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WOMA N'S PAGE. Paris Offers Button Boutonnieres BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. 'THE BUTTONS IN THE SMART B SIZES AND SHAPES. From Paris comes the very “last word” in boutonnieres. The flowers are made from buttons! It seems but & day or =0 ago that feathers were the final word. Surely, this is going to the other extreme. The delicacy of the feathers and their exquisite beauty when made into flowers and foliage gave a charm to vie with the texture of flower petals. The bouquets had the fascination of creations of art. ‘While these will still be decidedly in evidence, the pendulum of fashion has swung as far toward the utilitarian elements in the button flowers as it did toward the extreme of exquisite- nebs In’the feathery boutonnieres. Among the fancy buttons to be found on the matket today, and also thoSe that we have stored away be- caure they were really too beautiful to discard when buttons were not used so lavishly on:costumes, there are many to be found that are not unlike flowers. Of course, we have to think of them as conventionalized blossoms, unless the design on the buttons de- picts agtuMl flowers. But it is not such a design that is used to create the impression of blossoms in these new bouquets. Instead, it Is the .shape and color of the buttons them- selves. They are to real flowers what the modernist ideas of pictured flowers are to art—an im n_of flowers rather than an actual delineation. They are smart and impressionistic. Gilass Button Flowers. One of the choicest button bouquets is made of white glass buttons, either the opaque kind that have opalescent lights or the clear cut-glass variety that scintillate with the rainbow tints and flash like diamonds.. With these silver foliage is used, and the bouquets are worn with evening frocks. There i8 & cool crispness to such shoulder ‘ornaments that is re- freshing. A new note of chic is added by them to ball gowns, dainty danee frocks or elaborate dinner costumes. BEDTIME STORIE Peter’s Ears Tell Him. With ears to hear and o Tind can be. Yot woime both deat: fina'fi < It was no use. Peter couldn’t see anything that looked to him the least bit like a Spring sign. No, sir, he couldn’t see a thing. Yet his cousin, Jumper the Hare, who had led him over to that lonely place in the Green ., insisted that there was a Spring sign there. It was most pro- voking. You know, it is very difficult to see a thing when you don't kmow what ghe thing is that you are sup- posed to see. What that Spring sign might be, Peter didn't have the least Mdea. “I adh't believe there is any sign of PETER PEEKED OUT FROM UN- DER THE HEMLOCK BOUGH, I AND ALMOST AT ONCE HE SAW + HOOTY. Bpring around here,” said he. “If there is, what is it and where is it?" © “I wonder,” said Jumper rather ®oftl; “if your ears are any better than your eyes, Cousin Peter.” “What do you mean by that?” de- fnanded Peter. “Nothing but just what I said,” re- *plied Jumper. “Let's it here for a Avhile under these hemlock branches dut of sight and listen for what we can hear.” Peter was quite willing to do this, He was tired, and a good rest would suit him first rate. So he and his cousin, Jumper the Hare, squatted un- der the overhanging hemlock boughs. Peter almost forgot that he was sup- posed to listen. They had been there - make my verse Like snow stars 'OUQUET MAY BE OF FDIFFEREA\'T Round and ball buttons that are in | solid colors may be used to form bou- | quets to match or contrast with dresses and coats. Bohe, wooden or composition ‘buttons are employed for these bunches of flowers, while the leaves are the regulation artificial follage. Or, again, the buttons are chosen because they are aesthetic in | color - .combinations. A varicolored rosegay results that is a delight to the eye in its fine tone scheme, if not exactly in it¥ texture Green Wiré Stems. To make the button bouquets, sup- ply yourself with green silk or cotton- covered wire and with artificial leaves to accord with the sort of bouquet you wish to make, as well as with whatkver buttons you seléct for the blossoms. All- that is necessary to make the flowers is to wire the but- tons with wire sufficiently strong to hold them stiff and perky. KForm the wired buttons into a bunch of what- ever size desired, edge with the follage and bind the “stems” together with some of the