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WOMAN’S Friendship in the Family Circle B\: l;;LE BARON WALKER. Friendship signifies a bond between | other. ~ She “ha W } ngs on every word persons that may be neither of family | uttered by her idol. She is miserable nor of Kinship, but of congeniality. | away from her. There is a touch of o high is it esteemed that it is often | hero worship about the relatioriship that shuts out friendship, for that is a reciprocal matter. While the per- son idealized cannot avoid feeling gomewhat flattered by being thought | £0°perfect, still she usually is actually | Advises Returning [Boredom With) Interest How to Get Rid of Bores ,Dorothysz No One Need Be a Martyr If Noble Art of Self- Defense Is Developed—Get Started First and Talk Longe! THE FLOWER OF FRI IS WORTH CULTIVATI) put above all others, as, for instance, when it is said that.a mother and hild, a father and daughter are reat friends.” The tle of blood is sdded a_companionable quality which draws them together in mutual affec- tion and devotion. Friends delight in belng with one another, either because thev see things from the same viewpoint, or because one nature supplements the other. Each must draw out the best qualities in the other or true friend- ship docs not exist. Sometimes two persons appear 1o be great friends and they certainly are together con- stantly, but one dominates the other and is so insistent on being with the less decided character that the latter is carvied away with the power of the stronger personality. The weaker person is merely a satellite of the other, not a genuine friend. A mild hypnotic influence is being exerted, and this is contrary to genuine friend- ship. Or again, one person idealizes an- bored by its insistence. she could free herself from the other occasionally without wounding her feelings. - But this is difficult. If the other knows she is enjoying some one else without. her reproaches follow. Jealousy enters into such a friendship .and rob it of its beauty. Friendship in Families. Families in which the members are friends know the true happiness of home life as no others can. Jach things coming to others. Each one makes the other appear to best ad- vantage. The members are congenial without each person necessarily being engrossed in the same subject. They are quick to note opportunities for others. They have due respect for one another's opinions while not being overpowered in their own notion: They are, in short, as nearly an idea gr?‘up of persons as it is possible to nd. One of the greatest helps in acqu ing the power of friendship is to see the best in others. Every one can learn to do this, for it is a matter of the practice of kind thinking. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Ma bawt some apples off of a huck ster thig afternoon and my cuzzin Artie was around. and I sed, Hay ma, can me and Artie have a apple? You can have one between you, thats as mutch as you awt to have | # neer dinnir time, ma sed. | And she gave us one, me saying to | Artie. How are we going to divide it Wat do you say we take terns taking bites? Artie sed, and ma sed, O my goodniss no, that sounds too mutch like a possible argewment. 111 cut it for you, she sed. ‘Wich she did, cutting it in half, and T sed, Well holey smokes, ma, one half is bigger than the other one. Then its your place as a gentleman and a host to take the smaller half and offer vour guest the bigger half, ma sed. Well G wizz, ma, why aint it his place as a gentleman and a guest to take the smallest? I sed. Offer them to him and let him take his choice, thats the customery way, ma sed, and Artie sed, No, Ill offer them to him. Wich he did, saving, Heer, and re- member your duty as a gentleman and a host. uthing doing, you, I sed. O for goodniss sakes Il cut a slice off the big half and make them even or L wont get eny peace the whole afternoon, ma sed. ‘Wich she did, eating the exter slice herself. Il offer them to 150 YEARS AGO' TODAY Story of the U. BY JONATHAN Boston Has New Tea Party. BOSTON, September 10, 1776.—Less than three vears ago tea was s0 un- popular in Boston that the people, rather than let British ships land it on their wharves, threw it into the harbor. But &l that is changed now, since tea can be had, untaxed by the King, and Boston has had another tea party of a most sociable nature. ‘The persons concerned are none other than the wives of those stalwart pa- triots, Mr. Samuel Adams and Mr. John Adams., second cousins, now members of Congress in Philadelphia. Mrs. Samuel was the hostess and Mrs. John was the guest. Quite as it should indeed, especially as Mrs. Tohn was just recovering from inocu- lation for smallpox and a mild stimu- lant was most timely. But it hap- pened to be Mrs. John's tea that her hostess poured for her, and the party might eusily have become grounds for separation “between the two Adams families, if not between one or both of the 'Adams couples. John hought the tea and asked a Mrs. Yard to ask a Mr. Gerry to take it to Mrs. John, but he wa$ uneasy BEDTIME STORIES Foolish Swimmer. Wha will insist on gotng blindly Doth tempt a fate that's far from ki . Old Mother