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WOMAN’S PAGE. Binding the Hair for a Strong Wind BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. RET BOARD WIND ATTRACTIVE WAYS THAT ARE GOOD PLAYING TENNIS OF TO U GOLI, DRESSING THE HAIR ON_ SHIP- ALSO WHEN OUT IN A STRONG ETC. blem to know how | to keep it out of the eyes and hold it hen one is going to | firmly, this is a dainty way of dress wind. Thi ing it. However, it does little else. Tt oard, wher fails to prove as becoming when locks dushes are straight and straggly. Women head. Onee | of mature vears should not affect this with the salt | arrangement. It ix too childish and hampooed or re-|jacking in style for them, however all the rest of the | smart it is for girls. aetical sasgigt eyl Handkerchief. that will prove help- | These are ini! The Jarge handkerchief is in high crossing the ocean. | guvor for a real head covering. It may sed when vachting | pe of batik, or be knot dyed in artistic parties. They Wil | coloring. Sueh handkerchiefs do ad len pleving 1awn |irably. Tt is important to have the deck when | colors suit the complexion. This is vhen sitting o1 # | {rye of the bandeaux also. The hand wind is blowing. and | yerchiefs are arranged to suit the the seashore or|gapcy of the wearers, but they . where the recre-| g ppoged to envelop the halr com \ pia The | pletely, giving it real protection Arrangements are | againii the elements. This is a warm suit different re- | peuq covering, sometimes desirable for this very reason and again not so desirable. 1t is the best to use on shipboard when winds are so high that the spray is likely to sprinkle tresses, whicl may happen in rough seas on otherwise lovely days or eve nings when being on deck is delight ful. is espe winds high | hipt I spra Sprinkle tennis 1o head Bias Bandean of | i a4 jeweled | is so mueh in | i1k be on quite (3 of bias| silk fit the | band is wound about flat with the this sea stvle of | must not Bandeaux Favored. I may add that the arrangement of ‘e are no bows in thi preferred, except in high winds. It bows are | Protects the head and keeps the hair The | trim_ without any hint of setness i eolors, red, | which is always to be avoided, as it It is the|mars beauty. I may also add that if fiken band | You are planning to go abroad and wish to enjoy that fine sport, deck tennis, take along one dress with am ple skirts, and discard, if possible, both corsets and brassieres when at tired for playing. See that shoulder straps are very firm. There may not be such a large court for deck as lawn tennis, but it is a vigorous sport ha in silk purple even 2 other accessories iz o the Like Alice’s_Ribbon binding the hair tt red Ly flappers is n about the tresses in | Alice in Wonderland. If 1all that is wanted is BEDTIME STORIES Hare asked Digger. [ought to know, that {the ground and not ys |Jack Rabbit trusts id that he ! in times of danger. ¢k, out in|for a ‘hele in the ground had come |and coyotes and hawks and eugles osity at |and owls are all the time hunting for “How | Jack Rabbit and he has to be ever Peter | lastingly on the watch. But afte jumper | they have tried It once or twice tiey \lways |don’t spend much time chaging him: ps. In|he is too fast. They depend more jong been | catehing him by surprise. blg cousin Is he much hunted b the legged creatures called 1l the quired Peter W the Flyin “Indeed he nsider that the for he always | d o t is | o te | BY THORNTON W. BURGESS Rabbit at all?” know, or you Hares live on in the ground to his long legs He has no us |a and not ng Cousin. “You What Ja " Jumpi thos men?’ 1n zreatest Great is.” declared Digger. “I hore. That's because Jack is Metore HARInE er getting into mischief. Tle is imps. Of the |Worse than you are. They hunt him ped on the ground |out there with the fastest doss you hiz cousin, | ever saw. Those dogs don’t hunt kim "t be equaled. | With their noses the way Bowser the Jer the Tare, |Hound hunts you, they hunt him by jump,” | sight and try to run him down. You | never in vour life have seen such running as whei one of those dogs gets after your cousin, Jack. My, it's exciting. Well, I guess I've talked long eough see me agaiu [ some time, Peter.” With this Digger the Badger waddled away (Copsright. 