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WOMAN’S Entertainments for Thanksgiving BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. 1t requires more than a Thanksgi ing dinner to make this holiday a fes- tival. There must be instilled into it 1 jollity as well 2s a spirit of rejole- ng. for then happiness combines with thankfulness to make the heart PLACE CARDS D IN WHICH ZEST MAY B THI TESSING WILL ADD IMMEDIATE TO THE DINNER glad. Such a union is felicitous deed, and it is toward this end that the homemaker should work. With out the double effort to please the | palate and cheer the soul, there is apt to be a bit of tenseness at a_dinner, especially when prepared by the housewife herself, for her one con- cern is to have the good things eaten while they are just right. either | piping hot or icy cold, as the case may be. This preoccupies and flusters her and the whole table gets an un- easy feeling. But if she divides her attention between the serving of the meal and the entertainment of those thout the board,” each element as.| mes its right proportions. She be- | comes less tense, and, therefore, gets into the spirit of festivity which puts every one in a good frame of mind Start the Festivities. 1g the Thanksgiving menn makes a good start for dinner enter- ainment. though it can be used any time during the day or evening when the hostess prefers. If at dinner, write the problems of the quiz on the | hacks of place cards which have tally | pencils attached. These cards may | be plain white ones with the names of those whose places they designate written on one side, and the quiz on the other, or they may be fancy cards, in Redn BEDTIME STORIES The Coon That Wasn't. Wi Some | thin dream as in a (s seem —Bobby Coon. | The instant Bobby Coon felt that arp reminder he knew what it was and recovered his wits. He did so. He knew that he had stepped on one of the little spears of Prickly Porky the Porcupine. Those little spears | which Prickly Porky carries in his| coat are called quills, as you know. This one had dropped from Prickly | Porky's coat and Bobby had stepped on it in such a way that the sharp| point had entered his foot | Bobby didn't stop to out | % pull it | yelping 4lady ROBRY THE ALONG LOOKING DOWN, SAW LIGHT COME YJBBING BETWEEN THE TREES. | then: that dog was too near. But the instant he felt that little spear Bobby | remembered that he had seen Prickly Porky in the very tree under which he had stepped on that little spear. To be sure. it had been the day be- fore. But Bobby knew that Prickly Porky sometimes spends several davs #n a tree, having plenty to eat and seeing no reason why he should move | on. It was too dark to see if he was still up there, but Bobby decided to take a chance. So without pausing a second he scrambled up that tree. Out on a branch half way up the tree he saw Prickly Porky and a little sigh relief escaped from Bobby 3ut he didn't even speak to Prickly Porlsy. Instead he kept right on up, that tree until he was near the top. There he flattened himself against the | trunk and waited H How that dog did bark at the foot | of the tree! He barked as if he were | trying to bark his head off. What he was trying to do was to tell those hunters that he had driven Bobby Coon up a tree. Bobby, looking down, | saw the lizht come bobbing along be- | tween the trees and heard the hunters calling excitedly to one another. Pres. ently they were gathered just below around that tree. One of them pointed a flashlizht up in the tree and began 1oving it about. Bobby knew that they were looking for him There he cried one of the hunters, He is out_on that branch about half way up. Don’t shoot him! I'll_climb up and shake him off and we'll let the dog kill him. He can't 2ot away from us possibly | To this the others agreed and the hunter gtarted up the tree ‘When he reathed the branch on which Prickly Porky was he could just make CHOCOLATE Pure ehocolate, strained hesey. erysial soger s and finest malt, scientifie [ low. off. But this wasn't so easily | little spears, all the time yelping and crying. PAGE THE EVENING § COLOR CUT-OUT MILES STANDISH. in which event they add decidediy to the decoration. Any pencils will do, of course, but the tiny tally ones are daintier. Here is a sample quiz and | answer: Q. Reduce a vegetable and leave a conveyance. A CAR-rot. The menu to be “reduced” is g:\'Pnl \ | | | in the order of courses. ll Reducing the Menu. SOUP (FIRST COURSE 1-Take the rug from kind of soup and leave a and an exclamation MEAT AND SAUCE Reduce Thanksgiving meat and leaves a help to undving a locked door. 3 form a favorite educe its sauce and leave a of fruit | VEGETABLES ! 