Evening Star Newspaper, June 28, 1926, Page 24

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WOM AN'S PAGE Period Decoration Is Supplanted BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. * Last aite I was late for dinner agen, being about the 3rd time and maybe the 4th, and I went back in the dining room trying to look innocent and pop was jest passing his plate for his nd helping of liver and onions, being his favorite thing, saying, Well young man? | Meening wy was T late, and.I sed, { Well 111 tell you. | 1t is my duty to inform you that enything you say may be used agenst you, pop sed, and I sed, Well Iii tell you. Perseed, pop sed, and I sed, I was THE LOVE OF BINING OF INTER! INTRINSIC WORTH. 'HE BEAUTIF RN Period rooms which were in such higK favor a few ¥ ago are not now considered essential to*fine in- teriors. Indeed, the pendulum has swung far in the other direction. It is generally conceded today that 1o get best results, furnishings should be in artistic harmony, but not ad- here closely to periods. Rooms be- come less formal and more homelike. These two elements are important in homes, for without them g subtle something is lacking that nothing else can instill A home built In a definite period atyle that has in it an_accumulation of treasures that have been collected here and there in travels; or heir- looms that have beem handed down for generations; or both heirlooms and acquisitions felicitously combined, is a place that is a jov to occupy and a delight to visit. This was the theory of one famous woman® who built and furnished a palatial residence. In it she housed such rare objects that it i& a treai t6 wander through the patio fragrant with the perfume of beauti- ful rlo; vlants and linger in the spacious rooms to absorb the beauty or to study the masterpieces-of artists and craftsmen. Group for Harmon few, if any, of us can do done, but each home- get inspiration from her so ar- make Prol what maker 1deas, range the most way. We with the finest things that we fallen heir 1 We “can thinzs when we travel, even fo: of t BEDTIME STORIES Farmer Brown's Boy Loses a Pigeon. The stronz. the wealc, the gres e right o live belongs to all. —Old Motder the small, ature. It is true that Old Mother Nature has given each the right to live, but it is also her law that each must pro- tect that vight. In other words, each one must continually use his wits and he smart enough t -vent any one else from tak away that right, This is Moti.er ure’s way of mak- ing sure that only the most fit shall live Farmer Brown's Boy had pigeons as standing on the corner with Puds Sim- kins, and Shorty Judge came up and we was all 3 standing there. And then I sippose the ground opened and the 3 of you dropped through and havent bin seen sints, pop sed No_sir, a_horse ran pass attatched | to"a huckster wagon-and it was run- ning as if it thawt it was a fire horse, and Puds sed, G, runaway horse, and I sed, Aw it i$ not, its jest going fast because the mans in a hurry, and Shorty Judge sed, Who ever ‘saw a | huckster in sutch a hurry as that? | Thats a sollem question, come to | think of it, pop sed. Well, dont keep | me in sispense, wat was the anser? d, and 1 sed, There wasent eny nser, because jest then a little flivver almost bunked into a big truck and | if they both hadent of quick put on | their brakes the little flivver mite of | goy_hert. |~ You make my blud run cold, is your MONDAY, Tells How to Be a Perfect Guest Dont’s for the Summer Visitor DorothyDix If You Never Invite Yourself for a Visit, if You Never Make a ' Free Roadhouse of Your Friends’ Country Homes, if You Can Fall in With the Food and the Plans of Your Hostess, ‘You'll Be One of Those Rare Birds, a Truly Welcome Guest. ERE are a few don'ts for the Summer visitor: Don't be a self-invited guest. Chief among the social pests upon whom we would like to use some peculiarly potent and fatal insecticide are those who write us that they are pining for a breath of sea air, or longing to rest and relax in the country, and would like to come and spend a few days with us. All normal means of communication are still open. The post office, the telegraph and the telephone are functioning as usual, and you may he very sure that if any of your relatives or friends pine for vour society and desire a visit from you they would have no difficulty h‘ communicating the fact to you. Don’t surprise even your nearest and dearest by dropping in upon them without warning. A surprise is always a hoomerang that annihilates the perpetrator by insuring her a frosty welcome. Nobody in the world loves anybody else enough to want to have all of their plans and arrangements upset by the sudden descent upon them of an unexpected guest. Possibly there are good Samaritans who are heroic enough to invite a mother with children, or a woman with her pets, to pay them a visit. But; creatures of this high, heroic mold, martyrs craving suffering, are as