Evening Star Newspaper, August 5, 1925, Page 20

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WOMAN’S PAGE Tulle Scarfs for Hats and Gowns BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. tailored or sporty. Gather one end of the tulle and sew snaps on it. Make another gathering and sew the other part of the snaps here. The distance between the snaps should be sufficient for the tulle to wind around the hat, so that the snaps can fasten, secur- ing the material like a band and per- mitting the loose part to form the scarf portion. Two Styles of Tulle. There are at least two kinds of ma- terlal that can be termed “tulle.” One of them is very perishable. The other will stand a _good deal of wear { without tearing. The first, which is maline, costs but little to buy and is fetching to wear. Do not expect it to be durable. With care it may be worn a number of times; that is, if one is so fortunate as not to tear it. Silk net is the second fabric. It -has a suggestion of more body. It will stand many wearings and can be washed when it gets soiled. It costs considerably more than maline, but outwears it many times. Plain veiling can be used in place of tulle as a sub- stitute. Every man who wishes to look bewitchingly feminine should appre- ciate the value of tulle. It has a mar- velous charm when worn about the face. It softens features, mellows complexions, and add n elusive note that is nothing short of fascinating. Charm in Scarfs. Tulle s so filmy that it may be deep in tone and match a costume, vet, when worn as a scarf, it flutters so that the shade is hinted at rather than stressed. It shimmers against a fab- ric and appears to take on the tone if it is a contrasting one. It softens | the curves of the neck without hiding them and sets off a face like an aura of color. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST Stewed Figs Oatmeal with Cream. Dried Beef. Tomato Sauce. Toast. Coffee. LUNCHEON Cheese Souffle. Hot Biscuits. Cake. DINNER. Tomato Bisque Lamb Chops. Butter Riced Potatoes. Pineapple and Grapefruit Salad. Crackers. Cheese. Coffee. STEWED FIGS. Put the figs into a pan with enough cold water to cover them and stew slowly until soft. Then cut them up, add a little sugar and set away to cool. Serve with whipped cream. BEEF WITH TOMATO. About one-fourth pound dried Deef, washed, scalded and drain- ed. Cut a green pepper up fine (removing seeds and white par- titions), scald pepper, drain and add to a can of tomato soup. Pour hot over dried beef. Mix well; serve on toast. If any is left, use it in an omelet Beans THE LIKE A FLOATS SHIMMERING TRAIL OF IN THE It is no wonder that Kuropeans excel in the matter of costumin taken to wearing scarfs of tulle, nor do they confine the filmy fabric to evening we it with street costume delicate gauze floats o zes as the women wal clouds of color. shion and one follow is the t of gauzy scarfs s been wearing all Sum Let 1 ng tulle well touch in the way ve ha another way of us- to advar in our Summer SALAD. Make nests of lettuce leaves COLOR CUT-OUT THE WATER-SPRITE. The Children Escape. The children thanked the water-cat and did as it advised them. They took the water-sprite’s comb, her brush and her mirror and started out to run away. They ran and ran as fast as ever they could along the road that led to the upper world. Soon after the little brother and sister had left the water-sprite re- turned to her castle. When she found them gone she was very, very angry. She stopped only long enough to scold the water-cat severely; then, wrapping herself in her cloak of swiftness, she started after the children. Make this handsome suit of Little Brother’s dark red with black collar and black lining to the cape. His boots also should be black and his hat black with a red plume. (Copyright. 1925.) MODE MINIATURES The voice of the great god Sport is heard in the land, and every out- door woman is tempted to select the new crew-neck, sleeveless sweater. For she knows the smartness and It is an idea that can be » use admirably to refurbish a zive it that new look so much | se: on individual plates. In the cen- ter of each put a slice of pine- apple, cover with sections of pefruit puip, sprinkle lightly h powdered sugar, garnish h mayonnaise made very del te by the addition of whip- ped cream and sprinkle lightly with finely cut candied cherr Canned or fresh pineapple may be used. desired used by test milliners on nat- v mew 1 The tulle is twisted | about nd one end is left | jo ed as a scarf and is | wound & 1e neck when the hat | A detachs used with Jle scarf band of tulle can hat that is not too BEDTIME STORIES Almost Gives Up Hope. be BY THORNTON W. BURGESS He by hoped that if and by that big pickerel Snapper the Snapping Turtle { Longlegs the Heron would go away. Certainly they wouNin't stay there e that troubles never | 8 Meadow .Mouse »W many trou- 1@y only come one at a Danny, sitting on a raft, more than an old a prisoner in the raft of his was he. were patient Now, you wouldn't suppose that any one in such a position as was Danny Meadow Mouse would get hungry, | would you? Well, Danny did get . He had been a prisoner on aft 8o long that his stomach had become quite empty and he grew very, very hungry indeed. The hungrier he board, was in a way Smiling Pool T caught in the rushes at the upper end of the Smiling Pool. Along one side [ 80t the more uncomfortable he was. of it lay a great big pickerel, which, | But still he didn't move. He didn't you know, is one kind of fish.” Just a | even move that funny little short tail of his. And so he continued to be unseen. HOME BY JENY NOTES ' WREN One of the newest pieces of built- in furniture is the dressing table, clothespress and cupboard combina- tion. It can be purchased read: made from lumber dealers and built into old homes or new at comparative- {1y small cost. For the small bedroom it is a very valuable asset, as it is compact, r D LLY NEARER MINK CAME little off on the S1 the would Mouse other side was floating | wing Turtle. Kither have been glad of a dinner, and Danny kney It had been bad enou discovered the big pi h when Dann rel. It w 1 Snapper the er side. And now to still, Longlegs Heron came flapping de of the Smil long legs until shore on the edge eat wings tant, and and head above then long neck back A 1 his shoulders and pre- pared tc fently watch for a little fish or a pollywog to come withir of that great bill of h or Danny! Here was a hun; 1 ene 1 each itting right in rver a Meadow position? Certainly n 4 worse positiol to do he hadn’t there was one to do he move. He was sure of He t going to move so ker. As long as he e was i chance that | > three hungry people so close him would see him Ry and by as he sat there looking the Smiling Pool he saw Billy heac that way again. most too much fc Janny. Righ > almost gave up hope. But he didn’t quite. None of the little | people of the Green Forest and the Green Meadows ever fully gives up hope. T wouldn't long if they did. No matter how tight a place they are in, they cling to hope. There always a chance that something may happen Nearer and nearer came Billy Mink. For a time it looked as if he intended to come straight to that board on which Danny was _sitting. Danny suspected that he might be coming there to climb out on it But just before he reached it he turned and went off up the Lauzhing Brook. Then hope grew in Danny Meadow Mouse. There was still one way open, though how he was going to take advantage quires little space, and yet has a very large storage capacity. All across the top are shelves fo hand luggage and hat hoxes. Short garments can be hung in the cup- board at the left and lingerie stored in the drawers underneath. The dressing table has a triple mirror and a wide shelf for toilet artic The clothespress at the right roomy, and underneath there is handy drawer for shoe: Da What he the least t thing 1sn't wasn't that muct didn none of t Tongue-Raisin Sauce. Buy a fresh beef tongue, wash well, place in a kettle, cover with boiling water and simmer for two hours. Lift out and skin it, trim off the roots and tie into shape. Put the tongue in an- other kettle, add six whole cloves, three small peeled onions, one cupful of finely diced carrot, six peppercorns, half a pound each of seeded raisin and stoned dates, one and a quarter teaspoonfuls of salt and two quarts of boiling watér. Simmer for two hours longer, then take out a pint of the liquor, add half a cupful of water, thicken slizhtly with browned flour and season with salt and pepper. Boil for five minutes and serve with the tongue, garnishing the latter with the dages and raisins. Next day. chop’ the remaing tongue, measure and mix with one- half as much very thick brown sauce. highly seasonsd with salt, pepper and onion juice. When cool, mold into Mink his v tu of the comfort of a sleeveless style in vigorous game of tennls or golf. But only for the slim-armed per- son does fashion recommend it. If vou are inclined to be stout do mnot wear anything just because