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Facts, Fic | Excellent Advi CkMtlu Wito mat man ukl me to give him m tmw tip* 09 how to eelect a wife. ,.Tfce bMt advice that I cm offer ujr youth contemplating matrimony la to go off nmt quiet spot and hare a heart-to-heart aeaslon with himself, and honestly try to lad out what manner of man he raally is. and what he aspires to he and to do 1b the world. With this data In hand it Is easy enough to pick out the right girl Instead of one who will keep a man wondering to his dying day what made him do it, and where the fool killer was when he led the lady he did to the altar. "Know thyself" is never such a good slogan as when a man is chooalng a life partner, for the trouble with most unhappy marriages is merely that they are misfit marriages. The wife who drives om man to drink would have lifted another into the seventh heaven of connubial bliss. She who rasps the nerves of one husband at every turn would make a soothing and congenial companion to another. And these uncongenial marriages are more the men's fault than the woman's, for men do the picking and choosing, and it is their poor Judgment, and lack of knowledge of what they need, and what will suit them in the wife line that keeps Reno on the map. and the dl* vorce court busy. Therefore, son, when you think about marriage, don't waste any time worrying over the girl. Worry over yourself a little. Consider your own character, disposition. ? finances, ambitions and prospects and let this knowledge be a lamp to your feet when you go a-woolng. Suppose, for instance, you are of a nervous, irritable disposition, with a tamper that Is hung on a hair trigger and liable to go off at any moment. Can't you see that matrimony for you will be nothing but a dark and bloody battleground If you marry some beautiful slender creature with thin lip and quivering nostrils and lovely auburn hair? Whereas it will be one grand sweet song If you have- gumption enough to pick out for a wife some plump, placid maiden with oxltke yea and a nice, fat laugh. Woman for woman, the two girls may be equally models of all the k virtues .but the high strung one will keep you always up to concert pitch, while the good nature of the other will poultice your tore nerves and soothe them, and her optimism, will be a perpetual tonic to you4 With one you will live scrapptly. With the other happily, for there is not room for but one set of nerves, and one case of dlspepsia In any house. Suppose when you look into your own soul you admit to yourself that while you are not In the least vain or egotistic, still you can not deny that you are a man of most unusual intellect, and of a Judgment as profound that it Is entitled to respect on every occasion. 1 Will you find happiness If you marry some opinionated young person who Is firmly convinced that she Is the latest Incarnation of Mrs. Solomon, and who considers that a wife's place in the home Is to rule the roost, and tell her husband Just where he gets off?and stays off? | I trow not. Tou know plenty of men who 1 wipe their feet on the door mat be1 fore they dare to enter their own 1 domicile, and who Jump every time their wives speak to them. Can you see yourself qualifying In the 1 1 ff : Helene's Mama 1' 1 ^ ? CXIV?BLAME. J* Alice turned round and faced me ?? squarely, when I told her Tony was a rascal. "If the check was forged, why weren't thy police called in?" she demanded. That seemed to her a J conclusive argument. a "Jim's father believed Jim guilty, s He didn't want an open scandal, s Re had no Intentions, for the sake of the family honor, or prosecuting." - r spoke decidedly. Alice looked annoyed. " "I bet toe'd have prosecuted Tony quick enough, if he had thought that he Was the guilty party!" "No doubt he would!" I answered, isalmty. "Tony haa that possibility J to face." Alice paled a little. She seemed frightened. ? "Are?are you going to go and tell?" "I've already told my husband," I said stiffly. "at remains to be ' aeen what he will do." The blood flowed back to Alice's . cheeks. Her eyes