tWJpWvejJ w , 4 EVENING PtTBLIO4 XEI)GER-PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY JULY ,27, 19& i "i iftW&rw-xnyr,-lZg wit . I m I w The Love By IIA.EL DEYO itt Copvrtoht. Hit, bv J Yjjaonuia e IJ dfioppofntrd n the ,'etwn feat to marry 4nncy .nam v ieay becomes a louo coward. Eager. M frH ateat ans decent a nosHfon n Mterne fo a Hlfle cMId tu a lonely htuteon the Massachusetts comt, anil there discovers that Trix's uncle, Britoe Henderson, has a sinister in fluence over the child. From the be otnnlng Nancy clashes tcfth this man, lilt when he orden her to leave she refuses, because his sister, who has engaged A'ancy, orders her to stay. Then one night, thinking to send her flying, he seises her in his arms and hisses her roughly. From that in slant, although she fights against it and hates herself for the truth, A'onci cannot forget that moment m A is arms, although she continues her fight against him and guards Trlx from tehatever menaces her. CHAPTEU"XXXH "Look at Me!" SHU was conscious while he sat thero across from her that he was playln with her as n cnt plays wiui a mouse His very silence confused her, for In open battle with him she could use her wits for more readily. It was one thing to combat bin sarcasm and his mockery with words, and anothnr to sit there with his eyes upon her and with that ter rible alienee all around them. If Nancy had had the faintest idea how lovely she looked in the can dle light, velvet shadows splotching the) yellow of her HAZST. DKTO nATciiKiiOn gown, and her hair a nimbus of fire, she might have had more self-confidence. As it was, she finished her coffee abruptly "and roeo to her feet, her one idea to es cape. But to her dismay he roe when she did and preceded her to the door, which he held open for her. She was compelled almost to touch him as she passed through and for the briefest mo ment as he closed the door behind him they were utterly alone in the darkness of the ball. Before Nancy was aware of what he Intended to do, he put out his hand and drew her to him, 'I here was no cruelty In his touch, but his fingers on her arm were like steel and there was no es- I Two Minutes By HERMAN The Meal t fjHjprTLH ill '.-- wH Ru. V " I WnAT Is the relation between eduration and money making? A rather impertinent question, some professors may think, and just as Illogical; since education Is not intended to be a tool or a means to make money. Primarily, education widens a man's sympathies, broadens his intends, forever reveals life's new enjoyments and many things of beauty and culture which to the untutored are a closed book. But authoritative facts and figures show that in addition education Is a dominating element of success. FOB If uneducated, the average man has good. With a common school education he has four chances. With n high-school education he has thirty-four chance. And with a college education, Thomas A. Edison's views to the contrary notwithstanding, he has S00 chances. Education, therefore, is not u luxury ; it is In every senn of the word n compelling necessity ; It is an investment which pays dividends as long as a man lives. A century or even fifty years ago the thrco R's sufficed. To be successful, men did not need more because competitors did not know more. But just as success bns been graduated from the general store in a one-horse town to international organizations and chain etiiblishnients with links in eerv city of our land, as railroads and automobiles have supplanted the stage coach and tho horse car, as efficiency has done away with slipshod, slovenly manage ment and science has ousted superstition, so education has displaced ignorance This does not mean that a college degree or any degree of learning gunran ten a meal ticket there are many A. B.'s ond M. A.'s with ASS written 11 over them. But as a general rule, the chap who hns gone to the trouble and expense of acquiring an education has the enthusiasm and the energy to work, and because of his training and knowledge he v, ill work better and more productively than ha otherwise would or could. Today competition is of a far higher brand, n far brainier brand And nslde from his vocational, specialized knowledge, other things bluc qua , the more educational equipment a man 1ms the stronger chance he stands to win out. " The IV oman's Exchange About Removing Hair 'JTe the Editor of Woman's I'aae: Dear Madam Could you tell me through your paper whether hair can bo removed permanently, and If so, wheie: J. K. Thero are depilatories on the market which will remove hair thoroughly, but not permanently Repeated applications re necessary The only permanent cure Is tho electric needle, nnd even this has bsen known to fall In somo cases. From Hats to Health T ths Editor o Woman's I'uue: Dear Madam Are tarns In vogue this season? Could I wear a white velveteen tarn at the seashore, as I do not want to buy a white hat? Do you know whnt I could get to' remove a navy blue stain from a pink ponget blouse? Will coco butter put on the elbows make the arms fat? Does cold cream, when applied to the face, promote