| Show THE OGDEN FASHION Dorothy )ix !r Jitter 'Box ° years of age I am fond baseball and other sports dance4 Don't indulge in petting parties Despise drinking Smoke to excess Can you tell me from the above description of myself what type of girl would be suited for me? "" 21 old-fashion- "' C ' t ' 4 :?i'"5K v ' ed — 3 - She is modern without being crude She is intelligent without posing as a high-broShe is athletic without f around in breeches all the time fthf is a ennrt unnrt wlthnnt makintr an Imitation man of herself and cursing and swearing as no gentleman docs She is no miss yet she doesn't Rive her lips to every man nor let every Tom Dick or Harry paw her over 'A mother's hearing wbat has hap- r w V i pa-radl- ng j pened On Impulse she marries Russ who takes her to lire with his brother and his wife Russ has mo job and apparently no ambition Soon Boots begins to see him as he Is Russ goes to Miami promising Boots he will send ior her later She gets a job in a big department store After a few months she has an attach of influenza and is befriended by DENIS FEN- WAY younr author NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY ms prunes-and-pris- j j — She Is a good scout but she never forgets that she Is a lady lor sacrifices her womanly reserve nor forfeits her maidenly modesty ' i I- I think that sort of girl would suit a man ofyour type— a girl who would be interested in study a girl who read and could talk about what was happening in the world a girl who liked quiet things and who would be satisfied to stay at home of evenings instead of wanting to be perpetually taken about to places of amusement a girl jwho was domestic in her tastes ana looked forward to g as a career instead of a chore i 1 home-makin- t i don't think that a wild girl or a drinking girl or a 1 per would suit you - 4 ! ge ) HEALTH be a good working partner he pause to consider that there is more walking the colic after marriage than there is dancing the rhumba or that the kind of i line that makes a hit with a husband is good hard horse sense and not baby talk or that a poor man cannot afford to wife with the proper scenery provide a fa$hion-plat- e Nor-does- ! —— i rv - - Ifencc we have the unhappy marriages in which disgruntled husbands compJain that their wives fail to give satisfaction yet the poor wives are just what they were when their husbands picked them out The little dumb Dora is still a little dumb Dora The spoiled mamma's darling Is still the spoiled mamma's darling The lazy good for nothing who was never on time is still lazy and good for nothing and never on time And the internment man is bored with the stupid wife who never knows what he is talking about And the- man who married the selfish girl wjio never considers anybody but herself rebels at being a doormat for her to trample over And the man who married the lazy shiftless girl has to live in a pigsty where nothing is ever done on time - And all this grief comes about through men not finding out the type of wife they really needed So my advice to every young man is to study himself even more than he does the girl before he pops the question to any young woman N DOROTHY DIX ' Dear Dorothy Dlx—I am a man 31 years of age Single For the last fifteen years my entire salary has gone for the support of the home So has that of my sister who has worked for the last twelve years! We have done this although until lately our father has not only learned good money but has had several legacies but he has been Such a poor manager that he could never pay the bills Now at 60 he is penniless depending upon our support Like all human beings my sister and I have our ambitions in life We would like to become somebody and do the things that would make Vi n 11 fft thflt lifft ttfnrth whlla Hut urViaf nan vtrm An itnt cumstanccs? I would like to clear out and start my life thousands of miles away and but for my mother I would have eone lone aeo Why should men and women be permitted to marry and have cmiaren wnen iney are sucn ioqis? But perhaps after all I am the fool Have you a solution to our problem? L W D Answer: " 1 f TALKS By DR MORRIS FISIIBEIN Wearing of the same clothing by different players including particularly the mixing of headgear will result in carrying Infections of the skin from one player to another Leather football helmets' may be sterilized by sulphur fumes Infections of the skin with pus-formi- ng heart-breakin- bend and break under the load that mother and father dump upon them Ambitions are thwarted Love's young dream is suppressed Lives are blighted because boys and girls must give up the careers they long for and establishing homes of their own to make good on hr toria" training quarters so-call- indulgences ss FOOTBALL MAY SPREAD