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WOMA Possibilities in S PAGE Four-Piece Suit ' MARY MARSHALL. Some women feel about four-plece ensembles as they do about the once cherished “parlor suite.” A sort of admission of not being able to make tasteful selections one's self. And so while many of the most no- table of French dressmakers seidom AN IMPORTED FOUR-PIECE COS- TUME CONSISTING OF CLOTH SKIRT WITH KNITTED SLIP-ON SWEATER AND CARDIGAN AND FUR-TRIMMED TOPCOAT TO MATCH THE SKIRT. let any woman escape from their showrooms with only a frock or u wrap or a suit by itself, but always with companion pieces to go with it, there are plenty of extremely well- dressed women who still retain for themselves the privilege of making their own selections and combinations —all the more attractive, perhaps, be- cause they are mot so palpably pre- conceived. The four-piece suit is, chosen by many women as venient and really smart sports en semble for cold weather. st as you know, of a mounted on a light-weight bodice— slip-on sweater comes next—then a cardigan or jacket und last of all a antial toncoat. There are all of possibilities in such an outfit however, pieces may quite so cold the | but the For he worn n omitted. in Winter the slip- on sweater and jackeét may be worn without the topcoat--and substitute slipon sweaters may be worn in place of the original one. much interested the other ¢ a new shade used in white blue—described as . de er in a | poreelain " And that reall | is a perfect description. And have you heard that flowers were coming back into fash- ion as boutonnieres and posies? Of course women will go on wearing the artificlal sort, which are much more convenient, but a number of very smart women here and in Paris make a point of wearing real flowers not only in the evening but with the street costume. day | Pra Dainty evening handkerchiefs are a necessity in every woman'’s wardrobe. 1 have seen some very charming ones that may easily be made at home and if you would like to know how to make them I will send you directions and design if vou will send your stamped, self-addressed envelope. (Copvright. 1927.) Lessons in English BY W L. GORDON, ‘Words often misused—Do not say “you were the first of all to arrive.” Omit *“‘of all.” Often mispronounced—Iron. Pro- nounce iern, not i-run. Often misspelled—Elicit; only one 1. Snyncnyms—Perfect, faultless, com- plete, finished, consummate, infallible. Word study—"Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us in- crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Loquacious; given to continual talk- ing. “She was very loquacious and tiresome.” OUR CHIIADREN By Angelo Patri One of the most trying tasks of motherhood is that of tetaching an un- willing child to eat his meals. There are little boys and girls who take hours to eat two tablespoonfuls of cereal in the morning and who push the spinach off the plate and feed the bread to the convenient cat. Hours of time and tons of energy are required to teach these children to eat. What can be done with them? My experience says that hunger is the best spur to appetite. If you re- move the child’s food after allowing a reasonable amount of time for its consumption, offer no more until the scheduled meal time, and he will be- gin to eat. I have never heard of a child who starved himself to death. ‘When hunger calls there is no choice. ‘When one is faced with such a prob- lem, the first thing to do is to try to learn the cause of the dull appe- tite. Has the child had too much food? Too Much of One Sort of Food? ‘Will he refuse one sort and take an- other? Does he eat between times? Can he depend upon you to supply him with the food,any time he asks for it? Does he like the fuss that is made because he is not eating? Any and all of these causes carry their own remedy in the condition that pre- sents them. s But perhaps the child is a tiny, uri- derweight, nervous creature ‘who whines and nibbles and runs away only to return and take another nib- ble? Such children will need to have the doctor prescribe their diet and their mother to enforce the discipline necessary to following it. Discipline is not necessarily punishment—nor re- ward. It is the steady pull of the right idea over the wrong one; it is the steady pull of the stronger will on the weaker and wavering one of the child. If the youngster were well and strong he would not need the disci- pline that the routined order of the day brings to bear upon him, but as he is weak and undisciplined and without power of understanding his own need, he must have the suport and direction of the wiser adult. That means he is to be trained and disciplined to the end that he may be strong in the days ahead. 