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22 . WOMAN’S PAGRE. MO\’D'\Y OCTOBER 18, 1926. FEATURES. EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. O, 1 | Railia Style Babs, Emelopc Type | t i BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. idered purses, it e imi only | in you some Pa n color schemes as w them. In on the motif uld done bright blue, leaves of ters of ora \mong he When the " n most fa neediv the n have on the D e just now @ good Slovalkian. and so av ave fust £: ney A Creatio .hm 1 Paris wis deve, ther less t e e disk L the o end disks letnon <groun:d The bot nge with red in it, while the ches would be of so neuiral that it to say whether Such a log 10n yellow, the t e of Bag. ¢ hest deseribed as “en Paitern Oifered Gratis. ders of this paper wn in the | S weith with the c« nd the Wik ize and includ v i tree, paper « is full Color Seheme. wn let me give Ju STORE .51T);nt vions to fig I’“l i BY . THOPNTON FEVE Y BURGESS 0 'V | & B Danny RE. re’s lav th . ped i the 1 st ban n wanted “You wlow. meadow one of and this I cut it myself.” replied Danny, nt me meekiy, own o Kind," re You'll tura aliow , ox You'll do rted the 1 to Jose his know t and sho have r one me “Puzzlicks” Puzzle-Limerichs. I3 !1 aman, Leeniys Last night the frost was heavy, And now the fields are white Wifl'\ shrouds of litt le spree, u't trouble me,” lu‘t n.gkt. Africa that ca spine with the spinal cord seve Phillip Williams lived in _pain years and died recently at Yerkshire, South exquisite to” use your | o [LErT SUB ROSA BY MIMIL Danger of Sweet Memories. “What ha in there be in sweet ries? demanded Grace fm- *Hones! Mimi, you'll be our breathing this way and soon course I'm loyal to Ted. T love i and he knows it. We're going very hapi those arm e to me. rm in a Mt - 3. Bob wasg stun- " 1le was ih perfect dear that thme when |ing over dead K z, you sal lover. and Ty uidn’t {one in the we {a while I | bering tho! land the swe, ¢ used to cay | to me ) dare tell ma that a little wer the old love Know Ted 1t just once in out of remem res of Tiol t Grace n 4f ol fashioned nd to do our uth. wa v advice, we v and tell he ‘ihe gentle sizhs oy feeling ¢ Fond remc add a flutter or two to life, life is sweet with icuiar & in actice living of * old_rom: t when sot lit- iricsome money has hegun and vuried distn hen the ierous to ebsent-mir so du once more,’ ed and forgettul tning t dits of wted. up, she'll men of ErOW a discon- a splendid spe {tented wife o . Seginning w y|, § ¢ alitt) over @ rt, Where she ho 1cation of Ted docsn'e Do you it wilyn 0 people more and more my i roma her of the un. and good temper 1t when Tette one silly: inced her mite, 1 she hroke off w be ready to ma e eaw He did cor bui > old lov veet ol memories lat our: them nt 1 ma by ' man who ne e our own 1l Horry MOTIERS AND THEIR CHILURE can't | ou ean't | Lon One ger Wear for Rubbers. mother my Jite short for o heel. | on lad ~1 quite a iy damp day i i | s rubhers T cut LF BENNY BY LEF PAPE. er without anl however | task | broke | do, | moze | of | husband, or when | and | progy them | place | dont do they?| t stop, Twine D'sholoths e twine vou take off ther, « T (nit it (0 a dish cloth al ot square with steel needles, er crochet it in simple stitch. The knot$ in tho twine are effective in removing stens and burnt food from pans, pie dshes and | keep you healthy ether | | | dren’s |dren Is Our Love Shown—Too Late? Asks Appreciation for the Living DorothyDix Why Wait Until People Are Dead Before Bringing Flowers? Why Offer Words of Love Only to Deaf Ears? POOR, sick woman, whose sufferings have made her a little morbid, has made a curfous request of & friend. “When I am dead,” she sald, “my neighbors will come to my door with regret and sympathy. Do not let any i * } €F them in the house. because I e lived here for lonely arad foriorn,”! Ad shut in, and not one of them has drepped in to cheer and comfort me i with a little human companionship. “If they offer their cars for the funeral, refuse them, because they never | asked me to e a ride, though they