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' THE EVENING Importance of Mah-Jong Wrap BY MARY The warm weather wrap always Presents difficulties. On the one side it is apt to de too eomber, too heavy, too severe. Then tt gives the wrong contrast to the light, summery frock with which it has to be worn. On the other side it may be too tght, too thin. Then it looks rather Inane. One might as well g0 wrap- less. For many seasons tho cape solved the problem for the warm weather wrap. Now that the cape has been widetracked—save in a very few in- stances—there is nothing better than the so-ealled mah-jong coat. Many women who went to south- ern resorts this winter with no very good answer to their queation: “What ghall [ use as a davtime wrap over light frocks?" answered the guestion to their own satisfaction with the mah-jong coat. To be seure there are capes—white capes of heavy #Dun, many of them so provided with little side godets that when held close about the body they give an interest- Ing and very swagger little flare be- tow the hips. However, these are really for beach and country wear. The mah-jong coats are better suit- #d to answer the summer wrap prob- lem in general. They are built wide and loose and are, of course, made of rich colorfule Chinese embroideries and brocades or of prints of Chinese coloring and design. Colored bindings and facings, loops and tassels further Suggest the costumery of China. In the sketch you may see one of the shorter mah-Jong coats. Others are of three-quarter length. Telling the Truth. My Children:—One of the most dif- flcult stages of yvour growth lies be- tween fourteen and cighteen. You expect so much of people and they expect €0 much from you that the misunderstanding Is mutual and ve frritating. One of the rocks you eplit on is telling the truth. When you are in your teens you are very sure that you know just what t mean by telling the truth. You are sure that you know what the truth is. And you don't. No, you don't. In the first place, mobody ever knows exactly and if it isn’t exactly it isn’t the truth. is it? ‘Then be a little less sure of your po- sition on the next truth that comes your way. And you have a tendency to meas- ure the old folks on your very limit- ed stick of truth. “He sat right there and told Dad that he had the great- st regard for him. You'd think he thought Dad was his long lost brother —and all the time he wa¥® refusing to let Dad have that lumber. What 4‘!;‘: you know about a hypocrite like at?" Didn't it ever occur to you that the man might have the utmost respect for your father, love him even, and still not let him have that lumber? There was something there you didn't know about so it doesn't do to pro- nounce judgment. 1If all the facts aren't in you can’t arrive at the truth. The church folk come in for your MARSHALL. Sattiday aftirnoon 1 wunted to take Mary Watkins to the movies ou account of me having 20 cents, and I went erround to see if she was on her frunt steps, wich she was, on 2 cushions, me saying. Do you wunt'to go erround to the Little Grand this after? Theres & Kut Up Komedy erround there and ! Squidge Jones and Lutlla Dippers are both in it, and G. I bet its swell, 1 bet, 1 sed, and Mary Watkins sed, I rather €0 to the Narcississ, theres a Baby Dumpling pickture there. Me thinklng, G, heck. On aecount of you cant get in the Narcissise for less than 15 cents apeece, and I sed Aw, wats you wunt to sec Baby Dumpling for, all she can do is jest stand there and look cute, thats all she can do, G wisz. i , thats enuff to do, Mary Watkins nd I sed, But G, gosh. 1 bet this 'p Komedy pickiure s funny as enything because Squidge Jones. is fireman in it and he falls off of ladders thing, I bet you'll laft like the TED | dickins, 1 bet. I dont like Kut Up Komedies, theyre FROC { too vulgar, but 1 wouldent mind seeing . Baby Dumpling, Mary Watkins sed, and sketched has wide mandarin sleeves | ! 