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WOMA N°5: PAGE For a Traveler’s Apron BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. = - = A~ IN THE ¢ "ER INITIALS OF OF THE TOP O THE OWNER is one needle- | when to| when itch for | MBROIDERY of the initialing arts the woman. She knows use filet letter insel to substitute . cros: the filet, even though she uses the ! precise design; when to use satin stitch, fagoted lettering, darned, out lined or other special stitches to suit the material on which the embroider: is done. Some goods are worth very fine work and some should have the quickest and simplest sort. It a mistake to waste time by finely let tering fabric that lis cheap. However, 80 times the we of a material lends itself to special embroidery th is rapidly worked For instance, huckaback well when darned, though damask ks badly so em broidered. round-thread in loose, heavy weave len ad mirably to cross-stitch, making the | use canvas unnecessary. The squares can be ated without it. Letters can be easily traced on satin or very smooth finished fabrics, and satin stitch is excellent to use on | them. Large letters may be outlined and the space between filled in with catstitch or fagoting. The size of each stitch depends upon the width of the space between outlines. The grad- uated stitches are artistic. Very in- conspicuous fnitialing can be done in Armenian work. The square form of filet designs suits this. A fine, close weave fabric may be embroidered b; using a number oné needle and a ver: fine thread. Make a short stitch equal | 10 half a square, and draw the stitch very tight as in hemstitching, The large needle will make the necessary | hole without drawing the threads. of Stitch. Atter the stitch put the needle down through the first hole and bring it up on theoutline of the op- posite side of the filet square. Th under stitch must be straight acros what would be the square if done in si is goods itself Descript making BEDTIME STORIES Seeing Is Believing. Most_pe We the " beter “Rabbit ple wi must believe Peter Rabbit didn't want to believe that Jenny Wren and Mr. Wren were guilty of destro the eggs of their feathered neighbors. It didn't seem 0 him that he coul Carol the Meadow Lark had told him that there was a rumor, which, you know is a story that no one is sure about, | going around th: Wrens were | breakers of eggs. Now, after having talked with Jenny Wren, Peter more upset ever was than It true H-Capv A HE BEGAN A TREE OVER 3 HIS OWN HOUSE | turnea SINT 1 SINGING IN NEAR WHE WAS that Jenny had no very near neigh- bors, and there certainly was some- thing queer about it. It looked very much as if the ne rbors who used to be there must some good reason for leaving Jehnny Wren had disappeared in- side his house It was the house she hid oceupied, for raised one family in & Peter could hear Mr. 1le was some little distancé away Peter hopped over in that directi He thought he might be able to find out something om Mr. Wren. Just as Peter rted Mr. Wren opped | singing, Peter didn’t know just where to look for him. You know, Mr. Wren is so small that it is very easy for him to keep out of sight Peter looked all around, but he couldn’t see Mr. Wren. So finally he | sat down in the bushes along the old stone wall. He sat down just to rest a while. By and by he noticed that there was a bird-house in an apple tree quite near him. It was one of Farmer Brown's Boy's houses. Peter wondered if any one was living in it, and if so, who it might be. Then he heard the soft love of Tommy Tit the Chickadee. Almost, at _once Mrs. Chiekadee put her head out of the! doorway of that little house. She Jooked all around.and out she came, and together she and Tommy Tit flew | away to get something to eat. Peter watched them out of sight. Then he turned to again look at the little house. He was just in time to seo & tail disappear inside. Peter blinked. “That's queer,” said he to second | she had »ther hous: Wren singir st L3 SHOULD BE | both sides are good I | self-same {a bad deed in all his life. | people M the Old Orchard Jenny and | utes “or SLir g F THE TRAVELER'S APRON EMBROIDERED. THE filet. Make a similar stitch to the one 1cross and then bring the needle up at the end ef the next filet square, and down half-way back. Draw the thread tight. Now you have three tiny stitches on the right side and a right angle made by the threads on the under side. Repeat these stitches, re-| membering that the