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WOMA N°S PAGE. Celery Root and Its Unusual Uses BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. Celery root may be used to advan- tage in dishes in wore ways than would at first appear. Sometimes the root is cooked and again it is used IRY ROOT MAKE A DELICATE AND DE ADDITION TO MAN SALAD A lout. 1t is one of the things that ire often thrown away lely because their value is not appreciated he roots of p apt to be full of ft ing of roots this wa tubular vegetables carrots vor. When spe: 1 do not me Stich us po v then the bulbs . but 1 mean roots listinguished from the usual edible of the vegetables. Amonz the o e perhaps Their use in soups is Celery Root in Salads. When prepa celery stalk: off the roots e them common use these roc with salad. Cut off the tendrils and then scrub and cut off the dark out- side of the rc ‘Ut the white in- sides into stive These can be laid on top of meat salads o xed in with the othe ingredients of a salad. They can be included in some fruit saiads, such a ite and vineapple and cream ete. The ds are fiing, for the texture is and the flavor piquing. cut An un- silad; “different” BEDTIME STORIES From Frying Pan to Fire. th old a d o That is, of the s f course, the real meaning ing, “Out of the frying pan into the f When one is in trouble and in trying run away from it runs into even greater trou- ble, they are said to have *jumped from the frying pan into the fi THEY STARTED AT ONCE NY LED THE WAY. means simply t than they were hefare. Danny and Nanny Meadow Mouse, having made up their minds to leave Farmer Hrown's big barn because adow the Weasel was there, wast- ed mo time. They started at once. Danny led the way. Where are we going?”’ nny as they started. “I don’t know.” Danny whispered MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. are worse off whispered Reliving a Party. One Mother Says: » Iivery mother knows the dreary hours which seem to, crawl in between those o filled with duties and pleas- ures, when the voung folks complain everything being so stupid. Try gathering about the fireside, to imbibe ~omething of its magic glow. and then start recalling some particularly pleas- ant party in their experience. Have 1hem describe the points abeut it that appealed to them—the girls' dresses, the refreshments, the games played, some courteous act on a boy friend’s part and so on. It always acts like a charm and puts new life into a pre- viously grouchy group. Oegwrisht. 1026.) toes, | the | s is to mix | vegetable | s apple and nut | Try these shredded celery roots for one part of hors d'ceuvres varies. Or it you do not have enough of ths | sreds to form one separate little dish for the varies, mix them with shreds of the heart of a white cabbage. A cold dressing such as is sometimes used for cold slaw is excellent for such a dish. An ordinary mayon- naise may be used also. Various Uses. Chopped celery root may be added to white or egg sauce served with boiled fish. Tt can be added to meat gravies, especially to roast veal or pork gravy. Sprinkle the chopped, uncooked or cooked root on top of a dish of stewed tomatoes. When scal- loping tomatoes or potatoes scatter uncooked chopped roots on .the dif- ferent layers. put into a dish, and a delicate flavor will result. The par- | ticles can be used with cheese when | this is put in the layers. and be a | decided addition to the flavor. Try | the shreds or the chopped bits with | macaron, creamed, haked or au gra | tin. When you have become accus tomed to using celery root many w of including it in dishes will suggest themselves to your mind. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. ked Apples. Oatmeal with Cream. Creamed Beef with Eggs. Popovers. Orange Marmalade. Bouillon with Whipped Cream. Qrackers. Baked Rice Pudding. Cookies. Tea. DINNER. Mutten Cutlets. Mint Jeliy. Mashed Turnip. Delmonico Potatos Waldorf Salad. Prune Pudding. Coffee. BE WITH EGGS. Two ounces dried beef, one cup tomatoes, one-quarter cup grated cheese, few drops onion Julce, few grains cinnamon, few grains c: . two tablespoons ter, three eg; pick over beef and chop finel dd toma- toes. cheese. onion juice, cinna- mon and cayenne; melt butter, add mixtures, and, when heated, add eggs well beaten: cook until eggs are of creamy consistency, stirring and scraping from bot: tom of pan. COOK Tiwo eggs, one cup sugar, one cup butter, one cup sour cream, three and one-half to four cups pastry flour, one teaspoon soda, one teaspoon salt; flavor as you | lllke] Do not roll thin or bake hard. PRUNE PUDDING. sutter baking dish and cover | | bottom with cooked and chopped prunes. Mix togther two cups | | flour, one-quarter cup sugar, two teaspoons baking powder and one and one-half teaspoons salt and rub in three tablespoons shortening. Beat one egg until light, add one-half cup milk and ir gradually into flour mixture, oven until browned and serve with cream and sugar. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS back. “Anywhere is better than here with Shadow the Weasel about.” Now, Danny had Intended to make straight for the strawstack in the barnyard, and, after he reached that, decide where to go next. But he didn’t get to that strawstack. You see, he caught o glimpse of Shadow the Weasel, and tait was cnough to make him turn in the cpposite direc- tion. My, my, my, how he and Munny did run! It w rprising how fast those short legs of theirs could go. They were so frightened that they didn’t pay any attention io where they were golng. They Fad but one thought, and thet was to zet as far as possible from Shadow the Weasel. So it was that, instead ¢f leaving the barn from the baci as they had in- tended to, they came o the ‘ront door. It was open a crack. Danny slipped through with Nanny right at his heels. Danny looked around hastily. A short distance away as another great building. It was Farmer Brown's house. Danny didn’t know this, but he did know that usually there were hiding places under any big bul:ding. He didn't dare sit still ir. hroad day- light; so he led the way across the dooryard stralght to the back porch of Farmer Brown's house. 'l here was a hole under {t. With a little sigh of relief he dived through that hole with Nanny at his heels. It was quite dark under that porch, and it was dry and comfortable. “\We'll stay Yere, whispered Danny, “‘until we have a chance to decide what it :5 best to do. I don't believe Shadow will come over here. He will stay ia that harn as long as there are any Rats thera. My, but I'm glad to get away from there Nanny was just about to reply in that funny, squeaky littie voice of hers, but instead she rave the taintest of gasps. Peering in at that hole through which they had come were two greenish eyes. At least, that-is the way they looked to Danny and Nanny. They had seen thoss eyes before. They had seen them many times in the big barn. But in the big barn those eyes didn’t frighten them at all. Now It was different. Those were the eves of Black Pussy the Cat. In the barn were plenty of places where they could hide from Hlack | Pussy. Here under the porch there might be no hiding placs at all. You see. they never had been under there { before. They were so frightened they didn‘t know what to o, so they dld nothing. As ‘t happencd, this was !the wisest thing possible. Blac Pussy didn't see them and she didn't hear them. because, of course, they made no noise. But do you know what they wished? They actually wished that they were back in that big barn, even with Shadow the Weasel there. They felt as if they were worse off than before. (Copyrieht. 1926.) Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. often misused—Don't say paia five dol- Each” is the sin Words gular subject. Often mispronounced—Alien. Pro- nounce al-yen, a as in “day,” e as in | “hen.” not as ali-en. Often misspelled—Privilege. the ile. Synonyms—Peace, harmony, amity, tranquillity, quie . Word study—Use a word tiree times and it is yours.” Let us in- crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word induce, to lead on, to influence, pre- vail upon. “Former failures induce speculation &8 to what conditions may arise.” Note | | deliberative and careful. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1926. COLOR CUT-OUT BEAUTY AND THE BEAST. The Bargain. When tiie beast threatened to kill Beauty’s father for plucking the rose the poor merchant went down on his knees and begged the Least's forgive- ne: on one condi- “and that Is rour will forgive you tion,” said the beast, that you will send me one of Jaughters to dle in your stead. The merchant promised. although he intended to come back himself, and only wished to bid his family good- bye. But when he arrived at his home and told of what had happened, Beauty volunteered to go. The mer- chant said, “No.” but Beauty insisted that it was all her fault, because she had requested the rose. So they start- ed back, and Beauty accompaanied her father to offer her life in his stead. Beauty's plain dress is brown, with a yellow girdle and cap. (Copyright, 1976.) What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. | Aquarius. Tomorrow's planetary aspects are, during the forenoon. quite promising, and indicate success in all work of a constructive nature, whether it be in the office or the home. Everything that savors of speculation or hazard is. however. doomed to faflure. In the | afternoon and evening, the signs de- favorable —conditions, al- are not distinctly ad- verse. Buoyancy of feeling will, how ever. be lacking. and there will be! sensed a tendency to exaggerate the | tmportance of trifles. and to make a | mountain out of a molehill. This can only be overcome by exercising a prop. er sense of proportion, and by being though A boy born tomorrow will not, at birth, display many signs of health or robustness. He will, however, be gift- ed with a wiriness that will take the | | | | | tible to environment. deeper, richet place