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Show THE WASHINGTON STAR nme out onto the forward deck. Peggy wm saying: "Ob, Derek, I'm ao sorry. I didnt know. Isnt there MONEY DOESNT COUNT ffi By MEREDITH SCHOLL iaiHiM wnu r ftwnwn across th tibia at P eggy LookingHytchlns, It docent make any difference to yon. I can talk to yon thia way became jour rich, too. dome day you'll come into a million and ao will L It lent very pleasant to think about, la Why?" aeked Derek. Feny featured. "Well, yon never know whether people like yon beta oae of it, or became of yonraelf. If yon know what I mean.1' 1 know. "YMh." Mid Derek. Who'a the nunr "Thera lent any, Bold Peggy. "Not now. But, I mean, enppoM How will I aomctlmo there let know! I mean, I could never lore a nun unleM I wu aura It waa me ho wanted. Derek laughed oddly. He Mid: "Youre may. Son don't meaanre It that way. Peggy didn't know what he meant, and ho dldnt offer to explain. It wu a week now elnce that conver-Mtloand at the moment a tending at the rail of Derek'a yacht looking up at the moon, with Craig Unton done bealde her, ihfe thought of It oddly enough for tlii flrat time. Her llpa moved aa though ahe were repeating what Derek had Hid, and Craig looked at her curloualy. "Did you My somethlngf he naked. And Peggy laughed In faint confusion. Poetry," ahe apologized. "Poetry about the moon. Unea I need to know. Il'e ao bMutiful I couldn't help remembering then" He looked down Into her eyea and laid bla band on hern atop the rail. A little tremor ran through Peggy's She'd met Craig 'only two body. daya aga He wu tall and fair With amolderlng blue eyea, and there waa aomethlng about hla voice and the way he looked at- - her that quickened her pulae. She wondered If be waa the man the man about whom alie had been thinking during that conversation with Derek. Yesterday ahe had tried to laugh It off. It waa her own vanity, ahe had decided ; being flattered became rt ur something we I could dor "Bure, he grinned. "Harry me and save the family name from disgrace with your money. "Oh, Derek, dont Joke. IPs serious." "Bure It Is. Ha was suddenly sober. Glad of It Tired of being so doggone worthless, Lika to take a whirl at getting along myself." The moon wm not visible because they were standing on the port aide. It wm quite dark, Peggy could see only the vague outllno of hla face. Yet aha sensed that a change had taken place, Buddenly aha felt hla hands oa her arms, and she caught her breath. Derek had never acted like thia before. They had been friends, pals. It waa strange. "Derek I" But Derek didn't aMwer. Not with words. He suddenly ceased to be the grinning youth. He gripped her tightly, pressed hla llpa against hen, against her eyes, her cheeks, her hair. 8 ha heard hla voice, husky, unnatural. "I've wanted to do that for years. Couldn't go off without doing It. Not a bit sorry. Hope you bate me. Hake It easier. Peggy whispered: "Hake what easier, Derek?" "Trying not to love you, you little fool I "Oh, Derek, don't go I Come back. Take me In your arms again. I I am a fool. And now what was wrong with Craig? It wasn't anything much only that It wasn't you who wm kissing me. lie Hid the moonlight did thlnga to me; but here there la no moonlight Oh, Derek, now I know what you meant by Hying you didnt measure It that way. Darling, you don't and I wm erasy. And and, my precious. I'm glad youre broke, because otherwise you wouldn't hare been going away, or wouldnt have kissed me, and then neither of ua to John D.t Jr. often Sammy Jay worITriesISN'T about anybody but hlmaelf. is the ivory medallion of John D. Rockefeller, 8r, the aged gave bis son, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., as a ChristmM gift The piece Is tbe work of Armando Aroffo and Is remarkable for Its detail. hand-carve- d THIS By DOUGLAS g Kings and queena of ancient Egypt 4,000 years In their royal " tombs, soon may be to determine their relationship to Mch other. A method of finding the blood type from dried muscle, regardless of the time the owner haa been dead, bas been worked out successfully with American Indian mummies several centuries old, according to an announcement by two physicians at thevBoston university, In the Journal of the American Anthropological society. They believe the technique will be Just m applicable to Egyptian mummies. Human blood groupings, they ex"No, Walt, He Swung Her Back plain, are due to two extremely to Face Him. stable chemical substances, the naCraig paid her ao much attention ture 'of which Is unknown, which when all the other girla were Just are found chiefly In be red blood dying to have him cut In on them. cells. Upon the baals of their blood Craig wm new to the crowd, hand- clotting reactions they divide the human race Into four groups those some, with a vague past; hence