1925.) replied 1 jumper out there in the langh at him 1 Peter. e you “T am not hat 1 Come. Twenty-one is the 3 e at most girls in England re wed, which d bhefore 1 uly | MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKIFAST. Sliced Bananas ft Boiled Ezgs son. Whole Wheat Coffee. am, Jumper | be L hetter that all look like?" Digzer, “he looks like family enly he has ger cars. Jumper short compared Jack Rabbit Peter It What d 1 Oh helieve is Tack plied the Muffins, onger lex: the Hare are with the the Really exclaimed Really,” replied Digger “And his leg: legs and his hind | That is why ought to see | 1 LUNCHEON. Spaghetti with Cheese. Rolls. Strawberry Tarts. Baked Tea DINNER Hamburg Roll, Mashed Potatoes, I°ried_Onions. Sliced Tomatoes Lemon Merlngue Pie Coffee. longer hurry. e v up in the air nd then it seems a jump wa WHEAT MUFFINS. together one cup ent wheat flour, one cup white floar, one-half teaspoom salt, four teaspoons baking powde two tablespoons sugar. Bea one egg, melt one and one-half that he goodness kn enough out thel holes in the ground? | Didn't 1 vou that he is really tablespoons butter and add one ! | and one-quarter cups milk. beat all into dry ingredients and bake about 25 minutes in hot | | vaper. e can sift oven. This tknug}\t when | am laboring Has made my efforts greater — The hardest things I do right now Will make life easy later 17:cAry STRAWBERRY TARTS. To onme pint mashed berries add sugar to taste, and whisk in the stiffly beaten whites of two eggs- Line tart shells with rich pastry, fill ture and bake. When done drop a bit of meringue or whipped cream in the center of cach. with the mix- HAMBURG ROLL. Take one pound finely ed steak, season weil salt, pepper and chopped pars. ley (and onfon if liked), and mix with one egg. beaten. Shape into a small roll, squeeze over the juice of one-half lemon, wrap in paraffin paper, put in pan and bake about 30 minutes. Tt won't stick to the pan or chop with # are | the bias bandeau is the one generally | Waolves | two- | don’t know of any one who is hunted | THE FEVENING STAR, i | What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. Cancer. The adverse planetary aspects mm‘ prevail late today continue until noon tomorrow and, during this period it is advisable to refrain, if possible, from any efforts involving radical change, or unwonted endeavor. In the afternoon, there 1 decided ameolio- ration of conditions. and, although the signs do not counsel the launching of any new enterprise, or the immediate development of any new thought, they do not presuge a lack of success for any efforts made in the customary fleld of work. In other words, they portend good results ifgthe well known and well tried road is followed, whereas. doubt must exist as to the outcome of any in of “fresh fields and pasture Children born although much allke in temperament and cha acter, will experience strikingly var able health conditions as & resuit of sex difference. A boy will, during his early years, suffer nich from fre quent illnesses, and, although the signs denote that he will ulthnately attain o vigorous manhood, much care—especially with regard to diet ing—must be exercised in his youth A girl, on the other hand, will revel in good health, and just naturally grow into healthy womanhood. Their personalities will be attractive, but they will possess strong streak of stubborness, which, toned down later on by experience, will eventually be- come will power nd give them the abllity to say “no” and mean it If tomorrow is vour birthday suffer from ‘‘wanderlust,” —and | though you may mnot be able to in-; dulge vour desires, always lon for travel and change of environment It is difficult for you to “stay put” in any one position for any length nf‘ time. You possess a greal deal of | vigor, and are much addicted to out door sports and recreations. You have independence of character, and neither seek nor regard the advice of thers. You glory in your selfsuf- | ficiency although experience has | often proven to yvou that “two heads | are better than one.” You are de. termined. and never. for the sake of amity, willing to vield a point. 1t | the whole loaf cannot he secured, you | want no part of it at all, and, figura tively speaking, would ther starve. With such characteristics you should always ‘“paddle your own | canoe,” and work without partners or | oclates, as individually you stand | a better chance of accomplishment than if you are interested with others. Well known persons born on this date are Theron Baldwin, missionary and educator Stanley Matthews jurist; Robert Barry Cofin, author; John R. Brooke, soldier: Blanche W, Howard van Teuffel, author; chaun | cey Oleott, actor. (Copsright. 1926.) HOME NOTES RY JENNY WREN t you al Mothers who do not hold with the old theory that children thrive on dirt will approve of this sandpile on wheels. It not only can be closed against all sorts of dirt, but has the additional advantage that it does not occupy space needed for a garden or lawn | | The box has its cracks puttied to | keep the sand from sifting througt and has been painted red for zeneral cheerfulness of effect 1t is kept under the back porch and the swivel wheels make it draw out onto the sidewalk or lawn in sunshine or shade, as desired. Tt | is large enough for the littlo ones to get right into if they like, but usnally the children are just as well satis d and sit beside it while they make their sand pies and | castles | (Coprright, 1025.) Prices realized on Swift & Company cales 0f varcass beef in Washington, D. for weels ending Satur duly TR 1925, of hinments %010 0ld. ranged from 10.00 conts | to ‘ents per pound and averaged 16.01 cents per pound.