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WOMAN'’S PAGE. THE EVENING STAR WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1926. For Washington’s Birthday Party BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. Two good games to play at a Wash- |covered with brown crepe paper, and ington’s birthday purty are “Chopping | 2180 the hatchet bean bags for the S by | zame of “Chopping the Cherry Tree. : Fues Before making a coil of a sheet of Cherry Bl The fi cardboard, cut three circular holes in tive game, while the second is @ quiet | the center. Make one a trifle smaller than the other two, and have the smaller one above the space between the lower ones. The completed holes form a triangle, with each opening big enouzh to let the bean bag fall through them easily, even though the top hole is smaller than the others. Making the Hatchet. From red cheese cloth cut hatchet- shaped pieces and sew two together along the edges to the tip of the han | dle. Fill the bag with pea beans and sew up the top. There should be six hatchet bag: The rules of the game are simple. A hatchet chopping the wood through the top hole scores 10, through either of the other larger holes scores five. One hundred is a game. Each playver has three plays each turn, but he may \inue to throw after that (if the st one of the three hatchets goes in hole) until he fails to sc winning the most g which may appropriately be vox filled with choco: Tree' soms.” any player « prize, cherry-log candy | lates ‘or bonbons. Guessing the Blossoms. A cherry branch all abloom with pink flowers is needed for the second | zame, uessing the Cherry Blos. oms.”” The hostess pasted quanti- ties of wee pink tissue paper circles, | | tor blossoms, onto @ bare branch hav- [ ing many twigs. After cutting the | circles about the size of a quarter of a dollar the center of each blossom | should be held firmly in the finger; while with the other hand the pape is gently squeezed together. Touch the center with library paste and stic to the twig. If three varying shad lelicate pink are used in fashionir )ssoms the effect will be realistic hostess must know exactly how | flowers she has on the entire | The nany nch Pro THE HOSTESS READY THE CH AND THE HAT ARE EASILY MaL SHOULD HAVE IRY TREE LOG TH WHICH AND QUICKLY de each player with a pencil | 1 a card with three of the cherry blossoms pasted lightly in the upper left-hand corner. Pasie two or threc | we slivers of green tissue paper ong the flowers to lovk like foli Ask each player to write his or her me on the card taken. When this s been done the hostess taky cherry branch in her hand, r high up, and asks the players to | how many cherry bl The branch should be ayved for at least two min As the flowers are very many and pasted cleverly, some times ind in | ters, no one can actually count them in the time given. The person who ifter this writes down ‘st to the correct one wins a prize A decorative branch of Japanese cherry blossoms is suggested. one former that and old. ¢ throwinz the her thi nd of their ¢ when about to young delight in hatchet, not. while adults in the accuracy <kill of their aim in The sec ond game requires some skill in iNg numbers, and suited rer young and to adu The preparations for simple, but n be by th ss. For the log from t ioned from a rol out the first re Until then they ace usually iightiy scattercd here there. Now come out full force, like the tb meas g easy o1 I not be quite hing appeal iildren wil tle harm! ises it e v score ¢ satistac s .nd th sucvesstul i gaug ites. werefore est who are is not clus to chil very singly <umet each game are made beforenand instance, there to be fash {rdboard, crudely 1t must hosi is Our Children—By Angelo Patri iily. Bring the friends to the house nd let them see each other Just much as they like, while stage for a happy endi erash through you will fasten the be loved one hrmly in the imaginal of the lover. Say little and wait Take the rel for granted and as one not to be taken too se riously by anv_one concerned. Do not tease the children about it, as that by arousinz emotion, f s 1 on their minds. It is admis sible and right to slip in an innocent ind deadly phrase now and then dur- ing a conversation about the sweet heart. but it must not_have the air of personality. Just a general and cout teous appraisal of one in whom you are slightly interested Ha it understoud that children of ns vet self-=ustaining and self izens. have not the use| and that a grown-up per 1 accompanics them whenever they | ride in trusted chauffeur is i | xood and guardian, if vou annot go yourself. A studied indif fer is the best attitude in a chap- | eron. But it must be studied. The day is quite long enoush most entertainments. but now and there must be a party and the Iren must feel free in the enjoy ment of it. The time for homecomin must Le set and adhered to, and.some | one must be waitinz with the lights on o receive the returning revelers. J (Copyrizht. 