flung angry sparks. "I don't think you've shown up What Causes Wrinkles? What's The Remedy? tsp to fi?sM?r what produce* wrinkles sad saifiam of skia. Prtutuv ifUif. . MlMAIa, etc., cause the flesh to shrink. Joas Its yoathfsl plumpness aid firmness. ( Tho skia th?a is too lart* for the flash underneath ; doesn't fit tl?hUy aad souslj u It 1 mtd to?It wrinkles or sags. It most be plala that to tifhtsa tha skia. it ? the face perfectly la every Place, will egeetnally remove the hateful wrinkles aad bacclnesa. Thia la eaallj aad haialaaaly accomplished by dtmolrtnc an soaeo jt pare powdsied aaxeUte la a half tat of Witch haxel aad nsln* the eolation as s fsee wash. The Lnjredleata yoa eaa set at say drt store, of coarse. The result! are sorprtslae The skin Immediately tightens ap. hsrsaiiai Im aad fresh as la ysatfe. Irery wrinkle aad sai are sOseted at sac*.?Ate. At last, Reli From f <m ** *" to Get IMetn* Tsrtsns. ??? Victims of Bheumatism i>hculd 1 ^SMtafO of the wahn season e is ao favorable to the proper treatment for thia painful ailment ? Whewnsatiam is more than a mere Ineal disorder confined to th? lo. * Tallty of the painful part a. It cac' rubbed away, because it la * doep-aeated dlstase that has Its puree In the blood supply. The SfT <* ?*???. the millions of Jttla disease germs that cause the I1>aa?a mum be reached as4k^HaatJ i. Hon, Fash, ~ By DOROTHY DIX \Cf* Covjrlfkt. Itso. WfcaeiM ayatfleata. lac. '> hen-pecked brigade. and following meekly In wife's wake? Then wnjr not paaa by the (nappy girl who rum everybody ana everything In her vicinity, and whoae parents tremble before her, ana eapouae the timid little maiden who bellevea all men are oraclea, ana rule by divine right, and who will be perfectly happy sitting at your feet gathering up the pearls of wisdom tnat drop from your lips. And j you will be happy, too, for one un- ! Questioning admirer is aa much as any of ua get in life. Suppose you are a poor young fellow with your fortune to make. To achieve success means that you I must live plainly, and economise while you are getting a start. Do you think that you will stay long in love with a fashion plate girl, no matter how stunning she | looks. If she wastes your money, and keeps you in debt, and thwarts your ambitions? The argument >ver money Is a two-edged sword that can cut the bond between a husband and wife quicker than anything else on earth. But If you marry a girl who Is willing to work and economize, and put every ounce of her own energy and ambition In your career?who , thinks it fun to build your fortune with you. then you have got a wife for keeps, for she Is business partner as well. Tou will be happy and contented with such a woman for there Is no stronger tie between two people than to be vitally Interested In the same thing. Nor do any husband and wife ever bore each other when they can talk over the state of the stock market or grocery trade together. Suppose you have dreams of being a great lawyer, or a famous doctor, or of filling some big political office. Then look beyond the girl's pretty face, and try to see what is In her head. The time will come when your wife's brains will mean more than her complexion to you, Tor you can camouflage a complexion, but there's no known substitute for good, hard horse sens*. Do you think It will help you on aa a lawyer to be tied to an am- | bltlonless woman who weeps and thinks herself neglected every time you want to study of an evening instead of holding her hand? Will It increase your practice as a doctor to have a jealous fool for a wife who Imagines you are making love to your female patients? Will It help you to win elections to have a tactless blunderer of a wife who makes enemies where she should make friends? Rather not! So If yoO wish to be happy and successful though married, choose the cleverest, and most ambitious woman you know, no matter if she is as homely as sin, j in preference to the peach wno Is' content to do nothing but Just i hang on the tree. X am saying nothing against the ; woman without ambition, or the nervous woman, or