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WOMA N’S PAGE. Close-Fitting Rose Turbans Worn BY ANY It is smart to wear a turban cov- ered with closely placed small pink roses. But it's smarter to have those roses swathed with brown veiling of ~some sort to cast a sort of cinnamon dust between your eyes and the pink roses. It is a good idea to buy a fine light-brown vell to soften the bril- liance of your turban of pink roses, but a newer arrangement can be ieved if you have your milliner them around with fine brown tving the ends with apparent ssness at the right and allow-, rd or more of the filmy mate- | ang or float over the right | shoulder | Su nothing Egyptian here, or even rtesque”—nothing that we | could was inspired by Ind o or any other French nothing that you could say had come as an insplration from Rus- sia, for the Russlan emigrees in Eng- land and the continent are still try- ing to fan the fire of favor for their | native modes, to the end that the pot of their own well-being can be kept boiling. ut certainly rose turbans are not ian. | They are, however, very good war- E RITTENHOUSE., yant t women are in no danger of taking any period or natlonal in- | fluence too seriously. Artificial roses | are decidedly u modern inmovation | and a French one. Speaking as one | coes nowadays in tones of centurles, they a Doubtless the only re nkhamen's wife and Cleops other Egyptian lady whose we babble so flu- | , dldn't wear rose turbans was becatse Egyptians didn’t know how | to make them. Some milliners like small, close-fitting shapes something Egyptian hey like to imagine every veil drapery as Inspired by the drapery of Egyptian headdress. They | explain the vogue for cocou-colored | veils and those soft, light browns that we call cork and sandalwood as emanating from the desert. being in- Epired by the sands of Egypt or the | cases of her mummied pharaohs And they take particular delight in using little ornaments consisting of crystalizeg beetles or flies, though these winged creaturcs may mever | lave buzzed further away than the banks of the Seine or the hills of | to see in all | Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL. Installment Letters. ry busy housewife. especially ber of young chil-| e nights b spondence w triends get She tries to letter a nuw e th sol find her ! aw her e anid el fully behind time for the weekly [ mother or sisters. so eagerly looked | to by them, yet day after; by and she cannot scem to find cathing space in which to sit down at her desk. Perhaps the plan of a-young matron of my acquaintance will help her solve this difficult problem. She calls her letters to her mother and sisters and her correspondence with one or two school friends “installment let- They are written in daily brief installments, taking only a few snatched moments, and once a week ed. to write smooth, con- omposed letters, bécause I don't have cnough time for tha she explains. “And anyway, I know that what mother and the girls want t Know is whether Ned's business s improving, and cunning thing ths baby ‘sald vesterday, and what L£m going to get for a spring suit, and such items as these. So I keep a pad of letter paper handy, and now and then. while the baby i# asleep or while I'm waliting for the water to boil, T drop down and tell just one Jittle detail of wy life. Sometimes it will not be more than twenty or thirty words, but by the end of the weelk there is auite & little hudget of n to send. 1 keep w pad of I ide table, too. and ribble a few lines at in the morning. to school friends are in the —a little in- 1t i friends would ither o helter-skelter, appy, merrs letter than none at all, and T try to make my little daily anecdotes, comments and descrip- ilons ‘as bright and amusing as I can. The queer thing s that every one likes them better than the smoothly- fowing letters I used to write!” “Just Hats” By Vyvyan forward “I don nected, well- written TURBAN OF PL IN BROWN TU OF TULLIZ AND THE SIDE. WITH BOW LONG END AT New Jersey. and their