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Show fTOESDAY EVENING, MAY 3, 1921. THE OGPEN Tom Was Deeply Impressed THE DUFFS lZ Alicia Hammersly n Who Wouldn't Remarry Idah Mc Clone Gibson 87 - Tm H4e Writ SISTER BAB'S IDEAS. "Duane writes me that you're looking prettier than ever," said Hal at the close of his letter. "Don't be too nice to him. '"ray dear. His long suit Is making love .... to married women. lie's not a marrying man; his friends have, always known that. He thinks that a flirtation with the wife of a friend is safer than with one of his. friend's sisters. He says , 'after you have taken a girl out two or three limes, she always begins to think that your attentions mean intentions. I thought that ' was very smart before I was married, but now 1 think he's kind ,of a selfish guy, don't you? And I rather hate to give him the pleasure of a flirtation with my wife after all he has said to me about his affairs." "Oh, Hal. Hal," I said to "you want to do all the flirting formyself, the family, don't you. But you must remember that I have taken a leaf out of NeM Marshall's , book, and 1 am only 'going to: love you just as long as you love me; and I am going to consider that if you feel free to enjoy a mild flirtation, I can do ." , Hal ended his letter very "My dear glrl I miss you misssweetly, more you than I thought I could miss anyone. You know I'm not very fond of my own society, and mother and the governor are not the most entertaining people in the world, even to their only son. "When are you coming home, dear?" , "I am looking forward" to that home with a great deal of pleasure.1 After all, a man is better orr married, lsn t he? , "I am going to Nell's a little while to-- ? night. I just cannot stay at the house without you. Come home before J make I am beginning to feel f athatfoolI ofammyself. due for some kind of a catas-troph- e. But whatever I , do, you must remember that I am always like the old sailor in the old ditty who kept insisting is 'eart is true to Poll.' Remember there is one heart that is true to you, and that is the heart of your husband, Hal." Hal's letter might have made some women angry, but it saddened while it amused me,- - particularly- - as it was the first love letter I had ever received. During the time that Hal and I were en- : gaged, we of course had been In the snne town and although Hal sent telegrams and telephone messages, he ( never wrote me' a letter. I sometimes wonder how it would feel to have some ; one write you one of those really, truly , : -- llke-wise- ! VXj v , : me-man- THE Animals v. r allRiOHT If r h Ik BY ALLMAN "Ti,' '"' 1 GO?. ( COME, now WE MUST FWD i Hlr ' Kj ' , ,1 m rim ji v " ii in "" i ( 2 1 shall's every evening," was my mind's the secyna comment, as I read hisI letter was sure 1 had time. And although no feeling in the matter t knew that 1 looked forward to the ride with Duane. which f had promised to take that af ternoon, with a little bit of triumph, for I was thinkinc that while my husband was oaying devotion to another girl, I was not wearing the willow ior mm. Bab scowled as she hart said, when I told her I was going, "I don't think it's fair of you. Allx. You know I'm witn going to marry Duane. and yet you. your sunerior married knowledge of men. go and get him all tangled up In his ideas about women. , "What do you mean? Are you and Du, ane engaged?" not yet." "No. - "Has he proposed to you?" ."N'o. but I know he will If you and a lot of other married women In this town out jot it. I'D to now Duane has ken been laying his devotions to a lot of married women about here, and they have made him so very comfortable that he pas nao hasn't thought Of marriage. lie all the comforts of home and none of the you. responsibilities. - After Hal married Duane began to realize he. was on the wrong track. He began to think of getting married, and you may be sure that I helped the idea as muh as possible. 