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WOMAN'S PAGE Types of Collars With Fur Coats BY MARY Watch a woman try on a fur coat— and you will see t1 of ten the first adjust the c ing at herself whether the thing about her hi in the mirrc coat produces glanc. much LAPIN CHINCHILLA IS THE N2 GIVEN TO RABBIT OR CO DYED TO RESEMBI : CHILLA THAT WAS COLLAR AND CUF SLACK_CARACUL COAT Un the the ilhouette. n be persuaded that can be adjusted to produce slenderness through t in nine cases out she does is to to see ARSHALL. and abdomen she is not interested, If she has an idea that the fur of which the coat is made tends to in. crease the apparent girth of her body she will have none of it, The next attention of the fur pur- chaser is directed toward the Collars are very important. If the tone of the fur and the shape of the collar tend to make her look old—the coat is rejected. It has been found that while furs usually tend to a centuate the slender lines of the bod light furs are more becoming to the face. For this reason usually favors a of flat black peltr or Persian lamb wi or gray. F the same light fur Panther, which enjoyed much favor in Paris last season and which has been launched again for this season, is especially recommended to women the coat such as broad collar of be *quently the cuffs are of of some sort | who like to walk, hecause of its light | would weight. It is not one of the warmest furs, because the panther ix a tropical beast, Autumn and Spri Leopard coats are many smart women. For a time the stenciled imitation of leopard, they say, had a tendency to bring discredit upon even the genuine leopard, but discriminating women can easily see that there is a vast difference between the two sorts of skin. There s also L difference between leopard cat and just plain leopard. The leopard comes from Asia and Africa, while the so. called leopard cat comes from Central America ountry g needs. still chosen by A muffler, a waistcoat for your two a new-fashioned arm It xounds far-fetehed is really very simple, like to make yourself ome of useful Autumn accessories send but it these | a stamped. self-addressed envelope and [ T will send you a sketch with diagram and directions for making. (Copyright 192 Gooseberry Ja: Wash, top and tail four pounds of gooseberries. Put three - fourths pound of sugar and one gill of water into a pan and stir until the sugar has dissolved, then boil for about twenty minutes. Remove all scum as it s, Put in the goosebe and simmer them very gently for about three-quarters of an hour, or until the jam sets when tested by putting a little on a plate and leaving it in cold place. Stir occasionally and keep the jam well skimmed, When ready. put in into jars and cove first with a piece of waxed paper and then with a parchment or gum- med cover. When cold, store in the hips | cool, dry plac The Daily Cross - (Copyright, 192 Word Puzzle ) Across, . Contents of a ship. Crow. . Oak seed. Rub out. Mixed type. Observe. Town in southwest E Compass point. Hypothetical force. . Makes straigh Nickname. Part of Australia One. Printed notice. conception of being. (ab.). ite of g Increase, adian province (ab.). (ab.). rained. sothed Wanderer Down. Chicken Sour subs! (ab.) Unit Corded fabric. Metric ur suthern State (ab.). erman city. Ri O Pertaini to South American me Empl Within, rte (ah.) {t_republic_(@ah) . Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle. rer—v R[1 o‘u4 A = T Guaranteed pure imported POMPEIAN OLIVE OIL Sold Everywhere . Two thousand (Roman). . Insect. . Grammatical term. . Go in, . English river, . Paddle. . Negative. . Steamship (ab.). . International language. . Four (Roman). To Mend Bone Articles. Water glass, like we pack eggs in, | will mend bone articles and ornaments such as belt buckles. If you ever spilled any, you know how it stick It is transparent and will not show even a crack and the article will cer- tainly remain firm. Breakfasts That “Stand By” You Quaker Oats Supplies Vigor to Speed up Your Mornings OURISHING breakfasts of well- balanced food are now being N { widely urged by aathorities as an important aid to business success of adults, and physical and mental de- velopment of school children, Some 70% of the day’s important work in the business world, it is now known, falls into the four morning hours, 80% of the important school work, in thousands of schools and colleges recently investigated, in- cluding Princeton, Harvard, most state universities and public schools, falls in the same period. To be right mornings, you must eat right food; meaning rightly bal- anced, complete food. Thus Quaker Oats — excellently | minerals, vitamine * balanced in protein, carbohydrates, and the bulk that makes laxatives seldom needed —is the world’s dietetic urge. Savory, delicious food that “stands by” you through the morning. No other cereal compares. Always remember that. Get Quick Quaker—which cooks in 2% to 5 minutes—or regular Quaker Oats today at your grocer. Quaker Oats