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36 WOMAN’S PAGE." THE EVENING Gogod Speaking Voice fias Message BY The value of & zood speaking voice is beginning to be appreciated by Americans, We have called “loud voiced American: n been and one c mot deny the appellation as entirely groundless. There is probably a rea #on for it, however, outside of the A WELL MODULATED VOICE AS IMPORTANT TO THE HOST-| ACTIVE COS-| ATT! A LE BARON WALK | the final syllable, | | wo | that takes longer to acquire. | cludes a gracious’element, | hint of condes | voice | with a smile.” !'a pleasing quality into them that they | become delightful to hear. There are definite reasons | cvery woman should cultivate this | pleasing ve If she has to be in usir such a voice is an asset Heads of fine houses consider a good voice as one point, and a big ons, in| tavor of applicants for positions. If | the woman has special ambitions, she will find out that a veice lacking in refinement classifies her as “not up to requirements.” Since culture is an essential in the really fine society of our land as it is of other and older countries, and since it is evidenced immediately in ane of its forms by the why | beautifully modulated and correct king voice, its place is estab lished | The Cultivated Voice. | How, then, is a womaf to learn to speak with the requisite degiee of fineness that distinguishes her as cul- | ture It is an acquirement to be wed by listening to fine voices and | have. | the in it what qualities they e some guides. Iirst st be low hout being distinet. This means that there od enunciation. Both of ings lie within the power of ev omar © be no clipping final lef s, such a or the omission of final must be pronounced nd not as if it were Must never 2 can h must TH." i it word of muss™ phi Go elled four letters nor as is | is just from idioms, example, “How do place of a gracious jus: he contracted. For | cannot take th How do you do?” Ditfalls. Letters that are not in words never included, such as the letter added to idea, etc. The word m- | ma” is not called “mommer,” but is given preferably with accent on | ar R its Apart from the pronunciation of s there is a beauty of modulation | It in as well as | an appreciation of grammatical con ruction that prevents the raising and lowering of the voice without re gard to periods, questions or com mas. Quality The pleasing ‘voice is free from any ension. It has no taint of the obsequious. It is a sincere | with a quality of charm that e sum up in the phrase, “the voice | However, this smiling quality is not intruded when topics | are serious or sad, though a de-| bressing element is not introduced. | There is a mellowness about a AS AN { ; cul’ | : {lured voice that js instantly reco. : ; |nized by cultured people. It cannot | Mdea that this term implies, namely, | be gained in a moment, for. like wil| at we insist on being heard, even if | good things that are not gifts, it has we strain our voices to do so. Many |10 be recognized, soust “learned : , sought and lear helieve that the quality of voices is | e dependent upon climate. But, whether this is true or not, one thing is cer- tain: That it is possible for us to so modulate our voices and 1o so instill BEDTIME STORIES Mysterious Disappearance. Mystery is_seldom nice, But it gives to lfe a spice, —Farmer Brown's Boy. Farmer Brow Boy looked at Farmer Brown, Farmer Brown looked at Mother Brown, and Mother Brown looked at the other two, and on each WHEREVER HE WAS, HE WAS KEEPING VERY, VERY STILL. face was the same funny expression. They were standing in the room of Farmer Brown’s Boy. said Mother Brown, “what do you make of it? 1ls that a real Bear, or is it a ghost Bear?” Farmer Brown grinned. “By the looks of things around this house I'll said he. #ay that it's a real Bea “But where under the sun he's gone to now is beyond me. We heard him racing around upstairs here when we started to come up and he hasn’t had a chance to get downstairs since. He must be here. “But where? " asked Farmer Brown's Boy. “None of the closet doors is open. Nevertheless, I've looked in every closet. We have pulled the | Steps are gained. and then come the | By following the guides given the first more subtle qualities, almost of th, 5 c em- selves, for the secret of listening and learning is discovered, BY THORNTON W. BURGESS a squirrel to hide, let alone a Bear, even if he is little. He couldn’t have