Nature. Reddy Fox and Jimmy Skunk were still staring down into that little pool of black water when Graywing the ppened along. ell, what are 3 fellows interested in?" called Graywing “In 1t Fox. *T rolled a stone into that little pool and the water turned all black 1 never have seen anything like it until now. 1 i like Know e all that kness cy iraywing the Gull chuckiec so t black water.” replied Reddy Hiaov CTHAY BACK SXCLATMED. IS SWIMMING fellows follow me along down the h ," sald he. “There’s some- thing down there 1 want you to see: And off he flew. g Reddy and Jimmy took their time about following, but they did follow. They caught up with Graywing at a long, ehallow inlet of water. It had a sandy bottom. low over there”” inquired Graywing. Reddy and mmy looked. There was ansiher one of those queer thin, which they had seen in the litue pool hefore the 1 ned hi Reddy looked up «qu vou know”" he der wing had not been around when the diecovered that queer thing up in the lttle pool. i Graywing chuckled. but didn Fwer the question. Inste: them o yawh jvhat-ihey 1) “Can you see that fel- | S. A. A. RAWSON, Jr. about the safe delivery of the deli- cacy, for he wrote to Mrs. John about Mr. Gerry. ‘But he is an old bachelor, and, what is worse, a politiclan, and what is worse still, a kind of soldier; so that I suppose he will have so much curiosity to see armies and fortifica- tions and assemblies that you will lose many a fine breakfast at a time when you want them most.” Mrs. John waited in vain for her great treat. But soon Mrs. Samuel asked her to have some especially fine |tea at her house. {ond Boston tea party, followed by a letteg from John to his Abigail | saying that Mr. Gerry had reported that he had delivered the tea safely but “to Mr. Samuel Adams' lad; Abigail writes to her John the closing chapter, as follows: The herbs you mention T never re- ceived. " I was upon a visit to Mrs. Samuel. Adams about a week after Mr. Gerry returned, when she enter- tained me with el fine dish green tea. The scarcity of the arti made me ask her where she. got it. She replied that her sweetheart sent it to her by Mr. Gerry 8Y THORNTON W. BURGESS queer thing. So they sat down to watch. Presently this queer thing be- gan to move. Meanwhile Reddy had discovered that it had two big eyes. They were round and staring, and gave him a creepy feeling, for they | had no lids. And there was a mouth, which had a regular beak and looked 'as if it could hite most uncomfort- J@bly. From around this beak stretch- |ed out 10 arms, or feelers. 2 of which | yere longer than the others. How {any one told him that really & Kind of feet. hear m_excl: ning out of & head” The idea! The very idea!” Yet, this really was the case As Reddy and Jimmy watched, this queer creature’ ¢ r. It was swinmmir along very . denly it begin 1o go fast. Those long arms iled out behind it. and it {dawned on Reddy that it was going tail fivs *Look ]Th Jan't vou just ‘eet growing slow he exclaimed. “3 t thing is swimming backwar ‘Well. why not?” inquired Gra; | wing. ““If a lobster can swim back- | ward? Personally, I don’t think much {of it myself. 1 want to see where I'm going. This fellow can go for- ward if he wants to, but it seems to | be easier for him to go backward, and {so he does. I've seen ever and ever | 0 many of them dead on the beach, | because the silly things ran ashore I not knowing where they were going. Then they didn't know how to get back into the water again. “1 don't see how he swin v Skunk aywing chu said kled. L don'y said he. “He dvesn’t swim regular fish. He swims by tu i'water in and driving it out “again {with such force that it shoots him { through the water. Oid Mother | ture has provided him with what |is called a “siphon™ just for this pur- pose. That fellow looked to me as if he were hunery. If we watch him, person rejoices in the thought of good | Then came the sec- | of | | surprised Reddy would have been had | these were | Sud- | She wishes | | I | .“I found a dead black cat an’ put it | under the back seat to see if it would keep off punctures, but it was too | dead an’ pa found it.” What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. Tomorrow's planetary aspects are none too favorable and are not of such a character as to inspire confi- dence or engender much optimism. The influences will be more patent so | far as disposition and temperament are concerned than work attempted or accomplished. \Where, however, an {optimistic temperament is lacking and | courage is not present, not much suc- cess can be prophesied for any under- | taking. It would therefore be advis {able to concentrate as much as poss | ble on the work that has to be done {and to leave all greater enterprise for | some time when the omens are more | encouraging. | Children born tomorrow do mot | promise in their early days to reveal much either of good health or of pul- chritude. They will be more or less of a weakling nature, and more than ordinary care must be given to their i ion, while plenty of fresh air Once this ticklish period . will show wiriness which will enaible them successfully to bridge all further physical and | they will be self-reliunt and resolute. They will possess | ality in a | marked and in an attractive degree, {and will not only charm but will at- tract. This gift, added to their inher- ent ability, will insure for them an exceptional degree of success. 