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1 1 WOMA Carriage Boots ' MARY stu it is hoot— Wellington extabl e hearts of has b £ 50 firmiy enable Bngland and ' the outstanding Lond of the sea while th live none t* The 13 hinks it looks very o fact that it is not startness —while the Parvisian cannot see why she should display an ankle Pavisian wil smart wade thick and clumsy hy shapeless | AND WHITE FUR N THI EVENING BOO SHOWN Al ALSO O N INK RIEBC SHOWN TI \LOSHI BEIGE CLO BROWN FUR no one ap inzton hoots er warmth and her ankles wool stock ks, The only French women know that a these wool under: here. ation is heer: hem in th in Slippe in evenin, kles by day ndls lizht—i ver wble thing to ol il though 1 nkies the ixhic comes to the veri vour hoots by | ve tuck in the 2 warm evening doors oh as tap up ler +pacition Ciine comes 10 Tacl: has in olied lee 'to Nirky, demands gy deer” uind, aud in <rire whe weill do anything Toalind _orders fim 1o apapemiont aud reatizes ar last how TP Vas Mheapened hersel? Neer y sends her a diamond bracele v CHAPTER XXXIX Failure. 1. for the first Fosa apa went through her so etically. Tiers was not the 1 which enthusiasm could he simu A certafn amount of hrilliancy pe e nality was ne words acr imd all the while was conscious of he miade an effort to whip up her sinsn but heart w within her to make it possible could not bhe cleve she could not ~ provocative, wnd when for the first e sinee she had sung at the Tivoli encored enthusiastically o knew that she had failed. women in whom the is so strong that they 1 thing through even in the vt-breaking misery. Rosa- 1. however, was not that tvpe. Ter suceess had been due in large MOTHERS AND u iled e was not HEIR CHILDKEN. The Post Offijce Game. othie keep The ¢ n which vainy provide enter s They write let nd place them in the een duly marked wrries the veral of n days gat 1 W hicl acts us n and I which they read aloud. The “izhbors might be surprised if they 1ld read these letters, some of which - their addresses. The little game fair to make clever writers of the hildren, and the older one, enjo it us ich as the (Cops gl LUnG.) hed come one fushions ish woman despite Paris-born Liintil tonight he il never ne NS PAGE. in Cool Weather MARSHAL vour feet in some soft of earriage or wotor boot. 1t your box at the opera |or theater proves to he deaughty, cary your motor boots along with vou and sit with vour feet tivked into them. Of lightcolored velvet and satin’ trimmed with fine fur they are dainty enough to léok well with any evening frock. For evening wear prefer fur-trimmed beige zuloshes— | especially in the city—because now *ladays even the most privileged mem- bers of society must neeks stand around walting for their motors, or | may, indeed, have to walk to the corner of the street to avoid the traftic con- westion that oceu when the theaters are out in the Winter (Copsright. 1 many women MENU FOR A DAY. | BREAKVFAST, ' Bananis with Cream Corned Beel Hash Dropped E Coffee Cake INCHEON Baked Macaroni and Cheese Cream of Tartar Biscuits Cup Custards Sugar Cookies DINNER ‘egetable Soup Roast Lambh. Tea Cold { pon. mavhe thats the way jwerld with eny man that | thiug THE EVENING LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Pops fe tle uvvertizing hook and they wunt { pops pickture in it to make it look | better, and ma has bin reminding him of jt wenever she tninks of it. being most of the time, so today he wenc erround to the fotograters to ask | questions, me going with him. pop ing, Gosh how 1 dred it, -] havent d my pickture taken for 10 yeers nd then 1 bleeve I took ether, or I).r]rmps it was ony a local anesthet- ick. And wen we got to the fotografers the sine sed, P. Glantz, fotografer, 3 up. Ony there was some sam- of peeples fotografs down there Elass e nd pop started to [ look at them saving, Yee gods look at this fellow, theyve made him look as if he jest saw his own ghost Maybe he looks like that nuturally. he looks, T forbid, Td the same looked like { and hs pop_ sed, think 1 Heaven lived in that 24 hours out of the 24 And we started to go upstairs, and «t the top of the ferst Nite there w some more forograffs, e bein; man looking if he forgot some- ind couldent remember wat pop saying, O for Peet sake, look at that berd, how do I know they wont make me look the sume way G wizz, pop, you couldent look that way if you tried, I sed, and pop sed. ianks for the vote of confidents. And we kepp on going up and wat s at the top of the 