of strength, and enable him to overcome the weaknesses of his early childhood. A girl. on the other hand. will have a healthy babyhood. and. if no accidents intervene, develop into a good specimen of womanhood. In disposition, they will both be amen- able to influences, and very suscep- They will not be strong-minded, and their charac- ters will often show signs of weakness. If tomorrow is your birthday, you are rather disposed to hide your light under a bushel. You possess talents, but. for some reason or other, appear to be afrald to use them. You are walting for an opportunity, instead of creating one. You have ambition, but fear all the time that the prize is out of vour reach, and such a frame of mind precludes the success of attain- ment. You are quixotically loyal, painstak- ing, trustworthy. and the one thing that holds vou back is your inherent ! timidity, and the little confidence vo® have in vourself. While it is foolish to take ill-considered chances, it is even more hurtful to wait for “some- thing to turn up.” It may be true that opportunity knocks at every one’s door. It Is more practical, however, to knock at the door of opportunity— and, thereafter, force, if needs be, an entrance. Your home life should be very hap- py., as you have a very affectionate nature, and are demonstrative. Your home is your chief pride, and affords you much contentment and amuse- ment. Those who are related to you hy ties of kinship all feel great affec- tion for and take a great interest in you. ‘Well known persons born on that date are: Coleman Sellers, engineer and inventor; Edward W. Morley, chemist; Sir:Henry M. Stanley. ex- plorer; Alexander = Doyle, sculptor; Danfel Willard, railroad president; Plerre Lorillard, financier. (Copyright. 1926.) Luck in Numbers BY NEYSA MrMEIN. A Soothing Color. “I'm not sure why I am bothering You with my troubles,” trites a woman from Maryland, “when I be. lieve only a little in your numerology. I am living In the country with a sick child whose nerves have been playing such tricks that the doctor has rec. ommended complete isolation and rest. He i3 in bed most of the time. He is 9 years old and, according to your science, his birth number is a 6. We call him Jack—"" The first thing I would do, if T were Jack's mother, would be to sur- round him in his sick room com. pietely in blue; paint his walls and | turniture blue, make his bedspread and curtains of material of the same color, because blue is a powerful nerve sedative and is employed by the great chromopathic healers in treating ir- ritabllity and nervous disorders. As a tone it is almost anesthetic in its soothing and calming effect. It is the color ok harmony. The boy's birth number is 6 and his name Jack—figures up to 7. Every one knows the old proverb, “sixes and sevens.” I would try calling him Jock, which comes to a 3 and is in complete harmony with his birth number. : 1 would love to hear more about him and would be particularly fnter- ested to know whether his mother tries the “blue cure” and what its results are. (Copyright. 1026.) Montpelier Butter. Cook a loose handful of parsley for two or three minutes in boiling water; blend it well up with four tablespoon- fuls of butter, the yolk of a hard- boiled. egg and a tablespoon of an- ‘Mns. CROESUS. ha chovy paste. Then rub through a very fine uy If you add one leaf of spinach to the parsley it makes a green color, — Says Love Flies When Poverty or Rtiches Appear| Married Happiness. Dmm@flfl “The Happiest Marriages Are Those Where There Is Neither the Wolf Nor the Sports Model Car at the Door,” Says Dorothy Dix. \ AMO.\'G my acquaintances are a man and woman who mar d upon the proverbial shoestring. They started housekeeping in a little two-by-four flat, and husband hustled at his job, while the wife cooked, and patched. and sewed, and trimmed her own hats, and made over frocks, and hunted down bargains in butcher's meat. Ahd they were happy and contented and de- voted to each other. After a few years of this Darby-and-Joan life, fortune smiled upon them, as it almost always does on the thrifty and industrious. But instead of bringing them the hapiness they expected, it brought them misery, for the husband wandered away from 'his own fireside, and fell into hands of a vamp who persuaded him that he was too voung and handsome for the faithful little wife who had grown old working and struggling to help him get a start in the world, so he divorced her and married the siren. Such cases are not, alas, uncommon and they make one wonder whether poverty or riches makes for happiness in marriage. According to the old adage, when poverty comes in at the door love flies oyt of the window, but just as often when riches come down the chimney ioves sneaks out the back stairs. Undoubtedly, bitter, biting poverty is a hard test for love to stand, for even love Is materfal. When you are hungry you are more stomach than heart. When you are cold vou think more of the temperature of your body than