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Show - i Murray Eajjle, Thursday, June 5, 19.10 LINEN HIGH IN FASHION'S FAVOR The Victory Was All Margard The Weekly Short Story smooth road stretched out black ribbon. There was scarcely any traffic little by little the pointer crept around on the speedometer Margaret felt us If she were flying. Suddenly two blinding lights came toward her and she turned out a little a crash that sounded like the end of the world the Instinctive Jamming on of brakes b reeling ride In the field and then the smart coupe turned over with, a crush of glass. "Are you hurt?" asked a while-faceyoung man. "I don't think so." she said shak- THE ily; "what i . hit mer "You hit me," he replied, grimly, "or at least my roadster, and If I hadn't Junied you would have killed me. As It is I bet you've done five hundred dollars' worth of on the car." damages -look at Well, Oh, really? mine!" she retorted hotly. "You didn't have any lights or 1 wouldn't have run Into you." "1 did have a light and you were going entirely too fast. A car of that make never should be driven as you were driving it Isn't built for It." That was too much. To smash her car and then' defame it her lovely new pale gray coupe that Marhad been driven but once. garet's voice rose. "You had no lights and I am going to have you arrested. Where's a policeman?" An obliging hoy who loved a rumpus went off to find one and Margaret put In tfie Interval Investigating the wounds of the coupe. Finally a wrecker came up and hoisted the battered car out of the mud and departed with it forlornly trailing behind. mss. ore buying patterns, which arc easily available, for the big new linen hats, making up a floppy chapeau to match each of their sports linens. Directions for stitch ing the crowns and brims in novelty ways lead to very handsome ef fects for these hats, which add to vojnie for linen tins now to the ensenilile costume for town wear. The costume Is of brown Irish linen. It has a Jacket nipped In at the waist ml a skirt wild pleated side panels, thus achieving the fashionable wld" hemline. The blouse also Is of linen a very linht handkerchief weight. Pealed talis extend from to the waistline. the The bat likewise Is of linen. It Is stitched and has a facing tn contrasting color. The fact that the jacket suit Illustrated Is of brown linen Is very significant from a color as well as a fabric standpoint, for late reports from I'arls stress the present and forthcoming vogue for brown, especially exceedingly dark tones. Than the tailored suit of dark washable material there Is nothing smarter this season, with emphasis placed on linen weaves. Jacket and skirt outfits of black linen are The blouses especially worn with these sturdy linen are of sheerest pnatel linens and I hey are made very frilly and THE their charm the practical qualities of laundering to perfection. Not only solid colored linens are but printed, also emsponsored broidered linens flourish in the mode. A black linen embroidered In little motifs makes u stunning jacket suit or pirate blue with white. If color Is desired. The handkerchief linen blouse Is a theme of wide Interest, Inviting a lavlshment of fine fagoting or hemstitching or drawn work, or It may be made up strictly tailored. The most popular sheer linen blouses are in pastels and have huge ruffled or petaled collars designed to weur over the Jacket. r By NELLIE This country doesn't need a third third party. It was party that spoiled the Garden of Eden. I. good-lookin- 1130. Wrattrn Newiuauer Union.) two-piece- s Birth of Great Industry It might be said that the manu fact lire of railway locomotives In the United States had Its beginning with the founding of the Itnldwln Locomotive works. In Philadelphia. In lS.'fi Matblas Baldwin was the feminine. In more senses than one this might very properly be referred to as a linen season, for every! bins Is being made of pastel of the dark colored linens from suits, frocks, ensembles and the blouse to hats bunilbngs, and even shoes, for linen pumps matching the snorts costume have become a smart Item for sum mer. Enthusiasm for linen Is thai keen, women who know how to sew founder. Safa for the Present Discovery thai the earth's crust miles thick should assure us Is In no danger from the