Evening Star Newspaper, November 19, 1928, Page 32

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Real Dolls That Will Cost Nothing BY LYDIA LE BARON NS WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD, DR Registered U. 8. Patent Office. When the National Rifles’ Armory was the e of many a gay ball and the lock-step and Yale were the popu- 2 A MODERN RAG DOLL IN THE CHARACTER OF A SCHOOL GIRL IS READY WITH SCHOOL BAG, LUNCHBOX AND WEE BOOKS. real dolls to delight youngsters can be made by any woman from the materials she already has at hand. Thess may | be rag dolls, worsted dolls, knit or | crocheted dolls, and even the atten- uated French dolls that are decidedly a la mode and which cost s0 much to | but readymade and dressed in smart | continental costumes. | Modern rag dolls are by no means | the crude playthings of colonial days. | They can have real chic. Use old | flesh-colored stockings for head and | neck, arms and legs, and for the body if there fis cnough left. Make the | limbs of narrow straight lengths seamed to form tubing. As stockings stretch, stuff these tubes, forming shapely arms and calves to legs. The legs may have boot-shaped tips, but it is better to form the hands without cutting, ex- cept a slight shaping for thumbs. Be careful to make a pair of arms and a pair of legs, when finished. The head should be cut slightly elongated into an oval, but not much, and should be made in one piece with the neck, and pre- ferably with the body. The head will hold its position better so. Stuff head. neck and body with cotton batting or cotton or wool ravelings. Sew the legs to the lower portion of the body, seaming each leg straight across the top after stuffing it. Stuff and finish off the arms in the same way and sew to the body. Position the arms so that they come from the shoulders. By attaching them as de- seribed they will be fiexible. Bobbed hair can be made of silk floss, or mer- cerized crochet cotton, These rag dolls are chiefly modern- dzed by their costuming, except for their bobbed hair. Character dolls are Frenchy even when made in this type. For the ultra attenuated dolls, increase the length of the body somewhat, and make the arms and legs extremely slender, very long and perfectly straight. Features can be painted. Oils will not run, but water colors are softer. Mix the tones with benzine and they will run very little, the wadding will absorb extra liquid. Mix colors just as dry as they can be applied. Fea- tures can be traced from some fashion cut or other illustration, and then colored. If this is done paint the fea- tures before making up the doll. Put white blotting er beneath the head to absorb extra liquid. If the doll is in the character of a achoolgirl, make a tam for her head, and a jaunty jacket coat to wear over a short cotton or woolen dress. Make a | ‘wee, school bag, either from plain filet | crochet or embroidered homespun, bur- lap or canvas. In it put a few books made of small pieces of folded paper, glued between cloth covered cardboard, Dolls that cost nothing and yet Bl‘e‘ The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright, 1028.) . Musical instrument. . Preposition. g . On the sheltered side. . New England State (abbr.). . Steps. . Like . Spanich hero. . Scotch name. One of a European mountain range. Color. Obstruction. . Utdlizer. : 6. To practice hoxing. . Insect. . Western State (abbr.). . Concealed. § . Man's name. . Old times. A lariat, . Hawaiian bird. . Protuberance, . Solitary. . Faint, unsteady gleams, Down. . Uttering hiccups. Prefix meaning opposed fo. Right_(abbr.). TERDAY'S PUZZLE lar dances? NANCY PAGE Adds Beauty * Room. | for book covers. Include also & wee lunch box. A tiny jeweled box painted | black is excellent for this. Make a | miniature apple of red silk, an orange | of deep vellow silk, a banana of lemon- colored silk and a few sandwiches of | two bits of ecru or cream colored felt | o ve for a weddin; resent she usually This is a doll to delight any child. !ghos? some sort (‘lfg g." container for ivy. It takes no longer to make than many | She felt that most women had failed another present. As it will have the|to sense the decorative effect of this lement of novelty so much desired, it | hardy plant. It grows with little care, will please a youngster whether she al- | Trailing 1o / BY FLORE LA GANKE. | ready has a host of dolls or none at all. “Send in one or two to the doll's | booth at a Christmas fair or sale and | see if the person in charge of the booth | s not delighted to have such a unique | contribution, (Copyright, 1921 ° it A | Over The Hills “Beyond the hills, across the seas, the prospects are more fair, so I'll forsake drab scenes like these, and seek my for- tune there.” So speaks the discontent- | ed man who has the wanderlust, and joins the restless caravan and helps kick up the dust. He's tired of Punk- town’s quiet ways, remote from stress and strife; he’s tired &f all the dreamy | days that make up Punktown life. Be- it flourishes best when it has plenty of | sunlight and air, but it does its best | under adverse conditions, which is more | than can be said of friends and other | house plants. Nancy had seen an old | | ittle sunlight, little attention. Of course | Blames Them for Bad Marriages of Children. Do Most Parents Shirk Their Duty? ]DorothyDix Forget.That Boys and Girls. Can Choose as Life Partners Only Those With Whom They Are Allowed to Come in Contact. | "THERE is nothing more curious and inexplicable than the attitude that most | A parents take toward their children’s marriages. They know that nearly all | Joung people fall in love and get married. They know that marriage is the | turning point in the life of & man and woman, and that it either makes them | or mars them. They know that the happiness and well-being of their sons and | daughters depend upon the kind of wives and husbands they get. | Yet they act as if this momentous thing could never happen to their , children and that if it does, it is a mysterious dispensation of Providence, like being struck by lightning, wiih which they have nothing to-do. | L They accept no responsibility. They wash their hands of the whole matter | to make good marriages, or preventing them from making bad ones. This is a cowardly shirking of a most important duty, for parents are under just as much obligation to help their children get well settled in matrimony as they are to | help them get well settled in business. In the older civilizations this fact is recognized and fathers and mothers help their children seiect their life partners. It is only in this country that a callow girl and boy, whose judgment would not be trusted in any other matter | in the world, are permitted to make the biggest decision of all without a word | of advice from their parents. PR ! A PPARENTLY the whole subect of their children's marriage throws parents 4X into a panic, in which they take leave of their senses and do the stupidest things imaginable. They seem to forget all about their own youth, and the thousand and one influences that led them into making the choice they did of husband or wife. They forget, for instance, that propinquity is the great matchmaker, and that if you throw any girl and boy together constantly it is almost a certainty that they will fall in love with each other. Or; at any rate, that they will think they are In love with each other long enough to get married. _ Yet, ignoring this almost basic matrimonial fact, mothers will invite pretty | girl relatives, or girls of different social strata, to pay them long visits, though they would rather see their sons dead than married to them. Or they will give some handsome, hopeless derelict the run of the house, and then be perfectly horrified when John and Sally, or Mary and Bob appear before them and ask for their blessing. Only the other day a woman told me with tears that : because her cherished only daughter persisted in marrylngh:rr::;:n\\'k‘:f S only her first cousin, but a semi-invalid and a shi er-do-wi v o d a shiftless ne‘er-do-well to whom Yet what else did she expect when she threw an impressionable and romantic young girl into daily contact with a good-looking and interesting man who appealed to her sympathies by his very weakness? The mother’s alibi when John wants {0 marry the pretty chambermaid, or Mary elopes with the stunning chauffeur, or Saily casts in her lot with the impecunious student to whom father is giving board to help him through college, is that she never dreamed they would fall in love with each other. But | they nearly always do, and the safe rule is never to allow any young person in your home that