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{modern features for all the familyj i BRINGING UP FATSJEB Reglater*} U. & Patant Offtca BY G E0EQ2 M 'M AN US FOR HEWEN't* t>AKE D'ON'T ? TEL L_ VOU TWO HOOR^ to take THAT LETTER ON XO0R DREISER OVER "TO f^R^> KATZ^ HOOt>E ?Y ^OLLX -1 FORGOT ALL ABOOT IT- ^ YOU 40 At> FA^oT At> YOU CAN A^b THAT LETTE1R H At) TlCKETb ; TO THE OPERA IN IT FOR TONIC.V1T J THE^ ARE V*'AIT?NC f"OR THEM, -j i'll beon^ m"y wax ^ minotf. - \r NOT A TAXI TOC)E HAD j I'LL HAVE TO RUN ALL (_ THE WAX - IT "5 NEARLY EIL.HT OCLOCK MA^IE'LL KLL ME IF THEY Mlt>b v r-?~-i the 5HOw ? c? TrM-y?^ XE'b THlb lb THE K/\TZ RESIDENCE* HOLT MACKEREL! I I FER40T THE J LETTER WITH ( THE T1CKET5 5 ? ?92t by Int-l Ffaturc: Senvicr. Inc. JAPS LAUNCH GIANT " WARSHIP, THE KAGA Vo?s?l Included Among Those to Be Scrapped l>nder American Lim itation Plan. Toklo. Nov. IS ? The Kaga. the giant Japanese battleship, with a displace ment of 39.9iK) toas. one of (hose des tined to be scrapped under the Wash- ( lngton proposals, was launched this morning at Kobe, in the preser.ce of 1 30,000 persons. The ceremony was begun by the reading of an address from Admiral Kato by Vice Admiral ? Murakami. Japanese Enthusiasm Seems to Be Waning Toklo. Nov. 17.? (By the Associated Press).?With the fading of enthusiasm over the anticipated relief of armament burdens a spirit of caution has devel oped In Japan with the Inclination to look for a possible advantage to the United State* in Us proposal for a ten year naval holiday and limitation of navies. Expressions favoring a more equal balance of power have become the conspicuous note In public expres sion* concerning the scheme with the probable disturbance of labor conditions as a secondary consideration. The sacrifice of warship* aggregating 450.000 tons by Japan w<-uld be equal to the scrapping of l.5f'\000 tons by the L'nlted States. Japanese analysis de clare, cn the ground that 'n en emer-j gency. the United Stae* could replace! her lost tonnage within a third or even1 a fifth, of the time required by Japan: with her limited facilities The experts believe that a fair ra*e <>f strength can not be reached or a tonnage busts alone, but think the speed of the vessels and their age also should lu> considered. RAISE $100,000 FOR CHARLESTON LIBRARY Charleston. W. Vh.. Nov 1?The sum of II<?".(?<)?> was subscribed by eleven .-net. for a new public library for Char leston at the noonday luncheon of the Rotary club .today. The total was raised following an announcement by Colonel A K. Humphreys, an o'! magnate, for merly of Charleston, but now of Den ver. Colorado, that Ate would g!v? half of the money needed up to $100,100. Colonel Humphreys, however, called for other subscriptions, and the following ten men responded .giving $5,000 each: FYanK '"ox. U. <1 Hubbard. A. >1. Scott. John Ijilng. Arthur Koontr. A. S. Thom as. John Everett Woodrull. Isaac lce wensteLn and John T., Dickinson. Col onel Humphreys then said no would hold h1 subscription to $50,000. mm By SAM LOYD 4 *!nnt?? to Aa?w?r Thjg ? +* i m Thin fm?hm*n, who does odd Jobs to help him through college. Is at the pr*s?nt r????ft\?;tit posing ?for h rebus 0U7z!.) which represents the name of a noted waterway Iti the Vocth American Arctic region. >^n you guess It? Answer to Tssterdny's Pa as Is 5 mu^lplietl by 2 c.|u.iis 10 20 divided bv 2 eiuais 10 12 minus 2 equals 10 S plus 2 equals 10 45 THE CHEERFUL CUfflJB How C*lT\.I .tVfcP tk*.r\k tke moon For idl ker beauty SWttt ?fcjn.d cic-^-T ? I look 7>X ke,r wltk so mucK love, X wor\de?r if TX 5ke. knouj I L J I'm Wt. StifL RTC~: ft'v) / * j The New Generation j By Jane Phelps v ! J MRS. WALTERS URGES MARGARET TO DRESS BECOMINGLY . Chapter 12 , While it amu*cd her. Margaret also J felt a bit worried because ot Joan's con- 1 less Ion. ?i?he laughed when she thought J of the name .she had applied to the j stately Mrs. Thompson, then grew more j serious when she recalled Joan's naive j marner of deciding whether she liked i Ted or Malcolm the best. Hut she could I only watch and a wait developments. J Joan was always popular. Her freedom I of speech and manner, her breeainess. her familiarity with outdoor sports made her a much sought, companion of the young people; both boys and girls. Margaret knew she had made no idle boast when she said she was bound to be popular in college. li&t the idea of an engagement