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WOMAN’S PAGE. Using Wool Frock From Last Year BY MARY Sleeves heve assumed greaier im- portance this season than for many Doubtless the designers ssmakers suggested more ornamentation and variety in sleeves seriously, but the fact remains that have turned our thoughts definitely to sleeves as ground for decoration. There is a deep, slightly flaring ONE OF THE cuff extending slightly above from the elbow or it to the wrist that is cha teristic of the new mode, and quite often it is of contrasting and decidedly ornate construction. A French fashion writer points to this sleeve as offering excellent oppor- tunity to the home dressmaker in re- modeling a frock of lasy season. And the idea is one worth handing on to the American woman who turns nim- ble fingers to account in salvaging last vear's frocks. The sketch shows a charming new frock making use of this sleeve id MARSHALL The frock is of navy blue rep, with the large cuff and pocket of white cloth embroidered in black, with here and there a glint of silver thread. The slecve design is in the form of a large cartwheel—and any large cir- cular motive might be made use of. Your last season’s navy blue one- piece frock hanging in the back of your wardrobe, waiting to be sent off in the next bundle of old clothes, may be brought to life agreeably by the addition of just such cuffs and pocket 5 As the season’s taste is developing in matters of dress there seems to be more and more inclination to wear washable lingerie collars and cuffs on dark one-piece frocks. With the younger girls these collars and cuffs are often of perfectly plain, slightly stiffencd linen, but for older women sets made of fine embroidered batiste or mull and lace are more: becoming. (Copyright, 1924.) T was playing lotto with my cuzzin Sue on account of her living at o house for a wile with her mother on a visit and me having to entertane her, and the fellows started to wissle outside for me and I jumped up to run out and ma sed, Benny. dont you %o out unless vou take Sue with you, remember she's your guest. Aw G, ma, holey smokes, the fellows are wisseling, good nite, I sed. Its good practice for them, ma sed, and I sed, Well G, ma, maybe Sue dont wunt to go out, maybe she'd rather stay in and reed. Thats different, ma sed, and I sed, Do you, Sue, do you wunt to reed? 1 got_sqme swell books. I got the hole Young Rover series and all but 2 of the Fighting Frank series, and almost half of the Youthful Rangers series. Have you got eny of the Helen Homeboddy and Her Dolls series? Sue sed. 1 should say not, T sed. Then I wont stay in and reed, Sue sed. Well G w prove your mind? I sed. Do you wunt to improve yours? Sue sel, and I sed, Certeny I do, and she sed, Then wy dont you stay in and reed? I would if there was enything heer T hadent red. I sed, and she sed, I brawt 2 books out of my Domestic Dora and Her Little Problems series. If you stay in and reed them to me I'llstay in and lissen, she sed. Aw good nite, certeny not, wat do you think I am, wy dont you borrow a needle and thred and sew some- thing, if T was a gerl Kd be sewing all the time, I sed. “I'll sew if you reed Domestic Dora in the Kitchin to me, Sue sed. Aw come on out, wats a use of ar- gewing? I sed. Wich wat is, dont vou want to im- espeshilly with gerls. WHEN WE GO SHOPPING BY MRS. HARL. Fox for Fur. »u have decided on fox furs this you will want to know, not only what's the finest fox, but how to be sure you know it when you see it. Then, you will want to know some- thing about foxes in general. For, from the vouthful and popular red fox to the “silver fox" of fame and fashion, fox is one of the most be- coming furs you can buy. Its long, fluffy hair forms an attractive and oftening” background for almost any face. However, its comparative fragility is a drawback, for the long hair “scuffs” readily, and must gen- erally be repaired every year. Genuine “silver fox" leads the list of costly foxes, and it is, in fact, among the most expensive of all furs. Perhaps you do not know this.“sil- ver fox" is more or less of a m nomer, for the fur is a rich, lustrous black. Its claim to the “sil- ver” consists in the white tipped hairs that are scattered about among the black ones.. The fur is extremely deep—so deep that it is not suitable for coats. You will find it mostly made up into scarf: Now, the rarity and consequent ex- pense of the silver\fox make it a subject for many imitations. These are made by dyeing other fox furs— BEDTIME STORIE Bluffs in Vain. e no standing has at all, s ever ready for a fall. —0ld Mother Nature, To bluff is to pretend. If you are very much frightened and pretend that you are not frightened atall, you are bluffing. It other way around: frightened at all, but pretended to be very much frightened, you would be bluffing. To bluff is simply to pre- tend a thing is what it is not. When Bobby Coon ordered Une' Billy Possum out of his hollow