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WOMAN’S PAGE. Resetting of Wrist Watch in Fob BY MARY MARSHALL. Fickle fashion has given up her wrist watch, and instead is wearing her watch hanging from the lapel of her coat or from her belt. This should certainly not be taken to mean that wrist watches will be in any ap- preciably less demand than they have been, nor that to wear a wrist watch is now to brand one as unfashion- able. But, of course, wrist watches came into fashion as more or less of a fad— a fad that was made especially ap- pealing during the war days because the men of the A. E. F. favored them. But, in the estimation of the fashion- able ¥rench woman, no space on the arm can now be spared to a mere watch. She has so many gracelets to show that the watch seems an in- truder. Short gloves have persisted with the short sleeve, for no other reason, of course, than this -desire to display one's bracelets, and the rule seems to be to wear one’s entire col- Jection regardless of their compati- bility. Very valuable bracelets are worn along with the cheaper sort— colored glass bangles with bracelets of jewels set in platinum. The glas bracelets, however, will doubtles: soon go out of favor, since publicity has: been given to the numerous in- stances of cut wrists resulting from the breaking of these glass bracelets. The erstwhile wrist watch may be “done over” in more fashionable guise. The smart Parisian wears it from the lapel of her coat or frock. It is in “fob” effect, but in this in- stance the watch forms the pendant. Since wide leather belts have become so highly favored watches are again worn at the belt. But we do not tuck them into the belt as once we did, be- cause belts are not worn tight enough. Instead there is a pocket in the wide belt in which the watch is slipped and from the watch hangs a ribbon at the end of which is an or- namental pendant If you really do prefer wearing vour watch on vour wrist and want to wear it with other bracelets, then select one of the new wrist watches, that really amounts to a wide silver bracelet set with a tiny watch at one “JUST HATS” Pheasant Feathers and Cocoa Color A lovely loose pompon of pheasant feathers, shot here and there with touches of orange and yellow, is col- orful against a cocoa-colored hat of hatters’ plush. HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWTON. “They Shall Not Pass.” These famous words, uttered by the French Gen. Petain at the Marne, will live forever as an expression of patriotism and of determination and steadfastness of purpose that is bound to_win. But, although the French general has put the words, as it were, into the mouth of posterity, it was ages before his time that they were supposed to have been uttered for the first time. On that occasion, too, the exclamation was with reference to home soil, but in_the consensus of opinion it was in a less praiseworthy sense. It is in the Bible that we find the first expression of the sentiment “They shall not pass In the Old Testament, in Numbers, chapter xx, there is the plea addressed by the desert-weary Israelites to the King of Edom to permit the wandering tribes passage through his domain. And in verse 18 we find his answer: “Thou shalt not pass by me, lest 1 come out against thee with the sword.” Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST Bartlett Pears Broiled Bacon Buckwheat Cakes Brown Sugar Sirup Coffee LUNCHEON. . Baked Spaghetti and Cheese Corn Meal Gems. Spiced Apple Sauce Cookies Tea DINNER. Chicken Chartreuse Fried Sweet Potatoes Corn on the Cob Lettuce and Cucumber Salad Honeydew Melon Coffee BROWN SUGAR SIRUP. To 2 pounds of brown sugar 2dd 1 cupful of water, melt, boil carefully 7 or § minutes, or longer if desired, very thick, skim or strain through flannel. Flavor with extract of vanilla, 2 teaspoonfuls added when cold. Use any other extracts or add whole ginger, rinds of lemons, orange, quince parings or fruit sirups. CORN MEAL GEMS. One cupful of white flour, 1 cupful of corn meal, 1 table- spoonful of sugar, 4 teaspoon- fuls of baking powder, half tea- spoonful of salt, 1 well beaten egg, 1 cup of sweet milk and 2 tablespoonfuls of melted but- ter. Bake in_ very hot oven about half an hour in buttered gem pans. CHICKEN CHARTREUSE Two cuptuls cold boiled rice, one and a half cupfuls minced @hicken, 1 tablespoonful chop- ped parsley, a little grated lemon rind, salt and pepper to taste; cream sauce Or gravy. Grease a plain mold and line throughout with rice, pressing it with spoon to make sure it clings; add parsley and lemon rind to the minced chicken, with salt and pepper to taste, and fill hollow inside the lining of rice with the seasoned meat. Cover with a little more rice. Steam 45 minutes. Turn onto hot dish and cover completely with sauce or gravy. Fish Kedgeree. Mix together two cupfuls of cold flake flshfaone cupful of cold boiled rice, one and a half