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WOMAN’S Source of Present Craze for Green BY MARY MAR! Psychologists who have made a study of color preferences assure us that a penchant for green does not exlst without considerable sophistica- tion. Poetry written in the youth of arace's history does not contain much THIS GREEN GEORGETTE SHAWL LOVERED WITH GRE N OLD PAILLETT 3 WITH LONG IT IS WORN WITH PERS, WITH GOLD BUC] SIDES, AND HEE WITEH GREEN BEADS. AND dse of the color word green. Homer bably did not differentiate between blue and green—he was concerned only with reds and golds and blacks. Chaucer and Spencer and Shakespeare did not use the word green very often, whereas Wordsworth and other later poets make much of the beau green. So you might discover the art of races. Painters and deco- vators of primitive folk have little use for green—doubtless hecause in more primitive, more vouthful times zreen trees and green fields abound ind present no very unusual spec- tacle. So perhaps the present craze for green might indicate that we are PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM Except Boric Acid. In our Little Journeys in the Asep. tic Bra, it just now otcurs to me, I neglected to caution you, children, to save the boric acid when dumping vour stock of “antiseptic” nostrums in the sink. Borlc acid is an anti- septic, though mot a nostrum. -No fanciful or unreasonable claims are made Tor it. No appreciable share of our gocd money is appropriated by \e boric acid merchants fqr keeping vou well misinformed about the re- medial value of boric acid in vour do- mestic establishment. No element of mystery surrounds the use of boric cid. Boric acid hasn't a very im- sive odor. It looks so much sugar or salt. Nobody issues free al- manacs or publishes amazing testi- monials about cures wrought with 1. Secldom, indeed, does the mbulance make a hurrfed call or the coroner sit on the remains when boric acid is accidentally put to wrong use. ‘These are the good reasons why boric acld 1s cheap. I promised you that T would save vou some money if you Jjolned me in these Little Journeys in the Aseptic Era. Maybe vou don't want to save mone, A child never thanks his elders for telling him there is no Santa Claus. Aside from tincture iodine as a firstaid disinfectant for wounds, boric acid is the only anti- septic a well arranged family medi- cine cupboard should contain. It will meet every requirement of an anti- septic quite as well as any other agent, in my opinion. Eye drops, ear drops, nasal spray, mouth wash, gar- =le, solution for antisepticizing a wet dressing, antiseptic solution for bath- ig an infected wound, douche, blad- der wash, bowel wash, or dusting powder for the relict of foul sweating, horfc acld is an excellent first choice. Canker sores in the mouth, sieges espondent described as of the toothbrush and Your favorite dentifrice a well earned est. Touch each canker once daily with a mixture of equal parts of tincture of iodine and cerine— MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. Subdued Perfumes. One Mother Upon the occasion of my small daughter's birthday, several friends hrought her bottles of perfume. enjoyved sprinkling odors so lavishly over efs and dresses that the house hecame almost unbearably odorifer- ous. I made a set of flat linen sachet bags, filled them with cotton and used a violet sachet for the scent. These were to be placed in the drawer containing her clothing. When I explained how much more refined and desirable this subtle fragrance was than the strong liquid scents, she was contentrto dis« card he performancess handker- minor | PAGE. ALL. living in a very sophisticated season,| and this would be a sensible enough conclusion were it nmot for the fact that the color that shares the season’ favors with green is red—red in sun- dry shades. And red, the psychologists tell us, is the favorite color of primi- tive folk and yvoung children, and a fondness for it betokens just what a fondness for green does not. Wher- ever you see well dressed women or women who follow the fashions from near or a little distance you see green and red. It is perhaps best not to try to make any psychological de- ductions. reen has met with especial popu- larity as a hat color, this despite the fact that we have always regarded green hats as rather tpying. Only the woman of rare colofng could wear green ha ording to the old theory. Light greens seem to be in special favor still. and a shade that some people call chartreuse and others linden—a light green with much vel- low about it—far surpasses the one- i time favorite jade. (Copyright. 