4—Reduce a tuberous vegetable and leave the utensil in which it is cooked. | Cut the heart out of a vegetable and leave two ends that are just alike. Reduce a vegetable and get i Reduce a vegetable and get what sors do. 8—Reduce a vegetable to cinders. | 9—Take the end off a vegetable and find an insect. 10—Reduce a vegetable and get the | container in which it is served. 11—Cut the end off a green vege table <o that the rest will whi SALAD. 12-—Reduce a succulent vegetable a little more than one-half and leave to he rented. DESSERT. 13 Take the relatives the Thanksgiving pie and engine for drawing water ASSORTED FRUITS Behead a Ret The First Battle. the away from leave an| \Vhen the white to meet friendly Indians saw men coming they advanced them with furs, outwardly but with hearts full of hatred Welcome. English,” they | words they had learned traders, and they begzed for and powder in return for the f which they offered. When Standish | refused and said he would give them | the Bible they changed their tone | Unsheathinz his knife. Wattawamat | held it aloft, sneering, “So this is the | | mighty captain the white men have | sent to destroy us. He is a little man, | let him zo and work with the women.” | 14 cook stove, 15— Reduce a fruit troversial ancestor IEVERAGES fruit and a said in ! m the musitets “ and® get a con 16— Transpose a beveraze and et what you are asked to do at this di ner. 17—Drink half of a beverage and get the bill. | If the hostess mentions the fact that a prize will be awarded the one whose list is most nearly correct, it| adds zest to the competition Answers Sent on Request. Any readers who would like the definition-answers may have them free by inclosing a self-addressed and stamped envelope with a_request. Di- | rect to Lydia Le Baron Walker, care | of this paper. . | Another Dinner Game. | Preparing the Thanksgiving dinner | is another good game. One person is chosen leader and stands in the cen-| BN AT ter of a circle of players. He asks, |, (OMOIIOWS banelary as “What have you prepared for the | sinfus SONCs \mm:x‘w r:‘:’:,p.m» o food before the last count is given or|,eqt ana disquietude. Routine work | etons o0od once named | [ ster on, and especially - 3 is barred for the rest of the game.| o amd’ orminar wim canered it Forfeits may be exacted for breaking iy, It is also a good opportunity for | this rule. | travel or change. The promptings of | affection will be felt in the evening, | ang full advantage should be taken of these conditions by those in love, as an engagement entered into will be full of happiness and contentment. | Children born tomorrow will, ac cording to their sex, vary very much ble s ere in the|in their physical condition. The girl. B L A eiEi ‘e | whose appearance will demand ®ad- It J1dn't enter that marss head |Miration, will, in her infancy, be sub that it could be anybody but Bobby |Ject to continual ailments, and only | Coon, so he didn't look s sharpty | Very correct alimentation will enable | as he might have. He began to shake her to attain later on physical nor that branch trying to shake Bobby |Mmalcy. The bov, although his appear- Coon off. That is. he supposed it was | 41ce during infancy will give rise o} Bobby Coon he was trving to shake | Many misgivings, will have that} dome, | “wirvness” of constitution that rises | superior to all attacks. In disposition | hy =100 > C! F e | The man stood up on that branch |y, ."Giil be similar. They will both 'J"'I‘r"‘“:;"r]‘,’,‘“fip“‘a"“d‘"(',";"“‘_‘r"‘ ahove Dean | e (emperamentally attractive _and 5 ERarpicn B have delightful personalities. They e AL K cand down Went| \(ill be addicted to study, while not | that branch wit Prickly Porky. 1 5 of 3 Le ezlecting the pastimes of childhood, | The hunter in the tree velled as he | Fé tha ar clung to the branch above and swung {404 Will be more than ordinarily ambi his legs around the trunk of the tree. S = The hunters down below velled as they | 1 tomort saw what they supposed was Bobby |27¢ accurate, ] ~ " 2 You have very high Coon falling from that tree. Butj ' Tt oF 11es 2 = their yells were nothing to the yells| "°SPonsitilities of life. and in your of that dog a moment later as he| i " " (0 the standard vou have sprang in and bit at Pricky Porky. | 10, "0 "P o0 L " NG Wiehstanding Of course he gm: n;r]»:_mr‘:m} of '_P:“me_ you never preach to or criticize e ppear and hey burt. oT1°%|others, but are breezy and entertain 2 ongue, his cheecks and !y, \With a genial wit, and are a gen- | his lips. No wonder he velled. He | 1% % U8 f f | backed away as hastily as he could,|“ Yo, pever act on mpu His | )y, carefully bel master tried to get hold of him and | Loerate carefully before got too near Prickly Porky. Like a | S5V 0008 800 B0 T 0 e, o eten | e fihe latter's tall came around|jsiics, and you generally accomplish | an ere was another vell, this time |, N o = : 2 wug | o the e neta that which you set out to do. Your | n s m: ambitions, however, are more along For the next fifteen minutes or so | pe lines of happiness than those of | there was a busy time and a lot of | e arinlistic victories | and exclamations as those| 'y ur tastes are cultured and refined, | little spears were pulled out of that | pile your ideals are high and worthy dog and his master. one of the hunters | o¢ emylation, and, in addition to this, | holding the flashlight while the others | ine signs denote that you have decided | worked. You see, thev knew that'jeaninzs toward music and art. | the sooner they were pulled out the| \yell known persons born on that better it would be for the victims.!qaie are: Leo Lesquereux. botanist If left they would keep working in | e hotanist: James W. Ahert. farther and farther. Meanwhile | L dier: Franz Siezel. soldier; John A Prickly Porky had climbed another !} (:roliell. lawyer and Senator: Eliz tree and disappeared. As for Bobby | aheih A1 Gilmer (-Dorathy. Dix Coon. he had climbed across 1o an-| author. 3 other free alonz branches which met, and then down that tree and taken to his heels. He was safe for that night. As it turned out. he was safe | for the rest of that season. for that dog wasn't in condition to hunt azain until after Bobby Coon had curled up for the Winter. Here is the mighty chief's war| dress. Make the shield orange with | | the hanging strips various colors. The jrobe should be tan trimmed with many colors. Make the fur brown | and the feathers green with red tips. 16 (Conyrizht | What Tomorrow Means to You | | BY MARY BLAKE. | are | when | BY THORNTON W. BURGESS 1 out a feeble vour and birthday. you conscientious. ense of the e. but de- | ing or do-) nd are reliable. Steady (Coprright. 1975.) Savory Eggs. =ix hot hard-cooked eggs in half, lensthwise. and remove the volk. Mash the volks, add salt and | | pepper, one-fourth cupful of ¥t cream, some chopped parsley : .d anchovy paste. or any desired relish, | and refill the egg whites. Place | intol them on six slices of hot buttered inch lengths, wash thoroughly, then|toast and pour one cupful of hot let it blanch in equal quantities of | pi. vhi s ver N boiling water and milk for 13 mimutes. | . " lile siuce over them ‘Then remove the celery and let it cool. Add one tablespoonful of butter blended with one tablespoonful of flour, and some pepper and salt, to one cupful of the milk and water stock. Arrange the celery in a but- tered baking dish, and when this sauce is smooth remove it from the fire and beat two eggs into it. Pour the sauce over it, spread the top thick- ly with bread crumbs, a®d put the dish _in the oven. Cook it covered for 20 minutes, then uncover it and Iet it brown nicely before searving. Cnt Casserole of Celery. Cut. two bunches of celery Everywhere On Silvery, Gold, Bra: Nickel. It's safe and quick, and the luster lasts longer. Buy a can today at your grocer, bhardware, drug- gist or auto —and Bedding, in many styles and prices. A good selection of Toys for boys and girls. !to do but just to stay at home and keep the house | would find out that | the 1 | down on both the work | life before. ! he w 1 him to death without a parz of pity TAR, WASHINGTON, D. €, TUESDAY DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Ten-in-One Wife Whose Husband Thinks Her a Failure—Has Mother of Sixty the Right to Force Her Daughter to Give Her a Home? JDEAR MISS DIX—My husband demands that 1 take care of our 10-room house, most of the care of a large garden, do all the cooking and laundry work and sewing for a family of six. and do the canning and prescrving of the fruits and vegetables from our garden. We have no running water or electric lights. Besides this, he expects me 1o be always ready to accompany him at an hour’s notice on pleasure excursions, and to go out with him two or three evenings a week, and to entertain a large circle of friends I am strong. and it keeps me so overfatigued that my nerves are drawn to the breaking point, and my patience and temper short. [ feel so discour aged, for after trying my best, I know that in my hushand's eves I A Answer: Why, veu poor mart Instead of being a failure, you are a world wonder if you can do all of that work.and still be alive, instead of being expected to trot around of an evening with a_husband who has prob ably done nothing more