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WOMAN’'S PAGE, Various Kinds of Polishing Agents BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. A Among the liguids we find acids and oils_prominent. Acids eat away the stuff that occumulates on certain met- als and at the same time he.ghten their brillianey. That s why vinegar is | effective in cleaning brass, copper a nickel can be used without great precautions | | by housewives. { Oils are among the chief polishing lagents for unpainted wood, such as | that in furniture, hardwood or stained | fioors, trim in rooms and all articles {-made of wood. whether they have The kinds of polishing agents are | s and (¢ almost endless. They can he sub- divided into groups, however, each | group having 1o do with the particular | Furnitare Polishes. uld have a high zloss to the sur ce m A soft, dull finish. There are vavions other liquid polishing agents tor wood, but they are closely allied, such asx varnish in vavious forni namely, “oil varnish,” eggshell spivit varnish, shellac, ¢ home decor appreciate: of the oil polishing agents Solidified Agents. Wax ix the chief amon | polishing agents. ix hardest to ing good [ muscle and “elbow greas To make it less difficult a very little turpentine |is sometimes mixed with it. However, [ it must be rubbed in Gis oil) until the hax absorbed all that has be put on results are not satisfactory solidified It one of the MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAS Oranges Dry Cereal With Cream Shirred “Toast Maple Sivup flee IS Wam Rice LUNCH Chicken Croquettes Green Peas Sp Date € DINNE Almond Soup Baked Virginia Ham French Fried Potatoes Creamed Cauliflower Banana Cream Fritters Lemon Sauce Asparagus Salad Cornstarch Pudding Coffee RICE WAFFL Beat, one cup milk gradually into one cup cold boiled rice, add one tablespoon melted but- ter, one-half teaspoon soda dis- solved in one tablespoon hot water, two eggs well heaten and enough flour sifted with one tea- spoon cream of tartar to make thin batter. Bake in hot, well- greased waffle irons. RUR THE FURNITURE WITH CLOTH MO 3D WITH A FE DROPS OF POLISHING Ol A = gort of polishing it is intended to do, according 1o the subsiance or material it is to be used upon. Nometimes one | variety of polish can he used accept- ably on articles in more than one | classification The first division of this sort in pol- ishing agents separates them into dry, liquid, solidified and paste. Dry pol- jshes may he used with or without moistening with liquid. according to the particular preparation, to what use it is being put and, also, some- | times following the preference of the person using it. For example, there are powders for polishing silver which may be used effectively when rubbed on dry. Then the application of the powder and the polishing with it are done at the same time. If, however, tha powder is mixed 10 a paste with water or some other liquid, then the best results are obtained by applving the paste, letting it wholly or partial- 1y dry on the article and then rub- bing it off. In both instances there should he a final brisk rubbing with a soft cloth to heighten the polishing. Silver Polishes. Silver is one of the metals that re. spond well to any of the three types of polishing agenis. Not only are dry and liquid agents popular. but pastes wie with them also. The liquids usual- 1v have to he shaken before applying, &n that the mixture is held well in solution. CHICKEN CROQU Melt onehalf cup butter, hlend in one-half cup flour mixed with one-half teaspoon salt, one-fourth teaspoon celery salt, one-eighth teaspoon white pepper and grated nutmeg, then add slowly one cup chicken stock and onethird cup thin cream. Stir and cook until | | thick. ada two cups finely chop- ped chicken and one beaten egg, beat thoroughly, then remove from fire and chill. Form into cones, dip in beaten egg, roll in fine crumbs and fry in deep hot fat. Serve with white sauce. BANANA FRITTERS. Mix and sift one cup flour, two_teaspoons baking powder, one-half teaspoon salt and one tablespoon powdered sugar. Reat cne egg until light, add four tablespoons thin cream and add to dry mixture. Beat until free from lumps, fold in three hananas pressed through sieve, then add strained juices of one- kall small lemon. ~Fry in deep, hot fat, drain on soft paper and serve with lemon or pineapple sauce. the snow had been trampled down. In their eves was fear. rmer Brown's Boy could see it even at a distance. When he snapped a