wire. Cover the stems with metal foil and you have a Paris creation; that is, you have one if you 18ave her shivers of horror. THE EVENING STAR, SUB ROSA Purity Priscilla. She was the most conselously pure jyoung lady ever met in this country of free-and-easy girls. . She was more careful in her speech than your most rigid maiden aunt. She didn’t even use slang, which she thought rather ‘“suggestive” at times. Priscilla despised all forms of drama which weren’t on a higher moral plat- form than the average girl could pos- sibly etand. Even the very latest books bw the country’s most respectable authors She couldn’t bear to talk about them in front of boys, she confided to her friends. It was so dangerous to discuss books and plays which might sound Just the least bit risque. She went once to a movie which portrayed some heavy lovemaking and the shock nearly killed her. Needless to say, she wasn't a riot in her home town, but there were those who at least admired her. People were heard to say that she would make some man a good wife, ‘‘Some day,” prophesied the older heads of the families, “a sensible man will realize what a help a clean-minded irl like Priscilla will be to him and ry her. She'll be a sweet, pure sife. It's perfectly true that there are lots of nice men knocking around who expect and demand clean-mindedness in their wives, but they won't have much use for Priscilla. You see, she has the worst type of mind in the world. She really works overtime looking for dirt in every- thing that's written or said. How can she keep her mind clean and free if she's watching out for a remark or a song or a book that's off- color? # If she weren't so everlastingly de- voted to the business of shuddering, she'd have a lot more time to enjoyv all the things in the world which are i beautiful and clean and pure. Priscilla, I'm sorty to say, realy a elean-minded girl at all. She " gigglés ‘nervously when she hears-the wrong kind of joke told by the wrong kind of girl—giggles ner- vously and then proceeds to lecture at some length on the wickedness of that kind of story. A girl whose mind was really free | would ignore the wrong kind of story entirely; just dismiss it ffom her thoughts, but.little old Priscilla must make her speech and point out care- fully what 4s dift and what i8 not dirt. lg Prissy would clean out her own mind, she’d find much less to clean up in the rest of the world. isn’t (Copyright, 1027.) Mimi will be glad to aveind e piber, provided & addressed envelope is inclosed. Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. inagiries stamped. Mrs. J. B. E. writes: “I have receiv- ed valuable aid from yop before, and put the flowers and the foliage to- gether deftly. Bouquets Must Have Chic. Beware of making clumsy botton- nieres of buttons. Nothing could be less attractive than a poorly ade button bouquet, just as there is noth- ing smarter nor more “Frenchy” just now than artistic button bouguets. The cost is mere nothing if you have the right buttons and you are sure to have some foliage around. It must be fresh-looking. = Several boutonnieres be made in an afternoon or eve- ning—one to-gd with each costume. Apy sort of button, round ball-shaped, flat pierced or shank buttons. It is in combining the colors ant the buttens correctly that the secret of handsome bouquets lies. BY THORNTON * W. BURGESS some time when his Cousin Jumper whispered: “Did you hear that?” Now Peter had been half asleep and he hadn't heard a singie thing. He sald so. “Listen!” said Jumper. A moment later Peter heard a queer eound. It was a snapping sound. Very likely you wouldn’t have understood that sound. But Peter understood it perfectly. A little shiver started to chase another little shiver all the way from the tip of his tail to the top of his head. That was the snapping of the bill of Hooty the Great Horned Owl. Peter looked at Jumper. Jumper made & sign to keep still. In a mo- ment Peter heard a voice. More little shivers ran up his backbone, It was the volce of Hooty. ‘It was a low voice, but it was Hooty's voice just the same. . Peter peeked out from under the hemlock bough and.almost at once he saw Hooty. Hooty was sitting in the top of & tall tree a little way off. In the very next tree was an old nest. It was a nest that Blacky the Crow had at one time bullt there. Peter had mnoticed that nest when he had been looking around for a