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WOMAN’S PAGE. Lingerie Colors Blend With Gow BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. he latest whim of Parisian fancy jts best conclusion, we must r | that when costumes are of wool or of that does not lend itse'f to | lingerie, then that of the same shade in a softer goods is the thing to have. lingerie is to have it* match 8own with which it is to he worn his may sound at 1tned throughout with silk, a ¥OBue some years ago? verse, for in the past day: Were voluminous affairs, Quite the re i ! l h } SCANT IN DAINTINES GARM 1BER BUT FULL OF S ARE THE UNDER- NTS OF TODAY. yards of material, while today frocks are as scant as it is possible to have them and wear them with any com. fort or grace. . Also the lingerie is not so extensive. Few indeed are the garments now worn. In comparison with the under- wear of that day, which is, after all, not so very far gone by, we could use the word “scanty” as apt and appro. priate. But if scant in number of RYHI(‘II‘S worn at any one time the lingerie is exquisite in quality and in beauty more fascinating than ever before. Silk and lace, choice embroid- ery and handsome handwork are none oo good for the present-day kind Fortunate Fad. The reason why Dame Fashion pre- scribes lingerie to match costumes is that, with skirt so short and narrow the lingerie is quite Jikely to &how. | If it is of the same ‘material, it ap. pears not to show. A very sensible reason for the style. 7% 1t will;be, seen ghat color is the out- standing cause for this fashion. It is when garments contrast in hue that they show most decidedl another. And so to carry this idea to BEDTIME STORIE Whitefoot Climbs High. now what to do in time of stress 1 may be fatal just to guess. —Whitefoot the Woodmouse. Little Whitefoot the Woodmouse sat on the snow at the foot of the | if by any chance he might be in sight. | big stump in which was his home [ Then he went back into Whitefoot's | and gazed up at a little black spot as if he couldn’t believe his eves. You see, he knew right away what that black spot was. He knew that it was the black tip of a tail. More than this. he knew whose tail it was. | That tail was hanging down from oy . HE CAME OUT AND LOOKED ALL ABOUT TO SEE IF RY CHANCE HE MIGHT BE SIGHT. under the piece of b: the entrance to Wh and Whitefoot knew 1 of that tail was looking home. For a moment tionless and breath tail disappeared. Whitefoot that the owner was home in that hollow stump. White. foot turned and ran. My. my, my, how he did Ne: B had he run Py he said over “ghadow the ‘Weasel!” And this it seemed as farther. Whitefoot knev going to do. He had he would ddn if ever a; r, and now hi.’f:ah. dldn't that he saw that made for the nea get that tree IN that covered efoot's home. he owner into that knew now inside his dow the time he said he jumped a little what he was planned what Shadow should Shadow was instant disappear he tree, 80 a8 o be him the man who stoops to petty spite 't hurt me much less I stoop to answer him — then Im just as low. e the first like a bit of rank extravagance, but is it after all | any more costly than to have frocks was the the dresses requiring against one | ANY | alize | & fabric If one has the money to put into silk first choice. 1f one cannot afford such that can be substituted. There are | silk and cotton goods in endless va | riety : terials that are closely allied to silk of texture: there & v thin lingerie and rayon and glove silk for non-crushable goods. So it will be seen that the choice is so wide it per- to follow this desirable fashion entire garments matching in color, Expenditure. A word more about the expense may not be amiss. It is well to remember that while a few more changes of | tingerie will be required to follow this vogue, it does not mean extra The lingerie will last as long costumes, and replenighing will not be necded. This will go far toward off setting the initial outlay. But entirely apart from cost and from any other aspect of the subject | 0f such ensemble costuming is that | satisfying one of being dressed abso utel which is the delight of | every woman . rig MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFA Sliced Oranges. Cereal with Cream. Vegetahle Hash Hot Coffee Cake. Dry Cream of Asparagus Soup. Hamburg Roast Baked Potatoes. Buttered Beets " Lettuce Salad, French Dressing. Prune Pie Coffee. COFFEE CAK Cream 1 cup butter with 1 cup sugar, add 2 beaten eggs and beat thoroughly, then add 1 cup strong coffee, 1 cup molasses, ' teaspoon soda dissolved in 2 teaspoons hot water. Mix 4 cups each seeded raisins, cur- rants and finely cut citron. Combine’ two mixtures, beat well and bake in slow oven. APPLE TURNOVERS Put 1 pint flour into bowl, add 1% teaspoon salt, 2 level tea- spoons baking powder: mix thoroughly, then rub into mix- ture 1 tablespoon butter and add sufficient milk to make soft dough. Roll out in sheet 1 inch thick: cut with biscuit cut ter into circles. Put 2 table- spoons stewed apples on half of dough: fold over other half, pinch edges together, place these in baking pan, brush with little milk and bake 20 minutes. PRUNE PIE - One cup cooked. pitted and sround prunes. % cup sugar, teaspoon lemon juice, pinch cloves. pinch salt, volks 2 eggs, | teaspoon flour or cornstarch | | and 1 coffee cup milk. Mix well and bake in one crust. Serve very cold with whipped eream on top. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS stump. Then he couldn't be seen if Shadow should come out to look about. And this is just what Shadow did do. Just as soon as he found | that Whitefoot was not at home he | | came out and looked all ahout to see comfortable home. He would | there for Whitefoot to return. | was a nice soft bed and it wonld he | & very comfortable place to rest | while he waited. | Meanwhile Whitefoot, as | know, was running with all ‘his | might. There wasx a certain tall tree, a dead tree, for which White- foot' was heading. High up in it was 4 hole. It was an_entrance to an old home of Drummer the Wood- pecker. No one had lived in it for a long time. Whitefoot had known about it for a long time and once in a great while had climbed “up to it. He did'nt like to be up %o high 1t was & long climb and a hard climb for Whitefoot. He much prefers to be near the ground. But now he was making stralght for his tree. “That's the place for me." said he to himself. “Shadow the Weasel can climb, hut he is not fand of climbing. He is not likely to climb so high as that unless he fs pretty sure that some one is in there. He is not like!y to climb wayv up there Just to see if some one is in there. So if I can get up there without heing seen by him. T'll be safe. I'm sure of it." wait There you foot started to climb that was smart enough side away from the direction from which he had come. This was so | that if Shadow should be following him he would not see him climbing the tree. Up, up he went and popped into the little hole. There was an old bed in there, a bed Timmy the Flying Squirrel had made, for once upon a time Timmy had lived in that hole. Whitefoot curled up in and shivered and shook. he shivered and shook. thought he was safe, | not be sure. | that Shadow the Weasel might come {out and finding his trail follow it with that wonderful nose of his. If {he did not do this, Whitefoot felt | that he would he safe Whitefoot did not remain curled | up long. He just had to peep out. He just couldn't remain down in there without seeing what was going on. No, sir. he just couldn't. So. after he had gotfen his breath. he crept up to the entrance where he Icould keep watch. As he sat there he saw a Merry- Little Breeze doing A whirling dance and catching up the light snow and sprinkling it all about. This whirling, dancing, Merry {Little Breeze came along right where Whitefoot had run. White- foot gave a little sigh of thankful- ness. That Merry Little Breeze had covered up his trail completely. He was safe from Shadow tht. 190: tree. He to climh on the that bed Yes, sir, You see, he but he could (Copyi Corned Beef Stew. Wipe two pounds of corned beef or less, cover with cold water, heat slow- |1y to the boiling point and simmer for three hours. After the first few min- utes of cooking, -remove the scum. When the meat is tender, take it out of the broth. Cut in uniform pleces on small cabbage, four medium-sized turnips, three carrots, one or two on- fons ‘and siz medium-sized potatoes and boil them in the broth, reserving the potatoes until the other vegetables have cooked half an hour. Add salt it needed, and pepper. Reheat the meat in the broth and serve with the vegetables. i | | undergarments, that is naturally the a luxury, then there are many fabrics there are mercerized cotton ma- in the sheen of finish and the softness e silk muslins for mits even a woman with small thess of +|one article of clothing Without pausing for hreath, White- | There was the chance | THE EVENING SUB' ROSA You Can't Afford Not To! ‘Yes, T know this old hat is a per fect sight and bent—but there's no use of my buying a new one—I simply can’t af ford to.” Thus Natalie, who looked anything but poverty stricken as she stood pow dering her nose before the long cheval glass. Her black duvetyn with platinum fox, was straight—her kid pumps, steel buckles, showed off and good ankles velvet dress beneath anything but shabb trimmed smart and with cut small feot coat, the coat Yet the ghapeau surmounting this | old, s0 a fetching costume black felt, worn strenuously (hat shupeless mass. Neverthel med it down firmly that she an hat. By which she really me; when her next allowance cam she would spend it on another rather than “‘waste it on a hat Natalie just happened to feel that way about hats. just so long as it held together. Other girls show the same lesiness about shoes—they feel 1= long omething they've They was s0 it a dusty, long and had bhecome Nat che tight and mply couldn't afford rfully jam round frock care. in line of footgear. i done the necessary i will spend hours | just the vight effect with hat and | frock, gloves and bag—then calmly | ruin "everything by wearing a run- down pair of shoes. And they