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WOoMA NS TERGE,." THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON” D. C, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1927. —_— Trend Is Towar BY MARY The- various weasel cousins un doubtedly belong to one of the very fitst families of fur-bearing animals and there is never a season wi e ‘Weasel or another is not in IF IT'S BADGER IT IS DAT THIS NAVY BLUE CLOTH COAT HAS GENEROUS COLLAR AND CUFFS OF THIS MOST FAVORED OF ALL THI SEASON'S FURS pute. Mink, ermine and sable most _aristocratic members ‘Weasel connection. Otter. baum and stone marten, civet cat, fisher, fitch sea otter, skunk, wolverine and pahmi are other distinguished members. And now badger, which is usually regarded as one of the substantial but not espe clally fashionable cousins, has sud- denly come into prominence and is ranked with mink, ermine and sable, if not in costliness at least in smart ness, TP-TO. are the of the WHY WE DO WHAT WE DO BY MEHRAN K. We are all familiar with the old- timer who takes the joy out of life by reminding us of the good old days Nothing that happens now can com pare with what took place vears ago. Certain alumni of any high school, academy er college return ever so | often o their alma mater to see a ball zame or track meet and shake their heads in _disappointment: “The old gray.mare, she aint what she used to be”. And this in spite of the fact that the woung fellows are smashing the records - of the old-timers without mercy This is by ne means peculiar to our age. Recently an inscription was dug up in the Old World, dating 4000 B.C. The writer is very much alarmed over | the “modern vouth’ of his times and | longs for~“the good old days.” This | makes the game of glorifying the past | the oldest 5f indoor sporis. None ofsus is entirely free from this tendency, though we fight against it. The good oll_days seem better because we are used to them. It is re- | markable “how a. person becomes at tached to old ways. They become a part of our very being, Sentiments which are emotional attachments spring up to bind us still closer. It is the same trait that makes for Joyalty and devotion in all walks of life. The opposite side of the picture is fear of the new and untried. We are naturally distrustful of the novice whose strength and courage have not been tested. 1f you are taking a ride | in an airplane, you prefer a machine 3 S T | 1 Quality in Furs MARSHALL. As a trimming for fur coats takes a but the vided with honors are in a the silkiest of all furs There is a great variet styles this season. Any fur of in noteworthy style trend so fat quality This tendency imitations ix in jewelry 1 imitation pearls no longer muster they did, or rabbit, ing dyed plucked and otherwise longer takes the place dressed woman's wardrobe ind sable, ermine and seal Pigeon gray ch affected by ently. P deal for cheap as apparent furs as it is once and ously and disguised the of well dress George T. ning gown with eme evening Brokaw, wearing an of this tone embell ald ornaments alled forth much admiration Smocking is one of the smartest trimmings for little girls’ n fact frocks for though it expensive frocks S0 many Ang seen on ever grown-ups as well is found only on the 1 sort of clothes it is not at all difficult to do. If y interested in learning how to send me a_stamped velope and I will directions with sketch of frock on which it is us send you exp My Neighbor Says. Homemade spoiled added the bread by too much to the dough loaves heavy & curry is made all browned parts she removed When frying chip both time and frying fat will be saved if the potatoes, after being cut, arg steamed for 15 minutes Cream when whipped should be cold at the start of the wh ping process, and better resuls will follow if the bowl and whip per are cooled with cold water previous to use whippin just little, and care should be cised to stop at the point the cream has reached a good degree of stiffne Under ideal conditions this will be within two minutes. When s properly whipped it will remain unchanged for several days, ex cept possibly in flavor, if kept in the refrigerator mes i be potatoes. where THOMSON, Ph.D. which has fights. made several The good old day are relived and | seem more real and natural than the living associa- | one of the we tend | to forget the upleasant and, distasteful | while those of deny rehearsed so often that they present. All tions have diss most the unpleasant lved. It i remarkable traits t incidents of the past, the present are too vivid to Memory plays pranks. 