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WOMAN’S PAGE. Again Comes Straight Silhouette BY MARY MARSHALL. _ The middle woman in France snaps her fingers at fash fon. “They say one must be thin to be | MANY THE INDIVIDUAL- IN THE SKETCH R FROCK OF OF CHIFFON | BOLERO THAT SIDIE ONLY 1S A COAT OF BLACK SATIN WITH A BOLERO | LINED D EDGED WITH SHA WITIH AND THERE | seems to be comdng b | Still one does not see even among the middle classes many |fat women. They are just comfort- bly built. The red-cheeked woman who sits all day at her hand cart on the corner is an exception to this rule. One day has stalks of sweet miguets ley lilies, now tempting ved che: i the south of France, nd another ¢ay she has her cart full »f apples just a trifle specked. True, she is ver) but then she has it very easy, sitting there all day in the Other women who stay at home and sweep and cook cannot take on flesh like that. Eut among the truly smart French- whom the Irench like to les elegantes’—the slender fig: ure seems to be as much desired as where at home. And the 25 Irench girl of fashion, whose body is well rounded despite the (rugality i deed a never an even though But she is average Americ 1t did seem 1 i creature. lar, like the Englis she may be as slender. rare bird whom the n seldom sees, as if fashion had re- lented and as if we were all going to be allowed an additional kilogram or two. ‘There are inguished dress- ers who still tell you that the in- cred Iness of frocks below the hips and the more curving line of the bodice will better hide surplus weight than the straight lines that have pre- vailed. But apparently this_was but a temporary concession. It is the sad truth that the straight, spare line into fash- ion. Of the houses that have shown their new things for Autumn and Winter several have gone back to the straight silhouette. Perhaps they have not gone o new straight _line is a new way. Premet, where the effect of vouthfulness is always to be gained it anywhere, is a pioneer in this tendency back to the straight silhou- ette. (Copyright. 1926.) My Neighbor Says: To cream sugar ahd butter together by hand, bend the tips of the fingers on the right hand down, putting the thumb nail against the index flager so as to protect the mnail. Use the fingers between the first and second joint for kneading. You will find it is quickly done, while the hands are left comparative- 1y clean. A handful of borax in wash boiler will whiten clothes. Never leave soiled dish towels in your pantry. After each meal hang them out to dry. Add a little diluted ammonia to the water in which you wash them. 's keep cheese in a well covered dish or it will become dry and tasteless. If cheese is wrapped in a cloth moistened h vinegar it will remain t and retain its flavor longer. the the ERMI | tashionable,” she scoffs. “But what | £ that? To be thin one must starve. | Aly husband does not like bones—and | 1o do one’s work and be good-natured | one must live well. Besides, food is plentiful. Good times mayv not last | forever. Then we shall be fashion (ble. Only then it may be the fash- | jon to be— comme ca’ and with a curving gesture she indicates a figure | even more rotund than her own. | EAT AND BE When boiling clothes place an unpeeled lemon, cut into slices, in the boiler with the clothes. This will remove all stains and make the clothes beautifully white. To stiffen muslin dresses dis- solve a tablespoonful of gum Dbic in three quarts of water. > instead of starch, dr ikle and iron in the usua HEALTHY Dinah Day’s Daily Talks on Diet The Right Food Is i Importance of Wholewheat. | “But T don't like the wholewhea stuff. Gee, I couldn’t cat whole: wheat bread if 1 were starving, says undernourished Bille. And though neither Billy nor his mother realizes it, he is starving for nece: elements in his food. In later y his poor resistive vitality will pay the toll. A taste which has been cuitivated y for white bread, served with the crust | cut off, may resent the harsh feeling of wholewheat a tempting by cutting the br and, perhaps, eating it a la sandwich, with some tasty filling. tivate a liking for its o flavor. i A package of wholewheat flour can be converted into hiscuits, muflin: lunch loaf, pie vrust and cake. Whol wheat gingerbread for the youngsters 1s something they will surely like. A layer cake filled and topped with whipped cream is good. Wholewheat ple crust with prune filling, or with apples flavored with nutmeg and ¢ namon, would make anybody lik wholewheat. And when wholewheat biscuits are served, everybody sa “I'll take another, please.” Later on, taste