1€ you, the mother, were doing an- other kind of job in this world you would survey the situation, make up your mind what was to be done, how you were to do i*, and then you would do it. You weruld keep at it untii it was accomplished because it was your job, Take thie food fussing the same way. Study the cause, determine the course you are to.take, then take it. Other things will have to slip into the background for a time. You can only do one major task at a time. You will have to take a rest before each meal time so vou come to the battle with serene nerves and unshakable temper. There must be no excitement shown, no emotion, as you impress the child with the idea that meal time is the time for eating his meais. I believe hunger is the best appeal to the food fusser. Give him play in the open air, play until he is tired and his body needs the food. Then he will eat. He may skip a few meals. That won't hurt him. Most of our children are overfed. A bit of fasting will be goed for body and soul. The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright. 1927.) 1. Spigot. ‘4. Roman author. Not wet. Constellation. Father of English learning. . Affirmative. Greek letter. Verbal outburst. . Doctor (ab.). . Bohemian river. . Indefinite article. Signify. . Note of the scale. Southern State (ab.). Note of the scale. . Toward the top. . Nova Scotia (ab.). . Father. Wing of a house. . Street (ab.). ‘Thus. Form of address (ab.). . Uncommon. . River in Livonia. Brother of Jacob. . Conjunction. . Debated. Exists. Poem. Object of worship. Finish. . Small body, of water. . Letter S. Down Herbivorous animal, Get up. Stroke. West Indian witchcraft. Brother of Odin. Unit of germplasm. Father, ~ 2 { abakabal il ol Fortification. 10, Tales. 16. Crash. 17. Cuckoo. 20. Always. 21. Sound in the chest. 23, Meditate. 24. Serles of heroic events. 30. Not poetry. 31. Brother of Moses. . Bear down. . Greek letter. Girls. . Clever schemes. Increase. . Tear. . Unit of length. Fictitious name. Act, . Bird of Hawail. Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle. real | shoulder | | eat THE VENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9. 1927. WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Recistered 11 S Patent Office. When you were delighted to watch the fireman give the horses a SWig from a black bottle after each “run,” and how the boy t the dose gave the animals “wind NANCY PAGE Housewarming Calls for Blazing Grate Fire BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. Roger's sister and her husband were having a housewarming two days be- fore Christmas. Naturally, Lois was invited. Since Lois hoped that she and Roger would be in a home eof their own before another Christmas rolled around, she was anxious to go, to take something which would show her affection and her well wishes. When she asked Nancy, the answer came quick as a flash, “Take some- thing for the real heart of the home, the fireplace.” The fireplace had been built without the small gas jet extend- ing under the Jogs and kindlings. So some =ort of a fire starter was most acceptable. Lois chose a Cape Cod fire lighter. The metal tankard effect held the fire lighter, which had a blob of composi- tion material attached at one end. When this was saturated according to directions and inserted in the nest of logs and kindlings, it burned steadily until the logs had caught the blaze. Lols chose one in brass, although she had a choice of other metals. Then she added a huge box of fire- place matches. These matches come about 14 inches long, and are-made especially for the purpose. or beverages to sewe. write to Nancy Page, eare of this paper. inclosing stamped, self-addressed envelope, asking for her leaflet o1 beverages. (Copyrizht. 1927. Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Mrs. G. C. M. writes: “Do you think that my 7-months-old baby, who welghed nine pounds and 11 ounces, and now weighs 20 pounds, has gained enough? : “At four and one-half months she had two teeth and now has four. Should she have more? “She is very bright and sits alone, but makes no effort to creep. She is entirely breast-fed, with the ex- ception of water and orange juice. Do you recommend cod liver oil? At what age do you advise weaning? Avswer: Methinks this is a very new reader. Your baby at 5 months, if she had made the classic gain, uld have weighed nearly 20 pounds, £o she has not quite kept up to schedule. Perhaps this is because you have not added the foods thought advisable for a baby this age. We do advise cod liver oll, especially in Win- ter, and well cooked cereal, as well as the orange juice. She has the right number of teeth. She is young to begin creeping, and if she has the opportunity to crawl around on a_warm floor there is no doubt she will be attempting this at about 9 months of age. Weaning is usually begun at 9 months of age. I am sure you would find the weaning and feeding leaflet of interest. It con- tains information especially helpful to you right now. A self-addressed and stamped envelope, please. Mrs. R. L. W.: “Is it normal for a prospect mother to be hungry all the time? I never seem satisfied and shortly after a meal want to eat again. hll it harmful to eat lemons with salt?” Answer: It {8 a common reaction for mothers to have a wning and hollow feeling” which they interpret as hunger. It is not a real need for food, but as eating temporarily re- lieves it, it is wise in that case to five small meals at regular in- tervals rather than to try and be sat- isfied with three larger ones, Don't let yourself entertain desires for absurd “foods. These are mere food wbims and should not be in- dulged. There are still superstitions about a mother having to have the food she longs for. and it is hard