like may never have been seen in desert Bgypt The sketeh today shows one of the pink_rose turbans veiled in tulle of a soft brown. Menu for a Day. BREAKFA Strawberrie: Rjce with C Scrambled E; Graham Gems. Coftee. LUNCHEON. table Pie, uthern Style, hin White Bread and Butter. Cucumber nd Olive Ginger Pu! Little Meringue Lenion Pies Coftee. FEED THE BRUTE Favorite Recipes by Famous Men. ROBERT HERRICK. A Drink ¥From Cracked Coce: The Lest dish T know for these mad | times i old New England drink | made from the cracked bean of the | coc (not the hells), called crack- ed cocon. Take any amount of the cracked cocoa bean, still prepared for the market, and boil over a slow fire for an hour or more until the strength_of the infusion suits the taste. Then strain_and serve with cream and sugar. The bolling may he repeated until all the strength of the bean has been extracted, and fresh cocoa may be added from time to time ,thus making the drink eter- nal. . . . Tt is especially recommend- ©d for those whose nerves have been rasped by discussion of the prohibi- tion amendment _or political argu- ment, or the effort to comprehend | modern statesmanship. 1t is an cx- cellent substitute for Coue. (Copyright. 1023.) MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN an a Taste for Pictures. I cultivate my child’s taste for good pictures by giving her the inexpen- sive prints of some of the best and most beautiful for her very own, ! using those which may be explained by « story she can understand. She is very imaginative, so I rouse her artistic sensc through her imagina- Oh, My Poor Brother! Oh, there are times I blush to be & member of the female clan. Flo treats her George most shamefull; he is & sore-abused young man. Just list to this and drop & tear (if you've a heart to call your own). Each Mon- day Georgle does appear (I can't r train one bitter groan). He do { appear, as I have writ, and hiands h Taffeta and Lace. A serviceable little navy blue taf- feta mushroom, with brim edged in cream lace ruching that gives & de- Jightfully dainty air which is very QAACLV . wife his weekly pay. Yes, Ma'am, each blessed cent of it—he never failst| not one pay day. His wife extracts a a ck bill ‘and slips it to him ple. She phones on Tuesda: “Bring @ pill—the baby's got & bunged-up eye.” She .phones on Wednesday, “Georgle, please, bring home somé fruit to give the Kkids, and liniment for my stiff knees, and for the saucepans two new 1ids.” On Thursdsy she demands some cake, @ can of peas, a pot of jam. Some gum which to the show she'll take, and “Oh, yes, George, & leg of lamb, He brings them home and pays, of course, out of his weekly pocket money. Ah, me! his wife does get so cross when hubby says, “Some cash, please, Honey.” WILHELMINA STITCH. Apple Patties. Pare and core half a pound of ap- 1 Stew them with half a pound ar, & cupful of water and the grated rind of a lemon. Melt three ounces of butter. Take five eggs, leaving out ghe whites of two. Beat these well and mix all together thor- oughly. Bake in patty pans lined with puff paste until the crust is baked and the custard thick i | takes { about | pied by most “one-room girls’ ! they try to do too much in a small ! seat. THE EVENING My new dog has a name today, but vestidday he dident on account of me not having thawt of eny good enuff, thinking of Spoart, Rover and Prince, ony you can call eny dog those names and besides Skinny Martins tertle is named Spoart, and everybody I asked couldent think of enything but Spoart, Rover and Prince, and last nite pop was smoaking and thinking and ma was counting her tobacco coopons, and I sed, Hay pop, wats a good name for my dog? Dont call me Hay pop, pop sed, and I sed. Yes sir, wats a good name for my dog Wy dont you call him Yardo, be- cause if he dont stay out In that yard ware he belongs he's going to get out of the familly intirely, wat a dog. pop sed. A, G, pop, lie's a good dog, T sed, and pop sed Wy you dont even know wat kind of a dog It is, he dont look like eny other dog 