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36 woM AN’S PAGE. Freedom to Apportion Home Time BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. One of the delightful in the world of business can enjoy W OCCUPATIONS SEWOR! PERMIT TO PLAN SO 4 LY TO SUIT HER OWN HER AND they especially desire to They have no hard and fast hours for work. Much of it can be done at the pleas ire of the housewife, apart from pre- WHEN WE BY MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN. Does Nct Mind the Rain. Woman has taken her place beside man in the rain, and rarely holds an umbrella. An old hat and a raincoat are your only protection unless you're wearing finery. Probably, because of your mew habits, you're buying rain- coats for service even more than ap- pearance. There are many different styles in raincoats from which to choose. There are belted raincoats, raincoats with hoods or capes, straight-hanging raincoats and others. The belted coat is warm, because it's snug, and it won't fly open in heavy winds. The cape model isn't practical for heavy storms, but makes a good covering when you must step momentarily into exposed places with your “best” on. The straight-hanging coat sheds water easily, and if it's tightly buttoned o fers as good protection as any gar- ment. Hooded coats are made for school children. Your choice ‘should depend upon the conditions in which you live. the South a light oilskin garment might be advisable, while Westerners want coats that keep them warm as well as shed water. The plainer, manly raincoats appeal chiefly to voung girls and women of school or campus age. When you consider pu chasing a raincoat you must one question immediately. 1Is it to be only for rain, or is it {o serve more than one purpose? The two-purpose showerproofed or rainproofed. Its material, in other words, is treated with either oil or wax, for protection against water. Among the materials which you will find in these coats are tweeds, coverts and other woolens. coat is either BEDTIME STORIE Peter Rabbit Trapped. some fa Unless 3o k are diffienit 1o trap catch them in & nap cter Rabiit What Peter are wide awake they seldom get into difficulties. But sooner or later nearly everybody is caught napping. That is, arly every one has times of bein forgetful failing to watch out. Peter himself has had more than o he me or narrow esc st because careless and forgetful Winter is a hard time for the little people of the Green Forest and the Green Me At least, it is a hard time for most of them. A few, who have been forehanded enough to store ws “I'LLL GO IN AND RE: SAID PETER TO A WHILE,” HIMSELF. away tood, get those who must their 1ood day by day sometimes suf- fer a great deal. They suffer great hunger and they suffer from the cold. 1t takes food to make heat not be warm and hungr; nicely. But a on zetting t00. hody is warm. wake warmth. It simply keeps in the hody the heat which I8 made by the food. So vou will nearly always find that'in Winter a_very hungry animal usually is shivering. This is the reason that 1ol and Puma the Panther and Old Man Coyote and Reddy times become so bold “when ihe weather has been very, They are willing to take alwo: aspects of home life that women who are not out ” the planning of thefr time to suit the things that they have to do or which GO SHOPPIN In! ns s that if people | One ean- It fs only when the stomach is full that the The fur coat does not Yowler the | Fox some- the weather is very, very bad, or when ring and serving the three meals day. Sometimes the number of meals is but two, if the husband’s Iml! a turning home for the midday meal| and the children attend schools where | the lunches are served. No one knows | Ihow much freedom means unless | sometimes in her life she has worked in an office. Then she realizes that it is only evenings or Sundays, holi- | { days and during vacatione that she; hietself can plan her days. There are few occupations in which much latitude Is permiasible in| [ the sulting of time to wishes and to work that of homemaker. The | housewife is ruler of her domain, and | though it is her business to see that !the work i well done and properly dome, it 18 her privilege to manage it | to suit her discretion Homemakers' Advantages. In these days when so much is be- | | ing sald about women, the home and | the job, it s wise for the woman who | finds herself either by her owa sires or Ly the necessities of | home, a full time homemaker, ap | preciate the advantages shr Dosceses {in this one fact alone. It is worth |a great deal. Plans for Pleasure. | For example, a friend {s coming to | town and will be there for a day only. | A