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WOMAN’S, PAGE Slip-On Silk Sweater for Golf By Some one commented the other day on the fact that, usual as knicker- bockers had become, one never saw them worn on the tennis court. Odd this may seem, since no sport requires Ereater freedora of motion. 1f even a champlen tennis player can get along With the hindrance of skirts, why can't skirts be endured for w THIN SILK SWE WITH TWEED SKIRT WORN FOR GOLF. dening, amateur nd other occupations for which women nowadays feel that s are indispensabl further pointed out on this crior decorat- knicker It was PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM Whee-zz, Whee-2z. nursing a recurring “‘win- or “dry catarrh” or chronic or bronchiectasis, take my nd don't read this. It will only your animosity, and goodness uws T have nothing against you as lonz as you don’t come wheezing around about the bad weather we have here at oy For ten vears T have been trying 10 tell you how to get along without | ch concern about your bromicle toobes, and you have set me down as a erank with queer notions because my teachings have not always coin- cided with the almanacology of the subject. Most of your life you have constantly exercised ~ yourself * to avoid drafts, damp and changeable weather and com- fortable underwear, these being the nain _prophylac precautions laid down for you. Now, if in spite of all this thoughtless care and coddling you have acquired a fixed cough and maybe an indiyidual line of wheezes by way f accompaniment, 1 do not blame you for it. 1 don't even say I told you so. 1ut tell me, is it fair to'ask me to sym- pathize with you? No. Let the doctors ind the health teachers who taught you Tow to acquire bronehitis~ or Tronchiec ze with you. They're strong hy. 1 have no- ticed ~Plea; ture_treatment,” has bronchiec nicans dilatic irlyfrequent It you ter cougt Vronchi adviee 00 “mpath 1 sympat] - tell the doctors about the pos- writes tubes, a ! urrence in chroni onchitis.) ““Osler has it in his book. (Not in my copy, though the great toicher mentions that change of pos- ture often brings on severe coughing znd the expectoration of a large quan- 1ty of sputum.) “One physician who iissured me he was making a special study of my case, never had heard of ile had me sitting up in bed or a chair with backrest and pillows, when as raising several cupfuls of sputum chronic bronchitis with ration, whether any are dilated or not, com- of expe nchial tubs MARY MARSHALL. oceasion that while women didn't wear knickers for tennis they did for golf. But, as a matter of fact, it is now smarter to wear a skirt even on the links. It isn't a matter of pro- pricty—but one of smartness that really determines this question of knickerbockers or skirts with most of us. . There is nothing the least bit strik- ing or original about the zolf get-up of the best-dressed women Following the English may wear a tweed suit w shirt beneath, or you may select the costume chosen by the smart French or Italian woman when she plays golf—namely, a narrow, short skirt with a thin. silk slip-on sweater, ai- ways with long, close-setting sleéve Freferably thin_ silk sweater shows ne ripe nor application of any ornament. For cooler days it hanged for a sweater of wool. At the neck a handker- | chief—not too large—is knotted. There | pull-on gauntlet gloves, wool and silk stockings, heavy oxfords, and a simple hat of the pull-on sort—pref- erably of lightweight felt. (Copyright, 1924.) Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. liced Oranges. v Cereal with Cream. ced Lamb on Toast. Doughnuts, Coffee. LUNCHEON, Asparagus on Toast. Coffee Jelly. Chocolate Feather Cake. DINNER. ed Fowl, Caper Sauce. ench Fried Potato. Tomato, Chestnut and C alad. Cheese. lery Crackers, Coffee. MINCED LAME. Mince the lamb, but not too fine; add salt, pepper, a drop or o of onion jui Put on the spider with a teaspoonful of butter, a teaspoonful of flour, milk enough to moisten. Cook a few minutes. Serve on s of buttered toast. ATHER CAKE. Sift together one and one-half cups of frour, one cup of sugar, one teaspoontul of baking po der, three tablespoonfuls of co- coa. Beat one vgg very light, add three tablespoonfuls ~ of melted butter, one-half cup of milk. Add to the dry mixture and beat well. Flavor. SALAD. Cut a slice from the stem end of round, smooth tomatoes; scoop out the seeds, sprinkle inside with salt, invert and drain. Cover one half pound of chestnuts with cold water, bring to the boiling point, boil hard for five minutes, then re- move the shells and skins and €lice. Add an eq amount of diced celery moisten