—Adve by their quar) Ll::;}:..\( days made bitter to them by the knowledge that they are unwelcome Innumerable men are made miserable by being torn between the two women they love, who fight over them like dogs over a bone. herself said: Funa of everythi: easy to forget that your children are your children and to keep hands off in their affairs and treat them with the formality you would strangers. With @ chip on their shoulders and are always hunting for trouble. seem to feel that when a i | him and wipe out the memory of all the yvears of close assoclation that there has beer consider: inlaw they wouldn't have any husbands at all, and that the better husbands wife, it is She has trained him to be # good husband. just as she has trained him to be a good citizen henors ¢€Y OU never suw a bad son who was a good husband. You never hear of a slave to wait upon him, who didn't treat his wife the same way. mothers who raise up ciean, straight sons, who enter into marrlage with high deals have done the girls who get them they were on their knees be: mother-inlaw for teaching her son to be unselfish, or to be generous with money, heard of it to think that marriage should obliterate a man’s past and break all the ties of his life, have asked her her, have to forego the little talks that were this stealthily sense enough to see that any man,who could forget his mother and ail he owed to her would when some younger and fairer woman came along. “0 aren’t our children reared her | earning a fine salary a right to say money cooking? would rebuke her and show her where she was making a fatal mistake, and the daughter would not resent it instead of a martyr to motherin-lawism? who are inlaw w even get | presence wherever | an to live the fi | of our readers sailor's uniform. by sailor's white are pattern. It trouser 10t distine nan's quired. requiring ing o found their were ot inconsequential introduc WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY lDorothyDix Why Can’t Daughters-in-Law See That the Better Their Husbands the More They Owe to Their Mothers-in-Law? Gives Older Woman's Bide of “In-Law” Problem Mother-in- Law Herself, Speaks DOUBTEDLY there is no other thing over which so many tears are shed and which s such a potent source of discord and misery as in-laws. Innumerable young wonien have the happiness of their youth wrecked els with their mothers-in-law. Innumerable old women have in their sons’ houses and that their daughters-inslaw hate them. Discussing this subject the other da a woman who is a mother-in-law “Like cverything else. the mother-in-law question is a 50-50 proposition, when they -don’t get along together both are to blame. Certainly it fsn't 1 eary thing for a woman who has run her own house and been at the head & 1o take a back seat in her daughter-in-law’s home. And it fsn't “On the other hand, most daughters-in-law mect their mothers-in-law They n marries he should forget the mother who bore between them. They are even jealous of the slightest attention and tion that thelr husbands show their mothers. “They seem to forget that if it wasn't for these much-resented mothers. hey ave the more they owe to their mothers-in-law. “or if & man is tender, and kind, and generous, and considerate to his because his mother has taught him to be chivalrous to women. and he honors and respects his wife because he so greatly and respects his mother P man who abused and cursed his mother, and regarded her as only a And so we and a determination to cherish their wives and ‘h a service as they © us the balance of their da make them happy, could not repay if “But if any daughterin-law has ever lifted her voice in thanks to her or to pay her the little attentions that women love, I have never “And there is another queer thing about daughters-inlaw. They seem “He and his mother might have been the closest of companions: he may advice on every subject and taiked over all of his plans with but woe be unto all concerned if he tries that after he takes a wife ‘Ninety-nine times out of a hundred the wife grows green-eyed and onsiders it rank treachery to her, and for the sake of peace inother and son uch a joy to them both or else do and hold a stolen rendezvous “Yet it does look as if any weman who wasn't a moron would have e such a disloyal ereature that he would forget his wife course, the chief charge that our daughtersin-law is that we always-meddling in their affairs. Perhaps we do, but affairs our affairs, too? Hasn't the mother who has to manhood and who has made him strong and capable of something when she sees his hard-earned neglected aund his health ruined