1t rec wishes rather than facts. Think vour last Summer's vacation. wonderful it all seems now! hardships and mosquitoes are pletely forgotten. A man who crossed the continent many states, while he is in the E eems much_ better. We idealize have helped to partly responsible. because it. denounce the past produce To would be going back to our own self Every and | own Henca the praises of the | : { A man cannot deny himself. human urge prompts us to extol magnify whatever bears our trade mark, badger prominent place this season. | measure di lynx which, as you know is a member of the cat family and on fur of really z00d quality is in fashion and the most as 1 car trend toward furs of better from /1 | in Obvious! pass shorn no well min} is a color that has been 1 womer pink has been worr Mrs really smock self-addressed en suceessful How All the com has times t, the West He hustles West and_ wishes he were back East again. We are | | [ | FEATURES. DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX ’ Advice to Bachelor of 44 Who Believes He Ought to Marry—Shall Wife No. 2 Name Baby After Wife No. 1?7 [DEAR MISS DIX: 1am a bachelor 44 years of age and I feel that the time has come when T should marry and establish a family. What age woman would be the most suitable for a wife? I have also a very great desire to ve up the work I am engaged in, although I am a fair success at it, and do other work which T have long contemplated and for which I have innate ability and into which 1 could put my heart and soul. To follow this new career. however, would mean a considerable sacrifice of time and money and STYLE POST is road to the being Cartridge Belt. 1 the marker e smart sportsman or even the portswoman, but making the girdle ne of an evening gown, the cartridge | /et attends formal occasions. Louise Boulanger took it (almost exactly) rom the hunter's belt and put it on of her exotic robes de style. Taf r moire makes the belt to per- n, and it the basis of the | gathering for the bouffant skirt which | ten b tulle footing to prevent n appearance of heaviness, 1927 | LITTLE BENNY | " feta fect is (Convrisht LEE PAPE 1 Mary Watkins was sitting on her runt on 2 cushions, and I | started to sit alongside of her on none, ind she sed_Heer, heers one of my cushions, dont you dare sit down with- | out a cushion, do you wunt to catch vour dethly cold? 1 And she gave me a cushion, making | me feel populer, and we started to tawk about different subjects sutch as who has the best time, a elevator man aireoplane driver, and how a | would feel if he found out he had some of his own relations on \ccount of the bulcher sending him the rong order by mistake, and Mary Watkins opened a paper bag and started to eat little round cakes out of it, saving. Wont you bave one Benny? Me fecling like being coaxed and saving, O 1 dont know, no thank you not, and Mary Watkins sed please take ome, I got them it the baker store, please have steps canniba I gess 0 do | around one Wich T did, taking a small polite | bite and saying. G wizz you awt to go | around and get your money back, | hey taist like sawdust. O is that well if your intristed to know something T made these cakes myself, Mary Watkins sed. Me thinking, G good nite. And I sed, O, well I gess maybe a little saw- | dust got in little corner of one and 1 jest happened to get it. And I quick took another bite, saying, O. 1 should say thats different, thats swel® thats the best cake 1 ever taisted, thats wat T think No vou dont either, and 11l jest trub- ble vou to give me back that cushion, Mary Watkins sed. And she quick grabbed it back from underneeth of me as if she dident care weather T cawt my dethly cold or not and would even of bin glad if I had of, ' | | <0, MOTHERS AND THEIK CHILDREN | good old days will continue to be sung | while human beings retain their ego. centric tendencies. (Cooy The Swedish bride fills her pockets with bread, which she dispen every one she meets on her way to the church, every piece she disposes a mis- of averting, as she believes, fortune The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyrigh! Across, . Garment. Eat. . Act Wwild hogs. Weight (ab.). Swedish coin. Behold. . Perfume. . Prefix. Cash boxes. Untidy. Constellation. Mimic. Signifies. Frighten. Hypothetical force. Notable period. Street (ab.). Constellation. Toward. Change. Indefinite article. Large bundle. God of love. Down. Company (ab.), " Hebrew month, Whistles. vision. Exists. Spanish definite articl Fool. Craft. . Hard. t. 1927.) olitary. tend the hand. Those who utilize Meadow. ’1, Mineral spring. 