1925.1 BREAKFAST Sliced Oranges Dry Cereal, Top Milk Baked 15ggs French Toast, Maple Sirup Coffee LUNCHEON Cream of Mushroom Soup Spinach and Egg salad Crisp Rolls Chocolate Blancmange Tea DINNER Tomato Bisque Fried Smelts, Tartare Sauce Frenc ied Potatoes Boiled Squash Cabbage Salad Squash Meringue Pie Coffee FRENCH TOAST One-half cup flour, one tea- spoon baking powder, one-quar- ter teaspoon salt. half cup milk, one egg, sliced bread. Sift to: zether flour, baking powder and salt, add milk and beaten egg. Beat well. Into this dip bread, fry in hot fat, drain and serve hot with maple sirup. MUSHROOM SOUP Chop finely one-half pound mushrooms and cook half hour in one quart well seasoned white stock, to which two tea- spoons chopped onion have been added, then rub through sieve. Mix four tablespoons flour with one-half teaspoon each of salt and paprika, and cook until bub- bling in four tablespoons but- ter; add slowly one and one- haif cups milk, stir until smooth, add mushrooms and stock, bring to boiling point and serve. SAUCE FOR SEA FOOD Mix finely chopped pickles or Spanish olives. The writer uses half large sour pickle, one-quar- ter teaspoon salt, then mix this with your mayonnaise dressing. Serve on side with fish or sc: lops or oysters. BRADY, M. D. which smarts momentarily, then seems to relieve. Then gently rinse the mouth many times a day, espe cially before and after taking food, with warm saturated boric acid co- lution. Saturated solution of anything means simply all the water will dis- solve. 1 take canker sores merely as an example of the use of boric acid as an antiseptic—yet this is the antiseptic era. Have T not said repeatedly that no known antiseptic is worth a hoot as a germ chaser or even a germ dis- courager after the germ has pene. trated the tlssues—that is, after in. fection has taken place? 1 have, and I stand by that assertion. But here in the mouth affected with canker sores the boric acld serves another purpose, namely, the discouragement of germs which are given off from the canker sores and which, if not discouraged, may set up other canker ores. The warm saturated solution does this without irritating or injur- ing the mucous membrane of the mouth and withéut interfering with the natural healing process. At least I believe it does. Boric acid solution may be used for moistening a dressing on an infected wound or sore of any kind, the anti- septic in this instance again serving ‘ll_lfl purpose of rendering the germs given off from the infected wound or sore harmle: Some such protective dressing over boil number one would render number 2 boil a less inevitable f)\'cn(ualhi\' if people only knew about he asept era and th ¥ handle boils. Serulo Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. Words Often Misused—Say “The | committee has been appointed.” “The committee have all arrived.” ngular or plural, according to use, Often Mispronounced—Tremendous, Pronounce last syllable ; in “us” and not “jus” Often Misspelled—Aisle. Synonyms—Anticipate, expect, - prehend, forecast, predict, - " _Word Study—"“Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us in- crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word— Irate; angry: enraged. “An irate glance was his only, answer.” ! b i Pressed Veal I._a:f, | Here is a good rule for pressed veal—a rule so simple that you could hardly call it a recipe. Buy a knuckle of vedl. For a loaf of pressed veal to fill a bread pan three-quarters full vou should ask the butcher for a joint that would yield about two pounds of meat. With the bone it will amount to much more in weight. Also get him to saw it through the bone in two or three places. If it is chopped, there may be fine splinters of bone that will make painful mor- sels. The knuckle should be set on to cook in boiling water seasoned with a half a bay or laurel leaf and a pinch of spices, such as cloves, all- spice, mace and sage, and allowed to simmer gently for about three hours. Now drain off the stock and pick meat from the bones, adding the marrow to the meat. Put the meat through the grinder. Boil the liquor down to about a cup and a half. Salt and add about a teaspoon of lemon Jjuice, if the flavor is liked. If you wish to get quick results you may add a teaspoon of gelatin dissolved in a little cold water to the liquid, but this is not THE EVENING FOOD AND HEALTH FRED STUART GIBBS, Food Speciell Various aches and pains are as- cribed to “neuralgl This word, as well as “neuritis,” “sciatic rheu- matism” and several others, is used by a good many individuals who do not stop to think of their exact mean- ing. As a matter simple form: with the nerves are caused by infec- ton. Poisons are generated in the absorbed by the system and sent arious parts of the body, there to make their presence known by { pain, more or less severe. Sometimes the disease arises from a gouty con- dition. Unless the trouble has reached the point where a physician’s care is nec- essary, the sufferer may do much to relieve immediate suffering well jas to prevent the disease becoming