Evening Star Newspaper, May 29, 1924, Page 20

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WOMAN’S PAGE. Girl Graduate’s Sleeveless Frock BY MARY A group of well-dressed young boarding-school girls assembled one evening recently at a reception some- what preceding their graduation. Ap- parently no instructions had been given concerning the way they should be dressed. Every girl out of the twenty-five or thirty present wore a sleeveless frock with a fairly high neckline, There is certainly nothing new about this dress. For two years it been the type of frock that young FOR INFORMAL EVE- women have worn to the theater. to dinner and. in general, for not very formal evening wear. It has been the tvpe of frock worn in the evening by voung girls not quite old enough to wear a real decollete. American women are not reputed to have very beautiful arms. That is, there are many, many otherwise heautiful and pretty American wom- en who have scre or otherwise MARSHALL graceless arms. But this doesn't seem to affect the fashion, and the young girl with graceless arms seems to be quite as much at her ease in the sleeveles frock as the one whose arms are a sight to delight the mor- tal eye. The sketch shows a frock of bead- ed georgette in_crabapple pink ove white satin. It shows the rather high neck fn combination with the very short sleeve. It is the type of frock that will be chosen by the best dress- ed.young women for evening wear during the numerous festivities at- tending graduation from schools and colleges. (Copyright, 1924.) BY MARY BLAKE. Adverse aspects prevail throughout the day and evening, making it very inauspicious for all important mat- ters. Only ordinary and routine af- fairs should engage your attention. Try and overcome all feelings of anx- jety or depression,®always remem- bering, “Behind the clouds the sun still shines,” and you will see it again. A child born today will he strong— both physically and mentally. It will, however, be subject to frequent fits of despondency and pessimism. Even in its earliest days, it will seek lone- liness in preference to the compan- ionship of its playmates. This ten- dency must be counteracted as much s possible, 8o a8 to minimize the eventual probability of increasing moroseness. If today is vour birthday, you por- tray in human form the truth of the old adage, “All is not gold that glit- ters,”” Your character and disposi- tion if allowed natural outlets, would not provide criticism nor would they, on the other hand, inspire any eulogistic paeans. They would, how- ever, invite respect and companion- ship. As it Is, the natural outlets are Closed, and a’foolish love of display easily destroys a character that otherwise would he characterized by ordinary virtues of every-day -intel- ligence and honesty You glitter, but rarely, shine. ~ Your _knowledge, though it may be, is superficia conversation. at times brilliant, is never profound; your actions, al- though they may momentarily daz- zle, mever impress. You are imbued with the sole ambition to go one better than your neighbors, and spend money and time foolishly in trying to achieve this end. Your business suffers as a result of your love of display. Shoddy invari- ably looks pretty, but substance alone endures. Your home life is a continual struggle to outshine your friends. Your children, if you have any, are used in your parade, and you Worry more about their appearance and what they look like than what they are. Mediocrity, clothed in the gar- ments of lavish display, never fools any one. Inherent worth, although dressed in modest and humble ap- parel, is easily recognized and ac- knowledged by all. i Well known persons born on this day ar James J. Mapes, agricult- chemist; Thomas A. Emmet, physiclan; Joel Benton, author. es- saylst and poet: Eugene F. Ware, lawyer and statesman: Charles F. Richardson, _educator and _author: Charles R. Van Hise, geologist. (Copyright, 1924.) it ever, visible our SHOPPING FOR THE JUNE BRIDE BY MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN. Furniture “In Relays.” 