cupfuls of white sauce, one tablespoonful of chopped parsley, two hard-boiled chopped eggs, one and a half teaspoonfuls of salt, one-half teaspoonful of paprika end one teaspoonful of meat sauce. Heat to the boiling point and serve very hot AT TOP—WIDE SILVER BRACELET HAS TINY WATCH. IN CENTER— WATCH ON NARROW BLACK RIBBON HANGS FROM REVER. BELOW—WATCH FOB FROM POCKET OF WIDE LEATHER BELT. WhatTodayMeans toYou BY MARY Today's planetary aspects counsel careful watching and much discre- tion. They do not favor any gnal departures from vour usual routine, but indicate happiness and a freedom from worry if you endeavor to main- tain poise and equilibrium, even though little annovances should arise Especially should you watch your step in the family or social circle, as impulsiveness and the impetuous haste to reply will cause friction. unless this ordinary tendency is curbed and kept in check. A child born today will suffer from many ailments in its infancy, but, given careful nutrition and ample outdoor atmosphere, these conditions will be successfully converted into a well-developed and healthy maturity. Its character will be more seubborn than pliant; its disposition more peevish than cheerful; its mentality acute and progressive. It should be urged, and, if necessary, compelled to participate in childhood's sports and pastimes, as frequent association with children of its own age will ma- terially minimize the handicaps to which, under other circumstances, it will be subjected. 1f today is your birthday, you have not been as successful as your inher- | ent good qualities would justify, be- cause of your lack of judgment. Without good judgment, you may have and exercise every other talent and virtue, and yet fall short of suc- cess. Even your ceaseless industry will prove of little avail, for if you are following the wrong track, it is obvious that you will never reach the right goal. Genius itself, unless di- recteq by judgment, will accomplish no lasting results. You lack the power the judge af- fairs correctly, the power to criti- cise economic trends, the power to sense coming developments, the pow- er to size up conditions of today, and to judge what the morrow promises to bring forth. Judgment comprises more than abil- ity, more than knowledge, more than deft skill, more than conscientious- ness. You have all these, but are yet lacking in judgment. 1f you will analyze the mistakes which you now know you have made, u will undoubtedly find that you jumped at your conclusions too has- tily, or proudly ignored the advice of | others. Quick decisions are some- times successful, but very often are regretted. “Too many cooks spoil the broth,” but “two heads are better than one.” Well known persons bogn on this date are: Gardiner Greene Hubbard, lawyer, founder of the first deaf and dumb 'school; Samuel R. Franklin, naval officer; Francis Bret Harte, au- thor; Edgar Wilson Nye (“Bill Nye™), humorist; George P. Lathrop, author; Gen. William Weigel. (Copyright, 1924.) AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “It looks like ever' time I git a back-ache and don't feel like washin’, Pa gets a sanitary spell and decides to change underwear ever’ day.” (Copyright, 1924.) Tomato Marmalade. | peare THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGFON, D. C. MONDAY, AUGUST 25, DorothyDix Ma got another letter from Ant Fanny today about my little cuzzin Herbit, saying in_it, Deer Pawleen, You know little Herbit is neerly 3 yeers old now so we decided it was time to awaken his little moral sense, of wich at present he seems to have little or none and duzzent scem to khow the meening of the werd obey. In fact we have bin training him by telling him to do jest the opposite of wat we reely wunt him to do. For instants if 1 say to him, Now Herbit dont you dare let enybody wash your hands and face and espe- shilly vour ears, he will immediately start to pester me till I wash them for him, wile if I jest went about it in the reguler way both the child and myself would get totally ixhaust- ed before the job was done. However, the time has come to teech ‘him a little moral responsibil- ity, especially on the subject of the sacredness of private property, wich is a subject on wich his little mind has bin a perfect blank. 