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WU M AN O THE KV ENINC When the Fruit Basket Is Too Full BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. When the fruit man comes, or one makes a visit to the market wher: fruit is displayed, it is often a tempta ton to buy more than is needed tm or VERSTOCKED PEACH SUP. 3E2 MADE DELICIOUS BEDTIME STORIES Why She S RS, WHITEFOOT. Whitef the W Didn't Move. Ik all and when you reach home you | discover that you have overstocked |in_that part of your dlet. It is an experfer housewives that, instea warning word to forbear, I am golng | to sugzest what to do when the situ- {ation aiready has arisen. Other Ways. It is supposed the oversupply of fruit ha been made unintentionally, and that the thought of canning does not enter into the matter. One does not overstock to the extent that in- volves the necessity of canning or preserving without some premedita- tion. No, it is for the little oversup. ply that we are seeking to make pro vision. Berries _are apt to spoil most quickly. Do not walt until half of them are eaten and the rest are get- ting mouldy to take measures, be cause that will be too late. What you want to do is to make the most of all that you have, even if it is a lot | The berries will prove just the thing for an emergency when unexpected | company arrives, if they are cooked down and put away in the ice box in la glass jar. Added to fced tea they make a beverage of delightful flayor, lemonade may be the “stock” to which they are added. Peach Salad. The use of pears in salad is well known. The of peaches in like ma. 1s, however, somewhat less fami A decorative way of 1 salad is as follows: The peach may be peeled or left in the skin if that be a very pretty o It should be halved and the removed. The peach should then slit toward the center so that the pieces spread like the petals of a flower. The center may he heaped with cream A tiny piece of | repose _prettily cream cheese, if use ving peaches be cheese pepper may upon the top of th desired. green Fruit Sandwiches. : 1f you would use sandwich, why not It has be tried peaches of the As he b jan sh peaches, toc with success. The oversupply should_be peeled and sugared down. When = they needed, the superfluous juice may be drained off, and added to the berry julce for.a cooling drink. The peaches are then chopped and spread n buttered graham or white bread There is something very refreshing | and novel about a sandwich of fres) frult. No ome will guess that you did it 1, reason than to delight for any the palate in a novel way to sandwic for a Another Idea who eats a v in the Summer time put any that left into a jar, and when enough slated to make it worth while for flavoring | does =0 and has One lady riety of fruit is or to a b he something that ts to analvze and is at the sa thoroughly deliciou rember, also, that oranges added rosting of ¢ very de filler for a sponge re fally tasty are BY THORNTON W. BURGESS |sva low was anywhere around. wait now to make quite 1 ar.” | Whitefoot waited and | v would poke her pretty little head out and then draw it back | poor MOTHERS Al THEIR CHILDREN., Keeping Books Clean. One mother says: My two little girls make book cov. ers out of odd pieces of linen or brown Holland, embroidering “Book cover,"” or a spray of flowers in colored wools or flo When a book is borrowed one of the covers that will fit is slip ped on and the book is kept clean, thus teaching them a lesson in the care of other people's property. Note Book Lee and pop was taking a wawk, jest taking a wawk, and pop sed, Heer comes a berd that 1 never liked and ever ixpect to like, wen he was a boy he played with the gerls insted of the other fellow and he's bin a darn dude ever since. Meening a long narrow man with little pointy mustash and a cane, n saying, Well wats the black thing er { round his arm, pop? O, I dident notice that, thats a morn. ing band, the poor fellow must of lost some member of his familly and heer I am casting slites and aspersions on him, the poor fellow cant help his na ture, poor fellow, Id willingly offer him my sympathy if T knew who it was that died, pop sed Wy dont you bim? 1 sed That would be ruther indelicate, but 1 mite find out, indireckly, pop sed. Wich jest then the v ted to ) pass, and pop sed, Well well, if its not Willie Summers, I havent vou since Heckter was a pup, how are you, Willie, how vou bin? Very well, I thank you, the man sed. And he stopped to shake hands with pop on account of pop stopping shake hands with him. Hows all your family? pop sed, and the man sed, All well, ank heaven, and pop sed, Does your brother Joe keep well, how are your sisters Injoying the best heltk thankful to say, the m sed, Hasent enyvbody even bin sick Wy should they? t i sed, pop sed, On the contrary, ony I ticed your morning band and I thawt per o deer s 1ps. T lost my fel Toot ver ixpect to have another ch companion, he sed I imagine she's beter ware she is come on Benny, pop sed, and me and him kepp on going, pop sawing, the simp, the darn dude, berds like that awt to be put out of their mizze TUESDAY, i STAR, WASHINGTOM, D. C | [ DOROTHY DIX'S LETTER BOX Can Young Man Make a. Greater Success in Law i or in Business?