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WOMA Bandeau Gives BY MARY Every fashion has its own peculiar Botions about foreheads. During mueb ©f the Viectorian age forcheads were quite the thing. You hardly ghow ton much. And novelists of that, day seldom failed to add to their hero ine’s charms a beautiful, smooth, high forchead. Rut in these Georgian davs fore heads have bean at a discount, and most women have much preferred to 8hkow their knees than their bare skin could FLE HF ON TH REMIN "ASHIONS X1RLE PASTE ANDS ARE WORN HIG AD, IN A MANN} NT o1 ahove thi vs. To almost zoir do such nodest 1 par- the evebr has seemed < knees ar a = in ti; nz out from v when the shadow. A fow ppers in this conn try chose to wear their hats and their hair that their forehead most of us looked on in It was a fashion th bred in Paris. Now, « Parisian milliners here and there dar: to offer a that shows a patch o forehead. and little by little women are daring 1o w their hair hrushed or cut so that they show a considerable extent of noble hrow And - was not BY FERNAN CABALLERO. (Fernan Caballera is the pen nam. & Spanish writer who was born 1n 17 and died in_1N This author has ealied the Spanish Dumas.) | Once upon a time woman who wa v that her face was like to crack in two, and she had such a bad temper that Job him-| gelf could not have endured her However, she was as neat as a pin and industrious as an ant, but her daughter Pamfila was so lazy that| an earthquake could not have roused ' her. So her mother, who was nick- named “Aunt_ Holoferne scolded her from morting till night. Then one day Aunt Holofernes ealled to Pamfila; the gir] was listen- ing to the foolish wo Due to the gir tle fell on the mother w “You wicked, : love-sick girl! Aunt Holo-! fernes, then, in a towering rage. “You think of nothing but falling in love and getting married. 1 wish to Heaven that you'd marry the devil!” Not long after this a most hand-| some lover presented himself. He | was. young, well-behaved, and had well. filled pockets. Even Aunt Ho- Iofernes could find mothing in him to object to. Pamfila was half wild with | dell:che, and preparations were made | for the vedding. there was a All at ‘once people began to talk |y, ebout this stranger. though he very polite, well bred and clevel Tnen Aunt Holofernes began to d trust her prospective son-in-law. She | thought she could detect certzin su spicious protuberances under his in- nocent looking red hair, and she recol- | v lected, with uneasiness the curse she had pronounced upon her daughter Then came the wedding, and after-| ward, when the bridal pair were about to retire to their apartment. Aunt Ho-| lofernes said to Pamfila: “When vou | ¥o mnto your room shut all the doors and windows, stop up every hole and crack except the kevhole, and take this branch of blessed olive. Beat your | husband with the olive branch. Keep | on till T tell you to stop. This ¢ mony is never omitted at weddin my dear.” Pamfila, obedient for once. did as #he was told. As soon as the bride- groom caught sight of the ouve branch he turned to run away. Fi ing no opening save the kevhole. he| slipped Into it—and found himself in | a little bottle, which his mother-in Jaw was holding ready to receive him | when he came through. For Aunt Holofernes had guessed that this spruce-looking voung man was no less than the devil himself. who had taken | sdvantage of the power given him by | Aunt Holofernes' unwary curse. | Aunt Holofernes sealed up the tle and took it to a hizh mountain on top of which she left it, with the devil securely imprisoned. There his highness stayed for 10 ves The world was a wonderful place | those 10 vears—every man minded | his own bus nobody stole or lied | and crime a word without | meaning. But such happiness could not last. A soldier named Briones ar- rived on the mountain top and was| gurprised o find the bottle, which was | of good size. He picked it up and, holding it to the lizht in it the| devil, who had dried and withered till he leoked like a dried plum. “Tet me out, gallant warrior.” » devil, “and 1 will grant You may of me devil.” “1 want soldier “You shall have But as the stopy of hrimston it hack in he might ng. %1 want four dallars a day as long < 1 live,” said Briones | oy o hy Beelzebub, hy Lucl devil, “I have no money hot- | ame aid any the vou I'm my said the said the devil. | jones