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18 WOMAN’S PAGE. ' THE EV g FEXTUKES Home Treatment foxl' Your Cold { BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. It would sometimes seem as if, from | attention to it in earnest. Colds have the number of remedies that exist for a disastrous way of developing into curing colds, there was one at least | serious illnesses, which mean absence for each person. \When a person has | from work (or is it from pleasure?) for A cold there are few friends who know | two or three weeks, instead of days, of it who will not recommend some | to say nothing of the attendant suffer- | speclal “cures.” To such remedies let |ing. At best, if we do succeed in keep- ing up, work, with a heavy head or a | racking cough, cannot be done at fts best, and pleasure loses its zest. By following the wise advice of the doc- tors who tell us to go to bed, then, we throw off the cold and store up en- ergy. Nature will restore us pleas- antly, instead of making us fight to get well later on. Fortunately, moth- ers who appreciate this fact can keep their little ones in bed when colds are coming on, and thus cure the ordinary cold. and save themselves endless bother and anxlety. Black Currant Tea. The two remedies that I am giving are soothing and restorative, though they are not in the class of medicines. The first is led the black currant tea, and Is made as follows: One level blespoon black currant jelly, hot water, a few drops of lemon, if liked. Put the currant jelly in a cup (tumbler sjze) and pour over it enough water to fill the cup. Stir until the jelly is dissolved, and drink while hot. If the acidity of the jelly Is not sufficlent to gratify the taste, add the drops of lemon. Children find this a pleasant drink, It is well to give it to them as a sort of treat and not as a remedy, as it is not a medicine. This can be | taken cold and prove relieving, so a double quantity can be made and be sipped as eccasion demands. Milk and Honey. One dessertspoonful of honey, or golden sirup, hot milk. Put the honey, sirup (or even molasses) into a cup {(tumbler size) and pour boiling hot milk over it, stirring until thoroughly blended Drink hot when going to {bed. The remedy may be given more |often than this, and should be taken | for two or three nights, according to | the needs of the one with the cold My Neighbor Says: | To cool hot liquid or food, try covering it with a cloth, and | | | | put a rubber band around it to keep It in place. It can be set | outside a window or door with- | | | out fear of dust. A bowl is very | convenient for the purpose, and I use sugar bags, ripped open | | ana washed, for covers. | | Before skinning tomatoes for CHILDREN LIKE THESE NICE.| salad, place them in a basin and TASTING WARM DRINKS THAT | | pour boiling water over them RELIEVE THEIR COLDS. The skin will then peel off with- out_any trouble. When baking or cooking al ways spread a large sheet of | | newspaper on the kitchen table | | | | me add a few more! They are little known in this country, children like | them, and, since mothers sometimes | find children object to being doctored, | these remedies should be helpful. They | have the advantage of being easy to| repare, and the second at least is | made of ingredients always on hand and floor. This saves a lot of trouble, as any grease or flour which has been spilled can then be taken up bodily and emptied Soda should never be used for washing enameled pans. A little salt applied with a soft cloth will remove all stains, and the pan should be thoroughly rinsed afterward with plenty of warm water, Good mattresses should be cleaned and remade about every three years if you want to Keep them in good condition. It is wonderful how the spring comes back to them, making them as Rest Cure, Before glving these remegles, let me mention the fact that many physiclans &re now advising rest as the most suc- cessful of all cures for the average cold. If the person will only go to bed for | a day or two in the beginning, and relax, nature will restore the body to | normal in most instances. The one | outstanding ohjection to this cure that | comes to the 1ips of practically every | Food asinew:] Cheap matiresses verson to whom it s given is the | | £005.00 Uorth cleaning. “Oh! but I haven't time.’ Take Time and Save It. As & matter of fact, 5oing to bed for a coupls of days i3 more &pt to be a saving of time than a loss. If a cold once gets a firm grip, one has to pay | WHEN WE GO SHOPPING BY MRS. HARLAND H. | The intestine on the back of | | the tail of the lobster should be | | removed. The whole lobster is | | good 1o eat except the shell and craw, or stomach, which lies be- tween the eves. LLEN. to maintain. Recelvers have been made which can operate from the al- ternating house current of your home. By ellminating batteries much has been done, and will be done, to make radio recefving sets easy to maintain. Of course, this improvement, like others, increases the cost of a set. As sets increased in number they began to Interfera with one another by radiation. The neutrodyne, a five tube tuned-radio frequency set, was developed to overcome this nuisance. This type of recelver is one of the most popular. Conditions in the radio industry are becoming stable now, and you can buy a radio receiver without much fear of its becoming obsolete because of some new development. 1f im provements are made they can alwa. be added. The present receiver is al most perfect Shopping for Radio Set. Radio fans accuse the manufac- turers of radio equipment of bringing new designs out so constantly to make ©old mets obsolets. The manufacturers reply that they only change their de- signs to meet the demands of the radlo fans. There is truth to both clalms. Radio fans demand the latest improvements in their sets, and the manufacturers must maka what the public desires. Among the features that make the new sets cost more than the old is the cabinet. Many people are happy to spend from $100 to $200 more for a set If it's housed in an ornate cabinet In fact, many people care more about the appearance of their cabinets than | the efficiency of their sets. rans are willing to pay for sets Which are easy to operate, and the nufacturers are achieving the ulti- \ate in this directjon. Many sets = now may be operated with one dial L1 l"l I E BENNY This is done by standardizing the three tuning instruments so that, | when vou're tuining in, the condensers ‘hich control the cireuit always fall at the mame place on the dial | BY LEF PAPE. | of doctors. the perlod of infuncy Is pussed there Radio sets are put to various use and your purchase should depend upon what use you-have in mind. Some fans want to get faraway sta- tions, and are willing to pey more for highly sensitive receiving sets. The two and three tube regenerative receiver became popular when people discovered that they could get greater volume out of them. This made them more practical for dancing. Others have sought greater selectivity, and they've turned to the sets with the loop antenna. With these sets they find their recefvers more selective, more portable, and there is less static Few radio fans are electricians, or at least more than amateurs at a difficult sclence, and they are willing to pay more for sets that are easy MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDR] Cultivating a Pleasant Voice. One mother savs: Son and ¥ made a ach other to stop whatever noige we might be making, such as hammering, contract with running the sewing machine, etc., when it became necessary to com- municate with one another; also to come as near to where the other might be as possible, thus eliminating the harsh raising of the voice and unnec- essary repetition. There has been a much-needed rest to my nerves since then, and Bobby is cultivating a well inodulated and pleasant speaking ol (Copyright, 1925.) Tonight after dinnir ma sed to pop. | Now Willyum, this is the nite. | Congradulations, I had a feeling that this was some anriiversity, pop sed. It will either be one of the greatest anniversities in the histry of the world or elts the beginning of the end, ma sed. This is the nite your going to have your chance to fix that bathroom spikkot, ma sed | "Ah, ves, T knew there something | T wanted to do, pop sed, and maw sed, Then you mite as well start rite in, Ive taken the precaution to hide the | evening paper. Wat, the dooce you have, I want to | glance over the sporting page ferst at | | leest, pop sed. | The shortest glance you ever took at the sporting page was al leest an hour, so please cast your glances at | that ‘spikkot and then you can retire behind the sporting page tiil your | black in the face, ma sed. | Well, the quickest way to do a thing | is instantly and the best time is im- { meeditly, thats how I won my success {In bizniss and thats how Il win my | | | success with that splkkot, pop sed. And he quick wawked out of the room and ma reetched underneeth the | sofer and got the paper and started to | veed it, saying, Thank goodniss at last Im going to heer the end of that miz- | zerble constant dripping, reely 1 cant hleeve its true. And she kepp on reading the paper | and after about a hour pop called from the bathroom, Say mother, did you reed that account of the Robinson | divorce in last nites paper, its a