Evening Star Newspaper, October 30, 1924, Page 43

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« pigeonholed. WOMAN’S PAGE.- ‘Monsieur Jean Patou Comes to America Foremost French De- signer of Women’s Fashions Counsels Simplicity in Dres BY LOUISE ROCHON HOOVER. HAT much overworked phrase about the thrill that comes but once in a lifetime is yet the only way of expressing the way the writer felt whi'e talk- ing to the best dressed man in France. For not only is M. Patou the greatest authority on dress for women of today, but he also takes infinite in- terest in correct dress for men, and is himself the perfect example of how a zentleman should look. Strangely, in fact. the conversation opened on the subject of man’s dress instead of woman’s. So much depends on the attitude with which men re- sard dress, M. Patou said. It is| usual for the husbazd to decide the | question, “Well, shall we dress up? And if he shics at the idea of donnine the uncomfortable stiff collar, his wife must dress informally to be i keep- ing with him, thus upsetting the #hole scheme of formality for evening. A band of fashionable yorag French- men, M. Patou told us, has organized a sort of guard for the preserva- tion of formal evening dress, and at- tends all functions where full dress is in good taste to inspire their more phiegmatic brothers to follow their ex- ample. ML Patou has with him § trunks, eontaining 60 suits, innumerable pairs of shoes and on. But in no way does he impress one as simply + dandy. He in every detail the poliched gentlema y from in- nate good taste o acquisition lacks all ous elements H s that a gentleman should be so well dressed that, in 15 minutes after having seen him, one should not be able to remember a single thing he had on. This was all extremely interesting, of course, but the thing we wanted to know was “What will smart women wear? Volleys of questions were fired at him, whether skirts would remain short, if straight lines would continue, what colors fashion would favor and o on ad infinitum. To which he answered: “You ask me for a formula in dre. There can be no formula. Everv fashion must be wdapted to the individual. Will skir remain short? That is a question o the height, the type, the ankies of the wearer. Colo Asgain it is for you to| find vour particular color and wear it. Straight lines? Yes, but with fullness cleverly dissimulated. The smart woman's gown should present perpen- dicular lines when she is in repose, and yet there should be fullness to Etve flowing lines for motion.” At this exciting juncture luncheon ‘was served and the all-important mat- ter of Spring styles temporarily We weren't willing to wait long, however. for further words of wisdom to fall and the bombarding with questions again started. M. Patou was begged for an item absolutely new in fashions, something that had never been een before and that etood out as distinctly different from all that had preceded it. “Noth- of the sort exists” he said. “Fashions are not revolutionary, but rather an outcome which takes place season after season, according to the | demands of smart women. I have | never sponsored anything startling or « theatrical in my collectio; When 1 design a dress I ask myself if T would be willing to act as escort to the lady | of who Is wearing it. That is the true test. Simplicity of design, richness of material and detail, those are the things T stress. “Each season when the new col- lections are shown in my establish- ment 1t is the weave of a material. the intricacy of a simple cut, the me- ticulous workmanship and detail which are noted. Fashion is much morc a thing of Individuality than of trikingly new lines. 1 know many mart women in France who have never changed shapes in their hats. ‘They have found a style which be- comes them, and they continue to have that same stv¥le made each sea- ot in different textures and colors. - the same with frocks. Many views a collection of chooses the on t and has it mad, up in several different materials and <olor combinations.” Tn only a few subjects was M. Patou willing to make conclusive state- ‘ments. One of them was the question of colors for street wear. Black, he sald. was losing its popularity. That is because, in France, women dress to please men, and men do.not like hlack. They prefer shades of brown or navy blue. So in the Spring we will have these shades and also some creen In France women do not dress as much for display as we do. They dress in what becomes them and makes