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Show I CACHE AMERICAN. LOGAN, ITAH I? I'Vi,tr,-- OW I ; ir e - W.NL at j II! Y 'on .i or fourloi'ii w.is yi-.- In- - ; ,, a f gm a,)r, i i At Dear tfi lit nuk of iiN tiiUM'r. II li.ifl UthifM.l f Jiim Hint ft r;i It It greater ttuiti he luitl ever (IrtMiuevI Vet it all HevervJns. lie had worked hard, fought nd It Al Id al xiihuut fad r o r; mi mili'lj ing, - u j I a ,, i ii'i-o; 1. , r fiat mill'd a nt I In'l l I, tale. 'I I'll ' ' 1111111' Ill i you feci ll.llt l..i i oiii'i -- ii il'iy r grow owr Ids .1 hill. , l'ii u i "I through talkin'; .i.i i felt Hint tin- - nm- -t i inn n nun could pox- .it i . h - j., lu'i'iiiiu- - a luirlMT. . i i..i n!- - J'ud Itui;;li s, rill More, O' lm. I.y r I' - u - . .. me ln- a nit In the eyes a iii-- e and awe Inspiring nf l , l in I.. I, i .! uus Marly Dolan, a a .Ii ii, ir leieran, nlio had an . e mi ii, e others because he'd f, '.:.t at San Juan hill and could cut u'liul aiieiitiuii by referring to Hut itii'.i ur.ilde battle in a most in inicr, which lm did at , freijoiit li.u'rials. '1 o' nu n talked and young Ben-lill'l c!,e'l, r, they directed their roi,ier'.:tioa to him. In a sort of nunm-r- , for Ilennle wns an npprei utive listener and mi little amount of flattery al tiiiii lie.ng addressed. -e 'I uiun to him wore gods to le in i; I'd. If possible; to he acini rid ami respected and honored. In f a, t Rennie came to believe if t ier he could acquire a fraction uf the knoM lodge M'Hh which caih miis luiesiod, or achieve a small part uf the success Mhlch each hud achieiid in his respective Hue, he Mould ii'k no more of life. i'eiiim- - lehesed these things for a period ol two years. And during that t me he guiltily nursed a secret t' ijin-ntl- v d l.i- i , i li p j . i ' ; ! 1. In spile of the deep Impression nude upon him hy the sages of Itug-- , gles general store, Ilennle Mantl'd to l eeniiie an artist, a painter, He tilt rnlher guilty about It; Mould iieier for the world have admitted the nature of his secret t des.ri- - to Lafe or or any of Ilt-r- j the Olliers. He kin-i- i they'd laugh and scoff at him, and that would hurt. l'iiturtiiii.,;ily for Ilonnies gen- -! eral store career, however, the crav-- ! ing to heuiiiie an artist persisted. It m .is in him rather larger than a Moodehlu'k. A 'd I he youngster's father, Hubert M. ii Ilium, president of the loeal haiiU, a kindly, gentle natured, taci- turn nun, and hence somewhat compared with Lafe and licit, chanced upon a couple of Remm-freehand drawings one evening ami had a heart talk with his son. The upshot of the conference was that llennie ivas to go away to school an art school, there to !e-vi'lop the natural talent which his dad believed lie possessed, and seemed to he quite proud of. Ih'iui.e agreed to go, in fact was quite eager about the Idea, but he his father not to tell anyone lut he was up to, especially not to mention it when he Mas getting a fcl.iiie or having his car lived. And so Ilennle, still feeling rather gudtv and ashamed when he thought of Lafe and Ilert and Joel, went iiMay to school and began to study art. It m itsii t long before Maplewood ami the general store wise men became remote and hazy In his memmediocre . i I ; 1 ! ; , ory. The natural talent which had bosun to assert Itself years before was being cultivated, and the re-- : Kul1' were rather pleasantly sur- prising, even to llennie. I'.ennie remained at art school for , hie years, f returning during that tune to Maplewood at long Intervals, anil then only for short visits. He dei cooped fast, displaying an uni iiiniy gut for the creation of original Ideas and setting them down on paper in the form of drawings. 