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WOMA N’'S PAGE. Carpet Bags Come Back in Favor . BY MARY MARSHALL. Some one ought to write the story of the evolution of the overnight bag. Why doesn't th Phy thesis? Certainly original and diverting. he cave woman jus that there were fig where the house party was g take place, and let it go at that. The Queen of Sheba saw to it that some dozen or so of her camels were laden her With additional raiment from ardrobe, and then felt frec to as long as Solomon urged her. And what an array of bags and boxes, chests and packages would there be in the collection? Until quite recently it did seem as if the 1 word in" overnight con- traptions was the box shaped like a Mminiature suit case, silk lined and fit- ted with necessary toilet articles. But the carpet bag has been revived, and the woman who keeps up to the latest fads in all her accessories carries one whenever she makes an overnight Visit. Yes, it really is a revival of the old-time carpet bag that seemed so hopelessly out of fashion. Only it is not made of ordinary carpet, but of and-made tapestry of the sort that the French call grand or petit poin To do embroidery is, you know, Guite the fashion again. But the 1y up-to-date woman does nbroider her own underthings or ork on white table linen. Instead he works in all sorts of rich and orgeous colors on canvas stretched 'n a frame, following a most intri- “ate pattern in tapestry or needle point. This fad doubtless came from ingland, where many members of the royval family and aristocracy have been encouraging a revived ay ery, seeking to go back to quisite work of the Middle Ages for their patterns. Seats and backs of chairs, tops for divans, panels for fire screens, and table covers are among the subjects chosen. Now you may show your ingenuity by embroidering BEDTIME STORIES Secret of That Stone. To guard your tongue is alwass w You know not always what son f Timmy Skunk atience usually brings reward. Peoter Rabbit patiently waited and watched Jimmy Skunk digging under a big, flat stone on a sunny bank in the Old Pasture. He felt sure that it he waited long enough he would fi @it why Jimmy Skunk was worki £0 hard. Jimmy isn't given to doing 2ny more work than he has to. There nust be some good reason for him to dig like this on a hot day Jimmy stopped digging. He reached | AN PETER, OBEDIENTLY. in under the big, flat stone and pulled out something. Peter couldn't see what it was, but he knew it wasn't a fat beetle. It was something white. Jimmy pulled out another just like the first. He kept on pulling those Wwhite things out from under that big, pat stone. Peter started and stared, and grew ore and more puzzled. What those things could be he hadn't the slight- est idea. At last his curiosity could stand it no longer. He hopped over 10 the big, flat stone for a good look the white things Jimmy Skunk had pplied out. Hi “JUST HATS” BY present-day some Young student of anthropology choose subject for his doctor of philoso- it would be made sure trees growing ing to not | interest | in really expert and artistic embroid- | the ex- | eyes opened very wide. | OVER! AND MI BROWN LEATH YELLOW AND FITTED WITH fALL TORTOISE SHELL BRUSH, COMB AND MIRROR. BAG OF IATURE S TAP IT CASE OF R LINED WITH the sides for your own tapestry over- night bag. Only you must call it your “carpet bag." (Copyright, 1924.) * BY THORNTON W. BURGESS Why, those are eggs!” he exclaimed. Of course,” replied Jimmy Skunk. What did you think they were? ‘1 didn't have any idea,” replied Peter. “But they are funny | eggs. How long they are! | esgs are they? How did they happen to be under that big, flat stone? How did you know they were there? What are you going to do with them?” Jimmy Skunk pulled another egg out from under the big, flat ston “There,” said he, “that is the last. Then he turned to Peter with twink- ling eyes. “Asking questions, Peter, is the best thing you do,” said he. ) one at a tim. “Whose eggs Peter, obediantly. “Mine,” replied Jimmy Skunk. “Mine, and there are 14 of them. What a feast I'll have:!" “I know they are yours now that you've got them, but whose were they in the beginning? Who laid them " persisted Peter. “Why, Mrs. Blacksnake, of course. Who did you think laid them?" re- plied Jimmy Skunk. “I didn’t have any idea or I wouldn't have asked,” retorted Peter rather crossly. “How did they happen to be under that big, flat stone?” Don't ask foolish questions, replied Jimmy. “Of course, Blacksnake laid them there. It was @ good place for them. It was warm and dry there, and she thought she had them well hidden.” “But how did you know they were there?” Peter asked. “You toid me,” Skunk briefly. “I didn't do anything of the kind!" retorted Peter, indignantly. “I didn't know they were there.” “You told me that you saw Mrs. Blacksnake come out from under that stone, and that was quite enough. I guessed the rest,” explained Jimmy. So you see you really did tell me where those eggs were.” “Huh!” grunted Peter. *“Now that you have got them what are you go- ing to do with them?” Jimmy