with cooked d ng, fill the toma- toes with the mixture and dis- pose in nests of lettuce leaves. BRADY, M. D them to assume an inverted posture for five or ten minutes at that time and again at midday and again before retir- | ing, or better, half a dozen times every day. At least a posture which favors drainage from the bronchi through the mouth. Sometimes this most easily effected by hanging the head and shou ders over the edge of the .bed, resting the forearms on the floor. Sometimes the knee-chest posture preferable. Head stands, somersaults and the dachshund crawl a number of times around the room are stunts which i terest victims who have mnot yet wheezed their way into the chimney corner. These latter methods are mot for grumpies with frail dignity and brit- tle arteries. All that wheezes is not old. Of course, these postural maneu- vers induce coughing—that is necessary to assist the drainage of the bronchiec- tatic cavities. Another thing I've urged for many years is that subjects of chronic bron- Cchitis_or bronchiectasis, if not phys cally disabled, should take the air every day. An optical dealer furm and sewing glasses” dollar a pair. The glasses magnify slightly. They are indiscriminately sold without examina- tion of the customer's eyes. ;‘)0 suc| glasses injurc the eyes, of are they safe to wear” WL M. r—For elderly persons such | are harmless if they give e vision younger persons s glasses are worse than going without Vision is a precious thing and | of better treatment. | es “‘reading 1 have a hair dye ana- afraid 1 am developing I want to be sure it is Mrs. B. A Q. ‘Where can lyzed? T am 1 poisoning not the dye I use. er—A chemist The Connect popular hair dyes and hair “tonies” co tained lead, some contained silver ni- trate, some wood alcohol and a danger- ous staining agent called paraphenylen diamin. You would find the chapter giving the reports in ‘Nostrums and Quackery” instructive. This is a book compiled by Arthur J. Cramp, M. D. and published by the American Medical ‘Association, 535 North Dearborn street, a coughing spell on'rising monly morning. Not a bad habit for in the BEAUTY CHATS Can I Grow Tall? I believe that hundreds of young girls have asked me that. Can a young girl who is undersized add an inch or so to her stature? I believe e can—by takinz exercise. Most queries come from {ven o eighteen. There is always Jope for them, for most people do 1ot reach their full height until they Nite twenty-one. Of course, heredity s0 much to do with it, {hat there 1¥%itthe hope for a child of short parents, who is shori when half srown. Yet how many men over six feet come from undersized parents! “The only general rule is that the nor- mally healthy, well nourished men nd women who get a decent amount Of exercise are tall. And under- 1.0ourished children, deprived of enough fresh air and sunlight, able to play only in cramped spaces, are usually dersized. N hey say that the Japanese chil- iren average a couple of inches taller nee Japan was opened to civiliza- ion. They say the children in the <chools in ‘slum districts, when given scientific feeding and exercise, grow ialler than the children where such Jiumane experiments arc not tried. They. say the western men are taller than the eastern, farm laborers taller than factory workers, etc. Ao T womla suggest to every one +who wishes to add an inch or so go 10 a gymnasium, or form a class imong your own friends, or plod ong by yourself—but take exercises. umb-bells, stretching the arms over the head, lying on the floor and stretching the whole body as much an possible, walst-bending exercises, ieep-breathing exercises—these are all easy to do. Play tennis, play #olf, or any game that gets you out of doors. In these days of country «lubs, such sports are within every- ope's reach. Treating the Neck. Every time the face is given a treatment, the neck should receive some attention also. It takes practi- | ence in their appearance. Chicago, 1l (Copyright.) face itself is being coated; it takes very little extra time to massage neck wrinkles at the same time face wrinkles are being treated. ‘When the face is powdered, the neck should be powdered, too. Many women spend hours a week worrying new wrinkles’ into v.hnrl faces while they assiduously 1ub! away old ones, and never even look | at their necks! But a black dres: Fubbing against the neck, will wo dve well into the pore: even white, | if it rubs too hard, will make a sensi- tive skin brown. Cleansing cream is as necessary, possibly more mec- essary to the neck than to the face. One of the good things about the new printed_and batik silk scarfs