2nd flite but some mans pickture making him look Brown Raked Stuffed Potatoes Roiled Squash Boiled Onions H Lemon Meringue Pie. ! Coffee i COFFEE CAKE Cream one-quarter cupiul ter with one cupful su r, one egs well heaten, one-q cuptul milk igd one u halt cupfuls flour, mix sifted with two teaspoonfuls Laking powder and one-third - | | ! | teaspoonful salt. Beat thor- | | | | oughly, spread in buttered pan, sprinkle with currants, shred: ded citron and seeded raisins, dot with bits of butter, sprinkle with sugar. dust with cinnamon and bake in quick oven. Serve hot, cut in small squares. MACARONT WITH CHEESE. Onehalf pound macaroni hroken up aml cooked in plenty of hot salted water 20 minutes, Turn into colander and pour cold water over it. Make sunce two eupfuls hot milk, one tablespoonful butter, on ful flour and salt to taste. Put layver of grated or prepared cheese in bottom of Daking dish, then laxer of maca- roni, then sauce, and repeat un- Gl dish is almost full. Cover with bread crumbs and dot with butter. Bake umtil brown. LEMON INGUE PIE. H Crust—Ona cupful flour, two rounding tablespoonfuls shorten | ing, three tablespoonfuls ice | | water and pinch salt; bake in | | quick oven. Filling—One cupful | | sugar. voiks two eggs, two cup- | | fuls boiling water, juice and rind two lemons, two rounded tablespoonfuls cornstarch, little salt. Mix cornstarch and sugar, mix lemon and egg vollks: com- bine the two and pour boiling water over. Cook until thick stirring constantly, Don't cook too long or it will be sicupy. When crust and filling are cold, fill and meringue top with whites two e two table- spoonfuls sugar and little lemon juice. Bake in very moderate oven 20 minutes. { lar tablespoor is ME BY HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR {part to her confidence in herself. Tt | was only through self-confidence and | poise that she could acquire the lovely daring that had made her act <o charm. ing. Tonight, with the consciousness heivy upon her that she had been a failure in her outlook upon life, she could bring no contilence to her sing ing. She had lost heart; she was no | longer sure of anything As she went back to the dressing room after her act, Lura Lang was just going out in the South Sea Island | number. The two girls passed each | | other | tancied that she glimpsed a look of {triumph in Lura’s eves. Lura was impregnable. She could never he ¢ b N attack of conscience, She hadn’t Rosalind’s finer qualities: | she had heen too long on Broadway and was too much a part of it to le anything hother her At her dressing table Rosalind s motionless, for & long time. She won | dered whether she ought to go to Alr. Rogers, who must have realized her failure that evening. he might go | 10 his office and plead a blinding head ache. She mizht tell him that sh hadn't wanted to go on tonight, Lut | had forced herself to make the effort. | He would believe her, course. But. | she did no better tomorrow | night, if she could not force herself 1o | be'gay and daring and spirited, what then?” She was sitting what to do when a to her. She took it apathetically, but, is she unfolded it and skimmed through the few lines, curiosity surged up in her. It was from Allen Norris. | He was in the restaurant and, if pos ] sible, would like to talk to her for a few ‘moments. Would she be kind | enough to see him? | Rosalind was suspicious. Why had he asked to speak to her tonight of all nights? Other nights when she had been a conspicuous success he had | iknored her, or bowed to her with cool indifference. Tonight she had been a failure and he had sent her a note. | The thought flashed through her { mind that he wanted to gloat over her. | He probably wanted to see her <o that he could say “I told you so.” He | probably curfous to” know what had used the slump in her usually flaw- less performance, and then when he had probed for and found the reason he would probably treat her to another lecture on life. T won't see him!” she told herself | flercely, and vet there was something about the man that drew her. He was so secure, like a big usly rock in the | midst of "turbulent waters. Besides, | whether she liked him or not, she in- | stinctively trusted him. She knew now that her first impression of him had been wrong, and no matter what |she thought of him. she felt him to | tie sincere. After all, it would do no | hurm to see him. and, besides, she w | rather curious to hear what he had I'to sa; She smiled wearily as she rose