business girl must forego the pleas- ure of spending hapny hours with | her, but the homemaker can so a vange her time that she can plish the necessary wor visit with her friend. D mean more then the customa on the day previous or the ¢ But the fact remains that she do it. There are few things that de not have to be carefully arranged for, if one does her own wWor {he fact that the lomemaker can 1 her own time permite of the succ | ful arrangement for good times ! out the work suffering. Delicious Freedom. i There is no idea of shirking duties this scheme. It fmplies a bhappy | of adapting work to her vwn | | times and pleasures. She masters the | | work; it does not master her. Few| other occupations permit of suc h de | | Mielous freedom. It is surprising that | more women do not see this inst of the ever-present household t { hese they dwell upon in their minds | {and perform with feverish activity | until they are tense, weary and wory | and all the time they forget that they | } can use the time to better advantage. | | They have the power to manage the hours to include work and rest snd perlods of luxurious eas de- | the v | cadl | 1| in | tacul | [ These coats will remain dry inside, | after a moderate wetting, but they | are apt to be wet, inside and out, if thoroughly soaked. The advantage of a two-purpose coat is that you can wear it in_either fair or ~stormy weather, and more particularly when the weather is uncertain. It is not a heavy storm coat. The single-purpose coat is designed to protect you against the rain frst of all, and to present a neat appear- ance secondly. Waterproof coats pre- vent moieture from entering the ma- | terial. They are rubberized by treat- ing the material with a coating of rubber. These coats come in such materials as mohair, satin, silk and cotton. One of the best known processes of waterproofing is called cravenetting. If vour coat loses some of its water-shedding ability you may re- member having sent it to the cleaners. | Cleaning often removes some of the ( waterproof quality of a coat. Don't| dry a rubberized, waxed or oiled gar- ment on a radiator or other hot place. Wax will melt, ol will run in seams and streaks, and many rubberized garments have cemented seams that will open. Rubberized cloth can be | cleaned without damage, but it often grows stiff after a time. If you smell a disagreeable odor of rubber, you've probably left vour coat to dr. warm place. As a matter of cconomy. you'll have to decide for yourself which coat is| preferable. Some believe that the two- | purpose coat is better Lecause it per. | forms its two functions in a satisfac- | tory w Others say that the single- purpose coats do_their two separate | tasks in more efficient ways. They {also claim that, considering matters | of ‘convenience, appearance and real service, one should have two coats, BY THORNTON W. BURGESS 1 chance in order to get food. Of course, this makes it all the harder on the little people whom they hunt. So even those who do not suffer hunger suf- fer from constant fear. The scason of snow and ice and bitter wind is not | 4 happy season for any of the little | people in fur or feathers. Peter Rabbit should have known that hie had no business to I the | dear Old Briar-patch after the big ice | torm. 1 suppose Peter did know it | but he was so anxious to see what | was going on in the Green Forest, so full of curfosity, that not all that lit- tle Mrs. Peter could say could keep | | him at home. Away he went, lipper- lpperty-lip, as fast as his legs ! could take him, at the very first oppor- | lumm-. He reached the Green Forest | in safety, and there for a long time he | wandered about without finding any | one he knew. In fact, he didn't find any one at all. You see, the othe | follc_who had been kept in by the storm had not started out as early as Peter. ! Tinally Peter grew tired. Ile came | to a certain hollow log. It was quite | { a long log and it was hollow from end | to end, Tt was big enough for Peter awl through, but not big enough | for any one larger than Peter to crawl | i T'll go in here and rest a | while,” said Peter to himself. So in | he crawled and, because he was very tired, he began to nod. He began to | nod and doze. and pretty soon he wus asleep. { It wasn't long asleep that Reddy i Reddy seldom misses anything. He in. | vestigates every poseible hiding place. So, when he came to this old hollow 10g, he sniffed ut the end of it. Right | away his stomach almost flopped over | with eagerness. e smelled Pete Rabbit, and the smell was 8o strong | that it was almost as if he had Peter { right in his mouth. | “Ha, aid Reddy Fox | Peter