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WOMAN'S PAGE. Rigid Dress Schedule Is Passing BY MARY The old timeschart for dressing is n&lgg giving way to one that is de- ci y different, and under the cir- cumstances the habit of speaking of clothes for morning. afternoon and eve- ning is rather out of date. The idea once was that & woman of fashion dressed three times a day. In the ENOWN AS A “COCKTAIL COAT,” SHORT TRANSPARENT AND WHITE CHIFFON FROCK. she wore clothes appropriate | morning for the street, for shopping or for ::fll, which if she Junched informally Jeft on until midafternoon. Then put on a more elaborate afternoon | she dress, for bridge, garden parties, recep- BEAUTY CHATS Choice of Powders. | Choose your face powder and your | gouge with the greatest care, for the| whole success of your appearance may | depend upon your choice. You know | the importance of color in your clothes —well, then, consider how much more | fmportant is color in your face! | As & choice, use either very light or’ very dark der—this because you | "ot to establish and emphasize & type. You are pale bionde, or you are richly brunette. Unless your skin s extremely pale and clear, do not use a dead white der. Never use a pale pink unless it s yellowish pink. What few women | know is that the skin has a good deal of | :uaw in it. therefore “cream” powder | for pale skins, and blonde types, “nat- ural” for medium, and dark “rachel” or | *ocher” for the real brunette. These | basic yellowish powders have pink in| them, often. To match your skin properly, .it may | be necessary to buy one or two shades and mix them. And let me give you| this tip. when you are dressing for thei evening Use two powders. One, which ordi-| narily matches your skin. Another. al darker shade, fot around the eyes, chiefly | over the lids and out toward the tem- | f’.es, You can use both and blend | hem on your skin 0 no one will guess EVERYDAY PSYCHOLOGY BY DR. JESSE Your Dreams. | “To sleep! Perchance to dream!* Aye, | there’s the rub.” The big rub from the standpoint of everyday psychology is not the fact that you dream, but the fact that you do not understand what your dreams are made of And another rub is the question of how this dream stuff comes to consciousness in the form called dreams. You must, first of all, under- stand that you are consclous when you sre dreaming. Otherwise you could mever know anything about your dreams. To take up the first rub. You dream sbout the things you don't like !0 think sbout when you are awake. You re- press painful thoughts, but they break out at night when the mind is off its guard Now, Dream sciousness ‘What is added? dream stuff takes on. WHY WE DO BY MEHRAN to take up the second rub. consciousness s waking con- ith something added to it Just the form that the It 15 all dressed ' y one knows what it is 10 be sorry, to regret doing something, wish- ing that we had done something eise Some people would explain this fact by saying that it s conscience that is troubling the person who is sorry and segretful. And by consclence they would mean some sort of inner voice which condemns you for violating a moral law and keeps teiling you over and over ageln that you have acted wron| that you should not have done 80, that yo | be punished for your gct. This makes one feel blue and downhearted Whatever views we lake of conscience the fsct remaips that all normal people feel & sense of guilt and shame in doing what they know 1o he wrong f But it is not in connection with moral questions alone that we experience re- Great and are sorry. This happens every time we realize that we have made & mistake of some mrl—-m)urlnf. an- other person, making & foolish cholce getting cheated, or feeling cheap in some way n suffering a loss when we might have done better Some of us are inclined lo overdo this just as some are inclined not to fee] regret strongly enough Those wiw sufler from o sensitive a nature In this vespect are manifestly unfair to themselves As 8 man grows older he usually gets more mellow and has a bronder View of things which may bring regret concerning his earlier conduct ne eommon regret is the lack of apprecia- tion we have for our parents while they are alive, We do not realize at Qlu time that we are not doing all we SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. WASHINGTON, D. Ought Widower Over 50 to Marry Again? C., Says Yes, If He Can Content Himaself With a_Wife His Own Age. MONDAY, JULY 30, 1928. WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Rogistered U. S Patent Offies. FEATURES. | sales at their dull season of the year. |yet