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WOMA Cape Continues to Be Popular BY MARY No sooner had the tape reappeared ®s part of the fashion bill of fare for the Spring and Summer of 1926 than some women began to be suspicious of it. It'shound said one. “It's so easy o wear—before the to be over popular.” NAVY BLUE AND WHITE PRINT. ED FOULARD WITH PLEATED CAPE OF SAME ‘MATERIAL, BOUND IN SOLID BLUE. THE COLLAR AND TIE ARE OF| WHITE CREPE DE CHINE. | €0 many other wom- ring capes or cape uld be ashamed to ng is over 3 will be we effects that 1 eppear in or And so any number of women have failed to possess themselves of a type garment that would be most becoming and suitable —all because of this fear hat they might spoil their claims to exclusiveness in so doing always that way with one or ¢ three new fashions every Sometimes it is a_new color. {sea suffering is experienced not only | sea that scatters the insects N MARSHALL. able, let us say, and there are always some women who would love to pos- sess hats of this shade, to whom in deed they would be most becoming, who don’t do so all becau: tew of their neighbors have done the same thing. So with snakeskin ornaments on shoes. Many women held off at first because they felt the fashion would become “common,” and though it has become extremely popular the fact is that every one of the high- class shoemakers is making use of this interesting form of trimming. The striking thing is that, though Spring is almost over, the cape coat and cap2 wrap look as distinguished they did when they were firs i number of weeks ago. A surpr rge number of capes appeared ster, but even that did not tend to cheapen them in the of the more discriminating. ~ For Summer wear many frocks will be made with a little detachable cape extending just over the turn of the elbow. (Covsright. 1920 What Do You Know About It? Daily Science Six. ‘What is the origin word trade in trade wind: What is the ,chief acteristic of the trade wind © 8. From what direction the prevailing in Northern United § 4. Where do the t blow? What causes winds to be m some one direc- 1. char- are winds the tes? ade winds 6. What is a chinook wind? Answers to these questions in tomorrow’s Star. The Doctor Wind. In extremely hot climates near the j from heat and humidity, but also from insects and from that general feeling | of depression that comes when the is lifeless and stifling. In the region of the trade winds, however, these steady and gentle breezes spring up at certain times of day almost with clockwork regularity, the time of their blowing being exactly condi- tioned by the superheating of the land. A wind then blows in from the and stirs | the atmosphere and revives drooping | ibits so much that people do mot edk of it as a mere wind; the looray, here comes the docto Now, what do you know about that? Answers to Yesterday’s Questions. 1. The gypsy moth is poisonous to touch. Scorpions are not in 3. Centipedes have two pairs of legs to each body segment; millepedes have only one pair to a segment. 4. Beetles can fly, though the; usually only seen crawling. Most insects have wings, even which appear to have no wings, being winged as to their queens and males; there is a tropical group that is entirely wingless, but is known with us only rarely—the silverworms which we sometimes see in old books as minute, seurrying silvery threads. are ants, become extremely fashion EAT AND BE HEALTHY Dinah Day's Daily Talks on Diet The Right Food Is Pimples and Acne. When vou see somebody with &kin vou love to look you m be gure that that somebody’s digestion | is running fine. She is also gettng | sleep, fresh air, daily bath and mount of exercise. Whole- malkes health and health vod complexion. 1 moderate gome o makes Well-cared-for_chi Tooking whole ¢ wt. There responds. d en have fresh- | 3 Their v's sehedule is carefully laid i abuse and nature | ases of acna develop of the adolescent becomes a mass ackheads with fiery scoverable Some claim | infection, but | known. The | alence during | fat glands be- | mes In boys and girls age. The whole f: of pimples and t =kin There ave health disturbances. this disease to be this is not positivel reason for its i adolescence is that th come increasingly e Cold cream | should not be rha addition of | more grease applied to a case of acne | is only adding trouble. Indigestible, | <y foods and indulgence in sweets ke acne worse. | d case it hard to | the adolescent age, nty of