A teaspoon cloves ‘L teaspoon mitmag if teaspoon mace ‘A teaspoon allspico gatablespoons butter _ I cup brown sugar, paohgq 1 egg ou- 2 egg yokfuwaxeatm cup milk a peach of an orchestra you. Kay? If you fight w! I'll lwitdn you over to com else. But really, you'll lilo him." "Charmed, I'm auto." Kay Rid. after a moment's hesitation. "I'll have to n: it with Chick Rultoul to get ofl in time for lunchrbut he’! 80198 to the gama himself, I “D3060 . . . ." "Oh, he's taking ma," Halon ac- sured her. "He'll boat the party!" "I don't think he approves of meetlns his employees on a social basis." Kay confessed. trying no keep thq faint pique tones. But Helen laughed at her! and in tho and the thing was ar- ranged. Kay loft the telephone and turned to Genevieve, who had heard enough to understand; and. Kay caught the other iirYs hands and ‘SMAR f-cwmlzs FOR THE from: DRESSMAKER (Contlued on page 8) “He makes me so mad, because he could be a. wonder if he would! And his father and mother arcoso proud of him, have so many plans for him. so many hopes . . . ." Emily and Juniors! Isn't it smart? y in her next latter to spoke of Bob Dakin. assistant. The firm is Burnett and and they are for better able to take The memes have got Mr. Gould is nice, and I think 3A‘ Rantoul will get a ‘partn the summer was over, into rou end to the movies, of orange, sections of grapefruit and garnish the ham itself with full slices of pineapple topped by cherries. If candied sweet potatoes are served with the ham, parboil the sweet potatoes first. then place with the roasting ham for the last 25 minutes of cooking. A slice of r ‘ a few cherries and a little apple to cook along with the asset potatoes and ham will help COPYRIGHT PIOTIUIION BOMBAY-To ensure fair play for publishers in the matter of copyright protection in India. the Publishers Association of Great Britain and Ireland have formed an Indian group of the association. ACTOR-LECTURE]! _ airy officer of a horse dealer. o Elhgland-Sif‘ ooanaxaniwlcadtbnactonhu bun nobleman-ll DIX- $332231‘ stilt? i“‘ii‘;i'°.ii...&i "WWW- six feet tall,_ "m" ' -- quality about b0!‘- AMorningSmile NOT BEFORE “Didn't you guarantee that the horse wouldn't shy before the dis- u charge of a nnon?" asked a cav- "Yca. and I'll stick to it. Ha never ahlesuuntil after the cannon in “hm, ‘min’ m‘ "$13M; “'5' don baa ha» to dumb‘! moxmo mun '° d” or." hilt." "n" are" ..,...,. a . a at orp page v ‘ - for a nlcc little glrlydha was pro- K”. m “m; ducod. and Jean was about to clue the bargain when Sandy whispered: "Joan. woman, lot’: blvo a boy- an ye forgotten the lsdbcap we found in the_t_rain1_"_ Cambridge University for 1W0. Th0 hill but d1! loot- be amt! I Nomad. s? Q i: E "a as‘? 8 Mancunian n". midi-ion toxin: , £1- Gould; but. Mr. Burnett is cld, and gt: Wm Bum,“ noww-y. w“ ‘ working as a clerk in George's store. mu _ p Kty wrote: Her new exlstencg settled, before méeaekemw Sha made one friend. Genevieve mud o! mm when you we“ ” and I‘ Wm‘ ' “my ‘"9"’ Libs cause whoever you moat is l-l- curiously attractive despite the fact v0 A . rgc had been married in Juno; tor coat, too. Bob Dakin. He's one of nguibs you boar jacket. about but never sec. You must have Genevieve says avaryona of him, and I guess that's O I h’ for Jacket. ~Prloa of Wrap coin carafully. ao ny paopic, and now you're no,“ m, I w‘ 170-1930- Bite .................... INN tohavaa babylnllt! 0 - .-" ..‘.......--...............-.... . . nan pan stopped. and abo reread ‘ ', what aha had writton, ~ and than _ IHDOI hi!‘ 136M! 11M. tcoka ‘ICU "Honour-u.- .. -aa>coIoolocOII ahaetofpaparandoopladthofirat ,BtrcctAddi-eu punofnariaturmuaolmcmit- w. “n. “u. l.“ 1m‘ m. uuu- IOIIn-laalllalaaoronaool crumohd the anoint} about and Y dropped it in the at "an sarong-veer‘ “www N! . _l t ~ ‘q _ n "mm believe-lethal’. _ nun ° “m” “"5 “whom” “m” "ab: 1w ' ‘ - IQNDQL- ‘ . ' wmwrvflgfififi luau-stats??? tit "m w‘ » . w’ "~""'“""Y plied m and Handicraft: m... and no cam: bu: bu,“ hm,‘ maprwhmm.“ now ‘ ‘your up in amww. m", ‘ma, mu.“ P You can use tbs pattern again for I lflllfltb lkirt or separate lumber- Stylo No. i630 ls designed sill 1i, l8, 15 and 1'! years. 1b requires 8% yards of 54-inch ma- terial for skirt and jacket lining with 1% of 39-inch mam-m barman 1s cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred) A jaunty little sports costume of tweed wool skirt in dark blue and grey and plain my wool lumber- jacket to be thinking about. It's a perfect "find" for school wear, for shuns. hiking and the like. n looks so gay and apormy heath your win- for Size