ring | having a "moral effect"! the serious I way Joan had spoken was really too j ridiculous. And yet In a way she had j been right. She had meant that owing I fealty to sonto one person might keep i her from being too friendly with others. I Margaret knew the working of her | daughter's mind so well that she couid : now almost reason from Joan's stand- i point?forgetting her own Ideas on any subject they discussed. Ted. being a house guest, was down to breakfast. Margaret repressed a smile as she saw his sulky face. Hut Joan seemed not to notice and chatted away as brightly as usual, making plans for the day: tennis, boating, and a little impromptu dance at tllorla Freeman's would All the time pleasuraMy. They were sitting on the porch when Malcolm came strolling in. lie too wore a look entirely at variance with his usual good-nattired face. "I thought you'd never come. Mai- J colm." Joan said reprovingly. "Ted and | I have been waiting half an hour for I you. I Just telephoned Hortense to meet j us on the tennis court." i "I'm sorry if I have kept you walt ; Ing." Malcolm replied, but Margaret thought he looked rather pleased than ' otherwise. They started off Immediately, Joan hanging on an arm of each, all three talking at once. "What a fasoinatlnc little creature that daughter of yours is." Mrs. Wal ters remarked to Margaret. "Joan Ik a dear!" . "The way you allow her to decide things for herself would sped! anyone but a girl of strong principles. Hut she has si> much ruiwi sense Margaret smiled. Uut wondered what Ted's mother would say hud she heard" the naive contession of the early morn- i lag- Malcolm "too bashful, too afraid | of offending." Tod "too rough, too aax- I ious." and neither pleasing her royal highness. "Yes, she Is to be trusted. At least I have always found It to be so." "May I say something to you. Mar- I gftret"" ltoth women how called each j other by their gi\en names, yet hud been singularly averse to undue familiarity us are all women, perhaps men. also, who live much alone. "Of course you may. Janet. What Is it?" Margaret felt she was showing a tinge of anxiety In her voice. , Was It something about Joan?and Ted. per haps? "It is about the way you dress. You are younger thin t am. yet 1 am sure people would take you to he live or six years older, maybe more. When you do dress as you should you are absolutely lovely, and look inuro like Joan's sister than her mother." "Perhaps that Is why I mr sober things." Margaret smiled, yet she j blushed also. She recalled that Craig I Forrester had told her she "was love- I ly"?when she had been really dressed "Yon mean that you like to look old"* "No, net quite that! But It seems 1 rather silly for the mother of a grown i up girl to dress young, doesn't It?" "Now you are hitting me! Why silly for a girl's mother more than a boy's? Ted Is older than Joan, nearly a year | But 1 do not Intend to look old enough to bo his mother If I can htlp it. proud as I am of him. Then Joan would be ' so proud of you If you made the most of yourself. Children are wonderfully ' Impressionable to Mattery when Applied to their parents by their playmates." I "And Just as sensitive, If derogatory! remarks are made," Margaret slowly re- ! turned, thinking of Joan's objections to her wearing youthful clothes: to her ac quaintance with Craig Forrester, be cause of what she feared the children ml.gh t say. "Yes, but promise me you'll dress a little younger. I hate to see you always | In dull colors, Rnd plain materials." "I promise. If it will pleSse you." Mar- j garet replied. (To he continued) jsram ?cTj* ct ?gr^v?WLj^fa-trff | if 7TTT il jl1L 'TP il ? 1; : filil Mmi g^ By vJoKn D. Hufcer: A-M.MT)^^yj Good cooking- and good food are preventives of divorce.??'Wiley. BUTTERMILK ! Fermented milk Is a product 1 19 per t manent than cheese but n.ore pei anent i than fresh milk. The fermentatio. irod i nets are not unwholesome or unpleasant ! (In fact many people like them very i much, yet they serve as preventatives of undesirable types of decomposition. 