you wouldn't be willing to have your child marry. | There are the equally stupid parents who want their children to marry, and who cspecially want their daughters to marry, but who never give them a chance. There are parents who never give their giris any pretty clothes, and who never take them to any place where they will have the chance of meeting desirable men. _ There are even parents who will not permit their daughters to receive their visitors at home, and who, when boys do call, make it so unpleasant for them that'they never come back:again. There are parents who drive young men away by ouisitting the caller and boring him to tears by monopolizing the conversation and telling him ail about their rheumatism, or what they said to the butcher and what the butcher said to them. e IGHT here is where parents either queer a girl's chances of matrimony or boost them. They can give young men the glad hand. They can make the house gay and cheerful, so that boys like to come to it. They can cast sandwiches and seem to consider that they have nothing to do with helping their children | yond the hills, in lands sublime, l“’e‘ has a richer tang; he's tired of meeting all the time the same old Punktown gang. And so he goes, and as he leaves substantial burghers sigh. “We'll stay and gather in our sheaves, and grow rich by and by. We know that Punktown is as good as any town alive, so we remain and saw our wood and cut our grass and thrive. Beyond the hills there are no towns where shiftless men find ease, where rubles, kopecks, groats and crowns are growing on the trees. The man who cannot prosper here can't prosper anywhere; the roam- er will return, we fear, some day, in black despair.” The burghers’ vision isn't wide, they know naught of ro- mance, they stick to their own country- side and save at every chance. And when they find they're growing old, they cosily retire; they've salted down a crock of gold to keep alive the fire. Then to their door the roamer comes from some far distant heath, and asks them for. & can of plums, so he won't starve to death. They hand him then a brace of pies, a place to sleep at night; and if the burghers moralizg they surely have the right. ‘WALT MASON, (Copyright, 1928.) house with a largs living room which lacked the element of livableness. There was a mantel painted white. The woman received a pot of ivy and set it at onc end of the mantel. It grew downward gracefully and immediately added a touch”of life to the room. Naney fovnd that shops carried metal stands with two, three and even four pots placed at different heights. In each one of these a pot of trailing ivy is set, Try putting one of these against a plaster or putty colored wall and see what it does. A piece of blue-green pottery was suspended from an iron arm or crane which was attached to the window frame. In this pottery container was placed a pot of ivy. The effect of the deep green of the plant, the blue green of the pot against the window curtained in apricot gauze made Nancy catch her breath in appreciation every time she saw it. . (Copyrizht, 1928.) on the water that will return to them in wedding cake. Many an eligible suitor, who was taken with Maud, never returns after the first call because of the gruff | reception father gave him. Many a plain girl catches a good husband because i mother made everything so pleasant for him that he was lured into thoughts { of matrimony. Can you think of a more criminal thing than that half of the fathers don't even know the young men whom their daughters are going to marry by sight until Mary or Eally appears holding a sheepish youth by the hand and says: | “Father, here is your future son-in-law.” Why, father ought to be on the job | from the time Mary or Sally has her first date and have an accurate line on the morals and manners and business ability of every lad who comes to the house. If he did this before the girls fell m iove, he could get in his work and tell them just what boys were petticoat-chasers, which drank too much, which played the races, and which were shiftless and lazy, and many a miserable match would be prevented. But father doesn’t do it. Oh, dear, no. Very often he doesn't even take the trouble to make a single inguiry as to who or what the young man fis, or whether there are any mortgages on his past or not. He wouldn’t