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38 Turkish Toweling as Labor Saver BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. Mussed towels that are in evidence In a bathroom, give an untidy appear- mnce to the whole room. Yet there wmust be towels that are in constant use, and which cannot very well look Immaculate after use, even when fold- ed and hanging in their right places on the towel rods. What, then, can be done. 10 avoid this undesirable look, Yet have towels used as needed? The THE TURKISH TOWEIL ALL S MAY BE solutton is in having Turkish towels! They can be crumpled and creased when used and look as smooth as ever when hung on the rack. This sort of toweling solves the problem well. It can be in the form of roller towels, or be hand-towel size and be hung in convenient places. These are not expected, of cou to take the place of any regular tow- els, such as the members of the fami- Iy have for themselves. They are extras, for using at odd times during the day. One of these turkish towels The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright, 1926.) 1. Fragrance. 5. A color. 9. Paddle-like implement., 10. Not false. 18. Large body of water. 14. Try out. 15. Gait of a horse. 18. Diphthong. 19. Existence. 21. Three-toed sloth Doctor (abbr.) Printed notice Advertisements Be i . Plece of grou . Tiny point . Street (abbr) . Unit of length (abbr.) Printer's measure A burden Southern State Uncomme Philippine weapon Unit of work Submerged rock Two thousand Musical instrument Web-footed animal Dow (abbr.). pour Blood vessel Ammon Conjunctior Stmese coin Wager. Opening Ourselves Mentioned Peruse. One who 1 S quarter of Venice Perform. Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle. Mint Julep delic o maki This is a heverage. five lemons, add one-half a cupful of wate one and onehalf cupfuls of sugar. and the I ex from one bunch of fresh mint Cover cl 1y and let stand for 30 minutes, then adc large | Diece of ice and three bottles of ginger ule. juice 2 WOMAN'’S PAGE. in the kitchen will be found a, saving of work as well as looking tidy when in evidence, Turkish toweling needs no ironing and therefore it is labor saving. Such towels should be fresh every day. Guest Towels Small guest-sized towels can he used in_ families where laundry work is not considered. There should be sev- eral on the racks or in a neat pile on a shelf. When used, a towel is then tossed into the clothes hamper, and no mussed ones are visible. But if there are many members of a fami- | ly, especially if they are the sort who wash their hands many times a day, this is a_prodigal way, intended for | wealthy folk rather than the aver-| age household Many From One. In one 'w however, guest size towels are economical for home use. Large towels worn in spots can be cut down and one make two, three or| even four guest size towels. They are scarcely good enough, or some of them, at any rate, are scarcely good | enough to be appropriated for guest | service. However, by cutting down | old worn towels to these deminutive | ones the cost of replenishing towels | is materially reduced. The use of | them is money saving, if not exactly labor saving. However. since there are fewer big towels to be laundered ' THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5. ONNYSAYINGS Y Y. CORY 1 beginnin’ to fink Nippy made a bad break when he telled ‘at feller howdy! (Copyright. 1926.) and small ones are easfer, the balunce of work may be about the same ac- | tually. | Uses for Worn Towels. | When turkish towels get where | they shed lint and are not usable | for towels, make pads of them for laundry work. Put two or three old | turkish towels, one above the other, bind the edges and you have a de- lightfully soft pad to go under em broidery when it is froned. The pieces of toweling must all be of the same size for the pad. There must be no overlapping of seams, for if there are seams or overlapped places they will leave marks in the garment ironed over the pad. Turnips With Dressing. Have ready two or three cupfuls of rather small cubes of cold cooked sweet white turnips, and over them pour the following dressing: Blend one raw egs yolk with another volk that has been cooked to mealin add one-half a teaspoonful of salt, one fourth teaspoonful of pepper, one tea- spoonful of sugar and stir all well to gether. Add one goodsized cooked beet grated and one rather large cu- cumber which has heen chopped fine and allowed to stand sprinkled with salt for 30 minutes. Stir the whole into a cup of mayonnaise or French dressing thoroughly emulsified. or of any plain cooked dressing. The last part of the operation should not be performed until just before serving the salad, which may be made of po- tatoes, fish or chicken in place of turnips. Garnish with a border of very finely chopped cabbage. Malden loved by Zeus. . Repose. . Mass of ice. Story . Signifies. Brother (abbr.). 