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WOMAN'S PAGE. Log Cabin Features Pioneer Party BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. n entertainment would be party given at this season. 1 accent simplicity, but be tull tmosphere of pioneer days and cordin’ hospitality. Guests may come i costnnes suited to the olden times, cabin, sten the ends together with passe-partout paper. Glue two trian- gular pleces to opposite sides of the curdboard. These form the angles over which a folded plece of card board is glued to make the roof. Place a large “cabin” In the living room on_the mantelplece or u center table. Use another for the center of | the dining tahle, and light the rooms | with ordinary ‘white candles. The jeabln on the dining room table may Lave but one side of the roof f tened down, and that so flexibly that | the roof can be turned back and so make a “Jack Horner pie” In it put wee spades, hoes, rakes, bunche: fagots (made by tying toothpicks into small bundles), miniature fire- Dlaces, such as come for favors, etc, Wrap each article and have ends of that guests can pull | stgnal” of the hostes: thelr favers. | Finding Partners. Partners are found for the first ame by matching the colors of rib. bBons around bunches of fagots made as described above, Only two bunches ishould be tied with the same color { ribbon. The fagots are used to | fences, making the longest fence is a prize. “Snake” fences are to make from toothpicks. Lay one ! stick at a slunt and the next with the tip over the end. and at a slant in | the opposite direction. Alternate sticks should have the same slant, as n needlework fagot stitching. Fences should he two sticks high. or thre ‘as the hostess dictates when telling Zuests how to make ferces. Hand. srehiefs with fagot stiteht just inside the hems make appropriate prizes, at the secure them wd so Amusing Game. L =¥ ks P'rovide players wilh pencils and | paper, and have them write the words “Log Cabin” at the top. The hostess & a slgnal, and players are to down all the words they can tncluded 1 full name that with “L." But two minutes hould be allowed for & letter Another way is to have the com divided into two equal groups with one leader. He asks from alter nate sides, “What article in this room | begins with °L'?" znd so on through the letters in the name. As he in- terrogates, he points to some one in a group and counts 100 Fallure to together are | name an article vesults in that per- door und | son going to the opposite group. The Cut a|group that Is largest, or which gets dboard (all the players from the otier side the | wins ROOM CABINS ARD- vrite find s i white- | inds will look to indicate wa, the ¢ descending from hi: of two even legs. position The Lame Duck. 1 was little and | wended by and by, mp to remind him hie could do anything any other lad of s age could do. but they wouldn't of it. Jimmie was lame and ‘body must be kind and consider- e to him and make things easy for him. Many and many a time did Jim- mie taste the bittern of serving as a good ut's “‘good turn.’ adually he withdrew from the ople about him and went farther atield for his zetivities. Inquiries met With brief responses: “Down street,” “Playing over in the park.” Satur- afterncons he took for half-holi- evading all cfforts to discover biective, (Copyright. 1026.) Hear limp for t 3 urgeon, “but get it t noticeable, mg and | willing that § you. Jim when they Patri will give personal attention to | iex from parents or school teachers ot re and development of children. Write are of this paper. inclosing self-ad- wtamped envelope for repls. E STORIES iutcher that I saw the diin’t get a reul good but that is who it must have been. [ would much rather have discovered | Mocker the Mocking Bird. but I am glad to have the puzzle settled. I am head that he had | €lad to know who it really was.” ocking Dird up by | At that very Instant Peter hap- ile couldn't| pened to look over to Farmer Brown's ad | house, und there was another gray e|and white bird alighting in the vine fon Farmer Brown's house. From Tle where he sat Peter could see that this ran neighlor was making his breakfust on bLerries that were still on that vine. Peter swallowed hard a couple of times as though he had a tunp iu his throut. If this wasn't Mocker the Mocking Bird, then Peter tidn’t know Mocker when he was the one he had seen 1vs beto Now he knew thut his eves had not ived him. {“It is Mocker! [t i i surely us 1 can sit on my own it is Mocker the Mocking Bird!