to convince mothers that there isn’t any truth in such ideas. They are buiit on ignorance of how the body grows, and we know that only a good and wholesome dlet should be considered at this time. ‘Two glasses of lemon- ade a day would be fine for you, but I think plain lemons with salt not exactly the sort of thing to indulge yourself in. Pound Cake. Cream two cupfuls of hutter, add two cupfuls of sugar gradually, con- tinue the beating, then add the yvolks of 10 eggs beaten until stiff and dr, four cupfuls of flour, one-half a te: #poonful of mace, and two tablespoor fuls of orange juice. Beat vigorously for b minutes. Bake in a deep pan fo# 3% bours in a slow ovens ___.. Pities Those Who Have Caat-iron Backbones ng In Adaptability DorothyDixl Daily Dozens to Keep Bodies Flexible Could Be Supplemented by Mental Gymnastics to Keep Souls Supple. THE older 1 grow and the more T see of life. the more convinced I become that adaptability is about the greatest talent that any human being can possess. For the prople who are failures, the people who are lonely and { friendless, the peoplt: who make wrecks of their marriages, are almost always | the people who simply can't fit in. They have plerty of abil They are good and kind and upright, and mean to do their duty, but they can’t adjust themselves to their jobs, nor to the personalities of others. They can’t learn to take life as it comes to them. So these men and women with the cast-iron backbones, with no hinges in them, go stumbling through the world, kicking and ing their own Ishins, for it is a certainty that we must adapt ourselves to the conditions in }\\'hh-h we find ourselves. They are not going to alter to please us. 1t is given to very few of us to live in just the environment we prefer, or | to be able to do the work that is most congenial to us, and to be surrounded | by agreeable and sympathetic people. On the contrary, most of us have to live, whether we like it or not, ! wherever fate casts our lots. Most of us have to do whatever kind of work comes to our hand in order to n our bread and butter. We are brought In daily and hourly contact with those who just naturally rub our fur the wrong way, and whether we are happy or miserable depends altogether upon our ability to adapt ourselves to the circumstances that surround us. A woman once told me with prife #nt she had lived for 30 years in a community without speaking to a singic person in it, except upon matters ‘of bu. ss. She was a cultured, city-bred woman and she considered herself superior to her provincial neighbors, and, rather than adapt herself to them, she cut herself off fom all human contact and lived a narrow, lonely, isolated life. Think what she lost by this. For among these people she could have found love that would have warmed her cold heart; friendship that would have been a staff for her to iean upon; wisdom from which she might have learned many things; wit that - ould have amused her, and a never-failing entertainment in watching the human drama that goes on with just as many thrills and as much heart interest on Mah\.strcet as it does on Broadway. PR IT is a gommon thing in this country to find Northern people whom the exigencies of business have forced to live in the South, who spend their time berating the South and instituting invidious comparisons between it and the North; or Southern people who persist in considering themselves exiled insthe North; or Eastern people who have gone West, and who sneer at the crudity of the West; or Western people who have emigrated East and who are always talking about going back to God’s country. These people are truly to be pitied for their stupidity, because in refusing to adapt themselves to the <onditions in which they are forced to live they get the worst there is out of the situation. They are disliked by those among whom they dwell. They kill their every chance of success, for no community welcomes a carping critic with open arms, or makes an effort to boost his game. Yet these very people would find friendliness and neighborliness and help i they would throw in their lot with those among whom they had gone to live, if they would adapt themselves to their customs and habits instead of rebelling against them. It is the wise man who eats baked beans in Boston, and drinks black coffee in New Orleans, and refrains from telling them in Arizona how superior New York is. No complaint {8 more common among middle-aged and old people than that of loneliness. They wail out that their friends have.dropped away, that few people come to see them, that they are left out of things. If vou trace this loneliness back to its cause, you will invariably find it to be lack of adaptability. They are those who have inflexible opinions, ways that they will not alter, and finally people get tired of trying to gumshoe around their angles and let them alone. Every hostess has on her list certain women and men who are charming and intelligent, but whom she seldom Invites because they cannot adapt themselves to the company they are in, and are sure to start an argument if there is any other guest with whose views they disagree, or who else sit not tq their liking. up and sulk, and are as mum as clams if the balance of the