Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
[ WOMAN’S PAGE. Wide Brimmed Hats; Feather Boas BY MARY PARIS. Tt ta Qoubtful that the dressmakers of Paris ever set out with a definite determination to please the Knglish. THE PINK OSTRICH NECK PIECE TIPPED WITH BLACK IS THE ONLY TOUCH OF COLOR ON THIS BLACK SATIN FROCK. Of course there are certain well known houses which cater to in- dividual English women, but these women they consider as rather ex- ceptions to the rule. Frankly, the French have very little admiration for or understanding of the taste of Eng- lish women in dress. Quite frequent! they set out to please the Americ: 150 YEARS AGO TODAY Story of the U. S. A. Howe Gets His Answer. PHILADELPHIA, July 27 Lord Howe has submitted h proposal and received his answer. offers. pardon and forgiveness to all who will confess the error of their ways and return to loyalty to the King. eBfore al others he brandishes his sword and points to the King' army and navy He gets his answer from Dr. Benjamin Franklin, who tells him that “it must give your Jordship pain to be sent so far on so hopeless a busin “I know your great motive in com ing hither s the hope of being in- strumental in reconciliation,” says Dr. t Franklin to Lord Howe, “and I believe , when you find that to be impossible, on any terms given you to propose, vou will relinquish so odious a com- mand and return to a more honorable station.” Dr. Franklin further tells Lord ¥ Howe that if England really wants a reconciliation, one way for her to begin would be to punish her gover- nors who have fomented the discord; rebuild the towns they have burned; and repair, ir as possible, the mischief already done to America. They might thus, he says, recover a great share of our regard, and per- haps, also, the greatest share of our growing commerce. He say “Directing pardons to be offered to Qur Children— By Angelo Patri Visits the Camp. | Now is the time to visit the camp | you sent vour boy and girl to live in for the Summer. Unless the chil- dren are in the camp and things are golng on at a lively pace there is not much use in visiting it. There is nothing so awful as an empty school and a camp come: close second in its graveyard atmosphere when the children are gone. The only,way to know whether yvour child is getting anything out of a Summer camp session is to be on the ground and see for yourself, just how and where he spends his time. Tt will be enlightening, too, to watch how he or she measures up to the other children. Your own child is a stranger to you often until you dis- cover him through another child. If that does not mean anything to you it means that you ought to watch your child at play with other children of his own age and experience and opportunity. If you have the opportunity to stay | to disturb that regulation. Ask no ex- | is not school. MARSHALL. y | —South Americans as well as women from our own land. But sometimes it happens that in spite of themselves the French fashion makers do please the nglish. They have done so twice this season. The wide-brimmed hat delights the English woman. Much as she pretends to scorn French clothes—she will always insic . that they are of inferior ma- terials—she. hesn't quite the nerve to adopt a fashion that was not con: ceived along the banks of the Seine. Now the English woman likes wide- brimmed hats. She fancies that they become her immensely—and perhaps they do. And this season every French milliner of note has been showing wide-brimmed hats. Another way in which the French designers have pleased their tall sisters across the channel is by bring- ing back into importance the ostrich feather neck-piece. English women have always fancied these pieces of adornment. They like to wear a long light-colored feather boa to the races. That is the English woman's idea of the most sultable costume for certain races—a frilly, fluttery, flouncy lace a wide-brimmed, floppy hat and a Juxurious feather boa. Needless to say, when the French dressmaker brought out the feather -piece she had something else in mind—not a revival of the enormous old-time boa, but a neat little collar of feathers like the one shown in the sketch. Here this collar of pink os- trich tipped with black is the only touch of color accompanying a smart black satin frock. (Copyright. 