slow- Iy to her feet. Often in the past she | iiad longed for the time when, having | made good, she would snub < if ever she saw him ags wavs she had wanted to 1 that he had Leen wror {her as he had: she had flannt her triumph in his face, pressed there wondering ; note was bhrought ke him see in warning 1o i 1 Conright | Wontinued in tomorrow’s Star) Oatmeal With Sauted Apples. | Have ready sufficient cooked oat meal to serve the family. Place a slice of apple on an individual dish. Top with a serving spoon of oatmeal and sprinkle with mixed sugar and | “Lndgon. i ’ | one of these ch {and” matching vith curt nods, and Rosalind | | effect i s if he wasent thinking of enything ind couldent if he tried. pop said, Yee gods I cant go on with thi izzent werth it, Id rather home and face vour mother. Wich he did. MODE MINIATURES From the top of a motor bus in one of our large cities | spotted a de- lightful shop with a sign over the door which read: “The Trousseau Shop.” Immediately visions of rare loveliness were evoked. I could not resist. The shop must be explored. As a result T am now in possession of rming four piece en 1y called “trousseau nly their ds virtue would adr ation sembles, prope sots For cert capture the immediate of any bride-elect, And if you may such, white or a pale wr choice. If not ¢ pastel shades on. ss vourself as tlesh & ould be whole Gwaits vour MARGET BY MYRTLE MEVER ELDRED. Bands. Mrs. P E. PUs mot “Evervwhere [ read that ‘hands' should be kept on children until the: are 3 or 4 vears old. Will you kindly tell me why? I am my child of 2 years is 100 warm because she per spires very easilv after every little ertion. She wears a part wool band, single breasted shirt, one of last vear's, so that it is worn rather thin pantie body, outing flannel and white petticoai. and thin dress. 1 think she has on too much, but what shall T take off? Shall T buy new part wool shirts and leave off the Land? “I enjoy your articles so much and cut quite a few of them out and oftimes help out mv friends with the dilemmas by referring to the Yol Baby and Mine scrapbook.” Answer. protection for the al. In the case of very thin chil Bands are a men. en, with little or no fat on the ab- | domen, this is rather important, changes of temperature may upset the digestion. Your baby has on too many jothes. that, is true. though if by ntie body™ you medan rubber pants the heat of these ¥ enuse the child to perspire chil and has all would be quite safe this Spring to re move the bands, I would not do it now. I don't think she needs the flun nel skirt,'if the house is warm. Sk ought to he able to get along with ti bands, medium weight union vhich wonld he a hetter purchase than Just shirts (providing she is trained) thin hose, white petticoat and drawers. She can have additional clothes put on when she goes out of doors, if the weather is very cold. The other suggestion is but since 1 do not live ve your city it would be inconvenient to try to carry it ont. is fat =ood one. Luck in Numbers BY NEYSA MeMEIN. As many writers have observed, the face often registers the natural expression of colors. Red, for in- stance, accompanies anger and pas- sion. The blush indicates shame. Yellow betokens illness, woe, envy Blue is the result of fear, agony and hate. But the most outstanding wacteristics of blue are not ex- pressed by the human countenance. The color of the sky has always been associated with hope, serenity, truth nd constancy. You so often hear the expression. “true blue,” meaning tidelit Blue is dignified, sedate, soothing and melancholy, but to me its most striking qualities are cold- ness and intelligence, Blue is a wood deal like green in that it comes in so many lovely shades. I think it is the most all- around becoming color a woman can wear. If her eyes are blue it makes them look bluer, and if she has blonde hair it seems to make it more golden. Blue is a zood color for pale people hecause—a cold color itself—it brings out the little warmth and color their skin may have. One exception to this ix clectrie blue, a very trying ~<hade for most people, but extremel effective for those who can wear it. Blue lus vecently been used s essfully in treating various nervor disorders. The wallpaper, woodwork. curtains, rugs and furniture of the patient’s roont are done entirely in certain shudes of blue, and even the nurse’s dresses are blue, They tell me it is sury how quickly neu- rotics respond to this all-blue treat- ment—that its soothing and curative truly remarkable. (Copyright. 