little twis cidentally they all jumped. Then they stood trembling, shaking with fear. Farmer Brown's Boy knew uat ouce what that meant. He knew that the. had been frightened by Puma Panther, and he wondered if Wwas near at that moment. s & Brown's Boy stepped out so that oot and his family. You see, Farmer | [ jghifoot could see him, for he knew JBrown's Boy knew that there is noth- | that Lightfoot was not afraid of ing that Puma the Panther so much | him. Almost at once Lightfoot came to- | likes for dinner as Deer Meat. He | leat. el ira him and the other crowded| knew that Lightfoot and Mrs. Light- | apier Lightfoot. and as they came | foot and the nearly grown twins were | jhey kept turning their heads to look | back. Nearer they came, and nearer. Farmer Brown's Roy was their friend and they knew if. Just a few feet from him they stopped and looked back again, then stood there with their great soft eves wide with fear. He could see little shivers run all over them. Those little shivers were shivers of fear. Farmer Brown's Boy moved swiftly in the direction in which Lightfoot and his family were looking. He held his gun ready. There was a thick mass of low-growing hemlocks over there—a wonderful place for hiding. With his eves fixed on that, Farmer Brown's Boy moved forward, e had T it. when he caught a glimy reat catlike form. 1t was o1 but it enouph. Like a fleet low, old Moth Farmer Brown's Boy hgd been fhinking of Lightfoot the Deer. In gact, ever since he had known that Puma the Panther was In the Green | Forest, he had worried ahout Light Nature. himself!” wmut- under hix I zuess | got here just in time. He was after those Deer, and | he had them cornered there. lle | had them were they couldn’t get out \ BROWN'S BOY STEP- T LIGHTFOOT FARMER PED OUT SO THA COULD SEE HIM. fiving in a yard in the Green Forest. | He knew that they could not leave | without going into deep snow. My, that yard because of the deep snow, | I'm glad I came over here when I and he knew that this meant that did!" And then, what do vou think Puma the Panther would have a bet- | Farmer Brown’s Boy did? Ife pointed ter chance to catch one of them than!that gun in the air and shot. Bang! if they could run freely. I roared the gun, Why did he do it? “I must get over to that Deer vard ! He did it to scare Puma. He knew and gee how Lightfoot is getting on,” | that Puma would not come back said Farmer Brown's Roy. right away after hearing that gun. “I think it weuld he a good idea.” | (Copyright, 1926.) replled Mr. Brown. “When vou go, take your gun with you. I think pe haps this afternoon I can spare you for a little while. That Deer vard fen’t so very far from here, is it? “No," replied Farmer Brown's hoy, “jt 1e only a little distance from her That is one reason 1 am worrled, be- cause Puma the Panther has been around here so much that T am almost sure he must have visited the yard of Lightfoot the Deer. S0 late that afternoon Farmer Brown's Roy took his gun and on his Enowshoes, he tramped over to the yard of Lightfoot the Deer. At first, he could not find Lightfeot nor any of Lightfoot's family. He found where they had been eating, but there was no other sign of them. Of course, those paths went crisscross, this way that way and every way, and So were diffcult to follow. Slowly Farmer Brown's Boy tramped around, stop- ping often to look and listen, and by end by he spied Lightfoot and Mr: Lightfoot and the twins. The latter were you know nearly grown. In fact, they felt themeelves to be quite grown. All four were crowded to gether in & little open apace where 1t ix one of the few acids that | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1926. BY ROBERT QU a | 1rnish oc oil finish and whether they | “We don’t hardly ever need a at onr house except when s, 6.0 to spend for | 1 er I was thinking about doing sins, and pop wax smoking to [ and ma was reeding the paper, to pop. Did you bet eny money tite, Willyum? Wat fites that? pop sed. Wy e Dempsey Carpenteer corse, izzent that | has hin tawking about? ma sed 1 havent herd enybody tawk it for several vears, pop sed. this evenings paper is full of sed Full of wat Well, I wont of ft. bhut at le pleet account ol page, ma eed. vee gods” Ay its 1 heers a it on the pop m irpenteer fite, for Peet sak Wy certeny, wy not? avs Dempsey won and it t about the diffrent rounds and thing. its very ixclting, did yvou Dempsey was going to win? 1 vor of Carpenteer, fuce, m sed Am alscep or jest slitely sed, ou ook the