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WOMAN’S PAGE. Great Variety Shown in Pleating BY MARY MARSHALL. Perhaps the most remarkable of all the many and varied pleats of the present season is the inverted pleat found at the back of some of the | practical new sports skirts—remark- | able, however, only when seen by : modern eyes, for there was a time well within the memory of many women when the inverted back pleat on skirts was taken as a matter of ocourse. This inverted back pleat ap- | pears on a smart little hunting suit THE FIGURE DISPLAYS A SKIRT OF KASHA PLEATED LIKE THIN MATERIAL. IT IS PART| _OF A SEMI-SPORTS FROCK OF\ ROSE COLOR. BELOW IS THE SKIRT OF ANOTHER SPORTS FROCK ~SHOWING NOVEL PLIEATINC *ith an inverted box in the cket as well. When in doubt have it pleated, ‘ems to be the motto of the dress. akers nowadays, and the pleaters ave certainly risen to the occasion. ‘he_well-equipped pleating shop has nechanical devices for laying and setting a wide variety of pleats »nd the skill of the pleaters is such that there is dly a material that cannot be pleated. The woman who contem- plates g some or all of her own cht to visit one of these pleating shops just to bilities they ~afford. Materiul v as kasha can be pleated as finely as crepe de chine and the effect is charming. Moreover, pleating nowadays does not come out as it used to. The home d . to take advanta pleat see what smaker really ought ge of all these new BEDTIME STORIE Hide and Seek. You know. if you have ever tried. How hard it is from se'f to hide. —0id Mother Nature. Danny Meadow Mouse was all upset. es, sir, he was all upset. He didn’t know what to do. He had put to flight the handsome stranger who had been saying nice things to Nanny Meadow Mouse: but instead of feeling proud | of it, and going back with his head up and his chest out, for Nanny to @dmire, he was suddenly dreadfully afraid that she would sec him. Here he was, home at last, yet afraid to meet Nanny face to face. Presently he heard her footsteps coming along the little path. Danny took to his heels. Then began a funny game of hide ana seek. Danny was trying to keep out of “HE'LL COME BACK,” TO HE! SAID SHE RSELF. Nanny's sight and Nanny was doing her best to get a good view of him. You see, when she had seen him at- tack the stranger there was something strangely familiar about him. He had looked strangely like her beloved Danny. She couldn't believe that it was Danny, for she was sure that something dreadful had happened to him leng ago; but she must make sure. Now somehow a great sense of shame had taken possession of Dannv. | He was ashamed to face Nanny after devices ing, picoting and hemstitchi: cost 18 trifling and the result is to give the sort of finish that keeps a frock from looking home made. Fan-ike arrangements of pleats on either side of the skirt are made especially at- tractive when a material of contrast- ing color is inset so that it shows the fan is open. Insets of contrastng material may also be arranged when large box pleats are used so that the contrast of color shows only where the pleats open. Really good ready-made clothes can be bought so reasonably nowadays and such good results in alteration can be secured in the workroom o the shops where these ready-made things are sold, that there is no very great advantage or economy to ‘be gained through making your own clothes. One almost wishes that the saving were greater—then more wom- en Wc;!uld feel that they were justified in using time in making their own clothes. There s a fascination in handling the materials and in work- ing out the little problems that are involved in the making of the new ClOtReS: opyrieht. 1026.) e MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST Sliced Bananas Dry Cereal with Cream Fish Cakes, White Sauce Squasn _Biscuits Coffee. LUNCHEODN Cheese Souffle risp Rolls ‘Waldorf Salad Molasses Diop Cakes Tea DINNER Tomato Soup Baked Stuffed Haddock Delmonico Ictatoes reamed Carrots Lettuce Hearts, i'rench Dressing Steamed Apple Pudding Coffee SQUASH BISCUITS One cgg, % cup sugar, 1 heaping| large 3poon boiled squash, 3 cup) milk, % .cup flour, 2 teaspoonsj baking powder and % teaspoon cinnamon and nutmeg. Add milk| to squash, then sugar and egg. Sift] fiour and baking powder and salt| together, then add to first mixture.