1 he natural talent was polished and groomed to a degree nearing i tion. Two years after ids graduation, Ilcmilp was doing nicely as a free-- j lance artist illustrations for drawing ; Within Ihk gear's time he was be-- t sunlit Dy editors all oxer the famous over niht. His signature aernxxled on the boUuiu 0f R0 illustration, inst.iut- - mo rushing j he u eil to sit (loti that make tip la a w h d art I4 lust fad. tit! away. Ihirlly lMnu In the xone. xxe are natural nuilii-ufor that ro.x. healtty qua! d of color that U natural - tn( t!ie hold, nr! ills al. too tn. o!ixhuslx routed look. Then a unotNr rea hx (ie old faddotied "li l.id'oi. (tiia in.iui) up in had), la Iosji, 4 fa xor. I.oih mei and wotnen prefer I lie It. it in ike a nn:,r have lea! ami de!!j:h!tnl rlmt In xmiu ilepresM d. listless looking dll' I'.tklip. the w roi g in tin' fact oloi- tlmt lu the pnM too tn.iny women r.u g colors ippliid It too biidly. were um-dciol vihite siMtler for iiistiiiiie. Kais-looked clownNIi vivid roime-n- nd oiilj ot.e tnr two Now thire are as munv shades. rouge kl.. oh s ilk there arc skill tomMill another reason for reputation make And that Is; ton up once won. many young girls mid women rely on powder nud rouge to cover up of giving the body and the skin the care to keep the liIrmMirs away and to pre serve a smooth, clear, fine and healthy skin. In other words, make-uIn lls-- lf cannot give you a beautiful complexion If you havent a flawless skin to stnrt with. But makeup cun make doubly beautiful the skin that is systematically cared for. properly cleansed, toned and Hour Ished every single day of our lives. And this Is one detail I want parMake-uticularly to emphasize. will wear better on a clean and healthy skill. That Is why beauty authorities tell you repeatedly : cleanse your skin before retiring. Cleanse again In the morning. all makeup before applying a fresh dusting of powder or dab of rouge. If every woman stopped to give herself a quick facial before applying make up. It would not be necessary to renew powder and times make-urouge so many wears better, and looks better on a skin. lean, cared-fo- There was probably some other youngster who, not unlike himself, sat in wonder and awe while the general store sages told great yarns of the days when the now famous llennie Markham sat In their midst and drew pictures for them on the backs of order blanks. The picture thus conjured was amusing, and it occurred to llennie that it might he still more amusing to visit these old cronies during bis visit In Maplewood, give them a treat, so to speak. The thought became father to the act. Two days after his arrival at home, llennie wheeled his roadster up to Lafe Itipley's garuge and ordered gas. Lafe himself operated the crank, and when the tank was tilled Bennie tendered a $10 hill and grinned. Hello, Lafe," he said. laife looked up and nodded Indifferently. "Lo, Bennie," he said, digging Into his ovorulls pocket Hows tricks?" Bennie was a good deal disappointed. Lafe had expressed neither surprise nor pleasure. He acted quite as if the youth was customer. an every-daBennie drove slow ly away. Somewhat cooled in ardor, but nevertheless anxious to carry out his scheme, he strolled Into Bert Morgan's barber shop and found Bert there alone. He Bert was more agreeable. shook hands and admitted being glad to see the hoy back. And after ttie lather was well spread he even What you doin', Bennie? asked: Ain't seen you around much." Bennie did Ills best to be casual. Why, Int drawing pictures, Bert Youve probably seen some in the magazines. Bert compressed Ills lips. Humm. Yes. But I mean, what are you Ain't yuh earning a living at? vvorkln'?" Bennie was glad to get out of the place. He did not call on Joel Buggies. He went home Instead, and there was a hurt look in his eyes. Hubert Markham saw the look and Ilennle where he'd smiled. He been, and when the boy told him, the older man dared an arm about his shoulder and said; "Son, you're famous and a great success In the world outside of your own home town. But here In Maplewood you're still little Bennie Markham, nf,, used to sit with eyes a popping while the village wise men vied to impress you with their Importance, It isnt natural for those men to admit now that you're any greater or wiser than they. Their pride Is their forte. And Bennie, looking Into his ther's face, knew that the wisest man In Maplewood at the present moment was Robert Markham. ' p e r FINISHING CREAM TRY si-i-n needs a finishing cream one that has a little oil In It to keep the skin lubricated and ward off any drying effect of powder, rouge or even exposure to the elements. But that does not mean a very greasy cream encouraging shine and an unwholesome, oily In applying your finishing cream, remember that a little Is enough. L'se it sparingly and blend It carefully over face and neck, with the same movements you used for applying the cleansing and