by bad have against us a son being wasted, his home “If a mother saw her own daughter treating her husband that way, she “Why can't a fiving daughterinlaw take the same the throat of the motherin law advice and profit by it at and considering herself “Of course real there are exceptions to all rules. I shters to their husbands’ mothers borne with angelic patience cranky with their own daughters. And I know like a benediction in a h and others they g know daughters-in-law 1 even know daughters women who could not mothers-in-law whose who are firebrands ve “So perhaps there is way nan and not female with her children th wheel, and feels it no to settle the question saints. But God pity the mothe no matter how kind they may be! long as we are who is obliged She s alw. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. 1 | when in the way they can be rolled abave the knees. where they will re- main without rolling down—some. thing that the straight, narrow trouser leg would never do. (Coprizht HOW IT STARTED 1925.) ——— | BY JEAN NEWTON. | | Mango Pepper Pickles. Select peppers of good size, reject ing all withered dark ones. With a sharp penknife cut a circle round the stem and take it out whole. Remove all the the s fastening it with a single stitch # brine put in the peppers and let them stand | in it for two days Rinse and dry them, then fill with the following mixture: Chop together two quarts of green tomatoes, one quart of red tomatoes, three white onjons, one red | | pepper and a hard head of cabbage. Sprinkle well with salt, put in a the common seaman is re |cheesecloth bag, lay a heavy weight among other things, to scrub |on it and let stand for 24 hours. Then ks. Ask any man to do work |add three-fourths of a pound of suga similar bending and kneel |two tablespoonfuls of freshly grated | and he will don knickers or his | horseradish, one-half a teaspoonful | oldest trousers. Sailors, toe,|each of ground white pepper, mace | m for the work han-|and celery seed, and two tablespoon- | icapped and the casualties in trousers | fuls of white mustard seed. When all } The Sailor's Trousers. E you have intrigued. as has one | on observing a lad in the unusual shape hich as they near adually wider shape of a serga of or the cris as, the trousers fter this peculiar oticed, however If v joubt been bell the somewl the e b seeds and replace em, Make rm strong enough to float an egg, | for Summer s invariably « will be hat the officers on that are str the bot n that we strange trousers board ship we t cut and do om. It is in this have our story shape of the salilor had its origin in the fl The that Hence the |the peppers are filled, sew on the tops which be- |pack them in jars, and 5o that | scalded vinegar. ion wider trousers with the bott cover me JULY 20, 1925. Ma's parrit Napoleon hasent started to tawk vet, and last nite ma sed to pop. 1 bet that man in the berd store wont forget me in a hurry. Wy, what happened? pop sed, and ma sed, What happened? Wy, T went in there this afternoon and I jest gave him fits for gelling you a so called tawking parrit that never opens his mouth except to try to bite somebody, thats wat happened. And it ended up by him getting so good and seared that he finally told me how to make the parrit tawk, she sed. Wat did he advise you to do, vac- cinate him with a fonograff needle? pop sed. Dont be redickuliss, T told the man a thing or 2, bleeve me, ma sed. Now look heer, T sed, to him, this is sip- posed to be an lhonest reputable berd store, izzent it? and he admitted it was, and I sed, Well then how dare you sell my husbind a parrit thats sipposed 1o be a tawking parrit wen as a matter of fact he cant even sav boo? Im not an easy woman to-im- pose on, as vou'll find out to your sorrow if vou try it, I sed to him. Youve bin in this bizniss long enuff to know that a tawking parrit that duzzent tawk is not a tawking parrit, I sed, and it you wunt my trade in the future and the trade of my friends you'll do something radical about it, T told him, ma sed That was a good old fashioned ear- full, all rite, pop sed. It wasent all I told him, either, ma sed, and pop sed, Its enuff to give me a general ideer, Tm anxious to heer wat he advised you to do to make Napoleon tawk. O ves, T made him tell me, ma sed. It seems Napoleon is a Brazilian par- rit, from somewhere in Brazil, and the man sed he is proberly pining be cause he misses his native food and he advised me to try feeding him Bra- zil nuts, ma sed Ye gods, give me air, pop sed. And he put on his hat and went erround to the bowling alley, being less air there than wat there is home. COLOR CUT-OUT DICK WHITTINGTON. The Queen's Joy. returned to the ship cat. Taking it to the The and got captain Dick’s | palace, he turned it loose in the room full of rats and mice. time than it was entirely free In little more rom the