Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 297, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 April 1922 — Page 6

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' ©19T.1 A&M-HUTCHINSCN y^AT' 4 '

PART FOUR C HAPTER ll — Continued. (Continued From Our I,ast Issue.) "He hud—once. He showed me the letter. Well, yon know, old man. every fox knows what foxes smell like; and I amelt a dear brother solicitor's smell in that letter. Asking him to make a home possible for her to return to so they might resume their life together. “I handed it hack, 1 said, ‘H'm’ again. I said, ‘H'm. yon remember, old man, there was that remark that remark that perhaps the girl might have a claim on you. Remember that, don't you?’ “By Jove. I thought for a minute he was going to flare up and let me have it. But he laughed a if I- was a fool and >..U, ‘Oh. good l.ord. man, that's utterly ridiculous. Man alive, with all my faults, ■ny wife knows me.'’ CHAPTER 111. i Una day a month later—ln May—Hapgobd said : "Now. I'll tell you. Old Sabre—by Jove, it’s frightful. He's crashed. "Look here. It’s in two parts, this sudden development. Two parts —morning and afternoon yesterday and a bit today. And of all extraordinary places to happen at—Brighton. "Yes. Brighton. T was down there for a Saturday to Monday with my Missus. M ndav morning we were sunning on the pier, she and i. "Well, all of a sudden she began. ‘Oh. what a frightfully interesting face that man's got!’ "1 looked across. Old Sabre! "I went over to him. His face was like a shout on a sunny morning. Yes, he was pleased. I like to think how joliy pleased th“ old chap was. "I got old Sabre on to a secluded bench and started in on him. What on earth was he doing down at Brighton, and how were thing? “He said Things * * * ? Things are happening with me. Hapgood. Not to me. I had to get away from them for a bir. I'm going right hack tomorrow. Effe was right—with her baby. She was glad I should go—glad for me. I mean. Top of her ow misery. Hapgood, she's miserable at what she says she's let me in for. She's always crying about it. She's tom between knowing my house is the only place where she can have her baby, between that and seeing what her coming into the place has caused. She spends her time trying to do any little thing she can to make me comfortable. It‘s pathetic, yon know. Jumped at this sudden idea of mine of getting away for a coupie of days. Fussed over me packing up and alb that, you know. Look, just to show you how she hunts about for anything to do for me—said my old straw hat was much tbo shabby for Brighton and would I get her some stuff, oxalic acid, and let her clean it up for roe. Asa matter of fact she made such a shocking mess of the hat t h*. t I hardly liked to wear it. Couldn't hurt her feelings. though. Chucked it info the sea when I got here and bought this one. Make a funny story for her when I get back shout how It blew ff That's the sort of life Ty_-g ■v'jE r. Hapgood. Igjou anot 1 nßpf’, T ' I had brought her the sri'ft-T*> ™/4at. M°f me with. Had T lost Said I was to guess Guessed at last that it mnust be my •■igaret case, it was. She'd found it lying about and took me to show where she'd put it for safety—in the back of the clock in my rutun. Said I was always to look there for any little valuables I might mis. ad wanted me to know how she liked to be careful of my things like that. Fussing over me, d’you see? “ ‘That's the sort of life we lead togeher, Hapgood—together: but the life I'm caught np in. the things that are happening with me, that I'm right In the middie of, y that I felt I had to getaway from for a bit—astounding. Hapgood, astounding, amazing • • • “ ‘Hapgood. If I kept forty women in different parts of London and made no secret of it, nothing would be said. People would know I was rather a shameless lot. mt little ways would be an >pen secret, but nothing would he said. I should be received everywhere. But I'm thought to have brought one woman into my house and I'm banned. I'm unspeakable. " Do you see, Hapgood? Do you see? The conventions are all right, moral sound, excellent, admirable, but to save their own face there's a blind side to them, a shut eye side. Keep that side of them and you re all right. They'll let you alone. They'll pretend they don't see you. But come out and stand In front of them and they’ll devour you. They'll smash and grind and devour you, Hapgood. They're devouring me. " ‘That's where they've got me in thir Jaws Hapgood; and where they've rot Effie a their jaws is just precisely .rain on a blind, shut-eye side, • • * • 'hoy're rightly based they're absolutely •sr. one can't gainsay them, hut to save hdr face, again, they're indomitably ■lipd and deaf to the hideous cruelties n their application. They mean well. They cause the most frightful suffering, be most frightful tragedies, but they