INFECTIONS OF SKIN marriage "But you saw me that niorht com out of the vWillowmere" Boots ing Players Expose Selves to Ringworm "You— I know vou wr persisted by Contact In Quarters and by n't nleasant things about thinking Exchange of Clothing Carryme mat nignt" ing Organisms Tne veil that sometimes cam over Denis' dark eyes shut down at With opening of the football sea- that moment She was she son boys wllL begin in increasing naa saia the words Sh sorry had a numbers to suffer from the common feeling she had hurt— nrhan types of injury that are associated fended him "Yes I saw VOU " He 1noW1 with football training and football away ana nra air of cold aloof net practice mm ner There was alwavs som There are all sorts of funny su thing puzzling about Denis When warmca to him In simple perstitions connected with training you friendliness he was verv liviv tn For a while it was believed that ireeze toward you in this fashion soaking the skin in salt water or you didn't know what you had said in other solutions would harden it or done that was wrong and prevent rubbing and similar Yet she persisted determined to turn the knife in the wound deinjuries Actually thsse methods have not termined to know what his reac been found to be of any value In tions were stead they help to spread infec"It was the next dav we — w tions of the (kin which are par- were married" she said faintly ir ticularly serious for football play- "Russ cot me a room there ers and frequently are the bane of was staying with his neonle In Ac g or more Insoluble There organisms should be treatthan that of children with improvident parents And that It is ed by doctors who usually apply a very common one is proved by the fact that statistics show antiseptic substances that bring that more than half of the fathers and mothers more than 60 these infections under control Most prevalent type of skin Inyears of age are dependent upon their children fection among football players is athlete's foot This how- Of course in many cases this could not have been prevented will affect not only the feet The parents! earnings were so small that after they took care of ever also the groin and other parts their children there was nothing that they could put aside to pro- but of the body when clothing is invide for their old age But in many many other cases as in this one for instance It is sheer selfishness on the parents part They terchanged or improperly cleaned feet may be bathed regularly wanted to eat and drink and be merry and to leave their children in The solutions per containing one-ha- lf to pay the score They indulged themselves In whatever they want- cent of sodium hyposulphite now went ed as they along and depending upon their children's sup- widely used in locker rooms of gymporting them when they were too old to work nasiums and golf clubs The ringworm of the groin may be controlled Such parents literally sell their children into bondage by seeing to it that the supporters Mere children have to go to work to pay for father's and mothare washed every day er's shoulders s no problem more ed Young White underclothing may be worn under the supporter and ammon- iaiea mercury ointments may be put on the skin to control the in- their parents' deficiencies fection Special care should be to It is hard Cruel hard No one can deny that but what can towels used in locker roomsgiven Towels they do about it? They are bound upon the wheel They cannot should never be put on the floor let their parents starve neither their love nor ther sense of duty while the athlete bathes and then would let them do that And the only suggestion one can make is used on the body a half remedy that they should tryto salvage a little of their own Towels put on the floor in this" lives by trying to cut down on their parents' unreasonable demands way will pick up ringworm infection and by making all the other children do their part and then transfer it to various parts of the body Ringworm Infection spreads mostFor curiously enough parents nearly always elect some one child as the family goat and feel that the others should ly in the presence of moisture Athletes and others as well should - go free DOROTHY DIX make sure that their feet and socks dry before the socks and shoes Dear Miss Dix— Do some girls never fall in love? Is so why are are on put don't they? How can a girl tell whether she is really in love or not? — —4- 4EVA To provide for purchase and storage of foodstuffs and rice which will Answer: be held for sale at reasonable nrir In never fall love because they are not sentiSome girls when and where a shortage seems inclined Others because mentally they never meet any man likely to occur the Chinese governwho comes up to their ideal or who fires their fancy