Descendants of Evangeline's (dan on Move LIKK their ancestral Acadian*, more than ISO years ago, roost famed of whom was Evangeline, these trapper* and their families are gathered, awaiting transporta tion away from the scenes of I heir livelihood. The circumstances, how ever, are quite different. Iwange llnc g cion were driven out of Canada hy the British. The descendants of that hand, pictured here, were brought from their iiotnes in southwest Louisiana to a 00,000-acre tract of marsh below New Orleans by a fur ayndlcate, as trappers. Only the Intervention of a United Stales marshal and forty deputies averted a massacre when residents of the marsh, feeling themselves cheated of a livelihood, rose up In arms against the Invnders and protested with weapons and lire. The 'Cajuns, ns they are now called, were mobilized by marshals and gladly .■went to their homes 200 miles distant. They are shown preparing to depart. ^1- ]<1^ EfEDTIME STORy By THORNTON W. BURGESS< REDDY FOX QUARRELS B FOOLISHLY 8 REDDY FOX wit glaring up at Terror the Goshawk, whose arrival from the Far North hint ■polled Redd) 'h hunting In the Green Forest, he grew angrier and angrier. lie grew so angry that pres ently he walked over until he was almost under Terror the Goshawk, **What right have you down here In the Green ForestV" tie snarled. “The same right you have, Reddy Fox," retorted Terror. “It's no such thing," snapped lteddy. “You haven't the same right here I have. You belong up In the "HuhJ" Retorted Reddy Fox. "Talk Is Cheap.” Far North, while I live here all .venr round. Why don’t you stay where you belongT" “Since when have you owned the Green Forest?" replied Terror. "I would have you know. Heddy Fox, that I go where 1 please. I have found very good hunting here these last few daya, and I think 1 shall •tay the rest of the winter. What •re you going to do about It?” That question was too much for lteddy Fox. If Terror had been a four-legged person like himself there might have been ways to moke things most uncomfortable for him As It was, there wasn't n single thing Reddy could do, and he knew It. “You're a great, big bully and coward,” snarled Reddy. You know It la an ensy mailer to call people you hate hnd names. Terror merely chuckled. It was a Rateful chuckle and made Reddy angrier than ever. "So I'm a cow uni, am 1?” mild Terror. "Think again, lleddy; think again. It Is you who are a coward, not I. I fear nothing and no one. JiiHt to Hetlle the question I dure you lo go up Co Farmer Brown's and steal a chicken from his henhouse while he Is about." "That's a silly dare," snarled lleddy. "You are daring me lo do something you don’t dare do your self. You know well enough you’ll keep away from that henyard as long as Farmer Ilrown Is about.’’ "Is Hint so?" snapped Terror, and the feathers on the top of Ids head began to rise In anger, "I never dare anybody to do what I don't dare do myself." "Huh !’’ retorted lleddy Fox. "Talk Is cheap." lie said this with an uu pleasant sneer. Terror's tierce eyes blazed with rage. “I never boast," tie declared. "I dare you to go to Farmer Brown's henyard right now and prove who Im the coward." lleddy Fox couldn't very well hack out. He tried to think of an excuse, hut for the life of him he couldn't. "All light," said he, "(’ll take your dare." © T. W. Ilurnau -WNU Scrvlr* WITTY KITTY By NINA WILCOX PUTNAM "The girl chum says it it noticed that the guy who is to generous that he “will give you the shirt off his tack” never goes so far as to per form this act of self- sacrifice in public. ©. Doll Syinl oati- —WNU 8*rvlc« The End of the Crooked Trail TO MY CHILD By ANNE CAMPBELL SOMETIME In years to come, when the strong sea Of life Is threatening, with yon afraid, I hop® that cotirago comes with thoughts of me. And you recnll the hope that ever made A green place In the desert of our lives. We have made much of little nrul been guy. When your own disillusionment ar rives, Remember love that sweetened every day. I wish 1 could hulld love Into n wall So thick and high you never would be caught In life’s swift eddies. ... If you hear a call From a far place, It will express this thought: There was no road too difficult to take; There was no tnsk too hard for your dear sake. Copyright.