You do of the temperature of your affections. When you are harased by bills and hounded by collectors, money, and not sentiment, fills your wak ing thoughts and nightly dreams. Love has to be comfortable before it can get in its great and perfect work. But, on_the other hand, money brings temptations from which is exempt. Lspectally does money bring temptations to men, for every rich man 1s the foredestined prey of every adventuress he meets. Married or single, women smile upon him who has the price of the luxuries their sordid souls crave, and o it is that the man who, had he been poor. would have heen permitted to walk the straight and narrow path in peace, because be is rich finds hundreds of soft white hands dragging him down into the pit. . e . verty A TWOMAN once justified her extravagance to me by s way that a wife nowadays can keep her husband is to keep him poos and she was not far from speaking the truth. A rich man has to be, indeed. a Joseph if he resists the wiles and is adamant to the flatteries and seductions of the pretty young creatures who are always out on a still hunt for a Candy Papa. And it should console many a woman for not having a limousine to still have a faithful husband, and to know that that is a luxury that few wealthy women possess. ving that the on| Statlstics show that the ratio of divorce is much greater in rich and fashionable society than among the poor. This may be accounted for in many ways. The first aid to divorce is, as I have said, the fact that the feminine branch of Willlng Workers is organized to take every man with money away from his wife, and only too often it succeeds in its nefarious designs. ~ Then the rich have time to coddle their emotions There is doubtles just as much incompatibility of temper of taste in green grocery circles. as there s In banking circles. Als wives of green grocers lose their looks and get fat, just as do the wives of trust presidents, and the flapper we have alway's with us in every grade of society The only difference is that the leisure in which to t The poor d uncong green grocer is lucky enough not to have rood over his blasted illusions. Tie 18 50 hard worked trying to make both ends meet that he hasn to consider whether his wife represents his ideal of feminine perfeet not. Also, Mrs. Greengrocer's thoughts are effectuall 10 permanen verted from yearning for a real soul mate by having to get up breakfast and patch her husband's trousers and wash wund mend and sea for the little Greengrocers. In so far, poverty is the handmaiden of domestie happiness. The rich miss this aid to n they have abundant leis and dwell upon the state ital re to take ne of their ow ss. Being freed from the daily grind, e of each other's little imperfections, frections. £ nothing else to do, sits w. ¢ es t her heartheats do mnot 10 vears ago when her Henri Adolphus approached, from which. she that she made a mistake in n and missed her affinity. applies a little thermometer (o her hushand's love. heat it has gone down to normal, and the result i Or persaps If is Mr. Croesus, who, observin not what they once were, starts out to hunt 1o trouble and tribulations and alimony finger on ken as they her did ues she pulse and obse ares in_the divorce court & that his Matilda's looks are or thrills, the end whereof is Furthermore, the habit of self-indulgence is strong upon the rich. and the men and women who are not used to doing without anything they want are not apt to deny themselves. But most of all it is horedom, the desire for fresh sensations and fresh amusements, and a general lack of some- thing to do. and some real interest in life, that is at the bottom of the domestic infidelities of the rich. The wisest prayer ever offered is when the psalmist exclaimed: “Give me neither poverty nor riches.” and this petition might well be ifcorporated In the prayers of the marriage service. For undoubtedly the happiest mar. riages are those where there is neither the wolf nor the sport model car at the door, but where the husband and wife must work together and sacrifice together, and plan and hope together, and have that community of interest that makes them indeed one. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Coprright, 192 19261 . Native of Denmark. . Designations by figures. . Evening clothes. . Engineering degree (abbr.) . Conjunction. . Gaelic name. . Exhausted. . Prefix; again. . Perform. . Pitchers. . Hill of loose sand. . Other. . Island in a stream. . Frozen water. Six (Roman). . Rough lava of Hawall. French bathers prefer the bright colors of bathing caps made in America to those of French manu- facture and will buy $30,000 worth in the coming season, according to esti- mates. . Member of a certain primitiv . Plants of a particular locali Rallroad (abbr.). . River in Ttaly. . First note of Guido's scale. . Upon. . Female deer. | A unit. . Those who sell to the public. . Gamin. Trip on & railway (two words). Expire. . Be in debt. . Abraham’s birthplace. Indefinite article. . Note of the scale. Wing of a house. \ Island of the Leeward group, Brit- ish West Indles. . Wounds. . Prepare for publication. . Comfort. Down._ . Poet. . Mistake. . Affirmative. . Spigot. 