screem. For goodniss sakes do you mean { to tell me thats wat you bin doing in | | there all this time. reeding Jast nites paper? ma sed, and pop sed, Wy ves, 1 forgot to tell you, I cant find the plvers or the munkey rentch, Il haft to fix it tomorrow. Wich he probably wont. S - Married in Haste. From the Boston Transeript. “Weren't they married in & hurry?” Yes; each was afraid the other Bners of othermakes! trade quichlyfor Studebaker (Pewer Durability finish Bear Is Sheltered. Snow White and Rose Red came out from their hiding places to greet the bear, and their mother fixed him a place directly in front of the fire where he might warm his great, shaggy hide ““Here, Snow White, 1s a broom. Brush the snow off him,” she said, ‘and you, Rose Red, fetch him a littie gruel and tea. The sisters did as they were told, and soon the bear was: resting com fortably before the fire, warmed and fed and ple d with the efforts of the little family. When bedtime came and the others had gone away the mother sald to the bear: “You may hearth, and welcome, if since it is so very is wo deep outside. The bear thanked her and accept- ed this kind offer, but the next morn- ing when they arose their strange guest was gone. you wish, cold and the snow This s the blg, shaggy, black bear that came to visit Snow White and Rose Red. Paint him black and make his tongue red. (Copyright. 1925.) What TomorrowMeans to You BY MARY BLAKE. Sagittarius. Although tomorrow’s planetary as. pects are favorable and benign, they do not_appear to denote any excep. tional degree of success for practical effort, and they counsel and as little change as possible. respondence is favored, but no mitments of any be entered into Cor- com The auspiciousness of the signs affects more the emotions than activities of endeavor. They | indicate an awakening of the best that Is in you and & quick respon siveness (o affection. Little animosi tles and Jealousies that may have troubled you will disappear and be re- placed by sentiments of loving kind ness, toleration and forbearance. It I " propitious opportunity for “be- > Z g “ren o “tomerrenr i ve| | PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE subjected in their Infancy—especially girls—to many worrying ailments, but recovery will be speedy. They derive more benefit from nutrition than from the prescription The signs reveul that onc will be nothing o hinder, so far us physical conditions are concerned, the attainment of & normal maturity Their characters will be erratic. At times they will show the evils of cov etousness, petulancy and selfishnes At other times they will be attractive, winsome and considerate. Their en vironment will determine which side of their character will, in later vears, dominate them. If tomorrow s your birthday your|has optimism and enthusiasm over small as well as big things helps you in innumerable instances to withstand what sometimes looks like faflure. and to overcome obstacles that would dishearten another less cheerful and less hopeful. There is a resiliency in your “‘make-up’ that endows you with a buoyancy of spirits that is the envy of all those who know you You possess shrewd judgment. Many would confound it with intuition, but, in your case, it is attributable to quick | thinking, a keen perception and clear | vision. Your executive quite marked and vou have a decided gift for establishing order out of chaos and for the unraveling of com- plex problems. You are original and direct in your methods. Your home life should be happy. vour love is demonstrative and nature Kkind, erous. Well known persons born on that date are: Octavius B. Frothingham, clergyman and author; Leonard E. ‘Wales, jurist: John N. Irving, artis Susan Haynes Ward, author; George , as your sympathetic and gen- Cary Eggleston, author and editor, and Thomas G. Jones, lawyer and governor. (Coprright, 19 ) Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. ‘Words often misused: Don’t say “‘we intended to have gone.” Say “we in- tended to go.” & Often mispronounced: Really nounce re-al, the e as in “he, in “at” 1 as fn “it, and not re-li. Pro- a as three syllables, Often misspelled: Condemn. Note the mn. Synonyms: Light, airy, ethereal, subtle, imponderable, astatic, volatile. Word study: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us in- cfirease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Genial—kindly and sympathetic in disposition. “‘One could not find a more genial man.” memm e b No Measure of Industry. From the Harrisburg Telegraph Even the young man in the wide trousers may have no visible means of upport CHOCOLATE ON CUSTARD | SAMPLE - size i 10 sleep all night on the moderation | importance should | will | regulated abllity s | Urges Women sl D h D s to Realize the “Work” and t x o Ree Its Gender Oro y l melm:n of Labor Difference Between Work and Play—Women Not Truly Happy Until They Realize Work Is Equal Blessing for Both Sexes. 