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WOMAN®S : PAQ L0 Fan May Cost as Much as the Frock BY MARY MARSHALL. There are some women who feel considerable embarrassment if they have to walk about with nothing in thelr hands. Lecturers, public speak- OSTRICH USED IN T G _OF THIS WOND SHADES FROM P TO FAINT! ' MAUVE. THE T ers and actresses sometimes possess this aversion to empty hands. That very clever and magnetic French woman of the late eighteenth century, Mme. de Stael, habitually carried, when she received her friends, a sprig of myrtle. Without this or something similar she would have felt quite em barrassed. 1t would be interesting to trace this aversion to empty hands back through the ages to its source. Perhaps it is because women for centuries became accustomed to carrying the distaff, or later, knitting needles. Even queens once went about spinning as they talked and walked. Not to do 8o was to show yourself very lazy. Then, before there were sewing machines or knitting machines, women’s fingers had to keep eternally at work in or- der to provide clothes for their fam- ilies. Little girls of 6 or 7 were set to work. knitting, spinning, hemming, weaving —and grandames, nodding on the doorsteps or beside the fireplace, kept their fingers forever busy until death came and brought release from this endless finger work. So, perhaps,”it is not very surpris- ing that we who have .n!y recently been released from this compulsory finger work—not this time by death but by innumerable mananade ma- chines—should have a lngering de- sire to do something with our fingers ——or at least to hold something in them. Perhaps that is why some women like to smoke cigarettes. Other women must have fans, and really it is for this reason that women fans, far more than because the fans may be used to supply a breeze. Seemingly, the fad for fans is not waning. Last Winter several promi- nent actresses carried gorgeous &nd enormous fans. Sometimes they were called wonder fans, and one of thera, made of lovely ostrich feathers, i said to have cost $600. Following the example of the stage, a number of women of soclal prominence adopted these large wonder fans. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPI Glasses Magee has a new baby in his house too, the cheef diffrence be- tween his and mine being that his is a sister and mine a brother, and this afternoon him and me was set- ting on my frunt steps tawking about 1 and Glasses sed, My sister is 3 days old today G wizz, so Is my brother, I sed. Holey smokes they must of came pritty near being twins, Glasses sed, and I sed, Gosh, that would of bin funny, wat relation would that of made you and me, I wonder? Brother in laws, I gess, Glasses sed, and T sed, Do you think she will have glasses like you wen she grows up and wunts to look at things? T dont think so, she dont look smart enuff for glasses, I think Ill keep on being the ony one in our family with glasses, (ilasses sed. Proving the conceet of some people, and 1 sed, Who does she look like, our father or mother? She looks something like my gran- mother wen she cries, Glasses sed. Who does your brother look like? he sed. Nobody I ever saw, I sed. Wich he dont, and Glasses sed, Does he make mutch noise? ' He's pritty loud for his size, I sed. Has you sister got eny teeth? I sed. Has your brother? Glasses sed. Not saying weather she had or not, and 1 sed, I dont know, Im not sure, I havent looked. Neither have I, but I wouldent be serprized if she had some, Glasses sed, and I sed, Neither would iIf my brother had, he’ll be 4 days old to- morrow. Being all we could think of to say about them, so we went erround to Ruds Simkinses to watch him try to make his baby tertle do tricks. Qur Children— By Angelo Patri The Boy's Career. What is the boy to do with himself? We want to have a place of ionor among men, of course. If he could be President of the United States, or Supreme Court justice, or if his talents lay more in the busi- ness field, it would be rather nice to have him a Morgan, It doesn’t matter =0 much what he does, if he does it superlatively. It would not do to lower the stand- ard. If we ceased to cherish a secret ambition to place our mark higher up on the walls of achievement the tragedy of failure would lie like a pall upon us and upon our children, and we would long for the end. If we ceased to cherish the dream for our children we must admit all striving to be a bitterness and a mockery, and that the human soul will never do. It aspires and dreams and fights on through the children’s children and it does achieve. It seems to me that most of the achievement is blindly reached. Our idea of success is almost purely ma- terial. It is measured in terms of money and possession, and the power that they bring. What success the race achieves comes through those who cling to the inner vision of beau- ty and, in spite of isolation and neg- lect and grudging, manage to come through bearing the prize. The few achleve for the