underside must always have the stitches straight. These initials may be worked in a contrasting colored thread to that of the fabric, and form delicate points of color indicating the lette ‘When the knack of the work is acquired | this initialing is rapid work, and king, but it is sulted to few uses. The initial de signs must be good sized, and stitches nty and precise. Traveler's Apron. i Small crossstitch letters are just the | things to mark the pockets of a trav eler's apron. This apron is made by binding squares and strips of linen with tape or braid in a contrasting or tone and then stitching | them to a rectangular pilece of the same material. Letter the pocket pieces before attaching them. One of the long strips the full width of the apron probably should be lettered “Comb"” and another similar strip a trifle longer should have the word “Brush” on ets bear the words * ponge,” etc. The Jatter will probably be used for a face cloth, but sponge is shorter and is best for the space. This pocket may be lined with rubber cloth, or a small rubber bag may be slipped in. side of it Bind the top of another piece of the cloth, as well as the top of the one with the lettered pockets, and then bind both pieces together, except at the top, which permits of | a pocket space the size of the apron. Sew lengths of the tape or braid to| each corner of the affair and you have an apron. This case apron, when tied about the wal with ‘every ar- ticle handy, is a delightfully useful traveler's accessory. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS himself. s surel I'm sitting here I saw some one go into that| house. Now who could it have been and what did they go in for?' Not more than a second later both | questions were answered for Peter. Mr. Wren's small head and slender bill were thrust out. Peter gasped. On the end of Mr. Wren's bill was a pretty little speckled egg. Mr. Wren looked this way and that way and the other way. Then he dropped the egg. It fall to the ground at the foot of the tree. Mr Wren disappeared. Al- most at once he was out with another ezz. He did the same thing with this ezg. Peter kept count. Five of those little eggs speckled with brown were dropped at the foot of that tree. Then Mr. Wren looked this way and that way and the other way. He was making sure that nobody saw him. He looked every way except down where Peter was sitting. Then swiftly he flew over in among the bushes where he couldn’t be seen. A moment later he began singing in a tree over near where his own home was. It was that,same rollicking | song that every one loves so much. Hearing it you never. never would have thought it possible for Mr. Wren to do anything bad at all. Peter hopped over to the foot of the | tree where those little eggs had been dropped. There, in each, was the hole punched by the sharp bill of Mr. | Wren. Somehow Peter didn’t want to be there when Tommy and Mrs. Chickadee returned. So he and scampered away as fast as his legs could take him. To have seen him yvou might have taken him to be the gullty one. “It's true,” Peter kept saying over to himself, “that rumor is true. It must be that those Wrens have driven their neighbors away. It doesn't seem possible, but it must be true. ‘And to hear Mr. Wren sing vou would think he never had done Of all the Mr. Wren are the last ones I would have suspected of doing such a thing. You never can tell in this world. No, siree, you never can tel (Copyright. 1925, by T. W. Burgess.) e Stuffed Tomatoes. Eight tomatoes, three-guarter cup minced chicken, one cup _bread crumbs, one tablespoon chopped onion, one tablespoon chopped pars- ley, one egg. Salt, pepper and other seasonings to taste. To prepare the stuffing melt one tablespoon of" butter and slightly brown the minced onfon in this. Combine other ma- terials and stir into the hot butter. To prepare the tomatoes leave on the skins and cut a slice from the stem end, scooping out the inside of each. Before filling in the stuffing sprinkle each tomato with salt and pepper and allow the stuffing to come one-half | inch above the tomato. Place each | stuffed tomato on a round of bread and place in the oven for fifteen min- until brown. Serve with a brown gravy. Prices realized on Swift & Com) sales of carcass heef in Washington for week ending Saturday, August 29, 16 5100 Sants bei poand and ay 14.75 conts per ~—Advertisement, 1925; 10. Sundey morning Mary Watkins was setting on her frunt steps on 2 cush- ions