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Found at Last. Rich is he who doth command “Friendship that will understand. F A sadly frightened and very hung! Young Fox lay beside a log in t Green Forest. W wished that he had not from Farmer Brown's ‘Wwhere he had been a prisonen sir, he wished just that, strange as may seem. It had been better, f: better, to be a prisoner there than run s just what the young Fox was. a prisoner in Farmer Brown's bari the best of care. As a prisoner in tl ‘Green Forest he was likely to star to death. All night he had struggled to fr SCAW, FARM HERE IR BROWN'S BO himself. but in which held him h; 1y in a crack what he would, he free. So when mor in despair and con Tle was so tired out that he hardly ~which Sammy Jay a and Chatterer the R making. As soon enough all three see if he was st they had found started in to try to torment him by sshrieking at him and ng him names and making fun of That same Brown's hreakfast vain. That 1 wedged so t in an old couldn ins ¢ met i Squirrel s it wa 1 hurried ¢ I therc that he was The panel that hangs free from the figure, attiached to the shoulders, is as new as Japanese garments. which means about as old as the Suumauri. The east has always liked panels hanging from the shoulders. Whether §twas inoa gown for interic de ticated art of th 5w medium of o ery now and then (he dip down into the deep wells of Iying in the east and draw from then some an nt nd primitive thin is usually L A vear they dipped d the: fig them we +they cop « on wh Jacket, nirsers t CWe were non figures were s to bur eyes as those h this exotic Fash tter it was born swest cloth h were the to Zhout @ bad liitl the wiser. "he comprehensible ©n_an By plian s Curiously wiou 1on did not « It still exists erves the in purpose nsist that a when the over it loose back Moyvenage fro quite ic hangs gown with threatened by the which has become as Poiret and Lanvin wi On this frock is a half-fitte kled bodice extending from 10 hips, where it holds in siightly gathered skirt. Once were middle-aged women who, these gowns, but it xhould b ed that the fashion or those who retain The panel is the thi Thas flesh, whoev ha Wwhoever has bulky shouldres. The sketch sho; frock of straw herry crepe w has two ancient touches. One has the oriental panel, the other has the applica ored velvet and silk .embro! X means of decoration. Some of the panels, unlike the one on this froc are looped under and caught a low waistline. It is a fa r trick «f the dressmakers t9 pu up panel on an even allows the use of pale white materials another oriental is d it to b . wrin- houlder place a there wore inss its “suppleness 5 h n underbodice tri Tar Applications. One of the very best treatments for a stubborn case of dandruff is a tap application. Some beauty shops sell tar preparations in bottles all resdy to be applied to the scalp. If vau can get these you will find them convenfent and not very expensive. 1fiyou canmmot, however, you can fix the tar, for yourself. Buy a little bit of just ordinary 11gck sticky tad. One woman I know gdts it from a builder and roofer, though most drug stores will carry itiin some usable form. Heat a few onces of olive oil, as much as will alfiost fill the bottle vou decide to s for the tar. Add the tar to the ot ofl and stir with a small’ stick urtl it melts and blends. I can't zi§e you exact proportions, so much nds on the thickness or stickiness the tar that you've bought. The regult will be a black looking mass of about the comsistency of thick ByTUP, = This should be kept and used as +oeded. When ready for the shampoo . your a little tar mixture into a warm sacer and: dip Into it an old tooth- Lirash. Part the hair and rup the Lrush along the parting. Part the hair in another place a few inches away and rub again. Do this until vou have completely covered your vcalp with the tar preparation. It will wash off because you have used ly a small amount of tar to a large amount of olive oil. These propor- tlions are, I should say, from one- cighth to one-quarter as ‘much tar as oil. ‘When the scalp is thoroughly eov- ored let the tar stay on for about 1en minutes. Then begin to wash, nsing very hot water and good soap. aatile Boap or cocoanut oil soap 1§ alvemys best and particularly good if melted to & liquid. Use the soap soveral times. Rinse well. Bobble—It i{s quite a common oc- currence to have the ends of the