1 ever saw on land or seu. Maybe he's the kind of a dog that su haff to wait till they grow up efore you can tell what kind they are, 1 sed. Maybe he's the kind that you never can tell, p sed, and ma sed, Wy dont you call him Spoart or Rover? . ma, I wunt a good name, I Cant_you think of a good one, pop? I sed. Yardo, pop sed, and ma sed, Now Willyum, sippose the dog grows up to be a thorobred with a name lke that. Prince lzzent a bad name for a dog, she sed. Well, I dont mind Yardo, I sed. 1 think its a pritty good of a name. 1 think 111 call him Yardo, T sed Being his name, One-Room Girls. A surprisingly large number of people in our big cities might be classifled as “one-room people.” It @ different knack of arrange- ment for two persons to live in two rooms or three persons to live in three rooms than for one person to live in one room. You have to set your problem of furnishing from a different angle. The trouble with the rooms occu- is that They try to make the room too artistic, too studioesque. implicity is much to be desired this one room. though it is diffi- There is a temptation to have copies of all one's favorite pictures hanging on the wall, to have photographs of all one’'s best friends and every rember of the family from grandmoth down to siste Sue's newest baby. 1t would be a guod plan, if possible, to have a fair-sized cupbourd or set of drawers somewhere where one could slow away one's ornaments and pictures, all but a very few at & time. This is the Japanese idea, you know to keep most of one's beautiful things treasured away so that the few that are exhibited will appear in all the advantage of simplicit There e so many advantages in having a lounge instead of a real in the room that must be sitting and bedroom combined that no use bringing up the few ntages of the honest-to-goodness ) must have your trunk by all means have uan ~for it. This not only trunk. making you forge! )u wre a sojourner, but it makes a eaner furface than can be possible with the trunk that has been i about expr offices and sfer trucks. If you use chintz. then it should match the chinta used in other decorative schemes in your room, but it is sometimes better to make the cover of a neutral tone Bra or brown burlap or monk's cloth. Then the trunk makes a good place to hold plles of magazines. If it is in a sunshiny position, it may serve as a stand for potted plants and Ny bulbs. If your trunk is low, and you haven't quite enough chairs in your room. you may like to make it into a Then cover it with some at- tractive material and make a stuffed sver exactly the size of the trunk to go over the top. With one or two w cushions lald at the back this kes a comfortable and convenient “Jrashion) Y ABeReen New Overblouse Style. The better shops in New York are starting to show many blouses of this type, which means they will be worn exclusively In the late spring. The pattern cuts in sizes 16 years, 36 and 40 inches bust measure. Size 36 requires 1% yards of 36-inch ma- terial. Embroidery pattern No. 616, in yellow only, 15 cents extra. You could make this style of plain crepe, in which case the embroidery space. tw cult to attain. the design would give a pleasing effect; or you could make it of printed crepe without using embroidery; or you could use foulard or almost any wash materfal. Price of pattern 15 cents, in pest- age stamps only. Orders sheould be addressed to The Washington Star pattern buresw, 33 East 1Sth street, New York eity. Please write name and address clearly. Fish Salad in Cucumber. Pare some cucumbers, cut a slice from the top of each, hollow out the seed portion and shape like a boa hortening as needed, to make of 1ze itable to serve individually. Cover with boiling water or broth and let cook until Just tender. Cook S0 any portions removed that are free from seeds. When could, marinate in French dressing. Al marinate cold cooked fish, separated into flakes, with French dressing. Mix the fish and the small pleces of cucumber, cut into cubes, with Rus- sian salad