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WOMAN'S PAGE." The Sidewalks BY THORNTON FISHER. It is universally accepted that knowledge is power except in weight- lfting contests and even then it has its advantages. The promiscuous accumulation ~ of disconnected facts and figures. how: ever, unless the appertain to one's business, serve no particularly useful purpose, save the pleasure they give the possessor, who may be able to de- cide, in a pinch or | in _an argument. | that Sir Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy was an Indian philanthro- pist who was born in Bombay in 1783, founded hospitals and schools. and died in 1859. Sir Jamsetier, who actually lived. was a man of excellent character and mo- tives, but why one should carry the date of his birth and death in his head is inexplicable. Statistics, though ordinarily dull to the uninterested, are necessary in modern business. Without the) we would be, as the boys say, “sunk.” but the mere memorizing of irrelevant facts and figures, unless one is secking men- tal gymnastics, may prove to be an obstruction to those who practice it overtime. | A Washington man writes: “Do you know that you actually work 0 hours or four months a vear: that vou sleep four months and recreate four months® Do vou know that your morn- ing bath requires two weeks of the year and the time yvou spend in shaving occupies two days and four hours? And if you do know this, what dif- ference does it make and who cares? “I had the pleasure (?) of listening to this line from a man recently, the champion fact coliector of the world. and thought you might be interested. | In the course of three hours I learned | from him that four tons of sugar are made from one acre on the Sandwich Islands: the Dutch invented the thim- Ble in 1690; boots were invented by the Carians: down to the reign of Elizabeth most houses had no chim- neys: the Orloff is one of the largest diamonds in the world: Marquis Hiro- bumi Ito was born in 1841 and was assassinated in Korea in 1909; Fried- rich Froebel, the founder of the kinder- en system. was born in 1782 and died in 1852; Westphalia produces iron. e { TWE purew | INVENTED T™HE THIMBLE W 1690 | Rl WHO of Washington BY DICK Registered U, information or that a person Is not justified in absorbing it. but when one can glean all of it from reference | books, why fill the head up with it? | Should we not acquire more knowledge of our business or profession rather | than cram our minds with extraneous matter which can scarcely be of service to us?" What is the reader's opinfon? e A local minister says that he under- stands_that aviators can no longer fiy over Scotland, becausz there are so many air pockets. N | Showmanship is not confined to the | human family by any means. Many| animals possess it. The most adroit “gold digrers” extant are the so-called | dumb beasts. who are so stupid that | they can filch delectable morsels from human friends by sitting up and beg- ging. They are consclous that this! irresistible posture will invariably appeal to the liberality of the onlooker. Trick stage ponies are more concerned | about the sugar they will receive for the performance of their stunts than in the ringing applause of the spectators. | - e o Despite the signs in_ the Zoologieal | 11k, J0"N " eambag was favorcd Park admonishing the visitors not to fp.th 10, 325° @ 5 5 feed the animals, the temptation to|™ do so has caused several of the “in- mates” to develop a line of iricks cal- culated to extract the last peanut from the bag. One | of the smartest | creatures is a cor- pulent brown bear, | who sits on his broad haunch and offers his open | In the Nancy Page Club the program { mouth as a target | had come back to the discussion of for peanuts. Adults, | early American homes. The last meet- as well as children, | ing had taken up some of the_ earliest crowd about the | floor coverings and bed quilts.” Now the inclosure, aiming | B and throwing mor- | sels at the target. | Some of them hit | the bull's-eye. The peanuts thrown by the less accurate tossers fall inside the cage and these are saved for later consumption. The instant a newcomer saunters up M‘f fore the bars, the wily “gold-digging" bear presents his extended jaws. If | this isn't showmanship, what ‘is? ok ox % Naney Page Club Studies Gambrel Roofs A well-known _trainer of athletes, | noted more for his ability to develop | Adbvice to a Doormat Wife Who Hasn’t Kept Step With Her Go-Getter Hushand—Miss Seventeen “At the Cross-Roads of Life.” EAR DOROTHY DIX: I have a friend who married. About five years after | marriage her husband decided to study a profession. They had one child | at the time, a baby about a year old. In order to live as cheaply as possible while | | the husband was studying his profession they moved to a suburb and lived in the | poorest way. The husband had a part-time job and went to college at night, and | | to help him the wife eliminated herself as much as possible. She