it is new and fashionable—enough things par- ticularly become you. The sweater problem is solved by @ V-necked long-sleeved style. a MARGETTE I was sitting on the sofer feeling mizzerable to myself, and pop sed, Wats a matter, Benny, you look as If the weight of the werld was on your shoulders and you couldn't get it off. T had a kind of a bum day today, everything went rong, I sed. Thats the sort of days I have my- self every once in a wile, maybe you inherited one of them, pop sed. I even woke up feeling bum because a dreem that somebody passed s going to have insted of vacation next vaca- tion, T sed. They wouldent dare do that, it mite leed to a revilution, pop sed, and I sed, And then wile I was eating brek- tist I split soft berled egg on the cleen tablecloth. Tm glad to heer you felt badly enuff about it to let it distress you, pop sed. Al _soon as ma saw the stane she put the 3 cents back in her bag that she was jest going to give me, I sed. O I see, I beg vour pardin, pop sed, and I sed, And then at luntch time it was so hot ma left me go erround for A pint of ice creem, and the man filled the box away up full and then he sed, u_wunt me to close the 1id? and Yes, without thinking enything, and he quick scraped a hole buntch of ice cream off of the top so he could close the lid, G wizz wat did I care bout the darn lid? | Nuthing at all, naturally, that was too bad, pop sed, and I sed, And then this afternoon 1 was wawking along and 1 axsidently kicked a nale, and it sounded like somebody dropping money, and some man wawking past thawt it was him, and he started to look erround on the payment and I was standing there lafiing to myself and all of a suddin wat did he find but |a dime rite in frunt of ware I was standing, and I bet I would of found it if it hadent of bin for that darn nale. My old hart is breaking, come on er. round to the drug store and we'll drownd our sorrow in 2 ice creem sodas, pop sed. Meening one apeece. Wich we did. Children’s Parasols. A delightful novelty for a small girl is the doll parasol in colored silk. In {place of the ferrule at the top of the parasol is a doll's head set in a small silk ruffle. The effect of the parasol jis very quaint if the cover is made of checked gingham, which looks like a skirt when the parasol is closed and carried upside down. These make de- lightful parasols for the children at the beach or other Summer colony: SPetR Raspberry Ice. Make a sirup by boiling three pints of water and two and one-half cups of sugar for 15 minutes. Cool; add three cups of raspberry juice, three table- spoons of lemon juice, and freeze. of it was more than he could see. However, it did help to feel that he wasn't @uite surrounded by enemies. ¥ croquettes, dip each in beaten egg, roll in fine, dry crumbs and fry a golden brown in deep, smoking hot fat. When nearly frozen, add the beaten ;vhitea of three eggs and finish frees- ng. = Stands Up for 1925 Methods Against Those of 1850. In Defense of Modern Parents. ”DorothyDixfl Modern Parents Who Rule Their Children by Love and Reason Have Stronger Influence Than Old Thrashing Parents. A'RE modern parents failures as parents? Did the fathers and mothers of the past do their duty by their children better than the fathers and mothers of today are doing their duty by their children? Was the old-fashioned method of rearing children better than the present one? Of course, the ayes have it. Wherever you go the ery of the Jeremiahs is loud in the land proclaiming the decadence of the youth of today and prophesying the nethermost hell to which it is hurtling. “Look at the girls and boys of today!" they cry. “Look at the little, half-naked girls, with their bobbed hair and their painted faces! Nothing but dolls. Look at the varnished-haired boys in their flappy trousers! Drug store sheiks. Look at the way they smoke cigarettes, girls as well as boys! Horrors. Listen to the way they talk! Why, they discuss things that people used to speak of only to their doctors. “See how they dance! Perfectly disgusting. Look at the way they carry on, rushing around in high-powered automobiles without the vestige of a chaperon! Scandalous. “And it is the parents who are to blame for all this. They don't enforce their authority. They don’t make their children obey them as we were made to obey when we were young.” We have all heard this a thousand times. Probably we have added our voice to the chorus of condemnation of the young of today and the glorifica- tion of the parents of yesterday. But, when