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Few Americans care for monkey fur as a decoration for their clothes. It may be the coarseness of the hair or it may be its origin. A woman will willingly wear hide and fur of all sorts and conditions of animals ‘without asking the source, or caring What that source may be, but singly and in mass she hag an aversion to monkey. Yet she may wear it this winter. France likes it. She started the fashion somewhere about four years #go and has never ceased wearing It. In September it was as generously sprinkled over new winter frocks as it had been on spring frocks in June days. . All this is well known. The' new attitude of America toward it is the news interest in the story. Our designers begin to put monkey fur on jackets and frocks, to make huge separate collars of it, to use it decorative schemes. They mingle it Wwith gold galloon and lace. They 0 make a fringe of it for colossal rosettes that catch the drapery of the | EOWNn at one side or fasten a long top coat at one hip. _The coats, by the way, are drip- Ping with monkey fur. That par- ticular garment scems to be its chief Testing place. Those who wish Public have launched white -key fur. putting _it on gowns, on black j bright blue velvet wrap: an orange colored monkey fur which i mingled with black to form a conspic- ¢ of a draped ornaments c fur is quite civet uous fringe at the ed; collar or to dangle from laced at the hips. Orang, fashionable - whether from tiger, cat. or monkey. There are muffs of monkey fur and the longer the hair the better. There are e one a curious short coats of it that gi jesemblance to Robinson soc. It may animals are not gets she hides cheap. of furs and that they tak can find. Therefore one s fur dangling from every : women, from the one who sells corsets 1o the one whose yacht puts in to Vill Franche. It is not so popular in America. Our women have turned a cold shoul der upon it. althoug- the shopkee, crs have stubbornly continued tod Play it in the shop windows. But per. Women are what they of thick forate The sketch shows a f velvet which has amassed quite an amount of monkey fur. It drips from each side of the skirt, it is rolled into a round muff, and it makes an im- mense collar, ‘the kind that no cave woman would have refused as a gift from a cave man. This collar also appears on a short WRITTEN AND 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 gruntled husband came to me craying deliverance from the matrimonial handcuff, saying that his wife was no longer “his mental companion™; that she cared only for housework and babies; that she did not understand his professional ambitions nor fit into sort comes up I'd like to be abl Grandfathers. | Talk about the grannies and their | mistaken ideas about “taking cold.” I| have vet to meet one who can hold a candle to a certain grampy when it comes to spotting drafts in the offing and excluding all such imaginary perils from the environment. “You doctors mnowadays run _too much to_fads,” this doughty patient | asserts. “You spend all your time and the patient's money searching for microbes, making intricate and ex- Densive iaboratory tests and prepar- ing fearful and wondertul serums, and by the time you begin to get a line on what ails the patient his trouble has probably reached the operative stage if it hasn't automatically cleared up. The old-time doctor handled cases differently. One told him one's com- plaint and he felt the pulse, looked at the tongue, thumped over the chest a bit, inquired .about the appetite an pronounced the trouble so and so. Then without further ado he mixed u p“Yat. the doctor rejoins, “those good old days of shotgun or blunder- buss therapy were the halcyon days. uld have practiced then. wadays, With the Jaity so well in- formed on health matters, it doesn’t work so well. Suppose, Now, you came ¢ to me today for the first time about your bronchitis. Suppose I followed the fashion of the old doctors you describe and pronounced your. trouble a touch of catarrh. Would you feel satisfied? And suppose I then pro- + ceeded to concoct some horrible shot- gun_conglomeration. * ¢ ¢ “The old doctor handed out a com- bination of real medicines that start ed you right on the treatment.” grampy insists. “'In the old days you knew you were sick and you knew what you had. “A_slight cold on the chest, per- haps?' the doctor ventures I cetiously. “You- know just what ailed you. But now,” grampy regrets to say, “you get so little medicine and so many examinations you're half in doubt whether you're a malingerer