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0o & WOMAN'’S PAGE. How to Make a Handy Sewing Kit BY LYDIA L — y THE SEWING KIT CAN BE HUNG NEAR THE SMALL COMPASS Sewing kits are favorite accessories for work baskets and work bags, and ihey prove of great convenience when slipped into traveling bags or suit -ases. They can be made sufficiently compact to be put into ordinary handbags and be accessible at a mo ment's notice when an emergenc arises. The sewing kit described today has spool pockets that prevent thread from getting soiled. The strands do not have to be ended off after each needleful lest they unravel and tangle with other threads. The fittings complete, and in-pl fastened so that they their special places. The kit can be developed in any material one s on hand. The spools will slip to opposite sides of their pockets and So fit compactly if the case is rolled. The back pocket portion supplies a handy receptacle for odds and ends or for small bits of sewing. The size of the kit may be large or small to suit the needs of the needle- woman or traveler. It may measure but a few inches quare, for instance, and hold but eight spools, four in a row, or it can be increased in length or width, or both, and be a fairly ca- pacious sewing accessory, with many rows of spool pocket e secure in Directions Use a double thickness of material 1f this is aMke on both sides cut one plece long enough to be turned up and form the first row of spool pockets. If the fabric has a right and wrong side, make both pocket portions of separate strips of the ma- terial. Put one pocket strip along the lower end of the kit and the sec- ond far enough above it to allow the spools to be slipped in and out easily when the kit needs to be stocked Mark the strips into quarters. Punch BEDTIME STORIES Another Visitor. Some prople labor ceems to i While otbers dearly love o v ~0ld Motner Peter Rabbit found that Mr. Water Snake was in the habit of taking a sunbath and nap every pleasant day n the roof of Jerry and he found that Jerry didn’t mind i at all and never disturbed Mr. Wate Snake in the least. Then one da ‘Nature. when he chanced to be over at the| Smiling Pool, Peter discovered another visitor on the rvof of Jerry’s house. L5 2 —- “NOW, WHAT IS SHE THOUGHT HE ABOUT?” This visitor surprised him_quite as much as had Mr. Water Snake. It was Mrs. Snapper the Snapping Turtle, Peter was quite used to seeing Tur- tles taking sunbaths, and when he saw Mrs. Snapper climbing out on the roof of Jerry’s house he thought she was climbing up there to take a sunbath. He hardly gave her a glance. But when he looked over a second time fie saw that Mrs. Snapper was crawl Ing about all over that roof as if she were looking for something. Then he became interested. Finally, at a cer- tain spot on the roof, Mrs. Snapper went to work. From where he sat Peter could see that she w @ hole in that roof of rushes and mud. Peter certainly was surprised then. “Now what is she about?”’ thought he. “What is she trying to dig down into Jerry's house for? If she wants to get into his house why doesn't she go in the same way he does, under water? She can stay under water fong as she pleases, and I should thin) she could go right through his tunnel.” Then another thought came to Peter. Mrs. Snapper was big. She ‘was very big. He realized as he looked @t her that she couldn't possibly go DLEWORKER, TO SLIP INTO A BAG TO BE CARRIED. Muskrat's house, | s making | BARON WALKER. LIKE A BA OR _IT ( NER. CONVE AN BE ROLI NIENTLY 5D INTO |holes in the center of each with a |stiletto and_buttonhole around the circles. Bind the top of the turned {up or lower portion and both top and | bottom of the separate pocket. Baste in position on front portion of kit and machine stitch or feather stitch the pocket divisions. Fittings and Finishings. Above each end pocket sew strips of the tape to form small loops. Stitch through the middle of the right-hand loop to form two sections or holders for.thimble and emery or wax. This be divided into three eections or loops, emery and thimble each ha The right-hand loop is fc holder. Above the next pocket flat tomato pincush- fon, an. : space above the other pocket sew a needlebook made of the material and having flan- nel leaves. Bind the three sides of top and under portions of kit together and leave top open. This makes a pocket which will be found convenient for notions, such as cards of £naps, hooks and safety pins, etc. Through the eyelets in spool pockets run ends of the threads of diffefent sizes and colors. Sew tapes of ribbon to the top corners of the kit. A piece of whalebone or a covered bone such as come for corsets may be slipped through the top binding of both back and front portions, to hold the kit | straight like a banner. The tapes tied together make a secure hanger to slip over a hook back of the work basket or any knob that is handy. They form tie strings when the kit is rolled to put in & work bag. Such banner kits can be made from r ribbon and be smart little af- the back can be of leather to accord with the lining of a traveling bag, or the whole kit can be mmde of bronze kid, which Is a favorite me-. dium for developing kits of somewhat similar type. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS |through one of Jer: |nels. She was too br So_th: d he, talking to himself. “She can't get in through Jerry’s tunnel, so she is digging her way in through the roof. But what is she doing it for? That is what I can- not understand.” Mrs. Snapper was too far away for | Peter to ask questions all he could do was to sit and watch. Ife saw that | she had chosen one of the oldest parts of the roof and she kept right on | working as if she had something very important on her mind. Mr. Water Snake came for his usual daily sun- bath, but, seeing Mrs. Snapper at work there. didn't want a and swgm away. Snapper continued to work and and Peter continued to watch and watch. By and by Mrs. Snapper had that hole deep enough so that she was half out of sight. Then she Muskrat’s tun- ad for that. for a long time appeared to be doin; nothing. _“She must be tire thought Peter, “and is resting.” You know Peter himself is always ready to rest. The sun was warm, it was very quiet, and so presently Peter dozed. Then he dozed some more. Finally he took a real nap. Peter awoke with a start. Just for a wee part of a minute he couldn’t think where he was. Then he remem- bered, and hastily looked over to the roof of Jerry Muskrat's house. Mrs. Snapper the Snapping Turtle was busy again. But now she seemtd to be filling that hole in instead of dig- ging it deeper. It was all very puz- zling. Finally she waddled down o {the edge of the water, looked all around, then dived in and Peter saw no_more of her. Peter waited around hoping Mrs. Snapper would come near enough for him to ask questions of her. When she didn’t come, he looked for Jerry Muskrat. He was anxious to tell Jerry what “Mrs. Snapper had been doing on the roof of that house. But Jerry must have been taking a nap somewhere, for not so much as a hair of him did Peter see. It began to look as if his curiosity would have to go unsatisfied. Tomatoes au Gratin. Cut eight good-sized tomatoes in halves, remove the pulp. and fill the hollow with the following mixture: Cut one-half a cupful of bread crumbs in a dish with the same quantity of grated cheese, one finely chopped onion and the tomato pulp. Put one- half & teaspoonful of butter on the top of each half and put closely together r a well buttered tin. Bake in a mod- te oven for about half an hour and serve hot on small rounds of but- tered toast. seemed to grow tired of working and THE SUB ROSA BY MIMT. That Old Rival.* Girls are such strange creatures. They not onfy want all of & man's love and time and thought—they want the whole of his past, too. 1t irks them to think that there's been another girl before them—some one for whom he cared deeply, when he didn't even know of thelr existence. 1 know of one lar girl who worrled herself simply sick about her predecessor. She plied her sweetheart with questions about the other girl. She asked herself a thousand times a day: “Am T as good looking as his old girl? Do I dance as well? Was she more clever than T am? I wonder If he really cares as much for me as he did for her.” At the slightest mention of the old love she would start, change color, experience a feeling of the bitterest jenlousy. It got so finally that the thing was simply an obsession with her. She couldn’t bear to think of her man's former love affair, and yet she tor- tured herself hourly with mental pic- tures of the other girl's lovellness, her charm, her utter power over men. Then, suddenly, she had the amaz- ing experience of meeting the other girl, who turned out to be a total loss—unattractive, rather old looking, not very witty and thoroughly unin- teresting. And the silly little thing, who had worried herself sick about this old rival, was suddenly aware that she had been creating a lovely thing to be feared and respected—out of her own mind. It's always that way. When you first hear about the girl he was in love with before he met you, you construct a picture which would give Gloria Swanson or Pola Negri a run for their money. 1f you let yourself go on believing that the other girl was the world's best in every way, you gradually be- gin to belleve yourself the most in- ferior person in the world. You get the idea that he only fell in love with You because he couldn't do any bet- ter, and you end by being thoroughly unhappy. It's such a ridiculous attitude, and such a common one, that you ought to be the only girl he's ever been in love with in his whole life. Of course, he's had his flirtations. Tle may even have been in love before; and now the fact that he's keen about vou—that he may even be engaged to you—should reassure you that the old love is dead forever. How about all the boys you've flirt- ed with and thought you were in love with? Do you feel that it was wrong of you to have had those fiirtations, to have been in love with another boy? o, you don't. You're rather pleased ith yourself about them. Then don't begrudge your poor sweetheart his fling. Of course, he was in love with some ong else be- fore he met you. You ought to be glad that he had known and liked attractive girls; it makes it all the more flattering that he singled you out for attention. Don't let that old rival bother you. She's dead and gone—she's just the past. You're the present, and you've got all the trump cards. Mimi will be glad to answer your love questions. Just inclose a stamped addressed envelope for a personal re- 1y, o (Copyright. 