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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1925)
i t Page Seven Wednesday Evening, July 1, 1925 THE EUGENE GUARD. MUTT AND JEFF The Tourists Are Glad to Reach Roughton, Michigan By BUD FISHER IS i I H f4 f (Continued from page one) ".bout a dean little hotel In West Eleventh street i Gloria made up her mind that she would go there first to freshen up. Bhe was dirty and tired, after her journey. . , . And then and then, she would hunt up Stanley Wayburn! She sat back in a corner of the Uiicab and watched New York whirl by outsme the windows. In the pale unshine, the tall buildings seemed rich and wonderful. The very trucks and busses seemed marvelous to Glo ria that day. ... She waa going to Bee Stanley Wayburn! Perhaps she would go on the stage and become a great star! . And this big, careless town, .k;. Vow YnrW would be hers to- struggle with, to conquer! Perhaps she would write her name in electric lights against the night sky of Broad way yet: At the little hotel she registered aa "Miss Gloria Gordon" ... a better stage name than "Gloria Gregory she decided. She went upstairs to the tidy, de huinanited hotel room and unpacked her bug. She bathed. She brushed her red gold hair until it shone like polished copper. She "did" her nails, and rubbed perfume into the palms of her hands, and on the nape of her neck. She rouged her cheeks. " 'When tulips bloom in Union Square . . " Bang Gloria, happy for the firBt time in weeks. She was happy I And wasn't she pretty, though! She put her head on one side and laughed at herself in the looking glass. . . . Oh, she could land a job in a beauty-show all right! i If Stan couldn't help find her a V job, she'd go to Kit Cameron! Kit was a chorus girl in the ; "Gayeties" . . . the '-moat beautiful a choruB in the world! And Kit could f introduce her to the great Ginfield, ' himself. Gloria was sure that it Ginfcld : saw her, he would give her a place t in th "Gaveties" . . . 8he was sure Bhe was beautiful Dick had 1 always told her she was the prettiest r woman in the world. I Dick! The thought of him made Gloria's heart ache for just a minute. Sh nut the thought of mm asiae. i . . . She closed her heart against him She tbrew back her head, and studied herself with eyes that were ' likfi dark stars under their wmte uas, She smiled into the mirror. She knew that she was better-looking than Kit : Cameron had ever dared to be. Gloria's spirits began to sink as , Bhe Stood on the sidewalk and looked - up at the dingy, narrow building that ' was Stanley Wayburn's . boarding i. house. "I wonder if he'll be glad to see ; me," she thought. She was filled with panic aa she : went up the worn stone ateps, and rang the doorbell. , "Is this where Mr. Wayburn lives 2 : , . .' Mr. Stanley Wayburn?' she I asked the tall, black-haired woman who opened the door. "Yes, 'tis," the woman answered, "Who's wanting him?" "I'm I'm his sister, Gloria fal tered. s "'Well,' he ain't home," the woman said. "He'd oughta be hero in r few minutes. Wonta go up and wait for him?" "Yes, thank you," said Gloria. She followed the boarding-house keeper up the red-carpeted stairs to the scc oud floor. Stan's rooms were at the back of the house, overlooking a dirty back yard. Upstairs, someone wan prac tising on a doleful saxophone. But the rooms themselves were ( cheerful enough. ! There were magazines scattered about. A tin boi of cigaretes and a cooktnil shaker stood on the table. Sten's briaht flh house-coat was thrown over the back of a chair. Everywhere there were pictures of i women . . . the photographs that ) Gloria first had seen m Mans dress 7. ing room in