8ed. Well hay, Il tell you wat. lets and the straight, wide, upstanding {088 up for it, heds we go to the Little | collar that we call mandarin also. ) Grand and tales we go to the Narcississ. Loops and tassel fasten 1t at the| Well, all rite, I allways win every- ront { thing wen 1 bet something, she sed, And took out a dime and tos it _up and it rolled & wile us if it didnt know wat it wunted and then came tnles. See, tales, Mary Watkins sed, and 1 sed, Bure, but thats ony once, this is the best out of 3. MATJONG COAT OF CREPE WORN WITH ST WASHINGTON, 2| DorothyDix| If Any Other Business Were Carried on as Crook- edly and With as Many Lies as Courtship the Partners Concerned Would Be in Jail . Cy WEDNESDAY, Says Fow of Us Aro Honest Before Marriage A FINE and clever man, whose twenty years of married lfe has been nothing but a heroic endurance test, sald to mo the other day: “If the actual facts-In the case were brought out, half of the marriages could be invalidated on the grounds that the wedding rings were goods got under false pretenses. “In order to get a girl for a wite, or capture a man for a husband, men and women camouflage every taste, thought and feeling, and pretend to be what they think the other one wants them to be until they make the marriage ceremony nothing ‘but a gold-brick transaction. “Under such circumstances, pledging a couple to ‘love, honor and cherish’ each other is like giving a signed blank check to a stranger, who may bankrupt the trusting giver. “Instead of trying to hide their real natures from each other before marriage, it shouli be a time of the fullest self-revelation for people. “If there exists incompatibility of temperaments; if they hold different beliefs. and look at life from a different angle; If they have different Ideals and aspirations; if they even have different tastes in cooking, and a different God, instead of concealing it, why don't they turn the spotlight on it and see that they were never destined for each other, and that they could never |live together in peace und harmony? “Before marriage is the time for peeple to lay all of taeir cards on |the table and call the game off before they have gambled away their happiness. These are true words, and worthy of serious consideration. Especially do I commend them to the voung. for it is true that most marriages are contracted on a basis of misrepresentation that would land the perpetrators in jail If they carried or any oth busing as crookedly. Pl 7TAKE courtship, whose basis. is a propaganda of lies. The young man who tells a gir] that she is the most beautiful creature in the world, and that she has eyes like violets, and that she is so different from all other women, doesn't believe a word of what he is saying. He has seen dozens of prettier girls, and she is twin sister to a score of other girls he knows, but he knows it makes & hit with her to muke her believe that she has hynotized him. So &he marries him under the deluded belicf that she has. cast a spell over him that makes him sec her as she would like to be, | instead of as she Is. . Before marriage men are reckless about the way they spend money on a girl. They lavish presents on her. They ride her around in taxies and | cars, MARCH 12, 1924. The Home Art Scheol In‘reading a well known book I was especially impressed with the statement that a child’s first five, years are de- voted almost entircly to art, after which it is dropped almost entirely out of his life, unless, in after ycars, he becomes a student of art. A Nttle child draws quite naturally and unconsclously. Glve a mere baby a pencl) and he or she will scrawl a house, a deg, a boat, a man, a train. To make a picture of something is al- most the first impulse of a child. After school age, however, almost no attention is given to heiping a child express its own vision. An occasional hour spent in drawing cireles, cubes. triangles and other forms is about ali | he gets. As a consequence, most of us, who used to draw with joy and with- | out fear when we. were very small, are | helpless and self-conscious now when we try to draw what we see. Some friends of mine who spend their summers in an art colony (although their art is music) have established in their own home an art school for the children of the neighborhood. A tal- ented young artist comes one after- noon a week and ‘“criticizes” their drawings or sketches In color, giving them careful intruction, yet leaving them free