ment is organizing a permanent dls- - hr His warm smile flashed over again It was as if the sun had come out There thing almost apologetic in his man ner now "As if you needed to nlafn that" he' said But she vn ui Just the same that h hA v plained The veil fled Iom Denis's eyes xnere was a warm friendly note In his deep voice again Glory and Lou had accented th facts of Russ's death with their usual aDathv rouslnsr themiv only to ask if Russ had left any insurance He hadn't Denis had paid the bills and Russ rested in a little Florida churchvard Some day Boots promised herself she would go to his grave She could not bear to think of Russ so full of life being stilled forever sne was breakfasting this nr- tlcular December Sunday with Denis at the Lafayette French waiters moved deftlv to and tm absorbed In the intricacies of their service Denis had ordered for them both: eggs Benedict miuh rooms crisp triangles of buttered toast m a twisted napkin Dots of steaming coffee Boots was thinner was definitely more mature Her pale hair made a fluid halo underneath her old blue hat The collar of her blue coat framed her face Tomorrow there would be the salesbook at Lacy's again the thousand questions and the pushing frantic buying women the scent of cheap perfume and face powder and human bodies all Jumbled toi gether Denis had moved into the apartment Boots had not seen it yet She was to see it this afternoon when Denis said lazily lighting his cigaret "some people" were coming to tea "Why not come right along with You know when you fall In love by the symptoms You Just iriouuon ana transport have that gone feeling It is unmistakable DOROTHY DIX Copyright by Public Ledger Inc Vtf? n'DICK RUBY i Club 'GiRJL fir '4 f"rt me now? Denis was arguing lightly "Why not came back to the apartment and help me to choose some flowers on the way and see that the cushions are plumped up properly and tell Hong how hot the water must be before the tea is made? Your Children DU Olive Roberts Barton ifi33lXASS3YiCIiNC INSUFFICIENT WORK MAKES CHILD IRRESPONSIBLE THE KILLERS By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON But Boots was adamant Np she The biographer of a famous protested she must get back to man said recently "ResponsiShe had a thousand bility and her room industry at an early age things to do before tomorrow made him what he is Prom nine Things to press years on he got up at three-thirt- y to So Denis put her into a taxi and deliver papers six at finishing having paid the driver stood on o'clock From then on school the corner bareheaded in the bril- time he sold papers on until corner the liant December sunshine as she He worked evenings too after drove away school and then again after sup"He's oh I don't know — per" nice" Boots murmured lneloquent-l- y Today we would look on that as peering back at him through cruel ' and barbarous and it most the square of glass In the rear of certainly was But this man as well the cab Already she thought as many others who have fought a Denis had forgotten her The lights good fight and won goes back to his had changed from red to green for boyhood days for the answers to his crosstown traffic and his tall lean triumph the drill of sacrifice the elegantly dressed figure lost Itself need for persistance putting self in In the drift of pedestrians passing the background in the struggle to by Ah but why shouldn't he for- keep alive They all play a part In get her the instant she passed from success ootn as to me and char his sight she thought with a new acter and searing humility She was Just But above all is the habit oi a stray kitten he'd been kind to work We cannot always work at had picked up and saved from dewe like or even prefer We things struction Yes Denis with his good cannot always even be Interested doctor and alert nurse his ix it is better so if possible although had saved her Newer methods pensive medicines in t teaching must life there was little doubt ofUhat consider this and! not lean tod She mustn't expect any more of toward the strongly attitude ' "play" him after that in of Part the for study training Why was it then that a certain life is to cultivate a contented acdreariness descended upon her ceptance of duty that does spirit when she left the taxi at not consider routine or desire comfort And the foot of Mrs Mooney's brown-ston- e it must be started at young a She had steps? pleasant to be really successful There is that such afternoon ahead of her instead of a as a child thing making very hap loneliness Denis' fire and the deep child but at the same time chairs in the Van Servers' studio py as a the seeds of future happisowing living room about which he had ness j already told her waited to receive I RICHEST OFTEN UNHAPPY her No