hair | half a teaspoonful of walnut or to-|brains and sweetbreads and throw ary up and split after a summer’s | mato catsup to the gravy in the pan. | them into cold water to blanch, then Braid | Let it get hot and then pour it over |remove the skin and membran ihe hair in many small braids and |the steak. A slice of onion or carrot|chop them together. Add nearly half «xposure to strong sunshine. then ruff out the ends by loosenin the plaits Clip or singe these lroken enda Repeat this procedure very week until you have finally raught most of them. tty T—When the hands and feet | ] 2re inclined to get cold it shows that s our circulatiem is defective and that WOMAN'’S PAGE. - BEDTIME STORIES 014 Mother Nature. h all his might he away barnyard, Yes, prisoner in the Green Forest, and this As yard he had had plenty to eat and COMES chain <ht- log that, do it me he whs pink or cream | BEAUTY CHATS By Thornton ‘W. Burgess. that young Fox. noon before he had searched al | through the Old Pasture. | Ty he Jay carried a long distance. Green Forest, heard them. to listen. excited over something. His it | brightened. ar a himself. their voices that something unusual. and see what it is.” ting at his heels Boy where those voices were caming from. n- he ve | voices became. voice of Chatterer the Red Squirre! ee Jay. his heart. discover Fa Brown's “Caw, caw, caw than ever. “Caw, caw, ca comes Farmer Brown's Bo: mer Boy. o] fear. the Crow thought time. But it didn't. Instead it filled the Joy. Brown's Boy was a’friend. it probably woul, have to go b: rmer Browr would be better, No sir, it didn’t. s a prisoner barnyard, a thou: Forest. So his ears een | pricked up cagerly. Presently he heard foot: he saw Farmer Brown's aproaching and looking this way and that way. The young Fox sat up and whined. Yes, sir. he did just that. LOf course, Farmer Brown's Boy heard | nim and hurried over to him. - “You poor little rascal!” cxclaimed Farmer Brown's Boy as he saw how the younf Fox was held a prisoner. You poor little rascal! I how long 3 here. Then he went to work to get the { chain free from the log, while Bowser ked on, wagging his tail. | When the chain was free he picked the young Fox up in his arms and rted for home, while Blacky the Crow and Sammy Jay hurried to tell all the other little people of the cen Forest what had happened. and listened eps. |and started_out again to look for He headed straight for the Green Forest, for the after- Now the voices of Blacky the Crow and Sammy Even before he reached the edge of the Farmer Brown's Boy He paused for a moment He knew by the sound that those two scamps were greatly face “Perhaps those rascals have found the young Fox.,” said he to “I can tell by the sound of they have found FII go over there So with Bowser the Hound trot- Farmer Brown's headed straight..for the place | The nearer he got the louder those Then he heard the and It sounded as if e were as ex- cited as Blacky the Crow ‘and Sammy He hurried, and hope grew in Blacky the Crow was the first one he shrieked louder Here | Now, once such news would have filled the heart of the young Fox with Probably that is what Blacky it_would do this oung Fox with You see. he knew that Farmer He knew mean that he would in but that nd times better, than being a grisoner in the the young Fox Then Boy slowly ! wonder ou have been a prisoner | housew THE EVENING, STAR, WASHINGTON, 1 ‘What Will Happen to Conway? Girls, it has come to mine ears by Several Good House Dresses Can Be ; divers channels that Conway Tearle - is susceptible! What, then, what, I Made for the Price of One. ask you, will be his fate, now that Pola Negri is in store for him? I must be more explicit or Ieghall get into trouble and some day my diary may be suppressed, like those of other girls. 