Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
FEATURES. Full Skirt and Tight, Wide Hip Band The Dai]y Cross-Word Puzzle BY MARY MARSHALL. (Copyright.) College Student in Love With Married Woman. t peen a 1ol e o1 b did see! ible. . » . Pt S :y‘.'i! fometimies thes have: solved the prob- | Can High-Tempered Man Whose Wife Has wider skirt. Those who thought that it |lem by very skillfully adjusted inverted = = 5 would come in the guise of a revised [box pleats. On tailored suits and sport Left Him Persuade Her to Return? second empire frock with bouffant hips | skirts they are frequently placed at the below a closely drawn bodice ad their|front. On one-piece frocks they are. e alsappolntineht. | Thandact dnuthely S i lmansnean et e . AR DOROTHY DIX: I am a young college student, and have fallen mad- hear is not exactly like ansthing that |godets that seem to drape into nothing- Ly in love with a married woman, who is five years my senfor. This fashion has ever known heforc. | Fves Whem the swearer of the frock stands | Woman's husband is very rich, but she'does not love him. I feel that I can We still cling to our fondness for the | in repose, yet which give ample fullness | M€1P her, but if I do I will lose the respect of my friend. What shall | for graceful motlon. From Paris comes | 1 407 ; T D the persistent statement that skirts ar : Ih:,u\lx)nlr:z ‘llf’ :.»;“("‘A“x \" ‘lln- back. s Answer: Why, J. D., the best thing you can do is $ust sit down and have | P The frock shown in the sketch solves| ® 800d laugh at yourself, and realize that what you are suffering is not the | the problem of skirt fullness in a very pin),’.\. of love, but growing pains. | clever manner. It exemplifies the pres- Virtually every boy in the world goes through the experience of falling it tendency to It the flare begin ai- | if 10ve With @ woman older than he is. It is the little boy need of a mother P - v s {1y below the hips rather than in the { 19 €ling to that you haven't outgrown. You will get over it, and it will be one nyx Pointex Hosnery ogion of the knees. It is made of a | Of those tender, funny memories of our youth that we all put away in laven- | o e, ue ehitons- Sns | der and take out of their secret place when we are old and smile at thent In the season’s smartest colors Skirt is gathered into @ tight, wide band | With @ tear in our eyes and wonder how we ever could have been so absurd. | around the hips. - . . ¥ It 1s lovely and chivalrous for you to want to help the poor rich lady, ... Silk, \fl?l Lisle Top 51.65 = but she probably doesn't need any heip, and fsn't as lonely as you think Style' 155 —Medi ; she is. When you are ten vears older and have cut your wisdom teath on the 155—Medium weight . . ways of women vou won't be unduly depressod by the hard-luck tales of , - B Style 255 —Service weight . . . . } 5195 ves who complain that their husbands don't understand them and are not f their soulmates. Style 355—"Sheresilk”, the sheerest 5 1 | i Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. You will have found out that that is the favorite device of married = weight of pure thread silk, A e ThiE e women for starting a flirtation. And you can be very sure that this woman Oatmeal. Cream has no notion of giving up her rich husband for anything that a schoolboy has All Pure Thread Silk to offer b Brofled Bacon, Rye Mufins. - Style 350—Service weight ¥ 3 : 2w Moreover, I think J. D., she is @ pretty poor sport to pick out a boy as k™ 3975 Young as you on whom to exercise her blandishments. It isn’t cricket. She Style 450— "Sheresilk”, so clear you 2 should take somebody in her own age class can read print through it, It is @ cruel thing for & woman, for the sake of flattering her vanity, to play with @ boy's hieart. He gives her the purest and most unselfish affection AT LEADING STORES & man ever has to give, and when she finally disillusions him the star dust is gone forever from out his eyes, and he always sees women a little cynically 6, 2 . DL thereafter. n f'r untries. . s ‘I" g Don't make any sacrifices for this woman, J. D.; she isn't worth it. And| 1. Became liquid . To satisfy Fruit Cockta six months from now you will have forgotten her and will be playing around | 6. Alluvial deposit containing vilu- Inhabitants of a Siamese district > ked Fillets of Halibut with some little girl of your own age DOROTHY DIX able minera To knock senseless. Whipped Potatoes. Asparagus . 