gotten out of the windows, because the screens are in all of them. He must have gotten downstairs some. how; though how, I haven't the least idea.” Brown shook his head. id he, “he couldn't have got- ten downstairs. He was upstairs when you and I started up. Your mother was at the foot of the stairs by the time we were at the top. He couldn’t possibly have gone downstairs with- out being seen by her.” Farmer Brown's Boy grinned. “All perfectly true,” said he, “so supposing You tell us where he is.” ., It was Farmer Brown's turn to grin. He's a mystery Bear,” said he. “If looks to me as if he couldn’t get out, but did. - Probably he is laughing at uSs now. Are you absolutely sure that no closet door was open? One may have been open and blown to after he had gone in, or been pushed to.” T am_absolutely sure” replied Farmer Brown's Boy, “but just to | make doubly sure, we'll go through those closets again, Mother can stay ™ght here at the head of the stairs while we search the closets in all the rooms.” So Mother Brown remained at the head of the stairs while Farmer Brown and Farmer Brown's Boy opened and searched every closet. They made a good job of it, t00. But they didn’t find Cubby. Moreover, they didn’t find any signs that Cubby had been in any of the closets. There was no stickiness anywhere. Noth- ing was upset or disarranged, as was the case in the various bedrooms. Well?” said Mother Brown. t fsn't wel id Farmer Brown. “That Bear in any of the closets. rooms. self. isn't He isn’t in any of the bed- You've seen that for your- I think he is bewitched. All this time Cubby was in one of the bedrooms witched. Where do was? This much I can tell you: Wherever he was, he was keeping very, very still. He was keeping as and he wasn't be- you think he clotiies off every bed. There isn't a place in these rooms big enough for BY CLYDE It was when Maria Theresa was 49 | vears old that she was left a widow | by the death of her husband, Em- peror Francis of Austria, and became joint regent with h of the hereditary And thus began a period when she exercised her widest influence over Austrian and European politics. The English writer, Carlyle, describes her: *Most brave, high and pious-minded; beautiful, too, and radiant with gopd nature, though of a temper that will son, Joseph 1I, states of Austria. | a SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. The Woman of Forty-Nine still as any mouse that ever lived. (Copyrikht. 1 LLISTER. easily catch fire. There is perhaps no nobler woman living. “I know I have not lost any of my powers,” wrote the Polish actres: Modjeska, when she was 49, “and my talent is still in its full vigor. but I fear people will look for wrinkles on | my face, and, what is worse, they will some. " Mary Garden is a beautiful woman of the present time who might justly | say with Modjeska that her talent is | still at its full vigor. | - Another woman of this age is Miss | Maude Royden, the English woman evangelist, who was heard five y ago in this country. From her co lege days deeply erested in t cause of women's suffrage and social service generally, she became, when 39, assistant minister of the great City Temple in London. (Covsright, 1 All government-owned corporations | in’the Philippines, with the exception | of the Manila Railroad, are being sold i to private interests. | _HP FACTORY-TO-YOU HOUSE PAINT ANY COLOR The high quality of HPC will always be maintained. No WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. R U, S Patent Office When an old mill stood where the Barle Theater is now LITTLE BENNY| | RY LEE PAl Paris France. I ansered Puds Sim lett Puds, because | today, saving 1 was gl wen Kinses Deer ad to get your | letter far | away from home it is nice to get let-| ters from enybody it dont matter who. “ You can tell Sid Hunt he can have | his old cent back wen 1 get home and You are so | nuree, a diplomat. a judge. a teacher, { bag of bon ERN Me? | young. not before, hecause it would cost more cents to mail it to him on ac nd that | count of tl cost of stamps { would make him owe me 5 , ony | {he would never bleeve it then more trubble would start. Tell him he owed me a cent once for pritty | neer a veer and 1 wore myself hovse | asking for it 1t vou wunt to wawk home from skool with Mary Watking why go | ahed and keep on wawking home with | her. Why dont you take out a patten | on her and be done with it? Iny-| ways T bet it T