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G _STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1925. FEATURES. 3 WOMAN’S PAGE. THE EVE Color Cut Out ]‘ IN THE GARDEN WITH BURBANK Deft Handling and Mixing in Kitchen | | | What Tomorrow Means to You iy DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Gemini. 1Shall Young Married Women Keep Up With Old LITTLE CINDERELLA. BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. As Reported by Elizabeth Urquhart and Edited by Luther Burbank. [l { | i 1 | | S exUBEL N eul ey Ruuiis s e The conditions, according to the| . 3 - : o ; Gardens for City Dwellers. fix the scale of the zarden and decide tell the minute a woman takes a spoon e S St ravoraile | ang or arries R, s11-to-Do o : how much may be planted and starts to sUF a mixtire whether planctary aspects, are not favorabie ( (Gang or Go With Married Set?>—Well-t | Since onr tast talk 1 have been think- | "3 MR Llice b only 20 feet square | during the morning, become quite ad- | verse thereafter and until sunset. | .\Izl!‘ric(l \\’UI]L’LII‘\’ MI(‘ ’I‘imc_ she is & good cook or not. Quick work ing of the needs of men, women and |or even less, there will not be room this, in judging! Perhaps it seems 8o, Lty ntereo & mnrkeAiehnnES | | most certainly children living in| for many shrubs or even plants, but but ‘when I explain the secret almost o e hetts A RATRIl6 LHE¢ Gve ot | Gk B e S aa e B i i L 4ol walk down the any competent housewife could judge | | excellent, become at once benign and ; e e o o rens o Jove | CChLer, endin at the rear In & bench e e stimulating. During the day littie that | [Y1AR MISS DIN 2 years old, and have been married four years. of fAowers. 1 said By o T e e Tt ST 15 ab e T lh forcefully aggressive should be es | 1 have two sets bunch of high school gifls and some married | “Now, after all our garden planning (" SRI0ed 4 of the walk Eesiesaniare e L s s saye Important corres dence { women who are oid If. [ach set is demanding move and mozs "f; and planting and our lists of bulbs and | .14 he of grass with a border of 1 A ghtto et 5 | should, if possible, be deferred. Nolmy time. Which one shall I cling to F. B. perenrials and annuals, I cannot heip |70 Go e U RS B8 PR e e s aRT UL L Kt fcontracts or agreements, involving i | thinking of the many little zardens joi. wuiden pinks or violis, and some b e {financial _obligations, should be exe Answer: T think it will be better you to choose the married women. everywhere that seem all too small to| oy KAtlen 1k of violas, und some mine whether or not tea hiscuits will | jcuted. Every effort should he made |into whose class you passed when vou got married. The old proverh says | hold even a part of these many shrubs | ot G Vines trained to cover the mine whether or not tea biscults will to avold either acting or speaking on | that you cannot run With the hare and hunt with the hound, and this is ax | |and plants.” | o5 6, wiliich mrobably will ot B ox ok Ithwnl Qatermine. wlistbesia impulse, and the desire that w Itrue in matrimony as elsewhere. You cannoi be a young girl, with a youns | | Mr. Burbank’s face lit_up with a | EEC Y 1d understar present to act or speak without plenty | giyl's freedom, and hav of thought must be repressed. | A child born tomorrow will enjoy | When you go with the the privileges of a married woman. the crowd does. That's smile of interest = Another variation and he seated himself for a few min’ | . G000 PR utes to consider the matter S Tevine r this wee cake will have the desired light and lawn covering it creamy texture characteristic of per rowd, you have to do = e sthe: o . ow bed on all three fection in cake making or whether the normal health, although the signs de- | the gang ethics. You must dance, fiirt, have dates, spend vour time amusing | - wrden is too small for beauty,” | 4ig €7 ki Tall e batter will turn out merely an ordinary | ote t wil bubly be sub; 4 s b : | sides for vines or tall plants, and, in: = Sy note that it will probubly be subject | yourself, and these