2 e ol o B ER eh e inaanr s At any time “Onyx Hosiery ls sold only in recail stores, and never by howse-to-bows Lettuce Salad, Russian Dressing DAL MISS DIX: Lam u vouns man who has been married five years and | 12. Not well A metal. canvasers. We warn all persons sgainst peddiers claiming to sell “Onyx. BraliEa R D has a little son he adores. Unfortunately, I have a terrible temper and |14, To be born - Ancient Celtic languai o 0 friend wife is very set in her ways and headstrong. We had many quarrels | 15. Lowest tones of an D i vt RYE MUFFINS. and she started going home to mother and telling her all her troubles. Being By way of. RlasonE e . : E human, this infuriated me: and my wife's mother, also being human, told my | 17. A separate particular Mact rer 5 > o oome 4 oh i ids: do Petty demons. SIS O% 1. TeDI0Ve, SWRE wife to come home and stay, which she has done « fiont ta : 5 Ilove my wife and child better than anything else on earth, and am ut- Crecping plant Deduces quarter teaspoon of salt, butter terly miserable without themn. How can 1 get them back again? Unit of force. 2 size of a walnut, melted and A HEARTBROKEN DADDY. Expression of contemp Down. added just befors the milk, one Flowing back cup of rye meal and one-half cup of pastry flour, two tea- spoons of baking powder. Bake in muffin pans about 30 min- utes Rice Croquettes, Cheese Sauce Whole Wheat Bread Sandwiches. Grapefruit Salad. Cookies. Tea egg, two tabl of sugar. one cup of . one- Answer: T don't know, unless it happens that your wife has had har One whose intellect is impaired I\'?:.‘.‘r-\.- L;y:gdllm e lesson, as you have had yours, and you can persuade her to wipe the slate by age. 3. To speak imperfectly clean and start all over again 3 Invisible emanation It is a much easier thing to break up a home than it Is to rebuild it out In ancient Ireland, a freeman. 3 P of the f its of wrecked hopes and lost {llusions, and bitter memorfes. And | 323 Those who have met notes. 5. Frolicked GRAPEFRUIT SALAD. the patched-up contrivance is never the fair and beautiful edifice that the An ocean 7. Dry S [etaihed uy contvates Dnver hewais autihet dinl snifice tan ik _ i : Vitamines! Cut fruit in halves; with S ers e Tt 18 156 Dt PacdAing s S o = What Tomorrow Means to To fix again AT et St el e Aol satrsl center pith, loosen fruit from o oh it e fhan (fobbs L b - can pect any woman to be very ibout coming back to a e side of skin, then criss-cross 0 has a terrible temper and who makes matrimony a perpe family Gorton’s delicious Ready-to-Fry Codfish man who has a terrible temper and wh mak matrimony perpetual fight YO!L ks i en et wanis o k. all over fruit; fill with the best | |1 : . y ! . There is nothing alluring in that prospect Cries of large animals = bt e ol and a gaad dugtieer The woman who is married to a high-tempered man knows the strain BY MARY BLAKE. Bleat e ceaReer booklet free orika: set away for a few | | ;¢ 41qavs walking on eggs to keep from saying or doing something that . Purchase. GORTON- IES, Gloucester. Mass. urs before serving, then dust ; el fore SEr¥INg, thel Wwill rile him, She knows the humiliation of having cruel and brutal things | : Anger . 5 PARIS FROCK OF SILVER "LOTH AS with very finely minced cloyes: AN AliC ey T at Y evn ANTIks LiSE AlC shopla GVeRIsoE Bech b E 2 aaif tier Aquarius. A twitening o l h ak OFT AS CHIFFON. THE FULL vhen he was angry ; a S aayents Skill s es SRIRT “SHOWS A~ NEW SHORTCAKE e row's planetary aspe kil : Not much prospect for happiness with a high-tempered husband; and it late in the afternoon, ver Portuguese money BEING GATHERED INTO A TIGHT To two cups of sifted flour is not strange that, after once trying it and having got away from it, the | s s all con trated e 5. Spanish silver coin -Rmay.m.['a speak in a surly manner. BAND ABOUT THE HIPS. d one heaping teaspoon of woman doesn’t want to go back to it Break of continuity baking powder, 1 tablespoon of are | 35. A Hebrew name for Goc stralght trim si t L cars sugar, m add one- Tools for making conical recesses. infinitely more f i for quarter cup of melted butter, a in matters related 2 5 to real estate or property. They But often going back to mother is not il peaches and cream, either.|also fairly encouraging for business r Generally a woman finds that after she has run her own house she does not | i ans oo o1l of Its bran pro- River nymph = = llrm[wr‘ wall t # scant ¢ of milk, a speck of fit very comfortably iht ybody else’s house; and that while mother ¥ be | vided that nothing of a spe tive “To declare openly = = :?rn!ng r-gz:t 8t »-:‘v ecess I \\:' t and |.l>‘| (x11n~ :-nn.