4. Small 5. Shovel. haft of a_column English school. 0. Openings 34. Siberian gulf. 35. Nickname 136. Initials of a President 7. Like. 19, | 5 The officer on the beat was the sur | prise speaker our principal brought forth at one rent-teacher meeting. | The policeman, embarrassed but ear | nest, asked parents not to make a po lice officer the family “bogeyman,” but instead teach the children that the police are their guardians and friends. He told an instance which occurred in his traffic direction where his catching | hold of a child to Jead it across the street had sent the youngster off into wild pleas not to be “locked up.” Some one at home had been in the | habit of threatening him with a police man when he was naughty. A doctor who heard the officer speak said he | found the same condition in his prac. |t Mothers used “getting the doc tor” as a terrible threat when home treatment was resisted, whereas, he | said. the family doctor should be held | | up to the child as the friend who| | would come and help him if he was | hurt or (Conyright. 1927.) Lessons in English BY W. L. GOKDON. I shall speak relative to that matter.” se the adverb “relatively.” “Italic.” Pro- | ot as in | ‘ Words often misused: Do not say | Often mispronounced naunce-first “i" as in “it, write.” Often the “tle.” | “Epistle.” Net | “Synonyms: Careless | | misspelled im im- heedless, prudent, indiscreet, incautious, provident Word times word three Let us in- by mastering word each day. Today's word, cal,” contrary to sound reason- Your explanation is too illogical.” study: “Use a and it yours vocabulary is crease one illog ng Cottage Cheese Dessert. Roll one package of zwiebach, add | one cupful of sugar, one teaspoonful of cinnamon, one-half a cupful of melt- ed butter and mix well. Keep out three-fourths cupful of this mixture to sprinkle on top. Put one-fourth into the bottom and around the sides of a wellbuttered spring mold. Fill- ing for the mold: Five beaten eggs and one cupful of sugar beaten together until light, a pinch of sale, one-half a lemon, rind and ‘juice; one-half a pint of cream, add two packages of well mixed cottage cheese, and one- fourth vupful of flour. Pour into the mold. Bake for about one and one- fourth hours. Let cool in the oven for oue hour. Personal Stationery FOR CHRISTMAS 200 Note Size Sheets $1 00| 100 Envelopes to match. .. Hammermill Bond Used Exrclusively Printed With Your Name and Addreas in Blue Ink — Altractively ~Boxed. Order—Postage Prepai STATIONERY SERVICE Pliice. ¥ nklin 10104 | another, he develops “‘wa | what | without very much in love with him. | on his part | drops of would prevent me from marrying at present. Which shall I do? IDEALIST. Answer: T agree with you that if you are ever going to marry you should do so within the next few years. A widower who has been house-broken. so to speak and who learned from experience how to adapt himself to the whims and peculiarities of a woman may safely marry up to threescore vears and ten. But not so the bachelor. Never having had any one but him grow selfish. Never having to subordinate his ows *and habi omes faddy about his eating and finick tastes and inclinations to have broken up. He b about his | belongings, and a wife gets on his nerves and worries him to death. A man who has remained a bachelor until he is 50 generally does well to make the remainder of the journcy in single blessedness, because, no matter good qualities a woman has, they do not compensate him for the breaking up of his routine of life, As for the age of the woman, anywhere from 30 up is suitable. Don't marry a flapper, because you will have nothing in common with a yourg girl. She will want to run around at night and have some of the good times of which you are so tired. She won’t want to stay at home, while a home is what you are marrying for. So pick out a woman who is ready to settle down and be a fireside companion. But it is a bad plan to marry just because you think the time has arrived when you should marry. Don't get married unless you are enough in love with some woman to feel that life will be cinders and dust and ashes her. Since this is not the case with you and there is no lady love for whom you particularly care, I should strongly advise You to espouse your new career instead of a woman. That will bring you more happiness than marriage to a woman to whom vou are indifferent. Indeed, I doubt if there is any other onc thing in the world out of which we get such joy as we do out of doing the work that nature fitted us to do, that we love to do, and the mere doing of which gives us an unending thrill. You will find no disillusion in that. No weariness, no horedom. Every day vour interest in it will grow keener and keener. 