awoke. He saw, heard and smelled Reddy, but he wasn't fright- | ened. He simply crawled along u | little farther into the old hollow 14);:,1 | @ Peter fell | Fox came along Then he grinned at Reddy, and it was most provoking. Yes, sir, that grin was 4 most provoking grin. Reddy merely grinned back. “I've got you where I want you now, Peter | Rabbit,” said he. ‘“Sooner or later you'll have to leave this hollow log, and when you do——" Reddy didn't finish. He simply smacked his lips. It wasn't a pleasant sound. Anyway, it wasn't pleasant to Peter. (Copyright, 1927.) Juends Aires, Argentine, nearly 2,000,000 population. Blectric refrige 1ats e now has Jtors are iato Gllao, Sputu business does not permit of his re-§ | changed places and she tried to shift }isn't my fault that you don’t speak it. | wind started to blow like everything land the wind started to blow in so | was asleep and the 2nd thing I knew | you.I havent | Im still lissening. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, Does It Pay A Girl To Be Good? Discusses the [Question Wit Miss feventeen SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. DorothyDix Path—Real Happiness Comes Only to the Girl Whose Conscience Is Clear. YOUNG girl of 17, looking at life with the clear, candid eyes of a child asks me this question: “Does it pay a girl to be good?” The girl is pretty and poor. She has to work for her living. iler hour necessities of existence. She has few ple sees the future stretching before her, an arid highway along which she mus toil footsore and weary, cold and hungry and discouraged. Yet she has the natural impulse of her sex within her. She is scnseless, passionless machine. She is all quivering, throbbinz girlhood gs for pretty clothes to get off her beauty, for amusement, for gayet rasting and dancing and love-making. At her side in the shop this girl sees women whe witherad, whose livea have been as drab and featureles they w They have never had a frivolous zown or a jewel or eaten meal at a smart restaurant. re flat-chested, anemic { This girl sfes other women, he: roll up to the deor of the shop and she sells them embroidered silk stockin, real lace lingerie or 50 hats. Her eves are dazzled Ly the gorgeousne: | of thefr go and the flash of their dlamonds and she listens envious| !their chatter about theaters, suppers on a roof-gurden and gay parties ‘of { kind she only reads about. It 1 could dest catch ‘at fing in day- light 'at scares me ebery night, |, wouldn’t I knock the ‘tutin out obj him though? (Copyright DIARY OF A EW FATHER 1025.) She knows these are not good women hey w money by honest lal Neverth who have trodden tie hard and narrow road, instead of the primrose path, she doubts and wonders, t 1 T BY ROBERT E. DICKSON P irl to be good, little sister, in spite of the fact t seemn against it. It pays in many w One of these nce. Believe me, there is just one pe Tonight we ain to teach e i e ar happiness—and that is vourself. The day van how to dvive the car and T st SR ed and stopped several times to show |all peace and comfort with it her how it done. then we It does pay Thursday went out ag you is and wear, but vou. who cold business standpoint You covet the pretty clothes th from first to third and it sounded ter- | bargains in clothes, consider this propc vible. {Are a few yards of chiffon or a fancy hat or a jev I told her what .was wrong and she|of 2 woman's soul? Does it pay to walk in silk attire when your silks cover «aid, “Of course I know T should shift|a guilty heart and when other women draw away their simple, honest skir from first to second. but id that | from your soiled finers was second.” and I said . dear, | that is second up there, she | women ition from | roud; it leads you aws {has a right to look forwar to. ! will not be willing to ma ¥ the sort of woman vou have become. i Men seldom marry | when they do it brings unhappiness to the women. Ixperience has taught | the men that these women arc weak and foolish and too fond of pleasure | Nor are men just or generous to women. | Tt you think that wrongdoing pays. look at the faces of those who h | bought ease and luxury at a price Watch how soon the roses fade on th { cheeks and are replaced Ly rouge. Note how soon the light of youth flic out of their eyes and how they have to substitute helladonna for it. W how thin and hard their lips grow. | mirthless ther laughter becomes. tch Last night 1 said, * second, *and she said, “Well and maybe | and I said.