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WOMAN’S PAGE. Green and Rose in the Fashions BY MARY Yellow, beloved in Parl; There is a r on, ps THIS 1S FROCK, CALLED A “SWEET"” AND IS MADE OF CANDY PINK TULLE OVER CREPE DE CHINE AND LAC SLIP, ALL OF THE SAME _SUC ARY {ADE. PALE GRE! BEADS ARE WORN ABOUT THE THROAT. AND SHADED FLOW ERS IN GR AND PINK AR! FASTENED AT THE HIP. and it seems highly probable that the | so | ynuch vellow in Paris is because the | sunshine is seldom too severe and the | reason the French like and use days are frequently gra There are deep vellow sash curtains in many of the windows—under our own bright skies their color would seem a bit too nearly orange. The French suide points with pride to the wonderful vellow glass windows the chapel where lies the body of the great Napoleon. A rich, warm vel low tone of sunshine pours down on the great marble and bronze alt: that is bright even on gray days It is not only the glass that does it but the buildings outside stand rather close, the guide explains, and thus whatever light there is Were it not for those reflecting walls green and rose are colors vehologists tell us, for all our color preferences, is reflected. 4 MARSHALL. there would be only a pale vellow light on dark days. You may take the explanation for what you think it is worth—but you cannot help ad- miring the taste of the builders who give an air of cheerfulness to the great Emperor’s last resting place. Not only is this great tomb en- riched with yellow—bedspreads and common table covers are more often vellow than anything else. There are checks around the edge. are usually yellow. For some reason or other yellow is ration. Children dressed in green are numerous in all the of jade green with a tinge of yel- low, or a brilliant bluish velldw like new g1 Three or even four chil- | dren, all of the same family, pass by. and they are all dressed in green o nd green caps. And for adults the green hat still persists in favor. | tone of green that is named for the reat designer Lanvin, or that other de of zreen we call linden and the pink must be remem Little girls wear bright pink { hair ribbons, whicl sometimes strike la too violent note with the green | frocks. Rose-colored Summer frocks land hats are shown by all the lead- There is a_lovely like crushed rasp- | berries, and a rich tone of apricot {that is'much admired. « MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST Sticed Bananas Dry Cereal With Creain Creamed Chipped Beef on Toast Pancakes. Maple Sirup Coffee LUNC Escalloped_Lobster Clover Rolls Cinnamon Sponge Cake Tex DINNER Baked Hamburger Steak Tomato Sauce Riced Potatoes, Creamed Onions Lettuce, Russian Dressing Strawberry Mousse Coffee PANCAKES Take 1 pint lukewarm water or a little more to 1, veast cake. Let dissolve. Mix with graham flour to form smooth batter, not so very thin. Let rise over night. In morning add salt and about a level teaspoon soda dis- solved in little boiling water. Fry on hot greased griddle. CINNAMON SPONGE CAKE Use recipe for 3-egg sponge cake, adding 1 level teaspoon powdered cinnamon in sifting the flour, and finally little va- nilla. Bake in thin sheet and serve with whipped cream. i STRAWBERRY MOUSSE i Hull, wash and drain 1 quart add 1 coffee cup sugar and mash Use 1!2-pint thick | cream and !¢ as much cold || milk beaten stiff and add to 1 sweetened berries. Put into mold with tight cover and pack in ice cream bucket or any pail in 4 parts crushed ice to 1 part rock salt for 4 hours, when it will be ready to serve. 1 | strawberries { | sranulated | | thorough The Daily Cross-Worfl Puzzle (Copyright, 1926.) Across. 1. Church organization. 5. Gotten up. 9. Before. . Tavern. . Contend. Hallo! . Reverentlal fear. . Finish! . Walked upon. . Seed vessel. . Port on the Red Sea. . Greenish silicate. . North American rail. . African shrub. trike. . Land surrounded by iwater. . Openings. Combininz Short poem . Electrified particle. 5. A color. . Deserves. . Ejects. form meaning eight. Down. . Put aside. Require. . Gold. ’ _ Places to which persons are going. Brazilian city. Within. Bite at. | Necessiti Not out. Conjunction. 2xclamation. SOrrow. Answer to Saturday’s Puzzle. 