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WOMAN’S PAGE. Curls May Come Back Into Fashion BY MARY MARSHALL. The old-time idea was that one had to be very beautiful to be able with any sort of success to wear one's hair brushed severely back from one's brow. Even to altempt a very severe TER OF LITTLE CURLS 1S HERE TO HIDE THE OF GROWING BOBBED A CLU USED ENDS HAIR. coiffure was apt to set one’s friends and acquaintances agog. It meant either that you no longer cared a bean what vou looked like, or that you were suffering under the delusion that you were beautiful enough to get away with that sort of thing. You, of all people! But now every one and any oge at- “ tempts the sleek coiffure—pug-nbsed, hook-nosed and flat-nosed, women with pretty chins and women -with bulldog chins and women with no chins at all. And as we grow used to this arrangement it causes very little comment. At any rate, it looks neat and trim, There was that about the close halr out, called abroad the Eton crop. It may not have been flattering ,but at least it was neat and smart. But now, we understand, the Eton crop is losing caste. That the shingle in any form is coming to a close of its period of impgrtance many folk assert. And tor ‘more than six months the rumor has been going the rounds that curls— real ringlets—are coming back into fashion. s The change will not come suddenly. Already you may have noticed the dis- position to ruffe up the hair of a shingled haircut to form curls over the ears and forehead. One hair dresser also observes that many women are growing tired of the very wide, very smooth wave. And at every dance you attend you may see a girl or woman with growing hair just long enough to be caught into a little bunch of curls at the back of the neck. Only of course you do not need to have your own hair curled for that purpose. You can buy a little bunch of cukls and fasten them se- curely in place over the ends of your hair at the back. Perhaps when you had your hair cut originally you saved the hair that was cut off. From these you might be able to have the little bunch of curls manufactured. In England they point with interest to the fact that Lady Galloway, not yet 20 and distingulshed as the “youngest countess,” wears a curl right in the middle of her forehead. My Neighbor Say: A blanket pinned to a line on the porch is an excellent pro- tection from strong sunlight or wind, if one has no porch cur- tains. It is safer than a screen, which is apt to blow over on the baby's carrfage. The flavor of cocoa Im- proved by sprinkling a little cinnamon over the top just be- fore serving. When parsley s not obtain- able for garnishing, use the tips from celery or finely sliced outer leaves of brussels sprouts. A slice of lemon rubbed over the hands whitens and softens the skin. If you have a quantity of milk and wish to keep it fresh for several days, scald it, put it in sterilized bottles with steril- ized stoppers, cool and keep near the ice. Strips torn from sheets rolled tightly into little rolls and pin- ned up come in handy. Ban dages average from 2% to 3 yards in length, very narrow ones being best for toes and fin- wider ones for arms and Bandages should always rolled and pinned until needed. is BY YALE S. NATHANSON, B. Sc., M, A. Department of Paychology, University of Pennsyivania. Let’s All Yawn. Well, let's all yawn! mouth real wide. Make a fist of your hands. Raise them to the level of your neck by bending your arms at the elbows and yawn. Yawn! Yawn! Yawn! If you haven't yawned yet, repeat the exercise and you'll find vourself with your mouth wide open yawning for all you're worth. Did you ever sit in a street car or other public places and watch some one yawn? It's contagious. It doesn't take long before the exercise has spread about and every one s yawn- ng. This is caused by the fact that assoclate some particular act with & certain fesling. There is a pleas- urable feeling of rest which comes from yawning. We are all familiar with it, o when we see some one yawn or even talk about or mention the word we follow suit. This can be carried into other flelds. That is why we smile when we do—or the reverse. If you do not feel particularly cheerful and well, stand in front of a mirror ‘and smile broadly. You are apt to feel more jovial immediately. The story is told by a noted psychol- ogist of a bal~ who caused them considerable worry because she did Open_your i BEAUTY CHATS Last-Minute Treatments. We'll suppose you have to go out unexpectedly and you have been too busy to keep your appearance up to what you think is your best. What can vou do in a few minutes, perhaps while people wait for you (which al- ways makes you nervous and turns your fingers into thumbs), to improve your looks the most in the least pos- ible time? Well, brush the hair quickly and ously for half a minute. This ulone 18 often stimulating enough to make the hair attractive and glossy when it has seemed rather dead Comb it, using the fine tooth part of the comb, for this puts it neatly in place and “sets” it much better than coarse end of the comb. * hair. For the face quick trentments. 