ortal . in the last grampy tell it, one would ime doctor, with his limited secret or he could knock light, medium or heavy “colds” into cocked hats in no|la handles, or anything else of china, |' time, no matter how deeply or firmly sea . they were in the chest. (h'lmgy is convinced that his chronic bronchitis is a “cold settled jn_the chest” and nothing will change him. Like many other misguided victims of chronic bronchitis and allied trouble: he employs a physici: pays sub- stantial fees for medical advice and . unhesitatingly rejects- the Ao ‘s advice about the most essen- tial matters of hygiens. “You may Sdeitain akass g A Monkey Fur as Tnmmmg BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE, to startle the mon- evening mper jackets and There is also Tus that monkeys are plentiful and other 1t may be that France Her dressmakers admit they have not their usual supply Listen,World! 1tLUSTRATED By Elsie Tobinson dis® his soclal world—when a case of that | D st PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D., Noted Physician and Author. ELVET AFTERNOON GOWN TRIMMED WITH MONKEY AT EACH DE_OF THE SKIRT. THERE 1S A DEEP DETACHABLE COLLAR, ALSO OF MONKEY. THE MUFF IS OF THE SAME FUR AND 'HE HAT HAS AN ALSATIAN BOW ACROSS THE FRONT. {jacket. It is detachable, and well [that it is, for the height and heat of it would suffocate a woman if she sat in a crowded room. Bigtory of Pour Name. BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN CHAMBERS VARIATION—Chamberiain, layne. RACJAL ORIGIN—Norman-French. SOURCE—Title of,office. - some explanation of the social or- ages, following the Norma: occupation, is necessary. The life and busine: and social customs of the Normans were highly organized. DIsciplined, perhaps, would be a better word. The Normans ex- tended thelr conquest over large portion of northern Europe be- cause of the very high organization and discipline which permeated their entire social structure. They won their wars because they regarded war and the preparation for it as “thor- oughly a business proposition,” to apply & modern phrase. In this they Chamber- To understand the frequency with which this family name is met today ganization of England in the middle -French uch & The Prof of True Friendship BY THORNTON W. BURGESS. Nay Thad Feentunis Which 15 yiaser ead true. —O01d Mother Nature. The young Fox did not struggle when he’was picked up by Farmer Brown’s’ Boy. To be sure he cast many longing glances through the Green Forest and over the Green Meadows as he was carried back to Farmer Brown's barnyard, ‘but not once did he’try to escape. All the way there Farmer Brown's Boy talk- ed to him in gentle tones. As soon as they reached the barn- yard Farmer Brown's Boy made the chain fast to the pe where it had been fastened before. Then he left the young Fox and went into the were like the Romans, and unlike the Anglo-Saxons and the Celts who pre- ceded them in England and who, though fighters of the utmost per- sonal bravery and prowess, lacked that discipline, sense of co-operation and rather scientific attitude which marked the Normans. An important part of the Norman organization, for peace and war both, was the office of the “chamberlain,’ so called because he had access to their ‘superiors’ inner privacy. The chamberlains were, in fact. the private secretaries and treasurers of the rulers of the various feudal di- visions of the country. They were the expert accountants. They con- stituted the business end of the Nor- man feudal system. And it was nat- ural that their offices, like the au- thority of their superiors, should be- come hereditary and that the title of “de la chambre” (“of the chamber”), and “le chamberlain” (j‘the chamber- lai should eventually come to designate the family instead of the office and that the tendency toward simplicity should eliminate the pre- fixes “de la” and “le” upon the re- assertion of the Anglo-Saxon tongue. Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL. The Mandarin Coat. That the decorative beauty of our interiors has been greatly enriched by oriental colors, designs and fabrics is known by sll of us who have ac- cumulated Japanese screens and ceramics, Chinese bowls, ivories and silken pillows, and all the colorful lanterns, lacquered furniture and dwarf shrubs that come froth the far east. Our wardrobes, too, have taken on g/ D=2\, to sentence him to six months’ service in the nursery and kitchen, doing the work of just the sort of wife and mother he was criticizing. 