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The Heart Breaker
A LOVE STORY OF TODAY
Milly Thinks of Tom and of Harold Hilton, and Has Very
Little Time for Arthur, Her Fiance.
By Virginia Terhune Van De
Water.
CHAPTER XLI.
Copyright 1919, Star Company.
OM CHANDLER was as good
T as his word, Within a fort
night after the United tSates
had declared war he had enlisted.
The morning and evening papers
named Thomas Chandler, the son of
the town's popular physician, as
among the first of the Fairlands
‘young men to offer to fight for the
cause of righteousness.
Mildred read the announcement
with mingled feelings.
It was the noon hour and she had
lunched and returned to Mr. Hil
ton's office in time to look over the
puper before she started to work
again.
The paragraph thrilled her. Tom
seemed suddenly to have acquired a
new Algnity. She wished that he had
#till been her devoted slave when he
took this important step. If so, she
“would have shone by reflected glory.
Anx it was, he and che had parted In
anger. She could not even have the
pleasure of wishing him good luck
or of corresponding with him,
Bho regretted that she had quar
reled with Tom. Snice he was going
fAway 80 soon she might have over
the scene on the train. He
:..:.fll drinking and was not re
‘#ponsible for what he did. Now that
Le¢ was joining the army he would
bave no opportunity to drink, He
‘would return a hero—and he and she
were not on friendly terms! She
M never have the Joyous excite
ment of receiving attention from him.
- Unless she chose to bury the hatch
#fim write to Tom before he left.
3 because she was engaged to Ar
thur, Tom would certainly care little
Vl her. Bhe had been very foolish
1o tell him of her engagement,
* She began to muse on how differ
ently she could have behaved on the
night of Tom's last call. She might
have been _polite to him, accepted his
W for the way he had spoken
over the telephone, and granted him
Ppermission to come again sqon.
It would have been an easy thing
6 explain to him that Bruce was
ling that evening, that she had
fanted him permission to do so be
recelving Tom's message. This
Id only have proved to him that
h A 8 not her sole admirer. It
b.& have committed her to noth
ing. Yes, she wished that she had
> sensible and kept her temper to
i Milly in & Quandary. |
.~ The thought of Arthur was very
tame and unstimulating as she re
flected on what - might have been.
wur was such & Rumdrum, safe
: of man-—<content to settle down
and peg away at his father's busi
ness. Why under the sun couwld he
not enlist too?
The question lingered In her mind
all the afternoon, and her resentment
8t the turn of events was Increased
rathe: than lessened by a bit of in-
Aformation that Mr, Hilton imparted
%0 her just before she left the of
fice.
Making Good Soup
¢ ERMHAPS one of the most ha-
P rass'ng problems of the younyg
housekeeper is that of provid
ing soup for just two or three people,
Of course, there are the commereially
sanned soups but for one reason or
¬her some folks prefer the freshly
made home 200ked sanns,
“When in douht have steak" s an
ancient slogan, yet since =u many
husbands Insist on steak, rogardlsss
of cost, the housewife who knows mn}
@et a serving of soup from the steak
s well, }
Buppose vou purchase a parters
Bouse or Delmeniso stenk. Cus ..Ri
the tough “tall" pieee. Chop th's fine
) place it In a cook pot. Ad 4 ha'fa '
::Iy choprped anton and cover with a
mfl and a half of cold wnter, Add
¢ A teaspoonful of salt. Sopk sluw.
Jy for half an hour. This muy be
WVaried by the additien of two tea
‘-&fnlu of raw rice after the first
n minutes or a' similar quantity
of harley. A tablespoonful of left-,
;anf cooked peas or carrots may e
‘addcd or a lttle chopped velery. The
<overs will suggest the Kkind of
“sour for the day to the (hrifty wom.
an, |
1t you purchese half a Jozen rib
famb chops have the butcher crack
the bene. Trim the chops Put the
‘om- ends and the meat that adheres
into a pot. Add a quart and a half of
©old water and half a cup of eanned
lomatoes or a tablespoon of tomulo
,finchup. A few fine noodles or some
rice may be cooked In thix. |
~ Then there are the meatiess soups.
m cupfuls of cooked peas beans
4 be pushed through a ung strain.