the growth of hair? Is there anything that could promote the growth of a child who lis verv short for her age? READER. Yes, tains are wom a good deal this year. Not so much as last year per haps, but enough to make It all right for you to wear yours at the senshore. If you are handy with your needle you could make a very up-to-datn hat by adding a brim of buckram fcoverod with either velvet or satin. In black or white as you prefer, made in the shape of a visor on a cap. Hats of this kind are seen everywhere and It would not be hard to cut the visor, making tho cover ing bias so that It will stretch evenly and smoothly over the buckram. Unless washing In warm water and Strong soapsuds will remove the blue stain there Is nothing you can do but dye the whole wulst blue . Anything you could use to remove the blue would also take out the pink and that would only make It worse. But try soap und Things You'll Love td Make Gf 05gra'mRiMori Flowers ku dROUQRAIN RIBBON FLOWERS make an organdie frock look even more umpiery. Cut circles of buckram each two Inches in dlamuter. Cover them with Ilk. Make loops of grosgraln ribbon (two-toned Is tho prettiest) Stitch these loops around tho covered circles to ulnv J pat petals. Finish the centers of thesa IROBORAIN RIBBON FLOWERS with large French knots. Use embroidery silk at a, oolor that matches the underside of the ribbon, If the two-toned kind Is used If you uso a single-faced ribbon, have tho Ilk match the color of the frock, FLORA. TTT ,(AI 1-J1 Cowards BATCHELOB PubHo Lttotr Oo. capln. Proud and Beornful. she did not struggle, not even when, she was so cloao to him that her hair touched his forehead. In the dim light she could see the straight, even line of his mouth just above the level of her eyes, and still she did not struggle, although her body was rigid. "Xook at me," he breathed. But she did not move. He laughed softly under his breath and turned her face insistently up to his. "Aro rou so Imnrffrnihli. Nancy? he whispered, his lips not an Inch from her own. But he did not kiss her. He held her for an Instant, then released hdr abruptly and strode nway to his uuiuo. iinucj luwvrvu ngmusi inu nun for a moment, her hands covering her burning face, her heart leaping uncon trollably under the mnglc of Tils voice as he had breathed her name. For a moment he had been unennnily different, unlike the man she had grown to know and fear. "Oh, Nancy, Nancy you can't stay here," she murmured chokingly to her self, but the thought of Trlx galvanized her into action and she sned swiftly along the hnll and up the stairs with out a backward look. But cveu alone with the child after Miss Henderson had left, Nancy could not banish tho thoncht of Bruce Hen derson from her mind. She had looked ju him only once during those few mo ments alone with him in tho dining room and the scowling frown had been bauished from his fare. His brilliant errs hnd looked tired and his mouth ' had been grave, but not cruel. She i realized fully that slip was dangerously near to pitying Bruce Henderson at thnt moment, pitying him for some- , thing thnt she could not understand and that no one hnd explained to her. my togetner with ins ability to sway her emotions was a dangerous combina tion, but Nuncr hsd onlv to force her self to remember Bruco's treatment of Trlx in order to regain her balance of mind, and she steadfastly resolved to think. nothlrur else But his attitude toward her tonlcht had been so manifestly different from any he had shown thus far that her thoughts went back to that moment in the hall in spite of nil her resolu tions not to think of it. She saw noth ing at all of Bruce the next day, al though she had fully expected him to repeat to her the order he had given his sister that Trlx was to have nothing to do with any towmpeonlo. And tben I Thursday dawned bright and fair nnd Nancy realized that it was the day they had promised. to have tea with Dr. Hunt. Tomorrow "Nancy Takes n Clianco" of Optimism J. STICK Ticket of It bestows the pleasures derived from the only one chance out of loU.OOO to make 'tSinr'iPK0.neeo waahes well and the stain might pet at least light enough not to show badly. ni,f. V?u massage your elbows at the me tlme You Put on tho coco butter ?h. ettt ft . ttl0 harder than usual so vm you wi" add a mtle all over, you nicely00" your elbows flHIiifsT out mlV.80'1 co'd cream should not pro mote the growth of hair. Of course, if J.'?.lL.VBe.. '?? much of lt ftnrt '" not remoe It thoroughly with a soft cloth, it may havo had effects. But If you are careful with It and use a good ffrade you should havo no trouble at all. FnttV,V Viann.. ..v.. , L ?-iif' ?.w,In,nllnK. dancing and laughing. ... .... .,,,,, ,. uuiu iu grow. I'jeniv of fr.'Sh air and good nourishing food aro necessary and a comfortable place to live In. The Question Corner Today's Inquiries 1. In whnt ingenious und hnrmlew way are babies "tagged" In somo hospitals so that tho will not be mixed up? 2. How can the stand of n work basket bo iscd when it is shabby and tho baHket in worn out? 3. 