made no | | demands upon him, supplied him with good food and kept the baby out of his | way so that he could study when he was at home. | This went on for five years. The husband was graduated In his profession, | | got a good position that also kept him away from home at night, and for nine | years my friend was left alone with her child, her husband not even coming home for dinner, except occasionally on Sundays. More years have gone by. | The husband has different friends, different irterests, a different life from his wife, and when she appeals to him for companionship he tells her that he doesn't | see what she has to complain of, that he supports her. She has broken down | under the loneliness of it all and doesn't know what to do. Personally, I would leave him so quickly it would make his head swim, but women do not all seem able | to do this kind of thing. Shail I advise her to take her things and quit? | A WORRIED FRIEND. Answer: Tt is very casy to tell a woman situated like your friend that she should leave such an unappreciative and ungrateful husband, but where would she go? What home would she have if she left his home? How would she live? | Very often the woman who leaves an unhappy home jumps out of the frying | pan into the fire. } cover her and fire to warm her and food to e: She may have wept upon her | pillow many a night, but at least she had a p:llow on which to sleep. She may have had a neglectful husband, but he paid the bills. These may seem sordid considerations to a wife smarting under the injustice of her husband's treatment of her or with her pride lacerated with the knowledge of his philanderings or her heart broken by his coldness, but we have to consider | our bodily wants as well as our spiritual ones. Indeed, the needs of our bodies press on us more heavily than do the needs of our souls, and to the woman who | is hungry and cold and homeless it seems a small matter whether her husband | comes home to dinner or not. The main thing to her is having dinner herself. ‘ * And under Heaven there is no other human creature so pitiful as the middle- aged divorced woman who finds out that her decree absolute has given her only the right to hustle out and support herself. She is broken in spirit, and generally broken in health. She has no trade or profession by which she can make money, and there i1s no place in the world for her. | So I think you will be wise if you consider a long time hefore you advise | your friend to leave her husband and home. It seems to me that under the circumstances it would be far better for her to bear the ills she has than to fly | to those she knows not of. ! Certainly your friend's husband has been an ingrate, but to a large extent | she has brought her misfortunes upon her own head. Husbands are like all the | rest of the world. They take us at our own valuation, and if we make doormats | of ourselves for them to walk over and kick around, they will do it. Every woman's husband treats her exactly as she demands. If she demands certain things of him, she gets them. Otherwise, not. If she makes a slave of | herself for him, he accepts her services as no more than his due. If she him to swear at her, he curses her. If she lets him spend all the money on him- self, she goes shabby. But If she demands to be treated with respect, he is polite | to her. 1If she calls for a 50-50 divide of the family earnings, she gets it. There | s no mystery in why some wives are treated differently from others. It is the | wife who determines her husband’s attitude toward her. | The STYLE POST is the marker on the road to being smart. Handknit. As early as last Fall women with a genius for fashion predicting were fore- telling the coming popularity of hand- She may not have had an iceal home, but she had a roof to | knit sweaters and not a few women of | discriminating taste were choosing them among the things they bought in Paris to bring home for Winter andI Spring. Their popularity can now definitely he called a trend. In design they are usually modernistically geometrical— triangles, diamonds, stairsteps in vari- ous arrangements forming the motifs. | Everyday Law Cases May Agent Employ Subagents Withont Ezpress Consent of Principal? BY TIII‘;—GI NSELLOR, The Texas Products Co. appointed Gilbert Camp as their agent for the State of Montana. Camp found the proposition an attractive one, for the | ‘Texas products met with general favor {in the city in which he opened offices. Realizing that he could not cover the State alone, Camp employed three sub- agents to assist him. Two months later, permits Camp discovered that one of his sub- | agents had collected about $1,000 from | customers and had failed to account for the money. Camp_immediately reported this fact to the Texas Products Co. The com- | pany, on receipt of the report, informed FEATUR BY LOIS 0Oily Hair and Dandruff. Dear Miss Leeds—I am writing to ask your advice on the condition of my | 11-year-old daughter's hair. Only a few days