them look smart, not in clothes that make 2 dining room full of peo- ple turn around and stare. Mile. “hanel once said that the test of a «martly dressed woman was that the could paes in a motley crowd unno- ticed, but. with tho exquisite perfec- tlon of her costume, cause a mild enzation when joining a group of those who knew. Sham of auy sort M. Patou heap materials n tional styles to startle the ignorant nd all such cxhibitions of bad taste <ome under this category. Even in welry, only the obviously false nov- y affairs are permissible. He likes tinted pearls, as they make no pre- tense of masquerading as Oriental ones, and very large decorative pearls, obviously manufactured. All Jowelry in inMtation which poses as genuine s taboo. He was asked about furs, and an- swered that they are a chic accessory, but In themselves cannot accomplish * the perfect toilette.: Used to trim in- significant materials they are gro- tesque. but as an addition to the ele- gant costume they are without rival. It seems that M. Patou’s father was s furrier and that M. Jean Patou felt that in furs alone he could not success- fully carry out his idea of dressing wom- rn better than they had cver been dress- «d before. So he elected to become 1. couturier, and so cover the entire siold of women's apparel, giving her the perfect costume handsome furs. The ensemble costume, he says, has rome to stay. It answers efficiently the needs of smart women, making them feel always at ease and well turned out. There are not more than five models in his entire collection, but they have their matching coats. He is very fond of chiffon. It of- fers such endless possibilities in the hands of the artist, while with less mxperienced dressmakers it is worth- tcss. Skilled fingers can give it the wmrace of a lavely fountain, in its soft flowing lines And it may have such Veautiful colors. M. Patou favors color in_evening swns. Then {8 the time to be color- “ul, he thinks, for as men are forever consigned to black for evening, when women also wear it the scene of fes tivity immediately becomes transformed into the suggestion of a funeral. ‘There will be many new materials this Spring. Among them, frisotta, a #11k and wool material of heavy, raised texture. M. Patou has orig- inated many fabrics, Patou crepe be- 1ng perhaps the best known of these. !He has his own mills which produce many hand-woven materials, and all ihe materfals used in the Fatou es- tablishment are either made there or scorns. ade up into sen: to offset her| | that 2 monument be A PATOU MODEL OF B z . made especially for his models other mills. Vivid color notes will be features the Spring mode. Navy blu, touched with a bit of red or green, will be smart. M. Patou has no interest whatever in the empire style of dress. Not one of them is displayed in his collection. We naturally asked M Patou what he thought of American styles, and he professed to be much pleased with them. This may, of course, have been rench tact, but he did seem very sincerc in_his admiration of American women. 1le s their silhouette is all and straight, and that it is othes for them > jazz and is him mplishment. Business o is one of the things which he says impress him in America. His own establishment run in the acme of modern system— in fact, they say that his is one of the few elevators in Paris which always run. The highest compliment which one can pay M. Patou Is to tell him that his establishment is run like an American one. No wonder that one finds the most modern of costumes in this very modern young man's collec- tion. He is getting ready to launch a per- fume, with the ensemble idea, of course, something which exactly har- monizes with the styles of some of his models. It is still unnamed, and he hopes in America to find an in- | spiring one for it Thirteen years have clapsed his last trip to Americ: a remarkable improvement in the w the women here dress now in_ com- parison to then. Whether it is the fact that many spend the Summers in Paris or because our better shops carrying fmported models he does not know, but the fact remains that there is a distinct improvement, and that is at least encouraging. In conclusion, he repeated that there is no cast Iron rule about fash- fons. It is a question of adaptability. And so he leaves us, a little wiser in the ways of good dressing, we hope, to g0 gack to France and create charming new models for his Sprins collection. That is something for us to look forward to. = since | and he sees| re | Last nitc after suppir ma sed to !pop, Well Willyum, I suppose you the slightest ideer wat day I have, too, its your berthday and I havent forgotten it, either, pop sed. Dont be abserd, T ony have a berth- day once a yeer, not every 6 munths, ma sed. Perhaps youre rite, but all jokes aside, I know very well wat day this is, its the anniversity of our wedding, pop sed. We had a wedding anniversity 3 munths ago, you crazy thing, ma sed, and pop sed, So we did, how time flies, it seems like a yeer. Well, you havent the ideer, have you? ma sed. Certenly I have, pop sed, and ma sed, Then wat day it is? Its Wensday, pop sed, and ma sed, cely remember after all, you t teasing me, you mean thing. Sure, how could I forget Wensday? pop sed. Looking as if he was trying {to remember wat about it, and ma sed, Well, are you reddy? Yes, are you? pop sed, and ma sed, All T haff to do is put my hat on. Wich she went to do, and pop sed to me, Benny, have you eny ideer wat this is all about? and I sed, Yes sir, the Hewses are having a card party tonite and thats ware youre going. Yee gods, pop sed. And ma came back with her hat on and putting It on still more, and pop put his hand on his hed saying, wata hed ake, this is awfill. None of that, now, ma sed, and pop sed, I feel kind of punk, somehow, it be a touch of my old lumbago. Tell me about it on our way to the hecrs your hat, come on, e going now, ma scd. | Wich they did. MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. slightest Avoid Abrupt Commands. One mother eays: Unless there is some particular ne- cessity for it, 1 do not give com- mands. If, for instance, I see my little son buried in a book, I do not | wait until supper is ready and then call, “Come to suppe Instead 1 prefer to say, “Finish your story as soon_ as an, dear. Supper is nearly E Abrupt commands | especiany ill timed, are likely to | be disregarded by the child and he falls into the habit of disobedience. (Copyight. ST N Red Beans With Sausage. Cook one and one-half cupfuls of red beans in clear salt water. Just before they are done add three- fourths of a pound of pork sausage. Boll for half an hour. Serve hot. This makes a delicious dish for cold days. Black-eyed peas may be used Instead of red beans if desired. The Monuments of Washington Greene. Gen. Nathanael Greene, whose tary genius mili- acknowledged, died in 1786, four years after the Revolu- tionary War. In the same year Con- gress passed a resolution ordering set up in his honor at the seat of Government. The fact that the second appropria- tion made by Congress for a public monument was made to honor Greene 50 soon after his death showed the desire of the Republic to make prompt expression of its gratitude for the service he had rendered the country. Nearly 2 hundred years passed, yet no monument to Greeme had been erected in Washington. The bronze statue which now honors him in Stanton Park, at Fifth street and Massachusetts avenuc northeast, was provided for by Congress in 1874 by an appropriaticn of $40,000. Henry K. Brown, the sculptor, em ployed his art in representing this hero of the Rcvolution in his conti- | nental uniform of general with cock- aded hat, fringed epaulets and close- fitting gauntlets, a picture of m tary clegance. He is shown as he rode at the head of his troops, ex- tending his right hand to point out the location where an attack was to be made. The veins of . the .horse stand out In keeping with the rapid motion. of the animal, for there is every suggestion of the quick action of the battlefield. e of the monument and finished on the other, differs so in style and expres- sion from those on other monuments of the city that it is noticeable. Tt is interesting to know that it is the result of a suggestion of Gen. John M. Wilson, Commissioner of Pablic Buildings and Grounds at the time the statue was put up. It reads: “Sacred to the memory of Nathanael Greene, Esd., a native of the State of Rhode Island, who died on the 15th of June, 1786, late Major General in the service of the United States and Commander of the Army in the South- ern Departniont. The, United States, in Congress assembled, in homor of his patriotism, valor and ability, have erected this monument.” These were tho words which Con- gress in its resolution of 1786 or- dered to be put on the monument which it never erected.. Historical accounts of Greene's military achicve- | ments credit him with unusual skill |and courage. From a volunteer with {the rank of a private.in 