1f tomorrow is your birthday anni- versary, your mind is a very keen one. You possess very clear vision, have sound and reliable judgment, and | your actions are always ruled by hon- intentions. You are very thorough and competent in your work, and the only criticism that can be applied to you in this respect is that you some- | times minimize important ‘things in jorder to devote your time and atten- tion to details. You have very little confidence in the efforts of others, and are firmly convinced that if you want hing done well vou must do it vourself. You are quite resourceful and versatile and show a great amount of determination in the execution of | your plans. " You will be an indulgent parent, too { much so, possibly, for the sake of chil- dren, but you will certainly inspire affection, and your friends, who are legion, will be stanch and sincere. Well known persons born on that date are: James Brown, soldler, Sena- tor and judge; Sterling Price, soldier and ex-Governor of Missourl; James Pollock, ex-Governor of Pennsylvania Henry C. Bowen, merchant and edi tor, and William S. Macy, artist. HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN. | i An unusual stairway, this, and one | which belongs essentially to the Medi- terranan types of houses—Itallan or Spanish. The walls are pearl-gray and the capping is of stone In a darker { shade.« The doors and window sashes of this hallway are brilliant vermil- fon and the door grills are black iron. Orange-stained leather upholsters the Italian chairs and red and orange tints flame in all the flower pots and bits of pottery which give the stair- way its unusual decoration. The choice of the antique globe is very fortunate to complete this setting | and the large model of a Spanish gal- leon which is silhouetted against the hallway’s one great diamond-paned window joins with it in suggesting ad- venture on far seas and in strange lands. | ; Clues to Character BY J. 0. ABERNETHY. ° The Hermit's Face. Persons who have the faculty | friendship well developed are ily sociable and hospitable. They ht to keep their “latch strings out’” At all times, not only to intimate friends, but to acquaintances and triends of theirs, because they really enjoy it. Without the faculty of friendship | all men would be hermits, and isola- | tion, instead of assoglation, would be | the rule. In building up a friendship, {one should estimate it as so much | capital invested in one of the most substantial things of life, and it should never Le severed except for a good cause. Vunity bestows sons of supposed rank i or wealth, bui there action an ulterior motive. You can guish the natural. hos- - individual the upper lip, particu third of the mouth. h, you will fin ot atur- s atiention on per- nd distinction, is behind this pitable, 1 attention at the oute this faculty is h under membrane section of the near the closure of the mouth will be thick, and inclined to turn up. ‘Hermits and misers exhibit by their perhaps we shall see him catch 4 | faces, as well as their habits, all lack meal.” (Copsright, 1926.) Orange Omelette. ree egg: 1WO orange ‘ablespoon margarin, two and half tablespoons nge juice, blespoons powdered sugar. spoon lemon juice. tew grains *the whites (rom the it the volks well with salt pepper and orange juice. ~tiffiy beaten exg whites a hot omelette pan W one- two salt buttered Pour in the egg and fold in a pertion | of the orange slices sprinkled with Remove the foided | omelette to & serving platter and ar- | he told | range a border of the remaining slices | | owdered sugar. oL orangey one-half R8s . pure imported Fold in the Have ready of sympathy and understanding for their fellow beings. They have no desire to mix and mingle in society. A they present a shriveled appearance, with long, . pale and thin, ashen-colored 1i one tea- Guaranteed POMPEIAN OLIVE OIL *Seld Everywhere” L] GJTOR many years,” sald a woman to me recently, “I have heen that most * pitiably defenseless creature in soclety, an old maid. Everywher went my role was that of the star listener, and when 1 was out in cempa! the best thing I did was holding my tongue, for I have neither husband nor children to talk about. I live in a hotel, so the servant question is barred to me, and this made me the predestined victim of every female bore with whom I came in contact. “All that T could do when I foregathered with my sex was to sit help- lessly by in meek silence, enduring grinding torments, while married women discoursed about their troubles with their husbands and told me what marvels their children were, and monologued about the inperfections of hired girls. “But T am a conversational easy-mark no longer. I endure this dumb agony no more, for I have worked out a line of self-defense that not only enabies me to hold my own in any talkfest, but to deal a solar-plexus blow that will put any lady to sleep as soon as she begins to get tiresome discussing her favorite