desirable. Derek bad Imported him possessing one or the other of the from somewhere an old college agglutinating chemicals themselves, thou with both, and those with neifriend or something. ther. Yesterday, too, Peggy bad wonThere are Slight but not very dered If hed heard about the million dollars ahe wm going to In- algal flea nt racial and geographical The substances are herit sometime. The thought left differences. found In the blood of all races her cold. e apes. "Let' go In, ahe said. "It's and even the These substances were found chilly. He swung her back bard to destroy by such methods as "No, wait to taco him, lifted her chin with heating or drying. They are found a deft motion of hla band and not only In the red blood cells, but. drew her Into hla arms She felt In a lesser degree, throughout the hla lips, hot and fierce against hor body. The two Boston university physiown. It wm like wine running through her body. A moment she cians have worked out a special yielded, floating In sweet ecataay. technique to determine the blood Then she drew away, pushing hergroup from the dried tissue of tbe mummies It hM proved successself free. ful with about 200 Indian cases "Dont I Please. I 1 " Ha laughed Mally. "No harm Since the laws of blood type Indona. Im sorry. I couldn't help It heritance are well established so It wm the moon. It does something much .so that they are given standto you. . . . ing by the courts In cases of disShe turned and fled, aware that puted parentage It Is expected her cheeks were drained of color, that It will be possible to Identify d aware of a queer little fright a at least some of the troublesome doubt It had been rulers glorious, aweet And yet there was New Salvage Feat aomethlng wrong. She didn't know British Mlvagen added a new what She crossed the main Mlon and stunt to their new bag of tricks by entered the bar. Tbe place waa raising a sunken vessel with the Oiled with gay, laughing people. aid of Nbmarines, says the PopuShe found a place and ordered a lar Science Monthly. Bent to the eocktall. A voice behind her Mid: bottom by a collision, the steamer "Like him?"-Sh- e Errol, lying half submerged, constituted a menace to navigation In turned. It wm Derek, smilthe Firth of Forth, Scotland. Becking at her. "Yes yea. He's nice, Derek, ing a means of refloating the emit, but- -" the Mlvagera obtained the hulls of He shook hla head. "Nope, hes two obsolete, dismantled British not a fortune hunter. Plenty of submerslhles and used them M pontoons With the undersea boats dough. "It isnt that Derek. IPs aome- lashed to Its sides and made buoyant by blowing" the ballast tanks thlng else. I I can't explain It tbe Errol soon wm lifted from Its He shrugged, changed the subject "By the way, Pm Hying good-b- y shallow resting place and towed to you tonight Tomorrow rm to the seaport of Leith, where It wm beached. aff. Off? Off where?" Balsam and Spruaa "Dunno," he grinned. "Out West I guana. Remembdr The needles of a bataam are longsomewhere, what Horace Greeley Hid? I'm er and stralgbter than those of a spruce and may or may not ba taking hla advice. "But why, Derek? WhyT pointed at the end. They nre arHa looked surprised. "Havent ranged widespread on the branch-let- s In two tiers and have silver you heard? Family fortune's gone to pot Were broke. Gotta get out linings They are soft and fra; rad rustic up some shekels" grant The cones are cylindrical Unconsciously aha slid from (he nnd smeared with pitch. The bark Is dotted with blisters of rosin. Ugh atoeL They crossed the room. man-lik- . long-dea- "The ads are full of fur coats, says Pertinent Polly, "but so are the hock shops. Ball WXP Berries. Smaii-aU- THROUGH A Wimaris Eyes By JEAN NEWTON THE D X. W. Bars Mb WNU Ssrvles. ANNABELLES ANSWERS r NAT THOMPSON X&mspxr Industrial Panorama In tha Saar. kr Nations! UMsraphle eoototr. ?mm Wuklnston. U C. WNU Sorvloo. barely 738 square THOUGH area and wltb fewer people, the Baur hoi been one of Europe's moat publicised regions since tlie World war. Powder keg of Europe; witches' caldron; political sore spot For yean such graphic labels have been tacked onto this small but highly Industrialized region lying north of between France WHY DO DEAK ANNABEL!.!: THEY ALWAYS SAY OLD FOOLS ABE THE BIGGEST FOOLS? Innocence: JUST Dear LOOK AT ALL THE PRACTICE THEY HAVE HAD I Anukslls. Miss Pretty Print Dress Whenever He ' Had Found One of Them, Ho Had Screamed at the Top of His Voles. them ba had screamed at the top of bla voice to warn every one within hearing Just where that hunter was. Once hunter had lost his temper and shot at Bammy, but Sammy bad suspected tbat aomethlng of tlie kind might happen and he had taken care to keep Just out of reach. Let me be np at morning; Bammy had known about the Let me be for at noon, "fclmslTilfW Llghtfoot by the