1 mean, then, that when George Fitzmaurice starts in to film “Bella Donna,” Conway Tearle will play op- Dosite to the Countess Negri—I think ghe Is a countess; anyway, its a ‘handle” of some sort. - And Pola, by the by, Is just as pleased at the Con- | way prospect as the fans will un- doubtedly be. For when I saw her in New York—I told you about seeing her in New York, you remember— when we spoke of Mr. Tearle as her lleading man, she sald, “Conway Tearle, what a lover! Over in Eu- rope before I go to work in plctures T used to have raptures about how he made love to Mary Pickford and Marguerite Clark, and now that he is to be my Arab in ‘Bella Donna’ my jov in America increases once again!” Thus spake the dazaling Pola. Which reminds me, whether it should or not, that Conway once told me the kind of girls he most prefers are (hold your breath)—actresses. It came about in this wise. “There are three things." he confided—we were having tea together and danc- Ing a few steps now and then in be- tween cups. “There are three things that I cannot understand—tea, col- lege men and soclety girls. In Eng- land, where I was brought up, all men'you are likely to meet are ‘col- lege' men. The term ‘a college man' sald in America with such a tone of differentiation always amuses me. It is the same with the term a ‘society girl’ What are ‘society girls'® How is one to know them? By what ear- marks are they distinguishable? peaking of girls,” I sald hastily, not being qualified to speak for the assiety’ end of it, being of the working - brand-which - heaven-will- protect myself, “speaking of girls, what sort of girl do you prefer?” And then he sald, “actresses.’ He went on: “I like actresses best just as, for that matter, 1 like Listen,Wo WRITTEN AND 1 Perhaps you have an established housekeeping business and then per- haps you have just *“landed a job.” In any case you know, or should know. the stress the truly efiicient ife lays on neat and trig-look- ing house garments. At this time of the vear there is so much to do be- tween preserving and cleaning that many women become lax about what they wear. If you start now and make a few attractive frocks for gen- eral wear, the care of the house in all probabili | cease to “grow on your nerve It certainly isn't the time or money it takes to make a house frock that causes so many women to hesitate, for yoy could make one like the illustra- tion in an afternoon, and all it would if pere; cents per vard vere used with chambray for trim- the same price per yard, would be about 65 cents. The pattern No. 1582 cuts In sizes 34, 36, 40. 42 and 44 inches bust measure. Size requires three nd three-quarter yards 36-inch material, with three-eighths vard 36- inch contrasti Pri age y If I were a judge in a divorce court, there are a few little- things I'd do whenever the chance offered. For instance, when Some peevish wife came to me craving deliverance from the matrimonial yoke, saving that her husband no longer was her of pattern. 15 cents, in post- amps only. Orders shoald be The Diary of a Pfofession_al Movie Fan | BY GLADYS HALL, 1LLUSTRATED By Clsie Jobinson D. “CONWAY TEARLE—WHAT A LOV- ER!” THUS SPEAKS POLI NEGRIL actors best for man friends Why should I bother with other people, people 1 am told that I should ‘cul- tivate’? What can they do for me if they don't interest me? Actors and actresses are mine own people. I know them, and knowing them I un- derstand and love them.” Well, all'T can say is that after he and Pola have murdered her—but I mustn't tell you the story. You see ‘Bella Donna” and then you can tell me what you think they Bave in com- mon. Conrad Nagel and Claude King are also in the “Bella Donna” cast—and it's Conrad versus Conway—you can ! place your bets where you will® rid! e DB\ |lack delayed meals, untidy house. noisy children. | When she poured forth such a tale {to me and demanded divorce. with !alimony, as a relief, I would like to i be able to sentence her to six months | of hard labor supporting some woman and her children. Z I'd let her find out how it seems ito be under the officlal eve. working on a fixed schedule, for_eight solid | hours every day. No five or ten min- | utes off to lie down, no half hour's | gossip over the back fence with a | neighbor, no morning in bed because . ‘0, MONDAY, NOVEMB, ER 20, 1922. Training of Grandfathers. 1t was a long, hard battle. At the beginning the doughty patient would grow peevish whenever the vexed subject'was introduced. The acme of asininity, he called it. At one time he lost patience altogether and re- fused to see ‘the doctor for several days, but & happy turn for the worse one night placed him once K more at the doctor’s mercy and the campaign went on fitfully. The heavier action centered around a screen which :stood like a gloomy sentinel at the foot of the patient's bed. The doctor branded the screen a symbol of cowardice, a relic of be- nighted ancestry and a confession of bad ventilation. “Fresh air standing still has never- injured you,” he argued, “So why fear fresh