"with t v i Wom l an '5 Realm -:- Social i and.“ Personnel, i a ’ The ‘HO USE WIFE and HER ACTIVITIIZS rarnaucl: I _. Endurance is the crowning quality, I‘"And patience all the passion of great hearts: These are their stay, and when the lenden world Sets its hard face against their fateful thought, / And brute strength. like the scorn- ful coilqueror. Clatuzs his huge mace down in the other scat ,- The inspired soul but fiings his ‘ patience in, ' ' And slowly that outweighs the pon- ’ derons giobe.— One frlitll against a whole earth's unbelief, One soul against the flesh of all mankind. —J Russel Lowell. .______.__-____-__ CROSSING THE THRESHOLD Those who are crossing the thres- hold of manhood or womanhood shoud meditate on the two paradoxes Vlililh seek for solution -——Y.il" perndort of Authority and Freedom. and the paradox of Rizll and Duty. I should sum up the frst bv saying. "Freedom is not the rizht to do what you like, ‘but the power to do what you e ouzht." 11rd the second in the o words “No man has any right save one- the right tn do his duty" — Slrl-I Stilai. Jones. FEARS Every one wishes that the man whom he fears would perish- Ovid. , The absent danger greater still appears; less fears he who is near the thing he fears -—Daniel. Fear, either as a principle or a motive in the beginning of all evii.— Mrs Jameson " IMPUTATIOMS , Let us be careful to guard our- .seives against all the groundless imputaticns of our enemies, and to above them.—Addison. .. -—<—-———————— MILITARY SHOES MARCH ‘NALONG PARIS BOULEVARDS Smart military shoes are march- ing right along Paris boulevards trying’ to keep up with the Italo- lthiopian situation. Ethiopians ‘ijmay go barefoot. ‘out Parlsiennes -~_wear martial-looking shoes ~‘br:\vn. black or navy kidskin which are trimmed with fine braid. tiny gilt buttons and sometimes minia- ture military plastrons- ‘ Tl Italian Renaissance influ- ence as been responsible for the glitl/‘Ying, metallic sheen of after- noon flippers. Considerable bronze has .en shown. while kid, fabric "or mledc slippers all have a. nar- row piping of gold and silver. The ..nlunerous high and wide-tonzlled noes, some of which are slit in three sections. are reminiscent oi’ the Italian comedies. _ Back to cave man days with the “new fur trimmed shoes. For street wear, low-heeled extol-cs with ties 'ure seen in suede with insertions ‘of leopard across the toes. For afternoon, there is a pllml! in 5W9‘ ‘kid with a. tongue and heel of black broadtail fur. " The Parisian black and white l$ bolder and more Pfllmlllwed this winter. Some black dresses have entire sleeves of white others have mannish vestees of starched white similar to c. man's boiled evening shirt, and others are trimmed with bibs of white feath- ers or heads. To. keep step. Shoe- makers are making black and white shoes for winter and a pump 0f black kid has a collar of white liz- ard, while the heels are piped in white- -.--_—-——-——-—— LACE TRIMMING Jodelle emphasizes skirt render- hess with full sleeves above and below elbows as shown in a. black silk Marocain dress trimmed with heavy cream lace. wcaltrlewats" T0 nunancc YOUR CHARM Do you prefer to - wear Jewels? many women look better with- out them, but others add to their Rllpearancc in a striking manner when they wear them. This season for the women who ilk: adournment, there are many "costume" Jewels from which they may choose None is expensive. They do not imitafr: real stones. but have a dis- tinctiveness and originality of their 0WD. c There are clips for hats and suits; necklets introducing dia- mante to. pastel-shaded fronds or carved feather "tips" inlmother- or-nearl. nuns. .9“. double Strands of golden_ lnsel, _ _ '1,u|-g¢ ful; transparent daisies; flowers of mqthcr-of-pearl centred with different bolored stamens. m‘ of vivid porcehlin baekgrounded by metal leaves,_are_l_ eas in these new braid necklets, for _ evenlnl. Red and white porcelain petals clustered to resemble a carnation are a mart novelty is clips. Short strings of pearls are worn with sports wear in several useful color- ings. Enormous rings and bracelets of crystal, occasions ly studded with are effective worn with the r: 1 ‘B. n. lfonus, fr“. drifting chiffoni evening f." ‘ ' "l-o is the new fashion of ~, lnoklhts that only portly ‘line neck. These fasten to finulfler straps of a gown or '. "r side with clipo. ' ‘Per-tint! have never been so fir. 1”": "ut they must be lmlll- h-zi rid vivid, and in keeping flu ensemble; noises-of colored ’ . 