1 The fermentation product most used Is ! lactic acid although In certain types, ; alcoholic fermentation may also he I prominent. Fermented milks have long heen a common article of diet in Russia, j I Turkey and Rulg&rla under such names i of Kumyss.' kefir, yoghurt and the like;) and I believe Abraham entertained j strangers in his tent with clabbered j mUk. a fermentation product: "and n was good." Ruttermllk Is such a milk and. until ! recent years, the demand for fermented j milk was sufficiently met by a sale of a j part of this by-product of butter rnak lng. As the manufacturing of butter ? and the handling or market milk have grown to bt separate industries, this de mand has been met by dealers who fer ment the skim milk which remains a* a l>y-product of the cr-am trade. The products made by fermenting whole! milk are of much greater food value be-| causo of the higher fat content. It Is not simply because of their nutritional value that such milk prod ucts are desirable, but rIso because the finely coagulated casin In them is more easily divested than are the curds form ed In the stomach by ordinary milk; and because of the possible medicinal or pre ventative value of the lactic add bac teria which buttermilk and the other preparations above mentioned contain. The fermentation products tlnctv add. alcohol, carbonic acid) may lutvo a stim ulant or tonic action on the digestive tract, but mostly th? ossein In them *s'/" furnished In a precipitous and finely j j divided condition. Therefore In certain I disorders of the stoniRch these ferment- | ed milks Are found most beneficial. And ' In many cases the claims of Metchklnoff! that they are h possible means of pre- | venting or controlling excessive lntestl- j mil putrlflcation. have been made good. ! In buttermilk or In ordinary milk,which | A has been allowed to sour freely, about 1 J per cent of lactic acid Is usually de veloped; but certain selected lactic a'dd germs, capeclnlly (be Bacterium Rul garlcus. may carry the fermentation 10 the point that the milk may carry 2 per cent or even more, of lactic acid. QUESTIONS AND AKHWTr.S A PENALTY OF CIVILISATION. Will you please tell me bow to cure mv baby? She suffers this, that and ! so on. I feed her on the bottle. Answer?Possibly vmi yourself have! some ailment which would prevent your giving your baby the breast You do not indicate any such thing In your letter Consequently your poor Infant Is sick anil like to die. and you yourself nrej troubled much beyond what you would have to be. had you wielded to nature's | demands and given your poor baby Its i natural nourishment Information for- j warded. All Inquiries addressed to J>r. Hither] In care of the "Health Talks" depart-J inents will he answeed In tlmsc columns In their turn. This requires consider- > able time, however, owing t" tin- great! number received. So If a personal or i quicker reply Is desired, a stamped ami ' self-addressed envelope must In* enclosed ? . with the question. The Editor. |CALL EXECUTIVES |i | OF MINE WORKERS; V I Pittsburg. Kansas. Nov. IS.?The ln-i i ternatlonnl executive hoard of the 1'nit- ' led Mine Workers of America will he k j convened Immediately to take action on j the Kansas situation. President ,l>?hn h, .I.ewls announced In a message tocefved . J today by Van A Itlitncr, representative 1 j of the Internationa! in the Kansas *' I field. ( v ?\ Intelligencer's Daily Pattern 1 SMART PRESS IN ONE PIECE QTYLE FOR THE "LITTLE TOT" Pattern 3TR9 is hero portrayed. It Is nt in 4 Sizes: 1. 4. and ? years. A year size requires 21* yards of 40 tell material. This style has pocket section tinder he "apron" front The sleeve rn!iiy tie nlshed In wrist or elbow length. ? 11?i c am, clinnthrey. calico, linen, chintz, retonnet l.awn and gingham. linen ml pongee may he combined. A pattern of this Illustration mailed r> :m> address re ?*!J?t of 12c ill sli er or stamps. Write nam" nn.1 sadress plainly. Send 2 cents to Intelligencer office. Wheeli ng. \V. Va. Ir Is prohnble that not one time in a undred <ii ! any man ever make a few Mrs dollars that some extra demand rasn't waiting to take tt away from him E . THINGS THAT NEVER HAPPEN By GENE BYRNES , 1 f NO pop! I D OUT WAMT J < -fD 60T0 TfiE. < MOVIES BECAUSE ) THE PICTORE-S / WI^^LE AbiD y . HOrrr MY V "" fl38. IrriTiutAnowAj. CARTOON Cd K r. SIDE TALKS ! by Ruth Cameron ^ 1 . ?????????i?