has been cultivated, & mily can take its wholewheat in plain bread. The importance of wholewheat is so great that any device must he tried to put it on the family's bill of fare. White flour, with its products, has lost most of its nourishment. | In a whole grain of wheat nature has stored phosphorus, calcium, iron and all the othe alts. vitamins, A and B, In the milling of the & white flour three-quarters of these building materials have been removed. Wholewheat balanced food. White flour is cid-forming food. | The minerals which balance the aclds were taken out of the wheat at the : mill. The bran in wholewheat helps overcome constipation. Refined foods deprive us of mineral clements necessary to health. Whole- | wheat is laden with these essential eclements. And when an article so cheap and so brimming with nourlsh- | mént is to be had, we are a foolish ! nation deltberately to cast this prod- i uct astde. Foodless food” authority_expre: UTNAM FADELESS| DYES Dye or tint all materials in one operation Dresses made of combined materials— dyed or tinted in one operation. No is the way one You may eat draperies, etc. Boil to dye. Dip to tint. The origina! one-paci dye for all materials and purposes. ctions in package. 15 cents at your dealer’s. | Use Putnam No-Koler Bleach to remove eolor and stains. i Free Sample Package of dye i L’..M’ lor) sent with illustrated les, 199 We B T Hoime and Wordegbers Send 19 «cents to cover handling and postage. - Address Dept. N-3 * need to rip spart. Same applies to | | the Best Medicine oodles of food and vet not be nour- ished. You may fill your stomach to t | capacity three times a day and yet ot have health. Dr. Frederick Gowland Hopkins, department of chemical physiology, University of Cambridge, “The superior value of wholewheat meal lies in the fact that it retains certain food substances whose pres ence allows our systems to make full use of the tissue-building elements of the grain. These substance are re- moved from fine white flour in the milling.” A. B.—Do raisins contain iron? Answe -Yes. The raisin contains an abundance of fron in its most assim- ilable form. 1. B—Is skim milk fattening? Answer.—Skim milk is not fattening. The fat is in the cream. Even whole milk in ftself is not fattening when used in moderate quantities. Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. Word often misused: “Don’t say, “Come in the room.” Say, “into.” Often mispronounced: Accept. Ac- cent last syllable, and don’t pronounce | first syllable as ek. Often misspelled: Simultaneous. Synonyms: Truth, veracity, realit honesty, candor, truthfulne: Word study: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us increase our vocabularly by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Inte- gral; constituting a whole; complete. “This board of directors must be an integral part of the administration.” g Dby TORCH CUP CONE . Ask for it by Name Makes Good Ice Cream Taste Better THEY melt awayin your mouth! You’ve never tasted anything as igood as TORCH CUP CAKE CONES Manufactured by DRUG COMPANY, QUINCY, ILL, cessively ! lender | THE EVEN Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “Papa won’t hardly ever lick me it T can get him started to talkin' about what g fine boy he was.” (Copyright, 1926.) What TomorrowMeans toYou BY MARY BLAKE. Gemini. The planetary aspects are exceed- ingly good throughout the day, and it is a very auspiclous opportunity for the carrying out of changes, for the advancement of plans or for the ac- complishment of useful work. No speclal sphere of endeavor is more benefited than anoother, but success is assured for everything that savors of conservative thought and action. The reaction on the emotions will he favorable, and the indications potnt to happiness for all marriages sol- emnired tomorrow. Children born tomorrow are des- tined, according to the signs, to suffer from many minor ailments, as well as one or two serious ones, during their infancy. Much of the danger inherent to these illnesses can be eliminated by an abundance of out- door air and well regulated alimenta- tion. They promise to outgrow all thelr early weaknesses and aftain, long before adulthood, physical nor- maley. They will have pleasing man- nerisms, but weak characters. They will be easily swayed by others, either for good or for evil. More than usual care should be taken to surround them at all times with a good envi- ronment, as they will be very impres onable and susceptible more to ex ample than to precept. If tomorrow is vour birthday you have a very affectionate nature, which, sad to relate, is