1926.) = Farmers of Latvia are aroused azainst cutting of flax prices by the Suvernuent mon m is going to zet out w lit- | ntiness | as | the | suit. | close to | Would You Run Away? Do you run away from danger by re afraid, or are you afraid because you run away? Suppose you were walking through atch of woods when suddenly, directly in your h, you saw a big bear. Just imagine such a situation! Here you are without a gun or weapon of any kind and the big bear staring you In the eye! Now there are two theories which explain your actions in such a mat ter. Until a few years ago, when two famous scientists made certain dis- coveries, it was held that what oc- curred in your body was about as fol lows: You see bear. You become afraid and run away or else vou feel brave and stund there attempting to tight it off. This was th fdea | meerning fear. The 1 A however, is different. It that your reactions work th ay: | You see a bear. You run away’ S YOu run vou are terribly @ vou first stand and fight the 1d afterward th comes over o1 feeling of great brave “You could hear his kne is more truth than fiction. We actual- Iy feel weak at the knees when in S knock,” great fear. What takes place fs that during fear a set of glands, called the | WE GO SHOPPING BY MR life | back | | Dentifrice. me preserving the are o concerned ahout teeth these days than | aps that's why so much adver of tooth pastes, powders and washes Las been profitable. advertising, in turn, has, of course. helped to drive home the need for oral cleanliness. Still, with dozen preparations, of whose merits we | have read from every newspaper, strect car and highway billboard, it is | ot always the simplest process to| know which one is best for us, | AS a matter of fact, th genuine | quality of these various preparations differs but little, as vour dentist will tell you. And you should let him tell you' The reason vour denti: n the selection of that s, if you nesd « tention fn this line dentist is cor Knosls. One paste or ¢ be nended most h the 1 jrer to prevent pyorrhea. a take the film off vour teeth nother to correct acids in the Fach one may be purpose and be a iwell, but first you st tively what vour part tising mouth The a outstanding should help dentifrice- particulur at ts that none but | petent to make your recor inufac 1d know posi- | ular needs are, | For Small Mercies. of our children it to L M seiwol would cle ld have a little fun boy who never did an carpest work in his lifa and know what to do with him: 1t adone for a day mly had ent teacher. Ellen is snch an old crab. Wenrs in a pug. he nearly faiu 1 Maybelie cume in the other| < with her mouth rouged. | h a back number.” That from a girl who 0 out into the d to earn her own Jiving, Miss Fllen was conscienti- | {ousiy trying to teach her the best way do it, but this highspirited givl ~corned her beca lish, according isn't d Mins umbling here they o wish the from a | would ne Selt M ber hai when morni a must soon to the fit novies. bring m imo o dad and moth Iter it partic They're hope <s. There we are with the oid wal- | | e {nut furniture my at-grandmothier | | house on't had and we could just as well sell it and met u davenport ®nd two over ffed chairs and look like other peo wle. But no. We must stick to the old stuff, family portraits and ail. 1 my friends into weird en have It is true we of the older ge \tion cling tenaciously to the habits il the familiar things of yesterday. We hold to what has stood the {est of livingz, of service, of time. We to our memories. Generally we in doin; - The walnnt furniture " fathers’ time is quite as lovely us the overstuffed set coveted 1 the h “hool senior. The air of formality the living room is not such a arrier to social standing as the chi ren mav think. Neitherare the man of vesterd: and the customs of {ihe day Dbefore to be quite despise simple ways and the mall ‘reies wre still to be cherished in ratitude in spite of the flustered in experience of vouth It vou believe this to be true train the children in that spirit in the heginning ch them to enjoy and {he grateful for little thing ne | simple t costing but a few nts should he offered and accepted as a royal favor. Why not” The material i side of the gift, the material quality of the toy, does not matter”in the least. | The child who has an extravagance of | plunder tosses it aside for the 5-cent | rubber ball that actually bounces. Bring up the children to know and | appreciate