Spring sign, but he had given it no more than a mere glance, for he knew it .was Blacky's old nest. “My dear,” said the voice of Hooty, “isn’t it almost time for those eggs to hatch?” | “It won’t be long now,” replfed an- other voice from some one whom Peter couldn’t see at-all. “You know, we were a little late this year starting housekeeping.” You should have seen the look on Peter’s face. At first he couldn’t think ‘where that second voice came from. Suddenly he understdod. It came from that old nest up.there. It was the volce of Mrs. Hooty, and she was up there in that nest. He was sure of it. He twisted and turned and looked. After a bit he made out two tufts of feathers. He knew what they were. They were the two tufts of feathers that give this big Owl the name of “Horned Owl.” He could jMst see them above the edge of the nest. Peter looked at Jumper, Jumper was grinning. “How about that, Spring whispered Jumper. Peter nodde His ears had told him what his eyes had failed to tell him., Hooty and Mrs. Hooty were housekeeping. They had eggs up in that nest, despite the fact that snow {and ice were everywhere, What bet- ter sign that Spring was coming could .aid’ one ask than this? (Copyrighit. 1027.) Pl etk Beef Tongue With Sauce. Boil the tongue until very tender in water with a bouquet composed of | three sprigs of celery, three of parsley, {three green onions, all tied together. Take out and take off the skin. Lard the tongue through and through with a larding needle, put in a baking pan | with three tablespoonfuls of butter, pepper and salt, and bake for one-half an hour. Take out the tongue, put it on a platter to keep warm, and in the butter which is in the baking pan cook some well chopped parsley and a little onion, add a tablespoonful of flour, stir and cook well, then thin with soup stock until a thick cream. Add three tablespoonfuls of capers and a sour pickle well chopped, cook for ten min- utes longer, pour over the tongue and serve. " sign?v once again want to ask you a ques- tion. “My boy is now 11 months old and weighs 25 pounds, weighing 8 at birth. He is a fine, strapping fellow, but he absolutely refuses to take a bottle, and he won't take all of the milk he needs from a cup. He gets a quart of milk dally in his cereal, puddings, ete. 3 “Is it necessary to give him cod liver oil now? He was a nursing baby and did not take it. He is restless at night—do you think heé is hungry? Is he too young to have an egg?”’ Answer—If the baby gets a quart of milk daily, it is not rtant in what form he gets it, whether. from a bottle, or cup, or in his cereal and puddings. The important thing is that he does get it. He Is not too young for an egg, in Tact egg yolk is started very early in a baby's life because of the valuable minerals and vitamins it contains. It is useful in the same way that cod liver ofl is. The baby could hardly be hungry, as he {s certainly a splendid weight. It will do him no harm at all to. have cod liver oil, even if he does not seem to need it. 1 think you would find our new feeding leaflet a great help now and suggest that you send me a gelf- addressed and stamped envelope for it. Mrs. T. M. S.—Have you our new feeding - leaflet? It differs somewhat from the old one and is far more de- tailed. Children do not gain in welght as rapldly the second year as they do the first. Perhaps you are expecting too much. If you will get the dlet right and add cod liver oil to the dlet, there is really little else that you can teeth, Mrs. C. F. 8.—The milk of Jersey dows 18 too rich for the average child, and it Is seldom that it can be given without some such effect a# you have noticed, Try a milk with 18s butter fat. Eating carrots and prunés has no power to stain a chiid’s skin or teeth. Have the brown line on ‘the teeth cleaned by a dentist and keep them clean, If the boy won't let you clean his teeth,’ one can't expect they will remain clean and gilistening. Leave the enlarged neck glands alone, un- less they begin to supperate and cause trouble. Then have the doctor advise you as to their care. Sometimes it is necessary to operate and remove them. T am mailing you the feeding leaflet. Mrs. H. T. C.