fruits and suc , with milk and one | < but no meat, will | often help the trouble. Also drink | wo or three quarts of water a day. This dict will overcome constipation s well as nourish the body. | Nat generally clea | case of acne as the vietim grow: Al means do not open or rimples. metimes bran z00d to use instead of soap | ing the face. Tincture of | green p sometimes agrees with | the tkin. Tt should not be irritated in any way If the dise: n will in conquer 1 diet of ple older. pick at are R o seeme to be gaining | headway pite « simple. whole yme diet, a reputable skin specialist should he consulted. e will give a nreseription for a lotion to soothe the nd advise the diet. sleep and ex- to fit the individual case. Usually, as age creeps on, the skin hecomes coarser. You do not often sea the complexion of a haby on a middleaged woman. But anybody can have a clear, firm, fresh- looking skin. This comes from inside and outside cleanliness. A mild neu- gral soap to wash the foce and good wholesome food with an abundance of fruits and vegetables to give health and do away with constipation. Fruits and vegetables are nature's cosmetics. L—(1) T am and weigh 111 pounds. my weight be? () 1 amooth complexion, troubled with tiny | | | <kin rose-dea 5 feet 11 inches tall What should but now 1 am pimples around | plenty used to have a | 6. Junebugs are beetles. "the Best Medicine THE EVENIN G STAR, SUB ROSA BY MIMI. Elopers. 't see why advisers of young girls should find it necessary to warn them against eloping. ! *“What harm does an elopement do” <he a “If the fond parents are ore about something, it may take months to get them in the right frame of mind to consent toa marriage. W wait all that time, have all that fuss and bother?” Tt sounds like the simplest and eas- ometimes it's the long- st, hardest road to travel, You see, Billie, marriage isn't a great solution of all hwnan difficulties. You n't, by the simple act of marriage, olve all filial affection and parental objection and disapproval. ow look at Nancy. § great advocate of the And when her people over Paul, she said crisply: *Very well, Paul, my boy, we shall run off tc gether, and everything will be lovel, So off they ran, and everything was as they were concerned t a little while. But' Nancy, poor old thing, was just the usual sort of girl, after all, and she was devoted to her mother, needed her, wanted her. However, mother and dad were way up in the air, hurt and angry and proud. Naney tried to kid herself, for sev eral weeks, that she didn't give a hung; then finally she had to hang out the white flag. She went sobbing back to mother, asking for forgiveness—for a sign that they would be kind to her and her new hi > the family's rec their love and Billie doe: ¥ a row ch that she wanted ition—she wanted It took a long time, "o the elopement had 1 the hearts which might have softened quickly, if she'd walted and tried to win them over before marriage. It was more than two vears before daddy’s pride permitted any kindness to his wayward daughter ways there was just the slight ing of constraint and unea tween the new son-inlaw wife's people. You may be able to get along with out your parents’ consent and aid— but if you're really fond of them, you won't ‘be able to get along without their love. me day you'll want it, and then it may take vears to bring them around. Why not out struggle, feelin; L longer now. If it takes six months’ steady, hard work to make them see the light now-—before you're married—you can figure that it would take vou just six times that period to win them over after an elopement ave all that long-drawn- and bitterness and ill waiting just a while 1926 Mimi will be directed to addressed envelope MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. lad to answer any inguiries provided a stamped, 13 inclosed Raw Prunes. your age, and you do not say whether You are a young man or your woman. The health tables read for a young man of vour height, age 15 24, 123 pounds. For a young woman, | age 15-19, 116 pounds. (2) Eat whole some meals. Cut out sweets and fried or other indigestible foods. — Kat of fruit and vegetables. but 1t until your complexton clears. < two to three quorts of water day. A diet of simple foods, plenty £ sleep, fresh air and moderate ex should do away with vour no m | ercise { les. al answera o their auestic addressed ed enve fiistor} n; énur Pame| BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. DANFORTH. VARIATION—Danford. RACIAL