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Vacuum Cleaner No other cleaner compares with the Super New Eureka Vacuum Cleaner and we want you to know why. Use it on the rugs, upholstery, portieres, etc. BUY ON EASY TERMS FREE TRIAL Potomac Electric Appliance Co. 607 14th st —Branch Store, Washington Railway and Electric e B ing, 14th and C Sts. N\W. Phone Main 955 FAVORITE RECIPES OF WOMEN BY HELEN KELLER. Golden Gate Salad. One-half pound fresh marshmal- lows, cut in halves; two nice oranges, carefully peeled and cut in _swaall pleces, two bananas, cut in dicelike pieces; two thick siices fresh pine- apple, cut in the same way; one large .tart apple, cut fine; one-half pint bot- tle red maraschino cherries, cut in halves, with juice; one-half pint jar French marrons, ' broken up with sirup; the delicate inner stalks of one bunch of celery, cu® in small pieces; one-quarter pound of fresh ! ecans or English walnuts. Mix nuts, fruits, celery together in dish and put in ice box. Dreasing. One-half pint thick mayonnaise, one-half pint thick cream. Whip cream and mix it with mayonnaise and juice of half a lemon. An hour before serving mix salad and dress- ing and sprinkle with plenty of pa- prika. Serve very cold on crisp let- tuce leaves. HE fields of clover as they move to and fro, fanned by the gentle breezes, give an air of restfulness that is tonic-like. In fancy visit these fields and see the herds of cows as they tread their way through the clover, munching here and there, to the accompaniment of tinkling bells. from which Elk Grove Butter is made. With Each Pound of Elk Grove Butter Are Inclosed Two Coupons, Which Are Redeemable in Rogers Silverware Sold by Grocers Who Supply Their Customers the Best Butter Then consider that from these cows comes the butter fat A Butter for All the People All the Time | GOLDEN & CO., Distributors MAXWELL HOUSE e ZAUsos ‘ COF LIXRIE "Bee 9 Brand INSECT POWDER e health. garden insects. Brand Insect Powder on air—the insects will soon Harrhless to sifting a can toda§—it will pay. Sold Everywhere FEE Ao a CHEEK-NEAL COFFEE CO. Every time a fly lights on you, or crawls across the food you eat, your life is in danger. Flies are filthy and dangerous pests. Bee Brand Insect Powder kills flies and thereby guards your For quick results close doors and windows in room, place small quantity s‘lpu, tilt paper upward and blow powder into the e Bee Brand Insect Powder also kills H ), eties. Do o b Bt e e Bee everything but ingects. It does not spot or stain. Packed in the red top canister, it is ready for instant use. 100% pure—no adulterstion. Buy McCORMICK & _CO. _ Baltimore A Fashion From the Orient BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. ‘The dressmakers have found & wWay to persuade women to wear white in part, if not in whole. They use a white slip under a dark one. They reinstate the fashion for sleeveless garments in order that the ornate white sleeves can attract attention. The sketch shows this idea carried out in an attractive manner. One material Is dark blue crepe de chine, the other is white crepe. There are dark blue roses strung on blue stems to adorn and brighten the solid white underslip. Strange, isn't it, how these flat fabric roses continue their popularity? The skirt of the dark blue over- garment is slashed in front, which is quite a trick this season; the bol ice has a deep cut-out design ar- ranged across the front so the white underslip may catch the observer's eye. It is not a difficult combination to achieve. It is in keeping with the many-frocks-in-one movement which was sponsored by French dressmak- ers last August. The economical woman makes the white underfrock | complete, carrying a muslin or China | silk lining, so that she may wear it| on hot days and completely ignore the | upper garment. The latter can i be put over any kind of a slip. Its dark blue tone goes admirably with biege, with mauve, with blue-gray. It borrows the adaptability of a coat. Well-dressed women have slight in- tention of keeping one costume to- gother these days. It disintegrates in their hands and does the kaleido- scopic trick of grouping together in various formations. This scheme might puzzle the lethargic woman or one whose mind moves in a groove. Unless one likes to tax the ingen- uity. unless one has an excellent sense of color and line, these gar- ments, which