—Shall He Let Wife’s Bobbed Hair Break Uj) Their Home? EAR MISS DIX: In your opinfon has a Business man or a professional man the better chance of succeecfing? I am a poor boy, 18 years old, and have about decided to become a fJawyer. I have had no education be- vond the grammar school, and would ve to work my way through college and the law school. I am not unusually bright, but ¥ read a good deal. Do can make the grade? Joit Giuk X H, 0. K, AUGUST 1925. COLOR CUT-OUT DAVID COPPERFIELD. Answer: Success is such a relative, term that I do not think it fs possible for any one to decide whether the beisiness man or the professional man has the better chance of succeeding. If you define success in terms of tnoney, business offers a better chance of suc than the professions. Millibns are oftener made in in commerce than in the professions, although thepe are many highly paid lawyers and doctors. If you define success in terms of good te humanity, possibly the professions offer more opportunities to do good than business, though the money of some of our rich men makas possible the work of sclentists. It you define success in terms of glory aed fame, probably the professional man stands more in the spotlight than does the business man. In order, however, to achleve any success in a profession, you must have some especial talent and fitness for it, No other men have so little chance in the world or are so ill paid as the poor, mediocre lawyers and doctors, who barely eke out a livelthood, and o they must always remain on the lowest rung of the ladder. It takes a great many years of aard work and study, and a great deal of money, to fit a boy to enter a profmssion, and all of the effort and money is wasted unless God has put into himx the peculiar talent that fits him for that particular profession. He has ta be called to it, as definitely as any priest or preacher is called to his vomation. So, son, unless you have heard in your soul that summons to be a lawyer, unless you feel tha vou wogld rather starve practicing law than succeed at anything else, unless you are sure that you have a legal mind, a quick wit and an eloquent tongue, I should advise you not to study law, but to go into business. Any boy who has good common gense, and who is willing to work hard, can make a success in business, but ‘hard work and only an ordinary men tality will not make you a great lawwer. You have to have something more than that, an intangible something timt comes by nature, and that you can- not create for yourself. * b Consider well whether you have this gift. Remember this also, that all of the professions are overcrowded, and that only the most talented have even a chance of success, but there is no limit to the possibilities in business. {That is a fair field with no favor, mnd open to every young fellow with | energy. g DOROTHY DIX. [DEAR DOROTHY DIX: I have bean married for 13 years, and have had | as happy a home as any man coifld desire, but it is about to be wrecked | on the hobbed hair question. I am tterly opposed to my wife having her { hair cut, but through the influence of! some women in our neighborhood she | had it done, and we have quarreled aver it until we are about to break up our home, and separate We have two darling children that it would break my heart to leave, but | if my wife continues in her present aftitude there is nothing else left for me to do. Can you offer some solution #0 my predicament? WORRIED HUSBAND. Answer: What you need, Worrted Hushand, is a sense of humor to see how ridiculous you are in making sugh a mountain out of a molehill. Have a good laugh at elf, and then sit down and dope the situation out as you would a business proposition. on one side of the ledger “a good wife.” Set down her devotion, the many sacrifices she has made for you, the sed you when you were sick, the millions and millions of done for your comfort and pleasure and happiness. Put down and that means of comfort and happiness—the warm fire, dinner, vour little peculiarities catered to, the dishes you like pre | pared for vou: the comradeship of vour wife. Write down your children’s | names. You can do that in your heart's blood, they are so dear to you Your happiness is in them. The thrill of the clasp of their little hands in yours. The unending interest they are to you. Something to work for, Something to live for And against all of these blessings write down “bobbed hair.” balance your account. Write down theulr hes s she has nu | timy { thin the & Then T don’t blame you for not wanting your wife to bob her hair. T agree with you that a woman's crowning glory s her hair, and I have never seen assingle woman who I did not think was disfigured by having her hair cut off. Especially is it unbecoming and inappropriate for a woman old enough to be married and have