scarce as hen's teeth, and are not to be taken for granted. Most people would rather | have a spell of sickness than a week end visit from a mother with children, or! a woman who talks baby talk to a Pekinese, so don't take along your Incumbrances unless it is so stated in the bond. | story over? pop sed, and I sed, No | sir, “jest then some man thawt ‘he | dropped a dime and we started to help him look for it because it wouldent | of bin polite not to and besides we | thawt he mite gjve us something who- | ever found it, and we looked and looked and looked and he wasent even positive he dropped it for sure, but we looked and looked and Jooked. | But I cant lissen and lissen and | lissen with this bewtiful. liver and | onions getting cold, sit down and eat your dinnir, pop sed. Wich I did. HAPPY COM- UPON THEIR UL 1S APPARE. SHT MORE distances, that will enhance the inter- of our homes. We can combine articlés that we have in such a way R | that attention is attracted to the beau- | MOTHE S tiful and the pleasing. We can study - . N, | effects so that harmony is gained. | AN D | We can make our rooms charming to | live in and a Joy to our friends when | they come to see us. An atmospher will then emanate from them and be felt as keenly as if tangible. Within Reach of All. While it is true that money does help to get such interiors, it is absurd | to say that it is mone alone that does | it. If that were 8o, more homes would | have this much-to-be-desired atmos phere. 1 have felt it quite as decid- | | edly in some modest houses as in| | some pretentions ones. Nor does ! i good taste account for it entirely. | | Good taste is evident in many homes “hat lack this charm of accumulated beauty shown not in period decora tion, but in the combininz of inter-| esting things in a beautifving way Fortunately, those who wish can cul-| tivate a love for and an appreciationd | of the best in furniture, furnishings jand objets d'art by reading, or by | travel, or by both, so that they know what to look for and can pick up things of interest wherever they are. and, many times, at small cost.” It i | gne Mother Says: the 'spirit of the collector that gets| “ry'jittle daughter went to a garden ho) feels permeates the place. and|Party and came back feeling badly = . A = - because her beautiful new white dress adds a genuine glamour to interiors. | pega use her beautiful new white dress | 'Ihe love of the beautiful is appar- | 123 & il It Than'et - | spots at once ent. not in period rooms as such, but | ["\34heq the dress in the usual way in the happy combining of interesting LA sl L SUNE | and no trace of stain remained. I do furnishings. ~whether ' of intrinsic| ot pelieve in teaching children to be worth or not, so that they add charm S DUt accidents. will Baposn SOl | % too bad to have a child's en- joyment ruined by something whi can he corrected = (Copyright. 1928.) ‘What Do You Know About It? Daily Science Six. 1. What kind of an animal is a toad? 2. What are the stages in the life history of a toad? 3. Do toads cause warts? Is there any polson in a | | est Grass Stain. BY THORNTON . BURGESS - 1 (waved his arms in the hope of fright- | ening away that hawk: But that| hawk didn't frighten. Straight on it | came and struck one of those pigeons | in midair only a few feet from where | Farmer Brown’s Boy was standing. without stopping the hawk swept on, | carrying the pigeon with it. rmer | Brown's Boy watched it out of sizht It had flown straight toward the Big Mountain and at_the rate it was go- | ing it had soon disappeared. hew!” exclaimed Farmer Brown's Boy, “that's the boldest hawk I ever saw. and how it can fly. I hope he How old may a toad live tomorrow’s Star. Don't, when you are making a motor trip. arrange your schedule so to spend the night, or arrive st lunchtime, with friends. Of course, this materially lightens the cost of your outing by saving the hotel bills, but it is | rough on vour involuntary hosts. If vou rould even dimly apprehend what | the Jones' are thinking when they see vou drive up to their door just at dusk, with a car full of people, haif of whom they have.probably never seen before, you would push on to the next town if it took vour last gallon of gasoline, for they are despising you as you deserve for the cheap srafter | that vou are. i If you will observe, you will see that the first vear that people own a| country place they are wildly enthusiastic about it. The second year they are non-committal, and the third vear it is for sale. The reason for this decline and fall off in love for the great free spaces is because every one who lives along a motor road is forced to keep a free roadhouse. There is no| other way in which you can endear yvourself to vour friends as by passing them by, unless they have specifically invited you to park in their guestroom | at a certain specified time. Don’t visit at all if you are a food faddist © are on a diet If youj have to have your