Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
~or 1= BY MARY 1t is usually only those who occupy the top and bottom rungs on the finan- cial ladder who snap their fingers at the prevailing mode. Those below do it from nec those above, when they do it from hoice. They feel t afford to ignore fashions <ot by ot those on the bottom rungs that they eannot afford .to do otherwise. The position of the woman who has ®0 little to spend on her own clothes that she ca never anything do it v can cie ) ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS ARE US < AT AT FRONT OF FRi POINT DEEP V AGE FROCK T LACE WITH A CHRYSANTHEMUM. for the sake of he individnal taste <. Rut the o let her own er the niy or fash that no ' who can lividual tas ready-set standard ion or one env fford vail wor ov Sarah Surprises Herself. ARAH ELLIOT started slightly < her stated her errand. | can’t have a_child here,” | said firmly. “I don't know | ithing about children, es-| wild children from the tene- | ments, such as these well be, T'll give you money to pay for the keep of a child, but’ positively I one in my home.” " Sarah alw word with all the emph felt it deserved. Her dark eyes were full of pride as she glanced about the handsome room which was furnished with Aunt Melissa’s rug, Grandpa El- Jiott's family portraits and Grandma Elliott’s priceless old mahogany. Sarah had inherited these trasures, and much more. The fact that she was a spinster without heirs did not Jessen the selfish proprietorship she exervised over them. No, she could not have a strange child among her precious heirloom But before Mrs. Kelly went away she | sat down at Uncle Ebenezer Win- throp's colonial desk and wrote a check that would pay the board of | two children for the two weeks of | their outing. She called that being | generous. But Mrs. Kelly apparently didn’t think so. Mrs. Kelly was a small, plain, outspoken woman who feared mobody. not even the descend- ““This will do a lot,” s what the children really need is per- gonal supervision, contact with just such things as you have here in your home, They are America’s future cit- | jzens; that's the idea we work under. What we strive to give them is en- vironment. They won't hurt our homes and some day we may find that the child we helped has turned out to be a wzreat musican or singer or— or something like that.” “Good langr" Sarah said to herself | when Mrs. Kelly's blue gingham had disappeared through her front door, | “she seemed to think she had the right to lay down the law to me. T} guess I know my own business vet a | Svhile.” Then, as she had company to et ready for, she scon forgot all about the fresh-air campaign. Every Summer Julia Forrest, an old schoolmate of Sarah, came to make her a visit. Julia was one who ad-| mired and envied to Sarah's heart’s| content. Julia knew enough to appre-| ciate candlesticks and plates. | On the day when Julia went away Rarah accompanied her to the station. As she stood on _the platform waiting for No. 12, No. 6 slid into the station. | Down the steps came a crowd of chil: dren, eager for their first breath of | country air. Dark children, blond| children, curly heads, straightcut | bobs, husky bodies, thin bodies, flash- ing ey children of a sorted ages 2 d in gar-| ments expressive of their various na- | tionalities, bearing bundles and boxes of extra clothing, Every child was| expectant, jovful, for grand adventure | waited. Sixty-five of them in all | bringing such color, life, music to the | | packed food and clothes and to; MARSHALL. of women might envy. the women who m ctually set the fashion—or at Jeast ve influsnce the dressmakers in -1 When Mrs. Clews appear prominent social gatherin this Summer wearing an | chrysanthemum not on her the center of her the fact was conside to cable 1ov Something really had | happened—women talked ahout it— and some of them appeared thereaiter wearing artificial flowers not on shoulder but in the center of the bod. jce. Probably Mrs, Clews had no in tention of starting a faghion when she appeared that day with her ch temum in a new place, and with women it would hav no moment whatever »metime: ] ence in fashion hit upon novation at about the same tim t knowing it or having talked the itter over, they co-operate to chans e current of fashion in sonm way or other. I have seen a num of well dressed women recently we ing the ficial flowers in this n position and they may not have had | the slightest idea that they were fol lowing the fashion set by Mrs. Clews. After all, there is no reason why we should always go on wearing on our shouiders. It isn't what you pay for trimminz | but how you use it that makes a fro | effective,”and T will let you know ex- actly how to use a yard of 6-incn rib- | hon to make the most effective trim ming for an overblouse that T have seen in a long, long time. I got the idea from an informal little evening frock recently bought in Paris. 