1774 he worked up to a major generglship in 1776. His brilliant /expedition in. New York, his career as quartermaster general and his success in restoring confidence in the defeated army in South Cafolina in 1780 were evidences of his military ability. History has written that through his strategy reverses were changed to agencies which helped to a great degree to accomplish the victorious of the Revolution 121, by Viclorly Fu e Steyenson.) That “After-Marriage Let-Down” and Some of the Reasons—How to Treat a Slave-Driver Husband. . EAR MISS DIX: I would like to know why love dies away so quickly after one gets married. I have been married two years, and have found ou; that every day in every way my husband seems to care for me less and less. It is the great puzzle of my lifc. Why? BABE E. H. Answer: Perhaps. Babe, it isn’t love that fades away so quickly after marriage. It is just illusion, which is the trapping of love. It is our misfortune that love comes to us tied up like a Christmas package, in layers upon layers of the gilt-spangled papers of romance, and when we get the last of the fluffy ribbons untled, and come down to.the real present and find that it is a kitchen range instead of a diamond tlara, we can’t help being a bit disappointed. and feeling that the thing we have got lan't worth having. Perhaps men get this same reaction to matrimony, but women get the worst kick out’of it, because we women feed too much on our emotions. When we get married we expect to go on living In the same beautiful love story of which we were the heroines during the days of our courtship. We expect our husbands to hold our hands and pay us compliments, -’l tell us how different we are from other women and how much they love /. And when they stop love-making with a sulidenness that jars our back teeth; when they take it for granted that we know they love us because they married us to prove it, and when they want to &it up of an evening and read the newspaper. instead of telling us what wonderful eyes we have, we think that they ceased to love us. But they haven’t, Babe. Probably they care for us a lot more than they did before:marriage. It is just that they have thrown away the flubdubbery of courting and have got down to cases in which actions speak louder than words. They are making good on all the soft talk by working to support us, and that {s what counts. And don't forget this Babe: If every day In every way your husband seems to love you less and less, you must be falling down on your end of the job. So have a heart-to-heart session with yourself and find out why you are losing out. Are you disillusioning him by wearing sloppy wrappers and down- at-the-heel slippers, and screwing up your hair any old way? You were easy on the eyes before marriage. How about it now? Are you boring him with whines and complaints? mass of tears and discontent? Are you willing to grab your hat and go out of an evening? Are you chatty and entertaining at home? You were a good sport before marriage. What sort of a chum are you now? What sort of dinners do you give him? Does he brag about your cooking to the other men at the office, or do you feed him on food that would give an ostrich dyspepsia? It must be a blighting disappointment to @ man to find that he is marricd to a trifing woman who makes home a | place to flee from instead of a joy to come back to. | If. in twa, years. your husband's affcction for you is cooling off, there | must be a reason for it Find it. DOROTHY DIX. JDEAR MISS DIX: Two and a haif years ago T was a widow with a lovely boy 12 years old. I married a widower without children. He promised to be a loving father to my boy and to help me in every way to educate and rear him. He has failed to keep his promises, and not only does nothing for the boy. but gives me nothing. I am still wearing the clothes I had when I was married and my husband has only bought me shoes when I was actually obliged to have them. My poor boy has to work and earn enough to pay for hie books and clothes. I handie no money and am only allowed to purchase a certain small amount of groceries on a bill, and if that goes even a few cents above the allowance he abuses me cruelly. I am a faithful wife and do all of the housework and washing in the family, but can never please. [ am so broken-hearted. What do you think I should do? MRS. J. Are you a sodden Answer: T should think tkqt you and vour boy could make a better | living anywhere clse than where vou are. Certainly, a cook