thir are incompatible with Leing a good wil | he said, “and the mission of & Zarden | Sie.q of o path, stepping Stones crose GRS, e e and not heavy, vet not | to serious illness during the period of One of the main reasons why so many young wives are so disgruntled | is to bring beauty Into the limits of | {1e%%, S8 5 PEUR: SCERRINE SLones cross Hghit lescence—un_fllness that will de-fand dissatisfied, and think that they have fallen out of love with their| home and to give joy to the dwellers | (5 0 BN 0 S O el Some housewives express determina | mand the utmost care and vigilance. | hushands and in love with some other man, is because they are still running | thereof, he they LCMPOTATY OF PEFML- | aybor huilt serosn o e angula tion in the very way they stir a batter - a 1 ner, or pe: s they do. | This child’s disposition will inevitably | with their old girl friends and teving to do be sunny and bright, while its charac 2k 0 ter, not as firm as it should be, will be | They think they are heing persecuted because th | truthful and frank, but too much dis-and get dinner after the movies or a matinee, instead of meeting a lot of | | posed to forzet duty in order to please | hoys and loafing around at a soda fountain for an hour or two, as Mary, and | alleged friends. It is quite nec vy |Sallie, and Hilda, and Susie do. They think their husbands are unkind that much influence be brousht to{because they will not take them out to dunces every night, as the girls'| | bear on this child in order that its will-} steadies do. They think that they should have the money for clothes instead | | power may be strengthened. It will {of paying it on a house, and they can’t see any harm in having men make | {be intellizent, but lack the quality of | love fo them as they do to the other girls | leadership, and always be more suc-| il | nent.” % | “But so many homes on eity | streets, with only a strip o und in | front, or even nothinz but the side- | Peanut Brittle. | walk ‘and often only a small space at the back!" | “Then) said Mr. ank, whose | measu interest was deepening with the diffi- | sranulated sugar in clean frving pan culties, “we shall concentrate on the | SUr over slow fire. It will lump, then | back yard and we can call it the rear |sradually melt. When pale coffee | garden, if you like, but it will be a|color and clear add nuts and ed hammock or mix a dough. They grasp the han- dle of the spoon as if it would elude them unless firmly gripped. They press the tip of the spoon dowh heay- | ily until it scrapes the bottom of the | mixing bowl with ever revolution it makes. Butter and sugar may be creamed ) without detriment, but when the flour is sifted in and the | liquid is alternately added this heavy : bave to rush home | hell and chop roasted nuts to sure one pint. Put two pounds handling is ruinous. The ingredients | cessful in subsidiary capacity than in | that when they got married they undertook the serious | | &arden’in any case quickly on buttered tin sheet that are bein 1bined are fine. They {any one of individual and sole respon- | busir f life, that they voluntarily gave up their playtime, that they | |7 “No!" I said, “1 rather like the name | thin as possible. When cold break up. must be man ated as if they were. | | sibility assumed responsibilities which they are in honor hound ;-..rnlull et oKl | back yard. if we can make it bea 2 ek . | Is May 22 your birthday? If so. you So I think, Mrs. . B. K., that a young wife is much happier and safer tiful. “And 1 am recalling the charm Handle | Spoon Sighily {are not easily placated, and your at-{if she chooses her companions among younz married women who have the | inz zardens hack of Japanese houses A spoon should be held securely in belligerent rather than trac- | same interest in their homes, in their husbands and in their babies that she | of hoth rich and poor, ranginz from a the hand, but the wrist should be u very easily take offense, | has: women who are strugzling to help their husbands zet tart in_the tiny plot of only a few feer