the high tempered woman, or the bossy woman. There are men whom they wouid j Just suit. There are easy going i men who don't want a wife who is j not contented to stay put. just as | they are. There are men who de-1 light In working themselves to death so that "their wives may be | gorgeously dressed. There are shiftless men who need a high tem- | pored woman to prod them aionn. There are even men who like to be hen-pecked. It's all a matter of taste. I'm only urging you. son, to And out In which class you belong before you marry, and to pick out the girl accordingly. rl I By MAY CHRISTIE Q l.irp Coprrifht 1930. ^ lfcClura Syndicate. 'I | particularly well in this affair. HelI ent. so you needn't put on those j high-and-mighty airs. Why. you were glad enough to come down to j Anstruther Lodge, when I invited you. Just to spy on me!" This was too true. . I couldn't possibly deny it. She went on: "And you hadn't even got the nerve to openly acknowledge young St. Aubyns as your husband! You Just wanted to prowl around and watch the . two of us, suspiciously. ^ hy. It would have served you right If the poor soul had died there by the roadside! I'm thankful I haven't got your queer Jealous nature!" Again I didn't answer. Alice's remarks were too near the truth. "Why on earth didn't you ask me openly about the matter?" she resumed. "It would have saved you endless misery." I plucked up courage to reply: "Why, Alice, I did ask you who was the donor of the bracelet! The first time you assured me It came from an old friend of your husband's. The second time you said it was from an aunt, abroad. And It was only after a long period that I discovered you'd bought It from Tony!" Alice had the grace to look a shade abashed. . . The following day I ,pent Jim, my husband "But your father. Jim? He wasn't present at our marriage And?he Isn't on the best 6f terms with you. is he, dear?" Jim smiled?a superior, knowing little smile. ^ "The old boy's come around all Helene. I knew he would, if h,nl d,Bcreet|y *Ione. Seems he's discovered something or other about that check. Not that Ive mentioned a thing to him : But maybe mother did. Anyhow, his suspicions are lifting, if not already lifted." 1 " day i A Tfceary. leT ~ Rheumatism : S&. ir sasasr,!s?,,5s show results. For free expert" medical advice regarding your ow" case write fully to Chief Medical Ions and I children's i sunrise stories Br HOWARD n. OA?u UNCLE WIGGILY AND JACKO'S JUMPING. , Once upon a time, when Uncle Wlgglly Longears, the funny bunny rabbit gentleman. was oul walltlns with Jacko Klnkytall. the monke> boy, the two frlenda cam/ to a green grove In the wooda where tome of the animal glrla were playing. Oh. Juat * moment U you pleaae. The animal glrja, among whom were Jennie Chipmunk and Susie Llttletall. were not exactly playing?they were, rather, alttlng around on atumpa and logs. "What's the matter, girls?"' asked Uncle -Wlgglly aa he and> Jacko reached the green ffrow. "Are you tired of having fun?" "Oh. no," answered Lulu Wlbblewobble, the duck girl. "But we have been lumping our wild grape vine ropea uhtll we are tired. "Tired?" laughed Uncle Wlgglly. so that his pink nose twinkled like a chunk of atrawberry Ice cream. "I didn't believe you ever got tired, any more than I get tired of looking for adventures." "WelT^ we're not exactly tired." quacked Alice, who waa a duck alater of Lulu. "Only we would like to know some new ways of jumping rope. We are tired of the old waya and the old verses we aay aa we Jump." "Hum!" spoke Uncle Wlgglly, something like a cornstarch pudding. "I wonder if I know any new ways of jumping r6pe?" "Oh, you must know some new ways!" cried Jennie Chipmunk. "You know so much. Uncle Wlgglly, and you have ao many things I happen you. I'm sure you can tell I us a new way to have fun with our grapevine ropes." "Well. I'll try," said the bunny gentleman. "Do you know how to j Jump salt?" he asked, seasonable 1 like. "Oh, we learned that first of all!" cried the animal girls in a chorus. "How about pepper?" asked Uncle Wlgglly. spicily. "We learned that