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50 WO M!/ AN’S PAGE. The latest whim of fashion in gloves 18 to have them trimmed with buttons. These buttons have nothing to do with the fastenings. They are used exclu- THE FANCY BUTTON OF TRIMMING sively for ornament. Paris is show nz such trimming in fascinating metimes as many as five buttons are seen on each intlet zlove. The but e as those used on a frock and would measure approximately one h in circumference. They are not inconspicuous. either, for they may be of glistening brass. like gold spheres in richness. the buttons are selves as well Someti e in them s forming a trimming. these are set of contrasting kid with buttonholes stitched on glove. as if the buttons actually w through them. Sometimes the of a BEDTIME STORIES Buttons, Bands and Parisian RY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. In every instance | on one side | lets flare without any contrasting godets let in. The buttons start from | the wrist bone and are placed at in- tervals up the gauntlet toward the elbow. Buttons Like Buckles. Another way of using buttons on gloves is to have one on each turned back ‘wrist. They resemble fancy buckles, but are buttons, usually those with shanks. Some of the buttons are bright green with traceries of gold or silver on the surface. Others are ved. pink, etc., but all of the buttons are decidedly ornamental. Make Use of Mode. Both of these ways of using but- tons on gloves can be adapted by the woman who is deft with her needle. The fancy buttons can be sewed on the outer part of any glove with a turned back wrist. Or ' row of brass or fancy buttons can be sewed, as de- scribed,” on gauntlet gloves. Homemade Trimming. A further fashion that the needle- woman can_utilize to advaniage to make her gloves chic, at small cost, is to sew binds of handsome applique to the turned back wrists of gloves. The expense of this trimming depends entirely on_the sum paid for the bandings. Some of those seen in the Paris shops have choice embroidery | from Chinese mandarin coats. The | edzes of the bandings frequently are | covered with pinked pieces of kid | that _extend from the ends of the turned back portions to the bands. Such kid trimmings is in contrasting |Lue to the gloves themselves. It is not essentizl to have the kid, however. | The bandings may simply be stitched {on the glove wrists by machine. Use | a rather loose tension to allow for the stretching of the kid. My Neighbor Says: Do not keep pineapple in the ice chest where other foods are stored. The food will absorb the odor of the pineapple. Before serving soup or beef tea to a child or invalid take a piece of tissue paper and draw it two or three times over the top. This will remove every sign of fat, which is usually found so objectionable to in- valids. Rugs should not be shaken. Instead hang them on a clothes- line and beat them with a cane beater kept for the purpose. It a skirt is much splashed with mud or stained along the hem it should not be brushed until the Stains are completely { | dry, prompt treatment whi the mud is still wet only caus ing the dirt to sink into the ma 1. If brushing does not imin. the marks when the material is dry. sponging with denatured ether should be tried, this method succeeding ad- mirably both with serze and costumes in dark colors cloth s well as lighter fabric: If hooks for bathroom, kitchen and pan are dipped in enamel paint there will be no trouble { | from iron rust To make a starch that w | | not stir a pinch of b into boiling water and add it to the starch, with a few drops of blueing BY THORNTON W. BURGESS A Prisoner. Be suspicious, or mashap. You'il™be Vietim of G trap. r. Mocker. Of course, it ‘t nice to go abol always suspecting that things ar what they appear fo be. It isn't nice to be suspicious of the people around vou. Of course not. But, just the same, Mocker the Mocking Bird is right in warning not to be altogether unsuspicious. \What he means is that it is just as foolish to zo about that no one can do you a thinking HEaoy THEN HE FOUXD HE PRISONER. WAS A to think wrong that every a wrong. his life had nothing about Mocker neve trapped. He kne ipe. So when he ered with w end so that it and in under Lody intends tc M in ised at one sasy to go under, raisins and cur- w it saw spread, he wwosn't suspicious. Of course, he ought to have been. He sht to have been wise enough to now that it is best io keep away from things you do not know about. | i3t Mocker was hungry. He knew that those raisins and currants had ween put out especially for him. He walked all around that wire thing- ¢ looked perfectly harmless. Finally he walked in under it. Almost at once the raised end fell and there he was., a prisoner. He had been irapped! Even then at first he didn't realize what had happened. He went on ing. and it wasn't until he saw Farm- «r Brown’s Boy coming toward him hat he started to fly. Then he found iie couldn't fly; then he