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Show Till-- : Scenes and Persons in tlie 1 r ' 'lv- ' v? 'r''i f r . . !k ;! fei 7 ' iSPSw.. if SEN I) Curran aVv; UJfe o kiirwani 'cHwv I ' , SMITH1 li:i p I v ,M : iJ jv'! - ' vl: er hiis v "' :' I,,." fip n I I-- , z !' ' ' :KS drfis1 7ZZ7?F'' 77 ' . - ' ,l! A M 3- V7, sl. tadr 1 1 ;VW Mild 'V ' l1w 'v-v- Mi V '! I ' itioa - : ;;4 a ? Hat V wl.i-i- i I tliinlv baeit on t!;o aui'Us Xr s77 r;; M'S9w$i art'st, N it4 2l2!S2 JenfoEd rivrnni1 . g'a5 teUllc. ml ind SlS na 5 jfVttr' Vaastse river by Japanese bombing planes pre-dlymands from President Boosevelt for Japan to desist Lower ,eft' Premier Neville Chamberlain of Eng-nllU.ti01 aRainst indiscriminate bombing of neutrals ?te,t, w WHhiCh -- 1 !Sto m81 ' T Hints Born to Zoo Lioncsig lb. COUNTY JlDGE fok A Dressing Table Skirt table has dressing curved front und hinged arms on which to mount the skirt so that it can be opened to permit 'T'lIIS i attgg' broken ell records cabs. The mother is tional attention. Miss Jessie Sumner of IVatseka, III., daughter of a country banker, piece of a late county judge, who became Illinois first county judge as a result of a special election. Battle Spectacular Washington Blaze rugs, otto mans and ofhjr useful articles for the home. Headers wishing a copy should send name and address, enclosing 25 centsto Mrs. Spears, 210 South Dcsplaines St., Chicago, Illinois. 1 J4 eup 1 View of the battle waged against the fire wh ch destroyed a large building and threatened an entire fa, k in the shopping district of Washington, D. C. Damage was estimated at 5620.000. The fire, one of the tl spectacular the capital has seen in recent years, brought ont every available piece of apparatus. HARVARD SKIPPER Snow Army Goes on Maneuvers ; are there. Reading Dickens. reading Dickens again. I'VE been means again and again. I Pickwick Papers once a take year just as some folks take hay fever. Only 1 enjoy my attack. 1 melted (net shortening hot I cups drained canned fruit minutes. degrees) for about Serve warm with the hot syrup from the fruit as suggested, or any sauce peferred. Serves 6. MARJORIE H. BLACK. 30-4- 0 We Misjudqe Believe me, every man has hia secret sorrows, which the world knows not; and oftentimes we call a man cold when he is only sad. Longfellow. , ; k. those times How seem today when every dancing exhibit and ev- floor is a strip-teas- e ery bathing beach e nudist show; and a debutante, posing for snapshots, feels shes cheating her public unless she proves both knees still tap. vanilla li cup Cover the bottom of a greased baking pan with the drained canned fruit. Beat the egg well, end beat in the sugar. Sift flour with the baking powder and add alternately to egg mixture with the milk. Add vanilla, melted fat (butter will give excellent flavor, but any fat can be used), and beat Pour over the fruit thoroughly. and bake in a moderate oven (350 pliers. later when, for a season, blessed simplicity ruled the styles, her figure expressed the queenly grace that comes from long, chaste lines. Probably the dears never figured it out. Just the natural cunning of their sex told them 'twas flowing robes which gave majes- ty and dignity to kings on the throne and judges on the bench and prel- egg eup lugar ' i cup flour t tip. biidng powder milk h And ' , to have the oven going. Of the many canned fruits that might be used start with the favorite of the family, whether it ba apricots, peaches, loganberries, cherries or what have you. Tha syrup from the fruit can be used as the sauce for the cobbler just as it is, or it can be thickened and extra seasonings added, such as a bit of cinnamon, lemon or nutmeg. The sauce may be hot or cold, but it really tastes better hot. If you do not have a recipa for the baiter part, try this one: half-siste- rs worn-en-fol- f Fruit fnbblrrs. FRUIT cobblers combine fruit nnd a simple cake hatter to make a de luxe dessert which la especially suited to cold weather when hearty foods touch the hu Rry spot nnd when it is a real joy Grandmas Togs. LAUGH st our grandmothers who believed that, for a lady to be properly dressed, she should have a little something on anyway. ladies Maybe those sort of overdid the thing bustles that made them look like to the dromedary, skirts so tight they hobbled like refugees from a chain gang, corsets laced in until breathing was almost a lost art, boned collars so high they seemed to be peeping over an alley fence. Still, wearing five or six starched petticoats, the little woman was safe from Jack the Fincher unless he borrowed some steamfit-ter'- s ates at the altar and shapely ihh I Tavotite Jieclpe ofi the Becoming