second of all the jumps," said Beckle Stubtail, the little girl bear. "Dear me-" laughed Uncle Wlgglly. sort of rubbing his pink nose with his floppy ear. "I don't seem to be able to teach yeu anything about Jumping grapevine ropes. I'm too old-fashioned. I guess; eh. Jacko?" he asked the monkey boy. "Oh, I don't know," slowly chattered Jacko. "I guess maybe?that is. if the girls wouldn't mind?and think me a sissy. I could show i them some new kind and styles of I jumps for ropes." "Oh. please do!" quacked Lulu, "and we won't think you're a bit of a sissy." "Go ahead. Jacko." advised Uncle Wiggily. "Help the girls!" So Jacko took one of the short grape-vine ropes In his paws, and I he began a new kind of jump, I partly on one leg and partly on the other. And. as he Jumped, he sang a little verse like this: "Lady, lady, turn around. Lady, lady, touch the ground. Lady, lady," show your shoe. Lady. lady. I'm after you!" I And as Jacko sang the little verse he did Just what the words | called for. He turned around and gp Dorit jump on me, III be ?ood!" he stuck out his paw. only It didn't have any shoe on for he was barefooted that day. And then he stopped and touched the ground. And when he sang: "Lady, lady, I'm after you!" then Jacko made believe run and chase the girl animals, and they screamed as loud as anything and scattered. But it was Jots of fun and they all wanted to Jump as Jacko had done, so he showed them all over again, doing such funny little Jlgglly steps and dances In the jumping that even Uncle Wlgglly laughed. "Where did you learn such rope Jumping. Jacko?" asked the bunny gentleman. i "Oh, down In Cocoanut Grove," answered Jacko. "And there Is another funny little step, too, he added. "You put an orange on your head and then you?" But Jacko suddenly stopped chattering and cried: "Skeezlcks! Skeesicka!/ Tm after yoa!" With that he give a Jump toward a bush just behind Uncle Wiggily, and. as the monkey boy reached the ""bush, out from under It ran the bad old Skeeslcks, crying: "Oh! Oh! Oh! Don't Jump on me, I'll be good! I waa after Uncle Wlgglly'a souse, but I'll go away without taking afty! I'll be good. Jacko!" "Well, ' jrdu'd better!" eald the monkey boy, coming back, aa the bad chap ran away. "I saw the bad* old Skee Just as I was going to do a new Jump," exclaimed Jacko. "so I thought I'd scare him by making believe Jump on him." "I'm glad you did." spoke Uncle Wiggily. "He must have sneaked along through the wood a after me. Thank you. Jacko. You saved my aouae." Then the monkey boy ahowed the animal girls some more "Lady, lady" rope jumps and everybody waa happy. And If the pie doosn't try to Jump out of the oven beforo the cake, and tickle the leg of the gas stove. I'll tell you next about Un^cle Wlgglly and Jennie's brush. features of ?w??? ? ? Combines Practical J With the Artistic | J ir Fashion la much concerned this year with combining the practical with the artiatic, and illustrated is one excellent example of the way I she contrives to brine this about. It is a coat dress of prune-colored duvetyn. adopted from one in Julia I Marlowe's private wardrobe. The coat about the waist fits smoothly I with the slight fullness there Is at I the waist gathered Into a belt, and the front fastened straight up to tha chin. The skirt is similarly gathered to the belt and banded half way down with a simulated hem that is machine-stitched after a narrow fold of black patent kid has been insert- i ed as a heading. The skirt Is -comparatively full, the sleaves are long and finished with one variety of the new "flap" cuffs. Is This Your T ? The Greek Meal. ] Down through the ages goes the Influence of the ancient Greek ideas of beauty and to this day most of us have a notion that the perfectly beautiful type of face is the Grecian | type. By this we mean the type of face portrayed in Grecian art?the straight, firm nose, low broad forehead, full, flnely chiseled lips, large full eyes?a combination of regular features that was probably no more often found perfectly presented in the same face among the Greeks than