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WILLIAM WARM, HUNGARIAN EDITOR IN U. S., CALLED INVENTOR OFDUMBA PLOT u ' i fee ". ' '' ' William Warm. William Warm, the foremost Hungarian writer in the United States, Is belived to be the man who furnished the brains for tho ambitious schema to cripple American munitions factories by causing a strike of Hungaran und Austrian workmen. gWMttillUMii It GUmpsesM&rriGd. Life By MRS J7VA. "Well, the outing wasn't so bad1 after all, was it, Nell?" asked Dick, Thov were hjvini? the firit dinner at ' , " some. No, the last was all riirht- TheJout flat-footed, and not have your ..: ,.,- I t: i j. i ..t -i ? mosquitoes were not so bad; it was cooler, and when we were relieved of the camp work I pot a little rest. If I have to work, I want to be where I can have conveni ences to work with." Nell looked around the pretty home with pardonable pride. "I wish we could digest the real meat of this outing," Dick b e r a n apologetically. Nell stared. "I wish you could learn to be the truly picnic sort." "Please explain your wishes a little more fully." Nell's tone was in jured. "Oh, I suppose it's no use to begin, you wouldn't understand." Dick shoved back his chair and began lighting a cigar, while Nell cleared the table and put Hal to bed. "He's so tired I think he'll drop right off to sleep." Nell sat down on the aim of Dick's chair. He slipped his arm around her waist and asked: "Want me to read aloud?" "After a while. First I want to know what you started to say at the table," she replied. "To tell the truth, Nell, we are having too cozy an evening to snoil. and I feel it in my bones that if I opened up this subject, spoiled it would be, so let's read and be happy while the sun shines." "You talk as if I were a very un reasonable being who mvar be man ajrod as adroitly as possible." Dick blew a gusty breath through his closed lips. "I think yoi will find me reason- HUSBAND MAY TAKE DR. DUMBA'S PLACE b4UVl vgfl Baronwa ZwIeUlnek. JWl'JliMlg vJSSpf ABP ' -"xijlSPf war VLV C-, HN'TVTo&k--- s " 7a- 7V3 I A VV. " ..Xx'-K s "-s ' i I x&. sa v&sii -"VjnflaMJfcH- LI.ONAIU) able. Tell me what you had in your mind," persisted Nell. . iN0W yu re UHKinr, jrinie." ju re laiKingv jrirne. nc to his lap. "That's iust ,orcw ner to his lu-lint T wnnt f Via fit-tin folL ilf leeungs nurt and things end in a scene every time I make a sugges tion." Nell listened like a bird, ready to take flight at the least stir. "What I wanted to say is this: It applies more to camp than anywhere else, for more things are likely to go wrong mere, out it is a lesson we both need to learn, and it is not to let miles upset us." He stopped as if to see how she took the opening shot. "For example?" she prompted, looking steadily at him. "Well, take the mosquitoes, the flies, the rain, the heat, the smoke; in fact, any of the trifles that, added together, make camp life. They irri tated you so much that they spoiled your fun; they shut out the sweet woodsy smells, the lights and shadows in the water, the sunsets, everything. Now Olive loves the out-of-doors so much that those an noyances take their proper place; they are not noticed." "It's a pity you hadn't married Olive," snapped Nell, rising from his knee with a flushed face. "Oh, my prophetic soul!" Dick dropped his arms despairingly at hi3 sides. "I suppose the fine calm with which you bore the annoyance of sun burn is to b'e emulated," she con tinued, for Dick did not open his eyes. Dick sat up and shouted: "You hit the bull's eye that time, Puss! Come again." "Is that your way of calling that a catty romaik?" she asked, a faint smile coming to her lips. "I said at the beginning that we both needed this lesson, and my idea was that we could help each other if we set about it in the right spirit, a spit it of helpfulness. Honest criti cism is the hardest thing in tho world to take, but it cuts to heal. Are vou willing to try the scheme, little wife?" ho asked. "Yes, Dick," she answered. QUAIL AND CHICKEN Of th'e eggs of Quail set by tho birds in a wild state, 81 per cent Latch. Of the eggs of the same bird hatched in captivity on private game farms 72 per cent hatch. Of the binis hatched in the wild state 15 per cent attain maturity. Of the eggs hatched in private preserves 64 per cent mature. These figures are taken from one hundred and seven observa tions made in the years 1908, 1909, 1910, 1911, 1912, 1913 and 1914 Theso figures can be amplified by the statement of the observers a part of which is as follows: 'Chickens were originally u wild bird. The habitat