Evening Star Newspaper, September 3, 1923, Page 26

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WOMA N’S PAGE. China Offers Color Inspiration BY In France red smart, when and Dbecause it is Chinese. In England the smartness of red | traced back to Lady Patricia| Ramsay. who is never more admired | than when wearing one of her much- talked-about red gowns. Your Eng- lish friend will tell you all about it “Lady Louirz Mountbatten and the | Countess of Brecknock are also dev- otees to red compliment to Lady Patricia Ramsay—and a lot more to | the same effect, which dosen't seem | to make much difference to an Amer- ican : Red that resembles Chinese I quer was conspicuous at the Grand | Prix ball in Paris early in the Sum- | mer—the siartii & point for all the | much-talked-u} o . Chincse and In- | do-Chinese t.on. And _straight- | way it was -.cen up with something | like enthusiasm by milliners and | dressmakers There was nothing in the least new about this. Fashion- able women in France as well as in this couniry have for several years| prized little Chinese dressing tables | and incidentzl tables of this_color. The mirror framed in red Chinese | lacquer is almost a_commonplace. So if the Grand Prix ball did not | give birth to lacquer red it was an | enthusiasiic sponsor. 1 Tt is much liked for daytime wear as for evening, and as attrac- | tively used on house frocks as street | frecks Lenieff has made an x:\'e-‘ ming gown consisting of & Chinese red shp under a tunic of gold tissue. A jade green ornament is placed at the front with a fringe of green Lieads drapping the front apron-wise h red earrin with this remarkable gown. | us goud un example of the | present taste for vivid colors in eve- | ning frocks as one could find. | Chinese blue has had almost as warm reception by the dressmakers as has luacquer red, and the green that is jude, is enjoying someihing of a revival. Che fact is that green cne ously spread on_the canv: au- tumn fashion. Lanvin, who would not by Lanvin without wreen, is us- ing a green u little different from the green associated with her name. | 1t is described as a sort of pistache. Bernard, Channel and Jenny are said o remain loyal to bottle green. which will doubtless be a good selection for autumn and winter. For evening there is a light emerald, and a ecn that will doulbtless sur- vive cold weather. Cheruit has shown | an intere th's lettuce green, and! also us amen pink. In fact, pinks seem toghave co.ne 1y to| the front. * For_the t yellow, the summer- | time favoriie, wili doustless fade from | the garden of fashion with the pass- | ing of warm weather. There ittle s The Diary of a Prof BY GEAD is br Clara Is Different. The other day 1 had tea with ("ara | Bow. Did you the Sea in Ships” the Elmer Clifton production which dealt so peacefully with Quaker love and loyalty and so tremendou with whales and whalers? Anyway, Clara Bow “made »0d” in that picture. has recently done Hunter, | &irl ce her in “Grit” vet with to be She Glenn which s R WATCH CLARA BOW. | s~sn. But f:om what I hear she has | 2ls0 jusyified her movie existence tkat.” And now she has up by Preferred Pictu the Coast working in be followed by “The Boomerang. which she may have the leading rc I have talked to many and man & beginner. and, to be quite hones in these ro private pages of my diary, | 1 haven't handed ‘em an awful lot. | They were just that—beginners. But Clara is different. In the first place. she has rigen up out of the rank and file: not of the theatrical profession or anything akin to it, but just the This Monday my children is Labor | day. And what has this day to do with | you, whose whole duty in life is to play and study and dance and s'eep ‘and wake up to enjoy your good breakfast? Everything in the world to do with vou! If it were not for you there would e very few who labor today and none at all to march in the proud parades this Monday. For people rarely, oh, very, very rare- 1y, werk for themselves. They work to make a comfortable place for the chil- dren to grow in. Don't they? Of course, when I say work, now, I mean earnest work, like building houses and running } engines and swecping streets and writ- ing bocks and cooking dinne When you are tired doing anything, | you stop and do something eise. If| you are weary you,rest. If you don’t feel like going on Wwith what you are doing, vou just stop, and that's all about that. Of ‘Course that is not working. When one works in earnest, one goes on and on, even when it seems that another motion will be beyond human effort. Now people struggle like that to keep roing only when they have a very strong reacon. Something outside of them- selves pulls them along and holds them 10 _the tasks of everyday living. The reason is just you. People work for their children. Po you ever think of that? And not just for their very own children, but for all the children of