Our First Year Chapter XXlV—lnspiring a Husband BY A BKIDE. “~

START THIS SERIES HERE Perfect contentment may be found in olividufil independence, this bride and room think But their financial afi!rs are interfering with their "pereet freedom.” <'f course. I expect my husband w*Hl one day he a rich man. I've been poor 11 my life. I'm tired of it. We girls used to talk this oyer at coleg?, And l know that lots of girls feel be same as I do. They agree that a girl, after she’s married, mustn’t be too *asy In her demands on a husband. Not f she wants to make anything of him. Jeamte Alison .used to perfectly iirioug when we talked so’. “You silly flappers” she used to scold. ’Yon marry to spend and spend! And demand and demand! You want things tnd things! Then what? Y'ou’li lose ern ! And yon deserve to!” “But they say that if a wife is too ontent?d a husband will slump! Make i man too happy and he’ll slump.” So Mary Smith, at college, had said. “I liink a wife can help her husband make : fortune by keeping him on his toes!” Jeanne asked : ’’You girls all remember Molly Gain?*?’’ We did. Molly is the shining milliondress among our alumae. “Well, Molly married her chemistry professor, you know Ami *c prides herself on having made her husband. He was content to fool around with science, iii't as science, you know. Molly decided he might as well make a fortune out of his knowledge, and not teach in a minor university all bis life. So she kept at him until he went into commercial life. Color was his specialty. He was always meaauring color waves, Now he makes

won't look at I hem. they won't think of them, they won't speak of them: They mean well • • • "Obi Sabre put his head in his bands. He might have been praying. "With that he went back to ail that stuff I told you be told me when I was down with him last month. He his face all pink under his skin, he said, Hapgood. Ive got the secret. I've got the key to the riddie that's been puzzling me all my life. Light, more light. Here it is: God is love Not this, that, nor the other that the intelligence revolts at, and puts aside, and goes awaj. and goes on hungering, hungering and unsatisfied: nothing like that; hut Just this: Plain for a child, clear as daylight for grown intelligence: God is—love. Eisten to this, Hapgood: "He that dwelleth in love dweileth in God and God in him; for God is love.'* Ecstasy, Hapgood, ecstacy!’ if W hen i saw him again was about 3 o'clock, and I walked right into the middle of the development that has pretty well let the roof down on him. "He was in the lobby. No one else there. Only a man who'd just been speaking to him and who left him and went out as I came in. “Sabre had two papers in h!s hands. He was staring at them and you'd ha’ thought from his face he was staring at a ghost. They were divorce papers. The citation and petition papers that have to be served personally. Divorce papers. Ills wife had instituted divorce proceedings against him. Naming the •Mrl Effie. * ’ "\es. you can whistle. He was knocked out. I got him up to his room. It was pretty awful. He s at on the bod with the papers in his hand, gibbering. Just gibbering. Was his wife mad? Was she crazy.' He to be guilty of a thing like that? He capable of a beastly thing like that? A vile, hideous, sordid intrigue with a girl employed in his own house? Effie! liis wife to believe that? An unspeakable, beastly thing like that? He tried to sh-.w tpe with his finger shaking ail over the tiling. ‘Hapgood, i.. "MY GOD, THE WORD .MAKES ME SICK!*’ word here? I guilty of that? My wife, Mabel, think me capable of that? Adulterer! Adulterer! My God, my God, adulterer! The word makes me sick. The very word is like poison in my mouth. And I am to swallow if. It is to be me, my name, my title, my brand. Adulterer! Adulterer!" “I tell you. old man * • * I tell you I managed to get him talking about the practical side of it. That is I managed to make him listen while I talked. “Next morning -that's this morning, you understand—h--> was a little more normal, able to realize things a bit, I mean; in a panic fever to be off and state at the Registrar’s that lie was going to defend the action: but normal enough for tne to see it was all right for him to go straight on home immediately after and tell the girl what she had to do and all rhat. I told him. by the way, that it would pretty well have to come out now. ultimately. who the child's father was; the girl would practically have to give that np in the end to clear him. You know, I toll him that in the cab going along down. He ground his teeth over it. It was horrible to hear him. He said bed kill the chap if he could ever discover him: ground his teeth and said he'd kill him. now—after this. “Well, he got through his business nbou twelve—then a thing happened. Can't think now what it meant. We were waiting for a cab near the I.aw Courts. A cab was just pulling in when a man caine up and touched Sabre and said ‘Mr. Sabre?' Sabre said, 'Yes' and the chap said very civilly, 'Might 1 speak to you a minute sir?’ "Suddenly someone shoved past -me and there was obi Sabre getting info the cab with this chap who had come up in him. I said. ‘Hullo! Hullo, are you off?’ "He turned round on tne a face gray as ashes, absolutely dead gray. ! and never seen such a color in a man's face.

