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~WOMAN’S PAGE. I had. Md%ioayes 6f ¢ bread, I would sell |’ For @ Spread’ one of them to buy ] R . Don’t Spoil Your Child’s Hair By Washing It en you wash your ¢ be careful what yoy . use, soaps - and. preparcd - sh; contain too much,_ free alkali, which s very. injurious; as dries the scalp and makes the hair brittle. The. best. thing to use is Mulsified cocoanut oil pure and enti-ely greaseless. There are many reasons for accepts ing the decorative head covering In the evening. One is its attractiveness, the tother ie its ability to,conceal a coif- fure that is neithér weéll done nor be- coming, It is useless to tell a woman wmpoos | shampoo, for this is| It is | very cheap and beats anything elui all to pieces. <lans with u e ir dries quickly x roft, fresh wavy ounces will for wmonths. mives Yyou Beauty Contented You are always confi- dent ghat your beauty has been developed to its highest possibilities after fusing Gouraud's Orierital Cream. White FleslRachel. 1 Send 10c for Trial Size {1 F. T. HOPKINS & SON New York et Golraud's O;rien’ral Cream WOMEN! DI ANY GARMENT T ooifuls oF Mulni- | Tast | | { i { W HEADDRESS OF THIN CLOTH- OF-GOLD WITH LONG BROWN TULLE STREAMERS AT EACH THERE'S A BAND ACROSS THE CAP_ENDING IN E CRYSTAL. A HUGE WHIT! (that she should take ‘a fat slice of time out of her afternoon to arrange her hair in an attractive manner. She may not lnow how to do it, she may not be able Ornamental. Headdress Popular BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. ainst taking the time to deyote to its Upbullding, e crowd our llons with activities to the edge of dlnne: Then, again, American soclal life is mestly casual. It is a ceaseless per- formance, especially for those who live in large cities, where a dogen forms of entertalnmsnt present themselves each night. When life is restricted to formal entertainment there may be time to give to one’s costume which will in- sure its being perfectly done, but the majority of women will admit that more often than not we dress for the evening like a fire horse slipping into harness. Wrong, maybe, but we do it even In the best regulated soclety. Fof some unknown reason the Amer- ican halr is not manageable. It may be the climate, the kind of hair we grow, the electricity in the air, but the truth is our hair does not equal the Furopean's kair in its brilliant polish, nor is it so easily coiffed, nor does it remain in place without a hair net. French women look askance at Amerl- can halr nets. 'They think them as un- gracious as white glace gloves on bare arms. But the American is at u loss without her hair net. She rarely knows how to do her hair without its support. All of these conditions contribute to the popularity of the oriental headdress, which came into fashion last summer. The wide-pleated bandeau of soft me- taliic_tissue is the simplest. expression of this fashion. Various coples chosen from medieval days and the orient are worn by those who can carry off such decoration. They slip over the head, concealing the coiffure, ani give a decided cachet to a frock, Whether it be formal or informal in cut and col- oring. The sketch shows one made of sup- ple cloth-of-gold rolled into a head-} band and held in place by a strap that stretched from forehead to nape of neck. An immense white crystal is placed be- ween the eyebrows. The crown is made brown ‘tulle, which hangs in full streamers at each side. It is an artistic thing to wear brown tulle with dull gold over the head, be- cause the majority of women have hair that fits in this color acheme. Fashion- able women have taken up brown tulle for evening gowns, especlally when touched with tarnished gold, so it is sim- ple to arrange some head covering In a pale shade that keeps one incouspicu- ous yet gives one the chance of ccif- to do it even if she has the knowledge Jof how to do it. and she may rebel It Has Come to My Ears That Vin- cent Coleman- 1t came to mine ears the other day’| that Vincent Coleman either has been | iis engaged, arried, or contemplates the ‘step, or | or some such thing.” If {the young Coleman takes the maritalj i step a -~ OR DRAPERY. Waists Skirts Coats Dresses Draperies Ginghams Stockings Everything Kimonas Curtains Sweaters Coverings Each 1§-cent package of “Diamond Dyes” contanis directions so simple any woman can dye or tint her old, worn, faded things new, even if she | has never dyed before. Buy Dia- mond yes—no other kind—then rerfect home dyeing is guaranteed. ust tell.your druggist whether the aterial, you wish to dye is wool or silk, or ‘whether it is linen, cotton or mixed goods. Diamond Dyes e fade or ru Aspirin Gargle ~in Tonsilitis ! Cut This Out and Save if Subject to Sore Throat A harthless and effective gargle is to dissolve two Bayer Tablets of \spirin %in four tablespoonfuls of vater, and gargle throat thoroughly. Repeat in two hours if necessary. Be sure, you use only the genuine Bayer Tablets -of Aspirin, marked vith thejBayer Cross, which can be had in tin boxes of twelve tablets ior few cents. Bayer:Tablets ¢ Aspirin The’Bayer Cross”on Genuine Tablets DI T The Best Cough Syrup is Home-Made. ere's lfltlly way to save $2, and yet have the best cough remedy you ever tried. i - § coselisesseesorsomased You've probably heard of this well known plan of making cough syrup at home, But.have you ever used it? Thousands of families the world over feel that they could hardly keep homse without it. It's simple and cheap, but the way it takes hold of . cough will soon earn it a permanent place in your home. Into a pint bottle pour 2%; ounces of Pinex; then add plain granulated sugar syrup to fill up the pint. Or,! if desired, use clarified molasses, honey or corn syrup instead of sugar syrup. Either way, it tastes zood, néver spoils, and gives you a full pint of better cough remedy than you could buy ready made for three times its cost. E It is réally wonderful how quickly: this hom¢-made remr\d;v conquefs. a’ cough—usually in 24 hours or less: it seems to penetrate through every air passage, loosens a dry, hoarse or tight cough, lifts the phle, heals the membranes and gives almost im. mediatedrelief. Splendid for throat tickle, hoarseness, croup, bronchitis and bronchial ma., Pinex 'is '- hlflllfly fion:en@n}:fl compound of genuine Norway pine exlr:ct.‘:nd has been used for gen- erationsi for throat and chest ail- ments. ! To aveid disappointment ask your druggist. for “2%; ounces of Pinex” with difections, and don’t accept nnytlllnq else. Guaranteed to give absolute; funded. ~Ind. a { i | | i i i i seriously as he took the movie e —_——— N VI NT COLEMAN H is a Serious Young Man. step it will be a momentous occasion for him, to say the least of it. I remember that when I talked with him last it was at a soda fountain in a railway terminus, and there, over the vanilla ice cream sodas, young Vincent told me the story of his life, unabridged ! How he began, why he began, where he The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY GLADYS HALL, concealment. (Copyright, 1923.) wanted to end, and all and all! “I had an uncle,” he commenced, as 1 remember, and I also remember thinking at the time that he would have to do better than have an uncle if he wished me to be startled or surprised. “I had an uncle,” he sald, “who was an actor. Quite a famous Shakespearean actor in his day, but all I can recall his tell- ing life and the trials and tribulations of stage people. He was a sort of living warning_to soung men aspiring to be | actors. ~He narrated dismal tales of lack | of engagements, lack of funds, blasted hopes and blighted ambitions, and what he would have thought of the movies about were the hardships of stage Miss Weeks, aged thirty-seven, pers. ! Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL. Taking Stock. On the first of the year practically every large commercial congern does what it calls “taking stock.” The with an extra every hour is more than 1 care to imagine!” . “Well;” 1 said, “he didn’ his’ purpose with you . laughed ‘Vincent, “on the con- 1 believe that my appetite, or al inclination, or whatever it was, was augmented. 'And, besides, 1 had already had my start, as it were. I can see by your expression that you think T was a stage child—I wasn't. Far from it. But I probably should have been to have been really in my cle- ment, for when I was the tinlest sort of chap, not more than four or five, T used to play theater. Playing theater for me consisted 6f a wooden stage I had my dad bulld for me, and a number of wooden spools represented the actors and actresses. These spools I would move back and forth, up and down, forc- ing their rotund circumferences into pantomine and speaking lines for each one 1n turn.. Later on, reciting in front of- people—as many people as I- could get together to listen to me—took the place of the wooden spools. 1 was never bashful as other children are. In fact, whenever we had company, I quite inslsted upon taking the floor and deliv- ering myself of some sort-of an ad- dress.” “What a_horrid child!” I laughed. “My father thought so,” laughed Lack Vincent, “especially when he began to realize my growing serlousness and pat sion for the stage. He had been daunt- ed by his brother's dreary tales, if I had not. He tried to discourage me. After T had recited some bit I thopght especially well done, he would 'say, “That was awful, Vincent, perfectly aw- ful. I wouldn't try again if I were you The still very young Vincent at me over the innocent vanilias. I kept on trying just the same,” he sald flercely, “and I intend to continue, world with end—"" Of course, his wife may have some influence with him, but I doubt it! (Copyright, 1823.) t seem to ef- | glared “But PHistory of Pour Name. | BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. ROSE RACIAL ORIGIN—English. | SOURCE—A flower or celor. The family name of Rose, simple as it | seems, is one that is full of complexi-) ties. While there 1s one source from | which it appears reasonably certain | that a very large-proportion of the tamilies which bear It can trace it, there are many other possibilities pre- sented upon which little 1ight can be thrown. In the case where the word is combined with another in the for- mation of a family name the tracing of the eource is simpler; though the trail leads in an opposite direction €0 often as to make it doubtful how often the name of Rose itself is really related to these compounds, The one certain source of the name lles in the custom of tradesmen of the middle ages, erecting signs in front of their places of business, bearing pictures rather than words, since the bulk of the population could not read. The rose was in quite com- mon use for this purpose, and in the natural course of events such trades. men as used it often adopted Rose &s a surname, or had it thrust upon them in the speech of their neighbors and customers. In some instances, no doubt (but how often is a question for specula- tion) the name is a changed epelling of the old word for “red” which has given us such names as Russell, Rousell and Ross, and the word rus- or ‘a changed spelling of the name Ross—which, in its turn, how- ever, jgrot al; from” thig source, 1 _Rose'is theiname of an mnctent but small clan’in Scotland, yet the name does not' appear. tohotof Gaelic.ari- &in. . Indeed, authorities-differ as to the :origin- of: the_clan . itself, anclent homs of wiich was {n-Nairn. shire, .somse_accounts declaring that the ‘nante “was, originally “de Roos,” and’ that the ‘olan was of Norman- French origin. - Others declare it to be of Norweglan origin, and claim ways certainly derived a | that it first used the name of Geddes. The clan first appears in history about the time King Alexander IIi, the last Celtio monarch of Scotland, toward the ,close of the thirteenth century, CEOIR? “(Copyright:) e Cheese Fritters. Mix two tablespoonfuls of flour, the yolk of one egg and enough aweet milk to make a batter. Add a pinch of salt and pepper, two tablespoon- rated cheese and the beaten 63°t6 & nice n ‘;:lden brown. Serve very hot. Things You’ll Like to Make Bunny Hot-Water Bag. et a9 Any little one will just love to cuddle close up to a bunny hot- ‘water bag. Double a plece of elder- down or blanket cloth and out out two ~ bunnles after - pattern “A" Bunny must be just large enough to hold the baby hot-water bag. Slit one plece as shown in diagram “B. Bind the edge of the slit. Join the two bunnies on the wrong side; then turn them to the right side. Stuff the head with cotton, leaving en: room for the top of the bag. Tack the ding here and there. Sew on a - of this sort, no child will refuse to use hot-water bag. FLORA. (Copyright, 1923.) To Qlean Furs. All kinds ‘of fur, except those that are white, may be cleaned with sil- ver sgnd, -~ Put the sand In a dishand place the dish in an oven. en -the sand -{s thoroughly warmed through, but -net €0 hot ‘that it burns the hands, rub the sand into every part of the fur. Then shake out ths sand, using a brush t move the particles that rerain, furs may be cleaned with hot bran n the same w: Cream of Onion or Leek Soup. Wash, peel and dice one pint of leeks or onions, Cover with one quart-of cold water and stmmer until tender, which will be in #bout an hour. Drain, press through a coars, ve and return to the cooking ve 1, adding one pint of white sauce and one tabl oonful of minced parsley. Let boil up once, then push back to keep hot until serving time. n Cp R ARk ers. {amount and value of goods i the profit and loss during the year i!u | 5 show. on the shelves and in the storeroom are re- corded and an accounting is made of st closed. I wonder if it wouldn't be a good | tning for us housewives to adopt l Dorkin—such a strong, virile type, tool—and he is loudly telling The sweet, old-fashioned girl is still good enough for him, just had her hair bobbed last week. (Copyright.) BEDTIME STORIES Peter Is Reminded of Wel- come Robin. Hard times are Mother To bring out in us all th st —Peter Rabbit. “Hard times, hard times,” said Peter Rabbit as he poked his head out of the dear Old Eriar Patch one morning and looked across Green Meadows toward the Green Foreet. Meadows were no longer green. Even that part of the Green Forest which usually is green was no longer green. You see, everything was glistening white. There had been snow and sleet, and then Jack Frost had frozen everything hard. Peter knew just wk ture’s test t this meant. It meant hard times for everybody. | 1t meant that food would be hard to find. Just snow alone wouldn't have mattered so much. But with cvery- thing coated with ice, even the buds on the trees, it was going to be the hardest kind of hard work for any -{ one to find necessary food. But Peter had seen just such times The Green | ‘Tonight there’s a new boarder, Mr. the whole table what he thinks about flap- he'll tell the world! By Thornton 'W. Burgess. of everybody up in the Old Orchard,’ sald Peter to Mre. Peter. “He won': forget = single one. I don't know what we would do if it were not fo: Farmer Brown's Boy. Everybody wil! find something to take them througl. until better times.” i And then again he remembere: | Welcome Robin. He stopped eating Welcome Robin knew nothing abou how Farmer Brown's Boy was In th | habit of feeding the little people o | | before and he felt sure that some-| how, somewhere. he would find enough to keep him alive until that ice melt- ed.” It would be bad enough for him. but it would be worse for others. Suddenly he remembered Welcome Robin down in the cedar swamp. Welcome had never had such an experience before. Peter be- gan to wonder if Welcome would live through it. He began to worry. 'Then he remembered how, after just such a storm the winter before, - Farmer Brown's Boy had gone all about scat- tering food for all his little friends and he felt it in his bones that Farmer Brown's Boy would do the same thing this time. Even while he was thinking about it he saw Farmer Brown's Boy coming toward the dear plan and to pause for an hour or so on January 1 and “take stock” of our accomplishments for the year Old Briar Patch. “I knew it!" cried Peter. “I just knew it! He is bring- ing something for Mrs. Peter and for Lok Peter was right. Farmer Brown's Bay came down to the dear Old Briar Patch ard left a lot of good things for Peter and Mrs. Peter. When he had gone on his way Peter and Mrs. Peter ate their fill. I know withéut going up there that he has taken care past and our profit and loss In the| way of successes or fallures. Some- times & of discouragement fades away before this retrospective survey. “After all,” we say, "I believe we have moved quite a few steps for- ward in our business of home-mak- ing. Since January, 1922, we have put on & new roof and glassed In the plazza to form a sunroom. We have gatten a fireless cooker, which saves ever so much gas, and the cellar shelves .are loaded with preserves, jellies and pickles. Mlildred is pro- gressing wonderfully with her music and Billle didn't die with scarlet fever when he came g0 near it. Friend hus- | band has had a raise iu salary and I have been made first vice president | of the Fortnizhtly Club. Yes, our ‘stock’ has advanced in quantity and value and we certainly have ‘profits’ *Supposing I am feeling. a lttle oppressed just now because the furt | nace doesn’'t work well and the price of coal is so high. What if I haven't found time or money to do my guest- room over, and the faded chinta still hangs at the windows and covers the cushions of the chairs? When every- thing {s summed up, which is more important—that we are all well and comfortable and happy, or that we shall have to walt another ysar for a car and that I can’t keep & good maid more than & mo,nth‘:mlunt'; the proflt greater than the loss when the ocone n of our home today is compared with that of a year ago? So then, without making any good resolutions, which we probably would not keep anyway, we can look for- ward to the coming year with the hepe that we shall take still another move fo! ; that the guestroom shall be enchantingly refurnished, that Friend Husband shall find time for more ‘golf and so feel bettar than he has been feeling; that we shall be able to keep up with the house- | ‘| ¥anilla and spread on keeping & little better and that lit- |~ tle Alice can take the braces off her teeth! : Here's to' January 1, 1924! " Menu for e Day. BREAKFAST Sliced Bananas Ehln‘dc.ml with Cream Coftes ' LUNCHEON Curried Chicken Mashed Hot Rolls ‘Tea or Cocoa DINNER Toast Potatoes rves Ham Sou Turnipe with: Bauce = ~” Browned -with Hollandaise Sauce. -Jand_ sat "Tis no misfortune to be stout as 80 many women deem it, but being 2 little more plumply proportioned than one’s slimmer sisters does require a little forethought before purchasing new cloth As every stout or full figured woman knows, clothes that are shown for, them in the shops are very ex- penisive, probably because more care must be taken in fitting ing proper styles. So tI woman has found it very in - - ory. .to . make. her ewn o thes, - In this thin-line dress you will some | | | Hlast, ‘WHAT . BUSINESS | YOURs? DE: | MRS. PETER. { 18 .17 or MANDED LITTLI the Green Forest and the er Meadows. Welcoms Robin was aowm {In the cedar swamp and wouldn't come out. Peter felt sure tha: Farmer Brown's_Boy knew nothin: about Welcome Robin, so, of course | wouldn't take any food over to th cedar swamp. Of course, Farme: Brown’s Boy supposed that Welcom: Robin was down in the Sunny South Oh, dear!” said Peter. “Oh, dear Whatever will become of Welcom Robin?" “What business is it of yours?" d. manded little Mrs, Peter. ~ “Each o maust look out for himself these dayx “It isn't any business of mine,” 1. plied Peter, “but I'm going to mai it my business. Goodby, my dear And before Mrs. Peter could say other word Peter had started o across toward the Green Forest, (Copyright, 1923, by T. W. Burgees.) Favorite Recipes by Famous Men. HARRISON RHODES, Author. Zuppa i Pasia e Faginoft I send a meatless dish which I like | very much. If made with red bean: {1t Wil be more Venetian; if with | white, doubtless more Bostonlan, As to: whether or not it should be eater with a Tittle grated Parmesan cheese sprinkled on it, my walter in Venice says: “All soup I8 better with cheess, but those who don’t wish to spend their money say, ‘Oh, no, I don't care for cheese nt alll'” But, aside from that, this 18 the way to make Zu pa di Pasta o Faginoli: One pound of drled beans, soaked overnight; 3 tablespoons of olive oil and 1% quarts of cold water. Cover and boil on a slow fire, When the beans arc well cooked, add a quarter of a pound of spaghetti or noodles and one spoonful of chopped parsley. again for twenty minutes. pepper to taste, (Copyright, 1922.) Baked Apples With Frosting. Wash end core a few fine apples. Put into a baking dish and bake slowly untll tender, When cold, put into a fancy glass dish and cover with the following frosting: Stir into the Whites of two eggs enough con- ! fectioners' mugar ® a smooth | paste, then add one teaspoonful of | the apples. Then ~melt enough unswestened | chocolate to make a coating over th Boll Salt and ———————— notice at first glance that the collar will e you, and the side panels continue the line of the collar pro- ducing the panel front, which is always found good, in a new light Then, too, instead of the side panels being straight at ed; the cut- ay carries the eye downward, the mble producing the much coveted slender gilhouette. f-crepe de chine at $1.50 per ‘would cost about §8. 611 cuts in si: 48 and 50 inch 36 requires 5% yards 40-inch al with 12 yards braid. Price of pattern, 15 cents, in post- stamps only. Orders be re, Biz ‘materi: I Alexander Hamiltor and Elizabeth ! “I stopped to read my letter. It is Sckayler. The first Becretary of the United States Tresury was born in the same year s Lafayette and, like that pa- triot, he achieved brilllant success while still a comparative youth. Like him, also, he began his love-making early, though not quite so early as sixteen. Hamilton met Elizabeth Schuyler, daughter of the New York gencral Philip Schuyler, when he wae twent. two, while on @ mission to Albany for Washington, and married her soon afterward. He was a graceful lover, and charming Betsy received many a letter which she could show with pride as a fine specimen of lovers' art. I suspect,” he wrote her, “that if others knew the charms of my sweei- heart as I do I could have a great number of competitors. I wish could give you an idea of her. You can have no conception of how sweet a girl she s, Sho has & lovely form and a still more lovely mind. She i« all goodness, the gentlest, the dearest, the tenderest of her sex. Ah, Betsy, how I love her! - © * Well, my love, here is the middle of October; a few weeks more and you are mine; a sweet reflection to me—is it s0o to my charmer? Do you find yourself more or less anx- ious for the moment to arrive as it appraches.” Then there follows a few pages wherein he warns her to con- sider well if she is satisfled to ac- cept him for a life partner. =1 They arc easy_to is no waste. Cranberry Sauce served with beef gives zest to the whole meal. Now is the time to A recipe folder, cont: berrie: preserve cran ., I motley mixture of f and sprightly dullne reasonable or witty. extreme, and when I of my feelings I ra “I have remarked to you before thal real tenderness has also a tinctur of sadness and when I affect a livel spirit my melting heart rebels. separated from you and it cannot b cheerful. Love is a sort of insanit and everything I write savors strong: Iy of it.” That you return it is th best proof of your madness also. nd_extravaganci “ The truth 1 (Copyright, 1922.) Ham Soup. Brown one chopped onio: tablespoonful of butter, add tw| tablespoonfuls of flour and brown, |Four in one cupful of scalded mil and cook until smooth. Strain, adg one pound of cooked ham minced £t | | in onm Then, | P ———rmm——— aining will chopped fine and one bay leaf broker {in pieces. Cook for five minutes. stirring constantl: Strain through |a fine sleve and add three cupfuls o | scalded milk. Return the soup to | stewpan and season with_salte.pen | per and a little sugar. Reheat th | soup, boil up, skim and serve. | —_— The population of Rumania before tt.s war was about §,000,000, but with th increased territory is now over 18,000, 000. ~ Cranberries‘are economical preparce and there & buy for preserving.¥ many ways to use and e sent free on request. AMERICAN CRANBERRY EXCHANGE, 90 W. Broadway, New Yark. SUPER QUALITY Is Always To Be Found In ELK GROVE BUTTER The friends you are entertaining through the holidays will be sure to comment on the good butter you use—if it is Elk Grove. The Golden Spread for The Daily Bread GOLDEN & CO. DISTRIBUTORS Start the New Year Right Y resolving to B RS Buta Whole Lot Better Get a carton to- day — don't delay— and enjoy the lus- cious, mellow flavor packed in every box. MMM 3 e v usssasmapRenRe TR R SR LA RRRSRRRRRRGS v uu i DR - = send your wearing apparel and household articles to us regularly for a thorough renovation. CALL MAIN 4724 MOTHER! BREAK. CHILDS GOLD Hurry! Move Little Bowels with “California- Fig Syrup” ‘Whatever else you give your child to relieve a bad cold, sore throat or congestion, be sure to first open the little one’s bowels with “California Fig Syrup” to get rid of the poisons and waste which are’ causii the cold and congestion. In a few hours you can see for yourself how thor- oughly it works the constipation poison, sour bileand waste riqht out. Evenif you call your family ‘phy- ' jan he will praise you for havin, “California Fig Syrup” as th tive because it never fails, neve; cramps or overacts, and even sic children love. its pleasant taste. Ask your drug:is! for genuing [ “California“Fig Syrup,” which ha directions for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle, Mothen! You must say “Californfa” or yola' may get an imitation fig syrup. =