1t will absorb vour waking hours and fill your nightly dreams, and when success comes to you, as it always does to those who are fulfilling their destiny by doing their life worl, you will probably find that you can make both of your dreams come true and marry some woman who will appear unexpectedly on your horizon and whom you will know at once as your predestined mate. DOROTHY DIX. e s JAR DOROTHY DIX: My sister is married to a man who was a widower. His first wife died 10 years ago, after they had only heen married two | vears. He never cared about any one else until he met my sister and married her a Jittle more than a year ago. My sister is not of the jealous type, and when her husband eulogizes his first wife she listens patiently and agrees with him that she must have been a wonderful woman. But a baby girl has recently been born to them and her husband insists on naming it after his first wife. My sister is now afraid that every one will think that he doesn't love her and that his heart is buried in a grave, and this hurts her, as she is What do you think? SLLA. 1 think a man who hasn’t any more sense than to be forever lauding his first wife to his second wife is So stupid that he is fit for the home for the feeble-minded. Certainly a man has little knowledge of feminine phychology if he doesn't realize that every second wife who loves her husband is secretly jealous of that other woman to whom he gave his love when he was young and romantic. Answer And vet the poor, dear, blundering, dumb things go along casting No. 1 in No. 2's teeth, so to speak, and telling what a paragon of all the feminine virtues she was and recalling things they did together, and they expect No. 2 | to enjoy it. Why, when a widower goes a-courting, he invariably tells the woman he is trying to marry that she reminds him so much of his first wife and it never dawns on him that there isn't a woman alive or dead, from Lucrecia Borgia down, that she wouldn't rather resemble. Nine times out of ten when his first wife was alive her hushand was far from being infatuated with her, and she had plenty of faults that he spent his time in knocking, and in his heart he knows that he is happier with his second wife and thinks more of her than he ever did of his first wife. But blessings brighten as they fade and death covers a multitude of sins, so he has forgotten all the things in his Maria that irritated him, and he sees her as the angel she never was or pretended to be. Of course, every good woman who marries a widower wants him to he loyal to the memory of his first wife. She doesn't object to his glorifying her in his thoughts. But she does feel that he might have intelligence and tact enough to keep his posthumous emotions to himself and not to feed her | up on comparisons that she cannot but feel show her up in a bad light. 1 And certainly a man asks too heroic a sacrifice of his wife when he wants to name her baby after her rival, and unless she is in @ state of grace she won't do it. Furthermore, it's a good time to tell husband where she stands and shut off his foolish babble. And. anyway, nobody has & right to name a poor, little, helpless bahy any name that isn't a pretty one and that doesn't run trippingly on the tongue. After all, the baby's rights are the chief ones to be considered. DOROTHY DIX. DR EAR MISS DIX: who will not call upon her in it. When we go away he will come to the house to see her. We have a lovely home and everything to entertain with, and invited him time and again, but he always makes some excuse for not coming. He has never asked my daughter to meet his people. What do you think of this attitude 5 V. H. Answer: A decent, honorable, young man would prefer to visit a girl in | her own home, where she has the proper background, and to get acquainted | with her parents. And if everything were all right, he would certainly wish | his family to meet his fiancee. DOROTHY DIX J | | BEAUTY CHATS More Calorie Tables. 