9. Not on. . New Ingland State (abbr). Southern State (abbr). . Toward | hadn't_even hothered to call SUB ROSA BY MIMI When to Call Him Up. No girl wants to cheapen herself. She doesn’t want the object of her affections to get the horried idea that she's pursuing him. And so she care- fully avoids any appearance of chas ing him. She usually makes a dsfinite rule that though she dies of suspense she will never call him up-—never, never. W of the old cor is usu wise. For some ervative stuff still holds zood. The not much to he gained from letting a man know that if he just sit at home and wait you'll ring up 'o find out what's the trouble. He's apt to get into the habit of sit ting at home and iting. However, this wise littie rule has become o Important in some girls’ minds that they've set it up alo with the rest of the commandments it mustn't be broken no matter what the circumstances. It's always dangerous to adhere too strictly to any rule in your relations with boys. You've got to use your ensc sometimes. You can't just g up on the wall. select a #ood rule you find pasted there. and stick to it all the rest of your life. After Jean had been going with Harold for about six weeks—and she'd grown to depend on him rather —he suddenly just dropped out with « loud crash. She didn't hear a word from him. She was absolutely dazed They hadn't meant anything to each other particularly, but she'd liked him awfully, and his desertion puzzled her. Why should he stay did want to know. It occurred to her that since they had been rather good friends she might call him up in an easy way and find out why he'd left e suddenly. But when she remen bored her hard and fast rule—wh) she couldn’t call him up. Tt wouldn't do at all. That wasn't the right at titude for her to take. So she resolutely kept awny from the phone. Harold, in the meantime at home with a bad case of pleuris: was rather hurt to find that Jean to find ont why he wasn't around. They'd been good enough friends. he reagon- ed. for her to make some effort to find out about him. She couldn't care v much for her friends if she didn’t take the trouble to make inquiries about them. He rather lost interest in J. after that. He'd liked her well enough, but he resented the hard-boiled atti- tude which didn't permit her taking the trouble to call his mother and find out whether he was {ll. Things would have been different if Jean and Hal had been Roing to- gether for a long, long time—were deeply interested in each other—and had pretty nearly decfded to get mar- ried. n that case. a_ sudden silence on Harold's part would have given Jean use to worry. It would have been < duty to get word to her in some way that he was ill. And if he didn't make this effort, she might well have refrained from calling him because of her hurt pride. But where relationships are as casual and friendly as were Jean's and HHarold's there is no reason in the world why the telephone shouldn't be used by the girl as well as the boy. (Copyright, 1926.) The large number of unemployed in England and in other countries of Europe has led many mercantile and other blishments to dismiss their King of Bashan woman employes who are married and fill their positions with mer Fill Ugly Hollows With Firm Flesh Gain Pounds of Weight in 3 Weeks with new YEAST and IRON or Pay Nothing “More Energy Than I Had in Years” ago when I in an accident, 1 m loss of appe- energy and gen- down condition “Three was hurt suffered vea run more ener 1 better than I have felt in —Mr, B F. W Memphis, Tenn. 