attained your full strength: when MARSHALL. tions or other afternoon affairs and after that—any time after 8 o'clock lhv‘ appeared in evening dress. { suppose most women do try to get shopping and errands done before | luncheon and so usually the street cos- | tume is worn in the morning but many | women carry their sports activities on through the day and sports frocks real or of the semi-sports sort are really just as much afternoon frocks as they are | | morning. | And dressing for afternoon in the | old-fashioned way is no more. If you have worn_ sporis clothes until threc| or four and then intend to drop in at| the country club or a friend's house for {4 | the tea hour at five the chances are that you wiil wear something that you | may keep on during dinner time-—prob- | ably until you retire. Certainly you won't bother to don an afternoon frock | only to have to change for an evening | dress shortly after six. Hence the im- portance of these light attractive frocks that one may wear in the late after- noon and for daylight dining. Besides these frocks there are the formal eve- ning gowns—gowns to be worn after | nine, gowns which women don't bother | to wear at all unless there is some im- portant late evening engagement | For the usual less formal wear there | are frocks of the sleeveless sort without extremely low neck, in_colors | that are becoming both in daylight and under artificial light. To make these appropriate for afternoon and for | | restaurant wear there are jacquettes or | cocktail coats made of chiffon and | usually quite simple. An evening frock | of vellow chiffon has a straight little | jacket of the yellow chiffon_ studded | with diamante. Imntkl‘xxr‘r j:l‘g‘ufl":n r:.;-\ t s a flaring skirt of black chif- (u:‘;’}v‘rt\ :nh a';iglmred silk bodice em- ! Nancy Page was talking earnestly on bellished with silver embroidery and | one of her favorite topics—the right with it a stmple transpartent bIack | e in the right place. She and Mrs. k ing at the front to show g T ehlorul bodice Carlisle Hunt were discussing Summer cottages. “I don’t believe in having shack man- ners just because one stays in a Sum- Billv's daddy gived me an’ Tommy a ride in the rumple seat ob his car They picked a berry good name fer 'at | seat al 1 wight (Conyright, 1928.) NANCY PAGE Summer Accessories Fit in Summer Cottages BY FLORFNCE LA GANKE. This week’s help consists of sketch and working directions for & new| cubistic sort of hat trimming. that you | 2 e i S caxily niilke ‘with ‘bits af -velvet or| mer shack® Nancy's voioe Went ob. O Al R siadly send it to you an | “Folks seem to think they can dispens TIDBOR of stamped, self-addressed en- | With all the niceties just because the velope. | are not living in a city home. I don't 3 | believe in taking one's best damask My Neighbor Says: To prevent windows sticking the thing to remember is that for two or three days after the frames are painted each window should be opened and run up and down two or three times a day. Un- Jess this is done the windows are almost certain to stick. To remove brown marks from china put the articles in a sauce- pan with cold water and a lump of soda. Put the pan on the stove and let it boil for 15 min- utes. Then rinse the china well and you will find that the marks have disappeared. Always rub with the grain when polishing furniture. The furni- ture will then polish more quickly. Honey should be kept in the dark. If exposed to the light it will granulate. | lieve that napkins are just as essential | there as anywhere else. Now there are | paper napkins—" “Don’t tell me that you, Nancy Lee | Page. are going to advocate paper nap- | kins,” broke in Mrs. Hunt. “Yes, I am. Because there are some | of the softest, lovellest, quaintest nap- | kins now on sale in the shops. They come in soft white with lavender or that actually your skin around the eyes | pink or vellow flowers sprinkled over is a trifie darker than the rest of the them. I saw some in plalds, too. Then face. | there are oblong table doilies of heavier | What happens? Well, the depth of | coloring of the powder lends luster and | | depth to the eyes. Even though the | shading is so slight as to be nearly in- visible, still, it has its effect. 