must have known how much an invalid | ould enjoy getting out, away from the four walls of her room, and ofit into count Do not iet them lay a flower upon my cofiin, for they never gave me a single bloom in life | | re not especially hard and heartiess people. H ople, ei 1 airs, even as you and T. and I, when they hear that the poor invalld across the ¢ will be conseience stricken at haviag d in kindliness | 1t rush over to her house and try to atone for their neglect g their tribute on her bier, {went In first thing this mor {tell We all do the same thing, and I often think that, the most evnlcal thing | that wo have to die to find out what our family and friends | d the esteem In which we are held in the community. The ed and thirsted to hear, the love that we broke our hearis spered into deaf ears. o ow read the eulogies that papers print when Mr. A @ n. They hold him up as an example of unselfishness, and the zeal, They laud his blameless priva clams about Mr. A's virtues while he lived, yet a | d to him while he could know it, would have made {him feel that his long service to his community was worth whiie. They call him | righteousness. and the efcieney with which | te 1 But no one so much as gave him a word of praise. Ie served on He did the hard work on the boards of charitics e could always be depended upon to fill any sort irtzer, but ev. vy took him for granted. well. They blamed him when things institutions nd do the wor i seen villages § s thread the countr; The elopment of the h:l»‘gl ph. the invention of eiectric lights, and the phonograph, and the telephone, and the wireless fand radio. Such an interesting old man! We even repeated soric of the thing used to say. senti- ‘ i I work | Tt would | we ‘had Jet fan he nd I [ We were not ¢ séo that he b oo Jate fc ive made the old m know that radiantly happy if, while he was alive, red him, or if we had ever sat down for ned to crulous talls of old times. But we never did n decently eivil to him. We let him The fiest att 3 i r him to know or care . AND there is Miss C, who has been an invalid for vears and vears, able, on |2t hee om the hed to the window, and on her had days just to (v and lie sawn-out dull w Days and day dreary, drab 200d @ riness that is her life. | otony. ! s SR s intending to 50 to se fo do something to che , tell her that sl her, to take her a Jolly book, to zhten her lot, something mpathy. send her flov We don’t do it, be ed in our own 158 e ure ire. But wh own ple che is dead sures. we will of our own family in the same way. If the, tted to come back to earth, it must surpris iany 4 one to read on his or her tombstone that he or she was the beloved | wife, of so-nd-so. i he or she had Querulous a kiss with a! ciation. The poor ghost had never suspected such a thins. In life, , cold indifference. Neglect. Fault_finding. ‘a word of praise or appreciation. Never thriil of passion in it. Never any tenderness or sign of app l( cannot matter to those who are safe in the love of God to know ands and wives really Joved them, but it would have mude live It would have made a flower- ad of Calvary. ius! a differc ay of what was the r s not wait until people gre dead to show our nd our flowers to the living. love and appreciation DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. 1026073 # EAT AND BE HEALTHY Dinch Day'’s D'Ill}' Talka on Dmt {chew his food | Foods which | the teeth are Are Your Children Nourished? with aching Do m go to school? ow do Jira Sally ? Are t} Is their health | | gona? | Do you think because they got off | to school on time is «ndcd until 3 o' teeth, our chi Tnece marks good? ’“lL nt people. in well able to buy 1 o pelting wr T is ot | alon ) love 1 spends 1 plood with healih and “ing nis | the food strengt Not “foodless food,” hut food with | his school |real nourishment, chock-full of min future health | eral elements for tecth, bones and g | blood. Proper fuod give the youngsters a_good si for heaith, | v | happiness and pro | Peadcrs desicing persos send seif-addressed, & Dinah Day v h he sleeps 1l answers should eavelope 