sell a man a hundred-dollar bill of goods without finding out his rating, but he will let his daughter marry a man without knowing a single thing about him. And when parents try to break offi a match, look how stupidly they do it, with what a lack of finesse. Their only weapon seems to be violent opposition, which serves only to hurry up the wedding, whereas by the use of a little | diplomacy they could break off every marriage that isn't a real love marriage and | that should be broken off. | Of course, in this country we scorn matchmaking parents, but, believe me, [ e e e, . DOROTHY DIX. | (Copyright, 1928, BEAUTY CHATS Your Expression. ‘The one thing I should like most to imptess on my readers is the fact that facial expression is of infinitely more importance ‘than features or coloring. BY EDNA KENT FORBES frown, so in the end he decided she hated him. It may have. been a con- centration of adoration on the wife's part, but it certainly got on the hus- band’s nerves. For some reason, expressiveness is This is cerainly fortunate, since very little can be done to alter the features, and not a great deal to alter the color- ing. Unforfunately, very few women know anything about real expression, and if they try artificial expressions the not natural to us, who are chiefly of northern blood, even though all of us Americans have a mixed ancestry and at least some Latin blood in our veins. Natural, attractive expression has to be Maple Nut Popcorn. Cook together a cupful of maple syrup, half a cupful of brown sugar and two tablespoonfuls of butter until the candy seems brittle when tested in cold water. Meantime pick over two quarts of popped corn, removing the hard kernels, and mix with a cupful of chopped English walnuts, pecans, or peanuts. Pour the candy over the corn and nuts, stirring constantly during the process, then break into pieces of a convenient size and serve on a but- tered platter. Prices realized on Swift & Company s of carcass beef in Washington, D. C., or “week ending Saturday. 16.00 cents ‘to 27.00 cents per pound, and averaged 22.07 cents per pound.—Adveftise- DAILY DIET RECIPE CARROT BOATS WITH PEAS. Carrots, 4 large; peas, 8 table- spoons; butter, 1 teaspoon; lemon Juice, 3 drops; chopped parsley, 5 teaspoon. SERVES 4 OR 8 PORTIONS Select lerge carrots of even size. Wash and without peeling boil un- til tender. Drain. Pour cold water over them. Drain. Remove skins. Cut each carrot in half. Trim end to boat shape. With apple corer or sharp spoon carefully scoop out center to finish the boat. Trim- mings can be used mashed as a vegetable for a child, or used in soup or salad. Cream butter, lemon juice. Add parsiey. Drop a por- tion of this dressing in each boat. Put carrot_boats in buttered pan to reheat. Fill each with hot peas. DIET NOTE Recipe furnishes much lime, iron and vitamins A and B. C is })resmt also in the parsley and lemon juice. Can be eaten by chil- dren and by adults of average,. over or under weight, 4. A small report. One of the race formerly dominant in Peru. . Possesses. . Olympiad. (abbr.). . Not imaginary. . Ruffians. . Assistance. . Finish. 18. Fear. . Plenty. . An eagle. . Man's name. ., Bind. 9. Feline. . Object worshiped. Lengthy. . Remark (abbr,). . Arablan name. . Prefix meaning double. 43. Upon. SANITARY GARBAGE CANS Don’t scrub— use Clorox. Makes your garbage can clean, odorless, free from germs, Safe and simple to use. Just follow directions on bottle. For "Easy Housekeeping”—use Clorox AT ALL GROCERS November 17, | 1928. “on shipments sold out, ranged from | taught, and can even be self taught if necessary. Belle—The fullness below your un- derlip may come from your teeth; if it continues, better consult the dentist about it, P. O. M.—The dark circles about the eyes indicate there is still some trouble with your health. I would advise you to go back to the doctor until you are fully built up. L.-A. C.