after washing it becomes heavy with oil. The scalp also becomes itchy and there is flaky dandruff. The child scems healthy in every respect. MRS. L. B. on the child’s scalp I would advise you | for at least three months. Massage the | scalp for at least 10 minutes every day. | Brush the hair with 100 strokes daily, | using a clean brush. To keep the brush | clean wash it with hot water and soap every day and rinse it in water to which | a few drops of household ammonia have been added. Once a week give the | head a shampoo treatment. Make your | own shampoo by grating some pure Cas= | tile soap and melting it to a liquid in | | hot water. Add a small ‘pinch of borax |to a cupful of the liquid. Lather the | hair well with this soap, rinse it under a bath spray: lather a second time and | | then rinse out ail of the soap, using | Give the hair a final| warm water. Answer—Before trying any hair tonics | | to give it the following simple treatment | ES.” MILADY BEAUTIFUL LEEDS. lavender. (2) This roughness may due merely to wrong cleansing methods. Try cleansing your skin with cold cream instead of water. Rub a little of the cream into your skin before applying face powder also. Sometimes fallure to rinse off all the soap from the skin or lack of thoroughness in drying it causes roughness. 1If these local treatments | do not remedy the condition, you should consult a physician about My leaflet on “Care of Dry Complexions™ will interest you. Please send a stamp- | ed, self-addressed envelope for it. L LOIS LEEDS. | Thank You—The average weight for | girls 17 years old and 5 feet and 7 inches | tall is between 129 and 133 pounds. It is normal to keep on gaining a little weight each year until you are fully ma- tured. By your thirtieth birthdav you | should be about 142 pounds in weight # your height remains as it is now. LOIS LEEDS. Ba;k Accounts Limited. In France individual deposits in sav- ings banks are limited to 12,000 francs, while for mutual charity societies or trade unions they are limited to 50.000 francs. When an account exceeds thls legal limit the bank informs the depos- itor to withdraw the excess. | | | | | | | | rinse in tepid or cool water. Dry the hair by rubbing it between warmed Turkish towels or dry it in the sun- shine. Keep the linings of the child's | hats clean by changing them once a week. If these simple treatments do not cause a marked improvement, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope for leaflet on “Care of the Hair" that gives tonics for oily hair and dandruff. LOIS LEEDS. . Dry Falling Hair. Dear Miss Leeds—(1) My hair is dry and dull-looking and it falls out terri- biy. Ibrush and massage it daily. How often should it be washed? (2) Can you tell me what causes a rough scurvi- GJE is the benefactor of mankind who makes two grins grow where there was only a grouch before.” —FElhert Hubbard. S If you are in the habit of feeling blue most all the time. or even part of the time. you aren't a user of Wilkins Cof- fee. Wilkins bas the And it is a woman's own dolng if she has no life outside of her home. woman who concentrates her every thought and interest on her husband or children, makes a terrible mistake, because soorier or later they will fail her then she has notiaing left. The husband may be unfaithful to her or he may die. the company filed suit, contending that to bigger and better| The children are sure to get married or go about their own-business, and then |it had never given Camp authority to | she is left desolate if she has let the world go by her. | employ subagents. and. as he had ex- | ceeded his authority, he must bear the So my advice to your friend would be to get her some good clothes and | loss. begin going atound to places of amusement and to take up work in clubs and | Camp claimed. however, that by be- fill her own iife with intere: Perhaps if she did that, she would be more | ing 2ssigned to such a large territory, it ness on my forehead and temples. It comes suddenly every and then disappears as quickly vaseline to ease the pricking sensation. WISPY LOCKS. Answer—(1) The cause of your hair troubles is undoubtedly poor general health. You should have a thorough physical examination by a physician to sec just where the trouble starts. The | Camp that it expected him to pay it the her money embezzled. and | When Camp refused the demand, coal, copper. lead, zinc and salt; Pop- ring stars than for familiarity with | ocateptl Volcano is 17,520 feet high; English or cultured figures of speech, | the Taj Mahal cost $20.000,000 and re- was sitting at lunch with the writer | quired the labor of 20.000 men for 20 and several friends in a hotel. Soft | club moved on yea Harry Collingwood was the pen strains of music floated through the | home: name of W. J. C. Lancaster: M. Olche- | room. which was filled with handsomely Mrs. Gammel was speaking: “I am ¥itz wrote under the name of Jules gowned women and immaculately at-| showing you a picture today of a house Verne: Maxime