divot diggers. Arkansas Is H.'i that our world Chattanooga Chatterbox. LET menus. Evening us not forget the value of and vegetables In our Banana Supreme. Peel, scrape and cut four bananas crosswise Into Put cupful of quarters. nuts through a food chopper with Mix wltn four graham crackers. of a cupful of brown Jeasmonful of sugar, Hull the bananas In this nutmeg. and lay close together In a buttered pan. Iluke '20 minutes. Serve with whipped cream. Maids of Honor. Beat two eggs f with cupful of sugar until light, then add two cupfuls of cottage cheese, two tablespoonfuls ol cream, cupful of seedless raisins, one teaspoonful of lemon of lemon peel, one tablespoonful juice, two tablespoonfuls of choped Put a swionful of the almonds. tart pans filling Into Individual lined with rich pastry and bake In a moderately hoi oven. History has It that these small pies were first made by the maid of iionor to Katherlne of Aragon. Polenta With Sausages. Sprinkle f one and cupfuls of corn l The bored Justice of the peace holding trafltc court brisked up when he saw Margaret, pretty, well dressed and Impressive. "What's the charge?" he asked bis anger seemed to be evapornt-Ing- . When be got home he telephoned bis lawyer to do nothing about the suit until he heard from him. The next morning the doctor was solicitously. "Parked without lights," said the coming out of the house and John Anderson hurried up to catch him. policeman wearily. The doctor was In a hurry and shocked looked The Justice In"What, have you to say?" he de- when be saw the young man's manded sternly of the young man. quiring expression he replied to IL "Pretty bad today. A shock Is a "I bad lights," be replied Indigserious matter with a heart like nantly, "until she bunged Into uie Miss Willis'." And he plunged Into and put 'em out." his car, leaving a young man whose a and person-ablThe Justice, young own heart suddenly fell as if it num. looked at Margaret, had something wrong with IL prettier than ever In a rage. "It "A shock." he reflected, "a bud Is not true," she said. She said heart my gosh, the girl may die, more more but and I'll feel like a murderer 1" He considerably became she thai aware presently sent flowers on his way home and the Justice seemed to be looking the next day got his to rather than listening, lie roused telephone an Inquiry. secretary The rexrt himself from pleasant thought and was dubious and he rushed off to turned to the young man. "Fined order Rowers again. That was ten dollars for being parked with surely a bad week for John Anout lights." he said. derson. The young man paid under bitMargaret Willis bad a trying ter protest but the victory was all week, too, and at the end of It Margaret's. John Anderson left when the doctor said everything court with vengeance In his heart. was safe and the patient well on Tomorrow he would start suit the road to recovery, she decided against that hateful girl and pun- to take a walk. "Auntie, deur, I ish her Insurance company if he won't be gone long; hut promise me could that you won't fall down stairs punish her. With a From the address she had given again while I'm out." In court he knew that he passed gentle kiss she ran downstairs and her house on bis way to business out Into the street which seemed and bis wrath blazed up afresh as beautiful after her confinement in After her aunt's bedroom. be went by next morning. The trees bad leafed out. tulips be bad passed he recalled that there had been a car outside the were in bloom, It was a gay, fresh house, and with a little Jar It came May niotidng. a young man cume wit li his eyes to film that It was the familiar car toward Margaret bulging out of bis bead. His face of a doctor. was one treat great smile as he At night when he went home the same cur was there, and somehow grasped her reluctant hand. "Why. you're well again," he said, "and you look as strong as ever 1 never was so happy In my life if you had died I would have smashed the d d car with an ax t lie lights were really very dim because the buttery was low." MAXWELL Comprehension dawned on Marmeal into a quart of boiling salted garet and she (mlled away her water, stirring and cooking for 'Jit hand. "There weren't any lights minutes. Now add one pound of sail at all or I shouldn't have bumped sage meat which has beeu well into you," she said. cooked and broken Into small bits Well, they were both persons Stir it Into the corn meal and pour who made up their minds quickly, Into a mold to cool. L'ntnold. cover so six months later tbey were with tomato sauce and cheese and fighting over where they would go bake half an hour In moderate oven. to spend their honeymoon. K'npvrlKht.) (5. 