1f veu want the pattern and directions just send me a stamped, self-addressed | envelope. shion is in a position that most Se women ar shouider bodice in 1 suffi of it wome (Covyright, 1627} before a | bloom were saying their prayers Radiance resebush in_full Of course they kept her busy. They hatehed new ideas about every other minute; what is more, they put them | into execution. But Sarah got along | somehow. And the two weeks flew Then came the day of the fre exodus. Sarah dressed the twins in | brand-new things and made neat bun- | dles of the rest of their clothing. She them, And then she let them go, feel- | ing that after all she had done her whole duty. ! An hour after the train roared city- | ward Sarah began to realize that she | was a lonely woman, that home was never going to be the same again. It held too many echoes of childish prat tle or baby footsteps. | She held out a week and then she | hunted up the twins' address and be- | took herself to the ci She found | the Geiger Apartment, where the chil- | dren had gone to live after their | mother was taken to the hospital. The | mother had died and Mrs. Geiger was wondering what she should do with two more kids when she already had seven of her own, as Sarah put an end to the problem by asking Tony and Janine if they would go back home with her. After Sarah had had adoption pa- | pers made out. Mrs. Kelly came to see her. “I never dreamed you had it in you, Sarah Elliott,” she said. “Neither did 1" returned Sarah | gravely. “I'm just as surprised at my- self as you are, Mary Kelly.” (Covyright. 1927.) THE DAILY HOROSCOPE Thursday, August 11. Again sinister stars rule, accord: ing to astrolgy, which finds the busi ness hours subject to thwarting and disturbing influences. { Women may be stimulated to en-| ergy and activity, but they should be careful lest they expend energy in futile faultfinding. The sway is most threatening to domestic peace, for quarrels may be precipitated by means of mistaken efforts or opinions on the part of wives or daughters. Divorces will multiply, but their great number will bring about serious reforms in social manners:- and cus- toms, the seers predict. Because there is to be established | a new order of things in domestic re- | lations this period will be marked by | strange vagaries in sentiment, it is/| for t. Signs of times that appear discour- aging to philosophers are read by the seers as cheering, since they mark the turning point. dull scene as it had never before ex- perienced. The committes in charge had its hands full trying to sort out the chil dren and get them properly distrib uted. A dozen townswomen were there | 10 take possession of their charges. Sarah, jostled into a corner, watched | ith fascinated eves. Good gracious! here was Mrs. Hovt annexing sis And Kate Stevens was packing four | into her sedan! She was aroused by | a touch on he Julia! She had | almost forgotte “My train’s in. I'm going. Come to see me. Good- by said Julia and was gone, waving her way through the mass of restless | humanit “Mrs Zinck isn't here to get her It was Mrs. Kelley speaking | ott. “I must telephone | I'm going to let her have that pair of twins, Anna; they, 1 know she But e to be separated. doing it for the money. refu is only there is such or three we depended on have got sick or something—" The twins! That boy and girl stand- ing handin-hand over there. Why, they were mere babies. To think of their soing Amelia Zinck's! rah knew Amelia Zinck as perhaps few people did. She shuddered, ja's house—and yard—a she cooked. Suddenly she found It turing right around and hurl ing these words into Mr tonished fa L Zinck hem myse them, then,” retorted Mrs A taxi distributed two 1. wonder »n at the door of the old 1t looked Ii heaven to they sa 80, soupy baths n clothes. h ott home, ony and Janin there were ni shiny white tub, © had t phoned | te to the store for qulic delivery of garments at whose zes she merely guessed—and food rich with cream, butter and eggs were sufficiently plentiful. Sarah had never noticed kiddies eating The sight thrilled her strangly. She had never been hungry, she had never known a time when custard pie and nut loaf were not familiar to her. Af- terward there was a tour of the gar den. Sarah's fears vanished when Jannie and Tony knelt down as if they in Sar — Solutions of Today’s Word Golf Problems. 