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WOMAN'S PAGE. THE EVENI NG STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1926. FEATURES. = 3 o7 17 How to Make Smart Feather Bags SUB ROSA The o || meneawn Willie Willis p e Disitiusions 0ro t L e e 2 BY HAZFL DEYO BATCHELOR s 0 : crent After, - . BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. i BY ML Matrimony y Peed BY ROBERT QUILLEN. Jfosalind Nash, having given up her “You've changed since you came Your Money's Worth. . e > 100 2% Siemographer 4o sake @ position | ygre “¥ou're mot: the girl you were %o many_complaints have come to| “A Beefsteak as Sincerea Token of Love as a Bunch it BT dduie netaliy 'R | when you sung Tor me'last Summer me lately from my readers with re S ahio i . . i approves from ‘the firat. and Jack Apm. | YOU had more assurance then; you | ard to their state of poverty that I'm of Violets,” Says Dorothy Dix, Explaining g i e v Bl iurialo | were more confident; moved to wonder just how you all - o . J 5 Y Rl T e mtantine Hosatind s Greh | LAy iig ne changed you?” oo fire Why Husbands Discontinue Courting. AT A 5ty ke N | “Tta o it T fuess, Thero fsn't h i : = o anarry . Nicky Armatrong, . o has 3 S weal Ebot £ some than an old-fashioned lecture on VLo Y 5. R money: K inde, Hopiener. that she cane | po¥ibing real about it. The people thrift. But there are few things w nat o, his,andt Nicky e if in%r | hero at the Tivoll are all so teverlshly all néed more, every once in & While | W7is hear a great deal about the disillusions of matrimony. Wives complain Fact (hat Ke i vieh. "Aiten Norris, & man | no one I really papay 1 come oet The easiest way to make yourself that their husbands no longer keep up after marriage the delicate ahe fs, nivaduced tol ons ight at /,un'; DItS Just how L ‘!‘:vpl-.nhlu(; TL :l‘t" stop spending money on absurd trifles| g¢tentions they showed them before marriage. Husbands complain that their Tl revsy 18 M US BT et o ) Ghout e bu is to keep accounts. It's a dull busi-f \jves Jose thefr looks and get frumpy and fat and careless about their dress | e ofers her @'Joh in hix ofice and #he | leave. T don't know whether 1l bo ness, jotting down every item of €X-|at home, and whereas before marriage butter would not have melted in their finaily acceps. any happler, but Tm taine. the pense in your daily life. Bul once|pouths, after marriage the things they say would blister a sheet of asbestos . TR XLIIL Shanece® s e th you get-in the habit recording CHAPTER XLIL b vonbaiiio s i ur extravagances, believe me, you'll == Dorothy Learns the Truth. be glan fo tails to yon b {“‘x‘a- Ta learn to cut down on them. “Before we were married,” sighs a disgruntled lady, “my hushand never B he shook hands wuh’n{ér’ he L as | If vou've in vour pockethook | came to see me without bringing me flowers or a box of candy. If he should Rosaiind bezan work in Allen | NOihogk hands with her, { Monday morning, and it’s all vanished | bring me home a single rose now or a nickel's worth of gumdrops, I should Norris' offlce the following Monday. | o) (SR, smiled and thanked him |into thin air by Wednesday, with|fall dead with surprise.’ In the few days that she had before | o0 [EO On Y foo well that she would nothing to show for it, you can dis “1 forgot about boxin' with Pug|taking her new positlon she sald [PEPRr Come bagk. miss the whole matter with a wave of —— with 1ny new shirt on until I got yie | good-bye to her cabaret lite forever. | p DOIOhY, Tiehards came to see her your hand. “Before we were married,” says another peeved wife, “if there had been [ nose bleed on ft. Mr. Rogers was amazed when she | o0 % G hm‘hrhp«elp{’l‘““\m‘(‘rgdhh‘: You can say “Oh well, 1| earthquakes und cyclones and revolutions and scandals in highlife, with (Covyright, 1096, went to him with the news of her 2l PP BERhoeled, buckled shoes, probably spent it on a lot of necessary | headlines a foot high in the newspapers telling about them, my husband decision .. |ing from her, she swe '"1‘9“’"‘1‘:"'{' I can’t think of right now.” would barely have glanced at them. “T dow't understand it at all. Miss | i, T S0l ST O i‘ ChOndie | But w - ol ledger shows| - “Now he sits up with @ paper glued in his hand every minute he i in| | FOOD AND HEALTH | |Nash.” e suld bewilderedl s ter e 0Zen. ques - app list of items like 73] the house, and when T