1f you| are clever, you can use some quite dark | { powder. or the make-up that comes spe- 3 { cially for the eyelids, to heighten this| | luster. But two face powders will do‘ > very well, Rl | D. S—Any fine ofl soap is suitable | for the complexion, and these are not n jy costly. Many of them may | be bought as low as five cents a cake, if | NADKINV « | | bought when the shops have special paper which fit in beautifully. I can | see no reason for objecting to their BY EDNA KENT FORBES Mrs. L. H—Massage your face every| night with a nourishing cream to fill out the hollows. You probably have not | you do your face will be as plump as formerly. The splitting of the skin on your use. thumbs Shows that the skin over your ‘And then, too, I'd use clear glass containers for flowers. And the flowers | cut | | | | napkins to the cottage, but I do be- | IDdrothyDix! Incapable of Living Alone, Nor Can He Play Second Fiddle to His Children After Bossing Them So Long. letters from widowers who are in the 50s and the 60s, Jonely since their wives died and that they miss 1 think about a man marrying so late in life. I strongly advise them to go to it. It is eruelty to dumb animals to turn 'w‘u"r‘\‘mn.ll wh‘n‘hns been thoroughly house-broken and domesticated and had all 'of his original wild instincts trained out of him by 30 of more years of | matrimony, Toose on a wilderness of hotels and clubs and boarding houses. He is Just as forlorn and lost and incapable of taking care of himself as a canary bird would be in a primeval forest. l GET a great many telling me that they are very their homes, and asking me what Necessity has taught him how to shift for himself and how to make himself comfortable. but the widower is accustomed to having his wife take care of him and look out for his creature comforts. Therefore, he is helpless alone. He can't remember to send out the laundry. He doesn't know how to order his meals and loathes restaurant cooking. anyway And it's the abomination of desolation to him to go back, when the day’s work | is done, to a silent, lonely, unlighted room curlous things to people, and whether a man has been married it unfits him for the single life. He needs a | to quarrel with. He wants a home, if only to | ‘With a bachelor it is different. Matrimony does happily or unhappily wife, if only to have some one have a place to grouch in. o live with his children does not settle the elderly widower's | a happy arrangement, for either party. The man who has been at the head of his own establishment is never satisfied to play second fiddle in some one else’s house. To save his life he cannot keep from interfering and trying to boss things, for every father feels that he has & perfect right to | make his children obey him so long as he lives. And if he has any sensitiveness | whatever, he feels continually that he is a little in the way, always the third party who is de trop and that his children would be happier without his presence. | e e Going t | problem, for that is never gO 1 think that the elderly widower is wise when he marries and obtains for I himself the comfort and freedom of his own home and company for the last | long lap of the journey of life, when we need companionship more than we do | | at any other period. For the young can go out and hunt up pleasure and | society, but the old must find them at their own firesides. | | Lot | Romantic love is not, of course, for those in whose veins the blood is slow | and sluggish and cold, and who have lost their imagination with their hatr: | but they are still capable of a beautiful and tender friendship and comradeship. And that is what all marriage settles down to in its last analysis, if it is a happy | | and satisfactory marriage. | ! But one warning I would give these gray-headed and bald-headed sheiks. | | and that is to marry in their own age class, to pick out a contemporary for | |a wife. On this hangs their every chance of happiness, yet many men, otherwise | shrewd and intelligent, ignore it. On the prineiple that we all prefer luxuries | to neccssities, they suceumb to the allure of youth and beauty and marry girls | 1 ¥nlllmu enough to be their daughters or granddaughters. And disaster inevitably | | follows. | The young wife has nothing in common with her elderly husband.. She | is not interested in anything that interests him. She does not know anything | that he knows, She has not the same point of view or the same traditions or memories. She does not want to do the things that he wants to do. | He has married to get a homekeeping wife who will cheer his loneliness The last thing in the world the young wife desires is to be a fireside companion | His notion of a pleasant evening is to spend it toasting his rheumatism by the radiator. Her idea of enjoyment is an evening spent in rushing from dinner to . the theater and from theater to night club. She has no aching joints that need | coddling. On the contrary, she wants to shake them in the Charleston. ! She sold