and general! | houseworker can get go addition to her board, and if your husband refuses to give n allowance that would be fair pay for :our services, vou will be well advised to give notic: uud quit. Also, good cr are treated with kindness and po which yo sent master not seem to show you ness, docs |} imrieroital nomericiini belnz) A0l nnccessarymartyr. | Nohwormaniin these days has to be her husband’s slave. No woman need stand being bullied and insulted, and the thing for every poor, downtrodden woman who Is married to a stingy brute to do is to have enough backbone to lcave, unless her husband accords her decent treatment. Nine times out of ten all she would have to do would be to pack her trunk. Her mere threat of leaving would bring her husband to his senses for few such men want to loge a faithful drudge or have the comfort of thelr homes broken up. They merely treat their wives as they do because it gratifies their mean and tyrannical natures to grind down any one in their power, and their wives are the only ones it is safe for them to trample on. Once let thelr wives fight back, and they cave in like the cowards they are. Most men treat thelr wives as the wives demand to be treated. so in the end it is up to the woman. DOROTHY DIX. . . JDFAR MISS DIX: My father is what he terms old-fashioned. He 1s always lecturing to me about how people did when he was young. He wan't let me dance, because they don't dance as they did when e was young. | won't let me go automobiling, because they didn’t have automobiles swhen { he was young. Hc makes me rcad the books he u d to read when he was {my age. He wants me to have a good time the way he used to have a goed { time, but they don't do that way now. What shall I do? D. B. L. Answer: Ask vour father if he doesn't think th dri\'!\ with one hand oifered more opportunity for u?or:‘i:‘:c[}:g;u:;m:‘:fi: mobile does that takes two hands and all of your attentlon. Go through one of mamma's old trunks and find the packet of love letters that father wrote to her and read them to father. They will fix him. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1924.) 5 BEDTIME STORIE Grateful Prisoner. Be grateful for each littls deed BY THORNTON W. BURGESS jHe licked that plate clean. He felt {0 mlu::ih ‘be(lcr that he once more |prowled all around the pen and ex- That belps you when you are In need. |amined everything. Then he went —Bobby Coon. | back to sleep again. | Bobby Coon was a prisoncr. -He| The next morning he heard Farmer |was a prisoner in 2 pen in Farmer | Brown's Boy come into the barn. Brown's barn. He was so used up head out to look at and felt so badly when he was first | mer Boy. The latter I put in that pen that he didn't realize | another teful of food. Bobby jthat he was a prisoner, and didu't|eyes sparkled. 2 | vtand, i ful. and Bobby's heart was grate- down in his heart he |knew that Farmer Brown's Boy had saved his lifc. He knew that Farmer | Brown's Boy ‘would do him no barm. Ho knew that he had nothing to worry about no But still Bobby was too bashful to come out while Farmer Brown's Boy was there. Farmer Brown's Boy was too wise to try to make Bobby come out. He just talked to him gently and then left him. Several times during the day he came to that pen and talked softly to Bobby. They were getting acquainted. (Coprright, 1924, by T. W. Bargess) Rice Cooked With Brains. Remove the skin or membrane from one set of beef or hog brains and wash them all. Put two cupfuls of ricoand the brains in boiling wator and cook for 30 minutes. Season with pepper and salt to sult the taste. If liked, a cupful of tomatoes and a chopped sweet pepper or two may be added. Rice cooked in this way has about the same flavor as rice cooked with ehicken. yr———— HE DISCOVERED FOOD care much what happened, and didn't | realize that dreadful little can was ino longer fast to hic leg. He had suffered so much from pain and fright that when he was put into | that pen he wanted nothing so much as to curl up in the dark and rest. Farmer Brown's Boy understood this. He had provided a place, a box with a hole in it, where Bobby could be out of sight. In this he had placed some hay for a bed. There Bobby slept all the rest of that day. He just had to sleep. He was so worn out that he had to sleep. o When he awoke it was dark. The | first thing Bobby thought of was that dreadful little can which he had thought was a trap. He yas sur- prised to find that it was no longer on his paw. Yes, sir, at first he was