0PKfll
I FRIDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 15, 192G. THE OGDEN 5 1 ANDAKD-EXAM1INLK 5
I Her Daughter and His Son
A Great Married Life Story by
1 1DAH McGLONE GIBSON
I my Mi n iii R 8 STOR ii
'1 swear lo you, Margaret,' said
Koberl, Unit 1 was not mvs.if from
the tinir i met told Beaton. During
Ihe week that she was playing our
college town. 1 was With lier con-ntiy-
I cut nil my recitations, and
the only time thnt we wire parted
n.is while she was on the Stags At
Lha i'nd of the week, wi- were quietly
Diarrltd ami I left my Alma Muter for
ever. 'I followed the show final!) Hav
ing a small part. 1 did not wrlto home
tu my father and mother. I u orat1' I
knew I had broken their hearia For
a few months I was deliriously happv.
..ni t In-ii w ell. then It was the usuul
thing;. Wt 1-oth grew lireft I found
out that she thought she was r.iar
ryng Wealth when she married me,
and she was much disgruntled when
she found that I could not give her
things she wanted. Indeed, my .-.alary
small i than hers. Two Or three
ki times I tired to hreak away and earn
1 my living at iouii thing elae, imt such
was the Insatiable vanity Of LiOla thnt
even after she hail ceased ti cure for
ma in the least, aha insisted thai i
should follow at her heels as a dog
on leush!
" ve arrived In a largo western
iit lo the early springtime, aofne
months alter we were married. After
the first night's performance. Lola
told me she was going out with an
other party. 1 did not have Intereal
enough to ask bar who was in the
group, hut thankful for a little lime
to myself. I went home to our hotel.
The next day. Lola appeared In a gor-1
geous new lui ..lit, that site told me
she hari succeeded iii getting verj
cheaply because It was the end of the
season. I was still unsuspecting, ami
still glad to bc left alone- Night after
night, the same thine happened again, j
until at laat J awakened to the fact
that one of the richest and most dis
solute in-n of the town, had bcisome
quite us mad omt herns I had been.
" 'She calmly asked me what I was
going lo do about It.'
" And l dully answered Nothing.1
" The next morning thej both wars
gone, but such was my untoward
faith, that as I was about to serve
papers for divorce on her, 1 V(ug offi
cially toll" thnt sb- had gone insane
pjk i This, of course, put an end to any
thing in the ahape of a divorce, ic-
ause, as you know, according to out
laws, a man cannot divorce an In! tnc
wife.'
" "I had her put in a privi",. sani
tarium but a few months afterwards
She escaped and we found her badly
mutilated body near a railroad track,
her face was unrecognizable.' '
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Don't Risk Materials in Poor
I Dyes that Fade or Run
H I l'-rl - knK Of "Puimnnii In f" ron
B t ,i direction! so simpla that kit) woman
H can diamond-dye a new, rich, fadeletn col
I .r into worn, hahhy rirmcnti, SlfSpSlieS.
H SOVSriOSSV vorythtng. whether wool. bjk.
H linen, cotton or nilxvd goods.
H Un "Diamond P" no otb.r Wind
! ii.rn perfect results ars guaranteed evert
I if voo have nrx.i dyed before. Dnusfiet
has color card, showing 1 rich ivrtors
B advertisement.
I "You see little Ann" suld my moth
er. "1 am telling you all this Just as
your father told it to me, for I don't
want you lo blame him. U want '"
to uml-T-ta ml lha! It was iill i
Innocent of all that happened as I was.
"A very short time afterwards your
! father ami I were married, and in les
than two months, his former wife
turned up. She sued your father for
'bigamy unci there was a terrible scan
Ida). ( course, your father and 1
separated Immediately, i moved back
from the llg hous- into th's. little COf
itage. iinti eight months sifter, yu were
born. The family of your father's wife
tried to make It appear that he had
known all the time Thai Ills Insane wife
was alive and that I also had been
aware of that fact, but, Ann. my child,
I am sure that you know your moth
Yr well enough know that when she
married vour father, she thought she
had a perfect right so to do. Anil when
you came I would not even let you
bear the; name io which vou had no
right.''
