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' WOMAN’S PAGE. Children Dressed in Blick Velvet BY ANNE RITTENHOUZE. Once regarded as most unsuitable for children of any age, black has now be- come one of the smartest hues for what some of the merchants: ¢hoose. to. cail “juvenilo apparel.” We used even to a little at the French notion of BLACK VELVET FROCK WITH LACE COLLAR AND CUFFS, TIE OF CHINESE BLUE SILK. dressing _children in deep black for mourning. And those black satine school aprons that French mothers put upon their children to protect their frocks we regarded as almost barbarous. The American mother who clad a child of tender years in black we would once have regarded as a fit_subject for the attention of the S. P. C. C. Now black is considered, along with < We Are our Own Luck | DorothyDix| green, yellow, white and rose, as quite appropriate for party frocks. And at a smart wedding recently the little girls who made up part of the wedding gnni were clad in black velvet frocks—blacl velvet relieved by a bit of bright color. Usually the black velvet party frocks that are considered eo clever for chll- dren are made with a touch of color. Sometimes enough relief from the somberness of the black is gained by the addition of white. But black velvet really is not very somber on a child of bflfl“ coloring. “To be sure, there are dark little giris who ought never to be dressed in black, no matter how smart it is. They are not the coal-black bru- nettes who usually have warmly glowing £lin and eyes of starry bril- lionce. They are the sallow-skinned youngsters with hair and eyes of rather insignificant hue, plain little girls usu- ally who nevertheless often surprise us by_developing into comely women. But the all-black frock or the black frock relieved with color is not for them. (Copyright, 1824.) “Just Hats” By Vyvyan. Metal and Fur Bows. A wreath of small bows surrounds this cloche. They are made of light tan soft fur and cloth of gold. The bottom of the cloche has a band of cloth of gold to match the metal half of the bows. Shows How We Make or Break Our Own Lives Ounly Difference Between Successful Man and -« Failure Is Difference in Energy, Grit, Stick-to-it- iveness, the Heart and Soul and Brains That One Man Put Into His Work and the Other Didn’t. YOU bhawe been by factory towns where more or less benevolent corpora- tions have built rows upon rows of houses, each one as like its nelghbor &s peas In a pod. But one house would have dirty, newspapers or rags stuffed in a broken windowpane. grimy, unwashed windows, with old The yard would be filled with old cans and ashes and refuse, and the place would look like a shack, unfit for human habitation. The house next door would have bright and shining windows, with showing between them. clean, freshly starched muslin curtains and a gay red geranium in a pot Flowers would be blooming in the yard, and a vine trained over the doorway, and the place would be a home, bright, cheerful and attractive. difference was in what the people in Yet the two houses were exactly allke. The only them made of them. One cock can take a cheap cut of meat and a handful of vegetables and malke of them a ragout, over which an epicure would smack his lips. Another cook will take the same meat and vegetables and make of them a watery stew, with neither flavor nor nutriment to it. the difference is in the cooks. That is the way it is all through life. individuals who seem to be the darl Lady Luck walks hand in hand. And who appear to have majority et a pretty even relationship: work, and the balance i3 up to_ us. or failures, rich or poor, according W to . 7E MARRY, millions of us. been born double-crossed by fate. We go to the same schools. of those marriages end in divorce. It iy the same material, but There are a few fortunate lings of the gods, and with whom there are also a few miserable ones But the great deal. We have ‘We have the same chance to ‘We are happy or miserable. successful vhat we make out of our lives. And set up homes. More than three-fourths | More than three-fourths of those | the same family | Reeding keeps writing from going. to waist. All printing is silent unless it is red out 'loud. Some peeple all- ways wunt to reed out loud wild oth- ers never wunt to lissen. A sad site is wen 2 peeple wunt to reed out loud at the same time, espeshilly it they wunt to reed diffrent things. A book is ony in the way unless you know how to reed. One of the most useliss things is a forrin langwidge book with no picktures in it, Now matter how good of a education you have, you genrelly never know wat it says on your Chinee laundry check. This proves there is allways something more to lern. It you stay in the house reeding wile the other fellows are out playing your mother thinks you are grate wie the other fellows think you are crazy. This proves you cant please every- body so.the best thing Is to injoy your book if possible. Some