dyes.” “And a million a year l ” “Yes! Anil he used to lie the dearest, sweetest man in the university. And now he’s an old grouch!” Only a few of us shared Jeanne’s opinion. Most of ns believed that making money is a duty a man owes his wife. For doesn't a girl, When she marries surrender her own chance to acquire a fortune? Doesn’t a man, then, assume a double responsibility, his own and hers? So we girls argued In school. And I never have forgotten the theory. And long ago I decided not to let my husband get into a financial rut. Naturally, Jack felt from the first his wife ought to have the best of everything. Just as a matter of personal pride. For example, whenever I have mentioned a car. Jack agrees that I ought to have one. I must admit that he never brings up the question of a car, but he is attentive when I tell him about the new models some of the other gifts have. Jessie l.ungdnn has n row sedan. And her husband is in the office with Jack. I suppose things will come our way some time. But 1 have a harder problem than most of the girls. For if Jack has one -single tiny fault In his characetr, it is this: he may be a wee bit too much of a reader and a dreamer and a chess player. He much prefers sitting over a chess board at some kind of chess solitaire to going to the most brilliant society event of the season. And that attitude toward society and people with money will not do—if Jack is to make a quick success.— Copyright, 1922. * (To Be Continued.)

DID YOU KNOW— You should sit erect, and cot lounge back at the table. You should, when net using your knife and fork, rest them wholly on yonr plate. You should place food in your mouth as soon as It is lifted from the plate, never holding It in midair.

He said Yes. I'm off,' and sort of fell over his stick into the cab. The man, who was already in, righted him on to the sent and said, 'l’addlnglon’ to the driver who was at (he door, shutting it. 1 said, (hrough (he window, ‘Sabre! Old man. are you ill?’ "He put his head towards me and said in the most extraordinary voice, speaking between his clenched teethay though he was keeping himself from yelling out. he said. ‘l' you love me. Hapgood, get right aim out of it from me nud let me alone. This man happens to live at Tldborough, 1 know him. WeTe going down together. ’ “I said. ‘Sabre ’ "He clenched his teeth so they were all bare w‘th his lips contracting. He said, ‘Let mo alone. Let me alone. Let me alone.’ "And they rushed off. “I tell you what I'm going to do. I'm going down there tomorrow. I'm frightened about him.” (( ontlnurd in our next issue.)