—It js im ble for me to give readers the names of other readers in order that they may get in touch with them. I thank you for this interest, just the same. Lessons in English - BY W. L. GORDON. Words often misused—Don't say “it is a very unique article.” “Very" is redundant. ‘“Unique” means with- out another of the same kind. Often mispronounced ~ Laundress, The au as a in “father” is preferred to & as.in “call. Often mispelled—Sophomore. Synonyms — Innocent,, . blameless, guiltless, sinless, harmless, inoffen- sive, faultless, undefiled. = R Word study—"“Use a word three times and it is yours.”” Let us in- crease our vocabulary by. mastering | one word each day. Today's word— do to hurry either the weight or the | Impotent; wanting in physical, intel lectual, or mgral power; weak. ‘‘He realized that it was an impotent jealousy he must subdue.” Others Prices realized on Swift & Company sales of carcass beef in Washington. D. C.. for week ending Saturday, Mdrch 6 on $hip: .00 cents to averaged 15.71 pents sold out, ranged Trom 12.00 ceuts per pound.—Advertisement, shi 00_cents per pound and None have eq?\'lnll‘eAd' the quality. WASHINGTON, D. C. Why do the Miaale. Aged Seek “IAfed” Beys They .| Have Already Lived to the Fullest lDorothyDixI It Isn’t True That Only Those in Bohemia Really Live, While Those on Main Street Vegetate. Middle-Aged People Have Already Lived. T is very common now for middle-aged people, women as well as men, to arise suddenly from their decorous seats by the fireside and, giving a loud walil that they never have lived, plunge into an orgy of dissipatton. Husbands forsake their homes for the night club, desert their wives for vamps, hunt up affinities and pickle themselves in bootleg liquor. Wife cuts off her hafr, paints her face, rolls her stockings, and, turning her back upon home and busband and children, fares forth in search of a soul mate and thrills. Both are in search of life which they think they have missed. T often wonder What these Who complain so toudly that they have never lived think life is. Do they think that life is play and not work?. That it is divorce and not marriage? That it is cocktails and caviar, and not bread and meat and coffee? 1 is a strange theory that the druhken, the immoral, the untrustworthy, the irresponsible, know more of life than do the sober, the virtuous and the reliable, or that those who live in Bohemia live, while those who dwell on Main street merely vegetate. The great dramas of life are not played out in cabarets. They are enacted in quiet rooms behind shut doors. Nor are the great moments in life those passed in dancing the "Black Bottom.” They come when we stand alone with our souls, facing the crisis of our fates, knowing that we are staking our all upon our own judgment. Neither does one taste the supreme joy of living in some maudlin hour of intoxication. The greatest kick we ever get out of life is when we see the job to which we have set our hand well done and receive the nlerl!e.ll (‘-onl-mv.ndauon of our fellow workers. SER the ldea, too, that there is some peculiar thrill to illicit fove which “honest love never has. This is utter nonsense. Love is a flower that flourishes better in the open sunshine than it does in the shade. The love that brings a man real happiness is that which is a crown of honor to him. not that which is a disgrace and of which he is ashamed. Nor does romance long survive when it lives in fear of discovery. Kven a royal mantle becomes bedraggled and frazzled out around the edges if you have to drag it around to holes and corners and sordid places where you are not likely (o meet any of your friends. And lady loves and lovers are just as difficult to live with as are wives and_ husbands. The nagger nags Lothario just as much as she does John Henty. And, in addition, both have a thousand causes for jealousy and suspicion that are eliminated from matrimony. Liaisons rarely last long. And so it is a sardonically humorous thing that the men and women who have been married for 25 or 30 years to wives and husbands who haye given them a devotion that never falteréd, whose love has stood the acid test of daily and hourly sacrifice and work and struggle and suffering, should rate all this true and tried affection as nothing. ‘Why, the man who has a wife who has mped and saved and toiled to help him get a start in the world, who has nursed him with her own hands when he was sick and who has never even seen that he has got fat and bald-headed and bay-windowed, has been really more beloved than have all the sheiks from Don Juan down to Valentino. And the middle-aged woman whose hump-shouldered husband has slaved through Winter snows and Summer suns that she might have diamonds and furs and limousines and go off to Burope in the Summer and Palm Beach in the Winter nas had the finest tribute any man can lay at a woman's feet. ‘The pity of it is that she is too stupid to see it and palpitate over it. And 50 she beaits upon her breast and cries out that she is miserable because she has never lived and been loved. e e E man who started to work as a young boy and who has spent his days MONDAY, MARCH . 