'WHTY are women so unwilling to pay their way through life by working” Most 5olun't because they are lazy. Very few women really enjoy idleness. 0st women are just sloshing over with nervous energy. They are always doing something, and they put forth an amount of energy in amusing them- selves that would leave a coal heaver prostrated with fatigue. But they seem to have a constitutional aversion to being usefully employed. Women have coined a phrase to express their aversion of labor. They always refer to the woman who does real work as a ‘‘poor working girl,” and every mother whose daughter goes downtown of a morning to stand behind a counter Instead of before it, “‘poor Mamies” or “poor Sadles." The woman who has to earn her own bread and butter regards herself a martyr, and almost every wife and mother who does her own cooking sheds barrels of tears of self-pity over her sad lot, for somehow the idea has become ingralned in the feminine consciousness that every woman has a hereditary right to be a loafer, with nothing to do but sit on a silk cushion and sew a fine seam and feed upon strawberrles, sugar and cream. Of course, not many women achleve this hobo heaven. Most women in these days of the high cost of living are compelled to turn their hands to useful labor, but their fixed bellef that work is a curse that was pro- nounced against Adam, and not upon Eve, colors thelr whole attitude toward life. It makes them dissatisfied and peevish and fretful and complaining. It blights their ambitions. It robs them of the joy of craftsmanship, than which there is no keener happiness. They take no pride in their work. They are just furiously angry about having to do it. ‘ e e "THE idea that it is a hardship for a woman to have to work and that some one else should furnish her a free pass through life Is the greatest handicap that the business girl has. It keeps her from settling down to her Job and trying to master it. She s always expecting to marry and get her meal ticket at the altar instead of earning it herself. It is only after a woman gives up the husband hunt and abandons hope of ever getting any one else to do her work for her that she becomes one of the invaluable pri vate secretaries, or buyers, or saleswomen, who are worth their welght in £0ld to their employers. Nor is the domestic woman any more reconciled to having to work than the business woman. The average mother does labor long and hard and faithfully for her family, but in the great majority of cases she does it to the | accompaniment of groans and moans. 1 Listen in on any ordinary group of women and you will find them hold ing a lodge of sorrow over having to take care of their children, and cook and clean, and scrub and wash and do all the work necessary to keep their familles comfortable. They feel themselves ill used because fate has com pelled them to do some worthwhile work in the world instead of permitting them to be parasites. Yet the very woman who beats upon her breast and laments because | she has to hold up her end of the domestic partnership would be filled with disgust if her husband falled in his. She would have a contempt for him if he were forever whining about how hard he had to work to make the money to pay the rent and buy thé food and clothes for his wife and children. And the very mother who so hitterly resents her daughter having to | earn her living rejoices when her son gets his first job, because she knows | that there 1s no such medicine for body and soul for him as work; no such protection against temptation as having something to do that absorbs one's thoughts and energies; no such developer of character as having a goal before one which one Is striving to reach | = Women realize the value of work for men and they have a soverelgn contempt for the man who is a dead-beat or who is a lazy, purposeless, shift- less loafer. And why they cannot realize that work is just as necessary and just as much of a blessing 10 one sex as the other is past comprehension When they do appreciate this great truth, it will do more to promote thelr happiness than any other one thing. It will set a new sun in thei- heavens and turn their lamentations into rejoicings. for then they will go gladly 1o the labor to which they are now scourged by circumstance. HE difference between work and play is only our attitude toward it, and when women reach the point of enlightenment when they can see the