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WOMAN’S PAGE. Smart Styleé in Boudoir Slippers BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. Bvening slippers must follow a cer- tain degree of convention. Though ornate, they must have the ornate- ness of the season. We still retain something of the Victorian prejudice against feet that are conspicuous. Though we may not liken our feet to timid_little mice that play hide and ®eck beneath the foids of our sKirts we still do not wish to have our fee the most obvious things about us. Therefore, we wisely refrain from types of slippers that strike the eye ©of the beholder too vividly. This is especially our. feeling when choosing the slippers for formal eve- ning or for the street. We are all much more Victorian in public than in private. It is, therefore, when choosing the sllpper we wear infor- mall home that we dare mak our feet more striking, even a little amusing. The result is that some of the slip. pers chosen for boudoir wear are actually bizarre. They look as if the: had been chosen at random from the wardrobe of a versatile film star— here a pair that might have belonged o one of Blue Beard's wives, another that Cleopatra might have worn, old and roval purpie sandal som ow ' suggestive of the wives Byzantine mperors. Neediess to say, made 10 contribute her inspiration i the mauk of these intimate little slippers, for there ix not a detail of women’s apparel_but hus felt the strong touch of China this season. The sketch shows a sabot-shaped boudoir slipper, with a_gay-painted mask over the instep, finished with an amu turned-up black sole. There is also a pale blue satin mule, China has been What Counts. £ Robert were only like Jim nmie is su gentle child; so easy to live with. But Robert you can look for “He never a Never. Ha wants things his wuy and he'll argue and squirm and insist until he tires the others out and they either &lve in or go off in disgust. ot that he's a bad tempered child or a selfish one, cither. He'll give up things readily to hix playmates and help them any time, but he his wiil and won't. ' Jimmie lke that” Which may be bad for Jimmie. v wi has a will”of his own and has a gift directly from the €0ds. He will not trot off at a word of command. Not he. He will stand still and revoive the thought in his mind wuntil it has meaning to him The meaning he Rets out of it may mot be the one you held and he will attempt to show you that you haven't the right idea at ull If von the usual parent you will hecome enraged at the idea of his having an idea about an order vou issued and vou will peat the command without attempting 10 put it in terms that his mind ac- cepts. Then he sits in his mind and s 1 won and there are struggles and tears o v strugs ar: ad for him Of course trouble aceepts ism't a bit The re- it takes your time and it Wher- | suggestion. | is loud in | nd | WHIT PE KID SABOT-SHAPED SLIP- WITH GAY-PAINTED MASK R INSTEP AND BLUE SATI MULE WITH MAUVE MARABOU. with a large | of mauve ma { (Copyright, powder-puff ornament u at the instep. 1 your intelligence to put the sit- in terns that his mind can ac It really takes a Keen to keep up with a child ch quicker and his idea of w is much simpler th | gen | right adult's To vouth, bluck and white, right and | wrong, are clean cut, clearly defined | Why trouble with the shades” betwee | His" eve cannot discern them, Perhaps, | too, he is too honest to try to find them | where he believes they are not to be sund Howeyer reason for there the is no child t may be, grieving becaus thinks for himself That | wrong ing to your light is not the point. He thinks and he wills and 'that is truly wondertul. So few folk do. | Instead of moaning because he l"('m going to.” and “Not me” and “'some ¢ nee nd “try und get it."" ou should rejoice and forthwith set bout cultivating his acquaintance so s to be on the inside assisting at the council table instead of bwing on the ‘ouhirh- worrying about the decisions. There is Ny reason for worrying labout the lad with a_will and u pur- |pose. He's in luck. The one to worry THE EVENING Bistory of Bour Name. BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. GILLIGAN. VARIATIONS—O'Giligan, MacGilligan, Galligan, O'Galligan, MacGalligan. RACIAL ORIGIN—Irish. SOURCE—A given