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WOMAN’S PAGE Red Flannel Blouse in Limelight BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. ©Once, we woul the very thought of a flannel waist. 1t some kind old grandmother had recommended it as a safeguard against.colds we would have assured ber that our skins were much too sensitive. A red flannel waist! Im- agine. Red flannel next one's skin. It would be enough to give one & fover just to think of it. This 18 not the first time that a mere whisper from fashion has been more effective than all the scoldings and entreaties of all the wise old grannies In Christendom. And this winter fashion has whispered “flan- nel walsts—red flannel waists—white flannel walsts—green flannel waists —navy blue flannel walsts—long Bleeves or sleeveless, straight and shapeless—very warm and scratchy, but smart.” And every dealer in women's ap- arel finds that he must stock .up Pr fiannel walsts and blouses if he wishes to please his young cus- tomers. Most popular, so far, are the blouses of red flannel, which are often finished with binding of black braid, though: there is something un- deniably. smart about the blouses of White flannel. Often they are made with a close-fitting hip band with sailor collar strongly suggestive of a middy blouse. They are worn usually for sports without any additional wrap. “Can’ you stand the feeling of the flannel against your skin?’ asks the woman who has been led to the con- viction that anything more substan- tial than georgette touching her arms 18 exasperating. And the answer s, of course: “It's all in getting used to it (Copyright, 1928.) BEDTIME STORIES Nanny Meadow Mouse Yields to Temptation. Desire s temptati K2 Throughy 1t great mitikes are s For more than two weeks that air- plane: remained on the Green Mead- ows without once.flying. Now, two weeks Is @ long time In the life of a Meadow Mouse, By the time the two weeks ended Nanny and Danny Mead- “WHAT IS THAT FOR, MY DEAR? HE ASKED. ow Mouse had made up their minds that that man-bird was there to stay. They had made up their minds that it would never fly again. Every night and sometimes during the day Danny and Nanny visited that man-bird and climbed into it. The temptation to make a nest in the tiny cupboard_in that. man-bird grew on Nanny. The door of that tiny cup- board had been [6ft open just a crack, a crack just_big_gnough for Danny | and Nanny to run in and out of eas- The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY GLAD Is Beauty Passing? There has been much ado lately about the passing of the beautiful gal and the handsome man from the realms of the reels. Some folks say that they prefer to see the less gifted of the ‘gods on the screen; honest-to-goodness, ordinary-looking folk doin simple things in the as- tonishingly s great director, does have a habit of making them do things. These folk say that they are tired of looking at Greek gods and god- desses, or curly Ingenues and languishing young men, and would rather see some more typical human beings, such 48 one sees every day in the subway or on trolley cars. Other folk disagree. These other folk say that they get enough of the men and_women in the subways; and when’they go to the moviea they choose , to " sce .beauty and bravery plus, even if it'is only illusory and not strictlx .true to life. It makes them forget, they say. They want the screen to give them oblivion to everyday and not bring everday more definitely home to them. ‘What do you think about it? In a letter from James Cruze the other day, he seems to think that handsome ‘men, at least, are about to_pass .into limbo. “I belleve the public long since tired of looking at just bandsome men,” sajd”Mr. Cruze. “The hand- some star gr.actor of today succeeds in spite of his good looks as much | a3 because of them. It is his ability a3 an_actor that really counts. The late Wallace Reld was one of the handsomest men the screen has ever known, -bit’ he held his popularity because of his ability to act rather than his looks. “In my latest picture, ‘Ruggles of ‘Our Birds in Verse By Henry Oldys. MOCKINGBIRD. Thou minnesinger of the fr: Thou minstrel of the land of palm and myrtle, Where parching fields may _But human hearts are always rich and