1 used a box of chocolits for the object lessin, saying to him very seriously, Now Herbit, this candy all belongs to mama and it would be very nawty of you to take even one peece with- out permission. Now Im going to leeve it heer on the table and re- member if you disobey mama you will be a bad boy and may have trou- Ilvle getting into heaven in late years, Well, in about 20 minnits I came to ixamine the box and 10 peeces were missing and gone. Of corse their wareabouts wouldnt of bin eny mys tery to me even if it hadnt of bin for the choclit stanes all over Herbits face from ear to ear. So I gave him another hart to hart tawking to and left the box in another place and left the room agen. This time wen I reterned ony 6 peeces had disap- . wich scemed to be a tern for the better but still far from per- feck, so I gave him another little lecture and put the box in still an- other place. He ony took 2 peeces that time, in fact ony a peece and a half, to be ixact, and needles to say I was highly incouraged and decided to try jest once more, and this time to my de- light every peece was still in the box but Herbit was in one corner of the room dethly sick to his little stummick, so now I dont know for sure weather he refrained on ac- count of his moral or his fizzical Bleeve me bringing up a & child is a complicated propo- sition, your affectionate sister Fanny. MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. Dividing Up. One Mother says: My 5-vear-old son is very fond of having books and stories read to him, =0, to keep this from becoming tiresome to his father and me, we each make it a rule to read from different books. Then when the boy wants the story reread the one who is not already familiar with the story reads it. This avoids the tiresome- ness of having to read a story the second time. (Copyright, 1924.) ~ Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL. Daughter Goes to College. “But, mother, how can I get along with so few clothes? You have to dress well at college or you might as well take a back seat at once. Why, Evelyn Hilburn has a new fur coat and a spiffy sport coat, three one-piece dresses, two evening dresses and any number of sport skirts and sweaters. And her blouses, mother! Perfectly lovely. She has a whols shelfful of beautiful shoes and two dozen pairs of silk stockings, besides all her wool ones. Why— The mother, looking a bit troubled, interrupted. “Well, dear, you know it is about all dad can do to send you to college at all, with Tom studying law, Sylvia taking a long course in nursing, and the little ones coming on later. We want to dress you as well as we can and give you as large an allowance as possible, but you must not try to keep up with girls of wealth, like your friend Evelyn. It will be hard to go without all the pretty things and give up expensive parties and dances, but, after all, your education must come first, and that is about all your father can manage.” This mother, like many another, was battling with one of the most difficult _problems of her daughter’s life. College means to most girls not only study, but good times—popular- ity, soroities, extra money for spreads and “dutch treats.” Not only this. but the college girl is called upon to contribute to special funds, class par- ties, club dues and a hundred other calls. The modest personal allow- Peel 4 quarts of ripe tomatoes and cut them in halves lengthwise, then slice them very thin. Add 1 cupful of raisins seeded. Put into a saucepan in layers, covering each layer with granulated sugar, using 4 pounds of sugar in all Let cook one hour on front of the stove, then move back and let simmer until the mixture is of the consistency of marmalade. Bottle while hot. This recipe makes about 2% quarts of mar- malade. Ice Melon and Fruit. Choose a round melon and cut a plece out of the skin at the stalk end about 2 inches in diameter. Scoop out all the seeds with a silver spoon. Remove the stems from 1 pound of raspberries or blackberries and sprinkle the fruit with sugar and marachino essence. Let them stand for 30 minutes, then put them into the melon. Replace the top and put the melon on ice. Serve when very eold. ance of the average girl must cover all these things, unless her father can supply her with considerable extra money. And in many cases the actual tuition and living expenses are a se- vere drain upon him. Hard as it is, a girl shculd bravely face this necessity for going without many of the luxuries that other girls enjoy, and it is the mother’s dificult task to show her that she is really getting the best of college life when she devotes herself to her studies and not to extravagant gayeties. An occasional letter, indicating the sacri- fices that both father and mother are making o that shé may get her edu- cation, will strengthen the daughter's loving loyalty and appreciation of what is being done for her. If father and mother have to go without, so can she. And their consolation is that she s bullding up a character of which they may well be proud. e S0 ST SRS Prices realized on Swift & Company sales of carcass beef in Washington, D. C., for week ending Saturday, August on shipments sold out, ranged from 9. to 18.00 cents per pound and averag ceats per pound.