1o | Crystallized Figs. sorved figs that h n and b tve. 5 per cent to be 24 peen in the pr suffering | t rs might pos.! enough wate thefr metlers who during | did mor live Th hew 1! sun_ until Pack in b tween the I the figs are perfe: ed condition of n Japan, Den frer with eve 1 dlet lacking in Children land, Indi Lecatse of Certainl nin A, present in| s ort l d T volk, e di o Lo e -0 an original recipe ey e p(\u[)’(\ in, fous parts of world and at| S8t e a a _predisposiryg nutrition, foctive | due to insufclent lime | mothers' diets, and | ime in the diot of ! fore the coming of | Bad tecth cause ide from the poisons the teeth mizht drain into the chil- systems, no one can properly Willie Willis 1 BY ROBERT QUILLEN. | = 1 the i children 1 tecth. It’s good, try it 1 c2a Gorton's Ready-to-Fry Cod Fish Cakes 1 mblespoon Butter 1 cup hot Milk lespoon Flowr 1 strained Few drops Onlon Julce Tomate (o Totnaso Soup) Blend butter end flour. Add milk and simmer five minutes. Stir in tomato (to which has been added soda the size of a pea.) Add onion juice, selt and pepper to taste. Then 2and cook for five tes. on toast, garnished with parsley. TETS, recipe comes from Mos. Susen F. Hayford of Kozbury, Mass., who finds Gorten's Reacy-to-Fry Cod Fiah Cakes a handy food (o have arcand. We are alays glad to hear from housewives who discover such original dishes. Gorton-Pew FisheriesCo.,Ltd..Gloucester,Mass. They try to “'Gortan's Deep Sea.Recipes” Free ooes st | M ——— w're slck.” : “Parents is funng. you lots better wh B then DIARY OF A | NEW FATHER By R. E. DICKSON Monday Evening. It was cigars and candy for the All the fellows were so interested and kept coming over to office today. my desk so often that [ had to go out and get another box of cigars, The boss rather surprised me. I g to him, and while 1 was explaining just how 1 had relt he picked up some paper T st ‘hose five | brats of his aré the oniy children in ! the wori I noon dashed out to the with fruit and m and a pink rattl n stared at mo for o minute and she said I was such @ pretty ttle dhe 10 and it hospital at zines fnr to ge and wi o hospits them home, E by the Junum s wife for 2 in tho bs I owed he plained it had to be rt of doubled up and ran cn are funny. v looked o darn HOME NOTE ) it I} EVERYDAY QUESTIONS Answered by DR. .S. PARKES CADMAN lestions from read gally by De & Parkca be. Federal Cou: are anewered Lo Chubones o & st n America. e Catintr Shah & Inaiiples "inat” e fo e ey {ative of the frends of thought o | TR ST R L i ok | New Brighton, N. Y | In ome of your answers some time ago you sald that the Bible nowhere claimed to be inspired. Surely you must have some time read st Paul's declarition that “All Scripture is given by inspiration of |1 jod.” If mot, you Will find it fn 1I ‘imothy, 1ii.16. Answer—WHhat I said in th to which you refer runs as f. | “Nor does the Eible as a whol ot itseit as the ‘Word of Gou.’ * "Il se, Is by no means equivalent ng that the le nowiel Jel Lo be inspired of God. Such a {claim is frequently made in the Prophets and the Gospels. The title. “Word of God,” belongs by scriptural | authority to Christ alone. | The correot rendering of II Tim- | Lothy, iiL.16, is not “All Scripture is given by Inspiration of God,” etc., but Seripture inspired of God,’ very different translation, and 6 which is widely expianatory of ! the Bible. ! tions in qu South Norwalk, Conn. A | What ought to he the qulifications i | required for entrance to & university, | &xiinst the partisans who e brain capacity or urge of service 0 | perpetuate sl others? Answer—Both | fications for entr willingness to tud to know and think correctly. A: stud aims is worth while and hissnation, ! whether or not he hias a briltiant brain tor to take up specialized {types of social service. The marks of the university man i should be an upstanding body, & clear, | act.ve mind and : clean character With these acquisitions one may as that he will hava sufficient com- ense to understand why he is in ition of privilege and enoush | fodd_sportsmanship to desire to ren der his full