air in a moving state? The screen is an af- front to comion sense, an obsolete ant‘que, an ugly piece of backwoods bric-a-brac, appropriate enough for an old maid's boudoir, but here in a man’s room— “Never niind, never mind, please go away and let me. sleep,” grumbled Grampy. “That screen, he added with feeling, “has stood there inof- fensively as long as I can remember. It probably has saved me many a lame day.” 5 ‘How come?” persisted the doctor, biting into one of the patient’s favor- ite snow apples. “It has nothing*to do with your metabolism and it isn’t a crutch. It's just a bad hablt—let's send it to the attic.” The patient turned over in bed and forced £ cough. “You'd better leave n PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D., Noted Physician and Authior. | FEATURES. or just in the lower part of the large intestine.—~Mrs. G. G. Answer.—The upper portion (duo- denum) of the small intestine is the usual habitat of hookworms. So-call- ed pin worm or thread worm usually has its habitat in'the cecum (upper portion of large intestine) near the appendix. Lumbricoid or round worm has been found in all parts of the alimentary tract. Milk- for® Father. Is it harmful for a man aged sixty- 19 It Spreads Most ’Round the World The Spread that Everywhere goes with Good Bread three to drink milk freely—thé usual kind of milk sold in the city, steriliz- ed, I think it is-called. My daughter questions whether it is good for mc, though ‘T like'to drink a quart or sometimes three pints daily.—D. S. T. Answer.~—No.- It is an excellent staple of the diet for a man of your age. I think, however, that pure raw milk is preferable to sterilized or pasteurized of “aératéd” or any kind, except certified milk, which fis, of course, the finest and purest raw milk to be had. Eggshell. ~ Some time ago pulverized eggshell. taken in capsule form, was recom- mended to me to cure a goiter, an in- ward goiter. Would this be Injurious in any way? 1 have been told egg- shell “contains more lime than the system can stand.—Miss C. H. Answer.—Powdered gshell might be mixed with salt in the salt cellars (equal parte of eggshell and salt) to supply the deficiency of lime in the denaturized or ultra refined -diet of most city dwellers today. No harm | To the Trade Repairs for All Heating & Cooking Apparatus Grates, linings and vari- cus ,repairs, including all firing tools necessary. Rudolph & West Co. 1332 New York Ave. NW. Wavs to use “left-over” i door hurricane. something for my cough tonight.” he suggested. “I'm afraid it is going to keep me awake.” No, sir,” the Use your “No dope tonight. doctor firmly refused. simplex steam kettle if your cough seems tight. Better still, try a little fresh air for a change. This degert dryness of the heated air of the house is what Keeps your bronchitis going. my dear boy, and the air outside is comparatively well humidified al- ways. What do you say to an extra winddw ang an extra blanket or com- forter tonight. That will soothe your bronchial passages better than any medicine 1 can give you.” The patient feigned drowsiness, stretching and yawning, but the doc tor knew his fricks and eent down after the croup kettle. The doctor planted himself in Grampy's ealy chair and read the political news while waiting. for the steam. It ar- rived and presently the doctor he.rd the patient sét the kettle back on hixs stand and settle himself in bed. When the snores eounded like the gei.uine article—for Grampy could stage some excellent imitation—the doctor &oft- ly raised the second window, removed the screen from the foot of the bed and grinned as a young gale blew through the room. He turned off the light and quietly crept out, leaving the patient at the mercy of the in- can come of taking the eggshell. is almost pure lime carbonate. + (Copyright, 1922.) The Housewife’s Idea Box. Next morning when the doctor in- Te Remew Corks. quired how his patient had rested the | Sometimes a cork seems to shrink, popular | s only for youth! ENING GOWN OF STRAW- BERRY MORQCCAN CREPE, EM- BROIDERED ON A BACK PANEL OF A DRAPED SKIRT. THE EM- BR CRY HOLDS . VELVET PIECES IN PLACE. Y EDNA KENT FORBES. you are possibly in need of bullding up. Aim to counteract this tendency by keeping the feet warm overnight, | even though vou must take a hot- | water bag to. bed; or wear very loose woolen stockings during the night. 