1'd relieve him of all necessity for outside labor and give him un unlimited oppor- tunity to experience the life his wife had been leading. T'd let.his rest be broken nightly by 4 erying bab, 1'd let each hour be crammed by the repetition: of tiresome duties—duties for which he had no deep love and | concerning which he could form no inspiring ambition. | T'd let him see what effect the labor and monotony of cooking, ironing, mending and baby tending fourteen | hours a day, seven days in the week, n, without certain vacation or break in the responsibility until the | children are grown, what effect all this has on_health, looks, pep, dispo- sition and broadness of vision. I'd let him be forced to give up all | his pet amusements and subordinate { #ll his natural interests to the needs of others. | _I'd let-him experience the terrors of | self-pity that undermine a woman's i self-respect and against which she i fights 5o helplessly in her narrow rut. I'd let him be gripped by that hun- ger for understanding which makes a Woman pour out trivial wrongs which, given a happler range of activitles, she would learn to laugh at. T'd let him do all this under the | constant goad of insufficient fun “trying to make both endsd meet. i ‘Then, when the six months were over, I'd ask him if he understood his wife's “dullness” a little better. |1 think he would. make some hair-brained people believe | such nonsense, but not me,” he declares, “If exposure doesn’t cause colds, why does mine grow worse every winter?” And no matter how painstakingl: explicitly the doctor teaches hl‘my::;'l the bronchitis gets worse in the sea- szgr:r‘l;nrgr?m?y B‘Dsngs his time in- oul air an lesert 3 grampy doesn’t heed. R QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. lTodine to Prevent Goiter. Inglefis‘x:lntx the directions for tak- 0 _preve goiter.—Mrs. H. P?M. Sneiendtioure Answer—A deficiency of fodin the food in regions far from lh:l:: or at considerable altitude probably accounts for the frequency of simple golter among children, particularly ghils. This deficiency may be sup- plied by administering each spring and autumn, as has been done in some of the public schools in cities of the great lakes region, a course of fodine in some form, it doesn’t matter par- ticularly what form of iodine, save that very small quantitie: = q s are nece One or two drops of tincture of lodine may be given each day, in a glau'? o|f Whller, for a period of six ‘weeks In the spring and again f period of six weeks in the f:l‘i. Ao .Or two or three grains of sodium {odide may be given daily, dissolved in not less than a quart of the drink- ing water, for a period of a month each spring and autumn. o This has not only prevented golter o‘l‘lv: ln;z: 7:&{: when systematically n, bu a8 cured mi of stmplo solter. R ersons with exophthalmic ite: :l'l';u;d not elxnerim:lnt with Iodfi-noe ll‘l‘ orm unless under med: - tion and observation. o haes Castor Ofl and Salts: P ‘Which is the most harm] castor oll or salts?—T. U. G(?' el Neither can be called a physic, but it is difficult to say is the more harmful. Perhaps salts works moge havoc among aduits; cas- tor oil does more harm to {infan for adults abuse the one and infants are maltreated with the ether| —_— . Try This for Mending China. Onevof the very best cements for mending broken china follet articl or table chinaware, or china umbrel- Is made as follows: Put an shell into a bright fire and leave ‘it there until it glows with heat. Take it out and put it one side to cool. Then crush it to a fine powder and, if possible, pass it through a sleve. Make the. white dust into a paste with the white of an egg, and use this to join ‘broken china. Allow sev- eral days for the mended part to set; and & very perfect repair will be se- cured. ‘more than oriental splendor” in the shape of gorgeous kimonos, embroid- jered slippers, padded dressing gowns, strips of rich embroldery for trim- ming, and the stunning mandarin coats which make such beautiful evening wraps. These gorgeous garments, however. have thelr value in the decoration of the home as well as for wearing pur- poses. Not long ago I entered an apartment the bright walls of which were ornamented with Japanese prints, the electric lights were hung within decorative Japanese ;eh:dull nd the tea wagoon was equip] w us orange-vermilion porcelain and oddly shaped caddies and tea bowls. The beauty spot of the entire room, how- ever, was a splendid mandarin coat draped across the back of a wicker chair. It was of black and gold, ver- milion and Chinese blue, and was de- lightful to behold. \ On a wicker divan in Yhe same apartment was spread a e. em- broidered skirt in strips of Chinese embroidery, the whole lined with rich vermilion. These skirts, which are open down the side, make charming decorations for wall or living room table, chair or couch.