| (Spices may be omitted if desired.) Beat thoroughly and bake in hot buttered gem . pans about 2§ minutes. CHEESE SOUFFLE. Pour 1 cup hot mill" over 'z cup| soft bread crumbs from center of] loaf; add 1 tablespoon tutter, 1 cup srated cheese, beaten yolks 3 eggs,| 1-3 teaspoon salt 2nd paprika and finaliy fold ‘n stiffly-beatggp whites.| [Turn into buttered Individual ldishes ard bake about 15 minutes. Serve immediatel. APPLE PUDDING Mix 1% cups chopped apples with equal quantity fine bread) crumbs, add % t-aspoon salt, 1 cup) seeded raisins and 3 well-beaten ggs; turn into buttered mold and| steam 1% hours. Serve with lemon] saude. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS having been away so long. So he tried to hide from her. Really he wasn't hiding from her, you know; he was hiding from himself. If he hadn't had a guilty.feeling he wouldn't have hidden. But he did have a guilty feeling and so he tried to hide. Time lafter time he thought that he was safely hidden, only to have to take to his heels again. Nanny was persist- ent. But, then, Nanny always had been persistent. Danny couldn’t re- member the time when Nanny hadn’t had her w It was just like her to persist in trying to find him. ow Danny was at a disadvantage. Nanny knew all the little paths and just where they led to. Danny didn't know where any of them went to. You see, he had never been over in that particulay part of the Green Meadows before. Nanny had moved there while Danny had been away, So Danny never knew just exactly where he was coming out when he started along a little path. Two or three times the path ended abruptly and there was nothing for Danny to do but force his way through the long grass until he could find another little path, At last Nanny gave up and went back home. To be quite truthful, she hadn't given up. She merely meant to make Danny think she had given up. She is a very clever small person, is Nanny Meadow Mouse. ‘The surest way of finding any one is to make him try to find you,” said Nanny, as she climbed up to her home in the bush. You know it was an old nest of Brownie the Thrasher which she had roofed over. As soon as she was out of sight inside she turned around and sat where she could look out through the doorway without being seen. “He'll come back,” said she to herself. “I know it. He'll come back, and then I'll get a good look at him. It is queer how much like Danny he looked. ~ Yes, sir, it is queer. If I didn’t know that Danny must be dead, I should say that that was Danny. But, of course, it wasn't, or he wouldn’t have hidden from me.” Meanwhile Danny had discovered that_he was no longer,being sought by Nanny. Then, strangely enough, he was disappointed. He wanted to be found. Yes, sir, he wanted to be found. When vou come to think of it. Meadow Mice are queer people, aren't they? But so are some others. October’ s . Party By SHIRLEY RODMAN WILLIAMS— ! PARTIES! Vacation is over, old friends are grouping again and even the little folk feel the seasonal social whirl, but we must be careful that with the excite- tnent and nerve strain of beginning school we are not too indulgent in our eager- ness to make them happy. Parties for little folk should unquestionably be day- time parties. For the older children, not%ing should break in on school night rest, and week end parties should begin early and end early. T know of no more fal- lacious argument than for parents to say, Il the other parents permit late hours, ] suppose we'll have to.” Better let someone start a practice which would be an «xpression of love and concern for the best interests of the children! OCTOBER gave a party And “Farewell” Jack Frost fixed up With leaves of " was the reason, the woodland flame and yellow, The brightest scarlet ramblers, And purple berries mellow. Miss Sunshine spread a carpet, Sir Wind crici, “KatydidTl Help me produce the music By playing on her fiddle.” The birds all came at dawning To frolic ‘mongst the thickets, -And danced so long they scrambled To get their southbound tickets! e, umy THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY for pleating, stitching, braid- ] % When anyfing makes a noise like ‘at when I'm leadin’ it, I finks it's time to go home to my dear muvver. (Copyrixht. 