of tho chicken arc very limited. It consisted of a s'rip of territory bordering on the Mediterranean sea on the southern border of Europe, the western border of Asia and a part of the northern shore of Africa. The chicken was not domesticated until after the coming of Christ. Then we learn from Clixtus that a certain fowl very shy of mankind was brought to Athens, and after three seagons reared progeny. Since then tho chicken has become the most numerous of all birds. If laws were to bo enacted pro tecting chickens from hunters and butchers and forbidding their owner ship and rearing by private industry tiiero woud not be a chicken in existence in five years. GAYS EYES TELLS TALE8 TO MOST SHREWD OBSERVER8. Health, Temperament and Character Indicated by Mirrors of Soul, Says Physiognomist. Arc your eyes predominantly bluo or gray, or brown or black7 Accotding to some claboiotc stalls tlclal icsuarclics, If they aio blue or gray you aro of an Intellectual rather than nn emotional nature. It brown or black tho emotional in you ccoctls the Intellectual and you need to ho specially on your guard to keep your passions In check. If, again, your eyo Ii not strongly colorful; If It is prominent, with tho pupil small and seldom dilating to any extent, and with tho glance fixed, the modern physiognomist wains you to cultivate genorosity of heart and breadth and tolerance of mliul. For these are tho qualities which thU cyo formation Indicates that you lack. So, -too, there Is a danger signal for you If you find a puffiness below your eyes, with the lim of tho lower lid falling away from tho eye, showing the led, while tho upper lid dioops. These signs usually point to ono of two things, we are told. Either you are wasting your ener gies In Bomo form of dissipation or joub internal organs, paitlcularly jour kidneys, aro not functioning as they should. You yourself know best to which of theso evils dissipation or 111 health the pufflness Is due. Does your glance meet that of oth er peoplo squarely and fearlessly? Or do you have a tendency to shift your eyes and look away when talking with others? In the latter evont, says the physi ognomist, you nir.y he suie something is Wrong with you. You are perhaps suffering from some slight nervous weakness. Or, what Is more likely. you have thoughts in your mind which are not altogether to your cred it The shifting or drooping of your gnzc is then based on a subconscious fear that your eyes will betray what is passing through your mind. Finally, note the pcitlon of your eyes. Mistrust jourself eipeolally if you find your eyps "planting upward from the nose under blows also sl.mt- Ing upward with fullners In the upper lid which overhangs the ce and hides the lim of the ltd, the eyeball drawn upward." This, says the physiognomist. Tosh biokc, and the vrtltor hn vertfW hN observation, "is IV.p c;t rf craft and treachery, indicating the nature of the tiger and the fox, whose eye i' resembles." A person with such an eye cannot too soon begin a rourse ot uiori'l self education to straighten out the kin", lc his natuie. This can always be done. Eve ldl cations do not mcpn that jour natuie 1? fixed and unaltoiable in accordance with the signs shown by tho eyes. On the contrary, the value of such signj is that they specify precisely in what respects reforms r.ro most 'desirable. California's Ostriches. The ostrich farming industry of Southern California represents an Investment of three-quarters of a million dollurs, and the annual ouU put of feathers is worth about ?100,-000. "-"Sfff' rrfav'uyaMttstasaaiaixBatsaaKa t-4 ""- . &!;) w XT. SS' v'ljtrt.. i o. &u A H c! tcLi.V s-ifrxvm" -J jrammiTrH-p-.Tr VEGETARIAN RECIPES HELP REGULAR DIET The housewife sometimes finds it a Toat problem to please everybody in Jie fumily. In a month even those who have money for everything the market affords arc likely to get around to the point where they start ed. These recipes might help out with the regular diet. Cream of Almond Soup Half a pound almond butter, one pint wate, one dozen blanched almonds. Make a cream with one pint water and one fouith pound almond butter, salt to uste und heat thoroughly in double boiler. Cut one dozen blanched al monds into strips and put them into the tureen. Serve at once with toast ed whole wheat wafers. jl'i-otose Roast Half pound pro tCoO, two cups bread crumbs, salt and .sage to season. Mix well with one beaten egg; press into a small bread pan and bake one hour in slow oven. Slip out of pan on platter and sur round with tomato sauce made of two cups water, three cups tomato