ORIGIN—English. SOURCE—A place name: Here is a family name which car-| ries one back to the days of the strug- gles between the Saxons and thel Danes in old England, several cen- turies before the Norman invasion of that land. Not as a family name do you trace it all the way back, however. As a family name there is no reason to sup- pose that it dates from any other pe- riod than the regular era of family name formation. That is to say, it may have come into use at any time Letween the eleventh and fifteenth centuries; possibly in the instances of different families it developed at dif’ ferent times It was ds A place name that it ex- before that time ope to Din “Dan'’s »anieVs Ford.” and this origin would s plausible as the other explana re it not for historical record, h pretty well established the fact that it originally meant “the ford of the Danes.” And the chances are that it played some important part in one of the many battles which were waged | Dbetween the two branches of the Feu tonic race which at that time were oontesting for supremicy in England. (Copyright, 1926.) Tomato Rarebit. Melt iwo tablespoonfuls of butter and stir in two tablespoonfuls of flour. Pour on gradually three-fourths cup- ful of cream, and when the mixture thickens add three-fourths cupful of stewed strained tomatoes, to which a pinch of baking soda has been add- ed. Add two cupfuls of finely grated cheese, two eggs lightly beaten, salt, cayenne and mustard to season and | v nose and chin. How can I remedy this? nswer.—(1) You do mnot tell me con‘inue the cooking until the cheese | has melted. Then serve at once on { toasted brown bread One mother says I buy an extra good prunes. mot necessarily clean and sweet, so that may eat them raw. Of course they must be cooked for the baby, but for the older vhildren they are really better raw, or after they have been caked in cold water for an hour or so. They like them so well this way that L am not only saved the usual trouble of urging them to eat this wholesome fruit, but they welcome them as substitutes for candy brand large, but the children . Cake Fillings. Chocolate ~ Filling. — Mix together eight level tablespoonfuls of cocoa, three tablespoonfuls of milk, one egg. one cupful of powdered sugar d one-half a teaspoonful of vanilla. Stir over the fire- for a minute until thick and smooth, being very careful not to let it scorch. Cool before spread ing on the cake. This will make enough to cover two large layers or three small ones. Whipped Cream Filling in a pan of ice wate fourths cupful of thick bowl and beat until stiff, then one-fourth cupful of powdered s the white of one egg beaten to a stiff froth and onehalf a teaspoonful of vanilla. Place between layers of cake Just before serving. IMig Filling.—Run one pound of figs through chopper and put them in a saucepan with one cupful of iling water. one-half a cupful of sugar and the juice of one-haif a lemor Put in a double hoiler and simmer until it is a smooth paste. Cool before using. Set a howl put three- 1gar, Sponge Cakes. Whip two eggs with two ounce: sugar to a stiff froth. Lightly stir in two ounces of sifted flour with one level teaspoonful or baking powder, then add half a teaspoon- ful of vanilla extract. Put the mixture in buttered and floured baking tins. Bake in a moderate oven for 20 tes. A little grated lemon rind e Clear skinned— in spite of city smoke HarpLY a city today that doesn't have its smoke nuisance —its air full of tiny, grimy particles of soot. For a clear, fresh complexion and to keep the fine texture of vour skin, this griminess must be thoroughly removed, and the pores of your skin well cleansed, at least once a day. Before soap and water, or in place of it, give your face and neck a cleansing with Armand Eau de Cologne Cleansing Cream. A new Cream made with eau de cologne, remark- ably soothing and refreshing. Removes Powder, Rouge and grime quickly and completely. No oily after-effects, as in heavy Cold Creams. At lead- ing drug stores, 50 cents and $1.00 per jar. or write Armand Company, Des Moines, for free trial sample, enclosing 2-cent, stamp. of | ream in the | add | WASHINGTOX N, D. C. TUESDAY, The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright, 1926.) ipt (abbr., 11. Judicious 12 d the top. 13. Morning (abbr.), 14. Prefix: again 15. Company (abbr.). 16. Containing_gold 0. Southern State (abbr.) Babylonlan deity. Be scanty. Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle. The Engagement Ring. cepting a first-born, nothing is so great a source of pride as an engage- ment ring. Yet it s no easy matter to choose the ring. Etiquette rules that the fiance shall select the ring, but many young women insist upon| being heard in the matter. Unfor- tunately, this is too often because they are more concerned in getting a ring | that will surpass their friends’ than in selecting one that's within the means of the bridegroon The choice of pend upon two pur future hubb; our ring should de- ngs—first of all, means, and, sec ondly, upon your own good taste. 1f you're wise and provident vou will suit your taste to his means and save | him a lot of mental anguish. Many women still believe that all | engagement rings are set with dia- monds, but you probably know bet ter. The ring may be set with al most any kind of stone, because it isn't a badge at all, but simply the mbol of a pledge. Recently Princess Mary's engagement ring was set with | emeralds. and the Duche: of \'m‘ki had a sapphire in hers. Your birth stone is suitable for an engagement ring, and it may be a most gracious | means ofisidestepping financial strain. Just how large a ring sHould I buy? What kind of a setting is proper? How ould my diamond be cut? How ! much should my flance spend? Those are some of the questions every *‘most beautiful girl in the world” asks. Of course, there are varying answers to t | | | A New Bath Lotion. he most important thing about bath water is that it be soft, for hard | water is not cleansing and simply irri- tates the skin and makes it feel harsh. Therefore anything that softens er is a valuable beautifier. The value of bath salts is that they it and i | | chie make the water deliciously s a good soapy lather possible. You can soften bath water by throwing in lumps of soda, but the only danger is in getting too much, for strong soda is worse for the skin than hard water. I should like to sug- gest a very pleasant and inexpensive bath lotion made as follows: Take one ounce of henzoin and add to it two ounces of white vinegar, just the or- dinary good quality cooking vinegar. Put in a bottle and let it stand for a week before you use it, keeping it in a4 warm place. A few drops in the {bath water are all you need. It has a very pleasant odor, it does not dry | the skin, it is also slightly bleaching, and has the added virtue of being in- expensive. everal people have written me that like the oatmeal bags so much. These also soften hard water and bleach the skin, and are really no trouble to make. Some people like a mixture of equal parts of oatmeal and bran, but it has no more virtue than | to do so. BEAUTY CHATS Author of “Common Sense.” . Manuscript (abbr.). . Chureh official. Pronoun. New England State (abbr.). egative. Spanish definite article Rullfighter. . Point of the compass. . Boots. . Reposes. DOWN. Disdain. Exceptional. Go over. Group of Pacific islands Note of the scale. Behold. Within, Mother. Choose for office. ke. P T abbr.). of money. ew England State Payment for the Skins, Unit of germplasm. Point pf the compass. Comparative suffix One under age. . Emporium. . Units of distance. Exclamation. . Proposed International Engineering degree. . Bronze in Rome. language. WHEN WE GO SHOPPING BY MRS. HARLAND H. ALL! them all. Whatever ring that's too showy, as many large rings are. The setting depends upon the stone and the way in which it's cut. Settings and cuttings with the style. How much should your flance spend? Ask father how much he spent when he was a young man struggling to make both ends meet. It's certain that vour flance shouldn't spend his last cent of savings on the ring—that is, the last cent exclusive of the trav- eler’s checks for the honeymoon. Your engagement ring is a fixture for life, and it is only natural that you wish a beautiful one. Remember, there are even limits to the price one should pay for beautiful family keepsakes. How about buying the ring on the instaliment plan? Well that's a per- sonal matter, after all. But isn't it better to start vour married life with- out debts? Isn't it better to wait a while and then buy the ring you want without having bills coming monthly to remind vou that_vou don't even own the ring yet? Many flances are too proud to tell their sweethearts that they are buying the engagement ring on the installment plan. It is wrong Frankness and honesty are no obstacles to real love. If vour fiance had the good