to work out thelr own | swall inspirations. They are taught Y| How do you know scathing denunciation every now and | then. “She knew perfectly well that {1 wanted tosbe queen and she pre- {tended that she didn’t. Mabel Gilligan Just father is her father wouldn't care so much only why doesn’t she tell the truth about it? | Some church member!” hy she | that part to Mabel Gilligan? | the lady tell you? Unless she did you don't know. And if she did you | probably do not know because You | have little basis for understanding the lights and shades of neighborhood | life. You know little of the pressure {and the weight of responsibility these { older ones are carrying. They have their reserves. They are entitled to them. 1t is the idea that thay have them and keep them from you that makes you so tempestuous in your wrath against the story-tellers.” The thing for youth to learn here is that the truth is naked and not to be looked upon because of its glory. Seldom is it revealed to men. They | but approach its radiance and are blinded and bewildered by it. In our evervday living we ap- proach the light as near as we ean and light our little lanterns as best we may. If we can carry a flicker of it we are donig well. If one of vou youngsters by accident got hold of @ bit of truth you would hurl it from you in terrer. You couldn’t stand it. 1 know you don't understand but 1 thought 1 ought to warn you against talking so loosely about what you don’t understand. (Copyrigh | i | ! Early Days and Ways in Washington. Letters written during the presidency of James Monroe by Representative 'Phomas _Hill Hubbard of New York. These letters, addressed to Mrs. Hub- bard, picture social and politi- cal life in the National Capital of a hundred years ago. February 6, 1818, “You are mistaken about m¥ being on the committee of claims. My busi- ness is to investigate the expendi- tures in the Post Office Department. To be on one committee at once is enough in all conscience! We meet almost every day soon after break- fast and adjourn to meet the House at 12, where we are usually occuplied until sundown. Our dinner, therefore, is late. At 7 we take a cup of tea. I never eat anything after dinmer. I WHAT TODAY MEANS TO YOU. BY MARY BLAKE. Pisces. ‘ Vibrations today are inimical to peace of mind and to general business success. Avoid hasty, impetuous ac- tions, as there is a great danger of 2ccidents. Be conservative and re- strain wrong impulses, A child born today will be healthy and of a sunny disposition; not, pos- sibly, capable of anything really great in the way of achievement, but ra- diating happiness and contentment. 1f today is the anniversary of your birth your disposition is probabl one that is envied by all those witl whom you cofme in contact. You are even-tempered and kindly both in thought and action. Children and ani- mals always run to you and trust you. Your character, in spite of your Jovable disposition, is by, no means ‘weak. You have very decided views as to the right and wrong. As doing the wrong thing generally hurts some «one, you, as a result of your dispo- sition, invariably do the right thing. In business you have mever achieved any outstanding suctess, and many people have taken ndvantage of your good nature. You often feel hurt, but never feel resentment, or seek to be vindictive. In social life you ar® well and af- fectionately thought of by all vour friends, and your ¢ompanionship Is freely sought. All your friends when Sh trouble seek you out, and make a tather confessor of you, as they all realize that, even though you cannot always prescribe a remedy for_ their trouble, they will feel all the better for having talked éver their fca- ments with you. : In home flifé, it you have ehosen the right mate, and {0! Probably have, you always find that happiness gets happiness. Your mate will, as Bight follows day, respond te the “sunshine” treatment, and yout chil- @ren will éver remember the happy times of their youth. Yours is a life to be envied, even though you may not be overburdened with- this worid's goods, as, when misfortune or trouble comes to you or yours, your optimistic cheerfulneéss, converts the misfortune into & bless- ing