name. ‘While a great many of the Irish family names were formed at a much earlier period than those of England, yet quite a number came into being at a comparatively late period. But in all of these cases the persons who ssumed the new family name had used another family name before, Indecd, it is difficult to dete just what period the G: :i:";]fmeu‘; name usage can really be sald to have started. There are trac of it from the earliest days, and Irish history :;]r:;::‘l:n Seldck in - an - unbroken ough often scal i a e Heatly 2000 5. nty line to a date As a matter of fact, the surna was of greater importance In 1 way, among the early Irish, than the given hame, just the reverse of the situation in England and the continent, This was because the surname was a clan name, and it was the given name ! which differentiated the individual {from his fellows. A man was, first of |Ill, let us say, an O'Gilligan, then his given name showed which O'Gilligan he was. In England the surname came into being to differentiate one John or one Robert or one Walter Arom another. But the family nam not one of the oldest parently came ito n which bore it, entury. Th is eith Giollagain | of Gilligan is f Erin. 1t ap being, with the about the thir- Irish form of the O'Giollagain” or hoth forms appar- ently being used. It comes from the given name of “Giollagain.” (Copyright.) COLOR CUT-OUT A Simting Relay. L, 3 he thinks | i 1 j | | about is gentle Jimmie, who i8 50 easy to live with that he’s uccepted as part |of th | cording furniture to the purp {others. That's th |0f vour anxious care. |littie ginger into him brothem from imposing upon [ e catches up. ! Teopyrignt, 10241 and the will of ud who's in need Try to put a and ~keep his him until -_— PERSONAL HE BY WILLIAM ALTH SERVICE BRADY, M. D., Noted Physician and Author. Chronic Bronchitis. The “winter cough” of people alons in vears is usually chronic bronchi- tls. The victims are fairly free from cough in Wi summer time, but each fall it sta n. in spite of all Kinds of T -ommended “cough medicines.” reason it returns every winter is that our houses are overheated and hence too dry spe- cially is this the case in homes wh'-r.'v there are elderly folk with chronic bronehitis, and for two rea First, the notion that the bronchitis is due to cold weather encourages overheat- ing: and, second, elderly people have @ slow metabolism and therefore are fnclined to feel cold, so they insist upon coddling, under the erratic be. 1ief that excessive warmth of lht-. air will maintain a comfortable body ‘temperatur which is contrary to the actual fact. The body temperature is, if anything, lowered by the continued breathing of cverheated air. Let us try to explain how. Overheated air dary r‘ The higher you heat air the mort vou dry it out. ~Take the air of an ordinary sons v, which s, say, zero tem- bring it in and heat, it up Fahrenheit and_vou make it drier than any air of th | driest desert, so dry that it cracks |and warps the furniture, no mat | how you heat it. It becomes a strain upon” the respiratory mucous mem- brane of every one in the house, and espectally the aged. Excessive evap- { oration is caused by the dried-out air, | from the respirat membrane as {well as from the skin. This means | irritation, catarrh, cough, tendency to ‘colds,” bronchitis. It also means chilliness, which the older people particularly, They call for m heat, which dries the air still more and aggravates the bronchitis, the bronchial catarrh, the dry catarrh. The remedy is obvious. Stop try ing to keep zood and warm, and tr eeping cool and well. Let 64 to ¢ | degrees Fahrenheit be the household perature, and let the thermometer . not any individual's momentary iings. This seems a trifle to read bout. hut if you put it into practice vou will begin to think there is some- | thing in it iLis no joke, but a sad reallty. that the old folks take their winter cold from the all too plant. winter d | perature, to 70 degree v t (Coprright.) When We Go Shopping BY MRS. HARLAND H. “Purple and Fine Linen. Not without reason are the words in the seriptural mention of “purple and fine linen” always coupled together. They stood for the highest regal splen- dor among the ancient orientals. In the middle ages linen underwear was thought to he too magnificent for any one except a king. nLhu‘,n pi.w probably the textile that has been Jongest in u; Tt is the first fabric mentioned in history. Eeypt and China used it thousands of years ago. It dates back before the pharaohs and the pyramids, back almost to the dawn of civilization. Linen has always been the most erished of fabrics, and no wonder, 'or behind it is a history of absorb- ing Interest and a wealth of lrudl!lnn that cling to no other fabric, Used as the robes of royalty and for the Sacred purposes of the priests, linen has always been looked upou as a cloth to be devoted to the highest earthly uses. Th:‘n{ linen is the strongest of tex- tiles. It has always its remarkable durability. the cloth chosen for mummy Wwrap- pings, and many are to b found today, as strong and as perfect as When they were woven centuries ago. Wonderful examples of early hand- Linen was BEAUTY CHATS Before You Go Motoring. A great many women Wwho spend most of their time In office work have to make up for their lack of fresh air during the briet Saturday afteronon and Sunday holiday. A great many of them seem to do it by rushing about the country on the back of a motorcycle or in a side car or in an open automobile. It is splen- dfd for the lungs, rather hard upon the complexion. 1 you fortity the skin beforehand, it will not suffer and you will not| have to spend e large part of your week-day evenings in trying to make a @iapped skin smooth. ~ Wear a vell if you possibly can, and if it Is very <old or windy choose a heavy chiffon or gause veil instead of an open-mesh one. If the day is very windy, put #R glassos OF SogEios Aot of girls, been noted for | but sometimes | ALLEY made laces, embroideries and tap- estries of linens that were made hun- reds of years ago, are still to be found in the great museums. Another quality that linen po: sses and which belongs to no other fabric is that it grows more beautiful with ago. Quite firm and stiff just at first, when newly woven, it softens and re- fines_with use, and becomes silkler and finer in texture. “It gets lovelier every time it is laundered,” was the gld-fashioned ~guarantee ' of ~ good inen. So much for the enduring beauty, {the romance and the distinction of |linen. Now for the characteristics | that ‘make it so interesting to the | modern shopper. Line is the clean- | est_and most hygienic of all textliles, Lias a beautiful luster, sheds dust easily, washes easily and grows more beautiful with laundering, absorbs water readily and dries quickly, mak- ing It the superfabric for tfowels, summer underwear and handker- chiefs, does not become dull and dead-Tooking, as cotton does. Linen is very expensive, but if a good quality is purchased is very lasting. Its chief disadvantages are that it wrinkles and creases badly, making frequent washing and_iron- ing necessary, and the fact that it has little afiinity for dyes, so that delicately colored linens are quite apt to fade. BY EDNA KENT FORBES | will_protest that it's no fun motoring with 8o much armor plate on, and you need not do it unless you know that your eyes will become red and swol- ien from dust and your skin dry and chapped. Before going out rub a good cold cream into the skin and wipe off with a cloth wrung out of wa water, then rinse with cold water, dry the skin and powder. The cream will not wo:8 out while you are driv- ing, though it may as €0on as you go intoga warm room. When you do, simply wipe off the face with a hand- kerchief and rub well with a little powder. You have probably often had experience driving 'in the cold air and have dreaded stopping off at & hotel for refreshments, knowing the heat would make your skin ugly and your nose red. Try this cold cream treatment and see how much better you will look. There 18 nothing better for the hands, both before and after motor- ing, than she honey-almond lotion, and pushed about ac- | eflicient heating | “How ar going to manage this skating race?’ asked the hoy from {the fourth grade when Billy Cut- {out’s team arrived at the pond | “Well, why couldn't we have a {relay? “There are four of you and four of us.” suggested Billy. All agreed that it was a fine sug- |gestion, so the bovs took places jaround ‘the pond at “first, second and | third bases,” just like a ball game. A i big boy, who didn't care which side won, acted as referce. When he blew the ‘whistle, off started the contest- ants on the first lap. They touched { the otitstretched hands of the s pair at the same moment. Billy ut was on the third lap. and as soon as his man tagged him, he skated off like a whirlwind. Good boy!” called the referee as Billy crossed the finish line just ah {of the fourth grader. wins!" Billy's “‘Daniel Boome" cap is brown and black ooonskin, His shoes, liose. trousers and sweater are brown. his ‘mittens blue, and the ohecks on his outfit arange. (Copyright, 1924.) ‘Just Hats” By Vyvyan. Antithesis of Cloche. ! For the lady in the south who has been forced into cloches all winter comes this refreshing large loosely woven straw as a complete and beeom- ing change. This particular hat has a jade green palm leaf appliqued in front and tles closely under the chin with a jnarrow green ribbon edged in black Dicoting. Mock Maple Bread Pudding. ‘Take one-fourth cupful of dark brown sugar, flavor it with vanilla, and add some frult or not, just as you prefer. Just before serving, pour over each helping a sirup made of brown sugar.meited in a little boll- ing water, or else glycerin and rosewater. Van- ishing cream may be used under pow- der before going out, unless these long rides are taken every day. Too much vanishing cream is not good for the skin. 0. M. A.—At nineteen years of age lines in your face oniy indicate the need for lubricating the skin with a fine oil er a nourishing cream made from vegetable oils. Living in over- heated and often poorly ventilated rooms will dry out the secretions of the skin, much the same as with plants, and a massage cream will do much to counteract phig trouble, STAR, | WASHINGTON, D. Why Not Tell Husbands How to Hold Their Wivec’ Love for a Change?—The Young Wife Whose Husband ~Forces Her to Be Entirely Idle. AR DOROTHY DIX: Why do you write so much about wives trying to hold their husbands' love? Doesn't it ever occur to people that a wife gets just as bored with her husband as he does with her?- Sometimes she is even more so, because most wives arc home all day, and evening, too, whereas their husbands have diversions at the office and elsewhere, and @ few hours at home in the evening are really restful to them. It seems to be the general opinion that a woman remains in love with her husband, regardlesh of his habits and disposition—whether he fs tidy around the house, whether he fs entertaining or stupid, grouchy or pleasant. Also that a wife should be attractive, vivacious and ready to humor her husband in order to hold him, while he doesn’t need to do anything to hold her. So far as T am concerned, if my husband doesn't stay In love with me when I act my natural self, and the way I feel, he can just look out for somebody else. I have often been bored with him, and disgusted with him. So are other wives with their husbands at times. So why not_tell husbands how to make their wives contented and give them a little of the romance they crave? E. H. B. ! Answer: Yea, verily, sister: you have said a true thing. Wives do get just as fed up with their husbands' as husbunds do with their wives, and any a husband would get the jolt of his life If he knew his wife's real oplnion of him. A slouchy man with & two days' stubble of beard on his face and spots on his clothes i3 as unkissable an object to 4 Woman as any lady with cold cream on her face and a sofled kimono und curl papers is to a man. It is just as much a man's business to keep his wife fascinated as it is & wife's o keep her husbund enthralled. Why, then, 1s the loud pedal put on the wife's part in making a happy bome and keeping murriage a going concern? Simply bacause, in the words of ¥ sident Cleveland, “it is condition, and not a theory, that confronts us." There are certaln amenfties of domesticity thut must be practiced to pmake it @ success, and men won't take the trouble and make the effort, or even realize the necessity of practicing them, so there {s always a hope that women will. Also, it is more important to a woman to protect her home than it is to a man, for the home means not only the love nest, it means er meal ticket as well. It means not only her happiness, but her physical comfort. For a woman to say that she will herself attr: not make an effort to make ctive to her husband is to take a dishonest advantage of her situation. She would have to make a mighty strenuous effort to he agreeable if she got along with her hoss. She dally does things she doesn't feel like doing In order to get along in soclety. So it scems to me that it an obligation of honor to try to please the one man who is legally bound ) stand you. DOROTHY DIX. AR MISS DIX: I)”uih 'y ho What do you think of a man who does not allow his is not vet twenty-two years old, and who is health, strong and vivacious. to make any acquaintances, or to go to parties ©ven 1o occupy herseif at home or outside, but just to sit up at hom, 10thing to do and wait for his return? My husband knew when we were engagi active life, and to having my time well occupied. Now I have nothing to do und [ feel as if 1 would go crazy. Do you not think it is. dangerous for a woman to be absolutely idle, with nothing to do but to think and think, armd build air castles durlng the lonesome hours of a lonesome day? VERY TROUBLED. ed that I was used to a very ndeed, Troubled, It is true that Satan finds work for idle hands to do, and he invarfably gets on the job when a woman has sthing to do. You have only to read the newspapers to have this proved The women who figure in the scandals are the idle rieh or the do women who live in boarding houses, and who, having nothing with which to occupy their time. go out and hunt for trouble—and find it. It is the idle women who are the victims of lounge lizards and te hounds, not the hustling business woman nor the busy housewife, who find the day all too short to do the work that is piled up. It is the women with nothing to do but think and think and think about themselves who are the neurotic invalids who enrich doctors and fill sanatoriums. It Is the idle women who have the leisure in which to vivisect themselves who digcover that their husbands do not understand them and are mot their soulmates. You never hear of the woman who has to cook and sew and patch, and scrub for half u dozen children, wondering if her husband is her real affinity or not. Work is the salvation of women just much as it is of men. And any husband who doesn't see that his Wwife has plenty of real, constructive rk to do—work that counts and that she s responsible for doing: work that keeps her hands and her mind fully occupied—is not only doing her a deadly wrong, but he is steering his matfimonial boat straight for the rocks. DOROTHY DIX D" ! Answer: There is just one pops the question and names the All other slgns are worthless. Put no faith in words, In oaths of de- votlon that are not backed up by a bona fide marriage license. A man ma come to see vou for seven ycarg and mean nothing more than that he finds vou good company, and vour house a comfortable place to spend the e nings. ®He may look sentiment and talk sentiment that always stops Just short of popping the question. Pay no hesd to any such manifestations. If he really loves vou and wants you, he will ask you to be his—and that is all there is to that. DOROTHY DIX. Ansy 1 do, to AR DOROTHY DIX-—Please give « rule of thumb for telling when a man is in love. QUAERE. is when a man infallible rule, wedding day. and that (Copyright. 1924.) My Neighbor Says: Cover your recipe book with a plece of white oilcloth. This will keep the cover from be- coming sticky If touched by fingers soiled with cooking, and the oficloth can be washed easi- E Iy _when it is stained { - On sweeping day make a g0od suds in a pail of warm water and soap, add three tablespoons of kerosene oil, dip your broom In this and shake the water off, ‘then sweep in the usual way. Dip the broom frequent- ly. for it will take up lots of dirt. You will find that it will brighten your carpet, and there will be no dust to settle back again on the furniture. Keep the tray under the gas burner of yvour range spotless by lining it with two or three thicknesses of newspaper. Change the paper every other day. Tt will not ignite, as vou might think. ‘When makin, cake add a tea- spoonful of glycerin to the in- gredients. This makes the cake light and feathery. Save all the small scraps of candles. Put them into a little cotton cloth bag. Put this on the froning table and occasion- ally pass the iron over will “prevent the sticking. ‘Wet the ashes you put on ice on sidewalks so they will not blow away. C., TUESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1924. FEATURES. BEDTIME STORIES was kome red on the sides of his neck on his cars and across his br His tall was not as soft and hand some as that of Reddy Fox. All this Dunny saw ir in first trightencd g Then: ho v and scampered e wnirte0 ack for the stump he had just left. and he made these thor legs of his fairly fiv. Danny turned to run that Gray Fox paw him. Then he was so surprised fu_r of course, Le had never scen Dan ny before, that he hesitated for a moment. ‘It was that moment of hesitation that gave Danny s chane o reach that stump : dogge around it. nd . “L As it was that w dodge, u Danny tr tween Gray and round t dodged out of breath. There wa hole ke could get into. It he 100k Very much as if Gray Fox w ucceed In dolng what his cous north, Reddy Fox, had never able to do—muke a dinner of D Meadow Mous “Oh, dear!” sobbed Danny. dear! | I guess this ls 1o be the of me (Copyright, By Thornton W. Burgess Danny Meets Gray Fox. he loser “tis, and not the winner, Who always furnishes the dinner. Danoy Meadow Mouse. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS, Bob White had gone on about his business. Nanny Meadow Mouse had gons back to their home under the old stump. But Danny Meadow Mousge hadn’t been ready to go home. He had wanted to explore a little | further, and Nanny couldn't kee him from it Now, in that garden, of which Danny and Nanny had made | their new home, were many stumps. | You see, thix was the h of a set-| tler, and where that garden was l\.uk‘ been woods not very long ago. When | the trees had been cut down the | stumps had been left there for the | a radio set, ma sed. And she kepp Y : | on looking at her part of the paper { A f and pop Kepp on looking at his part, 2 ’ Ma was reeding one part of the pa- per and pop was reeding the rest, and ma started to shake her hed sad, pop saying, Wat are you shaking your hed ubout? What are you reeding, the deth collum? he sed . No, I'm looking it the radio pro- Bram for tonite and thinking of all & ..:;In[; by not having a radio on the cdge Ram keep that Fox and himself stump they r in witl tmp be Round and o g uwt to make you happy in- g sted of mizzerable, pop sed. Nothing will make me happy except ma saying, Jest lissen to this, eight fifteen, John C barrytone solo. I bet he'll render the life out of it, pop sed. Eight Snooke will render a 25, the Hilltown Quartet will sing plantation melodies, eight 40, Mabel Bamberg will recite The face on the bar room floor, ma sed reeding out of her part of the paper. Wich pop started to reed out of his part, saying, A matoh is belng ar- ranged between Mike Conner and Kid Levy wich according to dope awt to pervide some good fast stepping. Don be silly, elght 0, the Social String Orkester will play request numbers, ma sed A wire was received yestidday from rpo the Wild Bull of the Pampers stating he will continue to visit these shores until he does nock him out, pop sed. Now who cares enything about that? ma sed, and pop sed, W the fellows erround at the bowiing aley, Im going rite erround and tell them And he got his hat and coat and went out and ma red the rest of the radio program to my sister Gladdi Gladdis not saying weather glad to heer it or not, but me ha often saw her look gladder. 1924, by T. W. Pumpkin Fanchonettes. little patty pans and fi with the xture: To two cupfuls of pumpkin add half o cupful of sugar one-fourth of molasse Eoney. tur spoonfuls of melted butter, § ginger. mae § | Beat well, then add the y “ggs lightly beaten, and one cupfu nd one-half of rich milk or cre Beat well and strain. Jake th pies for ab wenty minutes, top with ingue ds of whites of the four tat fuls of sugar, the a lemon. Line wit pastry following o strained amon HIM_BEFORE HE e roots to rot away. so that later they might be pulled out more eusily. Th ground between the stumps had been plowed and planted. Danny liked those stumps. were holes under some of dart into in case of danger. As he explored that garden he ran from stump to stump. This is what he was doing when he met Gray Fox. It was « very unexpected meeting. It was as unexpected to Gray Fox as it was to Danny Meadow Mouse. Had it not been R0 unexpected to Gray Fox, it ¢ likely would have heen Danny st wnd last meeting with him, | Danny was not quite half-way from | h wa ms. If tor one stump to another when, without | 4T¢ nat obtainable, the tongur any warning, Gray Fox stepped from | SPread with tom atsup. behind the stump toward which Dar - ny was running. Danny saw him be- fore ha saw Danny. Danny knew who it was. although it was the first time [ From tie Dartmouth Jack O'Lanter ho had ever seen him. No one could| Professor (in z00 class)—We w3 mistake u Fox for any one else. He|now name all of the lower animais looked like Reddy Fox, excepting that ' in their order; beginning with Mr. his coat was mostly g There Jones The Aroma "SALADA" T XA me2 betoKens the perfect blend. Superb in flavor — Try it today. Ju Tongue and Eggs Tarta: Cut the desired numb eold tongue Into rounds, of each round place a slice cut one-half an inch thic cook the required numbs of cut them crosswise and place with the yolk side down round. Top the egg with ono tabl spoonful of tartare sauce and gar nish with watercvess. If tomets There them to i o of te Hard ety a h Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST Sliced Pineapple Cereal with Cream Browned Fish Hash Oatmeal, Gems Coftee. n Ready. LUNCHEON. Deviled Lambs’ Kidneys Rolls. Stuffed Baked Apples Molasses Drop Cakee Tea. DINNER. Tomato Soup Pork Chops. Apple Sauce Haked Stuffed Potatoes Spaghettl with Cheese. Endive Salad. Baked Indian Pudding with Cream. Coftee. LAMBS' KIDNEYS, 14 six lambs’ kidneys and, after removing the skins, cut them in halves. Melt three tablespoonfuls of bacon fat, add the kidneys and one siice of onfon finely chopped and cooked for five minutes, then skim out the meat and place on a heated dish. Blend three tablespoonfuls of flour with the hot fat, stir in slowly one and one-half cupfuls of brown stock, cook until smooth, season with two teaspoonfuls’ of Worces- tershire sauce, one teaspoonful of mustard, a flash of cayenne and salt to taste, then add the kidneys, and when well heated serve with a border of mashed potato or boiled rice. M TR il T e 2 Bl I I HiH Real Sleep: I's Yours! HAT is sleep? Regardless of how the scientists describe it, sleep must first of all be Perfect Relaxation. You can have real sleep only when you get that perfect SOME LIKE IT HOT and some like it cold—real brown bread, Boston style —almost amealin itself. it charming? Wouldn't you like to have ome just like it? You can, even if you know little or noth- ing about sewing. The waist is cut entirely in one piece and the skirt is in two straight lengths. Isn't that simple? Another very nice feature of this design is that it affords one a splendid opportunity to use short lengths of material that are some- times left over from other sewing, or which can be bought very reasonably, Of course, this dress might also be made of a single material, if you so desired. The pattern for this style cuts In sizes 16 years, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust measure, and for the 36- inch size you will need 1% yards of 40-inch materfal with 1% yards 36-| inch contrasting and 4% ‘yards of ribbon for sash and binding. Price of pattern 15 cents, age stamps only. Orders shomld be addressed to The Washington Star Pattern Bureaum, 23 East 18th street, New York city. Please write name and address clearly. . Bake it BESTwith DAVIS BAKING POWDER THE TROUBLE OF COFFEE MAKING--USE it (ons Coffee IT /IS MADE JUST DISSOLVE AND DRINK IT. A GREAT CONVENIENCE AND OH. SO GOOD! rest that comes from a supremely comfortable mattress, such as a conscience Brand. Every little fibre in the filling of a Ccnscience Brand (Either long-fibre cotton-felt or fine curled hair as you prefer).” These little coils I Mattress is a little spring. U TR T AT support veu comfortably—and maintain their bouyancy i | A R for years. NOW is the time! now, buy a Conscience Brand Mattress. TR Not next month nor next year, but If practical, combine it with a 72-coil Conscience Brand Box Spring and have the ideal combination for that greatest health and happiness builder, Real Sleep. Go NOW to your furniture dealer or department store, buy Conscience Brand and get real sleep. ONSCIENCE BRAN Clean, Comfortable, Long-wearing MATTRESSES also PILLOWS and BOX SPRINGS I Ty | i | I GONS CIENGE TSR T T A A M. BRAND ATt e /|