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1 j day was hot and his butter -soft and the! cither “inhalers”. irritable with the rc^at, |k* a4c little oi> no luncheon, 1,1 BARNWELL SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA PAOK family 'rtht, I warn yon, !f I brer hear, of Chr hi fine's husband getting an apos-J , tlo'gpnon—’ read- —She sullied Up at /‘You are; - "Well!’ and lifted h • hodlli -AC It a JiUrnm sidek: x He had prodig ous strength, le Spite of Ids 1ei» iiiru viai 1 "Sidney, when they were the note again. To his jealous eyes looking vefy grand come a vision oS that excursion to the hospital. jSldrfey, all vibrant eager- }ness, luminous cf eye, quick of bosom; .„and -Wilson, ! sardonically smiling, . amused ;ynd interested in'spite of him self. He drew y; long breath, and thrust 4 the note into his pocket: As he "went down the Street, Wil son's ear came around the-corner. J^e Moyne moved quietly Into the. shadow have-grass 'strains on yoqr wility* trou-* sers. Perhaps Katie can take them out” Quite suddenly K. felt that she thought - him too old for such frivolity of dress. It put him on bis mettle. /‘How old do vou think 1 am v Miss Sidney?” * - V 7./ ’ : “Not .over forty, I'm sure “ Hut you'; s both ofrrtnrruck. .cari'fullwbirffineed. “Are you cold?” > ^‘Not a hit.' But‘horribly unhappy,..) ihUst look_a sight.’] Then, renumbering her manners, as t|e Street hnoltv shY said prifnly, ” .. ' “Thank you for saving me.” “There tvqsn’t any danger,’ really, less—unlessTKe fiver had risen.” IK LINE OF ^Pretty Things in Profusion Have Boon Provided far Ty .* th e Debutante This Season—Fashion’s Edict Is :.T And then, suddimly, he hurst into de- ‘•Tm almost tiTTrty. It is middle age. ft'ighted'iangtiter. the- fleet, iiorhapH, for (Copyright, by McClure Publications, Inc.) . rt > The Pages—that is, Sidney, ^-her mother and her Aunt Har- riet—take K. LeMoyne, a strange "young man, §s a roomer because they heed the money. The addi ction te/the family is mutually 'saftrgTs/ctbr/^Tm,d presently Sid ney, who is eighteen, finds >her-v seif^bhO evenThg telling LeMoyne IS -4hat she doesn't believe she will marjy Joe Orubimond, her .child hood sweetheart, after ajj. In stead, . she "decides* to become a trailed nurse—now that Aunt Hhrriet has opened a dressmak ing s'Hop downtown—so'she goes to ask Dr. Max Wilson, old fan/ ily acquaintance, to get her into the hospital; And this K. Le- 5 Mjayne^hewToveIy-and polite and J all, but there's something dreads fully mysterious about him. Suddenly a whole new phase of 2 life opens upon Sidney. Just % read about it in this installment. v CHAPTER IV.-^Continued. I c Jewi a Tiig CHAPTER V. • i • /iAtvri 80.° Krte Moyuc, “you liked it in?/^ 1 S; T “Weilr, fir one way of-^course—you see, I didn’t.knpw it was quite like _.thirt; gll urflrr and peace: aii{L.flUluf, and white beds and whispers, on top—- yqu. know what I mean—and "the misery there just the same* Have you ever gone-Through a hospit al?*’ V-.v K. Le Moyne was stretched out on the- grass, his arms under his head. For this excursion t.o the. end of the street car line lie had donned a pair j of white: flannel trousers und, a belted Norfolk Coat. Sidney laid been di vided bet ween! .pride in his appearance ; and fear that the Street would deem him overdressed./* At. Iier question. Ju> closed his eyes, shut ting the ’'• peaceful arffi of leaves mid (lie bit of blue heaven*over head. He did not reply at once. — “(Jood grtiemus;—I—:—belt ova—bus asleep he car go of Cjeorly-the subject of his yeurs did hpt interest her vitally, for she harked back to the grasVgtiTinsr ‘Tm afruid you’re not saving, as you promised. Those are new clothes, uren’t; they?” ; - - 4< No,-indeed. . Bought years ago in England—the coat ‘ In London, the trousers in Bath,.on a motor tour,. Cost something like twelve shillings. Awful ly cheap: They wear them for cricket.” , That was a wrong move; of course* Sidney tmifcY hear about England*; anil she hi iffv cled' politely, ip view of his poverty, k afloat his beiflg tbeVe. Poof ,Lo~Moyne llbundered in a sea-of mm- daci.ty, rose to a truth herejmd there, clutched at luncheon, and* achieved safety at last * - ' . . “To think," said Sidney, “that you have really been across the - ocean! T never knetv/but one person who had. been abroad. It is I>r. Max Wilson.” % ' Back .again ‘to Doctor Maxi Le ’Moyne, Unphcking/si|htl\viche.s from a mus;- said Sidney,, Men. jewels, -require a 'setting llki A clerk on a /high stp'ol, poring over a ledger, is not unimpressive, or a cook over her stove] But place the cook on ♦he stool. poYipg over the ledger! Dbe- v Hut lie oimSkhI bis’ eyes and smiled at her. . / j “I’ve been arrmtnl hospitals a little. I. suppose no\v there is-iio question about your, going?’’-. • •* . ; ' “The ' superintendent said I wjis young. Tmt that .-any: protegee of Doc tor. Wilson’s would certainly be given’ a. eliunce.w .. : . ~ ' r, It is hard work, night add day.”"' "Do yqu think I am afraid of work?” “Andy-Joe?” ■- ~ * Sidney i col (Wed vigorousiy and sat ‘erect/ ‘ “ liffiiithp. * * • ' ’ 1 laLl* • at the sight of her in.lured.faceto re- I Strain It, achieved finally a degree of solmlety -by lixitig ids eyes-on the river j liank. j\ ' I ■, ’ I ”V> pen ymi have quite finished,” said Sidney severely, ’"perhaps .you wHl ^ .take mV. to' the hotel. I dare "say I sliall have tp be washed and ironed.” Ile drew3icr cuutionsly to iier feet, iter wet skirts clung to ju>rt ter shoes were soihlen and heavy. Site etnng to him frantically, iier eyes <vn the river below. With the touch of her hands the.man’s mirth died He held her very That Bags Must-Matulf tile Milliitery—Thrw Examples of the Best. 7- r7 ' carefully, Very, tenderly, as one-holds something jnfintteiy precious. CHAPTER VI. y. - Operations were: over for the after- noonr The last case had been wheeled out of the eleVutor. The pit of the op erating room, was in disorder—towels everywhere, tables of ’instruments, steaming • sterilisers. Ordeidies were basket, was aroused by a sheer rese'nt-'|;^ t ‘ l *'o-- ,, bout.;cn r r.yingout linens, empty-- ment to indiscretion. ^ ; fug- r.m*. M a table two nurses were cleaning instruments and putting them away in. their glass cases. Irrigators were being emptied sponges, recounted and checked off on rlttcn- lists. /1 i i •*v- Hv -torax, who had lived all his life on the edge of Sidney’s horizon, now, by the simple changing of her point of view,' loomed large and ,magnificent.'; “He is very slfty. He’s taken all softs Perhaps he knew it. (Vrtiiiuly he stood of idiotic notions in his head. I haven't - very erect. 'Certainly, "too, there was promised to marry him.” conshleralde manner in the way in “But lie thinks you mean to. If you which he ttsked Miss Harrison xo go have quite made up your mind not to, put and close the door behind her. better_tell him, don't you think? What \ Sidne/s heurt, considering what was —what are these,Idrotic- notions?” happening to it, behaved very well. j Sidney- cousi(h*red. “For one thing, "For goodness’ sake, Sidney,” said he’s jealous of yo v u !” , / V Doctor Max, “here you are a young “I see. Of course that is silly, al- iady and I've never noticed-it, 7- —though vour- attitude toward his sus* ■ Wilson was .thdl only one who . Tliis, bf course, was not What he had pietuu is lyirdly flfittering to me!” tlHcnded to s«y,'. being “Staff and all . He stpiled up at her. T tbiit.x But Sidney, visibly palpitant/ **i told him that I bad asked ynu to bring me in-re Yorfny. He was furious. Ami that wasn’t all.” - — ••No?" *—" . " ~~ rt /T" : i _! ■ "lie said I was llirting d'-speratoly wjfh luKtor Wlison. You sts*. the day Y was vefyv pretty, much-prettier than the. Harrison girT. heating a tattoo with’her heels'hi tin- next footu. — Doctor Max. belonging to tbeedass of inaii who settles lus’tle evcry time he < an aVtractfve wiunatv thrust his hands Lnto the pockets of .-his long ) 10 t wUl+e -coat anil "surveyed her we went tlirough the hospital, it or t \y and we went to Ilenderson’s/fo ijuizzi-*-soda water. Atid, Jf /ourse, Jpe v^tts there. It* was really.dratiiutic/ " / . /\K. Le Moyne* was daily gaining thd ^~T cully. “I 'id Doctor Rtl tell you?” / “Sit down. He said something about Xbj/tv t<; st ;' e tliinir^ fron/tlid angle ofo^ 1 .'* believe that’s ail there is to it.” thejiospital. How’s your mother and ,he Striv/. A month tigb he cotild haye T"^ If that’s 'tfe whole'thing, that’s en mV sittmyiou in 1uo people, n tnan Ibirdly- a mud passhya-./- He tried to y, Aupt Harriet?” ”\'ery well—that is, mother's never , quite well.” She was sifting forward ; oq iu-r chair, her wide young eyes on. 'hitVr. “Is that—is your nurse from the hospital here?” . ‘ i ' ”-YV:s. But she’s not my hUrse, She’s, a sribstitiite.”’ - > - “The uniform is so pretty. Sidney! with all the tilings she haiT meant to say about a—Wfe of servlc?, | and that,-although shc r W4i*-»qung. sine w'-as’Terribly in earnest, “it Likes a lot of plugging:--before nn< i uniform. -Look here, ‘Sidney / are going'to tlTe liospitar-he- the unifofin. and with any g»'ts Mi , If you cause of Idea of soothtng.fevered brows and all that nouscuse-r ’ _ ~~ ~ % She inti-erupted'him. deeply flushed.- indeed, n/ She wanted .to work. She '-was yoUJig'and strong, and surely / \ pait/Vf Williirg hands—that was rfbstird ubfait the uniform. >the bad no silly -4<len's.. There was so nirieli to do in tin* world, and she \vantcd to help Some people Could give money, hut she couldn’t. She-could only offer Service. And, partly through earnestness ami Partly 11 imtur11 excitement.^ sl>e ended . lri>a sort of h'ervauk soh, and. going to, the w indow, stood . with liW tmck to him. , *. / - ^ He followed-her, amt' because they were old neighbors, site (lid not resent Jt when he put his hand' on her /shoulder. —“I. ihin/Pkaow —#f coursoeif you feci like that ttbout it,” he said. “wc‘H see ‘what can lie done. It’s hard work, anil : a gdod\niany times it seems futile. They die, you know. In spite of all we cun do. And there are many thlngs tlurt- are worse than death—^ His voice trailed off. When he had - started out ltf~itfB profession, he had had some such ideal of service as this girl beside him. He sighed a little as he turned away.— —- ' ' -nr~ —“Jill speak to the—superintendent —“Yi'in'~li1;e tills Wilson chap pretty wfiK.don’t you?” • .- “What do you pi can?” “You talk about him rather a lot.” This was sheer recklessness/ of cimrso. lie expected fury, annihilation, lie did not look up, but busied him-, self w ith; the iusnrhrnn/^ Wheu the si lence grew oppressive'! glance toward her. She was leaning forward-, hvr chin cupped in her palms, staring out over -the valley that stretched ut their ft*et. " ‘/Don’t speak to me for a minute or twb,’ 1 she said. , ‘J*nr r thhiking over what you have just said.” Down through the valley ran a shal low river, making noisy pretensions to both depth and fury*. ; _He remembered just such a riverip the.Tyrbl. with.this same Wilson on a .rock,, holding the hand of a pretty* Austrian girl, while he snapped the, shutter o£ a camera. He had that picture somewhere now; but the girl was dea(f, and. of the Injhe midst of th- confusion. Wilson stood giving last orders to 111 * * interne t. ■' at his elbmv. As he talked be:-scoured 1 bis -fi bad met life’ and ^Vanquished it ‘Tve kiiown/mm all my life,” Sid ney said at/ last— “You’re -perfectly right aluqjt one thing: I talk about him and I think about him. I’m being t'aml/f, because what’s the use .of r he- in^lricnds if W(*’re t not fj^ink? I ad- juire him—you’d have to sde hitn in the ilo.spital, with’ everyone deferring -to him and all that, fo understand. And ; \yhen you think of a man like that, who holds life and denthin his hands, -of course you Tather thrill. 1^—I hon- hands and arms With a smalf lie .ventured to hrush; *' its of lather lleyv off on to the tiled floor. His speech was incisive, vigorous.- At the.hbspiti.il they saiij his m*rves w ere iron / there was no let- down after the ’day's work. The in ternes worshiped hml feared him. He was !Ju%k blit \ri|liout. mercy. To lie able to work like (bat, so certainly, , with so sure-a touch, and to look like p/Greck god! Wilson’s only rival, a gynecologist named O’Hara, got re-' ! suits, tqo; but he sweated and swbrB ! through his operations, was not too careful as to asepsis, and looked like a gorilla. ; ’ x , The day had been ’a hard one. The operating-room nurses-were - fagged. Two or three probationers had been sent to help clean up, and a senior nurse. Wilson’s eyes caught the nurse eyes a*s she-passod him, / ^Here, too, Miss Harrison!” he said 4 4 - *• '■m Party Frock fob the Debutante, * The feel ut t lie new adventurer in social pleasures trend a path maili* ’s ,fH ore or less-rosy according to the spe- j cess of- Iier party frocks. The pretty malii in th/ accompanying picture is gayYy. “Have they set you on my trail?” suitably clothed, for. tier gown Is Just Willi'W* eyes of the room on 'her, ' demure enough to suggest youtli and the girl answered primly: | J ust sparkling Fnongh tq express Joy. bp in j-oar office in the mnrn- i n *' 1 iwr'lcul*^ It-futllMs -|,s t lngs, T>,K-tor Wilson, uml ! iiivwln-r«U-i'J ,, " u v'•?&#!**, "OSout: myln * TI “ mission of this./1 iullni‘‘ot1(*i1 in the afternoons.’ “Anil your vacation?” is « tlmt this,/ as of all other of all, to be hecom- m when Miss Simpson , Thls/frock is made of satin with conies buck. - • | aii underskirt of not^tmil lw*>- and il Although lie went on at once with Jwdice developed in the same mater ills conversation with, the interue, lie rialg/Stlver threqdsrgtbam in the l^ce, still heard..the click of her heels about and a nSfrdtv'‘line of spangles edges ]Df ie rooin - H° haik.not lost the fact that j the-bottom of the overskirt ifhd point- Well, of course, there’s this; too. J she-had flushed when he spoke to her. ed bodice " .XarrovwUflUuo*biul7l%U^ jjiftile; succeeded £aTntl)7 know he’ll never look at me. I'll be The mischief that was latent in him ope of-iewt/ nurses; indeed, for three oame to the surface. Wben he had which it Joins by weaving lines all nuWhs I’ll be only a probationer.. He'll’ ‘rinsed his hands, he followed, hmvearr about the overskirt of satin, and this probably never even remember I’m in r . v >ug the towel t<r wliore she stood, note of silver is repeated iu the slip- tlie hospital at all.” ■ ,\p~- talking to the superintendent, of tlm^ pers. “I see. \ThetT, if you tlftmght he was training school. things' 1 would be dif- iiXkive with you, ferentT/ ' \ ' ' ./•If I -thought Dr. Max Wilson was in love With me,” sKld Sidney solemnly, •Td-go out of my-hbiitl with,Joy.” To hide .the shock\\vitlr which he 1.realized that she was, -tmknown to her- tjsell’, already in the throesNof a rotnan- Dic attaidunent for Wilson, Ty. suggest ed a descent -to the Fiu*r, »SliK accept ed eagerly-, and he helped her That was another memory lasted tiie t|ay—her siiurfl warm habd in ids; tii,e time she slipped siiid be “Thanks very niuch. Miss Gregg, said/ he “Everything weut .olT nicely.” Ife was in a magnanimous mood. He smiled at MissJiri'gg, who was elderly utnl grjyj-, luit visfljly his creature. “The sjMjnge list, doctor." , Tie glajiced ovc^ it," noting nccufutb- The underskirt of net is finished with •V two flounces of silver-jrun lace about the but tom". The >vide scallops at the bottom*of the overskirt reach only u little below the top of these flounces, - and are defined by spangles. Except for a small pannler.jjrapery at each side the oversklrt_ hangs in straight lines from the J&jl$t. For a short / figure this druperyZJwould. fetter be / dispeiwt*4r?with<. ' . - . ^ An undyrbbdlce of -net Is gathered Uy two rows 6t shirring Into a neck unNl htis elhow Jbleeves finit* with silver-run.bbyk" The satin jovey bodice is meriTy n-‘.length of the terial drawn*/alnoirt the figure trimmed in a point.-at the front. ;twq rows of spangles define' its lower edge. - About the bip of the" satin/bodice lines guy little* baskets' and bowknots.i'-and over-the riglit siiimlder tpwe ls,a light drapery <>f tulle. Over the Igft shoulder a suspender of narrow velvet ribbon proves that It is the unexpect ed that happens in. feminine affairs. rns as in other _ ritr l.v .sponges pfeimred, used, turned in. l>ut lie nvissettrim gesture of the girl.* who stood beside Miss Gregg. “All right.” lie returned the list. “That,wa»,n niighty pretty probationer I brought yoo-yesterday,”, ' - caught iier; the pain in herleyesjnt .. ,, . . , , , / - / j-- 1 . . ’ * between Miss-Harrison s dark-brows. . one of Jus'thoughtless reifilirks. ,, ^ ilexcaught, them, cquglit her somlier eyes/po, and was amused aud’ rather stimulated. “She JsNvery young.” - - tTrefer /t»m ymtng/- -akld Doctor Max. “Wiil.lng\to learn ./a*^ that age,. Y-oU’lI have to’wafch her, thougbrY’ou'11 have all the interhes buzzing around, ueglectingjiusiness.” m K ■ -•/Y'v - '. MtW wmM “I/m going to he pretty loiiely,” he said, when she had paused'in the de scent and was taking aZstone out of her low, shoe: “I shall hate to come home at night.” And then, seeiiig her wince ; “Fve been winning all day. For heaven's sake, don’t look nke that. If m i wouiu XJJFjxrVrt li T> C J'lUJVU t'Ul -■ ' p r _^. . . M . ... l#> .;Ju*re at the iioielfor supper? Vx£ or- - * nteraes at ^1L times and, , . ,J . e © arr ^ ,m ‘ ilcred a moon, orange-yellow* and extra I >r °bnti<>rn-rs -g-'m-rally, ami l a krirl/drinkimr sod* to-- size.” * ’ glance to the briiliant surge umrqr'joii* TJWWRfr “Perhaps “you'd /-i like irye to sh^w you ground a.little.” “When? £ffyluy?’:. anil a ^iri. drinking soda water to-’ i gi'tber, I vi n w;ith a boy lover on tin •next stool. Now lu? could view things . tlitwugb Join's tragic, eyes. And there was more than that/, All day he +1X1(1 noticed how inevitable the conversa tion turned to tiie .voting surgeon. ■Shinyy's. active- young brain,/turned Jmvard for the,, first time. In her life, \vusstil l oa-herkeHs- ——— 1 -- “Mother is plaintively resigned—a nd I Aunt Harriet h:r«4»e«i a tnflTip. Slrrt^ slowly bufi with a dreaU^jjJJjuailJiblL, goitig to ki^*p li.-r room. It’s rcany ti Wl r|fy ’ ,mn the ^' ater - K. happened to be to you.” / ' ; *He bad tneal^t Jp a month, ora year. ‘* To * before he re- “To your staying on. Mother trusts plleaa- yffiV ' * .vou absolutely. I- hope you noticed " I “\>s. toda4|fJLu.^ay^'m operat- 'bat you got one.of the npostieapopns ing a|t fourriliAv^oUt three o’clock?” " irh tht> custard she .sent tip to you — “Then wTl|^ii#arthre^ 1 die said tfm'otlier night. And she didn’t object calmly, and took pn oAfiwly and lmfinr- , t0 this trip today.x of course, as she 1 tied /departure. -/ ( ' §iiid herself, it isift, as if you were v /Hie sent K. a not<|^f neon, with .word to Til^ at .^rs. to pu/it UP- 4 .(T Her his plate --Clear Mr. i* MoJ'nv—I am bo excited I ean'liaj’dly write, poctor^ WilBon, the suf- .geon,'ts going to take meifhrough'the hos pital this afternooh.e J^wv the luck.—Sffft " Jney Page. C< . ** Jfe * K. X««4 U. and. p^rhap* because the young, oFat all. wU!|i." - - , In spite-of- hine-H-if, K, was rather start led. lie lelt uid enough, (3o<5 knew, but he had aIwaV? Thought of it as an age of the spirit. He rose to his feet amf-tbrew back ids fine shoulders. "Aunt Harriet and your jnqther and Christine and her husband-to-be, what ever his name Ik-we’H be a happy Hu-re’s one-sort of nmn I detest mgre than anotlier, it’s a man who is sorry , ^ JEoir’ himself. Do you suppose your— Ml.>s- Giogg rather “fluttered., She mother wiiulil* object if we stayed (»ut " as 'ID'ided between he/ disapproval .. of internes at aJL times and, of young er giance to the briiliant surgcon wliose ; “I sboulil hate to have anytliing or- "°ril " as rapidly becoming law in tb© ’■ ■ --V-—- hospital. When an emergency of (lie cleaning-up ealled her x away, doub^ .ivw” alle- / Bags Must Match Millinery. dorM>nnd wasted. .... v> v “Th,en we’ll stay.” ' ” ,r ~ “It's feitrfully extravagant.” “I’M be thrifty us to moons while you are4n the hospital.” - So it was settled. And, as*it hap pened, Sidney had to stay, anyhow. For, having perched-herself^out-lt river on a sugar-loaf rock, she slid, looking in another direction. So it oc curred that at one moment Sidney sat on u rock, fluffy white from head to feet, Ontruneingly pretty, and knowing it, and the next she was stantDng.neck deep in water, much too startled to Si'fe'iiiii; :uul trying .to be 'dignified un- dor the rather tryiug.cfrcunistances.,K. still in iier eyes, Wilson .was left alone with Miss Harrison. » - * If your-daughter 1 were in Sid- r- position now, wouId you fear Dr: Max Wilson's influence overher, or would “you be glad sneTad r such a friend III Uie’lfiRP" pital? - ifE CONTINUED.) ^ Fruit Juice Used in Milk. Juice of the fruit of the massarau- duba‘ tree, found plentifully in Brazil, In whatever direction-your face be turned, whether to the skating-fields or toward the land where “the’palms trow, or midway between, fashion de crees that you shall .carry bags to. match youF. millinery! And if you stay at fiome, not. one but several bogs .will be required, to see you through the everyday affairs of llfe in the ap proved way. There is u bag for every thing. and- bags within bags, and no ■idling Just whut ah wmittHr. Each one has a reason for Its exist ence besides the tdl-Important one of complying with theTniode, Three aspirants for tji^ favor of discriminating women are shown in . the picture. At tiie left a bag of vel vet and,fur Is part of a smartstikating fn colored heads. i> ciuhroidered on it exactly like the ornament on the hat, which lii^s a crown and brim edge, of plush: - ‘ In tiu* center ot the group a Palm -Beach set Is shown for those who turn, their backs upon./the ice and snow-to bask In*a Southern suh and wear marvelous sports "lotheS. The so?t hat and bag arA made yf blue and gold* faille silk, *sowed with blpe and -gold-yarn* and-finished with yarn tas- sels. These' tassels are fastenekl to - F* ' l^bag^are - reversible and may be worn with the’— blue side out .or the gold" side out. Whichever way, the blue and gold tas sels make them, complete. ' ~~~ the hat and bag with Snap fastener Why? Because tiie hat andrbag^ai is used la»wii»aa»—«w4ghlw>rhoMdii"”'t» i «f' had not lboked around. The splash had ; place, of cow’s mrik. , It is , sweet to been -« gentle one. *• “If you will 7b^ good enough,’ said Sidney, wiflr Iier chifTwFH Tfli, “to give me your hand or a pole or sometBlng— because if the river rises an inch I .shall drown." \ ' * ’ To his uudying credit, K. Le Mo^’ne* did not laugh vthen he turned and saw her. He went out on the sugar-loaf, the Jaste and.milky in appearance, but after hourkJt turns'into ap elas- • tHTTnass murnfr to ruffiter in' Its raw state. The fruit possesses nourishing, oral/ and binoHienf properties. , “ * Optimistic Thought. The most important element in sue ceas U economy of money apfl Urn* sot, with u cup of the Bhme materials and a short fur neckpjece. In this bqg, velvet la gathered on to' a wide l>and of fqr to foxifi the top. and itls drawn tip by’ narrow sdtlh ribbon which forms loops-fof- carrying it. TTr !_; At the left a bag made of. plush ts shaped so that the handle slips over the wrist. ’^.opejiij^fWs dosed by a narrow band Of/HS? plus|t slips up or down as required.^ Ah iflrnament /7~TVioleU on the 8leeve. * The o^-ier day two soefety buds at the Blltmore In bunches-df- sleeve cuffs, atriUctfve. / New York had small pinned to their whore they were quite