square to flexible. Let it serve as a sért of axle for t hand as it lightly turns the spoon around and around in the bowl or back and forth, as the case may be. The spoon should gently fold in the flour at first it a cake is heing made When it has become incorporated sufhi. ciently the cake can be beaten vigor ously, but not heavily When the e would | worlainst running around to juzz parties, and who arve pushing | perambulators instead of goinz joy-riding with sicek-haired youths. refer to| DOROTHY DIX i anoth friends, con a depth of one or two hundred feet “Yes." reed Mr. Burbank nd The friendly feeling in the humblest of these vou would thet I have find at least one low shrub, a - fow wellchosen,. rach i oo, | |For Frogs is very with perhaps a little stream trickling et e |away, and half dozen stepping stones. lost back yards ave depressing 10 | T love their tunny, sme of you our shortcomings [ these characteristics s excessive sus ceptibility. As a matter of fact, "'”‘l)liv\li MISS DIN: 1 am married to 4 man who is able to support me in | i Sullening Lo R e | 1ts to do my housework, so that T really | by careful in g _ b ¥ a4 number of friends who are business | ¢ what “small po- | isiness | (i comfort, and who zives me ser have nothing much to do. 1 hav i women. and they think that 1 should put in my time going to sch and if you could on trospection, realize my dear sisters, please let me to this ball with you,” bezged | = tatoes” you are life would be more | WQOHEH: 200 they thiE A not of the business type. What do you think | g ges il 4 down on.” I reflected, “ash cans baulnis adaed = Jittle af dlime, 16 100 Dearable for you, and more endurable [ fusines It b PamimntoR e sl L WM CSmaerella. . 1 couldweaBione oL YOUL | vhage, | Larrels, clothes| posts ) and pompous looks, &hould be lightly worked into the but B A shoule lold dresses.” e doemd % atter is beaten. Each time that either |t =y 'id N " should work outside of her home | they jeered Why, we should die of | _ _ et 1 s | “ chip on the shoulder” into your home Answer: 1 see no reason why a woman should work ou ' | g . L lall of these are generally necessities me of the flour or the liquid is [ 1ife. and ‘this does mot promote har- | unless she needs 1o do %, or has an inner urke to express some talent that | shame if the prince saw you. No, no, [&v.ayt “the rubbish, and If we accen incessant Seciem) helbatteq ALONIGIS WkDIOUEY ! mony, or engender contentment it would make her miserable to suppress jtne Kiichen thifne place forizon S them as fixtures and treat them as | beaten before more is Well-known persons born on this On_ the contrary, | think that the rich woman should not enter intoy = So -l_L<;i‘||”|h‘P stepsisters and SteD” | features they may he made harmo Making ¥ date are: Charles I, Haswell, civil |competition with the poor woman. She should let the girl who needs the |mother dressed and rode away to the | [ 0 " 0 0"y Wl to whom the pay |ball, and more than ever did Cinder- | or buyer. i : n <. have it. Of late it|ella’ wish that she might go, too.| 1 looked rather incredulous, and Mr engineer: Sydney H. Gray, journalist |situation as secretary, or saleswor and author; Worthington Whittredge, | envelope means food and clothes, or hunzer and ra If pie crust is beinz made. the| A\ LIGHT TOUCH WHEN MINI rbank went on to say Shortening must be gently flecked into| AND~STIRRING BATTERS AND |artist; Christopher ¢. Langdell, edu. | has been a fad for society girls and rétless, dissatisfied married women to|Scarcely had they gone, however, | U Yo O (G0 e )y the prevared flour until the mass IS} WHEN MAKING PIE CRUST DE-|cator; Henry Trimble, Sclentist and | use their social influence o get the big places il offices, whereby they have |than the fairy godmother appeared| . .qand get its dimensions. note the Bctnatly _Saky before | the = smalliNompS (HEIGOOD) COOK: educator: Jacob G. Schurman, edu-|worked eat and unconscious cruelty and wrong on poor girls who were [once more. enclosing fence and also any shrubs or amount of ice-cold