21. Like. Act. . Corhparative suffix. Man’s nickname. . Note of the scale. . Engineering degree. . Demonstrate. . Cooks. . French unit of square measure. . Two alike. . Southern State (abbr.). Lieutenant (abbr.). . Covers with soil. . Unit of germplasm. . Upon. Zuropium (abbr.). Clues to Character i _— BY J. 0. ABERNETHY. Long Necks Not Fighters. The length of the neck is a most significant indicator of character. Long necks are signs of independence. They are found on lithe and graceful persons, but are not significant of strength or tenacity. You can estimate the character of an animal if you can see the neck, even if the body is hidden. courageous animals are endowed with short, thick necks, while the weak, timid animals have long, mobile necks. The most sagacious men and animals exhibit necks of large size, but so short as to make the head ap pear connected to the sheulders. Those with this form of neck partake some- what of the nature of the bulldog, and are capable of great resistance and aggression. Men of strong passions have large, short necks. They generally are steady. cautious, watchful and plod- ding, but when aroused they are dangerous antagonists. alert, ambitieus, enthusiastic, -specu- lative and powerfully swayed by hopes and fears, sentiments and emotions, he does not- make a good fighter. Therefore, the neck is highly signifi- cant both of the head and body which it connects, and it most conspicuously r‘e\-eals mental conditions*and quali- ties. ! et those vellow glass windows, to little enamel stew pans of deep vel-| low with a horder of vellow and black | Dust cloths | not so popular in apparel as.in deco- | parks—a sort | This is more ofren of the more subtle | Strong, | Although a long-necked person is| LITTLE BENNY | Pop was reeding the paper before | dinnir, saying to ma, Wy do the pa- | pers give space to sutch stuff, heers another crazy cuckoo predickting the | end of the werld, he says it will end | at 8 o'clock tonite, sharp. Well, T hope he's mistaken, sure, ma sed. And after dinnir I was sittii on Mary Watkinses frunt steps tawking to her, and I sed, I*d you heer about the end of the werld? No, wat end? she sed, and I sed: T meen about it coming to a end, it says in the paper today the werld is coming to a end at 8 o'clock tonite. Im bleeve it? Mary Watkins sed. Well, T dont know, the papers have |a lot of reporters and diffrent things and they find out a good eel, I sed, and Mary sed, But my goodniss sip- pose it came to a end wile we are sitting rite heer, wat wolld we do? We'd haff to come to a end with it, 1 gess, I sed, and she sed, O deer, Im o nerviss, wat time fs it now? 11 ask somebody. T sed. Wich I did, asking Some man going pass, and he took his watch out saying, Its jest 3 and a_ half minnits to 8. 0 my goodni Watkins sed, and I sed, Never mind, dont be scared, Im heer, aren't I, I wont_leeve enything happin to you | wile Im heer. | T wonder wat time it is now? Mary | Watkins sed. | going pass, and he sed, One minnit | to 8. O deer, one minnit, Mary Watkins | sed. And she grabbed a hold of my hand, me saving, Nuthings going to happin to you wile Im heer no matter wat happins, bleeve me. And she kepp a hold of my hand, me saying, Jest hold on titie, you'll be all rite. And after 5 minnits I sed, Well, it | must be after § now, so the danger | is over. | "0 Benny, arent you brave, T think | your wonderfill, Mary Watkins sed. Making me think so too. MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. | Non-Collapsible Nipples. | One mother say | 1 had been troubled for a long time | with the nursing bottle nipples going | flat. When the nipples get a tiny air-hole in them, the sides press to- gether and they will not come apart | bottle. I solved the difficulty by cut- ting a small plece of sponge and put- but held the nipple in its proper shape | and prevented the sides from sticking | together. The sponge should be care- fully sterilized after each feeding and a new plece used when needed. (Copyright. 1926.) Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEVER ELDRED. Problems of All Kinds. Mrs. F. L. R. writes: “My is 6 months old and I want to if 1 should start feeding him now? Sometimes my milk does not seem sufficient to satisfy him. I would also like to know how I can get him to drink water. He will drink it only when I put orange juice in it. What would be good for constipation? Answer: The leaflets No. 2 and 3, constipation and weaning and feeding. will be exactly what yvou want now. baby know stamped envelope and ask for them. I am sure vou will find, though, that when the baby gets a little cereal with his morning and evening nur: ing, and some vegetable broth with the 2 o'clock rureing, the constipation will be cured naturally. Probably all in order to stimulate natural move- ments, which is far better than Hav- ing to make use of any artificial lax- atives. It might be well now to give one bottle feeding a day, in prepara- | tion for the time when the baby will have to be weaned. Let him have orange juice in the water. Mrs. I. E. R. writes: “I am worrled about my baby daughter, 10 weeks old. She has been wheezing since birth and she chokes up so, at times, that she can hardly get her breath.” Answer—This seems to me to be a matter entirely outside of your ability tocure. Take the baby to a doctorand have the throat X-rayed. This is the causing the trouble. Mrs. J. D. H. writes: I have fed the baby for a year on a prepared baby food, I should like to start him on solid foods. Should I give him just plain milk now or continue the food with it? it.” Answer—As soon as the baby is started on vegetables and cereals, as he should be at this age, there is no longer any use for the baby food, which is highly carbohydrate, and if | used cereals would overfeed that particular element. Use whole milk now and write for the leaflet help vou with the rest of his diet. Mrs. G. M.—Scarlet fever is com- municable throughout the course of the disease and ever after the scaling process is completed the child may carry the germs in nose and throat. T should keep your child away from the sick person for at least six weeks. I "puzz’n:les" ———————Puzzle-Limericks—— There was an old sailor of —1— Whose peg legs propelled him quite gty Strong liquor,” he —3—, Never goes to my ——4— And I know it can't go to my —5—. 1. An isiand in the Mediterranean Sea. 2. Tidy. 3. Stated. 4. Upper portion of the body. 6. Lower portion of the body. Note—While most of us would not care about having the - ‘“peg legs,” | there would be a compensation when viewed as this sailor did. How was! that? Complete the limerick by plac- ing right words in the corresponding spaces and you'll see. The answer and another “Puzzlick” will appear tomorrow. Saturday’s “Puzzlick.” A certain young lady, of Kent | Had a nose most awfully bent; One day, I suppose, She followed her nose— | For no one knows which way she (Copyright. 1926.) O my goodniss, O mersey, do you | Im going in. Mary | Me asking another man { unless the nipple is removed from the | ! ting it inside the nipple, which did | not interfere with the flow of milk, | Please send me a self-addressed and he needs is some addition to his diet, | only sure method of telling what is | I am now slowly decreasing | in addition to vegetables and | 3, which will | | about happiness Women Who Have Miss Agnes L. Peterson. Few women come to their major actlvities with a more thorough grounding in the essentlals of their work than has Miss Agnes L. Peter- son, assistant director of the Wom- MISS AGNES L. PETERSON. ‘en'x Bureau in the Department of | Labor. Beginning with _volunteer | service in the Associated Charities in | St. Paul in 1901, she served in orde: | as’ a member of the State industrial |and social conditions committee in {the Minnesota Federation of Wom- en’s Club, 1907-18; of the civic com- | mittee, fifth district, Federation of | Women's Clubs, 1909-11; social and | industrial committee, Women's Wel- | fare League, St. Paul, 1912-18. | | | | In these committees studies of con- ditions within the State were made, | with especial reference to" procedure | in juvenile and municipal courts. and Interesting Tasks in Government Service BY ALICE ROGERS HAGER was the result. Another result was the appointment of Miss Peterson to a post in the Bureau of Women and Children of the Minnesota Department of Labor in 1911, with her promotion to the position of superintendent a year later. The next step was an appointment in 1916, which she carried coincident with her bureau work, as a member of a child welfare commission to re- vise and codify the State laws con- cerning children. . The legislative pro- gram enacted in 1917 through the efforts of the commission is a stand- ard in its field. And in 1918 Mary Van Kleeck, director of the newly created Women in Industry Service of the Federal Labor Department, called Miss Peterson to help her‘as an Industrial expert. In 1919 she passed the civil service