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- . . o Stockings for Vacation Season BY MARY MARSHALL. Sunburned stockings, so called, , tume. If you wear a navy blue frock wve heen worn Swith white shoes for | with gra: mmings then you must tennis and other sports at some of the'| be shod gray. I you wear a Fouthern _resorts this Winter and {frock of figured silk with a gray Epri Lie story goes that at some |background gray shoes and stockings ©f the fashionable French seaside ve- | ure necessary. #orts where there is » tha - | Quite often you hear the comment g must wear [that black stockings are coming into emen rather enjoyed wearing these | fashion, especially” very thin blacks. $unburned stockings because of the But as a matter of fact though this toncern they caused the atendants | fashion has been repeatedly predicted ’ it 't come about—and at present - few women of fashion care to v them. Another comment that you » frequently is that among the ! {ings of a_pinky | favor at all. A gray {is chosen by some women. This is a | natural enough reaction to the ex tremely wide popularity of the flesh !colored stockings within the last 12 { months. _And now that colorful | frocks of Summer are sgon to apepar | many well-wressed women are biy {the new high-colored silk stocking emerald green. brick -blue, raspbe deep corn color and a:purple that is {almost royal. (Copyright, 19261 MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Melons. Oatmeal with Cream. Creamed Chipped Beef. Bran Muffins Coffee. LUNCHEON. l Japanese Crab M Salad. Whole Wheat Bread. Banana Custard { Drop Cakes ea. g | DINNER Fish Chowder. Baked Halibut French Fried Potatoes. French Peas. Cucumber and mato Salad. Rhubard Pie Cheese. Coffee. CREAMED CHIPPED BEEF. One-fourth pound chipped beef, one tablespoonful butter, one tablespoonful flour, one-half can evaporated milk, one-half cup water, salt, pepper. If chip- ped beef 14 very salt, turn boil- ing water over it and squeeze dry in napkin. Melt butter in. skillet, stir in beef and cook until it begins to crisp, then stir in flour, and when smooth add slowly evaporated milk and water. Cook until creamy, sea- son with salt, if needed, and pepper. D-COLOR SILK STOCK- ITII DIAMOND-SHAPED CRAB MEAT SALAD. Take a can of Japanese crab meat and pull it to shreds, be- ing careful to take pieces of shell out. Mix thoroughly with mayonnaise dressing and serve on lettuce leave: NG STOCKING WITH FINE OPENWORK AND CLOCK IN FLESH. . BLOOMERS AND STOCKINGS MUST MATCH. SHORT G SILK RLOOMERS IN BI AND STOCK, SAME SHADE. it was to enforce the oncerning suitable attire. v stockings apparently appe C shoes and many friends to_appear whose duty vegulatio Smoke g give thick legs Vor this reason gra inzs have gained smong women who want Jlender ankled. Then, too, the gray rhoe and stocking with gray gloves to match should always be worn when ay is the ground tone of the cos- BEDTIME STORIE | ing vou ought to be kicking up your | | heels and hugging yourself. T know. | Yes, sir, T know. wadays whenever | T get a chance like that I make the {most of it. I can come home any Ilimr-dor day or night and no questions The word had gone all about that | asked. . ) Johnny Chuck was living by himself | “But I don’t understand in a hole under the oid store wall on | Protested Johnny. he elge of the Old Isture «nd was | - Jimmy went over and whispered to in such bad temper and sa sulky that Such a funny look passed he wasn't pleasant to be nes S0 ‘Oh." he ex pretty soon none of the little people came near him. They leit him to him- <elf. He pretended that he didn’t care. tie actually tried to make himself be lieve that he didn't ¢ But really he did care. Sulky folk soon becoine very, very tired of themselves, and Johnny was getting tirea of himself. | But, of course. you can’t go off and | Use a slice of steak cut from the leave vourself. done. But |rump. round or sirloin, cut one and | that is only be an’t be done. | one-half inches to two and one-half Johnny was sitting on his new door- | inches thick. Wipe the meat, then | pound it with a steak shredder. | meat prepared in this way cooks | | quicker and more thoroughly than by {any other method, the juice permeat. Ing the crevices. Place on a hot! | greased broiler and broil over a clear fire for about ten minutes, turning | every few seconds. Serve on a hot | platter, spread with butter, season {with salt and pepper and garnish { round the dish with stuffed peppers. RHUBARB PIE. Cream two tablespoons butter with one cup sugar, add two tablespoonfuls flour, one beaten egg, one-half saltspoonful salt, juice of small half lemon and two cupfuls rhubarb cut in half- inch pleces. Bake with two crusts. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS Sets Him to Wondering. Tis sometimes auite To find a friend wh he very same expe That seems 10 30! consoling. s had it yet." claimed s “That’s it.” declared Jimmy. “Now take my advice and make the most of | 2 good thing while you've got it.” Steak With Stuffed Peppers. P f ' Easy to Gain 2') With Yeast and Iron New Combination of Yeast with Vegetable Iron Builds Up Weight in Three Weeks *TELL ME ALL ABOUT IT, JOHN AID HE. atep just a little before low time, | when who should come along but Jim- | . : ey Skunk. “Hello, Johnny Chuck,” | This new combi- exclaimed Jimmy. ‘““They tell me you |nation of yeast vit- are feeling out of sorts. 1 can helieve | amines with vege- ! just to look at you. Why not try | table iron renews . ‘mrin just for old time's sake?”|the action of slug- Jimmy grinned himself when he said | gic" blood cells, i irives out dahger- ¢ didn't_grin back. No. | neg! But Johnny didn't_grin b el da he didn't in back. He looked an even, if that iwere | increases energy nvthing to {and endurance ani | supplies the system e | with the vitamines t{that build up * 1 weight. For years yeast has been known as a rich vitamine ood "but not until we perfected “iron- ized yeast"—which comes in concen- grin for.” he grumbled. Jjimmy Skunk sat_down. “Te all about it, Johnny,” said he. nre vou so grump: but 1 want to hear “I don't believe vou know and I'm | not going to tell you,” retorted Johnny Chuck crossly. “All yight,” replied Jimmy, “T don't ; care, You see, I've been all through it and T know all about it and I even kmow the reason for it L At this Johnny Chuck pricked up = his little black ears and took notice. "f_a“‘.i(“hlit_b{‘""[« “What do you mean?” he demanded. | Va5 It possible to “Oh, 1 mean that once ear I)take yeast and.iron ! have to go and live by myself, just as | m the right pro- | vou are living by vourself. ' Once a | portions to build up weight. i vear Mrs. Jimmy won't have me} Vegetable “Iron” when combined | sround. Until [ understood it, it used | with yeast is quite easy to digest, 10 upset me completely. But it is all | thereiore better for the system.. And | vight. Just you take it from me that jwye, G p e oo (€ d 0 T Tt it is all right. It will all come out | ‘0 beneficial as ordi S _Just right in the end. e as beneficial as ordinary fresh +jor cake yeast. i “But I don’t understand it at all, ¢ 2 yrotested Johnny. *1 hadn't even | lIronized Yeast tablets are com- | quarreled with Polly at the time Far- | posed of concentrated food elements, 1mer Brown's Boy caught me and took | therefore, they are pleasant to take me away: and then when I came back | and free from drug-like effects. It tie actually seemed upset, to see me. | makes no difference how old you are aldn't want b around. Shs even id ;v‘o‘:l" ';“‘1“‘03"“)‘;’5\ 3‘;‘:};{:;’;?&“"‘;{ 0. and she said it as if she meant it.” | ¥ - =T = “Of course, she meant it.” replied ! how much under-weight you are, Jimmy. “Of course, she meant it. | “ironized yeast” tablets are positively Now you take my advice and have a | guaranteed to pick vou right up, and good time while you can. Yes, vou | add from five to twenty pounds of have & good time while there isn't | good firm flesh in three weeks' time. anybody io ask you where yowre go- | [f they fail get your money back. ing and what you're doing. You're S g our Sierky only i St " % Sold -by druggists, at $1.00 for a lucky, only you don’t know it. Here |, Bt ok i rou are, ble to do just what vou arge . -tablet package. or Se'“t e please, when vou please and how vou | rect from 'M:lra\{or.