the theater back home. She looked at them, again. Then she paw that there was a new one among them! ? It stood all by itself in a Dutch ' silver frame on a tnhle in one corner. ? " The pictured face in it was broad and fore-shortened. It was crowned by a swirl of blond hair. ... It was ; Sonya Chotek's face! Live pangs of jcaIonsy stabbed Glo ria like two-edged knives at the sight ! She wondered if Stan was in love with that face. . . . She wondered if he thought Sonya Chotek was beauti ful. Was she beautiful? . . . Gloria picked up the picture of the actress and smdied it closely Then she crossed the room to a mirror that hung there against the wall, and looked at her own face. Under the deep coppery waves of her hair, it smiled back at her . . . vivid and sparkling. "Pooh!" she said aloud. "I make her look liktf thirty cents! She put Sonya Chotek's picture Fashion Plaques The vttermelon hat a a summer ! OTJty, not to be taken too seriously ; or recommended for formal wear. It ! of silk in light and dark shad of green arranged to make Oik crtftwn m perfect cory of a melon. The brim ia of the lighter silk, forded. The ; erown it bound with a ribbon band of watermelon pink. ' back on the table, so that it faced the wall. It was then that the telephone in Wayburn's bedroom rang. Gloria flew to it and unhooked the receiver. "Hello," she said. The Toice that answered her had a foreign accent. It was a woman's voice. It was Sonya Chotek's Toice, Gloria knew at once. "Who is this speaking, please?" it asked. Gloria didn't answer. She banged the receiver back on Ita hook, and turned away from the phone. Then she stopped dead-still. Wayburn had come in. Ho was standing in the doorway between the two rooms. Of course, he must have been listening, , . . He stared at her as if she had, been a ghost. "For the love of Mike! Where did you drop from?" Gloria s voice was wistful wnen sne answered. "From home, of course Aren't you glad to see me?" Wayburn ignored her question. "Who was that on the phone just now?" he asked harshly. "Oh, just some Jane who wanted to talk to you," Gloria replied. She managed to ripple a laugh at him, flippantly, as she walked past him into the sitting-room. She was hurt bewildered. What was the matter with Stan? The Stan who used to catch her hands in his, give her a look that wa's like a caress, and call her "Uusset?" "Aren't you going to ask me to sit down, or say you're glad to see nie, or anything?" she asked. She dropped into a chair, and watched Wayburn through her lashes. Ha took off his overcoat and hung it up. He lighted a cigaret with a steady hand. He drew up a chair and sat down. i . And not until then did he answer her. "Well," be said, "as a matter of fact, I'm not exactly ticklpd to death to see you, Gloria. . . . What have you done? Left your husband?" Not exactly tickled to death to see her! Stan not glad to ace her? . . . She tried to speak but her lips would scarcely move. They were white and drawn. "I suppose you'd call' it that" she said at last. Her voice vibrated high and thin, like a violin string that has been stretched too taut. It broke suddenly. - , She wanted to tell Stan how empty life at home had been for her since he dropped out of her life how ter ribly she had missed him. But his coldness froze her. She couldn't tell him anything. Her voice was congealed in her throat. "Does your husband know you're here with ine?" Wayburn asked, lie! gripped the arms of his chair with both hands as he leaned forward, hungiug upon her answer. "Suppose ho does know it? What difference would it make?" Gloria's voice was a dull whisper. "Difference!!' Wayburn shouted. "It would make a deuce of a differ ence to me!" He began to dash up and down the room like a caged tiger. 