tree and said that if Unc’ Billy didn't leave he, Bobby. would pull him out if he had to pull him out in pieces, Unc’ Billy grinned and told Bobby to try it. Now, draws Unet way when his lips Billy Possum back, so as to Z = = BLUFFS IN VAIN. show all his teeth, he can make him- self look quite savage and danger- ous. This is what he now did. “Come on, Brer Coon, come on. Just yo' try pulling me out of heah! Just yo' try it!” he cried. Bobby Coon hesitated. Only Unc' Billy’s head was outside the doorway, and as Bobby looked at him it seemed as if that head was mostly teeth. Bobby wasn’t afraid of Unc' Billy. He knew that in a fair fight he could get the best of Unc’ Billy without much trouble. He was bigger and stronger than Unc’ Billy. But in that hollow tree Unc' Billy had the advantage. Those tecth of his looked sharp. They were mot pleasant things to look at. So, Bobby Coon hesitated. Uncle Billy saw that hesitation, and would be true the | if you were not AND H. ALLEN. cross fox, arctic fox, red fox—to a black color, and then putting in white hairs to look like “silver.” Such fur is called “pointed fox.” The glued-in hairs are likely to come out, but they are easily replaced. Now, many of these imitations, like many of the other foxes, when left in their natural colors, are “good bu But if you do want the genu- ine silver fox, and are willing to pay for it, you will naturally want to be able to tell it from the imitations. This is quite easy to do, for there are certain quite infallible distin- guishing marks of genuine silver fox. Look, first, at the skin beneath the fur. If it is yellow tinged, the fur has been dved. But if it is flesh white, you can conclude the fox is of natural color. Then examine the tail. You can feel the place where the white t joined on the tail of the dyed fox, in imitation of the nat- urally white tip on the tail of the real silver fox. The tail is the best part to examine for glued-in hairs, too. As a rule, the principal fox furs range in this order in value: Silver fox, cross fox, blue fox, white fox and red fox—though the order is vari- able and depends on the quality of the fur and the size of the piece. In general, the longer and finer textured the hair, the better the fur. BY THORNTON W. BGLRGESS he understood the cause of it. He rolled his lips back even farther than before. He snapped his jaws together two or three timets. Really, he looked quite fierce and dangerous. But all the time Unc' Billy was bluffing. He had | no intention of fighting. He wanted to | keep that comfortable home, but right down in his heart he was afraid of Bobby Coon. Bobby Coon’s hesitation came to an end. He had made up his mind that was his house, and he meant to have it back. An ugly look cameinto his ey “I'm coming, Mr. Possum, I'm coming.” =aid he. ‘*“And when I get there yow'll wish I hadn’'t come.” He turned about on the branch on which he had been lying and started down toward the doorway where Unc' Billy was watching him. Unc’ Billy had a chance to see just how big Bobby was. He knew that Bobby was a good fighter. He knew that there was no one in the Green Forest with more real courage than Bobby Coon. He had no desire to feel Bobby's sharp teeth. Still he kept up his bluff until the very last instant. He snapped his jaws and pretended to be eager for a fight. He kept his eyes on Bobby Coon to see if he would hesitate again. But Bobby Coon didn’t hesitate again. He came right on in the most deter- mined way., In fact, he seemed cager to get there. There was no doubt that Bobby Coon intended to do exactly what he sald he would do. Unc' Billy still looked fierce and ugly, but inside he was feeling very uncomfortable. He was afraid. Yes, sir, he was afraid. Bobby Coon came an. ,At the very last instant, before it should be foo late, Unc' Billy scrambled out and around to the other side of the trunk and then down. Hisbluff had been in vain. That comfortable hollow' tree was his no longer. He would have to g6 back to his old home. Bobby Coon looked down at him and grinned. Once more Bobby was bappy, and, being happy, he was good natured. He watched Unc' Billy out of sight. Then he went inside, and in five minutes he was sound asleep. (Copyright, 1924, by T. W. Bargess.) “AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “I envy Sallie Childs sometimes. TI'm fat an’ cheerful, an’ can’t never work up the feelin’ that I'm a | martyr.” i (Copyright, 1924.) Why Hoppy Homes Are Up to Women DorothyDix Up to Wife to Make Marriage Success, Because Matrimony is Her Business, and When She Fails Home is Broken Up. WOMAN correspondent writes to me: “Why do you write so much about wives trying to hold their husbands' love, and it being women’s duty to make a happy home? Doesn't it ever occur to you that women get just as weary of domesticity as men do, and that wives become just as much bored with their husbands as men are with their wive: “Sometimes they get even more so, because most