ed to pull ou e smelled such odor that he hastily pushed in. Then he thought well do a little bargain- sta e you! ! tnlz‘l_:” ‘musr find then, or T won't Jet vou out said Briones ] “Very 11, 1'll help you to get #aid the devil jow do T} <ked T “You ingmdent wreteh'™ cried th~ devil. “If 1 ever zet out TNl teach vou—but T'll keep myv word, 1 assure | you Just pull out the stopper { * Briones hesitated, but the devil ed o hard that the soldier finally nd opened the bottle. the devil, “here is goinz to slip down threat of the princess, whom the k . loves to distraction, and I £hall cauge her such pain that no doc- tor can cure her. Then you must pre- gont vourself, offering 1o effect a cure for a pension of as many doll as vou may want, and T will come out. So onr accounts will he seftled.” Everything oceurred as the had planned it. The princess to her bed. convulsed with pow vou'll keep your word” jones the Adevil o pain. s of nted of i= helpinz his service W if him By with all the knows that The kinz Ane condition hevil % which that he Aid not cure the prince ely promised to doctor should posit the presumptuoy nged. jov Ericnes, certain cf succeee, agreed STUDDED VICTORIAN | eclipse foreheads seem to be com- | showed | amazement. | now comes the Victorian eve-| 'ORLD FAMOUS THE DEVIL'S MOTHER-IN-LAW. | ven { to hold my daughter's confidence and | until T have given the matter thought, | uncomfortable and sur | way. | 'v)mi | | vi | a man | in thres | N'S PAGE. THE EVENING STAR., WASHINGTON., D. C. MONDAY, Victorian Effect MARSHALL. ) ning bandeau—placed not down on the [brow in the way to which we have | {heen accustomed for some years, but { fairly high on the crown with hair leither drawn soverely back heneath it or parted in a way that further adds to the Vietorian effect ! Usually this effect is mnch more he coming to voung faces than to old <o fortunately fashion still permit bandeaus placed on the forchead. It Il depends least o a—on vour face, vour forehead on your hirth certificate. date woman likes to have dainty and there no every woman ecannot s herself recently is 1son why when Ao the « most | she makes ot French Paris am-patte very easy to cut ont It von 1f-Mldres: 1 vou sketek in e morel f ther mped this woeek Shaded Tulle. pasiel shades which make the i first raffle of a dance frock n contont to remain the same for the whole length of a foamy | boufiant skirt With each successi larker, the frock takes on a more char rful effeet, which reaches a climax < eascade of flowers of the shade on the shoulder and Both tulle and taffeta are the omhre eff et The & ruffle a little out of in an know indine mistake or starch 1 emetic ble if spilied fmmediately marble with Apply and allow - 24 hours before tepid water., paint remover mnxious to have it quickly Apply and_give the re y time do its work. When pain rms in putty-like mass remove with putty k Hold a picce of heavy card { | hoara un moldinzs when | | paintin m. Taint that drops from the brush will spatter the walls n. but are WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Rezistared U, 8 Patent Office. paste it to re washin, Wh move with a paint br STORIES to these terms, but unfortunately the devil heard the agreement and jumped with joy when he saw a chance to re- himself on the soldier. I devil's jump gave the princess so much pain that she screamed for the doctor. The next day the same scene occurred, and Briones saw that the | devil intended to let hint hanz. But the soldier kept his wits about him, and the third day when the pretende physician arrived, a_gallows was being | erected in front of the pa door. | When he entered the princess’ apart. | ment her sufferings were redoubled, | and she cried out to her attendants to take away the impostor, | "My resources are not eshausted, said “Briones gravely. “I bez your roval highness to have patience a| g ¢ moment. Beloncs five months the devil still in the bottle on|pounds. He was a short, fat the mountain top he had uttered im- | when horn. He is such a good baby, fons _against one Aunt Holo-| 0"yt C the hour and watch the and the window. When the old honse which stood at the southwest corner of First and B | streets southeast was said to be | unted”? ac Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEVER ELDRED. A L “My baby is w write remembered that while el was haby whom he called his