that every one is now wearing is that the silk, which holds dye well, will keep the coat,and the woolen dress collars trnl:ln wdrking dust and dye into the skih. An old neck needs a fairly vigorous and very methodical treatment. It must be massaged with a flesh build- ing cream, and it must be treated af- terward with astringents. It is not difficult; one need not know compli- cated massage motions. Rub across the wrinkles and rub with a circular motlion of the fingers. If the skin is dry or the neck badly wrinkled, leave the cream on at night and bind the neck loosely with old linen, so it can take up the beneficial oils during the night. Use cocoa butter if the wrinkles are very deep, and ice rub afterward. Don’t have an elderly neck with a young face. Avoid tight or high col- lars, which make the neck old, and dark colors, which are unbecoming and which stain the skin. Red Hands—If you could protect vour hands with rubber gloves during part of the hours they must be in water, it would make a great differ- After you are throuzh immersing them for the YOUR HOME, AND YOU BY HELEN KENDALL. Sweet Boy Graduate. We hear a good deal every year, about this time, of the “sweet girl graduate” You might think that only girls graduated from high school or college, or at least that only the £irls counted. I really feel that a little mnre attention should be given to the "sweet boy graduate"—how ke would hate me if he should happen to see that phrase! A young chap just finishing high school is often a curious compound of modesty and importance. He feels just as keenly as a girl does this parting of the ways and the big step that is ahead of him; but he loathes 6214 having a “fuss” made over him, and affects an air of casual indifference that he Is far from feeling. He may choke up a bit ever the resounding Wwords from the rostrum and his chest may swell his diploma; Bt he i bbing. his elbow into the ribs of the fcllow next him and es foolishly into the atly clad callow youths a_background for the 1s who are the real show! difficult ordeal for him difficult for his prou; other. It scems to me thing they can do is to subtie dignity and narrow shoul- ves resolutely. se will make a hearty hand- cluding a modest k and a masculine word of con- ratulation, with a “reg’lar feller rom mother, will show him that they appreciate what it means to him to leave the past and look toward the future. Of course, a good deal depends upon the individual boy. I know of one whose solicitous parents had made him deceptive and rebellious by treating him as a child, and who was transformed by a change of policy at the time of his gradua His father began to confer with him in- stead of issuing orders to him, and his mother encouraged his bestowing attentions upon her instead of show ering them upon him. The recogni- tion_of approaching manhood gives voung graduate a sense of his re- sibility and value to others, and period is often the frequently mentioned “turning point in his career.” What Today Means to You| BY MARY BLAKE. asp from da Gemini. Today's aspects are distinctly un- tavorable for any new ventures or en- terprises. No efforts, along unproven | lines, should be initiated. Abgve all, nothing of a risky or hazardous na- ture should be attempted. Caution and deliberation are earnestly recom- mended. Toward evening, conditions improve, and counsel the considera- tion of new ideas. A child born today will, with proper care, “time table” babits and diet, develop into a strong and healthy | adult. Tt will have a cheerful dispo-! sition, and be very insistent, as well | as persistent, in trying to have its| own way. This tendency. which will | reveal itself in early infancy. must be carefully watched, and, ~whenever necessary, effectively corrected. It must be taught to obey, and to show a proper regard for other people's feelings and wishes, so that, at its majority, it will be able at least, to zovern itself and. if necessary, to ex- act obedience from others. If today is your birthday, are you not too much swayed by your sur- roundings, too much influenced by others, too willing to efface yourself and too lttle assertive of your own thoughts and jdeas? . Your conscience is an active one; our principles are sound; you very however, emphasize your con- ientious beliefs, or proclaim your ciples. This hesitancy does not se from any sacrifice on your part of either fundamentals or convictions, but from a natural dislike of self-as- sertion. Nothing is more conducive to an in- harmonious atmosphere than blatant cocksureness—either in word or ac- tion. On the other hand, failure to fight for what you know and