1926.) LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. I wasent exter good today, and ma told pop about me and pop wouldent leeve me go out after suppir, and he was adding up figures in his check- book trying to find out weather he was rite or weather the bank was rite, llke he does every munth, and the fellows started to wissle outside, me saying. Theres the fellows wis- seling, pop. J Do you sippose thelr wisseling for me? Pop sed, and I sed, No sir, for me, and he sed, Then why should I be_intristed? Proving he dident feel like taking the hint, and he kepp on adding fig- ures_with a fxpression as if he was lafraid the bank was going to be rite jand he was going to be rong, and I started to make sounds in the back of my throat trying to see how neer 1 could come to cawfiing without axually, and after a wile pop sed, Yee zods, If your going to cawff, cawff. 1 aint going to cawff, pop, I sed. Well then wats the ideer of all the rehearsing? pop sed. Lets see, ware was I, youve got me all balled up heer, 4 from 11 is 8, no, 7, he sed. And after a wile I wondered how a bord would sneeze If berds sneezed, and I started to make diffrent funny kinds of sounds through my nose try- ing to find out, and pop sed, For Peet sake thats even werse, havent you ot a hankerchiff. T dont need one, pop. Im jest try- ing something, Im jest making ix- periments, 1 sed, and pop sed, Your making me fit for an insane asylum, that's wat your making, go on out with the rest of those howling dervishes, Meening the fellows, wich I did. THE DIARY OF A NEW FATHER BY ROBERT E. DICKSON. This morning I told Joan T was sorry I had called her brothers bums when she and her mother and I were arguing over bofling the baby’s milk, and that my opinion of her brothers didn't matter when we were trying to safeguard our son's health. Joan said it was all right, and it would have been all right if her inother hadn't heard us and buttsd in. She said, “Well, you haven't said yet that they aren't bums,” and Joan said, ‘Yes, you apologize for that, don’t you? All that made me sore, and I raid they were darn right, her brothers were -bums, but I was being kind enough to let that pass in the present argument. Well, I spent the whole day figuring it over. It worries me to have Joan mad, and her mother is helping her stay mad, and I thought and thought, and finaly got *the bright:st idea of my entire career. It's a wonder it didn’t occur to me before. I could hardly wait until quitting time, and as soon as the clock struck 5, I rushed over to the telegraph office and sent a wire to Joan’s older brother, Bill. I said: *“Would vou advise bolling milk as per cdirections in making Dr. Soandso’'s formula for infants, or would you disregard direc- tions?"” As I say, it was nothing short of an inspiration. If th: answer is only what I want it'to be, I ought to take myself out and show me a good time in _celebration. I got the hunch when I happened to remember that Bill is an interne in the city hospital down home! “Puzzlicks” uzsle- Limericks A farmer once called his cow She seemed such an amiable When the farmer drew —3— She kicked off his —4— And now he is very much —§—. 1. A lMght breeze. 20 A young cow- 3. Close. 4. Al animals have two. 5._Mul“. impervious to sound. (Note—And after that he changed the name of the cow! After what? Complete the limerick by placing the right words, indicated by the numbers, in the corresponding spaces, and you'li see. Or, if you can't locate the right words, look for the answer here to- morrow. There'll be a new “puzzlick,” too.) Yesterday's “Puzzlick.” In (hes?'fld ‘West there lived a young ou X Who made quite a brilliant debut In highest soclety, With all due propriety, Just as every sweet maiden should do. (Copyright, 1920.) ———e Spanish Omelet. Fry six slices of bacon crisp, then chop into bits. Peel and chop two tomatoes and eight mushrooms, and mix the bacon with these. Return to the pan and fat in which the bacon was fried, and add a large onion minced fine. Stir over the fire for 10 minutes, taking care that the con- tents of the pan do not scorch. Have ready eight eggs beaten, add to them salt and pepper to taste, and six tea- spoonfuls of milk. Turn the eggs into a pan In which a bit of butter has been melted, and cook over the fire until the omelet is set. Pour the chopped mixture quickly over the omelet, fold this over upon itself, and slip from the pan to a hoigplatter. &end at once to the table, [ of extreme frankness or Worse [ DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Why Excessive Novel Reading Is a Vice—Must the Girl Terminate an Evening Call or Should the Young Man? )JEAR MISS DIX: First. Will you please answer these two questions? ‘What will be the effect of continuous novel reading