1 think the best is to spread a laver of cold cream over the skin, and, without even taking t.ae to £e it in wash it off again with ' ater and B \ery soapy e combi nation of the cr: the wet ness and the » on " formed wrinkies, I up i 0 the face. mik , ad alive. If the eves v v v v " the cloth from the v it over them for a momen and refreshes them and brizght. Now rinse with cold water. Neither $he face cream, the hot water nor the not start to walk when other children of the same age were already toddling about. This youngster was 18 months of age. She had been crawling for some months, but somehow seemed to lack the courage necessary to stand erect and actually walk. Every meth- od was tried, but the infant could not master the fear of stepping out alone, unsupported. . One afternoon the baby's father walked into the room and as he en- tered removed his coat. He sat for a few moments, then arose, ed over to the table in the center of the room and removed his cuffs (the detachable kind, now somewhat out of vogue). placing them upon the table. The baby crawled over to the table from the corner of the room, slipped the cuffs over her wrists and began to walk. Evidently there was an association between the cuffs and walking, for she stepped out with the greatest con- fidence and really walked. For a long time afterward the only way the child could be induced to walk was by permitting her to wear the much- needed cuff: . That is what we call associating some act with some other sensation. We all do it in our everyday actions. Stop and think over some which are pecullar to you. They are indeed in- teresting. BY EDNA KENT FORBES. cold rinse takes much time, and the cold rinse is so important I wouldn't advise you to omit. For it too brings blood up to the skin, draws up loose muscles and wipes out tired lines, giv- ing you animation instead of weari- ness Then clean the nails quickly, push back the cuticle with an orange wood stick and polish them hard with a buffer. A high polish will cover a lurge number of manicuring erro Mrs. George D y hard water with a small bag oatmeal for bathing the face You can also do this with a few drops of ammonia, but this can he so easily overdone that it is best not to depend upon it. Rain water s used often by people living where they cannot get anything but hard water. Proud Mother—Brushing the hair around the scalp instead of straight downward will encourage ringlets in the baby’s hain After you have washed the baby's head euch day, form the hair into ringlets as it s Lei ed. 1If there is anv tendency 1o curling at all, this will be the only raining necessary. S )wners of motion pictur: iingland complain that many women v developed the habit of bringing their lunches and staving all day, to the exclusion of other patrons of the theater. soften f bran or nd neck. houses in l Making the Most of Your Looks ! l BY DOROTHY STOTE. I Dear Anni Now, ¥ don't say the collar on the teft 1s ot smart, but what I do say is that it should not be worn by a girl with & thin neck, for its thiokness merely adds to her thinness. I think the thin neck would do better with a high taflored collar rather than a turn- over model. Yours for the high, when its becom- fos. LETITIA. Copyright, 1926.) SUB ROSA BY MIMI Wasted Years. “When I left high school,” sald the tusiness girl, “1 ‘ust refused to §o to college, although my parents were anxious that I should go. I was de- termined to make money immediately, and after a few weeks I got a job with a publishing house. “It was only a small firm, and they didn't pay very good wages. I start- ed out as a clerk—just a general worker with ne speclal job. “For six months I did the dullest, most. uninteresting things in the world. My superior was the most finicky, particular man 1 ever met— every bit of work done for him had to be perfect. If I misspelled one word when I wrote a report of my day's work to him the report had to be done all over again, ““One day he announced that he was going to let me do proofreading, and I was awfully pleased. The job meem- ed 8o much more dignified than that of errand girl. “Still, my salary increased by only $2, and my boss was fussier than ever. I worked myself to the bone in that place, and when I left 1 was making only $17 a week. I left be- cause the money was too litt] “Inside of three months I landed a job with a newspaper, got a good sal- ary to start with and went on making more and more cash until today I'm getting a salary that many men would he proud of. “1 often laugh at the old days and wonder why on earth 1 stuck down there in that little old publishing house. Wasted vears of my life and haven't got a thing to show for {t.” There are probably many of you business girls who feel that you're wasting vour time and effort on an ill-paid job. But are you? The B. G. above doesn't seem to realize that she learned mere about her particular line of work in those vears of drudgery under the “fussiest employer in the world" than she might have gained from years of college. Underpaid as she undoubiedly was, she was gathering knowledge and ex- perience from her job calculated to make her eligible for a better posi- tion In the world outside. Just because she had such a meticu- lously careful boss she formed the habit of belng painstakingly accurate. And her accuracy probably helped a great deal in putting her where she is today If you're working on a job that pays you almost nothing and is giving you nothing in experfence, by all means quit it. But if you are gradually be- coming & more poised, efficient woman hang on until you think you're good enough to look for something big. While you're still at the beginning of things make belleve you're serving an apprenticeship, as they used to do in the old days. When vou've mastered vour chosen Fork g0 out and demand a big price or it. Lovesick.