\' o rgmrl‘(g‘f ronize cast Co., Desk , 1 m Wh please, and you don’t know enough to price. [ros anake the most of it. Instead of sulk- Atlanta, Ga, | its green hear | > SPRINGTIME BY D. C. PEATTIE. Passion Flower. On an old red clay bank, sprawling length, I came today on the passion vine, the most resplend- ent and pretentious flower I have seen outside the tropics. The name, it is said, takes its omsin from the sion of the Lord. Pious Span- i of long ago, who first saw this flower, aw in its curious form a re- semblance to a crown of thorns, to ils and a cr The “crown” con- s in a splendid fringe of purple 1l around the flower; the stamens re- semble golden nails. while the glear- hite four-branched stigma in the - of the flower might indeed pass crose, nk the whole flower rather too > mystical a symbol. To me the passion flower is only what it is, & flower—in other words, the most miraculous thing in the world save only the brain of man 1 find that the country boys and sion flower by the name of ) because when the puffy frnits vipen and lie in the road- side’ the children, in their bare feet, delight to go along and step on the fruits to heur the soft exploxion that sautiful as the passion flower is, it seems seldom to have been worked | into ornamental design. saw it so. A woman had bought in noa a piece of marvelous embroid v said to have been made in Ame It was wrought with designs of alligators and and many St took it to the museum where then studying botany to have the flowers identified The silk s0 old that it had turned golden with age. but more intevesting to us were the flowers, which we Indeed characteristically American, or at least of the World. Chtef among the tterns was that of the passion flower, skilifully embroidered in purple silk. I remember, too, the leaven-blue of the lignum-vitae flow- But once I ers, and the green of the little bur-| reed, u flower that haunts the marshes and is noticed by few people not trained botanists. = Everything pointed to Florida or Cuba as the land where the old embroidery had been wrought. Whoever it was who did it, he or she was no mean naturalist, and certalnly had originality in choos. | ing the flowers of the design. HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN. teminiscent of the sun-kissed ter. races that border the blue Mediter- ranean are these pieces of iron garden furniture. They bring to the Ameri- can terrace and garden an air of Old World lefsure and ease of living. are painted gleaming blac a so_that they contrast most pleasantly with the chair is made comfortable with thick cushions covered in red patent leather, The little table is unique in th: it has a transparent glass top through which ones sees the ivy plant in the stand belo This little uge in one corner of a stone-paved terrace, tall hedge and shaded b the most de aginable in which to watch the close of a warm Summer’s da; The captivating subtle touch for evening use. Ren- ders a delicate, soft appear- ance to the. complexion, arms, neck and shoulders. Gouraups » ENTAL CREAM Made in White - Flesh - Rachel Send 10c. for Trial Si: Ford. T. Hopkins & Son, New York Cunning and perfectly comfort- able is the baby who wears Kleinert’s BABY PANTS—guarapteed waterproof and finished with soft pneumatic bandsat waistand knees. Kieinert's Sanitary Special give Guaranteed Protection They | THURSDAY Making the Most of Your Loo‘ks‘ BY DOROTHY STOTE. Deardnn: | | Aunt Alice, who as you Know is| | & stout, asked me if T thought she| \ could buy a striped tub silk to make | herself a dress, and I said she could | provided she bought stripes than ran[ up and own. Well, she did, but oh, | 1y dear, §he conceived the bright idea of making the upper part of the striped material and the skirt of plain white. Well, it seems to me as if looked twice as long and as If only she had kept the en- tire dress of the vertical stripes! Yours for mnot changi one’s stripes. LETITIA ! (Copyright. 1926.) she broad. | i | | | 150 YEAR | Story of the U. § ! | BY JONATHAN A. RAWSON, JR. i ;, conventions and committees of the| Army to Have Flying Camp 13 colonies that they adopt the most | PHILADELPHIA, June 3, 1776.