_®r and combined with a Juart of
thickened milk. This may/be sea
#moned with onion juice, salf, pepper,
salt. 'l'hoiddlflonc‘abhol
(f2oom or ham rind i edioyed by
%« B young housrwife T /know buys
Sl ey sid
Invaluable! Tne DPractical Pouliry Pointers--In Sunda i’'s American
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[ R OIRGIAN S @ MIACAZ NGB PAGE
“By the way, Miss Mildred,” he re
marked as she gave him a handful
of letters she had typed, “you met
my nephew, Harold Hilton, did you
not?"
“Oh, yes,” ghe replied *“I met him
several times. You introduced us.”
“SBo 1 did! Well, you will pe In
terested In hearing that we have just
had news of him. He has been
wounded.”
“Oh, how d-eadful!” gshe exclaimed,
Mr, Hilton amiled. “1 doubt if Har
old thinks that, He was wounded,
has been operated on and is In a
hurry to get back at the front, We
are proud of the lad.”
A Nice Thought.
“1 should think you would be,” she
rejoined. There was a note of wist
fulness in her volee. “1 wonder,” hes
itatingly, “if it would be all right and
proper for me to send himn a little note
of sympathy-—just to tell him that |
think he has been very fine?™
“Indeed, it would be all right, and
most kind on your part. her employer
assured her. “I know Harold well
enough to say that it wouid please
him tremendously.”
“I have not his address,” she sald.
She did not Intimate to the uncle
that she and his nephew had ever
carried on a correspondence., |
“Wait, and 1 will give it to you,”
the older inan suggrsted.
She linge ed near his desk while he
wrote out the address. She read It
when he handed it to her, wondering
secretly what “B. E. F." meant. Could
it be something about British engi
neers? But she would not show her
lgnorance by asking. Instead, she
thanked the elderly man and gtarted
on her way home
Arthur was coming to call tonight.
The prospect bored and depressed
her, SBhe would much rather spend
the evenng writing to Harold Hil
ton
For Harold had been wounded! She
shuddered as she thought of his hand
some young body shot down and lying
in the Flanders mud until stretcher
bearcrs, such as she had read of, came
and picked him up and took him to a
hogpital, where the surgeons operated
on him,
What a hero he was! And how
proud his people must be of him!
She wished she had a hrother who
could make a name for himself in
such a way. Yes, and she wished
more strongly still that she were a
man, soo that she might go overseas
and fight. How could any red-blood
ed young person bear to sit quietly
at home and let others fight for him?
That was what Arthur was content
to do. To think that she was en
gaged to & man who had not even
suggested going to the war! J
Why might Arthur not go? His
father could ecarry on the business
alone. |
She decided suddenly that it was
her duty to suggest to her betrothed
that his place was In the army or
navy., He would look awfully well In
either khaki or blue. And how would
she feel in yea s to come, when the
war was over and her man had done
uothing to end it? |
(To Be Continued.) |
a two and one-half pound broiler
chicken for her small family. The
neck, tips of the wings, the feet after
the outer skin has been removed may
all go, together with the giliots, to
ward making a deliclous chivken soup
A slice of veal, such 4 ona wets for
veal cutlet, will also give the thrifty
housewife the basis for a lttie scup.
Cut the meat into pleces suitable for
frying. Carefully remove the bone
Place bone and meat In a pot, Cover
with water and simmer slowly for ten
minutes. Remove meat and bone
Add a tablespoon each of mlacel on
fon, green pepper and alphabetie vers
miceill, A little ehopped parsiey may
be sprinkied over the soup just befory
sorving, f
The Saving Grace.
~ Everything was going swimmingly
‘at the Red Cross bazaur, wh.n Per
cy, pink socks and all, swaggered pat
the sweet young thing's stall, evi
dently with no intention of making &
purchase,
- “Won't you buy a cigarette holder™
said she, detaining him, +
“No, thanks! 1 don't smoke!"”
“Or a penwiper, embroide.ed by
me?”
“1 don't write”
“Then do have this nice box of
chocolates? *
“I doni eat sweeta"” .
Her patience was exhausted, Hold.
ing out a cake of soap. she cried:
“Won't you buy this?”
“I don'te——"
But this time Percy made the pur
chase,
The Editor’s Joke.