81. Dogs, Dots, Dote, Rote, Rate, Race——five steps. 62. Tip, Lip, Lit, Let, Bet—four Wane, : Wand, Sand —three steps. before. | Under this sway' one's financial ffairs may seem especially depress- ng, but it is well to forget them until the configuration changes. Industry will have reason to re- joice, astrologers foretell, for there is to be great activity in many lines of manufacture. Workers in iron and steel probably will be in great demand, for the Gov- ernment may have great need of them. Diet now will be discussed from a new point of view, for less food will be important as a means of economy | rather than a beauty fad. tise of prices in wheat and other | grains may cause a sharp advance in the cost of bread, astrologers fore- | | tell. | Persons whose birth date it is prob- ar. The | | {ably will have a happy young will court or mar; Children born on that day probably will be lucky in love. They are likely | a hig bateh and two | to have talent in mechanical lines and | hour interval of gu e inventors. (Copyright, 1927.) may becom | MOTHERS | | | AND THEIR CRILDREN. i Use of New Words. One mother says: Because 1 want 'n to express the tensive vocabulary, them when the, of place or mi children are sensitive my children to | selves with an | 1 use a big w pronounce on to ridicule, at out Al Then | | him | comfortable afterward, | | ever | or and to be highly amused at their un- | | ®u essful use of a new word may cause them to put that word aside for several more yeurs. I have found | it wiser to correct a child's English |in a matter-of-fact way | him right permanentiy that will set (Copyright. 19: & ot the | been a matter of | w | flowers | | fire. |in our honor. | we have to go. | dandy time. | will soon waken as regularly as any | w | quictly afterward. | and aft, LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. | Last nite T stopped going to sleep all of a suddin on account of remem bering my 35 cent flashlite was down on the hall rack jest ware it was the other nite wen a robber broke in and <tole a lot of clothes without seecing | the fashlite, me thinking, G wizz Im not woing to take a chance on eny more s not seeing it, Im going down and it. Wich 1 rted mers, being all dark in the house, and wen I zot half ways down I thawt I was on the hottom step and I was ony on the next to the hottom one, and 1 came down bang’ on the floor t ontside of pops room, thinking, ood nite, T wonder if he herd me. Ioping he didn’t on account of him being kind of nerviss about berglers the other ni waited there a wile on my 'n T got up and kepp woing downstairs, and 1 felt for my flashlite il T felt it, ony wat did 1 do but nock it off of the hall rack and hit it agenst the radiater and fell on the floor with 2 fearse noises, me thinkinz. Gosh, if nobody herd that | Im_lucl Wich 1 wasent, on account of pops voice saying, Whose down there? Sounding as if he was standing at the top of the steps, Being jest ware he was, on account of me pushing the button of my 35 cent flashlite jest then by axsident and 1 could see him up there as plain as day, ony he could- ent sce me, and he quick stuck up both his hands saying, Dont fire, dont & B to in my pidjam- siney on Proving he thawt T was another ber gler, and I sed, Its ony me, pop, dont worry, Yee gods, if T can get down there to you alive, youll do a little worrying, pop_sed. Wich 1 did. DIARY OF A Tuesday Afterncon. night 1 began my vaca- ¥ morning we started uto trip to see Joan's and here we are, is a bridge 4 Saturday and S00-mile amili we get Ji and my and wh; out of hed by a this morning, and staggered down for mother were - leaves out of which if 1 in this Joan beat me couple of hours when 1 finally breakfast she and m: watching the haby tea some of my folks' books, did it when I was a child house, I got licked. Joan said, laine called me up while you were asleep—you remember my old school chum? And she's giv- ing a big bridge party Thursday night for us, and is inviting all our old crowd.’ Isn't that lovely I said. “Do we have to go?" and Joan said, “Have to go? Of course We're the guests of | honor.” 1 said, “Everybody pities the Presi- dent of the United States on account of him never having any fun on vaca- tion. Well, look at me.” Joan sald, “Why, we’ll have al All the old crowd—— and I said, “I will not have a dandy time. I don't want to go to and darned old bridge game. 1 came here on vacation.” My mother said, “Well, you needn't go, dear. Joan can go without you,” and I sald, “Fine. Count me out, then,” and my mother said, “Why, surely. Joan grew up in this town and knows so many people. She probably has a dozen old sweethearts who would love to take her. . . . Let's PAR, WASHINGTON, D. 0. WEDNESDAY. The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyrizht. 