you come to think it over, is there any truth in it? Did the old, stern school of child-rearing fit the child better for life than the modern lax method of child-rearing doe: * v e e N former days the rod was almost a symbol of parenthood. “Spare the rod and spoil the child” was the slogan of our grandparents, and especially of our great-grandparents. For small offenses, little, helpless, quivering children that were mere bundles of fear were beaten by fathers and mothers who worked off their temper and their nerves on defenseless creatures too weak and feeble to strike back. Small, indeed, must be your knowledge of human nature when you think that you can lash virtue into a child with a whip or that by that means you can teach it to be anything but a coward, and a liar, and a sneak, and poison its whole soul by bitter and vengeful thoughts. A child would be an idiot who wouldn't instinctively protect itself by lying when it knew that it would be beaten if it told the truth. And it would be an angel if somewhere in its memories did not always rankle a contempt for the grown man or woman who would slrlk‘e a little child and an unforgiving sense of the injustice that had been done it. Besides, physical fear lasts such a little while. So soon a child is able to fight back, and then if the parents have established no authority over it except dread of the rod, their hold upon it is gone. Certainly it seems to me that the modern parents who rule their children by love and reason and not by fear have a far stronger influence than the old thrashing parents ever had. The parents of the past put great emphasis on obedience. They con- sidered themselves absolute rulers of their children’s lives. The child was glven no voice whatever in deciding its own fate. Father selected the careers his sons were to follow and picked out the husbands for his daughters. And if they dared rebel against his autocracy, out of the door they went. This policy has strewn the world with ruined men and broken-hearted women. Thousnds and thousands of men who would have been successful, and happy. and prosperous, if they had been permitted to follow ‘their own bents and do the things that nature created them to do have been failures because thelr fathers forced them into uncongenial occupations. 'HEY might have been great writers, artists, teachers, professional men, but father made them come into his shoe store or his grocery; or they would have been millionaire merchants or contractors, but father compelled them to study law or medicine, and in consequence they are poor, blundering misfits that never achieve anything. And there are so many miserable wives married to men they merely tolerate, and so many forlorn old maids, because father broke off a love affair with some chap whose politics or religion didn’t gibe with his own or the cut of whose hair he didn’t like. Certainly it seems to me that the modern method of according a child self-determination s a great improvement on the old tyrannical parental method. Not even parents are omniscient. Each of us knows what is in our own mind and heart better than any other human being can possibly know, and the chances are that fewer mistakes will be made in the selection of careers and husbands and wives when the young people make them for themselves than when their parents settled the matter for them. Our grandparents pinned thelr faith to the chaperon and kept a girl under lock and key, but girls in those days climbed out of the window to meet their lovers, and morals were no better than they are now, when we leave the front door on the latch and trust to what we have taught our daughters about honor and decency to protect them. In former times children addressed their parents as “sir” and “madam.” Now they call them *“‘old dea In former times children stood in awe of their parents. Now they pal with them. And it seems to me that the chil- dren who can sit down and talk things out with their parents, who can con- fide in them, have a lot better chance of being guided and influenced aright than those chilrden had who grew: up so afraid of their fathers and mothers that they never even got acquainted with them. I think the modern parent is all right. The only parents who are mak- ing a fallure are those who are trying to bring up 1925 children on the g DOROTHY DIX. HIRE apet, (Copyright. 