pests. All | that the cat had not killed had been frightened away. The queen was so happy she could not contain herself. She hugged and petted the cat, and while the king and queen ate their first meal unmolested by rats and mice the cat slept peacefully on the queen’s lap of rich velvet Here the lovel, Moors. Color her leaving her ermine sc: her crown is Queen of the dress & rich pin rf white. Mak gold. of course. (Copyright, 1926.) MODE MINIATURES Most women have hankered at one time or another to part thelr hair in the middle, but it is only a selected few who should yield to the impulse If your face is nicely oval, vour features evenly molded, a center part is apt to impart a Madonnalike ex- pression—a look of youthful serenity. And if the hair is combed back smoothly and slightly off the ears it may prove surprisingly sophisticated. But if your face is one of two ex- tremes—overly plump or decidedly thin—by all means avoid this manner of halrdress MARGETTE. Sweet Peppers. Red and green sweet peppers are abundant now in most markets. When wanted for stuffing, cut off the tops and with a knife cut out and remove the veins and seeds. Like tomatoes, they may be filled with a variety of mixtures, c¢hopped cold meats, and seasoned bread crumbs and onion boiled rice In any and all cases juice, or other seasoning, or plain moisten liberally with melted butter. Stand close together in a dish, pour in a little stock or boiling water, and bake about half an hour in a hot oven. Tn case your eyes should be rubbed while handling peppers and smarting ensues, bathe them freely with milk. . Raspberry Jam Shortcake. One layer biscuit crust, butter, two packages cream cheese, one cup rasp- berry jam. Split biscuit, butter, fill with cream cheese and jam. Serve warm. PSS The Netherlands Luxenburg and Abissinia have women rulers. takes to tell it the room | FEATURES. Somewhere in almost every house can be found some piece of bric-a-brac, furniture, or other bit of household clutter which bears mute testimony to the enormous popularity of burnt woodwork, or pyrography, some 20 years or more ago. We put decora- tive designs on wooden tea trays, tobacco tables, chafing dish trays and fire screens. Also we burned leather, though this was more difficult. BUTTERFLY AND FLOWER DE J SIGN BURNT AND PAINTED ON WHITE FELT HAT. And now somehow this pyrographl work has been revived in the making of hats. Tt is used on felt hats and | suede hats. The design seems to be | burnt in first and then 18 filled in with | colored paint and gold. One small | suede white hat has a large red rose on the front with green leaves at the side. The design of leaves and flow- | ers is burnt in and then filled in with | color. | The sketch shows a white felt hat | with buttsrfly and flower design first | burnt in and colored with palpt. So it seems a new use has been found for | the pyrographic needles of our child- hood, and our hats become the reps Soft Lips. Cracked lips ate almost as frequent | on the hot summer days as on the cold | winter ones. But a lipstick i3 not so easy to use, since the ofl melts almost as soon as it is on the lips. The best | thing to do, if the lips crack fr burn, is to use a white cream 1 last thing at night, and to remember | to cover the lips thickly with cold| cream when cleansing the face. ‘There are two kinds of lipsticks, the | colored and the white cream kir f‘).y The white cream is on to keep the Uips soft, the re of course, is frankiv | make-up. The white crea er cream, almost as light as massage cream; the red, being made to stay on the lips for several hgurs, is slifl‘e:“ and drier. The red lipsticks will not | melt, and they will keep the lips soft and prevent chapping from the sun. However, if you do not approve of make-up—and of all times, hot mer days are the last days to use - and If your mouth is sensitive and the lips crack easily, you can cc mise. There are rose color sticks, of | about the shade of one's own li | that are invisible, that do not “make up” the face at all, but that are stiff IN THE GARDEN | Cactus With Its Spines. | “Of all the plants that have been| the subjects of your experiments, M. Burbank, which has given you the| most trouble and which do_vou con sider the most important? Two ques tions in one!” T asked one v “Two questions that may almost be answered in ona word, and that | haps the Cactus! In all the specles of plants with which I experimented. not one has ever cat ed me the real physical suffering | vhich T endured while T was | with the cactus.” Mr. Burbank re plied | “In the course of one phase of the work which lasted for more than five vears, the cactus blooming season was a_period of torment both day and night. on account of the little spicules | remaining after the larger spi been removed. “The close contacts absolutely neces- | sary in the work, made it impossible |to avoid them, and theyv penetrated | not only any exposed parts of the | body, but clothing as well, causing In | tense irritation.” “Did you ever regret having started out on this thorny path?” “Many a time I wished T had never begun tho attenipt to remove the spines from the cactus, and I doubt 1if T would ever have the courage to do it again if it were necessary, but it never will be. “But all this is by way of introduc { tion to our subject and will explain how formidable is the armor of de fense of the cactus from marauding animals, and may add to the interest in the life history of the plant “The North American cactus is a native of Southwestern Amerlca, growing in the desert reglons of Nevada, Utah, Arizona and Northern Mexico, parts of which once were covered with a great inland sea, spreading. over thousands of square miles. “After ages of evaporation there still was moisture enough in the soil to support plant and animal life, but as evaporation continued the death struggle between animal and plant life_began. | “The cactus had already adapted | itself to its changing environment by | sending its - roots - deeper into the Parking With Peggy. “At last something has shocked gol;yv’o!od—but it tock an earthquake o it.” | painted hats are far preferable BEAUTY CHATS f | | slabs have | ; had | |c Pyrography and Painting for Hats BY MARY MARSHALL. tories far one more sort of once-popu lar handicraft. Once women spent hours a day embroldering table doflies, center pleces, bureau covers and sofa cushions in bright colors. Now about the only place we use bright colored embroidery 18 on our frocks and hats We once delighted in decorating china by hand, and every china cabinet wax the repository of odd cups and plate: and bonbon dishes painted with roses and nasturtiums and pansies and forget-memots by relatives who had gone in heavily for china painting Now we are spared the confusion of this amateurfsh painted china, but we wear frocks and scarfs and hats thar are painted instead. And from the present-day point view hand to of hand-painted tea cups and saucers. (Copyright, 1926.) My Neighbor Says: If milk or water is splilled on the dining table cloth, place a plece of white blotting paper over it. This will absorb the mofsture almost tmmediately. Equal parts of ammonia and turpentine will take paint out of clothing, no matter how dry and hard ft may be. Saturate the spot two or three times, and afterward wash out in soapeuds Cloudy coffes may result be- cause the coffes has not been thoroughly mixed with a smali amount of cold water or with cold water and egg or eggshell before the full amount of hot or cold water is added, or be- cause it has not been given suf- ficlent time to settle after the bolling of the coffee befors it is poured into the cups. To keep bread fresh, soak a small new sponge in cold water and place it in a saucer in the bread pan. The bread will re matn molst and fresh for sev. eral days. The emell of cooking that of ten permeates the house may be removed by filling a basin wit! boiling water and pouring into it about five drops of ofl of lav. ender. In a few minutes all smell of cooking will have dis appeared. Good use can be madse of sou milk in pies, puddings and cakes, as it renders pastry lighter. BY EDNA KENT FORBES. enough to stay on without running through the hottest day. You might try one of them. You will not be able to tell that red has gone on the mouth; vou can have quite a clear conscience about it, assumming vou ove of rouge and such thing vou'll have to be careful about wiping the month on a napkin or haddkerchief, for of course the red show then real cause of cracked lips is the habit of wetting them when they fee dry. Try not to do they'll chap less easily Discouraged—The cream . vou usin suited to your whi for ti throw are needs a fine almond or de fror either of these ofls when you massage and do this also as a base for pow- der. In the tter ¢ , use very little er and wipe off all that rem: 1 before you apply the pow There 1 the 16 physical cause on each side of that would not be and surely not for : uth, as as you your mc right a persor g as doctor abo WITH BURBANK As Reported by Elizabeth Urquhart and Edited by Luttsr Burbank. ground. br droppi attening where “Buffaloes thesc round iter w and its and rabbite nd even whose s like have been burr “As comp animal be tected itsel ules th at a ot ng spines evouring as not done in on but took place gradually he plants that pro tected es—not the cac tus, but the sage t juices and the euphorbi 1s rvived as its_de s b made a s grown nc nlv large b in case these are removed their base. little reserve force of spicules to come to_the front and repel the attack spines there 15 a Do you chafe? Dust magic Kora Konia on parts that chafe. No more soreness! 50c at All Drug Stores | il ; i) KoraKonia ... for Sore Skin