bounds. For with so much to see, to do, ' Everybody In the Green Forest bed And so the morn to venture; , known It You see, everybody bad And so the day to roam, heard the voice of those bounds. But when the evening ehadows foil, Once Llghtfoot had passed right unLet me be coming home. der the tree In which Sammy was Devoid MlJlcch. WNU Bcrrisc. kinder word, most frequently used by children of lire years of age Is I I That does not prove, of course, that a person who la fond of the word 1 necessarily bas a mentality of flvs But the connection Is unavoidable! And this la one characteristic that we cannot nttribute particularly to women I Thanks be for that As we sit back' and smile at the children who like above grown-u- p all else to say "L we can smile with the pleasing realisation that they are not preponderantly of our own sex. There are so mkny ways of Hying "I" without actually using tbe word. 'AH the dogmatic opinions, all the arbitrariness; all tlie "laying down the law In this world Is merely another expression of the spirit of-I.-" The people who age always sure of themselves, sure that they are right, that they must be right, theirs Is Just another way of Hying L" And theirs Is a very evident kinship with the For It Is only as the mind grows mature that It begins to question Itself, Its own motives Its own rightness. It Is when we begin to really know something of all this lnflnlteness that we realize how much we do not know. Then we are not very sure of ourselves, then we do It when we Indulge the with a sense of embarrassment Does It Irritate you, All you with annoyance when one of the are so constant with their POTTED MEATS AND FISH IN ENGLAND potted meats are so that the everyday cook knows all about preparing them. We like to have such meats occasionally, and tbe following are reliable methods of preparing such dishes. Heat such is bam, tongue or chicken m well as flsh may ba potted for a luncheon dish, rather than un It In other ways, such M hash, OB THIS TRICK By PONJAY HAKKAH CapTiMabr Public Ladvr.lac 11 T sure-peopl- o "Tsr Well, dont let you be angry with a Ml I Mletli-WinJIarvl- PAPA It Would Ni KNOWSl Pep, what la the liver? "Beat of munnese." Bril eradicate WNT! nsrvlca TIPSY MATCH PACK FOR thisanentertainingbooktrick, of you emptied paper matches. Id mysterious fashion you set the match pack oa and and releaM It Presto I The match pack doea a complete somenault along tha table. You pick it up, set It down and It repHta Its acrobatic stunt. Other people try it; but somehow the trick folia to work for them. To begin with, you must bend the match pack to make It concave at the front People observe thia fact and they think ttify know the secret But they Invariably neglect to notlco the most Important part of tbe trick; Always stand tbe natch pack upside down and let It roll backward. Other people; trying to duplicate your stunt, will naturally set tbo pack right side up. From that position, It will not do tbo double roll. Invented tha KaUidaccepa The kaleidoscope wu Invented by Sir David Brewster and patented by him la 181T. of marching Itself. ing and preparation and seasoning. If cm refolly prepared and put away, these will keep for a long time and may be used for an occasional snack or an emergency dish. half-cupf- shouts armies. Geographically, the Saar Is an Irregular iMitch of hilly land crossed by small valleys. It lies alongside Luxembourg, forms a buffer state between France and Germany, and was cut from the two German states of Prussia and Bavaria. With a population ibuut equal to that of Boatnn proper, It shelter more than 1,000 people per square mile one of the most densely settled areas In all Europe. Only such miniature European states Andorn, Liechtenstein, Ban llarino and Monaco are smaller than this tiny, yet dynamic country. America knowa no stale so dwarfish. Delaware Is about three times the Bnnr's size, yet hM leu limn s third Its population. Suariirucken, metropolis of the Bunr, has only 132,400 people; yet In one year Boar trains haul (XUU0,-00- 0 pnKsengera I Bit In any stuffy cafe at center. But look Into lla eventful annnls, or make a careful trip about Its historic roads and rains, and you And a land wltb a past peculiar to which la all too common In some homes. The goodness of tbs potted meats Is, of course, lint of all. In tbs meat, then In tlie proper pound- Potted Chicken. Take s cold roast chicken, rejecting the skin and sinews, chop fins and to every pint allow a of chopped bam or tongue; Put the bones of the fowl Into a unco-pan- , add a pint of cold water and simmer until there Is half a pint of stock; (train and remove tbe fot round the chicken, and ham or tongue to a smooth paste In a mortar with an pestle; this makes a smooth paste; or it may be put several times through the food chopper until line. Then