—Adt Mother As a Press Agent Says Her Praise Injures Don't Overadvertise Your Children, for It Will Take Them Years to Live Down the Too High Estimate. OFTEN wonder if mothers realize what an injustice they do their children by continually exploiting them as the world's greatest prodigies. course, a natural and a lovely thing, enables every mother honestly to phenomenon. Otherwise, very few of It is because our mothers saw monstrosity, and beheld a wonderful believe her 1t is, of and a direct act of Providence, that own offspring an infant us would ever have been raised. beauty in a wrinkled little hairless intellect in a countenance that looked like a cross between a cream cheese and a lobster, that they walked the floor with us when we had he colic second summers, and bore with us youngste: of nights, and nursed us through our when we were dirty, grubby little . and endured our airs and patronage when we were hobbledehoys, and as autocratic as the Soviet and wiser than Solomon. This blind love that enables eve they are, but as she wishes them to gives mothers. 1t is a miracle so s stand abashed before it and pretend It takes a hard and heartless cyn dream about her children, and so panegyric of her young, which is her patience and fortitude, and she goes have listened with breathle: stomachache, and that we are tarill Susie's new dress. .. JEVERY crow thinks Its own the wh interest to ry woman to see her children, not as be, is the consolation prize that God tupendous and so wonderful that we a faith in it that we do not feel. ic to wake a_mother up from her dope when Mrs. X launches forth on the staple of conversation, we listen with her way rejoicing, confident that we every detail of little Johnny's the marrow of our bones over ed to .. itest, and, as T have said, it is natural and proper and fitting for every mother to believe that her children would take the blue ribbon in any baby show, and for her to be absorbed in them. But. nevertheless, children a grea To begin with, she creates a children by boring us to death with them that we are sick.and tired of them. We have the overpraised place or book or dish. We are fed up on them, and somebody who is new, strange, instead of those of whose superexce satiety. when mot r harm than their mo unconscious distaste for them we want somebody her turns press agent she does her t malignant enemy could do. prejudice in our minds against her them. We have heard so much about their very names before we ever see that we have for an a change of of whom qualities diet. We want we know nothing, Ilent we have been told to Mothers often wonder why the children into their employ and give that she has queered her c The mother who is alw an irreparable®injury by Jennie as a vision of Leaut we look for superlative pulchritude, good-looking youns people we are so credit for the attractiveness that th .o raising OREOVER, mother's overlaudation old friends are so loath to take their them good positions. The answer is ildren’s chances by talking too much about them s touting her children as marvels does them expec: 2nd fascination, and John as a marvel. Naturally, ations too high. She proclaims and when we see two just ordinarily disappointed that we do not give them really possess. does her children a great wrong because it makes them ridiculous and the laughing stock of all who know them. her mother is always telling what a and soulful eyes Mamie has. and what How the world snickers behind her 1 key and who plays the piano as if mother is always boasting what a w if she would onl never at men and who neve proclaims from the housetops how po And what hard sledding for the cots mother who has handicapped him by proclaiming him a geni reads his doggerel poems to any one nimble enougl Sometimes it takes a man and £0 on the concert stage! How often we see people sneer at a homely girl just because willowy figure and what lovely hair Eorgeous compliments people pay her! back at the girl who always sings off she were chopping meat, but whose orld-famous musician Marie would be How people deride the girl who r goes anvwhere, but whose mother pular she is Loy to get a start in life who has a and who Who is not swift enough of foot and of wit to get away from her. woman half a lifetime to live down the spurious reputations that mother pinned upon them, and that made them figures of fun in their yout Out of the fullness demanding more self-control than t her to refrain from monologuing a soft pedal down good and hard when and virtues, and make the world view them with For mother is not a good press of the heart the mouth speaketh. It is perhaps he average mother possesses to ask ut her children and to clamp the she does mention their many charms but it would add enormously to the popularity of the children a Kindlier eye. agent. She overadvertises her goods. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1324.) BEAUTY ' CHATS Face Masks. Face masks are the latest cure-all of the beauty shops. ‘They are made of soft wax, clay with astringents mixed in, white of egg, or they are strips of linen, roiled over the face. If you are clever you can make your own face masks. You can, of course, buy the clay and use it ac- cording to the elaborate directions accompanying each tube if your skin will stand so severe a treatment Mine won't. I have, as a matter of business, experimented with every king that comes to my notice and 1 find them all very drying and irrita- ting, though the immediate, effect seems excellent. And elaborate cold cream rubs afterward won't soothe the irritation. 