1f Rome wasn't built in a da ther was the perfect home for newly weds furnished “all-of-a-sud- den?” So, it you're a bride, and if you're buying those first pieces for vour home, don't Succumb to the lure of furniture In “sets"—buy it in relays. The bride's problem as she fur- nishes that first home usually re- solves itself into th her she may elect to have cheap “suites” in her living room, her dining room, her bedroom—which. in all probability, she hopes to replace later with bet- ter furniture—or she has the courage to face those “empty spaces” in her rooms which our American minds are supposed to abhor—and she has the even greater bravery required to let the callers, who are sure to come in a few days, face them, too! However. furnishing in relays may not be so painful as it sounds if, in addition to courage and common sense, the bride uses judgment. The best solution of the difficulty is for her t. put most of the “furniture money" available into just two or three luxurious pieces, perhaps of overstuffed furniture, fine enough to compensate for the lick of such sup- poged “mecessaries” ax sofas, day eds. fioor lamps. desks, handsome rugs and knick-knack The bride might. for instance, start with two truly beautiful chairs, fine enough to raise the tone of the liv- ever BEDTIME STORIES How Chatterer Got Even. Retribution soon or late Will be the ‘evildoer's fate. ~0id Mother Nature. Sammy Jay, the dishonest watch- man, thought himself very smart as he made his way back home to the Green Forest by a roundabout way. He chuckled all the way. He had stolen the eggs of Welcome and Mrs. Ttobin, and no one had suspected him. Chatterer the Red Squirrel had been blamed for it. So Sammy Jay chuckled wickedly and thought him- self very smart. But as Sammy drew near the hem- lock tree near the edge of the Green Forest, where his nest had been car- fully hidden, there was a shriek from Mrs. Jay which startled Sammy and P — “WHAT IS IT, MY DEAR?" HE CRIED ANXIOUSLY sent him to flying as fast as he could e his wings go. “I wonder what has happened?” tHought Sammy. “What can be the matter with Mrs. Jay? 1 wonder if she has been hurt?" Mrs. Jay continued to scream, and Sammy flew so fast that he was al- most out of breath when he arrived | ing room, and to give it “atmosphere’ in spite of other home-remodeled and repainted pleces. Books and pictures, 100, well selected, though not nec: sarily expensive, have been known to work the transformation of a room. Besides achieving real economy by securing quality rather than quan- tity in her furniture, the bride who buys “in relays” will find other ad- vantages to the system. In the first place. she has a pro- longed pleasure in the furnishing of her home, It is probable that he thrill_when each separate piece is unpacked is as great as the only- once-enjoyed delight of the bride who buys her furniture all at once. Then, the bride and bridegroom who furnish their house slowly have in the end a real home which re- flects their personalities—for it has “grown up” with them. Each well selected piece, placed just where it is only after careful consideration, and much adjusting and readjust- ing, gives the room it graces that “finished” look which a too hastily furnished room always lacks. Too often the furniture hought “all- of-a-sudden” gives the house a too- full, over conventional and utterly unimaginative effect, making it ap- pear as if fitted out by a stranger. So if vou cannot afford to buy all that you would like just at once, still yYou are not to be discouraged. It is the furniture, slowly and thought- fully accumulated, that makes 2 home which has obviously heen appointed by the persons who live in and love t BY THORNTON W. BURGESS was enough. There were no eggs there! There were some broken shells, but that was all. Sammy Jay knew then just how Welcome Robin felt. Never in his life had he been more upset. But if he felt badly, It was nothing to the way Mrs. Jay felt. Sammy tried to comfort her, but she wouldn't be comforted. “Do you know who the thief 1s?" Sammy” asked. “No,” replied Mrs. Joy, shaking her head. {1 was gone only a few min- utes, but when I returned those eggs had been stoler and no one was to be seen about.” ‘It must have been that good-for- nothing cousin of mine, Blacky the Crow!" muttered Sammy. “Yes, sir, it must have been Blacky. Tell me, my dear, why did you leave the ne Mrs. Jay hung her head. “There was a great racket going on over in the Old Orchard,” sald she, “and I just couldn’t sit still and not know what it was all about. I stood it as long as 1 