was there insted of | heer I bet she wouldent think you w quite so grate because without men- tioning _eny names she would think somebody elts was grater. I gess you would be intristed in the food_over heer on account of you be ing intristed in food enywar They | put more diffrent colors of gravey on things than wat we do home, e: on fish, and wen you come to think of it, it seems more naturel to think of fish serrounded by something wet. It seems to be considered polite over heer to sopp up your gravey with hunks of bred, not even using a fork if you dont wunt to, but enyways its not considered polite for me yet, be- cause Ive tried it a few times to find out You dont eat everything together over heer like you do home. You eat one thing at a time sutch as chickin, | and then they take it away and bring vou something elts sutch as peez and then they take that plate away and bring you something elts h salad, ‘the main trouble never know how many different thinzs they are going to bring you, so how can you tell how mutch room to leeve? But I gess that wouldent worry you, Puds, because vouve allways got room. | Your trusty frend Benny Potts, esk- | wire, su being SUB ROSA BY MIML Trained Seals. You don’t have to visit the circus to see the trained seals. They are all about you, and they earn just so much | per week for their cute tricks. These trained seals are among men of this day the young and generation. They know a few tricks, but they do not impress the girls as being worth the price of admission. The evolution of man has produced many varieties and left as many fos- sil specimens. You know the list of male hasbeens—the Java man, but none of the real Mocha kind; the Heidelberger and Pittsburgher: the | butter-and-egger and finale hopper; the Jounge lizard and apothecary's cowboy. Evolution is now producing the Cinderella man, which is as near they have come to the superman. Step up. gi , but don’t waste your animal crackers on these cake con- sumers. They are all trained seals, but their tric do not get fis the way they used.to make our grandmas ‘Oh! nd “Ah!" ) for we prefer something in the way of wild animals. Don’t be afraid of these smooth creatures, with all the taleum on their cheeks and stacomb on their heads. They are slick guy and trained seals of the post-armistice period. The tough guys are still over in France and Belgium, and 1 guess they are there to s v until the big bugle blows, If we had remained where we were or where our mothers used to be, these specimens of the masculine spe. cies wouldn’t look 1. They'd seem moge like lion-tamers than trained seals. But, still, I think that men could show a little more pep. We girls would like to have them have them dominant. I guess that's the right word. But men are shy about dominating us. They don't even pay attention to us. Of course, they give us the Qnee, twice, thrice over, but that's not the kind of attention that I mean, Say, listen! It's the men of the old school who have escaped all this seal training. (Copyrizht, 1927,) Mimi will be glad to i to this ‘b <ed envelor newer any inquiries provided a stamped Tosed Repair Parts Stoves and Furnaces Fries, Beall & Sharp 734 10th St. N.W. $3.00 A Gallon | for a_pay envelope on Saturds | flowel WASHINGTON. DorothyDixl “It Is So Complicated to Be a Modern Womat That It's a Wonder Anybody Is Willing to Undertake It.” STAR, The Difficulty Envies of Being a Woman Grandmother's Easy Life EING a woman has always heen the most complicated eareer that any human being could possibly follow, because every woman has to be a jack of all trades. i Fven the common or garden variety of woman is expected to produce a satistactory job of being at one and the same time a vamp, a model of propriety #s wife and mother, a cook, a seamstress, a charwoman, a pur- chasing agent, a head of the commissary supplies, a sick nurse. a baby hostess, a consoler, with a few other scattering occupations thrown in for good measure. If 1n the past, however, a woman has had a full day’s work just fulfilling the duties and obligations that appertain to her sex, consider the difficulties of her lot now when all sorts of frills and furbelows have been added to the business of being a woman, and she is confronted with problems of which her srandmother never even dreamed. is cortainly a strenuous proposition for women in these days of female emancipation. for in attaining her new liberties woman has