A budding author sent a hum »
rnmtg the -S{tor of » dally éf;‘h
\ot it printeq wlthl&n ne
able time or hmh‘ from the editorial
department, he wrote to inquire about
it, "l! :.OM {‘:“ Jo:.:‘ about te:\‘ dl.)('l
ago. ave he nothing respec o
e poiet, gad el Wl et
ave . ‘
ly was as ?-nom!"mu Joke a 4
E;,fiq,t up to the present we have ot
[Zide Brims the Feature of the Spring Hats,
Kcpublished by Spccial Arrangement with Good Houselkeeping, the
Nation’s Great iiome Magazine.
In the center is the turban for first spring
street wear; satin and straw are a new combi- st
nation for turbans. Some of the smart new ey
veilings for the spring—navy blue, brown, s .-,:
black, taupe. . N
. . . * Sagre
Below is the new year version of the tri- “ v
corne, wide at the sides and dropping low over ' o X
the eyes; it is straw b ,
witha ecrown of satin » L 5 4o i
and a novel trim- AR R
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Parents, Be Frank About Your Child
By Dr. W. A. McKeever, |
MONG all the letters which come ‘
A to my desk reporuing Interest
ing problems of child training |
there 8 just one disappointing note.
1t is this: ‘
“Please 40 not mention my name in
oenection with the case.”
But, dear ‘parent, is is precisely
this false feeling of shame and this
wrong disposition to hide your name
and place which makes your case
more difficult for me and more weari
some for you, You have done nothing
disgraceful. 1t {s not a matte: of
shameé that your child has done some
rude thing. It Is the child's nature
to be rude. Ailthough there are a few
parents who pretend that their chil
dren are practically perfect or with
out fault or blemish, they a. e simply
mistaken, .
Do not imagine that people who
Hve in big, fine houses necessarily
have any easier task in managing a
child than those who live in small,
unpretentious homes. The records
show that the rich and the poor are
practically on the same level in re
spect to this matter,
One set of advantages offsets the
other. Likewise the disadvantages.
LITTLE BOBBIE’S PA
By Will'am F. Kirk, |
T was snowing wen Pa caim hoam
l last nite, he look like Santy
Claws, he was whit all over ey
cep his fact, his face was red, |
Well well, yed Ma, here cums my
noabel heero. What is the good word
today ? sald Ma. ‘
Everything i grand & glorious, sed
Pa. We stand on the threshhold of
a grate Day wich ig shining lke tho}
rising Sun in the West, sed Pa. 1
Or llke youre noabel face, sed Ma.
Since wen did the sun wake up in the
West? sed Ma. How times has
changed since the war, sed Ma. 4
Wa face a wonderful futnre, sed
Pa. | made a hundred beans today,
sed Pa. Like falling off of a log, too,
sed Pa. "
That is splendid, sed Ma. [ was
jest planning on sum little frills for
the Holly days, sed Ma. How thotful
of you to maik that hundred jost wen
1 needed it, sed Ma,
1 was thinking maybe you needed
about fifty of it, sexd Pa. But here is
the hundred, sed P’'a, It is my nater
to give fr:.lg & it I 8 my luck te
hove sum y hanay w receive,
sed Pa,
You deer boy, sed Ma, I will take
fifty of it and let you buy me sum
‘u\ln,fwm: the other fifty, | can hard
ly afford to be as gennerus as you,
sed Ma. This is going to be such a
seereen Chrismus thare will be no
muss in Chrismus this year, sed Ma,
1 know, sed Pa, it is reely wunder-
Mbmh\kmtunmg‘x(r’uco is
Rlies v et b saa
l s te @
bad un to his u& A Pa, he & hin
It is certainly a bad thing for a young
boy to know that there is a fo:tune
coming to him as a gift as soon as
he becomes a man. On the other
hand, It is bad for either a boy or
girl to feel that his parents are dis
gracefully poor.
But we parenits can certainly all
afford to be frank in confessing the
faults of our children and our own
shortecomings as guldes and guardians
for their Jives. It is a tremendously
trying, difficult and long-drawn-out
task to mature a good son or daugh
ter. The parent who does not realize
‘this fact is himself lacking in parental
knowledge and development.
Now, the point we espe{iany have
in mind here is that we all need one
another in our efforts to deal with
the manifold training problems. An
axchange of counsel, advice, sugges
tions, questions, and of honest con
fessions, is all “good for the soul.”
Tell your troubles frankly to other
parents and Nsten to them in ex
change., You will thus very probably
obitain m;'tt’ help and relief,. No one
should tr¥ to car 'y his burden alone—
no, especially not his burden of a
Aroublesome child, Tell it out——
“Wanted--Advice as to the man-
deer wife doan speek, she spoeks but
he doant, sed Pa.