feel is right often makes you an unwilling accessory to that which is wrong. In the home. in the office or work- shop, in civic life, you should capital- ize (in the best sense of the word) vour innate sense of what is right and proper, so that your outstanding characterlstics—so sadly needed in to- day’'s topsy trmfl. world—can exert their relative influence. ‘Actions speak louder than words, but words—carefully chosen and mot too aggressively used—are often needed to emphasize an action which might otherwise pass unnoticed. ‘Well known persons born on this date are: James Barbour, statesman. former Secretary of War and United states minister to England: Robert nrad, lowyer and author (was may- or of Philadelphia): John Jacob As- tor, 3rd, capitalist; Willlam J. Dema- rest. publisher and reformer, founder of Demarest's Magasine; Minot Sav- age, Unitarian_clergyman and au- thor; Caroline Hazard, educator, for- mer president of Wellesley College. (Copyright, 1924.) The Guide Post By Henry and Terttux Van Dyke “For freedom did Christ set us free."—Galatians G.1. After all, the surest way to be artificial is to try to be’natural ac- cording to some other man's recipe. One reason why the wild children of nature attract our eyes ard give us an inward, subtle n in watching them is because they seem so confident that their own Wway of doing things is, for them at least, the best way. They let themselves go, on the air, in the water. over the hills, among the trees, and do.not ask for admira- tion or correction from people Who are differently built. The sea gulls flying over a busy port of commerce or floating at ease on the discolored, choppy, churned- day give them as much ofl as the pores will absorb, and in between times when you have left the water temporarily, use any of the almond honey lotions, as they are taken up cally mo extra time to cover the garoat with cold cream while the by the skin very auickly and leave the hands very much refreshed. up waves of some great river, “Bordered by cities and hoarse With a thousand cries,” are unconscious symbols of nature's self-reliance and content with ancient methods. . ‘| tet of women appointed by President (A D. C STAR, WASHINGTON DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Wife of the Man to Whom Marriage Is Just an * Annex to His Bachelorhood—How Can She Tell When She’s in Love? ]DEAR MISS DIX: Iam married to a man who loves me and wants me, yet doesn’t want me, If you can understand*what I mean. Before I married I worked hard and saved enough money to furnish a five-room flat, so we have a beautiful home, which I delight in keeping, as I am'a home-loving But although my husband earns a fine salary, he is angry at me because I will not work outside of my home. He owns a car, and belongs to the lodge and goes fishing and hunting. I never kick about his fishing and hunting trips, but he spends too much at the lodge. My husband also insists on going out nearly every night alone. He never wants me to go with him anywhere, although we have been married only a little over a year. Do you really think he loves me, or that he just wants me and a home when he needs us? 1Is he trying to hang on to his bachelor freedom with one hand and his wife and home with the other? B. l Answer: You have said it, B. You have evidently had the ill luck to marry one of the men who can never be perfectly domesticated, and who consider a wife and home as an annex to bachelorhood, not a substitute for it. To such a man a home is merely a place to go When other places shut up; a restaurant, where he can get quick lunches without the bother of ordering them: an asylum to which he can flee when he is sick and old. That type of husband regards a wife merely as a domestic convenience— a combination of cook, valet, nurse and companion, and he feels that she should ask no higher privilege than just waiting with a glad, sweet smile of welcome on her face for him to come home when he gets good and ready, and that being married to him fs picnic enough. Apparently your husband goes even this selfish type of husband one better, for when he insists on your going to work outside of the home he expects you to pay your own way, and his as well, in addition to the labor of keeping the home. And I should think that a self-respecting female worm would get her back up at that. Such a man may well ask himself what his wife is getting out of [ marriage, and why she wants to keep on with such a poor paying job? For trying to make a home for a husband who eats and runs is certainly no alluring prospect. No man gives a woman a fair deal if he marries her before he is