- It is better to leave them in_their original shape than to cut them and fit them to chair backs and seats or to fit our modern windows, as I have sometimes seen them treated, to their gréat detriment. Part of. their beauty lfes in their oriental cut and unusual lines. “Not only that, but whenever we go to a fancy dress ball we take these coats and skirts off the furniture and put them on,” laughed the owner of the apartment. “They make won- derful costumes, and have several times won_ prizes for us when ac- companied by appropriate shoes, head- dress and wigs. The Power of Suggestion. From Life. Father (bracing himself)—I must sayMarjory, 1 thoroughly deprecate this—er—cigaretts tendency among ou young women. ’Dl-l?l"ht.el‘ (sternly)—What do you mean, father? Father (weakening) — Why —er— ah—I—I think a pipe would be much less harmful. are broken; then press bread, buttered toast, or cake. Serve Cranberry Sauce ‘Three pints cranberries, J§ cup water, 2 cups sugar. . 4 " Cook the cranberries and water until the skins of the fruit {f “through a sieve, and cook this pulp ~ - until it becomes quite thick; add the sugar and cook for % hour over a very gentle fire, stirring constantly. When stightly cool turn into jars, and cover closely - - ‘This makes a delicious and healthful spreati on hot biscults, R Koy prn MY, HOW THE EYES OF THAT YOUNG FOX GLISTENED! house. When he came out again he had a plate piled high with food. My, how the eyes of that voung Fox glis- tened! He could hardly wait for Far- mer Brown's Boy to set that plate down. You see, he had had nothing to eat for a day and a half save a few beetles and insects. He fairly gob- bled that food down. Yes, sir; he Bobbled it down as greedily as any pig. Farmer Brown's Boy smiled as he watched. “It was just as I thought,” said he. “You couldn't catch any food with that chain, and you must have been half starved. My, but I'm glad founu you. If I hadn’t you would The Way We Ought to Figure. How many of you remember Arthur I would naturally re- 1e the | Guy Empey? member him because he sent largest box of candy I have ever seen, let alone ever received; and, of course, I wouldn't go so far as to say that than his book, “Over the Top,” or his “fillum entitled the same. But you girls know how ‘tis! had once, not so long ago, and how impressed I was with his energy and the way he went at things. Since that time I hear that he has fallen in love. And love will do strange things to a man, cven if he has been over the top. Any: recall saying to him: “Would rather go down in the annals of fame as a soldler or as a writer?” And he gaid, vehemently: “As a writer, but even more as an Amer- fcan—just an American—first, last and all the time. I'm for Amerk right or wrong—and she's never wrong—through . thick and thin— through fire and water—I'm prouder thing I can ever do or of anything I {may ever be. At the time Arthur Guy was doing a stupendous amount of work. He always had, for that matter. His life reads like @ travelogue. He has hunt- ed big game; he has seen fighting in many parts; he sleeps about four or five hours out of the twenty-four. Sort of an Edisonesque trait. “Sleep,’ he told me, “js a waste of time, and time is precious.” He has a twinkle in his eve, and he grips your hand when he shakes like—well, like, you know. I groaned at his superabundance of ‘gotoitiveness.” “Well,” he said cheerily, “I'll only live about twenty BEDTIME STORIES The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY GLADYS HMALL, that ton of candy was more in my life | services in the war, or his| By Thoruton 'W. Burgess. have starved to death, and that would Now I am going to leave you for a good rest, and then I'll have a surprise for you.” The young Fox licked the plate clean, and then curled up for & n It was a_terrible disappointment be back there a prisoner again, but was_better than being helpless over in the Green Forest. He knew that it wasn't likely he would be able to get that chain free again, and so as he dropped off to sleep it was with the feeling that he would probgbly always be a prisoner. Early the next morning Farmer Brown’s Boy brought him his food as usual, and stood by and watched him eat if. Then for a few moments he petted that young Fox, patted him. tickled him behind the ears, and all the time talked to him. Finally he picked