many who are blind 10 the necessity for achievement in the things of the spirit, for the prizes of the closet and the laboratory and the silent places. it is not we who confer the prize him BEAUTY CHATS Dry Shampooing. If you haven't time for a real sham- poo, give yourself a “dry” one with orris root powder. Keep a few sunces of this in your beauty cabinet, proferably in an old sifter top tal- gum powder tin. Almost all talcum powder tins come apart at the “shoul- e and if you pry carefully with a nail file or anything pointed and strong and not too thick, vou can get the two halves apart and fill up with orris root, without damaging the tin at all. Orris root, finely powdered, clings Jess than any other powder. It is particularly dry, not oily and sticky, #s even the finest oatmeal powger. It takes up the surface oils of the hair very quickly, and it brushes out eas- fiy. Your r will never have that powdery look that talcum or ordinary powder would give you: a brisk brush- fng with a thick. deep-bristled brush will take out all the powder, a really surprising amount of dirt, and leave your hair glossy and fluffy and full of life. Now and then, while brushing, wipe our brush off on an old bit of towel: ou will see how much dust and dirt ou are getting from your hair that vay, and vou will also keep the brush rlean, so it takes away the rest of the powder more easi A dry week the date for the regular soap and water washing. I1'd not advise more than one dry shampoo between top my thoughts are nice and neat ith noble words and manners sweet, when some crisis hampoo will put off by a! when it is won. The winner wrests it from the hidden forces of life and wears it humbly enough on his bowed head. We confer our prizes on the successful one who collects all the gold and silver of the market place, holds them high and sells them high- er. The more he has gathered unto himself, the more he has magnified himself, the more power he has to make his hold upon us felt, the higher we place him. The superlative rules in the material world. What shall the boy do? He feels the demand upon him. He must ac- quire, not achieve save in that sense, or be gently termed a failure. We telk him that we desire above all things that he We a fine character, a man devoted to noble ideals, following a high calling, but we imbue him with the desire for material gain. Once he attains it, we turn on him and rend him. Witness what happened to the young foot ball hero of last fall. Let us be at least open with the boy. If what we honestly desire for him is money and its power, tell him so and put an end to it. If we would have him devote his life to the serv- ice of man and accept the bitter-sweet flavor of that life, accept the condi- tions of poverty and obscurity that surround it, tell him so. And if you have the happy child born to no high place, but rather to 1 | l | name (which, by fill a destiny of cheerful mediocrity, content to do the day's work, letting who will secure the prizes, tell him you .are glad it is so. Help him to find the job that he likes and rejoice in_his happiness. They also achieve who do their humble duty. That means the greater part of humanity. BY EDNA KENT FORBES. regular wet ones, for a little powder does sift down and cling to the scalp. You can get even this off by wrapping cheesecloth around your finger, part- ing the hair and rubbing along the partings all over the scalp. Annie, G. P.—If you are not sure that your cream is made from fine ofls, you will do better just to massage with~ oil that you know is right. Cream is preferable to oil, becduse it has wax in it that somewhat seals the pores. This helps along absorp- tion. Other ingredients in the cream are helpful to the skin also, such as the rose water and the slight amount of astringent which comes from the few drops of benzoin or the perfume. A very fine brand of olive or almond oil should be your chofce if vou use oil instead of a cream. Pistorp of Bour Hame BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. FRICK. VARIATIONS—Froks, Froak. RACIAL ORIGIN—En SOURCE—A characteristic. Note the two variations of this the way, are not nearly so frequently met with as is ¥rick). Note also that the name is the development of a personal char- acteristic. and you have the stage all set to draw a false conclusion. It doesn’t mean what you are thinking of. At least it did not mean that in the middle ages, in the perlod when family names were in the process of formation, taking their origin from surnames which, in one way or another, were descriptive of the particular person. It wasn't that the English of the middle ages would have hesitated to refer to a neighbor as “Geoftrey the Freak” if he impressed them that way. Their sense of delicacy in such matters was not nearly so highly de- veloped as ours today, taking us as a whole. But the word simply didn’t happen to mean “freak.” What it did mean was urageous. More than this, “Freke” was an adjective used to denote that a