1926 1 ' Sweethearts. r of b 1 erc h sehool bring: of sweethearts. girl chosen 1hle one trom hat rteel- When the 1t the ¢ W ing stric to 3 child talks endless! one listen mpathetically can and le all you can characterist the child the first ti ones iew. Keep urelf. ste! you the about es is showing to 4 who sehool ch or develop refused pracrices in the za in is view udy to e New ta: points. earefully 1 the new © you time o fri ne swihs, und that in filnence r than any you can exert he oppesite direction, while it ravely lasts longe than year The ¢ soronwin chanzing fre must work in the round and be than the serr nd 1 rmless than the dove. Never attack tavored one di rectly. Opposition rouses antagonism nd a tinct of on. Step softly ur plans can higher for | the > personal attention to | )¢ sehoo! ‘teachers on | Write | self’ BY THORNTON | W. BURGESS and deselopn Fim “in_ care of this pap addressed, stamped envelope’ f and * reply BEDTIME STORIES were still white feit that warmth thinking of Spring. Sweet - Mistre | Spring!’ He knew she must have started from the Sunny South. How glad he would be when she arrived. Thinking of her reminded Peter of her heralds, who always go before her—Winsome Bluebird and Welcome Peter to with snow. and it set him Mocker's Little Joke. a lit Rabint queer thing, Peter | glad bbit, ow people love to play jokes other people, b hate to have jokes Naved on themselves. Why people = - Robin. ould e lauglh at others and = v when they are laughed at | It won’t be long now,” said Peter, is more than 1 can under | talking to himself, “before Winsome ke 1sh nd <o loniz as | Bluebird and Welcome Robin will ar- i unploasant joke I don't |Tive. It certainly will be zood to hear what difference it makes who the |them. I don’t know of any sound |more joyous than the voice of Wel- | come Ttobin when he first arrives. 1 | -——What's that?” Peter sat up so sud- ; that he scratched his nose with says b hemselve sand. A From back in the 0ld Orchard there came a voice. “Cheer-up, cheer-up, cheer-up, cheer!” cried the voice, and Peter felt a thrill go all over him. There was no mistaking that voice, “Cheer-up, cheer-up, cheer-up, cheer!” | came again. Velcome Robin!” exclaimed Peter. s sure as I have a cotton tail it is Welcome Robin. I've known him to come as early as this, but I wasn't expecting him so early this year. My, | my, my, isn't it great! I must go | right over and welcome him.” | Over in an apple tree on the edge of the Old Orchard nearest Farmer Brown’s house sat Mocker the Mock- ing Bird. His bright eves were twin- | kling as he watched for ahurrying lit- tle brown form to come up from the | Green Forest. Now and then he | would put his head back, open his mouth, and from it would come the | eheeriést of sounds, Cheer-up, cheer- | Joke is on. Now, I don’t mind having | jb € "X;‘;‘rfi“"- ches hell“\:‘:lllfidlf;z’)l;ll:\ld | & joke piayed on me.” of Welcome Robin and it was “Is that so2 exclaimed Mocker the {jven in the voice of Welcome Robin Mocking Bird. “Then you are Very |yt there was no one there but X ost folks, Peter Rab- g = i different from most folks, Mocker the Mocking Bird. Mocker bit. Personally, 1 don't believe that is | COCKIY oo Hoen e L quite true. I have an idea that you| '~ U° '”(_ right, 1926, are just like everybody else. Somehow (Covyright. 1926.) the one the joke is on never can see the joke. ‘Pooly” exclaimed Peter, “I can al ways see a joke, even if It is on me." | (. Mocker said nothing, but there was | oo & twinkle in his eye It was aljoces Melt one-half an ounce of twinkle of mischief. No one saw it.} e in a saucepan. Stir in one. | but it was there just the same ?m.xr an ounce of flour and one-half Presently Mocker weat over to Far-{, ning of milk, When boiling, add the mer Brown’s house to get some raisins | j,pgter, salt and pepper and one or snd currants, for that is what he was | (S5 SO0 TG PG cream. When “Jiving on chiefly through the \\'mm.