~—The pipe organ pedal exer- cises should be very good for your ankles, since i‘hey will make them strong and supple. #There is no reason for fearing they will get thick and out of shape. Mrs. D. E. A—As you cannot use ice, try the next best thing—extremely cold water—as the final rinse after bathing your face. The egg astringent is only for times when there is much sagging of the skin, and comparable with what would be to some women & professional treatment. These would not occur on;nter‘;lhun oncle a week, al e muscles of your fa neck instead of having ’;o mm:fie rr:‘ans‘3 sage, and use cold water every day in- stead of the witch-hazel astringent. effect is disastrous. It I had a growing daughter I should be very much inclined to send her for six months or so to a good school of dramatic art, not with any idea of a stage career, unless she had genuine talent for it, but simply for the very hard and very excellent training dra- matic schools give. They specialize in exercises, they teach the girls how to walk, how fo sit and how to stand, how to use their hands expressively (most women use them badly, making all sorts of futile and meaningless gest- .ures), how to use their eyes. The schools, or rather the teachers who have had practical training, most of them having been on the stage, also give voice training. But I think the most valuable thing they teach is repose, and how to ex- press feelings. Odd that shouldn’t come naturally—but it doesn’t. At least, a thousand girls will express sadness by looking lugubrious to the point of farce, pleasure by a silly grin, quiet thoughtfulness by a completely blank expression. 1 heard of a woman once who adored her husband, but her way of looking adoringly at him was to You Never Before Ate Such a Delicious Corn This new breed upsets all traditions of canned corn flavor and consistency Jhe New Sweet Corn Unlike the many brands pf corn on the market—many of them excellent— DEL MAIZ is a distinct, generic breed, grown from a seed we took 12 years to develop and perfect, It was necessary to breed this new sced to give you a more delicious corn— a fresh corn flavor that will excite your appetite and those big- bodied, tender kernels in a rich corn cream—what deléctable mor- sels they are! These tall kernels of this specially bred corn, permit a full; clean cut, without includ- ing the unpleasant bits of cob and other tough particles so often found. to DEL MATZ. Tt is no mere brand or label or some- thing you've known before, but a dis- tinctly new and better variety. We alone own this new seed and every stalk is grown under the supervi- sion of our ex- perts, and packed in our five plants by our own improved pro- cess in sanitary enamel-lined tins, Try a can today and be con- vinced. Leading grocers handle DEL MAIZ. Get your can today and a FREE booklet of a dozen deli- cious DEL MAIZ recipes. DEL MAIZ is grown and packed only by the MINNESOTA VALLEY CANNING COMPANY Le Sut Minnesota A field of Del Mais showing polien bags ‘The ordinary standards of growing, packing and brand- ing various varicties of sweet corn, can't be applied + For Sale at All Sanitary and Piggly, Wiggly, Stores Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. | November 19, 1855.—Bartel W. Barker, who was advertised in advance as a “female approved minister” of the religious Soclety of Friends, spoke yes- | terday (Sunday) afternoon in this city | to a large audience, two-thirds of which was composed of women. Ore report in | a local newspaper today says that “Carusi's Saloon"-—where the meeting s held—“was densely erowded.” The minister in' her discourse ex- plained the religious views of the peo- ple called Friends or Quakers. She was particular in seeking to impress on her auditors the fact that they do not ad- here to the doctrine of “Ligh profes- | |sion” regarding the Trinity; in other | words, she said they hoid to the So- cinian view on that subjecl. She in- sisted on the obligation and necessity of a life of holiness to insure happi- ness in social as in politicz1 affairs. Her address was closely followed and she took occasion to compliment the ce on the gdod behavior iled throughout the meet- laimed being an advocate of s rights,” as that term is or- dinarily understood by tn» world, but said that women were eqial with men in the connection of Friends or Quakers. She referred to Scripture to show that St. Paul did not inhibit women from' preaching, but from ask- ing questions in church concerning doc- i ¢ them be instructed at home,” was one of her quotations from the apostle in this connection. Her hearers all “seemed pleased with the oratorical talents of tne preacher, leeven if all of them did no: agree with | her in doctrine,” says The Evening Star in its account of the