—Forget him by all means and look around for somehody else. The surest cure for an old heartache is a new love affair. (Copyright. 1926.) HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN. Here is a striking example of how a hobby for collecting little art ob- jects can be turned to decorative mc- count in one's home. These three framed fans over the black marble mantelplece sre treasures from a KAS small but valuable collection of old fans. They are both beautiful and interesting and sound a keynote of distinction for the whole room. The central fan is a pale vellow satin _creation, dating back to the courtly days of powdered wigs and patches. It is decorated with painted Chinese figures. The ribs were re- moved before it was framed so the satin would lie flat and the design show to best advantage. The other little fans are less im- pressive, but exceediugiy bright and pretty. They are of paper, dating back possibly 70 or 80 vears. 1Copyright, 1926.) L= Pistory of Vour Name BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAY WALDECK SOURCE—A name. RACIAL ORIGIN—Dutch or man. locality, also a given Ger- Here is a family name which may be either Dutch or German in its origin. The only method in which to be sure in the individual case is to carry back a genealogical tracing to the point where the decision can be ‘made. In most cases, however. it may be safely assumed that the family name is of German origin. The word “wald-eck” has only ene meaning, whether you trace it back to Holland or Germany, “forest oak.” Thus, it ia easy to see that in a great many instances it was first used as a surname with reference to the place from which the bearer came, or, rather, the place in which he dwelt. for such a description would have but little meaning except to persons who lived in the locality and were.familiar with the place referred to. In many instances, however, the name was used as a given name. It was by no means an unpopular one in the Germany of several hundred years ago, at the perfod when family names were being formed, and it is atill to be found & given name in that coun- try, though not so frequently as in the ast. i (Copyright, 1028.) Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. Often mispronounced—Px nounce the oo as in “school, in “look.” Often misspelled—Papier-mache. Synonyms—Desire, wish, aspiration, longing, coveting, craving, appetite, want, fanc; ing. Word study—"“Use a word three times ana it is yours.” Let us in- crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's woed: Involve; to draw into entanglément. “I do not want to become:involved in Jour controversy. i = | WHEN WE G O SHOPPING ' MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN. ‘When You Buy Service. Often we forget that we aren't get- ting full value out of certain things unless service comes with them. Many housewives uppreciate the value of service. and they will buy only from stores which render it. There are many things which we purchase that require service occasionally 1o make them useful and to keep them in_good working order. No_matter what sort of a radio set vou buy, there's one thing you will want, too, and that's service. You will buy vour set at a store which will take your battery for recharging or repair and replace parts. Radiv buyers have learned that some stores maintain_a regular “trouble” depart ment. They have men who will call at vour home to find out what's wrong with vour set and then fix it This is but one example of buying service with an article. Every automobile dealer maintains a service station. What good would it be to buy a car and after running it for a while learn that you'd have to send it back to the fetory to be re palred Aute pbile owners and buy ers value servi 80 highly that good service station ni by or in town may decide their purchase, all other things beink equal. Farmers feel the same way about farm implements, such as tractors and gasoline plowers. Service should be considered when vou're buying your vacuum cleaner. A careless maid may burn out a fuse or tear off a connection. If you wish to use the cleaner immediately, it's a convenience to be able to drop in at a store and get the part you need or have the dealer send up a man to put vour cleaner in shape. The same is true of all electrical equipment, | such as washers, irons. grills. ete. Some stores may be able to sell things at a lower price than others simply because they don't render service. You have learned that service Is worth the price if you are reasonably charged for