1 He stopped suddenly before her chair and glared down at her. "Do you suppose I want to be dragged into your troubles?" he asked violently. "Do you suppose I want that husband of yours to hunt me up and shoot me, eh? What could I do with you, anyway " Gloria saw in a flash how his mind was working. She shook with cold anger that was like an icy chill. And when she answered Wayburn her voice came between clenched teeth. She couldn't get them apart. "I see what you're driving at, Stan,' she said. "You think I'm asking you to take care of me well, I may be cheap, but I'm not so cheap as that!" Her anger broke over him suddenly like flooding waters bursting through a dam. "I'm not such a fool as to expect help from you!" she cried. "Why, you can't take care of yourself! I'll bet you're still living on that .?J(Kl ! you borrowed from me!" She could son Wavhurn wince. Thnt had got under his skin! "Don't worry, I'll pay every rod cent of it back!" he said. Gloria sneered. "I'll frame it when I get it," she said. She wanted to hurt Wayburn. She hated lnro. sud denly, as she had never hated anyone in ail ner life before The telephone in the other room rang sharply, ayburn slammed the i door after him as he hurried in to answer it. Cloria tiptoed to it, and laid hr ! ear acainat the panels of it to listen. ' "Hello, SunRhine," she heard Way- ! burn nay. Her lip curled. Thnt was ' like Stan to call Sonya I'hotek ; "Sunshine." as he had once railed her "Husner. Pet names were pnrt of Stnn'a lovo-makiiiR, part of bin "line" with women! Little caressing named that were like kisses on bis lips as be whispered them! And they inennt ex actly wliat his kisses meant. Nothing! Nothing at all! Oh, she had found Stan Wayburn out at last. Ho wn R coward and a cad. Why, hndn't she seen it long ago? U'rfyburn name back into the ror,m. IK sat on the arm of Gloria s chair, and laid his hand on Gloria's shoul der. , "Now, let's talk this ovr quietly, " he said. At his tqiieh, all the fury went out of Gloria, .he hatd him. yes. but with a kind of misery. She turned in her chair and looked up at him, pleading with her eye. "Oon't send me bark home, Wan!" she hepxt-d. f yon knew hw lone ly I've been! ... If yon only knew! Look here, I'll get a job on the stage. Maybe Kit Cameron can get ine into the show she's in. . . ." Wayburn got up. "N't. you'd better go home," he said brutally. His voir rut like a whip. And Gloria went mad for moment. She crosier! the room, and picked up Sonya t'hotek's picture. She held j it above her head, and brought it down hard on the bark of the neurit j chair. The glass broke in a hundred flieef. . . , Above the rra-h of it, Gloria hesrd the sound of Wayburn's , laugh. "Well, that's about all you can do ; about it!" h. said, "I married Sonya Chotek jeoterday!' I (To be continued) - - Newsprint prodnetion in Canada this year is greater than ever before. MuTT AND Jeer THe THiM VwseK. TRAMSCOiuTiNSMTAl. '5PlRlT'.'. THeiR. , Roll has shrunk to cap THe CUMAV TH6y At SUFFSRIMG THGY tilMcO WITH THe mayoR OF tVJLUTH, MIWN). AMb TRlMKAGT) THS CHIEF OF POLICG 0? SUPERIOR, UiiS. at Pinochle. THev arc mow f HeAbeb for o. 4 h 3 V- ' Jerry On'thTjob" - - . No Action Wanted V All 1 Eea Get o,w rZZri I C3"4! p-j I V)hat 1 vajat is I I lo Father. wamB "t 'wilSTss yfeHM rDoriTCMAl rwE1 S ACTION- SHlW GuyCA JSfti mm iMmSm A-HM t co ! OrLK HAILS 115 Ih.W t5LAU 1 I Suanne Keener Not sinrr the of Joritza has tho op' ra wurbl m" n so lovely a fare and fipuro as th;.t poss ?'m 1 hy r-uz;ihno K nor, Ani'Tir nn irl whose coloraturr poprjino voicn has bf on ar linmd lit lln' M' 1 politan