will tell you that simply can't afford new shoes. They imply can't afford not to buy new wes. when their costume calls for it If you shend a small fortune on an venin. d it you invest in mos pensive chiffon hose to go with it—if you are careful in the se. lection of Just the right beads and rrings—and then, if you blandly slip on a dingy pair of tarnished sil ver slippers, you've actually lost noney | For vou've thrown away every cent you spent on the rest of the costume. What good did it do to pay so much for all the other details when vour old shoes mar the tout ensemble. So many of us have terrible ideas about economy. We plunge wildly on that part of our costume which we consider badly, and we make up for it by wearing old hats, or gloves, or shoes, or bags which make our beautiful dresses look out of place. If vou can't afford to buy a hat worthy of vour new velvet frock, then buy a simpler dress and a hat that will seem in place with it. Unless all the details of your cos- tume are smart and tidy looking, 3 costume is a total loss. You've wasted every cent you spent on it. You simply can't afford to have | shabby accessories. They mean a total loss of everything you've spent to make yourself look smart | Learn to spend your money over a whole costume—not to concentrate on | which will | you own look | the achieving they make everything else {old and bedraggled Mimi will be giad (o answper any inquiries | ditected to this paper, provided a stamped | addressed envelope is inclosed (Cooyright, 1927.) DIARY OF A NEW FATHER BY R. E. DICKSON, Monday night. Joan was feeding the baby and look- ing cross when 1 came home this evening, and she said, “This child of yours has simply been sucking his thumb all day, even when he was asleep,” and I said, “One of the men at the office told me today how his wife broke their baby. She tied pleces of cardhoard around his elbows so he couldn’t bend his arms, and he couldn’t -reach his :mouth with his | thumb and so he quit trying, after while,” and Hilda said—she is a pessi- mist—*How long 18 after while?" Joan sald, “Hilda cut some card- | board out of a box or something. I'm | going to try it.” so Hilda got the cardboard and some string, and Joan tied the poor little fellow's arms up {ana he looked so pitiful and we put him in bed and I felt so ashamed I couldn’'t look him in the face.” We came out to the living dining room and waited, but there wasn't a sound, and Joan said, "My heavens, he isn't going to give in that easily, is he?” and I said, “Well, I'll say he is a good scout, all right. 1 feel sorry for him, all alone there in the dark with not even his thumb | to comfort him.” .Joan said, “It is for his own good,” and I said, “Maybe but just think of that poor littie baby lying there in the dark, all alone, wondering why we took his thumb away from him,” and Joan said, “Oh, don't be silly,” and she and Hilda put dinner on the table, but I wasn't feel- ing hungry. 1 d, Just think of that tiny little man, all alone in the dark, with- out even his thumb.” Joan said, “You're taking it a whole lot harder than he is." Well, T felt sort of guilty because I had givgn Joan the idea, and I was regretting it, and while she and Hilda | were doing’ the dishes out in the kitchen, T tip-toed into the bedroom to look at the poor little fellow, all alone i the dark there without his thumb, and one of the pieces of card- board had slipped and he had his thumb in his mouth after all and he was fast asleep and looking so happy and contentéd that it did my heart zood, and I tip-toed out. but Joan heard me and she said, “How is he?" | and 1 said, “Well. I think he must be asleep. It's so dark in there 1 can’t see him." room- | HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWTON. | “Sterling.” | The term “sterling,” which sets the seal of quality upon anything made of silver, is an example of that process o evolution in our language which is as interesting as it is strange. Because their countries were east of England, the inhabitants of Central Europe were at one time in England called Easterlings. And in the reign of King Richard the most skillful workers with silver were these “East. erlings,”” money coined in the Teutonic countries being in great demand. a!l knocked out of shape | to advantage—the | was | announced | that | Any hat would do that | their feet are covered with | the | STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, Fashionable Folk by dJulia Boyd 0a®_ o 00 DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX The Morbid Young Woman Who Is Despondent Because She Remains Unmarried at 28. AR MISS DIX: How about the poor girl who has no chance to choose marry? Is there tragedy in life greater than that of a woman with empty arms? What can a woman make of life without love? 1Is it worth while to continue to work without hope of ever attaining one's heart's desire TWENTY-EIGHT. Answer: If you ask me, my dear morbid young lady, I'll say that there is a tragedy in life far sreater than not being married and not having children. And that is for a woman to he married to a man