pound tbe pounding makes the meat of the creamy consistency seeded. Add a little of tbe broth, SMeon with cayenne, nutmeg and a tablespoonful of butter. Put Into man Jan; press down and eover with a cloth, then cover tbe cloth with a flour and water pMta; Bake tramp and watch tlie guests eat red COOK BOOK - and Germany. From the days of Attlla and the Carson down to Koch and Yon Ulndenburg, Its valleys and wooded Bills have rocked and echoed to the cabbage and boiled pork, or alp fot the hand play steins of beer heavy Wagner music, and the place seems Just another German Indus-trin- l MOTHERS that the GLOJl ot LIKES "I INTERNATIONAL ANgarten survey showed 'fhjb Alsace-Lorrain- e me be up Let me be for at noontide, Be far upon the quest For with to much to do, to see. Then who would care to rest? I hear the pulleys rumble; I hear the traffic roar, A hundred matter to be done And highways to explore. sitting, and a few momenta later the two bounds bad passed with their noaes to tha ground aa they followed LlghtfooPa trail. That wm the last Bammy bad seen of Light-foHe had been able to Mve Llghtfoot from the hunters, but ba couldn't Mve him from the hounds. Tlie more Bammy thought things over, the more he worried. "I am afraid thou bounds drove him out where a hunter could get a allot and kin him or else that they tired him out and killed him themselves," thought Sammy. - MALLOCH at morning, let me on my way. For, with so much to see, to da, Then who would long delay? Let me go seeking fortune; Let me go finding fame, And doing something for the world, Tbe world that does the nme. LET happily, rellevedly. Derek wm too deliriously happy hlmaelf to object but be thought be ought to put a atop to It and he did, taking her Into hla arms again where she to Provo Relationship of Ancients Truth to tell, be docent worry about himself very often. You see, Bammy Is smart and be knows be Is smart Under that pointed cap of hla are some of tbo cleverest wits In all the Green Forest Bammy seldom worries about himself because ba feels quits able to take rare, of himself. But Bammy Jay waa worrying how. He wu worrying about Light-fotbe Deer. For two days be bad been unable to And Llghtfoot or any trace of Llghtfoot But he did And plenty of hunters with terrible guns. It seemed to him that they were everywhere In the Green Forest Bammy began to suspect that one of them had succeeded In killing Llghtfoot the Deer. Bammy knew all of Llghtfoofs hiding places. He visited every one one of them. Llghtfoot WMnt to be found. . Bammy felt bad. Yon see, he wm very fond of Llghtfoot You remember It wm Bammy who warned Llghtfoot of tbo coming of the hunter on the morning when the dreadful hunting season began. Ever since the bunting season had opened Bammy had done bla best to makt trouble for tlie hnntera. Whenever he- had found one of MY WAY would have known. We'd have gone on and on Bhe wm babbling. Incoherently, Blood-Typin- i4 BEDHHE STORY Qt IX W. BURGESS SAMMY JAY WORRIES easy-goin- g, "blood-typed- - Sr.s Gift John D., Accordion pleats In the lh rape and In tha ruffles on the blouH and at the hem of this dress accentuate the daintiness of the small The tiny flowers print pattern. hade from red to yellow ou a black ground of dull silk crepe. a moderate oven for half an hour, having the Jan In water. Take out, remove the doth, eover with melted butter, then tie over a paper moistened wltb egg white and set away to keep In a cool place until wanted. This will keep for months, fins and makes dish. This will be good way to taka ears of extra chicken at any time. Fresh beef tongue, cold roast veal, boiled or roast mutton, bam and smoked tongue are all most tasty In treated In this way. WaaUn Hewepiper Uatoa. Gaining Momentum Saar Problem In Caesar's Time. Banr probThera was. In fact, lem even In Roman times, when blond men from the east of the Rhine already bad Inraded this basin. In Caesar's Commentaries" you read of these early German settlers. One Roman report of the time uyt that 120,000 bsrhsrinns, enamored of Gaul, had sett led here. Caesar feared these Germans might menace Rome Itself; so be helped the Gauls drive them bark croH the Rhine. Ills bailies on tbe A line and elsewhere were precursors of centuries of lighting along tbo Rhine. Borne Roman military roads hereabouts are shown on the rentlnger map of about 200 A. D. One ran north from Argentnratnm (now Strasbourg) to the Saar hnstn. About this same time the Romans built s CHtle at a point on the Bnsr river where It was bridged by their military road from Paris to Mains. Baarbrucken was so named, meaning "Bear Bridge." Dense forests clinked all the basin then, forest! freqnented by heathen druids, by wild Celtic tribes wbo hunted deer and boars with Scattered rains of menspears hirs, dolmens and cromlechs, symbols of the