1926.) My Neighbor Says: To make an old brown leather bag look like new, first wash it with soap and water, and then give it a good rubbing with a flannel moistened in oil. Then give it at least three separate coatings of brown liquid shoe polish. fiinally apply, a thin coating of white shellac, which will provide an excellent polish. A black bag may be treated in similar fashion by using black polish or “gloss.” . To clean a clock, saturate a plece of absorbent cotton about as large as a hen's egg with kerosene oil and place it in the bottom. Close the door and let the cotton remain for three or four days, Then take it out and swing the pendulum. Un- less something is broken, the clock will go all right, as the fumes from the oil cleanse the works. ‘When parsiey s not obtain- able for garnishing, use the tips from celery or finely sliced outer leaves of brussels sprouts. When using valuable vases for table decorations, fill them with sand. This makes them stand firmly, and renders them far less liable to be to be knocked over and broken. Never sait fresh meat when frying it. Salt tends to extract the juice and at the same time harden it. the Colonies, who are the very par- ties injured, expresses, indeed, th: opinion of our ignorance, baseness, and insensibility which your unin formed and proud nation has long been pleased to entertain of us; but it can have no other effect than that of increasing our resentments. It is impossible we should think of sub- n to a government that has, the utmost wanton barbarity and cruelty, burned our defenseless towns in the midst of Winter, excited the savages to massacre our peace- ful farmers, instigated our slaves to murder their masters, and is even now bringing forelgn mercenaries to deluge our settlements with blood. These atrocious injuries have ex- tinguished every spark of affection for that parent country we once held so dear. “The well founded esteem and, per- mit me to say, affection which I shall always have for your Lordship, make it painful to me to see you en- gaged in conducting a war, the great ground of which (as described in vour letter) is ‘the necessity of pre- venting the American trade from passing into forcign channels. To me it seems that neither the obtain- ing or retaining any trade, how valuable soever, is an object for which men may jusfly spill each other’s blood.” (Copyrizht, 1026.) prescribed and it would be very wrong cuse from routine for your child. You are there to see him at work in the camp environment. Ask no questions of the children. They think they know things that are not even under- stood by them. Ask the director. If you cannot trust him he is not the person to care for your children and that is enough for you to know. You will not need to ask another question. Make sure that there is an educa- tional program for your child. Camp It is a bit of life in the open, where children are to_gather educational experience from Nature: a place where they may listen to the silence of the stars and perhaps hear God speak. A place where they may catch His whisper in the still forest and see His hand in the faint gracer- ies of a wild flower’s petal. Make sure it is like that and the uniform will not matter. (Copyright, 19:6.) " Three-Egg Cake: Cream one cupful of sugar and one. a day and a night, that will be quite long enough: you will be in & position to know about the food vour child gets; the kind of a bed he has. the sort of a day's program he follows and about what his response to the whole situation is. His letters are honest enough, but few children have the power to tell the story as it is. There is much they do not see and more that they do not understand, put which would be very plain to you i€ you were on the ground. The quality of the other children is very important to your child. Chitdren learn far more through the associa- tion with other children than they get from grownups and it behooves parents to see that what they get from their companions is good. It is much easier for children to register impressions that affect their conduct than it is for us to remove those im- pressions after they have received them. “But my camp director doesn’t want me to visit my children. He does not allow visitors on his premises at all. How can I get around that?” Any director that knows his work will welcome you on a visit that in- forms you about his camp and about his staff and himself. He knows that his success depends upon your good word and that the best way to forfeit it is to close the door in your face. But, when you go, be a good guest. Observe the rules of the camp and ask no special favors. Bring no sweets for the children. If the camp is right, the diet is carefully half a cupful of butter, add one-half a cupful of sweet milk, then two and | one-half cupfuls of flour and two tea- | spoonfuls of baking powder after they , have been sifted together three times. Add three eggs at last. Bake in lay- ers and use whipped cream sugared for a filling. This is quickly made SUB ROSA Advice From Alice. Alice was by far the “caglest.” can- niest girl in her crowd. Every one looked up to her, respected her, asked her advice on all sorts of questions. She had had a short but glorious life, they all agreed. She'd been poy- ular since she was old encugh to walk by herself. Eivery one envied her knowledge of how to gain friends—her wisdom on the subject of clothes, mun, sports, books. So it came to be rather g habit for girls in search of advice to go to Alice. If they wanted to know how to handle a difficult situation they sought her out. She told them some- thing. She never sent any one away without some definite instructions as to how to act under such and such circumstances. Alice was witty and amusing. Her replies to many of the questions asked