found he was « prisoner. For a few minutes Mocker was ter tibly frightened. It is always rather frightful thing to find you are a prisoner, that you cannot go and come as you will So Mocker beat his wings against the wire until he was sure in his own mind that this was uscless. Farmer Brown's Boy came slowly up to the trap. Every movement h made was slow. He talked to Mocker soothi Finally @ demand porf’ect service wherever we do. We're enraged ot the tlig’htest negl:ct-— But consider the poor hurmn rce as it s And it seems quite 2 lot not | a frame cov- | Mocker i found an opening at one end J He ran throuzh it. He did it before | he had really looked. Then he di | covered he was a prisoner in a_small- er cage. Almost at once Farmer Brown's Boy slipped his arm through an opening in the top and caught Mocker in his hand. Very gently he | lifted Mocker out. He held Mock in a peculiar way, on his back, and o that Mocker could not well strug- gle. And somehow, after a moment, | Mocker didn't mind. Very gently | Farmer Brown's Boy stroked him | and talked to him all the time. | he slipped something around one leg | Mocker didn’t notice it at the time. After this Farmer Brown's Boy talked to him for a moment, then | held his hand open. Tt was almost minute before Mocker realized that he was free. Somehow all fear had gone. He got to his fect and for second or two he sat on Farmer Brown’s Boy’s hand. Then he flew to the nearest tree, e had been a prisoner, but once more he was free. It wasn't until after Farmer Brown B0y had disappeared into the hous | that Mocker noticed he had some. thing he hadn’t had before. There s ° something queer, something bright, around one leg. He pecked at it with his bill, but it wouldn't come off. He found that it was hard. He didn’t know what tq make of it. But it didn't hurt and it wasnt un- comfortable, so it wasn't long before Mocker had forgotten all about it. In the house Farmer Brown's Boy | had written in a little book a date and a certain number. That number was on the shiny thing around the leg of Mocker. It was a tiny metal band, and Farmer Brown's Boy was mak- o record of the date when that s put on Mocker's leg. You Farmer Brown's Boy wanted to see, That little band So it was that Summer or Winter. | would tell the story. Mocker was banded. (Copyright. 1926.) Clues to Character BY J. 0. ABERNETHY. Lack of Self-Control. Tlow often you hear the remark, “He has a brilllant mind, but loses ntrol of himself so easl The | result is, he blasts his chances for pro- | motion, particularly as an executive. type lacks the natural faculty of ontrol, which, if he would culti- might put him In a position e he would double his salary. elf-control, that happy facuity of never “losing your head” even under | the most trying circumst: s, cannot be overestimated in evaluating a man’s success qualities. When strong, this faculty gives one poise, coolness and tery of self, so desirable in every business and profession. Self- control makes for preciseness in speech and action, correct behavior, and close attention to details of busi: ness and science. You may know them by these signs: When there will be a fullness at the outer corners of the mouth, which cem to rise and form a hill slightly bove and below the closure. It self- control s small, there will be a depres- sion in this region. (Copsright, 1926.) Ehicken Timbale. Free the remnants of chicken from skin and fat, run through the chop- per, season well. then moisten with stock or a tomato or cream sauce and one beaten egg to each cuptul of chicken. Butter a plain mold and line with macaroni which has been boiled and kept in a bowl of cold water until needed, then dried on a towel. Fill the center with the prepared chicken. cover the top with macaroni, and steam for an hour. A white or a to- mato sauce should be served with it, or the creamed celery may be poured around the base of the mold. Then | know if Mocker remained there | through the Summer. Or, if he didn't remain. if he came back another THE EVENING A Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “I was lucky today. Skinny hit my tooth with a rock he throwed, an’ 1 didn’t have to let the dentist pull it.” What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAK Aquarius. Tomorrow’s planetary s are favorable, and presage t only a condition of optimism but an enel { setic attitude toward things in gen- eral. Full advantage should be taken of such influences, and if yvou have been awaiting a good opportunity fo the carrying out of some radical { change, or for the initiation of any new enterprise, it would be difficult to {find a more auspicious occasion. The signs al’ ) favor travel, but are very ominous ip regard to all that savors of speculation or risk. In the evening very qu benign influences will prevail, and indicgte success for all family or social reunions. | Children born tomorrow w un. less given proper nutrition and plenty {of fresh air, be subject to much