1 had just about got him up to the point when you came home and now he is undecided. Some way you have made j him think that a man cannot be as happy married as einsrle. What have you been saying to him?" "Oh, Bab, I certainly have said noth-a What ing to him about marriage. curious way of looking at it. It almost seems to me immodest!" "It's neither immodest- nor curious, not said Bab courageously. . "You will marget. deny that every girl expects ifto me truth ried, and you know that were told, every girl who knows- her that the man she business contrives wants will propose to her. It's all pretense, you know, Alix. this waiting Hke a modest .voilet to be picked." Tomorrow Alicia Rides With Dune. ii m 5 m mmmn m W- '""t .. . f' - HW 1,' . H V' AR VOU HAIMG that old acouwd CAMEL SO LOMG? ,'Jl, ' j AlwayB 5inulaUntttroo4tyErtuU-- j in; a 9 rV'T .'iii - i i - n Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria i " M M Tor Infants and Children. j ds "I ii Bears thu-- Signatnre ThcrctTylYcrraotinDo - k of i Mm C Jr 1 1 --cv wrrn him ' ! y r, DiarrM i Constipation I For Over -- ' fertile p b Sii Thirty Years 1st. Crvrxrs Cok i'"cri 2 i u CO :- iTmv.- - - r rti-i-" i h i i i u ii n ii f h i i - Exact Copy ol Wwppex. t I 4 BY OLIVE ROBERTS HOWARD R. GARIS ws MarrtrM ns t. va mi, 4 ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS Walt Mason BARTON THE SLEUTH. dPtrttlvr fiction brtuMime, ho. ith In th thr' a little Iuj u'rman cr friction, follows ut Uw "thread if Tlm-- . When th city ron are Laffled. comes old Sherl-xrto th place, leads the guilty to th Kcaffold, and remarks "A simple rate!" Oh. 'the cot" r represented an m honehead bunch of akn, men who dome could not b dented lth a t leaver or an as. Hut the cops do thing surrri4ntr. puttlnc guilty gent In Jails, thoujeh they no adverti'lni in the Sherlock kind of tate. Crimes of myMery unendlnr uliotk the virtuous w uec the fly oit wend-- J nd true. nd '.cr. following Kerne feell rlur; mnj. no , REMARKABLE REMARKS Just Folks SACRIFICE. d the I chap, and, letting go of no rv There way to eavy the bunny away he ran. Thin life i cie of earriflo. . th cradle Lurope ' an d cot Aia w Down tame the grinning face, with its With courac nerve and with the humaa race Alea Hrdllcka.- rf aleady red mouth,, yellow cheeks, green nose, For conouent each mum ) we I'tlce. ( throK'Irlat. pink r;ycs and blue hair, and it crashed into the bushea clo beside the bunny. . Who k mut wililng l slue. In the ear 15:o there .were I.c;C'.0 "i Uncle Wiggily was too surprised to run. Tor U.e marriat e and at the aa me ttm mn frlernUhip and a moment later the voice of Susie mul play gi tnv ; rrienl. "(OO house were built. Lepreaentative Littletail cried; I There ro to wy llr. Cablft. Ohio. "Oh, my nice new painted kite that I all man' )oy dtend. tn ervlre-royal made! Is it smashed. Uncle Wiggily?" Then the bunny saw that he face was Uatnon with them caper till their wery Pklll N lYohibitlon la an fnas!t,n f rronal icift imre painted with many Color3 on a paper iih t!wn I iueM H done, wrltlrg up for books and and ireeier of crime fltrhen l.'.erty U I kite, which Susie had made, almost as liy by day; fiient practice paper storlen of the triumph won. Hy And he writer. j lacok. who he good as a boy. She had used the red. tiren. aicp forsaken. Heuth (t forth llogruHtr-' Soon falN tehin'l 8lrr.g l.'.e way. green, yellow, blue ami other tints to I to rarn their iaj. and they rft bring make a grinning monster on the kite. Wtrid has ten made a cerfrchlbitiou home the LRon In their dr.ib. offklal "What happened?" asked Uncle Wig-sriltainty. lr. Oleb W. Saleeby, London. Not l.y maklne brlDUnt daahea Time grants ua what we rlaelv ftrn way. man hia lue. And glvea to tJ.rourh deduction puzxiing mate, not by "I was flyins my new kite and the ! In Ms turn. he takea who lint mut. hi o e!y Christ's plan of universal brctrer-- the errfn they pint uIIpk broke," Susie said. "It came down. string Htand up and t!y the rlrer. i h'vyti can reconcile an rlas differences.by terrv and. ttlent pl Hinc. Jut Did it scare you?" Ju.nt by WiJUam Jennings Hrjan. boneit brain. put Ucy "A little, but it scared the Bab worset down the Uaa maraudinK ot the lnful Not on the of Ucri I'm glad to say!" chuckled Uncle Wig-gilJ.iWc ami Jane. t l or At If srandca fa up to tljite tMay. he must foun.l. fijrtune fmt as was the kite not much Then, . tt un ie titils of the f iarit smPle itru.tjret and like jatz It nil jt he Susie liurt, fly it again. This helped U And on the roush nd atony groubd. FEATHER