ready to settle down and do his part toward making a happy home, and unless he cares enough for her to want her socicty and is willing to be a fireside companion. As long as Ris enjoyment consists of running around at night, and he prefcrs the company of men, he should stay single. Tt is a lonesome and dreary thing for a woman to spend her evenings alone, and not even a wandering husband is liberal cnough to be willing for his fe to amuse herself in the way he is diverting himself Making a happy home i s man’s place to help do it as it nan’s, and men responsibility in this matter before they get married. As to what a woman shall do who is married to 2 man who wants to | be both bond and free, that is, of course, for her to decide. Sometimes one of them is worth waiting for, but generally the wife is wise to make her husband take his choice between her and home and his old cronies and the street. DOROTHY DIX. [DEAR MISS DIX: Will vou please answer the following questions for me: 1. How can a girl know when she is in love; or in other words, how does a girl know which is Mr. Right? 2. How long should a girl go with a fellow before she lets him kiss her good-night? 3. Which are the most fickle, young men or older men? i 4. How can I tell when men are kidding me? Don't you think men ask too much when they want to monopolize PERPLEXED. It is just as much the | should consider their p affair. a girl? Answer: 1. Just because vou enjoy being with a man and like to| dance with him and enjoy going around having 2 good time with him and want to put yvour brand on him and keep him away from the other girls is no sign you are in love with him. But when you find a boy that vou Wwould rather stay at home with and talk to than go to a party; when vou begin to think about saving a man's money, and when you think more about his happiness and pleasure thun you do your own, then you may safely conclude that you really love him. When you find a man that your head and your heart both approve of you may be sure he is Mr. Right, but mainly vou will recognize him by just something in you that makes you feel that he is it, and that causes some little two-by-four shrimp to look better to you than a Greek god. Love is like the flu. You may have a lot of attacks of it that you think is Jove. just as you call a bad cold the flu, but when you are stricken down by the real malady you know you've got it, and it's fatal. ‘The length of time a girl should go with a man before she let's| him kiss her good-night depends on how long it takes her to get engaged o him. 5. The younger a man is the more fickle he is. Youth is changeable because it is in a state of evolution, and what it is crazy about one day it is tired of the next. The older mun has made up his mind about what he wants, and is not likely to change, 4. Itisa fe bet not to believe more than half that a man says to you, and to-discount that half. Apply a little common sense to all of a man’s jollying. and decide how much of it is reasonable. Men are certainly very unreasonable in demanding that a girl shall give up other men Tor them until after they are definitely engaged to be married. and « girl who does so is very silly to make such an un- | even bargain DORUTHY DIX. 1 . . i EAR MISS DIX: If. when you are zoing along the street, a_ strange man tries to flirt with you, what should you do? WAITING. i Answer: Pass right along and pretend not to notice it. If the man follows you up, call a policeman. The best way to deal with the masher is simply to ignore him, unless he persists in his attentions. A girl who keeps her eyes straight before her, and who does not herself have a wandering eye out for affairs is generally sufficiently protected by her own dignity. A wise old man of the world once said to me, “Ignore the men who try to flirt with you and who try to tell.you off-color stories. Préténd not to understand. There arc very few men low enough to try to force themselves on & woman, or who have the nerve to try to explain a smutty story to a clean-minded girl.” DOROTHY DIXs “JUST HATS” BY VYVYAN. | Fish in Potato Cases. | This.makes an attractive and deli- | clous dish for breakfast or luncheon. | Select some large, well formed pota- toes. as nearly uniform in size as possible. Scrub them thoroughly and bake in a hot oven. When done split |in half lengthwise and scoop out the inside without breaking the skin. {Turn into a hot bowl and mash thor- {oughly. Season with salt, pepper and | butter. Add just enough hot milk jto make a smooth mass, but rather jdry. Beat with a fork until very | light and pile in a neat border around | |the edge of each