examination for in- dustrial supervisor, and during the first three years of the Women's Bu- reau’s existence she supervised its field work. Five yvears ago Miss Peterson was made assistant director, and she has filled a difficult and arduous position with efficiency and resourcefulness. Seven survi have been made under her complete or partial guidance, in- cluding “Women in Alabama Indus- tries,” “Women Street Car Conduc- tors and Ticket Agents” “Women's Wages in Kansas,” ‘“lowa, Women in Industry” and the very important one on “The Share of Wage-Earning Women in Family Support.” One of the vital pieces of works that Miss Peterson did before coming to Washingtos was In serving as State chairman of the Minnesota commit- tee on women in industry and as chairman of the same committee in the State Safety Commission. Under this chairmanship counties were or- ganized into separate committees and a survey was outlined and made. Miss Peterson was drafted by Miss van Kleeck when this was about two- thirds completed, and while she was consequently unable to carry through the active direction, she continued as consultant. The report of this sur- vey covers personal Information on wages, occupations and hours of em- ployment for some 52.000 women. She also served on the advisory board of the national child labor com- mittee from 1915 to 1924. She is a graduate of Gustavus Adolphus Col- lege. 150 YEARS AGO TODAY ’lho securing of corrective legislation | | | | Story of the U. S. A. BY JONATHAN A. RAWSON, JR. BOSTON, June 14, 1776. — Provi- dence has once more intervened in the cause of liberty. June 14, 1774, was proclaimed through the cruelty of a British act of Parliament “the last day allowed for trading vessels to leave or enter the port of Boston” {and this present day exactly two years later, through the blessing of God upon the operations of a much in- jured and oppressed people, has be- come the last day allowed by America | to the British ministerial men-of-war to remain or enter within the port of | Boston, except as American prizes. Through beat of drum, the city of Béston vesterday heard that an expe- dition was under way against Com- modore Banks' hated ships of the enemy in Nantasket Toad. Great was the delight of the people at this | news and that a fortification will | soon rise in our lower harbour, Colonels Marshall and Whitney were | heartily cheered as the led . their colonial regiments on Doard boats which were drawn up at Long Whart, and the embarkation of a battalion | of artillery train, under Lieut. Col. | Crafts, elicited further demonstrations. These forces, as well as ammu- nition, provisions and eéntrenching tools were started to Pettrick’s Island and Hill. and have been augmented EVERYDAY | | } Boston Chases Banks Away. i i DR. S. Answered by Questions from readers are anewered daily D. € v "D. S Parkes Cad: Federal Council America. ~ Dr. Cadman seeks to_answer in: quiries ihat appear {o be representative of the trends of thought in the mans letters which he receives. ew York City. | T am a bachelor, 36 vears old, be- { cause I consider my father and mother | come first. | Am I wrong in this? Are bachelors who sacrifice them selves for the sake of others the con temptible creatures that some writers depict them to be? Answer—No. You represent Iy large class of bachelors of both | who have purposely sacrificed mar | joys to filial duties. Not a few of the | most estimable men and women 1 know are listed under yvour banner. It is a loyal and bonnie flag. at that. A personal friend of mine typifies | the good sons and daughters who will suffer no ill wind to blow on an aged father or mother. For nearly 30 vears this bachelor has tended his parents: the father, a veteran of the Civil War: the mother, who recently passed on, a fragile-bod- ied saint who breathed peace and pur- ity. The son has his reward in a singular elevation of general charac- ter and fineness of spiritual insight. of € | Dallas, Tex. Would you consider the following quotation _a_good philosophy from which to find guldance and cheer? It is from Euripides: . Hl‘svvny he. on the weary eea, hnhhl(h fled the tempest and won the aven Happy who so hath risen, free. Abo his_striving. For strangely graven | I ‘the orb of life. that one and another 1n gold and power mayv outpass his hrother. And men in their millions float and flow | “"And seethe with a million hopes as