SCARF. The Hev. K. 1L WtMr, was the little tragic. rabbit girl's secret, and it Clexelnnd clerrjman. The beautifully supple fiathem whUh helped the bunny a whole lot. adorn lome of the new nummer haiafllow mu h of aelf will you bestow? "What prlres?" aked Caliph Camtl. So if the doesn't under It. How do )oa meet the sterner tasks? completely circle the brim. out and go roller skating with thejump )lna wnts America to take a much fire and lw!M itracefullv around the wearer'a How far for "CALIPH CAMEL TALKS." "And Him." r i',.1 Klipp-more rtomiri kivking in tar eastern shovel on the front porch, I'll tell you conquest will yoj co? IUp. -"AVhat are naked Camel These tte iiuestir.ns aVa next about Unclto Wiggily and Lulu's mar- evetnrr withprizes?" Caliph AUrel H. Chinese and h.g. is to Ko to the minister t f( l.u mm that l.'llr.. the thn itinlilnn A. Juet lZI. by ble. tCopyrtrht. States. fnlted runner. ou How ' ,,oct pety-na- p run.1, cn took out of his shoes. " oo- Tbe prizes for the race. explained i Caliph? I hur-- J nipnety-Klabout two milea n hour wh-"Race?-- ' questioned the camel, meanry. answered th. rnniel ""I cun t t un i while wriggling his nostrils. You couldn't bit fast. I'd rather walk have smelled the content of those, blr "Well, that make no difference," said! bags, my dears, and I couldn't and Nancy the fairyinan. "A race is a race whether, and Mck couldn t. but Jut the same the It is run, or flown, or swum, or walked. oUl raxfirdypAtchy-lookin0- r ramH could J This vrizm t a bar of dried corn. th fin ' w ne- Whenever mfat or vegetable ae i r ts r I u i ' i ' v ' ttt uit tvitir v viifw. t wvti .w.j. "warmed-over- " "H'm!" remarked Camel again. should be reasoned. those sacks, but if he didn't rare, i d Caliph they ."Dried corn! TJat n very nice prize! No matter how perfectly the dish was Just like to see. What a camel looks he does care. salted and peppered lor the first servWhat's the other?" And he rolkd his eye "Yes." nodded Fllppety Flap. "I sid toward the third bag. ing, more salt and pepper will be necI'm going to gather up all the hLm. Flippcty-lMa- p "Peas."' told essary if the dish.Js to be' a 'race.' camels I can find and have a race. "DriCHl! Sweet and nice, too! They are success. stray ; The first prU Is this bag of dried beans. the third prlae." MENU FOR TOMORROW. "That's a very, very nice priic. In- Breakfast Orange Juice, fpinach with It g"oes to the winner, the. winner leing the camel who reaches the door of tho deed!" anawerod the camel, cjulte plea-- 1 coffee. poached egga on toast, Luncheon Cream t of 'tomato soup, big circus tnt first." santly. "In fact, they are l nice prises "H'm!" said Caliph Camel, reflective- I shouldn't mind having them myself." croutons, Martha's pudding, tea. Dinner Roll of mutton, riced potatoes, ly. "Dried beans! That's a very nice (To be Continued.) N. E. A.) dandelion greens, banana and peanut salprize." (Copyrloht, ad, fudge cake, coffee. MY OWN RECIPES. The tomatoes left after straining for many soup should be saved and used for scalBloped tomatoes the next day. Whenever -homes once child possible wait one or two days before repeating a meat or vegetable. If put in a cool place in a covered dish the tomablessed toes should keep several davs. MARTHA'S PUDDING. riALNUTRITlON. One and one-ha- lf chil-de- n, cups chopped prunes. Q. I have a son. 14. lit is almost five .with 1 cup molasses, 4 cup feet tall and flour, to graham about weigh pound. BY E. E. FREE. cup white flour, 1 cup sweet milk, 1 teaWhat food or medicine could 1 give him spoon soda, to make him stronger? A. B. a teaspoon each wishes to machinist who The fasten cinnamon; Lydia: 2 cloves, nutmeg and salt. eggs. A. Your son i more than 10 rounds Beat eggs. Add molasses. Mix dry in- drill into his drill press or a piece o work underweight compared wlth.the average-Legredients and prunes. Add milk and dry In his lathe makes use of a device called his diet Include a liberal amount of ingredients alternately to first mixture. a chucks by which two or. more Jaws milk and green leafy vegetables (spinach, Turn into a buttered mold and steam 2 are pressed down against the shank of chard, kale, etc.) In addition to fruits, hours. Serve with hard sauce or lemon cereals, eggs, bread and butter and meat. j the drill or other object to be held. sauce, 'j:." "f j His meals should be taken nora ROLL OF MUTTON. As one works the chuck, these Jaws with no aweet between meals, regularly, and the One and one-ha- lf lean mutton. move outward or Inward along lines radi- food should be chewed thoroughly. pounds ft No 2 from its center and may be pound ham, 4 tablespoons bread tea or coffee. 