where a person neglects home, family, business, church and social duties %o sit and read novels? Second. Answer: How long should a courtship continue where a lady meets a man from another State and knows very little about him? MADELINB. Novel reading+can become a vice if indulged in to excess. In moderation, it is one of the greatest pleasures and consolations of life. There are novels that present history in a vivid and dramatic form that makes the past live again for you. There are novels that take you to the far places of the earth and make you acquainted with strange countries. ‘There are novels of adventure that stir novels of sentiment that touch your heart; humanize, any pulpit. that preach more powerful sermons than any delivered your blood an1 fire your imagination; novels that educate, that in There are times when we are tired and worn, when to read a good novel is the best of all rest cures. » There are seasons of grief and anxiety in which we would break under the strain if we could not forget our own troubled lives in following the lives of some hero and heroine in a book. So we may well thank God for novels and the men and women who write them for us. But the novel-reading habit Is as great an evil as the dope habit if it makes us neglect our real work and live in an unreal instead of a real world. Also, novels can become a potent source of debauchery if one steeps oneself day after day in the erotic fiction that reeks of sensuality and that teaches that men and women have a right to indulge their passions. There are plenty of novels that are nothing but mental garbage cans, and to spend one's time reading them is to have one’s soul poisoned. I have known more than one woman who wrecked her life by incessant novel reading. These ladies lived so much in the company of beautiful But misunder- stood heroines that they came finally to believe themselves to be thrown | away on_their commonplace families, and so they finally went, like their favorite Lady Gwendolyn, with the men they fancied were their soul mates and who eventually deserted them. Second. Certainly a woman should be in no hurry to marry a man who ‘is a stranger to her. She should prolong the courtship until she has done a thorough job of detective V:urk about his past life. DOROTHY DIX. Dy EAR MISS DIX: When a young man calls on a young lady and the time comes when the call should end, should the young lady suggest to him that it is time for him to go, or should he, of his own accord, take his departure? Answer: No lady should be put M. F. to the embarrassment of having to order a man out of her house, or even suggesting to him in the most delicate and tactful way that she is weary of take the air. his presence and that he had better Believe me, my dear M. F., if a man wishes to make a hit with women he can acquire no more whning art speedy exit. than that of making a graceful and For there {s no man in the world of whom girls have such a horror as the one who stays on and on and on, until the very clock yawns in his face, and who keeps threatening to £0, but never goes until he is put out. Just remember that a call is agreeable in proportion to the shortness of it. The first half-hour is peppy and thrilling. The next half-hour may be interesting if the man is a fairly good talker, but by the end of the hour things begin to drag, and before the two-hour limit is reached the girl is shedding secret tears of boredom. So when you go to see your best girl, say vour little piece, and make it snappy and cut it short. And when you start to go, don’t of a gun. linger. Go as if yvou were shot out Most girls wear shoes three sizes too small for them, and when you keep on standing up and saying “Good-by, good-by,” she is enduring untold agonies and wishing that she had a patent bouncer to speed you on your way. 7 ‘ 2 Diagnosis of Face Skin. The strong light from the window brought out the rough blotchiness of the woman's skin. Miss Whyte flicked over a leaf of a record book before her and wrote swiftly for several min- utes. Then she said, “The skin, Mrs. Crane, is & woman’s chief single beauty when it is of delicate tint and texture. It acts as a barometer of inward health and physical purity.” “Shall we take it first, Miss Whyte?"” Helen's voice vibrated with emotion. The thrill of the chase was in her blood. “Yes; oughly, You never had you?" “No. T've never given myself any attention other than to be clean.’ “That reminds me, I want to speak about_your bathing today. It seems, indeed, a simple procedure. But the whys and wherefores of that simple ‘matter have not concerned you, I'll wager. Did it ever occur to you, M Crane, that the body breathes throug the skin, and if the pores are stopped up, the body suffocates? The poisons remain in the blood supply and are distributed over and over again to THE DAILY HOROSCOPE we've dlagnosed you thor- and we're ready to begin work. a facial before, did Friday, November 5. Venus, in benefic aspect, dominates the day, according to astrolog: Mars is strongly adverse. Under this sway women should carry on all public affairs with great energy, for success awaits them. ;s It is foretold that many women are to gain prominence as financiers and one will soon win fams as a banker. | This is one of the luckiest days for | the theater. Plays and players should lxt S be:eretm‘n to fine dramas is indicat- | ed for the coming years and a be | ginning In changing general taste 1 be made this season. wi)l““s‘c is subject to the best possible influences. (‘angxerls and operas 1d be profitable. : Bh{""‘hfle t)’?is Cnntlgur&tknlu pre\'x}s may be many domestic quarrels ;r‘:e:v;ich);vomen will provoke discord] by a tendency to be distatorial or ive. Bg"";eefi is still a threatening sign for world peace, and the Winter is t bring many troubles in_which the United States will not be directly con- ed. ce‘l’;‘ the seers are correct, the ap«;x T drama, literature and dress wiil $a reached this year, and 1927 wil' show a return to better standards o thought and action. s Universities are subject to the bes possible planetary influences, anc | from them, at this time, are to com: men and women who are world lead s. erThe clergy will focus attention f the United States in ways not hith erto familiar to the public, it is prog nosticated. : Much study of the Bible is foretol and faith in its precepts is to becom more widespread than at any time i | recent years, the seers prophesy. Persons whosee birthdate it is ma have rather a stormy vear in whic! ! quarrels may be numerous. Pois and serenity should be cultivated. Children born on this day may be- | come famous for adventures in bus: | ness or professional activities. These subjects 6 Scorpio have no mediur place. (Conyright. 1926.) Sunshine Salad. Remove the hearts from small heads of lettuce and chop or shred | fine. Chop the yvolks of hard-cooked eggs fine, one egg to each two salads. | Mix with the shredded lettuce and marinate with French dressing. Sea- son with salt, paprika and a dash of | scraped onion. ‘Return to the lettuce eyps, garnish with the egg yolks rubbed through a sieve, and chill un- il ready to ve. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. 1926.) SN S A Wife’s Transformation conesBy MARY CULBERTSON MILLER ~ | shampoo, apply a drying hair tonic the other parts of the body, interfer- ing with their efficiency and endanger- ing the health of the whole mech- anism.” Helen shogk a negative head. \nmf hugh and blotchy com: fons,” Miss Whyte went on. “are sible results of body uncleaniiness; yet, imagine how indignant the owner of such a skin would be if she were boldly accused of being .un- lean! ‘Not the prettiest face in the city can disperse the emotion aroused by the ‘least suspicion of uncleanlin Now, since you are accustomed to tak- ing a m bath at night, I would continue it. It should be between 92 and 100 degr Fahrenheit. That temperature is decidedly more bene- ficial in all its aspects. Millions of tiny pores are constantly draining off the waste matters of the body and skin. The warm bath removes thi: poisonous material from the skin sur face as well as soothes jumping nerves, takes away that tired feeling that persists from an exhausting day, induces sleep and relieves the stiff- ness ‘in overworked joints and muscles.” “It seems almost providential that I decided upon some one like you, Miss Whyte."” “There are others, my dear lady," sald Miss Whyte modes Looking up from Dr. Johnston's letter, she went on: “Your physician would like you to experiment with a cold dip in the raorning. He states that your en- tire system needs to be waked up from its sluggishness. Just slip in and out. Then rub vigorously with a big, rough towel until your skin glows and every inch tingles with a delightful feeling. But if you do not have that joyous feeling but in place you feel cold and unhappy . . . discontinue it . . . it is not for you. 10 Pounds With new combination of Skin now clear and velvety. Pay YEAST and IRON. nothing if not satisfied “I Gained 10 Pounds” ‘“For over a year T had no energy or am- bition. My complexion was muddy. I could not sleep at night, fell off in weight until 1 was but a shadow have gained I pounds. and 1 am fuil of energy."