919M910!‘ I539. “giiimnatifog fa he cor.‘ ‘b DRIP 0B. NYAA IS LATEST IN CAMPUS SLANI} Have you a little drip in you home? Not A nyaa, then, or stnorge? You have the condolence of the crowd if you have the two first named. but congratula- tions are in order if you have a stooge or possess of friend who is one. A "drip". my dear is the latest campus s‘ang for a fiat tire-- a bore-all utterly uninteresting per; son. A nyaa is a little worse than a drip. A nyaa is what -may be called an active bore. an offensive bore. A person can be like that. 5° ca" *1 Party or even a football same. A nyaa simply no fuh at all. - i=ut a stooge ,now. is another matter. A stooge, male or female. is a person who can be depended upon to back you to the limit, Whether it be in your latest dodg- ing of the campus rules, or your weakness for chorolate layer mire A stooge is a buddy, and she is never a. drip and never, never a nyaa THREE METHODS OF SALTING NUT MEATS Perhaps the custom of serving nuts at the end of holiday din. ners is a. survival of the pioneer days when hickory nuts, walnuts and butternuts were gathered from the forest and treasured as a special treat for festive occasions. There are three ways to salt nuts -roasting fn the oven. pan frying and deep-fat frying. For all nuts EXCBDt peanuts the oven process produces a more crisp and tender nut than either of the other methods. . BLANCH BEFORE SALTING _All nuts with a. tough outer 5km like almonds must be blanched be- fore saltink- 'I‘o blanch nuts pour over boiling water to mole Y than cover them-after shelling of course—and let stand five or ten mlnues or until the sklils slip easily. Drain and cover with cold gator. Rub or pinch off the skins, rain as thoroughly as pQ§ible m a colander and then spread on u, dry linen towel. Place another towel over them and pat dry, 1f convenient let stand several hours. Peanuts for suiting should be purchased raw. Alli’ 800d cooking oil is used for $6994“ ffYlnk- Butter is excellent d“ "ii-lull! and olive oil gives a elicate flavor used for either deep. ‘at °Y Dan frying or roosting. To Prellure nuts for roasting. "paint" the inside of a bowl with 011 o,- meltcd butter. Put a few nuke 1n gliiblogl and shake until each nut addlg Y coated with fat. Conlglnug 1'18 fat as necessary untll all the nuts arc coated. but use as little fat as possible. Sppegd we- flared nuts on a. baking pun and roast in a moderate oven (about gig M??? R) until a delicate uteswflfi will take about 20 min. ‘m; cdaiiélgryéleijss of] thetguts be. - _ E EH71 of time it will take tfsroasi: 511:1?‘ Sprinkle evenly but sparingly 31th salt. stirring with a. fork- ere should be a distinct salt flavor. but no vestigue of a crust of salt on, the nut. Try 1-2 t“- Spoon salt to one cup or nut; and add more if individual taste de. rnands it. ' EGG WHITE Ezg white m b of fat if preferrégd. Ieiegtedt: allii iltllkllllzly and “paint" the bowl with - nd nuts a. few at a time and shake until coated. Roast and c511; The? are not shin, when done an ' are a bit more deicate ' It will take about 2 minutes to "Y "We in deep m. Heat fat in a 599D fat kettle to 390 degrees p3 on a fat thermometer. Be sure the nuts are free from all moisture and spread them in a frying basket Immerse in the hot fat and fry until a delicate brown, Drum thoroughly on brown paper and Sprinkle with salt. Spread out to °°‘é‘.i'"§ "w"? ' i 09 llll dd Variety and or: brownedatlggegilygg wav as the salted ones, difference being in the seasoning After browning mix one-half tea; spoon each of clnamon, cloves and “IMP!” with 3'4 Wliifwon salt and sprinkle over cup browned nuts, c x When it is-h oessa lunch it is wlseefor tlghoutzeevifg t: make her cakes in the form of gem cakes rather than a layer coke. One or two ‘of these small iced cakes just about strike the right, not; go those who carry their lunch, where a slice of layer cake would be op i0 dry out a. bit _ Lemon Juice gives rpleasing "5"" V’ "l9 Chflllped spinach. LEAGUE or MODESTY. roulinsn m c caoo. anon-s mucus l‘ or u an vrcroaum vnvraou In Chicano. a League of Modesty has been formed . Its obicct is to warn » women a-rainst immod- OSW Ind “the phflotophy of the New Paganism." The league's first Job has been to draw up some rules. Here they are: (i) Necklines should not be cut lower than one or two inches-back and front. , (f) Sleevm must at