Gorki was no other tired escorts. One of our group casu- built in 1660 on Cape Cod. You will than Alexel Maximovitch Peshkov and ally remarked about the “atmosphere” notice the roof line, which indicates pleasant faculty of mak- ing life worth while, 8t the age of 39 one may reasonably expect to live 26 years more. I do not mean’ that this is useless BEDTIME STORIE Hive Becomes a Nursery. t girt Be i nr_he it hax The parents’ hearts a Sl e fiied with oy M4 Mother Nature. ‘Whitefoot the Wood Mouse had been right about the bees. There had come 8 very warm day. as will sometimes happen in the middie of Winter. Now, bees are such busy folk that they can- not bear to be idle a moment. So, during the warmest part of this day very many of them had to go outside the hive to see if perchance Spring really had come. They were not very lively, but they were lively enough to have stung to death either Whitefoot or Mrs. Whitefoot had they found them in the hive. But Whitefoot and Mrs. Whiteloot remained quiet, hidden in their nést, and when late in the after- noon the air became cooler the bees all feturned and hung in a great mass in the top of the hive. Then it was safe for Whitefoot and Mrs. Whitefost to #0 out. After that the days were once more @ld and the bees remained quiet. 7 4 of the place. “Yea,” said the trainer.|the original rectangular plan, with lean- “They air't a bit o alr in here. They to built on later. This house is still oughta op=n some of the windows™ | in existence and shows the shallow entry, the stair in front of the central | chimney. The chimney provides outlet | for three fireplaces on the ground floor. “Now, contrast this house with a dif- | ferent roof line. It is called gambrel. It is of continental, not British inspira- BY THORNTON . BURGES: | | Not for all the world would he have told Mrs. Whitefoot that he thought | they were the homeliest bables in the | world, but that is just what he did think. Now, when a home built just for two ! has five added to it, even though they | be tiny, that homs becomes crowded. | ‘Whiiefoot soon felt out of place. Not ( only was he uncomfortably crowded | there but he had the feeling that Mrs. | Whitefoot much preferred his room to his company. He was right about it. t00. She bsgan to hint broadly that | this was no longer a bedroom, but ¢ | nurserv. | “Just as if T didn't know it." mum- bled Whitefoot. “Just as if I dldnt!tjon, and resembles the mansard of know it! I can't step without having Louis XIV. It has two end chimneys, a baby under foot. I think Il move | dormer windows and the stmple, buf back to that little houss in the Old | peautiful proportioned doorway so char- Orchard. There I can at least slee | acteristic of the period in peace.” “This house begins to show the en- S0 Whitefoot moved back to the little | trance of lelsure and less financial house in the apple tree on the vdg | stringency Folks are beginning to live of the Old Orchard. and Mrs. White- | and not exist, as they had to do in the foot didn’t once protest. Mo, sir, she | Mavflower days | didn't once protest. The fact is she Nancy decided that for a house as w25 100 busy to think about Whitefoot. | spacious as this the club refreshments When you have five children—five | had better consist of tea, pound cake | always hungry, growing children—to and wedges of crystalline-clear feed and care for and bring up in the | served citron and ginger. | way they should go there is little time | BaE | to think of others. - { My, how those bables did grow! It served other wasn't long befors they had their eves s 0L il | It wasn't long before each had Tea Time | 2 nice little fur coat. Whitefoot thought | | they were much better looking then. | She have goodies. Write 1o nclosing stamped asking for her deidlet o pre- | interesting to her husband. DOROTHY DIX. DEAH. MISS DIX: I am at the cross-roads of life and do not know which ¥ to turn. .Will you direct me? I am 17 and deeply in love with a young man of 21, who also loves me, but he is poor and will not be able to marry me. for many vears. On the other hand, there is an elderly man of 70 who is very wealthy and wants to marry me. Don't you think that it would be better for me to feather my nest by marrying the old man, who cannot live forever and then marry the young man later on? My young lover says that he will wait for me, and as the old man is a great churchgoer I could see my boy friend often. ‘What do you think? BETTY B. Answer: T never heard of a more dishonorable project. and I think if you carry it through that you will be as unhappy as you deserve to be. Believe me, no marriage which is staked with the money that you get in that way will ever turn out well. There will be a curse upon it. Let me advise you not to marry a man of 0 for his money in the hopes that he will soon die. He isn't old enough. To 17, 70 seems the extreme limit of age, but it isn't in these days of the prolongation of life, and the chances are | that he will live on for 10 or 