topic. “For instance, I used to lend my ears until sometimes I feared I would never get them back at all to women who complained to me about how their husbands didn’t understand them, or how unreasonable their husbands were in not letting them go to Europe or buy a new car, or What not. A dreary proceeding, belleve me! For nothing is more wearying than listening to the tale of other people’'s troubles. But do I waste a couple of good hours now listening to the woes of wives who are having a perfectly gorgeous time visualizing themselves as martyrs? I do not. “I have concocted a romantic love story aboyt myself. It is gory with broken hearts and drips with tears, and as soon as a woman commences telling me about her troubles with her husband I, knock her cold with my blighted life, and that shuts her up as tight as a clam. Nobody is going to listen to a moth-eaten love story if he or she can help it, and so women steer clear of topics that are likely to lead me to confide my personal reminiscences to them. & . G 66QO that's that.. And I have silenced the mothers of the infant phenom- enons by going after them with heavier artillery than they possess. I study the funny columns of the newspapers and memorize the alleged bon mots of imaginary babes and sucklings. Then whenever the proud mamma relates to me the cute thing her little Sally said I blaze away with a fusillade of anecdotes culled from the juvenile wit of the comic strips. “Nobody wants to know about the clever things that other people’s children dld. Especially does this get on their nerves when it makes their own seem candidates for the feeble-minded institution, so invariably I have found that after one such attack the average mother flees from the scene. “In aggravated cases where little Sally or little Tommy recites or plays upon the plano I have sometimes found it necessary to retaliate by bringing in a dog and having him go through his tricks, or introducing a parrot that after much coaxing can be induced to say ‘Polly wants a crackes.” For the only people in the world who are greater bores than those who show off their children are those who show off their pets. “For the woman with the servant conversational complex I have found nothing so effective as an endless disquisition on the faults and defects of the hotels and boarding houses in which I have lived. Of course, to retaliate with this line of repartee is equivalent to knocking down the listener with a stuffed club, but desperate situations require desperate measures, and the provocation renders it admissible. “For the new rich woman who brags about her recently acquired posses- sions, and who reduces you to tears by lugging her butler and her personal mald and her four cars and her town house into the conversatipn, 1 have found an absolute deflater that T guarantee never to fail. /It is to ask her for a large subscription to my pet chavity. “The reason why people talk about themselves so much is because talk is 50 cheap, and the minute yau make them pay for it they begin to economize on {t. “0 the other hand, 1 have found that the best way to gzet vid of an acquaintance who comes to weep on my breast and tell me her troubles is to lend her a little money. The chances are that she will never darken my door again for fear of 1y asking her for it. o v s e “I have freed myself from lachrymose pests for as little as a tive or ten dollar bill. “The only way to deal with women who are afflicted with the cause mania and who back you up against a wall and talk you blind about the thing they are reforming is to beat them to it. Get started on your own cause first, and talk louder and more vehemently about it. “It is possible to get such a running start on a story that nobody dare break into {t, but you have to be up and doing and get there first. Otherwise you are lost. ' “As for radio fans who make and Bird Center and Rabbit Track, there is nothing you can do except to be taken violently ill when you are invited to spend an evening in their houses. Fortunately, however, few women are mechanical, and most of them get their sets jammed and decide, after all, that it would be better to play bridge. “Of course, I know that T bore other people just as much as they bore me, but I have the consolation of not being the lone martyr I was before 1 developed the noble art of self-defense. After all, it is true that misery loves company.” . DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. 