leut cover the elbows, and skirts fail "for bo- low" the knees. (3) Stockings must come over the knm and must not be transpar- ent. nor flesh-colored. (4) Women's clothes generally should conceal rat-bur thou meal i the only - THE COOK'.S' i comwsn Macaroon’ Crea/m Ho‘ Macaroons are such chuacterfu‘ bits of oodness that they are able to step qu to beyond their accustomed role of the small cake. 11nd ploy part in the making of a lot of quite fancy desserts. ’ Iu this instance, we use them t" l give a wry eflnite touch of inter- l est to a pie ling. i ‘Kl cup sugar i 1 tablespoon cornstarch 1/. teaspoon salt 2 cups milk (scolded) 3 eggs ‘i dozen macaroons ,\_ Mix sugar, cornstarch and salt to- -gether. Stir in milk. Cook over hot \vater. stirring constantly until mix- l ture thickens slightly. Cover and cook, with occasional stirring, until no raw starch flavor remains. Stir linto beaten egg yolks. Add finely- , rolled macaroons. Turn into lightly- i baked pie-shell and bake in a mod- I crate oven (350 degrees F.) till set. Cover with meringue (3 egg whites beaten stiff with 6 tablespoons sug- ar). Scatter 1/. cup blanched 2nd shredded almonds over top of pie. Replace in s'ow (300 degrees F.) oven to cook to goldenbrown- Macaroni and Cheese There are two things we would like to say about any dish of mac- aroni arid cheese. The first has to do with the pro-cooking of the macaroni. Be sure that you are using a very large pot-for any amount of macaroni should be cooked in a good many times that amount of water; be sure the water is boiling hard-drop in the mac- "aroni a little at a time so as notlto reduce its temperature too sharply- and be sure that you are using enough salt to kill that "flat" flav- or. Our second specific warning has to do with the amount of sauce pro- vlded. It is almost impossible to err on the side of too much sauce-the fault is usually the other way. With plenty of moisture, plenty of flavor, your macaroni-and-cheese ooh will be sure oflpopularity. 1% cups macaroni . '2 cups medium-thick white sauce 1 cup grated sharp cheese lé teaspoon mustard (optional ‘A cup buttered soft breadcrumbs Cook macaroni in a large pot of boiling, salted water until tender. Drain and rinse with cold water. Drain thoroughly. Arrange a layer of macaroni in greased baking dish. Add a layer of sauce to which the combined cheese and mustard have been added. Add second layer of macaroni. then cover with sauce. Cover with crumbs and bake in a moderately hot oven, 3'75 degrees F. i Millions‘ of Men. Have Been Floatedtto the Altar on Tears of Women They Did Not Want to Mam e ~ _.__ Dorothy. '3; LetterBlocci I Dear Mia Dix-About two years ago l. met a young girl about my age dud became very much infatuated with her. After knowing hcr mly two weeks I asked her to marry me. she accepted Times were so bad that we could not be » married immediately md in 8k months I was tired of her and told her I did not want to keep company with her any more. She threatened to kill herself if I left hcr. That frightened mo. so it bIOko down my I'd-silt- ance and I kept on Bblng to ace her; A number of times since then I have tried to break off with her and’ when I do she always makes scenes and says she will take her life if I give her up My mother, father and the whole family know how 1 feel toward this girl. They call me a fool and an idiot for consenting to marry her when I actually dislike he . Yet . I can't bear to think that I will brea her ' , heart and be the means of her death if I re- Shall I marry this girl and sacrifice my life in order tn fuse to do so. ERT. secure her happinses? ‘ Answer: You will be all that your family calls W“. and then some. u you let this girl force you into marrying her axainst W“? Wm- If you knew lily- thing about women, you would know that there are a million chances to one that her threat of killing herself is nothing but bluff, and that she has no idea whatever of even injuring a hair of her head. Tears and threats of suicide are the cowards weapons that women have used on men since time i memorial, and before which men have surrendered even to this day. Millions of men have been floated to the altar on the tears cf women they did not want to marry. Millions of men have been terrorized into marrying women they loathed by the women flourishing revolvers or reaching for the poison bottle when the poor dub males tried to make a getaway. The real shotgun marriage is