marred by fits of jealousy. This, of course, entails endless worry and provokes a morbid conditlon of mind fncompatible with elther happiness or success. It would be wise to remember that “jealously is said to be the ooffspring of love. Yet unless the parent makes haste to strangle the child the child will not rest till it has poisoned the parent.” Apart from your Jjealous fits—and these, if not curbed, increase in quency—you are even-tempered, com- plaisant and unselfish. You possess a high degree of Intelligence and have only a worthy purpose. It is most un- fortunate that your alm is eo often deflected by thoughts unworthy of vou, and which are, in all probability, not deserved by the victim of your emotions. You are a great lover of nature and are always happler, and saner, when eengaged in outdoor work than when confined to toil of a sedentary char acter. Well known persons born on that date James Barbour, statesman; Robert 'T. Conrad, lawyer and authol John Jacob Astor, 3d, capitalist; William J. Demorest, publisher and reformer; Caroline Hazard, educator; Minot J. Savage, Unitarian clergyman and author. MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. Sickroom Callers. One mother says: When a sick child is convalescing amfl relatives are permitted in the room, be sure to seat them on one side of the bed only. Do not let one sit at the right of the invalid and one at the left. and talk to each other across the bed. The sick child nat- urally turns from one to the other in trying to follow the conversation, and the poor head rolling back and forth is apt to ache after the visit. For a similar reason, don't let any caller sit in a rocking chalr. Alice Durfrene, prominent French barrister, has’abandoned law for the stage. Efim frocks, sheerest gowns . . . wear them now any day, amy ., anywhere, without 2 moment’s doubt or fear! The uncertainty and insecurity of the old-time “sanitary pad” has been ended. Most women now use “KOTEX™ v+ .a new and remarkable way. Five times as absorbent as ordi- npary cotton pads. Deodorizes, thus ending ALL dan- ger of offen V Discards as easily as a piece of tissue. No laundry. No embar- rassment. Obtainable at all drug and depart- ment _stores simply by saying “KOTEX.” You ask for it without hesitancy. Costs only a few cents. Proves old ways a needless risk. 12 in a pack- age. In fairness to yourself, try it. KOTEX Maryland Baking Companyl No laundry—disoard like tissue BALTIMORB L Says Chief Troubdle is Husbands. What’s the Matter With Wives? DorothyDix Lonesome and Unappreciated, But a Few Compli- ments, Theater Tickets and Kisses Would . Solve Feminine Cross-Word Puzzle. ‘What's the matter with wives?” He says that wives usea jent and satisfied and sub- ss and discontented and that they flout this is thus, and A MAN asks ms to be meek and mild and humble and pati servient to their husbands, and that now they are restle: and peevish and not willing to stay put in their homes. their husbands’ authority. And he wants to know why what's the matter with wives, anyway. Well, I think that the chief thing that s the matter with wives s busbands. The average man seems to think that just belng married to him s picnic enough for any woman, and that every time she looks at her wedding ring she should pass into a state of ecstatic bliss. He feels that he bestowed such a favor upon her in saving her from beirg an old maid tha: she hasn't a right to expect anything more from him. His whole conception of the duty of a husband consists of paying the rent and the grocery bill and giving his wife a few clothes. It never enters his head that he is under any moral obligation to make happy and pleas- ant the life of the woman he has taken into his hands. Possibly men have always felt that way about their wives. Probably wives have always resented this attitude of their husbands, but in the past there was nothing for the woman to do but to put up as best she could with such luck as fate sent her in a husband. But nowadays, when any able-bodied, intelligent woman can support herself, and three-fourths of the girls who get married give up good-paying Jobs to do so, wives are demanding more of husbands than their grand- mothers did, and they are not pulling any suffer-in-silence-and-be-strong stuff when they don't get it. They have made a big sacrifice on the altar of matrimony. They have given up their freedom, their good pay envelopes, their pretty clothes, their good times and the thrill and excitement of work that brought them in continual contact with the out world, so that they are not saying any particularly fervent “Thank