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WOMA Some women are prejudiced against beade® " frocks, ‘just as others are Against cameos or figured wall paper or colored handkerchiefs or scented PS. We all have some prejudice or 8et of prejudices which we rather en- Jov. The woman who doesn’t I beaded frocks goes to the dressmake{ ©Or the dress shop and asks for an eve- HERE IS THE BEADED DRESS IN SW GUISE—MADE OF WHITE GEORGETTE CREPE., HEAVILY LADEN WITH BEADS OF CRYS. TAL, RHINESTONE AND GOLD. aing frock. The saleswoman, not knowing her anti-head complex. brings sut somehting headed “Oh, dear, I don’t want anythin®| beaded.” exclaims the customer a lit tle annoyed. Something in her tone #eems to say: “Do I look like a woman who wants a beaded frock?" She may. if she is extremely strong willed. hold out even now agalinst’this prejudice against headed frocks—but it will be hard work after she has seen the sort of head work that is now produced. The typical headsd geor- N’'S PAGE. women because it became so inexpen- sive that any one could wear it. More- over, it lacked distinction—when doz- ens of women all about were wearing | similar beaded frocks—and the beads | had a way of coming off. No one has inventea a process of putting beads on so they won't come off, but the designers have produced beaded frocks that possess distinction and individuality. Printed silks of opaque texture show an outlining of beads around certain portions of the printed pattern. Other printed mate- rials are used for evening frocks, with the plain sections betwesn the design worked solid in tiny beads, while the only part not beaded is the large print- ed design. Figured lace is used for the background of the b2ad work on some evening frocks, the bead design following that of the lace pattern. Silver and gold lace and various sorts of velvet are chosen for the background of beads on many smart evening frocks. Some of these frocks show a combination of beads and pail- lettes, while. others are wrought en- tirely in paillettes. Sometimes beads are used in combination with sequins. | The beads now used are for the most | part small, so that the beaded frock no longer need posscss the slinky ap- | pearance that has heen associated with | it Moreover, the heads are often ap- plied to a material with more body than georgette. Sometimes they are worked on tulle. which though quite thin has some stiffness about it. (Copyright. 1926.) My Neighbor Says: A good washing fluid is made by mixing equal quantities of liquid ammonia and turpentine. Add two tablespoons of this when boiling_clothes. To remove the shell of an egg quickly after it has boiled the required time, place it in a basin of cold water for two seconds and the shell will come off with- out_difficulty. To exterminate worms in flow- erpots, water the earth with a strong solution of soapsuds or use a teaspoon of ammonia in a quart of water. The worms . that it does not kill will come to the surface for air and you can destroy them. Water the earth the same as if you were using plain water. Do not get it on the plant. Use it several times. After removing any stains and spots on linen, wash it in warm suds. Do not starch, but treat as follows: Hang out very straight on line, with warp threa acrose line. While still slightly damp, take from line, fold care- fully and evenly and iron dry. Begin ironing on wrong side, finishing on right. Use only a moderately hot iron. When sending choice cut flowers a long distance, cut slits in raw potatoes and fix the stems firmly in the openings. The flowers will keep from 10 to 14 days. gette frock lost favor with lots of PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE T HE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, ? “THE DAYS OF REAL SPORT.” LICKIN —By BRIGGS. Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLE! “It was my fault I got scratched. but 1 didn't know a cat didn't like th have its tail shaved.” (Copyright. 1926.) Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. ‘Wakefulness. In answer to Mrs. L. M. B.: It is natural for a healthy and well nourished child to sleep, and when these natural habits are broken into it is because there is something wrong somewhere, and almost always | this fault can be traced to incorrect | I'him to apprehend and enjoy the pro- | divine mind and purpose EVERYDAY Answered by DR. S. uestions from readers are answered di\l.’l by Dr. 'arkes Cadman. president of the Federal Counail_or Churches of Christ in America. Dr. Cadman secks to answer in: quiries that appear to be representative of the trends of thought in the many letters Which he recaives. Olean, N. Y. What is vour idea of life after death? WHIl it be one of continual development of all latent powers witih us, and of all that is fine and spirit- ual? Answer—The New slires us that the eye has not seen, nor the ear heard, neither has it en- tered into the mind of man to con- ceive the things which God has pre pared for them that love Him. If thi is so, then there must be further growth of man's faculties to enabie Testament as- vision made for him in the spiritual world. The thought of the future here sketched by the questioner is also im- plied, if not actually stated, in the teachings of the New Testament. For those who love the highest and strive to attain a fuller understanding of the (here will be no arrested development in the future life. New York City. What do you think of a great co poration which publicly boasts of its generous treatment of its employes, but which ruthlessly and without real | Angli QUESTIONS PARKES CADMAN Answer—The answer involves story which outvies rcmance. When Gregory the Great was yet a monk in St. Andrew’s Monastery, at Rome, he chanced to see three Yorkshire boys exposed for sale as slaves. Struck by their fair complexion and light flaxen hair, he asked whether they were Pagans or Christlans. Upon learning that they were pagans he lamented the fact. and inquired the name of their nation. “Angles” was the reply, “Well said,"” responded the future pon Giff. “Rightly are they called Angles, for they have the faces of angels, and they ought to be fellow heirs of heaven.” Y passed, but Gregory did not forget the scene in the marketplace of Rome, and after he was elected to the papal chair he dispatched St. Augustine to the land of the “Angles.” or, as it is now known, England. The first missionary to the southern prov. ince of the country landed in Kent. near Canterbury. In that city he founded the Christian faith, for which reason jt is still the « vism and its cathedral the mother church of millions of helievers in_Engiish-speaking lands. It is. said to have heen Gregory intention to fix the seat of the pri- mate in London. But the circum stances 1 have briefly narrated gave vise to local feelings which prevailed with the Pope in favor of Canterbury. | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER T | | | | | | | | | ;. [ | | la | He's not his usually | restlessly on its arm with his nervous | point. | is tired—that the long day at the office | change in his manner when others al pital ity of | addressed envelope is ‘inclosed | things she has to talk over with her | on 19286. 20, SUB ROSA BY MIML Danger Signals. Karl is regarded by most girls as a great catch. He's a popular 'boy— always present on big partles—always invited by some girl to make a fourth at bridge or tennis or golf. And he's the gayest, mast charming of compan- jons on any party. He simply radi- ates good humor. 1 His jokes are not stale—his manner is happy and carefree. He seems to be the incarnation of good humor. Only, now that Julla has been en- gaged to him for three months, shes‘ beginning to be vaguely unhappy. i Nothing has happened definitely to trouble her. She just has a feeling, that's all. Karl comes over to see her four times a week, naturally. They've | usually an engagement of some sort, but occasionally they find it necessary to camp in the living room for the evening and talk together. These evenings should really be the happiest—they should glory in the op- portunity of uninterrupted hours in each other’s exclusive society. But somehow, although Julia fusses and prinks and arranges all sorts of future husband, the evening is usually flat tire. Karl, somehow, seems different. vivacious self. He sits moody and abstracted, surveying his finger nails with the greatest inter- est. He rises abruptly, goes to _the phonograph and turns’ on a_record hums a few bars, turns it off again. and returns to his chair, drumming fingers. This sort of thing goes on until Julia’s nerves are on the breaking Yet she tries to fight down her irritation, telling herself that Karl made him moody and dismal. But she can’t kid herself gbout the come in. If a crowd of young people suddenly bursts iInto Julia’s house, Karl snaps out of his mood swiftly. In a flash he is his charming seif. He sparkles and laughs and jokes with everybody. Gone is the moodi- ness and despondency. Julia asks herself despairingly whether she's to blame—whether her personality has this dampening effect her man. But it's not Julia's fault. She's simply had the mis- fortune to fall in love with the type of man who isn't happy unless he s in a crowd. It's Karl's temperament to love to be the center of attention When he’s alone, even with the girl he loves, he's dissatisfied. His ego- tism craves admiration from many. Julia avill have to reconcile herself to the constant society of other peo ple if she marries this boy. And she will also have to reconcile herself to living with a supreme egotfst. Ac tions” like Karl's are danger signals which should not be ignpred. Mimi will be glad to answer any inquiries directed to this paper. provided a stamped. (Covsricht. 1926.) HOME NOTES A bedroom tucked under the eaves FEATURES. THE MILLION-DOLLAR WIFE BY HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR. SHE THREW HERSELF ACROSS THE COUCH AND BURST INTO HARD, RACKING SOBS. Betty Ames nurses James Cornell | through pneumonia and they fall in | love. Dr. Amos Craig is also in love with her and is hurt at the news. Jim is the type of man who is always | talking about what he will do when | he makes his “million,” and at St.| Martin’s Hospital the nurses call Betty the “million-dollar wife.” " Al- though he seems to have plenty of money, dim is in no hurry to get married, which hurts Betty. At his request, she gives up night cases, which, of course, curtails her income. In spite of that fact, Jim erpects her to be smartly dressed on every oc- casion. At a dance Dr. Craig shows his love for her openly and kisses her in the tari on the way home. Nafural- 1y, Betty'is furious, particularly as his love for her seems more unselfish than Jimmy Jimamy keeps post- poning the time for their marriage. but at last sets a tentative date, and Betty begins to buy her trousseau Jim does mot realize that the late hours Betty is keeping, together with | the emotional strain, are wearing her | out. And then he comes to her with the news that, instead of being mar- ried in June, he is going abroad.| Betty tries to adiust her mind to the fact that they will surely be married | in September. Jim writes her gay and charm - s about the good time he is PTER’ XLV. wounting the Days. As the Summer months passed Betty grew more listless every day. It was difficult dragging herself out of bed in the morning. It seemed as if she were tired all the time, and vet she At the end of August she was back in the city. She had expected a letter from Jim to be waiting for her, but no word came from him until she had been back several days. The old nervousness settled back on her, and when at last she held the square, foreign-looking envelope in her hands. she began to tremble as she had that day in the hospital. With shaking fingers she tore open tae envelope, but the closely avritten lines danced before her eyes so that she could not read them. Then, out of the meaningless blur, sentences fairly leaped at her “I know you'll be disappointed, dearest, but I am hoping you understand. I can’t leave things un- finished, you can see that, and I'm hoping to bring matters to a climax very soon now. As long as I'm here on the spot, I want to settle things myself. Just as soon as I know when I can leave I'll cable you. Try to feel that if this disappoints you, it is worse for me. I can see your darling face as vou read these lines, and the sad little quirk of yowr mouth that I love hecause it belongs to you. Re- member that I love you more than anything in the world, and keep your- self safe for me. Yours forever. “JIM A cold hand seemed to close around her heart as she sat there staring into space. After all, the wedding wouldn't take place in September, and wors still, Jimmy hadn’t given her any idea of when it would take place. He would «#hie her when he knew, but did he realize what the suspense meant to her? Did he r e how hard it would be for her to meet the nurses and see them exchange me: ingful glances? Did he have continued to concentrate on thd, thought of September and what it would bring. September! The word had a mag- of how much he had alr her suffer? There was a hard lump in her BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. | cause throws an employe out empty. | banded after he has devoted 24 of the | best years of his working life in loyal feeding. Since you made no mention at all of how she is being fed, it is impossi- | can be made quaintly pretty and home. | like with very effort. The slop- ing ceiling i < an air of cozi- Hopkinsville, ago 1 lost my Ky. only < old. Three years | excess of uric acid or uric acid troubl child. a dear daughter, Uric Acid Rarely Happens. Uric acid is not Large amounts of it injected into the blood of a normal person will cause no discomfort whatever. So the | popular faney that this and that ail- ment or trouble Is caused by uric acid poisoning has no foundation. The uric acid obsession moves a lot of “sliminants,” baths, fool diet systems and the like, which without this ob- fuscation of the lay mind would be| & drug on the market There is nothing in tween “uric acid” a popular notion that “uric acid mome way concerned in “acidosis” or *acidity of the blood™ is without any foundation in fact a poison. acidosi slon are hard to part Bearing tn mind the physiological fact that “uric has nothing whatever to do acidosis” or “acid in the blood,” the three or four in the blood. notice of acid ticular two things—First, that these three or four diseases have nothing else in common and there is son to assume that they are due to a common cause or amenable %o similar remedies: second, that in heaith there is a definite amount of aric acid in the blood. and it i oniy when special chemical reveals an excess o the normal proportion of uric acid in the blood that there is any significance at- ached. Just acid _one's need not it is a how much uric Siood normally contains worry we'll say roughly wee pinch to the pint. And now. since it doesn’t mean any- thing in particula here are the names of the disease conditions in which, as a rule though not invaria- 1y, the chemical examination of the blood reveals a slight excess of uric acid: Gout, leucemia, pneumonia, nephritis. No such excess of uric acid is found in the various conditions which masquerade under the mean- Ingless name of “rheumatism.” In- sidentally, no physician or other per- 3on can inter from symptoms that there is ““uric acid in the blood.” an common be- * The is in | Paraphrasing the adage. a fool and his uric acid obses- | undebatable | acid” | with we may safely mention. but not describe. disease conditions in which there is an excess of uric Please take par- examination | | this 1s a question which can be an. swered only by a chemical test of the hlood, and it is the height of folly to dawdle with medicines, diets, baths, { mineral water or other things which purport to “eliminate” uric acid, if the question of an excess of uric acid has not heen first answered by this chemical measurement. Even though a test has demon- strated an excess of uric acid in the blood. bear in mind that urie acid is not a poison. If it were my blood, |and some good lahoratory technician | found an excess of uric acid in it, I'd | say to my ‘doctor: “Shucks, what's a | couple milligrams of uric acid he | tween friends—just what ails me, do | vou suppos: (Covsright. 1926.) Parking With Peggy ““Now that barbers are giving con- =ultations to girl customers about the neck line, it only remains to decide what line of necking you wish to take up.” Making the Most of Your Looks BY DOROTHY STOTE. Dear Ann: There's the little matter of the position of pockets on Fall coats. For the short woman they should be placed rather high, as in the sketch at the left, so as not to interfere with her aim of being as tall as possible. If they are too low, they interfere with her highest pur- poses. Yours for lofty aspirations, LETITIA. (Copyright. 1926.) t ble for me to tell you what is wrong | there. Perhaps you are still nursing her, and at 11 months of age this would be the wrong thing to do, and weaning and feeding her properly | would undoubtedly stop the wakeful ness at night. Sometimes too hot a room or a room with too little air or heavy covers will disturb the child's | sleep, but in most cases it is just food, | as babies sleep under all sorts of dis- | comforts when their tummies are well and comiortably filled e Worms. Mrs. J. K. D.: | It is a frightful thing to dose a child with worm medicine periodically Jjust because you think he has “stom- ach trouble” and it might be worms There is no need to wonder if o child has worms. Consult a doctor before beginning any course of strong ‘durgs like worm medi- cines. This is the same princi- ple as giving a_child castor oil in order to ward off possible constipa- gion. Drugs of any kind should never be given unless there is a real reason for them, and if one is in any doubt at all it is better to err on the side of not giving than giving them. Clues to Character BY J. 0. ABERNETHY. Refined Lips. Oliver Wendell Holmes once said of Emerson: “He had a look of refine ment about the lips which is rarely found in the male New Englander. | unless the family features have been for two or three cultivated genera tions the battleground and the play- ground of varied thoughts and com plex emotions, as welfl as the sensuous and nutritive port of entr: Holmes meant to describg, Emer- son’s lips not only as refined. but of great artistic beauty. Unity of mind and body now here is better empha- sized than in the evolution of the lips The muscles of the mouth and lips are extremely flexible and are capable ot describing many diverse chapes. | Therefore, we naturally may expect that permanent expressions will fol-| low as the result of emotions and speech that are habitual, as the pas | sions of rage, scorn, envy and malice if often indulged, mark their presence upon the muscles about the moutk and the subject of these passions can not escape detection Handsome, well formed upper and lower lips are of inestimable value to the individual. They reveal a high grade of character and are indicators of general refinement. ‘ (Copvright. 1026 ) Stuffed Apples. Cut some apples erosswise and take out the ecres. making large cavities. | Bake without seasoning until done and fill with the foliowing: Two thirds cupful of sugar, two-thirds cup- | {ful of sweet milk. two-thirds cupful of flour. two-thirds cupful of pecan nuts, the volks of two eggs and one teaspoonful of vanilla. Cook all | together until thick. Make a meringue | from the two egg whites and pile on the filled apples. Brown. P { for at this price the quality is sure to {each bar into 2-inch-thick {to stand these with an air space be- | and efficlent service? The service was rendered at such meager wages that there was no su plus, after paying for the bare nec saries of life, to provide a margin for saving any money agalnst such a con- tingency. What should 1 do? Answer—Assuming that your ques- tion states what actually happened. | of course there can he but one answer to it. It exposes a condition rife with rank injustices and non-social behavior upon the part of the corporation. Why not name it if it refuses re. dress? Let the people jurlze hetween it and you. Publiclty is frequently a sanitating force for such a wrong as vou assert has heen done in this case. Erle, Pa. 1 have often wondered why the Primate of the Anglican Church should be enthroned in Canterbury Cathedral. Is not St. Paul's in Lon- don the metropolitan church of that nation and. to a degree, of the Brit ish Empire? If so, why are not the archbishops enthroned and located there? BEAUTY CHATS Toilet Soaps. There are certain things in which you should not economize, and one of these Is the soap you use on your face. You can get fair quality toilet soaps as cheaply as 5 and § cents a cake. which will do very well for bath | soaps, but you should use a better qualit¥ on vour face. Usually the| cheaped the soap the more caustic it | loved is | of her ‘day is the ive through I grieve continually. Eve) same; I wonder how I can |it without her. I think of her all the time. She loved life so, and when 1 see other girls having a good time I feel deso lated to think of my own little girl in the srave. Answe The life yvour daughter till hers in added abundance and beauty. Her body is in the grave, not her al self. The vital spark which animated her earthly frame is forever near its central Flame. misconceive her condition your heart hy useless grief as eagerly awaiting satisfied till vou not completely you re- join her. g Meanwhile divert vour affection for her into ministerial wa darkened lives of other girls not so fortunate as she w 0 that they may ultimately he where she is. The wounds of a great w can be come the channels of a great service, Here is your opportunity and your consolation. (Covyrizht 199 BY EDNA KENT FORBES . S.—The small pits left from |09 % the ¥ tfentment Will grow ldws | Cn oo SAUES 1o BetGIien the eBeet after a while. can to keep up a healthy the skin. Cold showers after the daily bath and cold water rinsing after any method of cleansing vour skin will keep up a. healthy circulation. all of which improve the tone of the skin which will have its effect upon these little pits. Mrs. Do everything you activity in M.—Try saturating your Why | paralyze | Think | and | Help the | is, and you must have what the trade | gealp with aleohol to stop this sudden | calls a super-fatted soap for your com plexion. out of the skin, leaving it harsh, apt | to chap in cold weather and inclined | to wrinkle. If you can afford to spend 25 to 50 cents for a cake of soap (knowing that one cake if used only on the face will last about two months). buy | vourself cold cream soap. There are a | dozen or more brands on the market | and it doesn’t matter which vou get, | be good. Cold cream soap will lather | in the hardest water, it is unusually | cleansing and the skin looks and feels | deliciously refreshed afterward. ! If you must be very economical. wait until sale time and then buy a bar of the real Italian olive oil soap. | castile soap. The bars are about 18 | | inches long. and I've seen them as | hoils. cheap as 50 cents. The soap is very | <oft, the economical thing is to cut | slices and | tween each in some warm cuphoard to dry. You can buy either the green or vellow bars: one is as good as the | | other. | If the water vou use is hard buy a special hard water soap, or tie a little ! oatmeal in cheesecloth and squeeze this in the water. or buy powdered oatmeal and sprinkle this in the wa-! ter. Do not use this cold cream soap | for washing vour hair; the scalp is a different problem Of course [ use it TLEY TEA It tastes better and goes farther attack of falling hair. Repeat it in other three da. e R Special Oyster Soup. in a soup kettle one-half a cupful of butter and cook in this from three to four dozen oysters drained from the liquor, until the gills separate. Lift out the oysters with a skimmer and add to the ket- tle one head of celery finely chopped. Cook until tender, add four table. spoonsful of flour mixed with one teaspoonful of salt and onehalf a teaspoonful of peppgr, and stir into the butter until smooth. Add the oyster liquor and stir until the whole Add a quart of hot milk and the cooked oysters, let come to a boil, then pour the whole into tureen into which four hard-cooked eggs have been sliced. Garnish with chopped parsley before bringing to the table. Melt Serve this new relish that makes the whole meal taste hetter/ PIN MONEY PICALILLI Otherwise you dry the olls | three days and then again after an.| | stain. | paste on the garment. They say new hot cereal is better | oatmeal. | time to phepare than just a pot of Also, one takes little liberties uch an informal little room and plans gay color schemes, and furnish- ing effects she would scarcely dare at- tempt elsewhere. A unique effect has been obtained here by tucking the bed back against | the shortest wall and using a valance seclusion. This room has pale| green painted walls, ivory woodwork, and a plum_colored rug is spread on the floor. The draperies are orange and black checked gingham. Most of the furniture is old black walnut, new- | Iv refinished to its natural, rich brown | Tuster. (Covvright. 1926.) g | Perspiration Stains. Moisten the stain with clear water, then dip a clean cloth in cornstarch and rub the cornstarch well into the This makes a thin coat of Let dry for about 30 minutes. then remove with a stiff brush. You will find this not only removes the circle caused by iration, but also removes all Austria will spend nearly $23,000.- 000 for new telephone lines to Hun- gary. Switzerland, Italy, Jugoslavia and Czechoslovakia. WOMEN PREFER ~ NEW OATA than oatmeal A hetter balanced food for cool mornings —a hot cereal that vields even more strength and energy than That is New Oata, a won- derful new cereal made by Kellogg at. Battle Creek. New Oata contains both oats and | whole wheat, including the bran. Ttis an improvement in taste, texture and nourishment over ordinary oatmeal. It’s new! The first improvement on oats in 50 years. New Oata is different. -And the wonderful com- bination of oats and whole wheat is un- surpassed for healthfulness and flavor. This delicious breakfast takes less coffee. All you meed do is to cook it three minutes in boiling water. It comes to your table the lightest, most delicious hot cereal you ever tried! Your grocer has New Oata. | Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek ° | NEW OATA | toilet set which she had brought with | ical sound in more ways than one. For one thing, it sounded cool, and certainly Betty had never known a Summer to be warmer. The city sweltered. The papers were full of items ahout the crowds sleeping on the sahds at Coney and on the roofs bf tenements, and there were morn- ings when she was on her way to| work that a blue haze seemed to swim e asphalt of the streets, mak- er feel dizzy. In Augzust she went home for a much-needed vacation, and in the cooler air of up-State New York she grew stronger again. Her mother, shocked to find her looking so thin and white, insisted upon babying her. For the first two or three days she had breakfast in bed and stayed there until almost noon. But when she be- gan to feel better it was fun to see the friends she had known as a_child and to display her ring, and her diamond bracelet, and even the silver her. Here it was not as it had heen in New York. Here ‘the girls frankly nvied her for what they called catching a rich husband.” And Betty, with the color bhack in her cheeks and her eyes starry, would laugh at them gavly. “If you knew how little difference that made to me,” she would tell them T'd marry him tomorrow if he didn’t have a cent Mrs. Ames, mother-like, had talked with Betty about the duration of the engagement, but Betty had replied evasively, eager defending Jim, and unconsciously using some of his own phrases. | “Jim knows best, mother, and after | all. we are to be married next month. It's natural for a man to think of the | future and he wants me to have everything. Wait till you come down | to New York for a visit. Then I'll make you stay in bed in the morning, while T spoil N The Tre-Jur Purse-Size “TWIN™ offers you the convenience of your boudoir in one little magic case. powder—refined by the secret Tre-Jur process—is scented with Joli Memoire— memorable. Below, there’s the sliding drawer. It ns at a touch and reveals the famous irresistible, appealing, o] ‘re-Jur rouge—smooth, the delicate shade that becomes you most. The Tre-Jur “TWIN"— purse-sized — purse-priced—is amazin, Compact refills alwaysavailable. Generoussample Tre-Jur Face Powder sent for 10c—stamps or coin. House of Tre-Jur, Inc., 19W. 18thSt., N. Y. C. TRE-JUR throat, and after a moment the slow tears began to trickle down her cheeks. Then she threw herself acros the couch and burst into hard, racking sobs. (Copyright. 1926.) (Continuved in tomorrow's Star.) Finnan Haddie Newberg. Cut up two cupfuls of finnan haddi= which has been soaked for one-half an hour in cold water, skin side down Drain and cover with hot milk for five minutes, drain again, and remove all skin and bones. Flake the fish in small pieces. Heat one tablespoonful of butter in a pan, being careful not to brown it, stir in the fish. and cook until vefy hot. Have ready two table- | spoontuls of flour melted in one table spoonful of butte ful of hot sweet thickens . salt if neces gary, an: one cupful of canned mush- rooms. Remove from the firse and set in a pan of hot water for 10 minutes. Just before serving. add the well beaten yolk of one egg. If the mix- ture is too thick, add a little milk Serve on hot toast. and add one cup- ring as it Golden Salad Dressing. Add two slightly beaten egg volks to one-fourth cupful of pineapple juice, one-fourth cupful of lemon or orange juice and one-fourth cupful of sugar. Cook in a double boiler until thick. Before serving dilute with whipped cream A soap that removes the “nap” or dead skin. Bringing you a satiny, smooth complexion. At drug and toilet counters. Doible Compact at a Dollar The exquisite adhering and in gly priced at $1. P