could and then flew over there to see what was going on. Our feathered neighbors over there were driving Chatterer the Red Squirrel out of the Old Orchard. After Chatterer had disappeared I stopped to get some- thing to eat. When I got back here 1 found things just as you see them now. I guess Blacky the Crow must have been watching to see me leave the nest.” Just then from a short distance away in the Green Forest there was a sharp, loud “chir-r-r-r-r-r.” It was the voice of Chatterer the Red Squir- rel. It fairly rang with joy and tri- umph. No one hearing it would for an instant doubt that Chatterer was feeling very well satisfied and pleased. Sammy Jay cocked his head to one side and listened. He turned to look at Mrs. Jay and he saw in her eyes the same look of suspicion which she saw in his eyes. “Do you suppose it-was that red- coated thief?” they exclaimed to- THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ©., COLOR CUT-OUT The Little Milkmaid. The Cut-outs were busily “shoot- ing” the next scene in their movie, “Belle of the Plains.” Polly, who was leading lady, had to run home to change her dress. When she came back she was dressed as a little milk- maid, swinging a shiny pail. “Now,” directed Mack, who was running the movie, “you're s'posed to have come home from the rodeo with Daring Dick. You put on your milkmatd Polly wears a red dre with red dots. (Copsright, 1921.) ittle Benny Note:Book and a white apron Bhe alzo has & white sun- Pop was smoking and thinking after suppir and ma was looking at a book, saying, Well, Willyum, Im going to get thin at last, Im going to lose welght as though by magic Plezzant dreams, pop sed. No, I meen it, its all a question of eating, T have a wonderful bodk heer, ma sed. Wen T was a boy T had a goat that use to eat books, but 1 cant remember it made him very thin, pop sed. Now Willyum don't think youre fun- ny, because youre not, jest the oppo- site, ma sed. Benny's laffing, pop sed. Wich I was, and ma sed. That child would " laff at ansthinz, so don't tuke that as eny flattery. Did you ever heer of callories? she sed. T use to know some people name of Callahan. pop sed, and ma sed, O stop being ridickuliss a callory is the mez- zure of food value. For instants bred has eleven hundred llories to the pound. or in other werds it is rich in food value and incre: your weight to a terrible extent, and this book tells you ixactly how meny callories the are in every article of food so you regulato your diet and ony eat number of callories every meal, your weight goes down like magic. And she started to lo at the book agen, saying, Butter has 100 callories jest_in half an ounce, wat do you think f that? There are 900 callories in one cup of sugar, deer me. 2000 callor- ies in one pound of cheese, jest think. 900 callories in 2 pork chops, imagine that, I ate one pork chop for luntch today and that ment without sispecting it I was eating 430 callories, O mersey, she sed. I extracted the flavor out of a stick of chewing gum this afternoon for about 2 hours, and if there were 40 callories in every 500 chews that meens 1l wake up tomorrow morning about 170 pounds heavier, pop sed. Yee gods, 111 be a site, he sed. O hush, if you cant be serious III| jest reed this to myself, ma sed. Wich she dfd MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDR n rten and Telling the Truth. One Mother says: An aunt of my children is much dis- turbed because she thinks they do not tell the truth. I have pointed out to her that they never tell an untruth to gain an end, and that s really lying. They do sometimes make up strange stories of things they have “seen” or “heard,” but they will readily admit that the story wasn't real. In that case 1 sometimes help them elaborats the story, as I believe this encourages vivid imagination. 