1926.) BY WILLIAM BRADY, D. to breathing from thickening or hyper- Tonsils and Adenoids. Certain common causes of nasal ob- struction (mouth breathing) in chil- dren often overlooked when children are operated upon for “gplarged ton- sils and adenoids” are nasal polyps, enlarged or thickened turbinate «or spongy bodles in the nose (laymen speak of excision of portions of these turbinate bodies as having “hones” re- moved), sinus infection, and sometimes foreign body lodged in the nasal pass- age. In certain busy “clinics” and in the offices of certain born nose and throat speclalists the operation comes first; the proper examination of the patient is left until later if the patient fails to derive the anticipated benefit from the hasty surgery, People who simply must have a ‘“specialist” for everything little reck the sins of omis- sion which are comwmitted by these same pet, specialists. People who im- agine a physiclan is & better trained or better educated or more skilled physician because he purports to be a specialist need a guardian to watch over them. 5 It is a shocking fact, at least T find it so, that the wholesale operator in his clinic sometimes has his first sight ient after the patient is anesthetized for the operation. This might be perfectly proper and right. if the diagnosis of the enlarged tonsils or the enlarged adenoids had been | made by a qualified physician, Tt is not quite so shocking. perhaps, though deplorable enough, that nurses employed in communitied where medi- cal inspection is in Vogue are encour- aged to attempt the diagnosis of “‘ade- noids,” and in some instances nurses actually send parents motices that children have “adenoids” and should be operated upon. Even the trained physician fs not warranted in making a diagnosis of adenoldyenlargement or of obstruction has either felt the adenoid enlarge- ment with his finger or seen it with his eye. It is the veriest guesswork, and most frequently a mistake, to de- duce from a blank or dull expression or from obvious mouth breathing that a child has denoi It is unfair to a child to jump to any conclusion as to the nature of an apparent nasal obstruction or the cause of mouth breathing without a proper and care: ful_examination of the throat cavity and the nasal cavities having been made, This is strictly a physician's work. (Copyright. 1826 1 Mot = Ginger Bread. One cup molasses, two cups flour, two teaspoons ginger, one-half cup sour milk, one egg, one-third cup margarin, one and three-fourths tea- spoons soda, one-half teaspoon salt. Mix the margarin and molasses and bring to the boiling point. After taking from the fire add the soda and beat well. AQd the combined milk amd beaten egg and lastly the sifted and combined and resifted dry ma- terial. Bake In a small buttered tin filled two-thirds full. Serve this new relish that makes the whole meal laste hetter/ PIN MONEY PICALILL ou listen while they tune in on Oshkosh | trophy of the adenoid body until he | Down East . . . out West «..South .. where, Chase & San- born’s Seal Brand Coffee is a house- hold word through- out America. Chase&Sanborn's SEAL BRAND COFFEE Seal Brand Tea is of the same bigh quality SUB ROSA BY MIMI The Outsider. Not all the wall flowers in the world are adorning the wall just be cause they lack the beauty and charm possessed by other girls. There are many mournful maidens lined up against the shelf through a curious mischance. : It doesn't happen very oftemsn Us- ually, the unpopular girls got that way because they missed something necessary for popularity. However, once every so often a case comes to hand which , makes one wonder if there is any 'justice Take a little girl like Molly, living in a nice suburb, growing up with several boys and girls her own age, dreaming of ‘a glorious future, gay with parties and dances. As she approached the age where it would be proper for her to sally forth into the social world, she had a few vague pangs of alarm, She looked around with a feeling of depression to discover that, of her crowd, almost every girl had some special boy to depend on—some old faithful who would always be on hand to act as escort. Somehow, although Molly was well liked, thoroughly agreeable, attrac- tive und smart, she'd lost out. No particular man liked her. No well trained Romeo was always at her beck and call, waiting to sce that she alvllys had an invitation to dances and parties. She was an outsider in her own home town. The other girls went out with, their schoolday friends, and met other men who in turn invited them out. Molly, with no one to launch her, so to speak, hadn’t the slightest op- portunity for meeting and attracting new men. And she was too proud to ask her friends to help her out. She sat at home, wishing some one of the old crowd would just give her a chance, 80 that she could get out, too. There wasn't a thing in the world wrong with her. 'There wasnt one of her frign any more attractive than she—ysat, by bad luck, she'd lost her proper chance. Now there are quite a few Mollys in the world—all of them nice kids, who, if they moved away from their present homes, probably would have the time of their lives in some other locality. Yet they're peglected and lonely in their own home towns, with their friends all about them. Those Mollys of the world must learn to swallow their pride and ask their friends for assistancs They must admit frankly that ‘they want good times and that they need some sort of golden opportunity be- fore they can hope for success. Unless one's friends are thoroughly selfish and dull, they'll help the un- fortunate out. The girl who finds herself an out- sider, through no fault of her own, shouldn’t wrap herself up in her pride and refuse to ask for help. Just one intraductiongo a new man might change the wholé course of her existence, make the home-town boys sit up, and change her status from that of an outsider to an insider. (Copyright. 