same as usual b certeny tawking erazy, mn pop sed, You must of got paper about 4 veers old I did nuthing of the Kind, thi: nites paper, I to in from t terbule myself vt s if v bleeve . and pop se lets have a look house. And he took wdx, Grate Fites of Bygone Number One, Dempsey and ( teer, give me water, me. O. 1 see, 1 didnt on the top, ma sed 1l see you later, pop sed Kot behind the paper and st po) hol sed it reed wat BY JENNY WREN. | The mystic symbolism of th, finds full expression in the grea inous rugs of China. Deej richly tinted, they rank high the artistic achievements of th colors vary est peach pink to heaven's own The body wine red to midnight blu from u tawny yellow t s gold at sunset rown of earth herselr. The rug shown displ lotux_motif, symhol of happin pastel shades of cream, greer and yvellow on a soft peach pin with a Nile green border. These rugs are really estment, for they last to th a sou a li $400. (Copyright, 1926.) ““The old-fashioned girl pra man; the modern girl prays.” hsilutely ma sed. sed somebod from Willie Willis I've had a my les- himself saving on the fite, of the fite everybody 1. about ow Willvum how can yvou ixagger ate so wen the fite jest took place and it? ma sed. full 1 com sporting Account of wat, not the Dempsey e? pop 1t ells al| every. 1 think was iy he has a sweeter dizzy? it your and i of a S s to. he ves - dont d. Yes. At it before T go bug saving, Yee Days, ‘arpen fan it sed HOME NOTES e Fast at Tum- p-piled, among e ages. rich m tint- rivals the e rich yu the famous ess, in 1, roRe k fleld, nd in- fetime. le 9x12-foot size can be purchased in most large stores for about $300 or Parking With Peggy ved for a | You The People’s Choice l "SALADA" TEA Wins by Sheer Merit DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Husband Whose Poor-Sport Wife Blames Him for Business Reverses—How to Treat Fault-Finding Sister-in-Law. l EAR MISS DIX: I am a married man with ‘a wife and four children. 1 have heen fairly successful in a business way, but recently I have had reverses which necessitated selling our home and .which have forced me to deprive my wife of some of the luxuries to which she has been accustomed. My wife 18 furious over the situation. She nags at me all the’ time, reproaches me for bad management and criticizes me even to the children. This has got me into such a nervous state that I have about lost all confidence in myself, and I am so miserable that 1 have not the heart for the struggle I should make. Do you think she is giving me a fair deal particularly as I am devoted to her and the children and have no thought but for their 1":'}{1'; n Answer: 1 think that your wife_is giving you a rotten deal and that she is the poorest sort of sport. Any woman is a shirker and a quitter who doemn’t _stand by her hushand in his misfortune and share his ill-luck with as good a grace as she did his prosperity. 4 Also, she shows that she not only has lack of heart hut lack of sense, because by her conduct she is doing everything possible to kill the goose that lays the golden egg and keep you from ever getling on your feet again, For she is breaking down your morale, and when that is gone everything fs lost. To have afbusiness venture go awry. to lose money, even to have to give up vour homegis bad, of course, but it is only a passing misfortune to those Who take it in the right spirit. Often it is a blessing in disgulse, hecause’we learn wisdom from our fallures and when we find ourselves hlocked in one direction we tirn in another. Many & m@n's bankruptcy has been the foundation of his fortune. Many 4 man’s failurd.in an occupation for which he had no aptitude has forced him into the thing for which he had & genius. But it i« only the man who does not get discouraged who can profit by his losses. He must keep his heart high. Ile must have faith in himself,.and it I8 very difficult to do this if he has a melancholy wife at home who whines over her misfortunes and wet-blankets every plan and saps his cournge by her prophecies of disaster. ! The woman who wants her hushand to succeed must hold up his hands. She must breathe fresh couraze and hope into him. She must make him feel that she has faith in him. For that kind of a wife a man can go out and fight the world and conquer. Rut the woman who sends her husband to the hattle with his ears full of her lamentations over his faflure and his heart hitter with the sense of her disloyalty has no fight left in him. He is heaten hefore he fires