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It clears the blood of impurities that ruin complexion, giving you a n ear, healthy skin. Tt will pick you right up and fill vou with the pep and “life” vou have always longed for. It you are below normal welght— take ‘warning! Underweight people have low resistence to disease. Do something now_to put on good firm flesh. Take IRONIZED YEAST. See your body build up with added pounds of good weight. Notice how vour skin clears up, vour digestion improves and you feel new strength and pep. Absolutely safe, contain- ng no hermful drugs. Get v TRONIZED YEAST foday: Nfec. . pleasant-to-take tablets—60 to-] a bottle Satisfaction or Money Back to any drug store and get ize treatment of IRONIZED 1f after this generous trial vou are not delighted with effects, ask for your money back. It will be refunded immediately. If inconven- ient to buy from druggist, send $1.00 direct to the IRONIZ YEAS CO., ATLAY K 52-D. She | jhis primary idea. { your ! the! EVERYDAY Answered by DR. S. ons from readers are anawered daily Parkes Cadman, president of the il_of Churches of Christ in 5 geeke to answer in; quiries ihat spvear o be represntative, of the trends of thought in the many letters which he receives. Providence, R. 1. reading Freud's book on Sometimes I believe him, I don't seem to get What would you I am “Dreams.” sometimes not say it is? Answer—Just tional conflict that usually this, which an emo- occurs | during the early years results in a species of diseased memory. The suf- ferer resolutely trles to forget and does forget this painful experience. But it strikes into the unconscious mind and festers there. This festering is the disease in question. It affects some part of the body or mind un- known to the sufferer. It is a bit of life “split off.” more or less, from conscious life. One way to get at it is by dream analysis; and if it can be raised to the surface and linked up with previous associations it should cause no further trouble. The toch- nical term for it is a_complex. Freud is undoubtedly a great medi- cal psychologist, but many of his old colleagues disagree with his theory that complexes have an exclusive sex origin. Hence you should balance his arguments by a later reading of Jung and Stekel. And after reading them all lean’ heavily on your own good sense. Boston, Mass. Who comes first, one's husband ot one’s mother? Should a girl marry if she has an: doubt in her mind as to whether hcr husband or her mother should have first claim upon her affections anc efforts? Answer—Surely you recognize th congenital difference hetween filial anc martial affection. They can and d exist together everywhere without jar. But if they so exist in you that You are unable to assign your pros pective husband the first place heart, do not betray him by marrying hin. T¢ your mother needs special care this you can give her without any diminution of your duties as a wife. No woman has to neglect her mother because she loves her husband. Yet when Jesus eald that a man (and this also means a woman) shall leave his father and mother and cleave to his wife, His command was founded upon the basic instincts essential for life’s perpetuity and is reasonable as well as revelatory. Omaha, Nebr. Would not many of vour daily read: ers be strengthened in their lives if got closer to nature? T say this hecuuse 1 recently have found sur- cease from sorrow in the quietness, rest and beauty of the countryside! Answer—Yes. A walk in a garden or through a wood furnishes many a consoling parable for life and shows that “man does not live by bread alone.” He feels that he is one in far- reaching ways with such surroundings. To escape from one’s self, to be rid, if only for the moment, of intolerable burdens, or made more equal to bear- ing them, to reconcile discordant qual- itles, to find freshness in familiar ob- jects, to quicken right judgments and stabilize self-possession, a return to nature s always advisable. For man the stars revolve, the clouds drift, the air breathes, the winds blow, the flowers bloom. It’s sad to think wmy lovely world That only I cun see, Its sounds, its sights, its snemories, Will have to die ¥ with me . MalHEs dent furniture It won’t because it can’t. 1t’s padded so that it gets around and under furni- ture with never a mar. Gets into mean floor cor- ners, too —because it is pointed. It cleans them first, then beautifies them with a thin, lasting lustre of loveliness—nota greasy film. Do your floor polish- ing standing up with an O-Cedar. * Ask your dealer to show you the New Rust Proof, Broad Sweep O-Cedar WATER MOP. O-Edar Mop .52 Dusts, Cleans, Polishes QUESTIONS PARKES CADMAN Through their multiform appearances runs the spinal cord of an ascertain- able pupose. By means of an