1930. WeatFrn Newspaper Union 1 e nt one-hal- EFFECTIVE USE OF ORGANDIE one-thir- d one-eight- h one-hal- one-hal- ' iiiiwih i iinnrmf.r-v.. .t 1 i il l1 fabrlc-for-slmpl- e lln ! i P SUCH A ben sold In June will bring in more than a hen sold In October, poultry men often say. To test the truth of that statement, particularly as It effects culling the loafers, poultry extension specialists at the Ohio State university present this example on the basis of last year'w prices: "A Leghorn hen weighs four pounds. She was worth 28 cents a pound or $1.12, on June 7 last year. On October 11 this same hen was worth 10 cents i pound, or a totnl of 70 cents. She was worth SO cents less simply because of a lowering of price. It would be necessary to make a profit of 30 cents on that bird In the four months from June to October to pay for her depreciation In alue.H Prices generally go that way every year, the university poultry-me- n point out, hence the necessity for culling the loafer hen early. "Another reason," says Paul Zumhro. one of the specialists, "Is that culling lowers your feed coMs. That Iyeghorn hen would eat approximately 25 pounds of feed In the four months, which would cost from 00 to 70 cents. "The hen steps laying the first of June. She Is not sold because the flock owner Is too busy, or It Is thought she will lay later In the summer. Summer comes and tha hen Is Rtlll out of production. October comes and the hen is sold to make room for pullets. On this one hen the pnnltryman has lost HO cents for depreciation in price, and CO cents for feed." i I U For Ivy Poisoning, Try Hartford's BalsamsulKoriitd of Myrrh inland art All EADACHE? The amount of feed needed each day for young ducks varies as much as does their growth. Their growth averages a half pound week, and to make this Increase of weight each week requires an additional quantity of feed over the preceding one. The rule Is, feed each meal what they will ent up clean with a relish, and do not allow them to linger over the feed If and get rid of tha bowel poiaona Mure also smart positioned nt the fmtil falciiieg of lingerie b bit mcl hei'llci colliii mi ll us nre loinole tlielilitig iifiertioeii hilk iii light woolen fro k, (island e for the f roi k Is ILp "last word,'' i ltla i pocd over bice or tmnle up In must lolltplb HleJ tteJS, often Willi li a ii I'cmlcr uHmii tlcw in cite, molding the lU'ure. becoming bntltTant below the km is o,, n,,i the hemline nt every move revealu ll bp-fnuiid.iiion. All Hie lovely "baby colors" nfe featured. Tlie color Is usually carried Into hroh-ni;i,- plcluie-.iii- e i IraO'paictil nasties of wide soft rutin or velvet ribbon. l i H I.I (T W A de-- safe, mud, purely presunta j vegetable 11 NATUal'I RIMKDT m trouble." Noth I ingthatlikecauseM tha for sick r headacha and biliousness, constipation. Acta pleasantly. Never gripes. MiUL sme, purely vtgetibla Al druggUu enly 25c. Make tht Utt teWgkt. I LKL L1KS A UlLUON, TAKB Spices and Pilgrlmi About 28.nk) Mohumim-du- pil- grims from the Netherland East Indies made the pilgrimage to Mecca during the last three months of Inst year. The number of visitors from the rubber districts, where prices were uncertain, was smaller than usual, while the number from the coffee and spice districts, where prices were good, was greater. The total from the two districts made up the normal pilgrimage from the Islands. The oldest known recipe for making perfume Is ill the thirtieth chapter of Exodus, in the I'.lble. W ft of OLIVER TROUBLES' Coaled tongue, bad breath, constipstion, bill outnna, nausra, indigrslion, dizziness, insomnia mult from acid nrnach. Avoid serious illness by taking August Flower at once. Ort at Sny ifnod drUKSist. Ktltevr pnmntg swretrns stomach, livens livrr, aidsdiarslion. clurs out poisons. You Ice! line, eat anything, with UGUST pLOWER g rt3?J PnTTiiMI.FY. iIfih Nrnji.iii,! I n nil By Charles Suhroc from f.irm revr-Mi- flm-lc- oht:il!icl from egts than from broilers or pee tern Koid. Is !!"