try to talk to him he just of reply had falled to make good. 1 “Yhat on erciiiisthermatien Hose cents for magnzines, o0 cenis for = . == hadn't shown promise, T could see a |, o1t S5t OF Carth 18 1 Vi : “ ) = e h oW] Lo Ll : where have you been? 1 w | candy © cut and wave, i.cent “Before we were marrled,” laments another wife, “my husband was BY WINIFKED STUART GIBBS, reason for your leaving. I'd be £1ad |araid that you were ill, but vou look tip, 31 for a new phonograph record, { always paying me compliments and telling me that T was his ideal of Edodiocclillsg th relye Yount el N N woud lan vipnic * ele., vou begin to get wise to yourself. | womunly perfections and a saint and an angel and a living picture, and so on ey with us. Every one likes your|™uj.Ce jart the Tivoll." Youwll probably make the old wave| Now if T want a compliment from him I have to extract it with a corkserew,| wppo quality group” in the magazine | * Hosalind hesitated. She wondered | Left the Tivoli? What on earth last longer, with the expense account| with more expenditure of time and labor than it is worth.” world, not in the food world” Of | SO BestE o0, O N and 1¢| o7 Are vou going to be married? staring you in the face And these ladies, and others of the same ilk, demand to know why this is| course food 1 stures and _dis- [ [ ME Bogers would upderstund U4 Rosalind, has Nicky proposed? Is Vou'lt zive the new record a runfthus, and why a man is so changed by matrimony that his wife scarcely | (pibuters are the alert_to|She tried to explain Would it be|hat it2" Do tell me. T'm just wild j for_its money: Lefore discarding it. | knows him, and feels as if a strange bridegroom had somehow been rung in{yiintain quelit ir products, but | 0! "" ‘{"'h“lfl‘-l .."“_.',"‘ ;" :r;--}’t"'“ im | {5 know." by hewer Minguzines, and | on her at the altar. For assuredly she never picked out this unsentimental. | does the consumer always realize just | S0 BOW she flts She doubted It | I’ going into an office downtown,’ read more thoroughly those you bave. | ynappreciative dumb creature with whom to spend the balance of her life. |\ quality means 1 to food- | don ithinkX wis mace 0L 0Cl B odattna asid simply You needn't be stingy—but it .4 stuffs and what its effect is on health? : Jith o faint smile.] “Into an office? You don’t mean doesn’t hurt you to use your common >urt] Sa WO GRIODE s abso. 0 Lk you, bl thet" vor zoing bac! e a | TTHI explanation is simple enough. Matrimony is not courtship. 1t is the | Furthermore, who e e s been more than’ kind | ,"(,A}r‘d‘;’,’lir“‘ che a8 s know perfectly well wd bread and meat and mashed potatves of life, not the flubdub | W Cwaf B8 T8 SH LI RO GRS | o me an’'t been for you ISl I GHrey 3 & vather @ new dress every sol whippedcream dessert. When w man rolls up his sleeves and goes to work | K0 0 the broduction of ity WESH wouldn't had the chance to|™Wg ol often than’a lot of knick-knacks and | to support a woman he is metamorphosed from a hero of romi into the st srade produsts? Can the con | P what 1 couldido | “Are you crazy? Something has a few taxi rides { family provider, and his symbol is no longer a fairy prince, but a cash | g% FEEEREEE FRATS LT He was silent a moment, 100king | peen the matter with you for some {" No need to stow away all the al| register. "“The consumer, otherwise vou and | it Per rother thoughtfully. Then, to|time. “Rosalind, what on earth s it? \!‘.“u‘,'.l or salary in the hank it i} members of your family, ean do much, | 167 SUrPrE ¢ Fadsicoen You kn, ery well that Nicky i MOA R s e e e e - AL E =) |13 tather satistactors to make:whitl The woman who wails that her husband is not always bringing her| You can, be your intellizent Knowl- crazy about you. Have you quarreled” = {you have buy someibing. flowers and showering theater tickets on her and tuking her to places of | eqwe of the subject, prove that you | - For heaven's sake don't be silly about THE FEATHER VANITY BA WHICH ARE AMONG THE DAINTIEST|, LU S0 easy th days i fritter | amusement as he did in the 's of courtship ignores the fact that he didn’t{jnow what you are talking about and NIOTHERS ft. Nicky is easy enough to handle i T MODELS e nr S {away the douxh on trif at that haleyon period have to stand for her b il and shopping ticket. | this in itself is a help toward the - if you're the least bit clever.” - l A few