taste to select you, perhaps you can depend upon him to select as good an en- gagement ring. Prove to him that you're going to be a practical wife by taking the side of economy. Unless you love the purse more than the man, you'll know what sort of ring to “suggest.” BY EDNA KENT FORBES. oatmeal by itself. These bags are often made with one part powdered or finely shaved castile soap to two parts oatmeal. I do not specially ad- vise this, because it seems easfer to make up the bags without it aud to use soap in the ordinary way. Of course no bath is more stimulat- ing or healthier than hot sea water, which can be had at home by pur- chasing bags of sea salt and adding a generous amount to your bath water. Salt water makes the use of soap impossible, but is so cleansing this does not matter. Rub the skin vigorously with a rough cloth or serub it with a small brush, and it will_be as clean as it could be with hot water and soap. Anxious O.—Tt is possible that van- ishing cream does not agree with vour skin, Just as you suggest. Try a fine quality oil cream, one made from almond or olive oil. You can use this for your powder base just as well as the vanishing kind, just a little bit worked into the pores with your fin- ger tips, and wiped oft before dusting the powder over your skin. If you are not sure of the quality of your cream, you had better use a fine quality of olive oil or almond of¥: g i It you need work, read the want columns of The Star. MAY 18, - 1926, Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Second Summer Weaning. To Mrs. 8. J.—As soon as hot weather shows its face mothers every- | where begin to worry about second Summer feeding and reiterate all the old bugaboos about not weaning the baby in the Summer, etc. One mother, whose letter stands before me, is stiil nursing her 15 month-old baby, who s underweight and wakes up three times at night to be fed, all because her aunt and her mother are sure that nothing but trouble will result if she weans the baby before Summer is over. Her sis- ter's baby is a big, fat, healthy, all- night sleeping infant and he was weaned at the proper time, nine months, but even this evidence doesn't quite satisfy this other mother. There must be some good reasomn why all doctors and specialists insist that a baby should be weaned at nine months of age; no matter how succe: ful a nurse the mother thinks herself to be. And the reason is that it has been found that children nursed longer than this become victims of malnutri- tion, are poor sleepers and generall lower in vitality than the child who is put upon cow’s milk and solid foods and is entirely weaned before his first anniversary. It is true that hot weather some- times complicates matters to a small extent. If the baby is 9 months of age in July or August it is quite all right to hold off weaning until September. The fact that he is no doing well Is no indication for not weaning, in fact, it shows plainly that he needs other foods, but as hot weather and newi foods are not always compatible, if weaning time comes in July or August put it off one or two months. For any other baby stick to the weaning at nine months. even if this comes in the early Summe: A" child of 9 months needs more nourishment than can be provided by his mother, and his health is threat- ened when she fails to heed this warning and continues to nurse dur- ing the Summer months. | FEATUR Making the Most ESS of Your Looks BY DOROTHY STOTE. Dear Ann: The flared silhouette, while good for the tall woman, is not so favorable to the short figure, for it will re- duce an already undersized height. The straight silhouette is much more flattering to tiny figures. Yours for favoring flattery, LETITIA. (Copsright. 1926.) Our Chfldren— By Angelo Patri Where To? No matter how naughty a child may a8 close to earning it &s you possibly can. It will take your time and your energy, and you will hate to waste FOOD AND HEALTH ‘ be, you need not fear for his future if | them upon a child who seems to be BY WINIFRED STUART GIBBS. Food Specialist. Suppose you were invited to par- taks of meal composed of nourish- ing foods, but foods that were so combined and grouped as 1o pre- sent a picture of unattractive same- ne: You would, of course, be| polite about expressing disappoint- ment, but vou would do a lot of thinking! And vet. are vou quite| sure that you would know just whera the trouble lay. g0 that you might make suggestions to a willing house- wife