peeple never 100k more nerviss than wen they are In a trolly car with no newspaper to reed. If you lived to be 100 yeers old you couldent reed the hole lyberry, 8o nobody hardly ever tries, even the la- dles that werk there ali the time. The ferst thing you lern to reed is the alfabet, the werst part about it being that the letters dont make eny sents in that position. Children think they are grate wen they know the alfabet and can count up to 10, the sad part being that their trubbles are jest beginning to start. Your Home and BY HELEN KENDALL The First Year. The bride and hridegroom of a year ago sat alone befcre the fire on their first New Year eve together. Their own hearth, their own dancing flames, their own wedding gift clock, their own holiday candles! They sat very close together and waited with in- drawn breath in silence, watching their first year out. Then the silver chime of the clock sounded. “Twelve o'cloc! they said gether. “It's 1924, said the bridegroom. “I'm going to miss 1923,” sighed the bride. I loved it." to- { “In spite of that quarrel?” ques- i ticned the bridegroom. anxiously, “Forgotten!” asserted the hride, homes are wrecked, not because there was anything especially wrong, not | But oh, Ned, can you ever forget because either husband or wite as an outbreaking criminal, but because | the time I gave away your old adored 4 they were too ignorant or too selfish to mfke their marriage a success. | hunting pants to a tramp?”’ All husbands and wives are cut man is perfect. without a jar or a hitch. Every marr for forgiveness, endurance, and you get out of it just what you put into it. heaven or hell. No woman is an angel. off the same.bolt of humanity. No No domestic machine runs alon, iuge calls for sacrifices, for paticnce, e, You go to homes that simply irradiate peace and love and good cheer, where there woman; ther a happy nd contented e fine children growing up in the right atmosphere. ¥you go to anether home that is a place of torment, where a surly man snarls | half portion man. and a smiling and blisstul And The bridegroom winced, but prompt- looked ashamed. “How about the time I brought Col. Inverness hcme to dinner without etting you know?" he asked. It was the bride’s turn to wince now. That dinner! Taen she cigeled. “And all I had was two chops, a of rold peas, and a and snaps, and a disgruntled woman whines and complains, and unruly, | blinding headache,” she added. uncontrolled children fight like the Kil Yet both of these families started couples were in love when they were amount of money. Both were called Both had the same chances at happ! marriage, and the other fafled. kenny cats. out with the same equipment. married. upon to iness. ] Both ‘Both had about the same > make the same sacrifices. Yet one made a success of We talk about opportunity, and Tuck. own luck, that we make our own oppo Did you ever think that every d; of green country boy: that everything was overcrowded an opportunity there? The world is full of failures, croak or the mercantile business, and warnin they become lawyers, or doctors, or acto are rich farmers with bursting granarie: There are world-famous lawyers and doctors and matinee Idols and men. men who write best sellers. We say we never had a chance. going into every big ol and thousands of city boys leaving those same cities beca And many of those country boys will find th he city boy overlooked, and plck up the fortune he passed by, ¢ CHanc when we fail we lay the blame on But the truth is that we are our rtunities. ay in the year there are thousands . seeking their fortunes, use they thought and that they had no e d overdone, ing that there is no money in farming hey will starve if or writers, or artists. Yet-there Everywhere millionaire business g young men that t ND the successes are side by side with the failures, working in the £\ “same environment, is the difference in the men themaelve: the grit, the determination, the stick-at-iveness, the hea brains that one man put into his work Whether we are happy or not depends upon ourselves, we all have pretty much the same Sickness, suffering, the death of those we love, to us all. The poorest woman aliv in the same agony, and weep the same not buy love, tenderness nor ‘peace of mind, and just as many « under silver brocade as do under cotton. But we can hold our souls sere: fretting. _We can resolutely extract under the same coi nditions, and the only dliffer It is the difference In the energs, rt and s and the other didn't. il s. for in reality hich to work. disappointment, come raw material with wi e and the millionairess bear their children tears over little coffins. Money does hearts ache ne if we will, W e can ke the sweet instead A of the bitter out “We'll change all that in 1914," sald the bridegroom. solemnly. “We'll profit by all our mistakes and prom- ise never to do ‘em again.” “But we wiil do them all again,” declared the bride, sitting