all he world. ~ When the pason lays stone after ttone in beds of mortar until his hands are stiff and his back aches. he does it for the sake—of the children who are to grow up and live in the fouse, worship in the church or tread +a the bridge he has built. It's the incught of thore who are with him now and those who are to come after him that Keeps him at his work. If he cearcd to build, what would happen to the world’s children? The man who runs the train every morning—that scoty-faced. Krim-vis- ged fellow who carrjes his head side- ways on the outside of the engine and #cepa his hand on that yueer ining in- ’!fl&—“h‘t do you think keeps him at ANNE RITTENHOU “Down to | § { that i | ful.” | “more i 2 i AN EVENING | CHINESE RED UNDER TUNIC OF JADE ¢ N WAIST. ¢ TENIEFF GOWN CREPE SL1P LD TISSU. ORNAMENT AT SEAD FRINGE. MAKES WITH 3 3 of violet or purple in the color scheme of the Qhinese decorators: perhaps that is why this first color range of the rainbow i3 so hard to find in the clothes thus fhr offered for autumn. (o i essional Movie Fan TS HALL. poor little with no one day Pickford lot of 1 Brooklyn, N. Y. hope than that of hands with Mary other ambitions. of course. chock full of ambitions. But she has a very clear and ¥ Jittle head on her shoulders he realized. even at her tender aze, movie ambitiong are not in the everyday habit of landing You be- fore the camera. Many an ambition has gone down to more obscure scas in less remunerative ships. Then Clara won a contest run by film periodicals. and even that she survived. By which I mean that winning a contest is not, as might be supposed, the surest way of winning cinematic gelebrity. A director is apt to think, “Oh, all she can do is look.” But Clara. for one, can do more than look. She likes to nlav gamin paits. She likes to fight in films, to be rough and tumbled and active That's why the was so d _in “Down to the Sea in Ships" = She was In_her young red-blooded ele- ment. She likes to play sirls poor sirle, common ing a in her aking She had Clara | fu with fi ant exteriors cover- ing Fearts of grief and gold. Which may be somewhat the truth about Clara. She has known poverty and pain. She lest lier mother not many months ago. Save for her father, she is quite alone In the world. She} las had no one to give her advice. no one to extend a helping hand. Her philosophy. her achievement she has gained by climbing with her own sure and nimble feet. “I like to play in pictures with sad cndinge,” she told me, the full: battery of her immense brown eyes upch me because life is sad. you knew isn't all happy. T knuwi 1t lots of | for in- he calis | svoils sof “getting | they've | uccess- a Bow knows She knows enough not_to get what “That's what of ‘em che said. heads just because enough to be knows enough than anything” out of! into the slume of the| cities and handing out candies toj the ragged little toddlers on the city | curbs. Her's is a voung philosophy. | but it is a vhilosophy. and that's more than can be said of many an- other. Take the advice of an and watch Clara Bow! (Al rights reserved.) hink_C! *anc +itzy ny Tled n lucky She fun soing down Wi he old lady | that job day after day. his eye strain- | inz ahead. his nervous fingers clutch- | ing. hours on end? Nothing would hold him there but the fact that the world is full of children. and that thought makes him smile and hold on a little longer. You see, my children, those men and women who march today are thoge who labor; those who work and work hard, with their bodies and minds, to keep this world moving,.so that it will be a pleasant place for you to grow up in. Many of them are saying as they march along in time to the drums: “Not for me. not for me! It will never, never come. But for them. but for them, I will hold on for them! The work of the world is done for you. Think of that every time you sce a good job on its way and watch the workers pushing it ahead. Think of it when father goes out in the morning and when mother serves your dinner. The work of the world is done for you. Labor day is but another children's | day, celebrated in terms of those who love children well enough to give their lives to their service. (Copyright, 1923 —_— Baked Chocolate Custard. Scald two cupfuls of milk with one stick of cinnamon an inch long. Melt one ounce of chocolate. Add three tablespoonfuls of wigar and one tablespoonful of bolllng water. Stir until smaoth, then-add to the scalded milk. Bedt two eggs slightly, add two tablespoonfuls of sugar and one- fourth teaspoonful of salt. Combine the mixtures, then strain into slightly buttered cups. Set the cups in a pan of hot water and bake In a slow oven until firm, which may be determined by running a silver knife through the stard. If the. knife comes out ean the custard is done. { Prices realized on Switt & Company, sales of carcass beef .in Washington, D. C.r l;r ‘week ending Saturday. September 1. 