1 think many parents crush children’s imaginativeness by too much insistence on facts. Cucumber Relish. Large, partly ripe cucumbers are best for this purpose. Cut the cu- cumbers in halves lengthwise, remove the seeds and soft portion, then grate and measure. Allow half as much vinegar as there is pulp. To each quart of pulp allow two even tea- spoonfuls of salt, four teaspoonfuls of grated horseradish, and one-fourth teaspoonful of cayenne pepper. Mix well and bottle. If corks are used, seal with wax. Use cider vinegar. Spareribs With Onions. gether. A moment later they were sure it was, for they caught sight of Blacky the Crow high in the sky over in the direction of the Green Meadows. He_ couldn’t have stolen those egs: and gotten way over there. ‘As for Chatterer, that red-coated scamp was filled with glee. He had had the breakfast of eggs he had so wanted, and at the same time he had gotten even with Sammy Jay for in the hemlock tree. “What is it, my dear?" he cried anxiously. “What are aming so for? What is the . Jay merely nodded it ”OIID look in it driving him out of the Old Orchard. Wipe the meat with a damp cloth, rub it over with salt and flour and set to cook In a moderate oven for about twenty minutes for each pound of meat. Baste often with the drip- pings and dredge with flour after each basting. Serve with onions, boiled until beginning to be tender, then set around the_pork in the pan to finish cooking. Baste the onions when the meat is basted. ST He had just happened to be passing when Mrs. Jay left the nest, and had at once made the most of his chance. . (Copyright, 1934 by T. W. Burgess.) Kentucky’s three woman dry agents to carry firearms, relying on for weapons, which have proven effectiva | DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Should We Grieve for Our Dead or Try to Smile and Work for the Living?—Nineteen- Year-Old Mother Performs Miracles of Economy. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: I have a neighbor, Mrs. A, who has six children. Not long ago one of her babies died. Another neighbor, Mrs. B, went to see Mrs. A., and was greatly scandalized because when Mr. A. came home from work his wife met him with Mrs. B. sald that Mrs. A. positively flirted with her husband. that this indicates that Mrs. A. is a mother's natural feelings for her children, and that she does not mourn over her dead baby; but I have seen Mrs. A., when she thought she was | alone, bitterly crying and hugging her baby's shoes to her breast. Now, Mrs. A. is a plain-looking handsome man, but he has never been known to look at another woman and has eyes only for his wife. Mrs. minute you come into her home you feel cheered and rested. Do y that it is disgraceful of Mrs. A. to laugh and be cheerful In spite of the fact that she recently lost her baby? Answer: No indeed, I do not courageous woman, and a wise one, living and not for the dead. You may be very sure that her heart 18 bleeding from a wound that will never heal, but she knows that tears s0 she forces a smile to her lips and attractive for those who are still left in it. Grief can be the most morbid and selfish thing In the world. can 8o ahsorb herself in her sorrow for her dead child that she will negle her living ones. She can make her ho: children will flee from it as from a wall between her and her husband. 1 have known women who did t pride In never “gettin’ over” a death. like ghouls upon their dead. They withdrew from society. ed any merriment In them. in black, with long, somber crepe veils. houses darkened and never allo disaster ‘upon their heads. For men have philosophy enough the inevitable and make the best of it and want to take part in the ordinary come home to a wife who Is sodden Nor will down with tears. So the left alone with them, companionship_outside. Any weakling can sit down and ¢ to lay her baby to rest in its tiny bed in the g home and carry on with a smile for EAR DOROTHY DI> nineteen years of age. She is an girl. As T am considerably older than because of her love for her baby both mother and father to the chifd. her baby always looks like a milll one of the railroad offices. but still & home, pay an elderly lady well as 'she does, and I am wondering My mother says that it is because she good wife for any old bachelor. Wha Answer: T should say that your can be efther the can throw mone; until_it grows the size of a dollar. oung people who crave gayety stay omen who have made a cult of their so: while their husbands and for since her husband's d. t spenders or the cl ¥ as if it grew on trees, or they THURSDAY, a smile, and was gay and cheerful| Mrs. B. thinks heartless woman, who has none of a woman herself and her husband is a A. does all of her own work, and the u think MRS. D. L. M. condemn Mrs. A. I think she is a to realize that she must live for the| will