herself to the old man and she is determined to collect the price So the old husband of the young wife is either left alone or else he toddles along and sits on the sidelines while wife dances with boys of her own age, his only | privilege being that of paying the e.:\ec.k. T | NOTHER reason why it is so all-important for an elderly man to marry his | contemporary is because as we grow older we like more and more to indulge | in reminiscences of the past, and there is no stronger tie than that which binds us to those to whom we can say: “Do you remember?” | | The thing that makes it hard for us to sustain a conversation with the | young is that we have no memories in common. We cannot talk to them about ihe Rutherford B. Hayes administration or the wonders of the World Fair at Chicago or discuss with them actors and singers and race horses and famous partfes that they know as little of and are as little interested In as if they were ovents and personages of a pre-historic period. But with a companion of our own age we can gossip endlessly about the Mauve Decade, because we both were part of it. It is especially important now that we should marry our contemporaries, | because the gulf between youth and age was never so great and unbridgeable | as at the present moment. The ideas, the moral point of view, the theories of Iife of the youth of today differ from those of the elderly as knee-length skirts | and rolled stockings differ from trains and panniers and chignons, as oxford | bags differ from skin-tight pants, as automobiles differ from side-bar buggies | Therefore, it is inevitable that this conflict of opinion about what is right, | about what is decent and modest, about what is good taste, is bound to bring ! about eternal confiict and argument in the family circle and no sane man looks forward to spending his last days in a hot debate with a wife who is younger'| ———————————————"._ and who has more fight in her than he has left in him. He wants peace and some one to agree with his theorfes, some one who thinks as he does. and he can only get this by marrying a woman who was brought up in the same tradition as he was. Marry if you want to, but And so 1 say again to the elderly widower: DOROTHY DIX. marry one of your contemporaries. . (Copyright, 1028, MILADY BEAUTIFUL | the Nation while seated under an old | tree in front of the Willard Hotel? When It Thunders. Therd is a certain fearsome dignity about a thunderstorm that awes the heart of childhood at its bravest. To some children it brings a wild terror that resolves itself into hysterics, shiv- ering fits, collapse. What is to be done about {t? Every Summer has its thunder and lightning, black clouds that are pierced through with swift lightning and rudden winds that whistle and shout and roar and make havoc among the hills and gardens Nature in action is heroic and child- hood is very timid in its presence. The first thing to do is to preserve your own poise. Behave as though thunder storms were nothing unusual Point out the beauty of the great piles of purple cloud. Remind the children how much good the rain and the wind do; how refreshing the air will be when the storm passes. Courage begets courage Prepare for tha storm when you see it rising. close the windows and fasten loose shutters and doors. Take in any fur- niture that is likely to be spoiled Rescue the tiny chickens and make all safe within and without the house. Seat yourself comfortably at a distance | from the windows and make sure you are not sitting in a draft. Then find some occupation for the children. Singing is a good way to change the thought from fear to security. A gond jolly song will bring happiness to most | children.” A quiet game is good. It is not wise to wash dishes or take baths MENU FOR A DAY. } JABBY When statesmen discussed affairs of BREAKFAST. Raspberries Cereal with Cream Corned Beef Hash Coffee Gems CofTee LUNCHEON Sardines Potato Salad Hot Biscuit Spice Cake Iced Tea DINNER. Baked Ham Boileq Potatoes Spinach Lettuce with Russian Dressing Frozen Peaches Coffee COFFEE GEMS. Two cups flour, one-half tea- spoon salt, three level teaspoons baking powder. Beat one egg lightly, add to one cup coffee and stir flour into it. If too stiff add little milk or water. It should be more like stiff drop batter than dough and not thin enough to pour. Bake 20 minutes. SPICE CAKE. Cream one cup butter, gradual- Iy beat in two cups sugar, then add beaten yolks four eggs and beat steadily three minutes. Sift three and a half cups sifted flour with four teaspoons baking pow- der, two teaspoons cinnamon, one teaspoon each mace and cloves and one-fourth teaspoon grated nutmeg. and add to first mixture alternately with one cup milk. Fold in stiffly beaten whites, turn into buttered tube pan. bake in moderate oven and ice when conl “More humans are leading a 1if> than there are dogs.” (Copyrisht. 