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, , . i . , - 'TiniliyllfT I II ir jJ 1 THE OODFN STANDARD-EXAMINER, THURSDAY, JUNE 10, I9Z0. 5 M I IlLOVE and MARRIED LIFEl nj Ijtj. t3ie noted author i HP Idah Glome Ciifoaoia g KAItL'S LISTTEK. After I reached home I made cx cussos to myself for not reading Karl Shcpard's letter. In fact, I hung up my H coat without taking It out of the poc- PHj kct, and yet I was consumed with curiosity to know what was in It PH It's very human to turn an envelope PPHI over and over in your hand and won- PHI dcr what the letter contains when it PHI would be the easiest matter in the PH world' to just open it and read the missive But witli me there w;u some PH thing- over and above mere curiosity. PH I really wanted to know what Karl Shepard had written, and yet I did not think it was quite right for me to read another poem such as he had written me tho last time. It was too! PH personal. PH Finally when I could mako no more PpH e.vcusses to myself I took out the let-1 PpH Jf ter and read: "If you only knew, my, PPHL i dear atherlne, how much pleasure. Hh- I get in sending my thoughts to you, PpHp you would not allow my Puritanical prejudices to stand In the way of road PpH ing them. PpHI Kcason for Ills Joy. PpH "How do I know that you havaj PpH prejudices against reading thorn?) PH "Why, hjy .dear, 1 know you. I know; PpH you perhaps better than you know) PH yourself. I know your loyalty andj PH tteadfastncs3 to John and because of) BV it I am not quite sure that you win' BV ever read this letter; and sometimes, BW I do not care if you never do. The Joy BV I am getting out of it Is the Joy or BhV sending my unexpurgated thoughts to BVV -f have learned, Katherine, one j wonderful thing about shall I say; friendship? and that is that there is' PpH really much more happiness in giving I PpHl love than there is in receiving it. I PpH Much as I would like to know that! you are well, that you are happy, and PpH that you arc thinking a little tiny bit of me occasionally, I would rather thntl I would give up tho sound of your, voice of your nearness than the, PPPJ wonderful joy of my dreams about ; PPHI PpHj "I am out here tonight In Lotus land: PPfl my dear Katherine. all the way down PpHI the Nile. Lotus arc in bloom. Tho'i PpHI "whole river Is creamy white with tho HI . j blossoms, and the moon turns themji Mttj-' to silver and then to opal as it flirts' i Br Byr with them caressingly from behind! faZj" the clouds. No one sees an Egyptian! rajM moon anywhere else on earth except N fflfiU right here and 1 am not alone, be-J'i f'lmt cause you are with "me. More with" I? lM mc- than you ever were, when I was! 1 , ISaS close beside you in that occidental . r SJ land of youth and onergj. jt Sfcfljj Thank the Fates. 1 1 Stffrjlf "1 thank the fates tvrj day that I I had spent the earlier part of My life , Jn making money lots of money because I am afraid if I were not able to indulge in my dreams now, that my business would suffer greatly. I jiim smiling at myself, dear, when I (think what my friends would say if they could look down in my heart and find the trend of my mind these days. Every one of them would think 1 had i gone mad. "You see, I have gone thousands of miles away from you. Just you; and I I am enjoying every minute of it out I here alone with you tonight. I "You know I can't picture you back there in the little country club where 1 first met you, or even walking the ! sleepy street which you have so often ! described to me as dividing tho town ! where you were born. Instead I see you here, sitting beside me, in one I of these queen rattan chairs, with' t your exquisite profile outlined against ; the moon-lighted sky. I am a foolish sort of a creature, am I not? But honestly, Katharine, I believe other men are Just aa romantic, just as Idoal Islic as I am when they find thu one woman and yet some way tSiov are as hamed to tell it. 1 don't think I could tell all this to anyone but you. Indeed, 1 do not think that I could even tell it to you. I can only write my 'dreams, not knowing whether you will ever read them, and so 1 am going to say good night' and Just sit here in tho moonlight with you beside me." Football of Fate. I wonder if fate is always tangling up the threads of other people's lives f as she does mine? It is my destiny,; It seems, never to get a letter from! Karl Shepard, breathing the most po- elic devotion, that I do not receiv;' one exactly opposite frmo John. I state I Joking or does she want us fully to understand the difference between a husband and a lover? "While I had been away a special do livery letter from John the letter 1 j had "gono to meet had passed mo byt and Hannah had received it and placed It in my room. I did not notice it when 1 first came in, my thoughts were so taken up with the envelope I In my pocket, but now as I went to! place Karl Shepard's letter in a cliaw er. I saw John's on the top o tho I dresser. I It was a, business envelope and It jvldcntly had been written rrom an of-, rice In the oil fields for It reeked with I the odor of crude oil, from greasy j smudges upon it. As I tore it open I; iad a feeling of being a spectator atj i play, so colncidently had letters from, :hese two men been coming to me ately. 