7, 1921. DIARY OF A NEW FATHER BY R. E. DICKSON, This morning T was having a won- derful sleep, and sleep is the most wonderful thing there is, but It Is too bad you cannot appreciate it Wwhile you are having some, instéad of ofly when you are not having some, because whilé I was asleep I did not know anything about it and then the baby hollored for break- fast and woke Joan up and she could not bear the thought of getting up without me get up too, and she pulled the covers off me and punched me in the ribs, because she says it 18 no use trying to get me out of bed with mere words, and perhaps she is right because she has used a lot of words at different times, although you could not call them mere words. Joan sald, “Come on; get up,” and before I could think of anything to say the doorbell rang and she put on her robe and went to answer it, and she was back in a minute and she sald, “The Htewarts want us to g0 to church with them. Hurry and gt up, It la a beautiful day out.” I said, “It is not,” and Joan said “How do yon know? You are not eéven up,” and I said, “How can a day be beautiful when the Stewarts are up this early making trouble?” Well, the outcome of it was that we went to church, while the janitor’s daughter stayed with the baby, and she charges 20 cents an hour, and the sermon alone ted an hour and 15 minutes, and when we came home I thought, now maybe Joan will lay off of me for the rest of the day. But a man 18 eilly to have a hope like that, because your wife cannot let you alone for five. minutes, let alone a whole day, and almost as soon as we came in the house she said, “Didn't Mr. Stewart look wonderful in his new suit and hat and everything this 'HI T in office or store complains that he has never lived. Yet he has known struggle and achievement. He has known anxiety and despair and triumph. He has matched his wits and his strength against other men. He has planned campaigns and seen them go down to defeat or on to success. He has seen human nature in the raw, human beings fighting together, helping each other, rising to unbelievable heights and sinking to jmmeasurable depths. He has seen avarice, greed, jealousy, treachery, generosi kindliness, loyalty. What more have the rounders seen? What more have they experienced? Which life is the more real—that of the worker or that of the loafer? The woman who married young and whose life has been passed mostly in her own home bemoans herself that she has not lived. But she has known love. She has known motherhood. She has seen birth and death and suffering and sorrow and joy. She has worked and wept and laughed. She has buried her heart in a baby's grave and pinned a wedding veil on her daughter and seen her son bring honor upon her. What more can life bring a woman than that? so I wonder what these middle-aged people really mean wWho that they have never lived. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1927.) . The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright. 1927.) And complain Thus. Depart. Lubricate. Insect. Floor covering. Al Commonplace statements. Electrified particle. Act. Devour. Slames e coin. Conjunction. Brother (abbr.). Proposed international language. Belonging to us. Chinky. Cold. Soak up. Siberian river. Steal. 