"Have you never seen my father
since "
"Never. Ann deal He went away
Into the wilds of Africa, and although
he has been heard of from time to time
I have never heard from him directly
in. I I do not know that he knows that
yOU ware born
"The only thing that I do know IsJ
that through his lawyers he left a
small income for me. with a heart
breaking letter. In which he asked me
to forgive him and to let him know
that i '.ad forgive i him bj accepting
this monej "
she. bowed her bead. "Yet, dear,
I did accept the mon f. I knew that
you were coming and that 1 would bo
unable lo teach school much longer.
I knew that Kob-rt t'arletnn loved me
tr.it- and honestly and looked on me
as his wife In the sight of tiod. I knew
that partially Insane woman, who had
been made lnsar.e by her own sinful
acts, should have no right to make us
unhappy as she had done, and so I
continued to Ihc here. .viin. among
these people who had known nie al
ways and who had known my mother
and your father before me. thinking
that sometime, some way. I didn't Just
know how. it might coma out right
again." t
"But r wouldn't have stayed here
with ihein," i said vindictively. "They
hav e never treated you woll, and I tint's
the rcttson so many of the girls have
been so mean tu me. jet's go away,
let's go away all by ourselves!
All through the night, my mo.thCJC
atni I talked end when the ptorningj
sun tame faintly through the window
I knew that 1 would never be a child
I again.
II BEDTIME STORIES
BY HOWARD R. GARIS
II .
t ( LE VTIGGIill VSH THE BOX
rORTt ls
Once upon a time. i- Uncle u iggiiy j
I. ungears, the bunny rabbit gentleman, I
was hopping along through the woods 1
with Nurse Jan. Fuzzy uz ttiev'
heard a Bail voice calling.
Help' Help: Help! Oh, what I
trouble I'm In!" j
"Ha! Trouble" exclaimed Unfeh
Wlggily. as soon as Jie heard this. "I
I gues. its time for me to help" he ad-PT-
fled. "J haven't had iin- pleasure of
gMtlnt; any one out of trouble this I
Week"
V.. i had better be careful," warned
Nurse Jane. "That may be the WOO
Wolf trying lo get you Into i trip,
for having fooled him with your Itchy
red flannels.'
"I didn't fool him h fooltd him
self!" laughed Uncle wigiiy. - But l
think this Is not the Wolf calling.!
Murae Jane," the bunny gentleman j
went on "It sounds more like John
nie or Blllle Hushytail .r ptihaps
Jltiitnl.' Wlbblewobbl. the duck. I'll
take u look."
Again came the cr
"Help! Heii.' Help! '
"It's over under this log." said Un
cle Wlggily. turning tv- one side of the
path Nurse Jam followed and the)
a a tad slKht.
Caught under a Iok, which had mil
. .1 down on top of him, holding him
on his back so he could not I urn over,
was , bps tortoise. He was about as
largi as the bath room sportge but h
hell was verv hard and was colored
yellow and black.
' Fleas help me!" cried the box tor
toise. He was something like a mud
turtle except that he could sbnt him
self all the way up In his shell, hiding
his head, legs and tall so that un
locked as though Bhut up In box made
of shell. That's why he M called I
1 box tortoise.
"How did you got that way?" asked,
Wlglly.