grinned broadly. ing to have a feast. | me?” said he. (Copyright, are they?" began Peter,” Mrs. replied Jimmy “I am go- ‘Won't you join 1924, by T. W. Bargess) My Neighbor Says: Bedrooms should be well ven- tilated. If an open window makes too much of a draft on the bed, fit a board six or eight inches high and just the width of the window below the lower sash. This gives a constant Four rows of ruffed lace decorate this high hat for evening. Three rows of Jace stand up, and the fourth turns , €own over the eves. A flat streamer of hce falls over the shoulder. THE GUIDE POST By Henry and Tertius Van Dyke A workman_that needeth not to be @shamed —11 Timothy 2:15. The idea that labor is a curse is qne of the most disastrous concep- tions ever entertained by men. And this despite the fact that it seems to be justified by a verse in Genesis, considered quite apart from the clear feaching of the Bible as a whole. exchange of air between the two sashes, slightly warming the air as it passes in. Remember always that “va- riety is charming,” and when a room has been cleaned, change the position of the furniture and pictures. Often by this means a picture is noticed and admired afresh. when otherwise it would probably escape atten- tion from the very fact that it is always in the same place. Put a little butter under the spout of the cream pitcher be- fore placing it upon the table. The cream will not -drip over the buttered line and greasy spots on the linen will be avoided. Silver spoons, match boxes, vinaigrettes and other small trinkets may be easily bright- ened without the addition of plate powder by placing them in an aluminum receptacle and pouring boiling water over them. Polishing -should be ef- fected by means of a plece of clean chamois, but in adopting this treatment it must be re- membered that the silver should never be allowed to become tarnished. . MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN, Lost Articles. One of the glories of America is fhe honor that it gives to the man Who works. And what is there in the honorable titlo of “workingman” that should Feserve it for any one kind of work? Or_what is there about any task which should make it menial, if it Be done well according to the cap- sksities of the workman? s not the writer a laborer among words and ideas as much as the man who swings an axe or lays bricks is also a laborer? The very place where the chemist works—laboratory—is indicative of efforts and toll. The idea that “ladies and gentle- do not work is silly. is one of the humbugs charac- ristic of certain Kinds of society. Some people are obsessed with the thought that they should not work nless they have to. By which they freduce man’s labor to the mere re- ponse to an economic urge. The true lady or gentleman al- lways works, knowing that labor— fiike life itself—has more than a'm: erial base. e - ACOPYDEht, 1924) mimmns One mother says: My children bring home lost articles that they have found on the streets or in some public build- ing. I'always offer a prize to the first child who finds out the rightful owner. No matter whether the article is of great value or-little, we make a com- plete search. If ne owner can be found I put the article away and teach the impressionable - young girls and boys that they must not use things that do not belong to them. You can scarcely estimate the value of such & lesson in Fightful ‘o a Now ask those questions over again, | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1924. Ma was down town this afternoon and she came home just before sup- PIr, pop saying, Meny have no rites €ny more. we mite as well all take an overdose of laffin gas and leeve the werld to the wimmin. Wy Willyum wat are you tawking about, this is a mans werld, tvery- body says so, ma sed. It use to be, maybe, but no more, Pop sed. The wimmin are runnin everything nowadays from elevators to polliticks, and the last straw was applicd this morning wen I wawked into my barber shop and low and be- hold there was a blg overgrown Woman sitting in my favorite barber's chair and I had te sit down for 20 minnits like a big stiff and wait for | her. Wy dident you let one of the other barbers shave you? ma sed. That has nuthing to do with it, its the principle of the thing that I ob- { Ject to, pop xed. Well wy, Willyum, I dont see eny principle attached to it? ma sed, and pop sed, Certeny you dont, and thats jest ware the principle comes in. You wimmin think you can get away with merder and nobody awt to notice it. Wy dont you put on falts mushtashes and start to walk erround smoking cizars? he sed. Now thats ixaggerating, ma sed. Lots of men like with bobbed hair, she sed. And lots of wimmin would like men with long hair. I suppose, but does that prove enything? pop sed. Certeny it does, ma sed, and pop sed, Wat, for instants? It proves wats fair for one is fair for all. ma sed. And enyway you'll soon get use to bobbed hair and in fact ou'll haff to she sed. O, will I wy #0? pop sed, and ma sed, Because 100k, hee hee. And she | quick took off her hat and heer her | hair was bobbed, making