7 Ap.;éndue of certain grasses. DRI Scalloped Corn. Take one can of corn, one cupful of milk, one teaspoonful each of sugar and salt, a little pepper, two table- spoonfuls of flour, one cupful of bread morning?” I sale “The only time that guy will look all right.to me is when I cannot see' him."” Joan said: “I wish you would pay as much attention to your appearance as he pays to his. That hat of yours is just simply shabby, and you need another best suit, and those shoes you are wearing are disgraceful.” I sald: “What {8 the matter with my hat?” And Joan said, “It prob- ably is a very good hat. It would have to be to last as long as it has.” I said, “There is nothing wrong with this suit, either.” And Joan sald, “Now, stop arguing. You can go right downtown tomorrow and buy a new outfit. I am tired of being ashamed of you.” I sald, “We can’t affora it.” Joam-said, “Oh, we can, too. You looked actually ragged side Mr. Stewart.” I said, “I can stand almost anything except being compared with that guy.” And Joan said, “Well, then, you certainly yught to dress as well as he does.” 1 said, “He-dldn’t look like #o much.” And Joan sald, “I thought he was awfully good-looking. He is.80 neat and im- maculate, and he has the most won- deérful taste. I am just wild about the way he looks.” I 'sald, “If I wasted as “much time dressing up as that baby does, 1 could make him look like a.lily in an ash can six weeks after Easter.”” And Joan laughed one of her laughs, and she said, “‘Oh, now, maybe not. I don’t believe I ever saw another man who looked as marvelous as he does.” 1 sald, “It is all in the clothes.” Joan eaid, “Not all.” And I said, “'If I spent as much on clothes as he does, three girls would turn around to look at me to every half-witted one Joan said, And T sald, “What's more, I can prove it.” And Joan said, “‘Ha, ha!" like that. ‘And now I have to go and show her. And how she ever talked me into it is over my head, and my credit is going to take a lot of patches while I doll up like I was celebrating that guy Stewart’s funeral, but maybe it will be worth it. Lima Beans Savory. Soak one-half a ¢upful of dried lima beans over night. In the morning drain and cook in bolling salted water until soft. Again drain and force through a strainer. There should be three-fourths of a cupful of pulp. Add one-third cupful of rolled dried bread crumbs, three tablespoonfuls of melted butter, one-half a teaspoonful of powdered sage, one-fourth teaspoonful of salt, a little pepper and one slightly beaten egg. Shape in the form of sausages, dip In crumbs, egg and crumbs, fry and drain on brown paper. Pile on a hot serving dish and sur- round with fried apple slices or rings. Answer to Saturday’s Puzzle. Printer's measure, crumbs and one tablespoonful of but- ter. Mix the corn with the salt, pep- per, sugar and flour and add the liquids. Melt the butter, mix with the bread crumbs and cover the bottom of a pudding dish with one:half of the crumbs. Add the corn mixture and cover with the rest of the crumbs. Down. Stringed musical instrument. Portion of ground. Bake in a moderate oven ahout twenty minutes, and serve hot in the pudding dish. Insect. Artificial language. Auditory organ. Pipes that carry smoke. Hindu ejaculation. City of the Chaldees. - New England State (abbr.). Famous Spanish painter. Imitate i Il{‘:ilns u:e.‘ Y'g«y:edikd with more beautiful complexions than any other wn. Youth is thus preserved, rx charm of nat loveliness cultivated. . Wash the face g:utly wit! Palmolive. Massage its balmy and palm oil lather ioto the skin. Rinse with warm water; then cold. That is nature’s rule for keep- ing that schoolgirl complexion. L‘f'!’ on. use Pl.lll‘l’fl!lve touch their faces olive | like. advice, millions | ahd oot Tor it's a'tmz complexion soap, made of cosmetic oils; for oge purpose only —to protect and bea: the skin. et fi"flf m much larly before bett’et your skin in Use powder and make-up all you ever leave them on over night. INE olive. Costs but 10c a_cake. wm“ o resented to be of ol ol are not the Be sure ‘you get GENU: FEATURES. MILADY B EAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS Coiffures for Long Faces. Milady thinks of her hair not so much in its original role as a mere protection for her head, but as a frame to bring out the beauty of her face ‘This 18 why she considers the lines of Her coiffure as important as those of her clothes. The wrong kind of hair arrangement may utterly destroy her . 