1925.) The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright, 1925.) East. To act. Serpent. Three-toed sloths. Meanis of transportation (abbr.). Plaything. Cuts with scissors. Execute. The essential part. Mirth. Bellef in two divine forces. Peculiar modes of speech. Arranges. The apparent rings. A direction, Red Cross (abbr.). Greek letter. A cluster of spore cases. Mountain range in Russia. Hero of Hindu mythology. Tolerate. Pointed missile weapon. Fabulous monster. Opening. . A high priest. Thus. Conjunction. About Beefsteaks. The “loin,” which extends from the last rib to the rump, is used for e — | steaks and roasts Z ¥ 2 The ‘“club steaks, ort steaks' Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle. L e Dt e AL i Tt cuts of the loin. If cut three inches thick there are just two club steaks. The ‘“porterhouse steaks" lie back of the club steaks. They contain more fat and tenderloin than any of the other steaks. There are four or five of the porterhouse steaks. The “sirloin steaks” lle back of the porterhouse. The “sirloin cuts” include two or three pin bone steaks, two flat_bone steaks (the most choice cuts of the sirloin) and about three round bone steaks. The ‘“tenderloin” lies under the bones of the loin. Tt fs usually in. cluded in the loin steaks, but is also removed separately and used for broil- ing or roasting, but is a very expen- . slvecuty i e Pertaining to the foot. Printed pieces of paper. Book of the Bible. Horsepower (abbr.). Metal. Ve England State (abbr.). Sarments crossbarred with colors. Part of New York State (abbr.). Prefix meaning three. Against (prefix). ‘A mountain of a European range. Relative. Circle. . Injury. Hyperbolic cosine (abbr.). Brother of Jacob. Ripeness. Contraction of “Ged's.” Epochs. Habitual drunkard. Bgyptian sun god. Metric weight unit. outhern State (abbr.). ‘A she bear (used in astronomy). Note of the diatonic scale. Without kindred or friends. Desist: Fatizued. end of Saturn’s [ {INID] [TIEDJOIL LA mgm (FIEIRINISHRL [A] Mol ILITISIDEPIAIRIT] L BIDIRI [P/SINO|BI IRIOIO/MITIEIEO[VIAIL [OIPIORITIOMN|! [NIEIT]Y] [PIRIOIDISIRIC “Puzzlicks” Puzzle-Limericks, A flapper who lived in ——1—— Tried a newfangled bleach on her ) And in one single ——3—— Her hair got 8o —4— That her head next morning was| 5—. 1: City in western Wisconsin. 2. Filaments growing from the skin of a mammal. 3. After dark. 4. Not dark. 5. Destitute of covering. (Note — Insertion of the proper words, indicated by the numbers, will form a complete limerick. The an- swer and another “Puzzlick” will ap- pear tomorrow.) Yesterday's “Puzzlick.” A poet swore several curses, “For empty,” he said, “my purse is. My poems, alack! Never fail to come back, And my verses are always reverses.’” " SUB ROSA BY MIMI. Ashamed of Her Home. A young lady who calls herself “Somebody Ashamed of Her Home" writes frantically asking what in the world she will do with the brand-new beau_ she's acquired—a stunning col- lege boy with a great deal of money— who is wild to meet the family and see her home . . . and her home is so | dreadful that she simply can't bring | him there. Of course, we girls are apt to be so self conscious that we overrate the value of some things. It's rather difficult to Introduce some one we admire very much into a home which we know to be ugly and poor and shabby. But very often the boys haven't the same idea about these things that we have. Perhaps they're not as sensitive as we suppose about these matters. Certainly it is pleasant to have a de- lightfully decorated, charming place to which to bring our friends, but if we are born in such circumstances that a nice house is out of the ques- tion we've got to accustom ourselves to_what we find about us. Now, if you were born with a rather unattractive face, you wouldn't rush around in circles being ashamed of it, would you? No, you'd just do the best you could with it, and vou'd ex- pect people who were your friends, to like you in spite of your appearance. You wouldn't apologize to them for your appearance. You'd say to your-| self: “Well, this is the way I look,| and if they're going to dislike me be- cause of my face, I don't think they could ever have liked me very much.” You must cultivate just that sort of attitude toward your home. I something that you yourself couldn't possibly have helped. You're not re.