in disguise, and your contentment of mind takes the sting out of all le. > Vel known persons born on this date are: Thomas Buchanah Read, ar- tist and poet; Louis Prang, art lithog- rapher; ?:0-‘- El Rowes, sol- dier; lement Studebaker, wagon manufacturer; Hilary A. Herbert, law- yer; Simon Newcomb, astronomer, Oopyright, I998) find that it is all habit, and since 1 have been here suppers have not been fashionable. Coffee I have discarded. I drink two cups of tea In the morn- ing, very weak, and usually eat a light breakfast. My health is per- fectly good. To oblize you all, as well as myvelf, 1 shall attend Mre Monroe's drawing room on Wednes- day evening next. On Monday eve- ning T attended Mrs. Bazot’s part She is a niece of Lord Wellington a most attractive woman, February 21, 1818, “On Tuesday I made one of a large party at Gov. Middleton's, in George- town. He was formerly Governor of South Carolina and is now a mem- ber of the House, and is a most pleas- ant, gentlemanly man, His family are with Rim and he has taken a house in Georgetown on the hill. The hill is studded with a great many elegant mansions affording the most delightful seats imaginable. In plain sight are these of Commodore Porter (Commodere David Porter) Hull (Commodore Williss Hull) and Rodgers (Commodore John Rodgers). “There was a great crowd, and Mr. Talimadge and myself took French leave before supper. I was introduced to Commodore Rodgers, Porter and Woolsey (Commodore _Melanchton Teylor Woolsey). Gen. Brown (Gen. Jacob Brown) made a great figure with two of his staff, Cols. Wool (Gen. John Ellis Wool) and Jesup (Gen. Thomas Sidney Jesup). A son of Marshal Grouchy of France was present and is said to resemble his illustrious father very much. “Yesterday I dined at My. Bagot’s with 2 party of fifteen genilemen. Mrs. Bagot was the only lady pres- ent. She was dressed in a white gown, and over it a thin, almost trans- parent lace crape or gauze, the bosom and neck quite bare. On her head she wore a kind of small turban of white satin and bracelets at the wrists. I was seated néxt to her for near an hour, dufing which time we talked almost incessantly. She is a pretty woman, and the style of her face is mueh like yours, but not so hand- some! The plate throughout was sil- ver, both for dinner and dessert. After the' meats were removed we had sal- ads and fruits. _After dinner she showed me pictures of the Princess Charlotte, Princé Lebpold, the M quis of Wellesly and Liopd Welll t ‘The Princess Charlotte strangely bles the wroyal family of Eng- land, but was not so handsome. came away at halfepast 8, much Fratified with my entertainment. evening we had a fall of snow 8t two Inches, and this morning I have been to the war office (one mile) in a sleigh. A sleigh is unusual here.”, My Neighbor Says: ‘Wash your face with oatmeal instedd of eoap and you will find that your skin is soft. Take a square piece of muslin and in- to it put about a tablespoon of Gatmeal. Tie the muslin nto a bag. Before washing, put this in & basin full of warm T and &8 s0ofl as the water R Crauniy eloaned shns ul y elean e with Xerosens and’ they ity keep clean for a long while. When making a cup of edcoa add a tiny plece of cinnamon. It will greatly improye the flavor. 'o_make old olléloth lool Uke new, give it & thin toating of varnish, allow this to dry mg then give & sdeond coat. 'hé eecret of fFying Ash crisp and brown without either egg or bread crumbe, is to dry well, Sprinkle both SIdes With Plenty of flour and plunge it into boil ing fat. Be sure the fat is boil- ing and have plenty of it, as upon that depends the crispness and brownness. Wats that meen? she s Why, you haff t the Test-out of 3, dont you Well; all rite, throw it up agen, Mary Watking Wich 1 did, t did it do but come down tales agen, Mary Watkins eaving, There, now that de- cldes it. Lets anake it the best out of 5 1 3 O, Im_perfeckly diskugted with vou, Mary Watkins sed. And she went in the house proud and I started to go to the Little Grand by myseif, think- ing, Aw heck, wat do I care, Im no m lonair. | Wieh 1 aint. COLOR CUT-OUT Trading Back Again. to have i ! i ! “Billy Cut-out, you never do use that nice red flannel marble bag T made you,” sald Betty one day. “Now that new boy, Terry, has a red bag and he uses his.” Billy looked very guilty. “I wonder where Terry got his bag?" asked Betty, growing suspicious. 