bottles of perfume—a new In all good truth a beefsteak is just as si 1 token of affection as a| astablishment of hizh standards. AND THEIR CHILDREN. “I wouldn't marry Nicky Blake re ix always i ¢ I for dainty | bunding should be sewed in place so K Wind of handkerchief, three| bunch of violets What are some of the clements that he were the last man in the world, o e curried with pa that the fronds overhang the row | 5 of neansilic tobe at half che = enter into the formulating of the in- T { Rosalind flamed hotly. “He's crude rizer b thit 4 low and give a graduated Do | '~‘“;"f price—and pouf. you've spoil "he woman who knows that her husband is brinsing home every dollar | formation likely to prove most practi- The Impromptu Party. Vulgar, he doesn't know how to treat some and which are culled pu ot sew the bands too clos: Ve Shesial rns and straining every nerve to keep his family comfortable is an | cal? | & woman., I d 1 neve: r should be Loge en te | or the bag will be too thiel Wt i "' it t of rate to contrast the boiled turnips of matrimony with the chocolate creams| Training of the individual taste 1t to see him : ney slippers. fun and all the | The bands should be so clo 2 own. yowll get tived of many | of ‘courtship or to complain that her hushand no longer lays poetic offerings | comes first. The person who can Dorothy shrt 3 ies needed for the fes-| line of stitches does not ample A at her shrine as he used to do. act difference in flavor, or. | noring Rosalind's c ire i mini- jeourse, When the feathers are vio. l"“"Hli‘“K“l:n:;xn-‘k\m-xlrll:x--( won't 1.,(4\;‘ == ore accurately, the absence of ap- o rn Wome SRR attor tike | deni Jlown the rows of stitches S0 s L wushing or two—anc 5 q - zingness, certain to characterize iled Nic g mn i tor ¢ h\- in”\!l)fl!h{ wa the rows of stitches will| g T 0 o e O ornd The wife who considers the daily paper neter of her husband's | DeUZingness Wl"" o _‘}x‘f,”{: ny one. S b A e e | tong before they should Waning affection and who fancies herself neclected because her John reads| ¢ #16s “omposed of inferior materia's, 1. Betty Plerce threw hersel Whs e it o6 ToRtRie. Feather Bandings. Then you'll have to o out and do| he paver in her presence after marriage. when he never did so before, isj ¢ 1 io thoss whous busiess 10| |at his head last vear. And in sp teim n be housht| Sometimes the feathers form a|it all over i, And Gehen she| SANEI NDISEAORENlE, O forgets (i John has jio ¢ il Which 104 i "to help in the establishing and the of all this he's en_hard for vo in several styles or the home needle- | fringe around the edge of the bag. | time comes Zeally mmart peiri T2 (HIRADER IOW. except whan Heo1y with es | of proper food stand- | @ cabaret singer. Can't you put up Wonn n make them if she prefers, | Then the stiteh s are concealed be- | Of shoes, you ve to forget them hen he saw her only two or three time k. or perhaps for a littla | ® with Nicky's faults when you think of Y B peike S o aes e eoncailed DE S ot i tabs on your. | \While every day. he had leisure elsewhere in which to read. He reads at|“Tge 0 G is money?. Ber sl Ll e S sy Caraia featheralioan i hibd Sucvess. |Selr: Tust for try it. Get your | NOme now because that is where he lives and where he has the right to expect | | SHCH & sondition s | everything " 1 s fully for making these b self a nice, important looking book, | 1¢ 9° 45 he pleases p ¥ boRead | “I'don't w * Rosalind t 5 e feathers and bandings are the sort to|4nd start checking up on your money = it | burst out n't want any ma 2 se. Fronds may be glued along nar-| T¢Il me what you are doing with As for the woman who feels herself a poor. unappreciated « et ot | money without his respect. It's too How to Sew on row silk binding that matches the | VOUr money. How are you spending | because her husband no longer deluges her w flattery after marr yming nmore extre much of a price to pay, Dorothy. It It is possible 1 Jor of the fronds.. Make the strips | it? Give Your bank account a chance | her console herself with the thought that her husband is not v st - is it isn't worth it. I've ered that t lie the lenizths needed for the size of tha | do something for you {her charms. He has only come to accept them s o matter of ¢ TaRtst on. Brding what an Dorothy’s blue eves narrowed, gres e the | b When all the fronds have beer (Cobyricht, 10261 ) any