the young Fox up in his arms and unfastened the chain from the collar. Then Farmer Brown's Boy started off with the young Fox in his arms. What could be going to happen? Where was he being taken to? What did it mean? The young Fox cogldn't even guess. Somehow he couldn’t be- lieve that it meant anything bad. for all the time Farmer Brown's Boy kept talking to him softly. Through the Old Orchard into the Green Forest they went. Then for a long time Farmer Brown's Boy | tramped through the Green Forest until they were far, far away from home. At last Farmer Brown's Boy | sat down, and for awhile petted the young Fox. Then he gently placed the young Fox on the ground and stepped back. In one hand was the collar that had so long been about the neck of the young Fox. At first the young Fox didn't know what to make of it. He stmply stood still, looking up at Farmer Brown's Boy. Then in a hesitating way he | took two or three steps. There was no pull on his neck from a dragging chain. He shook himself and took two br three more steps. Then with a sudden bound he was gone. He was free! He was as free as he had been before he had first become a pris- oner. Joy surged all over himy such joy as he had never known before. Farmer Brown's Boy turned and started for home. He smiled, but there was a little sadness in that smile. He had grown very fond of that young Fox, and It had been hard to set him free. But he was glad he had done It. Tt was proof of true friendship. “I hope,” said he to him- self, “that no hunfers will find my pet.” (Copyright, 1 by T. W. Burg | 1 remember a long talk with him T | | i gone, what's left? You can’t drive of my American birth than of any-Ya machine at top speed and expect it to ¢ the same endurance you might expect from one you deliber- ately conserved. But it's so much more worth while this way. One might as well really live w e one is about it and then rest will be wel- come and well deserved.’ I asked him if the war had changed him any. He laughed incorrigibly and returned: “Only made me a little ivelier.’ 1 asked him if he was afraid death “over there,” a ‘No. Why should I be? 1 figured that i my pals had met it so could I. That’: the way we all ought to figure as we whistle along to keep our courage of | up—if the other fellows can do_it, so years more, I figure, and I don’t even | want to live any longer than that.| be it life or be it death.’ 1 don’t know jus t Mr. Empey can w Going as 1 go now, my pep will be gone by that time. And once that's T Gooseflesh. | An extraordinary number of women write to me and complain of large pores, “blackheads and a curiously rough condition of.the skin on the arms and legs which some of them aptly describe as “‘gooseflesh.” ~ them and say that this is simply due to careless washing, yet that's the plain truth of the matter. The arms and the legs, not being as heavily protected from the flying dirt of the atmosphere as the rest of the body, need a rather more vigorous cleans- ing. and seldom get it. The lower part of the leg is particularly apt to show coarse black pores because the fine down that covers the skin turns into quite noticeable hairs at this point, around which small black- heads develop. The arms and the legs should be scrubbed with hot water, soap and a moderately stift brush,” either the small hand scrubbing brush or the large bath kind. If the large pores and the hardened matter under the skin that looks like gooseflesh is at all developed, then this hot water and scrubbing treatment should be performed every day; if not, once a week. You will be amazed to see how soon the pores of the skin be- come fine after a few weeks of this treatment. If you have had this “goysefies! for a long time the best thing to do is to soak the arms or legs in hot water for about ten minutes, then rub nl(lflhh'whhbuf. BEAUTY CHATS W is doing now. but I'll wager he's still whistling along with the crowd. BY EDNA KENT FORBES. them vigorously all over with ollve oil, white mineral oil, or any inex- pensive oil. The idea is slmply to ing day in an afternoon. per yard, about 55 cents, he pattern No. 38, 40, 4 measure. only. 22 East 18th stree clearly. en. BY FRANK CRAVEN, Actor. Cranberry Sauce. of sugar and water. berries, put in utes. Skim and cool. highly 1mportant admonition: ate lady famed 'l‘: You'll Realize Its Worth on Laun. Columbia Junlor High School is com- Even if a house dress is attractive, if it takes an overamount of your good energy to “do up” on launder- it isn’t worth a sou. house dress {llustrated can be opened flat to iron, and, too, it can be made If gingham at 15 cents per yard were used, with cham- bray for trimmings at the same price this garment would cost 7588 cuts- in sizes 44 and 46 inches Size 36 requires 3% rds 36-inch material, with % vard inch or wider contrasting. Price of pattern 15 cents, in postage stamps Orders should be addressed to The Washington Star pattern bureau, , New York city. Please write your name and addres: FEED THE BRUTE Favorite Recipes by Famous Five cups of cranberries, two cups two cups of boiling Pick over and wash cran- stewpan, add sugar and boiling water and boil ten min- Any recipe for cranberry sauce, a feature Thanksgiving feast, must include the Don’t let it boil over. 