1923, shipments sold out, rabged from 11.00 cents t0 20.00 cents per pound and averaged 16.03 cents per pownd.—Advertivement, | came {dont it hurry fout jest & tridle | shecze { back {delving into the |picked up during the THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. O. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1923, Sundey pop made me and ma and my sister Gladdis go out in the yard to take our pickture with his new . and we all stood in a nest to each other like people expect- ing to have their pickture took. pop saying, Now this is a v ixpensive camera and the lens came from Ger- minny, so I gess ycu know if this pickture dont tern out rite it will be hecause you moved someihing, so be carefill not to move or cnything. Jest step in” a little bit. will you, mother? he sed. Wich ma did. and pop pointed the camora at us with a ixpression as if he v going to shoot us insted of take our pickture, saying, All steady now, move back one step, will you. mother?” Wich ma did, saying. O for goodniss sake Willyum, snap it, I'm all ndgitty If it sutch a wonderful camera wy without all this red tupe? Gladdis sed It will if you wive it @ chance. step Will you moiher? pop sed % Im cal re i a moatal and 3 for gouodniss youre Boing to tuke sakes take it. ma sed Steddy now. everybody, hold it sed. Wieh jest then I sneezed Pep sud. Stop that sneezinz, is ey tin sneeze? im all sneczed cay more, 1 Then stop looking steddy now. take one wilt You inother? 1 will not, Im ixhaused, ma s Gladdis sod! So am L. And th in the house so pop § me by myself as if 1 was going sneeze but not doing it pop and E this t Im not going and pop it you werc, step forward Yoeur Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL. Give the Honse a Chance. Getting back into one's house after the sur er vacation ove beginning life all over again place has d. it dim darx past and worn and drear: looks. You hadn't is iike If the like How been is dingy thing every- realized fl | | when you went away that everything in the house needed rejuvenating and rearranging Now is‘a good time to stand off and take a good look at every room in your home and decide just w it needs to make it look its best. You'll never see it any more clearly than you do at this minute, without the veil of daily familiariiy. You can look on at it now as you would another woman's domicile—with eves that see it as it really is. not as ¥ou had been thinking of it. With a svmpathetic eve and ear to look with vou and listen to you (vour mext door neighbor's, perhap or a visiting relative's), your living room, vour sunroom or verandas, your dining room and kitchen, and every bedroom uptairs. Apply all the new ideas vou have icke umper while visiting friends or st wayside inns or summer cottages. Why not change the living room furniture around a little? You can see now that the big wing chair would get a betier reading light and | leave more room for the wood basket if it were on the other side of the fireplace. Why not do away with some of the bric-a-brac and knick- knacks? Perhaps you have learned the charm of great simplicity while you were gone. Change things around now while you can see how much better they might look, and while you have to move them anyway, to get the cleaning done.s Don't come back into the same old routine, the same old arrangement of furniture. but give vour house the bencfit of a change, as @a change has bencfited you! “Just Hats” By Vyvyan A Bow at Each Ear. This is a fall model in felt trimmed in wide ribbon that passes over the top of the hat, and then through slits in the brim at each side, where it goes into loops over the ears. ———e Herring and Vegetable Salad. Take equal quantities of boiled po- tatoes, brussels sprouts, caulifiower and sliced beets.' Add some chopped apples and flaked herring. IMix all together and add salad dressing. setting | up and take our pickture | ‘scrutinize | ng at quaint; TREES .OF WASHINGTON BY R. A, EMMONS. | 1 line | { HORSE CHESTNUT—AESCULUS HIPPOCASTANUM. fruits of the horse chestnut These smooth. shiny. chestnut-red bk i |nuts seem to hold a fascination for fca, the horse chestnut came origi-| pihood. They are about an inch nally from soujhern 1t is a|in diameter and are inclosed in a beautifu Ymmetrical tree, x-u..on.memm;‘m green to r;‘w:y'\;{-,‘;vn pod. i )f eighty feet w r n the autumn as they fall they are a helght of eighty feet with a trunk i gy ed cagerly by children and ear- @iumeter of three feet. Harriet | fied home to be used as large beads | Keeler deseribes it “Standing 2nd ornaments by girls and to be owed to attain carved into tiny baskets and odd pe. it becomes a stately tr shapes by boy s is erect, and the branches com It is of interest to know that this with such regularity that it de-|is the tree to which Longfellow re- velops @ superb cone-like head. The ferred in *Under the spreading chest- branches almost invariably ta nut tree, village smithy stands,” in- 1 curve, upward from the | Stead of our own chestnut_tree. He downward as the branch|used the English term for the tree upward at the tip.” It is a_prevalent tree in the Dis- is quite dense and is|trict. There are fine specimens in palmately compound | the Capitol grounds, and Thirteenth s of seven wedge-shaped, round | Street northwest from U street to rsely toothed leaflets. In | lowa Circle is lined with horse chest- this tree puts on its showy [nuts. The tree illustrated is growing its flower clusters are | on the Mall south of the New National ndant. large and beautiful. They ( Museum. e of a snowy white, spotted with| Note.