not staged by outraged fathers. It is pulled ofi by astute femmes who are out to let their man. _ It is only masculine vanity that causes a man to boliovo that it will break a wolnnrs heart to lose him. and that without him life will he so valucless that she will throw it away. Most women's hearts are con- structed of rubber instead of glass and stand a deal of punishment. The proportion of girls who die for love is so negligible that there is no cause to worry over any tragedy resulting from ypur hacking out of an engage- ment you should never have gone into. Of all the Mrible mistakes and useless sacrifices that mun and Women over make, the greatest ls that of marrying, when they have ceased t0~ love. from a sense of duty and because they have not the courage to inflict pain upon those of whom they were once fond. Yet this folly is continu- ally committed. and men ‘and women who drag through a long enBtge- ment until they have worll their romance to tatters and are disillusioned with‘ each other even before marriage, go on with a marriage for which they have lost their dwlre because they think they owe it to each others faithfulness. ' The boy wllo has gone out into the world to seek his fortune comes back and marries the girl he has outgrown because she has waited for him for years. A girl's fickle fancy changes and she loses her taste for the dull, stoiid youth to whom she has been engaged, but she marries him because she hasn't the courage to tell him that she has changed and that he bores her to death. The men and women who marry those whom they llaveceased to love until re-heated and delicately browned. Noodles or spaghetti may be used instead of macaroni. _ the wearer's figure. _ ‘l "In all art there must be some restraint," said one of the organ- izers, the Rev. \Va.t.r f... .| an interview. Women should re- member that something should be left to the imagination." More clothes-more curves also seem the ruie~—for, the "perfect Miss 1936" will weigh about 118 pounds-and curves" will be the keynote of her figure. This is the opinion of Mr. Harry S. Kaufman, one o_f New York's greatest experts on the subject. He has to pick the girls for the "Zieg- feld" chorus. Young women. he says. are be- coming more and more beautiful. They have ceased to “thwart na- tum." Mr. Kaufman gave this as the specifications of a 1938 "Zeigfeld" irl. “Five feet five inches in height. I18 to 122 pounds in weight, 17 to 23 years cf age. and (o. most im- portant feautre, in walking she will be far superior to the girls of Zieg- feid's time." The boyish figure is definitely “out." The girl". said Mr. Kauf- man, would be predominantly "curvilineal." __.____._______..__. “TRUCKIN” IS LONDONS LATEST DANCING CRAZE ,_____ London's newest dance is called "Truckinm and has Just arrived hot from Harlem. ."’I‘ruckin"' is Harlem slang for the strutting walk of someone who had Just heard good news. On the night that news arrived that Lind- bergh "had succeeded in his his- tory-making Atlantic flight a "Joy dance’ was created in a Harlem ballroom. "Truckinm is based on that dance. It is a. sliding walk with a Charleston-like twist. Tempo may be slow or fast but however you do it yml are supposed to feel happier as a result. .__._.____._. uuthgs Skin iriilions ____'_________-f think they are being noble and kind, but, in reality, they are doingl-he cruelest act that one human being can to mother. For they doom the party of the other part to being on unwanted wife or husband, which is a fate far worse than being pilted. pride more than knowing that he or she has been married for pity; that he or she is being merely endured and that, whenever he or she is given u. caress it is one that comes from a sense of obligation and not from the heart. No man can be a good husband if he is miserable and feels that his wife has forced him into marrying her. He is bound to take llls resent- ment out upon her. And so for the girl's sake as well as your Own, Albert, I advise you to refuse to let her bulldoze you into this marriage, You will be saving her as well as yourself a lqt'of grief. DOROTHY DIX. I II ll U S Dear Miss Dlx-—I am a man in great distress, Under extraordinary circumstances I was married to a woman far below my social standing when I was very young. A girl child was born to us and at the end of two years my wife died. » Ashamed of this marriage, 1 did not claim my child and she has growll up in the old