How pathetick, sed Ma, It does
reely seem too bad that men cant git
along with the wimmen wich has
trusted thare lifes to them, s
Yes lndgpd, sed Pa, 1 wish I was
married L 0 that woman for a few
days. 1 bet she wud wake up &
know who is bYoss around the place,
sed Pa, X '
. Ineed, sed Ma, so you wud be crule
{to a shrinking woman. That is cer
tingly a elegant Chrimus spirrit, said
Ma.
T wuddent lead the life old Hank
leeds, sed Pa. 1 wuddent cringe like
A houmd beefoar a master's lash, ’ad
Pa. 1 wutl stand on my rites & let
g): sawdust fall whare it wud, sed
| T cant help feeling that thare is
(ugually a pood reeson for a litle
‘aeoman as-serting herself, sod Ma.
& gurls have so few® wepnpons with
wich to deefend ourself with, sed Ma.
Old Hank seems to think his wife
has weppons enuff, wed 'a He sed
yesterday that the graitest poem
evver rote wins The KFeemail of the
Bpeeshies is Moar Dedlier than the
Male sed Pa, Old Hank sed if his
wife had been & gent instead of a
lady thare wud be a new hevvy
weight champeen by now, sed Pa.
It is splendid of a man to talk
that way about his wife, sed Ma, &
it is noabel for a 4 man to listen to
snch umlk. 1 am so prond of You,
sed Ma, . .
Us men likes to compair notes, sed
1 ~ but we always wind up, sed w
by _ ting that “?&: ‘t;:‘fia‘ht“:;
SRR Sk VUL Y lEe are in he eleht,
lONen PA. winkedng me. . D s R
i agement of my 14-year-old boy. Very
trecemly he has suddenly begun- o
‘manlrest a very ugly temper. He
scowls and swears at everone else
abgut " the house, and has lost his
nild and gentle manne's of a year
ago. Will any who have dealt with
cases of this kind please write, giving
alvice? MRS. JOHN SMITH."
Now, I like the method of the fore
going want ad rather better than that
of an anonymous letter, Mrs. John
Smith, of Irving place, will receive
much he'pful advice and will be
cheered and gladdened. Mrs, Some
body, from Somewhere in America,
will almost certalnly be disappointed
with the little help which can reach
her, .
Open your mind. Reveal what is in
your heart concerning your child. You
will thus let' the trouble out and at
the same time let the light shine in.
When you write to me or to anyone
e'se who pretends to deal seriously
wi? chiid problems, be assured that
he’ will never violate a confidence.
Your name will alwaye be withheld
from the public until you full con
sent is give to use it
Tell your troubles and sign your
name. You wil have plenty of sym
pathetic company, 3
“ Economical
Recipes
AAP At
{These recipes have been tested by
Good Housekeeping and found cco
nomiecal and nourishing.)
SALSIFY PANCAKES,
Break two eggs into a bow!l and
beat well. Add two cupfuls of but
termilk and one cupful of wheat flour,
one cupful of.corn flour, one cupful
ba ley flour, one and one-aalf tea
spoonfuls of baking powder, one tea
! : i k
| #booptul of soda, one'and one-half
tenspoonfuls of salt, and one-eighth
teaspoonful of pepper. Beat until
smovth, and stir in one cupful of
cooked salsify cut in small dice, Pake
tin the usual manner and serve with
| @ sauce made as follows: Add enough
+ milk to the water in which the sal«
#ify is cooked to make three cupfuls
lof liquid. lm a saucepan melt two
tablespoonfuls of flour, and coek until
hubbling. Add the lquid slowly, stir.
ring constantly. Season with ene
teaspoonful es wsalt, one-eighth (ea
sveoonful of pepper, and two table
spoonfuls of chonped parst y,
’ PINEAPPLE WHIP,
Two egg whites, 1.2 cupfu! granue
lated tapico, 1 No. '8 oan. shredded
pincapple, 1-2 teaspoonful vanil'a.