'What is marabou silk? 1. N.unu two synonym of tho vorb to fix. 5. Dewibe on exquisite new fnn mnde in un out-of-tho-ordi- nary way. fl. What helpful article should be part of tho bathroom equip ment, In enhe the doctor orders ii compress ns pnrt of n curu? Yesterday's Answers 1. An admirer recently presented Mrs. Harding wilh a bouquet, intricately rnrved out of a single ionf of rye bread. 2. An old pair of white kid gloves, nibbed and worn, will pro tect tho hands if knitting In summer mala? them dry and uncomfortable fl. Instead of the usual plunge Into hot water which would smear - glasses that havo had milk In them, wash them llrst in cold water until tho milk is out. 4. "Astonishing" and "marvelous" mean the same thing os won derful. C. When bobbed hair begins to (rrow longer and looks badly under a hat, gather it Into n cap net, pinning it with Invisible hnlr nins into a scmblanco of a knot. fl. To Judgo from the latest Paris fashion news, it is safo to say thnt tte nowest fad in after noon and evening frocks Is to have the sides different; I. c., if ono side has a cam-ado the other is plain. Please Tell Me What to Do By CYNTHIA Cynthia Doubts If B. H; Will Do It Dear Cynthia Will you kindly ask "Brokenhearted" to describe her friend and his ring and, perhaps, I may help her. M. B. Answers "Buck Prlvato" "T. B. r." Whllo the writer you men tion was formerly a member of the staff of tho Kvb-vino Punuc Ledger and Cynthia knows him very slightly, his story has nothing whatover to do with tho real Cynthia. How Is "Junlor"7 You do not mention him. Congratulations on storlca. Would like to read one. "Sunny" to "Mr. 24" Dear Cynthia I would like to answer Mr. 24's letter. Mr. St I wonder If I am the only one who understands your letter? What was n good girl but dlsKUsted's answer to you! Well I am corn' I misunderstood your letter nnd offended you. Hero's hoping everything Is O. K. I would like to auk you a question Mr. 24, It I nm not too personal. Have you dark brown eyes and black hair nnd are you rather short? SUNNY. Encourages "Timidity" Dear Cynthia Just n word to "Ti midity" In addition to what "X Helping Hand" has already advised. Tho book that was suggested "Timidity," "How to Overcomo It," lias my hearty ap proval. If you are nolo to carefully analyze honestly your own state you will find that among other things you are very self-conscious. This ono falling you must overcome. In n, word, forgrt your self. Decomo so Interested In other sub jects that you have no time to think oxcesslvely of self. Your concentratlve Interest In this regard will determine your success In banishing such a fool ishness. ICXPEIUENCHD. Is It Proper to Remember Them? Dear Cynthia Wo aro two girls of fourteen und fifteen. Wo have two hoy friends whom we greatly love. They have been away for eleven months. Is It proper for us to still keep them In our minds, as wo have many other friends since they went away? They have asked .us to keep steady company. We would not like to hurt our friends' feelings, so we are coming to you for advice. BLONDY AND SWEETin. Why on earth put them out of your minds? Of course do not do so, but have plenty of other friends, too. You aro too young to be having love affairs Approves Definition of Love Dear Cynthia I read very care fully the article concerning "A Defini tion of Love" and I think it deserves every praise. The article not only was written In the form of a meditation, but the elucidating expression would make any Individual consider same to be unquestionably tho real thing nnd only one of pessimistic mien would comment upon the statement. Let mo also add that each and every ojie. espe cially readers of your column, should consider the definition to be of real value and I hope the writer of tho arti cle will receive more letters In appreci ation of the same ALFRED I. C. She Did Not Kiss Him Dear Cynthia I am a dally reader of rour column and I am coming to you for the drat time for advice I am a young Klrl seventeen years of age and I go with a young man of eighteen. Now, Cynthia, wo have been going witn cacn otner atoui inreo years ana he always wants to give mo a "good night kiss" when he brings me home. I care for him very much, but I have never let htm kiss me. Was I right for not letttng him kiss me? I would be glad to hear from you. SUNBEAM. Un!ess j-ou are engaged to the youn man don't kiss him ; but also unless you are engaged do not go exclusively with him. Read Your Character By Dxgby Phillips No. P Short Legs Do short legs influence tho characters nf men and women? Or aro short legs the result of their characters? Neither, of course. Sho'rt legs, like Roman noses, round heads and scores pf other signs arc neither the causes nor the effects of chnractcr. They are merely physical traits inherited from the same sources as the mental traits, and altering the shape of a woman's no.e would not niter her character. The in dication of the altered nose would be n false one. However, just ns certnin rnces and tribes of nion hnve had short legs ns physical characteristics, so they had certain definlto mental