‘!hm 2dd a squeeze of lemon juice and }»pm lx:,u.mx = -|~:l4m];(ore’d i nh""fl‘ serve. You may use shrimps in place ipperty-lipperty-lip, back of the stone il d fah oached the cige anine | T o D Green Forest. There he sat down in a bramble tangle to try to make up hig mind what to do or where to It was broad daylight and here s up in the edge of the Green instead of up in the dear Old atch, where he belonged. Jolly round, bright Mr. Sun was smiling down from the blue, blue sky and there was beginning to be warmth in h . although _the Green Forest und the Green Meadows v i LIV “WELCOME PETER A COTTON COME ROBIN!" ‘E “AS SURE TAIL IT ROBIN! % XCLAIMED | 1. HAVE IS WEL- Creamed Lobster. about two pounds of fresh | or canned lobster into small ! | Panned Oysters. Pick over and wash and drain 50 oysters. Into a saucepan put one heaping tablespoonful of butter, one- third teaspoonful of salt, a dash of paprika, and 10 drops of Worcester- shire sauce. Turn in the ovsters, cover and cook, stirring occasionally antil the oysters are plump and ruf- fled. Serve on saltines. hatchets |. and prope and er | 7. which answers | he needs. | getting now. Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “Mr. Brown nice man. He give me seven puppies he didn't need.” (Copyright, 1926.) What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. Aquarius. Tomorrow's planetary in the morning, and become especially aspects are but change increasingly for all matters This does not rd to adverse at tavorable, that relate to finance. mean that you can look forw some unexpected windfall. It only implies that any financial operations in which you may be interested wil e successful if they be consumun under such auspices as prevail in the afterncon. Let the morning be de voted to deliberation, let the afternoor be the time for execution! It is favorable opportunit. for marri: especially it your “mate in April, July or #ovember. A girl born tomorrow will enjoy re markably good health, and will, witk little difficulty, reach a vizorous wom inhood. A boy, however, will have more “ups and downs” of a physica nature than fall to the lot of the aver age chi He will be a constant source of worry, but, given great cure alimentation, will eventual Iy outgrow all these early weaknesses attain normaley. In character both boy and girl promise to be attrac tive, und to personal ities. They will b more disposed live an outdoor life than pass their time in any contined atmosphere They will, at all times, be Kind, and very considerate of others. If tomorrow is your birthday, vou were very stubborn in your youth I owing to favorable conditions this has turned into a virtue, and you have become determined, and not t be turned from a resolution. You are methodical and painstak ane thereby ble to surmount difficul ties that would easily swamp another You are also careful and thrifty though by no means stingy. You are a good planner and have excelle executive ability. In addition to thesc outstanding traits, and largely as result of them, you are a genera favorite among your friends and ac quaintances. Your home life exceptionally happy uthough you nearly alway: get vour own way, you do this diplor that those whom you bend to your own ideas think that their desives are being gratified, and not_yours. Well known persons born date are: Charles Emory Smith, jour nalist; Charles B. Lewis, “M. Quad,’ humorist: Russell H. Chittenden, edu cator; Edwin Denby, former Secretary of the Navy: August Belmont, bank J. J. Jusserand, former Ambus sador from Fra (Covy noon possess strong is on tha Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. An Enormous Weight. Mrs. T. J. W writes: “My boy of 3 wonths weighs 16 pounds, weighing 7 at birth. Is this too fat? He takes 6 ounces of half milk and half water very 4 hours except at night. He is ¢ constipated; do you think he is oung for orange juice? When he € wakens his pupils are twice helr normal size. Is this unusual? He acts like a child of 6 months and has never had any trouble with his eyes. He has a tooth almost through. this unusual for his age?” too Answer. He seems unusually precocious, both as to the tooth and his general actions. He is unusually large and on the diet he is getting it seems as if vou must be mistaken about b weight. His milk formula lack: sugar, which it should have, and is rather weak considering his weight, but as he is getting along so beautiful Iy I would not make any changes ex- cept in the matter of sugar. Add half an ounce of corn sirup to it daily. This will help the constipation. If he needs orange juice it is far preferable to castor oil. Why should one feel he is too young for a natural laxative when one does not fear an unnatural, medicinal one? Write for Leaflet. J. A. C.