Drrain the julce from the pineapple,
There should be two cupluls: if there
8 not this amount, aldd watér w
make the two cupfuls, In this Juice
=oak the tapioca for one hour: Cook
in a double boiler untll the taploea
is cla’ then add the shredded piue.
apple and’ cook f'or » minute or two
loriger. Take from the fire and ald
the stiffly-beaten egg whites and the
vanilla, Serve cold, with or without
eream. orteustard sagoe made w}&
: SR e Rl T R SR
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‘f There will be more trim-|
| ming than usual on hats—not
| that they will be run riot, but
2 that they will be trimmed—as |
| the sailor of lisere straw with
a band of ostrieh studded with
steel beads avers,
F , |
{ - |
{
What Book
Helps Most?
Lleips MoSst. B
ot s R e |
\
By Eleanor Gilbert. |
BOOK ean't work for you, but
‘A certainly the reading of the
right book at a time when |
you need it may prove a turning
point. 1 get lotters frequently from
women who clamor for some book
that will show them how to transf'orm
failure into success. They want so
much to be important—to get a job
as head of a departmont or earn more
money-in some other capacity.
It is difficult to offcr any one book
as a magic cureall’ for business ail
ments. Many women find no stimu
fation in some o the technical books
affecting their own work.
I know women in office positions
who never read a book or magazine
uealing with offfee practice, and this
18 true Qi many other lines of work.
However,” these women might re
spond very readily to a more general
appeal--cither a'book of fiction that
struck the magie spark in the imagi
hation or essays, or other material.
| The point is that each one must
find out for yourself by general fead
ing what is the kind of matter that
she fécls help her most.
. What book have you read that made
you feel more interested or mors
eager to advance?
|1 find, for example, that many wom
¢n 1 know have hoen holped wonder
fully by reading a littie book called
‘i‘lri'm'l"' by Henry James. This is
lw.my Just a short essay puhlished in
book Torm, but it |8 written so well
is 80 stimalating and so sympathetic
f!'\ s appeal, that everr woman who
reads it gets something out of it.
- Another book of general interest,
which is sure to he stimulating to
€very womnan, no matter what she
does. 1s “Mind and Work,” by Dr, L.
H. Gulick. Here is another bool
’xhut in a sympathetic way explains
; what you feel (alert or impressed)and
llow you can transform your negative
qualities into energy that will help
build your future. s
~ There are, of course, nundreds “of
books of special interest to the busi.
pegs woman, and. if you will write
what book has helped you most, we
shall be very glad at some future time
te publish such a list for the benefit
of other women. !
If you want to get value out of a
bouk. howcver, don't lean on it as
theugh you were a eripple. A book
tan't take you by sheer force and
projeat you into a good job, or put
more money 4n your pay envelope, or
ke yon imdustrious or batient when
you are oth rwise. All you can exe
peot of a book is that it tells you how
there things can be accomplished.
The real job lles with you.
Pooks and courses must bYe ab.
sorbed with zeal and coneentration.
Then put Inth practice as soon as
porsible the things which nave been
tecgmmended in writing, for until you
do this mere reading is valuelesa,
A rhilosopher once sald trat there
i# no value tosany thouszht, no matier
Fow fine or noble, unless it is trans
formcd into action. If you fesl projite
ed by beautiful musle, do nomcthhs
thit will tally with your mood, ap
thon the music has besn worth qn’:.
1f you read mmethmxuthat is lnnf -
ing. nt once do something, no ter
how small, tt“ is a little dis:mn t
and 0 lite superior 10 your routine.
“The theory dppliss with equal w
Lo the reading of bupks as more (ban,
B BENLTRGS Rt s
Nights With Uncle Remus
By JOEL CHANDLER HARRIS,
At Teague Poteet's—(Continued),
UT the frying was over after
B awhile, The Titanic shadows
went to roost in the tops of the.
trees, and Teague . Poteet and his
friends, including "W”}
ex-Deputy Wood- il
ward,t took them- 3]
selves and their §. . T i’
fricd meat off up § weil W |
the mountatn, and ~Q@ & l
the raid followed Sgat g %@\ i
shortly after. It §i o&S SE l
was a carefully “'Z}fg{ X 3
planned raid, and ,r% o
deserved to be §i o vEmaS 1
called a formidable | % .. Sl ;‘
one. Like many (@8 = |
another similar en- § Wi it §
terprise it was a | BEE MRS 2}
failure, so far as i TST
the purposes of the : g‘
Government were ’ |
concerned; but fate or circumstances
made it famous in the political annals
of that period. Fifteen men, armed with
carbines, rode #p the mountain. They
were full of the spirit of adventure.