arduous than dictate a few letters and swap a good story with another T. B. M., and go out a couple of hours for lunch. For take It from me, sister, if your husband had leaped all day from one job to another as hard as he could go, he would be glad enough of an evening to get on his slippers and his dressing gown, and sit down by the radio and listen to them jazzing afar off. He wouldn't want to be shaking a foot that had already taken a miilion steps. I have always felt it the greatest pity on earth that the men. who don't see why their wives are not always beautifully dressed and serene, and ami able, and rested, and ready to amuse them when they come home, could not substitute for a while in the places of the women who th have nothing and take care of the children. They would find out that the woman who is night watchman and cook and dishwasher and seamstress and scrubber’and laundress and chambermaid and teacher and baby tender and purchasing agent and hostess and whatnot has a job that calls for the longest hours of any laborer on earth. They just taking care of W for a day, to say nothing of lance of the work. reduces an ablebodied man to a state nervous prostration. and they would marver that any human heinz had the physical endurance of the average iitile two-by-four woman, and the grit and courage | to turn off the work she does, Just as a matter of course every day of her life. ! woman can do. and a wife is very ognize this, and refuse to kil herself living, up 1o There are not many men who really desire to %0 the wise thing is just to have a heart-to-heart tell him that you are overdone and must cut the play. strength on a lot of nds who would not and who would not ut there ave lir foolish when she doesn't her husband’s expectations work their wives to death talk with your hushand and an Most women waste their and there are not many husl and less nerves in their wives cooking for her companionship. PDEAR DOROTHY daughter want to hre ations to what any unnecessary work, anyway rather have fewer doilies exchange a Jot of faney DOROTHY DIX vears old. and live with my though I have other children. My daughter and her husband k up housekeeping and board, but I don't think that they have a right to do this, because if they did I would have to go live with my other children, and that would not he home to me. Don’t you think my daughter owes it to me to do the way that T would be most comfortable? MOTHER. DIX—I am a widow, 60 Answer: If vou are poor. and sick provide you with a comfortable place other children with whom vou can live her to maintain a house just for place. That is nothing have no considerutic it to stay 1 do not You bec would be vour but daughter's duty to inasmuch as you have | that it is incumbent on | use you want to live in a certain { but rank seifishness on yvour \ for vour daughter. Your dat husband’s welfare 1 his happiness, even hefore 3ut what is the mattor with a4 woman of &0 who is hale and heart ing to force people to zive her a home. especiallv when they are unwilli do so? Nobody of 60 is gener 1 show has 1o 1 part. a hter that vou her ry is 0ld at 60 In these days. It is just the prime of life. A woman 1y stronger in body and mind than she has ever heen in her more capable of turning out zood work. and she should he ashamed to be a parasite, instead of striking herself and making her own independ ent livin, The world is full of women 60 who have settled themselves down to be burdens on their children. They are disturbinz elements in their children’s homes; they are miserable and fretful and whining themselves. and they would be happy and contented if they would get out and go to work and be independent Let your daughter go to boarding if she wants to. and zo out vour own home. And then you can have it where you waent it DOROTHY and make DIX DEAR DOROTHY DIN—T have been going position, have found her to be insincere she says she loves me. Question nts to be loved? Will What do you > with a girl of uncertain selfish and unappreciative. Can a girl of that kind love any man as she play fair” I am thinking of taking to the COLD FEET. dis but woods. Answer: Not without reason have vou acquired cold feet plating matriniony with that type of xirl will surely zive chilblains who marries her, and you will do well to take ty the while the going is still good. An insincere woman is never to he trusted ness devends upon his being able to have perfect A selfish woman never loves any one it. and the only use she ever has for a hu ing partner. She wints some one to take her around o places of and to provide her with the Juxuries she craves, and that is all considers her