! I.'i-- dlii c. l iiM wit well. i en refill linn hm lli.it become chilled i q li"i likely to hatch fsvn .'.'t it should tint fi'teirj.f tn nvvticr chick In Ifakesblft quarter1, s the r- suits will not be salMac-try- . - If the farmer ard bis wife look rs b'tig n vncetien ns tie nvernto fiirtn In n the bankruptcy law Would owl be overi orl 'd i If the turkcv hen Is to bp al lowed hutch her I'wn egg, tla li(t ! on! be mule w' ere It enn May through the hubblng mum in. 1 an ebb k, clean soil, cb-n- and clean mannfeinent work wonders In raHng I'irlfiv your. 8 bird, and Insuring their future as laving bcrs. After I'm tiMi.il crop of broilers on IN market, ti e prices Bra ss ronpard tl materially iheip ft ii t are paid for tlie early eel hatchcl cblti.". Wire rlrttforn for tnny be t oiily when (be ram-il Infected, or the fp:ic limited. mu inTie sMem l rtpcn-ivvolves a pond deal of labor. u'-c- i !i!rk-hii- Try the sanlssry plsn this year: fie chirks, Healthy ground, brooder stovsi In (Uninfect ed brooder house, balanced feed In (llne self feeders, brooder house and equipment kept clcaa throughout tht ifftion. I j il Ventilation in the poultry house must be secured wiMiout drafts, r lice lull! 31 Instead oftakedangerous heart brood-le- f Chickea a Songtter accnmniodntlons, I. Mr Daily Fed for Young Ducks Varies Greatly Tarly chicks require good but bottl t II Ml i George W. Vaught, of Keull worth, III-- , called at the village manager's office to protest against a notice be had received calling attention to a local ordinance against keeping chickens. "I am not keeping chickens," he said. "I!ut it Is true that 1 have a chicken ; It's a pet and 1 claim we have as much right to haveJ-a- s a neighbor has to have a canary bird. It Is a musical chicken and we keep her merely as a vocalist and Interpreter of songs. When my wife plays on the piano or the violin the chicken sings. And she Is off pitch much less than a lot of grand opera stars I've bad to listen to. We call her Chicken rutll." Indianapolis News. POULTRY HINTS tie dalw on! Urtk lint ventilation. i IS LIF- E- Snappy Answer Nonlayers Kept Until Fall Bring Very Small Price. Any shed will do for a cluck house provided It Is draft proof. It does not have to be very warm. It would be a good Idea to have a concrete Iiottotn, which should he A few covered with shapings. shavings should be spread In the comers so as to iUn the ducks a dry bed. For ten ducks and couple of drakes a house ten feet square would snswer. If It were 12 by 20 It would be much better. You could build a shed roof and have one or two windows occupying about one. fourth of the south elevation. It would h well to have tbee windows slide up or down or sideways, keeping thorn open a little bit at nil times even if It is cold, for " Sky Chatter c. CULL LOAFER HEN EARLY IN SEASON Inexpensive Shed Is Suitable for Ducks one-hal- gl 11 There's scarcely an ache or pain that Bayer Aspirin won't relieve promptly. It can't remove the cause, but it will relieve the pain I Headaches. Backaches. Neuritis and neuralgia. Yes, and rheumatism. Read proven directions for many important uses. Genuine Aspirin can't depress the heart Look foB the Bayer cross: trough. It Is better tbey should have not enough than too much, as they will lie In a much better condition to relish the next meal. One thing is considered to be of as much Importsnce as the feed, and that Is removing the feed left over and thoroughly cleaning the troughs after each mei I. This Is scrupulous ly attended to by successful duck raisers. f a II By RICHARD ROE ways asking about life on the planets. Of course they wonder most about Mars and a little about ALL signs point to a of triumph for orVenus, but I will tell you tha' Evening gowns, as gandie. there's no life on L'rnnus nor on By MARY GRAHAM BONNER Neptune. Itoth are too hoL Stars created by leading French couturiers, are the sensation are also too hot. of the present season. Which Y 'SEASONS." Saturn told through a telescope next time you was "Primus named after an an !s Interesting, Saturn called out dent because of the Harry, "are like yours In get a chance," A brilliant mnn named god. their degrees of warmth, mild "Sorry I couldn't Imve shown them