leaven: | And th.V‘“win their will. or they miss their i Wi, | And the hopes are dead or are pined for still. But, whoeter can know. ong dave £, “That_ 0" live is bappy. hath found his ‘haven ! Answer—The quotation is welcome for- its beauty, but it contains only half the truth it is meant to express. Allow me to cap it with a still better one from George Chapman’s splendid “Tragedy of Charles, Duke of Byron” . (Act 3, Scene 1): 3ive that on this life's | £ov mi-d'n'.':y’:‘ iRt e oo a et | Even w1 | And s ‘Fat_ship_runs on her side so low That she drinks water and her keel plows air. Life in_this world or the next is | best conceived as a continuqus attain- ! ment. On earth there is far more | good ‘cheer and,guidance in grit and | | resistance than in vielding and sub- | mission. The open sea has its storms. | but it also has an exhilarating joy which sheltered harbors never know. “Sunset and evening bell” brought little satisfaction to Homer’s heroes. Robertson of Brighton, that pulpit star of particular brilliance, believed | that at best rest was but the camp- | ing space either for life here or here- | atter. The wine of existence for him | was In the eternal etruggle that rids the soul’s armor of its rust and fills the heart with virile resolution. The period of Euripides in some re- spects anticipated our own. It was; an age of deep sadness, doubt and un- certainty, whendzople spoke much ause they did not Pposdes it. - For those who exalt happl- s sail yards tremble. his masts by continental troops and seacoast companies, making the number at each place nearly 600. Moon's Island. Hoff's Neck and Point Alderton were also reinforced by the landing of a number of militia from towns in the vicinity of Boston harbor, while Long Island is ready for action with a detachment from the continental army under Col. Whit- comb, with two 18-pounders, one 13- inch mortar and other armament. Becaure of a_sudden calm the troope did not all reach their desti- nation until this morning. but within a few hours our boys had our cannon in shape, the defenses hove up and Long Island and Nantasket Hill, and a pretty shot fired to tell the enemy that their days here were about, over. Their fleet, which consisted of eight ships, two brigs and one schooner. was soon hurrying off and well it was for them. for the ship of Com- modore Banks soon had one of our shots from Long Island through her upper works. Our one piece of bad luck was the late arrival of our can- non at Pettick’s Island and Nantas- ket but the latter still had time to deal the commodore’s ship some bad blows as she came in the Light House channel. Ona more disgrace- ful precipitate fiight to the -enemy’s | score! (Convright. 19286.) QUESTIONS PARKES CADMAN ness as the end of life miss the secret of both. Life's peace in the battle and calm in the tempest are in duty faced and done. Fortunately for human progress, few people stay resigned and con- tented. The lotus eaters weary of their food and crave hard fare and shrewd blows. The great adventure of lite herealter was well indicated by Henry Ward Beecher. who said to Dr Albert J. Lyman as they walked away rom Greenwood Cemetery. Brooklyn: ‘They will bring me here some day, Lyman, but they cannot Keep me here.” “Where shall vou be, Mr. Beecher?" querfed Dr. Lyman. “Still at the front, forging ahead, fighting for the right! That's the only heaven 1 crave.” replied the great preacher. Brooklyn, N. Y. Will you kindly give me vour ideas as to the source of the soul or spirit of man as related to evolution? Is the soul an evolution or a direct creation? = Answer—The soul is a direct crea- tion of God in every human being. Tts operating cause canmot, in my judgment, be discovered in the realm of natural law, but must be attributed to the unseen kingdom of the spirit. As the crown of the cosmic process the soul of man, like the majestic process itself, is a divine marvel. Are not the marks of a higher inter- terence which natural selection does not explain apparent in that process? I perceive them in the change from the inorganic to the organic; in the dawn of consciousness in the animal world; and most clearly in the appear- ance in man’of those noble faculties and moral characteristics known as his_soul or spirit. This is the best theory I know to explain the facts raised by your inter- | esting letter. (Copyright. 