hushand’s happiness, his pleasure or hie comfort. in conten any man tall ‘timber and a man's whole happi faith in his wife et herself. She is incapable of band is as a bill-payer and a dane amusement She never and she works | The zirl who is unappreciative makes the that her hushand gives withont isn't more. Kind of a wife who takes all a word of thanks and berates him becanse it What a man wants in a wife is lovalty and truth and honor puts him before herself: an unselfishness that makes h serving him. and tenderness and understanding that neve There are plenty of girls who e ready to giv marry one who car < nothing or shelves but ¢ ness. a love that happiness this 10 a man. Don't tism sind self-centere DOROTHY DIX. her (Copvright. 1825 ) s T e s IR i i HOW IT STARTED : the name of the planet nearest the sun. And in accordance with the old oo belief " that persons born under s planet were endowed with character | istics corresponding to the nature of | the planet, those born under Mercury were expected to be the humun ver sion of the chemical quicksilver which because of its nature, was also dowed with the name mercury! It €asily comprehensible. then. that when they did manifest such qualities (o should have been called “mercurial a use of the term which has persicta 1o this day Sl e NEWTON. “Mercurial.” This term, which is applied to peo- ple or actions that are swift. active, in the parlance of the day “full of pep.” is an interesting example of the wealth of color there is in words Derived from the Latin “mercuria lis” (pertaininz to Mercury). it is a survival of the days when astrology matter of daily concern in the en ot 5 writes she uses this qives Colorsin quue i omato surp [USERSof Timtex ind c excv o keep abreast”of Fashion’s color-fancies for Fall. For among the 24 Tintex colors are to be found the newest shades for dresses, blouses, underthings, stock- ings,etc. Seethe new Tintex ColorCard. For lace trimmed silks —(rints the silk — lace remains white) — use Tintex in the Blue Box. For tinting o dyeing all materials—silk, cotron, mixed goods)—use Tintex in the Gray Bos 15¢ at drug and dept. stores Tintex TINTS AS YOU.RINSE Tints & Dyes ANYTHING easy Christmas money? have used Premier. One may sen one prize for any one contestant. i Address FRANCIS H. LEGGETT & alad SOV ]‘br the mail YOU have only untilDecember 1st inwhich to write that chatty letter about the dif- ferent uses you have made of one bottle of Pre- mier Salad Dressing. For instance, a woman perfect ma; for tomato surprise and four kinds of sandwiches. What have you done with one bottle? Don't the EMBER 17, 1925 HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN. It you have in your home a shiny | brass bed or an old-fashioned white | iron bed, bumpy and hideous, don't;than half the hats sold fit the wear let it bluff you. You can have a pretty | €r's head, Hide it from | thelr expression’ The soft felts so popular this season have the great advantage of ada | themselves to the head, thus sparing headaches and reducing the straln on the halr hard on the halr hat should never you know that jight, bedroom in spite of it. view with neat slip covers for the un- sightly ends and prim ruffles at sides. The side ruffles can be tached to a small sheet of unbl the hed under the mattress, so it will disturbed when the bed is made. { The end slips and ruffles of the | brass bed shown here are fashioned | from inexpensive but pretiy cretonne flowered in shades of lilac, rose and yellow on a gray Hackground. The hedspread and bolster cover are pla lilac-colored rep not hp’ Wistory of Pour Name BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. CANNON VARIATIONS—0'Cannon. RACIAL ORIGIN—Irish. SOURCE—A nickname. It is remarkable in how nees a4 mere obvious vou the exact origin of a famil and in how many this very guess leads you totally astray. Know- | ing that the family name of Cannon is | Irish, you would, of course. distrust | the obvious. Naturally it would not ome from the English word “cannon.’ Instead, it comes from the Irish clan name of “O'Ceannfionnain.” 1t b out the “f in this. which is | inflected into silence. and simplify the three diphtho You hive a pronunci- | ation ronzhly like O'Canninan.” Then | 1zh that middle svllable and t “O'Cann'an simpl And this bout the name has hecome Anglicized simplifieation of hoth the spelling and pronunciation. 