and fs, therefore, well sulted to Mexico and parts of our own | It you a| {around.” pop THE EVENING MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN, collar, | older woman | | | Toasting Marshmallows. {One Mother Says: | “To prevent the hands from getting | too hot when holding the fork or wire |for toasting marshmallows, I slip a square of pasteboard over the handle, |cutting a_hole barely large enough to [let the stick through. This keeps the [ heat off better than anything that the | children have tried. | (Covyright 191 | on the pantry door so that he couldn’t | had upset the milk and then fallen linto the flour barrel. | hank STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, SE BEDTIME STORIES A Hot Time. Stolen aweets may have a sting And retribution swiftly bring. Farmer Brown's’ Boy. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS at fault and who wasn't. While some of them started in to give Cubby a lesson, a lot of others seemed to blame Farmer Brown's Boy for what had happened, For a few minutes there | was a hot time. Farmer Brown's Boy | took to his heels. He had to. But Cubby buried his nose in honeycomb and was blisfully unaware that there was any such thing as stinging bees He plunged one paw after the other into that broken honeycomb and crammed it into his mouth. was smeared with honey. It dripped from his paws. His coat was smeared with it. Now and then he struck angrily at the bees, but he kept right on eating. He was stuffing himsel* with honey, iCovyright. 1927.) HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN, Cubby was now quite at home at Farmer Brown's. He was quite one of the family. A hook had been put get into it again. And now that it was all over Mother Brown took great delight in telling about how Cubby Every day he was allowed to run about as long as Farmer Brown's Boy was near to keep track of him. ch as inquisitive little chap as he Why, the curlosity of Peter Rab- | nothing to the curiosity of this little Bear. He poked his nose into everything that he could poke it into. He could follow rmer | Brown’s Boy all about the place. He could en go fishing with armer own's Boy, playing about on the while ' Farmer Brown's Boy | was! bit w fished. Now over among the apple were some hives of bees, for I Brown liked honey and he alwa bees, some reason or other 3 never had been over where those hives were. Then one day he started to follow Farmer Brown's Boy through the Old Orchard. Their way led right past those hives. Cubby noticed them. Right away, usual, he became curious. He must find out what those white boexs w The way to find out was to go see. So he turned aside and marched straight over to the first trees | rmer ¥ BENNY| | | LITTLE BY LEE PAPE { The boat landed in France this{ {morning, and last nite pop down | |in his cabin counting his cigars out | (loud, and ma sed, Willyum do you| meen to say your going to waist time | tomorrow morning by declaring those | | cigars to the customs men? | Certeny, of corse, Im not going to| |start e in France by smugge)ingl igars into the country, I've got 87 | cigars and Im only allowed 50 free of | duty, so Im going to declare them, pop | sey nd ma sed. how mutch is 50 from | 877 pop sed, and ma sed. And do | { you meen to tell me that a grate coun- | {try like France is going to worry | about rs? Its not the axual number, its the principal, pop sed, and ma sed, Wat al can there possibly be in Yee gods. you win, pop sed, and ma | | sed, Then your not’ going to declare the cigars | 1 certeny am, pop sed, and ma sed. | Then I dont see how I win, I must| say | And this morning we had to pass in frunt of some long tables with men in | back of them looking in peeples suit- | cases and things. and po, stopped in | frunt of one of them and the man sed something in Frentch and the man ahed of pop sed, He wunts to know f you have enything to declare. Be | nz a man in a by . and pop sed, Yes. I have 8 tell him | that. will you? Wich the man in the brown derby | did, and the man in back of the table | started to move his shoulders up s down Frentch and roll his eyes| ying. Wat ales him now? Slip him something, brother, take a tip from a hard boil traveller and slip him a little jack, the man in the brown | derby sed, and pop sed, Reely? and the | man in the brown derby sed, Surest thing you know, and pop took a piece of Frentch paper money out of his wallet and stuck it behind his suit- case on the table, and’ the custom man quick took it and put a white mark on all our suitcases and things and we kepp on going, ma saying, There, now you see, you did all that counting for nuthing. and pop saying, Sutch a sistem, Corn M—e—al Biscuits. For a change, try substituting corn meal for one-half the white flour in your biscuit recipe. They may be rolled out a little thinner than the usual biscuit dough or mixed with a spoon, making them quite soft, and dropped by teaspoonfuls onfo a greased pan, Would Friends your full time and yourself— ELITE'S