1 mal crumbs, 1 teaspoon minced parsley, - ating thereby to fit and held larger or to should bed He ltd and early sleep tea- smaller pieces of metal. teaspoon powdered mixed herbs, The arrange- with wide open window. spoon grated lemon rind. 2 teaspoon ment that in a carpenter's holds bits H should neither play nor work too minced onion, teaspoon nutmeg, 1 tea- brace is an example familiar to every hard, either at school or outside, and ee spoon salt, ,1-- 4 teaspoon pepper, 1 egg, household carpenter. Mng entertainments should be very lim. milk. This invention in mechanics Is many ited. Conatipatlon should be corrected. Chop meat finely Mix" with dry in millions of years older than machinery. Ha should have, as soon as poailble. a Add unbeaten and mix Long before the slow proccsee of evo- thorough egg, gredients. following medical examination to deterAdd milk to moisten. lution had reached anything like man mine whether thoroughly. enough is there any disor defect or four Make, into a roll. .Wrap in three had develnned in the ancient ease that may be responsible for his con of experience thicknesses of greased brown paper and I Naturd aeaa atlll aur. whone animal descendants ' dition. bake in a moderate oven for 2 hour. Half vlve and who used the device of the drill two women an hour before serving remove paper, chuck to seize and hold their food. ANEMIA. roll with flour and the. brown. dredge with 1 are modern the examples splney, Q. What can be taken to cure "an-rjlBaste tablespoonful of butter in iThe of sea urchins, which you can cup" boiling water. Make a gravy in find on rock bottoms of left at pools A. Anemia is only a symptom of some the pan in which the meat was cooked. low tide along any rocky seashore. underlying disorder. Vartou form of (Copyright. 1921. N. E. A.) If you turn one of these urchin- - upside parasites or bacteria may Invade the oo . undown you will see at the center of his blood cause a destruction of the and in der alde.whlch wa next the rock, a patch blood corpuscles. cases. type of anmla of round, leathery skin with a hole In the 1 seen In malaria Thla In and certain forma HO BELIEVE CATARRHAL middle of It. of blood poisoning.' hole la hla mouth.v and at Its cenThis In other cases cf .anemia, the blood hicasro. I1L u I was altars tirrrL mr hnriA altrara: nrrif? nriA mv KiV DEAFNESS AND HEAD ter there are UBuaily visible the tips of ceils some poison cirare by destroyed ached until I could hardly etand the pain. I doctored for years, and five white teeth which work toward and culating in the blood. This type of aneNOISES away from each other exactly as do the mia aid nothing but an operation would help me. and that I could doctor the In lead poisoning. In tuberseen is Jawa of the drill chuck. The Ocean. In Brinhfa disease. culosis and not have A friend asked me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's VcgcUblo children, The urchin eats seaweed and If you hold If you have Catarrhal Deafness or Anemia is also produced by constant a piece of seaweed against, hla mouth, Iass 1 took I six boUies of it and it helped me wonderfully, and I are hard of hearing or have head Compound. of bloKl. Such loss of bjoo.1 may be of course under water, you Will see the due to an g or to fine ulcer now noises go to your druggist and Set 1 The ocean ixtends have a parababy boy, thanks to what your medicme did for me in re skin around the mouth draw back as lipa sites, auch as hookworm. from shore to shore ounce of Parmlnt (double strength,) And fills healtn. do five I can highly recommend tbe Compound to all women and the teeth thus storing- my the spaces between. exposed begin There Is a form of anemia cf rather and add to it V. pint of hot water and It is mad up up work as gnawers. their Tfho suffer from size female obscure of ills." Mrs. Wit, Rxisa, ZLH Willow J5U Chieara HL dlffrent and intirely apparently associat'a little grafiulated sugar. Take one Aa they move inward and outward they ed with origin, waves : ' functional disturbance in the crunch down on tha seaweed and break boweU. Thla type of anemia is not unWich keep each other cleen." tablespoonful four times a day. off pieces of it and these pieces are thrust common In young womn. This will. often bring quick relief inward to the stomach. , . .. , A person from the distressing head noises. from anemia should Tannetie, Wi5- .