| sponsible for it. You can't change it. Then, if this boy likes you really he’s not going to change his opinion of you because of the ugly furniture | in your living room. He's not going to blame you for it, and so he can't dislike you for it. Unless he's a rather sensitive young chap he will probably not notice all the imperfections and shabbiness you KRow 80 W The whole thing may be of little concern to him, at all and you may be worrying yourself over| nothing. What you must do is to appear perfectly at ease when he comes. | Don't let him see that you're nerv-| ous or apologetic about the old family | mansion. Keep up a stiff upperlip and act as though you were gixing a reception at Buckingham Palace—and perhaps he'll fall so hard he'll think you are. What TomorrowMeans to You BY MARY BLAKE. Leo. Tomorrow's planetary aspects indi- cate an active and probably eventful day. Initiative will be strong and the mind alert and sagacfous, with a stim- ulus to something new and original. Provided that the “new and original” does not savor of risk or speculation the urge to seek fresh flelds and pas- tures new can be safely followed, and success is more than probable. Al- though ability, perseverance and cour- age may “put it over,” it will be found advisable to count also on proper and adequate financtal support or assist- ance. In the “kingdom of home' the signs clearly denote unalioyed happi- ness and content. A girl born tomorrow will have an | exceptionally healthy maidenhood, and will, with proper nutrition, develop into a high physicdl type of woman- hood. A boy, on the other hand, will not reach manhood without havin suffered much, in early infancy and youth, from a varlety of ailments. Both boy and girl will have attractive dispositions and always be willing to do more for others, both financially and morally, than they should be ex- pected to do. They will possess a keen and original mentality, and will prove to be energetic, resourceful, en- terprising and well liked. They will, however, be thriftless, unless this ten- dency is curbed in early youth. 1f tomorrow is your birthday, you are emotional and erratic and at times tempestuous. Your impulses carry you a and you ve 1ccesstully still the voice of both judgment and reason. You are easily swayed by others and thelr specious arguments, and although quite capable of leader- ship yourself, are always willing to follow any leader whom you deem ca- pable and intelligent. In determining | this point you are more influenced by your emotions than by common sense. You are ambitious not so much for financial reward as for social and in- tellectual betterment. You read with avidity, converse fiuently and take a great deal of interest in social and club life. If you are mated with one who is positive and self-assertive, you are probably much happier than if allied with one who is as “wabby” as your- self. . ‘Well known persons born on that date are: Solomon Van Rensselaer, soldier; James Brewster, manufac- turer; John H. Wheeler, historian; Samuel P. Carter, naval officer and soldier; George T. Maxwell, physician; Tarkington Baker, editor and author. MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDRE: The Memory Quilt. One mother sa Ever since my oldest girl began to wear colored dresses I have saved a piece of each dress made for her. This year she is 14 and is planning on | that all part | nous making a quilt for' her bed of the pleces cut in six by six (6x6) inches FEATURES Navy Blue With Mauve for Autumn Shades of biue, it seems, are newer | nence, than shades of purple in the list of colors fayored by fashionables in Paris this Summer. The started in somewhat later here than it 50 that we have held on Consequently we have | did in Paris, to it longe BLUE REPS H MOLDED AT WRIS MAUVE CHIFFON. OF BLU RIBBON 3 VELV seen less interest in the new shades of blue. lieve Pari; shad that we and te mart Summer variou drangea hor pervenc vin blue, corn flowe held prominent place. WHEN WE BY MARY MARSHALL. purple F SIL. gatherin; HO ETT COLLAR, JABOT AND RUF- S ARE THE HAT IS WITH MAUVE And now the are thinking that makers frenzy | A" shade called commander brighter and more vibrant than is playing We have here in coior parlance of the day to kn the subtle differences of mames for indigo and ball blue. One of the things { | the fashion for the fact that blue is t the exposition -ollections Jenny and various shades of the fact that these 1 the Worth blue. were Of cou medium shade gave promise of good favor. The navy blue frock returns to f have never cease the smartest color As presented by to regard this for the | complement | There is that ca with navy blue rep frocks of the new silhouette. The collar, jabot a | rufties at the wrists are of mauve ct fon, wh some a hue worn other in the r col nb ve ribby g French speclally