are easily spoiled be dangerous playthi ly go wrong under w ment. Possibly_the best of these costumes 2 Th that can be disintegrated and form another group is the pleated skirt and the short, loose coat. The Amer- ican is more accustomed to managing these two garments. She does not balk at bullding up various combi- nations through the summer. It has been her way for decades. LISTEN, WORLD! BY ELSIE ROBINSON. Old Mrs. Cameron is incensed. She says that family life has been ruined, that children have “no respect for their elders.” “The idea!” she snorts. “Why, I ac'chally heard that Went- to her Ben- nie because she sald she had scolded him when he didn't deserve it!” Well, why shouldnt a parent apol- | ogize to his or her child? An apology | has nothing to do with age. It is the | courtesy and square dealing of ore human with another. Aren't par-{ ents human? They are. Then why | shouldn’t they apologize? | The trouble with tha old famil code was that it both old and young. worked harm to{ It made th parent too comfortable and powerful for his own good, holstered up his hypocrisies, catered to his prejudices and protected him from all stimulat- ing opposition. The result was that he turned into a crusty old fraud long before his time. Whereas the child was a cowed nonentity, whose | only hope of expansion lay in having children of his own and bullying them as he had been bullied. It's a rare parent who grows old in peace nowadays—which is admir- | able for both parent and child. The unwilling 'and unwholesome defer- ence of the old ideal is breaking down and in its place is coming a vital and happy companionship. which, though not as polite, is in finitely more healthy than the pass. ing order. This doubtless irritates some parents, but some parents need to be frritated that the human race may be served and saved. Tt was a good day for the world when parents began to realize that they could be wrong, and to apol- ogize when they were. The old bluff never worked, anyway. Every nor- mal child saw through it and even- tually concealed a sneer beneath his smirk. One ounce of the partnership feeling which the best modern homes give is worth a ton of the “manners” Which the best homes furnished in the days which are no more. The Housewife’s Idea Box To Remove the Odor of Onions From the Hands. d [ ] Vi h > A4 Perhaps you are fond of onions, but you do not like to handle them be- cause you have trouble in removing the odor from your hands. Try this method. Cut up a raw_potato. Rub your hands with it. You will find that the odor will disappear readily. THE HOUSEWIFE. Lamb Rissoles. Roll some puff paste one-eighth of an inch thick and shape it, using eir- cular cutters of different sizes. On the centers of the smaller pieces put one tablespoonful of prepared lamb mixture, wet the edges, cover with the large pieces, press the edges firmly together, prick the upper paste in several places, brush over with the yolk of egg diluted with one tea- spoonful of cold water and bake in a hot oven. The lamb filling: Cook three table- spoonfuls of butter with a few drops of onion juice until Well browned, add one-fourth cup of flour and brown the butter and flour; then add one cup of lamb stock and season highly with salt, paprika and curry powder. To one-half the sauce add two-thirds of a cup of cold roast lamb cut in one-third-inch cubes. Add stock to the remaining sauce and pour around the rissoles just before sending to the ihe - NAVY BLUE CREPE DE CHINE GOWN TRIMMED WITH WHITE CHINE. SPE DE THE IT IS MADE | STYLE OF | BODIC TO ST T OUT IN D SHOW THE WHITE Green Corn in Cream. Boil eight ears of fresh green cor in salted water for five minutes. While still hot, score the kernels and press out the pulp with the back of a Knife. Put into a saucepan a pint of cream, heat and add the corn with half a teaspoon salt, a dash of pepper and a ting of grated nut- meg. Boil gently for about three minutes, add a tablespoon of butter and one of flour rubbed together and cook until thickened, then serve at once. e e——— | Potato Scones. Take two cups of mashed potatoes, two cups of flour, two ounces of but- one teaspoon of salt, two tea- poons of baking powder and enough milk to mike sugh. Rub the 1 ter into the add to it the pota- 1 salt ar king powder, mix th the milk into a dough and rol out about half an inch thick. Cut: nto bisenits and bake in a quick