-I was in a very nerroas condition, was irrrnilar, and oo-, be sure to suffering a reliable physician consult Clogged nostrils should open, breath- On could not have any children, I tock doctor's medicino without sucFAN BAG. top of the ocean are all kinds of boata and submit to a thorough, examination. ing become easy and the mucus stop Sutch aa combination made The fan and he advised an operation. 2dy husband brought mo one of your and .saleboats has steem. As and a cess, boats bag an auch by examination dropping into the throat. It is easy its appearance. We find the plumes of Include rule, peeple on bord so seasick an analysis of the urine ahould booklets and asked mo to try Lydia 11 Iinkham's Vcgetablo Com pound. a and to prepare, costs little and is pleasant With wish it was ony a dreem. ostrich above and below. In the handle, microscopical examination of the blood. to take. Anyone who has Catarrhal They soon felt benefited by its use. lccame regular, and I which Is a trifle larger than previously, Only by determining the cause of the now we have a is the bag section cleverly concealed. trouble ran proper treatmenfbe Deafness or head; noises should give alter been married nine I outlined tiaby am years. pri having room Is handalways glad to recomThere a trial Advertisefor the patient. this prescription enough for coins, mend Lydia K Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to my In the middle of the ocesui are fishes, kerchief and puff. friends who suffer ment. '" oo With few fips but meny scales. such from troubles."rs. II. 330 R PANDOWDY -! Jefferson GOOD ' DISH. Held, Some are St, iXarinette, Wis. like minnies fond of mn sugar? Then UBSE" Wile someinconspicuous, ar the Opposite, like wales. ltw England Pandowdy will delight you. It isn't a new recipe but one Thcso letters should induce others to try uneartned frcm ao long ago that it will fOf hm 75 veara Over A RIIY NO rwF RUT lo tnl reneratlon. rnw ft bottom if y, rn of the ocean are i t?Uii" to cooking kettle and mak a Half ladies and the other half mermaids, fishes. Oriental Cream to keep Fif fut ,nto 'L leaving only a They leen back- on seaweed and comb out small ni't place at the bottom without hahany tnt their rlda and compkx 9 "DIAMOND DYES" mft annU- - ???n VUl ln od cooking And look like they felt delicious. ' ion la perfect condition nd cored or sliced. a through the stress of strip of crust, a few more apples, a fw tk season's activities. large cup of map- .imp. Unless you ask for "Diamond Dyes" O beware of th ocean in a storm IS r. for Srt good cider. Cover the whola with e?ust you may get a poor- dye that streaks, If you chance to b bathing nigh. Trial Stxm spots, fades and ruins your goods. And beware of it also wen the tide is low Ftia. T. RQrTINS A 6n next way It gets is high. , "w jorkUiry Every package of Diamond Dyes con For . the ' tains simple directions for home dye' 00 PAPER FLOWERS. ing- or tinting any new.rich. fadeless oocolor into garments or draperies : of Less expensive than china flowers for LYD,A E.PINKHAM MEDlCmc CO. LYNNrlASS. ypur black, bowl of basalt ar those made If In cooking you have ue,f too much any material. No in 1st a ices! No r.U. of paper and heavily float They on the water and will waxed. last a year if weir T w uoo much ugar. ' treated. correct It by using salt. I UNCLE WIGGILY AND SUSIE'S KITE. "Uncle Wiggilyl'' Oh; Uncle Wiggily! down there!" Nurse Jane said called a voice at the outside door of hollow stump bun, the rabbit gentleman's galowamone day. down here down cellar sorting "I over the carrots," the bunny answered as he went to the foot of the steps. "Who wants me?' "I do," answered the voice, and, for