and she sed she would take a wawk with me Sundey afternoon if 1 came erround and Sundey afternoon 1 started to go erround and 1 met Puds Simkins wawking in the same direc- tion all dressed up as if he thawt he looked wonderfill, me saying, Ware vyou going? Erround to Mary Watkinses, she's going to take a wawk with me, Puds sed O is that so. like fun she is, who sed she was? I sed. She's going to take a wawk with me because she told me so this morning with her own mouth. so wat rite have you got to come butting in? I sed. Whose butting in, you crazy aint you? Puds sed. No I aint but maybe vou are, are you? 1 sed, and he sed. No I aint, and wats more she told me last nite she would take a wawk with me this afterncon and Id like to know wat rite she had to tell you after she told me, good nite G wizz gosh shang it, it would serve her good and rite if neither of us dident go erround now, holey smokes wats she think we are, slaves? G wizz, she must, T gess, T tell you wat lets do, let us both wawk rite past her house and tip our hats to her without saying a werd and keep rite on wawking and take a wawk by ou selfs, T sed. Hows that for a revenge? 1 sed. | Sure,'it'll serve her good and rite, darn her, thats a darn good revenge on her, Puds sed. And we started to wawk erround to- gether getting reddy to tip our hats, and jest before we got to the corner who terned erround it but Mary Wat- kins wawking with Persey Weever with a flower in his button hole look- ing as if he thawt he owned the werld, and me and Puds quick changed ou revenge and wawked pass without even tipping our hats. Proving you never know wat a girl's going to do and she proberly dont herself. HOME NOTES must be ne: do The elegant and ingenious cabinet work of Thomas Sheraton strongly in fluenced English and American furni- ture designs toward the close of the eighteenth century. ny pieces in- spired by his work are still in exist- ence and are being copied by present to lik For It manufacturers with great suc- The girandole and buffet shown are typical of the Sheraton reproductions on the market today. The girandole is gilded and the sideboard is of flame mahogany with satinwood inlays. This lateer piece has a grace- fully curved front, fine brass mount- ings and slender, tapered and reeded legs. Such furniture as this can never be- come ordinary nor can its solid worth be influenced by style changes. It represents a lifetime investment for its purchaser in service and satis- faction. What TomorrowMeans to You ST BY MARY BLAKE. Virgo. “ ymorrow’s planetary aspects are | very different from those that prevail today. While not adverse, they are, | on the other hand, neither favorable nor stimulating. They are decidedly { complex and indicate an atmosphere of uncertainty, distrust and doubt. | You are liable to be assailed with thoughts of failure or fear of sick- ness, although there is nothing tangi- ble to warrant the one or justify the other. en worse than this, you might, under such sinister auspices, begin to doubt those you love and question in your mind their loyalty and devotion. Only a strong and forceful determination not to be swayed by external and inexplicable conditions, and a strict attention to the daily task in hand, will enable you to overcome influences that are S0 inimical to one's peace of mind. Children born tomorrow, regardless are fated to experience a cer- tain amount of sickness of more or less gravity during infancy. Their success in overcoming these physical difficulties and their ability to attain a normal maturity, will solely depend on the character of the environment with which they are surrounded and the correctness and adequacy of their alimentation. In character and dis position, the boy will be willful, quick- tempered and stubborn, although at other times he will show a winsome- ness that will prove very attractive. On the other hand, a girl will be do- cile, amiable and amendable to all good influences. If tomorrow is your birthday your magnanimity patent to all those that know you, your open-heartedness is recognized and your sincerity of disposition is unquestioned. You never mince matters, are a foe of compromise and no one has ever thought of you as being ‘“wishy- washy You are outspoken and brusque in your speech. There is never, however, a sting to any of your words, nor do they contain any hidden meaning. As a result, your friends do not hold your “down-right- ness” against you, and only look upon it as a proof of your sincerity and conviction. In spite of such idiosyncracies, you are chock full of sentiment and emo- tion and are very loyal to your Kith and kin. You are demonstrative of 33. 