mother- | Briones thou~ht this woman | must have been pretty clever to zet the devil into such a fix. So he went now and gave his orders, in the vrincess’ name. that all the bells in the city should be rung When Briones returned to the royal chamber, the devil, who had a mortal bells, and who is, besides, tive. asked of the soldier: | hefore a nursing period. He has never nt are they ringing those [ had a bite to eat. Should 1 i | orange juice and olive oil Briones answered casually, | should milk be diluted for a baby “that is simply because I sent for your |age? He has worn a sleevele ;-;‘mhvrm law, Aunt Holofernes, ‘and | band all Summer; seldom has had a e vines shrubs from until the same hour the next wning, but most often he has h meai at 10, He sleeps a lot dur- now he can hardly wait three, six and seven hours without nurs- now he can hardly night arrival in the ecity.” {brown from going The devil no sooner heard that his | old-fashioned eno mother-inlaw had come than he!a child should e some wool over slioped and ran so fast that a ray of | the abdomen until his teeth are in sunlizht could not overtake him, and | I have a friend whose haby was a per- left Briones, proud as a peacock. and | fect specimen at birth rejoicing in his good fortune. For the dressed in cotton since princess was cured and the soldier | nearly had pneumonia, would get the agreed upon pension. |and coughs and MOTHERS Answer—Your haby has gained so AND THEIR CHILDREN. barefooted. I am birth and as hay fever sniffles at every very well that I believe he would do | as well if fed on the four-hour sched- ule. In addition the haby should have cereal, orange juice and cod liver oil, not olive oil. The two are quite di ferent A six Yum-" complementar feeding, of which the baby could ta what he wanted. would be three ounces of milk, the same of boiled The Adolescent Age. The adolescent age is not the easiest to understand, but I have found a way I, too, ieve that children, 1y’ thin children with an in: te fat-pad over the abdomen, should have the protection of some wool. The amount depends on the I wait | particular climate. These are never do the baby v Ino harm, and th rotection inst changes of temperature. And | what climate 1= without these? Won't [you write for | the one on oranze juice and cod liver oil. These may be had for the asking and a sell-addressed and stamped en- velope. interest. T do not seem too eager to | know all she does. T listen interested- Iy when she tells me her plans and doings, but if T feel criticism necessary I never give it at that time. then we talk it over in a chumm (Cony WHAT, WEY and WHERE 1. What were the military deco- | rations of Bulgaria? 1 2: What was the highest military decoration of Greece? | 3. What were the military decora- tions of Turkey? 4. What were the military decora- tions of Prussia? | 5. What were the military decora- | tions of Austria? | Mrs. S. A: You do not need to apologize for weaning your young by if you have tuherculosis. = Thi: ¢ “grave constitutional diseas |Is a legitimate cause for weaning, i o Ak Meat Stew-Dumplings. | Cut 1 pounds of one of the | cheaper cuts of beef into small piece: Answers. Iremoving the fat Dry out the 1. The Order of St. Alexander, the |and brown the meat in it. When well Oder b of Tamara and’ spe- | browned, cover with boiling wate R leeionen [ boil for five minutes, and then cook lich, Order of | in « lower temperature fidieh, order of | i done. Ir tender, this n | about three hours on the stove or five hours in a fireless cooker. Add tw thirds cupful each of carrots and tu nips cut in one-half inch cubes, one- half an onion chopped, and seasoning of pepper and salt during the last hour of cooking, and four cupfuls of potatoes cut in small pieces 15 min- utes hefore serving. . Thicken rmnmn.-m cupful of flour diluted with 2% can he seen|€old water. Serve with dumplings. Lions can (i R 110 this dish 15 made in a fire cooker. the mixture must he reheated when the vegetables are put in. Such | # stew may also be made of mutton. 3. Order the Osmanich for the defense of Gallipo 4. Order of the Red of the Black FEagle, of the House of Hohenzollern, Order of the Knights of St. John, Order “Pour le Merite.” 