1f she sees some fancy work with colors brightly glowing, she gives her head a solemin jerk and looks most wise and knowing. “I see,” she says, “how that is done; I'll quickly make one, too.” She cuts some stuff, the fun's begun—she'll never see it through. She has a drawer of thi galore, of things begun, not endoe a table set, a pinafore, 2 bag with colors blended. She starts quite well, but, sad to tell, her patience peters out; she meets a knot, she grows quite hot and then she gives a shout, “Dingbust this thing!” and with one fling it's lying with a pile of work begun, but never done—she sgrely makes me smile. This very hour, she said: “That flower appliqued on your frock is simple quite, I'll work to- night one like it—on my smock WILHELMINA STITCH. English Dish of Beef. ° To prepafe this dish, have about four pounds of rump steak cut about an inch. thick. Put one tablespoonful of butter in the frying pan and let it melt without browning. Wash the steak quickly in’cold: water and put it in the frying pan, cover closely and let it slowly become hot. As soon as it is thoroughly heated “add o teaspoonful of salt and a little white pepper, then keep it just simmering. never allowing it to 'boil, until per- fectly tender. It should be closely covered all the time. It will require about an hour and & half to cook it Just right. When done, .place the steak on_a heated platter and add may be added if likeds —_— . Prices realised on Swift and Com- pany sales of carcass beet in Washingtor, D. for woek ending Saturday, November 18, ‘on shipments. sold out, ra: from 8.00 cents to 18.00 cents per pound and averaged 22 cents per pound.—Advertisement. addresscd to The Washington Star Pattern Bureau, Zast 18th street. New York city. Please write your name and address clear] You BY HELEN KENDALL. The Glory Hole. not win the approval of the hioned pernickety housekeeper when I say this, but 1 believe in a “glory hole” in every busy. active,| |HENKY WAJ 70 CRO5S, | happy home. The ideal thing, of course. is to have a place for ever: lover—that he would not dance or go to parties at night—that he had no sympathy with her domestic trou- bles—that he criticized expenses un- reasonably and made unjust outcry thing and put everything in its pl so that you live in a sort of pure, {pale perfection of order and system. |But in every home swhere there ure lively children, with lively little |against such trifiing things as her friends. young people who tear in and out, bent upen tennis or motoring or skating. and elders who have no special bump of neatness, there has to be a place where things can be tossed for the thme being and straightened out later. v glory hole is closet opening into the back hall,” said a mother whose house is a sort of convention headquarters for all her children's friends. *“i often come in haif an BHistory of Pour Rame. BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN VARIATIONS —®Hobson, Hopkinson, Hobbs, Hoby. RACIAL ORIGIN—English. SOURCE—A given name. a shortened form of the name Hop- Kinson, does not sound a bit like Robert. Yet, it is from one of the |forms of that given name that this group of family names has developed. Paradoxically, the Hopkins, the Hobsons, the Hopkinsons, the Hobbs {and the Hobys trace back to Anglo- { Saxon blood, for the most part, rath- |er than Norman blood, though the {name Robert was brought into Eng- | {land by the Normans. Though Robert may be classed as originally a Norman name, one nick- name derived from it is distinctly Anglo-Saxon—namely, Hob.” It was not at first a popular name among the subdued Anglo-Saxons, following the Norman conquest, but became so through the fame of one Hob, who won the archery cham- plonship of Sherwood Forest. Arch- ery, of course, was a calling reserved more for the Anglo-Saxon element| than for the Normans, who, as con- querors, had established themselves as the nobility and the upper classes socially. Hopkin is a combination of “Hob and the Anglo-Saxon ending “kin’ (similar to the modern Germa ‘chen”), meaning “Little Hob. Hobbs is a shortened form of Hob- son, or, as it was more likely to be spelled in those days, “Hobyson” [ (Hobys son). which also explains the ! hour before dinner, having been out all afternoon, and find books, scarfs, rubbers, packages, borrowed um- brellas, toys, half-finished knitting, snapshots and a hundred other things all over the living room, hall and veranda. I want the youngsters to feel that the living room is theirs to live in—bless them!