characteristics. What does this mean to you? If you have Fliort legs you inherited them, from some definite race. If you inher ited the legs you alio inherited the mental traits. Short legs indicate pliability and adaptability of character. They denote n lack of combativeuess, n greater read iness to yield thoir opinions to yours in mntters of less Importance. They also signify more than the usual degree of patience I always provided they are not overbalanced by contradictory indica tions) and readily nroused emotions. Other thlugb being equal, short-legged persons will react more readily to the appeals of emotion and Instinct thou to those of rcttton nnd calm judgment. They nre more likely to bo demonstra tive than reserved in the casual affairs of life, but less inclined to hasty ac tion, however, even though their action when tnken may be based on emotion rather than reason. They are, ton, more inclined toward extremes of charity and hatred than toward cold nnd abstract justice. WUATS WHAT riy irrxnN nnrir. Properly reared chlldron are sent to bed In good time all the year around They aro usually permitted to stay up an hour later In summer time, but 10 o'clock, at the latest, finds them all In slumberland This would seem to be matter-of-course procedure to all sensible parents, so lt Is amazing to see many young children at summer resorts coming from the "last show" of motion-picture thcatiea at 11 P M , and then going Into public cafes for refreshments before their midnight hour of retiring Aside from their loss of needed sleep, these Improperly reared children out "all hours of the night" aro subject to decidedly unwholesome Influ ences. Surrounded by an after-the.thea-tro gathering the careless "midnight crowd" of summer cafes thoy hear and so much that they become over-bold and "knowing," to the detriment of their minds, their morals and their manners Yip V FOOLISH LITTLE SLEEVES IpC By COBBINNE LOWE One pair Is nothing more than a puff, tied with narrow bands of whito moire ribbon but It is extremely stylish. Tho rest of thofroclt is whlto with black dots, trimmed with bands of tho whito ribbon. The sleeves In tho other dress aro absolutely nothing but wisps of pleated georgette crepe attached to the shoulders and wrists. 7110 color Is nasturtium, the material Is crepo nnd the trimming Is white soutache braid and white silk friiiffo Famous Recipes From Foreign Parts Are Sent to Mrs. IVilson to Vary Menus Tomato Cheese, Commeal Muffins, Lemon Cheese Pie and Spiced Summer Pears Are a Feio Items in Cosmopolitan Kitchen By RIBS. M. A. WII.SON CewHoht. litt, tu Ztrt, It. A. WUsen. All rtokts rrui TODAY I have n medley of recipes from many corners, garnered hero nnd there for variety. An old Filipino chef from the Philliplna Islands sends a delicious dainty thnt ho calls Taleo. This is how he prepares it. Note how delicious it Is. Mince fine: Tiro ounces of salt pork, Sir onions, Ttco green peppers, Four tomatoes. Cook slowly until soft and then add : One and one-half cups of cooked rice, One-half cup of grated cheese, Onehalf teaspoon of paprika, One teaspoon of salt, One-quarter teaspoon of mustard. Mix woll and then fill Into prepared green peppers and then place the green peppers in a baking dish. Add one -half cup of tomato sauce. Bake slowly for one-half hour, then serve with cheese sauce, made a3 follows: place In a saucepan : One-half cup of thick cream sauce, One-half cup of stewed tomatoes, One-half cup of grated cheese, Seasoning to taste. Heat to tho boiling point.- Now lift the pepper on n slice of toast and cover with sauce. Sprinkle with finely minced parsley and serve. Toinato Cheeso Take four ripe tomatoes and chop them finely, also an equal weight of cheese, cut into small pieces. Mix to gether with a littlo milk nnd season with salt and pepper. Stir the mixture until lt dissolves over the firo. Have ready some slices of very hot buttered toast and pour the mixture over. Serve Immediately. ... Another old - fashioned housewife sends this : Com Meal Muffins Steam for two hours In double boiler on simmering burner One cup of commeal, Three cups of boiling water, One teaspoon salt. Let cook, and then add : Three tablespoons of butter, Beaten yolks of Uco eggs. Three-quarters oup of flour, One tablespoon of baking powder. Then add beaten whites of eggs, bake in hot muffin tins for onc-half hour. Sour Milk Corn Menl Muffins One teaspoon of salt, Tiro ci;i of commeal, One cup of flour, Two tablespoons of shortening, One tablespoon of baking powder. One and one-quarter cups of sour milk. Bake In well-greased muffin pans thirty minutes in hot oven. While browsing about in Delaware I found this; ... , Buttermilk Tie Place in saucepan : , Three-quarters cup of sugar, Three tablespoons of butter, Yolks of two eggs. Cream well nnd then add : One and one-half oups of thick but termilk. Six tablespoons of flour. Dissolve the flour by using the egg beater to beat the mixture. Bring slowly to a boil and cook for throe minutes. Remove from firo nnd beat hard with egg beater, then let cool. Now add : One-half