potato shell Also | place a thin layer on'the bottom of | the potato shell. Arrange the shells | on a baking tin and in the hollow | | center of each place a small filet of | white fish which has been rolled and sauted while the potatoes were be- | ing prepared. Drop tiny bits of but- | ter on the border and a few buttered crumbs on the fish. Slip into 2 hot oven or under the broiler to brown lightly. Creamed fish may be used | {instead of the filet. Instead of the fish an egg may be slipped. without | Dbeating, into the shell. For luncheon sprinkle grated cheese over the egg and on the borde; Try Velvet on Your Hat! A touch of velvet, now that we're well into June. It sounds unbeliev- able, but that is what is being shown in the smartest shop windows. Velvet on summer hats. Whether it is worn or not is beside the question. The point is that a bit of velvet is being used on the best of hats. Here is pictured a hat with a wide brim, with one side covered with wide vel- vet ribbon. 3 Favorite Recipes of Prominent Women BY EDNA M. COLMAN. BAKING POWDER UOVA DELL INFERNO. Mrs. Thomas G. Winter, Clubs. Mrs. Winter heads a mighty host of two and a half million women in the membership of the General Fed- eration of Women’s*Clubs. This, the largest organized body of womea in the world, comprises twelve thousand clubs, embracing the leading women of the nation. Mrs. Wintef was one of the quar- JUICE OF LEMON WHITENS SKIN The only harm- less way to bleach the skin white is to mix the juice of two lemons with three ounce: Harding to the advisory council of of Orchard White, the limitations of armament confer- ence. She is also a noteworthy writer and speaker. Born in Albany, N. Y., reared in California, educated at Wellesley, and an instructor in a Boston school, she took into her club work in Minneapolis a high type of culture and efficiency. - When traveling about she collects with _her club data any choice re- cipes which she thinks the family may enjoy. A trip to Italy brought the following: Uova Dell Inferno—Put one-fourth cupful of olive oil in a deep frying pan over a quick fire. Add salt to taste or one-half teaspoonful, and a liberal dash of cayenne. When oil is hot cut Into it three onions and three large peeled tomatoes. Cook until tomatoes are quite tender; then into the bubbling mixture break eggs, as many as are desired, and cook to the desired degree of firmness. Do not stir eggs. .Serve, sauce and all, on oast. (Coprright, 1924.) and you have a . whole quarter-pint of the most won. derful skin whit. ener, softener agd beautifier. Massage this sweetly fragrant lemon bieach into the” face, neck, arms and hands. it can mot irritate. Famous stage beauties use it to bring that clear, youthful skin and, rosy-white complex- lon; also freckle, sunburn and tan Bleach. You must mix this remarkable lotion yourself. It can not be bought ready to use because it acts best imme. diately after it is prepared. Orchard White | tomorrow and stay all day. | cups. TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 1924, COLOR CUT-O0UT Betty Cut-Out at Wedding. There were to be two flower girls at Cousin Alice’s wedding, and Betty Cut-out was one of them. The other girl, whose name was Margie, she had never seen before, but they soon became the best of friends. Margie lived only a little way from Viewport, where the wedding was to be, s0 she could come to spend the day with Betty, who was to stay all week at Cousin Alice’s house, and then she went home in the evening with her father in their automobile. One day Margie came running up to Betty. “Oh, Betty, Cousin Alice says you can go home with me Won't that be fun?’ So Betty ran to pack {Ber little traveling bag. Betty Cut-out has light vyeliow curls and pretty pink cheeks. She is wearing a bright blue dress. Cut her out and mount her. (Copyright. 192) et sy Cheese-Currant Pies. Take two cupfuls of thin creamed cheese—that is, cottage cheese mash- ed smooth after adding sweet cream— one cupful of sugar, a pinch of salt, half a cupful of dried currants floured with one tablespoonful of flour and three egg yolks. Beat the yolks wel] and stir all together. Pour into a crust and bake. ‘over with meringue and brown lightl; e Coffee-Tapioca Dessert. Haye ready iwo cupfuls of hot. clear -coffee. Add half a cupful of pearl tapioca aund let cook over boil- Ma sent me on a errand this after noon and I was interrupted half way by stopping to watch a electric man thing up at the top, and after that 3 strange kids kicking a football er round invited me to get in it. Wich I did, and all of a suddin | remembered I was on a errand ony 1 couldent