Opera Hnusp auii' who han hO'n introtlucins herself to Amer ican audlenops through n conci-rl t nir. London (lossip Hy MtLT(. ItKONNl-i: (NKA Service Writer) J ONDON, July 1. Youua Mis' America, vno i n n visit lo these hhuif!. is not going bar; with a very high idea of llnsland as re gards one thine, and that i daminy. In nil the hotels and in all the hi dancing places, you csu sec M.m An.erica being an-uiiipaniid by y 'iing .Mr. John Hull, And ther d-'n't g"t aloii; at all. Mr. Hull is still d.m -ing the old steps that the I. S. A. de clared out of date lng ago. liver in America nil soils of new Mps and riirley cue have been invented by the young peop'e, whi h. mike ns really darning. toicervative Kngland still adheres to the fox ttot and toe one iep plan and iihid 'rneil. Has Which is why Mies Ainerna to Mr. John I'-ud; "I have certw'iiij' enjiy i your com- ! pa ti but I will tell ih world that i what oii call dancing is simply 1 ii:g ar'uinil the roou to tte tunes of A t.r.nd." One of the mourners at th funeral . of the late Karl of pres. better ; known s ltd French, was M.irvh! Joffre, They had hern fust friend in I lie. In fact. FietMh new-r r.ried in his etima(i"jt of lb greutne ut tl,e hro of the Marne. Smue time e- ' ftT" lm death, be was Talking of the French genersl and snid with itima thit ".hd'fre. v bat a revelation ! ' The v.hen tii- Hv of tiie w dd hur.g iin the! oUK-tMiie of the battle, 1 came to In rfin. He was sitting there tr.in .juijh drilling a tip .if hot circulate, I was an vioiis, even excited. 1 tit he calmed me by sajing everjth.ng was quite readv and in order. And he con i tmuwl dipping his choerJate with evj- : dnt relt-b. That morning I under ' stood that a Frenchman could be quite r rr 5, t Pae-i. TTT ' MyTT, whckj fJGFF, tv HKi 5A(e nefcelN fctca te.i&i excess -youi AH-CHoo.l ! rottcm' J I An" C,GT T6 Fevers lsft U usTeM'. l eeab omcc 8uT t Gotta r eesu tms AU nJnn'lA J J-i hooghtom vue'n. pes'- about We HooGrtTow do southing... se.vwAl An-"- HUU-M p iwHOO I But that UuoNfccRFuu'. oaoNJs. B,wi x'm njuttv y OOVajAH1.' v 'v ) U;ue Sot HftV . y Pouow to HAy wCP Jow!. J T X T'ff I Feviee AMb Feet ,) -,( Fcuel GcBlvlif!J X ?" 7 O JW J!HWJ.M,H 'Wtjfc !-f$m V 1 w x vi ,Xi t Si ; . At A--; V 1 ' 4K 5 V,- LF1 rilS phlrUliutir a- they s iy the Knglisli When you think of I i.-l!;iint oi tli'nk uf tii.' im-joiinx hi-a :ii d thnt nmkrs ynti think of the winl mills winch the wnter nud drive it from the hiinl. fi f hi l.)l,imf w'lhoitt wiiiilnnll.-. -.uitln'i st-ejn ll.jinl. But sum .rarw ng-i it w.ik found Hint it s far ''Shier t protert the bird hv r.it-itiiK "f I'l'-ri i ica) mn hilHTy. It was er to pn-sH a Imttoti nnd start 'N-ct riciiy norking tlnn to at lend to .i ! . iili w iinhmll Also the hind tli j wii,dmiU o .-i;,(i,.. waa viiliwble and i.-iu In- in-d f.ir ..(her tinnc-1. S i windmill afte wmdmiH ; torn d'-wn. Then suddenly Soii'b.idy Woke up. i He riiil zed that a land uilh"i't wino- niiPs w-Mihl be n flat dull land and : tourists don't come to flit dull litii'N. Tourists com to Holland to see wind ! miils and tulips and picture", t ut out j'he winilmil's and mi rut down the iMimber if tourists, llenie tods there Ms in Il-'llailll n Stejety wlinjir job is jto se iliat wiiidai'll- are pi-cm-d. There is n ntuisg man who has (lie entree at the Lksec. Uip I'ur.s bom i the president of I'rsr.'c. whin many n grave young politician Ins to od hiM heelK in tlie ante room, tie first won the regard of l'risid"nt iloiirneigue by hiR devfr flftlifin j at a private enter! nininent. Arid biter h" iii'-reu!erl his pull by showing nt a private dinner Hist he a good enrn osny. the telle;. of witty storie wlrch stl