Dr. Bishop's Talks OOK out for appen dicitis if you are often a victim of dyspepsia. Chronic ap pendlcltis often causes ''V gastric pain and ■ Dyspepsia is the ’* ' most common ailment '* j “/ in th * s country. It is the price we Amer icans often pay for BE' - our hustle and bustle. The chief cause of { the ailment and the one most easily prevented, is lack of sufficient mastication of food. We too often don't take the time necessary to chew our food thoroughly, and hence swallow it in masses, which the stomach can not take care of. But even then there would he a whole lot less indigestion were it not for the f let that we live under such high pressure thai we do not give the digestive organs time and strength sufficient to take care of the food that is put into them, for digestion depends upon the presence of good, pure blood. Such a bjood supply is not present wh, p we use that blood for active mus ciliar exercise, or for solving business problems. To be sure that the blood supply gets a chance to get down into the digestive organs we should always relax both mentally and physically while eating and shortly thereafter. Good digestion demands freedom from ire and worry. Any e rjjusi U> palmist it an-e., a bft(j efftyct on your digestion./ Hence you complain of dyspepsia ne stomach is always easily disturbed by reflex action from other organs. For instance, eye strain is apt to give you chronic dyspepsia, through its effect on the gastric secretions. Use Lace for Summer The fact that Paris Is using a great deal of lace Just now, added to the fact that many lovely frocks were seen at Palm Beach, indicates that lace, of every kind, color and width, will be much use I this summer. Spanish lnces. In black or white, are still decidedly popular. Anew lace which seems destined to enjoy a real vogue this spring and during the early summer is a mixture of silk and woo] in a big floral design. This comes in wide flouncing. To meet the demand for dainty fabrics which float gently, the manufacturers have done their utmost, and the array of chiffons, crepes, embroidered nets. sh.c r novelty cotton, batistes, voiles and the like is enough to turn the heads of beau ty-loving womankind. The spring of 1922 has witnessed such an orgy of color, following a season of somber black, that It will be no surprise if the brightest colors in waßh fab rics arc ignored by the woman selecting her summer dresses, and white or sweet pea shades chosen, leaving the high colors for the younger generation, which does not grow so fagged and flushed when the thermometer begins to climb. White or cream, pale blue, yellow or orchid always look exquisitely cool, and will be worn extensively.

WILL APPEAR IN SHORT RIDGE COMEDY

The three principal characters in the Shortridge Senior Flay, "Clarence” are: Maynard Wilson, as Clarence; Irma l lrich, os Cora Wheeler; .lames Kay a* Mr. Wheeler. <d i(H)

The Shortridge senior class will present as its class play, Booth Tnrktngton's comedy, ‘‘Clarence” next Wednesday night at the Murat Theater. Following is a list of the cast in the order of their appearance; Mrs. Martyn Grace Noble Mr. Wheeler James Kay Mrs. Wheeler Janice Thompson Bobby Wheeler Thomas Howe Cora Wheeler - Irma Flrieh Violet Finney Lucille Jones Clarence Maynard Wilson Della Katherine McClure Dinwiddie Lloyd Evans Hubert Stem Taylor Creighton Rosie . Elizabeth Hoyle The play is in four acts and scenes. Tile direction is in the hands of George So nines. Tickets have been on sale at. Shortridge for the last wees and the house is practically sold out. The balance of 6eats will be placpd on sale at the theater Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of next week. „

IN DIANA DAILY TIMES.

„ ,! .n.oiD see,cep miss c1e.,0,. ecuc.—s . , e . .T _ Miss Hildegarde Planner entertained Thomas Le Claire Jacques, <>F 817 West '

Announcements have ; • received pi the engagement of Miss Elizabeth.-Del phiue Jacques, daughter of Mr. jytnd Mrs. Thomas Le Claire Jacques, of 817 West End avenue. New York 7 jb Samuel Makarnes* Garber, son of / M r . and Mrs. M. G Garber of Madlsjuv/ Samuel Garber has been his home in this city for the dust few years and is a member of Herold-Garber Compauw. Miss Jacques is the granddaughter of the late Rev. Horatio Southgate. The wedding will take place In June at the summer home of Mr. and Mrs. Jacques, Hampton Bay, L. r. • • • Mrs. Ferris Carson Myers, 3001 Wash lngtou boulevard, entertuined Monday afternoon w;ih a kitchen shower iu honor of Miss Ruth Sprlnggate, a bride elect. Covers were laid at the bridge luncheon for twelve A miniature kitchen ft/ruied the centerpiece. Lilacs and redj bud carried out the colors of the brideelect. The tnbl" was lighted with candles tied with tulle. Among the guests were Miss Sprlnggate. Mrs. Robert Lewis, Mrs. Albert Asche, Mrs. E. Krtei, Mr*. J-.hn Ran, Miss Caroline Miller. MLss I Irma Korn, Miss Ella Hammond, Mr*. | Bernard Cartmell of Chicago, Mrs. Harry j Spring gate and Mis. Maurice O'Connor. Mrs. Myers was assisted by Mrs. Spring : gate and Mrs. O'Connor. i About 175 guests were entertained Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs Francis |M. Thompson, 4015 Rockwood avenue. ! Sunday was the twenty fif'h wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Thompson. The home was decorated with spring fle-ers and in pink and white carnations. Silver hearts with the dite on them were given as favors Among the out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. Frank McGee and family of New Castle: Mrs. Ida Thompson of New Castle; Mrs. Rose Harvey, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Gregory and di lighter Garnet of ZlonsviHe; Mr. land Mrs. Ernest Harvey of Zionsville and Mr, and Mrs. Guy Campbell of Browns- | burg. Mrs Thompson was assisted bv | Miss Innis Gregory, Mis Anna Hartman Mr. Rose Harvey. Mrs. Luella Maines, Mrs. M. E. Thompson, Mrs. Frank Curry and Mrs. Ben Meal, Mr and Mrs. Newton Todd of Tndlan-