company are And every hostess blesses on her knees those adaptable men and women who fit in anywhere, with anybody, and who are hail fellow well met, and who can discuss Einstein’s theory with a highbrow, or teething with the mother of twins. LR Y . THE reason that children dread to have their parents come and live with between the generations. And it* is the lack of adaptability evil. how far they are willing to compromi: broken-up homes, are wrecked on the Foot Treatments. Treating the feet is comparatively simple. Keep the toe nails cut short, keep the cuticle around them clean, as you would with your finger nails, and nip off any corn that promises to make an appearance. This means once a week (at the end of your hot bath, when the skin of the feet is soft and any callous parts are softened as a result of being im- mersed in hot water) take a regular corn knife, which is an extra sharp sort of knife, and shave off the cal- lous skin that may be forming on the small toes. When the feet have been soaked in water, as during the bath, this skin is soft, and one thin yellow layer after another can be shaved off without any trouble. The toe nails should then be treated, a nail file being used or an orange. wood stick. A pointed file is better, I think. And particular attentdon should be paid to the large toe nails, for a great deal of unwanted white matter gets ynder these and some- times causes a lot of trouble. Then the nails should be cut short either with clippers which come for the pur- pose or with ordinary scissors. The vefuse to adapt themselves to each other. that couldn’t have been prevented by the wife falling in with her husband’'s ways, and the husband teaching himself to like the things his wife liked. toe nails are usually too rough for manicure Scissors. After clipping, the toe nail edges should be smoothed, just as with the finger nails, and a little cold cream or petrolatum ~ should be rubbed into them and also_into_the skin where Personal Stationery FOR CHRISTMAS 200 Note Size Sheets 100 Envelopes to match $l'00 JHammermill Bond Used Exclusively ed With ¥ e and Tk ' Altruetively ‘Bove it With Order—Postay CONGRESSIONAY, STATIONKRY "NEWYFCE 37 dohn Mamahall Place. Ph, Frankiln 10104 Eye Bathe Sure Beauty Aid If you want your eyes to be clear and beautiful heed the ad- vice of twelve thousand oculists who recommend the eye bath. Ouce you have the knowledge of washing your eyes you will realize why Iris, America's Eye Bath, has become an absolute essential with thousands of well groomed women. Iris is a clear, harmless bath contaiping boric _acid, witch- hazel, menthol and other nstrin- gent cleansers. It relieves tired, inflamed eyes and gives luster and brightness to eyes to make them sparkle and look alive and dancing. Iris comes complete with eye cup in sterlized dressing-table size flasks at 50c. Also in larger size at $1.00. We guarantee and recommend | Try it today. PEOPLES : DRUCGT ORES them is the inadaptability of the old. Mother cannot endure to see her daughter-in-law raise her children and run her house differently from the way she did. Father is sure all the young people are going wrong because they ride in automobiles instead of buggies. And so there is constant friction that is at the bottom of the divorce A man and a woman born with a different heredity, reared in a diffevent environment, educated differently, with different habits, tastes and view- points, get married, and whether they make a go of marriage or a failure of it depends absolutely on how much they are willing to yield to each other, ‘The stormy homes where matrimony is just one fight after another, the personalities of men and women who There are mighty few divorces A great solvent of all troubles is adaptability. What a pity when we do our dally dozen every morning to keep our bodies flexible, we don't do a few mental gymnastics to keepcour souls supple! (Copyright, BEAUTY CHATS DOROTHY DIX. 1927.) BY EDNA KENT FORBES the corn may be forming. Keep the skin soft with oil and the corn can't form easily. Or if there has been a painful corn, shave off as much of the dead yellow skin as possible and then touch the place with collodion, which you can buy at any druggist. Put over it a felt pad made at home and put on with strips of adhesive tape. M. H.—As you are only 18 years of age and with a height of 5 feet 8 inches, you are hardly to be considered as underweight at 126 pounds. In- stead of rubbing olive oil into your face to fatten it, take it internally, and it will round out your face as it adds to your nourishment. Take a tablespoonful with each meal three times a day and in an equal amount of grape juice if you do not care to take the oil by itself. If you can take milk, a quart or two of this will fat- ten you, if you prefer itto the oil. —_— “Caps and Hats” was the nickname of two political factions in Sweden in the eighteenth century who ruled the country until overthrow: Whet your appe- tite tomorrow morning cup ofgood To Users of Percolators Seal Brand is offered especially prepared for use in percolators. it brings out the finer, fuller flavor of the coffee. Ak for Seal Brand Percolator Coffee. The STYLE POST is the marker On the road to being smart— Shoulder Fob. . The shoulder flower is having a successor in favoritism, the shoulder pin, and its very near cousin, the shoulder fob. Tailored brilllance is the mood of this sort of shoulder ornament with its clear crystals, its sparkling rhine- stones or marcasite, and the com- binations of the vivid precious and semi-precious stones—jade, sapphire or the warm carnelian. The pendant is a favorite animal, or the obtuse lit- tle cros-legged Buddha. (Copyright. 