1 the nickname meaning “fair- | ind which w given to a chieftain by | name of “Fiachra.” who was the | nder of the sept. The territory of | O'Cannons from medieval times at around Orgigll (Covyri many th throuzh Gaelid The comes { “Caenmfionnan, or fair-haired name Chicken in Toast Patties. onech slices some slices of hread two and If thick. Cut these nto rounds about three inches in diameter and then scoup out the center. Spread these patties with melted butter and brown them un- der a hroiler or in a hot aven, then Nl with creamed chicken just before inches Spotted Hats Are Never in Style Does your hat look Iike the bac" of a leopard? You wouldn’t buy a spotted . . . Why wear one? A few n ith Energine—the pecfec: dry cleaner—will spruce up your hat and make it look brand new. Get a can and try it. Only 35¢ a2 your drug, department or sbue store. ? yonnaise for devilled eggs, prizes suggest 147 prizes—$2,500 in gold The prizes range from $250 to $10. The contest is open to all who d more than one list—but only In case of ties, each tying con- testant will be awarded the full amount of each prize tied for. Contest absolutely closes December 1st, 1925. COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY DRESSING oA perfect mayonuaise =il Do your hats fit your head? say in; A €lops through the scalp, the wes cause though inside crown woman's head make a Don't buy hats that don't fit pretty when you wear them If po |canvas rather than wire adapt ~|{ your head like a felt always keep its own shape, muslin, cut to fit the springs and laia |are never alike, and have lumps and dents in smart FEATURES BEAUTY CHATS Hats and Heads. Don't “nensense,” because not more nd not more than a tenth pting A Dadly fitting hat is very A hot heavy be worn. Of cor But the new fel re soft, stretchable. and not heat Let us hope they continue being some time hat the. the leasi bit too ce circulation of damaging the hair A strained expression 1o s face, even when it doesn’t bad headache. A looxe hat padded ever so thickly with nds, looks badly because its <0’ much thicker than the and the brim does not line around the face. however suit vou even 1 tight blood givin is pretty hats, they'll ssible, buy hats stiffened with for these will the oddities of The wire must As skulls themselves to all sorts of different places, | BY EDNA KENT FORBES. and as we haven't much hair padding these dave. the softness of the hat is more important than ever. By the way. all hats must be long enough in back to cover vour halr Wisps and stubs of hair spoil one: whole appearance from the back Jessie keep less P vour if you usly D.—It will help much to nails from looking blood use the buffer on them vigor every time vou have occa sion to wash your hands or when you give your nails their regular attention A little r added your eream and rubhed into the nails will help by giving them a harmless ugh artificial coloring Mra. May T. B stubborn. but they time. Try cucumber juice as a bleach and Improve vour digestoin that the liver will function properls Liver spots are will bieach off in Onion and Pepper Salad. Spanish onion and 1 hours, Peel and cut a mild in the thinnest possi place in water for seve Keep very cold. Slice a green pep per crosswise and very thin. Place in ice water. Just before serving, dry well and arrange the onions and pep pers fn alternate rings on lettuce Garnish with bits of canned pimento A serve with French dressing made auite red with paprika “I’se in town, Honey!” Tender muffins,too ! —with the flavor! Blend BABANI PERFUMES to increase your: charm Made in no time from the easy directions right on the package. Just try them yourself, and see how good they are. AUNT JEMIMA PANCAKE FLOUR most delicious Euzmrm arpeN discovered in Paris—and brought to Amcrica—this new and artistic method of using perfume to increase your charm. Blend two or more Babani Per- fumes to creatc a different fragrance—a perfume entirely your own—expressive of your fashion of the smartest women of Euro, It is the pe. Blend two parts rescnt mood. of Ligéia with onc of Afghani. Blend Chypre and Sowsouki. Blend Ambre de Delbi with Ligéia, in varying proportions to match your feelings. All Babani Perfumes will combine in lovely harmonies. The fragrances are imported by Elizabeth Arden in just the smart bottles and boxes in which they are scaled in Paris. ELIZABETH ARDEN'S Venetian Toilet Preparations These are the scientific Preparations develol d by Elizabeth Arden as a part of her famous method of skin treatment. They are used in every Treatment given in the Arden Salons and should be a part of your daily care of the skin at home. Elizabeth Arden’s Venetian Toilet Preparations and Babani Perfumes are on sale at ELIZABETH ARDEN 1147 Connecticut Avenue, Washington And at Woodward & Lothrop Wardman Park Pharmacy Euzaserr AroeN, 673 Fifth Avenue, New York 25 Old Bond Street, London " rue de la Paix, Paris