* THE INTERLOCUTOR . "Well. I whs in Olnrier Park once and I Haw something t' e I never saw be fore or since?" sa.tl the man. There was a moment of silence while 10 waited for someone to ask "What?" Hie wife turned toward him with a gently expectant smile and said: "What 1 was that?" He had looked a bit alarmed at the pause, as if he feared no one would give j hint bis chance, but having received It j he launched forth with one of those oft- j told tales elderly people do so enjoy j telling. She Mart Have Heard It 50 Timer. And as I listened and watched his ! wife's gently attentive look, and knew j for a surety that in their nearly 50 | years of life together she must have heard, that story perhnps 50 times (I [ am reckoning that he told it once a year i in her presence, rather moderate, don't j \ou think?) I understood one of the reason* why she had always been the boloved woman in her family. I found myself thinking?she always rallies to his suppoft like that and asks the necessary question to give hiin his opening, Just the way the interlocutor does in the minstrel. She is a sort of interlocutor to his position in the spot light. fie doosn't realise it, but how he would miss It If he didn't have It! Bofors They "Were Married. Of course most women do it before ! they are married. It Is one of the most j common baits. A woman Who did BOtj know when a man wanted to be given, a chance to talk and didn't grant that wish, when she wished to please him. would hardly be a woman. But the wortien who keep on doing lt after they are married are not so u numerous. And yet It la not hard to do?not a high price to pay for affection, la It? A Hold That*? Hard to Pry ibooae. Of course I do not mean to say that a woman could hold affection In that way alone. It Is only one of the man? small ways a woman can make sure of the affection that means so much In most women's lives. Any woman who will play the part of Interlocutor In her husband's life In that tactful, gracious, nerer-seemlng to-weary way will have a hold on hira which youth or beauty will find hard to pry loose. M Nomination of Dresel " Confirmed By Senate Washington, Nov. 18.?The nomln$Ss. tion of iKlils L. Dresef to be Am?r!f charge d'affaires at Berlin was cov 00 firmed today by the Senate-. LITTLE TALKS ON THRIFT by S. w. S FRAUS, President American Society for Thrift With the increased attention now being given to matters of . thrift education, it is noted with pleasure that progress is bring made in the establishment and development of school savings banks. The inaugura tion of hanks to he conducted in con junction with the school work is a movement that has had insufficient en couragement i n America, and it is to he regretted that they have not be | come more general. They afford a I splendid means of j i m p 1 a n t i n g the I seeds of thrift practice in the hearts ot our school children. They teach the value of saving pennies and j nickels and dimes and make plain in a very practical way the im ? portance of little things. The child that learns the sav | ings habit in school has won one of the great battles of life. : It should he borne in mind, ' however, that the encouragement of school savings bank deposits should he accompanied with ample instructions on the proper application of the thrift prin ciple to tine a ft airs of life. Vhie consideration should be given to the fact that the mere saving of money, does not constitute the en tirety of thrift habits. It is not enough merely to see to it that the child saves his money for the unqualified encouragement of such practices may lead to false ana narrow cum.ca tions of thrift and develop habits of avarice and selfish ness that will prove a stumbling block in later years. Above all things else the child should be im pressed with the fact that thrift means the saving of money for a worthy, useful and definite purpose. ? .1 ?t? _e i ne iunoamenrai vaiuc ui uk= school savings bank lies in the fact that it offers opportunity for arousing the interest of the child, in thrift instruction. It ii the first step. Parents and those in positions of authority in our schools and various educational institutions j can contribute substantially to the future glory of America by Jfl giving every encouragement to ? the school savings bank. H It is one of our most valued V and necessary public institutions. IT'S A GBEAT LITE IF YOU DON'T WEAKEN 1*11 by 0*org? ldatthew Juumm.-Trad. ttark lUglaUra* B. ?. F?Uat OITloa) By JACK RABBCT - ' \A4HAT'S X THE MACTTE5 \ Vv|\TH lOO J t 0 V"r ftrj MOTH\KIL>\ JVJSI THE BLUES1 I siO&OD^ LOME 5 j V\E P>NID WW J \ COl-0 J rr you kno\m \ "that 6 mot true'\ YOu? MOTHER ] ? ' mubt UOvJE YOU I and \mhy don't / s You try 5itt\n? j \om your hfsslds j . \TS A ?geM" ^ LIFE if |_ DONT WEAKEN y