her look all | afrerent. | How do vou like it, Willyum? ma sed. 1 wont be able to eat a mouthful of suppir. pop sed, and ma sed, Dont be redickuliss, we have Hamberger stakes Wich we did. pop eating more of them than enybody, including me. YOUR HOME AND YOU BY HELEN KENDALL. Willyum, wimmin | The Magic of Order. | There are two axioms that apply par- ticularly to the problems of the wife—+cleanlinesa is next to godl and “order is heaven's first la; the two, 1 am inclined to think the lat- the more important. Dust and disturb a home maker consider- {ter s dirt | ably, it is true: but confusion, disorder and “muss” can drive her to a distrac- tion which renders her unfit to cope with her job. Every woman knows the frenzy of in- decision as to where to begin when she sees a kitchen table full of hastily as- sembled piles of eoiled dishes; when her living room is the wreck of 3 party the night before; when the guest rooms and other bedrooms display unmade beds with tumbled bedclothes, the dressing tables are strewn with powder; hair- pins and other debris, and fathers smoking room is gray with ashes and littered with burned cigarette ends and cigar stubs, smelling to high heaven. There seems to be only one thing to do on a morning like this—go out and Jump in the nearest river. It is on such occasions that the magic wand of order may be wafted over the scene of devastation and bring a sense of peace and quietness to the housewife. Put the whole house in @ome sort of order before you start to clean it—that would be my method. If you attempt to do any one room thoroughly,. be it kitchen or living room,’the awful state of the rest of the domain will haunt your every moment; but by making a tour of the house and putting even the unfinished work into orderly condition, you can proceed to get it all done in systematic serenity. For example, “pick up” every article in the living room that is out of place, remove the faded flowers, the candy boxes, the bridge scores. Don't try to sweep or dust. Straighten up the ve- randa and hall in the same way, hang- ing up caps and folding away sweaters, laying magazines in piles. Then go to the bedrooms, and either take off the sheets and pillowcases or open the beds smoothly to air, stretching the ‘sheets and laying the pillows straight; pick- ing up the trash on dressing table and chiffonier and putting it in ‘the waste basket. Leave the roome looking or- derly. Last of all—or first, if you prefer— put the kitchen table in' neat shape, scraping all the food off and consign- ing it to the garbage can, piling all the silver together, all the plates of various sizes, the cups and saucers and the glasses from last night's feast. Stack them close together and cover them with clean white dish towels, neatly. ‘When your mind js thus cleared of confusion, you can go back over room and clean each at your leisure. Try it. —_— Berry and Apple Jelly. ‘Wash three pounds of sour apples and cut in quarters: without peeling or coring, and remove any imperfec- tions and the blossom ends. Put blackberries in a preserving kettle with two parts of water and two pounds of berries. Let bell until the apples pulp, then put in a jelly bag and let the juice drain off. Boil the juice for twenty minutés, add an equal amount of hot sugaf, and let boil rapidly until it will jell. e 3 Raspberry Pudding. Line a small pudding digh with rich puff paste, prick with a fork and bake a delicate brown. Let cool, then ' fill - with the following: Beat until stiff the whites of four eggs and one cupful of ‘sugar, then stir in one quart of ripe black raspberries and 'hake in & moderate syen, Pities the Poor Little Rich Children .. |DorothyDix] Don’t Deprive Children of Pleasure and Privilege Of Making Way in World.- Early - Struggles Build Character. GEJIS father died when he was a boy, and left him a few million dollars, so he’s never done anything but try to spend his income,” some one said i Ing of u certain man. = !pf;:nr'ch.p! He has never had any real fun in life. It is horrible to think of a parent being so cruel toshis only child n:;:ll‘n‘::led a self-made v of a great commercial orga 0 et “any Tun to apend. money. ANl the (hrill, the excitement. the sport comes in making it,” went on the man who had made his own fortune. “Any idiot can spend money, but it takes brains and skill and finesse to make money. Spending money is child's play, but making money is the great game in which you pit all that is in you against ybur adversary, and in which you match your wits, your shrewdness, your farsightedness, your courage, your stamina, against the world. & f which you can so easily tire as spending money. Th!reT:‘:r:nlslll"l?elh‘\:: :enlly want. Food, clothes, shelter, a comfortable chair and a good bed. After we have got these, we have got all that money will buy for us. When we have eaten all we want, millions cannot purchase us an appetite for more food, or the digestion to assimilate it. We can wear but one suit of clothes at a time, sit in but one chair, sleep in but one bed. And when we have got these our money is