a Head Man. ET an unshorn dandruff fancier claim he's divine and, if nobody else agrees with his diagnosis, the police will jug him as a common nuisance and the jail warden will forcibly trim his whiskers for him or anyiiow have them searched. But if enough folks, who'vc tried all the old religions and arc looking for a new one, decide he is the genuine article, then pretty soon we have a multitude testifying to the omnipotence of their idol. Let another man think he is a reincarnation of Julius Caesar or Alexander the Great, and if few or none feel the same way about it he's headed for the insane asylum. But if a majority, which is a large body of persons entirely surrounded by delusions, agrees with him that he is what he says he is he becomes a dictator and rules over the land until common sense is restored, if at ail. Let the writer of a daily column begin to think his judgments are perfect and his utterances are infallible but, hold on, what's the use of getting personal! it r With Corded Shirrings rry tvpe of room and purpose. T A lionesi in the St. Louis zoo is believed far her kind when she rave birth recently $ thown here with her young which have k IV night-herdin- d; "an"' """' amUle, Scmi ' M.: sail! to the lady tourist who asliod liiin whether t!:e r s exaggerated when they described the size of the vanished huiTalo herds. Wellum, said I Charley, get up to this Mon- Irvin S. Cobb tana country until after the bulTu'ocs started thinning out. But I remember onee I was g when the fall drift got between me and camp ami I sat by nnd watched em pass. Not having anything else to do, I started counting 'em. Including calves, I counted up to 3.0UD, (125,294, and right then was when I got discouraged and quit. Because I happened to look over the ridge and here came the main drove. M fo? 7 v. Iiu-iscl- cowboy ! JR a v ii- ,- I saw drv.n he:o hi count loss hosts I'm romiuJcJ of what the Charioy tr .;f- Um ites f -- old-tim- -e Ault v : ; '? ': yfc oJp 7TF ' ;. VM Ruth Wyeth Spears i - ' If-- N) (j 'Jhinki about ' , lng clinkers. As you know, clink-th- e ers choke a fire and prevent the coal from burning freely and com pletely. Also, they clog the grates. making it difficult to shake the fire properly. Owing to the odd size and shape of lumps of coal at the point that Is poked from above, the fuel-be- d becomea packedf and thi, pat,k. big prevents the free passage of air, thus forming clinkers. Clinkers formed this way, however, cause less trouble, for ordinarily they can be broken up and dropped into the ashpit by gently shaking the grates. WNU Servlc. What a difference good bowel habits can make! To keep food wastes soft and moving, many doctora recommend Nujol. INSIST ON GENUINE NUJOL Dickens may have done carica- tures, but he had human models to go by. He drew grotesques, but his grotesques had less highly-colore- d duplicates in real life. And readers recognized them and treasured them as symbols of authentic types. The list is almost endless-Sa- m Weller, Sairy Gamp, Daniel Quilp. Uriah Hecp, Mrs. Nickelby. Mr. Micawber, Mr. Pecksniff oh. a dozen more. What writer since Dickens has h s been able to perpetuate many characters? There is Tark ington with his Penrod and his Al'ci Adams; there was Mark Twain will his Buck Finn and Colonel Mulbern Sellers. There lately has been Sid da:r Lewis with two picturcsqu-creations- , to wit: Babbitt und S.i eluir Lewis. one-tent- Unbby (irecn, who will captain the football team In r(er his election at the imn' u llion house at A unit of New Vorki mechanized snow army is shown gobbling Cambridge, Mass. lirs. was new the where equipment Lake Placid, drift at aieeeeda the famous Clint Frank a seven-foo- t seconds. M Ftiiu of tried. This machine, can move 21 cubie yards of snow in fe the Crimson team. unlv'rslty ilvarhoHn ' W IRVIN S. COBB CojoriShL-W- NU ScrtK-a- . fEie Housewife "Research Professor of Economy SHE'S not Ph D or aa LL.D. She bun t diploma or a cap and gown. Har raiearch i not done In the laboiatory or the library At a matter ol lad her hnding ate made uaually la the itreet car. In tha aubway. in tha auburban commuter'! (rain Sha read tha advertuamanta In fhta papar with care and ooniidera-lio- n They form bar recearch data By meam oi them ihe make her oi Research Professor oi purchase 0 that (he well deserves the bile Sha discover item after item, aa tha years roll on. combinEconomy ing high quality with low . and all who maka and keep II ta clear to you al once that you have Ihe same opportunity With Ihe help ot newspaper a home Ihe school d indiscriminate advertising you. too, can graduate horn buying into the (acuity oi laitidioua purchases' . , |