GEOGRAPHIC PUZZLES j 5 a, |je<”'FRANC’O A— * 4" IK + l/_ r r tffwL - YISIIRPAY '3 AR-SWER. . _ tEITKEL - UZZ ♦ TU.SJC -STC +C ♦ KLY -Z = KENTUCKY

WILL TAKE PART IN RECITAL*

kVolt'. arc among i he guests recently arriving at the Hotel Green. Pasadena. Mis* Hildegarde Planner entertained Monday afternoon with a luncheon in honor of Mias Elizabeth Gordon Holloway, whose marriage to Francis Henry Nesbitt will take place Saturday. The guests enjoyed a delightful luncheon and bridge party at the Woodstock Club. The Arbor Vitae Club will meet Monday evening at the home of Miss Martha Wigal, twill North Tuxedo street. The home will be beautifully decorated with spring blossom*. * Miss Martha Hickey, 111 ft l’nrk avenue, will be hostess for a bunco party Monday night. Miss Hickey wdll be assisted by the members of the Sigma Delta Sorority. The members of the Delta i’i Gamma Sorority will meet Monday evening at the home of Miss Georglanna Clemments. 613 North Keystone avenue. ... An Indian Musical will be given at the home of Miss Lucille Lnrkman, by the members of the Mu l’hl Epsilon Sorority, Tuesday afternoon. The program Is tn charge of Miss Bernice Reagan, and the hostess will be assisted by Miss Frances Wishard. • • • Mrs J. K Lang, Sl5O Guilford avenue will entertain with a guest day party for the Meridian Heights Inter So Club Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. F“lls T. McWhlrter wns the principal speaker at a guest day meeting of the Monday Cluh, held Monday afternoon in the l’ropylaeum. New officers for the Independent Social Club will be elected Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. 11. K. I’ruitt. 303i) Sugar Grove avenue. • • * The annual spring fun fest of the Vir-Si-Tel Club wilt be given Thursday night, at the Athenaeum. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Llndetnann, Mr. and Mrs. William F. Eckhart, and Mr. and Mrs. Connell, have been asked to chaperon. The committee in charge of general arrangements are Paul Roach, Charles Eckhart, Ed Klrk-

Tbe following program will te given under auspices of the College of Music and Fine Arts Monday evening at the Meridian Street M. E Church. Miss Eleanor Beauchamp, Miss Marion Williams and Mrs Arnold Spencer will take part in the program. Pastoral Sonata Rbeiuberger 1. I’asaorale; 2. Andante; 3. Fugue. Horace Whitehouae. Sposalizio Liszt Guonimenrclgon Liszt Miss Eleonora Beauchamp. Cradle Song Over the Steppe Gretrhaninoff My Native Land Mrs Arnold Spencer. | Echoes of a Waterfall Montanl Tasqualo Montanl. Pirate Dreams ITuerter The Day Is N’o More Carpenter I Charity Hugemen ! Spirit Flower Campbell-Tipton Miss Marion G. Williams. 'Caprice and \l teste Gluck Saint Sacns Tarantella Moakowski Willoughby D. Bougthon. Similitudes ... Horace Wbltehouse Invocation lo Eros Kurstelner Spring's Singing MacFayden Mrs Arnold Spencer. Saeterpeuten* Sunday . Die Bull Lcgende Wioniawski P. Marlnus Palsen. i Concerto in B flat minor Tcbaikowskl Andante non troppo e molto maestogo; Allegro con spfrlto. Willoughby Houghton. Orchestral part played on the organ by Horace VYhltehouse.