—(Mrs.) M. B.. Chicago, If we could only show vou the wonders IRONIZED YEAST has done for thousands of women! The ugly complexions that have been made smooth, glowing and lovely. The pimples, boils, blotches and sallowness that have disappeared for good. The bony hollows that have filled out. Eyes made clear and sparkling. It seems almost incredible that TRONIZED YEAST can do this marvelous good so swiftly—just by taking a one-course treatment of these nice, tasty tablets. Let- ters that daily pour in by thou- sands tell us of the wonders done by IRONIZED YEAST. It's New Yeast and Iron That Does It You know how good yeast is to clear up your complexion and digestion and set your whole sys- tem right. You know how vege- table iron enriches and tones up the blood, giving new weight and energy. Just imagine these two value elements in a concentrated D. €, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4. 1926. FEATU MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS Renewing Lost Curliness. Dear Lois Leeds—My hair used to be naturally curly, but since it has been bobbed it gets sa oily that it doesn't curl any more. I wash it every week, but when it dries it i straight. My hair is dark. Please tell me how to bring back the natura’ curl without using hot irons.—J. C. K Answer—There seem to me to be three elements in your beauty prom lem: First, the excessive oiliness that may be corrected by the proper scalf treatments; second, the skill you should acquire in arranging your hair with water-waving combs or your fingers; and. third, your general health. As I have explained in onc of my beauty talks, hair that has just been bobbed very often is toc oily because the sabaceous glands in the scalp continue to supply enousk oil to lubricate and feed full-length hairs. In addition to your weekl: to your scalp three times a week. Here is a good recipe for your type Two ounces cologne water, six ounces bay rum, one-quarter ounce tincturc of jaborandi, one-quarter ounce tinc ture of rosemary, one-quarter ounce tincture of cinchona. For your sham poc you may use the following mix ture: Two ounces tincture of green soap, two ounces alcohol, one-hali ounce tincture of rosemary. As the excessively oily condition improves, you may train your hair into prett: waves by the finger-waving process or water-waving combs. After you shampoo rub vour hair partially dr between towels and then patiently form it into waves by gently pinchins it hetween your first and second fin Curly hair is never at its best it has been trained in th’ Perhaps you have not realizec the possibilities of this manner of en couraging the natural wave. Do mnot use hot frons, but if your hair doe not hold its wave well use a curling lotion.—LOIS LEEDS. The Well Groomed Eyebrows. Dear Miss Leeds—Very foolishly my friend and T tweezed our ey hrows and now we have to continue it because the hairs grow fast an look terrbile when they are not re- moved. I alw tweeze out the N “You must always look after your teet, for that walk every day is com- pulsory. Later its length will be regulated to fit in with other exer- When you return from your give your feet a warm bath. The idea is to keep constantly re- moving the waste matters deposited on the skin by the pores. If you have corns, I want you to go to a chiropodist. We'll talk again about that. u are a wizard, Miss Whyte, I believe."” “No wizardry about it. 1 just ex- perimented and studied, and the result is that I know how to protect and conserve a woman's physical charms by assisting nature in curbing the raids of ill health or age.” The beauty specis s gaze had fastened on Helen’s hair. That will be a prob- lem, she thought. It was obvious it had been a sunny shade of brown once with golden glints. But long since those glints had fled. It was a | tousled mass, bits of halr stuck through a net. “It's at that exas- perating length, isn't it,” she said, fingering the fine brown hairs. “Well, in a day or two you'll have a shamp then I think I'd better call a hair- dresser. &he will tell us how to ar- range it becomingly.” (Copyright. 