share of social service a return for the advantages he has | | enjoyed. as some histories relate? Were thers pepul: the British side of the issue Answ here were, and they | cluded some of the foremost 1 'llnll 'lm . Others, like I» tin E nd not a few in the ce € wer t !taken in thelr Revolutionary 110 i “rs o Jo restd no one favette, in Fran of the high s Thomas ayne, wh < cught for us on both sides of the lantic, and ( iswer ' lows: | s : the British statesmen sacrificed political honors and emcluments, won into the cold shades of oppe . ahd | remained there for y ATE he conflict are he scholars of nd the United > of the na » beginning to 1t alike desira. An this_ap| to prejadiced and embtt tered persons wherever found (Copyrizht. 1 » But the chief quali- | nce to a_ univer and the desire T ——— i (I Best Wa to Loosm i ‘:tuobum o Cough i || This howe-made-remedy is a wonder | mor for quick results. Easily and a home-m \\ ms of pe it OB thid most o means of breaking up : uhb.»m\\ s cieap and simple, | npt in ac Under | thing alueice, chest) 5, phlegm loos: Locomes. eacior, tickling| in tliroat st and you get a xoofl] sleep. The u olds are con 21 hours or les. | for bronchitis, throat tickle, or bron York, Pa. In reading the New ‘Testament I came to this passage, which eccurs in | St. Mark's Gospel, xiv.25: “I will not taste of the fruit of the vine until I | drinky i Kingdom of Giod.” Please tell me what our Lord mean by these words Answer—The Greeks had two wor to convey the idea of ne the one they indicated what from the standpoint of ouher they expressed the e ness in guality ond word is used of our Lord. The passage this eplendid cough pour 2% ounces of Pinex t bottle and fill the bttle lated sngar syrup || 1f you pre- | Either way. | in th b svrup, | ation in & fellowship which t made for | "have mo ending. e expressed that bl sl i fellowship and indicated the kinge in which it should be complet the words you quote. They reve the kingdom to the distressed follow- ers who hung upon His words as e where peace would be forev: perfect and their joy forever fuil. T new wine ymbolic of eiernal | newnes their newness of three t fectly and tastes good Pivex is a ial and highly neentrated compound of genuine Norway pine extract and palatable| guaineol, known the world over for | its prompe hesling efiect upon mn mbranes, snppointment ask your draggist for “2 ounces of I with anterd to give ab satisfaction or_mo «l. The Pinex C Wayne, Ind. ¢ In my ecountry at inde y\\‘n(.f‘nufi without We are als: re that yc ay through division. A diffe used as a woodbox, | ng d 2 rauny interes ily old-timey »om has an ol fashioned wai showing bris T ks of (Coprright. 1926.) Suburban Delivery ‘West 264 and West 2190 Women to adopt new hygienic method and retain freshe ness this way; true pro- tection ; discardshketissue RGELY on medical advice, women are abandoning the old- timie ary pad” for a new way that sup 3 uncertainty with posi- tive protection. Sheer frocks and ill-timed social engagements no longer remain as worries. Lost days are fewgr, and kealth better. _ It is called “KOTEX.” Ends the insecurity of the old-time sanitary pad. Five times as absorbent! And deodorizes—ends ALL fear of of- fending. /;\s easily disposed of as a piece of tissue. No laundry. No em~ barrassment. You get it at any drug or de- sartment store simply by saying "KOTEX." You ask for it without lLiesitancy. Costs only a few cents. Eight in ¢ better-class women employ it, Proves the risk of oid ways. KOTEX No laundry—discard like tissue “ruby ! Make Your Qwn Paris Styles Queen Marie is bringisg fifty trunks of lovely cloihes from Paris —the fashion paradise of every woman. You, too, can have as many Paris dresses as your heart de- sires —models designed by the leading coururiers of France— if you make them from the wonderful line-for-line Paris reproductions in the McCall Printed Patterns now on sale at leading stores everywhere. McCall Printed Patterns are accurate, economical, and abso- lutely authentic in style. 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