dignity of working their passage through life instead of trying to graft it | they will find that darning socks is just as much fun as embroidering mono | zrams on doilies, and that it is no more exhausting to push a perambulator | than it is to follow a golf ball. Then the business woman will have a new pride, the pride of being {able to stand alone on her own feet, the pride of independence and the | pride of work well done, and she will have the pay that comes inevitably as the reward of good work Then the housewife will sing at her work instead of sobbing over it, for she will realize that in making a comfortable home for her family and ruising up fine children she is doing her part in building up her country und carrying on the uplift of the world | | Then women can look life and death unflinchingly in the face, for to { have done faithfully and well your allotted share of work in the world is the | only excuse that any of us can give for having lived DOROTHY DIX. BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. v i ints i s. |this is probably not the prevailing Practical Eointsti AICP“ {oplulon of good physicians. The This 18 the aseptic era. The antl-| consensus is probably In faver of the septic era is past. [ hope the new application of certaln antiseptics for ers does not find your household all | the rellef of coryza, particularly the cluttered up with antiseptics In | organic silver preparations, such as boxes, bottles, Jars and tubes, costly a freshly prepared argyrol solution, junk. which you childishly fancled | which may be dropped in the nostril: The aseptic, not the antiaeptic, | or used in a spray or an frrigating treatment of minor wounds is of all | solutfon. So many persons experi- means the best treatment, but only | ence rellef from such treatment that a physiclan, surgeon or nurse who | we are compelled to acknowledge its been scientifically trained In | value. aseptic technic understands how to| The use of antiseptic spravs or treat a wound in this way. The lay- |irrigations of the nasal passages reg- man simply cannot understand a ularly as a preventive against thing of this kind, and I shall not | coryza or any other known respira- attempt to make him understand it. | tory infection has far less support But perhaps it will be possible to im- | Of course, it is next to impossible to part to the layman some practical |obtain any practical evidence of the | points in asepsis which may be of | effect of such a procedure. In the | some use to him early part of the great influenza epi- | 7o select & homely, familiar [demic a large proportion of the troops malady, coryza—and please let's not quarrel now over the nature or cause of coryza, for surely no one can serl- | ously "doubt that vou just catch ft —and T don't mean stuffiness of the head. running nose, chronic rhinitis. arriving at one port of debarkation came down with the “flu” shortly after thelr arrival. One company medical officer insisted npon all hi. men using a nasal douche and gargle of diluted Dobell's solution night and wonld heal wounds or cure diseases. |or applied directly by the physician | but the inflammation of the lining of the nasal passages characterized by some slight chilliness with the onset and moderats malaise, sometimes slight fever (in a young child per- haps sharp fever) and a nasal dis- charge at first watery, but after a ally running a course of _several days. Does the use of any antiseptic spray, wash or other medicament prevent this common respiratory in- fection? Does the use of any anti- septic medicament cure coryza or even hasten recovery? Personlly I doubt whether there is any advantage in the use of any antiseptic medicament for the pre- vention or the relief of coryza. But Safe— for the most precious : gold - There’s no ammonia nor i acid in Solarine to roughen the most delicate handsnor harm the most precious gold or silver. It is the one safe metal polish that you can use. Buy a can today at your grocer, hardware, drug- gist or auto shop. 5 ! NA S S !\M s > few days muco-purulent, and gener- morning under his observation. Nona of the men in his company contracted the disease while in that station. Thi certainly seemed to favor the belief that the practice may be worth while.! at least against influenza when that disease is epidemic in the community. 