teaspoon of nutmeg, Pinch of cinnamon, One teaspoon of vontlfa. Now line a pie plate with plain pas try and turn In tho prepared filling and cover the ton with one-half-lnch strips of pastry, placed over the pie In criss cross fashion. Bako In moderate oven for twenty-five minutes. Lemon Cheese Plo Grate very lightly the rind from one lemou, thon ream out the juice. Place tbo lemon rinu nnu juice in n mixing bowl nnd add : One teaspoon of nutmeg, One cup of sugar, Ono and one-quarter cups of cottage or pot oheese. Now use a wooden spoon and cream this mixture well, by rubbing It against tho side of the bowl with the back of the spoon. Then put mixture through very fine slovo. Now place In a saucepan : One cup of milk, Six tablespoons of flour. Dissolve the flour and bring to a boll. Cook for five minutes slowly then ndd tho prepared cheese mlxturo and yolks of three eggs. Beat hard to blend thor oughly. Now line a deep layer cake pan with plain pastry and turn In the prepared cheese mixture. Dust the top lightly with cinnamon and bako In a slow even for forty minutes. To use tho leftover white of egg from the buttermilk pie and cheese cakes, make a small angol cake. Angel Cake Sift one-half cup of powdered sugar If) frY ft frnm Itimnu nt nlnnn rr m raucer. Now sift: Two-thirds cup of flour, TAree level tablespoons of cornstarch, One-eighth teaspoon of salt. Through a fino sifter four times then place on a plate. Place tho White of five eggs, ' Three tablespoons of ice cold water, Two-thirds teaspoon of cream of tartar. pn a large ment platter. Now use a wire spoon to whip the whites of eggs. Just as they begin to stiffen up. add the sugar slowly, by the tablespoonful and beot hard, then cut nnd fold the pro pared flour, using a tnblespoon to udd the flour. Turn in nn ungreascd pan and bake In n slow oven for forty min utes. Turn the pan upside down and Just as soon us you remove it from the even, let cool. Remove the enko from the pan nnd cover with chocolate water Icing. Chocolato Water Icing Place in a bowl: Ono-7nrfer teaipoon of cinnamon, Ono teaspoon of vanilla. One tablespoon of butter, Ttco tablcsooons of boilinn irnlrr One-half cup of cocoa, One and one-half cups of confec tioner sugar. Work to n smooth mix nnd then uso to Ice the cake. Spiced Summer Pears Usually lafo in July nnd in the be ginning of August, sccklc nnd other va rieties of prnrs con bo hnd for cooking purposes. Peel eighteen small pears nnd then cut in half. Drop into pauce pan containing sufficient water to cover and juice of onc-half lemon. Cook slowly until pears are tender, then drain. Now place in saucepan : One oup of water in which pears were cooked, One cup of sugar, Two tablespoons of cornstarch. Dissolve the sugar and starch. Six cloves Four allspice, One-half stick cfnnnmon, One-half package of seeded raisins, Four pieces of crystalizcd ginger, cut in bits. Bring mixture to a boil and then add tho pears nnd simmer very slowly for twenty minutes. Cool. MRS. WILSON'S ANSWERS Dear Mrs. Wilson Please print n recipe for making vinegnr to bo made with applo nnd peach parings. A READER. Cover the parings with plenty of cold wntur nnd add two pounds of brown sugar to each gallon of water. Add one yeast cake and just crumbled in and then add the sugnr. Stir to dissolve tho sugar and yeast cake. Let stand for four or five weeks in a sunny plnco nnd then strain and bottle. Dear Sirs. Wilson Please publish how to mako cinnamon currant buns and icing for top. Is it necessary to uso yeast, or can they be made without It? MRS. L. II. V. Place in a mixing bowl Four cups of flour, One-half teaspoon of salt, One-half cup of sugar, Three level tablespoons of baking powder. Sift to mix nnd then rub into flour six tablespoons of shortening nnd use ono cup of milk or water to form a dough. Roll out into oblong sheet ono half inch thick. Spread lightly with shortening, sugar nnd clnnnmon nnd then roll as for Jelly roll. Cut In three fourths Inch slices nnd then plnco on a baking sheet nnd bnkc in n hot oven for llttecn minutes. Ice with wntif Icing. Three-fourths cup of confectioner' sugar. Sufficient boiling water to make n mixture thnt will spread. Beat hard for three minutes and then spread on buns. Dear Mrs. Wilson Kindly give recipe now to mnKo root beer. M. P. Purchase n bottle nf rot-beer ex tract nnd uso the recipe as printed ou the package However, hero Is n good reclpo: Plnco in a saucepan four pounds of sugar, Ttco quarts of water, Two tablespoons of powdered ginger. One teaspoon of allspice. Stir to dissolve the sugar, then bring to a boll. Cook for ten minutes, then strain through n sieve which has been lined with a piece of cheesecloth into a clenn tub, Now ndd Four and one-half gallons of water, Ono bottle of root-leer extract, One yeast cake. Dissolve in One-half cup of cool water. Then stir with n clenn stick nnd let stand for two hours. Bottle. Lay bottles on sides. Ready to uso on third day. Ice well before drinking. DREAMLAND ADVENTVJRES Foirtcn at Work air DADDY CHAPTEBVJH . Tensing tho Monkeys CHATTER! chatter! chatter! The monkey