hoff, William Nagel, and Eldon Rogers. The music will lie furnished by Kelleys' Wonder Seven, of Muncle. Mrs. Effte Marine Harvey, 1504 North Fennsyivauiu street, is attending a conference of the board of directors <>f the National American Musical Festival of Buffalo, N. Y". Before returning home she will go to New York City on a business trip. • • Mr. and Mrs. Robert I. Blakeman, 2161 North Pennsylvania street, are pleased to have as their guests for a few days Miss Julia Blukeinan and Miss Margaret June Alexander. Both girls have been studying music in Chicago, and will give a recital Friday afternoon at the Woodstock club. • • • The Fortnightly Literary Club will meet Tuesday afternoon in the Propylaeum. Mrs. Fills F. Hunter will speak ou “Talleyrand the Man,” and Mrs. William H. Dye will speak on “John Mar shal.” The Women’s Rotary Club met Monday for luncheon in the Florentine room of the Claypool Hotel. The pntiro program was given by members of the club. Mrs. Henrietta Ellinwood, president of th Mothers' Aid Society, spoke and Mrs. Elisabeth D. Long gave some readings of Southern folk lore. Original South Side Women's Club will meet Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Emma Flick, 1509 Barth aienue. i • • • Having kept their marriage a secret i since Jan. 30. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gold- i berg will be at home to friends in Apartment. 6, 4580 Washington boulevard. Mrs. Goldberg was Miss Mildred E. Ries, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Hurd, 1322 W'est Thirtieth street, before her marriage. The ceremony was performed in Louisville. Ky.

Clubs and Meetings A reception in the interest of the candidacy of Franklin T. McCray will be held Tuesday afternoon at. the home of Mrs. George Hutto, 1607 College avenue. Invitations are extended to all other candidates. A meeting of the East Side Improvement Club will be held Tuesday evening it school No. 73 for the discussiou of improving Thirtieth street. All members Interested in Improving Brightwcod aro Invited. PERFUME. Women in Arabia perfume their bodies by reclining over hot coals on which have been sprinkled myrrh and spices. WASH CLOTHS. It is not enough thnt wash cloths be merely washed. They snoubl be boiled once a week to destroy all germs. HAIR. Combing Ihe hair with a load comb will darken the hair and subdue the color of red hair. BLISTERS. Touching with a bit of cotton saturated with spirits of camphor or rubbing gently with alum or borax, will help to drive fever blisters away. ?