| don't un- and she said. It |remorse, to shut out from their own vislon the picture of what they were. P DD vou ever think wl It is to awaken the lip: “It isn't m derstand I h," Truly, little sister, there is nothing in the world so little gay as what life. It pays to be good just in health and length of lite. n is death, literally as well as figuratively, for women. It petes to send a girl from the top of the ladder to the bottom ide. I should think you would want to help - I me instead of hinder me,” and she was | e call the gu. getting nervous, the way new drivers | (i€ Wages o do, and d: near crying, and she; SNes OO He: tried to start off in third with the ©f the toboggans brake on and killed her engine and ! said I shouldn't have bought such a | T . { from D e e anxiety, who are so abused, insulted rm around her be- |5 tmy ArI AN e i, | the tovs and playthings of men. I cause ghe wus crying and she said.| ) o .10 41 the time, because only the good have any real happiness. “Y Just want to learn how to drive DOROTHY DIX. ‘The Daily It pays to be good, bLecau: men. only good women get any decent treatment so T can take the baby out and get| him lots of fresh " and T said, “T} know, dear, and don’t you worry; we ! will have you driving in a few days and she said | and I said, “Who's meas and she said, You were,” and I id, “1rn be | darned if I ever try to help anything again, and she sai - body is asking you to,” and_we came home and I heard her tell Hilda she was golng to have the automobile| company send out an instructor, and { there is some more money shot. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. (Copyright. 192 Cross-Word Puzzle (Copsright, 1927.) | Yesterday in skool Miss Kitty m)d! the class all about fresh air and how | good it is for everybody and how | most people dont leeve enuff of it in their houses and everything, and last nite ma and pop went out and the outside, giving me a ideer to leeve o v = 2 = ST some of it inside to make everybody helthy, so 1 opened all the windows hard you mite of thawt it was jest de for somebody to open me thinking, G. I bet pop and ma will notice the diffrents wen they come in, all rite. And pretty soon 1 went to bed on account of startiny to feel kind of cold, and the ferst thiny I knew I} I woke up on account of heering pop and ma tawking downstairs, ma say- ing, Why Willyum, its like a barn in heer, is the fire out or something? ! 1 bleeve the roof is off, pop sed. Burr, burr, yvee gods, wat haprened cer? he sed, and ma sed, Why Will- yum my gocdniss graycous all the windows seem to be open. | Me thinking, G, I better hurry up | go back to sleep. Wich T did, and this morning wen I came down to get washed pon was| chaving his face, and he started to look at me funny so T thawt I better start the subjeck before he had time to, and 1 sed, Good morning, pop, d you feel eny helthier this morning Yee gods, eny wat? pop sed, and I sed, Eny helthier, Miss Kitty told us all about fresh air %0 I opened all the windows last nite, and pop ed, Look heer, young fell fortunately for ted to snee; yet, but if 1 sart sneezing, look out for your own helth, thats all. Wich he hasent started to yet . Comparative suffix Pith, Finishes . Preposition Rallroad (abbr.) One's entire property . Prepare for publication . Indefinite article, Be deprived of. Electrified particles. An entrance. An equal. Hewing tool. . Revolve. . Doctor (abbr. 9. A State (abbr.) ped % " New Engine Is “Lord Nelson.” “Lord Nelson” is the name be- | stowed on Great Britain's most pow- {errul passenger locomotive, which has | just been put into service. The giant | engine has been designed to pull trains of 500 tons at an average speed of 53 ymiles an hour, Exclamation. The unit of permplasm Warmth, A Hebrew month. Gilant King of Bashan Ceremony. T am. The Egyptian sun god Ultra-radicals. Within. Babylonian deity . A maliclous glance Finishing. Moet aged. Tn the neur future Silences. . Mineral rocks Cut_down. Mud. 4. River in Yorkshire, England. . Mountain in Armenia. 8. Goes in. Repast. New England State (ablr) Advertisement Time gone by Paid (abbr.) . Negative. . Traveled. 62, Prefix, out of . Father. h4. Assists. Upon. Pronoun Send forth. . Spreads. A royal 14. 15. 16. ! 17. 18. 19. 0. ony MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN, A Call Whistle. chair Down. . Divides Goddess ot vouth Morning (abbr.). . Horses and vehicles. Shaving. Part of the leg. . Seize with the teeth. Ultimate objects of attainment. Man's nickname. Engineering degree (abbr.) . Venture. Commences. . A hypothetical force. . Myself. . Number (abbr.) . Girl's name. . Not out. Manner of walking. . Fabulous monster. . Perform. 