her were couched in the most picturesque terms. She was cynical, bland, calm, cool collected. If a heart-broken maiden staggered into her presence weeping over the unfaithfulness of men, Alice told her to snap out of it, How could she win him back? Oh, by buying a lot of new clothes, flirt- ing desperately with other men, treat- ing him with absolute, open indiffer- ence. And away would go the forsaken damsel to follow the instructions of Not always with excel- , however. Somehow, al- though Alice herself was a whirling success, the girls she advised never seemed to achieve their goal. Despondent maidens asked them- selves why her excellent suggestions should fail to work for them. Never- theless, they never lost faith in her fitness for the task of guide and men- tor. \ Yet they were doing the very worst thing for themselves in faithfully heeding her lightest word. Alice wasn't really fitted to tell them what to do. Alice was too cynical, too hard, too cold to understand the problems brought to her. She hadn’t any real interest in any one but herself. The troubles and trials of her friends interested her vaguely, but didn't arouse in her any real desire to mitigate their sufferings. She infinitely preferred to be amus- ing rather than helpful. She got a great deal more fun out of sounding | really hard-boiled and thoroughly the woman of the world than she did out of giving earnest, thoughtful advice. The Alices of this world are many. | They 'seem so wise, so sure, so thor- mistress of every ' situation are moved to trust them with ets—to ask thelr counsel and to abide by what they tell us. Usually we are wrong to belleve them too wholeheartedly. The cynical point of view won't help you mend a heart-break. The advice to treat men outrageous- ly sounds well, but seldom works. Before you go for advice to the cagiest girl you know, be sure that her heart is in the right place—not ruled by a cool, calculating, thor- oughly cynical mind. (Conyright. 1926.) Mimi will be glad to answer any inquiries directed to this paper. provided a stamped. | Addrossed envelope is enclose. i HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN. This long, sunny room was origi. nally a sun parlor, but was conve:ted into a much-needed extra guest room. In the absence of guests it is also used by the family as a private sitting room and study. . One end of the sun parlor was par- titioned off to make a small but com- plete bathroom and a clothes press, The single bed placed against the long wall occupies-little space. The small table and chair before the window make a writing group and a simple dressing table at end is an appreciated feature. There are two large and comforta- ble reading chairs and well-placed lamps. This room also makes an excellent dressing room, where one may wash her hands, dab a bit of powder on her nose, and adjust her hat at the correct angle without bothering to go to her bedroom on the second floor. (Copyright. 1026.) o Molasses Sponge Cake. The following ingredients make a very appetizing cake: *One cupful of molasses, one cupful of sugar, one cupful of water or sour 1k, one egg. one tablesponful of buttér, lard, or other shortening, and one teaspoon- ful of soda. Season with a teasponful of any spice desirable. Add enough flour to make a stiff batter, and bake in a moderate oven. Scalloped Steak. Peel and slice thinly four large po- tatoes and three tomatoes, or canned tomatoes will do. Grind left-overs of cold steak to make two cupfuls. Put a layer of potatoes into a baking dish, sprinkle thickly with the ground meat, and cover with sliced’tomatoes. Dot with butter, pepper and salt. Alternates until the dish is full, sprin- kle the top with a layer of cracked crumbs, and bake until done, no and is delicious. moisture other than the tomatoes be- ing necessary. ¥ ICED "SALADA” TEA Cools like a breeze. Try it AR, " WABH The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright, 1026.) Across. 1. Large fungus. 7. Snake. . Like. . Body of water. . Honest. . Point of the compass. . Three-toed sloth. . Concerning. . Street (abbr.). . Myself. . Were in accord. . Edges. . Smooth the feathers. . Arabian name, . Act. . A State (abbr.). . Two thousand (Roman). . Note of Guido's scale. . Mother. . Mount (abbr.). . Portuguese monetary unit, Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle. EAT AND BE Dinah Day's Daily Talks on Diet The Right Food Is Fat Upholstery. One-of our sharp tongued dramatic critics wrote a most stinging account of the efforts of one of our-young and | most cavalier matinee idols. The ac- tion of th play was in Revolutionary time. The young hero was bewigged and barbed in a most gorgeous rasp- berry colored satin coat, knee breech- es, black silk hose and silver buckled shoes. The critic in describing this at- | tire said the leading man looked like an overstuffed raspberry covered dam sk chair. And alas, it is too true that | young as he is the gracious young | idol is verging into cherubic softness. | It's really too bad. For his career of dashing oldtime