a shot. Fair. weather wives are no hetter than fair-weather friends. A good wife is a good comrade who fights the hattle shoulder to shoulder with her hushand and who, when misfortune comes and he usks, “Are we downhearted””" smiles back at him and shouts, “No! I Kknow vou will win out!"” POROTHY DIX. . R MISS D) I have a darling baby 3 vears old and a good husband. a D But T have an old maid sister-inlaw who makes life miserable for me. She tells me that “I don’t know how to bring up my child. If we dance, she calls us sports. If we play a jazz record, we are low-minded. If I say I'm tived, T am lazy. When I have been up three nights and three days with my . %he tells me how old and haggard | look. Evérything I do and 1t do she eviticizes. My hushand tells me to pay no attention to her. vet how can I help it when she comes to my house and irritatex me x0? What shall 1 do? PERPLEXED WIF Answer: Take vour husband’s advice. Pay no attention to her taultfinding of xuch a woman is ne more to be seriously consider the vapping of a little dog at your heels, Jealousy and envy are at the bottom of vour siste Jealousy and envy of your vouth. of your joy in life, of your for you and your love for him of the little arms around your neck ely when vou think of that, vou ean find it in your heart to be sorry for her in her loneliness- growing old with no one ta care for her. with the certainty that no little head will ever lie upon her hreast. b The 1 than indaw's eriticisms hushar love As long as vou live, my dear, there will always he disagreeable peaple with whom vou have te have contact: people .who do things that zet npon vour nerves: peaple who criticize you and say unpleasant things to yvou: and it depends upon yourself whether vou let these people make vou miseruhle or not. : You can N to pay no attenrion to them: to attach no importance o what they say mlly to let it go in one ear and out of the other, so that it means ahsolutely nothing to yvou. Or else vou can brood over it and mag nify it and make such a mountain out of veur molehill that it will shut all of the sunlight out of your house. » Don't do that. Don’t fret vourself over what vour sisterinlaw sayvs or does, and don’t worry vour hushand by repeating her acid remarks 8o him. Forget what she savs. Don't argue with her. Don't try to defend yourself. Any phonograph will run down if not wound up. And remember that there is no such buffer for sarcasm as good nature, It glances harmlessly off those who laugh at it. Cultivate a funny bone in dealing with vonr disagreeable in-law. You will really enjoy her after you come to see how ridiculous it is that she could ever worry you. DOROTHY DI P EAR MISS DIX poor. hard-working boy, while T am a girl who has had every indul Would vou advise me to marry this yvoung man. or would it bhe hest an give me the things that I now have? PEGQY. gence. for me to marry a man wi Answer: Tt depends altogether on what sort of girl vou are. Pegzy. If vou are one of the sort. luxury-loving kind to whom fine clothes and a good car and living on the right street are matters of supreme importance, then I should certainly urge ¥ou not to MATTY a poor man. No love or tenderness or fineness of character in a man can make up to that type of woman for physical luxuries. Khe will he miserahle withont them and make the man miserable who cannot give them to her. Rut if you are one of the women who think more of 2 man than vou do of a pockethook: if 3 would rather he ecrowned with a zeod man’s love than the latest things in Erench hats: if you would rather walk with the m: love than ride in a limousine with one for whom you care nothi mArry your poor man. But don't do it unless vou are a good sport and are going ta be able to make sacrifices without whining and work without considering yourself a martyr. 3 Don’t marry a poor man and then nag him to death he give vou the things that a rich man could. DO | | with intelligence, although yo | occasions, display a good " d | common sense. 1 are not gushing or sentimental. Your affections, how |ever, are deeply and im- | mutable. You i vour | mentor, and v e a high sense of | honor - ‘and_integrity. Your friends vail | (TUSE you implicitly, as vou are never | disloyal in thought or action. ause he can't THY DIX. What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. Pisces. The plane aspects that p late today will continue to improve, | Heval h gt become excellent 'f*""r';';’- ":“;"""31?}“’; | September, should be ideally happy. 