—WNU Servlio. Gland* Muit Help Brain Tin* hraln alone Is helpless, tin less it Is assisted by certain duct less glands, two in particular—the thyroid and nilrennl glands, accord ini’ to an authority. The thyroid gland excretes thyroxin, which stimulates activity, particularly of the hraln, and causes the hormones to circulate, while the adrenal glands, the hralns of the sympa thetic system, control the emotions. It Is explained. __ Question box h ED WYNN, 'The Perfect Fool I Dear Mr. Wynn: I am a girl twenty three years old and have lived all my life in the country, and I have Just made up my mind to move to the city. I am a pretty good cook and that Is why I urn writing to you. What I want to know Is: Do many city people “keep'' cooks? Truly yours, SIAItMA LADE. Answer: They do not. But most people engage another as soon as one leaves. Dear Mr. Wynn: I know a man living right here In New York who Is a millionaire, yet he lias been wearing the same suit for the past seven years and looks as If he Is broke. I once asked him why he, with all his money, didn’t buy a new suit, and he said everybody In New York DAINTY DISHES SOME time when entertaining one’s friends at a dinner try this method of serving sweet potato: Orange 8weet Potato. Cook tiie sweet potatoes In their skins, peel, mash and season with butter, salt and white pepper. Pre pare the halves of oranges that have been squeezed of their Juice, by re moving all the white inner lining of the skins. Fill them with the sea soned potato and about twenty min utes before serving time place them In the oven to become hot; a small piece of marshmallow may be placed on top to brown or a sprig of pars ley used on top for a garnish when seiving. Oyster Soup. Add four tablespoonfuls of quick cooking tapioca to a quart of rich milk, two tablespoonfuls of salt, and cook until the tnploca Is clear, stir ring often and cooking In a double boiler. Add one cupful of oysters and the oyster liquor, a dash of cay enne and paprika and four table spoonfuls of butter. Serve when the oysters are curled. Ozark Soup. Cover a fresh soup bone with cold water and simmer until the meat Is tender, adding salt toward the end of the cooking. Strain the brotli and to one quart of the broth add one medium-sized potato cut j into dice, and one half cupful of washed rice. Let cook until ten der, then add one can of tomatoes, bring to the boiling point, add a ta blespoonfnl of Hour mixed with one cupful of sweet cream, boll five min utes. add seasoning of salt and pep per and serve. For further flavor add one teaspoonful of sugar, a lit tle chopped celery, n pinch of curry powder and a bit of mace with a few dashes of cayenne popper. Coconut Drops. Grate a fresh coconut and add to il half its weight in sugar, stir until well mixed, then add one bent on egg white and drop on buttered tin and bake in a slow oven until brown. ©. Western Newapaper Union Through JEAN NEWTON A WOMAN’S EYES LIFE AFTER NINETY AN EMINENT French inventor, ** Interviewed on his ninetieth birthday, commented that life is too short. Life, he felt, should he longer. "There are so many Inter esting things to be done,” lie said "so much to learn." Bon’t we find It thrilling, one of our readers wants to know, that a man of ninety should be so untir ing as still tp feel that life Is too short? Since this man Is an In ventor, perhaps he will have an Idea for prolonging our lives—and wouldn’t that be great! Sorry to be so perverse, but not for me. Front a detached viewpoint, going on Indefinitely after ninety holds few charms for me. And this nonagenarian who Is not only willing but eager to go on rnk ing It strikes me as rather excep tional. It may be his luck in what he chose ns his life-work. Invent Ing can make the hours fly, so per- i haps it can make ninety years seem as nothing. More usually, men and women who reach that age are not ‘’untired.” As for the things to be learned I should say that what we cannot learu and do before we reach nine ty, we are not very likely to learn afterward. If such powers are to be given to scientists. I should say try to pro long youth—rather than prolong life after ninety. By youth, I do not mean childhood, but the years of power—power of body and mind —power to learn and do and enjoy To prolong that time for everybody to beyond sixty would seem to me more Important than to prolong mere living to beyond a hundred. ' © Bell Syndicate.