cereals cooked in some peculiar way. or some special bread | that is unattainable at the village haker you n't eat fish or meat or | vegetables that haven't heen steamed for 9 hours and 45 seconds, then, for| pity’s sake, stay it home. \here You can humor vour stomach, or g0 to A | hotel, where you can pay for the trouble you cause, Servants are never so temperamental anywhere else as they are in the | country. Food is far more difficult to get than it Is in the city, where there | s a butcher shop and a fancy grocers” around every corner, xo don't make | e poor, overworked housekeeper's lot any harder by forcing o cater | to your dietetic whims Gl iG] Don’t visit unless you are adaptable and able and willing to fall in \\‘llh‘ all the plans your hostess has made for your entertainment. She is spending ! time and mon and effort tryving to zi you pleasure, so whether you enjoy | things or not, give a lifelike imitation of having the time of your life. No other people on earth are so exasperating as are those guests who accept an invitation to the seashore. vet refuse to go in the water, or to fish,| or even o eat fish, or who come to visit you in the mountains and will neither ! walk nor look at a view: who will not plgy cards in a bridge fiend's house, or | picnic with one who loves getting back to nature, and whose sole function is | to wet-blanket every occasion and take all of the pep out of it. | All of us known the idiosyncrasies of our friends. and about what will be expected of us when we go to their houses. It is only decent to play their game their way when we are eating their bread. Don't wear out your welcome. When your hostess ur visit, she is merely acting up to the proprieties. She is keeping her fingers crossed for fear you Don't stay too long. begs you to prolong Don't take her serious! will take her at her word. Don't fail to read Proverbs, twenty-fifth chapter, werse seventeen, every night when you read your chapter in vour Bible. DOROTHY DIX. Copyright 1926 150 YEARS AGO TODAY Story of the U. S. A, BY JONATHAN A. RAWSON, JR. Moultrie Holds the Fort. | makeshift structure with its 31 guns and garrison of 435 men withstand CHARLESTON, 8. C., June 28, 1776. [ the fire of 278 or more enemy guns? —Ceb William Moultrie’s militia, fight- | The fort’s ammunition was less than ing waliantly all day behind their log |30 rounds to the piece. | fort on Suilivan's Island, have held | Mouitrie ordered the long roll to | oft the ministerial Army and Navy, beat and the officers and men to their and Charleston is still safe. Not a |posts. “Mind the 50-gun ships,” he British soldier or sailor has set foot ordered. The ships began their at- on our shores, except on Long Island, | tack most furlously. Their shot sunk where Gen. Clinton’s unfortunate red- | harmlessly into the palmetto logs. | coats were held powerless all day by |Others fell within the fort. but most | our riflemen under Cols. Thompson of them were swallowed.up by the | | 1 JUNE 28, 1926. AY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Left-Handedness. Mrs. M. M. R. writes—“T would like to ask a few questions which seem | important to me. My boy is 2 vears old and has a strong tendency to use his left hand and I am trying to break | him. 1 don't want him to be left- handed. In it possible that I can do this? FEATURES. Making the Most Dear Ann: With a too round face, the bathing cap may be brought forward well on to the cheeks to lessen facial surface, and may be covered with a bandana that flares at the top. A plain rubber cap stopping at the ears will merely outline that unwanted roundess. {a child be given In breaking a child of that age be whipped # little, or taught in some other manner? Should water in the night Yours for good outlines. LETITIA. (Copyright. 1026.) wshould he it he asks for it? Answej | \ It seems to me a great mis- | take to try and force a naturally left- | handed child to be right-handed. Whatever quirk in his motor system is responsible for this tendency it | does no good to try and disturb it. but merely makes the child awkward | and it has heen said, though I do | not know if there s truth in it, that it leads to stammering. It would he better to teach the child to be ambi- | dextrou nd use hoth hands well. | than to stop the use of his left hand when he is evidently much better fitted to use this than the right one. | If by “breaking® yvou mean this habit, one cannot possibly see any con- nection between whipping and the use of either hand and surely one) could not train him to use his right | hand by spanking him when he didn't, 9 leaflet gives methods of child to cleanly habits, he exactly what you want not leave a 1l thermos bottle of caol er the child's crib and let him help himself to a | drink when he wants it in the night? | He would feel himself quite grown- up. T am sure. Sta ng. Mrs. B. £.