other blessing. We are not forever exclaiming over the sun rising | tt rdes as “fancy gr cold. Ros no matter whether sh ind sewed to glued, at one tp, to the silk | It i e swer any inguiries | €VEIY_MOrning or our good health or our p ity | «ubtle somethnig which worked in a ¢ et or not, was worth rtions should fold the binding through the it thls nas 1ng G stamped, It is only when it rains or we are sick se our money that we| quality food may be ac cultivating with the prospect of Nicky P the pattern Ethwise center, laste down and o envealone s become vocal and rend the heavens with our complaings tention to some such points as th | Blake’s money behind her. But if she » th - rows | stitch o o shine 5 5 « o0 n follows hid throw sver and was g the row h on the machine twice, once i tollowir o I ; aundi be caught se-| close (o the outer edses and again a | EN are equally unreas g ting " First, the food should be of good| = - < 1 #n office, that ek 5 a ) e equally unreasonal 1 expecting their wives to keep up | o Them curely. S the bottom of | little way above. The glue anc N[ 3\0 ES Pirtonias 4 7 : crade and in such condition as to nE There ey i Yo% At the botiom of| liule way above, Tho glus snd tnel HOME T marriage all the allure and romance that they possessed before mar ot Al L S SR TR oo veason for culiivattos her ¢ curve Lag foundation, which, Use as described for the banding that . e L Wofeala il SHE DR WTE Tios Ioet. her beauty and that she | qimination, e O loren. Starched . party | for_including her in the b: shouid be of silk ‘or satin | is hought by the yard. This homemade | BY JENNY WREN. complexion standing over the cook Stove for him: that watkion ihe iopcr| Second, the 1] process earried | meet their most familiat friends sisffly, |longer. Dorothy was ne 0 B the hue of the feather trim- | feather banding can he used for trim. | { with the colic so that he mizht have unbroken sleep put wiinkles areant hep| CUt In preparing th ! for distribu- | and it is t for the hostess to |CXpeaient. —° o liach successive row of feather | ming frocks as well as bags. and that the reason why her hands are not ee oy Hnkles around her | tjun should be handled by workers who | get them to unhend and romp with | fopsriEht, 1 | arly every one will remember { e e 1 o mer_hands are not soft and white and kissable of immaculate personal cleanii- {each other as they would in play- [Baving scon i+ st of this, general | cause she has made corns on them toiling for him [Dess. Od stuft? Yes. but e clothes cutdoors. I tried the experi (Continued in tomorrow’s Star.) TNy o - ype in old-fashioned home his one aithe i b8 eBthEtiE et ae e ahad requent repetition, especially in such | ment of an impromptu party. Mothers = . —— AUTY CHATS BY EDNA KENT FORBES. | 1% varticularly fine example, as i¢| , AT the very man whose esthetic sense is shocked by S appearing | discussions For, w S ate T T, =5 {15 & perfect copy of one designe at Preaicfast in 4 solled wrapper is the last mun whain o pay thelcomparatively easy to convince sked to let the little ones “come over Ginger Ice | 3 of pink silk and lace negliges. Iefore marriaxe, when a woman ham | nverase oomoumen that fot el a play’ - fternoon, no mentlon | B : - nothing to do but to cultivate her looks and plenty of money with which to | must he free from dis anciers 4 )t other puests or o parte | Boil equal ¥ of sugar and water Large Pores. Of course you'can’t do this all at doll herselt up. it is easy enough for her always 1o present a pleasing | rewlize that theve fo . core mo e |l 5 e ure maturai |ond grind one-half as much preserved . X e mostrila | onCe: Certatn pores can be squeezed, Appearance to the man who 18 courting her. But it is a different story when |of cleanliness aimost au e e i e e e e : sh they do not, You can con- | gy FEBUIAr instcumen: that comes Houscaori, “ueeze the pennies and nurse sick children and do her own|tant. Food that is otharwise quite |loriously happy afternoon. with all | Then add the ginger to the sugar and sider that your skin is unusually | f‘r,h‘ o Dunge, hving & round end = rholesome—that is, as far as actual | the us party stunts, and a .n-w.lv.u r, flavor the whole with lemon zood. f ny flaw in the complexton | Lif @ hole in it Dut this aust be . ) - - = » infection nay lose that inde-. | rated t favors and evervthing. | juice, and