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WOMA Problem of Selecting N’S ‘PAGE; tockings. BY MARY MARSHALL. Some one tried to start the doctrine the other day that a match stockings should to the complexion from the | the floor wbove, nd girl chance come shoy rtment iy two deps ceompanied careying one a half dozen on er- or be the business of selling stockings quite S it adds interest to it. We heard quite a bit of the vogue for the Russiun boot™ Winter, and alarm here to think that we, too, might take to wearing boots and so lose a measure of our interest in sheer, fine stock ings. However, nothing came of it. We also talked somewhat of the re vived interest in lisle stockings, and some women have been wearing them but the gfeat majority of well dressed women in this country are as firmly attached as ever to good quality silk stocking: (Covyright n seemed 1926.) MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST Stewed Prunes with Apricots Hominy with ¢ Bacon and I Orange Marmalade Coft Toast LUNCHE Baked Macaroni with Cheese Rye Orange Outmenl Cookies Tea DINN Split Pea Soup ffed Beef ileart i ved Carrots Baked Stuffed Potatoes Celery and I Salad Prune Tapioci Pudding [ PRUN W S WITH A one pound prunes half pound ay cover PRICOTS of sh LINEN ASOL. OF HANDLE, WKINGS ARE MEROIDER ACK IN PINK AND GRERN | SHOE | LINEN | THE hould have no | color of the = the in the | parently Nordic type, n your ownish re uld n the. ed shat worn | to the &n ince of shoes rect ratio witk short ski counters from they rather stovkng has beco, st ¢ i ad- | venture there tr will with Y tand whethe The Daily Cros (Copyright Across, . Arm of t ocean. a quick Rested. Mineral rock State on the Mississippi (abbr.) re 4 \n1 Pers cation of Insineering Indetinite article, 1y . Rin. e thuid, Hleven (Roman). Ixpiate. 1ot Pgerix 10 guse BeSRe: Egyptian ted notice. Negative, Observe. Exist. Drunkard 7. Back of the . The Emerald . Courage. Sorrow. Beast of burden . Sounds melodiously. . Despo . Own (Scotch) . Two thousand (Roman). . Owing and demandable. . Rounded piece of wood. . Go away . Female saint wlessness. dezree (abbr.). neck. Isle. (abbr.), Dow . Youth, . Exist, rinter’s measure, 'hus. Baking place. tremely penurious. Southern’ constellation, Until. Nevertheless. An obstruction, . City in Natal. Exclamation Prefix: out of The three-toed sloth 24. River in Siberia. 26. Exertion alpanak with cold water, let soak over- t, then cook in same w tender, sweeteni 10 minutes hefore to takir until MACARONT WITH s much and ed wate buttered d put then layer thin, accordin ngth of cheese; another macaroni, and so on. un is used, having macaroni Spread 1l thick crumbs (stale) and hits Fill dish with milk until about inch above bread crumbs, Let soak in well and add more milk to keep it hove crumbs. Bake in medium oven about 30 minutes CHEE:! roni il mir into nw h mic roni ched o s on top. hread hutter, over rises PUDDING Heat 1 pint prune ing point. stir quick ng tapioca minutes, then add 1 teaspoon salt and 1 cup stewed and stoned prunes until is clear from fire, juice juice to boil in 2 table: soons ind tapioca add 1 tablespoon and stiffly beaten whi beat thoroughly with egg ! v, then return to fire and minutes heati constantly wn - in pidd dish and serve with custard Custard T 1d 1y - and over ng chill tspoon salt, | 1t scalded until flay milk, cook hick with vater from fire and chill S-W()rd Puzzle 19 remove vanilln old times, Helps Whirlwind off the F Note of the scale. ] e degree (abbr.). roe Islands. (an@h). ngineering degre French unit of sq Note of the scale. Walks on. tive hless plant. arden walk. d covering. asten. Small block of metal, . Nodule of earth. . Member of Parliament (ahbr.). . Mother Neg With a membership of more than 4,000,000 the Natfonal Council of | Catholic Women lays claim to being the largest group of prganized women lin the world. or ched. And all of this complicates London this Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Good Hearted Relative. Mrs. A, “My baby of 5 months old weighs 19 pounds and is thriv splendidly on a lactie acid, corn sirup and milk formula. A pelative, admivable in ad- vising fn many respects, insists on giving the baby ‘licks’ of bacon fat gravy, wenk tea and salmon gravy She insists these will do her no harm, while I think such things are absurd for such a young baby and can’t pos: lo her any good, and are only ive to putting her off her reg- | ular food. She also advises soothing powders for teething. 