—The cure of stammering ties both in training to talk slowly and think before speaking. and in dis- | covering what nervous shock set up the stammering in the first place Sometimes a fright; fear of an older | romantic like those famous person or older children: terror - of pale hands in the Indian Love «chool work: an f{liness or fright due |Lyric. The flesh on them was firm and to some animal, are the initial experi- [ smooth like satin, the bones were sup- ences which result in stammering. If [ple. To examine her hand closely any one can seek out this cause and |to marvel at its perfect workmanship. eliminate it by seeing that there is|The nails were fibert-shaped and faint no repetition; that the annoving per-|ly pink. At ber delicate wrist the sons are removed from the child's life, | veins showed in a network of palest and by helpful training and not scold- | blue. ing, teasing or nagging, the child may | of course be_entirely cured of the habit. | Gl oo maaiiii vt DaaiiaB hant Please send for Leaflet No. 8, in-|gne prar S5ai WALe quits well closing a self-addressed and stamped | 308 2700 ST SN W TG O envelope , with vour request. This | ho "l iunctable she would pause in leaflet deals with dirt-eating | Whiataver: alie: wis da g {0 WateR tal m GHAPTER 1. Leila Marsh. EILA MARSH had always prided herself on. her hands. They were slim and white and Leila had been told over | reading, and took | rounded by sick people with that | thing. | of life. for the street she always took a long time to draw on her gloves, which al- | ways fitted perfectly and without the slightest wrinkle. | Her beauty was not confined to her | hands. She had a long, oval face and | skin of a clear pallor. Her eyes were | gray blue, with long. very straight | lashes, and her hair, of a strange cin- namon color, curled close to her head. As a matter of fact she would have preferred straight hair so that she could have had it marcelled fashion- ably. But after experimenting with it | she had discovered that by. having it cut very short she was able to get an effect that gave her head the ap. pearance of a Valasquez painting. From this description it can readily be seen that Leila was endowed with | more than her share of feminine | beauty. She was the kind of girl who | | required a perfect setting, a rich background. Those pale hands had never done anything harder than to | wield a powder puff. and yet as this story starts we see her in the dark. cheerless bedroom of a second.class | hotel. { | She had just come in from the | street. The ugly little elevator rad | whirled her up to the sixth floor and deposited hér in a dark corridor along | which she had proceeded to her room Under her arm she carried a bundle | of newspapers, and because it was | cold, she did not remove her cont, but threw herself into the one com. fortable chair the room afforded and turned hastily to the “help wanted” columns. “Help Wanted, Female.” Her eyes skimmed down the long column. hambermaids, cooks, cleaning wom. | en, candy dippers, clerks. Could she be a_clérk? “Wanted, a voung with some knowledge | Salary to start, $14. Fourteen dollars. Teila dropped | the paper a moment to reflect. Even | her fingers, and when she ready INY WREN. BY JE! The present popularity of checked fabrics for home decorating purpores | Jpens many fascinating avenues to the | home-maker. The question of intro- ducing pattern into a room is alwaysa | delicate one. 1f the wall covering is figured, then the window draperies must be plain and vice versa. And if either is used upholstery fabrics must be selected with care or the effect will be confusing. Checked fabrics. however. can he used very successfully in the same room with formally patterned or flow- ered fabrics. Tt is noticeable here that there is no conflict between the rather showy pat tern of the toile de jouy in which the French chair is upholstered and the clerk | typing. woman of | per. jdoesn’t come back again. I thought| | my,pigeons could fly, but they haven't | jany chance against that fellow. He | picked that pigeon out of the air as if it were sitting still instead of flying as hard as it could. If he comes often I see where I shall have to keep my New Clothes for the Toad. It is nothing unusual to see a toad in what is obviously a pew skin, still wet and glistening and price tag on it. Few people, however, Imost with a p and Clark, while Moultrie put an | effective stop to an attempt of the enemy fleet to get within cannon shot of the city. At least 11 mighty British men-of- war set out from the outer harbor on their errand of oppression about 11 sand. The flagship Bristol for'a time | sustained the whole fire of the fort and her quarterdeck was cleared of all | except the commodore. The fort's | flag was shot down and fell outside. Sergt. Jasper jumped out, rescued it, and set it up again on a sponge staff. large checks of the gingham which covers the screen. The gingham is green and white, while the toile has a cream background and is printed in crimson. The effect is both gay and refreshing. (Copyright. 