wa 1s added. If he shortenin is mixed with a firm | handling of the dough IZven if they s pressure, the pie crust will be firm,|cut the shortening into the flour, they 5 “Oh, my dear godmother, if T only too, when it comes to the table. It |press the knives down stolidly, com: could!” cried Cinderella = | should be in the most delicate of | pressing the dough rather than mak t Making a happy home isn't necessarily dependent on doing your own | Cingerella’s fai e Gamothor bade scarcely sticking together when | inz jt flaky. They lean hard on the . { cooking, and scrubbing, and sweeping It is a matter of brains and Spirit. | her bring the same things she had the | cut. There are some expert pie makers | rolling- pin and sq the pie crust | Tt is the finest work the world, and if you do it properly you will not find [ evening before and again she changed ’ it t among housewives who can handie | first this way and then that. as they hat you have much time hanginz on your hands | them by her magic into the heautiful %3 | i » with your friends as to the necessity every young wWoman|cgach.and-four. She then touched Cin study obs that they plived with for a few months and| “Well. I suppose.you would like to | kRS : 0 1o this ball, too [in desperate need of th hief fac ' { then tired of and threw up trees already planted. The tor, of course, is size, for A death mist for FLIES! cator (Copyright. 19 dough so deftly that they can mix pie | endeavor to make it big encugh to crust with their hands and it will| cover the pie plate. The crust seems | ins something and improving hersel continually. so why not join some | gerella’s rags and they were chanzed 1 subject? | come out like puff puste. If you watch |always to shrink back when the roll 3 class which is studving literature, or French, or art, or some cultur: into a dress even more beautiful than | them you will notice that they work |ing pin ix lifted until it seems as if the | You would “certainly “find_ this as improving as studying bookkeeblni o | the one she had worn the first night. | JUST close the doors the shortening into the flour with the | size would never be as big as the Lot 4 e | ssraphy DOROTHY DIX ( The prince was watching impa. | and windows. Spray tips of their which appear to|tom of the pie plate. It matters not AR Lo Ralil | g ey IMPROVED DETHOL flutter around, sure here and there, 1 slight pres- | how well such pie crust is baked, it i R MISS DIN: 1 am a very popular givl among the younger set and |moment Cinderella entered the room | it feeling th | will be tough Attt anildren hxdibeen {0 ea | 1) have many admirers, but they belong to a variety of natlonalities he rushed forward and tock her by the | till the air is misty. Wait texture rather than 1anipulating the - : Peter Pan they clamored for a play-| please tell me whic onality makes the best hushand? BLACK EY hand. “Why did vou leave me so| A e doushithey cantel by tliesteel S Gk e Bt e e e PL R R j[,.m.‘mw' he asked. “I looked for fe mml:"d' dTfi}TE" when sufficient shortening has been| When it comes to tea biscuits, they | hause the lost boys built for Wendy \nswer: American. There is no other husband in the world who is|you everywhere and could not sleep sweep out the dead flies. used. They know immediitely when|should be mixed quickly (as well as|\jother was in favor of the plan. but{{pe equal of the great American hushand, and the American wife is nn\'xwl‘?l! night for thinking of you.” nr; Every last one. Made by 10 stop adding the icy water. They [ lightly), rolled and cut as it they were | 3aq was not enthusiastic about having | pe the women of all other countries srushed past Cinderella’s stepsisters, < fes ool noich B Thine Bls AGTINN Gty iv Qull Ml o) Dy O en treat their women with such generosity, such kindness,|never noticing them. and led Cinder a wonderful new secret b of the crust on t 1 it out. There on treat theirs. No other women have the |ella to the dance. formula, IMPROVED DETHOL is the surest over the t as they re hing unless handled with care. hen they