it. 1t's a distinct advantage to buy carpets and rugs and furs at stores | which will repair, clean and store them. Many stores will give a serv- ice guarantee or agree to store them for a year free of charge when vou buy them at the end of the season Some stores have extra facilities our use, and it is wasteful on yvour part if you don't use them. If you are buying an article to be shipped you v be buving service, too. Most storea will not only wrap the article and ship it. but they will also pay the carriage charges and guarantee its delivery. It is certainly worth something to all of us to know that the articles we buy will be de livered In good condition. In many cases price may be a secondary con sideration. simply because service f: s0_important a factor. If vou're buving anything which will require service to keep it in sat tory use. don't forget that fact when you make your purchase. Every once in a while a store will hold "a sale of radio sets, vacuum cleaners, lawn mowers, etc., and put a low price on them. Yet in the end they may be the most expensive things you have ever hought. They may cost you a small fortune to keep in ‘use. It's advisable to demand service and expect to pav for It ice seldom costs as much as ack of it does. Nothing's cheap that’s useless or too expensive to maintain. Patronize the stores which will serve you as well as sell you. Our Children— By Angelo Patri The Tense Child. Took carefully at the child before You. If his body is tense. set to work to ease the tension before going any further. Tense nerves and muscles mean a blocking of the flow of energy and a cessation of activity. A child can do nothing worth while under tension. It is necessary for a child to know this. Often a teacher says, “Up tall and fmmediately the little figures b come rigld. The heads tremble under the tenslon as the ining children strive to hald them stiffly erect. The arms are like iron rods, the hands a St and lifeless, the step is jerky There i no rhythm, no swing any- where. Children cannot do good work in_that state. Teach them to relax as they work When you see them bent into Stiff, an- gular poses, sing to them, turn on the Victrola, recite a swinging poem, sug- gest ease and rhythm in word "and manner and deed. Let the body ride free if you would have good work. Slumping is not sitting at ease. Tell the children to let the seat carry them. Let the seat feel their weight instead of their pressing down on it. Sit free of the desk in front and rest lightly ainst the hack. so the backbone ays and the head is as free s a lily n jts stem. Listening should not be rigid work. It will not do to nag all day about posture, but vou can subtly -suggest it again and again. Keep all tension out of your voice and manner. A nerve control that is indicated by MODE MINIATURES A new umbrella has a zipper case, measuring approximately 18 inches. It was designed primarily for the woman who travels smartly equipped, the hinu. u.apses as the um- 4 can be tucked easily away until Ta In more fickle vein. other ymireiy s~ bemmg introduced by fashion vellow oilsking curiousiy painced— these to watch the numerous vellow slickers tnat have recently heen seen, adorned with faces, fantastic and puzzling enigmas. ! MARGETTE. w “|nore the fact weird and humorous | . locked jaws and clenched teeth is not control, but repression, and the re- pressed teacher makes an irritable and disorderly class. When things press too hard upon you. when you feel that if just one more child raises his hand to say, “Skip a line?” you will commit mur. {der, turn away and look out of the | window and tell yourself that you ary !riding the storm like a sea gull. Tell story to vourself until you L the sea and feel the the sea undernearth supporting | vou. buoying you until you float free hen turn back to the class and ig that Becky got out of her seat and that Patsy ut loud. Maybe th you could, if vou v to, gobble them up. 'Instead vou smile at them wisely and they subside—without ten- sion. For tension is contagious. So is relaxation and rhythm. Choose. It is no easy matter to eliminate ten- sion from the classroom. It cannot be done to the hundred per cent stage, but it can be approached and at times | accomplished to « high degree. Just | g0 gently, tread softly. keep your head riding free. and the children will | imitate and acquire the attitude. | What is true of the classroom is | quite as true of the home. The fam- | ily must learn how to save their en |ergy by sparing the tension. When the muscles of the neck and shoulders set, when you feel your teeth press- ing hard, when y®i hear vour voice rising and vour temper going, there in tension all along the line, and the child catches the mood and the dam- age is done. Loosen up. Ribbon Jelly. Prepare a plain gelatine jelly. - vide it into three parts. Flavor one with strawberry juice, another with orange and another with maraschino. AN IDEAL | LENTEN FOOD | SANITARY GROCERS | | can | rveat rhythm | | inches thic | 1 | to that of the best bloodhoun |in HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWT| The St. Bernard Dog. Even people who are not dog lovers are familiar_with the massive, mild, kind-eyed, affectionate dog, the tradi- tional companion of the fireside and the children’s friend, which is called St. Bernard.