1 Tomorrow Bad Xcws. jj I Sister Mary's Kitchen I If one is not the proud possessor of a cedar chest wherein to store woolens, a bit of ingenuity will mako an ordinary shlrt-walt box answer the Use oil of cedar in a hand spray pump and spray the Interior of the box thoroughly. Let tho oil dry In and spray again. Tho wood will ab ' sorb quite a lot of oil. K For the sake of being on the safe, side wipe the sides aiid bottom of the I 1 box with a soft cloth before putting I " any clothing away in the box. After cleaning a clothes press, a spraying of tlio walls and floor will fill tho closet with the arona of cedar and' discourage moths from attacking the contents. Menu for Tomorrow. BREAKFAST Orange Juice, scram bed ,eggs. corn-meal muffins, coffee. LUNCHEON Cold meat with vege table salad, baking powder biscuits, hDiNNER Lamb chor.fi. .scalloped potatoes, asparagus with Hollandaiso sauce, rhubarb tapioca, drop nut cookies, coffee. My Own Recipes. While fresh asparagus Is in the mar-1 lcet use it plentifully. It can be served i for breakfast with poached eggs, or added to milk toast. The Idea of1 using a vegetable for breakfast once In awhile is a very good one. As paragus is especially usable as it has not, a strong flavor. COLD MEAT WITH VEGE TABLE SALAD . Cold sliced meat Hearts of lettuce . . Mayonnaise or vinaigrette' sauce ( String beans (left over) Radishes Cooked beets Rut slices of cold meat In the center of a largo platter. Arrange hearts of lettuce around meat and In each heart put C or S siring beans, 3 or 1 slices of radish and 1 tablespoonful 'of cooked beet chopped qulto fine. . Put a tablespoonful of mayonnaise ,on each "salad or pour over tho fol lowing sauce. VINAIGRETTE SAUCE 1 tablespoons oil 2 tablespoons vinegar 1-2 teaspoon salt 1-S teaspon paprilca . 1 tablespon capers finely-chopped 1 teaspon onion Juico 1 tablespoon parsley chopped very fino Mix in the order given, making an emulsion of the oil and vinegar. RHUBARD TAPIOCA 1 cup tapioca 2 cups' water 3 cups rhubarb cut in inch pieces 1-1 teaspoon salt 1 2-4 cups sugar 1-2 teaspoon soda Cook tapioca in water with salt till clear. Pour boiling water over rhubarb to more than cover and add the soda. Let boil up once and1 drain. (Add to boiling tapioca with sugar. Turn into a mold to become solid. Chill thoroughly. Serve with sweet ened cream. The family dinner table should find tartness in its salad rather than its conversation. MARY. Seventeen aerial taxicab companies have been formed In western Canada and u number of these have already been licensed by the Canadian air board. oo Sir Knights and Ladies of the Maccabees and Yeomen, will attend Carnival dance at Hermitage Friday, June 11. Special cars leave 25th and Washington 8:30 p. m. 2475 What is Castona "ASTORIA, is a .harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guar ) antee. For more than thirty yenrs it has been in constant use for tho relief j of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverish- l: uess arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, I aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. ! The Children'B Panacea The Mother's Friend. ',- The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over K SO years, has borne the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under I his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-Good" are but Experiments that f trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and - : Children Experience against Experiment. flfi . f6A7-?lF i Genuine Castoria always beara the signature of t-t3?0 '&4Cfi(tf FIRST AND ONLY WOMAN BANK PRESIDENT -IN U. S. CLARKSVILLE, Tcnn., June 9. 'I will lend money to a woman Just as i quickly as I will lend to a man," saysj Mrs. Frank J. Runyon, the first and only woman bank president; in the United States. She doesn't show any favors to either sex, she claims, but bases her loans entirely on the collat eral the borrower is able to offer. Mrs. Runyon Is president of the First Woman's bank in Tennessee, a local institution, capitalized at ?15,000. Deposits total $51,000 and the bank Is only a little over six months old. All Dfficers and members of the director ate arc women and by agreement they use their husband's initials instead of their own. Even the bank's porter is a colored woman. "Startlns a bank was rather an ac cidental circumstance for us," Mrs. Runyon said. "When the war ended I was county Red Cross chairman and most of the wonfen now in the bank were associated with me. Somebody suggested that we start a bnnk, and we did, although none of us knew any thing about banking. They electcd me as president " Mrs. Runyon had posted, a set