a moment Uncle Wiggily" did not know what to say. He could- not hear very he was, and it plainly down cellar as Wolf or the Fuzzy might be the Woozie sort of shivered unFox. Uncle Wiggily der his fur. "Come on up, Uncle Wiggily' went on the voice. "It's Susie Littletail calling!" "Oh I All right!" answered the bunny, and he felt much better. "What do you want, Susie?" he asked, givdl. "Paint." replied the little rabbitcheeks. I V "Oh, not paint for your "Nor yet hope!" exclaimed Mr. Longears. paint for your lips. I know you don't need it for your nose, as that is pink, like or mine. But as for painting your lips ' cheeks" ; "Don't worry. Uncle Wiggily!" laughedh Susie. "I will never do anything asffool-isas that! I am going to paint some-aa thing else, and I want as many colors I can get." "I have a lot of paint left over when Nurse Jane Rnd 1 last decorated our hollow stump bungalow," said the bunny "Come down and get the gentleman. cans. There is a little color in each one." So Susie got red, green, blue, yellow, white paint, and, pink, purple, black and brother's express them in her putting which she had brought over on wagon, purpose, Susie wheeled them to her house. "Aren't you going to tell me what you are going to paint?" asked Uncle Wiggily. teasing like, as he nibbled the end off a carrot. "I'll let you see it when I have finished," promised Susie. '.'Until then it is a secret," and with' this Uncle Wiggily had to be content. But he was so busy for the next few about Susie days that he rather forgot and her paints, and it was not until toward the end of the week that an ad- s venture happened which made Mr. Long-earglad he had given . the colors to the little bunny girl. Nurse Jane had sent Uncle Wiggily to for the. store to get a lug of molasses,long-cakshe was going to bake a strawberry and the bunny was almost back the at the hollow stump bungalow with . cakes pound of sugar and the codfish when, all of a sudden, out from behind a Nosed Baboon. big rock sprang ohthe Blue howled the bad ha!" "Oh ho and as- he caught Uncle Wiggily by the chap, ears. "You can't get away from ; me now! You haven't any sticky postage stamps to make me so stuck up 1 can't nibble your ears. I have you now!" "Yes, it does seem so." sadly said Uncle Vvieily. He was Just wondering if he couldn't pull his tall silk hat down over hi ears so the Bab couldn't nibble them when, all of a sudden the bad chap looked up in the air overhead and cried: ' "What's that?" Uncle-Wiggi- ly glancedwasupa and saw what at first he thought big grinning face of some monster, colored red, green, blue and yellow. "My gracious sakes alive and some howled the Baboon. peanut pancakes!" "Such a looking- - sight! Is he after you. : too?" "I guess maybe he's after you!" said the bunny boldly, as he saw the queer . red, green, blue and yellow face, com And Just then ing nearer through the air.seem to be fast the face, which did not to anybody, gave a dive and. appeared' to corns straight at the Bab. "Oh, don't hurt me! I'll be pood! I , won't nibble Uncle Wiggily' ears!" cried you-wer- e k tlue-nose- . i I I - - . -- huM r 4 I y. I J. i - y. Jack-i'n-the-B- ee ui-lni- f dry : ft n, Sister Mary ,?Z91 n vj I r af-fui- :sg3BS7&aBH8 Motkerkoo . I Animal Takes Meal With Drill Chuck Hp HERE Uncle Sam, M. D. 1- -2 2 - . ad-Just- E. PinkhamV Vegetaole t 1-- arc less that now are healthy, 'happy because , 3-- trt Lharm ot like-whe- n . e, litr c 1 1 1 -- left-ove- cT-siln- Hfra -- w 1-- i,. ox ' Compound restored the mother to healthy, physical condition. ed 1- 1- -2 1-- 2 The letters give the and young prove the value Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound such -- r . tiD CODVpTI vnmEQL I love letters which are full of irotesla-tion- s cf undying devotion. I think I would like it, but I. suppose now I never will bus-banreceive one. I don't think-tha- t as a rule write love letters to their wives. Kven dadv who is devoted to mother, only writes her the news when she is away from him. "So Hal is Koing over to Nell Mar EDTIME. STORIES BY X7t V I : 1 TO SEE. rAJN Da k r j. h AAMITi EK S ar 1- -2 ' Little Benny : blood-suckin- - i -- .t - mm i r ,i-rt- ,?? j aer - - - m -- -j is inKJaams VedetaiQie mpaunoL M ra |