5. Octave above treble. 6. International languag: Always sealed in air-tight flav- or-preserving aluminum pack- ets. Rich, pure & fragrant, Try it. | spondents’ | You can adopt a greater independence | and finds that from fever | | dirreted to this { anvthing the first six weeks. | feeding her four tablespoons of milk | SUB ROSA BY MIMI Petting. Letters pour in to heart-throb editors all over the country piteously asking, “Can't a girl have a good time—go to dances and be rushed-——without pet- ting all the time with every man she knows! . Heart-throb editors answer *Yes,"” and urge honest young manhood to rise up and make the world safe for nice everyday girls who object to pro- miscuous kissing and moonlight par- ties. Every one feels that it's a shame if | a girl can't have a good time without submitting to the caresses of a man she privately thinks the world's worst sap. l!'lut now, oh, my sisters, give ear! For news has come from the enemy's camp. In spite of the fact that this column is run for the gals, the boys have fallen into the habit of dropping a few lines to Mimi now and then. Within the past week I have re- ceived three letters from men—all on the same subject. And from time to time before then I was constant getting appeals which run like this Mimi, why are we guys supposed to kiss everv girl we want to take to the movies? Somehow a fellow gets the idea that if he doesn’t grow sentl- mental with his companion she feels he doesn't like her. “It's an uncomfortable feeling to carry with you all evening that do or die, befora you say good-bye, you must kiss your lady or you'll be off her list want to kiss the my fraternity dance? ¢ in the name of goodness do 1 have to? Muet we Kkiss all the girls we take out” Now all the broken-hearted maidens who can’t have a good time because the horrid hoys want to kiss iisten to the words of my bo Does that letter sound as if all the boys in the world insisted on petting? H Do vou begin to realize that perhaps our own fair sex started this world- wide petting movement, and that only our sex can stop it? You to vourself that Tom alwavs Erows sentimental at the slightest provocation. Therefore he must be a horrid, tiresome boy. Did it occur to you that Tom may be the way he is just because he found Isie, another irl in your crowd, ather contemptuous of his lack of skill as a petter? Maybe half the boys vou think hor ing because they are overaffectionate are cherishing a strong resentment toward you because Vou seem to need ;0“' er words and actions to make you hanpy. The next e You spend the eve ning with a boy who vou feel is sure to bid you a very affectionate farewell | don't let the idea stay with vou | Just put it out of your mind. Tt voy stop thinking that he's going to kiss ¥ou good-night you'll stop looking as If you were waiting for it to happen And that may stop his notion that he must humor yon vou know there are hoys world who don't particularly nt o pet with every gir] they meet of attitude with the young gentlemen | who do. | Saems to me there are a lot of boys and girls in the world who think alfke on a great many subjects, only they're afraid to tell each other so. = ' | Mimi will he £134 to answer any inaviries Daper. prov ipe: addressed envelopa i inclosed. | > S aaped. . Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEVER ELDR ‘ad vour column with interest and I thought you might be able to give me some ‘advice. My baby is four months old and welghs nine and one-half pounds. having welghed a | iittle over five at birth. She seems | well and sleeps good and just gets one feeding at night and I never have to take her up or out of her bed, What worrfes me is that she vomits up nearly all of her food. If she goes to sleep after a feeding she keeps it nearly all down, but if she sta awake she vomits. She doesn’t seem to feel sick. She has done this ever since she was a month old. When she | Was put on the bottle she did not gain T am| and four of barley water What would yvou advise Answer. encounters such con- flicting symptoms. The baby is very | badly nourished and hardly g enough to nourish a new-born baby. | You surely must give her something to eat besides four tablespoons of milk | and four of barlev water. Do vou, by any chance, mean four ounces of each?” This at least would account for the vomiting and it might be possible that the child would be a stationary weight from too great a quantity ‘of food and a bad formula. Although I am quite at sea, it seems to me that what vou need is to re- | arrange the baby's diet in some way. and the only way I can help you is to ask vou to please send me fall de. tails of how vou feed the baby; and when. The child needs at least 14 or 15 ounces of milk daily and the same amount of water, plus one-half ounce