neighborhood under the impress- ion that she is an orphan. Now I am happily married t0 uscoond Wife who does not kllow the story of my first marriage, or even that I have Ncthihgcah. hurt an individuaYs K canoelng or something, chick, and she shall waste another x v tmarrm 'vu Kay uld quickly: "Oh, I've too much to do to bother with mun, this your, The work's harder than I . and I'm rusty." "Your duty to the race." sally reminded hcr. 3AA Hovelock mils so delicately points out the advantag- es of natural selection are loot unless the femaleof the species has n. flee opportunity to choose her mate. and from the widest possible field. new con you do your little rt with no one but u red-cared cl trlcian to choose. rromf I ask you?" She looked at Kly thoughtfully. "Is he. really the only bgy in this rustic retreat of yours?" And Kay said eoberly: "Almost! I was tollingl-Ielen before you cameJn. Most Carvel boys . . ." Before Kay's freshman your was done, she did meet Chick Rantoul. and other young men besides. Bill Hurd was at Harvard, and he squired Mary Bingham to Yale game, and was occasionally in evi- dence on Sunday evenings during the winter. But Dean, at Harvard Medical. came out regularly to see Lucy Smith. Ned Matthews and Chick Rantoul shared a bachelor apartment in Boston; and Sally Hays. in her own phrase-was Just now trying Ned's places. She was often away for week-ends; and she more than once urged Kay, or Helen, or both of them, to go with her. “I've got a blanket invitation," she assured them. "As many girls as I want to bring. Helen. come along. Bob Dakixfs sure to there!’ , . , But Helen declined. "Not for me, darling, thanks, awfully," she said in an amused tone. "Tho burnt child dreads the fire. I haven't seen Bob since the row last spring. He got me into that, re- member. If I never ‘ see him again, it's too soon." And she explained to Kay: “He was the boy who took me to that place that was raided, when Emily had to send me home. He finished Harvard Medical four or five years ago, and now he's pretending to be a doctor. You know what these young doctors are." "I don't think he's much of I doctor," Sally intoned. ‘But, Oh. what a. wonderful man!" "He's fun," Helen assented. "But a little too rich for my blood!" So she and Kay declined Sally's invitation, on that occasion and’ on others, tlll Sally at length pm- duced Chick’ Rantoul one Sunday afternoon and introduced him v0 oy. ' “Mahomet to the mountain? she explained. “You wouldn't go to him and I wanted you to know what you're missing. Chick's Just a sample." ' _ Rantoul looked down at Kay and smiled. "Ybuue not a W11! mountainous-looking person," he remarked. That was in the spring and the day was flue. Ned Mat- thews and Chick had come out to- gcther. Sully said directly: “Take her captivate the child. She's wasted all this year; but I don't mean that one." Chick nodded good-humorcdly ' ,sM)iLL. 1'oiwN c1121. . BY BEN WILLIAMS been married before, nor of the child. worry is how will she respond. Will forget? Answer: Your wife's reaction to your coni kind of woinan she is and how much her character and her heart; If she is narrow-minded and There are wives who let a who brace burden- there are other wives you cannot blame hcr if she feels hu a. father's love and guidance. can. w t Dear Dorothy Dix-What do you girls? AIISWBI‘ Z c herself in addition to making a. homo él?.“51.*'.‘.‘.'¥5!!'_'9'. “Y B‘? whim Protect ilanadian Antiques (C. P. By Gunilla’: Special Wire) oriramlr, Dec. zs-It may be a new lport but if it is there ls no approval but much concern from officials of‘the National Museum of Canada whose work is to aid in safeguarding ancient rocks and stones of historical value. Armed with small calibre rifles, men or buys have caused mutilstion these facts after my death. so I'have deci ed to tell her now, but my Jealous. she is likely to make a great pother over it and to consider herself ill-uledmnd especially to resent the girl. But if she is broad-minded and has intelligence enough to soc the incident in its true perspective as a piece of youthful folly long over and deeply regretted, she will Just be terribly ‘sorry comfort you and to help you make amends to your neglected daughter. And she will wonder why you did not know her and take her into your confidence and let her help you bear your him up and stand by him and fight shoul- der to shoulder with him through every battle of life. You