'OU RE: i .o iy | The recipe I procured from an up- . | DO YOU REMEMBER ARTHUR GUY MPEYS L or her cooking. The BY HELEN The domestic science class of the mendably active in -its work to help the Red Cross. This is a wide field in ‘which the assistance of such classes_can be of practical value, The domestic science ctasses of all the thigh schools could well consider fal- lowing in the footsteps of this one in this regard, as the neeg for cloth- ing, even renovated clothing, is very lurgent among the girls and boys of the stricken cpuntries of Europe and the near east. Miss Dorothea Campbell, director of the division of exchange of s¢hool correspondence between the students in schools in this country and in the other countries of the world, says that many of the letters which pas: through her hands from girls in Cen. tral Europe show a great need for good clothing. Of course, everybody knows the story of the well meaning club of women who sent flannel underwear to the heathen in the South Sea Is- lands, and it is astonishing to learn that some*of our best meaning flap- pers have actually considered send- ing old party dresses to the relief committees for the girls of other countries. Therefore, the made by the domestic sclence class of the local Junior High School i particularly noteworthy, as it shows that these girls realize and appre- ciate the fitness of things in general even more than some of their well intentioned but thoughtless elders do. Advantages in Removation. Incldentally there Is a great prac- tical advantage in the renovating of their old dresses and other clothing 80 as to make it acceptable and use- ful for the less fortunate girls abroad. The girls who do this reno- vating learn lessons of economy that may prove of excellent value to them personally in case of future need and which will make any welfare work which they may take up in thelr community later as grown women really valuable. The charm of domestic frience classes has previously been prijtarily that embodied in the actual méking of clothing and hats which the §roud maker can don as soon as comp)ated. The girls at the Junior High School are, therefore, having a novel sen- sation in the making of these things for the Red Cross. It is not difficult to imagine the character of the letters whicl be received in acknowledgment of these gifts when one has seen so many from little Czechoslovakian, Austrian, Polish and other girls who went _into eulogies over the gifts of toothbrushes. hair ribbons and hand- kerchiefs which were sent ®them through the Red Cross last year. Plan Folk Danees. The girls of the Virginia avenue playground, at 10th street and Vir- ginia avenue, are very much excited over the program of folk dances to be the She .insisted that it came out of a book, but that the main thing is to T watch it. to Make A Knife Rack for a Christmas Gift. (Copsright, 1922.f <= the finest FEATURES, Girls and Their Interests “and Other Days Has graced American tables for ffy years v~ Always delicious and wholésome. Made after a famous recipe from 1t doesn’t seem at all polite to write |'yy, A knife rack makes both a useful and attractive gift. Cut two pleces of board about on-quarter inch thick, six inches wide and twelve to four- teen inches long. Nail a small, thin piece of wood to each corner of the inside of one strin. ‘The pleces should be about one-eighth of an Inch thick. Paint or enamei both strips. Then decorate them, using a simple design like the one shown at the bottom of the illustration. Fasten a long screw through each of the corners. This should be long enough to go through both strips and to hold the tack to 3 the wall on which it is to go. The '!;m e M knives are slipped down between the get something olly Into the pores while they are open from the heat so o soften all this collected matter. After this vigorous rub Acrub the skin with soap, water and a