more_serious. P preventive treatment is so simple! Utterly lacking in interest, wholly” without any distinguished at: tributes! Summed up, it consists of eating diet composed of foods that do not easily putrefy in the intestines and food that helps the bowels main- tain a salut state of activit punds_simple, doesn't i Just what shall the neuralgia suf- ferer eat? Frequently the advice is simply “plenty of fruits and vegetables,” but if the diet is to be carried out intel- | ligently “t is well to learn something of the det of its composition. \ For example, we are quite accus® tomed to a breakfast that begins with either fruit juice or fruit, but an ideal breakfast for one who has neuralgia opens with- both fruit juice and fruit! “Then comes the cereal or breakfast food. Instead of the time-honored oatmeal that has been cooked for hours, try “brose.” a Scotch dish, which is simply porridge cooked for only five or six minutes. We used to be taught that all starch must be cooked for a long period so as to ren- der the granules digestible. Late re: search has established the fact that it Is not nec and that, in ad- ition to this fact, the lightly cooked mush has very valuable laxative prop- erties Other cereals cracked wheat, cool must porridge. The breakfast bread should be coarse. Only half an ounce of but- recommended, but_the addition of two or more ounces of cream more than makes up for the lack of butte: Finally, when considering breakfast one eminent nutrition authority, Dr. J. H. Kellogg, advises one and a quar- ter ounces of lettuce, surely a novelty at breakfast for most of us! Dinner may have a vegetable soup and not one but three vegetables be- sides potatoes, which should be baked Cucumbers, parsnips, turnips, rad- | ishes, all greens, beets and cabbage, appear, as well as all salads, on the diet list Bran bread and butter are also in order for dinner as for any other meal, and bran should be added to the soup. Gelatin puddings with fruits make excellent desserts, as do molasses and honey cakes, served without the pop ular whipped cream. Malted milk. buttermilk and acid opholus milk are the best beverage: with cereal coffee to take the place of the hot breakfast beverage. (Copyright, 19" ' PHistory of Bour Name BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWL. MacKINLEY. VARIATIONS — Mackinlay, Mac- inally, Maclnally, MacNally, Mac- Ginley. RACIAL Irish. SOURCE—A given name. The origin of these family names is more or less confused, concerning the clans from wh the varfous forms come, so that the following cx- | planation must be accepted as general and allowances made for the fact that there are numerous individual excep- tion For the most part, then, these names are founded on the Gaelic given name of “IFindla” or “Fionnladh,” which has given rise to the ttish family names of Findlay, Finlay, Fin- ley, Finlayson and the like. In fact, Mackinlay is but another form of *“‘MacFinlay” (which spelling is not to be met with, the Gaelic form belng ““MacFhiennlaigh”). Such forms as Mackinley, Mackinlay and Macinally are to be found mostly among descendants of the Clan Bu- chanan, but there was also a small sept of this name in the Clan MacFar- | lane. Sometimes, too, th names are most of " the pciated are old-fashioned ed at home; bran dry bran added to the cooked ORIGIN—Scottish and TAR, WASHINGTON. D. C, MONUMENTS OF WASHINGTON. BY VICTORIA FABER STEVENSON. Francis Asb-ury. Fourteen equestrian statues of mili- v leaders had been erected in the city before the $50,000 monument to anci was set up by the Asbury Memorial Association at Si teenth and Mount Pleasant street This fifteenth hero on horseback had no place in the army of any nation, but is honored for his generalship of Christian soldiers and for recruiting expeditions which_he made into the wilderness of the New World to gain followe in the cause he preached. During the 4% years of his pastorate and bishopric he crossed the Alle- gheny Mountains 60 times and trav- eled 250,000 mil Journey equal in length to 10 times around the world. By these horseback journeys he made 214,000 converts and ordained 4,000 ministers. When this humble itinerant Method- ist preacher arrived in A 4 from England in 1771, the few citles and towns here were great distances apart and settlers were ttered over the great strip of territory down the At ntic coast. From then on until his death in 1816, he spent most of his time in the saddle, for he delivered his message from Florida to the wilds of Canada and from the coast to the un- | explored West beyond the Ohlo. It was while riding on his faithful horse he thought out many of the ts and preachments of the 16,000 s and addresses he delivered. istus Lukeman’s bronze statue first Methodist bishop _in shows him on one of his journeys. The hat and cloak which he wears, as well as the other