13 FROZEN PEACHES. Four cyps crushed peachr two cups' sugar, one teaspoon lemon juice. Ice and salt. Wasii and pare peaches, put skins on in two cups cold water, boil 20 min- utes, mash and strain: add sugar to peach juice and boil three minutes. When cold add crush- ed peaches and lemon juice; put into freezer. pack with ice and salt and frecze, THE R a) T ELFAND'S Have the children help you | If you ever Dustributors « Washington. D. C BUTT-R-NAISE whole body should be more active. Oils and creams will help some meantime, but do all you can to hasten your com- plete recovery. Sleeping outdoors it possible, outings, and plenty of nour- | ishing food that does not tax digestion, would not be roses or orchids, either, but field ones, like daisies and Queen ! Anne’s lace. If you've ever seen a table set with green and white paper doflies and napkins and a clear glass vase with white Queen Anne’s lace with its BY LOIS Hints on Keeping Cool. LEEDS. Summer is to use plenty of water both | dreams are repressed thoughts dressed | | dream thoughts are vivid enough to be | recalled when you awake. will help much. [ green leaves—well, T repeat, if you ever have seen that, vou will be converted to simple beauty in simple places.” With a table ret like that what will go %o well as A salad? Write to Nancy Page. care of this paper, inclosing & stamped. sel | dressed_envelope and asking for her sala leaflet No. 2. W. SPROWLS. (Copyright, 1928.) THE DAILY HOROSCOPE Tuesday, July 31. up in gorgeous gowns. It looks quite different from what it did in waking consclousness, So dreams are said to| be composed of symbols or signs of | something painful, even terrifying. Your | mind could not, for a moment, look the real dream stuff in the (lc]e, and at the same time allow you to sleep. n- ever the symbolsytoo closely resemble| Tomorrow s a day in which the what they stand for you are awakened. | planetary government 1is stimulating Then you say you have had & nighi- | and helpful, according o astrology. o it 1s now an accepted fact that | Benefic aspects dominate. | Whatever 1 constructive and pro- | "Dv": . form that will disguise their | quctive should benefit by this sway. ugliness Perchanice to dresm!” | which makes for ambitious enterprises. | “To sleep! whole | Great engineering and building Shakespeare didn't know the Kml-] truth about dreams. If living today, he | ects are forecast and there will be developed nmarvelously the new archi- would have said, “To llreg:! Certainly to dream!" No psychologist today | tecture which distinguishes America. doubts that you dream every moment Bridges as well as buildings of tre- mendous size will be bullt and great during sleep. Only a part of your| stretches of water will be spanned, as- trologers foretell. Under this sway health is to become a national concern, and public organi- zations to protect the Nation will ex- pand, it is predicted. All the seers agree that there is to {be a type of beauty developed in the United States which will surpass all | that has been worshiped in the past. Spiritual as well as physical develop- | | ment is to be sought, and super-men can 1o show our love and appreciation. |and super-women produced, if the But after they are taken from us and | giars are rightly read. we cannot possibly make amends. We | Mexico again is subject to a plane- can think up any number of nice |iary influence that bodes ill for early things we might have done for them. | Autumn, There may be uprising among (Copyrieht. 19281 the people, but there is a forecast of progress and prosperity Again a substitute for gasoline 15 foretold, and it will serve as a practical fuel, it 1s predicted. Mars, elevated in the Autumn quar- ter, 15 held to presage for Europe many | no'\: war dangers, plots n‘r‘;d intrigues. or " " H ew dances and new ideas in enter- | Words often misused: Do not %Y. | 4ining “will be introduced in the ! Instead of me (or my) remaining I| Autumn, the seers prognosticate, as a | went home” Bay, “Instead of remain- | preliminary for a social season of mag- | ing 1 went home.” | nificence, 2 | : 7 Hon [ " Persons whose birth date it s have | Mten mispronounced: HAandsome. | yne augury of journeys and letters of Pronounce han-sum; the d is silent, |moment in the coming year Often misspelled: Accese; two ¢'s and | Children born,on that date probably i [ il