the simple loveliness of people; the bare and beautiful spirit lot truth; the ease and peace in con- tentment with little; the appreciation of small mercies like food and clothing and shelter and education and love, all so simple and so free that our children are in danger of overlooking them altogether. | A New Teacher. ! There is a sort of pupil that always Vlames the teacher for anvthing that oes wrong, and everything goes | vong with that sort of child. i “I have a C_on my report. She i zave it to me for turning my head. | Just for turning my head. She never | zives Jennio a C, though. Always! picking on me. “I can't get those examples right. She never explains them. Even if I ralse my hand and ask her, she says, ‘Put your hand down.’ I wish I had Miss Grey. She's a decent teacher. “I couldn't get my home work done. She rubbed it off the board before I got a chance to copy it. She's always doing it. She never walts until 1 get done.” By and by the wearled parent asks: “But_how do the other children get along” They seem to have good marks, and they never have any trou- ble copying home work or notes. How is it You have all this trouble? Seems | to me it you attended to your business | a little better you would get your work done. 00.” “They nave just as much trbuble {as me.” and the creases in his fore- | head roll inio billows and disappear in | his_tousled hair. | When a child brings home such | stories as these listen patiently and try to set him right. Help him start his home work and explain his diffi- cultles, It is because he is failing that he complains so. Give him a lift with his work. Then tell him to stop complaining. Whining and putting the blame on ather peaple is alwavs the sign of the unulit. Teach him that wher ke fcels Te HARLAND H. ALLEN. | wien | mouth, ti | 10 “schoot se she was not |, | tion | <chool STAR, WASHINGTON, D. 6, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1926. ODD FACTS ABOUT YOURSELF BY YALE S. NATHANSON, B. Sc., M. A. Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania. FOOD AND HEALTH BY WINIFRED STUART Gl Food Specialist. The dietary treatment of gastric ul- | cer cannot be accomplished in a day, nor vet in two. It is a case.of long, suprarenal glands, which are located on the kidneys, empty into the blood stream a fluid called adrenalin. When | giow, patient ¢limbing up the hill of this substance gets into the blood it | heaith. Moreover, because of the ne- uses the smaller blood vessels, called | cossity for daily observation of the arterioles, to constrict or get smaller. | Lutjent, ao general directions can be The result is, that since the passage- | given as a blanket cure for every one. wiy for the blood has been made|” The diet should be made up from smaller, the heart must pump faster |(he following foods: Stralned soups in order to drive the biood through | ot asparagus, corn, rice, potato, peas, the body. As the heart begins to beat | heans and lentils, And strained vege! faster 8o the lungs begin to Work |{albe pulp, of about the consistency harder and we pant. of mashed potato, from asparagus, ow the reason that we say we feel | ninach, carrots, celery, eggplant, weak at the knees is that the blood | peys and beets. Rice, wheat and corn supply to the arms and legs becomes | nd other fine grained cereals. Crispy much lessened because most of the | ,sted breads, malted milk, malted Wood 1s Kept jn the larger body cav- | nufs banana pulp, purea of dates ity. the trunk. | sweet apple, alligator pear; frozen Iixperiments have been made by |pqdings, custards without sweeten- Dix. James and Lange. which prove | i “allics “olive oil, cream, soft eggs ut this substance, called adrenalin, | coriige cheese, with bran and agar esponsible for the changes which |\ vequired to control. sur. This presents the actions of | \\Vhen arranging & set people in an entirely different light e friom thig list, ofie It is nard to guess what science still | 1005 iy this wise: holds in store for us, hecause as we | pro e Sl V0T five ounces ecome aware of the fuct that much of | gutmeal with cream, 2% ounc our behavior is due to certain physi-|7Three ounces of a fruit puree, a cal qualities, glands, blood suppbly. | posched egg and two slices of graham ete., we will be able more and more | o g% o0 G0 not only to understand and aceount | P SEEEGRL pon i ounce of olive for the actions of people, but to g0 @ | 41”4 or 5 ounces of a cream of vege. step further and to make predictions | Vi “coup, @ baked potato with regaTGIIE umun hehinylor. 