it is among the present-day Europeans or Americans, for that matter. There Is really no very good reason why we should accept this standard of perfect beauty so unquestionably. Nine Individuals out of ten find other types more fascinating?they sincerely admire features cast in another mould more than those made famous by Praxiteles, the greatest of Greek sculptors. But there is something still about this pure Grecian type that makes us willing to keep it on a , pedestal above the Ideals of all other times and all other places. j Of the Grecian face immortalized i by the great Greek sculptors one j art critic says: "The brows are' low and straight, and are framed by bands of wavy hair; the nose la , admirable in form and rather large: the lips are full, well turned and often slightly parted; the chin is delicately rounded; and. deeply set under arching brows, thf large, luminous eyes look coldly forth from the divinely immobile countenance." Heroines in fiction are repeatedly described as possessing Grecian features. Of Haydee In "Monte Chrlsto," Dumas says: "The beauty of countenance was p?cUTlarly and purely Grecian; there were tn? large, dark, melting eyes, straight nose and coral lips and pearly teeth that belonged to her race and country." And of Mercedes in the same book he says: "Lovely as the Greeks of Cyprus or Chicy Mercedes^boasted the same bright flashing eyes of and rip?. round coral lips." Elizabeth Patterson, who married Fashionable Nancy We all admit that atylea are fleeting. And yet this vogue of narrow pleating la atlll within our midst?you see Miss Nance attired In organdie. With tiny frills on nack and skirt That'a most becoming, all assert. >. Interest t Veu? Members Join Si And Plunge in Work, Extra Prizes of $ ? contiscbo raoM page onb. j arly weeks of the campaign 4ount J or many more credits than they ( sill later along.. In rfther words, t he present is the biggest and best j lubscription opportunity that will 1 >e presented. ) Besides there are two Extra Cash ' Arises?1300 to *e awarded to the l nember doing the best work up to ind Including June 17, and 1309 to ;he member who turns In the sec>nd largest number of subscription , :redlts during this same period. Ofctata likaoltdwa Aaywher*. It does not make any difference n what part of the campaign territory you live, you have the same :hance of winning the biggest and >est prize as anyone else. There 1 ire seven grand awards?$6,000 jpme, or $6,000 in cash. $$.885 . standard "Eight" $8,260 Jordan, j 12.125 Sayers "Six," $1,700 Dixie 1 flyer. $1,695 Allen. $1,275 Maxwall. rhese seven awards will be award- ' sd to the members with the high- ? sst total of subscription credits, 1 rrespectlve as to whsre they may < reside, just so they livs within the 1 -ampaign territory, comprising . Washington. District 'of Columbia, >j Maryland and Virginia. 1 The Keven grand prises are .not I1 the only awards The Herald is'. >ffering as there are eight $100 i' :ash award; for Salesmanship Cluo jj workers, and. of cou*M. a casn , commission of 10 per cent to every < ictive nonprizc-winning member. Be a Starter Today. If you have been thinking of lending In your entry you should . not delay longer. While there Is * representative list of men and " omen registered as members of 1 The Herald Salesmanship Club there is plenty of room for new , entrants. No member as yet shows a credit standing but what some ambitious new member can easily ob- : tain enough subscriptions in an hour or two of their spare time to overtake the leaders and gain a ; high position in the race. Why not send in your entry tolay. Join The Herald Salesmanihip Club. P(t your energies igainst representative men and ' women In Washington and sur- ' rounding territory. I Unusual awards are offered for spare time. Get busy. Drop into ' the club headquarters, obtain re- I ;elpt books and information as to how to go about gaining a start toward the winning of the first grand award?the $6,000 home (or. If preferred, $6,000 in cash) or if you want a handsome latest model 1920 motor car The Herald offers 1 six of them. If you cannot come in person, telephone Main 3300. The Salesmanship Club office is located at 423 Eleventh street northwest, and ' ' ^ marie laroque vne r c?p7rt?ht. two. J r BeClars 8ya41csts. Jerome Bonaparte. although an American girl, was famous for her classical beauty. "She possessed the j>ure Grecian contour." says one MBS j- teC^v?? uo pi.