1 prefer the old-fash- ioned cream massage and linen band- age masks. There are various ways of making these face masks. One is to make a chin strap of a strip of heavy linen, gathered on one side for about 3 inches. This is to make it fit around the chin. Tapes should be sewed at each end so that the strap can be BEDTIME STORIE More and More Curious. Curiosity’s a vice That trouble will entice. —01d Mother Nature It i{s true that Buster Bear 'has a great deal of curiosity. He has much too much curiosity for his own good. Most of the scrapes he has been in were the result of curiosity. But people who are naturally ' curious never seem to learn to get over the habit. It was just so with Buster Bear. Jolly, round, bright Mr. Sun was already well up in the blue, blue sky and was shining his brightest. Buster Bear had been in the Old HE SAT DOWN TO PUZZLE OVER IT IN HIS MIND. Pasture since shortly after daylight began. He had stuffed himself with blueberries until his stomach was so full that it didn’t seem possible it could hold another berry., Buster was beginning to think of a nap in a cool place in the Green Forest. He did dislike the thought of .leaving those berries, but enough was enough. It was just then that a noise in the bushes a short distance away caught his attention. Buster pricked up his small ears and listened. There was a rustling of dry leaves, but it wasn't the rustling made by any one walking. It was z different sounding rustle altogether. Buster grew curi- ous. Slowly, taking care to rustle no leaves himself, Buster stole toward the place that sound eeemed to_come from. - Presently Buster caught sight of something red moving about in a queer way. Carefully he thrust his head through the bushes that he might see better. What he saw sur- prised him so that he forgot himselt and gave a funny little grunt. It was Reddy Fox chasing his tall around and around. At Buster's grunt Reddy took to his heels and disappeared. “That was a queer performance,” muttered Bus- ter to himself. “I wonder what Reddy was doing that for.” He sat down to puzzle over it in his mind. Then he heard that same queer, rustling sound again a little farther on. Just BY EDNA KENT FORBES fitted under ang around the chin, and then tied over the head. This does much in preventing double chins and Sagging chin lines. A forehead strap is made from a strip of linen 3 inches wide, gathered very slightly at each end where tapes are sewed. This ties across the forehead Nothing more than these two straps is really needed. To raise the sag- ging cheek muscles and to do away with lines around the mouth, small wads of absorbent cotton are stuffed under the strap, once it is adjusted comfortably, so that the extra pres- sure made by the wad holds up the sagging muscles. For mouth lines, for instance, wads would be stuffed in just under the corners of the mouth. to push up the cheeks and to hold back the flesh that sags down toward the mouth Maisie—Take a daily full warm bath, eat less of rich foods for a time and your skin will become clearer. Many schoolgirls have the habit of eating too much candy between meals which usually results in crops of pimpled ang coarsened pores. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS as before, Buster crept forward very | softly. Just as before, he saw Reddy | Fox chasing his tail. Just as before, he gave a little grunt of surprise and Reddy ran away. The same thing happened a third time. By this time Buster's curlosity was so great that he had forgotten all about the Green Forest and the nap he had intended to take there in a cool place. He wanted to find out why Reddy Fox was chasing his tail. As for Reddy, down inside he was chuckling. He knew just what was going on in Buster's mind. He had used that trick before. He had used that trick on the bank of the Big River to arouse the curiosity of ducks and bring them in where he could catch one of them. It had worked then and it was working now. Smart Buster Bear was being led on by curiosity just as those ducks had been. ; So Reddy Fox gradually led Buster Bear over to where grew the big blueberry bush in which was the i paper castle—the big, gray paper castle of the wasps. He took care to lead Buster in such a way as to aprroach that bush from the side opposite the one on which the big gray castle was fastened. From that side it wasn"t likely to be noticed at all. When Buster was where he could hardly help seeing that bush covered with deliclous, big, ripe blueberrics Reddy stopped chasing his tail and disappeared. Close by he hid