5. Teutonic Order, Order of the Iron Crown, Order of Leopold, Order of Francis Joseph (A1l these decor in the military decorations exhibit at e National Museum.) AUNT HET BY the M . Order | may be omitted or simply a little onion | nsed Sometimes variety the | browninz of the meat 1s d <ed Tt When white meat. such as | chicken, veal or fresh pork. is used. the gravy may be made rich with m or milk thickened with flour. ROBERT ot Coconut Marshmallows. Brown some coconut thinly in a baking tin, then putting into a hot oven. Watch and stir asionally and when well browned pound into tiny hits. Dip some marsh- mallows into real maple sirup, using fork, then into hrowned ecoconut land place on a wire rack to dry. If maple sirup is not available, use corn irup fMav with maple flavoring I marshmallows are kept where it is very eold or dry. they will heeome wd. To soften, | in a moderate hot oven with the doe open, wateh {carefully “and remove soon as warmed, but not melted. Use high auality fresh marshmallows for dip ping into browned coconut, by spreading ared Hart asked me how {pa was gittin since he went to work for Mr. Knight. I told her he was cittin’ Afty a month for minding his| The diccovery that rubber would! husiness and fifty a month for erase pencil marks was made about ' cther folks’ business along,” _ the time of the American Revoluticn, . Sallie much lettin Sometimes he will sleep from 7 at| wait three, | | anless he happens to fall asleep just | 1 to believe that | He has heen | nd one scant teaspoonful of | the feeding leaflet and | | until the meat | will require | with | { 1€ veal or pork is used. the vegetables | Replies to Male Cunics Who Criticize Modern. Girl, Miss 1928— and Grandma. IDorothyDix 5 Old-Fashioned Girl,” but None of Them Would Marry Her on a Bet. women retrograding? Is the girl of today less sweet and modest and unselfish than the git] of yesterday? Is the woman of foday inferior as a vife ta her grandmother? Has the progress of the entive feminine sex heen, as an Irishman might sav, backward? The question seems | true son of Adam who Ia the modern Ive. s all the evils of the world upon the shoulders of 1, aceording to these pessimisis, hec ind insists upon having imported frocks, are driven to drink because the wives of today < mother used to m Men are loafers hecause business women Rave preempted all of the good jobs. Men are unchivalrous because women ho longer clinging vines. "It was a pleasure and a privilege to a man ' Vifld his seat in a crowded car to such women as my mother and gr Moiher were,” writes one of these disgruntled gentlemen, “hut 1 e myself to be even civil to the ag ve, forward, arrogant woman of tod: “Those whe yearn for the women of the past are like those who sigh for | the good old times. They would be the first to kick if they got them. No | hoopls are such enthusiastic advoeates of going back to nature and the simple lite s those who live in steam heated, electric-lighted apartments, with | individual tiled bathrooms and elevator service night and day. use the modern woman is a can’t make ples | sueh It is the fashion to decry the modern woman, and heaven knows she has Jlts and weaknesses a-plenty, but such as she is, she is the finest specimen | of feminity the world has ever seen and a hundred per cent superior to her | srandmother. | She is better looking than grandma was, and she is still young at an age when grandma was sitting in_the chimney corner musing upon her latter a She is more intelligent than grandma was, more resourceful and a far | beiter mana for grandmother was nothing but a domestic slave, who spent all of her time in her house, toiling to make things husband and children, while \ddaughter does her wor | and plavs bridge with the othe Wl helongs to clubs rerally pepped up. TTHE modern woman is more reasonable and loss given grandma was, and a more cheerful person to live with. around salting the world down with her tears. stron st woman since the cavewoman days, with one hand 1 keeps Ce e a s to vapors than She doesn't go And she is the healthiest, Of course, the men who have the grandmother complex will say: and nonsense. \Women sensible? Look at the way they Skirts up to their knees and not enough clothing on the sparrow warm. And think how modestly ou | that came down to their heels Stuft dress nowadays. r badies to keep a mothers were attired in dresses 1 up to their ears! True, knee-length skirts are silly, especially | nature did not give every woman an underpinning that Is halm to the eyes. even so, skimpy