brush as just described. End this, and any other treatment, by dashing cold water over the skin. Kitty—A schoolgirl who is over- | weight is often so from eating too much candy or rich pastries. A ces- sation in these indulgences would re- | sult in the return to her normal weight and good health. rs. J. A—No one could determine- how long it would take to build you up so the development would be af- fected. T hardly think that one bot- tle of the tonic would do this, but you may be able to determine whether |or not ‘you should continue with the treatment. Many people have quick | response because they recuperate { easily, but more time may be needed with others. two strips and caught in place by the handles. = FLORA. —_— The Realtors. a From Life, Give some people an inch and they ill proceed to divide it up Into bulld- ng lots. . The Dressmaking and ||’ Millinery School Make Your Own Dresses, Wraps and Hats SEND FOX BOOKLET PROF. LIVINGSTONE’S 115 G a.w. Fr. 478, Irrational Rations. From Life. Maid—I couldn't come yesterday, Miss Jackson. I was suffering that badly with paln In my chest. Mistress—What was it, Melissa? speps: D{dad?—Yel'm, it was. But the doc- you will ind Meadow o1 tor, he calls it an attack of acute indiscretion. > i HERE Pekoe. delicate satisfies. ;T No other tea combines that with strength that can be flavor a certainty TLEY'S B e e ves. ey know and they take no chances when they buy Meadow Gold. 83. H. FETTER. i &iven on the playground next Friday | afternoon. The exhibition will be given ynder the direct supervision of Miss Thelma Smith, director of the .work on this playground, and Miss | Loulse Sullivan, her assistant. Twen- | English dances, the Morrls dances which will include some of the old English dances, the ‘Morric dances brought to England from Spain by John of Gaunt, which became such a definite part of all old English fairs. There also will be Swedish and Dan- ish folk dances. The progra: includes the Ribbon Dance ~ (English), Bleking Dance (Swedish), Ace of Diamonds Dan (Danish), T See You Dance (Swedish), the Shoema < resul D; Grecting (Danish). Prepare for Charity Werk. The two chapters of the Merrill Girls' Club, the alumnae and the chool chapter of J School, are busy right now’ preparing their annual baskets oY food and bun- dles of useable clothing for the desti- tute families which these girls help out each year. They do thif welfare work at both Thanksgiving . and Christmas time each year #nd'con- sider it the most important phase of their club work. Tie members also enjoy many cial good times, two, forty couples of young folks having had a very en- joyable dance. given: by. the. alumnae ichapter of ti ub, last Suturd; [night. The school chapter of the Mer- irill Girls is planning a dinner and levening entertainment to be given just before Christmas time in honor of the commissioned and non-commis- sioned officers of the School cadet compa able the entertainment w form of-a miniature vaudeville show, | including clever readings, vo. {instrumental music. and, short dramatic skefchy As there now eighty-five girls in chapter of the Merrill club. they have a great fund of material and talent from which 10 draw in selectiug those to take part in the vaudeville show. Will Present Play in Jabuary. ss Mildred Boynton, president of b, has also announced that the are making prellminary ar- rangements for choosing a play 1o be given early in January.. Furtbet. disa { cusslons of the plans for this feature, iand probably a definite degsion on the ar play to be présented..wil H usséd at the meeting of the 1 ill Girls Friday afternoon. Alxo, program regarding the 1 e: g out of the plans for Thanks- | &iving welfas ki wili be an- ]nounced at th oo o 1 - Self-Obliteration. From Life. ¥ Sally—Whatever became of Susan lo used (o be in our class? Oh. didn’t you hear about deur, the poor thing married ingredients obtainable. At your Grocer's All Like cadow Gold Butter * Wherever goodness md'gui':;r 01 in foods are appreciated butter. For discriminating . adults or hungry children nothing can match it. You wili find itin good restaurants and among the most your friends—because Meadow Gold butter is always good, delicious and savory. For over 23 years Gold butter has been of uniformly high quality. That iswhy Meadow Gold butter is the first choice of careful housewi careful of Meadow Churned fresh every day from richest cream, thoroughly pasteurized. no substitute for Triple o sl at the cresmery 5 prtect s Gooinewe and . Tetley’s Orange e e Whalesste BEATRICE CREAMERY CO. * 308-10th St., N.W.