(? The (lassie Greek Tm as Alms! Tadeasa Depicts It. of her biographers, "her head wis i exquisitely formed. her forehead 1 fair and shapely, her eyes large and i dark, with an expression all tender- ' ness that did not belong to her character." ==?> Daily Horoscope . i \ enus rules strongly for good during the middle hours of this day. according to astrology. Around sundown Neptune and Jupiter are strongly adverse. It la a da# most auspicious for the activities of women. They should find organisation work especially easy during this configuration. Clubs are subject to the best possible direction. Love affairs are well influenced, so far as the meeting and the association of men and women are concerned. The wooer of the evening, however. Is likely not to be successful In financial matters. Public gatherings of every sort are subject to favorable influences. Churches should beneflt under this sway. press will be much discussed and r*mCv'?ns ln the Pr'c,> ?r clothing i .i-.. w,<,e8P?"aad, although there ... hope that the cost of living will greatly diminish within the year. " '* * Promising day for theaters and should be especially good for actresses, foj- whom the stars seem to offer unusual chances to play In Europe. Neptune (s read as forecasting vision that will enable men of afratrs to protect themselves against financial embarrassment.. Foreign I * greatly Improve during the coming months and-great enterprise" will prosper. There Is a sinister sign that Is A8 P^sagtng plots and troubles which an Oriental nation Is concerned. Treachery on the part of Wsons In the United States appears to be forecast. eptune gives warning of secret *?>o will make plana on an m?u* c*le and Involve prominent Americans. ^?p"on" whos? blrthdate it Is may * nccasaful and prosperous , ?"e born after midday should b? very conservative ln business ventures. I,,0!1!''*2rn OB ,hu d*? ar* like!ym p* *ff?ctlonate and welt-behaved. Thay may be high-strung intaUaec"' bMt k?ea ? o Women desman Club * for$6,000Award; 500 Come Jane / 7 s open from I o'clock In the mornng until $ o'clock In the evening. Tome in, you are welcome. Club members standings published oda? shows that new members can loin the club and go out In front ?y a little effort. Will you be among the ambitious to take adrantage of thia opportunity? Act now?today. S* Irani nikip Chb Member* Standings as Corrected Friday for Publication. DISTRICT ONE. All that section of Northwest Washington east of Sixteenth street ind south of and including N street. MEMBERS CREDITS *rs. Mabel C. Berger 21.000 Edw. Brause 11.000 i Tecll Davis ll.WO : Than. O. Kerr 11.000 lohn D. 11.000 Mrs. E. Malnwarlng 11.000 -has. Manthos 11.000 Mrs. Peter Messino 21.000 lohn B. Mitchell.., 2552? \ndrew Panagapanlos 12,000 Italph Pimes 20,000 Walter PoeUman 11.000 lohn M. Reed. 21.500 i W. S. Rice 11.000! Mrs. 8. Rosenfeld 11.000, Fohn A. 12.000 J Clarence L Schmid 26.000 Vincent Steilabott 13,000 DISTRICT TWO. All that section of Northwest Washington and District of Columbia west of and including Sixteenth treet. MEMBERS CREDITS ( red Allison 27.000: Morris W. 21,000 leremiah (jonnolly 24,000 Hugh M. Devine 13.000 Robt. B. Doing 13,000 Mark Friedlander 13.000 Joseph HofTman 25.000 Walter l^aman.... 25.000 Mrs. R. S. Ledman 26,000 William MacDonald 12,000 i Joseph L. Maggio....^ 28.000 Paddy Markley 13.000' C. C. Mayer 21.000 Stanley Nash 28.000 Walter F. Palmer 25.000' Mrs. Walter L Paul 30.000; Miss Ruth Price 29.000 Joseph A. Shafer 27.000 William Sullivan 11000 L J. Swain 28.000 BenJ. F. Torreyson 31.000 Milton A. Trenham 11,000 Mrs. Grace True 21.000 Q. E. Tucker 13.000 Miss Eugenie M. Wilson 29.000 Vilas C. Tetter 11.000 DISTRICT THREE. That section of Northwest Washington north of N street and east of Sixteenth street. MEMBERS CREDITS A. H. Bacas 25.000 Mrs. C. 1* Bancroft 13.000 Mrs. C. M. Baruch 21,000 L E. Beach 13,000 W. A. Brett 13.000 Charles H. Borman 25.000 Grantvllle Christman 27.000 Robert E. Doyle. Jr 30.000 Robert K. Garner 28,000 Mrs. Katherine L Hargett.. 