apparel, | are true representations of the bish: op's clothing. The traditional broad- brimmed hat was worn to keep off that te: sermorn Pilfering. At some stage or other of a child's growth he begins taking what does | not belong to h young nobody worries about it. i ows that he has reached the | tive age, where, like a crow, he gathers all things into his nest Along between 7 and 9, however, he usually begins to take things because they mean something to his comfort. He craves more sweets than are al- lowed him; he wants to go to more | movies than the schedule calls for; he wants to be a big fellow and swagger with the older ones; he wants. The little child has no wants like that. He was experimenting with the things about him and he gathered them just to learn about them. They meant nothing to him any other way. But the older child sees personal value changed spellings of “Mac-an-Laight,” an entirely different name, which is found principally among the Stewarts of Appin. But this name should more properly be rendered in English by MacLay or MacLea The forms MacGinley and MacNally (occasionally) are also derivatives of | the foregoing Scottish sept names transplanted into Ireland in many cases, though there are other chan- nels through which similar names have been developed in Ireland. COSTELLO. RACIAL ORIGIN—Norman-French. SOURCE—A given name. Here is a family name that is likely to puzzle you. Forgetting any par- ticular knowledge you may have of it, it looks more as though it might be Itallan than anything else. But all those of this name that you have ever met have probably been Irish. | As_a matter of fact, the name itself is Norman-French. But though the name and the orig- inal blood of the Costellos was Nor- man, they really have more right to call themselves Irish than any one in the United States, except the Indian, has to call himself an American. ¥or the Costellos began to be Irish long before any Caucasians, except per- haps certain Norsemen, began to be Americans. The Costello clan in Ireland became a fixture there in the early days of the Anglo-Norman invasion. It de- rived its name from one Costello Fitz- Gilbert, who was the son of Gilbert de Angule, one of the first of the in- vaders. As was the case with man: of these Norman chieftains, the; gathered around them, when they set- tled in either Ireland or Scotland,| many native followers together with | those of their own race, and, falling | into the Gaelic custom, gradually | evolved their own clans, adopting the Gaelic language and the Gaelic s tem of names. Thus, those who would otherwise have been known (under the Norman system) as *Fitz-Cos- tello,” became instead “O’Costello” and finally just Costéllo. But it has been so long since the eleventh and twelfth centuries that it is a safe bet that but little of the original Norman blood remains in the veins of the average person bearing this name today. . Macaroni With Ham. Cook two cupfuls of macaroni in plenty of boiling salted water. Drain, pour cold water through it, in them. It fs that thought that| causes indignation and alarm fn the | parent’s breast. “He knew what he | was doing; he took something from somebody else so he might benefit though another lost.” Not_quite. In one ser what he was doing; he w: e he knew | s conscious. | {1In the real sense of things he did not | know what he was doing because he did not know the implications of his| actions. Remember, he dwoes not know any- thing about property as such. He has never labored to make anything grow. He is quite unconsclous of the mean- ing of money and his relation to it. That must come through experience. When you find a child pilfering keep your head and use it. Think well over the circumstances. What want did | nose rubbed If he is very® both rain and sun, and the cloak pro- tected from both heat and cold. The venerable minister is pictured as meditating over the words in his Bible and has kept his fingers between the leaves of the Book o that he might readily refer to the text. He is tall, spare and has penetrating eves, as if accustomed to looking into the realitles of life as he met it in its vario#s phases. His own life of privation, toil and sacrifice is suggested in the calm usterity of the bronze likeness. It is said that the bishop's singing voice was a decided asset in his work, and that his rejoicing in hymns of praise was the only happiness he al- lowed himself. To him-life was a serfous obligation to do good and he belleved in abstinence from worldly pleasures. As the bishop's vearly salary of 64 and expenses was not sufficient to provide a horse of great cost, he is naturally shown riding a mount more conspicuous for its falthfulness than for its style and breed. It s said that no other horse in statuary has been given the posture of this one. The animal, thoroughly accustomed to the