fertile. Constant thy song throughout the burnish’d day, Lavishly charged with ra And when the bright, warm In the cool noon of night it still uprises.. Within thy stream of song thy feathered mates May note their various melodies reflected; The choiring multiudes are With now and then a qui These mingled replicas pour With rising spirit, flowin Or with a lingering on some favorite note, But always with the sure mple way that life, the! | Movies.” WHITE FLANNEL BLOUSE BO! ggljl{ BLACK GROSGRAIN RI S—— By Thornton W. Burgess. ily. Inside that cupboard was just | the right size for a home. There was | some soft cotton waste in it and| Nanny had already arranged that to | make a most comfortable bed. Then, one night Danny discovered | anny taking some dry, soft grass in there. Dan 's bright little eyes twinkled. “What that for, my dear?’ he asked. Nanny looked a little hit foolish. “Oh, nothing special” said she. “I | thought T would just add a little of | this grass to that soft stuff in there. There isn't quite enough of it. Then we can stay over here once in & while, | it we want to." | Danny said nothing, but he brought | some dry grass and Nanny was soon at work building a real nest in that tiny cupboard in the big man-bird. She worked just as if she were ma! ing that nest for the winter. he was just as fussy about it as she would | | have been about a winter nest. The | fact is Nanny had yielded to tempta- tion. She just had to see how it would seem to have a real home in that tiny cupboard in the man-bird. My, how she did work! And Danny did his share. It was great fun. Both of them spent more and more time in that man-bird. They began to feel as if they owned it Whenever Farmer Brown's Loy and his cousin. the aviator, appeared, Danny and Nanny scampered away and hid in the grass. But they were back agaln just as soon as the way was clear. There were some days that they had no visitors at all. They | dian’t even go home to their old home in_the old scarecrow. When at last they had the snug- | gest of snug nests in that tiny cup- {board and there was nothing more |to do to it Nanny hoped more than ever that that man-bird always would remain right where it was. By this | time she had quite made up her mind | that it would. She seldom went back to the old home in the old scarecrow She spent more and more time in | this new home. The fact is, she had | begun to think of this now as a real home, the home in which they would continue to live. And this is what had come from yielding to temptation. (Copyright, 1923, by T. W. Burgess.) ¥YS HALL. Red Gap,' the principal masculine | roles are filled by Edward Horton, | Charles Ogle and Ernest Torrence, not one of whom would qualify for a collar advertisement. but who are rightly regarded as three of the screen’s most gifted actors, “Of course, beauty counts for more in selecting feminine plavers, but there must be genuine ability coupled with that beauty, too, as in the case | of Lois Wilson, who plays the fem- inine lead in ‘Ruggles.’ “The handsome but untalent:d actor (or actress) is a thing of tie past; real artistry has come into ts ow Well. what do you folks think of | 1t? What do you go to pictures for? Do you want life with the tinsel mask off, or shall the garments of' illusion be maintatned? s: Nita Naldl is to play one featured roles in “Everyday Vi directed by William de Mille. The filmization was adapted from | Julian Street’s novel, “Rita Coven try.” New Yorker: My child, you will have to go to Chicago now to see | Glenn Hunter in “Merton of the 1 can't understand you, New Yorker. To miss “Merton” was like never having seen the Aquarium | or the statue of Liberty or Grant's tomb. (Al rights reserved.) Cabbage With Pimentos. Chop one firm cabbage fine. Beat together one cupful of sour cream, two tablespoonfuls of strong cider vinegar, one tablespoonful of sugar, | and a little salt until the mixture is | white and creamy, then pour it over the cabbage. Sprinkle on top one heaping tablespoonful of chopped | pimentos or sweet red peppers, and serve cold as a salad. agrant south, mark the summer’s drouth, vishing surprises; hours have passed away, voiced by thee, ip-quirk unexpected. from thy throat g fast and faster, ness of a master. Yef master though thou be of