80 for the balance of the B8 e ich a combination shouid engen- m:flu lmfl;-m:‘ ;lll;n t‘;::r £ 'n'n Sigge ida mutual forbearance and unselfish- edient only to plan befc on, e wites essential to D two attributes essential to the F | success of married life. Al n m in _— In-ldate are Emily S: dications point to general success, al. | 41 Are Fmiy SEELa HEoan it 1s ‘posnible that more imme. | Y TAWION, BEKCIEr KEI Qiate results will be secured in the . S G line of mining or real estate. The IREnCor evening Influences will be very be- | i nign, and have a marked influence on ? the hetter emotions. It will be found to be a very propitious occasion fo the telling of the “old, old story It will lose nothing by repetition. (Copyrizht Fish Patties. Pour hoiling water over a dried Children born tomorrow promise o haddock, let it stand until cool, re-| meventtul infancies. If, how- ot in and Soer they are properly nurtured and | {0 ST AN given an abundance of fresh air, they |, jiatoes mashed smoothly. Make will be equipped to withstand the all- |, ;4 oyt gut some rounds of past s i will sewel e te vl | S CUC OSR SO S ik patty. “teens.” The signs do not denote any yjic ), the fish and potato with one nen of an alarmingt character, but | X b e B A her. Pt 1 “forewarned ix forearmed DO- | |iele of the mixture on one round of sition, u hov will be boisterous and | fpe aqry, wet the extreme edge of rather disposed to exerclse BiS | pe ey, cover with w second round Physical ‘strensth on those mot s i i SR A LN T e edge, Sbundantly endowed by nature. lle e L e G Will, however, e @ stranger to resent e ely Tt Ment or envy, and will, later on, as- ! Wume those attributes usually asso- Siated with normal manhood. A girl | Wil be winsome, sympathetic and entle. She will he more guided b fer emotions than by her intellectt ality. 1f tomorrow is your birthday, vou are more fitted for gutdoor work than for that of a_sedentary character. are _studious, not _overgifted s | 1 the hones, hredk if enjoy t it into a dish with I g 5 ” X Beauty That Attracts = —80, e:{hlnting and allur- ing it commands the admir- . You can possess this soft, fascinating appearance instantly thru Gourauo's ORIENTAL CREAM Made in Whits - Flesh - Rachel Rend 10c. for Trial Size Ford. T. Hopkins & Son, Now York 3 I am deeply in love with a voung man who is just a | vou | SEAL BRAND SUB ROSA BY MIMI “Let Me Do It!” Val pushed her hair back from her forehead with a weary gesture, sat down limply on the edge of the bed and groaned inwarary. She, with a lot of her pals, was at- tending a-coflege house party. They had all dawdled through a long, pleas- ant day and were rushing to catch the train home. Every one had packed her bags— every one but Val. Clumsily, hope- she was struggling with sev- articles which refused to overnight bag. June turned from powdering her at- tractive nose and gasped: “Ye gods! Aren’t yvou finished yet, Val? Oh, for pity’s sake, let me do it! Valerie gratefully let her do it. The bag was packed and the girls rushed off to the station. “Val, you rush down and get the tickets,” Peggy com- manded. ~“Here's the money—and | hurry | Valerie returned breathleas and |thrust the pasteboard slips at her | friends. “Oh, gosh, Val!"" wailed June. “You are the worst. Theme are regu: lar ordinary tickets. Yop know we want Pullman’s. “Oh, I'm forry.” Valerie was crim- son. “I'll change them." “No thne now,” was the crisp re. tort. “lere, give them to me. let me do it.” In the Pullman the girls decided that fool was their greatest need in lite. They must get a table, must {order dinner before the dining car was full. “Shall 1 go and put in he order? asked Valerie, readily. z for goudness make, let me do Julta. “You never get Val. You're as helpless B0 advimed things right, as a baby Valerie wondered —why was she o | incompetent, so incapable of doing ihe simplest ghinga? Al her' life long it nad been that way. Her mother would never let her work around the kitchen-——never teach her anvthing about the art of domestic sclence. “Good land. no, child.” she used to| exclaim. “You're worse than no help at all. Don’t try to make vour own bed. You make such & mess out of it. It's better just to leave it to me.” And Val, no more fond of house- work than anv other voung girl. gladly slipped out of the task. N0, ax she went through life, and | | her inubitity ne known, people | did thines for her. She was keenly conscious of her clumsiness and her incompetence, hut sonehow she could | | | never get statted, People always took | CHAPTER XX | things wway from her and did then | Progress. themselves. All Val's friends laughed at her be. | I'TH Natalie and Arthur esch e W 3 ry pur- «l that she ought suing a sepurate walk of life, DAUGHTERS Martha Dennison at 1 faces the fact that her husband has drifted away from her. ax well as her two children, Arthur and Natalie. Khe meets an attractive bachelpr, Perry Macdonak, and accepts his atten- tions without realizing the danger in such an attachment. In the meantime Arthur is infatuated with Mimi, a dancer, and Natalie half in love with Lucien Hartlett, a married man. BY DOROTHY RBY HAZEL DEY FEATURES. Making the Most of Your.Looks 'TOTE. Dear Ann: It one straight line is gaod, then sometimes two atraight lines are het- ter. As, for instance, in the case of a woman with very broad hips. Two plain panels like those shown in the illustration on the left will reduce hip size, whereas a plain dress will he oh- jectionable. Yours for purity of es, LETITIA. (Copyright. 1926.) OF TODAY 0 RATCHELOR “Oh, yes, hut sentiment i= alwave expected from a Woman. a man usu- ally scorns the very idea of such & | thing.” He had shrugged his shoulders, smiling that adorable lazy smile of his. “Not if he's truthful,” he had ob- rved after a moment, and Martha had thrilled to the look in his eyes. iling along on & cloud of raman Hving only from day to day. othing mattered but to he able to drink deep of Perry's admira- | tion, his response to her moods, his her romance, that de- experienced appreciation of But, of course. lectable thing actually only fn falry tales. cannot he cap- [ hind her back. ar to be wshamed of herself, but they | ol . anly furthered the had work already | ieginoer vemue sarement Snd vee seeing a'most nothing of his wife | hesun and children, so absorbed was he | If they had truly wanted to helj her thev should have let her do things | (i hix business and his golf, and his owr way of living, there r { for herself. no matter how hadly she she did them. No mother should allow her daugh- ""‘”‘;dh “’“"‘:‘ B Sl esgrawine | > k friendship with Perry. ' v 3 pless a v ef 1o Erow up hetpiennands clumisy ince their talk linch when Martha had daringly abandoned through want of practice in doinz yme of her reserve, there had heen things for herself. i nd the girl who finds that she i La sreadily growing intimaecy hetween them. Martha was seeing l'erry sev- in a dreadful state of incompetence | because other peaple have pushed her ! .. o Etor it aslde and insisted on doing her work ‘,,:~":..”yr»':: s\‘»n‘?.'.?o.’"xfi'-’.' l‘l: Ivlu ¢ for her should take a firm stand and rernoon for te:u .I'un\ called wt fuse to allow some one else (o= do | house only when Martha was \ ’: e that Natalie and Arthur were ‘._""h;"‘ ik town, or when John was aw F Sl A husiness trip, [itorahout; he did not want | she did not want | Your Baby and Mine | | “inncc she ae the sure out of the familiar cry on her wisest course is faada il di e it talked about to see Natalie's rthur s quizzic lance, she wanted 1o keep her fee | ing for Perts to heself. . "his wing intimacy BY MYRTLE MEVER ELDR Perry i Marth was 1 . Bad Breath. rather t W u definite thing They talked more openly and H. L It i diffienlt to trace f a bad breath. If the | P with less reserve, amd then, too, Perry dared to do things that he would not have attempted earlier in c th are sound: if she has no|the game. There was a night when, infection, it is just possible that the [in holding Martha’s wrap. his @rm condition shouid be sought in some in. | had lingered about her shonlder. ternal defect which only a thorough| She had pretended not to notice xamination wonld discover. Have her | this. hut then there was the time gone over thoroughly, after looking to the condition of her threat and nose. I do not think the tendency to con. when she had dropped her handker- chief, and Perry had picked it up stipation would be entirely responsible for this and refused to give it hack. She had laughed at this. pretend- Mrs, 1. 