counterfeit so far as petting ¥ more physical comfort is concerned. e Noreovar, It i one of the pecullarities of human nature that thingx are desirable to us just in proportion to the difficulty of obtaining them, and the knowledge thut we can buy anything we want keeps us from wanting things. “On the other hand, making money is a pastime in which your interest never lags, not because of the money itself, for the dollars soon come to be nothing but counters In the game, but because business is the great adventure, the great romance, and because success in business means achievement and proves a man to himsell. When he has been through the battle in which he fought up from the ranks where he was a poor, little, ragged private, to being a captain of industry, he can look himself in the face and hnow that he was no weakling, but & man. GEVERY man who makes a fortune knows all of this. and he knows that nothing his money buys him gives him the pleasure that his work di knows that nothing the world offers can give him the 4bsorbing interest that his business or profession did in the 6ld days when he was struggling for a start, and when a dollar advance on a barrel of flour, or a new client made his Leart sing for joy. “Our happiest days are those in which we are toiling with might and main to build a foundation under our castles in Spain, not those in which we loll about in the completed edifice, bored Stiff because we have nothing to do and nothing to strive for. All parents know this, and the amazing thing is that, knowing this, and loving their children as they do, they are bent and determined to cheat them out of the most interesting and delightful experience in life. urthermore, parents know that, beyond a modest competence, just enough to give them an education and a small start in life, money 15 a curse to their children. There 1s no such safeguard against temptation as the lack of the price. and a thin pocketbook is a better protection against the wiles of Satan than all the ten commandments. very tich boy is a shining mark for all the vamps in his community, and if he ‘escapes them it is nothing less than a miracle of God. ery rich girl is the predestined victim of fortune hunters, and she hasn't one chance in a hundred of marrying a man who loves her for herself, and who will treat her kindly. . “It is the misfortune of the very rich that they cannot save their children from what the movies call ‘the blight of gold.' That is the heart- breaking price that the man who makes a big fortune pays for his success, as you will see if you observe how millionaires’ sons and daughters nearly always turn out. “ T people in more moderate circumstances could avoid this terrible catastrophe if they would. and that is why it is 50 pitiful to see fathers and mothers working their fingers to the bone and denying themselves every luxury and comfort to try to pile up a fortune to leave to their children—y fortune that will not only deprive them of the greatest fun in life, but t nine times out of ten will ruin them. “Why do they wish to deprive their children of the pleasures they had? ‘Why do they cut their children off from the experiences that taught them endurance and patience and grit and self-control, and that mads them the kind of men and women they are? Nobody knows, but they do. “You will hear parents say, ‘We don't want our children to go through the struggle we did.’ doesn’t have to make his own w: big game, and parents who deprive pleasure do them a great wrong." (Copyright, 1924.) BEAUTY CHATS Keep Your Figure. The American woman, noted for her grace and athletic slenderness when young. is also noted for the way she changes when she rears a family and settles into comfortable middle age. Now, no woman need be middle-aged; that is, no woman need look it. “Old"” she must be some day, though she can push that fatal day far down the years. But the deadly middle state of round shoulders and large stom- ach, of dull colored hair and skin with brown blotches, she can avoid. The first thing to watch is the fig- ure. If you have any tendency to- ward fat, be doubly careful. A natu- rally thin woman. with the help of a decent corset, can keep her young lines 20 years longer than a natu- rally chubby one. But even she will have to exercise, lest age give her hunched shoulders and unsightly, flabby arms. It you've had children, beware of the fat that settles around the waist and the abdomen. Take this exercise: Lie on your back, on the bed or the floor, draw one knee up to your chest, raise the leg straight in the air and very slowly lower it. Repeat six times, and after some weeks 10 times. Repeat with the other leg, and then with both legs together. That's the hard part; it takes practice to lower Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST Bartlett Pears Oatmeal with Cream Bolled Bggs, Broiled Bacon Squash Biscuits Cofree. LUNCHEON Baked Stuffed Tomatoes on Toast Peach Dumplings with Whip- ped Cream Cofree. DINNER Vegetable Soup Broiled Hamburg Steak with Onions French Fried Potatoe Lettuce with Russian Dressing Apple