children. But what you and I think doesn't matter. It is the craze to bob, and | women are sheeplike, and have to do as other women do. i So If your wife is determined to disfigure herself by cutting off her locks | vou can't help it. You just have to accept it as a silly weakness that is | more than offset by her other good qualities. Charge it up to profit and | | loss, and forget it. Nor do I wonder that your feelings are wounded because your wife car o little for your opinion that she is not willing to sacrifice following an a surdity.of the fashion in order to look beautiful to you. She is certainly very wrong in that | The Shiphouse. “Why, that's not it, that ship-look ing_thing!” cried David in_surprise. That's it, Master Davy,” said Ham. t's a shiphouse If the shiphouse had been Aladdin’s Palace itself it could not have pleased David more. David’s room was in the stern of the vessel and was so little it lookedl like the room In a play house. Tt had a tiny window where the rudder used to go through, and on the wall hung a looking-glass all framed with oyster shells, and just the right height for David. Make Ham's coat a dark blue. His | hat and scarf should be tan. MODE MINIATURE The smartest beach coats noted on a march to the sea 4 coolie coats brilliantly batiked with the crests of npbility. They are par. ticularly favoréd, being fashioned to foil sun and sea, to guard against chilliness when the air is cooler tha. the water, and to court covert glances of admiration. Their history is intermingled with that of Japan's, similar ones having been worn for generations, each Beads for the New Evening Frocks BY MARY MARSHALL. Truly we live in tbe bead age, so far as costumery is concerned. For silhouettes may change—grow wider or narrower, flaring or straight— skirts may grow long or shrink almost to nothing, sleeves may come and sleeves may go, but beads go on for- ever, or seemingly so. It may be that eventually we will grow weary of beaded frocks and that they will pass really out of fashion, but that time seems far off. More than once since beads came into prominence the prediction has been made that they were soon to o out of favor. The beaded blouse that girls used to wear to work In the morning and the inexpensive beaded georgette frock that thousands of women regarded as a necessity have, in fact, gone out of vogue. Varl- ously printed crepes and georgettes have taken their place. The beaded frock of today glorfous contraption. From Paris comes the information that at very smart evening partles the beaded frock is most in evidence, and women here who can think of new clothes at this time ot the year are tempted b the lovely georgette and chiffon frocks richly strewn with beads. The beads are lald on with a skilled hard, following the designing of true artists. They are not sewed on in neat little designs as they used to be.- They are lavishly applied in intricate manner, with sometimes fringes of the beads dripping down from the frock. You really must see some one of these new beaded frocks to appreciate the difference. For one thing, the beads themselves are different. Some one brings the information that they is a are of porcelain instead of transpa ent glass. Sometimes there almost barbaric splendor about the beaded frocks, combining rich me tallic textures, gold lace or rich vel vet brocade with the frosting of beads, and one sometimes sees bright colored bugles applied here and there like emeralds and rubles amid the frosting of crystal or pearl bead work One charming little beaded frock designed by Bernard of Paris shows a sleeveless, straight, long bodice of white mousseline de sofe, embroider ed with white beads running in ver. tical lines up and down the bodice. The short, scant skirt of the same material is embroidered in coral beads and black beads. is marked by a narrow belt of metal ribbon with a long, pliant white os trich plume hanging down from the s an The low waistline | middle of the front—extending inches eyond the edge of the skirt. (Copyright. 1925.) Nursing Boils and Things, Of all the poor fish that do not ap- peal to my sympathy the most unap. pealing is the geek that nurses a felor | an ulcerated tooth or an abscess an: where else, say in the appendix, waits to see what that peerless char atan, Old_Mother Nature, will d about it. I can weep and sob at al anybody’s funeral except the fel- | at has been operated on by | ssisted, perhaps, by one or| brand. of new-fangled “drug healer. It seems that these self-} | “drugless” healers are great PERSONAL HEALTH BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D ERVICE R wile their still bables. S h Ow es of nature and are alwa wflhng, Plove tiibe; ahcind let the goof who is enamored of |into q ure’s ways take his chances in the hands of nature, ided he has family owning its own crest. They | found their way to America through the students of Tsuda College in an| effort to raise funds for the rebuild- ing of their school after the earth- But I imagine,in the heat of argument you