39. 41, 42, 44, 45. 47, 48, 50. 51. 53. Ac “Is she interesting. she wasn't around when nature was handing out the beauty prizes, all bets are off. She might be a compendium of all the other feminine charms and graces, but wild horses couldn’t drag him into paying her any attention that the comeliness that Fortunately, however, Providence has mercifully ordained that beauty shall lie in the eve of the boholder, and so many men possess an astigmatism that enables them Venus in the eye of other beholders—a fact that you can easi taking a casual glance at the married women of your acquaintancey but what she is. all admire. time and to voice some measure of thanks. ‘What Do Men Like Best in Women? Pleasing Appearance, Sincerity These Men Admire—But, Most of All, Men Flock Lists Feminine Attractions Good Nature, Around the Womanly Woman, for That Is the Law of the Attraction of the Sexes. Well, the first question a man pretty?’ He doesn't He asks about her looks. inquire IRL asks what qualities men like best in women. always asks about a strange girl is, if she is intelligent, or good . And if you are forced to admit that So I suppose we must put good looks at the head of the list of qualities men admire in women. Not rakes a to behold pulchritude § ‘The next q ; who walks with a when a flat “a’ raving, tearing woman ity that men like tn man who liked an artificial, affected girl and rolls her eye: prevails in her community. does so at her peril. always a little suspicious of the sincerity of women anyway, and they flee in alarm from one who is obviously spu beauty object necessarily, but a pleasing to look upon. n ladies who resemblance to verify by bear no girls is simplicity. 1 have never seen a The girl who simpers, and smirks, mincing galt, and who adopts a broad ious. Men like the girl who is honest They like the girl who is not intellectual, wh brow and pretend to have read books she h Just interested in nice, chatty. everyday ¢ _ And they like the girl who doesn't pretend to be bettter off than she is, and to be accustomed to going to places and doing things that are fur beyond her. ‘They like the working girl who doesn’t 8irl who has taken a job just for the lark of the thing, but who makes no bones of it that she is poor and needs the money. enough not to pretend to be anything pose as a society does not pose as a high mmonplace things. No girl makes a that she has ver wears I have seen many a girl make resort by packing around under her arm a book on never opened, but which s deeper than Zane Grey. husband by And I uble their salary. Simplicity. Sincerity. but they never shine so ung gir After all, when Men like jolly, good-natured girls. trigger and will go off at any old joke. the best of things and who fit in easily anywhere. a French designer, or who casually anything but hats that are Paris creations, when, in reality, she has contrived her fetching little headpiece out of odds and ends that she hi picked up on the bargain counter in the basement of a department store. ared off all havy always talking about getting her clothes from Felice and other bankrupting dressmakers, when she sat up nights making them herself. young men who had their way to make in the world weren't taking a chance on supporting a wife whose dress bill they figured out would be more than a man thinks about know what he is getting and to feel that it is genuine gold and not pinchbeck. Girls whose laugh is hung on a hair greater mistake than the one who pretends that the inexpensive little frock imported gown from made with her own deft fingers is an remarks that a wallflower of herself at a Summer psychology, which she the boys who never read anything e known many a girl to lose a good But Honesty. Lack of pose. These are virtues we | brightly and alluringly as they do in marrying he wants to Girls who are always willing to make They like the girl who doesn't get wrong, who doesn’t have to be persuaded to do things be handled diplomatically e girls who are good sports Men like women who are apprec nd effort on entertaining a gir They don’t like a girl who acts irses to the man who is taking her to the movies about grand opera, or who tells the man who is riding her around in his flivver about what a grand car some other man has. to