you” to any man for the privilege of slaving in his kitchen and doing his cleaning and his scrubbing and baby-tending and working twice as hard as they ever did before and without wages. THEY look upon matrimony as a 50-50 proposition, in which a man is just as much married as a woman is; in which his duty to her is just as great as her duty 13 to him, and they feel that it is just as much up to the husband to do his part fn making a home as it is to the wife. Men may take the modern woman or leave her, as they please, but they may be sure of this one fact: that the patient Gris s tHE (thb. 2 riselda wife is as extinct as Never again are women going to keep the home fires bi : bands who come home only to change their clothes and cat. and thon e forth to amuse themselves. Never again are women going to endure the abuse of high-tempered husbands, the grouchiness of surly ones, the tight. fistedness of miserly ones. Never again are women going fo sit up and ;\:‘l-‘)l(d‘[so l‘};;;l:nl:)utlnhs waiting for the wrecks of unfaithful husbands to come Dack to them to be nursed and cared for when they are too old and broken The passing of this generation will see the 1 i r of this 2 3 end of the financial . pendent woman.' The woman who can get aut and earn her own Hiny aded that of her children is golng to assert her rights. S Goodness knows. when you see the kind of b oy . see the kind of husbands tha 2 l|x(\fi\!\§(})t, you Tz\‘lll blame them for being dl.\'a[‘A]‘lr’fiil’fle‘dS £ = ietotwomel hen a girl gets married she thinks that she is s ]‘:Ia(eti [n\'{'l. @ man who will always be tender and nf(l‘clll:;::!i ‘l?» :‘l;;se\l\('hfl \\ond‘;r‘?:l’;h:d;:“:n«‘lml:o\:\"“l‘&m’l‘:;“;. wears. of telling her how beautiful and 1 y he feels himself to ve got he a wi But, alas! the great majority of men stop their lovemal n;:’;l! thfiru,l‘:)arrd '?Illr:; never show to their wives by wore 2 res slightest affection or interest in |h‘:n‘)‘.l SR ey avekte xp@al’(‘.}:zr?hi:: (}):‘:;;)w: 1“35)(:.{3(";;20[]&':?)" of wives whose husbands never o ck them. There 1 uss Gold and flabby. = There are thousands upon thousands of wives who woug d of surprise if their husbunds should pay them & compliment il Is it any wonder that th . e wome! V] husband are discontented and pee\'n‘sh’!“ N ich husbands do not break their nec has a woman to fry herself to dinners for a man who gobbles ho have this brand of 1 £ clam-on-ice 1'): i\l(;uy \\’nr;‘der that the wives of n S to please them? \What incentive a cinder over the kitchen stove cooking gonS T 1 them down without 3 2 V] should she sweat every nickel for a husband why “Lu‘x":.f!o::{ g:‘:‘:elhs :‘“1']1) ills, anyway, without even a recognition of her thrif Why should she try to maki el active n \hm e er‘ lol?e ve 'n ore: thiw I make herself attractive to a man who never motices her any m 2 e does the carpet sweeper? Al OTHER thing that Is the matter with wives is that they are borell and is to e e " oman marries for companionship. Every glrl's dream S m she can 1 "hat | get is a walking delegate or a store Eumnr;;} SERESE SR e GO Nine-tenths of the husbands either put on their hats as s ’ s as soon a y have eaten their dinners and bang the front door behind them as thes mrics thelr exits, or else t s silent as mummles, with the evening papers in thelr hands, and only krunt when they are spoken to. Or else they tune n on the radio and expect wife to spend an exciting 2 watching get Honolulu and Birds Center and Squeedunk. = ek Beeate I Ep T They never think that after a_dull day spent in monotonous household duties a woman would like a little cheerful conversation or to be taken out to some place of amusement, where she would get spmething new to think about next day while she washed the dishes and minded the baby and patched Johnny's trousers. And that is what makes wife cross and fretful and whining and complaining. She gets morbid and self-pitylng, because she hasn’t enough new interests in her life to keep her from dwelling on her troubles until she magnifies all of the molehills into mountains. * k¥ % There are not many men who are intentionally bad husbands, bit there are lots of husbands who are careless husbands and indifferent husbands and neglectful husbands, and it is these who make disgruntled wives. ‘When you find a husband who is tender and kind and loving to his wife and who makes her feel that in every way he is seeking her happiness, you will never have to ask what's the matter with wife. She's all right. DOROTHY DI Copyright 1926. as heated through. A change in serving 18 to simply chop the whites of the eggs and add to