UNSTARCHED RUF-DRY SERVICE Those cumbersome linens and bothersome shirts—in fact every piece of family laundry is spotlessly washed and dried, then delivered to your door. Flat work ready for nse, personal pieces just ht for starching and iron- ing at home. Minimum bundle, 75¢ A RING Ago Recognize Me Today OMPARE a photograph taken of you ten years ago with your reflection in the mirrow now. If you have given arduous household tasks surprised at the comparison. done, but the laborious, time-taking work of washing at home is no longer necessary. inaugurated RUF-DRY SERVICE really relieves you of the wash-day burden at a remarkably low cost. Now You Can Have the Best Laundry Work Done At This Economical Rate! ELITE LAUNDRY Potomac 40 hive. Farmer Brown's Boy didn't | know it. He had taken it for granted that that lit Bear was still follow | ing at his heels When Cubby reached that he stood up on his hind leg: amine it lie hive was on a low bench When he stood up, Cubby’s ! head s only just a little above the entrance to the hive. Suddenly he felt a sharp pain in his nose, He slapped at it with one paw. There was an- other sharp pain and 1in he slapped | at his nose with his little black paw. ! At first he didn’t discover what it was. “ t hive to ex- | Many rooms done in manner today have tinted plaster walls. The tints vary from palest butter yellow, to gay pinks, heavenly blues, cool greens and light, dull shades of orange. In such rooms the woodwork is | usually white and the need for a hit |of pattern and color is felt. This is | often supplied by the use of a gayly colored wall pap | (0 eight inches wide. This border is | run along the top of the mophoard or | wainscoting and around all door and | window frames. If the ceiling is very the old-time plain white or | high it is sometimes used also at the | | ceiling turn The window sketched here is |such a room. The walls are a del | icate amethyst shade. The curtains are of sheerest white dotted Swiss | and caught back with amber-colored | glass tie-backs. (Copyright. 1027.) HCRov FOR A FEW MINUTES THERE WAS A HOT TIME % . AR OB Lessons in English Then he noticed a few insects around | a little hole in that queer white box. | They were humming very angrily and | every minute the number of them grew. Cubby reached out and sniffed at that little doom At the same | instant those bees, for that is what | those humming_insects were, began | stinging him wherever they could | veach him. But that sniff had tickled | “ubby's nose with a smell of something | he never had tasted, but which some- | how he knew was the best thing in | all the Great World. It was inside that white box and he meant to have | it. It was just at this point that er Brown's Boy looked back and d covered where Cubby was. “H, there!" | he yelled, running toward Cubby. But | he “was just too late. Cubby had | scrambled up on that bench and was pulling that hive over. Yes, sir, that is just what he was doing. He meant to have that honey, no matter what happened. Now I said Farmer Brown's Boy was just too late. It was true. He was just too late to prevent Cubby from upsetting that hive. But it would have heen a whole lot better for Farmer Brown’s Boy if he had been a whole lot later, AS it was, he man- aged to get there just as the swarm of bees poured out. Those bees were no respecters of persons. They were too Angry to stop to find out who was BY W. L. GORDON. ‘Words often misused—Do not speak of “a cherubim.” plural of “cherub.” Often mispronounced — Melodious. Pronounce the last two syllables di-us, not jus. Gften mispelled—Incurable; after the r. Synonyms—Relation, reference, bear. analogy a word three Let us increase no e ‘Word times and it is you: our vocabulary by mastering one word each day, of infamy or disgrace, hy should children carry the stigma of a father misdeed m- | of 10 Years ‘? energy you will probably be Certain duties must be Elite's newly Ask BRINGS serve nowadays. 2117—2119 14th St. N. His face | er horder from three | in | “Cherubim” is the | Today's word: Stigma; mark | PTEMBER 6, 1927. SUB ROSA BY MIMIL An Ambitious Mother. iove per annum is that boys and girls don’t give each other a chance when | misunderstandings arise. Instantly each comes to the worst | possible conclusion about the other, and neither will admit himself or her- self to be unjust or hasty. Girls come weeping because their boys have disappointed them—and the reason is often some simple matter that could be cleared up in five minutes if both parties to the contract could be persuaded to sit down and talk things over sensibly. They dom can. Fred is appearing in print today. He'd be pathetic if he weren't o funny. He's funny hecause he is so | self-righteous and indiznant and un | forgiving and hlind. But through all | the stern, unyielding man. one can cateh a glimpse of a badly hurt little £0 one forg s him something. Kthel met him at a_Summer reso; t st this Summer. and before the va- ation was over she had promised all the