matter where he is or what She deliberately shook off the he does in the future life will be mood This tea was no ordeal somewhat of a battle Perhaps it will be a battle with himself to be feared— rather a pleasant In- if heonly has no great need to earni terval to look rorward to on a long However it is well known that the Sunday But would Denis b th ranks of the unhappy draw heavsame when surrounded by a dozen ily from the well-to-class The otner people all strangers to her? rich who lack aim ior purpose in Wouldn't she be shy and gauche me usuauy nave a hard time keepand awkward among r those clev- ing content and are often Indeed er people? the most unhappy of all She hadn't heard from her And so it is not onlv for mate mother and father nor from Isabel rial success that children need to although there had been a brie nave the work habit Ingrained in notice of Russ's death in the New them early but to insure against York papers Maybe thev hadn't me ami towaras purposelessness seen It or maybe they were waitDRIVING IS DISASTROUS ing for her to make the first move there is a difference in Naturally Well she wouldn't do that Weak children Some take more readPS she was she had her nrid Kh ily to routine habit than nth would stand on her own feet What we often do mistakenly in She climbed the stairs wearily to uu case is 10 driving a her own room Denis had already child but unless weioegin are very care- -' established a more comfortahi ful using such means we are cnair mere It was one he had had oniy by mceiy to make things worse in storage he said She would h and set his face against work defitn doing him a servim The drivlnr method i nni nitely house space She didn't entirely the best way to approach child pcueve mis sne thought he had nut it is oisastrous with any the gone into a shon and nought if fn j one her after investigating the sagging Approach him with easv but springs oi Mrs Mooney's furni regular tasks that he won't convurc sider out of And if The affair of the ill hill at he has lacked the ordinary duties regular up to Lacys had been cleared nn Rh date to have these small duties sure wasn't whether it had been iirst conrorm somewhat If not al-at lOUna or not but she lrnrncH that together to his ability and taste Denis had seen vounar Mr rtiu In time there can be a ney naa oeen classmates at col- change toward the tasks hegradual Is not Bliss had lege together so fond of j evasive when she had asked him is real kindness to create In about the money but had Implied theIt child the affair was settled once and for Watch it the germ of industry grow There is a vast an difference work-habbetween Well her life hfA and the willlng-to-wor- k the habitit It ner now lonely and uncomplicated is the difference between the real She had been a wife Now h was a widow Russ had died before hustler and the one: who is always for something to turn up tney nad really known much about waiting BUT PLAT IS ESSENTIAL each other Bra velv th farA th Children need play and lots of fact that their marriage would not it need freedom and lots of They nave Deen a success ever Their it need time to call their own They aims and ambitions were too far and do somewhat as they please apart She had not been! married Child labor Is a a wee before she had realized scourge and for a destroyer and a boy of nine! to tnat She Was Sflfl! a Harlr mnnA t get up at three In the morning is unthinkable But let us avoid the tied upon her What had she to other extreme that wraps them! in ao witn tea parties and smiling cotton figuratively and feeds them faces and the light lauirhtr or ov a character diet of candy on a people Sunday afternoon? She All children are better for waa stray cat that Denis had some effort and the Ismail routine picked UD and been klnrf tn eh tasks that cost a struggle at times mustn't impose upon him further to finish Their whole mental fibre wn sne would telephone Denis will be strengthened by some work and tell him che wmMn't each School tasks do much day u all after She couldn't th nam more but little home responsibilind smile ties are valuable because Pl°?le'wlden her y they are wiiwc mis canxer ate at the very diversified from time to time wre oi ner soul Some children have too much to Mrs Mooney tanned do at home Others not enough "Mister Penwav lust wnhA a is It matter for Judgment and and he says the earn be waiting The mother thought must dedowdstairs for cide ' thought you oughn't to walk with (Copyright 1834 NEA Service Inc) not so strong and all f Dear kind nni Rh if-W " MlUOiU For formal affairs women have lose mm He was her only friend men's flannel trousers t at adopted no Be continued) Riviera bathing beaches wearing 44them a vivid crepe de chine with The ad that tells an is th that ' vtiwv shirt whose colors aeua Read and use Classified ads may vary from Chinese lacquer red to navy blue f - j i i j do e i tem-permen- tal f hn s trtrhi i ! fr BL THORNTON W BURGESS Alasl Alas! The killer knows No pity and no mercy shows —Old Mother Nature To kill f or food is no violation ol Old Mother "Nature's laws It Is obedience to the first great law the-loof sell preservation To find pleasure m killing and kill just for that pleasure is wholly another matter and there are few of Old Moth-- ? er Nature's children who are guilty of it Shadow the Weasel is one of these and sometimes Man I am sorry to iy Now and then we find this lust to kill in Man's companion the Dog And when this happens the helpless Sheep are the ones most likely to suffer Once in a while il is a flock of Hens or Ducks Occasionally these killers take to the woods to hunt Deer especially at such timu as the latter are most easily run down Seldom is it one Dog alono that does this Usually two or three or more work together Now hunting Dogs of various kinds usually hunt for the sheer love of He enjoys using that wonderful nose of his to work out the tangled trait and in matching his wits against those of Keddy But when you find Dogs that are not hunting Dogs that haven't the noses to follow faint scents running in the woods with a i3og who can follow trails you may know that they are killers hunting for the sole desire to kill I I There were two such killers In the Green Forest this beautiful sum mer morning With them was a small Hound He was not big enough to have pulled down light-fo- ot or even Mrs Lightfoot alone It was iiis part to find the trail and follow It Which the others rnnlr! nnt do One was a big Police Dog and one was a big mongrel If once they caught up with a Deer the latter would have no chance They were not hunting for food for all three were well fed The Hound was hunting for the pleasure : of the Chase and the' others for the lust of killing Patiently the Hound searched for the scent of a Der He knew what his companions wanted He paid no attention to the scent of Jumper the Hare when he found it The others ran aimbwily this way and that on the chance of finding a victim in some thicet At the first yelp of the Hound when he picked up the scent of Mrs Lightfoot they joined him and Impatiently followed while he worked out the trail They were silent umll as they burst out of a thicket they saw Lightfoot facing them Then they barked as they rushed for him their eyes hot with desire to sill v With sharp whistle Lightfoot bounded away the two big Dogi racing after him while the Hound brought up the rear baying steadily as he followed the trail There were running by sight while he was running by his nose In a few minutes he was left far behind They were fast those Dogs but they were no match for the speed of Lightfoot while he was fresh and it was not long before he was out of sight Then they were helpless until their Companion came up They ran thU way and that aimlessly but the Hound with the fresh scent always In his nose ran steadily and the others fell iu behind him The chase " was on i t Away from the place where LlghtJ foot knew the two helpless fawns were lying flat and motionless as 4 RADIO PROGRAM Frd'd Waring ond His Pnnsylvanlan TO NIG il T COIUM1IA KSL at m ah STATIONS G:30 ' - o vii NEVER SAW i A P M - t:i i ! GOOD -- POUR milk or cream on a bowlful-of Kcnogg' Rice Then listen as Kriiple they snap and crackle their tory of delicious crispness You've never tasted anything: so good Serve for breakfast or lunch An ideal food for children LighJ and easy to dirrcst Made by Kello££ in Battle Creek Mid From WATER MAID RICE ' : IVE CHANGED TO RINSO r i i -- I Jr A 'niir' 4t fc V — iVe r v X 1 v " always used RINSO FOR THE world fmoui prfcs nd dVryej here rt t tKeir bert now with beautiful tutumn colon od brc-In- S welher Visit Wihington this ru na enjoy your $uy more Stop st this distinctive hotel Quiet exclutlveaess downtown location facing Lafayette Park TH LAUr40RYBUTlVE ) DISCOVERED IT'S JUST AS - rT WONDERFUL FOR r DISHWASHING sr — w JIFFY-B- UT - - i r sK yfi---- : - RINSO'S CREAMY I ( Get KID OF ( GREASE IN A ktr-J (They're lovav) UKEYDU T - t i "1 ' SEE MOW THEY SAVE — n r MYHAHDSFRi1 r GETTIMG RED imcjaricm -- on washdif too Ia TSY RINSO j vfw ciocncs or 3 j 1 RVt red1 licafe Jlaxfcr HAY-ADAM- S - Vitalizing Ccreal HOUSE NATHAN XNftOOMGa 2 WASHIHaTOHDC 1 3 f'l ' ii In Washing ton j0 mil i Uis't en: THATi BECAUSE1 y GOU 1 1 vt' lHt uliHti —- 1— AUTUMBT DAYS (Hi " To create new fishing grounds in the Baltic thousands of young plaice caught in the North Sea off trj Schleswig coast have been tran v fcrred to the coast near Kiel GcA- many many of them being marked so that their growth and movements