nourishing creams upw ard and outward. Now with a Remember? cleansing tissue blot to remove any excess. If your skin is oily there Is no ne,ed to burden it with a cream. There are delightful finishing lo-tions on the market. They give a velvety quality to the skin soft, And these transparent, lotions usually keep powder and rouge doubly clingy, warding off shine. Seasonal changes come In for their share of consideration when foundation preparations are up for discussion. Tor In the summer, there is less complaint In general about In the winter, on the dryness. other hand, even the normal skin tends to be somevv hat dry. That is t,le lotions are more popular durillit the summer and the creams during the winter. even Yet, during the winter months or should I say especially y. - - f- V ' ? EDGES, BILL! HI THE HD, Billy Mullin, Little Jack, Tie Cuter, Kid. and Pock-Mark- ed about Twenty Others: Park drive. Xf Early the next morning. Miss Vera Stern, starting on her tlnil) XTiffht, trip to tlie meat market for Tod dies chop bones, uiiiki-- i before the lTECK-TT- E cloM-door of an apartment on tlie floor her own. Usually at Tfo cf tehich will ilil hour a burst of singing and the benu by chiller of dlsliea announced lo passer by Hint the pretty little red haired bride wn on the Job March 24th, 1882. Las Not (tint I'm curious. she wn soon explaining lo plump Mrs . Whan th Rop Wn Law on tha Santa Fa Trail. "You irlgg at Ih- - corner never pry Into other peo know National Kit Carson would find lota at MJ 8rvlc pie' affairs but It did seem very r too. L. C. come back, Lift MARKER la to be placed at changes, could be queer lo me. very queer. Indeed I ing hair," as he called Indian scalpwent around lo (he courtyard and Ingalla, Kan., by tha Santa ing, la practiced now only In tha looked up and every window wna Fe Trail association a a beauty shop of town along tb shut tight. And there waa Ihla peof one memorial to Smith, trail It la not easy now to trad culiar odor. It somehow suggested tlie early plonecra of America 'a beads or cheap firearms for bunkl a hospital lo me, bul It wasn't West. of virgin silver In Santa Fe; nor ether. ' Tlie Santa Fe Trail, a hard, would the town cheer a mult driver "Chloroform?'' highway, often PK) feet wide, arriving from Missouri or call IL sure that to beuten Thnt'a Yea, I'm and parked that It holiday should a dry goods peddler was IL LHvn't burglars use chlorocouldn't be plowed, and with not a arrive. form? white aettlement on Ita whole How th Trail Altered. Or sometimes "Yea, they do. length, stretched across But It. with kill themselves The ancient tree lined plaza, people meat alone On buffalo land. virgin ended you say they seemed quite happy? often lived, and from where pioneer freighter the plainsman "Oh, very happy I JurI bride and green hide he made clumsy, sack-liktheir long trip across th plalna end groom, you know. And she was boots to save oxen'a feet from unloaded their big wagons, la sttll such a pretty lift le thing, with loveatones and hot annd. A good day's the center of life In Santa Fe. At ly red hair. Oh. dear, whul do you evening time, when soft breeze march was 15 miles. think Id better do? Over this amazing pathway of the algb among the trembling elm "Do? Well, of course your Janidrove the longest wagon leaves, the local senoritat, darktor would have a pass key, but 1 plains the world ever saw, trains eyed and flirtatious, promenade this trains dont really believe . . . Oh, my often rnlli-- long, with four and even ancient plaza and smll aa ravish-Ingl- y goodness, there's the trolley comaa In Kit Carson's romantle eight creaking wagons rumbling ing! What a colossal traffic It day. But none of them would leave abreast. out of breath, Mrs. was, pushing out to win the Westl home now for a red beaded beaver Decidedly trapper, even If the trapper had Griggs sank Into the seal nearest At Its peak, 3,000 wagons and licked every other rival at the fanthe trolley door anil discovered Its ox yokes used In one sensonl other occupant to be a friend of Franklin, Mo., in Kit Carson's dango. her younger sister's. They fell youth, was the outpost of civOriginally the trail ran upstream Into ca8iml conversation, to which ilization. St. Louis, with 4,000 peo- from Franklin,' crossed the Missouri the older woman, after a