not been able to unload any of her old burdens. She must still perform all of the traditional functions of her sex and then grapple with her new difficulties, She must be all that her grandmother was and do all that her grandmother did, and then some. Life Grandmother must have bheen versatile to have been able to be a good actor in all the various roles she was required to fill, but, at least expected to be a miracle-worker as the modern woman is. If grandmother was homely, she was homely. If she was fat, she was fat. If she wa ., she was a bag of bones. and that was all there was to it. 1 woman wno accepts her looks as they are, and is as ugly as God made is looked upon nowadays as heing a quitter and lving down on her job. .. . Rut her, . standards require a woman to be easy on the eyes, and we expect woman who hasn't been endowed by nature with a beautiful complexion to acquire one at the drug store: we expect a woman who has hair like a poker to have it permanently waved, and that she who is inclined to embanpoint shall starve herself down to a boyish figure, and that the living skeleton shall pad her angles out by a fat-producing diet. Certainly, nothing has added more to the white woman's burden than this demand that every woman shall be beautiful, though ugly, and that she shall stay perpetually stion of marriage. Grandmother didn’t have to bother her head about that, because it was up to the men, and they settled it for her. A man either sought your hand in marriage and led you to the altar, or else you hung upon the family tree. Not so nowadays, when women have to be go-getters if they get married at all, and have to capture a husband with one hand while they work a smoke screen with the other, behind which they conceal their nefarious designs upon him. And there is the qu ndmother have to lie awake at night debating with herself or did g the relative merits of a husband and a job, because there were not any jobs worth having in her day but the wife-job. But the modern girl acquires wrinkles tryii® fe decide hetween a mahogany-top desk and a gas range: would rather work in some mar crying babies and bonuses; whether she kitchen for nothing, or in an office or store whether it crotchets of a hoss that she can leave, or the cantankerousness of a husband that she can’t leave; whether a latchkey and freedom are worth more than being bound to those she loves and who need her. And, more grief that grandmother escaped, she never had to worry over whether it was better to go on with her profession after marriage or give it up: whether she could better help her husband by earning the price of angel's food outside of the home, or making mean biscuit in it. For grand- mother hadn't spent years of time and thousands of dollars fitting herself to follow some gainful occupation, and she never had to consider the economic waste 1t was for a high-salaried woman to give up her job in the office to take the place of a low-priced cook in the Kitchen, She shouldered e ae JMOTHERHOOD was a simple proposition to grandmother. the responsibility on Providence and washed her hands of all blame in the matter, even if she had a dozen little sickly babies that she couldn’t even feed or clothe. Nor did she consider that she was responsible for her family's health. or how her children turned out. If they acquired dyspepsia from bad cooking. and were anemic for lack of being properly nourished; if her bables died from dirty milk bottles, and her spoiled and undisciplined hoys and girls went astray when they were grown, she laid it all on the Lord having mysteriously seen fit to afflict her. She didn't have a knowledge of the germ theory and dietetics and behaviorism to complicate motherhood, as the modern woman does, and that makes her feel that she is accessory before the crime for every ill that befalls her offspring. And it grandmother married a widower, all she had to do was to put on her predecessor’s grave, but nowadays half the time the widower's No, 2 wife has to learn to act natural when she meets her husband’s first wife out at dinner. " And even the stepmother job, which always had enough tacks in it, acquires a few more spikes when the children’s mother is living around the corner and watching to see how vou treat them. For, while she may have deserted them herself, she isn't going to see them put upon by another woman. All of which goes to show that beinz a woman has got to be such a complicated undertaking that it is a wonder any one has the courage to undertake it. e DOROTHY DIX. 5 (Copyright, 19 BEAUTY CHATS Ugly Hair. 1 i b y been watching. 