have ordered her not to have | | her hair cut, and forbidden her to have her hair cut, and otherwise been | autocratic about it, so that she got her back up and did it just as much to show you that she would not be bossed as for any other reason. | quick ful that she had been ‘inally she managed to ge - enough to. come wh out w nothing of Redt | the porti What Tomorrow Means to You ook for a n for an ad t | HER JUST HIM. me high up ring if perhaps it her to move also. 2t bear the 1ldn’t be wise fo ut s ink of m her wer el to so Hardly 1 t t 3 n 2 al the him. | oot der the | White > hole lucky thing Tt would have been the end of th of I didn’t suppose that fel- | BEAUTY CHATS Freckles. t to fight hould make a mental list freckles intelli- gents and use ining those bleach that good ordinary bleaches are mno as every one uses cold cream | g cold cream should be | kind, and Iotion should he u If this does not cure reckles, you can try some more dras tic remedy Your cold cream should be either | cucumber or peroxide cold cream. It | “Yhould be thing at night to| cleanse the skin. During the day the face should be rubbed with some such lotion barley water or cucumber milk. You will find a formula for making barley water in any cook book. It is one of the most delicious of Summer drinks. Use twice as much barley as the recipe calls for, and add o it an equal amount of spirits wine. Rub this into the skin and wipe off 1f if is sticky A simple sunburn and freckle lotion made by mixing equal parts of givcerin, witch hazel and peroxide of hydrogen. Be sure that the glycerin is pure and the peroxide fresh, and keep this lotion in a dark glass bot tle. Here's another stronger on Three drachms of citric acid, two| drachms of borax dissolved in 11 ounces of water. allowed to stand one hour after one ounce of red rose petals | has heen added. Strain this through a jelly bag 24 hours, and add two ounces of glycerin to the clear por- tion. It freckles still pers .to use a stronzer bleach. I hesitate to recommend any. I would prefer hat a prescription from a ead of the ordin sed last st, you will have you get | burn | the elbow ly a 1 leaf caused her her head quickly. There Fox. He saw her just him. Now Reddy can move ve Kklv. Few people can move more that Reddy Fox. He was j P two good jumps from Whitefoot, and he made those t mps so quickly that it seemed as if iad covered the distance in one hen the rustle of saw quickly w there is such a thing as being ittle too quick someti Reddy as so quick that in almost the time would take vou to draw a breath he landed right exactly on the spot where Mrs. Whitefoot had been. But she wasn't there. She had been qu as quick as Reddy. Instead of run ng away from him, she had darte straight foward him, for there was a little hole in the ground that she knew of there. Reddy had thought that if she ran at all she would run away from him, and that if he missed her n that second jump he would get her on the third. So he made that jump before he realized that little Mr: Whitefoot was not running away from him e result was that he jumped right over her. The very instant his feet touched the ground he whirled about. He was just in time to see Mrs, Whitefoot's long, slim tail disappear that hole. Then you should have seen Reddy dig. My, how he made e dirt fly! t he didn’t get little Mrs. White- t. There was a little tunnel along which she ran. Tt led to an opening under a pile of ‘brush. Peeping out from under this pile of brush she watched, until finally, Reddy gave up and went away. ‘Then little Mrs. Whitefoot returned stralght home. She had decided that this wouldn't be a good day to move. (Govyright. 1925.) BY EDNA KENT FORBES. doctor, for a very strong bleach may the skin, and a prescription sifould be given by a doctor, who can judge how sensitive your skin is. Bobbie—Massage your arms from up to the shoulders and use oil to help fatten them. Any exercises in which you use the muscles of the upper part of the arm will also help to develop them. D. Daisy—A line under the eyes just below the lashes is not a disfigure- ment. Try very cold water as a final rinse after bathing your face, or an ice rub, as either way you will tone vour skin and make it firm again, You may be a bit below normal, and it is showing itself in this way. fihe Cheerful Cherub) Sometimes at night my conscience wakes With pangs it seems that naught can lull. IP I could always Feel like this How good I'd ba, and oh, how dullt R some mnourishing new | { S BY MARY BLAKE. Leo. horrow’s planetary ent until a >y then become overca lex. 1If you on any untried ails of which have beer iy t out, the early hours of the day offer a good opportunity for the effort, and the signs denote ever prospect of success. Later on in the day there is nothing to encourage or timulate initiative or origin but hough the atmosphere is drab, there ill be no sense of pessimism or de spair. In the home circle re straint and poise are recommended in order to avold disagreement or lack of harmony Children