meeting. She enlarged on her theme for mor than an hour, imparting “wholesome advice, which if generally followed | would make the world far happier and better than it is and hasten the ‘mil- lennium,’ " says The Star reporter, who adds that the fulfillment of the wish | for that happy state in the world “in | qur opinion, according to present ap- | pearance, is' remote—very.” | MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST Cooked Cereal with Dates Soft-Boiled Eggs Hashed Brown Potatoes 1 Oatmeal Muffins | Coffee | e N LUNCHEON | Opyster Stew, Crackers Chocolate Custard Sugar Cookies | Tea DINNER Pig's Liver and Bacon Baked Potatoes Creamed Onions Escalloped Tomatoes Plain Lettuce Selad, French Dressing Cream Pie, Coffee OATMEAL MUFFINS. ‘Two-thirds cup oatmeal, 115 cups flour, 1 cup scalded milk, 1 egg, 1 teaspoon soda, 2 teaspoons cream of tartal tablespoons butter, ', teaspoon salt, 3 table- #peons sugar. Turn milk on oat- meal, let stand 5 minutes, add sugar, salt and butter; sift in flour with soda and cream of tartar; add beaten egg. Bake in gem pan. CHOCOLATE CUSTARD. ‘Two tablespoons sugar, 2-3 tea- spoon cornstarch, 15 square choc- olate or 1!5 spoons prepared co- coa, few grains salt, 1 cup scalded milk, yoke of 1 egg, Vi teaspoon vanilla, Mix sugar, corn- | starch, cocoa and salt. Pour milk gradually. Cook over hot water 8 minutes. Dilute egg yolk slightly beaten, with some of the mixture, add to remaining mixture and cook 1 minute. Strain, cool and flavor; if chocolate is used, melt over hot water, add dry ingredi- ents, then gradually add hot milk. Strain, cool and flavor. Serve in glass cups. The white of egg may be beaten until stiff, sweetened and piled on top each custard. CREAM PIE. Beat 2 eggs until light, add 1 cup powdered sugar and beat 2 minutes, then add ': cup hot water. Sift 1 cup flour with 1% teaspoons baking powder and Y4 ieaspoon salt, combine two mix- tures, flavor with each lemon and vanilla. turn into two greased pie plates lined with oiled paper and bake in moderate oven. Put layers together with cream filling between and sprinkle with powdered sugar. Cream fill- ing: Mix 1 gup sugar, 4 table- spoons constarch, 1 teaspoon salt and 1 beaten egg. and 1': cups hot milk, and stir in double boiler until thickened; then cover and cook 15 minutes longer, stirring occasionally. Flavor with vanilla and cool before using. 15 teaspoon | to Europe in 1870 on a seven-month | | of the wealthiest and most influential | was already established as a lawyer; BY L P. 1f Dolly Madison was the gayest and | happiest of all the Presidents’ wi Ida McKinley certainly was the most | tragic. She takes her place in history | as a woman for whom misfortunes mul- tiplied. 3 Life began joyously for her, but soon descended to depths of misery from which it never escaped. - She had one recompense. ~Like Jef- | ferson, Willlam McKinley was the ideal husband and the perfect lover. Sometimes fathers play unsatisfac- | tory roles by interfering in their daugh- ters' love affairs. It was the misfor- tune of James A. Saxton, a banker of | Canton, Ohio, that he should benefi- cently foster the romance of his | daughter Ida. with Maj. Willam Mc- Kinley. Ida Saxton and completed their school days and gone | tour with a party of young ladies of | their own age. They returned home | amid the pleasurable excitement which | rocked the soclety of every inland com- munity in those days, when trips to | Europe were uncommon events.’ Ida was 23. She is chronicled as be- ing “beautiful, bright, witty, vivacious, | high-minded and of perfect physique | and health.” As the daughter of one | men in Canton she naturally was a | leader in the younger society set. | Into her life, ushered by her father, came Maj. William McKinley, a young | veteran of the Civil War, handsome and despite his humble birth. distin- guished in appearance. People turned in the streets to look at him, and in- | quired of friends his name. He had lived in Canton three years, now was county prosecutor and was | prominent in politics. He was an im- pressive orator and he was only 27. His skill in conducting a certain case won the admiration of James Saxton. He invited “the Major” to visit him in s home. Saxton was a wise father. He be- lieved that even a wealthy girl should be able to take care of herself. He had