—and while it sounds well to train children to put their things away when they come jinto the house, I call upon any mother to say whether she has ever succee: ed in getting her offspring to do i “No, there's only one thing for a ;moment like that, when guests are {coming to dinner and you have to {dress—only one thing, and that's a glory hole. . Everything goes pell- mell into it, in heaps, helter-skelter— no time to sort things out. Five minutes later the Niving room is in peaceful orderliness. Next morning you ynscramble the glory hole at your leisure, hanging coats and hats where they belong, throwing out wrapping papers and broken boxe: and putting games away.. ;‘The chilaren know the glory hole well, and go_there promptly when| . - they cannot find their pehcil boxes,| I°re Is one of the newest hat trim caps or skates. Theoretically I don't | mings that you can make for one of be!lev: m‘ a glory hole, and I ap-|your new hats. -Cut -bias strips -of proach mine with hands held up in| gk of a color that will go well with dismay, but it is the only practical ; {hing when you have to brifg scem- | that of your suit or coat. Stitch them ng order out of chaos in liglitning {up to form a tubing. Fill the tubing ! time.” 1 with cotton and bead it with brightly f tolored bea o Brald three pieces of i i the tubing ant the braid aroun ‘Brains and Sweetbreads. the crown of your hat. Make loops Parboil equal quantities of calf's|to hang over the brim and some to stand up. This trimming is easy to make, imexpensive and fashionable. FLORA. (Copyright, 1922.) e —— The Limit. ~ ' ‘New Hat Trimming. and a cupful of rich milk, three hard- boiled eggs chopped, salt and pepper to taste, a tablespoonful of butter; stir together, then put in ramekins. cover the top with cracker crumbs and bake in' the Serve hot in the There's always room for a good mmt.“ he isn't looking for am apart- ment.. 3 Hopkins, which, of course, is simply | {of a headache—just grinding along | through the hours that another man |is paying for and for which he de- mands an_accounting. i 1'd. let .her discover what it means to wake and sleep with the thought {of another's need steadily tap-tap- | tapping on her brain. To be gripped | by “nightmares of what-would-hap- pen-if-1-fell-sick. | 1'd let her feel what it means to | plug along all day. counting on a | cheery welcome and a restful meal at night and then. on returning home, to find confusion, nagging. or-a cold ! | Kitchen and a wife gone gadding to { the movies. £ |7'r'd let her come to realize how maddening it is to hear a nightly | tale of trifiing irritations which any | good scout should bear, without grumbling. " I'd give her a taste of the haunting despair which debt casts over a man's spirit. And then when the six months were over, I'd ask her if she under- | stood her husband's “cruelty” a lit- tle better. I think sie would. (Copyright. 1922. i PAM’S PARIS POSTALS PARIS, November 6.—Dear Ursule: Now that I attend the “croquis’ classes in the Latin Quarter, I sim- ply must have a good pencil point. This wbnderful sharpener I just twist round and round a few times, and “voila,” a perfectly fine point. PAMELA. (Copyright, 1922.) Chopped Meat With Eggs. Chop some leftover pleces of cold bacon, pork or other meat, mixing several kinds if liked, and stir them into eggs when scrambling, or, if you prefer, the scraps of meat may be rolled into an omelet. Make an ome- let in the usual way and when done spread the chopped meat over it, roll the omelet and turp it on a platter | to _serve. 5 & | | SOLD EVERY WHERE RYZON BAKING POWDER You use [ess 1 ) <y FOR YEARS DISCRIMINATING WOMEN HAVE INSISTED ON (8 Nadine Face Powder | Try it In the New Blue Box, You will Hks its soft texture exquisite tints and charming fra- D It adheres througheut 1 Canstast applications. not necessary, At t counters “or by mail, Send 4c, for minfature box. Wikie, Flesh, Brusetts, Piak. . I o8 f night Grampy laughed at him. “I ilke fresh air,” he confessed, “but I'm no hog_about it—there are other in- valids besides me, you know. 1 had to get up and close both windows after you had gone last night. and it was 80 blooming frigid rumning around here immy nightshirt that 1 nearly caught a fresh—er—delusion! A tough proposition! But just the same, Grampy capitulated in the end. to leak out. the cork and make it again. Place it in a pan water. water to its fit tightly cools. The corl original size. THE HOUSEWIFE. (Copyright, 1922.) QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Rice Powder and Sore Eyes. You mentioned in one article that the use of rice powder for the face causes chronic sore eyes. Does that mean there iz no cure? 1 find that Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Stewed Prunes with Cream Cereal iled Bacon Tomato Fritters any kind of face powder affects my | | Brgiled . nose and eves—Mrs. E. J. V. Blacuite Gottee Answer.