The ADVENTURES of & Raggedy Raggedy Ann and Andy ypa By JOHNNY GRUELLE

j A kindly smile was Upon Raggedy Ann's face and her little shoe button eyes danced with merriment as she turned over in the little bed and raised upon one rag elbow. Raggedy Andy who shared Raggedy Ann's bed slept soundly, his little cotton stuffed head dreaming of pleasant things and a broad smile stretching across his face. Andy's smile was as cheery as Raggedy Ann's, for you see both smiles were painied on. Raggedy Ann shook Raggedy Andy very quietly, so as not to disturb the other dolls, "Sh!” she whispered when Raggedy Andy raised up. "Let's Jump from the window’ and start on an adventure !’* ‘‘All right;" Raggedy Andy smiied up at her, so as quietly as two little mice, the two rag dolls tiptoed to the window and helped each other climb upon the sill. It was very far dawn to the ground, but Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy caught hold of each others hands and counted, "One, two, three!", and jumped. Over and over they turned and twisted, the wind catching in Raggedy Ann's dress and making a balloon. Near the ground, both rag dolls struck a clothes-line and the force of their fall against the rope, sent them spinning back into the air, only to tumble all doubled up upon the soft grass. Ragged? Ann sat up and smoothed out the wrinkles in her apron and Raggedy Andy sat up too, but one of his rag legs had twisted about In back of his head and kept him bent forward. Raggedy Ann hastened to help her friend and soon the two were racing across the road-way. “Let’s crawl through the hedge!" said Raggedy Andy. "There's a lovely meadow on the other side, and beyond that is the deep, deep woods, where there ?.”e F'tlits and everything!" The two dolls Carted crawling through a hole Id the hedge when Raggedy Ann heard a faint little “Oheepy, cheepy!" close beside her and parting the branches, she saw a tkhy little song sparrow w’ith his wings spread out upon the ground and his tiny baby eyes tilled with fright. And right in front of the iittle baby song sparrow Raggedy Ann saw a snake. Raggedy Andy also saw the snake and with a scramble he jumped through the leaves and held the snake's head upon the ground. My how the snake wiggled and twisted and squirmed and shook. It was all Andy could do to hold It and even then, the snake sometimes lifted Raggedy Andy clear off the ground. Raggedy Ann had not been much behind Raggedy Andy and she picked up the little baby sparrow ns gently as she could and cuddled it against her soft rag body. “Don't cry!” she whispered. "\Ve won't let the snake hurt you! No sir! Where is your Mamma ?” At first the little baby song sparrow's heart beat so hard, he could not answer j but soon when Raggedy Ann had I smoothed him ail over with her cotton l stuffed hands, the little baby song spar- ' row cheeped, "My Mamma went away | to get us some breakfast and I climbed i over the edge of the nest and fell down | upon the ground! My I was sorry I | climbed over the edge of the nest, for I ! bumped m. head on a branch when I fell. Then Gerty Gartersnake came wiggling up to me and told me to be real still and she would watch me until my Mamma came back!' "My goodness!" Raggedy Andy laughed from where he was sitting upon Gerty Gartersnnke's head. "Didn't the snake l intend harming you ?" "No I didn’t!" Gerty Gartersnakp said: her voice sounding far away like someone talking with his head under the bed clothe*. At this. Raggedy Andy moved over and said, "Then I'm so sorry. Gerty Gartersnake !' Gerty Gartersnake wiggled her head out I from under the leaves where Raggedy Andy had pushed it and shook it to rake

Ambassador’s Aide i z**xaS iNa, i J . >-|| —l—2 "■ 1 Miss M. Verna Neil of Lowell, Mass., has been appointed to the staff of Ambassador Houghton, the new representative of tlie United Slates in Germany. She has gone to Berlin to assume her studies.

SISTER MARY’S KITCHEN ■n Dishes With Meat Flavor

—■ —■ " i ADE dishes with a | meat flavor have a I very definite place in Os m ffijcß the spring menu. 0 ta The odor of meat 3 surety stimulates the Sit ■ appetite and aids dlS ES gestion by increasing vj fggy f JgJ the flow of gastric 9\K Juices. But during 9 j K the warmer season of ~W|i ra the year the quan- ' f tity of meat should mgr be lessened. Try ; these recipes that make “half the meat go twice around” and see if the family isn’t healthier and happier. ROUND STEAK PUDDING. One-half pound round steak, 2 cups diced carrots, 3 slices bacon, Vi small onion, Vi teaspoon salt, Vi teaspoon pepper. flour, biscuit dough. Have the butcher trim and grind the steak coarsely. Cut the bacon in small pieces. Sift flour over the ground meat and stir with a fork until the meat has absorbed all the flour it will. Put tho bacon in a hot spider and as soon as the fat begiostgfry out add the steak. u U.l each tiny piece is Put Ihe of t lie oi9Kii deep linking dish, .i l l eai JHy^tHsFininc.-d. salt and pepper. M ..-i ; hi §||S3|ißpyi ’ll-- .1 .i- , aiul^HKHVan the To half three po U 1 a 111 - r

APRIL 24,1922.

the wrinkles out of her bonnet. "Ton see!” Gerty Gartersnake laughed, "I saw the weeny teeny bird fall out of rug nest and I knew something might find him, so I was playing nurse maid until his Mamma came home!" Just then Mamma song sparrow came fluttering up and was surprised to see so many visitors. She had a nice beetle and a fuzzy caterpillar for little baby song sparrow. Mamma song sparrow pulled the fuzzy caterpillar into three pieces and offered them to Raggedy Ann and Andy and Gerty Gartersnake for