heroism (and he runs | to such parts) will be seriously affect- ed. It is not very convincing to see a | fat hero snatch his sword from h scabbard and waddle across the stage at the villain. Besides the question of looks, exces- sive weight is a menace to heaith. It should be a cause for alarm. All stout people are potential diabetic: High blood pressure, kidney and hea troubles accompany overweight. Ever body needs a sufficient padding of | flesh, but no one should go around | with so much weight that he 100ks up- holstered. Healthy people of normal weight do not need to reduce. But when fat begins to accumulate in mnoticeable rolls the danger signal is out. The proper thing is so to live that fat will not steal on gradually. It is not necessary to starve. Kat wisely. Choose satisfying and nu- tritious but mnot fat-forming foods. There is a long list of nonfattening foods. Starch piles up fat. Boiled potatoes and white bread are pure starch. But a potato baked in its skin and whole wheat are mineral laden. The mineral content of these food assists in burning or completely using up the starch content. Starch which is properly burned in the body is first turned into sugar then into corresponding acids and gasses and is then carried off by the kidneys and lungs. Starch which is not burned is turned into sugar and then into fat. That is why an occasional baked pota- to is allowed & person wishing to re- duce and that is why one or two thin slices of whole wheat bread are al- lowed. Since all the minerals are in the skim milk, the fat being in, the cream, the overweight can use skim milk either in ‘cream” soup or to drink. Breakfast or lunch of skim- milk and fruit without sugar is ex- ceptionally good. This affords suf- ficlent nourishment, and from these mineral laden foods the blood. will gradually become alkaline—as it . Town of the Azores. ' . Lend. Noose. . Sorrow. . Exclamation. French pronoun. . Man's nickname. . Sun god. . Goddess of discord . Mountain lake. Exist. Crashed into. . Large, barrel. Down. . Killing without malice. . Ourselves. 3. Horsepower (abbr.). . Flower. . . Unit. Hypothetical f Hawalian lava. . Minor. ce. 9. Prevailed. . Shot. . Deputy. . Lean. . Manuscript (abbr.). . Unit of square measure. . Printer’s measure. Mixed type. Italian river. Ventured. Repast. Specks. . Mother. . Proposed international language. 2. Hectoliter (abbr.). 3. Initials of a President. . Behold. 6. Gentle breeze. ‘Armed conflicts. . Tatter. . 1 am. . Toward. - | 5. New England State (abbr.). 5. College degree (abbr.). HEALTHY the Best Medicine should be. As the blood becomes alka- line it will regain the power to burn the sugars and starches, Health s maintained by normal weight. Fat people are running into trouble. Overindulgence in fat-mak- ing foods will bring disease. Sensible | restriction of fattening foods does not mean starvation. It means good health. SUMMERTIME BY D. C. PEATTIF. Hollyhocks. that hollyhocks are the “Holy Mallows" which Crusaders brought from a to Western Eu- rope. Certainly is a land of mallows. And certainly Europe once knew not the gay holloyhocks of our gardeh. Though the popularity of holly- hocks may now be somewhat adapted, because of discouragements that the hollyhock disease has caused—a nas little fungus named Puccinia—holl; hocks will ever remain old garden favorites. For size of flowers, for | lofty stature, for mere gayety and showiness, they surpass anythng. Sunflowers may be bigger, but cer- tainly not as pretty. The hollyhock, so big in all its parts, is a perfect example of the structure of the flower of the mallow family, one of the largest and most important of all plant gpoups, be- cause it contains so many garden flowers, as well as cotton, ochra and others. Besides the green cup of the calyx, there is an outer whorl. of lit- tle leaf-like bracts. And in addition to the regular, pretty petals, there is a curjous central structure, the stamens united into a ring or tube around the pistils. Once seen in the hollyhock, this curious structure will never be forgotten or mistaken. No other plant family outside the tropics is remotely like it. Hollyhocks invite a golden flood of bees by the freedom with which nectar flows in those brilliant petal cups. First the anthers mature, hanging out showers of pollen to dust on the bees; then come the pistils, pushing up to catch the pollen from some younger flower. Thus nicely They say hock. o timed is the blooming of the holly- | A tortoise nearly a foot long was found on the links of the Herne Bay Golf Club of England recently. Hi START s you right for the day—Chdse & Sanborn’s . Seal Brand ' Coffe e for breakfast. Chase&Sanborn's | - | MSEspNBOF Seal Brand SEAL BRAND COFFEE Tea is of the same high quality LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Thie afternoon I went out and I dident see eny of the fellows, and I went around the corner and Shorty Judge was sitting on the cerbstone next to the fire plug, me saying, Wats you doing? Jest waiting for something to hap- pin, Shorty sed. Me sitting alongside of him and starting to wait with him, saying, G wizz its certeny slow this afternoon, if enything happins this afternoon it will be a serprise to me. I was sitting in this very place last Sattiday and a patrol waggon went pass with 2 prissners in it with hand- cuffs on, Shorty sed. Sattiday is diffrent, more things are 1{pel to happin on Sattiday, I sed. 