™ | Peter to himself. “Of course, it |be, but it is. Butcher the |wouldn't he eating berries. But how | can Mocker, who belongs down in the | Sunny_ South, live up Lere in the |land of snow und ice? I must look into this. I certuinly must look into this. This I8 the most surpris- ing thing I ever heard of. I remen- ber that Welcome Robin once spent the Winter here, hut Welcome longs up here, unyway, and Mocker doesn’t, even in the Sumertime | There's Summy Juy. Il see what { Summy knows about it. Hi, Samm Jay!” j ammy Juy, who was flying over | Peter, looked down and saw him. He at once allghted just above Peter Lead. “My goodness, Peter Farmer cluimed Samm at is the matter wi firs - and n ®not piay. | might hurt chap, con-! BY THORNTON . BURGESS BEDTI Restored Faith. other look at him, Peter 1tabbit couldn't LLOWED TARD A Ol TIMERS, AS HAD A LUMP I neur the torted Peter, ruther shortly bix enough for you to een o ghost,” retorted Sammy. “Well. T h plied Peter, “but 1 have seen Mocker | the Mocking Bird. atched Sammy Jay T look of surpri But Sammy B look surprised at all. “Well, e of it?" sald Sammy. “I have G | semn Mocker the Mocking Bird every {day for most of the Winter so far. caid |-, Whaswha-what did you say?” eried i must have heen | Fetar, DMBLIN B suid that I had seen Mocker the | Mocking Bird every day for mest of | the Winter so far. What is there won- | which Mocker the | Mocker. ! d Lot it wasn't instant he los LIl There was énd of that bLIL Lunting Shrike derful #bout that?” replied Sammy. | rhen he really ix spending the Winter up here?” cried Peter. | "ot ourse, stupid!” retorted ammy. “Otherwise I couldn’t have seen him. could 17" Peter had to ad- | mit that this was tru i (Copyrizht. 1026.) Lecture Tour Planned. Dame Rachel Crowdy, who directs the department of the League of Na- tions at Geneva which concentrates its activities on oplum studies, the protection of women and the promo- tion of child welfare, this Spring will give a series of lectures in Canada and varfous American cities. Dame Rachel, who is an English woman, has effectively served as sec- retary of the two international opium conferences held at Geneva. e Women on Farms. In the country devoted to the milk industry a great many more women are now employed than men. Demand for the new land girl has doubled in less than a year, and the Women's Farm and Garden Associa- tion is having difficulty keeping up with requests of farmers for this class of workers. ¥ “It's alws fare weather when you meet u fapper within six blocks of @ restaurant.” the ribbon fall beneath the eaves So | and the couple succeeding in | Jimmie would try to tell them that | suw | be- | ven't seen a ghost,” re- | NG Willie Willis BY ROBERT Q a called me O1d Scout all week Gl T used part of that inner tube to make . sling shot.” (Copyright. 1926.) What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. Aquarius. Tomorrow’s planetary uspects are variable, and no settled course can be outlined under such conditions. In the early morning, the signs denote op- timisim and success for any legitimate effort. In the rly afternoon, they indicate indiference and lack of in- est. In the evening, they become adverse. und definitely unfavorable. 1t would be impolitic to start any new endeavor or enterprise; it would be more advisible to be content, for the . with things as they are, and to let well enough alone. The influences will affect more yvour disposition than your actions, and vou will sense an urie (o be quarrelsome, argumentative and arbitrary. This can only be counteracted by deliberativeness. A boy born tomorrow will enoy excellent health during infancy, and be practically free from those allments to which little chikiren are generally subect. In spite, oo, of one rather serious lilness immediately after adolescence, he promises to attain a vigorous manhood. A girl will be delicate and frail. Careful nutrition and plenty of fresh air, however, will her to overcome the weak- aracter, they will both ible traits, but will not be frea from many glaring fau While they will be demonstratively af- fectionate, they will be also capable of unbridied ‘dislikes, and will go to any lenghts tc “get even.” They will be studious, and always envious of those with greater possessions, be they men tal or material If tomorrow is your birthday, your friends are disposed to fight shy of you, as you have a very unfortunate +habit of making engagements carele Iy, and breaking them when they in- terfere with vour convenience. You {are also inclined to make promises, and then fall to keep them. You are, of course, not self-rellant, and very few place reliance in you. In spite of these vagaries of char- acter, you are affectionate, puremind- . energetic and kindly. Your lack ration is most unfortunate, and ' only stopped to consider that a for: shriess causes. in you, unpun lity, as well as evision of your obligations and a disre for your word, It might cure vou of vour besetting us inherent- iy, vou are not and do not wish to be consldered s6. When you win love, vou will hold it. Your kind- liness of disposition insures this. Well known persons born on that |date are: Temy M. Guernsey. phy- |sician and author; Isham G. Harris, senator: Frederick B. Conwav, actor; | Augustus P. Cooke, naval officer; Ira | Remsen, chemist; William sculptor. it Copyright. 1926, | ES sets the vogne for sports clothes as assuredly as Paris sets the mole for afternoon and evening wear. And so we du not wonder that the short-sleeved sweuter that scored so { | successfully in England a few month. ago now makes its debut in_America. | ‘At Southern resorts you will glimpse {it worn by those women who have | just recently arrived from New York. | Because they afford the maximum of | freedom in action they win for them- selves recognition us the ideal style {for tennis, olf or riding. And, due to the fact that they are made of wool and rayon, you may wash them just as easily as a pair of Hos MARGETTE. Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. | | . C. 0. G. writes: My Loy is 3% months old and | weighs 14% pounds but as he welghed 9 pounds when He was born I wonder {1f he weighs enough. 1 give him cow’s | milk and malt sugar and feed him three or four times during the day and once at night. He sleeps until 7 in the morning. e is teething now. 1 give him barley gruel every other day and orange juice every two days. | Is that often enough? Please tell me | it T am feeding him all right as I du think he should weigh a little more. 1 read vour column every day and find it very interesting. Answer. Loy weighs what he should, onsidering his large birth weight. Of course he should be fed regularly, not three or four times, it exactly the same hours each beginning at 7 in the morning, most convenlent rising hour. Feed at 7, 11. 4 and 7 and once at night for a month or two. After that he should be able to go all night without feeding. He does not need anything but the milk, diluted with water and with malt sugar added, and orange juice once a_day, not more | than a teaspoon or so, diluted with the same amount of water. There is no necessity for the gruel untll he is & months old, as his dfet is strengthen- ed through his milk formula. 8o long as he is sleeping so well and gain- ing as he is you need not fear that he is not progressing as he should, and don't be in a hurry to increase his diet. 1 rather doubt that he fs teething =0 soon. Tt is quite common for mothers of first chiliren to at- tribute_out-of-the-ordinary happening The n | different from what it wus in thefr y to teeth. The first teeth usually ap- pear at 5 or 6 months of age and in the case of well healthy children there is only about 2 days of indisposition. It is literally true that a child is teething from birth on, but he doesn't show any symptoms of it except when the teeth are actually erupting. 2 | STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Distracted Husbafild Whose Wife Gives Him an Overdose of Her Relations—How Can Friends Prevent a Married Couple Quarreling? JDEAR MISS DIX: T am a young marrfed man with an adoruble wife and baby. I married a very voung girl—she is only 19 now—and I love her very much, but she has one fault, and that nearly runs me crazy. She can’t exist away from her people. She spends most of every day at her mother's house, and then insists on dragging me back there every night, and 1 am 50 fed up on my inlaws that I feel like screaming when 1 see one of them. This has gotten on my herves so that I am thinking of getting a divorce. Do you think 1 will be justified, or am I bound to stick it out? ROBERT. Answer: Why, Robert, you know well enough that an overdose of your wife's family isn't sufficlent grounds for divorce. You can't renig on the vows you made at the altar 1o love and cherish and protect your wife so long as life lasted; you Just because you are so tired of hearing father-in-law's oft-repeated tales that You are afraid that you will commit murder if you have to listen to them one more time, and because mother and the girls bore you to tears with thelr gossip about family affairs. Marriage isn't only the culmination of a love affair. ‘It is the signing up of the papers In a business contract, and you can’t throw it up because it has some unpleasant features to it. You made your trade, and it is a binding one, and you are bound to stick to it. Don’t judge your wife too hardly. Try to understand her point of view a little. To begin with, she was too young when you married her. A girl of 17 1s just a child, and it is natural that she should cling like a child to her mother, and depend on mother's advice, and let mother run her affairs for her. Try to be just. After all, your wife being overly devoted to her family is @ sin that leans to virtue's side. It shows that she has a loyal and devoted soul, and that is not a bad thing for a wife to have, for if she i3 faithful to her own the chances are that she will be faithful to you. i Somehow, women seem to be far more bound by the blood tie than men are. When a 'man marries, I he loves his wife, he concentrates his interest and affection on his own bousehold. They make his little world so completely that often he becomes estranged from his brothers and sisters, and even neglects the mother who bore him. There are many men who do not even write a letter to thelr mothers once a year, but a woman nearly always keep the love fires burning on the family altar. So make that excuse for your wife, and as long as she does not neglect your own home make no objection to her spending half her days in her mother's house. When all {s sald, it is a pretty safe place for her to be. She might be running around to tea dances, and places of that sort, you know. But you have a right to refuse to be dragged to vour inlaws every evening, and you might compromise on that issue. I