time, conple, wna the only other large town at Arrow Rock, and stretched west tributed tlie story she hnd Just In Missouri. From there clumsy through what la now Lexington and heard. boats, battling sand bars, snags, and Independence, Mo. A rich region muddy whirlpools, their passengers this, where, as settlers multiplied, a vigorous culture developed, with Don Biddle looked up from his often firing at deer or wild turkey desk, annoyed by the chatter of the on the wooded river banks, beat up- Ita familiar homemade walnut furfiling clerks Inside the next partistream to Franklin, where the Santa niture, ash hoppers, big soap and tion. He half rose from his chair Fe trail then started. sorghum kettles, looms, and spinto ask for quiet, overlienrd some Franklin boomed with tlie fur ning wheels. one say "The Park Court ApartToday, where Washington Irving-satrade. It fairly seethed with exments and sank back to listen. myriad prairie chickens, or cited men. Oxen bawled; mules Do go on, Elsie. Its like hear- kicked and grunted. Through mud parrokeets," as pioneers called them, one passes big pens of white ing a newspaper story before It and dust of the crude towns crowdcomes out. Old Endless Trail ed streets creaked heavily loaded Leghorns. , garages take the place of wayside "Only don't know the end. Anywagons of Conestoga type, schoonerlike wagons, loaded blacksmith shops, where former pilway tills young couple had been living there for six months, and they with bolts of calico, ginghams, vel- grims stopped to shoe a horse er Where slaves tended seemed crazy about each other, she vets, cotton goods, cutlery, firearms, set a tire. said which doesn't sound like sul tools, and light hardware, and hemp and tobacco, big dairy plants ride. But all the doors and win drawn by four or five pairs of oxen are busy now, their painted bams and silos replacing the weatherdovvs were shut tight and stuffed or mules; and, breasting tills westround the edges with rags, and bur bound stream, up from Santa Fe, beaten tobacco sheds of other days. As commerce grew, boats pushed glnrs wouldn't do that Then there from El Paso, even from far Chiwas this terrible smell of clinloro huahua, pack trains came drifting farther up the Missouri, passing form, simply overpowering, and no In, laden with Mexican sliver, with Franklin. By 1831 Independence beanswer to all their pounding on the beaver pelts and buffalo robes. came the starting point for traflle door. swarthy "Spanish" men In across the plains. Plying the river ails what My heaven, girls red blankets and tight trousers men then was one government-owneMr. iiiilille? who fought with knives and spoke boat nsed for exploring, the West"Hes been acting queer all morn- a purring tongue strange to Mis- ern Engineer. ing nnd now he's dashed off with souri folk mingled with returning Birth of Kansas City. out his coat or hat caravans. A few miles up from IndependLittle Left of Franklin. ence Landing, where the Kansas, At almost the same moment. In a Far outpost of empire Franklin long called the Kaw, twists north downtown tea room, a plump matron was In those exciting days. It saw into the Missouri, fur traders and suddenly exclaimed to her bosom friend : "My dear, do look at that the cheering legions pass. But now freighters found a flat, shelving girl Tearing out as though the its symphony of life Is lulled, rock, an easy place to land goods. Ivimg ago tlie hungry river claimed Near here, by 1833, a new town, place was on fire. remost of It. She was listening to you, Few, indeed, of the Westport, came Into being. In time It became the starting marked tlie even plumper friend, hastening host who pause now for placidly sipping a frosted chocolate. hot dogs or cigarettes even dream point for Santa Fe. Gradually, as And when you said Park Court what stirring scenes were staged merchants and farmers followed the Apartments' she Just jumped out here when tlie Mexican flag still fur traders, this colony spread of her elm Ir. waved from western Kansas to Cal- through a gap In the bluffs and came to be known as Kansas," aftSo it happened that Don Biddle ifornia. mid his new and very red headed Yet Its name, like Daniel Boone's er the local tribe of Indians. Incorwife fell Into each other's arms at and Kit Carson's, endures In the porated as the