1927.) Sailors. Dandy. Inclosure of poles Disorder. Sefore. Give ont. Scheme. Rusted. Cereal Annoy Tnsound. Feminine name. ak violently. ctinct bird. Speed. Challenge. Arrived (abbr.). God of Love German river. Asiatic hovine. Slight depression. Down. Journey. Assistant. . Deer of Europe (plural). Definite. Was afraid. Remnant. Looked narrow! Feminene name. Leave out. 10. Small rodents. ‘When Food Seems Poisonous. | Before you get excited let me assure you that no possible combination of two or more wholesome foods, foods that you ordinarily like and take with impunity, can become injurious or poisonous in your midst, and this I swear notwithstanding the hokum of charlatans. So if you like cream on your berrles or acid fruit with your vatmeal or lobster with your dessert.) why, go ahead and enjoy yourself | Every man's appetite is best guide in such matter: | Let’s take some asparagus and see | what happens. 1 can think of not less than three kinds of polsoning one might get from eating asparagus st, there is botulism, the most Kind of food poisoning of which we know. Among the 47 outbreaks of this dread diseasa in the United States in the three years from 1922 to 1926, home- | canned asparagus carried the botu- linus bacillus in two outbreaks. In | at least one of these outbreaks the | people noticed that the asparagus was | *mot just right” when they opened the his tell Elaine to invite one of them, shall we, Joan?” and Joan said, wonderful idea. We'll call | right away,” and they both got up | and started out of the room, and so I am going to the bridge party after | all, and I not only had to agree to| g0; I had to beg them to let me go, on account of you get in trouble dis- agreeing with just one woman in your family, but when, you argue with two of them at once, Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. It is of the utmost importance in successful nursing that the b be nursed at ctly the same hours every day. This an easy matter in | the beginning, the baby should he awakened at the proper hours and clock. At a recent exhibition of | incubator babies, the doctor in charge aid that every three hours the five babies yawned and wakened and set | up a feeble howl for nurishment, like so many little machines. This is the it should be. The breast milk is better when the breasts get regular stimulation and the baby's digestion infitely better when his food omes at the same hours each day. One may choose the three or four ng. If the moth- er has an abundance of rich milk it has been found advisable to choose the four-hour periods, as the baby has less colic and gains just as well when | fed only once every four hours, The three-hour schedule brings the feeding periods at 69-12-3.6 in the o can, “but they took a chance ate it. Second, there Is the peculiar sensi- tivity of cer individuals to the protein agus—the eati the food have this “idiosyncras; duces hives, asthma or other unpleas ant manitestation of innate or acquired anaphylaxis. Then there is the o acid in asparagus—comparatively little, according to the food chemists but then the food chemists seem all balled up about the oxalic radicle in foods—enough, at any rate, to teach those subject fo the distressing condi- tion called “oxaluria” (an madequate and | OUTDOOR 61. Go from DOGS to PAG they wouldn't let them in _on ho 62. Go from TIP to BET. happens next. 63. Go from WADE to SAND. PRINT your se race: We w daytime and at 10 and 2 at night The four-hour schedule will be 6-10-2-6 | in the daytime and 10 and 2 at night. | It is an excellent plan to lie down | when nursing the baby. It is easier | on the mother. does not have | to hold the least every three hours, a period, and this period of really helps her to e bette A glass of n before begin- | ning the nursing is also helpful. Most mothers find themselves in | explicably thirsty. One mother dis-| covered also that the baby fussed and belched frequently when she nursed while sltting up and was un- while, if she nursed the baby when she was ly- ing down, he scemed to have no dis- comfort from gas and went to sleep Breasts should be washed before r each nursing with a solution of boric acid. This is essential to perfect cleanliness. If there are fissures on the nipples it is more than necessary to prevent any in- and possible abscess of the <. The nipples should be kept with a piece of sterile gauze these precautions are nece s 0 that the baby will not be a vietim thrush (white spots resmbling