sick ness during their infancy. The s | presage. however, a happy issue out {°of all their troubles, and u heaithy and | strong majority. In character they | will be straightforward. and will never | learn to disguise their thought words. will always call a i a spade, 4 re bound to offend many Ly their brusqueness. They will have liitle artistic sense_ but will prove to be extremely practical, and be gifted { with an inexhaustible fund of com- mon sense. Thev will become good men and women. though they may not {attain any degree of material suc | If tomorrow i your birthday, lare something of a failure, but are i happy in constituting vourself | as an advisory board for all vour| friends and associates. You can al | | ways suggest a remedy for all their| {ills, but can never find a cure for| wir own. You are a living exponent {of the doctrine, “Do as I say, not as 1 do.” You are ever critical of your | | friends, and always counseling them I to be what vou are not, and to do! | what is numbered among vour signs of omission You, howeve yourself, although in fool no one, that you virtues. Your home life is not very happy, as. while very imperfect yourself, vou preach perfection to others, and, while wholly selfish and self-centered, you exhort others to learn to be un persuade doing so, you possess all thej | seltish. | Well known persons born on that date are: William F. Smith, soldier {and engineer: Rose Terry Cook, au-| | thor; John N. Galleher, Protestant| piscopal Bishop of Louisiana; Charles McBurney, surgeon; Josephine Dodge Daskam, author; Donald Brian, | actor. | { | HOME NOTES | BY JENNY WREN. This modern secretary-cabinet of in | 1aid mahogany is a Heppelwhite de- sign. As a furniture investment it ranks high. for it has beauty, dis- tinction and versatility. The bookcase top might be used for | MINNN a collection of little porcelains, or any other small art object, or for books or china. The section immediately below is fitted as # desk and the front drops down to make a writing shelf. Below this are the drawers, offering an opportunity to store away cloth- ing, household linens, or any small objects which might clutter the living room, such as bridge score pads, chessmen o old magazines. And a final virtue—no living room could possibly be ordinary under the influence of its stately presence. “Puzzlicks” Puzsle-Limericks An unfortunate dumb man of —1— Was conversing with signs that he So exceedingly —3— That his fingers, at —4, Got entangled, and fractured a —5—. 1. Site_of the Royal Botanical dens, in London. 3. Speedily. 4. The end. 5. Not many. Note—"It serv. talking so much,” was his wife said to thi rizht for probably what unfortunate dumb man when he informed her what had you happened. What was it? Complete the limerick and you'll see. The an- swer and another “Puzzlick” will ap- pear tomorrow.) Yesterday's “Puzzlick.” There was a young lady named Park Who swam out to sea for a lark. ..When she started to drown And kept_going down, “My word,” she cried out, “ain't it dark The ORIGINAL 1 Malted Milk H | ! Forinfants, Invalids, TheAged | and no doubt’ your sweetheart already | all nicely tied up with blue ribbon and garnished around the AR, WASHINC TUESDAY, Ik TON, D. C., DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX How Can the Too-Humble Girl Make Friends?— | Must She Disclose Her Prematurely Gray Hair to Her Fiance Before Marriage? [DEAR MISS DIX: How may one overcome the inferiority complex? As & child, when any one praised me, my mother would make some deprecat- ing remark, and she was constantly calling my attention to the achievements of other children, while belittling any efforts I made along those lines. Sh says that the reason she did this was to keep me from becoming conceited, but I was a sensitive child and I developed the idea that I was inferior to my associates; that I could never achieve anything and that people only tolerated me through courtesy I am a good-looking girl college bred, a musician and successful in business, but I feel that my life is a failure. I crave friends, but through timidity cannot make any advances to those I would like to know. 1 \\o_uld like to marry, but probably never will, because when I meet a man I instinc- tively draw into my shell. Is there any way to overcome this sense of inferiority? Answer: Of course, the remedy for what ails you is vanity applied ad lib in large and generous dose: Hold the thought, as our Christian Science friends would say, that vou are the most beautiful, the most marvelous, the most admired and sucessful woman in the world, and that every mun you see falls madly in love with you at first sight. EDITH K. The only difficulty with this remedy s that it is practically impossible for those with the inferiority complex to kid themselves along that way. Self. conceit appears to be one of the things that it is equally hard to cultivate and to exterminate, and unless you develop a case of swell head in your youth, it