born tomorrow, regardles of sex, enjoy normal health co during infancy, but are liable, ju: prior to the period of adolescence to - fror rious ailment, or an dent of a more or less grave na There is nothing, however, to te that given proper cary attention, they will not attain ph normalcy. In disposition the boy will be pliable and lovable, whereas the girl will be stubborn and only at tractive to those she wishes to charm The boy will be very susceptible to externals, and his character will al together depend on the environment with which he is surrounded in his youth. The girl, on the other hand. will have a will all her own, and. in sist on having her own way at all costs. If tomorrow our birthday you have a very strong character without being objectionable, and are fired with are noon a trifle to em- the t is an unlimited ambition, owing to the | confidence you have in yourself. Your powers of observation, combined with your systematic efforts, make it easier for you than it is for others to at- tain that which yofi seek. One draw- back to your cess, and which can be easily remedied by well regulated effort, is your impulsiveness, which makes you quick tempered and easily angered. Even though you regret these outbursts immeditely after their occurrence and are alwavs amenable to reason the ill-considered words ut- tered by you in moments of irritation alw leave a sting behind them. You take great pleasure in making others happy and cgasider no personal effort too great to bring comfort and solace to those who s d in need of it. Your mate will receive your un- divided love and unstinted devotion and your home life should be ideally happy. Well known persons born on that date are: Willlam C. Langdon, clergy- man; Wilson G. Smith, pianist and composer; Harold Frederick, journalist and author; Elsle Ferguson, actress. (Copyright. 1925.) “Puzzlicks” Puzzle-Limericks, A girl who weighs many an —1— Used language 1 will not —2— When her brother, one —3—, Pulled her chair right —i—, As he wanted to see if she'd —5—. 1. Onesixteenth of a pound. To articulate. Twenty-four hours, At @ distance. To move with a_bound. (NOTE: Put the right words, indi- cated by the figures, into the corre- sponding spaces and you'll have a completed limerick. The answer and another “Puzzlick’ will appear tomor- row.) Yesterday's “Puzzlick. Cordelia, a silly young wench, Went out on the Thames to catch tench, When the boatload upset She exclaimed, I regret, The word for a lady, in French! H .if you will tell her to do as she pleases about it, and that you recog- | { nize her right to do as she likes with her own hair, the chances are that she | will let it grow again. ‘ 3 H Anyway, don't let your home be wrecked by such a little thing as a hair 1bob. T are o many things so much more important than hair. | %1608 miks on) and all yout-wifs tist yon Fuow Sub ldye boen { acting like a fool and a brute, and that she looks good to you with long hair or short. And, take my word for it, she will sob on the second button of your | waistcoat and say that she “ne-v-v-er did like the old bob, anyway.” | DOROTHY DIX.* i s sien | EAR MISS DIX: T am a widower with two small sons to take care of. I am in love with a girl 18 years old. Do you think she is too young to make a good mother to my children JIM. Answer: Undoubtedly. No girl of 18 has the wisdom, the self-control, the patience and forbearance to properly rear stepchildren. No man has a right to put an unformed girl like that over his children. A girl of that age is a child herself, incapable of dealing properly with the most difficult problem that any woman ever undertakes to solve. DOROTHY DIX. & (Copyright, 1925.) i The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright, 1825.) i Arablan garment. Reflection. Chart. . Water nymphs. Makes angry. Preposition. Scout. 1. Literary collection. 2. To strike repeatedly. 3. Three-toed sloth. 4. Unit of germ—Plasm. 5. Manuscripts (abbr.). 6. Lively. Prefix meaning twice, 7. Prefix meaning in. Part of the body. 8. Pronoun. Golf term. 9. Vehement in emotion. Protestant FEpiscopal (abbr.). Greek letter. Becomes wan. Malt liquor. Negative. Obtained. Southern constellation. Cover thrown over a coffin. American soldier in the Revolu- City in France. tion. Trees. Japanese statesman. God of Islam. To give up for a price. ‘Welrd. Peruse. Grimace of derision. To vex. Discharges slowly. Girl's name, Request. Devoured. Girl's name. Note of the diatonic scale. A narrow strip of fine stuff, Precipitous. Back part. Part of the verb to be. Highly inflammable substance. To obstruct. A bone. To put on. Nolise. Fifth month of the Jewish year. Part of a play. Epoch. Greek letter. To act. Part of a curved line. Conflict. Lyric poem. Hired. Elevated land (abbr.). High explosive. Printed notice. Serfes of rhythmic movements, Engineering degree" (abbr.). 59. Native metal. Preposition. 14. 17. 