man was cour- ageous to the point of desperate, un- thinking foolhardiness. Tt is no won- der that the name has just naturally gravitated in its spelling away from our modern word “freak,” which, in the language made famous by Messrs. Potash and, Perimutt else.again.” ‘something |.about 'SUB ROSA BY MIMIL Sally’s Leavings. “Yes, 1 do love Larry, I suppose. But he's never going to know it. I couldn't bear to be engaged to him— and have every one in town saying I just took Sally Austin’s leavings. “You know, and every one élse knows that he was crazy about her foy four years—that he was engaged to her, and that she broke it off. She never cared about him. Just wanted to have a good time with him. And how she would laugh if she knew I'd snatched him up the minute she gave him the air. ¥ ““She thinks herself pretty good al- ready—and if I gave her the idea that I was willing to take what she didn't want—she'd look down on me more han ever. 't give her any satisfaction— Did you ever hear such a perfectly ridiculous speech, giris? Yet, there are lots of young things making such speeches every day. They seem to think that the act of falling in love with some man whom another girl has turned down lowers their dignity. They feel that the other girl will always have the laugh on them—that they will never be able to meet her on equal terms again. Moniea, who spoke this plece with great vehemence, is just another poor sap. Her rivalry with Sally is one of long standing. They have always Jjealously watched each other—striving to outdo each other in popularity, charm and style. Well, now, this Larry business, Monica feels, would just flnish her. Sally would win once and forever. Monica would never hear the end of it—would never cease to feel the sting of defeat. She hasn't thought of an answer to her rival if that young lady should openly taunt her with taking Larry when no one else wanted him. Monica hasn't realized that no mat- ter whom Sally herself chooses to marry some day, he will almost cer- tainly be somebody's leavings. A boy can’t grow to a marriageable age without having been given the air by some one. Every man has his Waterloo, and Sally's future Romeo is pretty sure to have been cast off by some heart- less creature—probably not even as nice as Sally. Monica must get it out of her head that in choosing Larry she’s lost caste with those who know of his failure with Sally Suppose he'd come from another town—a perfect stranger to her crowd. She wouldn't have cared a hang, then, whether he'd heen thrown over seven times by the same girl. She wouldn't have stopped to reflect that she was getting somebody else's leavings just the same. She is allowing her personal feeling for Sally to endanger her future hap- piness, and she's a very silly kid. Snap out of it, Monica! We've all got to take somebody’s leaving. Just tell- Sally that, if she dares to talk to you about the matter. Your love for Larry, and your com mon sense ought to take all the sting out of the situation. (Copyright, 1926.) glad to answer, any inquiries ., provided & stamped, pe s (nelosed. MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. Mimi will 1l direct dressed enve Correcting “Pigeon Toes.” One mother say: My little boy displayed such a dis- tressing inclination toward ‘pigeon toes” that I resolved to stop it before he grew any older. Every day when he and I chanced to be alone, we went through an amusing little form of ex- ercise. We both marched up and down the room to a martial air on the phonograph, and we ostentatiously turned our toes out. We laughted a lot at each other's exaggerated ap- pearance, but just the same the regu- lar drill was taking effect, for sonny boy is now practically broken of the pigeon-toed habit. (Copyright. 1926.) HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWTON. Mottoes. Roses are red, Violets are blue, Sugar is sweet, And so are you!” We have all been guilty of auto graph albums. No “promotion day’ would have been the same without them, and no album half so dear to us or so reminiscent of the very at- mosphere of those days without the mottoes! “Never be sharp, never be flat, al- ‘ways be natural,” is the “open sesame” to a long sealed and enchanted ex- istence of which we thought we had lost the key. A few leaves more and | then— “From your sister graduate, which tells another tale. And so on through the pages, with the gradually sobering and deepening messages as the finger prints of time assert their mark. The last is “Keep the faith!"” How came they? For the beginning of mottoss we must go back to the romantic age, ‘when the heavily armed knight could be recognized only by his. coat of arms. Because armorial bearings be- came very complicated. England’s Heralds’' College was established to regulate the forms. The first step to- ward simplification of the system was the abridgment of the emblems into the form of a crest and a motto. The earliest mottoes were the battle cries of the knights, who were known by