1 have given her one. but her only indication of teething is a little extra saliva. Please tell me if 1 am right in holding out against these things, as this iz my first baby and my relative has had eight. She, too, thinks I am absurd, and calls my ide; ads.’ es: Answer. The small amount of food which a cHild gets in these licks could not possibly hurt it. and by the very same count could not possibly do it any good. The sole harm comes from the suggestion to the child that he can have bites of whatever is on the table before him, and this is ruinous to his table discipline. When he gets older it will Inevitably lead to the giv- ing of foods which he has no right to have because he refuses to be quiet or happy at the table unless he is bLeing fed. Any one who has ever dealt with children (eight should have given this relative enough prac tice) knows that meals can be it eral times of horror with the child pointing nd screaming for every thing he sees, until the mother, en tirely against her better judgment, zives in to him. A child who has never had any food except what is | prepared and fed him by his mother has no such desires Naturally T could never approve of teething powders. If a child is suf- fering hecause of erupting teeth all one can do i8 to cut down his diet for a day or so, keep him quiet, give him plenty of cool water to drink and let him alone. Fussing with the teeth, doping him with powders do nothing except to give a temporary relief which must I for later by an upset stomach irritated nerves. None of your id are plain g MOTHERS AND THEIK CHILDREN, a fd and be 1s are “fads,” sense. they just Same Principle Applies. One severe | my sewin to my I was expressing ce at some break in machine which put a halt plans my observant little daughter looked up at_me reprovingly and shook her head. Then she sald in exactly the calm tone 1 always use to quell her outbursts of exasperation: “Oh, well, dear, no use to cry over It milk. Send for the man to mend the machine.” The lesson was a much needed one, I assure you. Clues to Character BY 1. 0. ABERN HY. Hand of Perseverance. Anatomisis have found no reason in structure for the preference given to the right hand. While there is a slight difference between the blood vessels within the chest which supply the right arm and those of the left, it is not sufficient to account for the dif ference hetween the limbs The first record of left-handed men appears in the Bible. In the tribe Ben jamin “there were 700 chosen men left-handed: every one could sling stones “at a hair's breadth and not | miss.” (Judges, xx.16). In First Chron- icles, xil.2, we read, when David was at Ziklag, there came to him a com- pany of men who “were armed with bows,” and who could use both the right and the left hand in hurling stones and shooting arrows out of a bow. Is the superiority of the right hand natural or is it acquired. It is our belief that it is acquired, because some people are not right-handed. As a rule the jeft hand may be trained to as much dexterity and strength as the right hand. As a sign of character, left-handed- ness means nothing, but square hands indicate love of detail, perseverance that gives tenacity of purpose. It is the Hand of ambition and it has di- rective as well as formulative power. vright, 19 Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle. Satisfies—Gratifies "SALADA" U1s Owing to Quality and Selection i FLAGSTAFFS OF BY JENNY GIRTON WALKER, ] WASHINGTON | i i The Rainbow Flag of ipes of equal width Red al the top black dots on white: ‘blue. horizontal lies: white: black. crossed horizontals and vecticals. Black s not often ween in flags. and 18 shown here for the first time in this series During Februa are i in’ vertic . when the people of China celebrate their new ye festival, a flag was to be seen Washington whose five hands of color have given it the bow the dr empire tion of 1912 s a in me of the “rain- to this flag that 'd of the ancient upon the inaugura- republic, February n: the anied Dr. Sun Yat Sen. the successful leader of the revolution- ists, when he made his ceremonious it to the Ming tombs and fo announced to the spirits of the Chinese emperors the establishment of a free republic and the recovery of the state of the people The five colors represent the five targe divisions of the republic—red uppermost for China proper, yellow for Manchuria, blue for wolia, white r Tibet and black for urk stan. The navy flag has three colors, red with blue cantdn on which is a white sun. These colors again repre- sent Chi prop Mongolia and Tihet On diplomatic flags a dragon is still to bhe found, though it is not the dragon of the imperial hanner. But this emblem, which stands for power BY WILLIAM Clothes and Metabolism. ing to explain the other day kinny person may get plump by dressing lightly and a fat person gets fat.er by dressing heavily, I find I spilled the beans. 