who is cruel and brutal to her and who fails to support his little children. The only man who can really break a woman's heart is her husband. A woman may regret having missed love. She may sorrow over a faithless sweetheart. But it is only when she has given herself body and soul to her husband and he repays her by neglect and betrayal that the iron enters her soul and her world is left desolate to'her And no woman knows the real blackness of utter despair until her little children cry to her for bread which she cannot give them and she segs them ragged and shivering with cold and Knows not where to turn for aid. So don’t dare to pity yourself because you are not married. Save your sympathy for those women who have made unhappy marriages. The trouble with women such as you is that they go upon the assumption that if they married they would be predestined and foreordained to make a fairy-book marriage. They seem never to doubt that they would get husbands who were tender and kind and rich and generous, who would give them beautiful homes and that their children would be rosy cherubs who would always he dressed in starchy white musling with blue ribbons in their golden curls. It does not oceur to them that they might get philandering husbands who would keep them pie-eved with jealousy all the time. Or husbands who drank and who would come home reeking with bootleg liquor. Or husbands who were lazy and shiftless and who would drag them down into the depths of poverty. Or grouchy, surly, tightwad husbands. Yet they might get one or the other of these makeshift hrands of hushands instead of the one who Is the hero of their girlish dreams. Nor are children always angelic creatures that fill a mother’s heart with joy. They are frequently dirty little brats that keep her on the jump and make her often wonder if they are worth rearing. So consider this s.de of the picture instead of being despondent because you haven't annexed a husband. Look about you and see what wife you would change places with and, then reflect that you might get a common or garden variety of husband if you did marry. This little survey ought to make vou quite content with single blessedness. And, anyway, don’t despair at 28. You've still got at least 10 more good years of husbandhunting before you, and any woman whose gind is really set on catching 4 husband can do it in that time. DOROTHY DIX. : (Copyright. 192 lasts 7 days, another frend of mine broke a looking glass and rite after that he broke either an arm or a leg every day for 7 days, ony unfortun- the number of his limbs was limited so he had to brake some of them twice. Now Willvum, thats ridiculiss and you know it, O good, heers my little bar pin that 1 bin looking for all week, { why that proves it must be lucky in- sted of unlucky te brake a mirrer, so you were rong all a time, Willyum, hee hee, ma sed. Yee gods, pop said. And he got behind the sporting page and stayed there. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Ma started to look all round on the living room floor after suppir, and pop sed, Wat are you doing, mother, looking for 4 leef clovers? No, T broke a little mirrer this after noon and they say its 7 yeers bad luck it you dont find all the peeces, and I know theres several little peeces T hav- ent found yet, ma sed. And she kepp on looking, pop ing, You can't bleeve everything yo heer, as a matter of fact wen you brake a mirrer its not 7 yeers bad luck at all its 7 munths. Well 7 munths would be plenty, goodniss knows, ma sed. And she picked up the edge of the rug and looked under it, pop saving, Enyway vou mite not have sutch very hard luck, sometimes it only lasts 7 weeks, a frend of mine broke his shaving mirrer and after that he cut his face wen he shaved every day for 7 weeks trying to shave without a mirrer, and then he bawt.a new one and hasent cut himself since. 1 prefer to find all the peeces Jest, the same, ma sed keeping on looking, and pop sed, 1 wouldent worry too mutch, sometimes the bad luck only From the Houston Post-Pispatch. In addition to the people of Texas being overwhelmingly delighted with the results of the late primary cam- paign, the people of the remaining 47 States and the District of Columbia are likewise delighted. Old Texas strives to please. god Youth —develop and hold its glori- ous freshness until youth is but a mem- ory. ™ Retain its soft, smooth entrancing beauty over the years to come. Check the wrinkles and flabbiness and keep the appearance of youth with you always thru “Torthe Soon these skilled workers in mint- ing were imported into England, and the coins they produced there were called, after them, ‘Easterlings.” ‘With the tendency to abbreviate t! we find in all language, “Easterlings soon became “nm{gg.” which sur- vives to this day as stamp of qual- ity In silver. A i Coprright, 198%,) Gouwrauo's s - ORIENTAL CREAM Made in Whits - Ficeh - Rachel Send 10c. for Trial Sise TUESDAY, JANUARY E D between a career and a hushand: the.poor girl who never has a chance to | kind~~Golden Brown 18, 1927. My Neighbor Says: White kid gloves should