where he could watch and see what would happen. (Copyright, 1924, by T. W. Burgess.) Shake & 1nfo your DRUGGISTS 1924. COLOR CUT-OUT A Boy’s Hobby. “Dick’s riding his said Billy Cut-out. His friend Ted's little sister, who was playing in the yard. looked up as Dick passed the house. “Why, he's not riding any hobby horse,” she argued, round-eyed. “He's walking on his own two feet Ted laughed. “What's his hobby, anyway?" he asked. “He's kind of a ‘queer boy, isn't he? What does he do all the time “Just wait and see. He's on his way from town now. I betcha he'll be past here in a minute or two, on his hobb: Then you can see for yourself.” hobby again,” Dick has dark brown hair. He is wearing a tan blouse and a dark green sweater. (Copyright, 1924.) Favorite Recipes of Prominent Women BY EDNA M. COLMAN. Cuban Salad. MRS. HARRY STEWART NEW, Wife of the Postmaster General. Mrs. Harry 8. New is one of the best gowned of the women of the Capital City. The perfection of ac- cessories and detall of correctness of dress for every occasion was a point of congeniality between her and Mrs. Harding and doubtless was part of the mutual attraction that resulted in such long friendship between the two. Mrs. New as Miss Catherine Mc- Lean of Toronto, Canada, member of the famous Scottish clan, after grad- uating from the Ursuline Convent of Chatham, Ontario, a branch of the ancient Quebec institution which is the mother of all of the convents in the New World, made a distinct place for herself in the world of literature in New York, first as the correspond- ent for her home paper, and next as the author of a novel called “The Woman Reigns,” whose publication about a year previous to her mar- riage made a decided stir and attain- ed best seller sales. Of late years Mrs. New has made a hobby of the Newsboys' Association of Indianapolis, of which she is pres- ident. Next to this she finds great pleasure in the camping trips and fishing expeditions which she and her husband take among Canadian wa- ters and the northern lakes. Among the dainties she cherishes for her menu list is a Cuban salad: Place minced boiled ham, 2 colg boil- ed eggs, 2 cold boiled potatoes, small leaves of lettuce and a tiny bit of finely chopped garlic in center of bowl. Cut up all ingredients to- gether and toss well with a 3 for 1 French dressing. Take 2 whole ripe tomatoes, peeled, and stuff with mix- ture. (Copyright, 1024.) JUICE OF LEMON g WHITENS SKIN The only harm. less way to bleach the skin white is to mix the Jjuice of two lemons with three ounces of Orchard White, which any druggist will supply for a few cents. Shake well in a bottle, and you have a whole quarter-pint of the most wonderful skin whitener, softener and beautifier. Massage this sweetly fragrant lemon bleach into the face, neck, arms and hands. It can not lIrritate. Famous age beautles use it to bring that clear, youthful skin -and rosy-white complex. also as a freckle, sunburn and tan ch. You must mix this remarkable lotion yourself. It can not be bought ready fo use because it acts best imme- diately after it is prepared. Orchard White In Betties Only Half Pint. .. .50c FLIES FEATURES. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. that tired feeling. Neurology today is not a limited field of practice and the doctor who professes to be a neu- rologist is really a relic of a past age of medicine. A “neurologist” is no~ better equipped and no more compe- tent to deal with ‘“nervousness” or actual affections of the nerves than a general practitioner is, though may- be the “nerve specialist” has a few more soothing terms in stock. Nervous Trouble. Many correspondents seek to con- sult nerve specialists apparently be- cause they feel “nervous.” We ought to have an institution with kindly attendants, plenty of sun- shine, vagrant puffs of fresh air, ef- ficient radio equipment and unexce!- led cuisine, and confine in it all per- sons purporting to be nerve special- ists. 1 should be glad to serve on the eleemosynary staff and keep every inmate on a standing order of | P D 5 eggs and milk, and glycerophosphates | HOW to Tell the Wonderful Story of ‘iron, lime and sodium, p.c., and |°f Life"—(Mrs. O. H. B.) bedtime doses of medinal, and 1| Answer.