short skirts are infinitely preferable to the microbe- dmothers wore that swept the streets and 1t it took one hand even to attempt to hold up and rendered their virtually helpless, 1 view of the fagt that “The reason why men don't marry is that women are crowding them out of offices and shops and they can’t make enough to support a family on,” ay these opponents to the modern women Pooh and piffic! The husiness girl not only makes he but she emancipates her brother and sets him free to marry. self independent, her's time the women of a family were millstones around male members thereof, and brother couldn’t think of such a s getting married, because he had mother and sisters to support. Not $0 now. The modern girl would he ashamed to he a burden on her | brother, so she hustles out and not only earns her own bread and butter and silk stockings, but far oftener takes care of mother than brother does. ‘ Ci [ 66RUT the modern girl is hard-boiled. There i | B gentie about her as the bout irgues the man Perhaps. But the clin flabby thing. anyway. And it was a happened to the sturdy oak to which it clu | support to be trampled under foot or to die bec nothing soft and grandma when she v weet and o was a girl,” ng vine wi of wishy-washy, spineless ic thing when something and it was torn from its use it'had no life of its own. After all, there is nothing particularly admirable in a parasite, and it is far better for a woman, and for a man also, for her to be able to stand on her own feet than it is for her to be dependent on him. ! As a matter of fact, men's glorification of the women of the past is purely theoretical, t one of them would marry grandma’s type on a bet if she should suddenly appear in flesh ¢ & woman who couldn’t walk two miles to save her life, every provocation, who had hysterics at the sight of a mouse, who wa tid she would he thought strong-minded if she read { anvthing more profound than Godey's Lady's Book and who in any emergeney could only wring her hands and turn on the weeps, ¢ | I should say not. No semiinvalid and Dumb Dora for him. | He may not know it, hut what he wants is the modern won work with him and play with him. nd innocuous woman of the past than he could to using tallow riding in an old-fashioned buzsy. i And that's why the woman of today is as she is. For in every age it | been women’s business to please men, and they have developed an uncanny adroitness in filling the bill, DOROTHY DIX. | (Copyright, 1027.) BEDTIME STORIES | Cubby Squalls. tmma hear, so heing so badly | For all mistakes we have to pay. | Alas: There 18 no other way. v | just had to hawl Buster Bea | —Cubl of the tree and | What? Mar who swooned away n, who can dips or BY THORNTON W. BURGESS are ringing the bells in honor of | dress on and his feet and legs are ! bawl. Yes, sir, he did so. e began red ared he Cubby found this out for him- self. Of course, his mother could have | told him that this was true. Almost any one with experience could have | up on his haunches and looked at told him. PBut almost every one | Cubby. Then he stood up en his hind- to find it out for himself. It was just | feet, and very tall he was as he so_with Cubby., reached up and dug the claws of his He had made the mistake of not into the bark of that looking closely enough at the big foot- | you would have though tjust prints in the snow that he.had been | all because Cubby w following. Had he looked at them as he should have looked at them he | would have known at once that they were not made by Mother Bear. But | just_because they were big footprin Cubhy fook it for granted that they were Mother Bear's. So galloping along carele: he ran around a great windfall and almost headlong | into a great big bear who was not his ame over to the foot looked up. All the time he was growling that deep rum- hly-grumbly growl of hi | tather dug his claws into that big tree Cubl vas sure that he was just as good ‘as caught. Little bears are like <ome little boys—ready to cry hefore | they are hurt. Mv, think of all the tears that would be saved if people just waited to be hurt hefore erying! Half the tears in the world are shed in anticipation. “Stop that | there and | ter. { % At that Cubby hawled louder than ever. I don’'t want to be eaten up.” he wailed. “You go away and leave me alone. I want n | 1 7/ » I want my mother | 7 Buster Bear didn't like that n It