'Well, T'll tell you,” explained Billy, 1ooking more uncomfortable. “I sort of loaned that bag to Terry. ‘Humph,” Betty sniffed. “Guess you don’t care much for It Billy bounded off to 100k for Terry. {He found him in a suit of his “old | eountry” clothes down on his knees playing with his precious marbles. ay,” shouted Billy. “Will_vou take my jackknife for that bag? My | Bister's” mad 'cause I traded it | Terry decided it was a zood bargain. | Billy certainly was relieved to get his y | bag’ back again. Here you see Terry's suit with the | blue trousers and cap and orange socks. He's trying to decide if the |Jackknife is a 004 swap for the bas, (Copyright, 1924.) Apple Meringues. Pare and core some tart apples, place them close together in a but- tered pudding dish, fill the cavities with eugar, lay a small piece of but- ter on top and flavor with a little nutmeg, ainnamon, lemon peel or vanilla. Cover with a plate and cook in the oven until tender, but not broken. Sauce—Into one pint of hot milk stir half a cupful of sugar, a pinch of salt and the yolks of three cggs. Pour this over the apples, place the idnn again in the oven, and when the custard has set spread with a me- ringue of the whites of the eggs and six tablespoonfuls of sugar, and flavor as preferred. Pace in a_ moderate oven. Cook for eight minutes. Serve with cream. . Z R N Corn and Cheese Souffle. Melt one tablespoonful of butter and cook one tablespoonful of chop- . ped green pepper in it thoroughly. i Make o sauce with one-fourth cupful lfl( flour, two cufuls of milk and one cupful ©f grated cheese. Add one cupful of chopped canned corn, the ! cheese sauce, the yolks of three eggs and half & teaspoonful of sait. Cut | and fold in the stifly beaten eg® | | whites Turn the mixtute into a but- tered baking dish and bake In a | moderate oven for thirty minutes. jMade with skimmed milk and with- ut butter, this dish bas a food vaiue Signtly in gxotas of & Dound of beef a pound of potatoes. Delicious Combination. Make some chicken,or ham sand- wiches and toast them., Lay a thin lgtéip of fried or broiled bacon or a little melted cheese on the top of eath sandwich. Serve them with bahana fritters made as -follows: Split the bananas lengthwise and foll them, first in a little flour, thi SR L cream has! an: in _chopped nuts, and fry them of sprinkle the chopped nuts on when the dish is ready to serve. Reo should be served with this dish, ' | stop the clock. { has got by spend far with the result th life by finding tha that the man shy ore than they can afford. ace mi 1 a They take her to high-priced restaurants and cabarets. Alway ght had ample means is as poor as Job's Often they they are liberal and generous, any a woman gets the shock of her tightwad instead of a spender, and turkey. Then what is a proposal but a fraudulent, met-rich-quick proposition, with nothing but honest marriage pro He never says 1 am selfish much money ve to put u u will need th ir 4 sal to back it girl nd have brilliant pr otta of a girl falls fo JOR are women any more honest wi never really seen the real wom: gins to wane and she takes off her that the face that and work h 7 Probably no man ever made an Mary. I have got n mean and cantankerons disposition. and stingy and only moderately trustworthy 1 don't make ts, and if you marry me you'll rd. and wear shabby clothes, riselda.” ure of love and devotion, and vine- . and that 15 what the poor simp 0spe . . th men n he hand Why, the average man has until the complexion, and he finds Also, he finds out about the same time that the matrimonial bargain he < not as was represented in . for one thing, that the girl he 1o se before him. Likewise by being so sweet and looking 80 soft an her to his taste. miable that bu ble that h But before he has been married a an unsuspected temper concealed abou her w she has set about te religion to his necktie. ange everythi Certainly no other one thing in the world would do so much to make | happy marriages as for men and women to be honest with each other before 1 But there would be mighty few marriages if they knew befores | marriage. 