alt the guefe'a roaring with laugh t r. The for'ttnste man is none other than Marry I'ilcer. formerly kii"n to fame as the dancing partner of Gby liesly. '.u! Cynthia Grey Says: fly CYNTHIA fillEY IOST aug.tft lady," says the Jap rin- an'-se, addressing not hi pre--, but only his wife; "This i h'- is almost cold. It is not fit to eat!" "Honored sir." she snswers polite ly. "I in sorry. Another tim I. tnv- self, shall see that it is hot ruough ! for your honorable palate." I , The Japanese, are the most polite people on the globe, Tliuit' manuera ! are perfect. Kveu their quarrels have j a certuin dignity about them. So their home life has au outward effect, of harmony that our American i family life very often lacks. Their "family jars" do not jar on i I the uerves of every member of the I j-iamilv circle. Whatever of hae or unfriendliness j they bear toward each other is con cealed under the shield of nood man ners. And this is an excellent thitig.... not only for the Japanese, but for all I uf us. Fur it isn't the disagreement that slicks in people's minds, after a ()iiar- rel, but tho cruel ami cutting things! that were said dining the tliMigree- meut. Take, for example, the ease of thej Juhu inilhs who are having a word battle about the Monthly Kills. Says Mr. John Smith: "You seem' to think that money .grows mi trees I ....the way you upend it. Jane. You ; haven t the intelligence of a child j when it comes lo keeping your family j budget : Answers Mrs. John Smith: "Itnn't talk to ine about intelligence. If you bad any brains, yom-self, I could havei ns murli money :a Mary Jones or Lot- j tie Leo. Their hioliamls seem to know, how to earn enout;h to live, if mine i doesn't!" ! Long after the mutter of the1 Monthly Hills hasNn-eti settltd, the rmic and cutting things each said to (he other will rankle 4n the Imisniun of iJohn Smith and Jane, his w.lV. Such things are not forgotten. They lie at the bottom of the mind, and "ften are the renl cause fur sepjua (inns ami tinlnippitieN be ween bus bunds jmhI wi(. A (piariel of (his kind couldn't lum pen in a Japanese f;nnil, . A p'flite tl,h 'gi-eement would tnlie its place. And the feeling- of neither the puriy uf (he first put or the feelings of the pai-' v of I In second part u oiild be hurt. It is not easy to "razz" a man. or name-ciill iiiiu iifler o" have just ad diesM'd him as "htoiored s;r." There t, ni'ire to -manners than jul good form. There is a s"it of giMitleness thai c ui.es with them. . . ,:ind t li.hr makes lor ft'tiuesiic peace and harmony. Someone mice nhhI good man- to rs jre more iinportunf than good i rs ojre o:,.r.' I woiiidn t go si far jih to !ut suiel.i they are iht in the dnily I fe of eveiv :l.v that, in poj-iaut "lie of us. I asfiion Tips Hurdered silks are used very ef fectively this year for dresses and also for negligees. Wider Brims Seen Gradually the linger bat is becom ing more general. Very frequently it lias a huge bow of self-colored ribbon. i Sash Tirs in Front The NHh of this NeHSf.fl ii IIIM'll more opt to tie in front than in the back, and the rolls r usually tie in the bark. Flowered Hemline Flowers are not only used as bou t onus ire but are ned to form the eollurs and hems of evening wraps. CHOSS-WOKDFOK LITTLE FOLKS H 0NESTl i ' -mr, TIE NfslEIS iR E E Dp TIAPPfl? FANNY sayy 9 n K tT "7.VF Ti A i IV M f LMI Tne 0reatost Cspital Offense Is ""' ' : PACIFIC COAST KGW, '.inland, Hfl.o mt'ters 0 Jackie Souder's Fort hind p. betel dance orchestra; iiitermi.