mothers at their party talked fast and furiously. They were enjoying themselves merrily nud didn't havo any idea that In tho junglo a poor littlo lost monkey baby was crying bo cause crows were waiting to eat it for dinner. Had they stopped for even a moment Billy and the fast-flying fairies might havo had a chance to tell them about tho lost baby, but the tiny voices of the fairies couldn't be heard in all that clatter. Then into Billy's head popped a plan to mako the monkey mothers heed the danger call. He had heard that monkeys do not llko 'to be teasod. They havo short tempera and fly into sudden rages. Perhaps If the fairies teased one of tho monkey mothers enough, she would chase tho fairies and they could lead her to the poor lost baby monkey. Billy told his plan to tho fairies nnd they liked it. ''I'll pick out the monkey that lookB as though she had tho hottest temper," said Billy, "and wo will all teaso that one." So Billy picked out a monkey mother who was shrieking moro shrilly than all the others, and he twitched her car. It was only a little twitch, for Billy was very tiny now thnt he wa3 the size of the fairies. But Billy twitched again, and tho second twitch mado the monkey mother slap at him as though he were u mosquito. Billy dodged away only to twitch the monkey's other car. Tho fairies tickled her nose and danced In front of her eyes. The monkey slapped at them and went on chattering more shrilly than over. Then Billy pulled tho monkey mother's hair. It was a tiny pull, but it hurt. The monkey mother stopped her chattering to grab at him. Billy darted away, but tho fairies had fol lowed )iis example in pulling the monkey's hair. Each gavo a sharp jerk, and tho sharp jerks hurt In an instant the monkey mother was in a rage. Sho jumped at tho annoying fairies nnd now her shrieks were shrieks of anger. Tho fairies darted away, but kept just out of her reach. The monkey mother thrashed out right and left try ing to squash the fairies, but she didn't harm ono of them. Instead she only banged tho other monkey mothers over their ears and noses. That made the other monkey mothers mad, and in an instant they, too, were thrashing out, and the chatter party became a banging party. All the tlmo tho monkeys were smashing and thrashing at each other,' Billy and the fairies Kept up the teasiug of the monkey mother they had llrst picked. They vexed her so much she hod only one thought that wns to catch them nnd punish them for their impudeuce. She began to cbnse them. She slapped tho other monkeys to right and left, but she kept right on through tho party to get Billy, who danced just uhcad of her nose. He led her away from the sliudy grove, across tho plain nnd toward the jungle where the poor little lost baby was walling aud kicking at the hungry crows. The other monkeys were vexed at the way the first monkey mother had slapped them, so they started after her. And thus the whole cnatiering party rushed for the jungle. Thnt wns just what Billy wanted. All thoso angry monkey mothers would ranko short work of those thrco rnscnlly crows. But fast as tho monkeys lied toward the jungle, they wouldn't have been In time to save the poor littlo monkey baby from tho crows, if it hadn't been for a trick that Peggy nnd the other fairies played upon tho hungry birds. Whnt that trick una will bo told to morrow. Adventures With a Purse A WOMAN -I know was suddenly taken very sick Inst week nnd u kindly neighbor rushed in nnd did all she could until the doctor arrived. When he did he suggested thnt the woman's daughter bo sent for, ns there wns no one to stny with the patient, nnd she wns too sick to be left alone. Fran tically the neighbor fished nround the house, in scarcli of the daughter's office address, nnd finally, in desperation, lt became necessary to rouse tho patient to ask the phouc number. There should be In every home for just such emer gencies, and albo for convenience, a pad on which are written nil phone numbers thut nre called frequently or likely to be needed In n rush. There can be had a pad of Imitation red leather, with the alphabet In gold let ters listed on the outside to show where Smith's or Brown's number may be found. The letters nre arranged in two columns, thirteen on each side, and that mnkes the pad smaller nnd nttacli uble to the phone. It can be had for fifty cents, and Is surely something that should not bo omitted from houbo hold purchnses For nnmf? nf lmps niMrra Woman's . Editor or I'hone Wnlnut 8000 or Main 1801. To Paint Furniture For new, varnished furnlturo a gen eral light sandpapering Is usually all that Is required In preparation for nalntlnK- Hut in cam) that tho varnish ing Is highly pollohed or heavy it Is best to removo It entirely and apply a coat of shellac, such ao Is used for un finished furnlturo. Tho next thing to do after tho wood lias been prepared Is to select tho paint for ths ground color. Turpentine nnd dryer should bo substituted for oil In laying coats of paint on furnlturo. Tho first coat should bo perfectly dry and then randpapered lightly before tho second Is