up very straight. “We'll do just such awful | thizgs as these, and move, too, We're {only” numan. ' Well do them all through our lives. But when we do, |let's pray hard to our household gods { for thelr help.” 3 | ““Our household gods?" the- bridé- {groom wondered, slowly. “What are they?” | Iney are Humor and Tolerance,” emiled the bride. { My Neighbor Says: To remove the shell of an egg quickly after it has boiled the required time, place it in a basin of cold water for two seconds and the shell will come oft without difficulty. The easlest way to wash a beanpot is to drop a pinch of soda into it, fill up with hot water and put in oven a couple of hours. When emptied bot- tom and sides of pot will be" smooth as glass. ‘To turn out a jelly, slightly grease jelly molds with butter and when the jelly or pudding \ TREES OF WASHINGTON BY R. A, EMMONS. SPICE BUSH—BENZOIN AESTIVALE. The spice bush is one of our fairest harbingers of spring. Its flowers are tiny, to be sure, but they are in great profusion, strung closely along the slender branches in little yellow bunches like delicate and brightly colored embroidery. They come in April before the leaves, along with the early blossoms of the red maple and the elms. Then does the undergrowth of woodlands and wooded swamps (of which this bush often forms a large part) become dusted with yellow enchantment, in mass and at a dlstance seeming to radiate the bright, new, spring sun- shine. Again in the' fall these bushes decorate themselves in yellow. To quote Harriet Keeler: ‘“The spice bush begins and ends it sylvan year in 1low. The pale blossoms fairly cover the branches in April ® ¢ @ (and) the late October finds it a glow of cunshine from the yellow of its changing leaves.” All frequenters of springtime woods are lovers of the spice bush, for it makes the human heart glow with 'BEDTIME STORIES The Great Man-Bird Falls. Who highest flies may, after all, The greatest distance have to fall. y Meadow Mouse. Danny and Nanny Meadow Mouse had become £o used to flying in the great man-bird which had taken them from the Green Meadows up North way down to the Sunny South that they didn’t think much about it when they were up in the air. They were_ living very happily and com- fortably. They had their snug nest in & cupboard In the blg man-bird, and the aviator who flew that air: plane never failed to-bring them good SCRAMBLED TO THEIR THET AND OUT OF THAT OPEN every day. They were he noise of the engine frighten them at ail the aviator placed them in a Dftie eago” whero Jhey_could look down and tee the Gréat World spread w them. Dot day they made & very early start. The aviator had planned to fy to another place many miles from where they had been staving. | Of course, Danny and Nanny didn’t know this. To them it was merely just another ride such as they had had day after day. He put them up where they could iook down and sec all that was below. They had been fiying for some time when suddenly the dreadful noise of the engine . “We must be going to go down,” said Danny to Nanny, and looked to see if he could guess where they wero going to land. But, look as he would, Danny couldn’t see any smooth, open place such as he knew that great man- bird always landed on. Then he things to eat 80 used to tl that it didn’t <& i ‘The Best Cough Syrup Is Home-made Here’s an easy way to save r yet have the best Temedy you ever tried You've probably heard of this well known plan of making cough; syrup at home. But have you ever: f i | its delicate promise. Such things as these increase our faith and help to nurture the more tender qualities of man, which the strength of man needs for balance and direction. i Tt is a tall, well-shaped bush inl the open, reaching a height of twelve to fifteen feet. However, we usually find ft as undergrowth in damp woods and it ranges from New Eng- land southward and west to Lansas. The leaves are oblong, three to fi inches long, bright green above, paler beneath. The flowers are in little clusters along the branches and are followed by bright red, oblong, spley berries, more numerous some years than others. The bush is aromatic throughout, in bark, fruit and leaf, and has been credited with medicinal properties as a stimulant. tonic and astringent. The twigs and leaves are quite pleasant to the taste. The specimen illustrated is near the south border of Garfleld Park, between 2d and 3d streets. It is very common in the woods around Wash- ington and this fall the bushes were unusually well laden with the scarlet berries. By Thornton 'W. Burgesa noticed that the aviator seemed to be.trying to do something in a hur- ried and anxious manner. They were going down. There was no doubt about that. To Danny and Nanny it looked as if the earth were rushing up to meet them. How fast it came up! The aviator was now giving his whole attention. to guiding the great man-bird. In the distance ahead Danny saw what looked like a tiny