not bring back her lost babe, and tries to make her home cheerful and | A woman ot use such a house of mourning that her | tomb. She can let her grief build a | his. I have known women who took They nursed their grief and feasted They kept their They dressed | And they always brought further to take life as it comes, ar pt | . They put their sorraws them distractions of life. No man wants to with crying and to a darkened house. in a home which is salted 1 to ows children are invartably find merrier Ty, but it takes a strong, brave woman eyard and to go back | the sake of her husband and childr DOROTHY DIX 0w with a ¥ renced 1 has been | orphan, and also a w n she is, 1 have alw he dresses well, but 15 if you is a good mi at do you sa P! nager, and would ma MR. NOBODY. mother was right, Mr. Nobody. Wome st economists on earth. Th an nurse a dima When it comes to getting tha value out of monev, women men for a goal, and every thrifty housewife performs miracles clering that entitle her to be Secretary of the Treasury. On the s. of money on which a man looks shabby hall bedroom and meals s gives him a dreary like a fashion plate and establish som. and i1l dressed, anc e sort of Few working women are as well paid as the men who work beside them yet the girls are nearly always bett iittle money saved up for a rainy day women depositors than men in the As for how your lady friend ma and herself and her child looking tid late into the night making their clotl iron at which she toils to keep her ba spick and span. Ask the basement er dressed than the men and have 1 have been told that there are r ings banks s to k 1y, ask the hes; ask the by ‘cle stores whe o ep a little home together la that she sews with and the elect zal ward for barg and the cheap grocers where she buys her food. saddened spirit, which knows every denlal of ple of restaurant meals and little treats, Any girl of nineteen who should: baby instead of putting it in an a support it and who turns a brave an nefther for help nor pity is a AR MISS DIX: Kindly settle an D brave bachelor would be lucky to get her fo men like the slushy girl, or the flatterer, or the frank . an; that she may keep ug s the burden of taking lum, who works night d smiling face on th Nobody, r DOROTHY DIX argument for us and tell us whether modest_girl? BI EY Answer: is always slopping over with romanc “no.” I think men are embarrassed faluting, poetical letters to which the goes into hysterics with joy every t any little ntion. Most American men are practical When it comes to endearments they a has to wrap his legs characters in a story say “darling around the table If by “slushy” you mean the sentimental. gushing zirl, who e and soulful thoughts, I should sa by the girl who writes them h v do not know how to reply, and who ime they come to see her or pay her 1 men, with their feet on re like Mr. Barrie, who before he can Men like flatterers when they are adroft and skillfu should be applied so artistically that it instead of a jolly. him on sweetmeats. Men loathe the faults. No man wants a woman to b her to have an honest admiration fo Any man will eat Giggles and Laughter. Giggling and laughing are two very different things. A child left to himself never giggles. He may laugh aloud and come running to tell you about the funny thing that happened, but he won't giggle. Giggling Isdone in groups; it is what is called a herd action, and to my mind it is not a healthy action. ‘There is never any real cause for giggling. It generally means that the group has lost direction, doesn’t know where to turn next nor what to do. One looks vacantly at another and giggles, that one bumps a shoul- der and, staring back, glggles. From one to the other the sign of the mental vacuum spreads and “Tee-hee, tee-be: is the burden it lays upon Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST Stewed Rhubarb Cereal with Cream Poached Eggs with Creamed Celery Graham Toast Doughnuts, Coffee LUNCHEON. Sardines Toast Canned Pears Jelly Roll, Cake DINNER Cream of Corn Soup Broiled Halibut Potato Cakes String Beans Tapioca Cream. Coffee, EGGS WITH CELERY. Cook 3 tablespoons of flour in 3 tablespoons of butter, add 1 teaspoon of salt and a dash of pepper, then pour in slowly 2 cups of milk and cook and stir_until thick. Add 2 cups stewed celery, cook 10 