1926.) if she had a knowledge of typing, she could never live on §14. Her room at this hotel cost §14 a week without meals. Of course she couldn't stay here, she would have to take a fur- nished room somewhere. But even in a furnished room she could never of Your Looks BY DOROTHY STOTE. PALE HANDS BY HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR. vet she had to get something to do, | her money was almost gone. She threw down the paper she was up another “Models wanted for 16-year-old misses’ coats. Must be experienced. “Nurses, undergraduates, for private hospital.” The word experfenced was omitted here, but Leila shuddered. She couldn't do nursing. The sight of blood always made her ill, and the thought of heing in a hospital sur- w ful smell of disinfectant evervwhere was revolting. She couldn't breathe in such an atmosphere, it would kil her. And vet, could she afford pick and choose? She had mo tr she had never been taught to do a And she was yvoung and full It was necessary to turn those useless hands of hers tn soma kind of work. ie (Continued tomorrow.) Parking With Peggy s - - 2% “‘One look' at a and you know her he: place.” bathing heauty art’s in the right Cucumber Jelly Salad. Peel two cucumbers and cut in slices, add one slice of onion, one-half teaspoonful of salt and a dash of pep- Simmer until the cucumbers are tender in one pint of water. Then add one tablespoonful of gelatin dis- olved in warm water. Line a mold with slices, of fresh cucumber cut very thin and pour in the jelly slowly. Set'in the refrigerator to chill. Turn out onto a bed of lettuce heart leaves and serve with French dressing which has been mixed with a piece of ice until it is nearly as thick as mayon- naise. I am not raising | have ever seen the toad shed his old pigeons to feed hawks.” |skin, This is because the whole " Now. once upon a time Farmer |process ‘takes® but five minutes, and | Brown's Boy would have been terribly | one might wateh a toad for days and | indignant. “He would have been ready | he away for a short time and miss the [to Kill every hawk that he got a |spectacle. The skin splits down the | chance to. ust because that one hawk | back and along the fore and hind legs | had taken one of his pigeons. But |in about the way that a coat is sewes I but | Farmer Brown's Boy had come to |togethcr by seams. The toad hunches |from Clinton's »'nfljhnl:.\ ,h.\’_!h!e n}flv] know the little people of the:Green | himself out of the arms and legs of [men who inirenched - hehind san Meadows and the Green Forest and | the skin and wiggles free from the hillsand myrtle bushes. made it highly | {the Old4 Pasture, and to understand breast. The only place that remains |unwise for Clinton to attempt a cross- e 7 | {ing of Breach Inlet from Long Island that when they killed they did so only | attached is at the mouth. so the toad |ing o ach Inlet . 3 for food: and this is no more than man | draws it in and thriftily swallows the :‘:n::‘?figsa‘lh;ll'w-:”hn‘?ww‘:.“ .\’nln”x:s; | does. cas keepi < | whole skin. ¢ imo at as e e el Aose DlEeon | N oW, what do you know about that? |auarter, Moultrie returned to the fort pigeons shut up. | live on $14, it was impossible. ; Wearily 'she took up the paper Lemon Water Ice. again and read on. There were Boil one cup of sugar in two cups|plenty of advertisements, the long of water for eight minutes, then beat | columns seemed endless, and vet the | until cold, add the stifiv heaten whites | only situations that paid any money | of four eggs and the grated rinds and |at all, even so small an amount as | | juice of two lemons. Freeze and serve | $20 a week. required experience. | at this distance, just where they were |in dainty dishes, sprinkling some Even the advertisements for factol this morning. Our loss was 12 killed | chopped nuts over the top of eich workers had that sinster word and 24 wounded. Col. Moultrie held | portion perienced” in their make-u { the fort. | | Three frigates ran aground and were | out of it. Just as the fort's powder supply ran low, 500 pounds came with a cheering message and the advice, ““Cool and do mischie i “Do mischief” they did. We know not vet how badly the ships were punished but they are a sorry sight o'clock. They came in three divisions. To reach their goal they must pass the channel’ which Moultrie was guarding. Moultrie was ready for them. Two sides of- his fort, th facing the channel, were finished. The rear was wide open, but protected Y4 Million More September 4/ S Lemon Eggnog. ARMER BROW- NS COULD B ING ABOUT OVER THE EVERY DAY. ROY N FLY- well as chickens. Of pigeons could fly at will. not kept in vards as are chickens. So Farmer Brow Boy’'s pigeons could be seen flying about over the farm avery day. ©00 on the roof of the barn. Some of them were so tame that they would come down and sit on Farmer Brown's Boy's hand while he fed them. He was very fond of those