Town of Kansas" In 1S50, Its name was change the door of a certain very to annals of the West. of apartment. As for the trail Itself, sweeping Kansas City In 18S9. "Oh darling, darling I was a on from the Big Muddy to ancient Southwest Into Kansas the old hrute Santa Fe, now It Is busier and bet- trail runs; thence west along the Dearest I was a perfect little ter than ever. Railroads and monorth baDk of the Arkansas river, I drove out to mother's for tor highways, paralleling its course, which formed part of the boundary fool. the night, of course. handle today's vast commerce. Now between the United States and A Suddenly they realized that the millions ride In speed and safety Mexico until the war of 1840-4door of their apartment stood open where pioneers beat their stubborn few miles west of where Dodge City nnd that from within there came way against thirst and hunger, dar- stands the trail originally crossed forth a faint hut decidedly anaesing torture and death In the forays the river at Cimarron Crossing, folthetic odor nnd the sound of voices , lowing the Cimarron valley over gad ambuscades of Pawnees, In tlie kitchen they found Miss Cheyennes, Comanches, Osages southwest Kansas and oa to Las Stern anil the janitor. Intently exand Arapahoes. Vegas. New Mexico. But this road amining a large wooden crate. Where millions of buffalo rocked crosses many miles of waterless "What's in it?" demanded Miss the plains with the thunder of stam- land, and later pioneers blazed a Stern. peding hoofs and died from arrows, longer but more watered path. Thla shouted the Bid"Tangerines! spears and rifle balls, now millions latter branch became In time the dles In chorus. of animals lift bovine main thoroughfare, especially for They're spoiling on the bottom faces to s'are at passing trains and wagons. It follows the Arkansas tlie mum, announced janitor, after motors ca-- s safe in river Into Colorado, through La another whiff. "And I'm not saying fenced fielcil, chased by no wolves, Junta and Trinidad; thence ove they don't smell mighty like this Indians, or hungry white men on Raton Pass, and to Las Vegas and here chloroform Miss Vera was a horseback. Santa Fe. Today the Santa Fe huntin for Windmills, wells, and city water railway and the popular Santa Fe I suppose should apologize," systems lots of water now whore motor highway use this same route began Mi'S Stern belligerently. men wild with thirst once vainly or closely parallel IL cried nh. please don't." Ioggy. From Franklin, Mo., to Santa Fe, dug with bleeding fingers In dry to most Indeed, were grateful stream beds, or walked nut on the old trail Is ow well marked Don. added 'Won't you you. lie down quietly h.v monuments set up by the Daughparched plains please have some oranges? ters of tlie American Revolution, ard die. you will bo Xnvitod to attend a CPA1TD PAPTS, grm-ery- M u A hoof-wor- ts making a F' CIUTIAKT In r sputac-- u gesture this season in the way of tioth novelty and style detail. Everywhere one turns In the realm of new furs the air la charged with that thrill of exciteof ment which attends the oiilimiry fashions. This Is especially so In regard to fur used In a triniimiig way. I.kewise fur accessories -- "little furs" as some one hag been pleuM-i- l to call the cunning collar gets, the little capelcts which tie on. the lei turns" w liicli slipover the head mid are worn like a necklace and the other novelties which tire simply breathtaking in their miiistialness. In accents loud and clear novelty in a trimming wav speaks vii the sleeves which distinguish the brown and beige wool crepe ensemble shown to the left In the picture. The designer of this snug out tit trims the sleeves of the long coat In hands of fox In contrasting is dor- s- he.ge und dark cinnamon. This use of two tone fox Is frequently carried out In black and white, and the effect Is stunIt Is Interesting to note that ning. the smart hit of headgear worn with the suit pictured Is of the Identical brown and beige crepe of the costume Itself. From the handsome mink trimmed cloth coat centered below In this group some idea is gained of the novel and intriguing alliances which fur and cloth are negotiating for winter. Outstanding style points Include an Interesting sleeve treatment which gains fullness through the use of