-ai n numbers by Lew Farris, (I feel K hi ch. s of song; 7:!l'l-S', weather, poli i and nnirhet repoits, news bulletins ami baseball snores; N-lll, Concert by courtesy of the Western Ant Supply . oiupini,, Lucille Kin ley, soprano; 1 ml ph Tho ma baritone, and t ity lm; IK -1 I, roticert from I lio Ai t Ktinli i by Sherman, Clay and t , KFAK. Fitllm.in. Wash., Ilis.tl me t.t rs 7 ! p. ni., horis .clte iiolds, violinist; Kcnnetli Hell, reader; I'eiiy Sevei niice, aa xojdioiieist ; tonus and melodies, Dye vx; Fnuline Wil liams, piaiit ; 'I leave nly Hat lit idf Lila Naider. tender; hnk ehut. Ah- Litid'-ay Webb; 'i'lion-iitg the (Col lege Course." N. J. Aiken; "Frepar.1 t ion of 1 loney for the Market," H A. Slociim. KFI, Los Angeies. -Ml" meters ."i:'ttl-d p. in., Fxamiiier'H m-itiuve inn-si- nle; (!, Mel lainels' nightly driiugi; t;:l"i, radiotoiwil talk; ", detective xiury. Nick Iburis; 7;.'tO-S. dinn-'r dance niMHic; K 1, progrjiiu, 'eiitu:a Kefiuing t- in in u ; It IK. the F.xamiiu er girN. M:;dlti Hardy. Jean. Jac iptej. and Anette Schiller; 111 11, l'nt rick Marnh dam-e nrebentra, Hc ,y 1'atrick, soloist, KI-'llA. Sentlle. 4 I meters (I- Radio Programs p. tn., tdjiiipic bond oiirert or-1 Josef Itosenfeld, director; prn . b'Hint; (i."i-S;l."t, Hopper -Kelt." j gram, Security Trust and Savings company sl'.dio progrmii; 8 ;.'I0-Hi, ' . . y ,,, vNX feature nrogrnm; Tun h studio piugram. K F WW, II dlywo-d, L'o'J meters--d-7 p. in., crtil'lren's hour, Hig Itro Iter of KFWH; 1-H, progriim. Itev eriyridge cfunpsuy, Hevefj, ridge I 'ol-b-gians' il.iiiie or'-heHlrn; h it, progia.a An Mwhe;id HpringH Water coin pan", I s ike An'ovhiiid string iputrtet, Jtill Hatch ni;d Hay 'Keliowtv, the ja. t w in-; 11-10, variei y h ur, Frnti't Fierce and Vie lte.il. France h St. : (teorge, the ja.7.iininiii girl, a no other; 10-11. Warner Hros. movo' ! nibt. dti ertiori t 'bar lie Welhiuui. Kt;t, tlikland, C.il.. :tt 1 .15 niete.- ; 7 p. m., H-ii Hlnck's orchestra. KILL IxiM Angeles, 4H.VJ meters Tr.'MI ti p m Lemliton's A mule eiif teri.i orchestra. Jack Cronnbiin, lend- -r; ; tl ;io, Art Hickman's Hiltmor, hoi " v -ncert trehe-it rn. F.dwnrd Kit - oalriek, tl:rectnr; ;'-U- little sto ries A meri hu hUtnry, I'rnfeN ,r W liter SivetiT lle.-log. O,. Wmlow. iijvMnle reporter, ibibv Mu riel MacCo. mae. lusev McH.in, screen siari'is; , it. .iars num garilt. scientific l' e ui'er; e '.'At-'J.ttK ir(i-uiii, Alva Idobo coinpaiiy ; iKtll t'i. I'igfv W Kgiy Kirln' triiigrf fn p; I'l 11, Art lli kiimn s Hiltiu te bote) dunce onhealra, Karl Hurttiett, lend- KNX, llolljwoo p. m., Wurhtrer d, :i.ii;i -r, ::(o- 1 jiipe ,o-',ni studio, li Ziffa "ports talk ; ti: lo. trav talk. W. F. AUbr; 0:Mi, talk on in ect life, harry V. McSpadden; 7 S. Ambn Vcidor h-tl concert orchestra, ADVENTURES Tho Sour-Old-Woman "VOW then," said the Oreen Wis 1 anl to Nanry and Nick, "when you knock at the door of tho Sour t)hl- W o m a n-Who-Livea-Undor-tho-Waterftill you niust any: " 'HhIIooiih! Hallonnsl A bunch of balloons 1 They nil go a-pnpping Tho loveliest tunes.' "At. that she will open her door Inst Hid ly, because If there Is any thing the Sour-f Mil-Woman loves It is balloons." "Why?" naked the Twins. "Herntisa one time," said the Oreen Wizard, "she had her fortuna told and the fortune tidier said she would find her fortune through balloon." "All right, we'll try to remember Ihn words," said Niek Haying them over again to himself. "Hut what if she won't give us tho key after we do get in." i, "Just do anything she asks you," Maid the Green Wizard. "No matter what it Is, do it. Then she will be sure to feel grateful and give you the key to the rupboard In Pixie, Cave." , So the Twins started. They crossed a count v and a tnwnshio and a town and a hamlet, aim at Inst they mm to a rushing stream. Then they went along the rushing stream about three furlongs and a