4 ounces of each of two vegetables, (Cupsright, 1026.) mashed and strained to x pulp. Two ices of toasted bran bread, with a halt ounce of butter and a fruit des- sert, such as a baked sweet apple. For supper it is advisable to begin with another quarter-ounce of olive Then come a plate of porridge m gluten flour, it G515 ounces; 0 ounces of another fruft puree, tes if the ane served at dinner en of Lanuna ounces of cream or cottage cheesze, 3 ounces of unsweetened herries in season and two slices of whole wheat toast served with a half-ounce of hutter. Such a diet affords approximately | 2,000 calories of energy. Jt is rich in lime and iron, gives adequate pro. tein, fat and starch, and is, in short, well balanced When ulceration of the upper in- testines exists, the diet must be non- irritating. In case of ulceration of the colon, the procedure in directly | | © of daily | may go | | of b A decayed tooth may be the cause of the aecfd in your mouth, aud only a dentist can fill that tooth, while to de- | pend on an antiacid tooth paste in| such condition not only is dangerous | 1o yourself, but an unfair test for the puste As to paste « ter of pe whetlier one should @ powder, it is largel sonal preference pla really have much better suc one and some with the other form: still T think that more than half of the explanation ix due to the fact that they enjoy using one form best, | und on that account use it more relt- | the opposite. Here it is not neces- ously. Some dentifrices, too, are|sary to avoid foods containing rough- “seasoned” and scented more 16 our | yze. The diet shogld be planned with liking than others. It certainly is per idea of complete cleanliness or missible to use the one which sults us | freedom from waste matter. Agar and best in that w That fact alone | hran will help, 1 in many « a irgues for move faithful use of it 1 use of acidophilous milk After all, dentifrices desizned |, atiaTaet principally to keep the teeth clean and in case of other diseases, prevent decay. We can usk vs to be desired, Tt little wore of them. When Luyin tement to <av dental preparation we shoul: of constipation L by these peets above rention of ul huy es s ex he: Just Mg ¢ prevention not 100 s the sidance ! go far towar coration of the colon. When uleera e digestive s Be. serib t ber that follow th in xo T that did not le o e portion of em is the at cian in eth needed aration in the Tt i the @ of @ ple wash may be atl correct the difficulty. alenlated 1o at the individ render himself onva | nimself cat ‘ valuable aid Once let everw this » to Sue Iy master 1y izestive nd their one res 1 nd forms ¢ ulcers flee awa simple no workings 1o disturbances and L 1 silently whine ris Taint wi Jistory of Bour Name By I'l"ll:':l:slli NOWLAN. ‘ EBERLEY. RACIAL ORIGIN—Welish or Cor- & roval ronat nish, German, possibly Scottish. But ent in his lanentati awi| English. he will hring vou ones tomor- | SOURCE—A locality, a given name, ow, and his failures will increase and | a characteristic. multiply. Whatever vou do, b 4 on | to your common sensa and do not and K the principal other teacher for vour downtrodden boye Remember that there are 30 or 10 more trodden on by the same foot is more than likely there is g really cloven about it hers are not perfect beinzs. | 4 not function in this world were. Most them are try 110 do their duty under tryir nees. Support them in th Even i what of it? to his Hps and ring in his mind fuilure coni dnst some he is hidir himself and coddlin worse next ti his troubles ponsibility hi and you will will Teach him to f houlder the re shorteomings, hewn him th is a famil fhle sour ame h sev es, which certainly assumed 1o have developed m more than one of them. Unfortunately it is unusually diff cult to get track of it in the Middle Azes. but from known data, consid- ered in the light of linguistic develop rent. the following explanations pre- | sent themselves. As erman family me it may | be considered the development of a nickname indicating a_personal char from “eber,” u “boar,” and i vors metzomsibn a5 3 enning ' “hoarlik figuratively himself. Al his life he will have to| “flerce” or “bold.” Or it may have uljust himself to the co nd | come from the given name indicating the people he nieets. wod | this characteristic. i lice to begin. | As h Cornish _British Safeguard the children against [would be the development of “aberlee. use by selecting the right sort of | indieating a marshy