-x“ r“:\h" sorry for her, she doesn't want to support her and the baby or nazardous characte ba attempted Aq:mlh“hlrd . . weight about the skirt * Mix soft and divide into two And, sometimes, the wife realizes that she is not wholly blameless, | They apparently indicate that reai Sea eagle, t t comfortable and so 3 piece in a round tim, butter used a little more common sense in deallng with the situation. And often | been in process of negotiation for |43. Woody plant especially apt to be impra the top and put the other she is big enough to be willing to sacrifice herself for her child’s sake. some time will be successfully One who utilizes ghorcye verion it women wanie | | pivce on fon of prag By | | S0l Shuh el epehuane dm ieart ke R K0 I e | 0 . " diher” ey : Joint-Ease, Writes Eastern Druggist e I 1 vourself L to persuade her to come back fo ot ate success for any skirt that should be wide enough with butter : = box of heboyts ek ack for | they denote ultimate su f 3 perfect comfort, but sne that should| | fresh cries, | washed, have all the chic ard youthfulness of drained and mashed, with one e o straight, scant wme that we have Zood cup of sugar. Spread both D been wearing. between and on top But clever dressmilers and designers DOROTHY DIX undertaking _initiated under these auspices, altRough unforeseen diffi- ot imse is = very much in love with a n s to see me | culties rise which will cause a : £ - e : “ in my store because it is a every night. but who will not p se to me. I 1k he is very anxious | change in the original ns. In the 2 i to marry me, but he is too bash to pop the question all 1 propose | evening conditions are quite adverse, and speedy remedy to him ANXIOUS a as is so often ommended in T troubles. - theso dafly obselvafions, care and 1l “But wh ipre Answer: 1f man is in love with you. and desires to marry you, he | circumspection must be used and thousands of suffering people son will do the proposing. No man ever hesitates to ask for what he wants, | self-control exercised e e e o Color Cut-Out T hes wiinen Tiasitie that a man hides fis Tove they kid themselves Bt 1f| | A shild ‘hor fomorrow (l.y‘n}rlx‘r(nfll lm‘.« ;]i‘/" duils you can’t lead him up to popping the question by indirect methods, ask him | experience much illness duri ey ATt 6 Ericks i BY JEAN NEWTON. % his intentions, rather than waste any more time upon him. But I warn you| fancy. Its few ailments will yleld SEIRe At 1 acsS The Time Comes. he will probably say “No!” DOROTHY DIX. very readily to simple remedies. Prior bago over night—ot (Copyeight.) N LHoleRtEnce oW avar §6 willk: i for chest colds and sore throat : t hy succeeds— “Tying the Knot.” all probability, suffer a serlous physi- | no equal, while many her nt-E: in joint agony cal setback. Only proper care and here isthing ey eves tried th : : it s eacte Do you promise to love, honor and S OI\AL HE xLTH SFRV!(‘E unrelenting vigilance will ¢ e it so efficient for net 1 And the knot was tied fotghcoiies SHIRTRE A even head colds al catarrh married as looping the loop; why BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. show a tendency to dissimulate and makers of Joint-I »w that wh should we call it tying th knot? Not h 1 A . = 3 phys romance, and will not have that sin 1& there any allusion or preten | sential to success, Discipline will | eny such literal entanglement! No, | | focus, to the lining of the bile tract.|eradicate this tendency to prevari- | not in ours, but to make our vernacu- | More Fall. ta tho blood Heraam et 1t il pooiiet more than ol Rex 0 ReonUOLIg, 0 I G RICI Kk The pint and a half of bile which| Conditions or factors which favor ability, and have great ambi- pressions gleaned from every part of the 43:-pound liver of azy | intestinal stasis and stagnation of | tion, and will endear itself to those the globe, even India has played a man secrates in a day is more than |blood in the splanchnic area (copious | whom it takes into its confidenc part 97 per cent water and less than network of veins in abdomen) proba-| If tomorrow is your birthday you Among the Brahmins of Tndla a {cent solids, so it isn't very thick as|bly predispose to the formation of |are a very easy-going and con- nuptial knot is actually tied. After | compared with milk, which 7 |gallstones if the blie tract is in con- . and no matter what the futher of the bride has given her per cent