They felt the strong arm of the law be
hind them. They knew they were de
pended upon to make some sort of
demonstration; and this, together with
a dram toc much here and there, made
them a trifle reckless and noisy. They!
had been taught to believe that they
were In search of outlaws, They
caught from the officers who organized
them something of the irritation which
Was the natural result of so many
frultless attempts to bring Hog Moun
tain to terms They betrayed a sad
lack of discretion. They brandished
their weapons in the frightened faces
of women and children, and made many
foolish mistakes which need not be de
tailed here. ‘
They rode noisily over the mountain,
making a circle of Pullium’'s Summit,
and found nothing. They peered over
the precipitous verge of Prather's Mill
road, and saw nothing, They paused
oceasionally to listen, and heard noth
ing. They pounced upon a lonely ped
dler who was toiling across the moun
tain with his pack upon his back, and
plied him with questions coneerning
the moonshinerss This peddler appeared
to be a very ignorant fellow indeed. He
knew his name was Jake Cohen, and
that was about all. He had never
crossed Hog Mountain before, and, so
‘help his gracious, he would never cross
it again. The roads were all rough, and
the ladies were all queer. As for the
latter—well, great Jingo! they would
scarcely look at his most beautiful col
lection of shawis and ribbons and laces,
ite alone buy them. In Villa Fay (or,
as Cohen called it, *Feel Hooray’) he
had heard that Teague Poteet had been
arrested and carried to Atlanta by a
man named Woodward. No one had
tald him this, but he heard peéople talk
ing about it wherever he went in Villa
Ray, and there seemed to be a good deal
of excitement in the settlement.
Cohen was a drod customer, the rev
Made-Over Gowns
3 ITH the renewval of social ac-
W tivities, d 'ess resumes its im
portance in milady's ward-l
robe, and clever, indeed, are the styles
ushered in with victory, Frocks thlll
scason are distinguished by grace o!‘
Hine and interesting color combination
with a tofich of elaboration lntro-'
duced in some small detall. To trans
form a somber satin dress from last
season into a thing of beauty and
charm is a simple matter and many
women are modeling the inevitable
black satin found in the average
wardrobe,
An®afterncon gown is a charming
Fown, Indeed, when it is of soft biack
satin and spotted net, For net and
jat were well met I 8 lovely “made
over’ 'frock, receiitly worn at a “ben
cfit bridge.” The foundation was of
the satin, cut c¢ff sha 'ply above thel
pust. Of slim proportions was the two
piece skirt, measuring but a yard and
a half .around the bottom. Almost
any black satin gown might be cut
down to this simple foundation.
Alluring is the correct word to de
scribe the overblouse of sheer net,
nlosely spotted with nalf-inch dots, A
kimono model, with a gathered neck
was outlined with a narrow band of
jet and the siceves were lengthened
to the wrist. The joining seam was
A Fewlo:-dsonßabies
‘By Brice Belden, M. D,
LL. young children should be
A vaceinated, preferably around
the age of 3 months,
.Children brought up on the breast
do better than bottle-fed ones, The
'atter suecumb three times oftener
ttan the former to intestinal diseases
and pneumonia.
Do not wean a baby just because
you think that the milk Is unsuitable
or insufficient. Always secure med
feal advice on this point. .
Babies must be fed at regular pe
riods. Disregard of thi€ point surely
invites trouble,
Bables should not be excited be
fore gleeping time or after eating
If rest and digestion are disturbed
in this way iliness is favored and
the nervous sPstem may be perma
tently injured.
Proper development depends upon
fresh air.. A child will not grow
properly If Kept in the house.
The daily bath is an important
health factor. Be sure that all skin
folds are e¢elean and wdered wit
eW e A
- No one should sleep with a child.
’,,'.’. ey sl
; VRvATE ,' }!f ’;:i‘,; P "4’ ! l
Poss & | 1 £ ¢
i i g
.11 he TN ?,
Qe | e, '
i S
(. onn ‘)"":.""r:‘\* ..f’:...{_..“ e o ..:‘1
enue officers thought; and the longes
they chatted with him the droller he
became. First and last they drew from
him what they considered to be some
very important information. But most
important of all was the report of the
arrest of Teague Poteet. The deputies
congratulated themselves. They under
stood the situation thoroughly, and their
course was perfec.ly plain Poteet, in
endeavoring to escape from them, had
fallen into the clutches of Woodward,
and their best plan was to overtake the
latter before he reached Atlanta with
his prize, and thus share in the honor
of \the capture. With this purpose in
view they took a dram all around and
turned their horses' heads down the
mountain.