1 led to take into consideration the fact that by reason of their abnormal state of nu trition and morbid me rolism both classes are somewhat dumb and so they find it difficult to follow a line of reasoning which involves mathe matical calculations beyond long di vision In order to get more hors de combat with my skinny and fat reade 1 must again cite the purest example namely. the child who revels in bare knees all winter. This fortunate voungster is underweight, frail, s Iy, to begin with, let us say, but he feels comfe able with his kn bared to the wintry blasts; he is not an imbecile nd therefore he knows better than vou or I can know whether he is un comfortable from cold or wet. The mere dissipation of heat from the uncovered knee surfaces will have one or two possi upon the child: efther it ate his cfr- culation, appetite, digestion, meta- bolism f(oxidation process) to produce more energy from the combustion of fuel, or it will freeze the child: The freezing is only theoretically pessi ble —given a child who is not an imbe cle is is scarcely likely to happen So, practically the only effect we look for is better appetite, better di gestion, better circulation, greater vigor and Increased vitality. That is all an expression, or varied expres- sions of improved metaholism, Rut we haven't considered another influence which, for all we know at Ipresent, may contribute more than the mere exposure of the knees to the nd that is the skylight, or even oc- casional flashes of direct sunshine upon the uncovered skin of the child's knees, I suspect this is the medicine we are after, rather than the mere exposure of the naked skin to “fresh air.” I think the suggestion ad Dr. John B. Todd, of Syracuse, N. Y., may prove to be the prophecy of a man of extraordinary scientific fore- sight. Dr. Todd takes up the great question of “fresh air" where the New York State ventilation commission laid it down, and he suggests that the vital difference between fresh air and stale or foul air is perhaps some. thing akin to a vitamin in the fresh air. Now, to continue with the happy “Puzzlicks” PuszleLimericks n how cold does, influence of daylight There was a young chap of —1— Who playfully poisoned his —2—; When he'd finished his — He remarked with a —4— “This will cause quite a family —5—!" 1. Town in southwestern Scotland. 2. Female parent (colloguial). 8. Task. 4. Affected smile. 5. Disturbance. (Note—Of course, the young Scots- man was a person whom no one would wish to have around the house, for a reason that will be clear when the limerick has been completed by plae- ing the right words, indicated by the numbers, in the corresponding spaces. The answer and another “Puzzlick” will appear tomorrow.) Yesterday's “Puzzlick.” There was a young man so benighted He never knew when he was slighted. He would go to a party And eat just as hearty 8 if d_been yeally invited. Peel the Skin and 3’ Have Natural Beauty How foolish to seek artificial “beauty™ when it s so to_obtain a truly natural complexion by the use of Mer- once begins to show its marvelous re- ually showing the fresher, mirtace defects aa freckles, Iiver spots, | uny drug store, no one need be deprived | | colized Wax. Applied like cold cream at night, washed off in the morning, it at Juvenating effects. 1t gently, harmiessly. | Desin Off the lifeless surface skin in tiny | icles, | Bveiier baantitul underskin. ' Naturally the di cuticle takes Wit moth patches and pimples. i | As Mercolized Wax is obtainable at | {08 it Temarkable benefits. ~An ounee | ‘ | will do. ) Brings out the hidden beauty A few days later the same flag | mally | the ( Repub | st his heen associnte | for ages with China's ancient super- stitions and her religion, and we tind the symbolism of the five colors in the modern flag can be traced to the old dragon legends. “A dragon in the water,” wrote suge, “covers himself with five colors. Therefore he is a god." In Mackenz yihs and Legends of China and Ja we told that stones of five colors combined all the virtues of the four dragon defties that presided over the four quarters of the world, and the sun, their chief. “At | the east was the blue god associated with Spring: at the west, the white 1 associated with Autumn; at the north the black god associated with Winter (the Chinese season of drought), and ai the south were two zods, red and yellow. The red pre- sided during the greater part of, the Summer, the reign of the yellow god being confined to the last month he combination of these five col- ors—red, vellow, blue, white and black—was always considered ef- fective, and whether it was found in dragons’ bones precious it brought good fortune to the s8or. The official flag of the Chinese lega- tion, at 2 Nineteenth street, is not displayed on New Year day, but only on such constitutio holidays as October 10, which is the real inde- pendence day and commemc es the promulgation of the new constitution. (Copyright, 192 | & PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BRADY, M. D. youngster braving the Winter winds and snowdrifts with his bare kn it is quite a common experience, a many intelligent parents report.’ fo the anemic, flabhy weak under to take on needed weight through the Winter, so that he gets into excellent ringside condition befare spring roll around. to the utter confusion of al the old harpies who have spent the Winter predicting rheumatism, con sumption and other dire casualties for rme day.’ If this isn't perfectly slear and intellible to any frail who vearns for just 10 or 20 pounds of flesh, I can only suggest that- maybe the ductless gland mechanism is out of order and requires adjustment by | the physician, | It would he ahsurd to assume that tall an individual who is much under weizht has 16 dn in” order to get plump is to leave off ‘some clothes, Rut there ix an underlying principle here which is sound and true: and 1 repeat a health maxim I have often urged and challenge any one to con- trovert it “Every which s must be health.” stitch or rag of clothing not essential for comfort considered deleterious to (Copyright. 1926.) HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWTON, The Sailor's Hornpipe. The dance we know as the saflor's hornpipe, about which a reader in quires, took its name from the instru- ment upon which the music for its ac- companiment was played in its early a Also, though it is now identified by that name, it was originally not a sailor’s, but a farmer’s dance. Tha ancestry has survived to the extent of making it a famillar number at a country or “barn” dance. The history of the sailor'’s hornpipe can be traced back to the sixteenth century in England and to about 1740 in Scotland. Its heyday was in the eighteenth century, when jt was gen- erally popt and it was subse quently that the sallor gave it specicl attention, and it came to be regarded as a sailor's dance. The hornpipe, a musical wind instrument, originally made from the horn of an ox, is known to have been in use as far back as Chaucer's time. Tlluminating are the ways of lan- guage, when a darce called the “saflor’s hornpipe” turns out to have heen originated by farmers and to have gained the second part of its name merely from the instrument which furnished the music for it! (Copyright. 1926.1 a 502 9th FOOD AND HEALTH BY WINIFRED STUART U'-“t case of chronic treated rationally we should be the number of If every known constipation were and a cure effected, startled to observe diseases that would straightaway siink away! This condition may be called our national fll, figuring, as 1t does, directly .or indirectly, in u large proportion of the allments and dis- eases which afflict us. : It is helpful to study fundamental principles of diet and nutrition, but now and agaln the vietim may.crave simple statements in the form of di etary rules. Any one suffering from chronic constipation may safely-adopt ‘the following suggestions as a basis for his dietary procedure, modifying each if necessary fo suit his own re- quirements. Before heginning on this plan it is important to remember that it is Aformulated tor simple, *chronic con- stipation, uncomplicated by obstruc- tione or definite disease of any portion of the digestive system. With this clearly in mind, then, the suggestions wiil be stated with as few words as possible. Suggestion 1-—An hour before break fast drink a wlass of clear water or diluted fruit juice. : Suggestion 2—Begin breskfast with a dish of fresh ot stewed fruit, fol- lowed by u moderate portion of vats, or plain bran mush or corn meal por ridge, served with maple sirup or mo- lusses. Next, have either cggs or bacon (both will tend tu make such a breakfast too hearty), and, finally, two slices of brown or bran bread. toasted and_served with unsalted but ter. Use coffee without cream, but the sirup for the cereal may be varied with cream. ) gestion 3—1In the middle of the roing drink glass of frait juice at a few figs or raisins or dates. Suggestion 4--Begin hincheon with a small serving of cold meat, with a portton of raw cel whredded raw cabbage, buttered caulifiower or cab hage, turnip or artichoke, carrots, Do snipssor beans, according to the way vegetables are planned for the evening meal Suggestion 5—First course at din- ner a fruit cocktall, varied with a plate of vegetable soup; small ser of fat roast heef or steak or with two of the vegetables. listed at luncheon. only served in larger por tions. Next a fruit or vegetable salad with lettuce in generous quantities and olive oil. Accessories, such as olives and radishes, to accompany the various courses, and dessert, to con sist of fresh or stewed fruit, a fruit pudding. date or fig or rafein, nuts to ollow in moderate quantities, and a single cup of black coffee “to top off.’ Suggestion 6—At bedtime an orange or apple or some figs or dates. Later in the season vary with a fresh pear Suzgestion 7—Wakk at least 3.mile a day, systematically, not spasmod ically Suggestion 8—Watch vour posture and do not allow vourself to slump either when standing or walking Suggestion 9—Watch your nerve control and keep relaxed. The com | mon habit of maintaining a ténse at- | titude of mind and body is definitely nourished, sickly youngster of the Fall | bad for the intestines that are striv- ine to keep active and normal (Copyright. 1028.) LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Pop was looking at the paper and.| ma was imbroidering imbrofdery. say- ing, Theres no use tawking, Willyum, if @ thing is werth having._ its werth paying for. & Absilutely, wat are vou thinking of buying me” pop sed. T was thinking of bargains. ma sed Theres no sents in allwavs looking for bargains. I never bawt a bargain vet that dident have a conceeled string tled to it someware, and Ive jest about made up my mind that after this In the future Il be saftl- fled to jest buy things at their full original price the way nature in- tended them te bhe sold. ghe sed That allways hin my motto _and Im glad your waking up to it pop sed. I certeny am, bargains are a thing of the pase as far as [ am concerned, it stands to reason that if a thing was perfeckly O. K. and perfeck in every way shape and form nobody would wunt to sell it cheap. so w. cant wimmin redlize that? ma sed. Well heers one woman that realizes it, envwav, she sed Meening her, and pop sed, Wat particular perchase has ‘revilutioned your life hy making vou see this grate lite? A A pair of gloves marked size 7. ma sed. You'll notice I say marked size 7 without axually saying they were size 7, because if ever a pair of gloves. were a size too large, its they pair 1 bawt at Hookbinders this morning plainly marked size 7. And how did I buy them? I bawt them at a bargain, 2 dollers reduced from .2 forty five, and wats the result? The result i their a size too large, she sed Well wy not take them back and get your money, Haokbinders Is a reliable place, pop sed. I know, but I think TIl keep them now. afier all they' certeny . iwere cheep for the monev, ma sed. Help aid sucker. pop sed. And he got behind the sporting page. A bill has been introduced in the French Chamber of Deputies to make wamen eligible for election to munici- pal and cantonal legislative bodles throughout France. St. N.W. 711 H St. NE. AR steres opcn Saturday night to accommodate customers Note—This is the first of a series. of which children by. visiting the Child Wel- Jare and Child Iygiene centers of the city. No mother need wo ailing child. no sic ne W Lodk in the telephone book. call up the nearest center and find out the hours of the confereices. HE Hospital of Washington. with pain| are.’ and Aow| time’ kind: Dr Nurse, Chorus N is your Conterenc baby cries The hear Mother “(jouneing dow He pus honi He says he works hard all day’ and he certainly does need his = But have Mrs £00 lost and Wil kind sa Nurse—How ‘come to the Center? Mother me here. the ters. well Lragging on baw come a Ny come to the right place. wha glve measurefment over her.) underweight feedink him? fother still., mon at brea there a while, and he grabs the food off my plate when he get Whe! table he vells to be taken lap. of pi under get N wone any njirs |are ilin have (The -.nurse and whe napkins clea of 1 you, Hos children, trained ested hegrt-and soul in the betterment of ¢ amination mother.) Do for start when vour breast milk was suffi- it. KEEP YOUR CHILD WELL " A" Bit From an Everyday Drama in Washington, cient for his needs tha last months of malnutrition h not done him as much harm ax would have beel the ‘case if ‘he had ha liet pre- ‘seribed by the neig n the time he was Lorn Mother—Oh, doctor! die—will- he? I've done could. 1 wanted to do did not know what 10 do. Doctoi--Die! Certuinly will give him_the diet outlined here for u and ‘will prepare it as the nurse directs, Willie wiil live to_sup- port you in your.eld age. B don’t forget”the cod liver oil and orange juice. Give spinach or mashed - cat rots and a baked potato every day. At his dge he should have an egg or scraped meat hesides one quart of milk daily, and cooked cereal once a day. These things will bring his terts |along. He is very backward in | teething. Keep on coming to the conference every week for the pres- ent, and we will start you on the right track There nothing o nically wrong with your child Who knows | perhaps you will be exhibiting him in | aby show a r The muther child with an piness on Iter fuce. “Next,” says (he in to the doctor's mother and anothel t these benelits your showing the be obtained for sketehes can be awake nights rrying abou't what to do with an Any mother who can- t.afford to call in a.regular phu- ian can take her child to the irest Child Hygieneé (or . Child elfare Center. s won't best I right, but L not! If vou scene is laid |in the Gwynn Center at the Children’s i A long hall ‘the bare sanitary look of clean t. Down the middle