league, and at last tfcey ("a ine to a high waterfall which fell with a crash onto (he stones below, Fnder tho waterfall was the stone house of the Sour-Old-Woman. The Twins went tap, tap, tap on the door and sang out: "Hulloous! Halloons! A hunch of balloons. They all go a-pnpping, The loveliest, tunes." What's that? What's that?" cried the Knur-Old-Woman, opening her 10-11, program, llerrtibM Oil com- pany. KFO, San Frnnrisco, 4-H,:i meters :4h 7 p. in., Wnldcnmr Lind an l States reslimrsiit orchestra ; 7-7 Kudy Seiger's Fiiirmoiint. hotel ov-ehe-i ra : H U. Cramona trio; M.dod Nteker-'tit Ha i ley. coiitrult'; U- U), ! (io'irlricb Si I vert own Cord orcliet rn ; Hi ll. Wnldemnr Llnd and the Suites re-taurntit orchestra. KTCL. Seattle, :tf.i.n meters 7-S p. tn., Simond Saw and Steel c.m piiny, KLX, Oakland. Cul., meters - 7-7 :!t( p. in. new s items, went her. markets; S-l:l"i, educational prognrn ' from the studio; piano i-nns: talk n" ! muHic and musician-; the weekly b'c.if j review; atyle studs; piano si!; rnad ; informnti'iit, -upplied by Hie N ition.il AntomoMIe rlnb; ti-LVlo. atudto pro gram, arranged by Jo.ph ( 'are;:, 'n!if'ruifl comno-er: III-1 1 mu j ny T(, ,rui,ovi. h s Imllru-nii rnte talners. KFSd. Los Angele. 7."i metetr--' t;'Mi- p. ni., Oi a.v t.lun;o (imgraai. j presenting Car-I Nelson, child singe ; Fannv Abby. nprano; loro(!iV i Wo'mI-, reader; Steve ( nmiats ti L Moriice Watson in fl blasa duet. j I i Masculine Influence Mannish weme top coals, in the j single or double breasted versions are i very, vert mneh liked hv flnppers. I no ooucuia-vvumoii iuutvcu wuhmmiu "mi - - -- c - (l) I ft?" she asked In a whisper. OF THE TWINS and tho Balloons door -with a" bang. "Who said bal loons? Who Is selling balloous?" "No one," said Nancy and Nick cooly, stopping inside. "We were just singing a song we knew." The Sour-Old-Woman tried to slara the door shut but she was too late. The Twins wero quite inside her house, "I don't wnnt company, ahe said sourly. "We're not company," aald Nick, "Wo came for aomething." "Wbut? snapped the fiour-Old Woman. "The key to the cupboard in Pixie Cave," said Nick. "The ptxiees stole the Fairy Queen's golden hive with nil her bees in and ahe hasn't had any honey on her bread for two days. Wo think tho plxiea put it in their secret cupboard and we know that you havo the key." "Why, 1 haven't any key, denied the Hoiir-Ohl-Woman. "Yes, you hove," said Nancy. MWe saw you drop It under a aton and w want It" Tho Sour-Old-Womnn looked cun ning. "What would you do to get it V" sbo asked In a whisper. "Anything," arid the Twins. ('Oh, ho!" said the old lady. "So mat s tlie wny ine wnm uiohb, is hi 'omo In and ait down. I want you to do inn a great favor and if you do this for tne, I will give yon the key to the secret cupboard in Tixin Cave. The plxiea brought mo tho key last night and I hid it this morn ing before breakfast." "What do you wish ua to do?" asked Nick. "I want you tn go to Twelve Toes, the Sorrorer, and get Vne the most beautiful balloon in the world snid she. I (Copyright, 1025, NEA Service, Inc.) Home Hints rriIR combs and brushes yon nsa for your hair should be kept im maculately clean by frequent clean s ings in ammonia water. To Whiten Linen To whiten linen if it has become yellow add one teaspoon of cream of tartar to each quart of water in tvhiib yon wash it. Air Them First FroeltH should never be hung nn in a do"d Mrtrdrobn immediately af ter they havo been taken from tne body, but shutiM he placed wheii? they may be thoroughly aired. Answer to Y-.-tertny Puzle. Tlolf S3 iWvi4it'UrJHi,4d i w , a 1 1 1 . r- in f J ! hA Ira ' l' Mihn rai -I (.!'' -r'i liNj ,Hq,- ..-.i ,-.