1t you don't care much for break-| fast as a meal, you can save up your breakfast calories for lunch and have quite a decent amount of food. But it you do like breakfast (personally, I think it is the nicest meal of the | JLeltuce day if the coffee is good), then keep | ) ¢ the calorie ration below 150 and if| “Pple. or whatever - : Soaihle Lot Sie [ and it vou like, you can have a cup Concerning luncheons, it you go out | 0f coffee with hot skim milk-the to Tuncheon parties, naturally vou are | %hole luncheon totals about 275 calo- dieting. You'll probably be the sen.| ries. If vou've ad e Sation of ‘the Darty, tov; #oink on & | YOUF iettuce s as'to make & rea terested and ls a most exciting toPIC | ,'(o1a) of 450 out of your daily allow- P oonyprasih: ance, a good dinner is in sight. Concerning luncheons when you are eating at home or alone and can| Mrs. D. A—If you reduce by elim choose: Eat a dish of lettuce as large | inating some starch and sugar from as ever you like, with a dressing made | your diet, you will find that your of salt, pepper and vinegar, or Jf you | health will ‘improve and yvour flesh Gislike this bitter taste, add a few | will become firm while you are ab- tasteless mineral oil. This | sorbing the extra weight. is slightly laxative, but that won't| A. B.—After you have fully matured hurt you—it has no caloric value of | the bust will not be too large. Mean- any Kind, neither has lettuce, which | time, you should not do anything to again is very sood for your system, | try fo reduce it. The sensitiveness is | especially for your skin, and which | natural and not seriou | gives you ‘bulk” without calories. A| Mrs, G. F. S.—Massage is not | foll or a smallish slice of bread or| cure for falling hair, it will improve | toast, or the merest sprinkling of left- | the circulation in the scalp, but if over vegetables on the lettuce or a|your hair is falling out it requires bit of cooked fruit (just to dress it up), | special treatment BURSON FASHIONING Adds Comfort to Perfectly, Permanently Shaped Hosiery Burson Fashioned Hosiery adds to the allure of natural beauty because it is “Knit to Fit” every graceful curve of the foot, ankle and leg. BY EDNA KENT FORBES | about half a pat of butter and lm’; dessert a baked apple or a dish of stewed fruit or the littlest } £ milk | and cereal pudding. How does this come out? ' Lettuc calories 0, and dressin ad; 100 calor butter, the dessert, 100, na Write rer 4 Sis FREE GUIDE te More Comlertable, Eeenemical and Attractive Heviery its flattering shape won't stretch- wash-nor-wear out for that reason. The absence of knots, threads or scams from the Burson Comfort Foot assures case and long wear. Most any good shop —anywhere will show you Burson Fashioned Styles for Every Hour lo of the Day. BURSON KNITTING Contains valu- able suggestions that will help you keep your ankles trim and attractive look- ing with less ex- pense for ho- siery. elf to consider, he is almost sure fo | s that it would make him miserable to | WORLD FAMOUS STORIES HOW MY DOUBLE UNDID ME By EDWARD EVERETT HALE Hale, American writer is chiefly famous for his we Xnown story entitied *“The Man Without Country ™ That patriotic tale has earned him eriduring fam My wife insists that T tell the world why 1 had to have a double, and how he undid me. She wants people understand the great pressure the pub lic exerts upon its servants, forcing them to all sorts of expedients to es cape their more hated duties T am, or rather was, a minister s the Sandemanian connection was | g1 settled in an active, wide-awake town in Maine. Everything scemed splen did: but I was young and had te learn what it meant to try to be the confi dential friend of a hundred families in the town. keep abreast of the thought of the age in one's study and to preach a rmon every Sunday And this was not all. Polly and I soon found out were expected to attend certa functions and act like dummies. They wera the duties. not of me personally but of my office. I loved the people of my parish. but 1 did not care a | ;o (0 straw for the vague public which de 6 alf s maned these extra duties of me, 1| It After the preliminaries at a cial fete of this kind 1 would be began to think how fine it would be to | \reqs e i i Have w acolie pretty much alone Then 1 sneaked | gdouble.. . v out, changed clothes with Dennis, who | I was singularly fortunate was waiting in dark lane, and he vacationing that Summer 1 38 - . Py Pacafionings thee Sunes returned to tuke my place under Pol- | no spectacles. He w B iiave bednin alls. But he was of my height, had 3 = Pled o 1 to me, for