Cohen was indeed a droll fellow. He
stood in the road until the revenue men
had disappeared. Then he unbuckeled
the straps of his pack, dropped it upon
the rround, and sat down upon bowlder,
With his head between his hands, he
‘appeared to be lost in thought, but he
‘was only listening. He remained list.
)ening until after the sounds of the
horses’ feet had died away.
Then he carried his precious pack a
little distance from the roadside, cov
ered it with leaves, listened a moment
to be sure that the deputies were not
;rflurning, and then proceeded ta a lits
‘tle ravine in the side of the mountain
~where the moonshiners lay. He had
been waiting nearly two days where the
revenue men found him, and his story
of the capture of Teague Poteet was
concocted for the purpose of sending the
‘posse back down the mountaia
the way they came. If they
had gone on a mile farther
they would” have discovered signs of
the Moonshiners, and this discovery
would have led to a bloody cueoultd‘
if not to the capture of the leaders.
The deputies rode down the mountain
in the best of spirits. They had ae
complished more than any other posse;
they had frightened the Moonshiners of
' Hog Mountain to their hiding places,
‘and not a deputy had been killed or
even wounded. The clatter they made
'as they journeyed along attracted the
attention of Ab Bonner, a boy about 18,
who happened to be squirrel hunting,
‘und he stepped into the road to get a
good view of them. He was well grown
for his age, and his single-barrelled
'shotgun looked like a rifie. The revenue
~men halted at once. They suspected
‘an ambuscade. Experience had taught
them that the Moonshiners would fight
iwh(-n the necessity arose, and they held
a counc!l of war. The great gawky boy,
!w‘.th the curlosity of youth and Ignor
lah e combined, stood in the road and
, watcheg them, When they %r;)‘ceeded
‘toward him in a compact y, he
| passed On across the road.
g (Copyrignt, 1881, 1883 and 1911, by the
| Centiry “emnbany: 1883 by Joel Chandler
’N:'rr'a; 1911 by BEsther Laßose Harris
ALL RIGHTE NESERVED Printed by
| permission of and by special arrangements
lmm Houghton, Miffiin Compnny.)
(To Be Continued Tomorrow.)
hemstitched, and so were the becoms
‘ing flare cuffs, ;
| To conceal the satin skirt, there
| was a two-piece net tunic suspended
} irom either side and banded with twe
irown of satin at the hipline. There
was a broad girdle of satin made gay
’by a scarlet velvet and black tulle
flower. This is an afternoon gown
l that appeals to the woman apprecia
| tive of true artistry and economy, for
t‘lt only required~three and a half
yards of dotted net to bring it up to
| the moment.
‘ Who would not delight to wear a
*{rock of black satin, combined with
a "“kumsi-kumsa” in the fashionable
“onion color?’ A two-tone model is
excellent to choose, when one |is
making over a gown. A black satin
id ess whose blouse is worn may be
| cut off at hip length and the lower
' part used. .
| When you attach a Im-nm
blouse of kumsi-kumsa (a new fa
' of rough silk crepe) to the sKirt, you
' will indeed have an ultra-smart gown,
‘mn if you add bluck soutache brald
to the onjon-colorvd blouse, you will
' leave nothing more to be desired. In
stead of the usual girdle of self-ma
’lerlal, try knotting a black silk rope
' cord about the wailst, and to give it
'w«luht, finish the ends of the cord
with silk tassels and amber beads In
queer shapes,
’ When a young baby Is picked up the
back should be supported.
. Don't overdress a baby,
. Wash out & baby's mouth after
each feeding. For this purpose use &
solution of boric acid, pouring a little
ifito a small glass and discarding aft
er use,
Bables should not be rocked.
Never kiss a baby on the mouth
yourself or allow anyone else to do so,
The sucking of pacifiers causes de
formities of the mouth and teeth,
spoils later good looks, Interferes
with growth and promotes adenoids,
Don't give soothing syrups and
cough mixtures to babies,
If the baby Is on the bottle, use the
Lest milk you can afford to buy,
ettt
- Got Him,
The young tan, one of the favored sow
Who can still run a car, reached home
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