Rie Cheese Coftee. SQUASH BISCUITS One egg, % cup of sugar, 1 heaping large spoonful boiled squash, % cup milk, % cup flour, 2 teaspoons baking pow- der and % teaspoon cinnamon and nutmeg. Add milk to squash, then sugar and ege. Sift the flour and baking pow- der and salt together, then add to first mixture. - (Spices may be omitted if desired) Beat thoroughly and bake in hot buttered : gem pans about 25 minutes. PEACH DUMPLINGS One cup of flour, 1 tablespoon of butter, 1 teaspoon of baking powder, a little salt.. Mix with milk. Raise as biscuit, drop in ‘buttered plate (tin preferred), set in steamer and steam 30 minutes, then split open, spread with peaches and cream. Cut the peaches and cover with sugar and let them stand two or three hours before using, putting on cream when serving. APPLE PIE Three tablespoons of hot wa- ter, 6 of melted lard, pinch of salt, flour to roll. For filling about § tablespoons brown su- gar, shake of cinnamon and a few tiny lumps of butter, with the apples. When top crust is, on, wet-it with thick sour milk. ‘When baked, it is a rich brown and flaky. Yet that very struggle develo character that enabled them to climb to the top of the of any necessity to struggle, and thereby souls, will make their children poor, weak, flabby just as soon as the prop of father's check book So 1 say again,” said the self-made man, “that I pity the y in the world. ped the strength of ladder, and the lack to develop the muscles of their parasites who will collapse is removed. man who He misses sitting in at the their children of this privilege and DOROTHY DIX. BY EDNA KENT FORBES both legs gradually, not to drop the weakly. But it's wonderful for man ing the abdomen flat and keeping the waist within bounds. And never for- get one simple exercise for keeping your whole figure trim, that of bend- ing over to touch the floor with the fingertips, without bending the knees, This is most valuable and is very easy to do. Repeat 10 times daily. Practice arm and deep breaking ex- ercises, t00, and you'll be pleased With the improvement in your health and your figure, noticeable within a month. Eggs a la Caracas. Put one tablespoonful of oil or but- ter in a frying pan, and when hot add a quarter of a pound of finely shaved dried beef and a tablespoonful of grated cheese. Toss lightly until the beef is frizzled slightly, then add one cupful of stewed tomatoes, a season- ing of salt and pepper, a few drops of onion juice and four €EES, yolks and whites beaten lightly. Stir and cook gently until of a creamy con- sistency, then serve. Girls Keep Your Skin Clear and Fresh No matter how well you dress, how attractive your personal- ity, or how talented you may be—one little pimple or black- head can_rob you of all your charm. For nothing is more offensive to the masculine eye than skin eruptions i~ a woman. Thousands now realize that the quickest way to banish humili- ating skin defects is through Ve-Lak. These wonderfully ef- fective tablets supply your system with certain vital ele- ments needed to keep your skin clear and fresh. Simply take two tablets with each meal Before you know it you have a clear, fresh, youthful complex- fon, free from even the slight- est defect. You won’t believe what a wonderful change Ve- Lak can bring in your appear- ance until you try it. Get it today. Recommended and sold by Peoples Drug Stores and all other good druggists. Ve-Lak Co., Atlanta, Georgia.—Adver- tisement. Clear the of = ‘h-uuu spaces v—r-' spraying BO-NO into the air. lor straying. What TodayMeans toYou BY MARY BLAKE. Virgo. Todays planetary aspects are exe cellent until the late afternoon and are fairly good thereafter. It is a very propitious opportunity for in- itlating any fresh undertaking and fayors aggressive action and force- ful ‘methods. Prudence, however, must be exercised and success can only be accomplished if aggressive- ness and forcefulness are allied with deliberation and careful thought, as risks and speculative deals are doomed to failure. If you are in doubt as to the responsiveness of the other gex today is a Kood oppor- tunity to put your fate to the test. A child born today will, after the usual ailments of early infancy, de- velop normal strength and vigor. Its character will be resolute, its disporition attractive, its mentality exceptionally bright. Kvery en- couragement should be given this child to pursue its studies along those lines for which it *hows the most Inclination, as it will only derive real success in that career for which It is, by its natural gifts and desires, fitted. “Any balking of its ambitions will only yield failure or, at best, a mediocre degree of accomplishment. If today 18 your birthday you are painstaking, conscientious and have # very keen Sense of your own duties. You, however, lack ideals— the most powerful force Known to man, more mighty than armies with banners. Low ideals, or none at all, and high station cannot long retain tompany. You must have ideals unless you are content to drift along aimlessiy. ambitionless and ineffec tually. Ideals vitalize and energiz