'Well wats a use trying to discour- age a guy? Shorty sed. Im not, T jest dont want you to feel too dissappointed, thats all, I sed, and he sed, Well 1 jest bet you eny amount of money something will hap- pin if we sit heer long enuff. All rite, how mutch do you wunt to bet? I sed. - & . A cent, Shorty sed, and I sed, All rite, I bet you. And we kepp on sit- ting there and nuthing dident habpin, and all of a suddin Shorty sed, There, thats somtehing. ‘Wat, T dont see enything, I sed, and he sed, They jest flew pass, I cant help it if you dont keep your eyes open, you owe me a cent. I do like fun, bees dont chase spar- rows in the ferst place, and in the 2nd place even if they did I wouldent call that enything axually happening to pay a cent for, I sed, and he sed, All rite, then the bets off. All rite, let it be off, wat do I care?” I sed. Wich jest then 2 dogs belong- ing to 2 ladys started to fite like eny- thing, me injoying it but Shorty ony partly injoying on account of jest having called the bet off and losing a chdance to win a cent. 5 MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. Collecting Pretty Stomes. One mother says: My 9-year-old son never tires of the fascination of collecting lovely or odd little stones. Last Summer, realizing that the number of these would somehow have to be limited, yet not wishing to discourage him with his hobby, I told him he might save only the nicest ones and make me a pair of beautiful flower urns to plade at either end of the stone steps in front of the house. He collected them in a box in the cellar, and last Winter he worked on the urns, mixing his own cement in an old tin pan, and putting on first a small amount of cement and then a stone. They are really lovely. (Copyright. 1926.) HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWTON. . The Bride's Wreath. The glery in our wedding costume for the prospective bride, the univer- sal sentiment that makes every girl want to be a “real bride” once, though almost all men avould rather spend a day in hades than attend their own wedding, lies not in the pomp and show of ceremony, not in the gown of virgin white, nor yet in the shimmer- ing train. Nor is it in the veil, one moment kind to maiden blushes, the next lifted to reveal the glowing fea- tures of the new-made wife. It is in the wreath, her blossom crown, that the bride finds glory, though of but an hour or a day, that lights with hope the dream days that precede it and the after years with reminiscent joy. For was she not a queen, there crowned beside her king to ascend the altar of his heart? Little does the bride realize the literal truth of this sentiment. Ac- cording to its significance from its ancient origin, she is really being crowned, for the wreath is the Chris- tian survival of the gilt coronets with which the ancient Hebrews crowned their brides. . Among the Russians and certain Christian denominations of northern Teutonic countries the old practice of crowning their daughters during the wedding is still literally adhered to. (Copyright, 1926.) . FREE Demonstration Making the Most of Your Looks BY DOROTHY_ STOTE. DR. S. Answered by Questions_from readers are answered dally by Dr. 'S, Parkes Cadman. president of ‘the Federal Council of Churches of Ci America. Dr. Cadman seeks to quiries that appear to the trends of thought which he reccives resentative of in many letters Houston, Tex. I have lost my hushand and my eldest son, a splendid boy just in his twenties. Both died within a year of each other. What can I do to hold on and make life worth while? It seems very dark and dreary to me just now. Answer—Surely all who love you and whom you love are not taken. I infer that there are left behind others who are near to you-—children, relatives, friends, whose tender mini: tries can shed light on vour darkness. The rudest winds that shake the soul are tempered by these intimate asso- ciations. Grief, not less than joy, can be shared and {ts burdens mutually borne. Beware of its selfishness. Do not neglect the living for the sake of the dead nor reject the outstretched hands that would raise you from the dust. dead, but of the living. He is your trustee for husband and son and they are in His guardian care. Believe thi: act on the belief and you shall find a Bethel in your tragedy. Boston, Mass. Did not Lincoln advocate the doc- trine of the Seventh-Day Adventists? Answer—Not to my knowledge, and T have read every life of Lincoln I could secure. Moreover, Rev. Dr. Willlam E. Barton, who knows as much about him as any Mving_ au- thority, assures me he has found no trace of Lincoln's support of these doctrines. He did rebuke the prejudice of some Christians