minutes over boiling water and spread on buttered toast;1ay a poached egg on each and serve at once. JELLY ROLL Two eggs beaten thick, 1% cup sugar, 3 tablespoons of cold water, 14 teaspoon soda, 1 tea- spoon’of cream of tartar sifted in 2-3 cup of flour. Bake in moderate oven. ~While warm spread with Jelly and roll tightly with a cloth to hold in shape. CORN SOUP Grate corn from 3 large ears and boil the cobs in 3 quarts of water for % hour, then take out cobs, put in corn and boil 20 minutes, take it up, press through sieve and return to kettle, rub 2 tablespoons of flour into 3 tablespoons of but- ter and add to the soup, stir for 10 minutes, then add 1 pint of hot cream or milk. Season to taste. Serve at once. seems r hand as Jo; who tells then him. He mere DOROTH Y merely out of yo frank wor e honest with r him. 4.) ted humanity. ggling is sheep vaeuity, so thing to do is to fill the void stantly with a_good stiff job. fatal to “What are you g about?” at brings more gigs re giggling ahout nothing ng at all—and the sensele: such £ makes any tilligent pe: and so. Thats all. Give them a ver hint that you noticed the lapse of thelr dignity. Just t. “Here, children—this pile of book (or dishes, or sticks, or whatnot) to be looked after. Here, put | the big ones there, and you, Ellen, | take these over there, and here, Pe- ter, get a chair to stand on.” Send them all scurrying and put them to work, But laughter Is.a different thing. Laughter is a healthy, cise of the soul and tt ; a child laughs he has given himself up to gentleness and kindness and | good fellowship and fun. A child cannot laugh with the sightest trace of anything ugly in his heart. For that reason a child's laughter Is to be_sought for and treasured. Not that planning for it, setting traps to catch It, laying trails to lure it, will ever capture it. Real laug ter comes unbidden and unguided. It | is as free as the bird on the wing or the light breeze that flutters the petals of apple blossoms. It is freelng_of the soaring spirit of a| child. We who listen wistfully to its | rippling merriment know it as a sym- | bol of a golden time gone hy. Age rarely laughs in the accents of child- hood. The golden quality has escaped on_the wings of the vea Wise teachers and parents know the vast space that divides laughter from giggles. Their trained cars do- | tect it instantly, but they do not al- | ways know what to d hould a child laugh in school? Yes, of course. School is part of everyday life and it ought to be enriched with peals of childish laughter. But giggles? Giggles are a sign of trouble. ~ Intelligence is slumbering when giggles abound. Ride over the top of them and give each giggler a job that will set him to work, inde- pendently of the group. The group has lost the idea that was holding it together and is reduced to vagueness and emptiness. The giggle is the protest of the submerged mind. Pull the mind up with a good smart job, Ignore the giggles. Work Kills them. (Copyright, 1924.) Broiled Eggplant. Cut the eggplant in ‘halves length- wise, then cut each half in slices half an inch thick and remove the peel. Brush over with olive oil or melted butter and pat in sifted soft bread crumbs seasoned with salt and pa- prika. Broil over a moderate fire for about ten minutes, turning often. Set on a hot dish, sprinkle with salt and pepper and dot with bits of butter. LN SR As & mark of beauty some African women stretch their lips to an enor- mous size. I have been keeping company with a voung laay Ut It | Who invited me out to her immaculate | 11 MAY 29, 1924. “JUST HATS” BY VYVYAN, Pink and Blue. If ever there was a May-time, June- time hat, this is one. The shape is an unfinished, blossom-pink felt, with a broad, flat bow of powder blue taffeta at the right side. On this rib- hon, there is appliqued a soft pink with a slender green stem and Some of the petals have fal- luckily, and prettily, the has caught them fast to the ribbon with a small French knot of green. And, by the way, felts with un- bound’ edges are the thins. A Cutting Board. Have you a little cutting board in vour kitchen? I've just made the ac- quaintance of one, and T wonder how I have spent o many kitchen-years with- I met it at the house of a friend, kitchenette to chat with her while ticed some potatoes for a salad. on the table