You are, without ideals, sailing without a chart, treading an unde- fined, unfenced path from which you are constantly in danger of falling Life, barren of ideals, is as dark sky barren ot st The difference between you and a person with ideals is the difference between the person who guides his life by what he sees and knows and can touch with his hands and the person who has enough of the vis- fonary in him to adopt as his guide a dream which has not yet come true, and perhaps may never come | true. It is a difference between the Person who never gets his eyes oft material things and the person who is always looking out to the very limits of vision, even when it is realized that the distant country de- scribed can never be reached. If you always walk with your eves downward, S0 that you can see only the earth beneath your feet, you have no ideals. If you naturally carry your eyes on your mental horizon that is as far as you can see at afl, 20 yod now and then catch a ghimpse | of the sky above, you are guided by ideals. Well known persons born on this date are: Cleofonte Campanini, mu- sical director: Lydia H. Sigourney, author; Richard Delafleld, soldier and engineer; Stephen Alexander, astronomer; Rex Beach, autnor. (Cupsright, 1924.) “Human Fly" Dead of Fall. CHAMBERSBURG, Pa, September 1.—George Oakley uman fly’ of Pasadena, Calif., died here yesterday as the result of injuries he received in a fall from the fourth story of a bank building Saturday night. FEATURES. WHEN WE GO SHOPPING | ° BY MRS, HARLAND H. ALLEN: Living Up to Linings. Did you ever “buy a coat lining?" Then you're probably a devotee of lovely linings. And you know that if you buy a handsome lining for a Wrap, you are sure to see that the wrap itself, and the gown you wear under it, do not cheapen the lining. Every garment you have however simple in style, must “live up” to that lining. So, as you pause at the lining counter, select your material with an eye to beauty as well as durability. It is generally economical, anyway, to get as good a lining as you can af- ford. But it is also quite possible to get an inexpensive one that will both look and wear well. The best economy is to buy a guar- anteed silk for your lining—provided that you can afford one of good qual- ity. A good grade of some well- wearing and good-looking mercerized cotton cloth, however, is infinitely preferable to a cheap silk. Foulards and crepe de chine are rather expensive, but they are among the best of lining silks, since they are usually durable as well as beau- tiful. Satin, like silk, is lovel good satin. But loosely wg “catches on everything.” e, again, if you cannot afford the ¥t you will do well to choose your lining from mercerized materi; in satin weave Sateen, for instance, will not only outwear many a coat, but may be had in quite handsome effects. Firm weave, which will not permit of “roughing up” and pulling, is next: and then, don’t forget that your coat lining must have a fast color, for the protection of the gowns and blouses you wear underneath it. Test the fastness of the color by rubbing a white handkerchief over the cloth. If for its any color comes off on your handker- - chief you may be sure that friction {and perspiration would mean fthe ruination of any garments that come in contact with the material. All in all, the requirements of a de- sirable lining, whether expensive or not, are that it should be soft, attractive, serviceable, not easily crushed and above all comfortable AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. ‘It ain't,such u burden to keep house after vou “learn that dust don't hurt nothin® if you skip it a day or two.” (Copyright, 1921.) —e Pricex realized on Swift pany sales of carcass beef D. C., for week ending S 1624, on shipments sold o centt to 15.00 09 centn & Com- in Washingt turday. August 3 . ranged from 806 wnts per pound and averaged wer pound.—Advertisement Drink Health In a Glass of Water— Start the Day Right with ENO’S A teaspoonful of ENO'S in a glass of water, hot or cold, the first thing every morting, will effectively relieve constipation and that depression of spirits resultirg from inactive organs of elim- ination. You will be surprised hcw it will stimulate the sluggish functions into wholesome activity and how fine it will make you feel—Try it today. At all Druggists. Two sizes—ysc and $1.25. Sales Agenss: Harold F. Ritchie & Co., Inc. 171 Madison Ave., New York ENO’s FRUIT SALT - DERIVATIVE COMPOUND FOR INNER CLEANLINESS ACleanTasting,Refreshing, Effervescent Health Drink Prepared onlyy].C.Eno. Ltd., London, England X cMother/ “Guard the child’s teeth” Those tiny teeth are a priceless guard them ift — g:rell ! WRIGLEY'S is a wonderful help to keep teeth clean makes sweet and removes and sound, for it clears out the crevices, the mouth acid conditions frem which most people suffer. A prominent physician says: “It is surprising how free from decay the teeth can be kept by using gum after each meal” WRIGLEY'S is good, not only for the teeth, but for The whole family should use DIFFERENT FLAVORS- SaME QuauTy