juice, one-third cup lemon, juice, one bay leaf, boiled down to half. Nuttolcne Nuttoleno can be used instead of chicken for chicken salad and prepared same way. For nuttolene cottage cheese Rub nuttoleno through n wire strainer, add salt and enough lemon juice to give it the slight tartness of cottage cheese. Use plenty of salt and be careful not to get in too much lemon. Mix well and press through a fine strainer again, shape into balls and roll in chopped parsley. Use with s'llnds. Frozen Malted Nuts One cup malted nuts, one cup meltose, one und u quarter pints boiling water, white of three eggs, yolks of two eggb, one and a half teaspoons va nilla and a very small pinch of salt. Boil the malted nuts and water for five minutes und set aside to cool. When cool udd the vanilla. Beat the whites of the eggs until stiff and beat the meltose with an egg beater until light and foaming. Beat (don't stir) the meltose into the whites of the eggs; add to the malted nutu and let freeze. When about half frozen, stir in the yolks of tho eggs, which have been beaten until they are quite thick. v Meltose Ice Cream One pint creum, one pint meltose, three eggs, one teaspoon vanilla. Beat the whites CATCHES METAL CHIPS. Shield Is Adopted ly One of Big Steel Companies. A slmplo but effective shield has been adopted by ono of the leading steel companies for preventing metal chips from flying when chiseling Is being done It consists of a screen made of ducking, ordinarily 21 inches square, and carried In a frame made of a 3 8 Inch round steel bais. The frame Is mounted on a steel block weighing twenty-one pounds, and the whole device Is easily carried from bench to bench nnd placed In any desired position. For floor use the shield Is made larger and is mounted on a heavier base. In some of the shields tho base is made with a lounded bottom bo that it will re sumo an upright position automatical ly in case it be upset. Fopular Me chanics. HAS NEW MICROMETER. Gauge Scale Equipped With Direct Reading Apparatus. A direct leading mlciometer has been Introduced which carries two different gauge scales in decimals of an Inch. These three scales appear concentrically on a circular dial. Tho lnshumcnt is made so that only the use of one hand is requited in operat ing it, which leaves the other free to handle the wotk. A coarae multiple-pitch screw with a one-fourth inch lead enables the in strument to be used quickly, and all measurements up to No. 80 steelwlro gauge may bo made by one revolution. The wholo system of wire gauging la a confusing one because of the variance in tho scales. In England tho imperial standard wire gauge la the one which carries the official sanc tion of the British board of trade, while in America what is known as the B. & S. is extensively used. Pop- Disregard of Truth. If Orientals have one fault more than another It- is a disregard for truth. In the early days of the Eng lish occupation of India, tho English Judges were astounded at the conflict ing Btories told by witnesses, and they soon learned to set them all down as unworthy of credence, in American courts it is also well known that Chi nese are very penurious ot the truth, and that no oath will prevent them from gllng witness. In Egypt it is also very easy to get native witnesses to swear to anything, true or untrue. For Instance: Ahmed, a native of Cairo, had a slave who peeped over a wall into Suleiman's harem, and the ladles considered themselves insulted. Suleiman wanted revenge but he could not bring his wies into court to tes tify, so It was agreed that Suleiman should accuse Ahmed's camel of walk ing on Suleiman's land. A crowd of witnesses came forward and for two days testified about the camel and the land, until the English judge decided in favor of Suleiman. It was not until a week afterward that he discovered to his gieat surprise that Suleiman had no ground and Ahmed no camel. So that shoes can bo made to Iook new as long as po'Mble metal guards have been patented to protect the sf;','ilr"r in their extension soles v - thfy are belrg blnclcned. SB H o-uselvold Hinlu - - a z&zzssxsssssirzSJ to a stiff froth. Boil the meltose un til quite thick. Measure carefully a cup of the boiling meltose and beat stiffly into the whites of tho eggs. Add this and the vanilla to the cream, which has been previously whipped with an egg beater until stiff. Pack into the ice. Beat yolks oi xne egg until quite tnicl; and when the cream is about half frozen add the yolks to it and finish freezing. This will make about a quart. Five eggs win ue suihcient for each qua:-i