should be put not too close such liberality as American 1 freedom that American women have. It is only in America that husbands ms The prince’s cloak should be purple magic in their hands, for the crust in- | togethe to the pans and baked in 2 - o pa v s may have the money to - creases in size without appeu to| quick oven. ; ; SULAE Home andimock In order that (el wles e e e you oan soe | s boots, hat and stick black. Next fly-killer ever shot from be pressed or spread into the righ Practically all kinds of food that re | travel abroad American women taking the grand tour alone. but you nm'»r'“;']‘l“_“"’j of the haughty stepsisters a sprayer. You need el nenge Do the miineiof stieni 0 | see the European women doing so unless they are rich old maids or widows. [\\ appear. o b Sompexentigogks be handled thus lightly it the dishes | In America it is the wife who dominates the home, who decides where | Pt Get it today. Simple — trouble with the unsuccessful[are to turn out as perfect as could | they shall live, who picks out the house and furniture, and fixes the style of | Safe—Sure. Kers is senerally of heavy | be wished - At i iheain o decides everything, and the woman| Beat two-thirds of a cupful of short- IVing 0 eiverte fheimanewio geccanie lening to a cream. Gradually beat in a Oy cerything s oms x - | scant cupful of sugar and the grated ; ea the best of everything goes to the woman. They are our fscant cup! = F BY THORNTON | tetsume e urope the wife Is generally just the housewife, and her | vellow rind of a lemon. Add two egs | < | business i to make her husband comfortable and bear him children. beaten light, two tablespoonfuls of . BURGESS Lo > il thick, sour milk, half a teaspoonful of I < because the American husband spofls his wife that international | salt if the shortening is unsalted, and ‘ L ian whnanny n girl cannot adjust herself | two cupfuls of sifted flour, sifted again | tandard of husbands, and she thinks she is ill-used when | with one-fourth teaspoonful of soda. | marriag Perfectly Happy. sized white marble. How his eves did Lo She BEEanely Ak as see other men of his acquaintance { Mix thoroughly, knead slightly, and o & n.)‘. "W::F’ e sparile then! He knew he had found her husband treats her as he has seen all the other OOLIEE ausiuisice A thordughls, ke sllshtly; Fan S e e The stmach often 18 the 151 Ay, Snapper’s nést and that if he treat their wives (Coprright, 1923.) Set in a greased pan, dredge with your money back. Half-pints, 50c: Pints, 75¢; Quarts, $1.25; asathar el A0 dn-Mesins e JronllRG Mo e | sugar, and bake in a quick oven Gallons, $4.00. Combination package containing pint can and Unc' Billy Poss 1 ped| SsERDxobably & 1t afithem, i | This recipe makes about 40 cookies. sprayer, $1.00. Dethol Manufacturing Co, Inc. Richmond, Va. ne' Billy Possum actually was be- | Une' billy didn't stop to eat that | “de” does not indicate the likelihood oming excited. Yes, sir, he was. It egs. He rolled it aside and went to | k Pour AME | that the name is a derivative of a de- had just popped into his funny head | digsing again. Out rolled another egs igtory of Bour RN | that the trail he was following throush | and another and another. That was a the grass not far from the Smiling | rezular mine, an egg mine. Out came Pool might, just might, lead to eggs. another and another and another. The trail had been left by Mrs. Snap- | With every egz Unc' Billy felt better. per the Snapping Turtle. Une' Billy | At least it seemed to him that he did. AN scriptive word, but rather of a place OWLAN ’n me, though this is not ‘ proof. Since no English locality named “Bleys" is to be found in the old rec ords, you turn to Normandy as the BY PHILIP F) his precious back-yard garden turned i’ S into a N ever Land. { BLISS And so, because mother was just o Srarted L Toniow 1t Just aE AL et aemed to him that he did. | 4/ anxlous to keep: him happy as 16 i s, you taen . ; e s orax JUe QUE of idle | avhen at last he couldn't find another | Lo1 e the children, she hired a real| RACIAL