Dennis sprinkled “I am black hair worn off by his hat—like | (o "% 10" vou liked it- and “Very me. He stooped in walking. So do 1 AR ; i | His hands were large, and so are mine, | e, thank vou all over the eve e exan lm|I .mL Trom a childhood| L% 8 conversation. But I woukdh not | a ight ey lightly | PS. Warned | escapade over his right eve, Slghtly| “rhings” went well for almost 12 affecting the movement of that eye & o saEe ward Everett | 1aiEdTan ind slept late. When he came for or ders he wore a red silk bandanna tied | round his head, and overalls and no | spectacles, No one could suspect we were both Frederic Ingham. His first assignment was a meeting Enlightenment Board welfare or uplift board He succeeded wonderfully meetings, under my oted with the minority me quite a reputation for Jught and cautiousness in with vital questions After went to several com mencements for me. and ate the din ners provided. He especially liked to eat dinners in my place. He sa through three of our quarterly conven tions for me. Consequently I # \ reputation for having n everything, being always on hand | Even my silence—in the person of my double—was in my favor Polly, more rash than I. even risked night under tk own sex. I went in first the ball rolling. 1 knew 0 mucl any At of the like a where such always This of cAreful dealing this he to real interest that we 1 public ng Dennis eves of he left | for while saw my He had on | s dressed in over- | warning 1 ¥ | his family | friend on the other side of the. room.’ | only my office w 1 have a daughter who is engaged to a young man | n her own home when her father and I are | | to a sincere appreciation of them, but | | stands and chintz-shaded | any turniture shop, moderately priced. Dept. P—75 R eaa ment of that eYe | months. Dennis went to all the duil Y ,""*““‘ sg e My fate ' ihings and I performed my well liked yoaie s A duties in my parish as I ever could ,A.,‘ “,"} Anm; ’w‘.. a .‘Y,u‘m have done otherwise. 1 caught up or ble fellow of the class known reading and had time to pay court who had sealed fate ¥ fe. 1 ht say. | marrying a dumb wif then iron my at ing in the Jaundry. I ed both of | \nq then Dennis was overtasked an 2 h nd then Dennis was overtasked and them for five years We applied undid me. the probate judge to change the name| "ji was at an annual county meet- of Dennis Shea to the same MY | ing. I had heen asked to speak, but | own, Frederic Ingham. We explained, | heggod off. Finaliy, some one else was what was the truth, that an eccentric| ghtuined and 1 was asked merely to gentleman wished to adopt Dennis into| come and sit on the platform. This The age of Dennis never | was a job for my double, who was occurred to the judge. | well trained In just these things, so The fun we had shaving his beard | sent him. I told Dennis to hold his | to my pattern, cutting his hair 10| ,eace under all circumstances. 1In| match mine and teaching him how to | b2y an hour he returned. wild with | wear and fake off goldbowed spec | uxcitement. He had undone me! | tacles! Really, they were plated and A thousarid people had come to the glass was plain, for the fellow's there, and the man who was l‘\"“f were excellent, 1o s k was late. When he came he Then in four afternoons T said that some one following him him_four speeches. I thought would make the real speech. The next would do for all occasions at which | man passed it on to the next, until— he was to take my place. It was hard | o)) ederic Ingham, in the person to teach him, but T did, and these were% of Dennis, was called npon | ! the speeches “Our friend, Mr. Ingham. is alwa\!i | | my as shiftless his to my w gan. yc wife, by to know sight least to gether taught these (1) “Very well, thank vou. And|prepared—and though we had not re vou?’ He was always to say this in answer to greetings on the street. etc. 2) “I am very glad you liked it For comments on my sermons, ete (3) “There has becn so much lied upon him, he will say perh ps.” it was announced. Apy e followed, which turned | Dennis' head. He rose and tried | said. | 3. “There has been so much said, and | and, on the whole, so well said, that | on the whole so well said, that I will I wili not occupy the time.” For use | n,t longer occupy the time. He sat when asked for impromptu speeches at | down, looking for his hat, for things | dinners, meetings, etc seemed squally | ) “I' agree, in general But the people cried, “Go on! Go| on:” | Dennis, still confused. but flattered by the