freeze it. s ere Test The Tson T iy | done carefully, the skin must never Because husbands and wives are different before and after marriage is | scrthable te known variously as | $¥hat the clreuldion 1s “_‘n o n;\»— bruised, and aftevwards (he pores no sign that they are failures as husbands and wives. The really and truly eshness, “‘quality.” and so on, if | M e i iy i IB0Te »hf must be closed with cold water or mated couple can take a lot of things for granted and do without many |it fs handled by work ho are care- | B e f &Y PUher | with an fce rub. Otherwise, they fill outward observanc Such & man doesn't have to bring his wife home |less about thelr hands, the cooking | ' i : B pamerefure all treal” | up again from surfacs airt. flowers to prove that he remembers her. Nor does such a wife fear to lose | utensils thes use and the kichens in | Fr0llow the world’s dietetic jpont e | Akt rea et Taust andlssith er hushand’s love by letting him see her when she hasn't on all of her|Which they work i f B - Pores that aee o are clogged, |an astringent. Cold water or ice is warpaint. If you don't Lelieve it. try an experi- | UFg@ fOr active mornings T1 is constantly throwins of | Splendid, or a milkv sotion made by — Caok some cereal, let us say. in o Litter: & good deal, but noy all, | adding & few drops ‘of tincture ot Heaven help those hushands and wives who have to be always polite to|# Steamer that is scrubbed like the and healthy days is r and evaporates rest | be n to a basin of cold rinse wate each other and who cannot sink into a blessed restfulness in which neither | e1al work on shipboard. Let Bodome ellowish subst cky, | This shrinks large pores and closes has to take especial account of the other because they are just one! Water be fresh and actively bo rathe | open ones. . DOROTHY DIX e that the cover is shining clean Eat G (Copyrirht, 1096, and the dishes in which the porridge | happer “ P i - i Is served ure inz. Tastes - i Merrvlee—Shampooinz the hair agesn't it? : S5 cvery week will dry it out #nd . > ow cook another portion. Select 2 e e e 10 aon it Making the Most of Your Looks doutie boiler that, while not exactls il can rub most of the oil. and soiled, is vet a bit grimy and dull from K much of the soil, from the hai long standing on the pantry shelf. I Thi than a surfacs|You use soft towels just if you BY DOROTHY STOTE. shade less careful as to the water, | bt ting the poros | Were drving it after a shampoo. 1. in short, cook in a “sloppy™ way, i I | vi ey H r ohy ‘ stead of In a dainty way a see relis m can do| Powders or cornmeal will act {the great Duncan Phyfe. The elabo- o % 3 Yy 8Nl “, i cleansers for the hair, but they abscrh | - carved frame with its winged Dex Aon 4 : A, i e et - i —Food that “stands by” you eln o much of the oils and other secre paw feet and legs is of wine- vas quite by accident that Esther | This is a somewhat extreme illustra- | . : | Eficn soeen o st et e o e had her hair cut shorter this time. But | tion. chosen for the purpose of driving | through the morning. af the p a muds beinz be ket Gecent: 1h sxircie s baads Lttt i oh, my dear, the difference! She has|home the point that “quality” depends 3 : thing 1 f 1 ™Mary H.—You are 40 pounds over.| ofa is well placed and the ac. | 1 xery rount, faC fuce whlon loneieh on othar Dutars bealiad ithe Hind —Food that's excellently , s S ity welxht, so it will take vou at least | cessories that surround it have been ’ob did not help a bit. Now, how-|picked” variety of the or foud " : i e soves ot SOl Ehn L e o e i e gver, with a shorter cut-whicll gives | -Tufrs balanced” in protein, car- e i o e T an e Bl cr o] Yer chin and cheeks a chance to come | = = = = . s s rem by i u it your heatih sumuentle: | i IR JRUIG B 20 O makcrny | below the hair line—her face has much Quick Quaker bohyd_rates, “‘tlamm‘e‘" and 1s the ofa. | mas "'";"m'l';*‘- i { supplies the “bulk’ that R ST housttes 0 2 fortunate | B e N s { Cooks in 3 to 5 minutes— makes laxatives less often t r they do not distract atten- | Copain TRl = p Blfi DTIDIE STORIES W. BURGESS |tion from the heauty and distinction PITANG 1050 | faster than plain toast needed. n i Reeing But Not Believing. | Woodpecker about: Slaty the | B 2 ! Junco was seep-seep the Brown i | What Tomorrow Means to You g Y0 Ko Creeper wi trunk of : 5 Rabiut right near where Peter wus