1 was looking fur a wnrm hole, into
which to crawl to spend the Winter." I
answered the box torlots. . and I,
DUgglpd under this log. Then It U rn-
,d over flopped m i m: back (If
vou will kindly exi use me for s-aylng
to) and held me here. I can't C ' up
gga . nlemun and vvtlh the help of Nur-.
gS Jane he bfted the loR "ft the bO tOT-
gS tolse. Then the creator., thrusting his ,
gsH long anakallke neck out of his shell ;
LH and 'by pushing with his nose against J
,n,. cround, turned himself over he
.mid walk along in proper fashion,
,11, one ln II on hi- ba. 1, and an. ah r
hell his stomach and a hinged
Bball, likS a door. In front that he
j u ,hut when hs drew In his
h'K-Thank vou for helping me Uncle
LB W tartly" said the box tortoise, open-
ng his sharp bill with which he could
! I
CUt and chew whatever he vvl'h-d to j
l'r.i do not mention il," spoke l'n- j
clo Wlggily with a low and liolJte bo v.-I
of his tall silk ha:. It was i pleasure'
to help j ou."
"Indeed il v;n,' agreed Nnrs'- Jane
"Ami 1 hope you find a w aini hole In
which to spend the Winter If you
do nol. you m iv sb-cp undi-i our hid-I
low stump bOSfgalOW We have plentv '
of room "
"Thank you." sjnl the tortoise, ami
he was about to . iwl on when, ail
of a gqdden he g.vv a hiss like a
snake, which many tortoise or turtle I
can do and th a Uncle Wftgglly and
Nur-. Jam look. .a helnnd th m
There stood the funny old Fulxj
Fox. with a pmllc on his face, show nig
his sharo teeth.
"Oh this is a lucky day for irgfl-" !
ripd the fox. I hoped I might cab h
rabbit." and he looked sharply nt '
Uncle Wlggily. "Bui ! did not know .
I was going to h ive a muskre lady. '
too." and he smiled nt Kurae Jane
"bun't be too sure' Vou haven't
me yet"' said Ml-s Fuzzy Wuzzy,
"ih but I'M soon hav.- you! growl,
ed the Fuzzy Fox. and Uncle Wlggily
booking toward (he ground, saw that
the box tortoise had drawn his he. id
legs and tall within his shell, abutting
himself up until he looked josl like I
j black and v. Mow stone
I "I'll soon have you!" growled th'
Fusay Fox "Pi ret I'll take Uncle wig-,
I glly . and thru I'll take Nurs'e Jane."
"What will you do if we run awa) "'
j asked the muskrat lady
"Oh. ho! I'd like to see you run '
I away!" howled the Fnzzv Fox "If you
I try It I I'll throw a Minn at vou ami
. make you stand still." he wnt on. '
! "Yes and here's a stone all read for,
j me to throw at von'" he said reaching
j down.
uui . riii u i inn' ii iKin . a
he saw what Ihe bad fox M la gOlrig to
pick up. ' That Isn't a s'one. i
box "
Hiish'" whiscered Kura Jane.
Hut the fox. never h. edlng. rem hed
hUl pan closer to What he thought was
a bteck and yellow- stone on the path
In the woods. The next moment th
bad Fuzzy Fnx began dam Ihg am and
on his hind legs, holding one fore paw
up In the air and howling:
"Take it off! Vakc th's e.i,n, off!
There must be a crack in i'. and IF
pinching gie terrible! Take this stone
off my paw!"
"I'm not a stone'" answered the b e.
tortoise, sort of speaking through hi
nose. "That's the time yon fooled
yourself! I'm not a stone. I'm a tor
tin-. ,iid I have ntppe.1 vonr psw In
my Sharp beak Mr. Fuzzy Wnzzy. I'll
hold on and bite yon until you prom
ise to led Nurse Jane and Fncle Wig-gllx-
alone."
"Oh. I promise! I promise! I won't
hurt Fncle Wiggily or Miss Fuzxy
Wuazy at all!" howled the fox The
the box tortoise opened his beak and
dropped to the ground. The fox. hold
ing his paw In hU mouth ran away
and UVlCle Wlggily and Nurse Jane
thanked the box tortoise very much
for saving t hem
"Prog, do not mention -It." said thr
j black and yellow chap. "It was no
; more than you did for me."