—I do not know of such a should be only too happy to make |booklet, but the United States Public rounds every Mondday and Friday aft- | Health Service has issued a free pamph- ernoon and exhort the inmates to be- |let entitled “The Wonderful Story of lieve that day by day we are getting | Life,” which is an outline of a moth- better and better. Perhaps that |er's talks with her young daughter would be eleemosynary psycholog: regarding life and its reproduction a notoriously impracticable thing, but | Send 55 cents to the Supt. of Docu- even o, I'd be willing to try it. ments. Government Printing Office, Diseases of the mind, including eon- | Washington, D. C., for a copy. ditions popularly called insanity My 2-year-old eon will not eat well as mental disturbances which | cooked egg in any form, but he likes are dubbed psycoses, neuroses, hys- |the raw volk with a little sugar on teria, hypochondria, feeble-minded- |t s it all right for him to eat it ness and the like, constitute a field | raw? (Mrs. M. W.) of practice for a specialist. , The field | 4o o0 T°0 7 is known as psychiatry, and the spe- % cialist is a psychiatrist (pronounced siki-atrist) or, when the case comes before a court, an alienist. In the present system of jurisprudence an alienist may be defined as a psychia- trist whose opinions are subject to check. The system h: given us such grim jokes as “brainstorm” and ‘de- mentia Americana. 1t makes the medical witness nearly, if not quite, as biased as the lawyers are. But | that seems to be the way Justice likes "em. When a practicing psychiatrist holds himself out as being a “neu- rologist,” too, he catches a great deal of busines which would otherwise not reach his door; just as the ear, nose and throat specialist does who holds himself out as an oculist, 100, There are a few eve conditions which probably depend on throat or affections, but that isn't the reason many ear, nose and throat include eye disease in their repertoir Sometimes an insane or minded person really appears ‘“nerv ous,”" or a person who feels “nerv ous” really proves to be suffering with some psychosis, but neither is that the reason why many psychia- trists bid for patrons who profess to be “nervous.” This adjective “nervous” is one of the most pernicious in the English language. It doesn't mean a blessed thing. It is a soporific word, as de- praving as dope, stultifying in its influence upon the conduct and wel- fare of the victim, an indefensible artifice for a physician to acquiesce in, except to protect a patient. A good doctor may lie for but not to his patient. Neuralgia, neuritis, paralysis of va- rious kinds and other affections in- dependent of the mind no more be- long to the domain of a “nerve spe- cialist” than does whooping cough or Please give the address of the com- pany that publishes the booklet. Napoleons. Roll some flaky pastry to one-fourth Inch in thickness and bake in two large sheets, or cut in strips about two inches wide and four inches long. | Prick before baking and bake in a hot oven until puffed up and a golden brown. Cool, and put the two layers together with a thick layer of cream filling. Spread the top with icing and | sprinkle with chopped nuts. Garnish with a candied cherr: Be Your Own | Skin Specialist New Treatment Brings' Fresh, Youthful Complexions. | Clear away every pimple. every | blackhead and every other skin | blemish almost like magic ox- | change muddy or rough skin for | a clear, smooth, velvety one. It| is delightfully easy to do. Just| take two pleasant ‘tasting tablets | of Ve-Lak three times a day, and, in an incredibly short time, blem- | will have vanished. Ve-mki ies you with certain vital ele- | very elements needed | vour skin clear and your Get a box of these | remarkable tablets from your druggist today. In a short while your fresh and rosy checks will compel the envy and admiration of vour friends. ‘Get Ve-Lak today. | Recommended and gold by Peo- ples Drug Stores and all other | | 20ood druggists. Ve-Lak Company, | Atlanta, Ga—Advertisement. | nose feebl, Juices of fresh fruits and pure cane sugar Just the thing for children. Something they can drink when thirsty that you’re sure won’t harm them. Tomorrow’s breakfast prepared with tonight's dinner—a QUICK QUAKER delight Try this new recipe RE is the richest, most delightfully cooling of hot weather HEbruHm Made of oats, it’s supremely nourishing and - e Y breakfast As e dinner ight, cook your reguiar qnamit’;uoi UICK QU (the new Quaker Oats that cooks in three to five minutes). ‘When done, pour into a pmiding mould and let cool Then place in the refrigerator over night. Cut in medium thick slices and serve at breakfast with fresh or cooked fruits or berries and sugar—float with rich milk or cream. The combination is delightful. A world noted chef discov- ered this new way. Just for the joy of it, try it. Standard fall size and.weight packages— Men‘iun:l%po;‘d‘t;lage:3pounda,1oz. Quick Inner Cleanliness will improve Your Appetite Start the Day Right with ENO'S 1f you have lost your appetite, it may be due to your body failing to apose eflectively of ehe waste products of digestion. ENO'S will stimulate and ote those orderly conditions and help you regain a healthy appetite. Take plenty of fresh air and drink ENO'S —a das{x in a glass of hot or cold water, first thing every morning. At all Druggists. Two sizes, 75¢ and $1.25. ENO’s FRUIT SALF DERIVATIVE COMPOUND FOR INNER CLEANLINESS ACleanTasting,Refreshing, Effervescent Health Drink Prepared only byJ. C. Eno,Led., London, England Sales Agents: n n Ave., New T'u:\u. Wellingron