1926.) What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. Virgo. Tomorrow's planetary aspects are very inauspicious and unfavorable un- til - about ndown, when a sudden change {s apparent, indicating an awakening of emotion and a stimula- | tion of thought and activities. During the day there will be present an at- mosphere of nervousness and unneces- sary worry. It would, under such conditions, be impolitic and inexpedi- ent to attempt to do that which could be conveniently left for a more pro- pitious occasion, as you, in all prob- ability, will not be in a state of mind to encourage concentration of effort. In the evening all social functions or family reunions promise to be produc- tive of happiness. Furthermore, if the opportunity should be desired and should present itself, advantage can be taken of the benign and emotional sense to “put your love to the test.” Children born tomorrow will not, ap- parently, possess that strength and vigor of constitution which will, un- aided, carry them safely through the ticklish_period of infancy.. They will all need very careful nutrition and a clockwork system of living, and, if given the one and provided with the other, they will, although in some cases with difficulty, attaln physical normalcy. In disposition, theys will be rather peevish and complaining, but this will largely be a natural re- sult of their physical condition. As they grow up this condition wiil dis- appear, and give way to contentment and a philosophical state of mind. If tomorrow is your birthday, you are very fond of change, and such changes as you make are liable to be | quite’ sudden and unexpected. You are very partial to the attractions of society and very punctilious in carry- |ing out what you consider to be your social obligations, and. under any and all circumstances, are a stickler for convention, as you have a wholesome fear of “Mrs. Grundy. rour love you are very demon- strative. In your hatred—and you can hate with enthusiasm—you are very bitter. You are known as a good | triend and an implacable enemy. You Ppossess a. large amount of “sang frold” and are able to repress your inner- most feelings. You do not carry your heart on your sleeve, and, even though you may be worrving vourself to death, the outside or onlooker would never guess it. Well known persons born on that date are: Willlam Welgel, United States Army general; George P. La- throp, author, founder and president of American Copyright League; Edgar Wilson Nye (“Bill Nye”), humorist; Francis Bret Harte, author: Samuel R. Franklin, Naval officer, and Gardiner Greene Hubbard, lawyer, HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWTO) Dog Days. “Muzzle that dog! The idea of let- ting 2 dog go &bout that way in these dog days!™ And it was a'“dog day.” Why do we call very hot days dog days? To be sure, in the Summer dogs are dangerous, and when people were not compelled to Le as careful as they must be now to incapacitate them for doing harm, the hot days witnessed enough horrible accidents to earn the appellation. But that isn't how it started. The anclents, with their myths ana goddesses, were ardent devotees of astronomy. The planets and stars were popularized, so that school chil- dren were familiar not only with their ! symbolism, but their physical changes. Dog days” was the name given by the anclents to a period of about 40 days at the time of the rise of Sirius, called the dog star. This happened to be at the hottest time of the year, the star rising on July 1. On account of changes the date has been brought down to about July 23. Regardless of Sirius, we call them “doz_days” if it is hot, and in cool weather we do not divert our attention from the strenuous life to astronom- ical problems. Yet the star rises just the same, EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, DorothyDix For a Trained Brain Is a Weapon in Emergency, an Aid in Marriage, a Cure for Boredom and Consolation Prize in Love’s Game. [ Learn to Earn Your Bread, Butter and Cake, Girls Urges Rich and Poor Alike to Be Kelf- Supporting 'HIISE few lines are adressed to the thousands of girls who finished school in June and who are now standing, as the poet puts it, “where the brook and river meet” and wondering “Where do we go from here? I want to urge you, girls, with all the earnestness of which I am capable to psychoanalyze yourselves and try to find out what talents and aptitudes nature