druid cult, have been found In tbe Boer forests. Roman ruins are there If you dig ruin of villas, of baths and bridges, some almost In the eliadow At of early Christian churches. Tholey la s church that dates from the Thirteenth century. In sharp contrast, near Baarbrucken la a mosque built by the French during the World war, wherein their Moroccan soldiers might pray I Long Held by Germane, Strategically, tbs Bssr lies on a natural route between France and Germany, and for centuries they have disputed m to where tlielr boundary lines should be fixed. Boon after the break up of Charlemagne's empire, and the Treaty of Verdun, In 813, tbe Saar became German soil. thon-nu- d Briefly, for more than years prior to the Versailles treaty, Germany held the Saar, except for two short periods, the being tbe year from 1703 to ISIS, when Napoleon pushed the French frontier to the Rhine. When BIncher end hi Prussians advanced Into France In 1813, he followed the very route taken by see-en- the German hordes when tbe Romas empire fell. It wm H In the war; Von Moltks; In 1870; followed Ulurlieri routs of 1813, and about Baarbrucken came one of tha flrat clashes of that war which helped Bismarck to found his German empire. Again, of course. In tbe World war, the armies passed this way, and many an allied soldier WMhed his slilrt In tlie Suar, the Moselle nd the Rhine, or trailed cigarettes and white brand to willing fruulelni for a Jug of wine. Fly over Baarlouls, where Marshal Key was born, and In Ita very heart you ice the outline of the old forts built by Louis XIV of France, Dating, as a town, from 1080; Ita people lived for more than 200 years almost wholly by trading with tlie garrisons first French, thenGer-man- , then French again. Today old wall! and monte that encircled the fort have been torn down end filled to make broad, smooth streets, as the A merles ns did with pnrts of Manila. German Infantry, artillery, cavalry, army wagons all tlie machinery of war made Baarlouls a busy town nntil after the World war. When they evaco-- ' sled, the French came In for s while; but now few occupants art found for all the vast barracks. It la quiet, almost too quiet, for those residents who remember the band concerts, the glittering reviews, and fot 'army pay rolls of other days. French Ars Scarce There. German la race, speerb, culture, and traditions, tlie Saar showed r census only about one by a person In 200 wltb French as bis. native tongue It was simply s legal accident at Versailles which nude those people citizens, tempo-- ' rarily, of phantom state. The Bear, under tliat treaty, gained no nationality, no president or other ruler of Its own. Instead, s commission of live Europeans wm named by the League of Nations to administer the territorys affairs until the plebiscite. By treaty the Boar went under a custom union with France; French customs guards were set to patrol the line between Germany and the Bear and French money wm put Into use. To pay France for her own coal mines damaged by Germane lu the World war, she wm given tbe coal mines In the Bssr. The treaty provided also that after tbe plebiscite Germany might buy these mines beck again If ahe wished, and such an agreement wm concluded late In 1934. Only around Baarloule Is any French influence noticeable, and that la not due to the presence there of many living Frenchmen. Such Influence belongs to the past old forte bnllt when Louis XIY made this a French garrison town; French names and epitaphs In the cemetery; and an odd local dialect current among older residents, s curious blend of German and French. To see how thoroughly German the region Is, In speech and sentiment, you have only to mingle with any holiday crowd and listen to the songs, the speeches, and the mnslc; nr read the papers; or see what crowds follow broadcasts from the radio stations at Frankfurt and Btuttgart Industry Is Intensive. As In the Ruhr, Industry here ie compact. Intensive, and theatrical In Its setting. Like volcanoes, Its giant mills, m t Volkllngeu (230,201), belch forth clouds of thick gray smoke; the red glare of blast furnaces turns black night Into brilliant Gehenna. Under every MU la cosL Over every mine le a big wheel on s tower; again and again you see the Mg wheel spin, as It winds up s csbls that lifts Its load from deep Is the earth. This Is tbs only place on Mrth where you see mines and steel mills closely crowded by forests, m If bits of Industrial Pittsburgh were set In one of onr forest reserves. Tha wooded slopes of the winding Baer river an covered with snow much resemble Algonquin park in Ontario In winter; It seems the dense end myswoods must be terious as when drulde built their Mcrt (trial altars there and hungry pagan Celts searched for wUd meat. Franco-Pruiali- n money-spendin- g pre-wa- Van-ban- 's ' -- i- |