Then, looking Just like a walking
i atone, the box tortoise crawled slowly
' off through the woods. And if the cr
i pet beater doesn't hammer on tfie bot
j torn of the dish pun and make the
I paacaks turner slide out of the Sipk
I'll tell vou next about Fncle W iggllv
and the hroomsllck t
... i
LITTLE BENNY'S
Note Book
y UKK PAPS
el i ,
WAHK HAS SI M M K II K1.KW T
The day was fair but windy.
And the leaves blew to and fro.
I For the brers kepp on chasing them
and they had no place to go
A lot of herds sat np a tree.
Wishing their feaihera fit closer.
Bewitching Simplicity
In Wild Rose Frock
4 1
BY CORA MOOPE.
New York's Fash on Authority.
NEW YORK. There hive been
petal gowns and petal gowns, but
none of the m. even among the Paris
creations, has been quite BO attrac
live as this wild rose Hock that
M tilde Hattaford wears at Ihe Hudson
Theater.
And it Is so simple. All of laifeia
save for some lohls of creamy tulle
inside the' low-cut square neck Any
cJeVer home dressmaker can copy i.
succesplulh
Fii-st, i here is a straight, narrow
under.-kill of the taffela or of taffeta
And one aed. ' Aint thla wind grate'.'"
O!"
And another unared. "No Sir!"
'Where haa the sutnmrr flew to"
Sad one little herd to another
Vy does It worry you 2"
Set the 2 little one's brother.
I "For it will come back ugen next yrer
The same as Its did all along.
So let all fly Southward out of hecr
i tCeeplpg ln "tep with a song."
So lhr all rose up In the empty all .
And started South with a cheer
Kor Its allWaya summer xiimware
SO mailer wat it la here.
(attached to a sham top, then a tunic
cut in scallops that are finished with
B narrow bias banding. The alterna
ting ones are decorated with a large
!wild rose fashioned out of the taT
feta, their edges embroidered with
metal thread.
A kiniono-cul tjodice. just a little
'round" affair with short sleeves and
ihe petal-like scallops introduced in
i the neck line, is atlachctl lo a plain,
rather wide gl'dlc that Is outlined
! along eithe r edge with the bias band
Ing.
Two of tho roses are placed at
one Bide Just at the lop of the belt.
Dorothy Dix Talks j
MOTHER JEALOUSY j
By DOROTHY 1 ) iHjiJ
I have recelv !d letter from a man
who. writes:
'when i was a small child m fath
er diei. leaving mj mother with a
helpleisB babe and iio money, liy al
most Incredible labor and sell sacri
fice she brought me up decently, gave
me a good education, and enabled me
to get a fair start in the world 1 have
tried to be a 'good son to her. and
ihii- far. have devoted my life to her
"Hut now I am fortv year-, old, I
want to marry. I want a home of mv
own. 1 want a wife's hive, and com
panionship and the fell of little chil
dren's arms around my neck For five
ears 1 have been engaged lo m'
the aw eel Cat and noblest women In the
world, bul my nio'ln r will not hear of
my marrying. When I speak of i'. sfce
almost goes mad She weeps, and
tells me that 1 will break her heart,
and reminds me of all the .---acrlfices
she has made fOr nie, uu! Implores
nie never to marry while she Is alive.
"i aannol endure the thought of
hurting m mother, yei 1 must choose
between doing that, and wounding the
woman I love and who lOVCa me, for
I cannot ask pr to wait indefinitely
on Ihe whim of a Jealous mother. My
mother ix ohlj sixty-two years old and
in perfect health, ami will live for
man) years, l trust, so if J defer mar
rlage until her death ; put it off for
.ever, tor I "shall myself be then loo
old to think of such a thing.