* We may not be able to distinguish a collle from a Russian wolfhound, but we do know a St. Ber- nard. And the history of the St. Bernard, in which lies the origin of his name, is in keeping with his character of the most beloved of domestic dogs, for this animal was bred for the special pur- pose of bringing succor to humans! The race was originally developed from an unknown strain at the hospice of | t. Bernard in the Alps, whose monks | have for centuries maintained the ! breed for the purpose of rescuing trav- elers lost in the terrific snowstorms common there. The Monastery of St. Bernard is in a mountain paxs of the Alps east of Mon: Blanc and 8,000 feet above the level of the sea. It is 17 miles from | Aosta in Italy and 30 miles from Mar- | tigny, Switzerland. Founded in me]‘ year 962 by St. Bernard de Menthou, from whom the dogs whose breed was | developed there take their name, it ix still in existence, having been found by visitor shortly before the war to be occupled by 20 Augustine monks with 7 assistants, whose special mission was to use their famous dogs to aid travelers lost in the smow. At that time the hospice was entertaining 000 to 25,000 guests a year, who contributed only a small part of the cost required to maintain ft. Besides rescuing travelers in dis tress the St. Bernard dogs are used | 1o test snow tracks and the safety of ice bridg The keenness of scent- ing and the ability of the native St. Bernard to track is sald to be equal Al though they are very hardy animals, the bréed was twice threatened with extinction during the middle of the nineteenth century, once by a pesti-| lence and again by an avalanche, which carried away all but three of the monks' dogs. However, you can't keep a good breed down and the St. Bernard has survived to be the savior of the mountain pass as well as the guard of the household and the pet and playmate of children. DAUGHTERS OF TODAY By HAZEL DEY0 BATCHELOR Martha Denndson ot }1 faces the thit her Rusbond and children drifted away from her. She emeets Pervy MacDonald and they become friendly. * CHAPTER V. The Invitation. Tt seemed an unusually long morn- . Martha was lying on the couch in the living room leafing through a magazine, when at 11 o'clock the tele- phone rang. She went to answer it with a thrill of expectation. Anything was better than stagnation in the apartment. Perhaps Emily Westcott was getting up a foursome or bridge, or it might be Estelle Brainerd with the suggestion that they take in a matinee. She took the receiver off the hook with the thought that at least some- thing was going to happen, and then there came to her across the wire a cheery hello in a lazy voice and in a flagh her depreasion vanished. “Good morning,” she returned quickly, her voice suddenly warm and cordial, her breath a little uneven. “I hope it 18 good morning Wwith you,” Perry said with a laugh. “It's anything but that with me. Did you ever see such a day?” “Never,” laughed Martha. “Well, you sound cheery enough. Perhaps you'll let me inflict myself upon you this afternoon. I need some- thing or some one to buck my morale. Let's go to see one of the revues and have tea somewhere afterward. What do you say “That sounds amusing. But why not have tea with me afterward?" “Provided we have tea together, nothing else matters. Shall 1 call for you then a little before “That will be very nice.” Martha turned away from the tele phone with a feeling of guilt. Im pulse, augmented by John's attitude of last night and this morning, had led her to accept Perry’s invitation and, more than that, to invite him to the apartment for tea. She had never done such a thing before and it troubled her. But, in spite of that fact, she was stirred, excited. She looked forward to seeing Perry again with all the anticipation of a girl in vited to the theater for the first time in her life As a matter of fact, It was not so much Perry, the man, who stirred Martha; it was what he represented to her. He stood for the things she had thought lost forever. He made her feel that she was still young, still desirable. He was willing to give her the small but {mportant atientions that John had denied her for o long While she was eating a solitary lunch she heard John's key in the lock, and again that feeling of guilt swept over her. Was she being fair to John? Would he be angry with her if he knew the truth? Perhaps she ought to tell him before he left. Then the would have nothing to regret afterward. ‘These thoughts were rushing through her mind when he appesred in the doorway. “I'm off,” he said curtly, as a'ways. ‘“‘Better plan to get out for a walk this afternoon. You women hang around the house too much. No won- der you're bored. “I'm golng to the theater,” Martha returned evenly. “That's good,” he said indifferently. “Have a good time. I'll be back to- morrow in‘time for dinner,” That was all. He did not evince the slightest Interest {n her plams. It made no difference to him where she went or with whom, and as she heard the door slam behind him revolt