1 hand what they were getting! (Copyrigh BEDTIME STORIES Getting Settled. Fnongh's enough. and wise is he Who s content fhat this shail be. uny Meadow Mouse., Never had the Green Meadows sesn more excited little people than were Danny and Nanny Meadow Mouse and their five children on their return from spending the winter in the Sunny South. At least it was the re- turn of Danny and Nanny. The five children were born in the great man- bird way down in the Sunny South and never had known any other home. So they were as excited as their fa- ther and mother. You remember that they had all left the great man-bird while the aviator and his cousin, Farmer Brown's Boy, were greeting each other. Finally Farmer Brown's Boy happened to re- iber that Danny and Nanny had been taken away in the great man- bird in the fall. “How long did you -ep_those two Meadow Mice™ h asked, i I've brought them back with m exclaimed his cousin. “And, what is more, I've brought flve more. They were born In the airplane. Come over and Tl show them to you.” So they went back to the airplane and the aviator rapped on the side of the little cupboard In which Dan- ny and Nanny had bad their home. Of course, no one came out, because no one was inside, “That's queer.” ex- claimed the aviator, and slipped his hand inside. He fcit all around, and such a funny lock as orossed his face' “They're not here!” he exclaimed. «What do you know about it, they're not here! Those little scamps must have climbed cut while we were talk- s e Menau for a Day. BREAKFAST. Oatmeal with Cream Creamed CMN:;’%B":&\AH Orange an Tap Zossk Marmalade Coffes LUNCHEON. icken Consomme Olive and Cheese Sandwiches Canned Pears Cookles Tea DINNER- Celery Soup Boiled Shoulder of Lamb Brown Gravy Creamed Cauliflower D it Padding d Indian Baked Totteo MARMALADE, - en - of seed] orSotea 1 Sgtapetruit "and 2 lemons. Wipe Lho‘n all with 5 iy otk Tt g hat wi Bheciiest size of your food chop- per. Take the seeds out of the pefruit and lemons. bowl on a chair just below yo‘:: food chopper to catch thla Jul > that FIng Ceoia S nd mad cover with col and add ¢ sugar. Bol cookEs. cup of butter, oS Jear und when creamy § cges, 1 tablespoontul of milk a the favoring. powdet o * e ixcure Add to_the mi little- more flour to and %% “tne consistency of Sough, roll and cut with cookle Do not mix the trim- ith the fresh dough, all until the last DELMONICO POTATO! o each pint of cold boiled potatoes, cut finé or mashed, Pota b of milk, 3 tablespoons of butter, 1 teaspoon 0! salt, 1, teaspoon of pepper. Season the'potatoes with salt and pep- per, pat them in a shallow. :: - Do P3lsh, which bas been e over | Bemtiion the butter, in a quick oven. and that. many respects. He had been led t led to the altar looked upon him as the girl had “sold” herself to him, commercially speaking, tter wouldn't melt in he e never doubted that mouth, and could ‘mold menth he has found out that s it her person o far from ¢ ng about him f he had that she is as set in king him perfection, n his politics and DOROTHY RIX. t, 19821.) BY THORNTON W. BURGESS ing. T wonder If they knew that they were back home. Perhaps we'll find them back in their nest in the morn- ng." & But they were not _found in their nest in the morning. Danny and ) ny had had ail the fiying that th wanted. Such a busy night_ae thej had put in! First, they had had run along all their private little paths just for’ the sake of seeing them again. Some of those little paths wer already to get to. In many the FIRST THEY HAD TO RUN ALONG ALL THEIR PRIVATE LITTLE PATHS, new grass had already begun to spring up. “My, my!" exclaimed Damny, “we've got to get to work right away. It will never do to have these little paths in this condition.” “But first,” declared Nanny, “we've got to have a home.” “1 suppose we can go back in the great man-bird until we get a new home ready,” ventured Danny. “No. sir! No, siree!” exclaimed Nan- ny. “We are never going into that great man-bird again! It might carry us offt t as it did before, and then might never bring us back again. Now that I