them. With the passing of time, however, imagination came into play and, there evolved the epigrammatic sayings that we know today. (Copyright, 1926.) Onion Souffle, Put one tablespoonful of butter in a saucepan and when melted add one tablespoonful "of flour,. stir until smooth and then add gradually one cupful of milk and season with. pa- prika and salt. Let boil, then add one. Ons Seammoonte) of hopped. parsier: one ul of chopj ey, one and one-half cupfuls of cold bolled onions chopped fine and the yolks of two eggs well beaten. Mix thor- oughly, then add the. stiffiy beaten whites of the two eggs and mix them gently through the onion mixture with a fork. Put in a buttered bak- ing dish or in individua) cases, sprin- kle fine crumbs on top and bake 15 minutes to slightly brown aal'lion Gfof S WINTER BY D. C. PEATTIE. Ascent of Sap. This is probably the last week of Winter, yet Winter is still actually with us until the first flower blooms. The trees, however, and above all the maples, have been behaving as though it were Spring. For they have been forming their flower buds, now close to bursting, and that medins that sap has been ascending. Can anybody tell what makes sap rise in trees? This is such an ordi nary phenomenon that people never stop to ask how it happens. We know why water flows from a tap even on top of a high hill: a pressure pump is forcing it up. But where i3 the tree's pump engine? The annual as. cent of sap is just as difficult to ex- plain as it would be to explain how a thing should fall upward instead of down. People have suggested that sap rises in the ste by capillaris that is, by the process we obeerve in blot- ting paper drawing up ink. But the laws of physics do not admit that capillarity will act in-the cases of trees 100 feet high. Other theories, like osmotic pressure and traction, with dificult names and still more difficult explanations, have been sug- gested, but there is an objection to every one of them. It is one of the many and unsolved puzzles of plant science. Furthermore, why does sap rise when it does? Long before there are any pleasant days, long before anything even resembling Spring, the sap, as if set off by clockwork, begins to rise. It is true that we know that heat increases the flow of sap and cold retards it, but that explanation seems only part of the truth. MODE MINIATURES I “Button, button”’—who hasn’t but- tons down the front of the frock, up the sides of the coat, in orderly array on the suit? And now come buckles to match buttons, thereby making the TR LTIl ToITIiin ( effect ever so much more satisfying in its completeness. Whevr you see the galaxy of shapes and colors in the trimming shops you will immediately decide in favor of a high-necked dress with buttons in abundance—one following the other down the !rnnt—lwlr'.h a bli’l‘ckle"lflr the buckl or each cuff. belt and a buckle e CETTE. Clues to Character BY J. 0. ABERNETHY, Shy Lips. Are you one of those shy individ. uals who stand back and let _others step ahead of you in street cars? Do you see your friends -pushing ahead, Yrabbing the good jobs, while you stand back, knowing in your he thgt you ar capable of doing just as well @8, it not better than the other fel- low? In other words, you ‘lack con- fidence in yourself. You fear some one will think you egotistical or. for- ward, and you shrink from publicity r notoriety. 5 The world has a way of accepting us at just our own valuation. We should, therefore, placé a high valu- ation on ourselves. Average self. esteem, with firmness and conscien- tiousness, lend great dignity to the aracter. chnahnccd self-esteem is of infinite service to man and teaches him to protect, uphold and respect himself, because it causes him to follow a course of conduct that will win the respect and confidence of others. Self- confidence will lead one to push him- gelf to many places of importance, social, commercial and governmental. Those with short upper lips and a depressed region directly outward from the gelf-esteem.. They * can:’ easily be crowded away from the higher: posi- tions by the egotists or those with even average self-esteem. (Oepyright. 1936. x scorners of the mouth, lack '¢ BEDTIME STORIE Can Stand It No Longer. Whe Vouit Ahd thas trow rommy Tommy Tit the Chickadee answered the questions of Peter Rabbit until he grew tired of it; then he flew over to the Old Orchard. “My goodness!” ex- claimed Tommy. “Was there ever any one else so full of curiosity as Peter Rabbit? Such questions as he can ask. I told him that I didn’t know anything about that stranger in the Green For- est, yet, he persisted in asking ques- tions, I saw Reddy Fox heading that in. ble will begi L the Chicksdee. “YOU'RE LOOKING FINE PETER,” SAID REDDY. way just as T was leaving. I guess Peter won't bother Reddy much with questions. But in this Tommy Tit was mis- taken. You see, Peter felt quite safe where he was sitting in the dear Old Briar-patch. It didn’'t bother him at all to have Reddy Fox just outside, for he knew that Reddy couldn’t get to him. Reddy stopped to peer be- tween the brambles. “You're looking fine, Peter, said Reddy. 