vocal art, ¥ ‘Whene'er I see thee flash across the spaces, flutterin or g Display thy gleaming wh up and down a vine-clad post, * ite with languid graces, I know that thou, when singing, are not lost To all save'music’s overmastering passion, But with a truly feminine touch doth cast A comprehending, slanting eye on fashion. Still, though the riches of thy radiant art Be not purveyors of an us nmixt treasure, They none the less deliver to my heart A gracious gift of undiluted pleasure. Then fling thy ringing medley to mine ear, Or- night or day, with pure or mixt emotion, ht, i ds thou, that hol It sirrors to m. A lpvely lan n vision clear, my high devn(lnn.' | the class, | Stir_over & I was late for skéol this morning on account of axsidently going to sleep agen after ma called me 4 times to get up, and I was hurry up wawking and ‘hoping . the skool clock was slow or something wen who quick ran out of his.house but Sid Hunt, saying, G, are you late too? And he started to wawk alongside of me, me starting 3 feel better on account of mizery d6ving company, Sld saying, Enviways, 1 got a ixcuse, my father ent the end of his chin shaving himself and 1 can say 1 had to run to get the docter. But did you? I sed, and Sid sed, No,.but I would of, 1 bet. if he'd of cut himself about %' intches decper, 50 it wont be a reguler lle. Well then I got a godd ixcuse too, I sed. My dog, Yardo pit the letter carrier in the leg, and I can say I had to go erround to thie drug store with him wile he had stuff put on him. Who, Yardo, 518 sed. No, you dum bell, the letter carrier, 1 sed, ‘and Sid sed, Well did you? No'but T bet 1 would of hud to if Yardo had bit in eny ferther than his pants, so that wont be a reguler lie either, 1 sed. And we got to skool and wawked In all out of breth and Miss Kitty sed Well, izzent this a pritty site, 2 boys late to spoil the bewtifill record of and 10 to one neither of them has the faintest shadow of a ghoast of an ixcuse, come up heer, the both of you, and look me in the | eve. Wich we did, and Miss Kitty sed, Now, if ‘either one of you has a legit- imate ixcuse, speek out. Me and Sid jest standing there feeling dum and looking dummer, and Miss Kitty sed, | There, not the siightest shade of the trace of an {xcuse, you will both re- main a half hour after class is dis- missed. Wich we atd. COLOR CUT-OUT Priscilla at Spinning Wheel. *“The act where John Alden goes to seo Priscilla Mullen wH1 be the prettiest one in our Thanksgiving play,” remarked the director, Betty Cut-out, when ber cousin Polly set the spinning wheel from the atiic in place. “The story goes like thi: “John was the friend of Capt. Miles Standish. The captain wanted to marry Priscilla, but he was afrald to ask her, 8c he sent John to make his proposal. John went to Pris- cilla’s house, and while she spun he told her of the bravery of the cap- tain. Of course, John wished to marry Priscilla, too, but since his captain wanted Priscilla, he de- clded he should not speak for him- elf. Priscllla went right on spin- ning while she listened, and finall: said: ‘If your captain is as brave a you say, why does he fear to face & woman? p Mount the brown spluning wheel on stiff cardboard with a standard behind, 80 you can put it on your stage in front of the fireplace. The blue candles with their yellow lights are for, the mantel. Indian Sardines. Skin and dry six sardines and re- mové_the tails. Put one-half ounce of butter and the beaten yolks of two eggs into a small saucepan. low fire until the eggs thicken and form a fairly thick sauce, but be careful not to let them boil. Chop half a teaspoonful of chutney fine and add to the egsgs. Season well and turn onto & plate. Coat the sardines with this mixture, then roll them {n fine bread crumbs, brush over with the beaten whites of | the eggs, and dip in the crumbs again, Fry in _hot fat, and when a good brown, drain on soft paper. Serve on croutons of fried bread and garnish with fried parsley. My Neighbor Say: Tiled floors should be wiped over with skimmed milk once a week after they have been washed. It i1s a good plan to rub them over, linseed oil about once in two months, and Sgoo& to polish them with a soft To make a cake richer always beat the eggs, butter and sugar t'os::.her. ;nd