—The tfouble is curable if LUNCHEON. the use of the rice powder is stopped and the minute sharp grains of rice starch imbedded in the lining of the eyelids is washed out by repeated Corned Beef Cakes French Fried Potatoes Mustard Pickles Bread and Butter Pound Cake irrigations of warm normal salt solu- Tea. tion, 80 called (about & heaping tea- = spoonful of salt dissolved in a pint DINNER. of boiled water and cooled to about blood warmth). Worms in Small Intestine. Kindly tell me whether worms are ever found in the small intestines Fricasseed Veal Browned Potatoes Creamed Cauliflower Fruit Salad Hot Biscuits Cocoanut Pie Coffee Delicious! Expresses But Poorly The Unique F| lavorro¥ 'SALADA’ T XE A e TRY IT FOR YOUR NEXT MEAL. BLACK (Orange Pekoe Blend) MIXED or GREEN . Delicious New England Fish Cakes in five minutes HOW would you like a breakfast of real fish cakes—but * with none of the fuss and bother of soaking, picking, :dm paring, mixing, etc.? Take home one' of these blue- cans of Gorton’s—the original ready-to-fry.fish cakes—made from famous Gorton’s Cod Fish—No, Bones. Any 'Touch of Indigestion Your Until your various digestive organs Food are in order your food, instead of will properly nourishing you will be liable to clog and poison your system. Your blood will be poor and impure and your nervous system thoroughly run down. Take immediate steps to secure the healthy activity of stomach, liver, and bowels. To this end you should It allowing the contents of the bottle You can easily renew of boiling Let it remain there till the will expand Comet Rice When cooking Comet_Rice for dinner, prepare sufficient to allow for serving Rice and Milk for breakfast. For dessert rehest plain Comet-Boiled Riee and serve with a sauce of thickened canned {fruit juice or fresh stewed fruit. Say Kraft Cheese to your dealer and solve lem. Our free recipe book gives scores of appetizing ways to make it the “meat” dish of the meal. \3 varicties: American, Pimento, Swiss, s0ld by the slice, pownd o locy. 8VARIETIES IN TINS Combing Won’t Rid | Hair of Dandruff The only sure way to get rid of | dandruff is to dissolve it, then you | destroy it_entirely. To do this get about four ounces of ordinary |Tiquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring: use enough fto moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. Do this tonight, and by morning most, if not all, of your dandruff will 'be gone and three or four more_applications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, mo matter how much dandruff you may have. You wlill find, too, that all itch- | ing and digging of the scalp will stop_at once, and your hair will be . flufty, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hun- | dred times better. i You can get liquld arvon. at any | drug store, and never fails to do | the work.—Advertisement. A CLEAR COMPLEXION Ruddy Cheeks—+Sparkling Eyes —Most Women Can Have Says Dr. Edwards, a Well Known Ohio Physician Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17 years treated scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave to his patients a pre- scription made of a few well known vegetable ingredients mixed with olive oil, lumln@fllem Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets. - You will know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder work- ers on the liver and bowels, which csuse a normal action, carrying off i the waste and poisonous matter in i one's system. | If you have a pale face, sallow ilook, dull eyes, pimples, coated itongue, headaches, a listless, no-good ling, all out of sorts, inactive wels, you take one of Dr. Ed- wards’ Olive Tablets nightly for a time and note the pleasing resuits. Thousands of women and mcn take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets— the successful substitute for calomel —now and then just to keep them fit. 15c and 30c. v «