against those Jews who pre- ferred their Sabbath to the Lord's da In this connection you may be inte ested in a little book by Isaae Markens on “Abraham Lincoln and the Jews It is barely possible that he may also have mentioned other sects, such as the Adventists, who had equal rights to their own day of rest and worship, but I recall no expression of his own preference for the seventh as against the first day of the week. Cleveland, Ohio. Not long ago I went to see a friend tomorrow b Thc.won-y that threatens today, T0DAY And Every Day This Week SO many housewives have told us that once they adopted.electric cookery every other Eleetric method became a makeshift—we believe more will want to learn all about it at this Cookery Demonstration Only electrically can you cook right at your . table. Heat does not broadcast from electric heat- ing units—all of it is confined to a small area, around the food being cooked only. Here is an opportunity to investigate a more economical method of cookery which will save you much time and energy. Visit here today. SPECIAL THIS WEEK Thermax Electric Percolators *g's" SALE ONLY Made by Landers, Frary & Clark The Potomac Electric Appliance Co. § ' This Com 14th and }(I:fllg“. N.W. y Stands Behind Every Appliance It Sells Main Ten Thousand Moreover, God is not the God of the | Dear Ann, The smart slipper with its narrow contrasting dividing band is distinctly | meant for one kind of foot, and dis- j, tinetly unfriendly toward another. On a short, broad foot the interference of this band increases the breadth and suggests stubbiness, and should, there- _ fore, not be worn. 4 Yours for avolding breadth. LETITIA (Copyright. 1026.) QUESTIONS PARKES CADMA | In Kentucky. On arriving at the | house (which was my first visit) I was almost speechless with astonishment | because 1 felt T had seen the places | before. T knew T had not and_the experience worrfed me all night. How do_you explain it? Answer—There are several expla: tions offered Some would s the place before because it we travel in our slee d: said by o leave the physical bod and go on a journey. This theo: has too many difficuities to make acceptable. Other psychologists would argue that you had seen the place beforey’ {in a photograph now forgotten. > Still others have declared that thes mind “skids” for a moment—you}’ really see the thing twice, once un-g. consciously, then consciously. The second time gives you the impression fous sight of the object. ¢ own opinion is that the true ¢ ion must be sought in the. mind's processes, and I favor the for- - | gotten photograph theory: or it may | have been the memory of a picture.s of a house similar to the one you, saw. Forgotten things return with™ a forcefulness that is often mislead ing. Anyhow, there is nothing you: need worry about. Poets have had . the same’ experience. You recall’ Rosetti's lines: I have bheen here before. But when or how I cannot tel! = 1, however, to the whole nd this would lead us into reincarnation. ) Oklahoma City, Okla. 1** . _What place is the Young Men's Christian Association really filling in. the community today? Answer—Its chief purpose is to build serviceable character in boys.”, adolescents and men upon an avow- edly Christign basis. - It is not ‘primarity an institution for ~ welfare work, charity or reform, nor* does it have specific accommodations®’ for abnormals or subnormals. It supplies the training in physical, mental, moral, social and religious life " which promotes personal and general ® development. training is im- | parted both by formal and informal methods, the latter reproducing, so’ | far as possible, the right sort of home atmosphere. ' Its task begins with the acknowl-: edgment that the home is the best educational center. The church fol- lows as the complement of the home. The school, from grammar grades to | the college or university, is regarded | as the outer circle of the three in | educational influence. | _Upon this theory the work of the | Young Men’s Christian_ Association is | being done at a time when some mod | ern social developments have deeply disturbed the older American trac tions. Only 11 per ent of our children complete their studies in the public schools and but 2 per cent go to col lege. The Young Men's Christian As- sociation and Young Women's Chri | tian Association are keeping the ed b cational pass for the remainder to the ™ utmost of their resources and to the best of their ability. (Copyright. 1026.) “Tintex dyes sports- wear so colorfully!” OW the sun—and laundering, too —do fadedelicate colors! How ez~ i i.:hnzw fir;:ery_!r But mn E:y new things. For Tintex you true economy by restosing, the colorful eauty of your entire w:im Wich | thelightand medium shades you simpty “tintas you tinse,” in either hot or col water. For the newest colors, see the Tintex Color Card. ‘Biue Box — for lace-trimmed silks (tints the silk — lace remains white). Box—for tinting and dyeing all e il comant mied gocia. 15¢ at drug and dept. stores ETIN‘TS AS YOU RINSE Tints & Dyes Anything gny Coloy