c&an “x‘ lbe‘ lIhmr. ruit and other . in lonts. Gare enoula So taken to sife the baking powder or soda into the dry flour before adding the rest of the ingredients, Marks on the kitchen wall that have been caused by strik- ing matches will disappear if they are rubbed first with the cut surface of a wi %D, quickly with & Wrung out of cleir water. . Eggs covered - with bolling water and allowed:to“stand for five minutes are’ more nourish- ot "‘&..a :' b egEs n_ bol wat and allowed to boil quickly ;:: three minutes, - - When doors_do not close -openings through Which drafts enter, place a” strip of putty along the jambs, cover the 3 with chalk and shut it. TI putty will then -fill up all spaces. Chalk rubbed on the edge prevents ‘adhesion. Th putty is left in place. where it soon_ dries and. legves & per- fectly fitting jamb.. TREES OF WASHINGTON BY R. A.EMMONS. POST OAK—QU! The post oak is easlly recognized, for, its .leaves are of very unusual form, not to be confused with any other, though they are somewhat va- riable. It is a southern species; is the most abundant oak in central Texas, and ranges from Florida and Texas north to Massachusetts and southern Michigan. While in the northern part of its range, this oak is a compara- tively small tree, often a shrub, in the lower Mississipp! valley and other regions of the south it Erows to very respectable proportions, up to a height of fifty to sixty feet, sometimes to 100 feet, with a trunk diameter of five feet, with stout, spreading branches forming a close round- topped tree. It is an oak of strag- gling, ungraceful beauty, destinctly characteristic, and a desirable orna- mental - in its favorable habitat, though it is of slow growth. The bark is dark graylsh to gray ish brown on the trunk, with flattish ridges and is deeply furrowed. The Can a Wife Be Made to Obdey? |Dorothy Dix| ERCUS MINOR. leaves are five to elght inches long, three to six inches wide, tapered to the base and divided usually into five large rounded or squarish lobes, of which the three terminal lobes are larger. They are thick and firm, coarse and rough on both sides, shin- ing dark green, pale pubescent on the underside, in the autumn turn- ing to dull yeilow and brown and r maining on the tree well into the winter. The acorns mature in one season. The nuts are one-half to one inch long, reddish brown, oval, set in c3ps, which are reddish brown and covered with loose frec scales and inclosing one-third to one-half of the nuts. The wood s hard, close-grained, brown and is quite durable In con- tact with the soll, thus making It es- pecially desirable for posts and prob- ably giving it its common name, post oak. It s also used for railroad ties, carriage work and fuel. 1t is of sparing occurrence in the District. The tree illustrated is grow | ing in the grounds of the Capitol, se | eral hundred yards east of the south | wing. Tells Hua- bands Seoret of Moral Suasion. Stress the “Love, Honor” Part of the Marriage Ceremony and Soft-Pedal “Obey” If You Would Have Marital Happiness. MAN asks me how he can make his wife obey him. He says that he has forbidden her to use rouge and powder, and she continues to adorn herself with a hand-painted complexion. He also has forbidden her to go DOROTHY DIX. to raise his hand agalinst a do so. There remains, then, onl. if Indirectly applied, for it is th woman if you go about it the righ to the movies, and she goes right along, putting in one or two after- noons a week watching vamps vamp. and big, strong manly men rescue persecuted herolnes in the silent drama. There is no charge against the lady, you understand. She doesn't neglect her home or her family. She is a splendid wife and mother. There Is nothing the matter with her except that she won't mind her husband, and he wants to know how he can make her obey him. The old English law granted a man the right to control his wife by beat- ing her, provided he did not use a stick bigger around than his thumb. But in these emancipated days the man who undertook to discipline a lady with a rod, even if she was mar- ried to him, would find himself in the police court, and subsequently in the divorce court also. Likewise public opinion does not countenance the chastisement of dis- obedient wives, for the