of it there rows of cubicles with a mother a baby or babies in each, over- ing into the corridor from time to ‘" and making almost as many s'of noises as a barnyard ramatis. Personae—A Doetor, a Mother, a Baby Mothers and Babies. Step this way, ple first’ visit to a Child V n't it? My, how to keep it still, ple listening to a child's Mary from ne h exprassion of ging her At hap- zoes out irse et ind passes anoth wurse, aftic baby. T doctor 18" 't detion ST the child up and n in her arms)—I'm awful sorry. has been making a terrible rum- here, and he rie: much_at e that my husband is near crazy. My Neighbor Says: Strong flavored vegetables such as onions, cabbage and t ooked an un quanti nips should by in ep ut night. \ e | |t of water a lot of Jones 1 tell him I do the best been giving the bi Jones said did hei 1. but I don’t’ know four. babies and 1 now I'm awful worrie fe. Hé ain’t much o’ picked chic ny, breud box should be fre ied and ng the The auently washed ¢ thoroughly aired t lid a little way ope < the bread will never get a musty taste o keep it frem hecom- ing too dry place a well washed potato in the Molsture is given off hy but not sent enough He read in the abont To work of the Child. Welfare (en which He says, “If they can keep the | o 4" child . well, liké they're always | | (otve una ey I guess they can make a | | 3"gUE A0 S stop bawling 1 P i feid e | | ois atreaks the snrface an first about look at hushand lost my my von tto aid happen dew. cloud highl it po cause 1 hushand ape It was my the o1 remqve comes o rniture: wa i water cha with a and rub S wrung A dry cham- d does baby ong. Well ling S0 this time.vou have | We will see we can do. Did the. volunteer | vou the card with the weight and | of your baby? (Lioks | the card which the mother hands | This child is several pounds What have vou b I see he Is.a vear old. | Well, I mostly nurse him | He did so fine oh ft for the first ths, but now he seems to get. mad | Sometimes he punches my fit.to kil after he has heen arse not remove the bl Whenever. | ries, raf sins, nuts, éitron or anything of the kind to puddings or cake, I always roll them first in ted butter, then in the flour and n| | they mever fall to the bottom | Alw the wa of at ter using it before Ui fresh wa again rinse | In this way vou wiil help vent the from formin at the hottom of ‘the add 1 t er out and st fiment a chance, n he sees us sitting down at the up on my Today he grabbed a big piece ork off my plate and scuttled off the bed, and before we could him-out he had it all eaten rse —Hungry, poor babhy! No der e 4s so underweight! Didn't one tell ‘you that vou should not | e your baby that long? Here you | new. . Doctor, this is Mrs and here is the record e just made out for her passes the mother baby -into the doctoris cubicle, re the baby is laid on fresh paper on a table covered with a n sheet. A thorough examination | he baby follows, as thorough as | kind -patrons of the Children's | pital can obtain_ fof your own and by a docter “especially in. child hygiene, Still uwse old hygienic methods. Charming freshness, true protec- tion, thre new way .. .discards like tissue and inter- | O help women meet every day Tunhandicwped is the object .of a pew hygiene. A way that ends the hazards of the old-time “samitary pad,” that ends the embasrassment of disposal Eight in 10 betterclass women today employ “KOTEX." Wear lightest gowns and fracks without a second thought, any dav, anywhere. = - Five times as absorbent as ordi- nary eotton pads! Deodorizes. Ends ALL fear of offending. ¥ V Distards as easily as a plece of tissne. No laundry. ; You get it at any drug or depart- ment store simply by saymng, “KOTEX." No embarrassment. " In fairness .to yourself, try this new Costs only a few cents. Twelwe @ a package. KOTEX el 7 Aot hild-health. At the end of the the doctor turns to -the pcor—Well, mother, fortunately him your baby had such a good SILK STOCKINGS -Lasting Beauiy.’ sz Moon Silk Stockings—beautiful, sheer, en- during, full fashioned—Ilast long because they have a patented garter strip to take the strain away from the sflk. A triple line of fabric is knitted into the hem. Buy Blue Moo Silk Stockings for longer wear in every pair. Next time, insist! No. silk, full f; -and eples. $1.65. No. 200—Medium weight, pure . silk, full fashioned. Lisle taps and soles. .85, No. 800—Heavy welght, pure ollk, full fashioned service stockings. Lisle tops and soles. $1.98. —Chiffon weight, ure siik, full fashioned. isle tops and silk soles $1.85. No. 500—Chiffon weight, fine uge, puresills,full fashjoned. fram top'to tos. $2.15. No. 600—Medium weight, full fashioned service stockings. Silk from top to toe. §2.15. Colors: Black. White, Skin. French Nude. Gravel. Atmosphere. Jenny, Paarl, Blond. Cinder, Gun Metal. Rose Beige. Rose Taupe. and Silver. strip prevents runs.