sit- | Tommy Tit the Chickadee was | BY MARY BLA has been fool- | telling all the world how glad he was | bt - times that |to be alive, even if the ground wi - little doubtful |covered with snow. Yank Yank the Aquarius. ire teil him | Nuthatch was getting his breakfast. | S TS it wasn't anvthing surprising the Tomorrow's planetary aspects ave ¥ e 4o Diter should eatch 4 glimpee of 4 fly- |@dverse and indicate very little of v be fooled by |50 5% Nevertheless, Poter sudden. | cheerful or propitious nature, It ldom that YOU {1y eat up very straight with his two |Would be advisable, under such con- eyes and ears. | jone ears polnted <ht up to the |ditions, (o remain a8 quiescent as pos ' put ence in 1 gy and sucia funny look on his face, | Sible and not {0 tackle anything out £ and eyes do not help out | e gidn't know that it couldn’t be, |of the ordinary. Speculation and was the case when early |1 ghould say that was Mocker the | hazard should be left severely alone. orning Peter wus up behind the | Moeking Bird: but Mocke Travel, if possible, should be avoided. ldown n the Sunny South. The astrological influences tend, how {pretty tir North for him e im- | ever, to try your disposition much ~ {mer.” Now, who under the sun could |morc strenuously than they promise t he? It must have been Butcher the | io affect your practical affairs. It 1 hrfike that [ saw just now. Yes. most essentinl that vou should estab- it 1 t have been Butcher t lish pofse and exercise deliberatfon. 1 have heard that at | Do not yield to impulse. but “Stop, Le and Mr. Mocker look much alike. | look and listen:” |'Fhey are about the same size and they | Children born tomorrow are destined [ hoth wear gi nd white. Butcher is |10 have rather hectic times during in- here, for Nanny Meadow fancy. They will he endowed with » Mouse told me that he nearly caught (tood constitutions and recuperative (G L the same, that did look like |shilities. Nevertheless, they will all { Mocker. Goodness’ knows, I've seen | require very careful nutrition and an | enough times: I ought to know |abundance of fr ir, if they are to There goes that bird around the | develop into normally physical men — corner of Farmer Brown's house and |and women. In character, a boy who e tim B it Mocking Bird, . e morninz eter | He should in s up there Tommy Tit. tha Lave L Lome in the dear OId | Bird, but T didn rier i No one knew that bet-{ “\Where did h ter than he. But vou know how | Tit. curfous Peter s Curiosity zets| “He went ar Peier into more serapes than a few. | Farmer Brown' Juset now he was curious about Danny | Then why and Nanny Meadow Mousc, He hnew they were Living in Farmer Brown's ‘I don’t dare enhonsc: that was all he did know. |honestly. So he was hanging around to see if he could 1 & zlimpse of them after T Farmer Brown's [ in the henyard was h « ju it om one apple tree to another and 1y irown’s b ingz particulas ver ird at that Summy Jay was about; Drummer the cream and powdered sugar. ¥ had let the hens Stew the prun two tablespoon: little water and boiling prune ju! st idly looking around ed, when he saw a bird Parmer s noth- ng in seeing & the morning. a vine:on Now, 10 prunes, aslde to stiffen. hour of ix the living image of Mocker the | or T cannot believe my | m Dee. dee, dee, chickadee.” cried a \ merry ifttle voice. There was Tommy Tit trying to get a drink from a drop MR e e s obin fie hang T SAW MOCKER THE | ing from s twig just above Peter's BIRD.~ REpLIED | head. “What are you staring at, 4258 EPLIED | poters eried Tommy, his bright eyes twinkling . - “I thought 1 saw Mocker the Mock- Il wlonz the Old Orchard, | ine Bird,” replied Peter. “Of cou: to where the latter join: T didn’t, bat certainly I saw some one n's deoryard | that looked just like him. It is tough, t I cannot believe my Tocker the Mocking 't e go?" asked Tommy round the corner of replied Peter, ou go around ter him?" asked Tommy Tit. to,” sald Peter quite (Copyright, 1626.) Prune Charlotte. es and pit them. Soak fuls of gelatin in .a add to it a cupful of jce. Line a mold with slices of stale cake, fill the mold with pour the juice in, and set Serve with whipped | of the sofa itself. +Copyright, 1926.1 the w | A girl will be A boy will ha sonality. wher the first for will be willful and ob: ht inate. menable and winsome. © a strong, forceful per- « a girl will be easily lled. A