—The and purple, in large, terminal, | discussed August 25 in this series “rect clusters. In Europe this tre€ | may be seen on the Mall in a group is sometim lled the glants’ nose- | of pines just wesi of the 13th street sy, Dear to the hearts of small boys | entrance. It is labeled, Long a favorite tree for avenuss|are the ind parks, both in Europe and Ame: a a trunk, iengthens, and The 1oliage omposed of pring for. sugar pine which was By Thornton W. Burgess. BEDTIME STORIES ’t Be-[interest He could see a heap of shining, vellow sand a little way back from the bank on the other side | But he shook his head. “No," said ‘lll' very decidedly, “it cannot be {that runaway voung Chuck. It must | be_some other young €huck.” “Why can't it be that runawa young Chuck?’ demanded Grand- father Frog grufy. . lieve. The diplomatic have the raci To never state a thing as € s g “Grandfather Frog. Of course Peter Rabbit had heard | hat one o c of Johnny that one of the children of Johnny | Muplc,, (808" 500 the other side and Polly Chuck had run away from |of the Laughing Brook. replied Peter lome. News like that travels fast.|promptly. overed \ g| “Well. what of Later he had discovered the youn | Wik Nhat < Chuck living in the old stone wall |~ '“SWhe' e couldn't on the edge of the Old Orchard. He |gotten there without had even visited him ther Then, |Chucks dom't swim there being many other | things | triumphantly about which satisfy it?" demanded possibly have wimming. and cried Peter his big, s0 %| Grandfather Frog blinked his curiosity zozgly eves two or three times ay o he looked up at Peter.” “Huh! You !still have a lot to learn, Peter Rab- | bit.” said he. “T've seen Chucks swim. |More than once I've seen Chucks |swim. That young Chuck over there |swam across the Laughing Brook two or three davs ago. 1 know it because lJerry Muskrat told me so. He saw it | “T don’t helieve it declared Peter | most impolitely. “I don't believe t' (Copyright, 1923. by T. W. Burgess.) “Peter | | The next Obstinate.” —_— Illinois leads in the number of. woman preachers with thirty-three, | seventeen of them being In Chicago. Kansas ranks second with thirty | woma nministers an dNebraska third | With eighteen. The total for the en- [‘tire United States is 178. story: Remains | | i GOOD MORNING, GRANDFATHER = FROG,” SAID PETER POLITELY. | My Neighbor Says Odd pieces of flannelette or soft cloth make useful mope. Cut them into fairly even lengths, tie In small bunches and nail to a long handle. Smaller pieces fastened to a stick make good dish mops and lamp cleaners. Longer pieces nailed on to an old brush- head will answer splendidly for brushing down walls and cefl- ings. Stubborn white stains on pol- ished wood, caused by hot dishes, may be removed by ap- Dlying to the spots a feather dipped in sweet spirits of ni- ter: but this must be used spar- ingly and the place must be rubbed wel directly after with a cloth dipped in sweet oil. When the stain is completely removed. polish well with bees- wax and turpentine. When you are about to sweep a room take a page of news- Daper or other paper, wet in hot water and squeeze until it ceases to drip. Tear into pieces the size of one’s hand and scatter over the carpet; then sweep, and most of the dust in the:room, if vou use your broom judiciously, will be gathered in the paper. A burnt saucepan can be rem- edied by boiling in it for ten minutes a heaped tablespoon of common washing soda in one pint of water. When making fruit pies dampen the edge of the pastry with mik instead of wateg—it holds better, and the juict is not so liable to boil over. he had forgotten all about the young Chuck for a while. When he did think of him again and go over to the {old stone wall for another visit the young Chuck wasn't there, and no jonc knew where he had gone. | Right away Peter's curiosity was jawakened. He wanted to know what {had become of that young Chuck. He wondered If Le had been caught by an enemy or if he had been caught away. So Peter set out to look for {him. He found no traces of him any {where. Finally Petericame to the {Smiling Pool. ~ The first person he saw there was Grandfather Frog sit- | ting on his favorite big, green