be rubbed sently with bread crumbs after each vi ind they will keep clean a long time. good way to use stale bread fs to eut it into squares, tri angles or rounded shapes. fry it in fat, butter pping: and serve with hacon or other meats. Heat the fat in the fry- | | ing pan until it smokes, then put in the bread and fry to a golden' brown color. Drain on a paper and serve very hot | Trons can be kept smooth by | | washing them in strong soap- | | suds and carefully drying them. Keep your irons in a box where | | they will always be dry. | If you find in washing dishes | | that ‘soap chips will not dissolve quickly, put the chips in a clean salt bag, tie the top of the bag with string, put the bag in the dishpan and let hot water run You will soon have soap suds. When making bread and but ter puddinz, sprinkle each slice of bread and butter with dessi cated cocoanut instead of cur rants, and stew some on the top. This make a change from the ordinary pudding and will be found very tasty To prevent milk set in an out side ice hox from freezing, tie an old magazine around the bot tle. This will prevent milk freezing in the coldest weather. THE DAILY HOROSCOPE Wednesday, January 19. Astrologers see in the skies many menacing aspects which should cause | inhabitants of the earth to be exceed- | ingly cautious i Under this planetary government | women will be variable and difficult to | please. It is well to avoid them in the early morning hours. There is a sign that indicates easy entrance to a quarrel, and for this reason it is wise to beware of disturb- ing the domestic peace. An accident to a bridge or a battle- ship is indicated by the stars, which | presage strange gnd unusual dis- asters. All the signs appear to foreshadow earthquakes in many places and high | winds will be frequent in many parts of the countr In Great Britain there is to arise a towering political figure with the tendencies of a dictator, although he will wear the title of a minister, as- trologers prophesy. Neptune in Leo is threaten France with an upheaval. Persons whose birth date it is may have a year in which there is an un- usual amount of romance. The young will marry. Children born on that day will prob- ably be zifted, but a bit err#tic. The; should be most carefully trained. (Cooyright 7 ‘ HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN. supposed to some sort of Radiators nowadays ered or they will as well as the homes hown here is an especially clever design for the disguise of the ugl hissing beastie. It resembles a quaint, tile stove of European extraction and stands in a living room furnished with e French provincial furniture. | When first viewed by a stranger it is must be cov- 1in the appearance | decorations of our usually supposed to be a very valuable member of the collection. The tiles which cover this stove are delightfully colorful. The plain tiles are apple green, while the decorated tiles have a pale gray background and bright, peach-colored flowers. The peach color is repeated in the Toile de Jouy, which makes up the window draperies in this room, the gray in its paneled walls and the apple green in the molding which frames the panels. Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “I was goin’ to be mad at Pug for three days, but I went through his alley an’ he was settin' on the porch eatin’ doughnuts.” | service at | church of 2 Ja FEATURES. EVERYDAY Answered by DR. attended a phonofilm | Christian F. Reisner's in this city and was amazed see the form and_hear the voice United States Senator who had been dead for several months. The service made profound impression on me. What 1s the explanation of so| wonderful thing as the phonofiln Answer—It seems to be real last word in the realm of invention. Nor am 1 surprised at your amaze- ment, for T have seen the film you have mentioned and felt its thrill. It is a combined reproduction of picture and sound which brings on the screen the nearest possible resemblance of the speaker and his words as he ut- tered them, although he may be dead or a thousand miles away. ; peaking generally. the treatment is an application of the principles of the radio in their reverse order, pro ceeding from light to electric current and then to sound Certainly this device, which makes permanent the personal influence of leaders in every sphere of social and religious service, has a great future, By its mysterious agency the verl similitude of civilization's best guides and what they have to say can be imprinted on the motion pictures now shown around the globe. I recently Dr. to Is it not right that a wife should know all her husband's business? I write as an_injured wife. Answer—Under normal circum- stances the wife is the husband's con- fidante and,counselor. As such she has the fight to know what his busi- ness is and something about the way it is conducted. If a respectable woman had no right to know how her husband gets his living—and hers might become associated with a disreputable business. Nor is this by iny means a purely supposititious e. It occurs frequent On the other hand, if the wife Is ignorant, garrulous, vain or wasteful, the husband fs justified in keeping his business affairs to himself. In numerous instances, however, “the QUESTIONS PARKES CADMAN religion, but not obligations. They all its duties and were .Christians in part Wesley urged them to be Christians entirely. He did not cara for character which was sanctified in spots. “Come out boldly for the whole program,” is a phrase that he might have used This entirety of devotion does not certify immunity to errors—Wesley himself made quite & few mistakes— nor does it give guarantees against falling from grace; but it makes such @ fall the last thing possible. © (Coyrisdt. 