bestowed upon you, and then this Fall to go to some school where you can develop your gift and fit yourself to be self-supporting. I glve this advice to the rich girl no less than to the poor girl, for in these days of shifting fortunes we have the new poor as well as the new rich, and no woman knows how soon she may be called upon to earn her own bread and butter or starve. If she has been taught how to do this, losing her money is merely an inconvenience to her; but it she does not know how to earn a dollar, It is a tragedy. women in the world are so pitiful as those who have, as the saying goes, “seen better days” and, with thelr money gone, are suddenly flung out into the world to make their own living, with no trade, no profession, no skill in any line, no knpwledge of how to make a penny. They can only eke out an existence by doing the most ll-paid work, or else they become parasites. Prepare yourself In time. Have that within yourselt which wil not be affected by the fall in stocks or the depreciation of real estate. Many things may rob you of vour fortune, but you cannot lose your trained brain and skiliful hand. They will be a resource that you can always fall back upon in any emergency. . .. I course T know. when T urge You girls to fit yourselves to learn some gainful occupation by which you can support yourselves, that you smile and sy to vourselves that you do not expect to earn your own living long. You are going to marry und follow woman's oldest profession, that of wife and mother. That is as may be. Tn the past the great majority of women have been able to count, with @ fair degree of safety, on being able to marry, but it is by no means a forcgone conclusion that the girl of today will get a husband. . most decided decline and fall in matrimony and is foolish for girls to think that they have the same chance of 1 ng as their mothers and grandmothers had. Now, for the girl who is sitting around and waiting for some man to come along and marry her, it is a catastrophe to be passed by. She be comes the sour and disgruntled old maid, eating the bitter bread of de- pendence, the fringe on some family that doesn’t want her. Or else she has to take any sort of a poor stick of & man as a prop for her to lean upon. There has been a home life, and it Far different 13 it with the girl who has fitted herself for some defl- nite work and ir competently dolng it. She has a professiom in which she is vitally interested. She has an occupation which fills her time. She makes enough money to indulge herself In the luxurles that women love, and g0 marriage becomes to her merely an incident of life, not the whole thing. If the right man comes along, well and good. If not, also well and good. She has her pleasant, independent, interesting life as a girl bachelor. The world to her is full of such a number of things besides weding rings. Furthermore girls, even if you do marry, you may &till need to keep on being a bread-winer instead of a breadmaker. The high cost of living has to be reckoned with, and not every man undere present economic conditions 1s able to support & family aione and unaided. e A ] the past the good wife helped her husband by doing the housework, and turning, and mending, and pinching the pennies. In the future the good wife will doubtless help her husbund by keeping on with her well pald job and assisting in making the money to give her family the living conditions and her children the education that the man alone could not afford to give them. So, except among the rich, marriage is going to mean no more a retirement’ from business for women than it is for men. Another reason why 1 urge you, girls, to learn some cupation and perfect vourself in ft is because it will do other one thing to make you happy. and boredom is the root of all gainful oc- more than any Tt will keep vou from being bored, fretful discontent. People who are sy, who have a definite object in view and are striving to attain fit, find the day all too short, are always content and cheerful. And talk about thrills! You never really know one until you hold your first pay envelope in your hand and it surges over you that the money in it rep- resents your own work that was good enough for somebody to pay for. Being able to make vour own living sets vou free. Economic in- dependence is the only independence in the world. As long as you must Jook to another for your food and clothes you are a slave to that person. You must obey him. You must defer to him. You must bend your will to his. But when you can stand on vour own feet you can enap your fingers in the face of the world and tell it where it gets off. You do not have to endure tyrannical parents. You do not have to put up with a cruel hus- band. You can support yourself, and you are free. So T urge you, girls, never to rest until you have fitted yourselves to earn your own bread, butter and cake. And remember, the better you do this the more you earn. It is efficiency that pulls down the big pay en- velope. DOROTHY DIX. fCopyright. 