can be checked their mother had warned them to when she had left them he rani The flnt thine to do was tn pet those killers away where there would be no cnance that they would find those precious babies or their mother There would be time enough to think of himself later Once he —— M spair" i - II the trail f i — DIALIRS D The Hound brought up the rra bayiar steadily as he followed 5 j A' FORD WW' had thos killers safely away Mrs Lightfdot would go back where the could watch over the babies They were sale for the time being Lightfoot had had a good look at those Dogs and his heart had sank If ever they caught him It would be the end cf him He knew that Even had he rosscucd his great aharrrv 1 pointed untlers he would have to small charco in a fight with three1 of them Without thoe cntlrrs thrre could be cut one jesult There was the chase It is this not the mere ro mercy In those killers behind lust to kill that takes them afield him Bowser the Hound thoroughly en (Copyright 1034 by T W Burgess) Joys following Reddy Fox for hours although In the end Reddy escapes The next story: "Lightfoofs De- i " 1C3-4- ' T T POWELL r::i"i:r:i5T ill chilling FEELER a0 jJi:nVCLC:JDSLL air nicDtEfZnsu pitts f want— I'm terribly anxious to pay you oacie" sne said her voice inicjcening treacherously She winked back the tears — it Kmrf to her that she was such a fool iaieiy always weeping about nothing at all But Denis seemed not to notice she was clad to observe He was snubbing a cigar et out in the heavy hobnail ash tray "I wish you wouldn't wcry so mucn aoout that"j His matter-of-factnewas heartening He never asked questions that was one of the nice things about him Other people aid — the nurse even the doc tor Mrs Mooney and the girls at the store Everyone was so curi ous about her affairs Not Denis e accepted tmngs as they were He knew that she i had married Russ had broken with her family Lois hadn't told him He hadn't seen Lois He had told that Lois and Dr Hart were havinr a year in Germany Sq he hadn't Known & tning about— about her "1 But how wise you are to consider before marriage the type of girl who will be congenial to you instead of waiting until to And out that you have got a misfit as so many men do The average man in selecting a wife seems never to take his own personality into account His concern is solely with the sur- Dark gray gaylak is used to fash- face attractions of the girl and he never asks himself whether Ion this sleek sports and is'ormal she has a single quality that will be what he wants in a wife daytime coat worn by Frances uraKe screen star A scarf from the back of the frame-lik- e A girl is pretty Or she is a good dancer collar Or she has a and ties under the chin in an Ascute way Or she is a swell dresser And a man marries her without reflecting upon his needs in a wife He doesn't say cot loop The sleeves are smooth at the shoulders full at the elto himself jthat while beauty is undeniably attractive in a wobows and tight at the wrists man it is also expensive to maintain and that he is in no position to set up a living picture that will require a costly frame What he needs is a strong healthy practical wife who would after-marria- CHAPTER XXVI Boots faced Denis Fenway across ' the exDanse of a - white cloth There were drooping pink roses m silver vase but Denis had set this vase aside so that he could see her better He was smilWhat a nice smile he had ing she though And yet she idly! hadn't In the least liked him when she had first met him He had seemed so superior— "snooty" she had called him to herself "So you're going back to work tomorrow?' r flap- THURSDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 20 Mirri McEttiQTi BEGIN HERE TODAY BOOTS RAEBURN At and pretfy Is snubbed by wealthy SYLVIA RIVERS Dvc to SylrU's gossip Boots Is forced to resign from the Junior Both girU live in Larchneck fashionable New York suburb Hurt and humiliated Boots accept the attentions of BUSS LUND swlmmlnr instructor MRS RAEBURN returns from a out of town and Boots dreads' trip her (? Answer: I should think that what I call the lady type of girl would best suit you I use the term lady type to designate the girl who has held on to the virtues of women with one hand while grabbing the new ones with the other hand " EACfl ? WONDERING PAT ' y " i con t ivm IN FUR WHAT TYPE OP GIRL SHOULD FINE STRAIGHT THINKING MAN MARRY? LAZY PARENTS WHO CONDEMN CHILDREN TO SLAVERY TO SUPPORT THEM Par Miss Dlx—I am a young man studying Like swimming football r STANDAnD-EXAMINE- U Clotfaej wasbci this 3 times locrer GfMf "no-scru- b" irwKir wuhmg ali dexoinc easy AfPnttJ h AM ERICA'S creamy studes whiter wtyf htt 2 or Ey d HmnhttfiBi a oa hsuds f $ Jit 1 & I' I ImsU'Ik BIGGEST-SELLIN- G PACKAGE SOAP |