dressing and use to fill the boats. Set these on heart leaves of lettuce and sprinkle the whole with shreds of green pepper. Serve asthe main dish at luncheon or supper. In place of the fish, chicken or sweet- breads may be used. STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY GLADYS HALL. Clothes Economy. Every fan will agree, I think, that most of the stars do know how to dress. Most every fan believes that they know how to dress only because they spend such scads and scads of money on themselves that they are bound by the very nature of things to_look just about right. Well, ‘of course, what with the change in roles and personal appear- ances and trips to Havana and Cuba and trans-continental, and Kurope and the frozen north and such like, they do have to put out a litMe more time and cash than is customarily customary, but most of them contend that it fa rather time than money— more a case of getting the thing that is becoming than many things, a per- centage of which will probably not be becoming. It's all @ matter of knowing one's type and then catering to that type. It simplifies matters in more ways than one, and principally the money one. | Idith Roberts once said, “I've al- Wways been extremely interested in the study of styles, for they are a real study. The classical type that can wear the long-straight lines of | the prevalling mode and look strik- | ing in tailored severity is an espe- clal object of my admiration, but I realize thut to my type belong the more simple, youthtul style I never waste time or effort or money In buying clothes that I know will | never really suit me. “I some times think that if girls all over the country would pick from the screen some one girl whom they consider their proto our calllng (we who are on the screen) mukes it necessary for us to study this subject very carefully and very judiciously. Just because we do have to buy so much, we have to buy Just that much the more carefully and we can never afiord to look wrong, even in our mo-called ‘private | lives'—not so private at that! ‘Color, too, is & fascinating sub- Ject of stud: in that respect. I think that for a woman with brown eyes the wonderful red dish browns, Listen,Wo WRITTEN AND and so | ¥pe. it might be | helpful, because the very nature of though of course the | screen can't help other girls o much | But just generally, wood browns, tans and greens are the most becoming; and of course if she has blue eyes, blue is her most flattering color, and variations of blue may be used to interpret every mood. “The true brunette with black hair and eyes has her own choice of color, too, with black heading the list, fol- ' IS EDITH ROBERTS YOUR PHUTU-I LYPE. l lowed with dark Llue, grey, certain shades of jade and olive green, red, pink and purple. “So you see, when it is all summed up, it is not so much expenditure that makes the most becoming ward- robe as it is the studying of one's particular style and coloring, and then purchasing g« hats and which ‘belong. | girls, which | type—Constance Talir Pola Negri, your prote dge, Doroth dith Roberts or zimova Note how they , ‘according to your kind, and | then go vou and do likewise! | (AlL rights reserved.) rid! 1.LUSTRATED By C/sie Tobunsan The flowers In the park are won- dertul to see. The tulips shoot in sturdy husky. lite. The hyacinths arise in waxy sprays. [ like the single hyacinths the best— rows, complacent, filled with scarlet A NATION'S TREASURE AND A, NATIONS the small white bells, all daintily adangle on the jade-green stems. The pansies, too, are opening their buds. They've set the plants out in great rounded beds. which look as rich of Qavor as a chocolate cake. And on them all the gay enameling of velvet i bloom fs spreading day by day. Such | folds of purple, amber, royal blue: it | 13 as though the butterflies of all the ,world had drifted down to sleep the ummer through. nd everywhere the little nameless flowers run or creep along the branches of fine shrubs; doral and turquoise. gold and misty white, or