of cream used. TWO HELPFUL HINTS For Pickle Bottles Cutting round pieces of cardboard, putting a round piece of paraffin paper on the bot tom side, then wedging them in the top of the bottle and pouring paraffin on the top makes a covering just as good or belter than a cork for all large necked bottles. Substitute for Sour Milk When sour milk is scarce try using one tablespoon vinegar to one cup cold water and soda the same as for sour milk. This makes fine griddic cakes or biscuits. THE TABLE Apple Bread Pudding Put some custard in pan, then a layer of sliced apples, then a few raisins, sprinkle with sugar, then add remainder of pudding and dot with apples, raisins and butter, and bake. Serve with any good eaporated milk, using pait water, and the result is fine. Devil's Tood Cake One cup sugar and one-half cup butter (creamed to gether), one-half cup sweet milk, two eggs, one nnd one-half cups flour, one teaspoon soda sifted with flour: Cooked part: One-half cup sugar, tlueo-fourth3 cup baker's chocolate, one-half cup milk, yolk of one egg beaten in well before cooking. Cook until quite thick and let cool, then add one teaspoon vanilla and stir it into white part. . Bake in three layers- and frost with remaining white of egg made into boiled icing (or confectioner's Icing ifvprefcrred). Easy-and Very 3ood Soft Frosting Take two tablespoons powdered sugar and enough evaporated milk to make it as stiff as desired; a pinch of salt and one-fourth teaspoon ex tract (any kind desired). Spread im mediately on either layer oi Joaf cake. 10 Storca MICAHELJ.LEOiKRtf 225-27 Summit mThe Best Suit Values in Toledom Women and Misses New Fall Suits " B SPECIAL 1 SALE Prices $14:?5, p Mori wonli du not make Uipm' ult values : the host In town, lint tho faot that sooios of S5 oiwtoniors. iiftor hopping nil nwr town, ooino buck to piiii'lmso ami toll iw our stylti 3"33 and our pilors onniiof ho oqii.iloil. H Tin so o.tfu good suit values aro not just 55 it "Wind Fall.' but lather n well thought out pin n on tho p.irt of our buying organiza ) tlon In ooiieoiituitliii; our tremendous pur ; ehiislng nbillty. mid planning done bol'oie S tho mhuueo In the woolen umrket. 1110 Hp bountiful now xullt.. mid ouv.v one Is f.vsii Eg fioiu tho medio mid last h. o.irefiilly tnilo"- oil. ,''' 'n tiis'ol'nlly fiislihiwd. iin miy soils rH now selling elsev hori vt double oill p"!"t s "g Serge, Bro.idclath, Gr.bnrdinc and Foplin ' "1 In , in in i li'h blown sl.nile... B new slii'ilos of green Mi'pie navy blues, B bliiek mul other fashionable fall eoloilngs. H Plain tailored, bolted sport elVeots. mlll- tnry stjlc. chin olii collar styles, hrald and 2 fur trim mod stylo--. Sizes 1(1 to 4-1. Guaranteed Perfect Alterations Charge. H NEW SUITS FOR LARGE WOMEN. Sizes 44 to 48 built on fine tailored lines, givitiB the large woman the same lines and styles as seen in the smaller sizes: made of fine quality Poplin romcrtimc collar, special value in mvy blue and black; trimmed MICHAEL J. LEO v Toledo ZS - - a Ami riaynouey B. F.Keith's Theatre The Amusement Centre of Toledo REAL VAUDEVILLE 2:30 TWICE DAILY 8:15 PRICES Matinees, ICc, 26c Evenings SO, 35, 25, 10c All Interurban Cars stop at Theatre leLBECKMANN.&J Optical Jluthorities ojT TOLEDO 319 Adams Street opposite Trinity Church OV PTTEIS RE'HARGEDAND REPAIRED Also, Battery Supplies Miller Storage Battery Go. Manufacturers of Miller Storage Batteries, all purposes 807 Jefferson Aveuue TOLEDO, O. KINDLY MENTION THIS PAPER WHEN WRITING T& OUR ADVERTISERS. Tfaa! Rids Creamy osve the Trademarks icnvn L MUSIC OF EVERY DESCRIPTION ?Him-,HaaiMHimoiSttai'H a Starr Made Pianos ! 5 Starr Made Flayer Pianos ! j a Front Our Factory to Your Home Saves You the Middle-man's ProJifl ! Write for Catalog ami "Factoiy to Home" Prices. Distributing Warerooms : 318 Jefferson Ave. mti 0iKicicitHatitHiiHaHacHa niKHiifiOiKHKHKHTOoHKHTOJrKHKJoac xa St., Toledo, 0. $16:25, $18-95 1 refreshing Free of $19.95 ' j EMPIRE THEATRE SHOWING HIGH-CLASS BURLESQUE A SHOW THAT ENTERTAINS Matinee Every Day TOLEDO HORSES! HORSES AUCTION! Fresh shipment received for ale every Friday at 10:30 A. M. 1 buy only the choicest stock, best driven aiidfnrm chunks. WILL BROADWAY No. 7 So. Superior St. TOLEDO, O. SAFETY FIRST For Your Money IS THE MOTTG OF THE MARKET SAVINGS BANK 49& on Savings TOLEDO, O. Wi en in Toledo stop at THE UNETEP GARAGE CO. - 719-725 Jefferson Avenue New Location Fireproof TOLEDO, OHIO OFFEE Kind. Four Grades Ask Your Grocer Write W Call on H. J, Votteler & ion. Arcade Music Store. 37 Arcade, Cleveland, Ohio M Toletlo, Oh-'o i