is extremely difficult to acquire it when you are grown. Ame in You have my carnest sympathy, 1dith, for T was brought up in ti spartan school and had every sprig of self-confidence that showed my character nipped in the bud. It was so firmly impressed my youthful mind that I was a poor. miserable worm of the dust that to this day it embarrasses me to death for anybody to look hard at me, and it is a matter of perpetual amazement to me that I have somehow managed to keep out of the Asylum for the Incurably Ieeble-Minded. telf upon Of course, when our mothers keep our faults and weaknesses continually before our eves, while they remain as silent as the grave about our virtues, they are actuated by the noblest motives. They feel that it is their duty to suppress our egotism and cultivate a humble spirit within us, and they never have a suspicion that nine times out of ten they are doing us a deadly wrong by killing our confidence in ourselves. For we can only do what we think we can do. The limit of our faith ir ourselves Is the limit of our achievements. We only aspire to the star that we think we can reach. It is pitiful to think how much talent has gone to waste. how many ambitions blighted, how many fine things might have been done that are never done because families consider it necessary to tuke all of the conceit out of children. It is because Johnny and Susie have heard so continually “You can't do it,” that they sit down supinely and never make an effort at all. And if @ child has any defect, such as awKwardness, clumsiness or shyness, to be continually reminded of these faults just intensifies them and makes the youngster that much more self-conscious and deprecating. Of course, a happy medium is best, but it is better for a child to hay an exaggerated ego than to be afflicted with an inferiority complex. The self conceited are, at times, hard on the nerves of their fellow creatures, but they generally get somewhere. DOROTHY DIX. OFf course, this was in the pre-hobbed days, b as o hair dyes as well as rats and switches and However, Emily Jane, you are pro t the principle holds good | ransformations ably worryving purself without re a knows that vou touch up vour locks for about the only person who is ever fooled by dyed hair is the poor, silly woman who is foolish enough to think that she has deceived other people. son n who has prematurely gray hair makes the mistake 1 she dyes it, because there is nothing so distinguished looking, I think that a won of her life wh nothing so becoming, as gray hair above a young face. Try a white wig on | the next time you ko to your beauty shop and see if it does not add 50 per DOROTHY DIX cent to your good looks. D AR MISS DIX 1 am very much in love with a girl who I am sure would make me an ideal wife, but marriage does not seem to appeal to | her. She has been trained for a teacher and she appears to feel that she | would rather have a career than a husband. She is 20 and I am 23 yvears old What should I do? 0. P Answer: You are both too younz to get married. anywa so give the girl three or four years to try out her career, and there is every chance that | at the end of that time she will be glad enough to scrap her ambitions for a wedding ring. S When a girl has the career germ in her system. the only sane thing for a man to do is to let her work it out. Let her find out by experience {hat career is not something her fairy godmother hands her out on « silver salve checks; but that it is something that a woman buys with he. sers neeree | blood, with work and worry and anxiety and loneliness, and that worth the price she paid for it. is never ” reat many men persuade girls o give up their careers to m: This is always a mistake, because, no matter how good and kind the hushand is or how much money he gives his wife, she goes through life feeling that she has made a terrible sacritice. & A arry them { She is always looking back regretfully and thinking that i pursued a career instead of permitting herself to be sidetr: she had only | cked into matri mony, she would have been the world's greatest novelist or singer orj film star. Of course, that is mostly a pipe dream. but the woman firmly helieves in it as a reality, and it makes things mighty uncomfortable to have a! blighted genius around the house is & genius and is on her breast, you are lucky o let your girl have a go prefers the glad hand of the public to hab: not to get her, for careering wives and matrimony don’t mix. ! But the chances are that she will find that a career for a woman isn't | all it is press-agented to be, and she will say “ves” and thank you. too. when | her to devote her genlus to home-making. DOROTHY DIX. | (Copyright, 1926.) BEAUTY CHATS BY EDNA KENT FORBES. The Hairbrush. | scalp: but again, they do not cleanse | £ . | the hair of dust and surface oil as The first function of a hair brush i8 | the closely bunched hair bristles. A is understood | good brush for very thick hair