9 charm by emphasizing the weak points | of her features. The harmony of color in dress fis better appreciated by most women than harmony of line. that determines the style of coiffure, frock or hat: that expresses one's per sonality. The woman who has real artistic taste cannot choose a style of | hairdressing or an article of dress that is unsulted to her individual tyy no_matter how popular it may The lines of hat or colffur be arranged as one stands b full-length mirror, since the hei; breadth of the figure must be consid ered. The shape of the face and the spacing of the features are of next fm- portance. The colffures that I am de- scribing here are designed to suit a long, slender faces. The first two may be used by short girls or women and the last two by taller types. Coiffure 1—The hair is parted low on the right side and brushed across the top of the head. It may be brought Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. | 2 “I dldn’t know but two cuss words until papa stepped on the rake an’ it flew un an’ hit him a lick.” It you combined the curative JOREAR made” co\ 'y could ::! get as much i there is in anu- lated:sugar syrup or clarified foner. The mfit is lphlll pint of m!!y better cough syrup than you could buy u:: e for three times the monlez pleasant and never is Pinex and Syrup prepara- tion gets right at the cause of a cough and gives almost immediate relief. It loosens the phlegm, sto; t tickle and heals the sore, irritated membranes so gen umufllyunizumuyu- toni A d:’"l use will usually over- come the ordinary cough and it is splendid for bronchitis, hoarseness and bronchial asthma. Pinex is a most valuable concen- trated compound of genuine Nor- way pine extract and palatable guaiacol, which has been used for generations to break up severef your di for “2 v I Guaranteed to give absolute, tisfaction or money re- lunded. The Pinex Co. tant School Wark Falls in RE yon letting listless mornings, A brought on largely by wrong breakfasts, handicap your child’s school work? Recent investigations, conducted in over 2,000 Amesican schools and e-ll?u. reveal 80% of the so-called “bard” studies - 38; falling in the. me . This is con- firmed by Prof: Willard, of North- western University, and other lead- ing educators. uaker . Oats breakifasts, the excellent food balance tein, carbohydrates, vitamines and the “bulk”™ to make laxatives seldom needed are being urged as a duty ‘of parents in protecting their children’s most important working hours. No other grown com-, Tt is the latter | | down rather low, almost parallel with the eycbrows, te conceal a high fore head.” If the hair is bobbed the ends may curl up on the left temple. The side hair should be worn rather fluffy | and arranged over the ears In the style of a long-hair colffure. | Coiffure 2—Part the hair in the mid | dle and arrange a long bang over th | forehead. Curl the enas of the under and put a few deep, loose waves in the hair on each lde. The end« of the side hair should also be curled under. | Coiffure 3—For a tall, thin type ti ! hair may be parted in the center, wit a single fluffy curl on the forehead. small knot of hair sheuld be worn lo | at the nape of the neck. A shing et is exceedingly unbecoming whe e long and thir her coiffure for the slender girl with a long face 18 a hig lde part, with coils of hair over each In order to make the two sec tlons of hair equal in size, may be worn straight or water-wa in shallow, loose ridges parallel wit the part. Generally speaking, when the hair | Iy beautiful color—blue or pure gold—it st advantage when w. aves and curls make dral, um brown look more interest preaking up the light that fall upon it. A thurn I (Copys Fried Tomatoes. Siice some good sized tomatoes ee slices and lay them in a lered with salt to ter. Let stand for half Take and gently dip them sides in fife bread crumbs and quickly in half butter and half lar for minutes, then draw the fr i ing pan to the side of the stov they will simmer and - hal hour. Take up e on a yeget he. 1927) . - Cream of Barley Soup. #oak a_cupful of barley ter for three hours, 1 the barley In a quart of mutton brot and boil until the barley is very soft Make a white roux, which is § little flowr in a dry frying pan, st! and cook without letting brown. a teaspoonful of chopped pa | juice of ene onion and salt and pepy Thin this with a pint of milk slow Buy It At | Center Market DOWN Balance easy ¢ monthly payments The Grand Prize VACUUM CLEANER Get a brand new, genuine Grand Prize Eureka— z;;mu' d‘Athn e;uu Prize lighest Award) at s e Sesqui- only $2.00 down. Extreme- ly easy terms will quickly make it yours. But hurry, for this great offer is posi- tively for this month only. PHONE Main Ten Thouund TODAY For a FREE trial in your home POTOMAC ELECTRIC APPLIANCE COMPANY This Company Stands Behind Every Appliance It Sells 14th & C Sts. N.W, MainTen Thousand (336,