surprised. Then little by little it came back to him all that had hap pened. He remembered being foynd by Farmer Brown's Boy and taken out of the Green Forest. It must be that Farmer Brown's Boy had taken that dreadful thing off his paw. He hadn’t seen it done, you remember, because his head had been covered. But the dreadful thing was gone and he knew that Farmer Brown's Boy must have taken it off. In England an agitation has been started for smoking compartments on trains for the exclusive use of women. i { cardboard band. He {th it Iperity. {will be He began to under- | THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1924. COLOR CUT-OUT Halloween Hats. 3o l 2 in.widdh-black fissve I “These hats are to be the favors my Halloween party.” explained Betty | Cut-out to Billy and Dix. “Yeu can help me to m: them, if you want But you must get them just right, 0 as 1 tell you. “First cut a cardboard band three inches wide and long enough to go around your head and allow room to lap over and be glued in place. That makes the band the hat is built on. Then cut a piece of this yellow crepe paper. Make it fifteen inches high and just as long as your cardboard band. Paste one end the length of the band, so that it just covers to the edge of the band. Then fringe the other end three inches deep. Cut out a strip of black tissue paper two inches wide and as long as your so but t the o on the inside of you ok Strip is side_edge. Now paste a hat, ple of ent- out bats on the hat. Fold vour Lat together and pa t in ®lace it fits on your head. You then gather it together and tic it at the slashed end and iU's done.” Why don’t you try to make a Hal- loween hat just like Betty’s? (Copyright 1924.) What TodayMeans toYou BY MARY BLAKE. Scorpio. The planetary aspects of today are very good and indicate success along most lines of endeavor, cspecially se of u mechanical or nature, provided the efforts on conservative thought and calcula. tion. Aggressiveness, but not “dare @evildom,” is recommende The signs aJso denote success in affairs relatedto the heart, and a proposal is | likely %0 be met with a willing re- sponse,” while a marriage solemnized today promises to be fraught with hap- piness and Joy. A child born today will be quite normal physically and will develop into a strong and vigorous maturity. Its character will be generous and frank, its disposition loving and affectionate. While this child's intellectuality will at no time attract or demand atten- tion, its character and disposition will radiate so much unselfishness and cheerfulness as to endear it to all those with whbm it brought in contact. Only by the intervention of some unexpected good fortune wi ever attain much material pros- Its moral success, however, wssured. 1f today is your birthday your per- sonality is very strong and your at- tractivenc is undeniable hosts of nd; but nearly them accuse vou, in a greater or less degree, of affectation and a fail- ure to be at all times natural. It is generally conceded that your good attributes are so many and so out- standing that you do not need to affect to be something that you are fr all of inventive | ire based | FEATURES. BEAUTY CHATS An Obstinate Complexion. In my opinion an obstinate com- plexion is one that will not stay clear Do matter how much attention is paid to It. If you have this sort you prob- ably need to take agar-agar. Have you a bad skin? Have you tried dicting? Nowadays so much is written about proper foods that eve one must know how to eat to have a good complexion. But if, in spite of | good food, cleansing creams, of exer- cise and of fresh air, your £kin stays muddy, then you must try agar-agar. For it is probable that the trouble lies in some form of constipation. Such 4 condition often exists un- suspected for years. The eliminative system of the body Is so complicated that it is easily upset. If it does not function almost perfectly, the least of the resulting troubles will be a sallow skin, or a greasy one (for Lhe skin then must throw off more than its proportion of waste matter from th |ous matter away with BY EDNA KENT FORBES body), or large pores or blotches un« der tho ekin's surface. Agar-agar will probably set evexy- thing to rights. It is a form of sew weed—Japanese sea weed some drug- gists call it. It comes in little traps- parent flakes, whicn, when wet, dis- solve into a sort of jelly. But the stomach does not absorb any of it: it goes through the entire system and passes oft, gradually carrying poison- it