1027.) Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. December 9, 1790.—William Deakins and Benjamin Stoddert today wrote to President Washington concerning the lots laid out on the townsite of Hamburg, which is included in the territory east of Rock Creek, not far from Georgetown, now under consid- Er‘atlon as a site for the new Federal City. ‘“We find,” they state, “there are 287 lots laid out upon 130 acres of FEATURES. BY LOIS Unwholesome Appetite. One of the problems that over- weights must contend with is that of curbing their appetites for sweets and other fattening foods. Since their bodies do not really need large quan- titles of these foods, the craving for them is an unwholesome one that is nothing more or less than a bad habit, just as incorrect posture or nail-biting is a bad habit. Habits may be changed—not all at once, but gradually. The fear that she must give up induiging her pet crav- ings for sweetmeats, etc., is prevent- ing many a stout woman from begin- ning a reducing program. She lacks the will power to strike these foods out of her diet entirely and she knows it. Between the fear of getting fatter and her inability to give up her favorite dishes, milady is in a serious dilemma. The easiest and most practical way to solve this situation is to attack one's undesirable dietetic habits at a time and be content with slow but gure progress toward normal weight. Plan a long campaign of reducing, be- ginning by a taboo on a single item of fattening tendency like chocolate creams. Keep this up for three or four weeks before adding another item, such as butter. After you have become thoroughly used to denying yourself these two small items, cross out all pastries, then proceed to lim- iting your ration of potatoes to one small one a day. Other foods that may be added gradually to the overweight's black- list are: Breads, mayonnaise, thick gravy, cream soup, all fried foods, sweet sauces, sugar in beverages or on MILADY BEAUTIFUL LEEDS. cereal, macaroni, fat meats. By adopting this gradual method of re. ducing the diet, one achieves the dou- ble end of training the appetite and the will to self-control. The flabby hody and the flabby will both benefit by this system of reducing. Another advantage is that it does not make one feel weak or look haggard, as more drastic methods sometimes do. The same principle of overcoming undesirable habits of eating may be applied to correcting the habit of taking insufficient exercise. Begin by walking six squares a day and taking one simple bending exercise to reduce the waist line. After two weeks of this easy regime, increase the daily walk and add another reducing exercise to your program. Gradually accustom yourself to a 5-mile hike and 15 to 20 minutes of reducing exercise a day. (Covyright. 1927.) SUB ROSA BY MIMI Being a Good Predecessor. One of the things the engaged girl usually has to face is meeting her pred- ecessor—that other woman, the old flame who throw her man over and usually cracked his heart badly. No engaged girl, in love, looks for- ward to the prospect. She konws she land the whole of these lots are in the hands of about 150 proprie- tors, principally Dutchmen residing in Frederick and Washington Coun- ties (Md.) and in Pennsylvania, who have hitherto held them in but little estimation, and we have reason to be- lieve the far greater part of them might now be purchased at a little more than the original cost, which was 5 pounds ($13.30) each lot; though there can be no doubt that if the seat of government should be fixed so as to comprehend these lots a much is going to hate the other girl. She's already jealous of her. And yet ;‘urlosny urges her on to the meet- ng. Few girls know how to be good pred- ecessors. Sally is a bad one. She probably the worst type of prede- cessor to be found today. She has al- ways thrown them over gayly and carelessly when she tired of them. Consequently there are many who have to regard her as the ‘“other woman.” She is the predecessor of countless jealous young flancees and wives. And each of the men who higher value would instantly be set upon them . . It is reported that the people of Hagerstown, Md., and Shépherdstown, Va., are busy raising money by subscription to erect Gov- ernment buildings in the hope of per- suading President Washington to place the Federal City at their doors.” December 9, 1809.—Opening of Sev- enth street from Pennsylvania ayenue to the northern bounds was author- ized today by the City Council. The opening of New Jersey avenue for a short distance north of the Capitol was also authorized. Up to the pres- ent time these two streets have only been opened in the southern part of the city to the river. December 9, 1824.