surged up in Martha's heart, So that was the way he felt about it! Well, in that case, she was justified in doing what she pleased. She would take what the gods had to give her and with no qualms of consclence either. She was trembling a_little as she rose from the table and went to her room to pat on her hat. It s partly from nervous excitement and partly because she had caught a look of pity in Hilda's eyes as she had left the dining room. John never bothered to be polite befors the servants, and Mar- tha hated to he humiliated befc them. (Cops ht. 1926.) (Continued in Tomorrow's Star.) Clues to Character BY 0. ABFRNETAY. . The Walk. The walk, pecultarly, is expressive of character. As a person walks, so will be his character. If the life prin cipal i8 slack, and its manifestations lax, the walk is slipshod, dragging, shufing and loosejointed. A full of snap and vim indicates a char- acter full of energy and power. A shiftless, lagging, dragging walk is found to be the natu ait of an fnert, shift'ess person. An abundance of life magnetism keeps every muscle taut and renders the walk Iight and springy. A walk w. full of short steps, turns, b ks a short, curt and ill-balanced kind of character. A smooth, gentle walk denotes a sweet, gentle, harmonious character. A shuf- fling walk, and stubbing the toes, indi- cates that those who possess these characterisiics rarely ever attain any- thing worth while in this world. Slow walkers think and live slowly. A nippy, dainty, affected step bespeaks just this kind of character. This per- fon is mnot le is cunning and tull of false pretense. Beware of hin. sharp uneven sincere Thousands find vigorous health in these vitamins! WHEN people have too few vitamins, they lack energy, become easily tired, have less resistance to disease. When the vitamin deficiency is more pro- nounced, they actually fall ill of such diseases as pellagr beri-beri, scurvy and rickets (in children). And without any vitamins at all, human beings die. That is why cod-liver oil is so often prescribed by physicians for people who are apparently not ill at all. That is why cod-liver oil is considered so important to the health and growth of children. For good cod-] ver oil is the richest known source of the essential fat-soluble vitamins. These are the vitamins that raise resistance to disease, protect children against rickets and insure the proper development of tooth and bone structure. No wonder so many thousands find vigorous health and energy in good cod-liver oil! But it is important that you should choose an oil which really contains all the vitamins it is sup- posed to have. For the vitamins in cod-liver oil are easily lost in the process of preparation, packaging and transportation. Squibb’s Cod-Liver Oil is refined and packaged under a special, exclusive process which preserves its vitamin potency. One pint of Squibb’s Cod- Liver Oil is richer in vitamin A than 1200 pints of grade A whole milk; than 100 pounds of the best (Copyright, 1926.) Fillet of Veal the fillet from the upper part leg. It should he a “Tie it in d with a few strips a hot oven, lowering the heat after a quarter of an hour. Baste fre-| quently, allowing 20 minutes for the | pound. Remove the strips of pork about half an hour before the meat is done. smove the bone from the fillet before cooking desired, filling the vory stuffing. In either Cut of the Others how this new hy- gienic pad discards easily as tissue — no laundry ECAUSE one woman 20 advises others, and because doctors so urge, most women are deserting the old-time “sanitary pad” for a new and better way. Eight in 10 better-class women now use “KOTEX.” / Discards as easily as a piece of ssue. o laundry. No embar- rassment. Five times as absorbent as ordi- nary cotton pads. Deodorises, thus ending ALL danger of effending. Obtainable at all drug and depart- ment stores mply by saying “KOTEX.” You ask for it without hesitancy. Package of 12 costs only a few cents. Proves old wavs a needless In fadirness to vourself, try it. creamery butter! To be safe, insist upon Squibb’s Cod-Liver Oil. At drug stores everywhere. No. 100—Light weight, pure ik, foli rabioned. Lisle Tope and soles. §1 N 200 Medium weight, sil. . full fashioned. Li and soles. $1.85. No. 300 _Heavy weight, pure sllk, full fashioned service stockings. Lisle tops and soles. $1.95, ure ops KOTEX Ne laundry—discard like tissue Patented triple garter strip prevents runs. BLVE MCON 'HESE lovely stockings of purest silk have the dainty strength of a fairy’s wing. Full fashioned, in all the new colors. At prices that mean real saving —in the beginning, because they cost so little; in the end, because they wear 30 long. The patented garter strip helps to give longer wear in every pair. Be sure to ask your dealer for Blue Moon Silk Stockings. “LONGER WEAR IN EVERY PAIR"* SILK STOCKINGS No.400—Chiffon weight. pure silk, full fashioned. Lisie tops and silk soles. $1.85. No. 500 — Chiffon weight, fine gauge, puresilk, fullfs Silk from top 1o toe. No. 600 — Medium weight. full fashioned service stockin Silk from top to toe. $2.15. 5. Witte, Skin. French Nude, sphere Jenny. Pearl, Bl letal. Rose Beige. Rose Taupe.