Al aflame like tiny tongues of fi in the grass. uch richness and as- | surance of new growth! And no won- | der: they are tended as though every ! bed housed royalty. Our taxes pay a regiment of men to weed and wate | scrape and hoe and dig. that loveli |ness’ may blossom in the public square. But one may see another sight within the square. Along the path, outside the well fed beds of tulips, daffodils and hyacinths, the benches stand in rows, all filled with fdle men. All day they sit_there, far into the night, until some legal nightstick pokes them on their way. Young men and 0l men of a thou- sand types and lands, vet marked I'by curious hall-marks of the flesh and soul which brand them in a dreadful unity—a certain hungry | look about the sagging neck., the list- lessness of knee cocked over knee, the slouching of their hat brimsover | empty eyes. Man power that could tame u wil- | derness. or build a thousand homes | for common folks, or net the seas | {with prosperous merchant ship: there, stranded on the benches, dere- | liets, 'with no one caring where they dritt or when! | Our taxes tend the tulips and the | hyacinths. | “How rare we rate the loveliness of flowers! | (Copsright, 1923.) THE CAROLINA CHICADEE. Carolina Chickadee: Parus Caro- linensis. Length about 4% inches. Top of head and throat glossy black; cheeks pure White; the rest of the body ashy-gray, under parts lighter. Resident (common) all the year. The chickadee is & flufty, restless mite of a bird, very common, espe- cially in winter, but he is oftener heard than seén. His two-note whistle ia very pleassnt, and he also calls doo-dee-des, rather softly as he flits about the trees, searching in the crevices of bark for inseots and their eggs. He is shy and retiring in the nesting season, but at otheér times he fendly, and will n_come -.boll' “{{h?h o picking up seeds and broad crumbs thrown out to him. He builds in holes, either remodeling & woodpecker's hole, or digging one r_himself in rather soft dead d xla bl 18 archod th- the help of uv:r—vl until the hole is from six to twelve inches deep. Although the éntrance is_small, the nest is roomy at the httnn.;ndmnnunlnchql;nnn feathers, hair and wool—sometimes a bit of squirrel or rabbit fur. The six to eight, are white, spotted with’ brown. —_— Endive and Cress Salad. Pick over, wash and dry some cress, freshening it in cold water {f neces- sary. Cut some heads of endive in halves, then in smaller pleces, length- wise of the head. Use about half head for each service. Insert these lengthwise shreds of endive in two rlndn cut from slices of cookéd beet and one ring cut from & green pepper. Place on 2 layer of the cress, pour over some French dressing made with onfon juice and sprinkle with finely- chopped chives and parsley. Serve with roasted, broiled or braised meats. Cherry Bounce. Take one quart of juice from ed cherries, 1 t s of "l:.r I:I'l one lemon, two cu; one’ quart of ice water. Sice two. lom ons thin and lay one slice on top lass of the drink. In the each slice of lemon place atuffed with @ nut meat, of each center of la .fll'n”’_ APRIL 11, ITTLE CTORIES [J&Br:gm&& The Surprise of Farmer Brown’s Boy. Of friendships that alone s best That stands the unexpected test. ~Johuny Chuck. 1923. Farmer Brown's Boy tramped down the Long Lane. He didn't hurry. He knew that Bowser had chased some one and got him cornered. He knew that Bowser would stay right there, and so there was no need of hurry- ing. “I wonder who it is that old scamp has cornered this time,” said Farmer Brown's Boy to himself. *robably he has chased Peter Rabbit into that old stone re all 1 never did see such a persistent fellow as Bowser. When Bowser saw Farmer Brown's Boy coming he became more excited than ever. He barked twice as fast and hard as he had been barking before. The nearer Farmer Brown's Boy got to him the harder Bowser barked. But Sammy Jay, who had been screaming " silent. He flew to another tree a lit- tle further away and without making a sound. Crew flews high