1 hope ,you feel as fine as you look.” “I'm feeling quite nicely,” replied Peter. “Won't you come in and make me a visit?”’ Peter grinned as he said this, for of course he knew that noth- ing would induce Reddy to try to get through those brambles. Of course, it was very saucy of Peter. But Reddy didn’t seem to mind in the least. “No, thank you, Peter,” said he. my way to the Green Forest.” Peter pricked up his ears at once. “By the wa: said he, “who is that relative of y the Green Forest?” ‘Reddy pretended to know nothing about it. “Relative?”’ said he. Rela- tive? What relative is that?” 'Well, if you don’t know, of course T can't tell you,” replied Peter, “Sam- my Jay and Tommy Tit both have told me that there is a new stranger in the C\?lfispws ppingfime a BY THORNTON W. BURGESS Green Forest, and he looks as if he is a member of the Fox family, a cousin of yours, perhaps. Have you any cousins in this part of the coun- try, Reddy Fox?" “If T had T would chase them out,” replied Reddy, which, of course, wasn't & nice thing to say. “Well, it is time y some chasing right away,” declared a sharp voice. “Tut-tut-tut-tut, fo shame on you, Reddy Fox, to talk so 1t was Jenny Wren. “Of course you have a member of your family in thi: part of the country, and you know it.” Instantly Peter was ready with a question. “Who is it, Jenny Wren? “Tut-tut-tut-tut, old Mr.” Curiosity! texclaimed Jenny, jerking her tail in that saucy way of hers. “If you want to know, go over to the Green Forest. If you're smart enough you'll find him there.” *““That is where I am bound for, said Reddy Fox. “Come with me, Peter, and we'll pay this fellow a call and see who he is. No, thank vou,” repiied Peter. “I don’t care for your company. I am afrald that before we got there you would forget where we were going and why, Reddy grinned and trotted off across the Green Meadows toward the Green Forest. Peter watched him out of sight. “I'm going, too,” he declared “I just can't stand it any longer. I've got to find out who this stranger fs. 17l go by way of the Old Orchard just as soon as the Black Shadows come creeping out from the Purple Hills. And that is just what Peter did. (Copyright. 1926.) “ . ” Puzzlicks -Limericks. There was a queer fellow named —1 ‘Whose intellect moved in a —2—. No peace could he —3— For his rotary —4— Till he'd circled by cycle —5— 1. Masculine name, that of an arch- angel. 2. An orbit. Discover. Reasoning portion of the brain. Large lake in southern Siberia. (Note—"This is not only a good lim- erick, but it's a tonguetwister as well,” says R. D. McC. of Washing- ton, D. C.. who ment it in. After you've completed it you might try reading it out loud. The answer and another “Puzzlick” will appear tomor. row.) Yesterday's “Puzzlick.” A beautiful young lady of Butte Once thought herself very acute; ‘That her suitor might praiso her She gave him a razor, Which suited her suitor's hirsute. (Copyright, 1926.) These vitamins increase resistance PEOPLE who are trying to disease: to throw off a cold, or a cough that hangs on, often take cod-liver oil with the most remarkable results. For good cod-liver oil is the richest known source of the fat soluble vita- mins. And scientists have discovered that these vitamins are extremely potent in imparting energy and vigor, in enabling the body to repel germ attacks, to resist disease. Convalescents, too, travel the road to vigorous. health more quickly, with the aid of cod-liver oil. Often its effects seem almost magical. But vitamins of cod-liver oil are, unfortunately, easily lost in the process of preparing, packaging and tr: ng the oil. astoundingly rich in. Too often oil that was these health-giving elements when first taken from:its source reaches the con- sumer with its therapeutic value so greatly reduced as to render it practically valueless. That is never so with Squibb’s Cod-Liver Oil. A special, exclusive process, developed in the Squibb Laboratories, insures that. It insures the retention of vitamins to a greater degree than has ever been possible before. Every bottle of Squibb’s Cod-Liver Ol is rigidly tested for its vitamin potency and is prepared, pack- aged and ‘transported under the protection of this new process which protects against loss of vitamin’ taste, so Squibb’s is' much nary cod-liver oil. To be potency. ‘Incidentally, that process improves the more palatable than ordi- safe, imi;t upon Squibb’z, At drug stores everywhere. FEATURES, DAUGHTERS OF TODAY BY HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR Martha Dennison at §1 faces the fact that her husband has drifted away from her, as well as her two children, Arthur and Natalie. She meets an attractive bachelor, Perry M , 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 Ralf in love with Lucien Bartlett, @ married man. Perry and Martha see Natalie and Lucien at the thea- ter, and