com- | to clean; when that goodiilisan os iy eyl 5 SS S ble, for |bines both kinds of bristles. there will be less scalp trouble, for | bines both kinds of bristles = | then people will take better care of the | 3,.04" ¢ v ‘being a cure brushes and combs they use and never | o) SIFOES 3 GEF, BERE o nduce allow them to get dirty. The second |75 e i< if the brush happened to | function is to stimulate the scalp. e ouahin | be_dirty and used so much. Brush | gently. not too hard. ~Hard brushing | (e hair, ‘ves, and daily, but never does more harm than good. mind counting strokes. Brush till The hair brush should be made with | closely bunched, long, flexible bristles When vou use it, you should feel the | bristles against the scalp—if the brush is “thin” the bristles may not reach through thick hair to the scalp: if the bristles are too soft, they'll bend and clean only the surface of the haf Some brushes have wire bristles with rounded ends so they cannot tear the hair or scratch the scalp. These have the advantage of being easy lol clean but the disadvantage of not cleaning the hair so well as the regu- lar hair bristles. Some brushes are made of splints of horn, very fine and quite flexible: these wear well, wash well, clean the hair and are very stimulating to the o b‘l, vour scalp feels stimulated and then stop. Too much brushing induces too much oil, and that means too frequent washing.” But some brushing, some thorough brushing, is necessary every day, or rather every night. to cleans and to stimulate. And don’t forget to g ur hair brush a weekly bath with soap and | hot water and a drop or so of antisep- tic in the rinse water. A Size Larger. From the Madrid Buen Humor. “I like these “Louis XV shoes, but Y T A i i ) " Y i | : !!?F‘: i 'WINNING nation- wide good-will by pleasing the tastes of coffee-drinking millions—that is the sixty-year rec- ord of Chase & Sanborn’s Seal Brand Coffee. Chase&Sanborn's SEAL BRAND COFFEE - Seal Brand Tea is of the same high quality BRUARY 1926. 16, FOOD AND HEALTH BY WINIFRED STUART GIBBS. Food Speclalist. If only there might be a general getting together on the part of nutri tion speclalists for the purpose of raising a_ united voice! Several things might be accomplished thereby, one of the mast important perhaps being that “of a soiemn warning, phrased somewhat in this wise: “As you value vour health, o to your bhysiclan and your dietitian before you try to go on a diet.” Going on a diet is the popular phrase for going on more or less of a1 dietary joy-ride. The overweight wom- | an goes on a diet to reduce; the thin one goes on‘a diet that she may on flesh; the victim of rheumatism goes on ‘a diet to stop his pain, and S0 on. One might even with propriety go back of this bit of advice and say, before allowing yourself to reach the place where it is necessary to go on a diet, learn what & normal diet is. That such pre are naturally acts as a preventive is fairly well known. The wise and safe use of foods as a cura- tive agent is quite another matter. Whiit are some of the disordered conditions in which diet may help? Obesity we have already spoken of Diet may aecomplish much for thi condition, unless there is some evi dence that endocrine or other glands are not in good working order. As Dr. Russell nd Mr. Wildor the Mayo Clinic express it: *““The real problem here is not why Mrs. Jones keeps fat on her small diet, but why Mr. Jones remains thin in spite of his big_appetite.” Most authorities e agreed that there is still much work to be done in the determination of such questions us this. They are also agreed that one should not hegin a reduction diet without a thorough overhauling by a physician. The fashionable craze for starving one's self, out of considera- tion for the silhouette, is probably do- ing untold harm to the general health of of the ruce Another condition in_which diet is almost a specific is diabetes. This is | o long a subject that it can be only mentioned in passing, so far as this short_discussion is concerned. Epilepsy is another condition where radical methods of die treatment sometimes seem o be in order. For example, well known physicians have given epileptic patients diets in_which the energy was practically -all fur- nished by rfats. This and other experi- ments, however, in the dietary treat- ment of epilepsy are still frankly in the experimental stage, and no layman S e should even attempt to formulate JDEAR MISS DIX: T bave just become engaged and my fiance thinks 1 am fspecial diets for the epileptic wonderful. However, there is one thing I have never confided to him,| C(0ming to the more common dis- and that is that 1 have my prematurely gray hair touched up by a beauty |Orders and those " more comuonly expert. He often remarks on my pretty hair. Shall T tell him this secret or | {reated by the home dietitian, we find. shall T let him go on in fxnorant bliss, get married and then perbaps have him |20 the head of the list, constipation