What shall I do? Has my mother
the rights to euct the sacrifice of my
life i.-j th price of her -are of me
When ' vvas a child T"
No. A thousand times no. Children
owe much to their parents, but not
a thousandth part of the dutj tha.-
parehta owne to their children. None
of us ask to tie born, and when our
parents thniM life upon US, they are
morally bound to do every possible
thing thBy can to make it tolerable
for us. There are plenty of selfi-di
and aeif -Centered mothers like thla one
who are willing to wreck their ehb
flren'a happiness ln order to gratlf.v
their own morbid .loalousv and their
sons and daughters do a wrong and
foolish thlnu- in giving in to them.
A woman who Is not willing for her
son of forty to marry a nice girl Is a
meglCf-manlac. and snoutd be dean
with gently but firmly, as om- who Is
not quite sane, and Incapable of Judg
ing clearly of the nature ,,r hrr acts.
There la something even abnormal in
her affection for her son, that makes
her want to Isolajte Him from th regu
lar life of man. It Is a love tbat is
sirangllng, blighting. suffteatlng and
unhealthy. instead of wholesome
mother love.
Every woman who is Tn her right
: senses knows that filial love cannot
'take the place of romantic love, an. I
! tffut no matter how ccvoied a son
mav he to his mother, or how neces
sary she Is to his happiness the feel
ing he has for her does not prevent
him from j earning to tmd his male.
Also the woman knows, from ner
own experience that the tove one nas
tor one's mother, and the love one
bears one's husband or wife are not
Liitagonislic, heiausc thev are no more
alike than da) and night or fire and
water. They are entirely different
passions. springing from dlfferen:
emotions, and so the Jealousy between
mother and wife, or mother and hus
band Is the most senseless waste of
emotion' in the world.
I To ask which one lo c the better,
one's wife or husband or mother Is as
futile as to Sak Whether one prefers
roast beef or Ice cream. Indeed, in
Bte&d of a wife or husband supersed-
'Ing their mothers in their affection,
most men and women love their moth-
; better after they .tre married than
they did before, because they rcalls
the more
Ai.il ahy woman who has the cur
age to look facts square ln the fa c,
knows that while her child may be the
one person of absorbing interest in
the universe to her. her coippanlon
Bhip Is not enough for ner child. She
can sli entranced for iiours listening
to her son tell every little dl tail of
his dally life, what he nas done at
tho office, whom he saw, what they
did and so on; but when she begins
tU reminisce about her own affairs, ho
i- bored stiff. He carea nothing about
'the sewing society, or the missionary
meeting, or the stale of the rheuma
tism of his mother's old cronies.
Youth calls to youth, and age may
not answer it No mother can possibly
bo ihe comrade to a man that a Wife
can be. because, after all. the mother
and son belong to different generations!
and each generation has Us own wel
polnt and between them a great gulf'
is fixed.
Therefore the mother wbo keeps her
son from inarrvlng Is dooming him to
loneliness. She Is cutting him off from
that COmpahlonshlp of husband and
w-lfe that Is the greatest Joy of life. I
and she docs not make up for it by
feeding him on just the things he likes,
'and keeping his socks darned with a'
icare that no wife would bestow upon;
him.
And (he mother must surely realize i
jthiit in the ordinary course of events'
Jher son will outlive her. Has she no
I pity then for hts desolate days If she
Ihaa kept him from forming any other
I ties?
The man who marries the woman
'he loves, who haa children about his
knee;, and grandchildren to cheer hi.-
o.l age. is nliietv -nine rtmen out or aj
hundred a happier man, a better man,
and a more prosperous man than the
lone who never marries. This Is the
natural destlnv of man, and no one
has s right to Interfere with it.
I Not ev.en a silly and selfish old
'mother.
DR. VANCE'S DAILY ARTICLE j
What is an enthusiast ? He is
something more thau a man with a
hallelujah tvpe of mind. He is not
to be confounded with the individual
! whose dlsfniculshlng characteristics
'are an explosive vocabulary and n
monopoly of the exclamation point in
punctuation .