water and 13 per cent s. [dition to start in that business. H § n store for you, whether rally, to the highest bidder, { But certain constituents of th. is one way in which the fat, forty and | failure or succe shrug vour Y man places about ler neck give it a rather viscous character. v individual accumulates a collec- | shoulders and pt it all as part a piece of ribbon with a Botably the 0.6 or 0.7 per cent of [tion of gallstones. Here the corset|of the day's routine. You always ®old threud 1ded from it, and mucin, the 0.9 or 0.9 per cent of bile |Eets in some of its harmful work:|console yourself with the thought ties the knot. And this Is the tie that | ealts, the 0.4 or 0.6 per cent of bile [Women are four times more frequent- | that your misfortune could have been binds! For it is the gnia of mar- ‘ids and the 0.08 per cent of cho- |1y the possessors of precious gall- | worse, or your measure of success rage which forever labels the bride lesterin. stones than are men could have been greater. with the sign. “Hands off!” And it is Now. having acquired a gallstone! You are not, by inclination, indus- an indissoluble or a bunch of them, what is one to| trious, and are more disposed not be untangled or do about it? How does one know,|cept things and conditions as worthy people do n before the grand opening, that there |are than try to change them, vores are any stones there? Can't the stones | though the change may be to be dissolved by some kind of treat- |own advantage, if, in order to bring | ment? . about a better result, effort and work It is possible, though certainly rare, | are required {for gallstones to remain latent for{ Owing to your unguffied disposi- years, causing no trouble at all. As|tion, you have a host of friends, and | It is doubtful whether a gallstone |a rule, however, the victim at least|no enemies—except vourself, and | would form in the bile duct or the|suffers from “indigestion,” complain- | your own lack of ambition. Your gall sac (gall bladder) unless irrita-|ing of fullness, heaviness and disten- | companionship is sought, and in vour tion of the mucous lining of these|sion after meals, relieved more or less | home you are, unconsciously, either canals and reservoir preceded the by belching gas or sometimes by vom- [ a dominated husband or a subservient srmation of the calculus. Generally |iting; or a sense of tightness|wife. You, however. provoke no such {rritation is a prolonged 1ow- | around the waist for which one loos- | trouble and make no complaints, and grade inflammation from bacterial in-|ens the garments. Frequent heart-|are supremely happy, either with t fection of the bile tract. On exami-|burn, or the regurgitation of sour|little or with much & mirror in the door of a small secre nation of a gallstone it is a common | material from the stomach. is a fam Well known persons born on that tary desk instead of the usual panes| thing to find at the center a clump of | liar complaint of persons who carry | date are: John A, Rawlins, Secretary of glass. For cne thing it conceals| digease germs.’say typhold bacilli, en- | gallstones. Of course, none of these|of War under Grant: Charles Bar- the contents of the cupboard o that | tangled with mucous, and around this |symptoms would convict one of har- | nard, author and dramatist; Alex- it may be put to more general use. | central nidus sucessive lavers of |horing costly calcull. I am merely | ander J. Julian, geologist; George el | The Sieeping Beauty lay in her palace | cholesterin and lime salts which have | reminding readers that even if there | Brown (Goode, ichthyologist: Charles and the years passed by. Long since the | been gradually deposited from the |he such a thing as innocent or latent|C. Curran, artist, and J Fargo, people of the country had forgotten the | bi The typhoid bacilli have been |galistones, certainly there is no such | express man. story about her, and no one knew any- |found In the center of a gallstone, |thing as innocent “indigestion,” and (Copyright, 192: thing about the mysterious palace whose |5till alive and ready for busincss aslaside from the symptoms mentioned, towers could sometimes be. eeen from |lOnE as 12 years after the original at- | gallstone subjects often have severe Vit nearby: Hitis tack of typhoid fever. But typhoid is|or alarming attacks of what is And. the hundred sears drew mear |the infection responsible in only the |wrongly called “acute Indigestion.” thelr end minority of cases of gallstone