women are home all day, treading the monotonous round of housewifely work, whereas their husbands at least have the diversion of seeing new faces and talking to new people at the office,-s0 a few hours at home in the evening are really a change to them and restful to them, while the woman is fed up on home, sweet home until she often comes to loathe it. So why isn't it just as much up to a man to make a happy home as it is to a woman? “And why shouldn’t a man meet his wife when he comes home of an evening with a glad, sweet smile of welcome, instead of her having to grin like a chessy cat at him? And why shouldn't he exert himself to be bright and amusing and gossipy, and tell her all the bundle of funny stories he has heard during the day to keep her diverted so she won't want to put on her hat and go out to find amusement, instead of her working like a coal heaver to keep him so entertained that he will Le willing to spend his 77 evening at his own fireside? “It seems to be the general opini she has a fatal case that she never gets over, and that she never loses her | ion for her hisband, no matter what sort of habits he has or what kind |of a disposition he exhibits. affect She will the hero of her girlish dreams, even shave and wears dirty collars stupid and dull and wearisome and gi wom ierself attractive, but it posit 11 out of love with him i o far as I with me when 1 2am my natural self out for somebody else. I am often be Otiier wives are with their husbands to make their wives contented and g 'RULY, my correspondent is a daughter of and none may dispute her pronouncement. )f their husbands and as much bored by them as husbands do with their wives, and many a man with a meek-looking, little patient Griselda of a wife would get the jolt of his life if he knew her real opinion of him. A slouchy man with a two day spots on. his clothes is as disillusion! woman as any lady with cold cream solled kimono is to a man. It is just wife fascinated as it is a wife's to k more & wife's duty to be a little ray of sunshine in the home than it is a man’s, Why, then, put the loud pedal on the wife's part in making a happy home and keeping a_marriage a gol words of President Cleveland, “it is a condition, confronts us" certain amenities in matrimony that n and men will not take the trouble o; necessity of practicing them, while there is always a hope that women will. Also, it is more important to a woman to protect her home than it is to a man, for the home means not on: her meal ticket as well. It means her physical comfort and safety. . . HEN a man's home is broken up that is all. has all the luxuries to which he has But when a woman's home is bro but she is often reduced from affluence to poverty. her divorce gives her with her freedom the ne living for the first time in her life. pitiful than a middle-aged woman accustomed to w. taken care of. and with no knowledge of how supyort herself. Making a happy home is just sainful occupation, and when a woman fails in as truly as she would if the sheriff h business, For a woman to say that she will attractive to her husband, or please him, is to take an unfair cricket. She is presuming on the satisfaction, because she can't lose her job. She knows that it she were an have to make a mighty strenuous effort with her bos him and handled him with gloves. obligation of honor for a wife to try bound to stand her. Because it is good policy and good principle is why women to try to do everything possible to make their m (Copyrix! MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. A Left-Over Dish. O e R ted One Mother says: Left-overs may be made into whole- some and tempting dishes for the children’s luncheon. Part of yester- day’s roast may be diced or minced, a little of the gravy added—and pars- ley or onion, as the children prefer— and served on rounds of toast. Or it may be cut into thick slices and broiled for a few moments so that it is slightly browned. Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Baked Apples. Hominy With Cream. Poached Eges. Toast. Coffee. LUNCHEON. Clam®Fritters. Tomato .Catsup. Raisin Bran Bread: Ginger Bread. _ Whipped Cream. Tea. DINNER. Cream of Spinach Soup. Lamh Croquettes.« Scalloped Tomatocs. Mashed Potatoes. Lettuce Salad. Harlequin Bavarian Cream. Coftee. BAKED APPLES. Put as many apples as needed in baking dish, make a sirup of sugar and water and pour over them. When done lét cool and serve with evaporated milk . - CLAM FRITTERS. Beat 2 eggs until light, add % cup flour, % teaspoon ealt, dash of white pepper and 1 teaspoon of chopped parsley. Heat until perfectly smooth, add gradually 1+ dozen: finelychopped clams, stir in a little more flour if the batter seems too thin; drop from a spoon into deep, hot fat; fry until brown and drain on brown paper before serving. SCALLOPED TOMATOES. One can tomatoés, 1%- cups bread crumbs. Place a layer of crumbs in a buttered pudding dish, then a layer of tomatoes and eo on