He Is not no rely the leader of a
mob. the organizer of discontent, the
author of the contributed articles In
the daily paper telling us how the
town sho'.ild be run the patron saint
of anything that Is startling and ori
ginal The n!heiasi is a promoter but
he Is something besides. He has
.vision, bui he Is note visionary. He'
has big ideas, but he does not de
spise details He believes In the fu
ture, but he is not contemptuous of I
jibe patt. He has temperament, but
he also has horse sense. He pos
I esses ginger, bul he does not lack
grit.
Yes. the enthusiast Is all this and
i imafderably more. He is what his ,
name indicates If he is a sure enough
enthusiast and not merely a tinsel
counterfoil wilh a tin horn.
An enthusiast is one whose life is 1
In gear wrli the infinite. Therefore'
difficulties do not discourage him nor 1
ob-ta-- op him lie l- not bothei
ed by poverty, for he Peels thai he is
here not to what hv can get out j
jof life but what he can put inio it.)
He is concerned not about what other
people may do for him. but what he
may be able to do for them.
He dos not worship the payroll.
Vou cannot commercialize a true en 1
thustast. He is willing to suffer for
his idea. II. ia h.r . njov the pcrs.
mion that jrtve publicity to his
work and h"Jp- along his cause.
He "ff barriers, but does more
He sees through barriers. He sees!
over barriers He sees the unseen j
'anej hears the inaudible. Therefore,
I Graceful Carriage p I
"T F the lines of your figure --
A are full, with a tendency VN.
toward weight, you will tind nHattfc
no corset so grace-giving and BSHLr' yJ V
at Hi" sain'- tune m mi'ori- g V
able and .satisfactory as VJ
engoeltZ WL-- i I
The special steelastic webbing BBffl i"! I h
belt over the too prominent wBSSKllllJnl ImMIaA Wl R!
abdomen holds it flat, and BB7f HT cji
the reinforced back and sides WEXLJl
straighten and slenderize the Bf , y
Women who wear Rcno:o Corsets St I JSilB 3
always look much younger than they iBMW 'T jnlH
really arc. This is because of the ex- BbhL ' w&l rl ftroV
HP elusive and patented Rcngo feat- r: - a 1 jcTJJ
fej urcs which make them cxtraordin- BfHll 'J aul jIbI
nnly strung where thegrcattst strain Hf' W r I H i, v3 !Ih
falls over abdomen and hips. I 9 jj i ji' 1
I V. H. Wright cx Sons Co. I f J; y l ,
(JJ IBM immk f
m
Sister Mary's Kitchen
Many housekeepert like to renovate1
their pillows before the cloudy winter
days set "
To do this- al home i? a compara
tively . i -v l.isk, especially if one has
a vacuum cleaner. Use the attach
ment Speciall) made for pillows and
the dust will be drawn from the
feat hers.
in a windy day rut the pillows on
the line anil the feathers will fluff
and freshen In ihe fresh air.
The ticking should be removed and
washed.
Ml i Milt TOMORROW.
lire., v. fast Melons, creamed dried;
beef, linking powder blBCUlte, coffee.
Luncheon Tomatoes stuffed with
oysters. Ktcamcil In own hi cad. spiced
prnpes. tea.
Pinner Veal hlrds. creamed pota-l
t oV lint tfsrerl lihntn m.rknnr unrl nrAuni I
cheese s.1hiI, peach short cake, coffee.
M U Rl II I S.
When serving honey dew melons,
try putting a III 1 1 lemon juice on .nh
piece. ' A lemon Is cut ln QUarti n
lengthwise and placed on th- side' of
each plate of melon. Il gives tone to
the fruit.
TOM V.TO! s - i n lll W I I II
Ol sn. its.
I medium sized tomatoes
8 larjfc oysters
lz cups bread or cracker
crumbs
4 teaspoons butter
.Milk or water to moisten
bait and p p'per.
Wash tomatoes and cut off slice
from stem end. Scoop out seeds. Rub
the pulp through a strainer and dis
card seeds. Add crumbs to tomato
Juice and enough water or milk to
moisten. Season with salt and pepper.