25.000 Arls P. Harrison 13.000 Miss Rose KrucolT 32.000 Paul McNeil 13.000 S. W. Marsh 13,000 Mrs. F. E. Mole 29.000 D. E. Morgan 25.000 D. 8. Ofano 13,000 Charles E. Parker 13.000 Miss Goree Pellan 31.000 A. F. Reaney 27.000 Mrs. Clara W. Ryon .?. 33.000 Robert C. Small wood * 13.000 Morris Stein 21.000 Mrs. Lenah J. Talbott 30.000 Miss Eliza Tenly 29,000 Mrs. F. L. White 13.000 DISTRICT FOUR. All of Northeast Washington. Including Benning. Kenllworth. Trinidad, Ivy City. Brookland. Langdon and Woodridgc. MEMBERS CREDITS Robert H. Alcorn 13.000 E. L Carleton 29.000 Mrs. Bessie Gray 32.000 Miss E. M. Hlrrlinger 13.000 A. F. Jones 13,000 Maxwell MacKenzle 30.000 Frank Pew 11.000 Stephen Pope 28,000 F. M. Pratt 12,000 Apostle Sladys 13.000 DISTRICT FIVE. All of Southeast Washington, including Anacostia and Congress Heights. MEMBERS CREDITS Mrs. Helen M. Blanchard... 21,000; N. G. Biankenship 27.000 Mrs. Grace Dixon 33.000 Mrs. Petty Dodge 13.000 Stephen Frank 25.000 George E. Gould.. 29.000 Miss Louise F. Grubb 30.000 John H. Hal stead.-. 26,000 H. W. Irwin 13.000 Miss Jessie L Ryon 28.000 Calvin A. Schaefter 21.000 Ernest Schllke 19,000 DISTRICT SIX. All of Southwest Washington. MEMBERS CREDITS Mrs. Claude J. Coffln Daniel Goldbarn 13>000 C. E. Riley 13.000 J. Sheahan Charles H. Weeks 22.000 DISTRICT SEVEN. Alexandria City. Alexandria. Loudoun and Fairfax counties. W. W. Boyce, Alexandria... 13.000 Mrs W. E. Donohoe, Leesburg 21000 Harry Jackson 13,000 John H. Relnheimer. Leesburg 21,000 DISTRICT EIGHT. All of Virginia (except that territory Included in District No. 7); all of Maryland and all other States and Territories. MEMBERS CREDITS R. J. Davis, Manassas ?1'02? Wm. DeCoss, Warrenton.... 11.000 M. A. Estes. Estes 12.000 Stephen E. Lane. Brightwood ?0J0 Jiiss Blanche McDanlel, Purcellvllle ' 29 000 Miss Mary L. Rector. Haymarket 2?-000 Meter Markers Aatkorixed. The House yesterday passed a bill authorising the placing of a marker or monument on the north side of the White House Ellipse to designate the place from which the motor convoy started recently on it* overland trip to California. The marker also will he used to measure distances to points radiating from the National Capital. 1 'w qqmnir pbnn. j | Op? 9:1S A. M. " "r Thousands Two St] Car Checl / ?You know what a bother it pocket, or pocketbook for on checks; you will appreciate t the other of these styles bf hol< ?The Flat Car Check Holder, with the two places for car checks, will hold 10 checks or tokens. 1 A Priced at 1UC LOUISIANA SUFFRAGE MEASURE FAVORED Baton Rouge, La.. June 4.?The Federal suffrage ratification resolution was today reported favoVably by the Senate committee, and probably will be voted on early next , week. Both houses adjourned until S o'clock Monday night. Col. James M. Thomson, publisher j | of the New Orleans Item, and Jbn- | in-law of former Speaker of the Na- I tional House Champ Clark, has been 11 named alternate to Gov. John M. 1 Parker, and will attend 'the San Francisco convention as a delegate- i at-large holding Gov. Parker's proxy. CONTROL VOIR MOODS. Bad digestion and ill temper seem to be so frequently found In the same individual that we have fallen into the habit of blaming the temper on the digestion. Physicians are beginning to realize that worry and anxiety cause a condition of mental depression that will invariably react on the digestion. Sometimes it is a personal antagonism. Some individual eats at the table with you that so Irritates you that the proper digestive juices are not secreted and indigestion results. Every individual owes It to himself and to his community to keep his digestion in order. Make your plan to keep your mind serene so that you will not get the wrong psychic reaction on your gastric juice. If you are annoyed or irritated'ar meal time do not eat?wait until you "cool off." If business worries are carried to the home table trouble is bound to occur. You must actually enjoy your meal if you are Koine to get full benefit from your ! food. This has actually been tested by I research work on animals. The secretion known as "phychic secretion" occurs in the stomach about fifteen seconds after food has been taken into the mouth. It is clear that we deal with a more complicated process than the simple reflex caused by the food itself an? that the secretion discharge Into the stomach occurs as the result of nervou* processes connected with the "enjoyment" of food. (Copyright, 1020, by The M-C Syndicate.) Th# Ynung Lady Across the Way * tm i*i. ?n n 111 " " The younr lady across the way saya the thing to do la to eliminate th* middleman entirely and uuy direct from the jobber. ~~ ? sdsnqtsiiB MEHUE-AT SlWSTWT Closs <:6> P. r\ I I of These pies of i Holders On Sale in Oar Toy Store? Fourth Floor, Today. is to fumble around in your e of these evasive little car he convenience with one or lers. ?The Ronad Holders, which will hold sixteen checks are be Tod.y 20C at, each ? Kann's?Fourth Floor. 0 ' ' """" " ^ What's in a Name? By Mildred Marshall. EFFIE. From the quaint old-fashioned Euphemia. bo rarely heard In the?e days, comes the popular name of Effle. It is not a diminutive, as is generally supposed, but a fullfledged name with an interesting history. Originally Euphemia meant both fair speech and abstinence from the reverse, so that from an Ironical standpoint it signified silence, and was applied to the stillness that prevailed during religious rites. The first Euphemia who gave vogue to the name was a virgin martyr of Bithynia. whose legend of constancy made her popular in both the east and the west. Russia called her Jevflmija: she was J etna in Serbia, and Benma and Bimmie in other lands. Scotland, however, adopted the name and straightway called her Effle. Phomie was also Scottish but did not attain the popularity of the former. _ However, neither Effle nor Phemie, which have been prevalent since thos$ early \imes, can ever be forgotten because of the finest works of Sir Walter Scott. Heroines of fiction, written by tjie masters of literature, find their names as immortalized as heroines of history and Effle is no exception to this general rule. It was once thought that the Scottish name Euphame was one of the Greek names brought from Hungary by Queen Margaret. Others believed that it came from the Keltic Aoiffe which has fostered so many of oun present-day feminine names. Indeed, those so inclined mav take their choice of possible, sources, though general credence is more often given to the first derivation. since it concersn a religieu?e and In olden days, it would seem that being martyred was all that was needed Co perpetuate one s name through the centuries. In the Scottish Hightlands, Effle is called Oighrigh. a name which seems to have no derivation whatever. The Church of Santa Eufemla at Rome gives title to a cardinal and through it, the name has spread in popularity in Italy and France. Effle's stone is the topax. whicn has the power of the sun to put to flight all evil and dark foreboding?, but it must be set in gold to accomplish its purpose. It promises that no harm ahall befall Its wearer. Tuesday is her lucky day: - her lucky number, and the chrysanthemum is her flower. (Coprriitht. 1K?. by the Wheeler Syndic**. Iae.) St. John's Exams Open Today. Scholarship examinations for St. John's College will be held at tha school. 1225 Vermont avenue northwest. at # o'clock this morning. Applications to take the examination mav be made to Brother D. Ed warm, president of the Institution, up until examination time. The awarding of the scholarship* is a part of the college's free educational program. The next time you buy calomel ask for ^lotaLs The purified and refined calomel tablets that are nausealess, safe and sure. Medicinal virtues retained improved. Sold only in sealed packages. Price 35c. 4 V '