1926.) — Spiced Tomato Soup. | Chop one onion and a little parsley | fine and fry in three tablespoonfuls of butter for about 5 minutes. Pour on the juice from one quart can of toma- | toes, add one potato chopped fine, one small can of pimentoes and salt, pep- per, cayenne to taste, and one whole clove. Cook for ‘about 30 minutes, adding more water if necessary. Everybody Likes IRONIZED YEAST Because it is Tasteless form that is 9 times more effec- tive than iron and_yeast taken alone. Thats IRONIZED YEAST. If you are thin, scrawny, run down and have a poor skin start TRONIZED YEAST toda It will pick you.right up and add 5 to 10 pounds in only two to three weeks. It clears out im- purities, giving you a fresh, lovely smooth skin. Safe for everybody—free from harmful drugs. There is no nasty, pasty taste. IRONIZED YEAST tablets are practically tasteless. Got a bottle and begin now. Satisfaction or Money Back Go today to any drug store and get a full size treatment. If after this generous trial you are not delighted with effects, ask for your money dack. It will be r funded immediately. If incon- venlent to buy from druggist send $1.00 direct to the IRON 1ZED YEAST CO., ATLANT GA., DESK 82.G. LEEDS. hairs over the brow, not under. 1 there anything I can do to make them look pretty? (2) I have mediun skin, grayish-green eyes and ligh brown hair with a red tinge in it ‘What colors may I wear?—FREIDA. Answer—If you do not wish to con tinue the tweezing, 1 advise vou to let the hairs grow and use an eve | | brow pencil to conceal the new sho: hairs until they grow as long as the: will. Every night wipe off the brow pencil with cold cream. With a small eyebrow brush dipped in v line or olive oil brush your brows up ward and outward. Then brush the upper hairs down, so that they me« the lower hairs in a neat line throush the center of your eyebrows. This will give you well groomed brows It is usually better to tweeze out th hairs from the under side of the eye brow than from the upper side, : you have done. (2) Flesh and peach are excellent colors for your type Dark blue trimmed with salmon pink medium blue with tan or pinkisi gray, dark green, soft medium greens, dull brick, rust, bronze. palest yellow and black trimmed with bright colors may be worn.—LOIs LEEDS. Correction—An error occurred in : recipe for a blackhead ointment ir this column. The correct recipe is Six grains (not drams) salicylic acid one ounce benzoinated lard, one ounce lanolin. (Coyright. 1926.) . Grape Juice. Grape juice has come into great prominence lately, and although the commercial grape julce is delicior still the home-made variety sometimes preferred. .To make it, mash the grapes gently and put them in a crock. Heat them gradually, either by standing the crock in water or placing it in the oven. Then pour RES. jthe grapes through a deulie chees leloth bag and let drip. Do | squeeze or the juice will he clondy pint of julee add a cup ¢ ind heat just long enough to dissolve the thorowghly. B tle while ho kot in starilized he 1 L . . tints like This! To give your dainty underwear and stockings frue tints, you must use real dye. For the gorgeous tinting like you sce in things when they are new, usc the original Diamond dyes. Don’t stop wtih tinting, though! It's just as easy to Diamond dye almost anything vou wear—or the hangings in the home—a brand-mew color right | over the old. Home dyeing is lots o fun—and think of what it saves! FREE now, for the asking! Your druggist will give you the Diamond Dye Cyclopedia telling dozens of dyc | setrets, containing simple directions and will show vou actual piece-good- samples of colors. Or write for_ bi illustrated baok Color Craft, free fron DIAMOND DYES. Dept. N4, Bur lington. Vermont Diamond Make it NEW for 15 cta! | Best by test and taste TLEY TEA A real India blend The first real improvement on oatmeal! KELLoGG's New Oata is a combination of both oats and wheat, including the bran. It has the delicious taste—the nourishing food elements of both! No wonder it is an improvement! Just try it. See how much better all your folks will like New Oatal Easy to prepare. Just boil three minutes in water. New Oata is always light in texture— never soggy nor gluey. You'll welcome New Oata as a change. And you'll be delighted with it as a steady diet. Ask your grocer for Kellogg's New Oata— made in Battle Creek. (I)WEW 7l TA A DEuCIOUS CEREA 3 minuTES IN “Tth serone SERVO Yoursewr 1o WA Kol atl v/ LLogg coMpANY L s