in- formed imagination all ranks and con- ditions of humanity are linked to the soll and what it produces; to the sky and the mountains, the rivers and the seas; to all the fortressed loveliness of nature. Reading, Pa. Christ committed His_mission and message to other men. Why does not the average minister do this? As a rule, he rarely permits others to work unless they are subservient to his wishes. Answer—This question comes from a youth movement conference in which the older generation of church- men received plentiful advice, much of which was helpful and some of it frrelevant. The fact is that most ministers are pathetic supplicants for any sort of help and often have to be content with an inferfor kind. Others are nof organizers, and not a few find it harder to get work done by laymen than to do it themselves. The clerical monopoly of which you complain began in former times when the minister was guide, philosopher and friend to small local communities. It has not yielded to lay control and to the policy of adequately staffed churches, especially in cities er towns. You and those who feel as you do can render valuable service by sup- porting this policy. It broadens the mission of the individual church and makes openings for its message in hitherto closed neighborhood: If you have a minister endowed with nrophetic gifts, see to it that he is J0t asked to peddle on Main street vhat was meant for mankind. No ‘ensible sportsman uses his speediest :orse to haul coal all morning as a wreparation for trotting it on the “ace tracic in the afternoon. Would t numerous churches were as con siderate of thelr ministers! . Prune Biscuits. ook some prunes until the pits Arop out. Add sugar to make ve wwaet. Mash through a colander. Cut any rich biscuit dough in four-nch squares. Place a spoonful of prunes in the center of each square. Fold center, inclosing the king. sprinkle with pow- and prunes, powdered sugar or cover with dered sugar icing. For oysters and other delicious it French-Fryer There IS a difference in French-frying. You will discover it, too, when you taste the crisp, flavorful foods prepared with this “Wear-Ever” French Fryer. Your dishes will compare favorably with those prepared by celebrated 1926. HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN. Brightly springlike in effect, these curtains and spread are guaranteed to bring rare daintiness and charm to the Winter bedroom. They are of sheer and crisp tissue snowy white backg crossed with lines of and mauve. The floor of this room is n plain green linoleum, waxed to a soft glow. Here and there an old hooked rug in dull shades of mauve and orange makes a little pool of gingham-—a und lightly covered issue ginghams, by extremely practical fabries to us a decorative way. Those of good quality are sunproof and they can be laundered to a state of tis aper crispness. Their sheerness and ele flowerlike colorings make them espe cially nice for bedrooms (Copy; in Liver and Bacon Entree. Cut four slices of fried bacon, four |slices of fried liver, and two medium- sized hoiled potato small i squa Add two cupfuls of toast | erumbs, salt and pepp to taste, land a lttle savory. Place the mix- ture in a baking dish and pour over it one pint of milk with which you have mixed two well beaten eggs. Sprin kle grated cheese on top and bake until brown. Do not allow it to be- fcome too dry into ver; ustration of French Fryer in draining position orange, green ! the way, are | FEATURES. 150 YEARS AGO TODAY Hodge, Secret Agent, Sails PHILADELPHIA, October 5, 1776, Willlam Hodge, jr., is leaving Phila- delphia for France on a diplomatic mission of great importance as a rep- resentative of the secret committee. The sloop Independence, now at an chor near Reedy Island. will take him to the Island of Martinico, where who will secure for him 2 passage to France on a French vessel. From the general of Martinico he will secure a letter to the commander of the French port for which he safls re questing for him a passport and all assistance in specding his journey to Paris. At Paris Mr. Hodge will report directly to Silas Deane, the present American representative there. The importance of Mr. Hodge's mis- sion may be judged by the instruc- tions which have been given him for the eare of his papers. His directions are ‘“You must never suffer them to be |out_of vour possession one moment { until you deliver them safe, with un | touched sea to those two gentlemen | (Mr. Deane and Thomas Morris) un |less you should unfortunately be tuken, and in that case you must | throw’ them overboard, always keep- ing them ready slung with a weight | | to sink them if that measure should | be necessary, and for vour faithful discharge of this trust vou are an- swerable to your God. your country, | fidence in you." Mr. Todge carries with him care | ful directions for buying, equipping |and sending our three cutters to act | as privateers in the British Channel. | He is to_arm, man and fit these cut | ters in France, Spain or Holland, and has full anthority to appoint the cap- | tains and select the crews in co-opera tion with the captains. Prizes taken by the cutters are o be taken to any convenient port ir France, where Mr. | Deane will demand protection for |them and secure permissfon for the | sale of seized goods. Any dry geods captured will, how- | | ever.” be ‘kept and whenever a con | siderable quantity of them accumu lates one of the cutters will sail with them for the first place of safety in the United States that can be reached. The captain of each cutter will re- ceive these erders: The ship must make but a short he will report to Willlam Bingham, | Story of the U. S. A. BY JONATHAN A. RAWSON, | eruise in the Channel, and a short one (Covrright Parking A soft answer will do the business, for she will dally meet prizes: but if she is long there they will have men of war in quest of her. 1926.) With Peggy turneth the eve. K _into a necking party PEANUT BUTTER Special price for limited time 98¢ Regular price $1.65 This French Fryer consists of one “Wear-Ever” Alumi- num 3.quart Deep Sauce Pan and a durable wire ear-Ever” The French chefs at the leading metropolitan restaurants. You can use either vegetable oils or animal fats. I¢’s well worth while to take advantage of this special offer. Firstof all,there’s a considerable savingin money. Then there’s a saving in time, fuel and material. The “Wear-Ever” French Fryer eliminates the muss and bother caused by old-fashioned methods and it insures better-flavored, crisp, light foods. And, last but not least, both of the utensils comprising this Freach Fryer have many separate uses besides deep-fat frying. Do not delay. Get yours at the special price TODAY. THE ALUMINUM COOKING UTENSIL CO. New Kensington, Pa. At this time you can secure the new “Wear-Ever” Percolator at this special price Recipe folder, telling howtoprepare a dozen dishes, given free with every French Fryer. basket of special design. Now you can prepare light, French-fried in your own kitchen. French Fryer is the most economical size . for the average family. Larger sizes require too much grease. Smaller sizes 270 too shallow. —and, in addition to deep-fat fry- ing, you will find many uses for the “Wear-Ever” 3-quart Alumi- num Deep Sauc one part of These stores we know can supply you! DULIN & MARTIN CO. S. KANN SONS CO. Ave. S 3. Ave MOSD W Berlin & Freeman, 803 P Rrightwood Hdwe. Co., 541. Cavanaugh & Kendrick, 33 M. Cohen, 4811 Georgia Fdw. Cooper, 1 14th St Dixle Hdwe. Co. 7 Penna MARYLAND (Local) Hyman Brown Y. H. C. Johnson & Sons . Hawkine, RG. J. Foresi V N Ave. SE & W vertisement in Baltimore Sun.) VIRGINIA RIA. R. E. Knizht & Sons D. B. Cox Co.. Inc C ¥ Holemes. R, W. H. Sipe Co.. Inc, e Morton Hdwe. H. H. o, E N W Va—See THE PALAIS ROYAL BARBER & ROSS, INC. W. A. Finch, 1114.18th St Flynn, 851 Penna datels 1 105 H St Fred M. Huas, Rho 1. Hoffenberg, 11125 F CAY e 12 St 23 Fth St. N.W. PFORD Burton Hdwe. Co J. T. Heard RCHL H. E._Brown Paullett Crockery Co N. G H. Steinhardt CKSHURG. WA, Bell & Bro LANSBURGH & BRO. GOLDENBERVS}'S N. Ge VIRGINIA (Continued) HARRISONBURG, Hawkins Hdwe. HERNDON. C. M. Dudding. . Hopewell Hdw. & Glass Co Lowenbach & Son . R, S. Anderson & Co. Printz. Basley-Spencer Hdwe. Co Tne, o ROANOKE. Geo SHENANDOAH CITY TALUNTON. & FOLK. ewman Triisier Hdwe AR & S K. Fawier Siove & nz-mnx"é"':""' ler s e NORFO Max \'l‘hu:fl. 'l.m- ity PETERNBURG. Joyner Hawe. Co. co v WINCHE PORTSMOUTH. Hawke-Maupin Co PULASKI. Inc WOODS’ WYTHEV M. Yeatman, VIRGINIA ER. John Price Hdwe . Edw Pan, which is this French Fryer. (Continued) S Solenberger & Co E. Nichols Blundon & Hinton er & enton € B. TOCK, Batley MacBain Co ILLE. Blus G Rhoades hina & Housefurni Ine Bri Wit s Ciniea St BrotheraPruden. G WINCHESTER. John < Solenberger & Co. & Solentorger, s Hdwe. o,