keep her in a good humor. peeved over every little thing that goes and who doesn’t have In a word, men siative. When they spend money and 1 they want her to register enjoyment s if she were bored to ds how h and who she adores But most of all what men like in woman is the eternal feminine the womanly woman that men flock around as bees about a honey pot. No real he-man likes to see a woman dressed up in trouse: and the fluffier a woman's clothes are, the more men admire them. It The frillier And the qualities that men admire most in women are the ones that have been identified with women for ages. rgiveness. Love. Tenderness. Sympathy. Patience. It isn't the hard, brilliant, go-gett: is the soft, gentle ones. So there you are, girls. The more to men. For that is the law of the attraction of the sexes. er, successful women that attract men. womanly you are, the more you appeal DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. 19 The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyrig . Military aviator. Ttalian river. Cuts snort. Gold (herglary). . At one time. Babylonian deity. . Maiden . Exclamation. . Spanish hero. Arabian definite article. Myself. . Pitcher handle. Mother. . Goddess of Egvpt. Wing of a house. Island sea of Asia. Steamenip (abbr.). Demons. A Godders of earth. Hear yel! Violent whirlwind off the Faroe Islar.ds. Descrt wanderer. Noto of the scale. Unit of germ-plasm. Negative. Southern State (abbr.). Requests. . Exclamation. Worthless leavings. Negative. Pour down. That is (abbr.). Finish. Ourselv: where your affections are involved, and this, by its own force and strength, evokes a ready response from those nearest and dearest to you. (Copyright. 1925.) BB Corn Meal Rolls. Sift together one and one-fourth cupfuls of wheat flour, three teaspoon- fuls of. baking powder, and one tea- spoonful of salt, then mix with three, fourths cupful of corn meal. Rub two tablespoonfuls of butter into the dry ingredients. Beat one egg, add one- half a cupful of milk, then add this mixture to the dry ingredients. Add more milk if necessary to make a soft dough. Roll out on a floured board, handling lightly. Cut with a round biscuit cutter, fold like Parker House rolls, and bake in a quick oven. This makes 14 small rolls, Answer to Saturday’s Puzzle. (wlaln[ole[alelo] ht, 1925.) e Great Eastern city (abbr.). Front of a ship. Down. Neckpiece . Period of time . Assumes an attitude. Upon. A plant. . Delay through lack of wind. Capuchin monkey. Of superior merit (slang). One who wears a cheerful aspect Plunged. South American river. Grasps. Line jolning points at which the ‘barometric pressure is the same. Feminine name. Injurious substance. Rubber. Great sufferings. Instruments for moving a boat. Understood. A gratuity. Within. Act. « Spanish Rice. Put into a saucepan two tablespoon- fuls of butter. When it is very hot, add half a cupful of rice which you have washed well and then allowed to dry. Fry the rice until it is brown, stirring it frequently. Then add an onion chopped very fine, two table- spoonfuls of cooked tomato and a lit- tle salt and pepper. Cover the mixture with hot water and let it cook until the rice is tender. - Add more hot wa- ter as needed, but do not stir the mix- ture after you have added the water. Salmon Patties. Take 1 can of sdlmon, pour off the oil, remove all skin and bones and break Into flakes. Meit 1 tablespoon- ful of butter in @ saucepan and mix with it 2 tablespoonfuls of flour. Then add slowly 2 cups of milk and season with 1 tablecpoontul “of salt, % teaspoonful of pepper, a little mace and 1 teaspoonful of parsley minced very fine. Add flaked salmon and cook 4 minutes, stirring con- stantly. Put in patty shells and serve. or Men are s never even heard of, but who is | she is | Such & Nice 0ld Family. Have any of vou fallen the “oldfamily” disease” Dreadfal 'it you have. There's nothing that' can ‘blight your outlook on life more speedily. Once you get it into your head that this or that girl is worth cultivating because she comes from such a fine old family all your happiness is on the way to ruin. We Americans are supposed to be the most democratic nation on earth —we probably are—and still there are dozens of our ucquaintances who are heard to exclaim several times a day: “Such a nice boy—he comes { from an excellent family.” Of course |it's an odious enough abit in older people, but in young girls it's down right tragic. What chance has the girl who goes