added, and the second must be treated In the same way as the first before a coat of enamel Is lnld on. Eaoh coat must be perfectly smooth nnd must have no drops or bumplnesn on before tho next Is applied. Big nuggets of goodness Gold Seal carton of twelve At all our Stores n EmmiimmmmmmrmMmmmmmmx o o 43c Mothers Become Merely .Background When People Come i But They Don't Get Offended friends Arc Still Just as Fond of Them ' T ILY and her mother nre coming -' down to sco mo this afternoon' said thi young mother In her morning telephone conversation with her own mother. "Oh, thnt's nice," replied mother. "Lily hasn't seen the baby yet, has "Yes, she -saw him onco out on the i.trcct when I had him in the conch, but Mrs. Jefforson hnsn't seen him at nil I've hardly Been her nt all idnoo I've been married." Tho baby and his mother wcro nil fresh and clean when the guests ar rived, nnd settled out on the littlo porch to wnlt for them. Mother smiled her most, cordial greeting at Mrs. Jefferson, kissed Lily affectiountoly nnd led tho way to the conch, where the most important mem ber of tuo family lay rooing nnd gurgling and boating tho air. "How arc you. dcur? And where Is thnt beautiful child that I've heard so much nbout?" Mrs. Jefferson's greet ing was only a stepping ttono to the real object of her visit. "Hullo. Jcsa: isn't lt nn awful day where's that precious bnbyV" cried Lily all in one breath. And there was a double dasn toward Junior. HE STARED at them solemnly, waved one hand experimentally. wondered whether ho hnd better cry, decided not to, caught the wutid of his mother's voice nnd smiled Instead. "Oh, isn't he adorable I bclicvo you know your Aunt Lily!" "The blessed thing!" oxclnlmed Mrs. Jefferson, protending to herself thnt he was Lily, n baby ngnln. "Was bo so very happy on this misty old hot day?" Evidently ho was. Ho cntertalued the guests all after noon with his sweet, unlntelligiblo re marks and his funny little giggles over nothing. Woman s Life and Love, By WINIFRED HARPER COOLEY The Woman With the Latch Key MAGIC little symbol of the new free dom of the fair sex! "Havo you ever thought how tremendously times have clmngcd. t What must the Orlcntols think, when they reach our Bhores and behold the inde pendent woman? Thoy havo left their wives and daughters secluded and veiled. In clolstcrod gardens they bask nil day y baslt nil ua i,V.S;;-. vS If they nre poor V - .--zlx3 d do the Inbor tv. ,;xx,iai.u' or nnd do the of the market or field thev slink nlnnff Hmlrllr with WINIFRED HARPER COOLEI their faces enshrouded in thick screen ing. Only the gay and disreputable who dance in public pinces ror too tie lectntlon of sensual men ever nre scrutinized opealy. , , Even in this country, in Grandma a doy, girls wcro shut within the shel ter nf the home at nightfall. Fathers roof covered them, and permission to stay out till 10 o'clock was accorded thorn grudgingly. Mother eat up for them, when they went to n party, and unbolted tho heavily locked door. TODAY: ,. ,. . "So long, young folks; sco you when I get here!" shouts Mnymo, nnd that is the Inst thing father and mother know nbout her till sho turns up at the breakfast-table. Shn haB arrived some time during the night, nnd let herself In with her latchkey. Or perhaps she is a trained nurse nnd out on n case. She comes nnd goes from her lodging-house, using her key, nnd giving nn account to no one. Or, she mny be a reporter on a morn ing paper. All night she sits i in the glare of the bluo electric lights nnd pounds n typewriter, or comes In from somo assignment nway out in the sub urbs of the great city, and sinks down wrarilv, as tthc selres a mass of paper and n 'soft pencil nnd dashes off n spec tacular nccount of some scnndnl. "Want to come out nnd get n bite of chow?" queries n cub reporter. She nsscnts, and nt 2 A. M. they wnpdcr Into some all-night restnurant, usually of tho dairy kind, nnd order crackers nnd milk, or ham and eggs nnd coffee. In the still dawn, when most girls nre getting their beauty-sleep, sho crawls home to her little flat, probably climbs throe flights of stairs, meeting the milk man on his early morning round, un locks her door with her latchkey nnd tumbles into bed. Or perhaps th? nctrcss has hnd nn all-night rehenrsnl. It Is not nn un usual event for n company to keep the dress rehearsal going until dawn, the night before thoy open a new produc tion. Sho hails n taxi, whir's uptown to her apartment, opens the door wenr lly. ents her grnham bread and milk, niid falls, nslccp exhausted. No one has questioned these women's right to their own home, nnd own life. It would ho absurd for nnv one to sot somo nrbttrnry rulo ns to their comings nnd goings. "Ah, but. you sny, they are busi ness women, who nro forced to this abnormal night life. How nbout those modern mnrrled women who use n latch key?" Why should not a mnrrled woman let herself into her own home, ns well ns n slnglo one? HsVSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSBaL- Bsssssi. MSSmmM B rT t MetWW KWH. ssssssssssi v. -.