made a great mistake in not telling your wife about this first marriage, and especially about the child, from her. But your real sin has been against your child, whom you denied Try to rectify that wrong as soon as you DOROTI-I __-___._ Companionate marriage is a legalized liaison ill-which a allowed, and out of which a man can walk whenever ho feels s0 Inclined- DOROTHY I do o1; wish my wife to find out mu Ned and Sally moved away upon their ovm concerns. “Where she leave me, or will she forgive and d0 I mum, m1, canoeq" has“- A HUSBAND- ed. "Or could I do the prescribed .. captivating on dry land?" Kay said frankly: "I'd rather walk! Around the lake, say, and through the gardens." "Fine." he agreed. He chuckled to himself. “My, my,’ he reflected. "How many times I've trumped that beat. They swung away to- gether. and he tried to match his long strides to her short ones, but gave up the’ endeavor almost at once. "Can't be done." he con- fessed. "I'm this way and you're that way, and no remedy for it in either case. We'll have to walk out of step, or else stand still." She laughed softly, looking up at him. "You're older than the boys that come out here," she suggested. "You'd make a oentcnarian feel young," 11¢, assured her. Kay was silent for a moment. She said thou straightforwardly: "I'm not-particularly frivolous, Mr. Rantoul. I haven't developed any line! And-you don't need to work one up for my benefit." She look- ed at himbquareiy, smiling. ‘mm lust got acquainted," she said. "And i no foolishness." He chuckled. "Pouch!" he ck- ession will she loves you. depend altogether on the It is an acid test of for you and anxious to her well enough to trust man down in his hour of need. but before‘ you were married, and rt because you have kept this secret Y DIX. coo .. think o1 companionate marriage for MARIN-n. girl supports for a man in which no children are '-:-i- Liferofure i "Why. a nlanuiacturer comes to us‘ and lays ho wants to advertise his product and spend a certain amount of money. We plan the camPI-llll; that-la, plan where the advertisements shall be run. And w. plan the advertisements them- solves, the illustrations, do the reading matter. I write the things you read in advertisements." She considered this. "That means you have to know a lot about whatever it is?" "Yes." he assented. “We have to study it and try to pick out the selling points, the details that make it better than similar pro- duos in the some lines." "Like Flaubertfo prescription for being original?" Kay suggested. "Or was it Flaubert? To look at a tree till you discovered something that distinguishes it from every other tree; something instantly recogniz- able by evePyone. but never re- marked before.’ Ho nodded thoughtfully. “Some- thing like tho," he agreed; and well launched now, he talked on without much prompting, with only on occasional word from her. Till when they come back to the cam- pus at last he said apologetically: “I'm afraid I've talked you blind." Ho grinned. "Bllt I liked. it. rlike to talk shop, of course, when anyone will listen." ‘I like listening,’ him. “Then we ought to get along fine," he declared; and she laugh- ed and said: ' “I think so too!’ She saw him once more before Commencement; and one day that she assured i” summer he stopped to see her in Carvel. Kay on her homecoming had felt a sense of strangeness. The town was not as she remem- bered it. It seemd unaccountably shrunken; the houses smaller, the streets narrower. She" forgot this first fleeting im- pression within an hour; but when one day a car stbpped at their gate and she saw Rantoul alight- ing she remembered it. and saw Carvel through his eyes, and was furious at herself because she was for a moment uncomfortable. she went to meet him at the gate. "I was going through Newfleld," he explained. "Saw ‘Carvel’ on a slgnboard. and remembered the name. Cilllidlfi», pass so near w-lth- out saying hello.’ He looked across the brood lawns, shaded by tall elms; and Kay realized that the grass needed cutting. that the place looked unkempt and neg- lectcd. "You're -a peach to stop," she said hurriedly. . "What a grand old house!" he "i ‘ EXPLANATION “I want a room with t .. insisted the new arrival atvvtikrrxg ‘fiat; "Certainly," replied the clerk .1)“,- what an odd request for s ' m,“ travelling alonol" "Perhaps" returned the t abut which‘ '1’! spent a night hrfivefliifg Year I a on Y half ‘ clothes for one." - enough bed A prominent, ed when chided rgdeflfily m“ drlvln: ulhlscanmadethlstimgly s: nearer “we e es e ere - too early hereafter." I m 2o years cr . and he stayed to for most o. the aftorrloogncllieilial: continuing on his way. Kay map ized that he enjoyed the vim, Emily had smiling questions afterward; but ..ay shook mu- head. ‘Nothing to tell," 51m 1m slated. “I like mm and he like, my and we both enjoy being together. But that's absolutely all." “It WIS D106 O1 him to (some out v! his war to m you." nhlly to. marked: and Kay said quickly, u, though she suspected the wistful thought behind the others words; "But he didn't'bave to come up the way from Paris. miilyrf Th, older girl laughed fondly , at Kay's reassurances. , Their summer was quiet. Nql Pastor was gone to Manchester u; a position of larger responsibility; but he drove up almost dVQry we“ on businesr. and never failed to stop at the house, and between, times he wrote ‘anally. Yqt Kay saw with a sort of pity that already Emily spoke of him in the past tense. “We had a lot 0f 300d times m. gether, he and I,’ she said, "But of course I knew he was too able a man to stay hero in osl-vel vgl-y long!" There was something rue- ful in her tones. ‘ CHAPTER. VIII‘ t Kay thought her sistnr seemed, tired. ‘Teaching c! winter must have worn linnily out." she told Mrs. Brannon. "She looks-older. Mother!" There was a deep dlstreu in her tones. "I saw her with Lil- lian today, and-they almost look alike. Mother, she mustrt stay hem and Just-get dusty and worn and oldl" Mrs. Brennan smiled. faintly. “People do grow older. Kay." she reminded the girl. "And-mt n quickly in Carve! as in other places, perhaps." She added: "But I don't think Emily will teach school long." ‘Kay looked M her. sharply. ‘Mother. what do you main!" Continued on page B claimed "Sorry. It's automatic to-_ stort ‘- when you meet l. new kirl. I suppose." "Sally has spoken of aha said. "She's forever telling mo about you." She hesitated, “I've had a faint idol. that ahc like: you more than she pretends. She li- ways pretends to make fun of you, says you're a. aoberaides; but I llll- pcct she doesn't mean it. And-ebb doesn't give details." Hen eyes were twinkling. "So you'd better do that. Name. please, and all about you. I'm Kay Brannon, and I live in Carvel. Now Hampshire, and my ointm- Emily wu here lut your, and that’; all there t: about mo." DIX. an old Indian camping ground, is a giant sandstone cliff, towering above the rolling prairie lands. On its face are strange "symbols. never dc- oiphercd, and named by the Black- foot Indiana "Mosinu " or the "writing-on-ltmlc." ‘ The plctogrophs. curved into the lturdy stone. are believed to be more than 600 years old. They tell a story of ancient horses and cattle andof bottle. Scientists have vicw- ed them, but none was able to make o complete reading of the strange of tdoor antiquities, of which m,“ "y, .. ‘Canada nu so few, and an m, “Mum fifniiflfiffi ‘u: on; fffi§cffPge"“”qe§“°;flogf h" W" m“ l" ""1" 1- 5 l“ oflm uncilnt m» which momma uunkwunaj, “w”, m‘, 1m of the National Museum, for ir m, “u” m,‘ w“, m, n‘ m than" i prcaervltlon and ltfcluartiing. . H0 Tom‘ m, 0g “my” nshe,‘ "warm!" u‘ “a” h“ “Wm” h’ ' “mpmn °t “b lhMmI- *1.“ “"'m"'°“"°°” her are!‘ twinkiinl’ "$1114 know‘ hfilfifimflm “w” m" mung“ °‘ ‘ "mff- about Emily! ml rho- about m." ‘Rifles have been ulod to mutilate‘ m. n“ m, n“ m‘ h.“ m“, Ighgak nodded chuow- "W11!- M gunman “f”: m” m m“ m m ' u oluckrwtn centred wonde- ‘I lfidffflflYlui-Uu like: . k then time youth 1S‘ School. I write advertising copy for Burnett and _ " . aJ-fult what loll tllfi hill! 7M1 you a lot.’ . Bunion: ' No. 502-I"or Schdolgirl. . l4 yearn. awash contrasting. of ao-iheh material with u-mo of 71ml OI ‘So-QED mlkflll. . NAM! .........-e....u.;..,e..-I-} m‘ Addrdl\-..e-e...eee.-.ul. citr -No. m-mwc-rleee shu ' ‘. w. m rum. so. u, to and $1333. but? ‘$331k? newenuoynouiuwcv-n.- c moolt~ - SMART CLOTHES FOR * THE HOME DRESSMAKER % All patterns 15c (coin ls preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. This style is designed i silos 8. Bile 8 requires 2% yards or 89-inch metelfinl with it w’ 1g mid yard 0T no. sm-smncer-nme cachet Dress. ‘Thu ltylo a designed in elm 86. 39. 4°. N. M. 46 and 4a inches bust manure." out an require. s w!" 39-inch contrasting. dcoigllod in 81m 1,4’ Qipesdrcquires 4/‘ niuoodnouriw-‘couoobcbnonueu w" eelnvuaecniotttteanu»-"tun-nun I