—This department offers a leaflet, for only a self-address ed and stamped envelope and a re- quest for it, which answers all the Mrs. | usual questions and suggests the diet | from seven months to Won't you please write for children three years. for this? An Anxious Mother—Children some- times have spasms when cutting man: teeth. The spasms might have been due to an injudicious diet at this time. Please write for leaflet number your last question. Inclose a self-addressed and stamped envelope with your inquiry. Mr. J. D.—The baby is progress- ing so fast that it would be logical to feel that he is getting more food than This might very well ac- count for his restlessness at night. Cut down the amount of food he is In your zeal to see him gain you may be overdoing the mat- ter. As vou did not tell me what you are feeding him I can't correct that. I think the baby's eye will grow straighter as he grows older. If not, he may need corrective glasses later, but T can’t think that his “eye have one thing to do with it. Wakeful Babies. Mrs. M.—Your baby’s case puzzles me as much as it does you, since you have apparently done everything that T could possibly suggest, and to no apparent avail. It may seem trite ad- vice, but I should not go near the baby and would let him cry for a night or two. It is more than likely that the waking has now become a habit and he likes also the attention he gets. Mrs. H. P.—I cannot tell you if the baby is getting the proper nourish- ment unless you tell me how you are feeding him. Why not send for the leaflets this department offers? They might be helpful in curing the trouble. Send a self-addressed and stamped envelope with your request please. Barley Broth. The remains of a mutton stew should be placed on the fire and cooked until the meat falls apart. After removing bones and gristle, the meat must be passed through the chopper and returned to the fire with the broth. Add one tablespoonful of pearl barley for each quart of broth and simmer for three hours. If pre- ferred, the barley can be cooked sep- arately and added half an hour before serving. Speaks Tartly to Fathers of Marriageable Daughters Know Your Son-in-Law DorothyDix Many Divorces and Unhappy Marriages Could Be Prevented If Fathers Would Investigate and Dis- cuss Daughters’ Beaux Before Marriage. ERHAPS one of the reasons why America leads the world in the number of its divorces is that in this country alone, of all civilized lands, young persons are permitted to marry without any guidance from their elde We let a boy, who couldn’t make a horse trade that would be binding on him, enter into a contract of marriage that involves his whole life. We permit a girl who isn't considered to have enoush judgment to pick out a silk dress alone and unalded, choose a husband with whom she may have to live for 50 years. No wonder so many American marriages turn out disastrously! The marvel is that they result as well as they do. Although we are great marriers in this country, and all fathers and mothers may reasonably expect that their sons and daughters will commit matrimony in due time, there scems to be a false sense of shame that keeps parents trom ever discussing the subject with their children or taking any precaution regarding it. 