William llerscliel discovered lit in. fact that Its employment for to you here, hut on account of go wear lifts organdie weather, and so forth only every hut was too modest to have the formal Ing around me " the simple seven seasons lasts one of my named after himself so out of planet frocks class lo a poHarry did not hear the end of chose the name of an old god in years." sition of Haltering prestige. "Do you mean seven years, of the sentence Tlicy were Hying stead." So It Is that organdie in winter and seven years of spring once more.' "If I ever did anything like dls He made himself quite at home covering a planet I'm sure I would white or colors Is exceedingand seven years of summer and so ly smart Just nmv for garden In the plane now. He looked at want It named after me." on?" asked Harry. Harry warty, dine and dance frock. "Just what I mean," said Saturn. said, "although I'm not strong fm Worked wild lace II Is even "Olnd you get the Idea at once." conceited people." The latest wblni smarter. "Do you find anyone grumbling ew Uranus, by They looking out of fashion Is to mount the over having a season last so long? at It from the windows of the plane frock on a lace Now If we have too long a winter It seemed very larye from llielr organdie The glimmer here foundation. or too long a spring people view of It so close al hand and and there of lace as revealed llicn the pilot went In the dltec grumble." through the sheer organdie "I never bear complaints." lion of Neptune. weave Is fasclniitltig. was Harry bad hoped from the way loss discovered "Neptune ;n creating the go n In the tn which be hud put his question than one hundred years nun h an the downer poses tiers of picture Hint Saturn would give himself EiigtlMimnti named John Couch circular cut organdie In flounce no answer that and having Adams. ni iciMH'd away pl.itiet minau t fa-- Ion met an all lin e could there on Ids planet after Fill her Neptune people Alifiit th fnlit'dalinti When It comes In Hut Saturn's be no complaints. same time, too, n French n ntie the ijualnl lilted bodice. for mer named Severricr discovered I eyes twinkled as he answered, riot niomi lit the organdie is be knew what was In Harry's mind. his planet." omitted in f.nor of the lace, empb.i However, Harry was Just about oer "ibive cithfl of t!ice planets sl'.ilitf Its lioweer. In 111'' tain Hint there win no life here. moon?" Harry asked. of Itie 111 lie puff nVevo Front the look of what be could "Yes. Neptune ban a moon to fai..H:og The buge hair bat lakes up Hie see be could tell that II was very keep him company way !T 111 Hip refrain of mgatid'e In the way of his tint It was like hot and thai And I'riinus has four little a sky. facing. ones." earth where so many rrcaiuros Attention l called tn Hie belted lived. "I'.ctter than none, xhoi:ld say," al tin' wals'liiie rillnri with an They Flew by Uranus. It was the strangct thing but Harry irmarkcd. "I'.ul now w must visit the stars old fabb la d round lace burden d lit this liioiiietil I'omho arrived with ho as sand ate of the charts lioiiii!i. set primly a hit lo nun side (Hi, I bore Is so tnu li in he seen the plum1. How well the) were go Some withes. Yoiit Solar system amounts lo so from wlo'loe falls the long p! renin Ing to guard Ibdr secrets! Harry Vli! li s I" show Miat il "Well Just whir, by 1'ranus." said little when we think bow much else er. said by lo Saturn hurriedly, dis there Is such countless II, ev ell. I and iblc these d.ivs to il'ess for Cosmo "said they mustn't be Cosmo. "He's next to Hie most hlw slurs, Htid thorenlfoiit. III the I These taut plittiel and you can't see oilier sly families." late. halve liille cluier of posies are IS t'n'nn I WTin "Don't forget to look at my rings 'without a telescope. You're al A SChiidrenthe n IfAU nn ra HI! Il I 5 Appealing Dishes nil-ov- . I 'I took LyJia E Tinklum's Veijctable CompounJ when I was tircJ, nervous and rundown. I s.iv the aJvcrtiscmcnt anJ tkciJcJ to try it because 1 was hardly ahlc to do my housework. It has helped mc in every way. My nerves are hcttcr, 1 h.tve a pocxl opiKtite, I sleep w ell and I do not tire so easily. I recommend tlie Vegetable Compound to other women fot it gives mc so much strength and males mc feci like a new person." Mrs. Lena Voung, R. f i, E.IiiwmJi, Maine. |