house. In front of it was what looked like a tiny gray patch. The man-bird was heading straight for that tiny patch. The house grew bigger and bigger and bigger. The gray patch grew bigger and bigger and bigger. Both house and the gray patch seemed to be coming right up to them. Pretty soon they saw that the gray patch was & sandy field, with things growing it it. Then they guessed that the man-bird was going to try to land in that fleld. There were trees around that field. It began to look to Danny as if that man-bird were going to land in those ! trees and not in the fleld. He began to be frightened. Never had that man-bird come down quite like that before. Those trees seemed to rush right up at them. Then just as Danny thought that they were clear of the trees there was a snapping and tearing, and they struck the ground with a terrible crash. One of the wings of that great man-bird had struck the top of a tree. The cage in which were Danny and Nanny. was_thrown out and hit the ground so hard that the little door was knocked open. Danny and Nanny were dreadfully shaken up. but they scrambled to their feet and out of that open door. Then they discov- ered that man-bird, standing on its head on the edge of the fleld, with one of its great wings broken off. Their friend the aviator was getting o his feet and feeling himself all over, as if to see if he were all whole. Iback "ai A lack of development of the mus- cles ‘of; the-back is conducive to faulty posturs’ and chronic’ conditions: of spinal curvature. Remember that the spinal column in itself, because of its very elasticity, will not hold one grnporl, erect. This is a mattér that lepends “upon the muscles of . the back. If these muscles are atrong and -well ‘developed and so trainéd as to preserve correct. posture, one will ex- Pperience na difiiculty in keeping.the u;nu straight “and the .body.. erect. 1f, on the other hand, they are weak- ened and debilitated, and not proper= 1y trained, the individual is liable to &0 about in a drooping stoop-shoul- dered condition, and to develop vari- ous ‘forms and degrees of chronic spinal curvature. The necessity for proper exercises to keep the spine strong ‘and normal will, therefore, be apparent. Such’ exercises will not only strengthen the muscles, but will tone up and strengthen the liga- ments as well. To- overcome a bent or slouching posture, the simplest method is to stretch ‘the arms high above the head. This straightens the back and elevates the chest. Now, keeping head, chest and shoulders in the {same_position lower the arms and you find yourself standing in perfect posture. An ideal method of correcting a bad posture is to stand with the ainst the wall with heels, hips, shoulders and back of the head touching it. Then by bending the head backward, the shoulders are pushed one or two Inches away from the wall. The man or woman who has passed middie age and who wishes to main- tain the condition and the appear- ance of youth—for they go together —should make continuous and per- sistent effort to bring the body up to an erect position and keep it erect, as well as to take those exer- clses which are essentiul in straight- ening the spine and giving it youth. ful flexibility. In the absorbing care of business life- one s liable to forget this fundamental necessity. Particularly in the sitting posture one is llkely to slump carelessly into an improper position. Therefore, it may be sald, one's entire life should be a constant fight to maintain .the erect position. One should stand erect, walk erect, sit erect and try to maintain a straight and normal position of the spine even during the sleeping hours. ; dSh 10 |7§ orecdst Y A Jacquette Blouse. This one would be just the thing to weer with a plain or pleated skirt, visiting, to a luncheon, card party or for the afternoon tea, for it lends a dressy ‘appearance and at the same time is inexpensive to make. One can afford several of these attractive overblouses in the place of a single frock, thereby deriving the benefits of an adequate and varied wardrobe. This gauern comes in sizes 16 years, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust measure. 'For the 36-inch size, 2% yards of 40-inch material is needed. For very dressy occasions, this blouse would be lovely developed in a vel- vet brocade, a plain or printed silk crepe, and for more general wear, wool eponge could be depended upon lorrfive e);ce]lfl:'teservll;::. . ice of pattern, 1 postage stamps only. The embroidery pat- tern No. 670 costs 15c extra. Orders hould be addressed to The Washing- on Star Pattern Bureau, 22 East 18th street, New York . Please write name ‘and address clearly. i breathed David, opening his New Year packages in the hos- pital ward. “A new sweater! Now T won't have to wear my shabby when 1 go outdoors next “It's such a woolly warm one” ad- mired his nurse. “Let's see what is in the next package.” “A cap,” yelled the happy boy, with a