until dish is full, hav- ing crumbs on top. Season each layer with salt and pepper and dots of butter. Bake half hour. nd talks about him n expects her husband to keep on loving her 1 am concerned, in trying to settle the domestic problem; be He still has his business. do anvthing she doesn’t feel like doing to advantage of her situation. . and if she got any preferment it would be because she jollied on that when a woman is once in love ke if 1 p on loving him and seeing in him eats soup audibly and forgets to I all the time and is rouchy and stingy. man that she ively never occurs to a his f she tried. it my husband doesn't sta love 1 act the way 1 feel, he can just look sred with him and disgusted with him. At times, so why not teil husbands how ive them a little of the romance they .. Solomon _come to judgment, Wives do get just as tired s’ stubble of beard on his face and ing and as unkissable an object to a on her face and in curl papers and a as much a man’s business to keep his ecp her husband vamped, and it is no ing concern? Simply because, in the and not a theor: e the must be practiced to make it a su r make the effort or cven real cess, e the ly the love nest to a woman, it means not only her spiritual wellbeing, but his heart may be sorely wounded, but | He still h, been accustomed. ken up she not only has the heartache, | M. i a woman finds that of earning her own is nothing on carth mor. alth and ease and being | to make a dollar, trying to| i And ther a a profession as any other that she goes bankrupt just ad closed her out in any other line of | much not make an effort to make herself She isn't playing fact that she doesn't have to give employe instead of a wife she would to be agreeable if she got along And so it seems to me that it is an to please the one man who is legally T continually urge arriages a success. DOROTHY N ht, 1924.) pie What TodayMeans to You BY MARY BLAKE. ~ Scorpio. Today's planetary aspects are ad- verse, and counsel the pursuit and carrying out of ordinary duties only. Risk, speculation and hazard must be avoided, unless disastrous conse- Quences are invited. Today there will be a strong tendency to bad temper | and general disagreeableness: trifles | that, on other occasions, would pass | unnoticed by you will annoy and ex- | asperate. Self-control must be exer-| cised 50 as to avoid disagreement, and | care should be exercised in corre- spondence. 1If you are prompted to | write a stinging letter, by all means write it, but do not mail it until alter you have reread it tomorrow. A child born today will enjoy a fairly healthy infancy, but just prior to the period of adolescence will, in all probability, suffer from a serious ailment, which will demand much lov. ing care and unremitting vigilance. Its character will be rather tempestu- ous, its disposition variable, its men- tality keen. This child will be sub- ject, at all times, to violent ebulli- tions of temper, and strong discipli- narv measures must be employed to correct this failing. Its character will reveal an unreliable disposition, at times bubbling over with warm af- | fection, at other times savoring of coldness and aloofness. If a boy, its success will be found along profes- slonal, rather than commercial lines. If today is your birthday, you, with- out any apparent justification, are timid and lacking, in any degree of assertiveness. Physlcally you are| prepared, speaking figuratively, to tackle a mountain. Mentaily you pos- sess no self-assurance and are al- ways ready to_ underestimate your own ability and to underrate your own charms. This is frequently shown, both in your commercial or professional, as well as your social life. You seem afraid to take a chance, and will, of a certainty, never be numbered among those who rush in where angels fear to tread. Without affectation, and in all sincerity, you suffer from an ex- cess of humility and exaggerated self- | disparagement. Assertiveness, where there is no foundation on which to build, is pos- sibly as much to be condemned and as little productive of lasting results as the great defect from which you suffer. In.your case, however, the foundation of solid merit and worth éxists, but the structure you have erected thereon, owing to your lack of building - material, is small and disproportionate. It is, possibly, a two or three story structure, where- as it could well be a skyscraper. The success we achieve in this world is invariably proof of our abil- ity or inability as salesmen. Better far it is to have attempted some- thing worth while and to have failed than never to have attempted any- thing at all. Well known persons born on 'this date’ are: Edward W. Serrell, civil engineer; William Corliss, inventor; Ella Wheeler Wilcox, poet; Ida Tar- bell, editor and author. —— Banana and Nut Mold. Scald three cupfuls of milk. Mix half a cupful of cornstarch with one- fourth cupful of sugar and stir into ] the hot milk. Cook slowly until it