the sauce, bofl up once, and garnish with the volks of eggs e e During_the five years of its exist- ence the National Women's party has sponsored five congressional and 406 legislative bills, all designed to obtain equal rights for women and equality in industry. Lyonnaise Eggs. Put into & frying pan or chafing dish two tablespoonfuls of butter or olive ofl. When hot, add two table- spoontuls of minced onion and one tablespoonful of parsley, and fry until the onlon is a light yellow. Add a tablespoonful of flour and one cup- ful of milk or good broth. When smooth and creamy, add four hard- boiled eggs sliced, and serve as soon Keeping Your Schoolgirl Complexion Bat mind what sort of soap you use Foes, as essential to natural complexion clearnesa. But all urge greatest care in selecting the kind of soap one uses. A Risking a precious to an unproved soap is a ofty. The only kind of soap to use on your face is a soap made solely to safe- d the complexion. Launder and ith any scap you wish. But s besity stake, take care. Do not use ordinary soaps in the treatment given above. Do not think any green soap, or represented as of palm and olive oils, is the same as Palmolive. Wash your face gently with Palmolive Soap, massaging it softly into the skin. Rinse thoroughly, first with warm water, then with cold. If your skin is inclined to be dry, apply a touch of good cold cream—that is all It costs but 10c the cakel—so fittle that millions let it do for their bodies what it does for their faces. Obtain Palmolive today. Then note what an amazing _difference one makes. The Palmolive Com- Chicago, tfin:. G STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 9, 1926. i not think any theory ha | with a fair degree of accurac: If I go through the motions of living When sorrow has deadened the heart of it Life soon may seem peaceful as ever, Jean Ainsley and Conrad Morgan elope. They are so much in love that they do mot stop to consider the con- sequences and it isn’t until afterward that Jean discovers her mother-in- law must make her home with them. Mrs. Morgan has taken a dislike to | Jean and is always cztolling her own | daughter Florence. Florence is bored with her husband and fancies herself | |in tove with Merton Thorne, a college | senior. . Jean has known Merton be- fore her marriage, and Mrs. Morgan thinks he is still interested in her. he succeeds in planting” the seed of |jealousy in Conrad’s mind. Florence | |and Cynthia Eldredge plan to motor out to the Red Lien Tavern with Merton and Andy Pe terson. It hap- pens thet on the same night Jean is invited to spend the night in Baston with Julia Rathburn, an old school friend. part of it. P oo Your Baby and Mine s e CHAPTER XXXIX! I BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Florence Makes an Enemy. . i After Richard ad departed for his | | Mrs. O. R. A. writes: “Is it possible | es Florence found herhelf rather to d x of a cl | etermine the sex of a child before | ., ;45" and jumpy. She realized | birth? 1 have been told that-it is | only too well ‘that in going to the ang am interested in knowing the| Red Lion Tavern she was taking a trdth of this.” big chance. If she were seen and it Answer—There have been numer- | reached Richard's ears that she had ous theories advanced which in a few | been to such a place his suspicious | cases seem to bear out the state-|would he crystallized and he would ment of thelr originators, but I do lied to him from the | ever proven 1at meant that un- | infallible. It is evident that these would have burmed are matters which cannot be left to | oy behintts b and. ahiel} the discretion of the individual. The | wasn't sure enough of Berton to do | theory which you advanced seems | ipot to bo just a_little sfllier than the | "Alout 11 o'clock Cynthia g | Gulal CHAS 1 N G0AOE casB taIl SO0 | st ocloek (Cynthias callfaiuD | before i bt b | birth whether the child will be a boy | fee e, in Panishing bt or girl by counting the fetal heart sy beats ¢'s nervousness returned. She ibout the house, unable to Irritable Baby. concentrate on anything, and wh M I am writing | at last she went up st to you concerning my 9%-month-old | reom and discovered that an expen- baby who welghs 22 pounds, having sive bottle nearly full of French ex- weighed over 9 at birth. She is an | tract had been broken, she flew into exceedingly strong baby and takes|one of her tantrims. steps alone now. Will this make her | “Kitty!” she called over the b bowlegged? 