overhead, was silent. But both Sammy Blac were quite as much as was Bowser. Now, Farmer Brow Boy had ex- pected to find Bowser Larking at an opening among the stones of the old and excited EXCLAIM BOY. stone wall. 0 he was very much sur- prised when he drew mear encugh to see that Bowser was dancing about the foot of a small tree and looking up into it. “So yu e treed some one!” claimed Farmer Brown's Bos wonder if it can be Bobby Coong began to hurry. He could sce some one of quite good s crouching in a crotch of that tree, and he couldn’t think of any one as big as that who would be like to bLe in a tree excepting Bobby Coon. But soméhow that didn't look like | Bobby Coon. The coat was the wrong i colo “Well, I never:” exclaimed Farmer Brown's Boy when he reached the foot of that tree and could see clearly | who it was that Bowser had driven | up there. “Well, T never! If it isn't Johnny Chuck! I never expected to see you In a tree! No. sir; I never expected to see 1 in a tree It must be that Bowser surprised you where there was no hole for you to get into. I have heard that Chucks sometimes climb trees, but T never was sure of the truth of this. Now I know. Bowser, vou rascal, keep | still Bowser obeved. He 10o J nny ¢Chuck and then loc in his master's f and qu all over with eagerness, He wanted his master to shake Johnny Chyck down, | but. of cours couldn’t tell him 80 in words. He didn’ need to, Farmer Brown's Boy understoc the look in Bowser's eyes perfectly. He shook his head. “Nothing doing, Bowser,” said he. othing doing. You've made trouble enough for Johnny Chuck for one morning. You just follow me back home and we'll give Johnny a chance to get down on the ground, where he belongs.” He made a sign which Bowser knew meant that he was to follow. | Such a & of disappointment as | there was on Bowser's fac His tail | dropped and his head hung low as| reluctantly he followed at his mas- | ter's heels. Two or three times he ! stopped to look back, but each time ! his master snapped his fingers and Bowser promptly followed on. i (Copyright, 1923, by T. W. Burgess ) 1 ex- ! N He that was i | up at The Housewife’s Idea Box. | To Amuse Child Confined to Bed. 1t a child is confined to his bed but is well enough to sit up, you will find that making soap bubbles will ! help to pass away the time for him. | Spread a large woolen blanket over the bed so that the water will not! penetrate to the other coverings. | Mix & little glycerin with the soap | suds and it will make the bubbles | stronger. THE HOUSHWIFE. | Candy Box Cushion. Make a cotton or feather cushion hollowed out to fit around a circular candy box. Place the box in this hol- low. Fit a piece of heavy, round wire around the top of the candy box. Gather the silk cushion cover on to this . wire. Cover the candy box ‘| cover with matching silk, after pad- ding it with cotton. Decorate the outer edge af this cover with large silk or.ribbon roses. ‘ Sew a_large rose to the center to form the handle or knob. Finish this charming and decorative candy box cushion with a ribbon rosette and long enda. ’ 'LORA.. . . 4Gopyright, 1923.) | The box FEATURES. April showers bring forth flowers,but none of them can compare with the cocoanut blooms that turn into snowy hearted cocoa- nuts from which is madedelicious,flower- sweet Nucoa to Spread your Bread. NO talc NO glucose NO coating Absolutely . Pure MACLARENS Stands for better CH Bold in sealed packages only. Send for recips booklet FREE. Comet Rice, 57 .aight St. N. Y. : both Rapld Progress. 1817 ¥ Prots. - trom. . Spain—Conv COLUMBIA | SCHOOL OF DRAFTING Roy C. Claflin, Pres. 14th & T Sts. Phone N. 272 Ne. 7 Municipal Fish Market Quotes the following prices on Fresh Fish, received daily: Roe Shad, per Ib Buck Shad, per Ib Pan Rock, per 1b.. Large Rock, per lb.. White Perch, per Ib. Spanish Mackerel, per Ib.. .. Crab Meat, per Ib Orders Promptly Attended to Phone Main 4968 Learn Drafting and enter this profession of good pay and congenial work. DAY OR_NIGHT INDIVIDUAL INSTR COURSE IN 3 TO 9 3 Full Information_on Request Get Latest Catalogue ENROLL THIS WEEK STONS TONS NTHS Sta e ek caont ning. April 1 roll at once s prepared befo on May 9. WOOD’S SCHOOL 311 East Capitol Street Lincoln 38, the exami ACE INSTITUTE Accountancy and Business Administration y electricity. The revolvin, heater under the flat-work rolls is heated by gas or electricity. Apex Rotarex Electric Co. 1317 New York Ave. N.W. Phone Main 1940. 