would tell her frankly that it was she whom I married, and not her family, and that they didn’t interest me as they did her, and that I would like to have my home and my wife to myself sometimes And, if all other plans fafl, you can at least move to another city, picking out a place far enough from your inlaws to have the railroad serve as an automatic protection to you. DOROTHY DIX. EAR MISS DIX: We are a very happily married couple, and although we are neither one of us angels, we have lived together seven vears without having a real quarrel. Now we have two friends, another married couple about our own age who, we are sure, love each other, vet they are in a perpetual wrangle. What can we do to induce them to dwell peaceably together? L. H. P. Answer: Iam convinced that when a husband and wife tight perpetually together it is becuuse they enjoy dolni it, and that nothing that anybody can say or do will induce them to forego thelr favorite indoor sport. They know, just as the gambler and the drunkard know, that they are wrecking their happiness, and ruining their homes by Indulging in their vice, but that doesn’t make them stop it any more than such a knowledge stops the drunkard and the gambler. Somehow the quarreling husband and wife get a punch which they enjoy out of hysterical scenes, and in saying to cach other all the mean, cruel things they can think of. They enjoy hurting each other just as sav: enjoy torturing their victims, 1f this were not true, they would not engage in family spats, for there never a one that could not be avolded by the use of a little tact and diplomacy. ges Yet dally we are all witness to the fact that a woman wi sav to her husband the thing that she knows is the fighting word to him, and the man will. with mallce aforethought, drag into the conversation tuple that he is perfectly aware is as good for i scene with his wife as a nickel is for a gmger cake Yet these very same people will be diplomitic strangers, and possess sufficlent self-control to keep the tongues within bounds in public. Such being the case. the unavoidable, that battling married couples are having the tin however disgusting the spectacle is to the helpless hys deliberately tempe < with nd their conclusion s of their lives 5 DOROTHY DIX [DEAR MISS DIX: I married 4 man who had leen married before, wife dying and leaving a baby girl, which his fat care of. She is now 4 years old, and I stmply worship h have her to bring up, but the grandparents are <o devoted to her that they are not willing to give her up. I appreclate how fine they have been in all they have done for her, but don't you think the place for the baby is with us? Recently the grandparents have moved so far away that s zet 4 chance to see the child. What do you think about this? like this that the good ui should tike precedence ov and mothe and would like to 1 think in a situation considered first of ail. T grandparents, and of you and your hushand. In i marries « woman who resents’ the children of his Jealous of thems, and who Wil make @ cold and h is better to leave the chiliren with the want them <hould desires of th Where idower who her to them grand But in a case like yours, where the second mother heart, and yearns for the children, it is far better they Ve brought up in thelr own home and under their father's influence. It is 2 piteous thing for old people to have to give up the ol set thelr hearts upon, and who is the light of their lives, hut not fit to rear children. They either xpoil them tuo much, or e hard upon them, and. in any case, they are to w of vears to understand and guide young lives uth. woand loving should arents are v the gulf in is totally srandparents away from 1 of a hadt orphan. 1t s only The chilid who « stranger, und and tenderness and guiding hand DOROTHY DIX Furtherniore, for @ child to Le rearved by is 45 father is to muhe it wholly an orphun inste: in dally assoeiation that the chains of affection are sees its father onfy oceassionally is bound to regard fc voungster ot to have a father's love is to s one of the great privileges of life. » (Copyrizht. 1 BEAUTY CHATS Short Hair. One blessing of short hair is that| it has brought about an enormous | variety of styles. You can wear : slightly wavy bob half way to your shoulders, vou can have the hair| fluffed around the face and a straixght line «t the bottom from front to bac you can have a fringe of any thick ness and & length clear over the forehead to Your eyebro: or comb your hair straight back like the mu- siclans in the old-fashioned cartoons. You can go the whole length of bobbing &nd bav your hair short, like a boy's. You can have a “little | girl's” bob, which is fluffy and ends | just above the tip of the ear, and if Your head is flat in back you can give | it an artificial roundness by a real or a modified shingle. There’s noth- ing in the way of head shaping that @ clever barber can't do with short hair and a_pair of good shears. | For which reason alone let us give thanks that the bob style is stronger | than ever. Hairdressers will never| let it go if they can help it for the business-like reason