20 years. I have seen many a girl marry an old man for his money and then have to nurse him and sit by the fire with him until she was old and broken herself. | So, believe me, it docsn't pay. Don't sell your youth. “Don't sell your love and romance for money. There | is nothing but misery for both parti 0 You are {00 young 1o marry, anyway, so wait until your sweetheart can | make enough money toafford a wife, and then marry him. DOROTHY DIX. EAR DOROTHY DIX: My father and mcther died when I was 3 years old and since then my sister and I have been living with our uncle and aunt. I am now 18 and through high school. My uncle and aunt had six children of their own. Some of them went through high school, but none to college. I want to go to college. but my uncle says that he can't afford to send me. the money somehow to send me to college? Answer: Well, for nerve and Ingratitude you certainl, You show no apprectation of all that your generou: INEZ, they have not even given their own children And more than that, yi willing to run them into debt to gratify your desire to go off to c:né-:’rcu \’:5 should be ashamed of yourself. DOROTHY DIX. barren waste. As touch of green would show in the southern portions. for Spring comes early there, because of the benevolent Gulf Stream. And south of Washing- ton, as this continent came into view, WINTER ny PEATTIE. les, the freshening in the marriage of an old man to & young | He is | man and works hard and is 55 years old. but don't you think he ought 1:1":::‘ take the cake, Inez. | uncle and aunt have | done for you, and coolly demand that they should give you advantages whict | England rolled by a i was implied that he had authority to {employ subagents to enable him to | cover the assigned section. ‘The court uvheld Camp’s view of the situation, stating: |7 “If an agent is employed to perform | certain work for a principal. and the work is such that it would be impossible for the agent to do it alone. he may |employ subagents to assist him. His {authority is assumed from the nature of | the agency. (Conrricht. 19781 } | | Bring your weight up to normal for vour age and height. Eat wisely and be sure to avoid constipation. Local treatments for ydur scalp can alleviate but not cure. Give ygur scalp a hot- oil treatment twice a month. followed by a shampoo as described in my leaflet on “Care of the Hair." Every other day b a little of i i the ounc hite zoated lard. on | dram oil of ber your massage: One . two ounces ben- Ive into ! ulwul‘ur‘\nu of mnfn | of the lawns, would make a ba; ‘gro;n llx!ul;l :Iy visible. Sz ‘or the fundamental fact of Spring | | Is the tipping of the Northern Hevmls‘E | phere toward the sun, the lengthening the da: the strengthening of fts precious rays. In this great miracle the round world shares alike, and when the spice bush and hepatica come into bloom | with us, the windflower blooms in Eu- rope, the wild tullp flowers in Asia. . Pork Shoulder Pot Roast. Try out the trimmings of a small | pork” shoulder in & pan suitable for | A pot roast. Remove the cracklings | d all fat but one tablespoonful. Add | two tablespoonfuls of flour and brown slowly. Add one medium-sized onion | sliced. Brown slightly, then add to| two cupfuls of canned tomatoes. Sea- | |son the meat and add to the mixture. | | Cook In a fireless cooker or stmmer on | | the_stove _for_four_hou My Neighbor Says: All boiled vegetables should be drained as soon as tender. If al- lowed to stand undrained after cooking they become soggy. The water drained off may be used for soup stock. If the clothes you wear are looked over each time before they are pat away, brushed, but- tons tightened, ete, your ward- robe cannot help but be neat and in_good condition at all times. If you will keep the oven daor of your gas range open until it is cool after you are through with your baking, instegd of keeping it open after you light it, your oven will not rust. Closing the door after you turn out the flame caures the oven to sweat and consequently rust ; In fact, he began to be proud of them. | | You see. he came over every night to | visit them. But he didn't take any care | of them. He left that to their mother. | 80, not having to care for them. he | didn't worry about them. But Mrs. | Whitefoot did. You see, living in the | hive all the time she was aware that { day by day there was a growing un- Hasy | casiness among the bees and she rad a dreadful Inrdthn s;)mo time when she | wasn't around one of those babies would ®AREN'T THEY DARLINGE?" WHIS- | oo*0. L 10 0¢ OF A MRS, WHITE T, ,;:."s‘(‘p r's d perhaps be stung to Whitefoot and Mrs. Whitefont were out | every night, sleep; ‘during the middie | of the éay. They certainy did enjoy | their home. Yes, sir, they certeinly | did enjoy their home there in that bee- | hive. They were fat with good eating. ! And they didn't lose any of that fat | through worry. You see, there was Bothing 1 worry about. Bo the Winter passed and there were | signs that sweet Mistress