1 leaflet | | | hetween subtie | Mrs, J. | the “caus child's te ling a lightness that she did not feel. “Don’t tell me you're sentimental.” | "“\Why, aren’t yon?" he had asked anickly. H. This department offers alled “Some Frequent Ques Will you send a self-addressed mped” envelope and ask for | | Far be it from me to ! tions for change when | ing and developing ax | he sheuld and is happy and contented. ;.:-In well enough alone and be thank- | ul. Mrs. AL COR I vou will send o self. addressed envelope, plus a firmly | tixed stamy, cafler N 7. this will co tion fo | which vou are secking. Mrs. L. . When the baby, of his own accord. sleeps straight th h the nizht don’t think of waking him. 3 Begin his day when he wakens natu i | rally i M C. . The baby has made {only r gain, but at th | using more milk than is advisable for | %0 voung a baby. One-half hoiled | | water, one-half milk plus the sugar., is / | better. If you use a stronger formula | | there ‘should be some lactic or eitric 3 |acld used to help digestion, and the | mula should be worked out by a 6 | MODE MINIATURES Now comes a vogue that the woman golfe, Iy adopt-—that of the double ater costume built around the idea of ‘comfort but stamped with | you are | | physician. Give the baby cod liver oil as a preventive of rickets, five drops daily. A baby of his aze can take at fthe most 5 ounces at avfeeding. Please kend a self-addressed and stamped en velope fo this department for leaflets in weaning, feeding and constipation. | Mrs. Betty Lou: It would be advis |able to have a physical examination. t is impossible to say if what you sug- | st is responsible for yours present | [discomfort. At te it is a most | dangerous procedure. with which you | may some day with your life, un- ill‘mt you are sern enough to stop it. | the seal of certain chie. For the first game in early Spring when the air has | «till a tinge of frost to it you will | fortify yourself against quick tempera- | ture changes while out on the links by wearing such an outfit, Tha under sweater—eton collared, and separate skirt are both of wool and very often match while the outer cardigan jacket may be in_effectiv contrast. Asparagus Creme. Put one cupful of cold, cooked paragux through 4 sleve and then dd five ‘cupfuls of “chicken stock Bring to the boiling point. Beat the yolk_of one egg and add. Heat thoroughly, seaxoning with salt, pep- per and-ane cupful of crea i i FoR sixty years Chase & San- born’s Seal Brand Coffee has held the affections of coffeestoving millions, (Chase& Sanborn's Shine and More Sll_ine That's Solarine, the easy, quick and safe polish that women all over the world have used for genera tions. Buy & can to- day at your grocer, hardware, . druggist or auto shop. COFFEE Seal Brand Tea is of the same Aigh guility R % T gl | tangible fragrance | that | contented | should | swer and another * tured for long. Martha's romance had to develop into something else or stop altogether, and there ¢ 4 night when after an evening fo gether they were saving good-by 1o each other. Martha was standing very near him. so near that the In- of the perfume she affected drifted 1 his nostrils, and she seemed suddenly very desir- able. and mysierious and feminine Good night,” he said softly, a deep | note ereeping his voies, And then, quite suddenly and unexpect- dly. he was reaching for her. Mar- tha's quick and startled impu to draw hack whie there was yvet time remuined only an impulse. Th was something so infinit about the way he drew her to him something o sweet in the ability drop her head against his shoulder, Martha did not v b Then, too. I'erry did mitke the mistake of spoiling the moment. He himself with holding her lightly #nd touching his Jips softly to the soft mass of rmsset hair. Afterward when she was alone in her room, Martha faced herself in inte }the glass and smiled a little wond: ingly at the radiance of her face. She fonked uncannily Yo almost as fresh as Natalie Rut nat even then did she realize the danger into w hich she was drifting. nor did she ap- | preciate the faet that thinzs mmust | naturally g0 haekward or forw ard they cannot stand still le-Limericks. A cheery old fellow of —1 Who made his man diet of When asked by a 3 “Do vou eat to the —4 He replied. “Only down to their 1. A page of Great Brit Gastropod molluses - One who cherishes re have t this Ave mov been quite happy cheery old fellow 1 across the channei. Why? You'll see. when vou have com pleted the limerick by placing the right words, indicated by the numbers, in their corresponding spaces. The an- uzzlick” will ap- in his pear tomorrow.) Yesterday's “Puzzlick.” A modern composer named Brahms Cansed in music the greatest qualms: His themes o complex Every eritic would vex, fe< clear 1p to psalm ) of the new colors.... Last to wear out. VAN RAALTE SILK STOCKINGS —"*becase you love nice things” Mape sy Suk G ® MAKERS OF VAN RAALTR ovas, St.k UNDERWEAR : ¢