be ‘daring ‘and selt-reliant, | The el ') L e 8 Bynonyms: _(ntelligible | Sinsla i 8 D WERO obvious, apparent, explicit, manifest, | lucld, clear, | success of llving | "word study: “Use n word three times | Rilsedloisg i | and it is yours” Let us increase our | o a\mllu:!v by mastering one word each Casserole of Crab Me: ay. Today’s word: Discursive; passing | or nm};m} His ‘xrun:' misfortune | pushrooms if liked, all of which have | was s discursive intellect, | been finely chopped in a little butter. d To this add a cupful of thick cream { Bulurfly Salad sauce seasoned with a dash of salt N o and pepper, & generous amount of Cut_one slice of canned pineapple | papriks, and one teaspoonful of Wor- hrough the center. Place it in a lettuce | cestershire sauce. Add Lo this a me- leaf. placing the curved sides together, | dium-sized can of crab meat, pour into with & Fn—u of asparagus in hetween to | a casserole, and sprinkle the top lightly form the body of the butterfly, Use| with grated American cheese, paprika olives and pimentos cut in small bits to | and dots of butter. Bake in & hot oven make the dots on the wini Use thin | for 15 minutes, and serve hot on | slices of pimentos for the feelers. Make | rounds of toast, This makes a deli- (Copyright, 1028.) WHAT W K. THOMSON, Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. '8 1928, within and without. Six glassfuls of Those of us who cannot escape Sum- water daily is the requirement usually. | mer's heat by flight to cooler regions learn to be resourceful in finding ways| Most of us drink much less. We may 10 keep comfortable, The obvious:first also get water in succulent vegetables step in adjusting ourselves to rising | like lettuce and tomatoes. Most fruits, temperature is to don Summer apparel, | are largely composed of water. A fruit- modify our diet and bathe more fre-| fast over a hot week end will prove very quently. refreshing. This sort of fast is just The Summer wardrobe should be| what its name implies. The fruit-faster based on cool underthings. The coolest | may eat a cantaloupe or two peaches materials out of which they can be | for breakfast. For lunch she may have | woven are cotton goods or linen. Knitted | a fruit cocktail comprised of sliced fabrics are always hotter than woven |oranges, grapefruit, pineapple and | ones because they do not permit eva- | cherries, The third meal of the day | poration of sweat as readily as the may be a salad of apples, dates, ralsins | Iatter do. Although glove silk and |and bananas. Of course, water should | rayon make beautiful undergarments be drunk during the fast. Such a diet | they are not as cool for warm weather | is not sufficiently balanced to be used as a fairly loose weave of cotton. There | daily and is not suitable for growing | are voiles and dainty cross barred ef-| young folks. | focts in cotton that come in hues as| Daily cool and tepid baths are needed | dainty as the siiks, though not perhaps | in Summertime to wash away sweat | in such an amazing variety of shade.|{ and body odors. The cleansing bath | For the price of one silk garment one | comes conveniently at bedtime. Early | may buy several cotton ones. morning is a good time for the cool | Not only what we put on our bodies | bath that helps us start the day with but what we put into them helps us to | a fresh feeling. keep cool. The Summertime diet should | ________(Copyright. 1938) include plenty of raw fruit and vege- | S T tables. Less meat, sugar and starch is needed at this season of the year than in cold weather because these foods are heating. In choosing cooling beverages and desserts in Summer we should remember that no matter how cold they are to the touch they are really heating if they contain much sugar or cream. Iced chocolate, frozen custards and ice cream are not as sult- able hot weather desserts as frult sherbets or water ices that are sweet- ened very little. One of the secrets of keeping cool in MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. drink coffee and .r/eep ReAL coffee too! Kaffee Hag is the finest coffee — minus 97% of the caffeine. But it's so cheering and bracing you could never tell it! All the quick coffee “kick” remains. It has nev:> come from caffeine anyhow — but from heat and aromatic oils. Caffeine stimulation doesn’t even come until two hours after drinking. Thus you don't notice its absence at meal-time. But it may keep you awake hours afterwards, Try Kaffee Hag—the coffee that lets you sleep. At gracers. Full pound— 16 oz.