made Buster une: He glar this way and he glanced that wa and again he looked up at Cubby. It was almost time for Buster to go to bed for the Winter. had been thinking that after one more g0od meal he would go to bed. This young bear bawling up at the top of that tree would make a good meal. In fact, he would make a splendid meal. He would make just the kind of meal to go to bed on. Ruster looked all about once more in a he tating manner and then abruptly dug {his claws into the tree, He would | o up and get that noisy litile bear. | (Convrizght, 1925 ) | noise or I'll come up | you up!” growled Bus- “STOP THAT NOISE OR T'LL COME | UP THERE AND EAT YOU U GROWLED BUSTER. mother at all. TIn fact, the hig bear was his father, Buster B Rut Cubhy didn’t recognize his father and Buster didn’t recognize Cubby. For perhaps one minute they stood staring at each other. Then with a deep rumbly-grumbly growl great biz Buster Bear jumped toward Cubby. Cubby gave a frightened yelp and started up the nearest tree. My good- | ness, how he did go up that tree | Chatterer the Red Squirrel never went up A tree any faster than did Cubby. And he kept right on going just as far 1< he could go. And when he found |he could go no farther he hegan to | The Cheerful Cherub We all must compromise with l;f'e., 1t seems, to some degree — Unless I make the best of ‘things FOR QUALITY NOVEMBER 28, fen May Think They Would Prefer the “Good | »surd, but every mail brings me a letter from some | omfortable for her | herself | wearers | He could no more zo hack to the sweet | Then he sat | tree, | el The moment his | mdther! Oh, Oh, | se. | In fact, he | FEATUR 1927. S. The Sidewalks of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. The lure of window-shopping has be-) “W-0-0-la-w-n,” laboriously spelled come =0 universal that the large stores | the colored man. | today employ window-dressing experts | The ticket agent looked up the or artists. Time was when a store | place and then said, ““You mean Wood window was re- | ford, Va., don't you?” g rded simply as | “Yes, that's it,” he exclalmed. “You a bit of space in | folks up North here calls it Woodford, which to display |fiut us folks down there calls it Wood as many artieles | Jawn. [ , as could be In five minutes he { conveniently i | q A sembled. Fre- | 4 quently a bab; A honnet and e ning cloak w little pals in the same windo.y ch an incon- Aruous ASSOT L ment of wearing | apparel may still | be seen, hut the number of shops | At addicted to the ancient custom pidly diminishing. on his way as- * ok K Probably most of us do not think about such things but you would b surprised at the number of towns i this country divided by state lines One of them is Bristol, Tenn., another is Texarkana The former city distributes its allegiance to tes, Tennessee and inia. tter town is divided by Texas and nsas. On the Texas side of Texarkana | pool and billard rooms are permitted only in private clubs, but one can | waik across the dividing and » | play all he cares i to. However, the point we are aim- (7T TN ing at is this—the | R OVER TO Ly ket agent must | ViRGINA ToDAY-) | . now h R onions.” Virgi de residents ristol, when pur- 17 chasing a railroad | <k for a 3ristol, Va. eeable behind has nei nor inclina- to v heart of a purse. T ment, daxterons draping, clever compesition have superseded the old | hit-and-run method of tossing a pro- miscuons lot of unrelated objects into 1 window, calenlated to confuse | ather than enthuse the potential | buyers who loitered before the me- | lange of wh pacious window | fiboa grant | rose in an arid desert. A capable win-| dow-dresser must he more t | | artist—he must, conscionsly consciously, apply somethi chology to his job. The of a cleverly draped sc times a “hetter selling salesman ean put up. One line of business, however, has apparently survived the metamor- | phosis of the shop window. We refer {to the window of the nd-hand | shop. One window scarcely differs | from another. so standardized do the | time, | tion simply | wked Bi ides the town, but not seem to he. The same motley sacrificed possessions, mutely | claiming their abandonment by noverished owners, clutters the wi dov. We do not sugzest this as a_com. | mentary on the thrift or thriftics ness of musicians, but it is the curions {truth that musical instruments are most conspicuous in_ the display of