1 Skin made milky-white new safe way No more sallow skin, no more muddi- ness, no more tan! Science has made a covery which clears and whitens your skin with amaing quickness, almost over-night. Your skin takes on that en- chanting, clearbeauty that everyone envies and admjres, yet few possess. .Make “this 3-Minute-Before-Bedtime test. Smooth this cool, fragrant cremeon your skin tonight. Tomorrow morning notice how the muddy sallowness has given way to unblemished, milky whiteness.' Get a jar of Golden Peacock Bleach Creme (Concentrated) now—today. Use it for only five nights. Then if you are not delighted and amazed with the transforme ation your money will be - instantly re- funded. At an xood Drug and ment _Stores.” 0'Donnell's Drug Peoples Drux Stores, Gilman's 8 Christiani _ Drug Co., Golden! Dep| Store, Talale Hoyal 'Dept Storg, Palace_ Dept. Store, 8. Kann Sons Co. Dept. Store, Sigmund’s Dept. Store. Golden Peacock - The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright. 1925.) AUTUMN BY D. C. PEATTIE Yam Pods. ‘When all the flowers have vanished from wood and fleld, and only their dun wisps stand stark, prey of the de- vouring hordes of littlé black fungi that speckle their dead forms, beauty is not all gone from the earth. For this is the season when the rambler tumble and brown wrens hop silently, may discover and pick the pods of the wild yam. Light as snowflake now, dry as cork, the wild yam, trailing by brooks, over alder and elder and little red birch, is dead, but how beautiful in death. Still, by the finel writhing of its vine stem, it strikes a fantastio, deflant attftude, and shows with what a regal gesture it had of late flung open a sllver purse and scattered its seeds of life to a dying world. In all our woods, no seed-pod fs half as beautiful as that of the wild vam, with its elegant triangular form, its thin, silvery walls, or its hyaline partitions that part the vessel in three. One spray of these silver pods across «a_chimney-plece would throw the soul of a Japanese artist into ecstasy, with its living asymetry, its neutral, sil- very, etched lines, its subdued high lights. However used we may become to seeing the wild yam in our woods, we never behold it without a strange sen- sation, this kin of a great tropical family strayed to our Northern midst. And while we are gathering the wild pods from our drear woods, we think of sunny isles of the Pacific. where brown.skinned people squat and munch the tubers of their native vams Do not suppose this has the least to do with what in the Southern States thev call a yam, which is merely a sugary sweet potato. The true yam is a rare vegetable, indeed, in America, and few are those who have tasted its strange flesh, crisp as a cucumber and like a white potato, but richer and sweeter. This is the vam of history and legend. which Poly- nesians carried from island to island in frail proas long ago. Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED | Boils. There seems to be an agitated in- terest in bofls at the present time, | this affiction being particularly prevalent among infants and chil- dren. The reason for serles of hol the treatment of them, Is therefore of general interest at this time Bolls are due, in the first instance, | to septic agents which infect firri- tated portions of skin. Children who get frequent bruises which are left uncovered to gather dirt and germs are oftenest victims of them. The bruise may result in a boil which will heal with no further trouble— put when a child is in a run-down condition and his system is lacking 12 anti-bodies with which to fight fafection, he may have a serfes of bolls, the body than those firritated by sores or bruises. In any case, no matter what the initial cause, if a | child has one boil after another it {1a well to look carefully to his dfet {and make the neceswary changes so that his system will be furnished | more nourishment and, espectal at- tention being pald to the kind of nourishment the child is gettng, to see that it 15 not lacking In any es- sential elements It is possible that by poor care the initfal boil may. through fts dis- | charges. affect other areas of skin surrounding Some mothers cover a boll with mome mort of grease, thus making a nica comforter for tha boil and en- couraging the Eoftening of the sur- rounding skin so that it {a the mora easily infected. Poultices of bread nd milk are dangerous because of this encouragement. In every case the poultice,, If any, should be of an antiseptic kind. The medical method is to treat the boil by cutting out the core imme- dlately and then dressing the wound with an antiseptic dressing. Mothers who care for thelr children's hoils will do hetter to keep an antiseptic Aresaing of surgical gauze liberally moistened with boric actd water. made of one teaspoon of the cry tals dissolved in a half pint of bofl- ing water, and kept in a covered jar. This dressing if put on warm and covered with a plece of oiled silk will speedily bring the boll to a head and {1t may be gently relieved of its core land s fresh antiseptic dressing put {on and kept firmly in place until the | wound has dried up beyond any pos- sibility of infecting any of the sur rounding skin. Such treatment fs safe and sure and is not bevond the {powers of any mother, however un- ! accustomed to medical procedure. among thickets, where numb beetles | coming on other portions of | Across. 