drops of milk which come on the roof and sides of the baby's mouth, causing him much pain and dis- comfort), as this miserable ailment | is ®ue to lack of cleanlines: S S Cockalgne was a fabled land of hap- piness and ease, with houses built of delioncies. a s CORRECT SOLUTIONS ON TH Copyright in | delec | But | item or bed WORD GOLF—Eve T know T The solar disk. Seize. Mimic. Born Anger. Period, Compass point. Color, Climbing device. Stupef: American c xelue heref Motal The-CGloomy Dean. Uncommon inglish college, Snug retr Opening: s Puzzle. [ z2|0] Al " PERSONAL HEALTH S BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D, term for it) that they must not indulge in this succulent relish, So that's asparagus. And yet asparagus fresh or canned is a_very healthful vegetable for all ordinary folk—it doesn’t cure anything that we know of, but it yields such desir able nutritive material as iron, phos phorus, sulphur, lime, and the by products of its combustion or meta holis;y favor normal exeretion by kidney and intestine. But these are not the reasons why we should eat sparagu s a ru when it vailable, either fresh or canned. We should eat it because it is pleasing to the taste, Enough said about as) indicate to the inquiring m food poisoning can happen though we know there is no such thing as “ptomaine poisoning” and no particular danger or risk involved keeping any canned food in can for hours ‘or days after the is opened if the food will keep that long in any kind of container. Substitute any other food item for which you have a pet aversion, say tomatoes or pineapple or walnuts or huckwheat or oysters. it any of these ble items would fit the fore- pictures more to vour likin for that hecau peculiar s gain 1s to d that even goin, e vou happen to have a sitivity to a given food ause your late aunt took hefore she departed the wholesome for others if they like it. If we were to follow such a policy, T'd advise every one to feed coweumbers to the cows—and then what would we do for salad? When food seems poisonous or “dis agrees” don't draw hasty conclusions or alizations. Likely enough, it isn't the food but rather the individual that is abnormal. (Copyright, 10 some food not of is it ) rybody’s Playing It BY JOHN KNO) SPORTS. that dogs can run, but T wish <. ill draw the veil of silence over what ook out for sandburns. ‘steps” here., 1S PAGE 1027 IN TODAY'S How It’s Done The rule for keeping that school- girl complexion, that thousands know SIMPLE nightly habit, mous beauty experts sa, day responsible for better skin con- ditions, greater charm and beauty, than any costly treatments known. Simple cleanliness —soap and water—they aver, is the first rule in getting that schoolgirl complexion., -Wash the face gently with Palm- olive. Massage its balmy olive and palm oil lather into the skin. Rinse with warm water; then with cold. If your skin is inclined to be natu- rally dry, apply a little good cold cream. That is all—it's nature's rule for keeping that schoolgirl complexion. Thus, largely on expert advice, millions uge Palmolive Soap; touch By NORMA SHEARER their faces with no other. It is made of cosmetic oils. It is made for one purpose on to protect and beautify the skin. Use this way regularly, and par- ticularly before bed. Use powder, rouge, make-up all you wish. But never leave them on the skin over night. Note, then, how much better your skin in even one week. GET REAL PALMOLIVE Get Palmolive today. Costs but 10c a cake. Use no other on your face. But be sure you get GEN- UINE Palmolive. Crude imitations, represented to be of olive and palm oils, are not the same as Palmolive. Remember that and TAKE CARE. The Palmolive-Peet Co., Chicago, U.S A. wodness sake don't assume | AU | own self selv | e Women dress to please other wom- Yes, we've doped that all out our en. | dience in the world for a new dress and h; comes dressil hit? smart dulze o Wha most | women et Is th [than the spectacle of yourse mirro railir | unbrushed, uncombec red? Wou cure every comfor herself’ Yet t of don | hours spe ety ahout abl i ind A them ¢ tude. Doro piece | ana ‘IHI(H'I#‘H w | picture of her snapped as she is |t |actly | owing to the moth-eaten wrappe By th make | Mueh” wiser for | Wales if he should happen to drop jn. | wre dev o star ing w he wears a shahby, heeled, toes, looks | outr: in was cr 0, W st quired: hrir to behc tures of wreatest friend spin, a tacle o rassed { somethin, never Don’ uch n 1t b The pains one is | into embarr The sad c: herself | well known [ moth-eaten wrapp settle d the doc | window the boy his curh, our for him t zolden oor sk « Take ers, ¥ vays Cre: tablesp: of two cream and tHe }. ke or can | 1f irls this she sa | hecause “no one ¢ | this sh uld anything v TaT 18, SUB ROSA rEATURES. MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY MIMIL BY LOIS LEEDS. When You're Alone. The Hair in Summer. before the ha | One of the ha every Summer damp hair. Tt secretion of the Ip. The makes the hair look dull It is hard to keep a wav u it s naturally heen permanently diff 1 after the shampoo, has dried Besides keeping the scalp and hair | clean and using the astringent ton to tone up the tiny muscles ihat nor mally regulate the activity of the sweat glands, it is necessary to ai the scalp dail ng hair should be llowed to han for at leas half an hour while it fanned ken. Bobbe r should be brushed upward to le problems that recur is “ayperidrosis, is due to the over weat glands in the | excessive perspiration nd string in such hair curly or has ed, and it is in a becom coiffure. hecome ined at the hase of the crown, and en on the brim where it joins t n. ) e frequently hyperidrosis i for seborrhea capiti calp. Althot the afMicti related, they not_identical Intter is the result of exc from the oil glands. Both the oil an sweat cateh and hold accumulations of dust from the a so that the hair must be shampooed frequently to iaep it clean. Onee a week is not too often to wash hair of this sort. After the shampoo the scalp may he given alter- nate w m an cold rinsings with a hath spray to stimulate circula: | i Other women are. the best au alf the it with thrill of 1 rival's envy new frock and annoy nless well, but how about wrselves a little we're re proud of being nty, why don’t we in Ifpride oceasionally and se v treat? the complex that makes areay themselves like rag when they're planning to a ning alon ere anything more all very 1z to pleiase ind alp o of the sym) Nervou hat w U's ev ¢ owered self-conscious types r from this person who is troub, drosis should b physi ian_to fiig Qui taken mis oily of disty people are e as oo sckeron 1 examinat e wha' n in order to bring h normal. This will in for a change in habits of liv diet may need to be modified tain more fruit, s nt and dairy products. 10-m riod for setting-up e ses bot and morning shoul he new regime. A w bath should be taken at b tepid sponge or hand i ning. Daily ¢ rouraging € in the 1 wreck, left-overs 1s, hair h dishevels soiled dirty, und down ) 1 in he face ru ldn't you think that sight would A irl of the impulse to be slovenly when she's by th 1 : " | housands of girls make a point | , such costum for the |20 t in their own exclusive | They don't seem to have any | keeping them pre- | e and smart, just for their own | | ason | their arn ‘or hyperidrosis the following sca ic may be used three times a wee Two ounces witch-hazel, 1 ounce alco- | hol, 20 grains resorcin, 2 drams pow dered horate of soda 15 quinine sulphate, Use this tonic THE‘\VU\I.\ OF TWENTY-FOUR BY CLYDE CALLI nnin f they won't listen to r ss nicely just to keep respect, I shall have to v f the dangers of slovenly s wout as vain a little R, flippery as vou'd carve to meet 2t of her waking hours | to thoughts of clothes, lik any one of the four n she's dolled up—but a | hout | t out for market in the morn- | uld find a place in any rogue's| thy i From a woman's 24th birthday | til her 30th, she is sometimes be in the May of life, and there are ome men who 1 that usually a woman is not her most attractive un- 1id to death sha ruled in } two years. M. e | this period own name for Toe tics hold the opinion that is the time of greatest charm and beauty in the lives of most | wom nd it may well be considered a time of good health. After the twen- v-fourth birthday, the risk from tuberculosis among women decreases (Covyright. 1927.) PO it i Peach Puffs. Pare and halve some peaches, Wt up the whites of two eggs to a st froth, add two tablespoonfuls of pow dered su, » & pinch of salt and on teaspoon tract. pe April year Among presidential ladies who n vellow oxfords with bumpy | ried in this first year of the May stton stockings and a hat that | life were Mary Todd, who married t had been chewed by an| Abraham Lincoln; Rachel Robards, [Who married Andrew Jackson; Han nah Hoe, who mar A Martin Van Buren, d Julia Gardiner, second wife of John Tyler. Of th , Mary Todd had always from girlhood wanted to marry man who would be President, and seems to been confident that would accomplish her ambition. - chel Robards was perhaps one of the most picturesque of presidential dies. She was considered thi horsewoman and dancer in her sec- tion of North Carolina Hannah Hoe Van ren was a housew v type of woman of Dutch descent, and