Hut a little of this mixture Into the
tomato shell, add I oysters and cover
with crumb mixture Put a teaspoon
fpl of butter on eacn tomato. Put on
.'.lice cut from top of tomuto and hake
in a moderate oven for thirty minutes
The top slice of tomato may he re
moved and the buttered top of crumbs
browned under the broifer. Serve
once.
spp i i pn pi -
7. pounds crapen
.1 pounds brown sugar
cups .idei vJn-R.u
. tablespoons cinnamon
1 tablespoon eloTes
2 tablespoons allspice.
Wash and pulp grapes Cook pulps,
stirring to present burning until the
seeds begin to settle to the bottom
of-the kettle. Put through a strainer;
and remove .-o ds. Put skins and pulp'
of grapes In presemng ketiW nhh,
vinegar, sugar and spices i"ook slow
ly until thick and Jelly-like.
Homebody has said that one hxs no
"thrills" after 30. But there's many .
a white-haired woman of 70 who will
at least hare a thrilling experience '
when she votes this fall.
osj
The new name of what was onc '
German Kast Africa has been pro-1
viaioiially fixed bj thu British colonial'
office is Tang-inviki territory
uu
A plant near Honolulu no makes!
furl alcohol from pineapple waste. I
be is full of confidence w hen cla j
souls dee-pair.
Nothing great can be done without I
ayjgnaelaan The enthusiasi lead
Ibe wa.v. He may be the victim of
today, but h s the ictor of toraur-J
row.
z
Rippling'
Rhymes
Bj WALT MAijON
1
I s i i B1L1
I watched Old Wllhelm as he
wrought :ind knocked the stately yew
fr. e.s cohl while down his legal dome
of thought th0 uveal of honest effort
rolled "f old thl Wllhelm scenic 1 ..o
crown; vet now he whacks up cords of bbbbsbI
w ood v ou cannot keep a good man
HHs
! watch him mak 1 buokaate nrhhi J
1 (id "Old lull's our one best bet" H
When he was ruler of a realm he earn- H
led no high and rich reward, such as H
he earns while sawing elm and pulling
down six Idts now; when he B
goes to roost at night, he has no H
crimes o'er which to fret; the record
of his day Is white, ami Wllhelm iv
one bet. If we'd do as Wll- H
helm does, and ply our bucksaws In
it thi bati In oui belfries bu i I
I .
plj -he swift ami tireless Jaw until H
Its hinges creak and smoke, when we H
should wield the trenchant saw and
up ricks of helpful oak.
oo ! 5 v P
suit. it02 there has been steadf bLsbB
r.ase of women entering the edu- B
Ion
oo F
In India nnd Burmah th de still laWssaVfl
(Mows natives to he flogged for cT BHJBJ
3-3 School fpys are
Si::,L.A. Mr, Ik r- everywhere ' '-v;4
prefer HICKORY bc-rrrmfjUBm
'V , cause these garters lr.i cH j A
toc-iTa' banished the sagging and y j'
HB trn stocking buur.ih m . They WJ B
HBH arc bu in 11 ICrvORY because h
they know these
jflflHR Five famous HICKORY features
1 -TV emir cfcildrta'i (artcr mtit vHa tbt pa'tcUd rbkr
OMhiM dBfe-Wa ftmlr SoMi Mw-Usci t.cn r.blKj
sad raster. Sam Mnrkift md Ssrab-v
fit: e VV sdjstMi btKkJ
mat pin ossot b A tit hrrtt. I
rHHB BaBi -frmt inBtf lstic tad vcsMsc. Ukfotkh' tprt. tak
HLsTi iHI S-GaOTsu wrti trtrj ptir wua yew rnagliti tiOiftcOa
. jghi -" j ' 1 c: OM3. . bU.
mWfjJ gl Al your Jeoler In fit nxci.
9mW ASTEIN & COMRflNY
I