1926.) cEe Prices realized on Swift & Company gales of carcass beef in_ Washington, D. C., for ek ‘ending Saturday. June 12, 1026, o shipments sold out, ranged from 12:50° cénts 10 18.00 cents per pound and averaged 16.30 per pound —Advertisement. f Served by the most | gracious hostess BREAKFAST COFFEE {often is the case today, the Worker. What Do You Know About It? Daily Science Six. Who was Asa Gray? Who was Alexander Wilson? Who was John Muir? Who was John Burroughs? . Who was Erasmus Darwin? . Who was Thomas Huxley? Answers to these questions in tomorrow's Star. Audubon and Baron Rothschild. When the great American bird painter, John James Audubon, was in Europe getting subscriptions to his costly set of books, he called on Baron Rothschild, then the richest man in the world, “the man who had sald to Napoleon, ‘You may be a King', and Napoleon was a king.” Rothschild’s manner was as insulting as if Audubon had been a beggar, but he said he would subscribe to the book. “If we had been in America," Audubon reports, “I would have knocked him down.” But when Au- dubon sent in his bill for the books and the Baron saw that he had let himself in for $1,000, he refused to pay it, saying he would give $25 and no more. Aubudon refused to take the $25, so Rothschild, the richest man in the world, kept the books which he had never paid for. Now what do you know about that? Answers to Yesterday’s Questions. 1. Thistles, milkweed and maples have thelr seeds distributed by wind. 2. Ragweed, pine and poplar have their pollen distributed bv wind. 3. Honeysuckle is pollinated by moths. 4. Bamboo rarely flowers and usu- ally dies after flowering. 5. Ferns, mosses and mushrooms never have flowers. 6. Pines have inconspicuous, but very fertile flowers. (Copsright. 1026.) Pistory of Bour fRame BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. HARRIMAN. VARIATIONS—Henman, Harman, Harmon. RACIAL ORIGIN—English. SOURCE—A given name. In view of the obvious fact that a name such as Harrison comes from the given name of Harry, or Henry you'd be strongly tempted to believe that Harriman also came from the same given name, wouldn’t you? And if You were so strongly tempted | that vou actually did think it—why. | you'd be right. The name of Harriman does come | from Harry. The question is how, and what could it have meant in the first | place? Merely this: In the middle ages, as the servant, the follower of a given person was known as his “man.” In the records (tax lists. census re- | ports and others) of the middle ages vou will find the forms ‘“Jon Har- riman” and “Harry's man John" used | interchangeably. | The family name forms of Harman | and Harmon have other explanations. and these others. perhaps. are the more usual origins of these names. | There are proofs to be found, however, in a tracing out of the medieval rec. ords that these family names are in some cases merely modified forms of Harriman. (Copyright. 1 HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWTON. Calling It a “Blazer." Now that sports wear is “de rigeur” for almost any occasion we are b(“ coming more and more familiar with | the blazer, that smart, short sports Jacket that formerly was worn for golf or tennis, but today en on ihe boardwalk, at the races, being \Jl‘t’)rn.t indeed, on any of the many occasions for which sports clothes are now per- | missible. Blazers today are seen in any color. sometimes many-colored. But it from the color of the ‘original blazers. which was red, that they take their name. The first blazers were the sport jackets worn by the members of the Lady Margaret Boat Club of St. John's College, Cambridge, England. They were so called in allusion to their color, which was red, and seemed “to blaze. (Copyright. 1 hy cant we introduce ourselves To pecple on the street ? I know [ pass 2 lot of Friends to prepare hot breakfast now 3 to 5 minutes Q UICK QUAKER, savory and delicious, takes less time to pre- pare than plain toast. Thus provides a hot and nourishing breakfast in a hurry. That is how every day should be started. Started with the ideal food balance of protein, carbohydrates and vita- ‘mines—plus the “bulk” to make laxa- tives less often needed—that leading dietary authorities. now so widely urge. . Start your days and your children’s in that way. No need now, simply to save time, to deny them the supreme strength food of the world. Your grocer has Quick Quaker— also Quaker Oats as you have always known them. Qu.ickQuaker {cruel and unus | will not endure, FEATURES. Making the Most of Your Looks Y DOROTHY STOTE. Dear Ann: It one is going away for the Sum- mer, one certainly needs a dressy silk frock for Saturday afternoons and Sundays. The one on the right is ex- cellent for the tall woman. The con- trasting color and the deep embroid- ery on tunic and sleeves reduce her too great height and impart a much more pleasing proportion than the same frock all in one color and with- out the embroidery. ‘Yours for choosing wisely, LETITIA. (Copyright. 