— WNU Service. knew he could afford a new suit, and as long as everybody kuew him he couldn't see what difference It made. Last month a friend of mine saw him In Philadelphia (where he doesn’t know a soul) and he had or. the same suit. How do you flgur* that out? Sincerely, IZZIE X. ENTRICK. Answer: He said everybodj know? him In New Y"ork and they know he can afford better clothes, so It doesn’t make any difference how he dresses. He probably fig ures that when he Is In Philadel phia he can dress the same way because nobody knows him, so It doesn’t make any difference how he dresses. Dear Mr. Wynn: It Isn’t that I am opposed to a person playing cards for money, but I would like you to settle an argu ment between my wife and me. The question Is. “Can an honest mar play poker?" Sincerely, JACK O’DIAMONDS. Answer: Of coarse he can, bat he w'on't win. Dear Mr. Wynn: I saw a man with both his hand* bandaged and I asked him how it happened. He didn’t answer me. 1 later found out the reason he didn’t answer me was because he was deaf and dumb. I also heard his hands were bandaged because every Joint in his fingers is broken. How do you account for an accident like that? Sincerely, DINAH MITE. Answer: He is deaf and dumb, the Joints of his fingers are broken; very simple: he most likely broke them by cracking Jokes on his fingers. ©. the Associated Newspapers. WNU Service. Fascinating Tunic Dress Striking In material and motif Is this fascinating new tunic dress. The fabric is navy blue taffeta with white polka dots. The suit is close ly fitted at the hip nnd skirt, and cut with deep raglan sleeves, which are turned back at three-quarter length to form deep cuffs. Really stunning Is the wide ruching which Is made of self material, cut on the bias and fringed at the edges. Three rows are used on the tunic, another row forms the Pierrot col lar, nnd the same ruching Is used on the navy blue straw hat. A blue velvet bow Is caught in the neck ruff, nnd a velvet ribhon carelessly knotted forms the belt. Navy blue suede was selected for hng and gloves, nnd matching kid for the pumps. Snow Plows Liberate Stalled Trains F'OL'lt rotary snow plows were at work on Cumores t’ass, Colo., 10,U15 feet above sea level, clearing tbe way for three Denver and ltlo lirande Western trains barricaded by Immense snow drifts. Eighteen passengers were marooned In the cars. High biting winds, Icy tracks, steep grades, all made It exceptionally difficult to clear the way. It took ?U hours to liberate the trains. BRISBANE THIS WEEK Mussolini Warlike Supreme Court Power All Happy There Learning How to Spend Mussolini has found the opportu nity to show the world what It means when modern “Rome" starts moving. He has mobil ized an army with air planes to supplement tanks and artil lery, and the Emperor of Abyssinia, Haile Selassie, must discipline his unruly chiefs that have of fended Mussolini by an attack on Arthur Brisbane African c0l0nies. or so much the worse for Ethiopian Selassie, who, believes that he Is the direct descendant of King Solo mon and the Queen of Sheba. Maybe he Is, but he will encoun ter a problem that King Solomon’s wisdom could not solve for him when he meets Mussolini’s air planes. If wise, Selassie will pay the In demnity that Mussolini demands. As a practical business man, Mus solini always asks a little soothing cash. He got some from Greece. Also, Selassie must salute the Ital ian flag, which costs nothing. Mex ico would not do that. One question may surprise you concerning Supreme court decisions setting aside laws passed by the congress and signed by the Presi dent, on the ground that congress, in passing the law, had exceeded its constitutional authority. This is the question: Are those Supreme court decisions In themselves un constitutional? When the Supreme court, some times by a narrow margain of live to four, declares a law unconstitu tional and void, Is