anxious to please? Accent is a wonderful help whether in writing prose or poetr: in painting a picture, or in_planning a meal. Poetry is made to be noetr: largely by accent. So accenting enu makes it a satisfactory bill of | fare, instead of one that is u mer collection of dishes assembled in a | fashion more or less helter-skelter. If we were talking about dress we | should characterize the matter of | accent as that which gives smart- ness. In the case of meals it is| largely a question of adding just the touch that means satisfaction, :\mii this touch has positive health value as well as esthetic. | Breakfast first. Accenting a breal fast menu will vary according to the | type of meal served. The continen tal coffee and rolls is “pointed up” by | having the boiling milk poured into the cup from a slight height. as the French waiters manage it. This in- sures & bubbly mass with a flavor quite different from that which would result were the milk to be put first in the cup. as w like do with cream for luncheon coffee. Incidentally the accent of this tyvpe of breakfast mayv easily be the means of weaning a_confirmed cream-in the-coffee addict from his evil ! There is no proved reason cream makes coffee indi- the fact remains that to why gestible, but it _does! Luncheon. hot dish is often the only required addition to im luncheon if it is to have this de able quality known as accent. The modern lunch of the wise eater is growing more and more simple. un- less he has to perform muscular la- bor. So simple a matter as substi- tuting a cup of hot broth for a hasti- Iy swallowed ice cream soda may this _very result for a -up lunch. The kind of accent at this meal. as at breakfast, depends first of all on the type of meal itself, secondly, on the conditions under which it is eaten: third, the sex, age and occupation of the one who partakes thereof. same principles apply to which, in turn, depends for | type on the types of bbth break- fast and luncheon. One of the most agreeable meth- ods of providing accent for the din- ner is by means of a savory or appe- tizer served as the first course. These appetizers may be in the form of a fruit cocktail, and. for actual food value, this is the type advised. If no soup has been served at| lunch, then the first course at din- ner should often be a plate of hot soup. There is no set rule, vet the point is so important that the keen- minded housewife will enjoy thor- oughly exercising her sight and sense of values by keeping this mat- ter of accent well in mind when planning her meals. (Covyright. 1926.) Chocolate Cake. Cream one-third cupful of butter, add one-fourth teaspoonful of salt, one cupful sugar gradually, and heat well. Add the yolks of two eggs and beat again. Add one-half a cupful of milk and one and one-half cupfuls of pastry flour sifted with two level teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Beat until light. Fold in carefully the whites of two eggs which have been beaten to a stiff troth, and pour at once into greased layer-cake tins. Bake in a moderately | joice that they have the power and where he is going. When the sturdy 3-year-old starts out of the gate and you halt him with, “Where vou going, Bill”” and he calls back over his shoulder, “Down to the river,” take heart. That child will never need a guardian. He will take care of himself, because he knows where he 18 going, and if you asked him, he would know what he was go- ing to do when he got there. And t you must know. is a golden gift from the fates themselves. It is the child who, when halted, says, “Oh. T dunno. Maybe I'll stop in at Pete’s and maybe I'll go over | to Simmie's. T dunno. I might and I mightn't,” that brings the worry lines to your face, and with cause. The child who does not know where he is going, nor why, is in danger. He will be likely to waste time and effort and more than likely get into trouble before he finds his way. Some children seem born with a purpose in life. They know whero they want to play and with whom. They know definitely when they want things and why, and they are just as | definite when they don’t want them. | They are not always wise, nor always right, but that one thirg they have. Thelr decision of character gives you many a difficult hour. They must be reasoned with; they cannot be forced from their position, but one can re- he knows the desire to form a decision and stick to it. The child who has no purpose in what he does is in danger. It shows out_in adolescence. Along about. the eighth year of elementary school he | begins lagging behind the class; he drops He doesn’t know just what z he is going to do. THe is going to get a job from somebody. Somewhere, “ome time. Ty and by is the closest he gets to a definite time of achieve- | ment. The only thing one can do with | this sort of child is to get a job for | him, and as fast as he loses one get him another. Teach him the cost of his dally bread and see that he comes | “Puzzlicks” Puzsle-Limericks A hefty young lady named —1 Once traveled, despite her great Said the man at the —3—, As she gave him her —4—, “You'd_be broke if you traveled by friend! 