Julia, the second wife of Tyler, married | while he was President. She was a Roman Catholic. Other famous brides of 24 are: s of Julius r, ried Pompey: Queen Elizabeth of Bel- | sijum and Elizabeth atterson, the I'altimore heauty, who w married | to Jerome Bonaparte, voungest broth- | er of the great apoleon. Jerome, red 19, was serving in the Fiench | n which he was ded by the Eng Jerome made his wa to Boston, intendnng to go thence safe | back to France. There he fell violent- v in love with the American girl, and, | without gaining his brother's consent, married her. poleon annulled the ma and ref d to allow the | younz bride to enter France, while the crestfallen young husband was warded for his submission by a hi command in the nav Catherine—Iater ruier of Russia as Catherine T—became the mist { Peter the Great when she was rl, she had b | ed b theran pastor in burg. While still barely ma child she beeame the wife ¢ dragoon. Through the vicissitude: war she was rried into Ru: where, after several adventures, 1e under the protection of Prince —— Menschikoff, one of the Czar's gener- | 3 1s. It wr house that the Peach Dainty. | great Peter a her, and was m one cupful of sugar with two ' struck as much by her good sense and oonfuls of butter and the volks eggs. Add one pint of whipped ad one quart of sliced peaches little salt, Serve over gel dirty coat, low- | ch day And in She you lie n forth her. e came to g f last week ossing the market street hen a smooth-running for spped and an amazed voice in ‘Dot Anderson—is that you?” iking in horror, she glanced up J1d the carefully enameled fea £ Muriel, her worst enemy and rivil. Muriel and her hoy were out for an early morning nd_they both enjoyed the spec { Dorothy cringing and emba s vainly to do costume which could meringue into the delicately In nd serve cold with eream strove exion 1 Just 8 few to a improv ieve for an instant that n incident is one of the things ippen once in a lifetime. | careless girl, who takes no about how she locks when no round, is constantly plunged ssing situations. of the girl who settled alone for a sloppy evening is She attived herself in and proceeded t a good novel. When prbell ran rushed to the and _discovered that Harold, wonder, stood on the porch— appy roadster parked at the| t e Julia, who mar- and a It 'is ki, oily s rous *persp ysicians itive guarantee of sati< Remember—"CHEX—does soap.”—Advertisement ' WASH OFF YOUR FRECKLES — 1 Pleasant Soap Guaranteed to Remove Them Endorsed by e on our pos- MORE than | down for Lo little heroine had been w 1 to notice her existence hree months, opportunity e iting r ex and now that knocked at the | s unable to reccive him, | time she rushed ups quiet change he w be more it from me, you dress ou're running rhance. ou to keep vourself ccive the Prince of gone. | The famous house of J. D. Stlefe! makers of medicated soans. lised and pre: ed by physicians since 1847, now offers in this _country the {amous Stiefel's Freckle Soap. | Freckle Soap—recommended nt skin epecialist, Dr. Hebra uick and pleasant means of unsight nd of gen-| e than a | Swedish | ready 1o Stiefel's (Covyright. 1 tiresome “treatment” ix necessary. | Simply wash e with Stiefel's Freckle Soap. freckles will a If in any rare they don the full purchase price WHIT be imeiediately refunded. At your | favorite store or mailed direct upon re- #int of 75 cents fo J. D. Stiefel. Ine 16 Pearl St Y. C.—Advertisement vare intelligence as by her beauty. Menschikoff gave her up to the Czar. This was when she was 24 vears old Eventually she was married to him, | a crowned, and after h don't fool yourself Make yourself welcome Listerine, the safe antie septic, before meeting people. Keep a bottle handy in home and of- fice for this purpose, Realize this: in busi- ness, social and home life, it is vital that you do not offend those about you with Hali- tosis (unpleasant breath). 8 Had Halitosis 1 1 I manicurists say that halitosis is apparent in about every third customer — every one of them men from the better walks of life. ‘Who should know better than they? Face to face evidence Immediately Lister ine removes every You yourself can trace of unpleasant never tell when you odorand makes you ac» have it, and the one way to put ceptable anywhere. Send for free yourself on the safe—and polite book of etiquette. Lambert Phar- =—side is to rinse the mouth with macal Co., Dept. G-7, St. Louis, Mo, LISTERINE ~ the safe antiseptic EVERYBODY'’S TALKING Bverybody’s talking sbout the marvelous whiteness of teeth after using Listerine Tooth Paste a short time. You will be de- lighted. Large tube 25 cents.