— | effectual means of removing all live | | An immediate enlargement of the |stock, grain and meal from such parts | | Army of the United Colonies will be [of their territory as are invaded or| |one of the results of Gen. Washing- |are in imminent danger of invaston | ton’s conferences with Congre: 1 of jnew division the known as the flying camp, | mustered in the middle colones, 10,000 milit furnished b \ it is realized, may bitants of these sec convenience arn pos- | of which 6,000 will be | ible loss. As a st this, it has heen Pennsylvants, 3400 DY [urged the military necessities Delawa This | demand the measure in order to make will not be equipped with IVing it difficult for the enemy to maintain as might be supposed from | jiself on our shore { its name, but it will consist of in-{ It will be pointed o . ready to march immediately |of Connecticut. Long Island and the pon mnotice to any point in danger| jerseys, in particular, that by this of invasion means they will not only insure the | The militias enlisted for this service | safety of their own possessions, but | | will be engaged to the 1st day of De-|will also perform a great s cember next, unless sooner discharged | the cause of America’s liberty. { by Congre Their pay will com (Cop: | mence from the day of their marching | ZEa -—- | from home and they will be allowed | | 1 penny a mile, lawful money, in lieu Strawberry Sponge Cake. | of rations, veling ex and | Take a cold sponge cake of the de- | one day’s pay for be- | gired size and soak it thoroughly with |tween home and the dez- {and sweet fruit julce. Scoop out some | vous, going and coming. of the center and fill with mashed | the expected invasion of New York crawber: nd whipped and sweet |in the near future by a large enemy | ened cream. Brush the cake over with force, it is expected that the {jam and sprinkle it over with | first rendezvous will be at Chopped Decorute e s En it ipe strawberries and whipped 13,800 militia will be mobilized. Of B4 these, 2,000 will come from Massachu . 5500 from Connecticut, 3,000 from New York and 3,300 from New Jers Orders will be issued once, urging these colonies to assem- ble and march their quotas with all possible dispatch. Another war measure agreed to to- | |day, after much dis jon and in| | spite of considerable opposition, was a recommendation to the assemblies, for health eat PEPR bz This meas Il be | cybject the ink with | tjons to great t to the people streets IGHT hose and dresses— fashion’s vogue. Muddy streets! Careless drivers! Unsightly spots! A can of Energine removes them instantly. Energine comes in handy cans. Leavesno odor. 35cat drugand department stores. . | L) PEP | THE PEPPY BRAN FOOD | e S Y [/ eA Full-Size Package of CHASE-O is yours for the asking! Use it with any good laundry soap, soap chips or soap powder. Does away with rubbing. Makes washing easy. Can- not harm the most deli- cate fabric. For sale at all grocers. A postal card request brings FREE package. Address J. L. PRESCOTT CO. Front & Wharton Sts. Philadelphi: “Tintex tints it just like new!” 'ADED finery quickly becomes new and lovely again with Tintex. And 30 p ly, too—no muss, no fuss, no streaks or spots. Simply “tint as you rinse.” Tintex also has so many uses in your home—for_givirig new color to curtains, drapes, luncheon sets, etc. Your choice of 26 beautiful colors— all fashionable ones, too! Blue Box — for lace-trimmed silks (tints the fllk—bnmm--hu}‘.' Box~—for tinting and dyei S con: mised goose). 15¢ at drug and dept. stores “Pntex INTS AS YOU RINSE Tints & Dyes Anything any Color e Digtributors, PARK & .II.FIII JUNE HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWTON. The Wedding Breakfast. * Whether “breakfast” wedding ceremony s scheduled for 10:30 or for 1 o'clock, is 1t really one's breakfast? Not if we know it! How- ever, we may be pardoned a little innocent curiosity as to whether any one else of the party had the hardi- hood to attend so exciting a function on an empty stomach! And behold the table—it hardly looks like a break- fast, Altogether the name is a mlis- nomer. But it has come down to us from a time when it was only too literal for the hungry bride and groom. In the pre-Raformation days England no bridal couple left the hurcl, without hearing mass and re- iving the holy communion. This took place at the time of the cere- Imony, and, as none may receive com- munion who has not fasted since the previous night, the bride and groom went hungry until after the wedding. At the close of the ceremony the officiating pr would bless some wine, cakes and other sweetmeats, which literally constituted the “br fast” of the wedding party. Hence the modern “wedding breakfast.” (Conyright. 