It exceeding Its constitutional authority? Where In the Constitution of the United States do you find authority for the Supreme court power to overrule congress and the President In the making of laws? This ab sence of authority is no accident. Those that wrote the Constitution, after long arguing, disputing and many concessions, knew, presum ably, what they wanted the Consti tution to say. And they did not want it to give the Supreme court the power to veto laws, that it now assumes and exercises. In London, John Puckering, fifty eight, apparently dead, was revived after five minutes. Meanwhile, lie had gone to heaven. He saw In teresting things, came back to tell of them. Souls, evidently, travel more rapidly than light, which takes 000,000,000 years to get out side of the universe ns we know it, going 180,000 miles a second. Mr. Pickering says heaven is filled with a "happy crowd.” There were no children. "All were dressed ns on earth.” No moths In heaven, of course; no depression, either. Mayor LaGuardla, consulting with President Roosevelt about loans for New York city Improvements, again proves that we have at last learned to spend money. Something over $1,100,000,000 would be the prelim inary totnl, for tunnels, highways, public schools, a $150,000,000 hous ing program. $232,000,000 to bring a better water supply from the Dela ware, extension of Park avenue as a broad highway above the tracks of the New York Central north to the Bronx, elimination of slums and the slum character from the East river shores. From Ireland comes Jack Doyle, via Mayfair, London, (I feet 4. hand some fuce, nice smile, big muscles, telling the truth about himself, whatever the damage to Ills mod esty: "I am not like the usual low brow tighter. I’ll go up and up and up to the very top." Alfred P. Sloan. Jr., head of Gen era I Motors, announces that 30,000 employees, under the company’s sav lug and investment plan, will have $11,0tXMX>0 cash divided among them. The employee who saves $25 a month, the maximum. $300 a year gets back his-$300, plus $321.50 con tributed by the company. Including $114 for Interest. It Is rather diffi cult to persuade men to “arise, ye prisoners of starvation." and “throw off their chains.’’ when one of the chains Is attached to an $11,000,000 melon. Germany plans an army of 400.000 men. sniHll compared with the kai ser’s army. But the real fighting ma chine hereafter will be located in the air, and. besides. German re cruits for the 400,000 army will serve only one year. Instead of four giving a rapid turn-over of trained fighters. At the end of five years Germany will have 2.000, mei trained to fight. It Is likely, how ever, that whatever is going to hap pen will happen long before five years are up. Kin* Feature* Syndicate, la*. WJftT Benrle* JUST RIGHT FOR WEAR IN KITCHEN PATTERN 9K1« This “kitchen ensemble" would ninke a delightful present for some member of your family—that Is, if you don’t decide to keep it yourself, after it Is finished. The apron, made especially to fit the frock, is cut amply full for protection, and bonsts a convenient patch pocket and slen derizing half-belted waistline. The frock has a disarmingly demure ruf fle to emphasize its nice square neck line, and cunning puffed sleeves to set off pretty arms. Vertical tucks at the waistline keep it trim, yet provide comfortable fullness in bod ice and skirt. Both the apron and the frock are Included in one pattern Pattern 9840 may be ordered only in sizes 14, 10, 18, 20. 32. 34, 30, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size 10 requires 4% 9346 //YM> O yards 36-lnch fabric and % yards contrasting. SEND FIFTEEN CENTS In coins >r stamps (coins preferred) for this pattern. I5e sure to write plainly & our NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE .'UMBER and SIZE. Complete, diagrammed sew chart ncluded. Send your order to Sewing Circle ,’attern Department, 232 West Eight eenth Street, New York. OH! OH! Husband—Dinner isn’t ready? Wife—No, I’ve been shopping all lay. “Looking for something for noth tig, I suppose.” "That is putting it a bit severe, was trying to get you a present." Elimination “Ilavo you decided on the dlstribu