1. Heroine of “The Taming of the Shrew.” Heaviness. 3. Gate. 4. Card of admission 5. Transportation of commodities. (Note.—*“This ‘Puzzlick’ would make a good advertisement for one of the many reducing medicines now on the market,” suggests H. T. D. of Boston, who forwarded it. Why? Finish it and you'll see. The answer and an- other “Puzzlick” will appear tomor- row.) Yesterday's ‘“Puzzlick.” There was an old monarch in Thibet, Skirt dancing he tried to prohibit; out, saying he wants to work; | but jobs are scarce, at least for him. | and the corner store is hospitable and | perfectly able to heip himself, if he would. But he s not able. He fix purposeless and without the power to formulate a purpose. Our only hope of his arriving at a decision s to force him into situations where he has to make them and hope that he will get the habit of knowing where he is going and why, with practice Scolding such a child is u Yie does not know why he is as he fs. If he could be different he would. Part of the deficlency is due to his stage of growth, and the remainder of it was born with him. He must be trained to work, and the sooner he starts the better. But he is no self starter, and his guardian must make up for that weakness by doing the starting and the gulding for some time to come. 1t you have the sturdy chap who knows what he wants, rejoice and di- rect him. If you have an aimless wanderer, who goes outside the gate because it was left open and doesn't know where to go next, direct him daily toward some job. Begin early. Creamed Sardines. Melt a quarter of a cupful of butter, add the same quantity of bread crumbs and a cupful of canned cream. Chop two hard-bolled eggs fine and add to the mixture, and, finally, the contents of a small can of sardines, drained, boned and mashed. Season well and serve very hot on buttered toast Whiten Your Skin New Safe Way Just recently I found a wonderful new way to clear and whiten the skin —almost overnight! No more sallow skin, no more muddiness, no moretan' Science has made a new discovery, which clears and whitens your skin with amazing quickness, ~ Tonight, smooth cool, fragrant Golden Peacock Bleach Creme on your skin. Tomor~ row morning notice how _sallowness has given way to milky whiteness. Get a jar of Golden Peacock Bleach Creme now—today. Use it for only five nights. Then if you are not delighted, your money will be instantly refunded. At all good drug and department stores. His rule was so strict, 1t any one kicked He ordered her hanged on a gibbet. Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. Words Often Misused.—Don't say 3 say “Did you go there forme; Often Mispronounced.—Peculiar: pro- , nounce the last syllable as “yar,” not as tar. Often not er. Synonyms.—Insinuation, intimation, implication, suggestion, hint. Word Study.—"Usé & word three times and it is vours.” Let us in- crease our vocabularly by mastering Misspelled. — Creator; or, quick oven for about 20 minutes. Re- move from the pans, and when cool put chocolate filling between the lay- ers, and ice with chocolate icing. T T W - wot HASEasANBOR' ) 311 SEAL BRAND one word each day. Today's word— Imperil; to place in danger, jeopar- dize. 'he whole industry has been imperiled by this condition.” For sixty years Chase & San- born’s Seal Brand Coffee has held the affections of coffee-loving millions. Chase&Sanbom’s COFFEE Seal Brand Tee is of the same high quality O'Donnell's Drug Storex. Peoples Druz . Gi Drug Store. Christiani idenbers’s, Dept. Store, Palnis Kine's Palice Dept. Store Store, Sigmund's Preumatic bands at waist and knees are among the exclusive features which make Kleinert’s Basy Pants the most comfortable your baby can wear. Look for the name on the tab of the genuine. Kleinert’s Sanitary Specialties give Guaranteed Protection