ORIGIN—English. next’ most likely place, and there you had been. He hadn't thought of e ve N ; ElOal§ rpenter to put up this substantial| SOURCE—A place name. will find the town of Blois, which, in << | over his pile of treasures. Then he . he had quite forgotten began to eat pper, like other members | ‘Those eggs were fresh. They had | the period of the Norman conquest and for a time thereafter, was called | “Bleys.” The name has developed in t little cottage at the | S paint i, me which seems to be the obviou and weathe end of the tig arden path. It wa then. In fac that Mrs. Sn: Often the derivation of a family e Lap Al B : led an entrancinz old green-blue and 1 2 e A8 = of the turtle family, lays ex Ehenijesn laki emiyiaverslite white WU nct S0 o) reanining RoTlvhobks acommd "‘hn-f is the real one. But here is alope direction in the English tongue Billy smacked his lips over the first { S5 it has become one of the most | €4S¢ in which it is not. A pretty good|,nq in another under the influence of | one and he smacked them again over |50 thAC 1t has hecome ofe of the most ument might be put up that the | finzlich speech. | the second one.. The third tsted just | Picturesa 8 9 = family name of Bliss comes from the | SRR e las good. Even the last one, and that 02 word of similar spelling which me: ‘\\ the twenty-third, tasted good { happine: h|‘ And the argument mig! (Copyright. 1925.) | enough to make Unc’ Billy wish for SV B | he as zood as any other except for one | more; uithough his stommch was. fult. | Leftover Omelet | thing ; | Velvet Molasses Candy. | But that wish was only for a minute. In tracing back the name of Bliss| Put one-and-a-half pounds sugar, | He really had had plenty for once, one | | through several centuries we come to | one-half pint molasses, one-half pint { {of the finest exy feasts he ever had {\Cp not nse this Italian method. | the record of one “William de Bleys” | water, one-fourth cupful vinegar in known y Whith was not devised th hrevent {in 1272, and in tracing back the word |agate kettle. Heat: when boiling add | UAb am perfecily happy. Yes, suh, | ACh NS T O e | 'bliss” to the same period, we do not | one-half teaspoonful cream tartar, boil | Ah am perfecily happy.” said Unct| 350 B (0 WS, 1 choite dISh | fnd that it takes the 'spelling of | till it crisps in cold water. Stir; when| Billy as he started tor home in the ) JHE O T8 @70 TCE AUILE TR B0¢ | “bleys,” but rather of “blisse” or|almost done add one-fourth pound but- Green Forest. “Ah don’ know of any- | SPEeA0 1o Coob GG Thep are ut 100 | wy)vae. ter, one-fourth teaspoonful soda. Cool thing that could make one so perfectly Dee cay ol in buttered pan and pull | happy as a stomachful of aiges, nice | These strips are heated in butter and ' q fitlflav” ' ymetimes it happens that omelet i eft. It seems too bad to waste it Y Wi s the presence of the prefi Serves i @ eat gravy or sauce. don’ know J've ot them und won't|3erved with a m vy O aalice know I've got them, fo' she's no kind |, orv ith vegetables, celery, onfon of a mother, that Mrs. Snapper. She > anta 1t : |lays the aizks and then never oy | A Daxsley; and I Comato alch: 1 o' a certainty whether the young turtles she sces by and by are her| Londoners expect a record-break- babies or the babies of somebody else. | ing number of American visitors this D IT OUT, AND THERE | A certainly do like aizzs Y EERORE BT Ah cert'nly do like nice tresh aigis. The sauce should be well seasoned and | frech turtle aigss. And Mis Snapnes |SPrinkled with grated cheese and HE SCOOP] T [] € without warning it had popped into his head that Mrs. Snapper lays ezgs and Cream Candy. buries them in the earth. Couid it he,| One pound white sugas, three table- could it possibly be, that that wus | spoonfuls vinegar, one teaspoonful ex- what she had heen doing and that this | tract of lemon, one teaspoonful cream trail wsuld lead to those eggs? tartar. Add little water to moisten Right away Une' Billy besan to|sugar, boil until brittle. Put in ex: hurry. In fact he hurried so that he ) tract, then turn quickly out on but. lost the trail You know, it wasn't|tered plates. When cool, pull until a very plain trail. Then vou should | white. and cut in _squares have seen Unc’ Billy! The longer it = = took him to find the trail sgain the | more excited he became, and of course the more excited he became the longzer it took him to find that trail. Final he wwent buck to the ton of the bank | Nevq sold where he had first found it and s l“"d‘ 1y / ood worth traveling a thousand miles for” —wrote OHENRY « HE attention was full of exquisite southern cour- tesy, the food worth traveling a thousand miles for,” this is what O. Henry, the noted author, wrote of the old Maxwell House in Nashville, over again This time he succeeded in keeping to | the trail, and so at last he came to a damp place where there was no grass. Unc’ Billy's eyes, his shrewd little | eves, sparkled. The e ! . rth looked as | if it had recently been disturbed. It | was soft and easy to dig. Unc' Billy | began to dig. My how he did make | FACE POWDER = [ _ Renews Skin Wosk i oves e ey e e hose little paws of his go! He dug : - i those little_paws of his g He dug ga\;.— of wum‘!crful Banquet &a{n e l;f::‘;egnsfl:cs(:fi;fit Tennessee. Years ago, O. Henry reveled in the delicious “IC can't be that Mrs, Snapper done | ou in flavor and fragrance—so skillfully . fare, and above all 1n the coffee, that had made this hotel been way over here for nothing. No, B grown tea—yet it Costs no m £ h n ; sub, it can't be that she done been | Beauty l;—‘xpel"'J Makes Amazing Most grocers can supply you with genuine Banquet Oran amous throughout the old South. A special blend of fine Sl o' her heain "An Tecions ew Discovery Pekoe Tea in the air-tight orange canisters. _If not, write for coffecs was served at the Maxwell House, wonderfully e DRl T A famous French Beauty Expert has free sample and our booklet, “A Wonderful Flavor,” and give rich-bodied and 11 I saiine: - 4 TR Cream Cheese just discovered that certain imported name and address of your dealer. Teapot coupons in all -bodie 1 mellow. In all parts of the country, So Ui il et again. This ime lsr‘\fi:tr:dix:nzsml::;g galml?stkfnagicalbfe- ackages lge_‘(l:elpt oc size) explain how you may secure the family after family wanted this blend for their own tables. he didn’t dig far before he found some- . \ ing all skin troubles anquet Percolator Teapot. g thing round. He seooped It out and is made from and bringing back the soft, alluring S And today the same coffee, prepared and roasted in just there before him. perfectly h skin of childhood. McCormcx & Co., Bal :;or;;n the same way, is supplied to them in sealed tins. For your round and white like a_good . This expert has been able to powderize the Importers, Blenders and Pacl kf: eavy cream Ingredients into & thiraculously sof and B ferg : own breakfast you can have the rare fragrance and flavor that first won fame in the old South years ago. Ask your grocer for one of the blue tins of Maxwell House Coffee. Also Maxwell House Tea MaxweLL House Corree “Good to * _ToDAY—Americas Iage.t‘?sellirg, . thelagt drop” high grade coffee 4 powder. This magic powder is healing and enlarged pores, pimples, blemishe., roughness. 3 Even blackheads vanish when it is 1sed. Amid this splendid rich WhO]»e clingsdespice wind snd pecspianion: Ther foe; grandeur and multi- while gently stimulating the skin to health and e o e m]lk vigor, it is not absorbed (blackheads are often women Gouraud's Oriental Cream was a cherished beauty ~ secret. Let it be yours to-day and know a greater beauty. W ot o Triol Y. - or Trial Sic F.T. Hopbine & Son. New York Gouraups ORIENTAL CREAM and soothing—it _has an immediate effect upon This powder is marvelously adhesive — it caused by the pores absorbing inferior powders). Get a 75¢c box of Golden Peacock Tonic Face Powder from any drug or department store today. . oples 18 Drug Storex. O'Donnells | o Store. Gilman's Drug Store. Golden. | | berg's Dent .. Palais Roval Dent. | Store. Ring Dept. ~ Store, - Sig mund's Dept. S