1925.) The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright, 1925.) AUGUST French unit of linear measure. Malt liquor. Until. Norse god. . Prefix; into. . Wise men. Notable period. Indian memorial post. . Tantalizing. . Arablan garment. 1-1.000 inch. Dispose of by sale. More aged. . Memoranda. Three-toed sloth. A fabric. Reverential fear Insect. Mineral rock. Mesh-work. Grandchild (Scotch). loor covering. Poem. Constellation. High priest of Israel. ‘Wooden shoe. hrubby Asiatic plant. Man'’s nickname. . Sound in mind. One who rouses. Run into. Sun god. Requires. . Prefix; two. Goddess of mischief. Storehouse for muni Maiden. Behold. Straight lines from the center of a circle to the circumference. City of southwestern Illinois. Female sheep. Prefix; not. Before. ‘Through; by means of. Obtain. Brother of Osiris. Down. . Danger signal. The highest mountain in Crete. Small three-masted vessel. Stroke lightly. Conjunction. Sleeveless outer garments. ons. “Puzzlicks” Puzzle-Limericks, There was an old maid of Who captured a man by For she jymped on his —3— With a cligrtle of —i— And nothing on earth could —5—. 1. Seaport in British Columbia. 2. A stratagem. 3., Joint between the hip and the ankle. 4. Mirth. 6. Take her away (two words). (NOTE—The lady from British Co- lumbia had a splendid recipe for at- taining her object and if the right words, indicated by the figures, are fitted into the proper space, the result will be a limerick which tells the secret. The answer afd another “Puz- zlick” will appear tomorrow.) Saturday’s “Puzzlick.” Said an elephant traveling by train, “They tell me my trunk nwust re- main In the baggage car. T cavil At this, and my travel Henceforth will be by airplane.” (Copyright. 1925.) (T S ot cents per pound.—Advertisement, i Answer to Saturday’s Puzzle. EEMER0 (z]>|m|o/2]> ] (L[] o] [ 24, 1925. . Puds Simkins was setting on his frunt steps looking at something and 1 sat down alongside of him and he sed, Wats you think ‘of this for a trick key ring? Meening a key ring in the shape of a man's face with its mouth wide open, and I sed, O, its all rite but it aint enything compared to this china €gE. And T took my china egg out of my pockit, looking jest like a reel one only it was china, saying. This is something werth having, this is, i you put this under a hen she wouldent know the diffrents. Well wat if she wouldent, she could- ent hatch eny little china butter platas or enything out of it, could she? Puds And enywauys who wunts to fool'® hen and enyways theres none erround heer to fool, he sed. You can fool peeple with it, too, Jest imagine putting it in somebodys egg cup in the morning and imagine them trying to open it, O boy, I sed.| Well, "you mite do that once, but vou couldent fool enybody twice with it, Puds sed, and I sed, Not the same week maybe, but you could the next week and it would be funnier on ac count of wat happened the week be- tore. O, I gess vou think its better than this trick key ring, dont you? Puds sed, and I sed, I dont think, T know darn well it fs. Wy vyou havent got eny keys, wat the mis schiff good is u key ring without eny keys, tell me that? You'd haff to ba crazy to try to compare that key ring to_this china egg, I sed. You never know wen your going to get some keys, thats a way Puds sed. nyways, Im satisfied with this key ring and you can keep your old china egg. he sed, and I sed Well jest for that I dare you 1o swap Allrite, nobody can say I aint a sport, nobody cant dare me, Puds sed And we &wapped, proving it was wat we both wunted to do all the time. COLOR CUT-OUT || DAVID COPPERFIELD. The Journey Home. Soon David's sadness at parting with little Em’ly gave way to excitment and joy at once more seeing his be- foved mother. As they drew near home he became more and more ex- cited and impatient. Pegotty, how- ever, did not seem to share this im- patience. Indeed, she appeared to hang back with a dread at arriving home. But_in spite of Pegotty, Blunder stone Rookery—as David's home was called—finally came in sight. As they drove up, the dor opened and David leaned far out to wave to his mother. But when he looked it was not she. A strange servant stood in the door. Here is David's attractive mother. Make her hair a golden brown and her siip the faintest pink. (Copyright. 