22 4 ; 57. . { them down. quake. MARGETTE. SUB ROSA BY MIML Cigarette Question. Several of my readers hava been asking lately: “What about clgarette: Mimi? Will it cheapen me to smoke All the boys offer me cigarettes, and | sometimes 1 imagine they think me a poor sport and a prig, because I turn What's the proper atti- tude about it?” Well, personally, it seems to me these young ladies are giving too much thought to a rather trivial question. The 1idea that it is immoral to smoke is dying out so rapidly that even the older generation laughs at it. If you are refraining from this pop- ular indoor sport because you think vour abstinence is golng to speed your entrance into Heaven, you're on the wrong track entirely. Smoking as a moral issue is out of date; smoking as a menace to health is still a very live questjon indeed. There is not any 'meed for me to point out the statistics, showing how many young people per square inch dle every year because their use of to- bacco had made them unable to resist disease. You've read all of that sort of thing before, and don’t want it inserted into {a column of advice. But if you're on the road to becom- ing an addict. you might drag out those same old statistics and look them over very carefully. 3 - Some doctors are saying nowadays that a few cigarettes a day will do your nerves good—will calm you and soothe you. That's all right if you keep to the few cigarettes a day, but don’t get into the habit of lighting one every time you read a book, sit down for a chat or take any kind of refresh- ment. Overindulgence in the matter of smoking has several unpleasant re- sults. Did you ever go near a girl and immediately become conscience of the odor of horrid. stale tobacco? Did it attract you toward her? It did not. Girls should smell of some slight elusive scent, and the perfume of stale tobaceo on a girl is as disagreeable to me as to the worst prig in the world. Did you ever notice the yellowed fingers of some girl of your acquaint- ance? Did you notice what a soiled, unpleasant look her hands had be- cause of those yellow stains? Those disagreeable little results are the things to watch out for, when tak- ing up smoking. If you feel your health can stand it, if you know you can confine yourself to & few a day—if your smoking won’t offend the special man—and if you can remember to avoid the yellow fingers and cigarette smell—then there’s no particular reason to get worked up over whether you ought to smoke or mot. Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle. enough jack to lay vance or retainer fee ticket The ticket is good for a dozen or a score! of punches and it serves to keep the buyer's mind off the fact that he has been required to pay cash in advance | for the short-cut healer's services. In some States, alis, tNpse “drug- less” healers are not licensed and so they collect in advance, since they have no standing in court and cannot compel a dissatisfied customer to pa for the fllegal treatment. Next to the healer who attempts to | appeal to popular ignorance and pres- | udice by holding himself out as a| most contemptible humbug, I % is the one who plays to popular ignor- ance and prejudice regarding medi- | cines. As though it made any differ ence in the world whether a_quack uses one method or another. But all these trick healers, whether within or without the legimate medical profe sion, knows that Barnum was right. | The Wisenheimers are people. 1 fear my sense of humor is warped | and abnormal. I, the doctor, was the | only one in the party that laughed aloud at the spectacle of a very digni- fled and ponderous old gentleman | leaning back in his chair so bard that | it broke down with him. I find it ex- ceedingly difficult to avold laughing outright at the pain and suffering of | the victim of an “‘ulcerated tooth” who | walks the floor in agony waiting for the “swelling to go down,” so that the dentist can extract the tooth “with- out” danger of blood poisoning. And even the unphilosophical sufferer from felon, the pain of which, I suppose, makes an “ulcerated tooth” seem a trifle, falls to arouse a spark of inter- est or concern when he seeks surcease in the form of a while walving the knife with his good arm. Individuals vary greatly in their fondness for bofls. With some indi- viduals one lone boil is sufficent for a season; with others the first boil mere- 1y serves as a sample, and it seems so satisfactory that they go in for boil culture on an extensive scale. One reason for this prevalent fondness for the boil business is the popular fancy that boils are somehow indicative of “impurities in the blood.” which no- tion persists from a tradition of the dark ages that the blood *casts out” impurities through such lesions of the skin, a childish superstition which is Every package of Glori- entyoubuyis guaranteed. It dyes any real silk like new and alwaysleavesthe lace white. This means every one of the 18colors, whether used in their full strength or dainty pas- tels. Look for the name —It pays. No boiling. No staining hands or basin. At Drug and Department Stores Chase & Sanborns Seal Brand Tea is of the same high quality