usual th light and Summer vacations. promised to wait—and to love until such time as he could furnish b She some sort of enaggement ring. They were to see each other at the end of August ad arrived home from his vacation brimful of happi ness and all sorts of new ambition He wrote letters every day. So did_she. | The eventful day in August on which she was to arrive had a_special red mark around it on Fred’s office calendar. He planned for that day boys plan for Christmas. a present, he had tickets read now in town, t's shop And _then on the morning of the t Moment he got a letter. Ethel aling for Europe the next day. wouldn't be in New York at all. was sailing from Boston. She terribly sorry. Her sorrow cov- ered eight sheets of paper, but Fred paid no attention to that. Nor did the dumbbell even take in the pathetic stuff about her mother think ing it best for Ethel to have a change | of climate. | except that small He bought as he was bitterly disap- two yooms and a bath, and present | worn One of the reasons why there are | S0 many young people disappointed in | K el- | | pure ngs that go with moon- | him | | seneral rule | | for the | he ordered half a | He didn't notice anything | | pointed and that his faith in women was utterly shattered. | “Had he tried to read between the | lines—had he even made a slight [ effort to give sweetheart of the doubt—thi would | looked brighter to him, ambitious mother was the rea | son for Kthel's sudden departure fo Europe—and she was the use | her daughter’s apparent change | heart, 100 | An of air would do her daughter good. in spite of the poor malden’s frantic pleadings and urgings. 1f Fred had tried to believe in his sweetheart, he wouldn’t be a discour- aged. broken-hearted kid today. It's the wisest thing to wait before | jumping to an unfave about the boy or girl who apparently throws you over. Very often he or | she may be as sincere as eyer—and your ready unders situation for both of you Many an ambitious mother been able to break up a match | displeased her si relying on the fact tha dom allow him | reasons. | (Canvright {o Mimi will be ‘uiries directed to this st addressed faith and to come hegging for 27.) to “answer any in paper. provided a ove 18 inclosed d | ium’s reorganization of its rail has produced receipts beyond | expectations. the benefit | have | She it was who thought the change | ble conclusion | v fond of you | anding will ease up a difficult has | hich | pride will sel- | | | FEATURES.' MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS Color Problem. The medium blond whose color prob lems we are discussing tod does not have the white or ivor: pure blond. Instead her complexion is a warm medium hue. The hair may ashen blond or skin of ir, it but it i e nally a mixture of diffe tones. Eye color varies with type; sometimes it is brown or blue or gray. The medium blond should use white or pink face powder. mixed with flesh ot nediate shade between brune When only two shades re available. a dark or she should choose the form rning sl may mix a I rouge wi it Her lipstic should be the natural color of her lips when they are reddast. which is usunal ly after meals or exercise White is blond, but as u h; an a calor the one’s skin tin wproach those of the brunctte the white should shade to ivory, cream nd deep cream, so that the color con ast will not be unflattering to or White with kish vellowish cast be worn, a light color sho rouni the faes ns fhthe (aolne at brim, neckwear or fur collar. brown and yellowish furs are Blue in dark and medium shades is a deper for the medium blond. may relieved at th ind’ wrists with co lar and cuffs of flesh, cream or ood t complexion. worn ht becomi Those whom injustice has killed Live Forever enshrined As martyrs whose death may yet make Men less cruel, less blind. RMcams She | CEDS. ehead blue, with vellow, red and lig tume. "he brown or I find bronze and mec also be Other good co! T zeleved type um tan becc LIGHT ABOUT THE EACE Lrick, rust, peach, burgund ro Every effort sh the complexion | from sallowness s the red and old d be made to keep ooth and free possible. Not only treatme re- oper 1 ise and ¢ s of skin become m skin is cl hen the n beaut w w Hidde be discovered i drab t sk GOOD POSITIONS AND FINE INCOMES [ urants, Cafeterias, andy _Gift and Food d men ana 0 to £5 0010 sses now forming TRAINING SCHOO i Aver' i $hed ek orlingerie that canbe made new — and colorful with RIT FAST DYES OR TINTS Almost everything on your table today is finer than could be bought a generation ago. Why not bread, too? To us it scemed a sen- sible idea. So we perfected Merit Bread. And judging from the way this loaf has swept to popularity in so many homes—thousands of women think it was a sensible idea, also! Try Merit Bread today. Youll appreciate the difference. HAVENNER BAKERY the other good things you A sensible idea MERIT BREA A loaf different from any other you can buy! Makes bread as appetizing as all Get it fi‘om your Grocer today!