Spring would | soon arrive, Whitefoot knew that then | There is a balm that steals across | the airs of these last days of Winter | that can be called by no other name | than Spring in the afr. For though | Spring cannot, astronomically, be ac- | bf | counted truly come until the ides of | | March, or until the Spring equinox. it | is surely stealing up the land. The | | carth has softened and its cold heart | | relented. I like to think of Spring as something | more than balloon men on the street | (why do they not blow horns now as | they did in my childhood days?), or light overcoats, or the cessation of cnll bills. I like to think of Spring nol | as a local thing, but Spring in its world- | wide sense, Spring as it truly Is, the inclining of the earth’s axis toward the South. "If we could stand off from the carth a thousand miles, we would be able to see Spring as a slow green flush, Never dredge steak with salt | stealing northward from the eternal and pepper before cooking as the | | green of the tropics. We should see salt will extract the julces. llhr polar snows glittering at the Pole and belos that a gray and brown and mericas leading & motion picture directors 5] EDWIN CAREWE. reveals * how women e DAILY DIET RECIPE Raw Salad. cabbage, one cup, celery, one cup. Shredded raw spinach. ones cup. Bhredded onion, one tablespoon. Garlic clove, one. & ) T i"e o SBhredded Bhredded they wouid have 1o move. Yes, sir, he | knew that then they would have 1o move. There would be no living in that hive when once the bees were thoroughly awake. He was about 1o suggest 1 Mrs. Whitefoot that they, must be thinking about moving when, | on returning 1o the nest one night, he found a surprise which for the Ume ! being put all theught of moving out of his bhead. Guess what that surprise was. You cannot? Then il tell you. | Whitefoot's nest had become a nursery! | French dressing. one cup. BERVES SIX PORTIONS. Mix well washed and finely shredded vegetables together. Boak garlie clov in Prench dressing about one-half hour Beason vegetables with this and le them stand about 15 minutes before | serving, s they will be well flavored. | DIET NOTE i Recipe extremely valuable because of | 1ts great amount of lime, iron, vitamins A. B and C, and its cellulose. Good in | ¢ GOT damp quick! How often you've put up wi th that, with “or- dinary” salt. Butyou don’t have to. International Salt will never harden or become lumpy. It's the cleanest, purest salt you can buy. Andit'sale Houbigant's Products Here can always look their best HE effectiveness of face powder de- pends very largely upon its shade rather than its color. Asaresultofa study of hundreds of women seeking screen careers and coming to him made up for the street and not for the screen, Mr. Carewe has come to the con- clusion that the use of Houbigant face powders, because of the marvelous Hou! —and that is the property of endowing the skin with a natural beauty —a sort of Instre that is free from the appearance of being made up and yet, while concealing what should be hidden, brings out and in- creases all the natural charm.™ Houbigant face powder is incomparably soft and adherent. Tt comes in 6 shades all delightfully fragranced with the smart FDWIN CAREWE, fomoss Unioed 4rtnsin Prociucor-ihe gant shades, will make any woman more attractive, sinca as, he say “The Houbigant shades of the various colorsin which face powdersare made seem to have a virtue exclusive to themselves [laxative diet. Good in bloodmaking Advertised on whispered | diet. Could be eaten by children ot 10 | | and over. Can bs eaten by adults of | OFf covirse, Wiitefoot sald they were | average and under weight and by those Bit, down in his heart, he had i | wishing 1o reduce i non-fattening ofl | admit that ne would have liked them |18 used In the dressing much better had they had their eyes | o —————— open and had they had pretty litle | fur ooets inswead of no coats 8t all Houbigant odeurs, At $1.50 and T30 the box. For purse use in the new double compact, $2.30, And incidentally, Quelques FleursSkin Lotion is quite the most perfect powder base. + oz.—$1. ways free-running! 24-ounce pack- age for five cents. At your grocer's, ik Dwore Dol K and many aihes aNe aenn Sale at Lansburgh & Bro. 7th TO 8th TO E Famous for Quality Since 1860, Franklin 7400 HOUBIGANT tace powder in the nRew size 75¢ Madiguer e oo wav N Aadd va tha A DICGAN PARILS NORILITY Creates m me a sl v fear : I'll never live — it takes so long To get myself s.ssembled E ADD Cuticura Treatment For Dandruff Part 1he hairand gently rub in Cutleurs Ointment u o w, irested. Let the o im0 wilh e D warm water, (U not vl Sosp on the hair.) Rinse thoroughly. A light spgi cation of Cuticura Ointment 10 e scalp between &hampoos is often benefic Banp e Ointament 2 and Ui Jaicum the sretywhers e Vo Ad o your new Spring Frocks R T e B Tatton Covaring, Ko oni Neryien Fow Prices RUNSCHWIG" E St. Cor. 8th Formerly Oppenheimer's e P PARFUMEUR TO THE OF THREE CENTURIES