V *-i.b . “ ~ Gerty Gartersnake shook her headbreakfast. But the three shoo£. their beaus iuX W trhed. "No ‘hanK'you!" they said, "Let little v.eei.j baby song sparrow have them, so that he will grow strong and fat and soon we will hear him singing pretty littie cheery songs just like his Daddy!” Then Raggedy Ann lifted the little weeny song sparrow into his nest and after shaking hands with Gerty Oartcrsnaktv-_the two rag dolls said, "Good bye" and smiling happily, they crawled on through ..the hedge and hand In hand went skipping over the meadow towa and the deep, deep woods filled with Fairies and everything.—Copyright, 1922. ARRANGE END OF CAMPAIGN BY BEVERIDGE No Section of Indiana to Be Neglected in Last Week of Speaking. No section of Indiana will be neglected in the final week of the primary campaign to obtain th Republican senatorial nomination for Albert J. Beveridge. Plans for a "driving finish” have been made by Archibald M. Hall, chairman of the Beveridge speakers’ bureau. Mr. Beveridge will speak tonight at New Albany and Tuesday at North Vernon in the afternoon and Madison in the evening. Wednesday afternoon he speaks at Greensburg. In the evening at Columbu*. Thursday he will speak at Rushville in the afternoon and Newcastle in the evening. Friday afternoon he will talk at Anderson and in the evening at Frankfort. The campaign will wind up Saturday night with a mass meeting at Tomlinson Hall which, according to Beveridge managers. will be the biggest of the primary campaign. They say 5,000 requests for reservations have been received. Tentative plans for the meeting include speeches by Mr. Beveridge, Mayor Shank and Mrs. Arthur Robinson. Mr. Beveridge is invited to ShelbyvUle Saturday afternoon. , Alvan J. Rucker, Arch M. Hall, Mrs. Martha L. Huggins, Judge Arthur R. Robinson and Mrs. Allen T. Fleming will make speaking tours of other parts of the State during the week. Mayor Shank and Pr. Amelia Keller will address a meeting at South Bend Tuesday night. Cultivate Corns to Avoid Rheumatism LONDON, April 24 —ls you want to avoid rheumatism or gout, cultivate youi corns. This solace to foot sufferers emanate* from T. Gillings, veteran chiropodist, o{ Fleet street, who has tended the feet of almost every judge, sheriff and lord mayor of London within the past fifty years. "Corns, bunions and almost all otheir callosities of the feet are simply Nature * wonderful provision for extracting from the human body the chalk that sets up rheumatism and gout." he says. "The corn," explains Mr. Gillings, “draws the chalk from the body like a magnet. Invariably when the corn or other callosity ceases to grow the twinges of gout or rheumatism set in.” RUMORS OF ARAB WAR. CAIRO, April 21.—Reports received here slate that two Arab tribes have dev dared war on the Zionists of Palestine.

tablespoons butter, water to make a soft don :h. Mix and sift dry ingredients. Rub in butter with tips of fingers. Add water, cutting the dough with a silver knife to mix. Roll on a floured board and ent with a biscuit cutter. This amount will serve four persons. DRIED BEEF WITH RICE. One-fourth pound dried beef, 1 cup milk. Vs teaspoon pepper, 1 tablespoon minced onion, ] 2 cup rice, 2 tablespoons butter, 2 tablespoons grated cheese. Cook rice in boiling salted water till tender. Melt butter in frying pan, add dried beef picked in small pieces, pepper and onion and cook five minutes. Add ruilk and bring to tho boiling point. Stir in rice and cheese. Turn into a baking dish and bake tiil firm. No salt is necessary because the dried beef is salty enough to salt the dish. MEAT ROLLS. One-half pound round steak. Vi pound pork steak, 3 potatoes, Vi onion, V teaspoon salt, Vi teaspoon pepper, biscuit dough, parsley. Put beef and pork steak through chopper till very fine. Put potatoes and onion through chopper and mix thorough ly with meat. Season with salt and pepper and make in small rolls. Make a biscuit dough as in the first recipe. Roll about one half inch thick and cut in squares. Put the meat mixture in the center of each square of dough and roll. Dampen the edge of the dough with a little water to make it stick and pinch the ends together. Prick the top with a fork in several places and bake 45 minutes in a hot oven.—Copyright, 1922.