pigeons. Some of those pigeons were very swift flvers and Farmer Brown's Boy took great pride in them. He: de- lighted in watching them. 1lle was doing this one morning. ‘Fhe. pigeons were gome little distance away in the cornfield. Suddenly they, rose as if in fright and headed for home. At first Farmer Brown's Boy couldn't think what §t was. Then he saw some dis- tanea back of them a dark form com con ing through the air with tremendous | speéd. He knew it for a hawk, but it was the fastest fiying hawk he had aver seen, Those pigeons were com- ing fast, but the hawk behind them ARM | those | Pigeons are | They delighted to bill and | | that in the eves of hawks, owls, foxes | {and €ome other of the little people | vho kill for food pigeons and chick- j{ens had no rights that other birds hadn’t. So he had Jearned not to| blame any of these folks who were smart enough to now and then get a chicken or a pigeon. He knew that it didn’t happen often and that it was | done wholly in the spirit of self preser- vation. These so-called ‘“robbers™ were not thieves, for they did not know they were stealing. They were simply getting food when the oppor: | tuni presented itsélf. So he had {learned to protect his chickens and rarely.did he lose one. | But the pigeons were anofher mat- [ter. He couldn't keep them cooped jup as he could his chickens. Hitherto | they had been smart enough to take care of themselves. But if tfis hawk were to come that way often some- thing would have to be done ahout it. Yes, sir, something would have to he done about it. Minority rule comes into the home Answers to Saturday’s questions: 1. The hutcher bird, or shrike, cap- tures other birds and impales them on a thorn, to eat them at leisure. 2. Passenger pigeons are not found anywhere now, being extinet. 3. Barnyard pigeons are not native birds, but Europeans. 4. The commonest of our native pigeons is the mourning dove. 5. Cuckoos build very poor nests, and sometimes no nest at all, even laying eggs in other birds' nests. Cuckoos are of a different and unrelated family from doves and pigeons. (Covyrizht. 1926.) Having grown tired of high and low walstlines, London dressmakers have decided that women are to wear their | sashes like a broad ribbon from shoul- der to waist, diagonally, after the when the first baby arrives. This Quaker picture identifies genuine shortly befote the first frigates | This is a very nutritious drink.| came on. Beat the white of one egg to a froth. | The finished part of the fort was 16 | Beat the yolk until light, then stir feet thick, consisting of two walls of |lightly into the white. Stif rapidly palmetto logs dovetailed together into |into the egg the juice of one lemon bing filled with sand. Would this and two teaspoonfuls of sugar. & e > % ‘-’\) s fresh as a flower — and as sweet! Intangible loveliness, not too easy of attainment in hot and dusty cities! But women who call to their aid Djer-Kiss Tal- cum do achieve this flowerlike sweet, cool effect! ‘They use Djer-Kiss Talc, im- Flies-and mosquitoes love campers WHY allow these aggravating, filthy pests to ruin your out- ings? In camp or at home Flit will free you from the nuisance. Flit spray clears your home in a few minutes of disease-bearing flies and mos- quitoes. It is clean, safe and easy touse. F1it i8 the result of destroys insects and their Flit on your garments. Flit and theirlarvae which eat holes. Exten- sive tests showed that Flit spray did not stain the most delicate fabrics. A Scientific Insecticide . Spray moths exhaustive research Kills All Household Insects by expert entomologists and chemists. It is harmless to mankind. Flit has re- was coming faster. Rarmer Brown's placed the old methods because it kills all the insects—and does it quickly. | rted from France,—because i itis so exquisitely fineand pure —after theirm?min showers, their evening tubs. Their skins take on a satiny beauty—and the inexpressibly lovely Djet- Kiss scent. Other Djer-Kiss . aids to beauty—Extract, Face Powder, Sachet, Toilet Water, Rouge, etc. ALFRED H. SMITH CO. Sole_Importers 418 W. 25th St., New York City boy velled and l-'lid spray -Ih:'y dutl:oyl bsdl:mp, roaches and ants, It searches out the cracksand Get a Flit can and sprayer todsy. For erevices where they hide and breed and sale everywhere. STANDARD OIL CO. (NEW JERSEY) i Quaker . ~ Oats~ Quick Quaker Look for it if rich flavor is what you want in oats; if the finest that money can buy is what you want for your family .". . . the finest oats that grow milled under highest pure food standards. Imitations cost the same. See that you get the genuine Quaker Oats. i in 3 to § minutes, 2 Kinds—at Grocers | 2 g e o et v s ) I was little there were hitching posts OF horses’ heads or “little iron ‘:oy.s All ‘down the street;and when I went for walks I clanked their ngs and made :l:\g‘nly noise. . Vo Al in 3&1 (omtainer for Your sing Table

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