o books for her1 husband, who is a physi cian, but knew nothing of finance. For two months before the bank was opened, she and tno present cashier went to a nelgrboring town and studied in a small bank there, without suiting their intentions. All tho bank stock, by agree enl, is held by members of the directors' families, no one person being permit ted to own over $200 worth. The wom en say they did this to keep any other bank from getting control of the institution. s . -4 j FOR LITTLE FOLKS v A WALLY GOIiS FOR SASSAFRAS. Nancy and Nick and Tingallng. the fairy landlord, followed Wally Wood chuck Into his house to hear why he had put out his children. Tingallng was still pretty cross, and "Wally kept! watching him out of the corner of his, eye, because he didn't want to hao a; bell tied on him (that was the fairy-' But she came right down carrying a clean handkcrclucf. man's way of punishing tho animals In tho Land-of-Dcar-Kuows-Where. ) Wally led tho way through n. long hall, and down another hall, and ush ered them Into the living room. Then he- called upstairs to Mrs. Woodchuck who was taking a nap. That was why she hadn't heard any of tho door bells ring. But she came right down currying a clean handkurchlef. "Mrs. Woodchuck. said Wally.' "Mr. Tingaling came to hear about the chil dren. But wo ought to have something to eat and drink first, don't you think? "Yes." nodded Mrs. Woodchuck, who was an excellent cook. "If we had any water I'd. mako some sassa fras tea, If we had any sassafras." "I brought some water," said Wal ly, "and I'll go get some sassafras, loo; the roots are growing down right through our kltchon celling." Nick w.osn't sure, but he thought he saw Wally wink at Mrs. Woodchuck and could it be thai Mrs. Woodchuck -w ... 1 1 i L i , I , , I winked back at him? But of course he wasn't exactly sure. Tingallng. who was looking around a bit. had decided on something in the meantime. As lie owned the house he know all about it. so he told Nick to sit where he could watch one hall way, and Nancy where she could watch tho other, and he sent the Magi cal Mushroom outside to watch tho kitchen door. Then he sat down- near tho front hallway himself. "Why. ys, thank you." ho said then, sitting down with a jingle, "I'd like very much to have some tea." (Copyright. 1920. N. E. A.) ! WHAT COLLEGE MEANS TO YOU K . BY LEWIJTTE BEAUCIIAMP POLLOCK, (Teacher of English In Jiast Technical High School, Cleveland, Ohio.) When collego seems all over, when you have put aside your cap and gown, when the wonders of commencement week are past do not foarj For you, college has not come to an end. j Always, there will be memories. That's why you must keep a stunt book, several of them Jf necessary, land must mako of your mind a store house of happy memories. Then, when the years go by and you yearn for a change, you can unlock the door to these treasures, tako them out one at a time, and look at them lovingly. You will lauglr over many of them, little chuckles of gle at past foolish ness. Over others, perhaps, tears will come to your eyes.; tears for little incidents of human Intercourse that you thought you had forgotten. And then, when you can't stand it ! JUNE 15 IS THE DAYTQ GET A BASKETFUL j I j j You won't need to come home with a description of the "big one" that got away if 1 ' you use our tackle. You will have the fish to show your doubting friends because H j j "our tackle sure gets 'em." ffl H j j Call now while our stock of boots, baskets, flies, hooks, leaders, reels and poles is 1 ! H j complete. i H j Proudfit Sporting Goods 9 I I if Cor. 24th and Hudson Ave. M 'Other Mess Shoes' Scores Hit at Ogcten With All Star Cast "Other Men's Shoes," which opened a three dayo engagement at the Ogden I theater today is one of those different j photoplays, -with a 'story filled with I deep human Interest The theme is inot extraordinary but a story dealing I with the life of two brothers, twins, jand as near alike as two peas. We (have such brothers in Ogden. You Will be talking with one thinking ho fa the other one and then there's some ! complication and explaining. This sit j nation is brought out with a fine Uirill jing story about tho two brothers, one a wild harum-scarum and the other a .minister of the gospel. The picture I runs Friday and Saturday. Beginning Sunday night will bo seen j Harold Lloyd in his latest and greatest I two reel comedy, "An Eastern Wesl erner," together with Lew Cody jn !"The Beloved Cheater." oo TWO REBEL LEADERS ALLIED WITH NEW REGIME MEXICO CITY, June 9. Francisco Villa and Felix Diaz are virtually th; 1 only .notable exceptions to the list of j former rebel leaders, who have es Ipouscd the latest liberal revolutionary cause. Guillermo Melxueiro, the Oaxoca leader, was in possession of tho capital ' for a time after Presdient Carranza land his followers evacuated the capi I tal in accord will: tho new movement. I Manuel Peaer., tho oil district chief, 'entered Tampico, was feasted and I toasted and interviewed to the effect J that he was not a perpetual rovolution j ist and saw Jn tho liberal revolution i ary movement a united country. He said the Cedillo brothers and otherfor hner rebels in the Tampico district were with him. Hlginio Aguilar. Pedro Gabay and 'others between Mexico City and Vera J Cruz, helped impede the advance of the j Carranza trains but while they are supposed to bo under the leadership of Felix Diaz, his name has not been men Itioned in connection with the opera tions. The successors of Emiliano Za I pafa in Morelos, Genevevo de la O and j Valentin Reyes came into the capital with' General Obregon It is stated that, on the Isthmus ' south of Vera Cruz, trains are operating without guards for tho first time in years. IA FRIEND RECOMMENDED THEM A person often does moro good than he realizes when he tells a suffering friend how to get well. J. N. Tohill, ! clerk Lottlo hotel. Evansville, Ind., I writes: "For weeks I suffered con- stantly with pains In the muscles of , my thigh. 1 was treated by the doctor i for rheumatism but found no relief. J Upon recommendation of a friend, I 'tried Foley Kidney Pills and began to jget relief almost Immediately" Good for backache, rheumatic pains, stiff I joints. A. R. Mclntyre Drug Co. Ad j vertlsement. " any longer, you will pad: your grip, take tho train and travel back to tho old campus, where you will "renew your youth liko the eagle's," roam the familiar loved place- nd cnjpy again tho od-tlmo comradeships. They will rest you In boy and spirit, these reunions, and will send you out Into the world with re-consecrated heart, that will keep you going until time for tho next reunion. So, llttlo high school girls, from the day you enter college, you must be gin to store up In your mind and in your stunt book a myriad of guld en recollections. If you do, college days for you will go on and on to the very end of your life! ' WOMEN RULING TEXAS TOWN OUTLINE PROGRAM JEWETT, Texas,' June 9. -Women who now holQ tho reins of government in Jewett have mapped out an encr-' getic program for their administration. They came into power at the spring election. Mrs. Hattie Adkisson is mayor and sho has five sisteraldermen The only man remaining in office is the town marshal. He used to bo sup ported by fees but the new regime j put him on a salary. ' The women have already started a j clean-up campaign. They aro consid ering street improvements and the col lection of back tarcps or new taxes If1 necessary, to pay for them. Revision of the traffic laws and enforcement of tho stock law arc also projected. Tho women came into office by slight majorities, twenty votes in sov eral instances being sufficient to over turn tradition. SS. mars ihc perfect llSkHr J 0PPcarflncc f l,c( com y - plcxion. Permanent U Jj and temporary skin Vk " troubles arc effectively : , Jjy concealed. Reduces un- j WfcNj- natural color and corrects ' &f greasy skins. Highly antiseptic, j r used with beneficial results as a curative agent for 70 years. k I j . TOOTS AND CASPER Casper's Too Liberal for His Own Good. Ey J. E. Murphy " Nothing Helped Me Until I' L Took Lydia E. Pinkham's , Vegetable Compound. Wyandotte, Mich. -"Fop the last j four years I have doctored off and on i lllllllllllllllllllllllllirifil wituont help- I Jl I 1 ulljliu!!'! 1 have had pains i jlyltSSgwJII every month so bad I JeffiHlu that I would nearly -i 1 -JE2& . EaK double up. Some- I ' 4 5f3r "CS": iSsK times I could not 1 1 isSr vi? YiPS sweeP a room -with- 1t?i AsJi-S outstoppiDgto rest, i lli - 'ViliwMMlf an(i everything! ate. IB.''- "f&yfl upset my stomach., I fWvlQ Three years ago : ; pBWpv'J I lost a child :- CMS-vand suffered so V " i badly that I was out of my head at times. My bowels did- not move for days and I could not eat j without suffering. The doctor could not ' help me and one day I told my husband I that I could not stand the pain any j longer and sent him to the drug-store j to get me a bottle of Lydia E. Fink- i ham's Vegetable Compound and threw the doctor's medicine away. After ' taking three bottles of Vegetable Com pound and using two bottles of Lydia "E. Finkham's Sanative Wash I could do- ; my own housework. If it had not been for your medicine I don't know where I would he today and 1 am never without a bottle of it in the house. You may j , publish this if you like that it may help j j ' some other woman." Mrs. Mary Stendek, 120 Orange St., Wyandotte, I 8 ; Mich. i f, dont : f DESPAIR If you are troubled with pains or i aches; feel tired; have headache, ' indigostion, insomnia; painful pass- j age of urine, you will find relief in ML GOLD MEDAL f The world's otandard romedj for Iddnoy, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles and NAtional Remedy of Holland sinco 1696. ' J Threo guoc, all druggists. Guarantood. I Look for tho noma Cjld V-doI oo OTcyy hoi ( end accept no isait&tioa I Citrus fruits are all native of tropical I' Asia- ' I