cartridge pleats. The coat Is one of those straight down tube effects which Is so slenderizing and which Interprets the swagger silhouette of the mo nnd-mii- tf d ment. The fur on the sleeves U so arranged as to simulate a cups contour which la characteristic of many of the new fur treatments. The generous collar Is a draped affair that may he worn In several Intriguing ways when opened. The luxurious heavily furred of this model ts a feature accentuated In many of the latest cuuts. A theme widely exploited In t fashions Is that of the dress which Is fur trimmed. Sometimes It Is merely a matter of shoulder epaulets made of fur or a swatch or two somewhere on the waist or skirt, perhaps In form of an unexpected pocket or a decorative tab or rever or whatever the motif may happen to be. It only takes a dush of fur positioned Just right to achieve a maximum style touch. The pen and Ink sketch of a Baris frock, apearing above to the left In the group, demonstrates the ordinary trend of vogulsh flat fur treatments. This stunning onttlt, which, by the way, hears a Martial et Armani stamp, has Its sleeves entirely of supple broadtail. A most unusual detachable neckpiece and a matching muff complete this story of high fashion. The dress pictured to the right Is also nattily trimmed In flat fur. It Is a street or business frock of gray lightweight woolen with a swatch of Persian lamb on the skirt to correspond with the fur bertha which collars the waist. In connection with the existing flair for flat fur trimmings we would especially emphasize the growing tendency to match fur details on the dress with a hat of the same fur. cut-ren- gun-meta- l . 1933, Western Newspaper Union. savage-- haunted e 8 50,-00- 0 1 canvas-topped- ! d FOR RESORT WEAR It? CIIKKIK MCIIOI.AS TUNICS RETURN TO FAVOR FOR WINTER The tunic again Is In vogue. Mnlyneux uses It extmsively, one very stunning model being of pale dull beige velvet ribbon for evening with a little coat trimmed with dyed martins. A yellow Iris is the shoulder trimming. The gown has that simple and slightly curved decolielage with very narrow shoulder straps so typically Molyneux lan and the tunic comes low over the hips. The dull beige ribbed velvet has the ritis running diagonally and the skirt beneath the tunic falls in soft lines. Increasing In width from the knees to tlie floor. The Jacket is a sort of crepe coat affair, with two bands of the martin where the cape curves around the arm to form a sleeve, and another hand of martin in a circular movement around the neck and down each side, stopping at the waist. VS0 - Ii CHARLIE, SAW Vcas, POP''1"11 evening n,nre laStins makfr f P s desre1' " niaklng a tram trip, visiting a frl0nd r Preparing for a busy round of social engagements the lotion is , ,, e' Master the art of applying it skillfully. Moisten a pad of absorbent cotton in cold water. Now pour a little of the lotion on the cotton. Shake the bottle thoroughly If directions say so. Work quickly. Pat face and neck and before the lotion lias a chance to dry, smooth and blend very evenly with the fingers. If you let the lotion dry in patches before smoothing and blending well, you won't have that nice finish I've talked about. The young, fresh, fine and firm, perfectly normal skin needs no foundation cream or lotion, Skin tonic can serve that purpose. With standards of personal lovell- m- -s going higher and higher out modern woman inii't look as r''t'y groomed on an ordinary day as her torhears did on the very special occasions. Bel! 8udicat WNU Servlca. J. J, Among Whom Ar IMH, t!hs OH WEUJ; la Esjco 100 Substantial Citizens. j ' ' ,, . 'X i fl J J - V . iJ I L ' Y - - a ,, rfkS.i . , . g fresh-lookin- Dre BUNKO-STEERER- r Tin-re'- mous. THIEVES, THUGS, FAKIRS S, AND Found rxrithin tho Limits of thia City oftor TEIT O'CLOCK P. IL, this - mouth sjur, eyes popping, one of the three tohl a yarn Instantly iliiistinguDheil the as n grout und wise man. Hoiv ridiculous It now how uulmportai.t and Itiklgnlfloant these men were in the grand scheme of things. llennie wondered wlmt they must think of him, now that he was fa- Muleliay (returning after absence) -- Did yez teed the two bins while I was away? Muleliay Ol did net the two bins fed me. auart! s there, while that orator Mrs. Uj' 111 n Other Way About ' TO ly loo