34. A lake. 35. Point of the compass 19, South American plains. L0 rronch unit of square measure. willdo ~av One Mother S: 1y Calls of mothers wanting their children to return home were always disagreeable to me. Yet children must be reminded and mothers can- not always go after them. I bought a whistle, not shrill but with a clear mellow tone. It has proved an in- stant signal. (Copyright, 19 For Oolds, Grip or Influenza a1 Brcentive, take Laxative BROMO T% Hhibiats. A Safe and Proven Rem- 1 X beira the sgaatym of B W Cucut l | i ! | 1‘ FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, Watch the Girls Who Have Chosen the Primrose of labor are long and hard and her earnings only enough to pay for the bhare res and no luxuries, and she no an the black dresses | yoq e a the clang of their sutomobiles as they o a that a few years or months ago e poor working girls, even as she is, and that they did not get their less, a8 she looks at them and at the worn and weary women something has gone from you that takes sell 1 or two worth the price Does it pay to mortgage your future for a little present pleasure? Make ino mistake about this, little sister, when you take the wrong turn of the from all the natural happiness that every good woman The kind of a man you would like to marry the women with whom they have gone the pace, and Listen to how loud and noisy and | v such women invariably take to drink or use drugs? flagging spirits, to force the laughter to their tired to which it no longer comes naturally; to stimulate pleasure when their | hearts are dead within them or to forget and deaden their memory and | There are no other human beings whose lives are so full of | and mistreated as the women who are pays to be good, little sister, first and GOLD MEDAL BUCKWHEAT FLOUR Tove Buckwheat Gues wand gon want them tobe as deliciousascanbe /// One luscious bite~ and no otherbrand 1927. SUB ROSA Estelle’s Good Taste. stelle desired above everything else to convinee people of her ex quisite taste. Particularly did she want Lesile to appreciate the fact that she bad 1deas alove those of the common people. Leslie was a college man, a thinker . |a peraon of taste and culture himself. | 8he yvearned to make him realize that | her aims and asplrations were on a ‘llmol with his « They went toke for many weeks t | and always Estelle subtly conveyed to him the information that she appre- clated only the most beautiful things They spent the weck end with Chester and Janet, fr of Estelle. Chet and his wife were newly married, | very poor, very cramped in their little | Summer cottage Thelr furniture was ususl and not “Such a pity thelr taste i hortible,” Estelle sighed to her mental equal on the way homs | At the theater she sniffed | tully over the leading lady's clothes. | “They may be all I'rench models,” she remarked, “but they're not in good taste. That last brown dress was aw tully badly chosen.” She hoped as she said Leslio would notice her green crepe and appreciate its ex pensive simplicit She'd spent a. lot of money on-her clothes lately, just to show Leslie that he was not the type who dressed just to look pretty. she hoped he tly e pse—how careful she'd been to have shoes and hats and gloves the last | word in smartness and style. Sometimes she wished that Leslie's taste wasn't quite So expensive and difficult to live up to. It would have Leen mnice if she'd dared to wear that old blue eveni dress, just for a_change. But she felt that admire her in anything less than an original model of leaf green, showing all the latest tricks from Paris. So she heaved a sigh and made an- other dent in the family income by investing in a dress which she couldn't afford—but which made her look like a million dollars. When Leslie decided to marry Pauline, Estelle’s hair nearly turned white. “But the girl has no taste!” she shrieked to her intimate friend Only Leslie could have told her how ittle that mattered to him—how bored |he'd grown with Estelle’s constant criticisms of other people’s clothes, furniture, jewels, books, music, etc. He'd hegun by liking the fastidious lady—he'd ended by heing scared away “Who am T, to_try { fussy lady happy”” he asked himself. | “Where will I get the dough to give | her the kind of clothes she insists { upon? If she finds fault with things | which most girls consider 0.K., what chance have I to make her happy? Nothing doing.” Estelle proved her Leslie he had no place (Copsricht. 10 il Mimi will be glad to an: any inquiries directed to this paper provided a stamped. addressed envolepe is inclosed. “Puzzlicks” uzsle-Limericks |80 scorn this that admired the severe, i | 1 | | to make this good taste so her life. | Mary Jane goes to bed at —I- Committing her welfare to Her face Is 50 —3— She's so good and — But then, she is most — ortly before midnight Where we all hope to go. Free from sin. . Modest. 