'his is particularly true of the American father, who appears to feel that he has no responsibility whatever about his daughter's husband and who acts as it a ghl's getung married was as much in the nature of an accident as her being struck by lightning—something that is in the hands of Providence and that he can neither promote nor avert. It is literally true that the average father does not know, by name or sight, the young men who visit his daughter and who take her out to places ol amusement. Still less does he know anything about the ability, character and the habits of these youths. About the first time that he wakes up and begins to take notice is when Mamie and a sheepish: looking strange youth walk into the library some night, hand in hand, and Mamie says: “Papa, tals is Mr. Terwiliiger, and Percy and 1 are going to be married. That rouses papa up, as « general thing, and he begins to make a hurried stigation into the present and past of Mr. Percy Terwilliger. But it is everlastingly too late then, for if Mamie has set her heart on marrying Percy, 40 matter what papa finds out, she wil £o along and marry him just the saie and the divorce wiil foiow in due season if Percy happens to be a blackguard instead of @ gentleman. But its no thanks to papa whichever way the match urns out. SOMETIMES papa is so inert, so careless of his daughter's happiness, that he doesn't even take the trouble to investigate at all into what kind of son-in-law he is getting. I know of one case in which a man let his daughter marry a bigamist, and yet if he had written a single letter to the town from which the man -ame or if he had gone to it—and it wasn't a hundred miles away—to avestigate the bridegroom’s record he could have saved the girl from neart-breaking fate before it his daughter observes that he institutes an undesirable match who docs his duty by The time, however, iappens, and for that rea aeeps & lne on every man who c to his house. It he soung Tomkins has taken to campmg on his parior chairs W casual inquiries as to that gentieman's moral habits. ith eve afternc in his front hall, he sstens 1o what the other_young tellows at the office and club have to say «bout young Smitn. It he observes that young Jones is nding good deai ot money on taking Mamie out, he invites Jones” employer out to lu unds out whether he 1s one of th young men who go climbing aom desk to desk or who are going to stay put the foot of the ladd to break up m any father It he runs across young = More than self and he sculine way wwssibly can, It isn't comantic 1or o papa nis i but w drunken loafer. ccause tne world is b hold down a warders 1o support that, he gets p gives Mamie the ot looking at them, ts sonally benetit Tor acquainted with the young men of his judgment and hard-headed, he sees through them as no woman to isnt any good for young Tomki papa. “Sissy,” he calls it. 1 herited tendency to drink. Papa Nor does the fact that nded against him appe The woman who him way papa s pose and any use for posture and look Smith to bemoan doesn’t see in him anything Jones is always out Work al to papa. 0 no-account him Wil have to take in up that gentleman o Job. mar is the -5 ND his eriticism goes with Mamie. T is sensitiye to, and that is a man’s opinion of anot man It cuts her o the quick fb know that other men have a contempt for the man she loves )¢ that they despise I weakling. Therefore, while a girl may not isten to her mother advice on the subject of a husband, she will to that )f her father; and it is the shame of shames that fathers so seldom speak ap in time to save their daughters from making miserable sre is one thing that every woman matches In these days no man can hide his faults under a bushel much out under the electric light for that. It is perte easy for any tather to find out whether the suitor for his daughter’s hand 1s a sober, clean iving, industrious youth who has some zood way of supporting a family or whether he is idle, trifling and dissipated. Nor is that ail. He can find out whether the youth is tyrannical, overbearing and mean, or whether he is zenerous, kindly and manly. And, having found ont, it is up to him to pass on the information to Mamie in such a way that she wiil the right man instead of the Wrong man and thereafter be a happy woman isstead of a4 wretched one. Papa should, in reality, be the best man at the wedding, the € Angel, instead of the figurehead who is ng behind th up the expenses and wondering what sort of a son-in-law he is getting 4 man a girl baby He lays on him providing her with something more than food and clot of fathers do not seem to think so. DOROTHY DIX. When the good God gives responsibility fe (hough the majc Dafly Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright, 1926.) N - H N =2 N s . Disposal of goods. 2. Ramparts. 3. Spanish definite article. 4. Brother of Odin. 5. Rub out. 6. Fine earthy sediment. 7. Vegetable. 9. Boll gentl 10. One who ships. 2. Pompous 14. Pleasure. 15. Snake. 18. Increase. Kind-of molding. 