touch I Jecper I" Don had sal it Huveti'l you even brain enough to return lead? If you can't learn to play bridge, why not ailinil It end quit?" Well, she had quit : she'd left not only the bridge party bill I ton him self several miles way. Peggy gave a vli'loui push to the accelerator of her blue roadster and awntig on two whi-el- s round the corner Into xx , I Strength of Golden Eagle The golden eagle Is said to be capable of lifting and carrying prey weighing 15 to 20 pounds. National Geographic Magazine questions this, however, stating that reports from reliable observers indicate that a weight of eight pounds is about the most one of these birds can carry. When larger prey is killed it must he eaten on the gronnd. I In 111 l(nitit husinrv and aixclnl (hat lu thought of ti e da,xs taek In Kilbies itenernl Ftre with Unfe and I hrt a; lie laul.f aloud at the thought. And toiddi-nlyfor no reast.n other tliau until tiov he hml not found the lime (o cojitenijil.ite the mat ter, he realised what a gulllhlp and wholly trusmi,' little shaver bed li.uv of i once of cti.it inents, d rlit Hi home fueUl, iro.itimiiit a other Ue fr lie recall. m I iwxeral u wroti t 1.eedionithe ltudT xtand (he u)i) and wherefore o' iimm up and It ir;HT u)M,lh(hn ahne I'oMitvll-cut- k1.11, Hrt. roadster. while he wn al"ii lliroiuh the hills nf with hN mind fre .j j Ffiuntr.v. II bourne York titi In lu And It ,,"io miii I'.ort , ; n iil.iili ii.'io lo h.s i , too. tli'i'p, i , Unit itie-we- m. t i 11 iii-l- . or riitilet the tlidehmA Imiehea -- we will Mart (.mJh of lesson mt - j A 1,0 i i ,, JUNE DALEY r WEARS WELL MAKE-U- 111 , Santa Fe Trail It Happened MJ ikrUii lx ninrrled had bN-THEY to the very day Peggy about annlvi-wasn't aetitlim-iita- l enrlot. She itldn'1 eiec! candy or flower. She waan't even mueh die appointed when Don forgot the date entirely but to have him rtnH.se tlmt particular evening to talk to her so dreadfully, end In front of all their friend, win real MAKjOKli: DTNCAN ,;i-- t By liy i x IIoxv TALKS I'tit.l the c.omile oMftrli'rf. I fifteenth l,.il!i oerioim and (riumi.hed oxer adx entarlcu. was nliule unlu-rni. Ii wim unrin4 the puinmer or that tin-,- i ii in M.iIi'Mimi, ante vr, rdlow in,; a . winter whleh u ho knew, in ri. iik fur im mueij, Mide from Imura of in! ks eierj where, i.tdaily work, a constant round of 11 i n i', fur example, laife Itisi rated hvlnn. d.nnerN, jurtlea the ii Mil ninl opiTiitiil of every dsrrlttton, weekend, as tin truest of I, p foremost families III I'.l'lllllo till'll- of rxv York utid other lar,;e cities, In- anyone llliluh.ve that I'entdo divided lo take a monih i. nun more tlmn I.nfi-- . otf und return to Mnptewtmd for a i Life liny kind of mtieh luvdeti rest. mi t unj tiling, mid he lie drove from Nexr jurii. ti n .i,. i. ii rp Y Smartly Devised Fur Trimmings J i . cvu-t- . lined lo kit around sti-ri- lit ,ii I li : unit llhti-to Hu' older ... ! bt M.irklmtn m lu-- Hill WilkitiMiii r 1 it Ilo klii.nl o'jt head a t, i nil, ml, It lull other nf III, Ul,.r fiillnw.t,-ll- n i mime .in,r a by word In m, II.i- I' .nil mt'U!i,i n, XortMlig , mt j;j1 ll'i III, 'I lull ili'lirt- rollij'.lllle, Ill'll 1.1 per kj lulii uiin, Hwas hiu-.ifruin ct n .t Ii 83 ,x , att!try. S VK IN HIS 'N COUNTIN- -- Clever Combinations Are Made by Fur Designers , iS 1 f - ( j Paris collections all sound the note for resort wear. Molyneaux uses corded turquoise velvet in an informal dinner gown for cruisThe jacket Is that ing or resort. cunningly constructed it suggests the lines of a cape. No costume, so word comes from leading style centers. Is conq lete without jewelry. Tlie fair resorter in the picture is wearing a stunning bracelet, anil a glitu,rin star as a hair ornament. Parisieunes are not so wedded to fur coats as are American womBut en. Paris designers have evolved many smartly practical ways of combining cloth and fur in costumes which are warm enough for all hut our bitterest weather. These costumes have the addeil ml vantage of being less bulky In line than many of the fur coats. Heim, admitted past master in designing smart furs. Is responsible f,.r many of these clever conceit-One of tlie best tilings he does Is to make lilted sleeveless vvaNtcoats of fiat fur, to match tlie trim on cloth suits. much-talke- ! Klo-was- meat-nearin- 1 |