lily pad. W LG “(;00d morning, Grandfather Frog, said Peter politely. ’ Grandfather Frog didn't reply. His biz. woggly eves were fixed on a Ifooiish green fly coming his wa: [Sudderly” Grandfather Krog made a short jump. He landed in the water with a splash. Then he turned and jclimbed back up {lily pad. He s on the big, green llowed once or | |twice with a satisfied air. blinked his | eves and looked up at t on the bank. ‘“Good | morning.” said he grufly. “What brings vou over here thig morning?") { “Nothing in particuldr.” " replied | |big. gossl Peter Rabl “T was just looking around. you happened to see one of | Chuck’s children over this wa. 17550 that's_it, is it?" exclaimed {Grandfather Frog in his deep voice. {1 thought there was something. |There's a_young Chuck living over Ithere on the other side of the Laugh- Perhaps he is the one. finished digging ~ his Peter. Have ohnny jing Brook. c has just nouse there. 3 Peter pricked up his long ears with Sunburn VEN the most severe cases of sunburn are speedily relieved by the use of Resinol Ointment. Its cool- , ing touch quickly allays the pain, andreduces inflamma: tion and soreness as it hastens the return of the skin to its normat condition. Resinol Ointment is also invaluable for insect bites, ivy or oak poisoning, heat rash, etc. Easy and pleasant to apply and so nearly flesh colored it can be nsed on exposed surfaces without at- tracting undue attention It is even more effective if aided by Resinol Soap. Your druggist sells the Resinol products. Keep them on tand for skix ills of summer. 1 The Guide Post ‘By Henry van Dyke A Philosophy of Life. For now we see in a mirror, darkl but then face to face; now 1 know in part; but then shall T know fully.— I Cor. 13. Can g philosophy of words be out- lined in two hundred words? Let me try. The world of matter and spirit is the work of an omnipotent, wise, lov- ing Creator. In the natural world law reigns in- flexibly; in the spiritual world, free- dom, in order that there may be other 8pirits who voluntarily answer God's love and obey His wisdom. By a wrong choice man has fallen under the power of evil and so be- come separated from God and con- scious of sin as no other creature God, loving man in spite of sin, re- veals himself to those whd seek Him chooses the wise and good to make His ways known on earth: enlightens His own Son, the eternal Word of Reason, to become true man in the person of Jesus Christ, and to live and suffer with and for men, thus re- deeming the world. . This redemption covers all who de- sire it and walit for it, as well as those who know it; the desire and the knowledge are proved by the effort to_do good. The mingled conflicts. trials, sor- rows, labors and joys of mortal life are a school to prepare the souls who seek God for His gift of immortality. This seems to me a reasonable view of life for one who knows in part It leaves mysterles. but it satisfies our innermost conviction that we are somewhat more than dust, and our chance, and our destiny, if we will {have it so, something better than ex- i tinction. ! (Copyright, 19 COLOR CUT-OUT Betty Starts to School. | | 1 i ready to go so soon?” Billy called to Betty, who was dressed up in her new school dress and was anxlously looking up the street to see if her friends were coming to take her to school. It was the first day of the term, but it was aiso Betty's first day at sghool and she could hardly wait to get started. “I wish the girls would hurry. If I don't get there early maybe there won't be a seat left for me Belty exclaimed excitedly. “What do yvou think school is—a circus?’ Billy laughed. “There'll be seats enough. After a week vou'll [be wishing they hadn't let you in, land you'll think school isn't so much {fun, “after all. I'd rather play ball jor fisn.” Just “All then Betty heard the girls give them by His spirit; and finally sends ! Creator some one greater than blind | FEATURES. isten,Wo People often sav to me, “But how do you manage to think great thought ev day to put in this space?’ The answer to that is eas: I don’t think a great thought every y. = As far as T know I thought a great thought. thinkers are rare, and I've never la- bored under the delusion t one of them. Nor do I regret the fact. The few great thinkers I have a have never DO YOU THINK A GREAT 'B-éOUGHT EVERY DAY or YOV Lve ONE? 3 | encountered have been nuisance in practical have yet to meet one of them that can mend a scre door or bak a decent batch of biscuits. Morcover, I've @ lively hunch that great thoughts would prove about as popular in this section as a daily recipe for a_mange cure. This viction is based on what I daily life. | VERSIFLAGE In Every Sphere. Women enter every sphere, do the work that mere men do! More and more and year by year prove this contention’s true. Women farm ard build and plumb! Crawl right underneath a sink, turn a screw with