1f it continues, ask e modern girl has a new problem | the doctor about it. After adult years ;chiffon stockings of light belge and | nothing can be done to straighten how light gray are fine, but they do ShoW | jegg, except that of an operation where dark hairs if there are any on the bi legx, AUl Summer girls ‘have beoy | oy Lreuk and reset the bones. writing me asking what to do about | {ihutes to buildi L hairy legs, bathing sults being what | jj] I tol meke (e ooene Ao they are today. I have answered, be| iabbiness shows a lack of health, old-fashioned and wear silk stockings| gituated as you are, you could build lled tightly below the knees, or|y, A ; i Shahe e N TaCret s be | Yourself up and get rid of that extra :m?x;::n‘n: a:\fig‘prllr‘: ::v‘:\';‘z:r':n‘":v:‘ : weight if you would play tennis or any haive Joven: Sosn ik, 1h the 10:C0nt other of the convenient outdoor games. tores. Shave under the arms, too, or use depilatory powder. 1'd prefer shav- ing: it's easier and quicker. But de- pilatory powders cannot be used on the face. Nor can a woman shave without bringing in these hairs thicker and coarser than before. For the face the tweezers are much more effective. Generally, it is best to hold the skin taut around a particular hair, using| the fingers of the left hand: then with the right take the hair firmly with the tweezers and pull it out. Then| right away touch the place with a| little peroxide of hydrogen. i erves two purposes—it makes it tends to ch any fuzz growing around the Of course, a new hair will come BY EDNA KENT FORBES Corn Relish. Blanch two quarts of corn for two minutes, then drop into a cold bath, cut from the cob, but do not scrape. Cook together for minutes the corn, one quart of cabbage, one pint each of sweet red pepper and sweet green pepper, one quart of white vine- gar, ane-half a pound of sugar, two tablespoonfuls each of mustard and t and one tablespoonful of celery alt. Pack into sterilized jars. hair again after a time, but depilatories take the hair off at the surface, as in shaving, and next day there is stubby growth already showing above the skin; also the powder eats off the fu: and encourages it to grow also, mak- ing the whole condition worse than ever. Any number of women keep their skins freed in this way and never undergo any embarrassment from superfluous hair on the face. Blue Eyes—An unpleasant breath v come from indigestion as well as Mrs. Wright’s Recipe! Codfish and Egg Toast m: 4 equs, hard b 1 cup milk 3Jtablespoons butter 2 tablespoons flour 6lices toast salt, pepper, parsley AND No longer need any woman endure the embar- zasoment of fabby face muscles lines an wrinkles, says Marie Nielé, famous beauty specialist. Thanks to her discovery—Marsha Tissue Creme, ybu can quickly erase those blemishes which ravish youth and beauty. Deep creases in the face, lines about the eyes, rings and lhndow{ hollows disappear as if bz HAPE contents of can into six fish cakes and fry them quickly in deep fat. With a large biscuit cutter, cut half inch slices of bread into circular shape. Toast these and butter slightly. Cut eggs in D. C. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBE is better to put up with the | 10 Years Younger New, Easy Way Quickly Remo¥es Tell-Tale Wrinkles, Rings and Lines | ’ _ervflutedvnrulndullow,muddy:omplexm | S “ work of building up the fisues. ging facial musclesa : ened. The skin is rejuvenated—facial contour Showa an amasin, looks younger. NANCY PAGE Clothes Gay in ' Color Practical for Warmth. LA GANKE. hops were advertising sweaters for the big folks. little folks, young | | as well as old. They seemed as good | this Fall as they had been in the early | Spring and Summer. For early Autumn days Nancy chose a soft yellow one for Joan, It had fitted cuffs, a V neck and a_fitted belt. This was a slipover, which was not mew. of course. But the long sleeves were the variation from the ) Y | Summer mode. They kept little arms warm, hut the sleeves certainly did soil quickly. There were times when Nancy wished that Joan's mother would come home, Joan's first Fall dress was of vellow linen. It matched the s But | then another dress of Joan's was of printed linen with a white background and vellow figures. Both dresses were