stressin tumn are Je Drecoll. on trimming. makers who blne 1. (Copyright My Neighbor Says: An easy withot it to way to skin and ¢ to | soon # a beet cooked down each ¢ skin _ will drop trouble In cases where it is img to obtain a filter purified by addi: dered alum in th one tablespoon lons of water. allow it to s impure will then s tom and the pure be poured off Oranges and lemons sho ways be washed and the brushed with a soft Apart from the certainty the fruit has passed many doubtf: clean and receptacle: seen on the fru be of a_ parasitic n: Doughnuts will not if gin When roll vour dough ing in a fe | | Then and without e bot wate ¥ that through hands TAD: OF son to be- he lead of > new blue abroad »Wn-ups Ar hands 1y be rem by rubbin this of blue— BY M GO SHOPPING HARLAND H. ALLEN applause from countless women w dres of frocks for cooler days of Autumn we hear more jand more of the darker, deeper shades bilue, navy, ant role in Pari One must needs be well verse between royal blue and commander blue, pencil blue t have favored undoubtedly in of f the well known French dressmaking houses—notably in Jortant houses & for their display must have been because that ull ho as street wear. designers now it is seldom to be worn without the or. and worn well The sketch shows a nav molded nd hi e the hat is of blue velvet Genuine Walnut. Unfortunately. find the term pieces of furniture ma somd substitute Wwoc stained to a walnut bi It is no great task to learn to rec-) ognize walnut at sigh The thing to do is to look for the} ‘A plece of real- American wal- which are the fine pen depend- had h the 2 find arkings | ir pore: nut is full fine t scattered thickly thr The unaided eve sees lines, as dot ing on whether th it across the grai It commor three of thes in one piece of wa! If you have norm: annot clearly distin, d, row 2 ubes, ough them vou will sometimes ‘walnut™ | posed part furnit applied to | e entirely of | oy, and merely dashes— to aper wood, “wa equally pr 1u, ion walnut” e shopper in th; s getting mo: | the avers that she she and examined which contal per cent wamut, and shot ve been designated as suc The best place to look in b t the backboard, ideboards and 1 and foot wood been | in all | po. o On a ch especially if it is a finely figured piece. eve: guish t dots and dashes, vou can be wood is not w After you h the wood by piece of fur nut. the por are waln the same in a Walnut is naturally s late brown, and if different woc 2d in the piece, have been u. these place: a rule, they lifeless, as epth show ‘an are da nut of and dead in compari the darker the finish ubstitute woods. ombination walnut,” | the top or front of the furniture i and the rest some- is to detect the In a so-called usually of walnut, thing else. By takin; color, cheap and inferior woods look 1 parts “off rker, son. g a ve learned to recognize | iture carefully colof and itseif has a be e ot the h look article? rder i an otherwise all dresser, espec the 4 that ome ot ut-bre s0-ca of course, e “‘walnut. choco- | This is t | walnut £ orally | N0 claim As more Porto Rico lumi- | the ed States, which | has eased its ar flat” | approximately $00 per ce course, el nnexed produc and Ink Stains inen. wool or at the | simple 16 walnut, and then comparing the other | watch parts of the piec you can tell which are the same wood. is no real objection to having the ex- UPOH the of those growing list e readily 3 d : There | the handy holder for” e saa ' 1 et Thucands of hower Dot Think of e USTICATOR [ day and find ¢ | Srndipa e o o | Sterlinz Produets Company | Easton, ¥ i soon shall have to rise and slay Are countless souls who ask me if It's hot enou gh Cupples Presto Magic Opener Jar Rings areof th perior quality that characterizes all rubber products of the Cupples Ca. < Do you rub raw? When skin is raw or chafed get guick relief and healing with— Cupples Presto MAGIC OPENER JAR RINGS Fruit jar caps never stick with Presto Rings. A pull on the ears lets the air in, and caps come off easily no matter how tightly sealed. Presto Rings are the biggest jar ring im- provement ever made. With their magic opener feature they cost no more than ordinary rings. Ideal for cold pack, water bath, steam pressure and hot packcanning To save your- self trouble later, start your canning by securing a supply of Presto Rings. Order them at your dealer’s taday. CO St. Lowis, U. 8, A. or f the islz mol her wn Tled to and A e < AL |Erusticator Eradicates Rust

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