through life with the firm conviction that the only people she must associate with, are those whose family trees stand high above { the common run? | Think over the best dancers best sports you know. How many of those boy# can trace their ances- try back to some grand old duke? Very few of them, I'll wager, A &roup of us one night surveyed the scene of a collegiate ball and idly epeculated as to just what sort of people these trim, bright-faced, well mannered bovs had come from. We all agreed that it was impossible to tell, for American democracy had smoothed them to pretty near the same level And the have the old spend a_weary beaux who grees, but wrong with youths who victim to and fortunate nily bug, not time trying to find possess the correct pedi- they get themselves in all the less eligible make up the stag line. (And, after all, line does more for a girl's ularity than any other modern invention.) Consider the fastidious young lady who, while dancing with some gay mfides to him that she's been around lot with Stuyvie ort, who is a perfect dar- ling—and comes from such a fine old family—awfully aristocratic, etc. The stag, whose father probably cleaned up a fortune on pickled pigs' feet, gives her a mean look and sighs with relief when he's cut out. Thereafter she may see that par- | ticular stag again—but it's probably not his fault if she does. Of course the bLoys hate snobbishness of th kind worse than the girls It's rather a girl fault—this habit of Jjudging people by thel family's coats-of-arms—or the grand old n- cestral raits in the living room. So let’s beware of that feminine ult. We've plenty enough, most of . goodness knows. (Copsright COLOR CUT-OUT DAVID COPPERFIELD. who onl girls sh | i | Off for School. This is the beginning of the last week of the story of “David Copper. field.” If you have been saving these paper dolls, at the end of this week you will have a whole set with which to. act out the famous stc The noise David had heard was Peg- gotty. She could not get in, but she put her lips to the kevhole and whis- pered to David that early the next {morning he was going to be sent away to London to school. Peggotty wept a great deal when she told him this and David cried, too. Then they kissed each oth good-bye through the key- I hole and David went back to bed, but not to sleep. He was too sad t The next morning David w lowed to see his mother once again, but only long enough to bid her good- bye. ' The carrier’s cart was waiting | for him at the gate and he got in and was driven off to Mr. Creakle's School for Boys in Leondon. ® (Here is Mr. Creakle, the school master. Color his suit a very dark gray.) . MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. o1 One mother say My small boy's interest in his work has been very much stimulated by & filing case, in which we put away all the papers which have the grade of 100. He likes to look over these old papers and see the progress he has made. We have another place where we put the lessons which are not per- fect and sometimes on a rainy day he gets them out and tries to see how many of the mistakes he can correct himself. by (Copyright, 1925.) BB Nine women now fill positions as assistant United States district at- torneys in various parts of the coun- try. The latest addition to the list is Mrs. Sarah CGory Menezes of Dallas, who is the first woman to hold such & post in the Southwest. 2 | to tempt the unw | demands FEATURES. The New Evening Wraps BY MARY HE evening wrap plays more important role in wardrobe of the woman fashion than it ever did fore. Once a woman went to from evening parties with almost little attempt to reveal her person ality or her natural charms as a poor far the of be. and ng_wraps are spon- sored for Autu: This model of bois de rose velvet is lined and trimmed with fur dyed to match. Arab of the desert clad in her less calico thub. Now her evening important her frc sometimes more important. Since the evening wrap has become impor tant dressmak t about to give it variety ith which an to spend the dress de their fashior eve shape wrap is quite as in fact, it of persy money. Some even try to that the a separate evening frock Among the newest sort or Autumn | more custe ners e wrap for WHEN WE GO SHOPPING BY MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN. The Boy’'s Sweater. | Most young boys would sooner think of starting to school in the Fall with- | out textbooks than without a sweater. | So if the