that often stays months in the body. Agat- agar cleanses the entire intestinal tract and regulates it. Mineral ofls are supposed to do this, and usual do, but agar-agar has never failed yet Occasionally laxative pills must be taken to clear the system of the mineral ofl! Try agar-agar if your ecomplexion is not perfectly clear. —_— The sugar crop of Japan this yea: weighed 4,352,000,000 pounds. ETLEYS There are many kinds of tea, but only one Tetley’s. Orange Pekoe Tea i ! i The cardboard goes | know that it is no longer necessary to soak, pick and cook codfish, or pare, boil and mash potatoes in order to have fish cakes! Gorton's Ready-to-Fry, made of famous Gorton's “No Bones” Codfish | and boiled potatoes, come all mixed, ready Makes good & & certainty to shape into cakes aad put in the pen. All the flavor and food value—none of the bother. Government authorities say “Ear more codfish, it is rich in the vitamines and natural minerals the body demands.” P.S. Send for the new free bookier “Gerton's Deep Sea Recipes.™ GORTON-PEW FISHERIES CO. Ltd., GLOUCESTER, MASS. insist onit! They know there is no danger of paying tos mach & > for Pancake Flour if they ask for Virginia Sweet. | . For fifty-four years its makers have been giving i -~ the public the best possible Pancake Flour at the i lowest passible price. This is proven by the fact that the price varies from time to time according i A to the cost of production. But no matter S what Virginia Sweetisselling for, you always You have | | | not By adopting this attitude you| estrange many who woulddike to be numbered among your friends. Nothing is gained by pretense, as thereby only false standards ere cre- ated. In your case pretense is not insincerity, as with your friends you are quixotically loyal. Your affec- tation is more evidenced in your man- nerisms and in your speech. The ad- vice has often been given, “Be natu- ral, and to flattery be deaf” And you gain nothing by disregarding this recommendation, as both your de- meanor and speech become stilted and offer excuses for merriment, and sometimes ridicule, instead of that warm and frank admiration that a natural pose on vour part would oke. Whitens Skin DAVIS BAKING POWDER Bobby examined his hurt paw. You remember that Farmer Brown's boy had .put a bandage around It Bobby didn’t know what to make of it. He examined 1t with his nose. He didn't like the smell. You know Farmer Brown's Boy had put oint. ment on that hurt paw. So, because Bobby didn’t like the smell. he let that bandage alone. He didn't try to pull it off. You see, he rcally didn’t mind it, because it didn’t hurt as that dreadful little can had hurt. But that paw was still swollen and sore. | Bobby lay quiet until his stomach for over eighty has relied upon Gour- d's Oriental Cream to keep the skin and complexion in perfect 'This amazing new treatment whitens your skin almost overnight or it costs you ing! Sallowness, muddiness, and tan vanish like magic. Make this test tonight. Right before bedtime smooth some of this cool, fragrant creme on your skin. To- morrow moming notice how saowness, muddiness and all blemishes have already started to give way to a milky cleamess. Ask ywrf ist for ajar of Golden Pea- cock Bleach Creme (concentrated) —the harmless and latest discovery of science. warned him that it needed attention. He was hungry. Bobby crept out of the box. He could move about easily now on three legs. L Of course, it didn’t take him long to discover that he was a prisoners But he hardly | gave that a thought. You see he dis- covered: something else. He discov- ered food! He discovered food, and plenty of It! Farmer Brown's' Boy had left a big plateful of food for Bobb: My, my, my, how good that § i taste! Dobby ate and ate und condition throughthe stress of the season's activities. Whit. Flesh-Rachel Send 10c for Trtal Sise PFERD. 7. BOPKINS & SON, Now Yark Gouraud's Oriental Cream .l}ememb:em‘zh r—this creme whitens yo'\:rn;kg Imost overnight or your money tefunded. Get it today at all good storea. For cale at Pesples Drug Stores, O'Donnell’s Drug Stors, Gilmaa's Drug Siors, Obristisai Golden Bleach Creme | ! can be sure that equally good Pancake Flour can’t be bought for less. THE el na Kansas City Tryit Moo Weffles ton. | | easier and better way | to wash stockings COLGATE'S | l FAB bo freats have coupon value. ‘Comtbine thess with coupons cut from Octagon Soap Products far 'wecful and beautiful premiuma, at

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