conventions of polite society do not permit & man woman, no matter how much he would like to y moral suasion. This is generally effective e easiest thing in the world to work a t way, and there are mighty few things that a husband can’t jolly his wl(e. (n.to .doln‘. A just to tell her how much he lo clates everything she does for him if she would do = certain thing, of blemish on her otherwise perfect all down, and be so obedlent to Griselda herself. But to order a woman to do anything! To come right out flat-footed, and assert on and where she gets off! his_marital authorit: To _forbid And especially for a mere clothes and her makeup! Oh, la la! Any woman In the world with against such treatment. would put on another daub of paint, a; LL that a husband has to do to make his wife eat out o character, hig wishes that she will outdo Patient How does any man ever get that way? fool killer, that he doesn't get the poor simp? f his hand is es her, and admires her, and appre- and how happy it would make him r how doing_some other thing is a or looks. She will gulp it v To tell her where she gets her -to do this, .and to do that! husband to dictate to a woman about her To treat her as if she were an idiot child! And where's the a spark of spirit in her would rebel Any woman with a grain of pep in her system nd a fresh coat of calcimine, and pluck & few more hairs out of her evebrows just to prove that she could do as she pleased if she was forbidden by her husband to help nature out little in the matter of looks. No, my friend, there is no way she wants to. The wife who can be made to obey B her with a rod of iron; to force i make her do what he wants Instead of and the pursuit of happin in her A m that he s wiser than she i eneral thing a man’s wife has just UT why do you want your wife to obey you? husbands suffer fromsthis “wife-obedience” complex, but, believe me, it is & mental affliction of which they should try to cure themselves. For stripped to the bone, it is nothing but a mean and ignoble desire to tyrannize over the one human being t! can't excuse himself for trying to dominate his wife by in particular, and a thousand times more sen: Any woman who has the backbone of a fishing worm would haunt the movies if her husband arbitrarily told her that she shouldn’t go, just to show him that the days when a wife was a slave and had to have her master's permission to go off the place are ended, and that this is 1923 {nstead of 1723. to make your wife mind you unless It she isn't willing te do your way because she wants to please you and thinks your way Is a good way, there's no help for you.; Js just as’extinct as the dodo. I know that a lot of t is in a man's power; to rule opinlons and desires on her, and to f grapting her the right to life, liberty own way. saying , and a better judge of what is proper, for as a as much e as he has about things about women things. The .only husband, for Instance, who has a right to chirp about his wife's clothes is a man dressmaker. grocer that he should set himself up ‘What is a banker, or a manufacturer, or a green- an authority on hats and tell his wife that she may or may not wear such a shape headgear? Menu for a Day, BREAKFAST. Prunes FEorned Bear Hash ‘orned Beef Hasl Hashed Brown Potatoes Toast Coftee LUNCHEON. Salmon Timbales, Cream Sauce Rolls Jelly Roll DINNER. Baked Pork Chops with Dressing . Bolled Potatoes Creamed Carrots Banana Pudding Coffes Tea HASHED BROWN POTATOES. Try out fat salt pork eut in small cubes, remove ‘scrap: there should be about one-half cup of fat. Ada two cups cold- boiled potatoes, finely chopped one-eighth tcaspoon of pepper and sait it needed. Mix pot: toes thoroughly with fat; cook three minutes, stirring con- stantly; let stand to-brown un- derneath. Fold as an omelet &nd turn on hot platter. on SALMON TIMBALES. ne cup salmon flaked mixed with one-fonris oay bread crumbs, one slightly beat- én egg, two-thirds cup milk, one tabiespoon lemon juice, one- fourth’ teaspoon salt and pinch of pepper. Mix well and il buttered cups about half full. Put cups in pan of hot, water, just the same as when baking :.:I‘]l;:llrll:.