boy will be headstrong and a leader, whereas a girl will be pliant and of the clinging ivy class. They will both present difficult problems nd their future will very much d pend on the environment in which they are brought up. If tomorrow is your birthday, you e credited with the possession of some great possibility, and in some cases this reaches a very high spirit- ual order. If you have not attained that success to which you think you ave entitled, study vour own ability, find out how it fits in with your in- clination, and then work diligently, even though you have to make a radical change in your surroundings to achieve the end in view. 1) not be content, for the sake of ease or comfort, to be a square peg in a round hole. You have many friends and ad- mirers—more than you suspect, as you are sympathetic and kind, faithful to a friend and constant in your love. Your home life should be very happy, especially 1f you have been fortunate enough to secure a mate who appre- clates your good qualities and is com- panionable in the best sense of the term. (Copyright. 1926.) | | i i | TRADE MARK | At Sloan’s Art Galleries : 715 13th Street REGISTERED A Magnificent Collection of Persian and Chinese Floor Coverings ! in all sizes from the most re?owned rug-producing districts of the FAR EAST To be sold at public auction within our galleries— 715 13th Street MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY February 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th, 1926 At 2 P. M. Each Day On View Up to Hour of Sale Each Day Note: The above sale offers an unusual opportunity to the rug- buying public, as the size and varlety of this collection is unequaled in the city. Terms, Cash. C. G. SLOAN & CO., Inc., Aucts. Daintiness Under|the most trying hygienic handicap now assured. NEW way offers true protection —discards like tissue. IGHT frocks, sheerest gowns . . . wear them now any day, any time, anywhere, without a moment's doubt or fear! The uncertainty and insecurity of the old-time “sanitary pad” has been ended. Most women now use “KOTEX" «..a new and remarkable way. Five times as absorbent as ordi- nary cotton pads. Deodorizes, thus ending ALL dan- ger of offending. )/ Discards as easily as a picce of tissue. No laundry. No embar- rassment. Obtainable at all drug and depart- ment stores simply by saying “KOTEX.” You ask for it without hesitancy. Costs only a few cents. Proves old ways a needless risk. 12 in a pack- age. In fairness to yourself, try it. KOTEX No laundry—discard like tissue By IRENE Take Care What Kind of soap teuches your face The kind beauty experts use them- selves—how to use O endanger a good complexion with an unproved scap is a folly. | The only kind of soap to use on your face is a true complexion scap. Some soaps that arc excellent in rr‘:(a_ny ways are too harsh for the skin. Launder, scrub, with any soap you wish. But if guarding a good com- plexion is your aim, take care. Use a soap made to protect it. Thus Palmolive is so widely urged ... a soap made solely for ome purpose: to protect the complexion. A soap made by experts in beauty to be used frecly and lavishly on the skin. The accepted beauty method today is the simple rule that follows— Vature’s formula to “Keep That Schoolgirl Complexion.” ading skin experts urge. Thousands of beautiful complexions prove its results. Follow this rule one week—Note the improvement that cemes Wash your face gently with Palmolive Soap, massaging it softiy into the skin. Rinse thoroughly, first with warm water, then with cold. Tf your skin is inclined to be dry, apply a touch of good cold cream—that is all. Do this regularly, and particularly Keeping Your Schoolgirl Complexion Copyrighted 1926 by P. O. Beauty Features CASTLE rouge, if you wish. But never leave them on over night. They clog the pores, often enlarge them. Black- heads and disfigurements often fol- low. They must be washed away. Get real Palmolise Do not use ordinary soapas in the treatment given above. Do not think any green soap, or represented as o0& palm and olive oils, is the same as Palmolive. It costs but 10c the cakel—so little that millions let it do for their bodies what it does for their faces. Obtain Palmolive today. Then note what an amazing _difference one week makes. The Palmolive Com- paay (Dcl. Corp.), Chicago, Illinois. in the evening. Use powder and 3168