of corn syrup or some other sugar. Put this into five bottles and feed at 6, 10, 2, '6 and 10. Feed this way; if she still vomits, then one will have to look further for that cause. If you are still nursing her the extra feeding may be just sur- plus. You see, I can do nothing but guess out loud. One seldom Parsley Sauce. Wash the parsley and dry well by wringing in & soft cloth. Then plek from the stalks and hold in a_tight clump between the fingers. Cut it across as closely as possible before | chopping and then chop as finely as ever you cane with a sharp knife Parsley cannot be chopped too finel: It should be like a fine green dust when finished. When chopped gather it tightly in the corner of a clean cloth and rinse in running water until the water runs green. Then wring quite dry again and mix with the white sauce. Two heaping table. spoons of the chopped parsley should be added to half a pint of sauce. This is good with boiled mutton, sal- Delicious! mon or chicken. — i outstanding departure, a stronger feel FEATURES. Making the Most of Your Looks BY DOROTHY STOTE. Dear Ann The other day 1 very prominent hips we sacket effect like the right, and oh looked enormons’ had been made wi the my dear loose ne, one w r hips rs for concealing pr (Consrizht. 10 BEAUTY CHATS Finger Nails. The problem of keeping the fin nails not only presentable but as pin and artificially perfect as present fash ion demands has been largely solved for the modern woman by the inven tion of cuticle solvent s tha stay glossy for weeks, bleache: take off any sort of stains and similar quick aids to smartness There are dozens of wa curing the nails, and m is for you to try them : which of the quick met best. If your cuticle is grows fast, undoubtedly the cutic solvents will help you. Ther about 20 varieties of these. Pr vou use some variety already, am told that of a canvass of v readers of magazines somethi 80 out of every hundred said their nails at home, at least most of the time, and of the 0. an enormous percentage, well over of them. said they use vents of one sort or an It's quick and e: run a little nice-looking lotion arour vour nails with an orange-wood stick v or a little cotton wool. rub it off or Person, or the wagh it off and have clean. neat too deeply ar ing nails as a result. In using vari Lvery oth ous kinds I've never vet found that | Cill be don scissors weren't needed, for little bits| fessional tr of cuticle are brought up that have to| You need to be clipped off. Still, they do make the YOUr finger e h ¥ of the of scissors less necessary. favored tk BY EDNA KENT FORBES. of mani Lest advice and decide suits tough well (and most be one i eas of course ill have t MODE MINIATURES The topic of hoslery has been little aiscussed for practically the last two years by fashion reports. The various tan and beige shades held such undis- | puted command that no one thought | The nauses of Ses, Train and Car omptly relieved. Expe rienced travelers testify to its positive action. SEASICK Epe D of challenging their popularity. How- | ever, with a new year new tendencies emerge—pleasing additions to a mode in danger of growing monotonous. A subtle flesh tone represents an FADELESS DYES Go farther Last longer Dye better Colors are fresher and brighter when you use Putnam. It is less trouble— more economical — a smaller amount oes farther. Putnam Fadeless Dye i the on'lflll one-package dye for materials and purposes — dyes cotton and wool in one operation. Use ssme package for tinting. Complete directions on packsge. Price 15 ceats. Bee color chart at your druggist’s. Use Putnam No-Kolor Bleach #0 Remove Color and Stains 0 ing for gray is evidenced, beginning \x with a medium and proceeding down the scale to gun metal. Clocks in sheer afternoon hose are | much in order, while a horizontal bar of perforations just below the knee has the spectal appeal of that type of ornamentation which gains charm by being only cccasionally. | Women | Secure against lost charm, this new way of solving oldest hygienic problem —offers true protec- tion; discards like tissue | ) hoid no terror for the modern wor HEER gowns and ill-timed <o cial or business demands The insecurity of the old-time “sanitary pad” has been ended. “KOTEX,” a new and remarkable way, is now used by 8 in 10 better class women. 1¢'s five times as absorbent as ordi- nary cotiom pads! You dine, dance, motor for hours in sheerest frocks without a sec ond’s doubt or fear. It deodorizes, too. And thus stops ALL danger of offending. VDisurds as easily as a piece of tissue. No laundry. No embar rassment. . You ask for it ath anyhdrug or department store, without hesitancy, simply by saying “KOTEX."” Do as millions are domg. End old, insecure ways. Enjoy hie every dav. Package of twelve costs onlv a few cents. Like it. Nothing else brings luster so quickand so safelyto silver, gold, brass or nickel. Buy a can today at your grocer, hardware, st or auto shop. KOTEX Nodamendry—discard like tissue