‘ ‘.Bflka in moderate ouf twent; Serve with oream sauce Lo BANANA PUDDING. One quart of milk in a double boiler; ‘when brought to the boiling point add to it four €gES beaten with one cup sugar and stir constantly until it be- gins to thicken; remove it at once. If allowed to stand a mo- ment the custard will curdle. If you are unfortunate enough to have it curdle pour In about & tablespoon of cold milk, beat rapidly with an egg beater. When' cool, pour over thinly sliced bananas in & deep dish. Whip one-half nint of cream. Pour over top, also drop in a square half-inch of grape jelly. THE GUIDE POST— By Henry Van Dyke Silent Things That Speak. Day unto day uttereth speech, and night unto night showeth knowledge: There 1s no speech nor language; their voice is not heard. Their line is gone out through all the earth, and their words to the end of the world.—Ps. 19:2, 3. The King James version of our English Bible translates this verse, “There {s no speech nor language where their voice is not heard.” But the word “where"” {s not in the Hebrew text. The Psalmist is praising the wo derful works of God in the heavens that sflently declare his glory and power. How many of these prophets there are that speak through our eyes to our hearts! Not only the mountains and all the stars, but also the trees and the flowers, tell of a supernal Wisdom and Beauty abiding in the universe and shaping it a&s an artist shapes his work. It s worth remembering that most of the great astronomers and bot- anists have been great believers in God. 1 do mot envy the man who can look up from the flaring lights and confused noise of the city streets, to the glittering ,afithful, silent stars, without feeling the Divine Majesty suling far above human turmoil. 1 do not envy the man who can ‘consider a flower of the field without feelipg the Divine Goodness. (Copyright, 1923.) - Bistor of Vour Name. BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. POWERS VARIATION—Porson. RACIAL ORIGIN—Waelsh. SOURCE—A given na No, the first bearers of this family name were not necessarily powerful men. The name is a Welsh one, and has no connection with our English word “power.” “Powyr’ was a given name of rather widespread popularity among the Welsh of the middle ages, hav- ing been the name of a famous chief- tain, & descendant of “Leod,” who was the father of the leader “Mande- brog” of Welsh tradition, and the ‘fandebratius” of the Rofans' British history. The endings of both forms, Powers and Porson, indicate English influ- ence, and more than llkely devel- oped, for the most part, in England at first, where the natural procedure ‘was to refer to the son by the nam: of his father with the sufix ‘“son” added. It is to be noted that in the case of Porson, where the pronuncia- tion was not difficult, that the end- ing has been preserved. But “Pow- yrson” is a little clumsy, and where “Powyr”’ was not elided to “Por,” all but the *“s” of the “son” has been dropped from the ending of the fam- lly name at some period after it ceased to be truly descriptive and settled down into a sort of “tag" for the family with the original meaning overlooked. In some instances, too, the name undoubtedly came 'into being fin Wales at a later period when English customs and speech became ~more general -there. (Copyright.) FEATU VERSIFLAGE Oh, Hilda! Hilda s twenty and Hilda plump. “I'll diet,” vows Hilda, “I swear that I will” She then eats some fafty, an awful big lump, and last of & box presented by BIIL “This box s now empty, I'll begin right today and not eat potatoes, nor butter nor bread.” This in the morn- ing, plump Hilda did say, but thickly fted cake went with her to bed! At breakfast she spurned the porridge and cream, drank hot water twice and nibbled some toast. By noon she was starving, just ready to scream, and ate an enormous por. LEASPERRINS SAUCE makes RES tion of roast, and spuds—half a dozen all gravied and browned—and bread buttered thick, three slices at lcast, @ great chunk of pie, the richest in town. “O gosh,” satd plump Hilda, b:‘hnlk'enm:r:e 18 -l !eluat. Well, 1" y vow, it isn't much use, said Hilda the plump, eating galors, then supped with delight & sirupy Jjuice and tipped down the scales at two hundred and four! WILHELMINA STITCH CLAFLIN i If vou want plenty of thi beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do ?y' all means get rid of dandruff, for | it will starve your hair and Tuin it if you don't. It doesn’t do much good to try to BAKED MACARONI taste better “DANDERINE”. Girls! A Gleamy Mass of Thick, Beautiful Hair 35-cent Bottle does Wonders for NV, ‘An abundance of luxuriant hair full of life and lustre shortly follows & genuine toning up of neglected scalps with dependable “Danderine.” Falling hair, itching scalp and the dandruff is corrected immediately. Thin, dry, wispy or fading hair is quickly invigorated, taking on new strength, color and youthful beauty. “Danderine” is delightful on the hair; a refreshing, stimulating tonic —not sticky or greasy! Any drug store. % % i Pine is used in nearly all prescriptions and remedies for coughs. The reason Is that pine contains several elements that have a remarkable effect in soothing and healing the membranes of the throat and chest. Pine cough syrups are combinations of pine and syrup. The “syrup” part 1s usually plain sugar syrup. To make the best pine cough remedy that money can buy, put 2!2 ounces of Pinex in a pint bottle and fill up with home-made sugar syrup. Or you can use clarified molasses, honey or corn syrup Instead of sugar syrup. Either way, you make a full pint—more than you can buy ready-made for three times the money. It is pure, good and tastes very pleasant. You can feel this take hold of a cough or cold in a way that means business. The cough may be dry, hoarse and tight, or may be persistently loose from the formation of phlegm. The cause Is the same—inflamed membrances—and this Pinex and Syrup combination will stop it—usually In 24 hours or less. Splendid, too, for bronchial asthma, hoarseness, or any ordinary throat ail ment. Pinex Is highly concentrated com. pound of genuine Norway pine extract, | and Is famous the world over for its' prompt effect upon coughs. Beware of substitutes, Ask yo druggist for "2 ounces of Pinex” rections, and don’'t accept anytl Guaranteed to give absolute s, 'action or money refunded. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. How to Mak:e' i’ine Cough Syrup at Home moment to prepare nd saves you about § | MUSICAL INSTRUCTION. ADVERTISEMENT, COLDS THAT DEVELOP INTO PNEUMONIA Chronfe coughs and persistent colds lead to serious lung trouble. You can stop them now with Creomulsion, an emulsified creo- sote that is pleasant to take. Creo- maulsion 1s a new medical discovery with twofold action; it soothes and heals the inflamed membranes and kills the germ. And, aside from the folly of a man's trying to make his wife obey hifn, there is the crime of the thing, because it kills 8o much happiness unnecessarily. Half of the oy of 1 Metle personal tastes and whim peril. Wh; alf the troubl wh e with 1 struggle for maste: Ty, ‘wants to force the other to do his or her other obey. More other one 3 can't do it without breaking h hate yoy, and it isn’t worth the ;m 2 [{ fm- and to a without having anybody interfere wi't)h ‘:Iu sy ‘These are the eternal passions of the hum: any human love, and those who try to deprive us of them do homes have. been wrecked by | So don't try to make i iving comes in being able to gratify 1 simple mat Personal libe: heart that are stronger thani 50 at their Freedom. matrimony is ‘that hi Y usbands and wives 'h wants to rule, the other. Each. Wway. Each wants t9p make the- ic tyranny ) any ur wife obey you. My Mar. Tou irt, and her spirit, and making her L . DOROTHY DIX. . R oo R N L AU Meringue of Pears. Pare, core and halve aldozen pears. and stew them in sirup untll they are sufficlently tender to be plerced easily with a needle. Put them into a deep dish which they will almost fill, and bol:n. m:&lmp qulelua until Peured -ml.-m’ over the pears. Whip the whi ¢ four'eggs o & wolld Proth. e nes them four tablespoonfuls of powdered and sifted sugar, and spread - th‘g‘ o) ixture evenly “and smoothl. o frult.”’ Put It at once into s Ve moderate oven and bake: tntil Of all known drugs, creosote is recognized by the medical fra- ternity as the greatest healing agency for the treatment Of chronic coughs and' colds and other forms_of throat and lung troubles. Creomulsion contain in additfon to creosote, other heal ing_elements which soothe and heal the inflamed membranes and stop the irritation and inflamma- tion, while the creosote goes on to the stomach, is al blood, attacks t troybie and destroys the germs that lead to consumption. Creomulsion, is guaranteed sats {sfactory in the treatment, of chronic coughs and colds, bron- chial asthma, catarrhal bron- chitis and other forms of-throat and fung diseases, and is ex- oellent for building up the sys- tem after colds or the flu, Money refunded if cough or cold, no thatter ‘'of how long standing, is t relieved after taking accord- LPI» to directions. Ask your drug- t. Creomulgion Co., Atlanta, Washington Conservatory of Music 1408 N, H. Ave,, at Dupont Circ] Maia 7858, Violin, Plano, Voice, Saxophone, Cornet, etc. andc clas: Orchestra irbook. 24% | NEW YQRIH(TOEJS‘FiVAfORY IN 7 LESSO! Clase, Frl and Wed., 434 7th st. n.w. | PIANO, SAXOPHONE, BANJO Rag, Jiss, Popular Music fn 20 lesson B8 (T bontlet Ciriatomaen. Schont et ensen_School. |182 G et w Easy terms, | GEO. LAWRENCE Vees! Cuture Singing. Breathin; | Btudio N.W. Branch, 1321 Corbin n.e. L. 361 EDUCATIONAL. g 1. COLUMBIA Roy C. Claflin, Pres. | | brush or wash it out. The only ‘.\ure way to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve it, then you destroy {t | entirely. To' do this, get about | four ounces of ordinary liquid ‘sr\'on; apply it at night when re- tiring; use enough to moisten the | scalp and rub it In gently with the | finger tips. Ry morning most, If mot all. of your dandraft will b gone. and two or thres [|| mome apotications il compiateiy *dissoive | St ¥ destroy every single sign and You will find, too, thet all itching and | aigging of the scal | bair will_1 o e L better. You drug store. need. 2nd feel a hundred times n_get liquid arvon at oy Four ounces is all you will no_matter how much dandruff you ple remedy never fails— | Eczemar On Hand; For 5 or 6 Years Cuticura Healed Ecsema broke out on my hand following a severe burn. Every time 1 washed my hands ’Q or had housework to do I suffered tortures. = I could not rest at night. It broke out in blisters which ran water. After & tme the blisters would dry up and peel off and & new blister would form. “I had the trouble about five or six years before I began using Cuti- cura Soap and Ointment, and after using them about three months 1 'was completely bealed.” (Signed) Mrs. H. F. Elmer, 1723 Mechanic St., Galveston, Texas. These fragrant emollients are all you need for all toilet ». Soap to cleanse and purify, Oint. ment to soothe and heal, Talcum to powder and perfume. Sampes Froe b7 Ml Addree - Cutinrs Laber- x Saws Rere:Soup e, Oiptient £ andtoc. Talcomibe WP~ Cuticura Soapshaves withoutm: Possess Clear, Bright EYES Murine clears the whites of the EYES, intensifiestheirnaturalcolor, and drives away not only the dull, tired look but the tired feeling. Use Murine efter business, lufl and exposure to sun, and dust. Absolutely harmless. ‘WriteMurine Company, Dept. 80, Chicago, for FREE Eye Care Book URINE FonYou EYES | Rheumatic pain Yields to treatment with Sloan’s. Just pat it on gently. The tingling glow, the comforting warmth is in itself relief. The ache eases off— then stops. Get a bottle from your druggist today and have it on hand—35 cents. It will not stain. EDUCATIONAL. :twenty yea ention. to_stupid, cilling puplls. $1, § 1408 Hopkins st Cail or write. BOYD SHORTHAND IN P moeerscton 30 DAYS 1348 N. Y. Ave. N.W. Day sad Eve. Classel 30DAY BUSINESS COLLEGE. - Main 5488 COLUMBIA BUSINESS SCHOOL 14th St. & Park Road Telephone Col. 7078 Complete secretarial training. Begioners and advanced students in Gregg and Pitman shorts | hand may enter any time. Day aud eveuing | sessions. e i A world of Difference—Investigate 30-DAY $TENOGRAPHIC SCHOOL On G st. or 14th—1338 G. Short- hand, Touch Typing. Main 2076. The Boyd ! Bchool. Positions guaranteed rl'ld%:fl.l % H SCHOOL OF gpm WASHINGTON SPANISH, FRENOH, PORTUGUESE 1817 ¥ WMain 5688, SCHOOL OF experience. backward and HERT JOXA | i DRAFTING 14th and T Sts. NW. Learn DRAFTING—Architectural, Mechanical or Topographic Map Drawing—through our special e * dividual instruction method and let us help you snto a 'yrofitalilc position. Specialization means success! Complete course in 3 to 9 months. Learn in your \Spare time, either day or night. Call, write or phone for | interesting mew catalog. S’ TART THIS WEEK!