1926.) Send for Mimi's Fashion Hints inclose self-addressed, stamped envelobe MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. Plegse Geography Sense. One mother s It is surprising how many children are completely lacking in “geography sense. To develop this at an age when regular maps were quite be- yond her comprehension, 1 helped my little girl make a chart of her own room, the proportions and placement of windows, doors and furniture. A little later she took pleasure.in meas: | uring and drawing a “map’” of the whole house. It was but a step l’l'uln] that to making a diagram of our | street with the various houses, and | she soon learned the use and im portance of printed maps. Welsh Rarebit. Put into a saucepan one-half a cup- ful of sweet milk and set over the fire When hot, add two cupfuls of grated rich cheese and stir until it melts. Add «quickly one teaspoonful of made mus tard, one-half a teaspoonful of salt. one-fourth _teaspoonful of paprika or a bit of red pepper, and two egge well beaten. * Stir until it begins to thicken, pour over the toast, and serve at once. North every- FEATURES Making the Most of Your Looks BY DOROTHY STOTE. Dear An Here is a tall woman who knew what she was doing! She selected stripes for a sport dress, and just look how she used them to break up her tallness. Of course, if she had let those stripes run at will up and down her whole figure she would have taken on inches of apparent helght. She overlooked just one thing. and I'll tell you about that tomorrow Yours for thinking before doing. LETITIA. . (Copyright, 1926.) " BEAUTY CHATS stouter than other girls at that as: but th: does not matter as yvou growing and changing and will co tinue to do so for a number of veur Annette—Use a buffer or otherwis improve the circulation under you nails and they will I the white look that appears in he i BY EDNA KENT FORBES + Leg Development. Exercise, and only exercise. will de- velop the lower part of the body. you have flabby legs, and ¥ shaped hips, or if you are bulky and fat all over, the same advice applies— exercise until you have strengthened the weak muscles, or reduced the un- | provement you notice after you i necessary flesh. merse your hands in warm water for Dancing 1s probably one of the best |a time is just due to the circulatior exercises, if not the very best, for leg | from the heat. development. You never saw a pro- fessional dancer with ugly legs! The mere act of dancing, with the whole welght of the body on the toes and the balls of the feet, brings iuto play various sets of muscles down the backs of the legs, which ordinarily are not used to such an extent. ! Fancy dancing is several time valuable as a developing exercise than ballroom dancing. so if you can join | a dancing class, do so. You will get a quarter or a half hour of general gymnastic exercises first, to “limber up” stiff muscles, and then training in folk dancing or fancy dancing which will make you more elast more graceful, and which will keep your figure slim and youns. j If you can't get any dancing at all, walk up ‘on the toes of your feet as high as you can get, for 15 to 80 minutes every day. Walk around your room that way while you are dressing; gnd at odd times during the day, walk%r run about the house on | tiptoe. It is surprising how much | good this will do you. It may seem | silly, but it will develop your legs, it will* strengthen them and it won't; take’ any extra time, which is a consideration for the busy woman. Traveling post offices in Russig are being replaced by foot and mounted 5000 ina Tea Cu | OWN YOLR OWN TE ROOM _AND_EAR INCOME flers wom ard a vear In fession ta roon of your own and profits or manage one al ready ko Onportunities cverywhers for tea rooms, coffes shops, motor v Stecessful ted rooms started on s little s S5O canital Ve teach you and put sou in touch with big opportunities. The Lewis Tea Roum Insiltate receives daily mana a pagers table dirpeto oy You with the Course. A enee uime ueation 15 Open # tion is sug more earn « del bureau se student A Friend—At 18 years with a height TRAING of five feet. u are normal weight at 112 pounds. You are probably e Newliles in Advance Exact reprodae- tions of Classic London and Paris fashions which the smart world so enthusi- "-""W”yh follows —now being dis- played here at the astonishingly low price of $3.50 The semson’s Smart- Patent. st Leather Step-In with New Astractive effest and Spanish Heel Here are a few of the lovely models with a very decided French accent and English “air” which we are now display- ing for Fall —copies of stvles that will be all the vogue. That's the wonderfu! part about NEWARK hoes—you get the exact duplicates of the most exelisive styles which sell at three to four times our price—and this bmm e ootwear for onl, $3.50. Tsn’t it re. markable? Remem- ber, we save you the middleman’s profit. Come tomorrow and see the charming Fall styles now on displey. Adorable Paten Leather *Ong-Sirap h Mat Kid Tri Dainty Buckie A mew Pall Mndel wi'h Mitivars Heels 8350 Newark Sfioe Stores Co. 00 Branches Throughout the United Sta 913 Pa. Ave. NW. 502 9th St. NW. 711 HSt. NE.