1. Arm of the ocean 4. Pointed weapon 8. Disguised observer Be in debt. Pronoun. . Conjunction. . Garden tool 15. Long for. 17. Peruses. Capital of Latvia. An American Prestdent. Spoke imperfectly. . Bowers. Indefinite article Period Employ. Exist 31. Man's nickname Fruit of East Indian horse-radish tree. . French unit of square measure 1050 (Roman). Beautiful. Arid. desolate land The first man Persian poet. Outer part of bread Large boring tool. Hasten Printer's measure. 3.1416 Swedish coin. Nevertheless. Comrade of Pythias Mesh-work. 19 21 Down. 1. Youth. 2. Reverential fear. 3. Perlod of time (plural) 4. Walt 5. Preposition. 5. Company (abbr.) Mistakes. 8. High, Iff, military hat 9. Seed-bearing vessel. Your Feet. If you take good care of your feet, you need never have corns, bunions, callouses, or any of the troubles that spoll life for a lot of careless people 1t needs only sensible care, too, noth- ing expensive. Give yvour feet a pedicure once a week. Soak them in a deep basin of hot water, with a little soda added and some soap so that the water is soft. Special powders come which You can use if you want, but soda and soap will do. After 15 minutes. dry the feet quickly, scrape off any growing callous with a corn file or even the roughest side of an emery bourd, cut the toe nails straight across, clean under them well and clip any loose cuticle from around them. A real corn will have to be shaved down, nsing a corn knife it you think vourself competent to handle one T.ots of paopla are 100 nervous tn he trusted with a_ corn knifs. They should go to a chiropodist. Once tha corn {s shaved rub with cold cream to keep the skin soft. or paint with collodion if sore, and bind 'round it a bit of cotton wool to keep the shoe from rubbing. Corns between the toes can be avoided and cured by keeping the toes from touching with & felt pad, by wearing thin stockings and soft shoes 80 that the feet are not too hot. Massage the feet with the han this brings down the blood, and makes them feel fresh and rested. Have your feet ever feit really good-—a pleasure to you? They will, after a pedicure, CHATS Affirmattve. Mature German river. Girl's name. . Town of Southwest Franca . Classify. Within. . Sun god. Small fish _ Aot. Couches. Overjoved. . Follower of Falstaff . Hubbub. 37. Stay behind. Brother of Jacob. . Title of address Boast. A measurs of work 46. Weep. | 47. Regret. Before. teep, or soak Mother. Ttalian river OPERE BEO0 MIPOE T AL IS AV EIARINO LA AT RIA[[T5] AININ A P [O MY MK [TIA[8 U N0 oS E] [AM[ATS s JOIWIEN] NEEN OE @00 [0/ AW E R A BY EDNA KENT FORBES. The feet are ey respond to even an amateur one usually neglected, and & little good treatment Discouraged Ann—There are seis of combs that come for waving the hair; all one does is to dampen the hair and adjust the combs over the entira scalp so as to form the hair into frregular waves. Tie a band or a narrow ribhon around the head hold the combs in place until the hair is thoroughly dried If vour hair is inclined tn curl nat- ¥, once a week of this extra curl- tng will be all the attention it should need during the Winter months. You can also wave the hair by tying nar row tapes around the head after dampening the huir, and forming it into the waves. Never use curlers or irons on naturally curly hair, as ft will take all the natural curl out Mrs. T. G. H—There are special dentifrices made for keeping artificial teeth clean. Ask vour dentist to ren- ommend a gond ona. Scorch Marks. The following is an excellent way of removing scorch marks from a silk blouse: Squeeze the juice out of two onfons, and add half a pint of vinegar, half an ounce of soap and two ounces of fullers’ earth. Botl this little of the paste to the scorched until thoroughly mixed. Apply a part, let it remain there tfll dry then wash it off. This paste mav be stored away in a covered jar for use at any time. FOR DINNER_ TO-NIGHT The eye is charmed—the appetite is tempted by the bright color and rich savor of a piping hot plateful of Campbell’s Tomato Soup. Then you lift your spoon to your lips and relish a rich tomato flavor that gives a sparkle to your whole meal. Enjoy it this very day. ! C€ream of Tomato! It’s so easy to prepare this nourishing soup. See the directions on the Campbell label.