am back I am never, never go- ing to leave here again’ So Danny and Nanuy went hunting for o place for a new home, and the five. childrgn obediently followed them. In a fence corner they found a pile of cori talks. They made a passage under this pile until they reached the middle. “This will do until we can find a better place. It will do very i " declared Nanny. Danny agreed, and they went to work at once. All night they worked, and by the time jol round, bright Mr. Sun began his daily ¢limb up in the blue, blue sky they had a new home under the pile of cornstalks. Nanny sighed happily as at last she curled up to rest. ‘“Theré Is no place like home, is there, Danny?” she squeaked. Danny agreed that there is no place like home. right 1924, by T_W. Bus CRANBERRIES are not only good themselves, but they make other foods taste good SAVE THE TROUBLE OF COFFEE MAKING- USE uatonglons € IT IS MADF, JUST DISSQLVE ~AND DRINK IT. A GREAT CONVENIFNCE AND OH. SO GOOD! w to draw from lifé, one of the older onos posing for the class. Some- times the mother herself comes in and pose Thege children are learning to handle a pencil or brush with freedom, joy and a certain amount of skill. Their inter- | est and delight are great. Meanwhile, | it is a great help to the aspiring young art student, who may wish to teach one of these dayx and who is making & lirtle money to help pay his own tuition in the art school. There must te many such struggling young art- | irts who would gladly teach a class of children one afternoon a week. and | the effect upon the children them- telves would be invaluable. { honeymoon | launched a thousand ships for him fs often enough to ' By Vyvyan. Recipe for a New Hat. and asked nothing better of fate than to sit at his fect and burn | | | | | | I Take Ann. Put a small tight-fitting cloche on her head, making suie toat § covers her eves and lh»l Then an | de of her hat, | it_completely { upper half of her face. | enormous bow on the j#o that it completely covers the half of | the half of her face that's left, thereby | leaving onlv a quarter of her face; and { that's all there is; there isn't any more to_be seen. Then if the question arises, how old 18 Ann? you'll know she might be any age between eight and eighty. But yow'll_never Enow—till she takes her hat ofr. Oatmeal Crisp: Take one tablespoonful of butter end cream it with one cupful! of sugar. Add two eggs_ well beaten | and one teaspoonful of vanilla ex-| Mix two teaspoonfuls g powder with two ext ized Is of rolled cats. Drop the| batter from a teaspoon onto buttered tins and bake the es in a mod- erate ov Keep them in a tin box. eupfu You choose fine FEATURES. When You Try "SALADA" " El LA uers you will realize the difference between “Salada”and “just tea.” If this Signature C. %% ore is NOT on the Box, it is NOT BROMO QUININE “There is no other BROMQ QUININE” hmm&fchmthnooumadacmyulqfid mm' remedy for Colds, Grip and Influenza, and as a tive. The First and Original Cold and Grip Tablet Price S0 Cents HICKORY .. GARTERS Oh, how awful to have a stocking come down—right at school—in front of everybody! Children are so sensi- tive, but Hickory Gartersare safe. The strong, smooth pin never bends nor gives away—the patented clasp holds the stocking securely. Made of genuine . Hickory Elastic. Emphasize Hickory. A.STEIN & COMPANY GOCAGO YORK. W 4 Hickory Under Waista Hickory Baby Pants Hickory Girdle oty A AV toilet soap ~for your hands ~ Yet in the dishpan they are exposed to kitchen soap an hour and a half id your OW many times a day do you H wash your hands—ten—fifteen? Each time it takes you two or three seconds—and every time you wash your hands you use mild toilet soap. Then, wheh you do dishes what hap- pens? You take your bar of kitchen soap —and in its harsh, drying suds you keep your hands an hour and a half every day! them with your fine toilet soap. Of course your hands get rough and red. Use Lux for od. dishes. Lax w::;: imj t oils that i easy on yout hands s fine toilet soap. 4 teaspoonfuls a day of Lux into your Keep the big new on sink—then you won’t have to bring the regu- la¢ sive Lux from the bathtoom. Lever Bros. Go., Cambridge, Mass. of that dishpan look