muffler to match! And here are mittens! Gee, New Year parties suit me all right In the afternoon the nurse sald David might go out for some fresh alr, so he put on the new gifts he had received, and the nurse took. him to Fatty’s house. “I_just came to cal explained the little cripple when Fatty answered the door. *I want to show you how fine I look in store clothes like you wear. And 1 brought vou my book of ~pirate stories to read.” The new sweater is tan, the searf and cap biue, and the stripes are red, Color the blanket tan, too. pay my party Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST Sliced Bananas Dry Cereal with Cream Creamed Chipped Beef Toast Coffee LUNCHEON Salmon Salad Potato_Chips. Baked Stuffed Apples Sponge Cake ' Tea DINNER Celery Soup Shepherd Ple Creamed Carrots Pear Salad Cheese Balls Rice Pudding Coffee. CHIPPED BEEF One-fourth pound chipped beef, 1 tablespoon butter, 1 tablespoon flour, 3% can evapor- ated milk, 3% cup water, salt, pepper. .1& chipped beef is very salt, turnt bofiing water over it and squeeze dry in a napkin. Melt butter in skillet, stir in beet and cook until it begins to crisp, then stir in flour and when smooth add slowly eva- porated milk and the water. Cook until creamy, season with salt, If needed, and pepper. STUFFED APPLES Bake carefully 6 apples. Core and fill -with :sugar, allowing a seant 1; cup of sugar to this number of apples. Cover bot- tom of baking:dish” with boll- ing. water, to which add 2_tea- spoons of lemon ‘juice.. “Bake apples'in a hot oven, basting often.. . When . cooked, remove to 'dish:and fill cores with apple jelly and pour over all any Juice left from: baking ‘Then sprinkle . the whole with chop- ped nuts and:serve with cream, whipped or plain. SHEPHERD PIE Take any bits of cold me: put through grinder, season with salt and pepper, put in & buttered dish with bits of but- ter and a little gravy or'stock. Cover with mashed potatoss, in ‘which’ are bits.of onion.” Bake about’ 20 minutes. It is the Juice that. Makes Oranges Good All the good things that make oranges health-giving and pleasing to the taste are contained in the juice. ealdsweet - Jorida Oranges: Juicy in the extreme, whether bright, golden or- russet in color, Sealdsweet Florida oranges excel in flavor, sweetness and other good qualitics. S.” “Baked Tongue.- Put a fresh tongue in a kettle, | cover with boMINE giled yrator, and let cook slowly forftwh heurs. While hot, remove the fongue from the water and take off the skin. Slice a emall onion and brown it in one tablespoonful -of butfer. Add_ three tablespoonfuls’ bf butter and half a cupful each of carrot and celery, cut In small pleces, stimuatdl well blend- ed, then turn into a double roasting pan. Upon these place the tongue, garnish with a sprig of parsley, and pour over ail‘about five cupfuis of water in which the-tongue was-cook- ed. Cover close and let bake in.a slow oven fdr two hoirs Orange Ice Cream. Strain two cupfuls and a half of orange juice. Add ‘one cupful of sugar and mix ‘thoroughly. Slowly add one copful of milk and one cup- ful of cream. . Freeze in . the usyal way, and if liked mold in individua! * mol]da and gerve with candlied orange pee : - SAVE THE TROUBLE OF COFFEE MAKING-USE Goffee IT IS MADE JUST DISSOLVE -AND DRINK IT. A GREAT CONVENIENCE AND OH, SO GOOD! oty fons Absolutely Pure " imported POMPEIAN OLIVE OIL Makes the most delicious mayaonnaise and French dressing 5 “DANDERINE™ Girls! A Gleamy Mass of Thick, - Beautiful Hair 35-cent Bottle does Wonders for Lifeless, Neglected Hair .An abundance of luxuriant hair full of life and lustre shortly follows 8 genuine. toning up of neglected scalps with dependable “Danderine” Falling hair, itching scalp and the dandruff is correoted immediately. Thin, dry, wispy or fading hair is quickly invigorated, taking on new strength, color and youthful beauty. “Danderine” is delightful on the hair; @ refreshing, stimulating tonic —not sticky or greasy! Any drug store - Glasses Fitted Eyes Examined Graduste Dr. CLAUDE S. SEMONES Eyésight Specialiat 10th and G Sts. N.W. Phone Main 721 MoCormick Madical College * Youthful Freshness and Beauty of Skin used it? Thousands of families, the | world over, feel that they could hardly keep house without it. It's Sealdsweet Florida grapefruit, fréshfrom the groves, and Sealdheart grapefruit, in of life. We can dwell on our blessings instead of our can acquire a_philosophy that will enable us to laugh over the misadventures that befall us. For our lives are what we make them. is to be taken out, plunge the mold into hot water and re- move at once. The jelly will turn out without any troubla. miseries, and we instead "of weep ¥ ‘ (Copyright, 1628.) It is all up to us. DOROTHY DIX. When We Go Shopping BY MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN. Longer-Lived Lingerie. ' Many foresighted shoppers look shead to the seasonal sales on lin- gerles and depend regularly on stock- ing thelr chests and dresser-drawers at this tima. To the up-to-the-minute modiste and to buyers i the big de- partment stores, the changing styles in lingeries may be very apparent, but to most of us it doesn't make a particle of difference whether we se- cure the very latest whimsies of fashion in the under-things we buy. But this cycle of styles does enabie the economical shopper ta plan ahead for her year's needs, and to profit by the gratifying reduction in prices when the stores are closing out the geason’s stock and clearing the counters for the new summer lingerie. It is never wise to invest in such elaborate or expensive underwear that ‘we dread to have it washed frequent- 1y, ¥lat, simple garments are easier to launder at home, are sent to the laund; less than for more and when the ry the charge 1; elaborate gar- ments. The strongest, simplest un- |. derclothing is always the best. even though the Inftlal cost may he slightly more, for it will wear th, longest without need of repair. © Flimsy, cheap lace, inad. brolde: and poor Fibbams® e through weak . bindings mean con. stant repair, and trouble in washing. 1t takes twice as long to launder & garment that is trimmed with many ruffies as rof in flat trimming of French emb: Y, feather stitching, or simple Iinen ‘This is time and energy expended which must be figured into the final cost of the article. ° Good, close-stitched em- broldery is probably the most durable trimming, anll after that a stout cluny, torchon, or crocheted edging, In" buying re ade underwear one should also consider the cut. Ir skimpy and narrow, it will soon give way under the strain of ordinary bod- ily movements. Is the material firm and durable? As t6 “muslin” unders “buy,” Grease marks on pages . of books may be removed by sponging them with benzine, placing between two sheets of lotting, paper and pressing with a hot iron. Ground coffee may be tested in this way: Place a leaspoon- ful of the coffee in a wineglass containing water. If a part floats and a part sinks, it is safe to consider it adulterated. ‘When _difficult to remove cover from cream jar take & hammer and rap cover gently all around on the top, then throw over it a wet cloth and you can turn cover at once. ‘wear, longcloth, cambric, crepe, mus- lin, sateen or satinette will give the most satisfactory wear if the garment m! have hard everyday usage. Ba- tiste and naisook are finer and sheerer in quality, but not so durable. any girls say “It js as cheap to wear silk underwear, if you wash it out every night” Miny more of \us are no doubt waiting eagerly to be convinced of that, for there is nothing ®0 exquisite and luxurious as the “feel” of silk. Anyhow, there are the 1k jerseys, crepe de chines and.wash s that are most attractive, and one must have a few of them for oc- c‘:.lonll. At m{t ,c(n-ulz.t ‘wear, “For e woman who fravels.a gre B other tyDe ot Tingerts in so Hotle: awsy i the dialient pessible space in away e o e suit case, or week end bag, and are so easily washed out in a hotel room, simple and cheap, but the way it ukgn hold of a 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 cornp syrup, instead of sugar syrup. Either w: it tastes good, never spoils, and gives you a full pint of better cough remedy than y&m co;l;i hu)"- ready-made for ree times its cos th" is really wonderful how quickly this home-made remedy conquers a cough—usually in 24 hours or less, It seems to penetrate through every air passage, loosens , hoarse or tight m.nm the phiegm, heals the ranes, and gives almost immediate relief. Splendi d for throat tickle, hoarseness, croup, bronchitis and bronchial asthma, Pinex is a highly. concentrated compound of genuine Norway pine extract, and has been used for gen- erations: for throat and chest ail- intment ask your ounces of Pinex” cans, are alike appetizing and healthful. For gift copy of book *‘Home Uses for Juices of Sealdsweet Oranges and Grapéfruit*write Florida Citrus Exchange, 815 Citrus Exchange Building, ‘Tampa, Florida. Daily use of Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuticura Ointment, overcomes = the foundation of a clear skin through life. Always include the Cuticura Talcum in your toilet preparations. A Sure Way to End Dandruff | There is one sure way that has never falled to remove dandruff at once, and that is to dissolve it, then ‘you destroy it entirely. To do. this, just.gat about four ounces of - plain, -ordinary liquid arvon from any drug store (this is all you will need), apply it at night when retiring: use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. By morning, most, it not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and tweo or three more applications will, completely dissolve and en- tirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. You will find, too, all itching and digging of the scalp will stop instantly, and your hair will be fluffy, lui}.rou!, glossy, sllky and L and.