—inevery can. Ground or in the bean. Garden Frook. One mother says For the young lady of six or so who works in fhe garden, I have made a charming little garden dress to wear in hot weather. It is & sl less slip-over dress of blue muslin with a wide, boat- shaped neck, and s held in place by narrow strips of cratonne over the ching two large Jjoflklu mother could make Not a substitute — | cheese balls serve with the salad, | clous luncheon dish, and may be pre- IThu will make a very attractive but-'pared in the morning and set aside terfly, ‘ until time to bake it. A\%hnut a pattern. It B but REAL COFFEE—wminus caffeine during thunder storms, but there are many useful and absorbing tasks that may be done. Do not pull down the shades and darken the house. That sets the stage for screams of fear at every thunder | clap. Allow nobody to hide his head | under a pillow, or go down cellar to | hide in a dark closet, or go to bed in | sheer terror. Hold the children in a | group with some good story, some good songs, some pleasant occu them something to think about they will lose their dread of tI It is not wise to keep saying, “Now don’t be afraid. It won't hurt you.” If you say anything about the storm | make it a positive statement about the beauty and the service of it and ignore the fearsome side. Hold your own thought bravely to the task in hand, and the children will follow you. If you happen to have a child who grows pale at the first siy of a thunder shower be very gentle. Keep the child close to you and let him feel your courage and faith and security. Soothe his fear by your attitude rather than your speech It helps some children to know the scientific facts about the storm. It helps some to watch it as it comes and goes. It helps all of them to be husy and serene as possible. | t. 1928 Mr Pairl will give personal attenti; inquiries from parents and school ‘,Ele’;’ln on’ the cars and development of ehildren Write him e of this paper. enclosing for teply. Turnovers. Roll some rich pastry into a thin { sheet and cut it in three-inch circles. | Place in the center of each circle two tablespoonfuls of the following miz- ture: Three-fourths cupful of seeded raisins, one-fourth cupful of shredded citron, the grated rind and juice of one lemon and three-fourths cupful of sugar. Turn the pastry over into neat half circles and erimp the edges of the crust tagether with the tines of a fork dipped in flour. Place in a greased pan, brush over with beaten egg mixed with a little cold water and dust lightly with sugar. ankr in a hot oven until crisp and rown. Potato Souffle. Select four large potatoes, pare them, quarter, boil, then mash. Then stir in two tablespoonfuls of butter, salt and | pepper to taste. and two teaspoontuls of minced parsley. Add one cupful of | hot milk, and the beaten yolks of four | eggs. Beat the yolks in thoroughly, and then quickly fold in the stiffy beaten whites. Put into a well-buttered dee baking dish at once and bake for minutes in a moderate oven. BUTT-R-NAISE is a new spicy cream to be used as butter on sandwiches, and as mayonnaise on salads. It gives the fa- miliar sandwiches and salads a fresh, piquant fla- vor. It is pure creamery butter whipped with lemon juice, fresh egg- volks specially prepared; vegetable oils and spices. Delicious just on crisp crackers and on pie-crust strips! Excellent for one's health because of the vita- mines in it. Delivered fresh, three times a week, in 30c glass jars at your dealer’s. Gelfand's French Dressing is very fine too. The Gelfand CARPEL CO Mfg. Co., Baltimore. A LA Why did Heinz go into the cereal business? Because the House of Heinz, after yearsof research work, was convinced that it was possible to make a con- tribution to your health and enjoy- ment by the production of a cereal food entirely difterent from any other already on the market. Heinz Rice Flakes are the result. But to give you Heinz Rice Flakes it was necessary to develop an en- tirely new process of cereal-maki By this ted process, qualities of the whole rice grain are combined in such a way as to impart a new health.giving quality to the flakes. This is the first and only time that the natural cellulose or - age content of the rice grain giving toHeinz Most im| cereal you ever been entirely retained in a cereal, Rice Flakes the prop- erties of a gentle, natural laxative. t of all—you will say — is the delightful flavor of this new cereal. An entrancing, nut-like flavor that has no likeness in any tasted. All in all, Heinz Rice Flakes are just what Heinz set out to perfect... aking. an entirely different, more edible, better tasting, more healthful, cri to eat with milk or cream and a HEINZ Rice FLAKES TASTE GOOD — DO GOQD