forsaken collateral. Iere are just a few of several hundreds of articles we saw in a down-town second-hand win- dow the other One saxophone, considerably den one banjo, on the head of which several “beantifnl ladies™ had been drawn in purple ink. | also several initials inscribed thereon. | fingers t once strummed a melody from it apparently needed fond more than music. Two cornets stood | | cide by side, like a couple of old timers waiting for the inevitable of parting. One typewriter, six tols, one shotzun, one rifle, two lins, six long-bladed knives, one namented bronze clack. Yes, there were hundreds more of these neglected hrethren. Just a bloc l\‘ away was another second-hand shop which displaved practically all the ar- | ticles enumerased | Stop and meditate bhefore one these windows some day. for the truth of inds so reasonable that we print it. small car of the rden in eve joint, rattled down one of our stree ist ahead of it an other car had ¢ n up for the pur pose of making a turn. The officer di recting traffic turned the signal to al- low the h about, when the small ca heedless of every one immediately ble\v a sharp blast on his whistle an shouted in no uncertain tone Where do you think vou’ To Fairfax, Va.. by ' was the reply, as the car was lost in the maze of traffic down the street. Willie Willis BY ROB We do not vouch the story, but it riety aking the other day. T OUILLEN, * X k ok | | The most interesting public places !'in the world, in our humble opinion. | [are ‘a rallvoad station and a_hotel: | | Life drifts ceaslessly through ti | portals of these institutions, a sort of | | passing show. The other day, ored man approached one of the t windows at Union Station and for a ticket to Woodlawn, Va. ticket man_said, “Why there | Woodlawn, Va The no “I was goin’ my school teacher when I got biz, but she went Sh. yos they is” was the reply. |#nd asked Pug to clean off the black- “How do you spell it” inquired the rd for her today instead of me. agent. ‘ 1997 | i g to marry is Children Never Tire of Eating Bond Bread “Bond Bread is my children’s main food,” writes Mrs. Walter Dempsey of 1232 Jackson Street N. “and they never tire of cating it. In between meals they eat it with butter, jelly or peanut butter. They also like it toasted—as milk toast—dipped in egg and milk and fried. They will eat vegetables on Bond toast where they wouldn’t eat them otherwise. It is their foundation food and keeps their systems regu- lated, thus eliminating the use of medicines.” 3 OR many mothers Bond F Bread solves the old diffi- culty of getting children to eat a balanced meal. The home- like flavor of Bond stimulates voung appetites. They approach their meals with zest when Bond is the basic food. Seceing their eagerness for this wholesome bread, careful Mathers seize the opportunity to combine with it the milk, eggs and vegetables which every growing child should have. close-knit in texture and deli- ciously appetizing, but it is easily digestible. Good digestion makes ior happy dispositions and you find chifdren good natured as well as healthy. will Bond-Bread Mothers who have kept on baking their own bread to be sure of its purity and flavor would do well to read the bond which is printed on the wrapper of each Bond loaf. It is a pledge that the food materials in Bond Because only the purest and Bread are the same as she would finest ingredients are ever used in Bond Bread, the Inaf is not only inviting looking, firm and use at home. than a Every day more million housewives this pledge faithfully kept. see Your Neighborhood Grocer Can Supply You Daily Bond A AGINTNIND The iron with the OU don’t have to /| keep attaching? and removing a cord to regulate the heat of the Westinghouse Automatic. For the famous million-dollar Spencer Thermostat keeps this marvelous iron always within the limits of correct ironing heat. Its Automatic When it reaches the , highest good*ironing /temperature, this ,// thermostat turns off the current. When it cools to the lowest good ironing tempera- 4 ture, the thermostat turns it on again. You can give all your at- tention to the actual ironing and let the iron take care of itself. .. Because hundreds of thou- sands of women are using the Automatic today, it can be sold for $7.75. Let the nearest Westinghouse dealer show you. WESTINGHOUSF FIFCTRIC & MANUFACTURING CO. Hibbs Building, Washington, D. C.