finger, thumb, mend the leak in just a wink. Women haggle, buy and sell stocks and shares and real estate: restaurants they run as well; swim |and ride and fiy and skate. Women |join the legal lights, argue cases with great ckill; they enjoy the wordy { Aights—being women, sure they will! Women win the men's degrees, arts and science all the same, many wo- men are M. D.s, galning interna- |tional fame. But more wonderful {than that (English papers lately said). women catch the fearsome rat, and doctors pay 8 cents per head! —WILHELMINA STITCH. —_— Coffee Cabinet Pnd-(gng. Beat three cggs, add one-third cup- ful of sugar, one teaspoonful of pow- dered cinnamon. three-fourths tea- spoonful of powdered nutmeg and one-half a teaspoonful of powdered clove. Pour in two cupfuls of milk and one cupful of strong coffee. | which should be heated together. Add one and one-half tablespoonfuls of | melted butter. Thoroughly grease a mold and sprinkle it with one cupful of finely-chopped dates, then put in a layer of sponge cake. Strew over this'a few more dates, continuing in this way until all the sponge cake and dates have been used and the mold is three-fourhts full. Pour the egg mixture over this, cover and steam for one hour. Serve with cof- fee caramel sauce. Stale sponge cake or a mixture of odds and_ ends of cake may be used in this dessert. Fried Yellow Turnips. Pare and boil for thirty minutes a large yellow turnip. When tender cut in medium sized slices. Dip in egg, then in crumbs seasoned with a little salt and pepper, a teaspoonful of sugar and a little chopped parsley. Fry in deep, hot fat until a good brown. Drain and serve. yoo-hoo and she danced out on the walk to wave to them, her pretty red plaid skirt rippling in the breeze and her yellow curls dancing. Betty was_ very happy, for she knew she would now be able to go with her friends to school and not have to wait alone all day for them to come | lurks a | about the a doggoned | that | rid By Elsee Tobinsan”® ’wnum like to find in a “Listen | World” section. T wouldn't | find great thougnts for nine |10 one I wouldn't understand if Tdid. But I would want to | friendliness I have come to feel that the gift ot friendliness is the secret of all su cessful human service, whether 1t na good feature writing or good steve- doring. And by friendliness 1 do r mean surface gestures which ma- nipulate your hands and uncover vour teeth, but leave the heart cold. 1 mean’ that outward attitude whi springs from a profound inwa conviction that vou and the othe fellow are brothers, regardiess o what his job may be or what his so- cial status. Friendliness which is feeling like that can't possibly & imitated. Many do try to imitate it particularly in writing Tha type fairly scems to jump up and Kiss you, it's so cordial. But there's no sincerity in that kiss. Back of it smug, condescending mind that sooner or later makes you feel like a moron or a criminal befors the_bars Now, I'm not as wise or as good a3 T should be, and 1 know it But I don’t want any snippy writer, or in- want to hances the find 4 based on | surance agent, or dry goods clerk any one else to tell me about T suppose the rest of the world fee same as I do on that su We ow we'Te a rather poo lot and we do want to be helped. but criticism and condescension won't help us. We want friendliness Before we'll confess our own she comings we want the assurance that the other chap doesn’t think he's any better than we are. When that iy given our hearts are opened wide and we give and take in orious fifty-fifty p ership. So I'm trying { to give vou friend v | pal. And I'm asking yours (Copyr dSh io n§ orecast | 8/ Annabel Worthngton Comfy Rompers. s jee in | If a tot must be careful of ! clotges the real fun of a morning or the beach or in the backyard makins mud pies is lost. In this rompe: little brother or sister could be as sured of a good time—why, ther: aren’'t even any sleeves to bothe about. Of course, if you wished, yoi might have them, for the pattern provides for little elbow-lengi" Sleeves. The pattern cuts in size- two, four and six years. The fo Year size requir 11g rds of terial 40 inches ide with yard af ruffling. Price of pattern, 15 cents, in pos- age stamps on Orders should h: nddrexsed to T Washington Star Pattern Bureau, Enast 15th street. New York city. Please write nnwme and address clearly. No woman's “no” means 3 when she is conversing with her hu band where. _ price, the highest possible quality in a beverage is with- in easy reach of one and all. home to play with her. Cut Betty Sut, mount her on lightweight oardboard, and she's all ready to play school with you. B‘ for Consfipac.m!' \ (Coprright, 1823.) We have spent 37 years build- ing a distribution system to you good service every- ry. Thus, with the 5¢ Delicipus and Refreshing ‘The CocaCola Company, Atlants, Ga.

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