clothing plans call for some. thing new in this line before Christ- | mas, it will be the part of “under-| standing parents” to see that sonny has his in time to help him get a pro pitious start in the Fall term. The choosing of a boy's sweater is not a simple matter. This is partly because very few adults understand the whole problem of it. Parents are likely to put most of their stress on the durability side of the choice. and mothers who have a pretty keen ap- preciation of what's important in boy life, will want a good color—may even think of the desirability of its con forming to school or team colors. But still the most important point in vho‘ selection of a boy’'s sweater is unsus pected. So it is best always to take him along when the choice is made. Style—or as he thinks of it, “what the other fellows are wearing’—is the paramount question in sweaters. Other | clothes are perfectly all right from models which grown-ups have passed on, but Young America is tempera- mental about his sweater. The vogue for him may be a matter of pocket the nature of the collar, color, belt or tailoring, but whatever it is, it is all- important, and it won't be a real sweater without conforming to this standard. This much decided on, we are ready to_think of practical featur How heavy and warm the sweater should be depends in large part on whether it is to be worn under the coat or to take the place of a coat Either may be coat-shape. with buttons down the front, or a “‘pullover.” Many of the younger boys, as well as their mothers, prefer the latter type be- cause it eliminates the problem of buttons. The fit of a sweater to be worn Little idle stories, Ancient jokes and ' ho&r, Endless repetitions Make the mighty Bore . L5 S ~ fish cakes that make New England fa- mous. They’re the ready-to- fry fish cakes. Made from fa- mous Gorton’s Cod Fish—Ny Bones. Look for the cheerful blue- and.vellow can. | [ | | | with ‘which it 1s made | uraly | Who MARSHALL. are those that beautiful material shawls—not just mid-Victorian days but thrown shoulders and in charming consist of a square of and are worn as the won wore their wls more the dra fold! gracef the body fashion make as many of possible these per tax the abilities maker. It is usually square and ma sides or may have a on one side b about the it is brocade, with georgette and Sometimes lovely bro the center with a wide bor cloth Last evenin tailored manner clothes as nothing in of square wraps to There i inches difterent whic 1 neck and to Iy forms me They were usua al cloth some sort seemed as if one, whether she whom that sort of would be becoming or 1 vear we shi from. So wraps tailored variety half-coat call dolman variety to choc he sketeh of bois de rose med with fu every n wanted was' of e to evening » Bu have 1 to the still ¥ Others are still are and hal ade others Ve teed My Neighbor Says: About ove finger-r ishing daily use v leaving strong Kkind, put a sma mon soda and boil unt burned 1 may be thick the If et brilliar hed under the coat sho: snugger than fo Sweater sizes are from 6 to 18 The wear of the closen a sweater de the sends up the s of care of fiber used course, the est material. Knitted easy to recognize by its wiriness and the gloss of its color. Serviceable tailo strong buttonholes, tape on 1 of pockets and shoulders, r elbows and covered seams A close-knit garment less than one that i washes better L ng vir nforced & ill stretch 0 it nat “Puzzlicks” Puzzle-Limericks, Saturday’s “Puzzlick.” tell of a girl of Duluth, had_what tooth.” So large did it seem That a gallon of ¢ Sufficed not to fill it They she called a am in sooth. By incorporating rubber the fulminating rial vuleanizing by a special matches and match-box now made absolutely damp-proof. Tests have proved that matche treated can be actually immersed in water ithout a single match being spoiled its ability fire when rubbed the tmpaired latex with then process water and so FADELESS \DYES ) /) The original | jone-packagedye { ifor all materials and purposes Dye your faded garmeats, draperies, curtains, trimmings, sweaters, scarfs, etc., a new and fashionable color with Putnam—the dye that goes farther— gives clearer, brighter color—with no effort. same package will tint or dye all fabrics—silk, cotton and wool— in one operation—important in hand- ling silk-trimmed cloth dresses, suits, etc. Complete directions on package. Price 15 cents. Use Putnem No-Kolor Bleach 70 Remove Color and Stains