23. Island on the Gulf of Riga. 24. Large stream. . Repair. 27. Travel 29. Observes. 33. Negative. 31. Himself. . Turns aside. God of the Philistines. Goddess of discord. . Dispose of by sale. Singer. Parts of the feet. Plant. Pronoun. hovel. . Sorrow. . Not evem. - River in Ttaly. Command. Greek letter. Bird. Fotten up. Portuguese coins. © Sell. Paradise. Pay attention. . Thdse who run off. Tested by Time "SALADA" TEA Has Stood the Test of Time the h and]| up | We all live too SUB ROSA BY MIMI. Wouldn't Have to Cook. Tva was always a superior young person. although her parents were Just average middle-class folks with a inoderate income. Tva’s mocher used to moan and wail over her daughter’s refusal to take a hand with the housework. “She just won't learn to do a thing. she will never have to cook. She won't marry a man unless he has enough money to keep her in luxury with a few servants and a car. Where she gets her ideas from I don't know.” Thus did the poor lady mourn over the defections of her offspring. But Iva remained stubborn. She ! took no interest in cooking or sewing lor any of the maidenly arts—and she sneered at those of her friends who married poor men and took over the work of keeping house. Finally she married, too—just the sort of man she'd planned for. He was wealthy and attractive, and gen- erous—what could be sweeter? Little Iva found herself mistress of a stunning house with three respect- ful servants ready to do her bidding. Only she hudn't the slightest idea what to 14 them do! She did want to please her husband-but how could she give orders to the maids properly, when she hadn’t the faintest conceptions of | their proper dutles? She couldn't check up on any of them when they were careless; be- use she hadn't the true housekeep eve. Dust and dirt escaped her notice. The maids, realizing this, eased up on their work, and the house began to look messy When the cook made a mistake, and spoiled a lot of food, Iva couldn’t tell what was wrong—she complained, but she hadn't any helpful suggestions to offer. At the end of four months, what her servants thought of her cannot be printed. And what her husband thought of her was nearly as bad. She'd failed on her job—even an wdoring young husband’ couldn’t for ve her that And haughty te science now what vears humiliation and suffering Jut it is humiliating to have to con- .s< o the man you love that you're incapable of managing your end of the marriage business. of ung er Tva is taki of she, s0 the proud and £ a course in dome: all things! Learning might have learned ce th labor of must manual irself, you ch lubor. n't hold a man’s love without keeping learn to t respect can he have for vou've chosen? You don't apply for a position as secretary unless you Know stenogra- phy. do you? Then don't file vour be a wife, unless yo the job. application to re trained for i will be glad o anewer any ingoiri-e per brovided a stamped. Ie inclosed pyright. 1926.) “Puzzlicks” Puzsle-Limericks. There once wus a bu Who bored by mista His inopportune In pursuing a —4- sw a piece of him clear to —5— A ship-worm A device containing an explosive to be fired by concussion Fervor. 1 4. Repast. 5. City of Ohio. (Note—""I'll never m: that mis- take again,” the ship-worm re- ported to have murmured, as he sadly gathered the pieces together. What mistake? Complete the limerick and { vou'll tind out. The answer and un- other “Puzzlick” will appear tomor- row.) is Yesterday’s “Puzzlick.” unfortunate dumb man of Kew conversing with signs that he knew. So exceedingly fast That his fingers, at last, Got entangled and fractured a few. An Was Co;tage Cheese Salad. Divide one pound or more of cot- tage cheese into four portions. Chop separately some red peppers or can- ned pimentos, some nut meats, some cress and the volks of some hard- boiled eggs. Mix the peppers with one portion of the cheese, the nut meats with another, the cress) with the third and the volk of the eggs with | the fourth. Mold every portion into small balls and place the balls from each portion on crisp lettuce leaves arranzed on separate plates. Then add a little dressing to each plateful. Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle. [HE FIRST IN FIFTY YEARS New Kellogg Achievement is Real Improvement on Oats - If you’ll buy a package of New Oata from your grocer today, you can have breakfast ready in three minutes tomorrow—in less time than it takes to boil an egg! And what & hreakfast! Evaryono’l?ny it’s the best in years! New Oata makes the most tempting and delicious breakfast. A hot cereal for cool mornings. It’s a blend of oats and wheat evolved in the famous Kellogg kitchens. There they have merged all the exquisite goodness of these two luscious grains and created _;mnew flavor—a new food—the first improvement on oats in fif ears. And all you have to do Z; yprcpll‘e New Oata is heat it three minutes in boiling water before serving. It is already cooked through and through when you buy it. You get every bit of the flavor and perfect texture. New Oata is always light, always melting— never Soggy or gluey like ordinary oatmeal. Your grocer has New Oata. Try it. You’ll find it a revelation. 9, NEW OATA ked for you I 1 i o, apd spared herself much | it takes a high grade of m Even though you don't have to do | matted. re unfitted for the vocation j down is the best sort of filling made i i | { i | | I | 2 FEATURES. Making the Most of Your Looks BY DOROTHY STOTE. Dear An Wou'd you helieve that other I s bust ed in th Her bust may taten sman with a large ight dread , but ded vest her hips like a dif nan. dress on th been not have fully out of proportion such a style, it looked hu and long side would have her ferent—and smarter Yours for discernment, tus with its A long draperies at rou 1 ok WE GO SHOPPING BY MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN. For the Rest of Your Head. Most peopl rest of their heads sorts of pillows, all colors, fillings and cove of piilow you will finally sele depend chiefly on your ne ds. A low priced pillow is rarely cheap. because terials 1 make a pillow really serviceable Probably the cheapest filling, ir price, is made of chicken fa hers. s nice and soft, but it lumnps eas and it is wet it floss is also cheap pillows, but it isn't sat tory, because the floss ten t arate and the pillow becomes lump Duck feathers, duck and geese, zee feathers and down are the «ther kinds of fillings. A fine qui e g e T There are all shapes, sizes, S he kind t should xra can sleep e How is 1 ured” to 1 filli pi should worth ical to assure used i1 in hour be the over put in roth When macaroni ow has plenty made and if a light-weight pil of resiliency it is probably that filling. You can’t en a4 pillow to see what filling is inside, it's true, but cvery reliable dealer will show his materials glad! Halr pillows because they If you don’t want to larly you x on hand in Summer use You may buy a pillow ¢ ered with plain or art ticking. There are cneap cotton ticks, also those made of fine art | and linen materials. Many manufac turers make up tick to the mattress. For down pillow of linen is advisable. It is soft, closely woven, and tiny bits of fe: can’t work through the cover. ticking is more attractive, but ticking must above all fullfil its purpose of | keeping the contents from leaking. | There are no recular sizes for pil from 18 by 30 inches. pounds, to pillows weighing as n h as 5 average size is a 22 by hing 3 pounds pillow that's smaller than 22 by 27 inches is probably designed for use as_a cushion. Many women have wondered wheth er a low pillow or high pillow would be the best to buy. If you are ac- customed to sleeping on a hizh ¥ low you will find it difficult to r easily on a low pillow. Ph: preferred by some cooler and firmer se them resu ) keep a couple | I sickness or for case of ’armesan Woman illness just man_work Vo Comet Rice cooks liaht.white and FADELESS DYES Dye or tint all materials in one operation Dresses, however trimmed or made of combined materials, successfully dyed or tinted in one operation with Putnam Fadeless Dyes. No need to rip apart. Same applics to hangings, draper- ies, etc. Boil todye. Diptotint. The original one-package dye for all materials and pu ." Directions in package. 13 ceats at your dealers. Use Putnam No-Kolor Bleach to remove color and stains. | FREE ILLUSTRATED BOOKLET: How to Besutify Hun- dreds of Things in Home and w-rdmbe.o'AgdrulnD'th n::. MONROE DRUG COMPANY, QUINCY, ILL. Basty (Cocoa and Delicious (Chocolate (2ake " BAKER’S Cocoa ax¢ Chocolate Delightful foods and beverages of high quality, pure and healthful. “WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. ESTABLISHED 1750 DORCHESTER, MASS. CANADIAN MILLS AT MONTREAL BooKlet of Choice Recipes sent free.