- . fl JA.vskfl (L ibsbsbsbsbV &am tnt CORN S? MeKUTRSEY , 3f Hou CiWxc Corn on the Cob try JBRSET Cbrn Flahos With milh and you can enjoy this natural corn flavor in a new and delightfully ap petizing form -a form the whole family will relish in any season. TTGttCCV Corn JrJtvT 1 Halves V(? UriginaC QhicA (Porn Vlaios T HAMTftCTVUA tV 'e OX, Jersey UUAl, FUtHA to See the New Babfi ! w Because They Know That Their J . ow ,do. T." llkc thls nouse. Jea. so?' aaked Mrs. Jefferson casuaUy "Is it nn nice n vniit. r.H,. l' . V11'.9 T?rJr n,C8'" bcttn JoMle, "but I don't like the locality qult -!' "Oh, look, Lily. He's trying to Hit his head up all by himself! Isn't h. strong, though 7 SVhy, I don't know when I've seen such a strong baby!" 'And .Tessio's answer to tho question was drowned out In raptures over h baby. THEY had had a lovely time, the Jf. il left, "And It was so nice to sea job again," added Mrt. Jefferson. They really hadn't seen her at allt they hadn't paid any attention to her they had come to seo the baby and th had seen him. ' Tho fact thnt his mother happened to be there, too, wns just incidental Fortunately mothers get used to this In fact, they don't expect anythlsj else. ' As soon ns tho Invitations for thrfr wedding aro out thoy begin to be tncrtlj background. "Como over and sco my presenti," they urgo cordially, and thoy don't fed ' a bit hurt if you notice them only la passing, After their marriage and return to ' the new home, there Is something ti to see. ' " "You must come and see the houte It's adorable," they invite. ' , And then comes the final effacementi 1 "Come sec the baby !" ' EVERYBODY comes, too. But mothers don't get hurt or of. fended nboH things like this; they know that pcoplo came to see them when they wcro babies, too. And they know that when tho babies arc grown up and not so fascinating to watch, their friends wil keep oa coming, and this tlmo "to seo me." In the rush of modern life, people n nnd come nt all hours. The womis who hnd to depend on her husband to unlock their home would be in a stranti position Indeed, When folks rent u apartment, they are alwnys given two keys, nnd ench goes nnd comes ind pcndcntly. To suggest that women will misuse n koy is to hint that if thtt arc not locked in by their husbands th; will run awny! Recently, a man from Cuba told mt (approvingly!) nu actual story of a friend of his. Tho man married a girl, aud being extremely jealous by nature, shut her up n dozen years in a locked house! Tiio first-story window wu high up and barred. She was never permitted outside her home except to go to church with her husband. She wns supplied with servants, and gtren governesses to tench her music and lan guages, in turn prison she bore mot children. In twelve yoars or so tit master became lax, cither because tit decided that nine babies would "settle" nnv woman, or because as he grew older ho became more careless and lew s. jealous. Ho had stated that he wanted to be certain that tho children bis wife bore wcro his ! Think of tho insult to the women one marries. And is it, possible thaM mnn supposes that if a girl realljii wild, she can be kept true by barred -doors? It is notorious that in Latla countries where chnperonnge is serere, . and women nre secluded strenuou&Ir, thero Is continual romantic intrigue, and bribed scrvnnts wink nt secret rii- itors. Thero Is something in human ' nnture thnt violently resents lack of fnlth in one's honor, nnd in the veu nnture of thiugs such lack of fnlth le rewnrdod by deception nnd lies. Or, if a woman's self-respect or ltd of opportunity provents her from tak ing revenge, she nurses n long, smol dering resentment and bntrcd whlcn surely arc not to bo desired by a men from one whom he professes to love! Better give n wife a latchkey and trust to your own attractions to "keep" , her, Friend Husband! It mny seem n trivial thing, this little) key, and ono may object that we milt n good deal out of nothing, but, bellta mo. lt iff tho big symbol of independence nnd self-respect. Only when one li free can sho bo moral. As tbo Chine mnn naively insisted that to unbind I girl's feet was to let her run nway, m men for ninny centuries, in suppoeedlj freer countries than China, tare preached thnt to grant nny freedom to women wns to wreck the world. Sure!; nothing more insulting to the sex the professed to reverence could be con ceived j to free them wns to let them go according to their own desires, and theso must be immoral ! Lnck of all supervision nnd restraint tiinv ta linrmflll kmiipHtilPA to Immature girls. Minors need wise guidance, and , parents may have swung the nenauiun too far, when they flung to the jounj folks u key, nnd themselves went n to bed. Temptations and pitfalls, of coune, sometimes are for the ignorant. "H the wise parent ought to seek the conn denco of daughter (and son!) and ougM to keep a kindly supervision over noun of nrrlval after parties. But when ii.A.n,n Tin Innpor nrn minors, but W" responsible human adults, there ! J one who ems a ngni. to unsuiiia - dlnnship over them, or to do poiw duty. Cereal Food Co. tmWAVUI.Wl& sv T