5. The square root of (Note.—Don’t blame that “square root” on us. It and the rest of the “Puzzlick” were sent inm by Miss A. H. W. of Bryn Mawr, Pa., so there’ a reason for the slightly scholastic tone of the definitions. The answer and arother “Puzzlick” will be here tomorrow.) )9 Yesterday's Puzalick. There was once an honest old goose Who said to her friends, ‘What's the | use Of pretending to know If soda is 80— Such questions are very abstruse. (Copyright. 1 Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. Words often misused—Don't say. “We turned it sideways.” “Sidewise is preferable. Often mispronounced: nounce uzed, not ust. Often misspelled—Peremptory; not pre. Synonyms—Assign. allot, divide, share, grant, appoint, distribute, ap- propriate. Word stud: Used. Pro- | per, i a word three| Tet us increase tering one word{ render less harsh or drug will mitigate the pain Eludali]e] [ ]T]e] [o]o[w] anENEn [clo]n] [sse] 1ce of the few gowns she | Leslie wouldn't | FEATURES. LIFTED BY HAZF own dark | ! SHE WAS RI ALLY VERY Mark Burton returns abroad because of a letter r from Maude Mawnard. the a his 1ward. Jessica Bartiett. Jessica is about to inherit the principal o her jather's estate. and Mavde afraid a_ fortune hunter named Raymond Townley is her affections. She help in the matter CHAPTER V Supper. I geners | from asks Marl. The you vocabulary, and some the least, weird. Nearly all of Jessica’ | wandered into the d a buffet supper w: table. It was an {looked like a very Creamed sweetbreads diches with alcohol Tamps hur | underneath. Chicken salad. sand | wiches cut in different shapes and of | various kinds, little cakes and finally ion has f it 1 on nple supper delicious one in chafin was a regi T 1 | I'm | | 1 { coffee for thosé who wanted it large buffet there | shapes and sizes. T i “There’s another thing I jnear | having what they want to drink amused, more particularly as he lis | gayety. But when J htly | looks like a good scout,” there was | | began to act more naturally. It was Mark saw that they took for granted | i about him. when gome youth brought her a drink little plopped now., old de The boy tried to press the drink | | to the sideboard, Mark turned to her f the youngsters didn't wint rk couldn’t help observin bar. Sodx water i ”m(flos and other bottles ¢ day was to help oneself said_in an undertone to N | epeak to you about. Imagine child | of their “age with the privile | me it's shockl t Mark couldn't help being | }(ene:l to the conversation about him At first there had been a lull in the | “This is my guardian, Mr. Burton { haven't seen him in 10 years, hut he | | general laughter and'the Young people | | assumed that this was Jessica’s part ¥ | after all, and it wasn't long befo | that he would entertain Miss Maynard | He listened to the conversation One tall, blonde girl Wwho stood v near him shook her head violent he had just poured. “No, Tommy. not just Plopped: thought Mark. a word for you' upon her, but she was quite firm, and while he was carrying the drink back | ively with a question. do you all call Jessica | Bunny She turned big, blue eyes upon him and studied him for a moment, calmly, | | critically. She was really. very thought Mark. Ash blonde hair { an exquisite skin. If she were ‘‘just little plopped.” as she had said; she didn’t show it in any way. Peggy Hartley, for that I wont be cheerful apy more. Ive said this many times before. To stop awhile is sueh relief I quite luxuriate in grief. day. No, sir! Fruit. Then cereal. I LOVELY w sea surface o m of MA + DEYO BATCHELOR THOUC ne,” he sa I'm afraid \in Peggy studied him. Rea Where have you bLeen of Europe Singapore China fter the in “well nd it st place secor me arted to pla t of the seasc wed in tomorrow’s Star.) Erie ¥ nal in the &'n - Great 3 i width ¢ 1825 artificia. es with the is 3 h marked internal Spici th impre ser 180 on Ame Salt-Rising BREAD Gluten Whole Wheat BARKER'S 616 th N.W ith oy A Sore Throat Bad Breath Sore Gums Will Be Quickly Nasal Catarrh Tonsilit; Relieved by U A sare SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS Antisep You take the stairs ... TWO at a time. You eat breakfast with a gulp and a promise, and grabbing your hat you're off for town. But that is no way to start the Take time to eat your breakfast, leisurely. Prop up the morning paper on the sugar bowl. Then eggs and a crisp slice of bacon. And plenty of hot coffee. Chase & Sanborn’s Seal Brand Coffee. As the proverb has it, “Good coffee and good tempers go together.” Try it and see! Chase&Sanborn's SEAL BRAND COFFEE tes, serves