remember wat the errand was, 80 I went home agen &and ma was in her room and I called to her insted of going in, saying, Hay ma 1 tell you 1 was. in a hurry for that’ ma_sed. For wat? I sed. O, try to tawk sents for once, bring it_right in heer, ma sed. Wat did you fell me to get, ma? I sed, Well for mersev sakes, have you gone and got me the rong thing after me £oing to the trubble of repeating it about 6 times? ma sed. No mam, I sed, and ma sed, Then bring it in to me insted of standing out there argewing like a bump on u og. Well wat was it ma, T just want to be sure, T sed, and ma sed, Well wat do vou think it was? packidge of sewing machine needles, 1 sed, and ma sed, Well for pity sakes, does a spool of number 6 pussywillow wite imbroidery silk sound like a packidge of needles. Do you axually meen to stand out there and tell me Youve brawt a packidge | of needles? she sed. | No mam, I sed, und she sed, Then pat_in oodniss name have you rawt? Nuthing, 1 havent went vet, but Im going now, 1 sed. Wich I quick did before ma could think of a anser. and serprize her, the only trubble being 1 serprized her too mutch by bringing back number 5 silk instead of num- ber 6. ICED curable, inz water until tender, stirfing occa- | sionally. least two hours for cooking. The quick-cooking tapiocas will cook in half an hour. When done add half a cupful of sugar and turn into glass Serve with cream slightly whipped. For cake icings and fill- ings and for toppings of cake, custard and other quickly made desserts. Mavis Chocolate Sauce is GUARANTEED to please you or the dealer is authorized to refund your money INSTANTLY. Requires No Preparation l- Sold Everywhere 3 . and other complexion #lis and gives your skin an appearance of entrancing beauty. Made in white, flesh, rache!. Send 10c. for Trial Siew Ford T. s & Sen, Newr York City Hopkinn ! Gourauo's AL._CREAM Pearl tapioca will take at | Mothers! Have ‘Boys — Girls Win Big Money Prizes The Pioneer Products Co., makers of Chex—the amazing new toilet soap with deodorant properties, now on sale at all Drug and Department Stores—are pledged to give to children, or adult: $150 in money prizes—to those who co rectly solve a Picture Rebus-Puzzle and write a good sentence regarding. Chex that may be used slogan. If your boy or girl wants a radio a tennis -th,V..pnu outfit or mons for a summer ‘vacation, this will be fine opportunity to win. It will teach your child to reason and think. See Friday's issuss of this paper— look for “Big Chex-Rebus Advert ment.” 1 ran all the ways there and back to | T XA is the most refreshing, economical and delicious summer To be convinced — Try it. * MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. The Teaser. clime up a telegraff pote to do some- | Well its time you came back, dident | | | One mother says: My little Son teases his sister, and she comes running to me with com- plaints. I believe that the teasing as much her fault as his, for she took easily angered. In a frank with her I had her tell me exa ¥ the subjects he teases her about. | | explained to her that most of these things she ought to laugh about, and that when she showed no annoyance | her brother would quit. There are [certain things he OUEht not to tease her about, and he is not permitted | to do so. ‘Otherwise she must defend herself and is not allowed to run to | me to complain of his slightes: texs- |ing, as she once did g { Bacon Fritters. 1 If the supply of bacon is short it | can be stretched by making into frit ters. They are aiso helpful if one's palate or eve objects to the fat of bacon, which, however. is a very valuable food. Any good fritter bat ter may be used. It should stand for |at least two hours, and may even stand overnight. HSe4 e pro- ‘THE NEW “WHIRLWIND” Electric Vacuum Cleaner Ask for a Demonstration The brushless nozzle of the powerful WHIRLWIND Electric Cleaner not omly Lint Bluc Rin Suggestions e NEexr time ump, meaty green olives give flavortosALAD s removes all clinging threads, bairs or and deeply embedded dirt. but is so dosigned 15 to get uader the edges of ports, desks, etc. This nozzle is also provided with a soft robber bumper which prevents scratching baseboards and furniture. Sold with at. tachments or without, peyment plan if desired. on the deferred NaTioNAL ELECTRICAL SuPPLY i 1328-30 New York Avenue HELLMANNS . BLUE RIBBON | Mayonnaise you make a salad, mix some plump slices of green olives into it. That tangy flavor blends right individuality to salads, « of flavor that forms e . It gives an tantalizing sort quick friendship with hunger. 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