made practically | the same. The cuffs and collar were | of white handkerchief linen. The col lar scemed to extend itsell into the tailored tab down the front. Glass buttons were sewed on this tab with vellow floss. The pockets were of yellow, so were the little bloomers which were just visible below the diminutive frock. Nancy Poge's Teaflet many tasty combinatio “alads” contains Write_and inclose Rlamped. addressed enveiope (0 Nancs Page. care of The Star, and get a copy of this leaflet. veryday Law Cases Does Playing Cards at Private House Violate Statute For- bidding Gambling? Five men sat in the home of Henry Russell playing a game of cards. Alongside of each man was a stack of coins. Two officers of the law stalked into the room, and the peace- ful game had a sudden ending. Russell and his guests were charged with violating a statute forbidding bet- ting at any game of cards. The men defended themselves on the ground that they were merely playing a friendly game in a private residence. ‘When Russell and his friends were convicted and fined they took an ap- peal to the highest court in the State. There the conviction was reversed, the court stating: “Whenever the question has been | decided in the appellate courts a dis-| tinction has been made hetween gam- ing at a public resort and at a private residence. From an examination of the decisions it may be laid down as a general proposition that in no juris- dictions where statutes against gam- | ing exist is it unlawful to play or bet | at cards at a private house or resi- dence, from which the public are ex- cluded, where those participating come as guests of a host not conduct- ing the game for profit and strictly on invitation, and where games are not conducted with such frequency as in law to impress upon the private house or residence the character of a common resort or public place. NN\ BURNISKINE POLISHES ALL METALS 7///u|mu||\|»mmmvmy\\\ \ e way is prepared for nature to give its nourishment and vigor to the Weak or | are tightened and stren; improvement and the face ad following guarantee. | round, | temples and br BY LOIS Feminizing the Bob. There are endless in which long hair may be arranged, but with bobbed locks one’s choice of eoiffures is limited to a few styles. Since I am rather frequently asked to suggest bobbed coiffures for different types of faces, 1 am _describing three today that are a little different from the ordinary. (a) The first coiffure is suitable for small, daintily built girl with well shaped head. Her fea tures are piquant and delicate, her ears small and shapely. To dress the coiffure make a part up the center of the back to the crown. hair forward away from the parting Curl the hair and mold it into three wide, flat waves running across the head from side to side. The ends of the hair on the sides curl up over the cheekhones, exposing the The ends of front halr are curled under like a bang that extends half way down the forehead. All the hair kept fairly close to the head, so that the natural contour is preserved. The hair ahout the nape of the neck is, of course, clipped neatly (b) A second coiffure for a girl with a long face and rather promi nent nose requives hobped hair that is not shingled behind. Soft blond or light brown hair of fine texture looks pretty arvanged in this way: Make a part in the front hair, beginning it at a point above the center of an eve brow and running it to the top of the head. Pull the hair forward over the sws in a few dips or waves, pinning each securely in place with invisible hairpins. The hair covers the ears. Brush the back hair down straight and put one wave at the end, so that it curls under, form ing a roll of hair across the back of the head. Adjust a hair net to em phasize the roil of back hair with the aid of a few hairpins, and you have a coiffure resembling the youthful, long-haired arrangement popular among college girls. (c) A fluffy style of bobbed coiffure that is becoming to the tall, slender girl with a high forehead and large ways a features may be made with a ¢ nter part. The hair is marceled at the sides and across the back. It is brought forward in waves down to the eyebrows and over the temples and ears. Its distinctive featuse is a group of three ringlets made from the top layer of hair and pinned over each ear. Weight and Colors. Dear Miss Leeds: I am 18 years old and 5 feet 213 inches tall. I weigh 125 pounds. Am I