1926.) PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. Hail to the Brogans. Perhaps it is just chance, yet seems to me that there is much less foot trouble today than there was 10 years ago. Although I receive more queries about general health and h giene now that I did 10 years ago. there are not nearly so many about foot troubles as there were then. I believe the peak has been passed and that the tyranny of the shoemaker has heen broken. And now that it is possible to find shoes to fit the feet, instead of making the feet fit the shoes, now that we have tasted free- dom of the feet, it is incredible that we shall ever again submit to the forms of punish- ment the shoe stores formerly in- flicted on us. No doubt the war and the last used for Army shoes had something to do with it, but it was the flapper that prevented a relapse after the armyj: tice. The “last word” in men’'s shoes is alarmingly extreme—the toes are =o very broad that one fears the fad that the pendulum will swing back. For many years the suffering feet of the nation have been crying for just this relief which has com> with the brogans. The chief fault with both men’s and women's shoes in the last 20 vears has been the cramping | of the forefoot. If vou can find a_photograph of un. civilized people. who wear no shocs and have no static foot troubles. vou will observe that the undeformed hu man foot is triangular in shape with the base of the triangle in front—-the | widest_part of the foot is across the | | toes. The shoemakers have attempted to reverse this plan and make the foot | narrowest across the toes. It has paid them exceedingly well, but it has cost the public a vast amount of suf- | fering and loss of efficiency, not to mention the outright extravagance of freak shoes. Another wholesome change which I | believe naturally follows the advent |of the brogans is the apparent | dwindling of an evil which was be coming rampant, the humbug ‘foot specialist” mame. These trick “foot experts” did a tremendous amount of harm, and it is a distinct blessing for the gullible public that their day is | done. It was always a wonder to | me that the coat and vest makers did I not provide a line of diagnosis and | treatment for liver and lung troubles. They would be just as competent to do so. They missed a bet. Here's the health suggestion T | would give vou: Think of vour feet as conveniently triangular. with the long est sides of the pair of triangles par- allel. Keep that picture in mind when selecting shoe: 1926.) Chocolate Mousse. Melt two squares of unsweetened chocoiate, add one-half a cupful of | powdered sugar, and gradually a cup- | full of crcam. Stir in a double boiler e fire until the boiling point is nful of gelatin, dissolved in three poonfuls of hoiling water. three- cupful of sugar, and one tea i ul of vanilla. Strain the mix- ture into a bowl, set in a pan of ic water, stiy, constantly until the mix- ture thickens, then fald in one quar | of whipped cream. Mold. pack in i land stand fou befora servi Relieve Sunburn Instantly —awith greaseless healing cream 'I'H'E moment you apply this dainty, medicated, greaseless cream, torturous sunburn ains begin to vanish—you can actually “Feel It T The soothin; cooling elements of Noxzema Cream sink right into the skin, draw out “the fire of sunburn,” quiet the aching nerves and pr:vent painful blistering. Noxzema is not an ointment or greasy cream, messy and re; pulsive to use, but a fluffy, snow- white Healing Vanishing Cream that you can use without fear of soiling delicate fabrics or bed- clothing. Over 1,150,000 jars of Noxzema used last year—and twice as many this year! ‘Take this sure, clean way to end your sufferin from sunburn. Noxzema is now on sale at zfi local drug and department stores. Get a small jar today. NOXZEM “Feel It Heal