before her lay a small lab of oak, cr by the i her kitchen tools. level and eve unsightly a small bra d ve Yet . with- notches. At s handle. v _most indispensable hen,” she told me. a small bread- vy board, and nd one things. bread- or cutting doing such atiful enam- nd n 'S it v husband to solid oak plank it with a brass drawer-handle, is the h; est wood one can get, vou know his small board can be placed on the lap, carried out to the 1ok . or laid on the ies. T cut the breakfast juice ad; 1 dice carrots, on it, chop ralsins and cut rhubarb B A thorough scour- ing removes the taint of onion from it ve quickly, nd now and then T rwh'n down with a piece of heavy sandpaper on it oranges on it for th or for fruit heets it, into ine find my husband using it, ghtening bent bits of things into shape, ing bac! pound. v board, and 1 move, in starting 1 put my eutting )n the table. It is sure to ground Wh handle find that my ry me Hot Cheese Cutlets. and a half cupfuls of milk . r, stir one-fourth of flour and cornstarch, of F If at nful ¢ 1 1 half a cupful of i milk, then cook in the hot mil £ until the mixture thicken Beat ir to a cre: two table- pped truffles »f cheese in tiny cubes. red pan to make a 7 inch thick. When | itlet shapes with a i crumb, then | with a green | m, two exg My Neighbor Says: When boiling milk i lightly with a little nd ailow it to become ot Your milk will then scald nor boil over. move e spots from clothin mix powdered French chalk r fulle earth to a paste with water or turpentine, ad on the spot, let it stand veral day then brush it off. A \lux'nml application may be needed Painted kitchen walls may he easily cleaned by closing all and windows, then plac- boiler o ter on the < and allowing the steam rom the boiler to dampen the walls. In ‘this way dust and are loosened and may ba removed with a piece of dry_cheesecloth, When i rting a tape In the neck or waist of a sure to sew it firm slot at the center-back. then be impossible for the tape to be withdrawn by the laun- dress or for it to slip into hem. When making a frill do not take one long thread for the gathers. You will find it far easier to arrange if the length i= divided into sections and the fullness arranged regularly on each. When steel knives that have n put away for a time have ome rusty put the blades in t oil for half an hour and n dig them in garden soil eral times. Polish with fina emery cloth and the blades should be brilliant. sprinkle "o T BAKING POWDER ..z AN A\ [EX Fashionable Colors Style No. 255 —“Onyx Pointex” medium weight silk with lisle top and sole.......$1.95 Style No. 355—“Onyx Pointex” sheer silk with lisle top and lisle lined sole...$1.95 At leading stores NN CI NN CI NI NS NSO NEOS= CEXIN *“Pointex" is to be had only in “Onyx" Hosiery, and is 5o marked on the heel of every stocking. AN TONY 72y CNV 7Y ONY IS ONY A O A /D ON VI ONY A ON Y AD NV, él lé’gdflfe is “to snatch a grace beyond the reach of art”—to possess the treasure of charm throughout the most exacting hours and seasons—and the fascinating Paris- ienne knows the inimitable friendliness of the rare poudres, talcs, rouges and par- fums of the exclusive House of Piver! <At Your Favorite Shop LIPIVER Faris, France (Fondée Gn I774). Dowdres de LexE Souares:ae Belo In four famous PIVER odeurs Azurea FEloramye Le Trefle Incarnat Pompeia In mew, dainty glass comtainers, with gold- fimished sifter sep, for the dressing table. In e, convemion metal containers, with nfier 10p, for the bath or ivaveling case LT PIVER.INC 118 East 16t Street NewlorkCity CBAS BAEZ,54ing Agent for US. Its flavor won the nation sixty years ago THE crinoline and wasp-waist of the sixties are now but memories, but the style in coffee has not changed. Chase & Sanborn’s Seal Brand is still the favorite, from Boston Harbor to the Golden Gate. Nor has that remarkable flavor changed. Sixty years’ experience in buying, blending and roasting maintains the high quality and un- deviating uniformity of this really fine coffee. Try Chase & Sanborn’s Seal Brand—in the sealed tin. Chase & Sanborn’s Seal Brand Tea is also a national favorite Chase&Sanborn's SEAL BRAND COFFEE Trade supplied by Chase & Sanborn, 200 High Street, Boston S #EYCEN NN VD N YA CR\ VAR VRS CN N AESCEN AEERN JEN Ny a

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