boils, then. add half a teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonful each of vanilla and lemon extract, one cupful of mashed and sifted bananas and half a cupful of chopped nut meats and the stifly beaten whites of three eggs. Leave on ice until hard and serve with custard or whipped cream and bananas. by his money. He still | British warship off the capes of Vir- | |ginia in 1776 he made the first naval John Barry, a master mariner and |conquest under Continental authority wealthy ship owner, living in Phila- John Adams’ delight on hearing the delphia when the Revolutionary War [news was expressed by the comment: broke out, was evidently born with|“We begin to make some figure in “health, wealth and wit to guide]|the Navy way.” him.” His statue, on Fourteenth| RBarry's most daring service to strect between I and K streets, America was rendered when he con- Franklin Park, shows him as a veri- | vayed important commise across table mountain of strength, regard- |the ocean to France. Besides trans. ing with confidence the responsibili- | porting valuable cargoes, his crows ties which he assumed as captain in jand passensers traveling on national Navy. errands, to their destinations in He is represented as both soldier |safety, Barry undertook a great deal and naval officer, for his uniform and | more. the orders he holds in his hand denote It see 11 the naval forces |realize th : United States at that time. to France, The sword which he also clasps by |©PPortunity the hilt denotes his responsibility in [Chemy and to capture four loaded AR dict e e with _rich cargoes, which he took When he volunteered his services |y apoany, 0 LUroPe and sold for over to America in 1775 he was thirty-one years old, but he was appointed cap- | congres by the Continental Congress, for | jopn y the highest rank of the in-|hirp 'ip vy. Then it was that he!yzict Vo the Continental flag on the |y 130 ton, a little brig of fourteen | The marble roddess o hel guns, and soon_after " sailed ‘down |tha front facs or - the Sommaces laware Bay. From then on until|gtands on the prow of the ship which fired the last shot of the Revolu- |sho has evidently guided throust n, oF even to his death in 1803, he | confict. The eamie hovere nracush | was the ranking officer of his Ship of [one side, and the shicld and eheathed squadron and never served under a | Y ; the 1des 8 Isword at the other suggest senior officer. | of preparedness in des b y. (Copyright, 1 a spectacular to ;. one of these missions he iled himself of the to sink five ships of the in 000 memorial, erected hy the work of the sculptor Boyle. It records Barry's County Wexford, Ircland, his death in Philadelphia Ta Lexi When Capt. Barry captured the| COLOR CUT-OUT A Japanese Maid. BY HELEN KENDALL. In the Paneled Wall. ! “I want to show you mjy ova- tion.” cried Cousin Betty, dragging | me into her charming bedroom. done | {over when the biz old housc was re- | modeled early this Fall. | “It's my built-in dre ng table” | |she went on. “And the way it came |about was this: When they changed | the stair landings on the second floor | here it left an unused space in the upper 1, just the other side of the partition in my room. That space made a kind of small alcove in the lhall and dad was going to turn it | linto a closet, which wasn't remotely | (needed. So I begged him to open the | [ wall between my room and the hall, | move the partition back to the line | of this unused space and let me in- | close that alcove in my room “As soon as the wall had been | opened and dropped back I got the | {carpenters to fit the whole small in- | closure to my wide dressing table, | with mirrors on all three sides. The | table is not really built in, of course, | but can be removed for cleaning pur- | |poses. The inclosure was made to | i hold it, however. There is room for v dressing bench within the niche, see. he next thing was te whole alcove in with double doors matching the paneled effect of the walls and the doors to the closet and hall. T had the doors fitted with full- length mirrors on the inside and by | | setting ~ these doors at the right | angle I can see my full figure, both {front, side and rear. No badly hanging I skirt can elude me now! { “Of course, the three-sided mirror | | around the dressing table is invaluable | for hairdre ing, and, altogeth ! dressing alcove is a great success. When | 1 am all prettied up [ can close the doors on it entirely if 1 want to. al- though it is so decorative, and all thos mirrors reflect the room o nicel shut the From Japan comes Madam Tovo, Star of Betty Cut-out's show, Dressed in dainty silk kimono— Color it a golden glow. . In her trunk she brought an extra | Little gown to please you, too; Japanese like brilliant colors— Paint it up a cherry hue. Coloring with crayons will do— Then cut out the little lady; i Make her face a creamy yellow— | She'll be glad to play with you. | | Betty Cut-out's room at school is| giving