o pour his merciless wrath o - having deceived him?” bl e intestines. Such a diet ma ; Ath on me for having decelved him? EMILY JANE. | o' harq unless, in its administration, it her and her dressing table, which she is under no obligation to reveal to any | SnoW3 What he is about. Take the in- | b h as is 1 { dividu wh B 1 obstruction in man How she does it is her ¢ 1oafl and he is only concerned th the Ithe iutestinal tract If such a one results. I once heard a very famous man say that his idea of a subtle woman | e, itestinal tract 1€ such a one was one who could be married 1o a man for seven years without his ever | i iicaiie stre to “pack” and gather finding out whether her hair was h own or not, e arha ooe spot, setting up trouble some irritation Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. When a mother asks me if it is possible for her to “mark” her baby by the power of horrid sights which she sees or unpleasant experiences which frighten her it gives the gr est satisfaction to be able to assure her that she has no such power and that nothing which purely external an possibly affect her child. It is not all sincerity says: “If I prac at the piano can I make m musician?’ One would like to tel h that such an ambition can be gratified, but the truth is that, de spite one’s most iant efforts, un- less the child comes into the world en- dowed by its inheritance with such a gift the mother’s efforts will go for nothing. In the matter of there is so little chance to know what one’s child might be, since it has gen- erations behind it of persons of every type. that in many cases the mother’s efforts might seem to bear fruit just because after such efforts the child became a musician. What probably happened is that the mother, loving e hard child a ! music, wanting her child to be a musi cian has turned all her efforts after the child was born to fostering such talent: and the force of environment has done what just wishing could never d Tt is a blessed thing that mothers i have no power to mark their children, Why should a child bear all through its life the curse even of a minor de formity which was induced by a scare? Why should a child have its face scarred because a mother forgot and put her hands to her face when she saw some horrible sight? And vet there are persons, who in all solemnity will assure a mother that she mustn't touch herself when she is frightened, becanse then the child will bear a mark. Our looks, or lack of them, do not depend upon such trivialiti a child comes into the world with some deformity, or with facial blem- ishes, there is no reason for the mother to feel to blame. She had nothing to do with it. No matter what she has thought; no matter what she saw during the nine months of her pregnancy, her child is unaffected by t. The child will always be the sum of the strongest hereditary influences derived from both its father and mother. What the child is depends on what his father and mother, his grandparents, and their parents and so on, are and have been. The mother's part is to endow the child with a strong body, to keep her own temperament peaceful and serene, so that she will be a patient mother, and to give her child, after birth, the best possible environment, so that her de- sires and hopes for it may have some chance of coming true. Shine and More Shine That’s Solarine, the easy, quick and safe polish that women all over the world have used for genera- tions. Buy acan to- day at your grocer, hardware, druggist or auto shop. | ] | | | ) u,‘;fl\ . il e | I il — No Cooking. for All Ages L4 Nourishing—Digestible The Home Food-Drink i ! TR R T i R o F 0 easy when a mother in talents | i i | | } | | Dear Ann: Here is a good sleeve for the long thin arm. Its two colors serve i break the long arm line it seem shorter, a good a possible an gularit You for avoiding the point LETITIA “I slapped her hands and s ped back. It is better not to slap he When a to misch ifying things about the world, gro cally and mentally as he str hand and mind things and must do e Mc of at ing abont t { situation, g it. He “Most chorus girls we run anywhere but in the hose Our Children—By Angelo Patri rim When you forbid thing you usually do so with drama emphas tention upon Parking With Peggy Making the Most of Your Look BY DOROTHY STOTE. and so mal and its fuliness hs influence on (Copyright. 19:26.) Slapping Hands. What can 1 do little child re s something it is n The litt] inve aches revous intent one his eye He touches be warned s« tries danz ents and must be protec him to s or he ed touch vhole at his deed the cer You turn vour the child and t children enjov ention, N, s the rights o all the s. i of the fun po: touches the coal and you say | turn his atient and rer | that is its loeation a ome a Uniform Quality "SALADA" TEA o Is Always Uniform and Superior ‘We know of no other. cereal so full of Health— Growth=— Happiness— Serve it for breakfast, when empty stomachs need the nourishment