1926.) following @ | FEATURES. WHEN WE GO BY MRS. HARL! dark shads ch as white uld he avolded. about the Lest materia ball caps beorbs both Wool t cay should i and e sl | underside 16 nd oran Base Ball Cap for Junior. Boys will be boys, and most boys like to wear buse ball caps vou think of the cap as a plas and o regular pal of his everyday clothing, it won’t sound so non-essen- tial and extravagant. Base ball caps are made usual head sizes. They vary and a try-on is the surest v t | ting a fit. Most S e made of | either wool or flannel. Both shrink you know, so that a cap should be | bought loose rather than tight. Caps have either leath bands, cloth sweatbands or none at It will cost you slightly more to buy a cap with a leather sweat band, but it's worth while. [Leather[" absorbs perspiration and is comfort- able on the head. Cloth gets soiled ind irritates the skin, and it gets 8. weatbands | e adjusted. | cide for him- | self about the visor of his cap. Sowme boys like them long, in order to Of the 700,000 teachers fuil length eyve shades schools of the United States, to have short visor 1 the rural schools sun is high overhead they of the teachers in th chins in a bit. If the unders her country schools is the visor lined with green, it In the small towns the ave: [ prove to be restful for the eyes. is 504 a twelvemonth. real spiration in Y Pt Cotton ¢ - cheap e |1 season rily. dust collectors and hargd to nnel or wool need only be s far as the color of the wo things must be consic r school color and serviceuhi iy or navy blue most serviceable colors red or blue are easil 1f son’s school h fuce him to sel ackground a on the nob hut > darker shade have the lighter colo ton or trimming 350,000 Teach Rural Classes. in_ i 330.00 The will | ve The Why is it that mothers everywhere are serving Heinz Rice Flakes once a day or oftener? For two reasons. First, it is the taste; the delicious new good taste of these tender, tempting flakes. Children love them. Grown- Second, ‘Mothers know they are whole- some, healthful rice in this new, delicious Also Knows How Good They Are ups like them too. form . . . made by Heinz. Serve Heinz Rice Flakes any mealtime, any day. AND THIS IS WHY—1a perfecting this new food Heinx spent years and years in scientific Heinz has created an entirely new reparation. And vor—a flavor se- cured by a specizl process developed, owned and used exclusively by Heina. sz £ o o O B o 2 Gas Goes Into the Movies! Introducing Gas—a rising star in the mov The largest film concern in San Francisco has cast gas in a dual role—drying films and heating the plant at the same time. An ingenious installation of gas furnaces enables the en- gineers of the company to dry the films more satisfac- torily and more econom- ically than ever before, and at the same time redistribute this heat to warm up the three-story plant. This two- for-one-arrangement ‘h a s been quite a success and represents a saving for this company. . It just proves once more that “if it's done with heat you can do-it better with gas.” In every phase of daily life, gas has its. place -—an increasingly important one. Food, shelter, clothes, industry, recreation, all are depending on gas in in- creasing mheasure. Look around and see what else it can do for you. Double Cper Coil Gray Enamel ONLY by special factory permission can we make the unusual low price—the 85¢ down-payment—and the offer of a De- ferred Payment Plan as liberal as anyone could wish. S 2B A great many homes could tell you how well Rex Water Heaters supply them with hot water—with its large Double Copper Coil that makes for economy of operation. Hon- estly made of honest materials, this GRAY- ENAMELED Gas Water Heafer offers beauty, quality and a dependability that will last for years. SEE IT. Or, if more convenient, have us send a representative, ‘Washington Gas Light Co. Telephone 419 TENTH STREET N. W: