Evening Star Newspaper, November 3, 1926, Page 37

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WOMAN’S PAGY, FEATURES. 37 THE SPIDER WOMAN DIARY OF A "NEW FATHER Reports That Tears Have Gone Out of Style Where Are the Old-Fashioned, Weepers? BY HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR. Revised Fashion for Fine Linings BY MARY MARSHALL. R. E. DICKSON. | | BY | very mew in @his fashion for fine | inings. Fur wraps that once might | have beer deemed luxurious enough | themselves with a plain white There is nothing very new or very DorothyDix" 1 wies me moodby| Tears Used to Be Cowardly, But Most Effective this morning and I went to work | elvilized in the fachion of fine lining: for our clothes. The most interesting | Joan wouldn't : s instance of this fashion among primi- | gatin lining are now lined with fine | feeling pretty hlue, especially after | A loveiy ermne coat has a |she laughed whent her mother passed | SIGN SEMBLI OF BLACK AND WHITE. TH COAT IS OF BLACK AND THE | LINING AND FROCK OF (REPE | DE INE IN BLACK AND WHITE. THERE ARE SCAL- LOPS OF GOLD KID. tive folk Is the gorgeous feather cloak once worn by the kings of Hawaii. The feathers were not on the outside | of the aloak, however, for the outside consisted of coarse grasses woven to- gether. The linings wege intricately ocontrived of red, vello® and black feathers woven In marvelous designs. The feathers were taken from birds now extinct—the regal taste for their lovely plumage may have had some- thing to do with thelr passing. Now & member of the Hawailan bureau of archives is going ahout the museums of Europe trying to collect examples of this lovely feather lining. At one time the hospitable Hawalian kings had a habit of giving away cloaks of this sort to strangers who admired them, and so a number of them have been discovered in mu- geums far from the Pacific. | to follow i lining of one's coat must surpass the So you see there really is nothing BY Mohawk Valley Seeks Aid. | ALBANY, N. Y., November 3. 17 ~Fraquent reports from the westw: gections of this State tell of the dis- tressed state of mind of the inhabit- ants hecause of threatened. Indian up- risings and Indian and Tory conspir- Acles azainst the liberties of America Another danger which disturls the State is that of a British invasion from Canada. A committee from the New York convention is here to ! with Gen. Philip Schuvler of n- | tinenta! Army in planning a campaign | to ward off three menaces to our peace and safety. i Word has come to this committee | through Gen. Schuvler from Nicholas Herkimer. who is stationed at Canajoharie. that Indians and Torles are assembling at Oswego for | a junction with Canadians and Brit- | tsh regulars as a preliminary to a de- scent ipon on County” and the Mohawk Valley. Details of this con-| spiracy were brought to Gen. Herkimer | by a friendly squaw. | Gen, Herkimer hax further informa- tion that Pet n Rroeck. Hanjoost | Kachyaho son and 120 from Klice Burrach have foin- ed the enemy. that Siv John Johnson in coranand at Oswego with 600 regulars, and that 22 nations of In- 150 YEARS AGO TODAY Story of the U. S. A. JONATHAN A. RAWSON, JR | cided to join Sir John. | nations, | informing Gen velvet. {lining of shrimp-colored velvet fa- conne. A luxurious chinchilla eve- ning wrap has a lining of fine ostrich feathers in soft pastel shades that realiv vivals the soft feather lining of the Hawalian cleaks. Sometimes the [ lining of fur coats is of siik embroid- | ered in gold th:reads server has gone so far as to say that the present fashion the outside thereof. 1t not a new fashion, but one that still is followed, to line the coat of an ensemble with silk to match the frock worn beneath. This ar- rangement is found in a clever little ensemble shown in the sketch. The outside of the coat is of plain black cloth, while white crepe de chine and hlack crera de chine ave used for'the | frock and Me cnat iining in effective magpie arrangement. Broileg Bacon Bran Muffins Coffee LUNCHEON Chipped Beef in Cream Southern T'one Sliced Bananas Brownies Tea DINNER Cream of Potato Soup Stuffed Beefsteak Baked Potatoes Brussels Sprouts Vegetable Salad Hot Mince Pie Coffee BRAN MUFFINS Gne cup bran, one cup entire wheat flour. one-third can mo- lasses, one cup milk, one scant teaspoon soda. pinch salt. BROWNIES. One-third cup butter, one-third cup sugar, one-third cup molas- mes, one egg. one scant cup flour, one cup pecan or other nuts, one-half teaspoon haking powder. Cream butter and sug- ar, add molasses and egg, and lastly, flour and baking powder sifted together. Stir in nuts and bake cakes in small fancy pans well greased. SRTUFFED BEEFSTEAK. Spread one pound round steak an inch thick with dressing sea- soned with sage and a little onlon if liked. Roll steak up, tie with twine, lay in baking pan with thin slices salt pork on top, pour around it one pint water, cover closely, bake in moderate oven over three hours. dtans have held council firex and de- These hostile it is further related. have sent a belt to the friendly Oneldas as an invitation to join them at the same time conveying a hint that if the On- eidas refuse the helt and remain at peace, the 22 nations will declare war on the Oneidas and spare not the life. of a single Oneida child. Gen vasion may be expected at any time along the Mohawk River and the re- zions west of its sources, and hegs for State or Continental troope with which to oppose such powerful foes and frustrate their wicked intentions. Another appeal comes from Col. Lath vop Allen at Fort Dalgton, where sim dangers threaten and where the rrison of 123 men has but 12 pounds of powder. Although the State committee be-| lieves that some of this information arises from. panicky conditions and is zreatly axaggerated. it will send 430 men into the Mohawk country, and is Herkimer that “‘these are sent In compliance with vour wishes though we really think them unnecessary if the people of vour county will exert any degree of that spirit which we have reason to expect of men animated by the glorious cause in which they are engaged.” What Do You Know About It? Daily Science Six. 1. Do earwings really get into people’s ears? 2. Why is the 17-vear locust not a locust? 3. Does the 17-vear locust al wavs appear every 17 vears? 4. How does th ear locust know when his 17-vear sieep is el 5. Where are true locusts seri- ous enemiecs to man? | £. What animal does not fear the giant army ants? Answers to these questions in tomorrow’s Star, The Death Tick. People used to be extramely afraid | of the death tick, @ little beetle that hores into furniture and woodwork | and ticks away like a watch. It was | supposed that the heetle was ticking | away the last minutes of someone dving. or was forewarning the listen er of approaching death. It is now known that the beetle is calling to his mate. and this he does by knock fng his head against the walls of his tunnel, a singular form of love-frenzy | indeed. In fact if vou rap three or four times. you can usualiv get a de- | lighted response from the silly beast | Now what do you know about that? | i Anawers to Yesterday's Questions. | 1. A mirage is a reflection. always | upside-down, of some object that is, actually out of sight. over the round | edge of the world. but due to certain atmospheric cond « casts its image | on the horizon: mists and cloud banks resembling water or mountains are | not true mirages | 2. A rainbow is a display of the | spectrum in the sky en when !hF! sun shineg thro 8. The aurora a little wnderstood display s in high Jatitudes, probably having static elec- treity as its origin 4. The corona is a display of light around the fiery edges of the sun al- ways present, but visible to us only at_aclipses. 5. A nimbo-stratus is a black storm eloud havi > form of a great sheet rather tl billowy form of a eumulo-stratus Summer | thundersiorm ¢ v the is blue is not cer-| tain: probabl; t is so because the atmosphere, acting like a prism, scat- ters the biue rays of the sunlight as soon as the light strikes the upper mosphere. (Copright. 1926.) Jots From Geography The villa of Marie Antoinette, in the Petit Trianon of the Versailles Gar- dens, evidences the architectural { taste of the period just preceding the | French Revolution. There is little credence given legends of the comic ' opera capers of the royal family rather it was here that the unfortu- | nate Bourbons found quiet and rest. Parking With Peggy “When I teld Dora I thoug! should see an alienist she =aid, ‘Heavens, no; I can't stand foreign One fashion ob- | Herkimer predicts that an in-| me the cream for my coffee and asked Ko - | me whether 1 wanted it boiled—the |eream, 1 mean. That row over bodl- ing the milk for the baby's formula | gives me a pain. It's my baby, isn't it, even if it is mother-in-law’s grand- | child? I got the doctor’s bill today. vi he's i 1 like pretty white—and wish he amputated I'd like to be a A Got o talking to one of the fellows | at the office about babies’ food formu- las, and he said his baby didn't use |a bottie, but why didn't T look up a | certain book on the sublect; it was a | good hook and if it @ald to boil the | milk, then the milk onght to be boiled. So at noon I bought a copy and read three chapters this afternoon, and finally found where it said to boil the milk, in the part about the formula our baby is using. Tonight I brought {1t home and put it on the table in front of Joan and her mother, opened to the page [ wanted them to see— and 1 _had marked the paragraph. |too. They read it and Joan seemed to be impressed, but ner mother oniy |sald, “Huh,” and that if we wa {to ruin our child's digestion, why, go | right ahead. And she put on her hat | after dinner and went around the | corner to the plcture show. | T tried to talk to Joan, but all she | are they?" | bedroom ‘and_ closed the door behind lher. 1 wish I hadn't brothers that when we were all three |arguing last night she went on into the bedroom and to hed. and here I am, going to bed on | this darn dining room lounge again. [ suB RoOsA BY MIMIL Saves Embarrassment. There are many embarrassing situ- ations which arise to confront all of us from time to time. Most of us meet these incidents with | what poise we can summon. Some utterly self-conscious girls just blush, falter, stammer and run away from a predicament. Others, with a more gallant _ effort, remain and talk nervously to cover their distress and confusion. Few there are who actually carry off a situation, no matter how embar- rassing, with a really high hand, with a gay, carefree manner, which puts them 'fn the ascendant and leaves their opponents or tormentors looking rather foolish. Let me tell you half the secret of meeting humiliations or sudden em- barrassments—it lies in vour smile. The girl who can assume the natu- ral, easy smile of a normal, happy per- son in the face of no matter what ificulty is the little actress who gets out of the most difficult situations with the greatest ease and grace. Now, here's one of the most com- | mon situations which arise: | Barbara has been thrown over with | a loud crash by her adored Dereck and her heart has bled considerably— he has even thought vaguely of end- ing everything in the nearest river. However, life has held just a few charms still for her, so she's gathered herself together and started out to mend her wrecked life. But the worst of it is that in her | little crowd she can't help running into Derek. He's always present at the dances she attends. ‘Tt's the natu- ral thing for him to ask her for a dance. And, being a tactless young man, he spares her nothing. He has fallen madly In love with HelenNn the meantime and in Barbara's pre: ence now he very often makes love to his new flame Barbara says the strain is un- | endurable. If she only had some defi- | nite rule to go by when faced with | her old sweetheart woolng his new love. Well, the best definite rule that can be given her is: “Learn to smile; learn | to register natural, easy, amused in- | terest.” Of ‘course, it's hard. But once you've got control of the old facial muscles =0 that you can throw that cheerful grin whenever you want to you have a valuable ald to ease and poise. Practice that smile till it doesn’t look forced or theatrical. Practice it hard. Try it on vour friends, rela- tives and near-neighbors. Then turn it on when the situation calls for some display of ease and poise on your | part. | A happy laugh is the surest way of | banishing no matter what embarrass- | ment. Tt will dispel confusion, it will put_people at their ease, and it will, as I've sald before, defeat those whose | purpose it is to annoy or torment you. . | " Try it the next time you feel like | running away and having a good ery. | Learn to act in six lessons. Your his- trionic ability may get vou out of many a tight hole. (Copyright. 1926.) Mimi will be glad to answer any inquiries directed to this paper, provided a stamped. addressed envelope Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. f Words often misused: Don't say | “We shall be there except something |prevents.” Say ‘“unless something prevente.’ Often mispronounced: Calaboose. Accent on last syllable, not the first. Often misspelled: Devise: s, not z. Synonyms. Assert, affirm, allege, avow, state, declare, claim, certify. Word study: “Use a word ihree times and it s vours.” Let us in- crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Ambiguity: doubtfulness; having a | double meaning. “The ambiguity of | her answers did not satisfy him."” Beef Loaf-Banana | _Run through a meat chopper one | pint of roast beef, add one well beaten | egg. one cupful of bread crumbs, one cupful of tomato juice, one teaspoon- ! ful of Worcestershire sauce, and salt {and pepper to taste. Form into a loaf and bake for 20 minutes. Peel and | slice three bananas lengthwise and ar- | | range around the meat. Continue bak- |ing for 10 minutes, basting with melted butter. Serve on a hot platter, the | meat loaf in the center, the bananas 'around it. ted | would sav: “My brothers are bums. | Finally she went into the | called her | | any less for them to cry over. Feminine Weapon—Nowadays Women Work ! for What They Want. 1 AVE you observed that tears have gone out of fashion and that women | Heaven knows, it is not because there is weep less than they used to? There that tear at women's hearts. and anxiety and loss and poverty. ! unfaithful husbands. " | i heroines in all ‘nlwa,\'n standing in their | remen| | thon long-distance weepers. | had befallen them 30 or 40 years before and who must, upon conservative' has been no diminution of the sorrows There are still death and sickness and suffering There are still wayward children and ( Probably there are just as many unhappy women now as there ever | | were, but they no lénger do their wailing in public places. They shed telrsL behind locked doors at night, and they meet the world dry-eyed the next) | morning. | Yet this was not always the case. In former days it was considered an elegant feminine accomplishment for a woman to be a free weeper. The | of the ol into tears at the crook of a fing shioned novels are described as having water' X drenched in dew—and they would burst Those of us wha are middle-aged can ber somber, black-ciad iadies who visited our mothers, who were mara- who had never “'got over’ me misfortune that estimate, have literally shed barrels of tears. | | | | are impervious to tears” There are nn such figures of woe now. ‘wiped their eyes that it is aimost as startl as it is to see a man. I often wonder why. . . S it because women have become less emotional? really reliabie waterproof masqara and rouge? se men have become so hard-boiled that they Or is it because women have got strong enough to damage in a flood” Is it beca Women have so thoroughly | g a thing to see a woman cry Is it because there is no No complexion that doesn't fight for what they want instead of sitting down and crying for it? Time was when the shortest and moat direct route to a woman's desires | ways always by water. mush before her. | marry hecause he couldn’t withstand her tears when she wept for him. All she had to do was to turn on the hydrant and| ingulf some man in a torrent of tears, and he melted down into a spineless | Many a man has married the woman he didn't want to | Many | a husband and fathe: has dried the eves of his wife and daughters on cars | and jewels and trips to Europe that he couldn't afford, but he was willing to do anything ratner than perish in the sea of brine into which they plunged him. Of course. the efficacy of tears has depended to a large degree upon the | ability of the crier to weep without getting red in the face and having her | nose swell. Also upon whether the weeper pulled the cry-baby line before| marriage or after, for it is sadly true that the man who will invite his sweet- | 11 his wife after marriage not to act aeart to weep upon the second button of his waistcoat before marriage will | like a foo! when she cries. Stil! and all, tears have been a valuable weapon to women in fighting the battle of the sexes. but they have been a tower of refuge They have not only proved a potent source of revenue, to which a woman could flee when she was trying to hold an untenable position in a domestic debate or when she was attempting to excuse some undefendable act. In such an emergency all that a woman had to do was to burst into| tears, and the incident was closed, for you can't argue with tears, nor is there | anything that a man who isn't a perfect brute can say to his poor little | weeping wife but, “There, there, now; don't cry,” | *Rtother-in-law came in after a while. | 907€- | &he told me the show was good. and | I no matter what she has . T is the women who can weep who can literally get away with murder and | be acquitted by man jurors who couldn’t withstand their tears, and who in | domestic circles henpeck their husbands out of their lives. A little two-by-four | wife who can throw a fit of hysterics can make a giant of a husband tremble before her and walk on eggs for fear of riling her. Teare have always been the only feminine weapon of which men were afraid, but they have always been a coward's weapon, and so it shows how immeasurably the morale of women has improved that women have thrown | them into the discard and that they no longer play upon man's sympathies and his tenderness in order to bamboozle and browbeat him. And it shows how women have grown in strength that now they roll up | their sleeves and go after what they want, instead of howling for it. The woman who lost her fortune in former days became thereafter a | gevser of tears, who spattered over everybody in her vicinity and took all of the starch out of the pleasure in their own possessions. Nowadays, she realizes that no one wants a damp, moist, unpleasant body around, so she sheds never a tear that is in evidence, turns & smiling face on the world. but goes to work and makes good and And what a fine, brave attitude toward life it shows for the woman who has had some great sorrow to hide her grief in her own heart and to refuse to sadden all who come in contaet with her by making herself a fountain of tears. Certainly is is a significant and propitious sign of the times that women are using their handkerchiefs for ornament and not for use, and that they have quit crying and gone to work. troubles down in brine anyway. (Covyright. 1926.) The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright. 1926.) Thers was never any sense in packing It only served to preserve them. DOROTHY DIX. ’ 1. Sorrow. 5. Laud. 10. Awaken. 11. Preposition. 12. Lifeless. 14 Gaelic language. 15. Stumble. 17. Dry. 18. Suffix of agency. 19. Something tantalizing. 21. Dowry. 22, Goddess of the earth. 23. Overlooked. 25. Raflroad (abbr.). 26. Vehicle. Printer's unit. 28. Standing room only (@bbr.). 30. Rowling term (plural). 33. Rhymes. Entertainment. | 86. French province. 3¢ Limited (abbr.). Preposition. Branch of American forces (abbr.). Proceed. 45. Temperance. 48. Pronoun. 49. Cretan mountain. 51. Worthless mob. 52. Companion (colloquial). | 53. Tradition. Christmas. | | | | | | 56. Unaspirated consonant. 57. Notched. Answer to Yesterdav's Puzzle. 59. Right (abbr.). . Lift (colloquial). . Says under oath. . Slacker. Down. . Telegraphic code. . Remove. . Purpose. . Concerning. Vitlate. . Three-toed sloth. . Those in office. . Rules. . Business. . Prefix: four. . Number. . Inclome. Bull fighter. . Steadfast. 23. Marks of omission. . Ostentatious. . Man's name. . Arablan sultanate. . Measure (abbr.). . Road (abbr.). Father. . State (abbr.). . Metaled hole. . Active. Bowers. . Chinese dependency. . Aromas. Forbid. Measure of cloth. Parsonage. . Lined up. Servant. Compass point. Card . Each (abbr.). 60. Symbol for bromine. Pimento-Potato Croquette. Force some hot boiled potatoes through a potato ricer. To two cup- fuls of potato add two level table- spoonfuls of butter, the lightly beaten yolks of two eggs and two tablespoon- fuls of pimemto pulp obtained by pressing through a sieve. Season with salt and pepper. Shape partly, dab with flour, dip in beaten egg and inders. Fry fn debp fat absorbent paper. roll in fine crumbs, lhlpxn: m cyl- | laf an n on John Henderson and Helena Ford are engaged to be married, and John is_tired of her. He <doesn't know whether to tell her the truth or not, but finally decides that he must. CHAPTER IIL John Changes His Mind. Of course, on the night John made up his mind to tell Helena, she was unusually sweet or seemed so. He thought he had nerved himself up to the point of blurting the whole thing out and asking her forgiveness, but when he reached her house in the suburbs where she lived, with her mother and two younger sisters, he | tound her in an unusually gay and adorable mood. She looked very pretty, too, in a | canary-colored sweater and a pleated sport skirt and she ran out of the house to meet him in a more enthusi- astic manner than she usually ex- hibited. Natalfe and Doris, Helena's sisters, were playing croquet on the side Jawn. They waved to him gayly. There was a pleasant air of domes- ticity about everything. The warm, scented kitchen was so big and roomy. So different from the kitch- ens in apartment houses. John al- | most wished that he and Helena were | planning to live in the suburbs. Tt had been her wish that they take an apartment in town and he had been quite willing. But houses in the suburbs were rather nice and this one particularly. ‘ Mrs. Ford was really a darling. Not a bit like the traditional mother- in-law. “Fricasseed chicken,” she said with a smile as she kissed him, “and Helena is fixing candied sweet pota- toes.” . It was pleasant to lie in the porch swing. ‘There were gay awnings with green-and-white stripes, and in | the distance poplar trees swayed in the hreeze. The house across the road had a rose arbor, crimson ram- blers. The smell of them drifted across to him. It would be nice to come down here after he and Hel- ena were married, just to get an oc- casional glimpse of the country. He liked Mrs. Ford and the younger girls. And what would they think of him if he told Helena he didn't want to marry her? Helena appeared in the doorway with a small tray. On it were two thin-stemmed glasses, and as she came toward him he rose to his feet. As they slipped their drinks he looked at her critically. After all, she really was sweel. He could imagine a worse lot than to he mar- ried to her. Why not let things go on as they were”? Perhaps he would fall in love with her all over again once they were married. And how could he be brute enough to tell her that he was no longer in love with her? He simply couldn’t do it, that was all. Dinner was very gay. Natalie and Doris prattled of high school doings and it always amused him to hear their comments on life. Mrs. Ford was eager to see that his plate was kept replenished, and the candied sweet potatoes were deliclous. When the coffee was served he was in a very good humor, and later when he and Helena sat in the porch swing he put his arm about her and drew her head to his shoulder. He did not face the fact openly, but actually he had put all thought of telling her out of his mind. He was in a mood., that was all. If he and Helena had married when they had first became engaged he wouldn't be feeling this way. At 10:30 Helena got the flivver out of the garage and the two of them climbed into it. They always allowed a little time to reach the station so |that there would be no need for {hurry, and it was very pleasant to |drive along through the sweet- | scented countryside. When Helena ! stopped the car In a little nook near LITTLE BENNY | | | BY LEE PAPE. 1 was allmost late for skool this morning on account of being allmost late enyways and then not remember- ing ware I put my cap. ma looking out of the dining room deor and say- ing. Land sakes Benny, wat are you doing. nuthing but a old fashion mir- acle can prevent you from being late even as it is without dashing around like a fish in a aquarian, wat on erth |are you looking for? | My cap, imminy crickets its never ware T put it, holey smokes how can |1 find it if somebody is all a time | putting it some place different? T sed. | ;’ea, and your the somebody, ma sed. And she started to help me look, saying, Havent vou eny ideer at all | ware you could of put it? | Sure, I have several ideers but Ive | looked all those places, I sed. My goodness its a wonder you dont mislay yourself some time and forget ware you live, ma sed. Wats your hed for enyway, is it perfectly usiiss? she sed, and T ged, Well G wizz, it is i T cant find my cap. Meening one of its cheef uses was to put caps on it, and we keep on hunting and I kepp on being later and later, and all of a suddin ma sed, Wats that buntch sticking out of you coat in frunt there? ‘Wat buntch, O yes, heer it is, ma, I stuck it inside of my blouse before brekfist so as I would be sure to have it without looking, I sed. G wizz, ma, its a good thing your sutch a good noticer, aint 1t? I sed. It will be a good thing if your not te, ma sed. | Wich T pritty neer was but not ql‘!. AS THEY SIPPED THEIR DRINKS HE LOOKED AT HER CRITICALLY. the station where they always said | good-night, John took her in his | arms with more tenderness than he had showr in some time, and she clung to him for a long moment. “I love you so much, dea-est.” she whispered against his throat. “Don't think me silly if I tell you something, will_you?” “Of course not,” he said deliber- ately. “Nothing you could say would be silly.” “It's only that sometimes of late I've imagined you didn't care as much for me as you once did. Isn't that absurd?” “Absurd, he said with a laugh. should say so.” “Then you do?" “Now, Helena, old girl, fancy you short getting temperamental! You know I do.” She drew a long breath and kissed him_quickly. “I'm glad,” she said, with a little break in her voice. “I hope you al- | ways will.” | (Covyright. 1926.) | (Continued in_tomorrow's Star.) Salt-Rising - BREAD BARKER’S | Gluten 616 9th N.W. Whole Wheat 118~ *¥. Yive. HOUSE COFFEE The Flavor i3 Roasted In! Dwinell-Wright Co. 7 Woirde rrxoe T EA Containing Extrafancy ORANGE PEKOE TEA from the Finest Gardens of | INDIA sns CEYLON 4 CORMICK & CO., RALTIMORE . MD. To Make Pine Cough p at Home Has no equal for prompt results. es but a moment to make, Saves about $2. Pine is used in nearly all\ prescriptions and rewedies for \ coughs. The reason ix that pine \| has a remarkable effect in sooth- ing and healing the membranes of the throat and chest Pine cough ayrups are made of pine and syrup. The “syrup” is usually plain sugar syrup. To ‘make the best pine cough remedy, put 2 ounces of Pinex in a pint bottle, and fill up with home- made sugar syrup or clarified honey. This makes a full pint—more than you can buy ready-made for three times the money. It is pure, and tastes good. You can feel it take right hold of a cough or cold in a way that means business. The cough may be dry, hoarse and tight, or may be persistently loose from 'the forma- tion of phlegm. The cause is the same—inflamed membranes—and this Pinex and Syrup combination will stop it—usually in 24 hours or less. Splendid, too, for bronchial asthma or hoarseness. Pinex is a_highly concentrated compound of Norway pine extract and palatable guaiacol, and is fam- ous the world over for its prompt| effect upon coughs. Beware of substitutes. Ask it for “235 ounces your drug of Pinex” with directions. Ft. Wayne, Ind. DIN or Coughs, correctly 9,- Be sure you use India Tea, or a blend containing India Tea. Use an earthen- ware teapot, and put into it one good teaspoonful of India Tea for each cup of tea required. Be sure you pour the water into the teapot the moment it boils. Only fresn boiling water can bring cut the true flavour of the tea. Hot wateris nouse. Water that has been boiling for some time does not givethebestresults Thisisimportant if you want a really good cup of tea. Allow the tea to stand 5 minutes to infuse. Putalittle cream or milk into each cup before pouring out thetea. It greatly improves the flavour. Then add sugar to taste. % Any retailer or store can supply you with India Tea or blends contain- ing India Tea. He has no difficulty in getting it, as prac- ticallyevery whole- sale distributor of tea in this district supplies India Tea. He will gladly get it for you—but— Be sure you use INDIA TEA ora blend containing India Tea

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