place where two | teacher and then stick to the or three streams come together. | Mr. Patri will give personal a ¢ equivalent for this would to inquiries from parents or|he and the name, developing teachers on the eare and de | in the section where highlands and velopment of children. Write him, in | lowlands of Scotland fuse, might be care of th ~elf- | due to unconscions redundancy. Those uliressed. stamped envelope for reply . <peaking English coming across the Me Patri will give personal attention to | locality known as “Iubar” might eon- | mauites from barents and school teaviicrs coivably ndd thelr own deseriptive Write him in’care of this b word “lea” to it. not knowing that “tamed. addreseed envelon the menning of the two words were virtually the same. As an English family name it a development of a Saxon name of a similar meaning serman. ton may given to the (Copyright. 1926.) | Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. Words eften misused—Don't Cuse “device” and *“de: is a noun meaning a contrivance, vise' is a verb meaning to contrive. Often mispronounced—Wednes | Pronounce Wenzday. Standard says Wenz.dy. Often misspelled—Goddess. Two d's, two s's. Synonyms—Impulse, impetus, incen- tive, motive, incitement, instigation. Word study—“Use a word three | times and it is vours.” Let us in. crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word, | Formidable—exciting fear; dangerous to encounter. “But from these formi dable censors T shall- appeal to you." o -Date Roly-Poly. _This is a good dessert. Make a | rich biscuit dough, roll it out, and | spread with dates which have been | stoned, chopped and stewed in a very little water until soft. Sprinkle with sugar, roll up, steam for three-quar- ters of an hour, then place in the oven long enough to dry off the top. erve with a soft or hard sauc “Best Is Cheapest” "SALADA TEA Conforms To This Slogan “Every time I'm broke and ask dad for a loan he comes back with ‘So's your old man.’” — Tnemployved cared for by Vienna number more than 75,000. » FEATURES. The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright, 1926.) 10, Across. Luminous circle Bound around clation of degres Farewell Poemns. Man's Without Brother o Prolonged Point of the « Anything shupe Designate Ocean Muscular t Bind Mineral Stuck in the wud Sonthern cucke Down 1o of tie de itehing spring s, . Turkish con Thickness Prefix; into Half. Three-tor £ time An obstruction “ver stoppir t moving. together Ir onn pound of nehialf a cup el spoonfuls of Jlespor fuls of thick baking soda vineh o hout st tla w water. to har il u The proper care of your teeth and gums What parents e 9 should know l g 7 THAT little girl whose eyes flash out at you so gayly—what are you doing to protect her teeth and gums? Are you really aware of the importance of teeth and gums to her health and development? Then this statement by a prominent dental author- ity will interest you vitally: “Cleaning the teeth with a safe dentifrice should begin as soon as the first teeth appear, for careful experiments have demonstrated unquestionably that when children’s mouths are kept in a healthful condition by the use of a safe dentifrice such as Squibb's Dental Cream, made with Squibb's Milk of Magnesia, those chil- dren are protected to a remarkable degree from the most prevalent children’s diseases.”” That Squibb's Dental Cream is safe for all—that it will protect the teeth from decay and the gums from infection, has been definitely proved by abun- dant clinical experience. Parents! protect your chil- dren’s teeth and health, as well as your own, with— SQUIBB'S DENTAL CREAM. At drug stores everywhere. 40c a tube. Remem- ber the name — SQUIBB'S DENTAL CREAM — and that it is made with Squibb’s Milk of Magnesia, which safely neutralizes the acids in the mouth which decay the teeth and irritate the gums. © 1926 ¢ cup of 7/ealt/; at the Dreakfast table that means Efficiency at the Business Desk. BAKER’S BREAKFAST COCOA Has a full rich flavor delicious to the taste; it is invigorating and sustaining. Henry C. Sherman, Professor of Food Chemistry Co- lumbia University, in book “Food Products™ says: “Cocoa, inaddition to the stimulating property, due to the alkaloid theobromine, and the flavor which makes it popular both as a beverage and in confectionery, has a considerable food value. WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. ESTABLISHED 1780 DORCHESTER, MASS. CANADIAN MILLS AT MONTREAL Booklet of Choice Recipes sent free.