that everv short-| halred woman goes to be “trimmed” | at least once a month; whereas with | long hair she might never enter a beauty shop from on year's end to | the other. That we will go back to long hair is sure, as sure as we ko | from tight to wide skirts and long to | short ones. But we won't until we've | exhausted and become bored with every possible type of hair cutting. Meantime, it does the hair good. If you like short hair, try cutting yours in various fashions. If you have BY EDNA KENT FORBES. a thin, almost a sharp face, the very much cropped boy's style may suit you perfectly—you'll have to dress in only tailored clothes, though—or the sofger “little girl's” bob. The well featured fuce, especially if voung. will lock best with hair parted in the middle and cut about at the ear tip. Idna May T.—Hot baths tend to- ward reduction and cold haths are stimulating. Cold ones are excellent for the circulation if you have quick reaction from them. Any one who can take a cold bath and react properly, is very fortunate, as the effect s equal to vigorous exercise without extra exertion. Martha F.—Close your eyelids, and then roll the evehalls around in & cir- cle, reversing the direction occaston- ally. Turn eyes to the right and then to left, and then up and down. All of these exercises are for strengthen- ing the eyes. To relieve the financial depression nd unemployment, the government of Hungary will undertake much im- provement and construction work this vear. The man who tells or acte small ki In word or deed had among his fi Till pretty soon he isn't there! trev TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9 n't break up your home, and half-orphan your child | All of Nature's rich coffee goodness comes in your cup of White House Coffee. Dwinell-Wright Co. porons Chicegos The Flavor is Roasted In! 1926. SUB ROSA BY MIML Such a Good Hostess! Do boys angd girls say that about you—and your home? Do you know the secret of being a charming hostess —or are voir guests strained and nervous when they drop in for an eve- ning? Dozens of letters ask for advice about entertainments, games, duties of a hostess and 0 on. All of them evince a pathetic desire to do things up royal- ly—to make their visitors have a good time by sheer force of expense and careful thought. It can’t be done. You can't give your friends a knockout time simply by overwhelming them with the lav- ishness of vour arrangements. cither boys and girls nor men and women can be made happy for a whole evening by the fact that the refresh- ments cost three times as much as they should. Surely you realize that there are some homes in which you have the time of your life—minus refreshments or exciting games or elaborate pro. grams. What makes those evenings so en- Joyable and stimulating? Your clever hostess has made you feel perfectly at home by leaving it to you to chooke what you shall do. She’s rolled up the rugs, and turned on the phonograph in case you may want to dance. he's unfolded a card table and left several packs of cards lylng about just to hint that yow're at perfect lib. erty to play if you want to. And she's wisely refrained from managing you. That's the awful mis- take most girls make when they want to_give their friends o big evening. You'll see the young hostess sitting on the edge of her chalir, determinedly making bright conversation, until the last guest has arrived. Then, as if she Were raising the cur- tain of a performance of some sort, she takes a long breath and announces that the assembled company will play 4 brand-new game, When they've finished with she has other plans for them. don't get a chance. thing arranged for hours And all the time she's unde: Any one can see that. She's anxious for them to be pleased. She's nervous lest they shall be bored. Her manner gives her away. Her friends are un- easy, too, as they catch some of her spirit. It's all too bad—this Ariving to please, and the struggle to be pleased. You wouldbe hostesses, learn to treat your guests casually. Don't make a desperate effort to keep the ball rolling continually. Let them | talk to each other—wander about, that, They She has every- the next four strain. dance with each other, before you get them all interested in a4 general game. Be as natural as possible. No spe- cial manner for the occasion. Let them all feel that you're having a good time. too—not that you're putting yourself out to please them In short, the secret of entertain ing people successfully is to let them ain themselves 1 to answer any inguir 1o this p sddressed envelope is inclosed HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN This dressing of distinet The bas L table des 1l tervestin, It ex sses a furniture fushion which we followed more and more fre as the vogue for unmn hed This idex of placin in ¢ widow is ex e ood light from irvor on its sep 1 table cellent. for it all sides. The other pieces which would com bine s y with this group to fur nish a small bedroom would be a four post bed. a Salem chest of draw wing-back ea: nd a light for the bedside Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. Words _often scribes “for” a_paper, subscription *“to” it. the (name of your paper). seription to the (name of expires next yvear.” Often mispronounced Pronounce u-zhu-al s¥llables, and not u-zshal-y. Often ‘misspelled: Magnetize; i not ise. Synonyms: Temperance, sobriety, | abstinence, self-denial, moderation, ab- stemfousness. Word study: “Use times and it is yours. crease our vocabulary one word each day. Placate—to _pacil make | friendly. “To in part of | our policy of placating them; we want | thefr friendship.” used: One sub- refers to his T subscribe for *“My sub. ar paper) | Usually of four .