overweight? () I have medium brown hair, blue eves and very pale complexion. ors are becoming for me? (3) What cup of To Users of Percolators Seal Brand is offered especicll prepared for use in percolator. It brings out the finer, fulls flavor of the coffee. A<k for Se: Brand Percolator Coffee. YOU'LL What True Ec Rur-DRY Thi a distinct saving. In pert Unsurpassed And prompt, intelligen UNSTARCHED RUF-DRy SERVICE The entire family bundle safely cleansed. Soft water. Pure soap. Everything sweetly Flat work returned ready for use. Personal articles sent home ready for starch- ing and -finishing. Minimum Bundle, 7sc. Six rinsings. dried. MILADY BEAUTIFUL Brush all the | ‘What col-' WHEN You USE ELITE’S superior laundry service gives vou the highest quality work at a price that means. Turn Over Your Laundry Cares to LEEDS. will clear the facs of blackheads and pimples?—N. €. M Answer: You are not very much overweight for your age. If vou will avoid too many sweets and cut down on fatty, fried foods vour pimples and complexion will clear. Include more raw fruit and fresh, green vegetables in your diet. Avoid constipation and drink several glassfuls of water he- tween meals. Active outdoor exer. will also help you, both to keep your excess weight down and clear the skin. Plenty of sunshine and fresh air is very necessary. Bathe the biackheads and pinples in warm boric acid solution, using one tea- spoonful of boric acld to one pint of hot water. If the blackheads are stubborn apply the following salve after cleansing the face thoroughly at bedtime: One teaspoonful precipitate sulphur, two teaspoon powdere starch, two teaspoonfuls powd 1 zine oxide, four teaspoonfuls pet: latum. Mix to a smooth salve and apply to the parts affected. Leave on overnight In the morning wash off | with warm water and soap Rinse cold water, Dry the face thorough using a little friction. Pat on lotion and repeat the treatment eral times a week. When the heads are softened you will he able t press them out quite easily with bruising the skin. After pressin blackheads out. bathe in fre<hly boric acid water for several mir 1 <k black the Dry the face and apply a litt cream or a soothing lotion (3 following colors e becomin your type and color: Cream-white Shell.pink. pure vellow. poach, me { dium tones in blue, turquoise blue for evening, warm browns and tans, me dium shades in green, dark green dark red and burgundv. The Caspian Sea has been classed as a lake, and therefore, with its 370,000 square miles, is the largest I the world Whet your appe- tite tomorrow morning over a coffee Seal Brand Tea is of the same’ high quality KNow onomy Means SERVICE dividual care by ex- sanitary conditions. t SERVICE. other Paint can justify a higher price. Any color made to order. two length-wise. Place one fish magic. In their pl At no risk to you try Marsha Tissue Creme on City Deliver: | | PAINT MAN | | Phone Main 1352 See, Miss Bibhs, T got my wheel barrer all made! Ain't 1 a terrible quick ter? But 1 ain’t stuck up abou it! e «Copyrisht. 19270 and Out-of-Town Shipments J. W. HUNT 1221 NEW YORK AVENUE N.W. Hunt Building UFACTURER Factory 2112 5th St. N.E. Y ace returns your emoot radiant skin of youthful firmness. Margha Tissue Creme actsnot only on the sur- tace as do ordinary creams but penetrate: deeply into the pores and,throws oft all the dust and grime which irritate the skin. Its antiseptic, healing and invigorating natural oils assist nature in its Dbuilding uo the tissues. Thus it removes those irhties which cause cake on each round of toast and | top with a half egg. Make a sauce of the butter (melted), milk, flour and scasonings to taste. When thickened, stir in other hard boiled egg broken into pieces or mashed. Pour this sauce cver the fish cakes and garnish with parsley. Mrs. Leonard Wright Book of Deep Sea Recipes Free “seply imbedded im- Gorton-Pew Fisheries Co.,Ltd.,Gloucester,Mass. ",‘.“[II’I‘;I T l. S et e ] Stores * . » this offer: If after 5 days, youare not satisfied ELITE for Satisfactory Work Wwith results in every way—if your crea lines, wrinkles, sallowness or othsr agi blemishes do not show a marvelous improve- ment—if your mirrordoesnot reveal a smooth glowing, youthful com: | plexion, merely return the unused portion ot | the jar to your dealer. | He ‘will refund your money instantly. F sale at all good drug and department stores. SUE CREME ELITE LAUNDRY Potomac 40 21172119 1ith St. N.W.