a show of dolls of all nations. | Each girl dresses a doll to represent | a different country. Color the one | today, mount her on lightweight | cardboard, and cut her out. l | My Neighbor Says: | To avoid lumpy cereals, stir a little cold water into the cereal, then pour and stir this mixture into the boiling water. When ordering meat always bear in mind that beef, when boiled, loses nearly 1 pound to every 4 pounds, and when roasted quite 18 pounds, and mutton will lose even more than this. To prolong the life of window cords they should be dusted and rubbed with a well greased rag. The snapping of the cords is caused by friction, and they are further weakened by sun and weather. The greasing makes them pliable and prolongs their usefulness. 0Old_potatoes are greatly im- proved by being soaked over- night or for several hours be- fore being peeled. Change the water once or twice during the time. Rub laundry soap on gas pipes to stop a leak until the plumber comes. ‘When making yourself an ex- tra good cup of cocoa or choco- late, try the experiment of add- ing a tiny piece of cinnamon. The flavor is very greatly im- proved, and the drink seems richer even though you may have been sparing with the milk. BAKING POWDER Keep Looking Young | It’s Easy—If You Know Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets The secret of keeping young is to feel young—to do this you must watch your liver and bowels—there’'s no need of having a sallow complexion—dark rings under your eyes—pimples—a billour | look in your face—dull eyes with no sparkle. Your doctor will tell you ninety per cent of all sickness comes from inactive bowels and liver. Dr. Edwards, a well known physician In Ohlo, perfected a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil to act on the liver and bowels, which he gave to his patients for years. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the sub. stitute for calomel, are gentle in their action yet always effective. They bring out that natural buoyancy which all ould enjoy by toning up the liver and clearing the system of impurities. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are known | by thelr olive color, 15¢ and 30c. - FEATURE THE GUIDE POST By Henry snd Tertius Van Dyke Irrelevant Issues. | Wisdom is justified by her works.— Mat. xi.19. Knowledge on all subjects is im- portant, but not to be confused with wisdom’ The man who knows the most is not necessarily the wisest man. Sometimes we are inclined to ship knowledge as an end in But nothing could be more ingless than knowledge discon with wisdom. Bishop W. F. McDowell story of a plain man who being examined under Civil Service rules for night watchman in a Government building. wor- if. me tells the ted | js One question asked was: “How far is the earth from the sun?” To which he replied: do not know how far the earth is from the sun, but it is not far enough to pre- vent me from filling this job of night | watchman it T can get it.” That W a wise answer because it threw out an irrelevaat matter. Perhaps we all need a little of the wisdom, the ability to concentrate on the matter in hand, and disregard extraneous issues. Cosmic laws are inspiring to under- but th will not stand, arily disqualify or doing my particular job todas Too many pcople allow irrelevan ues to hinder their usefulness. No man can know or do every- thing. Wisdom is found in concen- tration on the matter in hand in view of that fact Why worry or hesitate because of irrelevant issues? “« ght, 1924.) The Fresh Flavor "SALADA" TIE A reflects the absolute asi7 purityof the blend. Delicious to the last drop. — Tryit. ful cure for ' A quick and delight the monday mornin blues . .. Breakfast Blend for the bracing morning cup Perfect Blend- the mild, mellow dinner coffee AORCHOACR0RCACACR0R0H A F your favorite gown shop were fo go . about fitting, to order, a knitted under- > garment for your figure, they would cut and fashion it just like this Mérode. Mérode is tailored, too. Every Mérode garment is actually cut and tailored by band. You must marvel also at Mérode fabric, the soft cleanly webbing of finest yarns that protects the skin in every kind of temperature. There is a style and weight of this popular hand-tailored knit underwear to suit preference. The representative shops carry it for you. Watch for special values at this season. Are you reducing ? The body moisture that successful reducing meth- ods stimulate is absorbed by elastic knit underwear that fits snugly. Mérode fabrics are cut and tailored by hand. There isno bindin Mérode protects the body and abasrs the moisture. knit underwear is knittedandband-tailored at Harvard Mills,inthe Townof IV ake- field, Mass., by several bundred employee partners of the firm of Winsbip, Boit & Co., and is sold only at representative stores. Y There is a complete range of styles and weights and prices in Merode. i AR A ACH0N00 8 W a0H SACHOHO K S , P R, PORCK every The comfortable fit of A