1 o are anewes iy o g e et of the Flaeral “Gopneil of ‘Churches of - Christ in Amerfea, _Dr. Cadman seekn to answer in: niries tl appear 1o be representative of :‘\' tren f lwfl\llhl in the many letters Which o receives Boiled Salt Mackerel. Provide a fish weighing one and one- half pounds. Soak it over night in cold water, with the flesh side up. When ready to prepare the fish, cut off the head and fins, put the fish in warm water, let come to a boil and boil for five minutes. Take the fish out of the water and lay it on a plat- ter. Put pepper and a plece of but- ter the size of an egg on the fish Heat one cupful of cream to the boil- ing point and pour it over the fish Serve at once. Spanish Cream. Four eggs, four tablespoonfuls sugar, one-haif cupful strong coffea, one quart milk, one tablespoontul gelatin. Beat the egg yolks and sugar to- gether. Have ready the milk, which has been scalded in a double boiler. Pour all but about one cupful of the milk over the egg yolks and sugar. Stir constantly and add the gelatin, which has been dissolved in the re- mainder of the milk Place again on the fire and add stiffly beaten egg whites and the coffee. Pour into a mold and set away to chill. Serve gray mare Is the better horse,” in which case the husband is wise to recognize his wife's superior abilities and govern Himself accordingly. Sometimes fhe husband has a part- nar and is forsworn to secrecy by hita. Or he may be the manager of another man’s business, about which he is not free to talk. Under these circumstances his silence is no af- front to the wife. He is only fulfill- ing_his agreements. Not a few happily married men consume their own smoke in business affairs. They hold that their wives’ domestic responsibilities are heavy enough without addfug business anxieties to them. Yet, if conditions become stringent, the men I have in mind would at once turn to their wives for sympathy and strength. Perhaps the personal issue of this question refers to your husband's income. I have never been able to E v a man should submit false figures to his wife, and where their relations are congenial I do not think such deceit is common. But when love is dying or dead and finances are low the question of money is usually the first source of trouble. While affec- tion reigns, matters of business and income present few difficulties of the kind you mention, and your right to know about them is not seriously dis- | puted. But should uphappy estrange- | ment occur, it is not easy to enforce vour right. Don't threaten. Try diploma Boston, Mass. What, in a word, is John Wesley's eory of entire sanctification? Answer—If I may answer your question In non-theological lang) I should say that Wesley’s idea of en- tire sanctification was that the be- liever reaches a stage when the urge to sin is dead. He is wholly and un- reservedly on the side of righteous- ness, without a spark of desire for actions regarded as evil Character has been described as a completely fashioned _will. sen- tially this was also Wesley's idea. The katharsis of the heart has been so thoroughgoing that nothing of the old nature remains. The believer be- comes a_new creation; his will is the side of God. Wesley complained that many Christians of his day were half- hearted. They craved the inwar satisfactions and external benefit: | th | with marshmallow sauce. 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Several years later boatloads of Irish and Scotch immigrants flocked to the land of rich promise . They cleared small farms . . . hewed homes from the forest and began the first civilized life of what later became the Capital City ... But even the arduous task of wresting a living from the wilder- ness didn’t destroy their instinctively gay spirits. " ... Their folk songs and NRE T S dances were the forerun- ners of our present of elaborate social life. . . Time meant nothing to those of the “early elite,” but today it is all-im- portant. .. How we cram activity into each. hour! . .. No wonder time- saving devices are so warmly welcomed. . . Saving you hours each week for more pleasant pursuits is a pertinent oint in favor of Elite undry Service ... And not only is it a saving of time actually spent in the home laundry, but also of worry and—you’ll find —of money, as well. Be- cause Elite Service is safe, efficient and de- pendable. Give Elite a trial this week. 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