Perry tells Martha that Lucler is married. Perry finds himself more than a little inter- ested in Natalie. CHAPTER XVIIL Martha’s Resolution. Martha was preoccupied. On the way home she said very little, and it wasn't until she was .about to say good-night“to Perry that she realized how silent she had been. Nelther of them had talked very much, and quite suddenly Martha was afraid. - She was afraid that Perry might read into her silence the thought that she was con- sclence-stricken because of her friend- ship with him. - It ‘was practically true, but for all that, she did not wish Perry to think so. e could not lose that friendship, she would not lose it. She had made up her mind definitely to that. Distractedly she sought about in her mind for something to say to him, something light and airy and convinc- ing, something that would dismiss the evening, and what had happened dur- ing the play as something of no con- sequence. But the more she tried the 'more impossible she found it to do this. ‘There was something in Perry’s man ner, a grave aloofness that choked the words in her throat,’and for the first time since she had known him he did not come upstairs with her. He left her at the door of the elevator with a few conventional woifls of farewell. Martha had hoped to take him up to the apartment. John 'was away on one of his trips, and nefther of the chil- dren would be in for kome time. Up- stairs Martha had hoped to regain some of the radiahce that had been hers earlier in the evening. As it was, she had a premonition that ter- rified her. It was as though she were suddenly convinced that things were not the same between herself and Perry. It was almost as if Natalle had come between them. For the ti being the danger that threatened Natalie was swallowed up In her imagination she followed Perry home. She saw him light his pipe and sit down to think things over. Suppose he decided not to see her again. Suppose there came days when she walited in valn for him to telephone. Suppose tonight had end ed things between them forever! Once in the apartment, she almost yielded to the temptation to call him on the telephone. Some inpate pridi in her, however, kept her from yleld- ing. No, she could not do that. Besides, she was exaggorating things. She; wasg overwrought, nervously tired. T6% morrow everything would be just asr it had been and she would laugh a herself for being such an idiot. ‘While she was undressing she ma an effort to put her own affairs aside and to return to Natalie’s probleni She would have to speak to Nataife” Not in the old-fashioned way of old fashioned mothers, but as a friend. She would make an attempt to win Natalle's confidence. She would show Natalle how girlishly winning and sympathetic a mother could be. She} would wait up tonight for her, andfy she would be very careful to show .’ Natallo that it wasn't because of a< desire to interfere that she had} broached the subject, but only be<ii cause she was interested, " ‘Wrapped in a neglige, she sat down in a big chair with one of the new novels. She had turned several pages before she realized that she hadn't as- similated one thing she had read, and finally she put the book aside, and returned to her thoughts. How silent the apartment was. must be getting very late, how late she didn't know. hecause the little." amber clock on her dressing table had stopped and her watch was at the jeweler's. She decided to go into the living room to look at the time, but as she rose to her feet and went toward the . door she heard a key heing carefully inserted in the lock of the outside door. She drew a long breath of re- Mef. That must be Natalle now, - Softly she crossed the room and open- ed the door, and as she did 8o foot-~ steps that were not quite steady came. down the corridor. Z (Copsright, 1926.) (Continued in tomorrow’s Star.) e Doclaring she had been converted - at a church 1 meeting, a pretty | of Sacramento announced in Martha’s worry over her own af- fairs. As the elevator carried her up- stairs she was weighed down by a de- pression that she could not seem to shake off. “Best You me time that ehe had drop- 000 heart balm suits# against a local merchant, because it} conflicted with her religious cunvlo-j tion: - X\ CanBuy” F SN "SALADA™ TEA So Conceded Y Q 1/ Sl p) = by All Users Qar[[n ve ‘4/&') ring o, dlireck fiom our factory. FOOTWEAR. FORL WOMEN cind theyre PLE il i 8 ‘with Dainty and Attrac tive Gray Kia Trimming and Military Heels, $3.50 See No. 9780 An Exqunts Blonde Kid ot g al Direct from the factory without the middleman’s profits make the price $3.50 instead of $5. See these per- fectly ltuqmng New_ Spring Styles in “The Season’s Smartest” Colors, Styles, Lasts and models. Adorable Blonde Kid Dainty Two Tone Combina. tions, Chic Bois De Rose, Exquisite Satins, Smart Pat- ent Leathers and Patent Leathers Gray Dart trimmed, magnificent Gray Kids, Suedes, Tans, and popular styles galore. 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