ven for fifteen minut Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY GLADYS HALL. Marion Davies Says That Girls! | Don’t Change. Day before yesterday I went up to the Cosmopolitan Studio to see Marion Davies. I didn't want to go very much, because 1 dislike going to studios and trying to hear one's self think and some one else talk to the anvil chorus of carpentry. How the stars manage to emote as they do, under said carpen- terish circumstances, is something I have never been able to fathom. Most of us have to have sun, moon, stars and sea before we can conjure up a decent love scene. But the young cinema actresses can ail but die of love under a hammer and nail. Such, methinks, is art Besides, 1 haven't seen Marion for two y s, and I wanted to talk with her, and 1 did. 1 can’t complain—much as I should like to. For Marion has a charming, secluded little apartment, all rose and blue and comfy chairs, built right in the studio, where, 'tween scenes, she retires for friends, questions and re- freshments. There is a_large and airy kitchen, too. ~ In and about the studio T saw For- rest Stanley and Pedro de Cordova and others. They were finishing “When Knight- hood was in Flowe: Marion says she read the book a long time ago and has always wanted to do it for the t is a bully story. I love love the character of Mary * Marion said, “you know, she was just a medieval flapper, after T've read her life story in every sion 1 could find and collected all data available, and 1 feel that I know he: retty intimately. She was full of 11 and she wanted to have a good time, and when she fell in love she was carried away by the romance it all. I don't believe that girls change much from age to age. I think re have always been flap- . today thev're sensible i 1 i i ) “STUDY THE THINGS YOU LIVE WITH DAY BY DAY,” ADVISES MARION DAVIES. flappers.” Marion sighed and read- justed the heavy, voluminous folds of her medieval gown. “These costumes weigh tons” she told me. 1 don't see how the girls of olden times had energy enough to do anything. That's one of the sensible things about our flappers. They dress sanely. They've dispensed with the unnecessary. Soon, 1 hope they'll dispense with $0 much schooling.” Unless a girl is studying for some special profession, I think she should go in for dancing, fencing, voice culture—that sgort of thing—the sort of thing we live with day by day. All this algebra and etymology and rhetorie—" Marion snapped her fingers. I learned to powder my nose when 1 went to school,” she said. “That was all.” There’s nothing quite so cooling— quite so re- freshing—quite so com- forting on a hot summer day as Tetley’s Orange Pekoe—iced. Serve in a tall, cool glass with plenty of clinking ice. You’ll find its frosty delicious- ness will put hot-weather fretfulness to rout. Tetley’s Orange Pekoe In 10c, quarter-pound, half- pound and one-pound packages. TETLEY'S Makes good TEA a certainty ‘Brings ‘em smiling and happy WOMAN'S o, 2 PAGE. Crex rugs make a cosy bed- room look cosier still. They harmonize readily with dra- peries and furnishings. Ask for the genuine Crex. You'l! know it because the wire grassstrands are firmly twisted and bound, ensuring long wear, at the lowest price for which a good rug can be sold. GRASS RUGS POMPEIAN OLIVE OIL ~ Sold Everywhere Surely none is more delicious, refreshing and nourishing than ice cream, made pure and wholesome at home in the Sanitary, All-Metal ACME FREEZER (with the Blue Label, Sold at hardware, housefur- nishing and department stores; 2qt. and 4-qt, plain or gal- wvanized; prices $1.25 to $2.50. Made exclasively by Ritter Can & Specialty Co. Philadelphia, Pa. Freeze Your Own at Home— to breakfast ~ Scampering feet answer the call of Post Toasties—appetites eager for the goodness of these delicious flakes of toasted corn Always in EVER a food that says “Good Morning!” quite so pleasantly. Good for luncheon, good for supper, good for any between-meal time, and good for everybody, old and young. Nourishing, energy-building —satisfying. Fill the bowl with crisp, Good Taste— Post Toasties Improved Corn Flakes golden-brown Post Toasties, right from the package; pour on cream or milk, and then let appetite revel in a genuine to0; treat. Post Toasties are corn flakes of special quality. Order them by name from your grocer today, and be sure to get the Yellow and Red package. st e o