disease. (Copyrignt.) Foo it B openiad the s hbor. | Focal infection is a more common A Seste s da rince, He was as light-hearted ang fcoccus finding its way from diseased | Modern Version. { ple loved him. | Harrlnfllons— “'lhal‘s the matter Bt TN ? Y One day he called som f the yi with him? een looking upon th %3 G e ot e S o et | | MOTHERS Vine when 1w et . % them to get ready to go on a hunting “arrington—No; looking upon the W& . . o : trip with him. He was tired of the AW AN S, alcohol when it was wood. 7 S g Eisa great coffee drinker—it is really interest- pleasures of the cour & 3 : ’ TR 4 ing to sec how much pleasure he gets out of L Color_the princes hair with your g P2 it,”" this is what Major Achibald Butt wrote paste him on light-weight cardboard and " : about Theodore Roosevelt in one of his cele- cuthimout = : brated letters. How “‘T.R."" must have relished his break- - : ] ; fasts, during his visit years ago to the Maxwell House in T livine Zoomsdinlieinoom oy AUNT HET Nashville! For it was the coffee served at this famous old epaces for china, silver or linens. i THE NON-BOLLING SILK DYE southern hotel, a special blend wonderfully rich and mel- furnishings of the room—another i to-wae low, that its distinguished guests always praised most mirror o scintillate and. gleam-— [ P | Quick highly. Everywhere critical families have heard of vistas. | This mirror, (oo, [s & partic. | S BOb H . )t You won't sigh over faded Maxwell House Coffee and have secured it for their own ularly lovely one, well sulted to the| hd w‘ :an silk, lace-trimmed lingerie T, 1z dolicatedesign o "the ‘e After | S usc. Today, prepared and roasted in just the same way, the French manner, It s made o : : - i sevaral panes with mitered edges held | ! 7 Be Gl'fly T s Risors lisie this same blend of fine coffees is supplied to them in SoEstner by el giags ot E T PR ) and body to silk blouses. scaled tins. Your own family can cnjoy its rare fragrance preight, X the hair is bobbed. Make it youthfal And most wonderful of all, and aroma. Ask your grocer for one of the blue tins of S with Brownatone. Easy t o de. 1 Nut and Apple Bread. Liy. Apply once and thereafter onty Glorient . Maxwell House Coffec. e i as new hair Soms in,‘ I;oaifiuly safe, _&a‘l&f ‘&“ w&t. one tablespoonful of butter, B contains no harmful ingredi add to It one teaspoonful of mus- | O e Aaentor found it necss- |- Natural shades astured, e € Also Maxwell House Tea takd, teaspoonful of sugar, one- sary to pin her dresses on the shoul.| S0ld and recommended by all dealers. BRI tepspolniunl el Ity DE ders, even when she used metal lin-| LW Sizes=S0c and $150. Two colors, ey sy gmnnmtee . Nom white pepper, the volks of two eggs = lightest blonde to medium i y boili well beaten and four tablespoonfuls gerio clasps. Soon her dresses were | g% A this. No boilin 5 T dark brown to black. Trial e of lemon juice, Cook in @ double badly worn where she pinned them, | i BEOW (8 BRcke o bottle for No staining hands. 18 AXWEI L HOUSE O boiler until it thickens, then add the % so I made a loop for each shoulder| U2:0 3™ The Kenton Cor lowing, lovely colors, all whites of the eggs stiffly beaten. | :( n:r:::u“;zhli:: ar:‘l‘)bun v;-l!r;lrh fas-| g Coppin Bullding, c"""'“‘"‘" g ?ldelcss-;o fighe 3 o Chill, then add one cupful of whip- ene e straps with a snap -light. £ B i Baditream ust bafors serving b Tis fastener.” On top of this was ‘xewed GUARANTEED HARMLESS 5:5‘0 \) ToDAY—Americas layges? selling, dressing £hould be mixed with one| “I never licked my boy John but|the lower half of snap—the other last drop E quart of chopped apples, one pint of fonce after he was fourteen, and that [ half of the snap being put inside her At Drug and Department Stores hgmdecqfi'u dlced celery, one and .one-half cup-|was when ho come home from school | dress on e M s 7 ThsSoekes GLORIENT, Inc. tuls of blanched and shredded al-|thinkin' he was teo growed up to |them “stay put” without wearing ou TINTS MAIR ANY SHADE monds and two-thirds of a cupful of | kiss me.” ! 2 the shoulders of the dress, 30 Church St. New York solled pecan nut meats. (Copyright, 19259 . ACopyright, 10280 ' ____ .. Cholesterin is a peculiar non-nitro- | genous fatlike substance found in |the red blood corpuscles, the white | matter of the brain, the sebaceous I secretion of the skin, the sweat, and EEe | the bile. It is commonly found to be the main constituent of soft or friable gallstones; lime saits predominate in the harder stones.