| word three | Let us in-| mastering | ay's word: | a | immediately | size FEATURES. Making the Most of Your Looks BY DOROTHY STOTE. Dear Ann: I just happened to ses this ense ble coat, and I thought what a good model for the too tall figure. Those broken lines of braiding will help to ward cutting down height, and u: much more suftable than the long, u broken lines. Yours for contrelling one's lines, LETITIA (Copyright. 1926.) ODD FACTS ABOUT YOURSELF BY YALE S. NATHANSON, B. Sc, M. A, Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania rn that the center fire, and thought « rain of | was nervous to lea of the earth the sun would “I used to fear Worried by Fire. Hundreds of lives have been lost and millions of dollars of property d stroyed by maniacs who love to s fire to buildings. They are help- less against this desire as are klepto maniges who evervthing the can get their hands on. These peop love to see the flames and ti and hear the clanging and crashing of the firebells. The other who fears fire. These to work in biz buildix this danger. Here are several st ments of some of those \fraid “I used to regard fire sort demon, the w being its tongues which licked up ever hin reach, and always & cet more in its f the grandest sights is a big ere is an awful feeling in see ing its pow I do not k whether love fear, agratic red intense wa thur steal ear ain of and postpone the rair Lecause of the the world end by flood, but by the reason why n fea likewise f world. Among mn rs expressed as th “My horror was _intensitied becanse uld come when ing of felt mind." “I tire romise th 10 should extreme the pel people refu: of one titat on it ste t the end of elop out of a b v raid 2. r their condition their fears a the case r s porte: i the end of WHEN WE GO BY MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN. regula st Care of Man's Wardrobe. I as any < a well upon the of the per be depen ste outhit when pur S0 iness m wi Tebate Feminine Honors Mme. ¢ ral and er Tit nir o iber presentable shij ished unexpected banagiet then finds t wre carries an_ir just as grievous a perfectly to miss a game which 1siness “contracts” hecause missing in the laundry! All of which suggests that the most nt thing about keeping up we is 1o keep (he various out fits intact, with clear v and repairs de on each piece, when necessa after it has been v o however such thing us too much Sharp new as cressy preserved Coats should squarely on Trouser hung up. too. They may over a bar, or ded from the bottoms. The is to get the ulge ont of the knees best. but Lend- ing double doesn’t stretch the trouse so grievously. To avoid this stretch- ing. belts should be removed before \ging trousers, and everything taken out of the pockets. including handkerct ttedly has all the ttributes to en academy. bu the pr More ll the: ithiere, daugh- it she did not smic duties any too se- out 10 1 ood gol the su elected Mlle. Judith (¢ [ ter of the poet, und t take her and then means new o hose Oriental Dish. 1dd one cupful of graham ful of sugar, one saltspc t and one cupful o < mixture thoroughly, 1s too thick add more milk until makes a thin batter. Drop the ter by tablespoonful into deep hoi: ing fat and fry the pieces until they {ure brown and crisp. This is a good nfu Beat 1 . “and prope alw 3 hangers should, the proper be be doubled tén Your Neck | New Safe Way | A yellow or muddy neck is now un- | mecessary. For now a new and harmless | treatment—GoldenPeacock BleachCreme —makes your skin soft, clear and white almost overnight. This amazing new dis- covery is safe, sure and absolutely harm~ less. Yellowness, sallowness, muddincss and tan vanish as if by magic. Soon you nave the clear, milky-white neck which everyone _nvies and admires, and which is especially necessary with bobbed hair. Make this test tonight. Three minutes before bedtime smooth some of this cool, iragrant creme on your neck and shoul- Jers. Tomorrow morning see howthe skin has already begun to clear. Your money will be returned if you are not delighted. Get your jar now—today. Ask for Golden Peacock Rleach Creme (Cancentrated) At _all good Drug and Department Stores O'Donnell's Drux Stores, Peoples Drug man’s Drug Store, Goldenbers's Dept. ' Store. Palais Royal _Dept. Store, King's Palace Dept. Store, S. Kann Sons Co. Dept. Store, Sigmund's Dept. Store. Golden Peacock Solarine dissolves the tarn- ith like magic and leaves a high luster that lasts. It’s the only safe pol- ish. Buy a can today at your grocer,hardware, druggist or auto shop. U