pensive moods of its rider, adapted its own habits to those of the bishop. Hence it is pic- tured as relaxed, with head down and against its knee, while the bishop is engaged in deep study. As carrying food and raiment was »f relatively small importance beyond furnishing the necessities for health and comfort, there was always ample room fn the saddle bags for the Bibles and other religious books which the bishop usually took for his own use and for distribution to those who could use them to best advantage. (Copyright, 1925.) he have? What provision had you made for that want? Was it a healthy and a normal want? What were. the uggestions, from people of circum- tance, that led him to desire this thing and to take it? Study the case as earnestly as would the surgeon who found a difficulty in the child's} physical being. Whatever you do, don’t call him names. “Call a dog a thief and he’ll steal,” is a saw of deep cutting wis- dom. Tell him rather he is an honest and dependable child who made a mis- take. -Keep the story of his misdeeds from evervbody but those personally or pro- fessionally involved. Nothing so in- Jures a child's dignity and self-respect —without which he can make no true progress to manhood or womanhood— as the knowledge that his failings have been heralded from Dan to Beersheba. Keep all the child’'s fail- ings a secret. Speak to him privately about them. Give the child an aliowance, letting him earn it or as much of it as pos- nd encourage him to responsi- by sending him on errands of trust and sharing responsibility with him. Many a child ceases to take money or to squander it once he knows how hard fatyer and mother work to get it and how much it means to the family group when it is spent foolishly In short, pilfering is usually a mat- ter that yields to education, not pun- ishment. (Copyright. 1925.) Mr. Patrl will give personal attention to inquiries from parents or &chool teachers on the care and development of children. Write him in care of this paper, inclosing self- addressed. stamped envelope for repls Easy To Gain Weight With Yeast and Iron New Combination of Yeast With Vegetable Iron Builds Up Weightin Thin, Three Weeks run-down and under- - weight men, women and children can improve their health, in- crease -their energy and put on from five to twenty pounds of good solid flesh in three weeks. A new combination of yeast vitamines with vegetable iron, renews the action of sluggish blood cells, drives out dangerous poisons, and endurance and supplics increases ener; e system with the vitamines that build up weight. For years yeast has been known as a rich vitamine fou perfected until we yeast”—which but not onized comes in concen- trated tablet form, was it possible to take yeast and ironin Pproportions to egetable “Iron” right build up weight. 'gfl'l C&- bined with yeast is quite easy to digest, therefore better for the system. And “yeast” when ironized, ‘becomes just twice as beneficial as ordinar{ of then place in a buttered baking dish. necessary if you are not in a hurry. Now mix the ground meat and stock and pack it into a pan that has been rinsed in cold water. 1If you like, you may put halved olives or sour pickles in the top. 1t requires several townships of ariq lands to feed a few goats, , Put raw or any left-over cooked ham, enough to make about one cupful, through the food chopper, heat in a frying pan and add two tablespoon- fuls of flour and two cupfuls of milk gradually. Stir all the while until it boils up thoroughly. Pour the mix- ture over the macaroni and add one- half a cupful of grated cheess, Bake 1n 2 hot oyen fox 16 pinufens . . L d Ironized Yezt tablets are composed they are pleasant to take and free from drug-like ments, therefor fresh or cake concentrated east. ood ele- effects. It makes no difference how old you are—or how young you are—how long you have been under-weigh ‘weight you are, “ironized gleck you right up, t—or how much ynder- ast” tablets are positively ranteed to and adxefrom five to twenty pmdn‘::? good firm sh in three weeks’ time. If they fail get your money back. Sold by druggists, at $1.00 for a large 60-tablet pacl direct from laboratory on receipt of price. Ironized Ye 201, Atlanta, G& or sent 0., Desk THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1925 My Neighbor Says: Curdled custard may be due to too long cooking, or to cook- ing over the too hot water, or to pouring the egg mixture into hot milk instead of the hot milk into the egg, or to lack of stirring either when the milk is added to the egg or during the cooking, or to allowing the custard to remain over the hot water after the cooking is fin- ished. The container should be removed from the heat as soon as the custard coats the spoon. For starting morning fires use nut-size kindling charcoal. It is excellent in brolling steaks, lobster or fish. Cork moistened with turpen- tine will remove marks from hearth tiles or white glazed bricks, and rust spots on metal will yield speedily to like treat- ment with cork slipped in parafin. Brisk rubbing is, of course, necessary, in all cases. Xou should never use small coal without first dampening it. If you put it on d it will fall through into the ashpan, but if dampened it will cake into a hard lump and, in addition to lasting, will give out a splendid heat. To clean a bathtub put half an ounce of powdered pumice stone to soak in half a pint of paraffin oil and with a plece of soft flannel steeped in the 1idutd clean the inside of the tub. Then wash out with warm water and dry thoroughly. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAP Sattiday nite pop and ma had a in gagement to go erround to Mr. and Mrs. Hewses house and-play bridge, and after dinnir ma sed, O my good niss my only pair of silk stockings has a run in them, I cant possibly go out with stockings that look like that Thats too bad, Tm mutch releeved, pop sed. We'll call up the Hewses and tell them not to ixpect us, he = ma sed, We'll do nuthing of th dont you know its one of the 9 sins to break up a bridge party? haff to run up to the avenue and go to that little notion store and get me a_pair of Silver Dot stockings, Prince of Wales, size 9 and a half. How can I wawk in a store and make an announcement like that? pop | sed. And wats the Prince of Wales got to do with it enyway? he sed. Thats the color, ma sed, and pop sed Yee gods, well then wats the ideer of the silver dots, we're not going to a maskerade party are we? silver Dot is and dont forget the size, 9 z and now for pity sake hurry get started, ma sed. Wich pop did, me going with him | partly for the wawk and partly to see wat happened, and wen we got to the notion store some lady was buving something in there, pop saving, I can'’t go In there and make that speetch | wile that woman is in there. And we waited outside till she came out and then we went in and jest then another lady came in rite after us and pop and me wawked out agen and walted till she came out and jest then another one went in, pop saying, Lets &0 home, Im through. And we started to wawk hom and jest wen we got there I sed, G, pop, you could of sent me into ask for them, I wouldnt of cared. This is a swell time to make the | suggestion, pop sed. O well, I prob- | ably wont haff to play bridge, so ;:l]sl well that ends well, he sed And we went in the house and my | sister Gladdis sed, My stars, father, ware have vou bin, mother couldn't wait eny longer so she sewed up her stocking and went and says for vou to hurry rite over. Wich pop did, saying, Yee gods wat B ey Apple Whip. Take some whites of eggs left over | and beat them until stiff, with sugar | and a little salt. Take some left-over | baked apples or apple sauce and put | through a sfeve, add the beaten egg whites and pile lightly in a glass dish. Decorate with small bits of jelly keep cold until served. The Newest Designs Are Here THE period models of the Humphrey Radiantfire are genuine replicas of old English coal baskets. They successfully combine the conveniance of gas with the cheery glow of the old-time open fire, ,and are today the accepted fireplace and portable equipment of the pest Americsn homes. You must see one in operation to appreciate its pure, wholesome and economical heat. . Portion 2 Reforn . Hill in . Mountain in . Preliminary wager 13. B FEATURES The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copreight, 19: . Winged mammal. . Gentle breeze Burned residue ities ot odd. . Hypothetical force. . Prefix, out of, . Certain. . Ribbon. . Brilliant dash . Inspire _ Colle with fear. ion of facts. 411 valle . Prefix, into Sun god Jerusalem Crippled. L Down. Ordered. Nodule of earth. efinite articl ch unit of square meas Come to a standstill. Thessaly asts of burder Ldible me ction. e not done Request . Licks D Agreeably to one’s wishes . Winged | a life ! ! | | linen cambrie, . Once more. . Bird's abode. Toward the center of trouble in Win eful. F er—unless 3 r chapped fllictions. sped b and perhap are so ay women that thetic who : does the 1 in cc So the wbm! much nds are the n s to left ev use some on to keep th ! Ably be the treatment neces o of this, the then can buy glove n use loose co Iy with an seline is ind pull t Christmas Gifts of Good Cheer See Our Enlarged Christmas Stock Many Beautiful Models, Including Modern Designs at $15 Up. Abso Fenders to Match, beginning at $15. Wha_t better.gift could you make than real comfort—not only for this winter but for the winters that are to come? Particularly in view of the coul shortage. A Small Down Payment Reserves Your Selection— Balance in Convenient Monthly Installments if Desired. Washington Gas Light Co. SALES DEPT.—419 TENTH ST. N. W.—MAIN 8280