1925.) French Fried Potatoes. Wash, scrub and pare the potatoes and cut them in eighths lengthwise. Let them stand in cold water until all are ready, then dry them between towels. Fry a few at a time in smoking-hot fat. Drain on white paper and sprinkle with salt. Serve at once, @6 they retain their crispness only a short time. Often potatoes to be fried are first soaked for one hour or longer in ice water. The question of soaking or not soaking out pota- toes in ice water before fryving is a matter of individual taste. When sliced and left to stand in water .a large quantity of starch is lost and | the potato is more crisp as a result. In the other case the pieces would be softer and more mealy. MODE MINIATURES ‘How do you determine whether or not a hat becomes you? Many, I wager to say, consider its attractive. ness from the face view only. How- ever, it should measure up to three other requirements—does it suit your profile from the left, the right; does it fit your head in back? Face the cold facts and discard any hat that does not abide by these stand- ards and your choice will pass the cengorship of the most discriminating —it will have that chic—that intangi- ble smartness about it that is instant- ly evidenced. - And speaking of hats we must again mention the preference for velours— you cannot g0 wrong on deciding on one of these. MARGETTE. —— During the past year the British Broadcasting Company of London made a profit of $424,000, G winnickers, | 1 feel, | LATURES. Long-Nap Felt in Veronese Green BY MARY MARSHALIL “or your little Autumn hat of felt, velvet or velour what color will you choose? There are still resplendent hats of pansy or bishop purple, fuchsia, of commandeer Dlue, jcussed charact monopoly on hue. of | long of ris Storrm ou ago A Jament, 1 in may rec British llen W il membe that A seer W ed Erd suasion time a_ye: elt hat of gre young women here. B a rather green hat « ide of velvet long-nap fe influential in the = on has spread the ment that the Ny well woman will now wear a hat exa atch her frock. Hats will be as they have freq the past, chosen in som shade. So the you could wear your when s were u vish The is dres tly only bout wearing |areen is qui something not care to do But perl to follow the | match their | their owr |and wex [in the seas ¢ .| fuchsta hats WITIH |coats. The effe RIEBON. | Later T o sweet faney IS THE GREEN HAT AS IN 84 X AUTUM T, we s ints appes There will|frocks—not ve g browns (now the latest of Autumn— name of fashion | purple frocks wit bright blue. shades of hois de rose be new and interest shown with the comi and then th is green Do not gine for Michael Arlen and BEAUTY CHATS Face Powders. The most important things about face powder are, first, its sec ond, its quality. If you have a very | dark skin and you attempt to make it lighter with a white powder you only | cast a funny shadow over your face which makes you look odd and ficial. ce powder should be a near 1 lor of the dn possible invisible, and it hould ity so fine that it blends perfectly into the skin You can, to a smail extent. modify the tint of the complexion by using certain shudes of powder. If, for in stance. you are very pale, flesh-col- |1 ored face powder will give an effect| of warmth. If you are ¢ can darken your skin v powder. and you c 1 moment that iis much-dis BY EDNA KENT FORBES. he finest q grow down on your brush or comb at direct in ‘th There is no bangs, since th the over tip forehead b Oc | your complexion by powder of very good qual I say idealize T mean that y accentu: yo kind of com nd make it prettier, which, af s qui enough to expect from a face powder It you Homemade Sundaes: You can serve most delic | daes at home, if you wish to a little from plain ice cream a deep brunette vou can | S fudge pec sundae bring out all the rich, creamy tones |choco! ool it in_vour skin by using the deepest|pour yellow powder you c rchase. The |of ice shade is usually called ‘grachel” and |meats to metimes comes in twh shades, a| Another lighter and a more vivid color. There |For is a_good deal of >w and brown | them in these rachel shades, and each a third v g red fc scotch allow brunette For the nilla girl i o Imond: and om a white Marsh dead blue-white, to|c hocolate a quite The blue-white [ mallow nd_lavender-white shades should be | then a used only in the evening and then |sprinkled with very sparingly, for thodgh they give One tterscotch sundae Imonds and brow: the o six f Then pour bt er cach helping rre is the uir | v iche person. sauce the sundae is made with Guaranteed pure imported POMPEIAN OLIVE OIL _ Sold Everywhere Little drops of water Little grains of sand It seems my stylish bathing suit Was never meant to stand. FADELESS DYES Go farther 3 AL Last longer Dye better i | Colors are fresher and brighter when | you use Putnam. It is less trouble— more economical — a smaller amount | goes farther. Putnam Fadeless Dye | the on*iml one-package dye for materials and purposes — dyes silk, cotton and wool in one operation. Use e package for (iminlg. Complete | directions on package. Price 15 ceats. | See color chart at your druggist's. Use Putnam No-Kolor Blesch to Remove Color and Stoins For Baby’s Skin— No baby needs tosuf- fe:" from sore, chafed skin. Just dust with this magic powder— Kora Konia Jor Sore Skin SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN™ and INSIST! Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Headache Neuralgia Colds Lumbago Rheumatism Accept only ‘“Bayer” package Pain Toothache Neuritis which contains proven directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets S " Also les of 24 and 100—Druggists. Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bsyer Manufacture of Monoaceticacldester of Salicylicacié