1 feed her every three |nister, her voice unpleasantly hours, beginning at 5 in the morning | dent. ome up stairs at on and ending at 8 In the evening. She | want to speak (o you. gets 6 ounces of milk, a small tabl Kitty appeared, a look of def spoon of sugar and 1 ounce of water. [on her pert little face, and Flo For the past two wi pointed to the bottle. It had been | been very cross. She has not fussed | hroken so t s conteitiee Baa in the night until the last two nights. | jeaked out, but pieces had heen She has a bad cold and it may be her | put neatly together eh a teeth, as she hasn't any vet and may | cingle inadvertent touch would make be cutting them. I know I should be | 1 e e h S bt hes fust Heen ziving her vegetables, but we live in Sl St the country and I do not get to mar: | ket often. How can I break her of | slapping e Al ab fine weight and should be able to get | §"\ M SO0 FIETE (€ T Tve told along with several fewer feedings a | coir e day. Feed not oftener than once |fin o i L ] every four hours from now on. This| “iiirc {osced her head impertinent- will_ eliminate one, and if pos e T e e start the day at 6, which makes far | \Innitt0 RTRERC RO nce: and ::::"'r hours for you and the baby, | (pe bottle was nearly full. I_shal You can give 8 ounces at a feeding | FK7 It eont of your wages. ThAL and that will make up for the loss of | “'p the two feedings. i O Yot should be giving cereal morn. | 90%n the staira. 1f she had dared o i g g nd this will ! diately, but ‘Places were scarce in help the diet. As for vegetable . = s i can always get good canned ve !]l'lV)z‘wxr'A:nlv’:xn\\' Qn;(lmg,pn;““ fion;;‘?he left tables and they are far better than | SF 0 (5 Lo fir-hm_ o (aid ;fi:{“u‘ffi:o’(‘,fl’n;;’\‘;‘::h" 4 |4 place fn the iron works, and factory none of their essential vitamins in the cooking. Canned | spinach, tiny peas and tomatoes should give the baby sufficlent variety | until the garden begins to produce. It would be better not to use so | much sugar now. The baby will not need it. But cod liver oil would be a | good addition to her diet. The baby | won't be bowlegged unless s as rickets. She is late teething. It would scem that the baby had learned the slapping habit from some | older person, and if so it is the older | person who should be punished and | not the baby. If you slap the baby’s | hands when she doesn't mind you can’t expect but that she'll slap You in return. Show no anger at all when she does this, but take her hand and kiss it gently. ‘T imagine she will soon lose the habit. “When did this happes ‘I don't know, Mrs. Rogers.’ tien miner: TET BY HAZEL DEYO Kitty flounced out of the room and | FEATURES. THE MARRIAGE MEDDLER BATCHELOR {WS—— work was much housework ne ry to kee ence's small house clean if she had another place that would be diffcrent All afternoon Kitty sm the humiliation of Florence and, as was customary witl sought about in her mind for a way to get revenge. It wasn't as if &he broke things very often. In the ty vears that she had woiked for Flor ence she hadn’'t broken a dish, then to be spoken to that way and to have her wa some thing Florence well t replac: At dinner that night she was « Dishes were banged unnecessarily nd when at las. Richard looked ar lorence with an express: mild interrogation on his fa rence oved the girl op: tty did not answer. b kitchen her small fists harder could the | furiousty. “I'll get even with her T don't,” she muttered haif aloud guess if Mr. Roc on in this The way s ame her. tled to some fun rtainly dead. But she nev me like this until t b to take it. 1 Rer At half-past 7 she was her dishes and was fl room to dress. It was her and she and a friend fron side of town were fe with yuple of As it happen planning Lion T: that nntil lat (Con men didn't were Rec kno 1926 (Continued in tomorrow’s S Cherry Sponge. Put one and one half pounds of | American wor 000,000 for mil | It is estimated t |en last year spent $ And | to pile my | Its cheaper to buy the best! LEY TEA brews strongder be only skin deep, | “Beauty may be knee | but this year it seems to height.” and goes Jarther \ i i (i R e )”4?’ g_.‘. ek SARITICX] =3, For the ‘“Outdoor” Room TVABLE porch furniture is another Heywood-Wakefield specialty. It-adds another “room” to your home and makes it a cheerful, comfortable, inviting place in which.to live. In design and durability, Heywood-Wakefield porch suites live up to the 100-year reputation of the makers. ‘You have a wide choice of styles and upholstery from which to choose, at prices that will please you. Heywood-Wakefield Baby Carriages have A Quality Seal on Every Wheel, This Red Hub Cap, with the letters H-W in gold, helps Mothers to identify genuine Hey- ‘wood-Wakeficld products.