4 RatArex.:o*:. IRONER | ntancy pr ne i B gl 8260 for B - Washington | MUSICAL INSTRUCTION. SAXOPHONE Piano, Tenor Banjo, Guitar, Uke., eto. In 10 to 20 Lessons Music a_spec e for booklet. andine terucon Teles 715G St., N. W, Corner 5th St A CLEAR COMPLEXION| Ruddy Cheeks—Sparkling Eyes— Most Women Can Have Says Dr. Edwards, a Well-Known Ohio Physician iy Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17 CHRISTENSEN SCHOOL OF MUSI( treated scores of women for liver a2 G st w. b Main 1! and bzw 1 lih:ler;‘!x. lzu:ing these | = years he gave to his patients a pre- . scription made of a few well-known | MOVING. PACKING & STORAGE vegetable ingredients mixed with MEEROTOLISANZ WA EHOLSERO0T, olive oil, naming them Dr. Edwards SHORAER Olive Tablets. You will know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers| 104 on the liver and bowels, which cause l a normal action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter in one’s | system. If you have a pale face, sallow look, dn}lll ;ye':. pim IIcs. coated | tongue, headaches, a listless, mno=: good feeling, all out of sorts, in.| SEPARATE ROOMS, $1 Mo, active bowels, you take one of Dr.;, JLocs] aad Lons Distance MOVING. Edwards’ Olive Tablets nightly for | “PAOKING BY FXPERTS. Goods insured a time and note the pleasing re- | $8.000 while in our no o sults. CLEAY, DRY STORE FOR ¥ URNITURE ANT Thousands of women and men | [t Jocatinn. WESCHLEL S, take Dr. Edwards’ Oli ¥ the successful substitute for calomel | AMain 1 NATIONAL CAPITAL STORAGE —now and then just to keep them ' yoren fit. 15c and 30c Fre Phione n PHONE | NORTH ‘a2’ UNION ¥ € 8 STORAGE 'COMPANY | 705-9 Fia. Ave. . W Mouth 5. & MOVING Co UNITED STATES STO MOVING, PACKIN PHONES: M ¥ leTH!s TRANSFER H & STORAGE LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE MOVERS wopery FIREPROOF suitoing WE CRATE, PACK AND SHIP PHONE No 3343 __1913 You'STmEET N.W. i HOVIN'O STORAGE KRI EGSE)(PRESS PACKING SHIPPING 1226 H St. N.W. __ Main 2010. RESORTS CITY i 1 __FIREPROOT is blue Opal jar inside Be sure to get | real Resinol | .. 1f you want to get rid of eczema, pimples, or other distressing skin eruption, you will accept no “gub— stitute’’ for Resinol. Preparations " similar in name or appearance are s0t *‘just the same as Resinol Although a feww unserupulous deal- ers may offer them as or for Res- inol, they are often crudely made, of little healing power, and some may even be dangerous to use. Buy in the original dlue package. ' Resinol is never sold in bulk on the beach, is tne Chelses sso- d_fresh ‘'water in ail priva exclusive feature malntain: eut with costs of service. ., Send for booklet. THOMPSON & 0O. INGROWN TOE NAIL Bt Charles Pl. & Beach. Fresh and sen : run. water In rooms: elev. mod. rates. Coach at trains LAE Lagton, GRAND ATLANTIC HOTE VH(';} NIA A\'E'. NEAR STEEL PIER. S AUTO BUS MEET 0. D. PAINTE ) RAYMORE “3* CITY Worlds Greatest Horel Success. NEW CLARION Kesticiy arc How to Toughen Skin so Nail Turns Out Itself H Altew drops of “Outgro” upon ine skin surrounding the ingrowing nail reduces inflammation and pain and 8o toughens the tender, sensitive skin upderneath the toe nail, that it cannot perfetrate the flesh, and the nall turns naturally outward almost over night . ““Outgro” is a harmless, antiseptic manufactured for chiropodists. How- :m. Ayone I.lmbvb‘:.\y from the store n; drlll > y bottle containing The Beach. _ 1 mfortable. Running water and priva rage. Booklet. N. K. BON DELAWARE CITY oo o hotel from the | Bonch. Newly furn. rooms. Pricace haths ning water. Reasomable. Mrs. Wam. Laiide