—Gen. Lafayette was received on the floor of the House teday. It has been customary for representatives to wear their hats in the chamber, but they uncovered in his honor. MOTHERS AND THEIK CHILDREN. Soap Container. My children need the hand lotion for use during cold weather, but when they took it from the bottle they wasted a great deal. So we now have installed a small liquid soap dis- penser and the saving has been quite noticeable. . Emergency Biscuits. When making baking powder bis- cuits and no milk isat hand, if an egg is beaten very light and added to the necessary amount of water to mix the dough it will be found to be a very good substitute. The biscuits will brown quickly, and the egg adds to the taste. over a were once in love with her has re- mained on friendly terms with her. Donald was one of the most abject of her victims, and even after she gave him the air with hard finality, he stuck around. Finally he got over the affair altogether and married a nice kid called Muriel. Muriel knew all about Sally. She feared her, she dreaded her, but she was determined to meet her. Donald arranged it. He took his new wife to call on the old love. The old love was in good form. She was feeling great. She greeted Murlel with: “Well my dear, I want to tell you right away that you're one lucky girl. And I ought to know,” this with a signifi- cant little glance at Don. They had tea. Sal poured. She remarked pleasantly: “Don, dear, you know these cups will always remind me of that marvelous day we had together in the old antique shops. Will you ever forget it? It was such fun, pottering around those old places with you. You were always the most ideal companion for anything like that,” then hastily to Muriel: “Oh, my dear, you're not going to be bored with these reminiscences, are you? I ful when she’s thrown away her own chance years ago? It's a mean trick to be a disagree- able, annoying old flame. It takes charm and friendliness and ease of manner to be a nice one. If you are a predecessor, for heaven's sake show the better side of your nature and be a good one. . Mimi will be glad to answer any inquiri dirscted to this Daper, provided a stampe addressed envelope Is inclosed. (Covyright. 1927.) -— Simple Spice Cake. Mix one cupful of molasses with one cupful of sour milk. Sift to- gether two and one-third cupfuls of flour, two teaspoonfuls of ginger, offe- fourth teaspoonful of nutmeg, one and three-fourths teaspoonfuls of bakifg soda and one-half a teaspoonful eséh of allspice and salt. Combine the tWo mixtures, add one-fourth cupful ‘of melted fat and beat well. Bake in muffin pans for about 15 minutes in a moderate oven. e w People of the United Kingdom ate more than 5,000,000 bushels of apples the past yea CONSTIPATION SAPS VITAL STRENGTH Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN brings quick, natural relief! Don’t permit faulty elimination to undermine your h:-,lth. It is the cause of wis fering and pain. Dizziness, spots before the eyes, headaches, sleeplessness—are just a few of the symptoms of this scourge. Guard against it. Prevent it in can’'t help them, when I see Don again.” That’s how things went. For the next hour Sally reminded Don of tender little scenes, old happiness to- gether—until Muriel was on the verge of tears, and even Don vaguely per- ceived there was something wrong, although he was having the time of his life. . Z Now that's being a rotten predeces- sor, and a bad sport. The old flame has the advantage over the new ac- quisition and it's up to her to be a good sport about it. She ought to take particular pains to make the new wife or sweetheart feel at ease—in- stead of shoving her out in the cold with great deliberation. A good predecessor makes a point of telling the new wife how nice she looks—how much in love the husband seems to be. She is friendly and in- terested and self-effacing. That's a good predecessor. Honestly, it seems to me it's the only fair thing for her to do. After all, she threw the man over. She owes him something. Why not pay it back by being kind and helpful to his new sweetheart? Why take it out on the newcomer? Why be jealous and spite- National Association’s Emblem of Purity sure to be 100% pure. Handily Packed in Purity-protecting Pint packages the way that is nature’s own method. Plenty of healthfol “bulk” 5a youk plenty of heal daily meals. = Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN s i anteed to relieve eonluvl{‘i':?f Kellogg’s is 100% bran or “bulk.’ Itr:scocltnplilhes results Tr;:' pnir:-bnn product can equal. it Wl doctors recommend it. h, Serve ALL-BRAN often. Two tablespoonfuls daily — in chronic cases, with every meal, Delicious with milk or cream—and add fruits or honey for an extra treat. Mix it witl:A oth% e.erea}:;dUu it in cook- ing. Appetizin; es on every package. Made by Kel in Battla Creek. Sold yfiagl ol everywhere, USSELLS Everybody’ll like this Week-End Special - It’s a combination of Fussell Favorites— Delicious with their natural fruity flavors—and e —— "} Pineapple Ice Cream and Grape Honey Ice aaaaae———————————— Ready tonight, tomorrow and Sunday at all dealers who specialize in PURE FOODS. Fussells is always made with that scrupulous care which insures the utmost in quality. b; grocers. Served ogd® 4( ALL-BRAN Our products are entitled to use it