placed Ida in his bank, and she was so successful as a business woman she was able to run it in his absence. Wisely, he foresaw that McKinley would make a splendid hushand for his daughter. None was happier than he when their troth was plighted. They were married January 25, 1871, and began housekeeping in a home given to_them by Saxton. Never did a young coupls start mar- ried life more auspiciously. But it was fated that all the wise forcthought of | her father and all the tender devo- “I could never figger out why Scotch- men stick to those short skirts, until Laddie told me it's because trousers sometimes give at the knees.” | | | | Mother KNOWS that and muscles. That's _SCHNEIDER’S WHOLE WHEAT TWICE DAILY puts solid flesh on growing young bodies . . . hardens teeth. . . builds strong, sturdy bones Schneider's Whole Wheat Bread. (Copyright, 1928.) this nourishing Bread why she insists on | her sister Mary had | § |of a fair . Star Says: | is bei | the-minute . THE WIVES OF THE PRESIDENT Tda McKinley, Who of All the Women of the White House Had the Saddest Life. GLASS. “She Went to Him for the Last Time.” nd could Ida 1871 A s But not cKinl a da tion of her husl a tragic_existence for On Christmas _day, ter was born to he April 1, 1 month _ Mrs. Soon the second & before three years born was -gone, bereavements ¥ Her mind sta of her sorrow before she could even a semblance of If to be an invalid for the life. Mr. McKinley rose steadily came Congressman. Govern President. But all He be- the highest offict performed some Mark Hanna said: made it hard for bands in Washingt Poor man! She live tale in wh participate in a shadow-iik: her cup of sorrow was not vet fille On September 6. bullet felled the Presid visiting the Pan-American in Buffalo. Almost his fi he waited for an ambul; Mrs. McKinley. ‘To_his secretary. Cortelyou, he whis- pered. “My wife—be careful how you tell her. But that frail individual. who had been resting at the home of John G. Milburn, president of the cxposition, exerted a strength of will that was astounding. In this extremity she be- came the nurse and comforter. In the darkening twilight of Priday, September 13, realizing death was near, the President asked for Mrs. Mc- Kinley and she went to him for the last time, leaning heavily on Zc-cretary Cortelyou's erm. Priends withdrew as she leaned over Mr. McKinley to kiss him and his arm stole around her neck. Hours passed, but still she remained 2 him, “I want to go too,” she murmured feebly as he lay suffering. “We must all go, we must all go,” he_rejoined. ‘The night advanced. Consciousness was gone and the final journey was at hand. Mrs. McKinley was led away to wait anxiously for the day when she le service for her “The President has he rest of us hi in the midst And d Operetta “In my work on the stage, I have found MELLO-GLO Face Powder a rare blessing.” Desiree Tabor, fa- mous beauty, pays this compliment |to this new, wonderful French pro- cess powder which 'ps ugly shine away without di clogging' the pores. “MELLO-GLO spreads so smoothly that not a | single pore is visible, and it bestows |that youthful om which all women covet."—Adveriisement. enough Color in your Home? «+s . more and more color used in home-decorations ... . gay, light colors. . .. to add cheer and ‘warmth to every room. +++s and so, modern women «++. whose homes must be smart, up-to- | Tintex to transform pes to gay bright- ness... .dull cushions and table co 1o new smartness .. .. white sheets, low casesand table cloths to f..hinnn“-ly colorful ones. No muss, fuss.... perfect results always with Tint, . with everything washable that is used | in home-decoration. | | l T ++. . your dealer has the new Tintex Color Card....ask to seeit. It shows all the colors favored by Interior Decorators. ...onactual samples of silk. @ =THE TINTEX GROUP——¢ Products for every Home- tinting and Dyeing Need Tintex Gray Box—Tiots and dyes all materiala, Tintex Blus Box—For lace-trimmed silksmtiots the silk, lace remains white. Tingex Color Remover—Removes old color from any ‘material 0 it can be dyed & new color. Whitex— A special bluiog for restaring whiteness to yellowed silks and woolens. —eee et et s LOF ntex TINTS AND DYES ANYTHING ANY COLOR Oiributors PARK. & TILFORD Now Youty R B e - ’ [

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