applause, rose again and tried | No. 2: “I am very glad vou liked it." My friends stared. All the people | who did not know me personally yelled with delight. A boy in the gallery hoilered, “It's all an infernal hum bug™ And Dennis just then waved his hand and tried No. 4: “I agree, in | general, with my friend on the other | side of the room.” ‘The chairman doubted his senses and tried to stop Dennis, when the boy in the gallery | shouted. “How's your mother?” Den R | nis, now completely lost, tried, as his HOME NOTES last shot, No. 1: “Very well, thank you. And you?" 1 think I was undone at this point. But Dennis was not through. The audience rose in a whirl of amaz ment, rage and sorrow. They ealled Dennis names or something—and he. in pure Irish, delivered himself of an address to the gallery, inviting any one who wished to fight to come down and do 0. stating that they were all dogs and cowards and that he would take any five of them single handed Shure, 1 have said all his riverence and the mishtress bade me say,” he said in defiance. Well, that is why. am now in voluntary exile in one of the new towns of Maine, where the first settled minister gets 100 acres of |land free. WHAT, WHY AND WHERE ‘What is the wombat? What is the dingo? What is the sea elephant? What is the kaola? What is the flying phalanger? a word with my Whenever his opinion was asked, etc at any function At first I thought clothing would be an expense. But then, whenever he was out I would be at home. And he went to all of the functions where | as desired and I stayed home and read and studied to my heart’s content. Dennis lived in his wife's room over the kitchen. He had orders never to show himself at that | window. He did his chores bhefore dayiight, and then went to sleep again BY JENNY WKEN, dear reader, 1 | | ! | | | | | | Answers. Since early American furniture is| 1- A large burrowing marsuplal, na- still in wide favor it appears that our | !ive of Tasmania, which looks some admiration for it is deep-rooted. With | thing like a small bear. some of the Italian, Spanish and| % An Australian wild dog. extreme carly English furniture we have felt | IV destructive to flocks. @ little 1l at ease. We have had to| 3- A Tasmanian marsupial animal make an effort to educate our taste| Which lives in trees, but is awkward | and sluggish. 4. A large seal found in the South Atlantic and in the Antarctic. 5. An raboreal Australian animal, | with membranous attachments to its wings, which enable it to make long. flying leaps from branch to branch. (All these animals are to be seen in the Division of Mammals, New Na- tional Museum.) | not with the early American style. The reason is obvious. It is our “home folks” in furniture design. It was built for and by our own ances- —people with the same ambitions and ideals, the same conceptions of home life and home comforts as our own. Duplicates of the wing chair, light glass lamp in almost Modern drainage and excellent water supplies have heen installed in cities of Northern Malaya shown here can be found (Copsright. 1927.) “The Perfect Flour for All Purposes” Now’s when you will appreciate the convenience and dependa- bility of the Pantry Pals—with all the Christmas baking to be done. Plain Washington Flour bakes anything. Self-rising Washington Flour for Biscuits, Waffles, etc.—ready-for-use. The “Pantry Pals” are: for sale by grocers and delicatessens in all sizes from 2-Ib. sacks up. You'll find the 12- Ib. and 1b. sacks more economical. Wilkins-Rogers Milling Co. Washington, D. C. Thz’s 1101 knows the limits of correct ironing heat Connect the cord 'ofxc the Automatic and it§ ¢ heats up quickly. As soon as it reaches the highest good iraning temperature, the fa- mous million dollar Spencer Thermostat turns off the current. When. the iron cools to the lowest good ironing temperature, the thermostat turns -, OR again. gy . 41 Its Automatic You can devote all your attention to the actual ironing, for this iron stays within the limits of correct iron- ing heat without any assistance from you. There’s no waiting for it to heat or cool. Notimeneed be spent attachingor detaching Because hundreds of thou- sands of women are using this Automatic today, it can be sold for only $7.75. The nearest Westinghouse dealer will gladly show it to you. WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC & MANUFACTURING CO. Hibbs Building, Washington, D. C. Phone — Main 8843 GET A Westinghouse Automatic Iron Cormec? ironing temperaturs —akoays!