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Popular Type WOMAN'S PAGES . s of Footwear BY MARY MARSHALL. Large shoe buckles are still worn, but fortunately they are now recognized as not aj priate for every type of foot. ‘The s , broad or very large foot looks better with some other form of orna- ment. At luncheon at a fashionable res- taurant recently where women were ‘wearing buckles extensively just a year ago, one was struck by the fact that large buckles are worn so much less than they were. Some women cling to GOLD AND DARK BLUE ENAMEL BUCKLE USED ON LIGHT BLUE SHOE. TAN KID PUMP WITH COP- PER-COLORED METAL BUCKLE AND NECKLACE TO MATCH. ONYX AND GOLD SQUARE BUCKLE. ONE OF RED, WHITE AND BLUE STONES, the flattering lines of the opera pump with piping of contrasting leather, while many others this Spring have adopted the low-cut oxford, which has the ad- | vantage of greater security over the | instep than either opera pump or strap | slipper. The foot that is short and broad has much to gain in shapeliness if the opera pump of simple design is chosen. The long, excessively narrow foot is favored by the shoe with a fairly large buckle that gives the appearance of greater height to the instep and breaks the long liges of the shoe. chooses clothes of the ngom type for daytime wear generally throughout the warm weather there are shoes of a semi- orts sort, made with heels of me- dium height that are usually much more becoming than the very broad-heeled, flat sports shoes intended for actual sportswear. For wear with these sports type of ensembles, stockings of a not exagger- ated sun-tan tone are in good taste, though any beige tone that harmonizes with the rest of the costume may be worn, If you have a little girl I am sure you will find this week's Help for the Home Dressmaker very helpful. It contains a diagram pattern for the new short French drawers which are worn exten- sively with short thin dresses this sea- son. Send me a stamped, self-addressed envelope and I will gladly send you & copy at once. (Copyright, 1929.) My Neighbor Says: ‘Wax the bottom of glass or wooden cups placed under furni- ture. ~Furniture may then be moved more easily and in moy- ing it will not scratch the floors. Tissue paper makes an excel- lent polish for window glass and mirrors. Wash, dry and then polish with the paper. | When water does mnot flow | {reely from the sink, an accumu- lation of grease in the trap may } be the reason. Remove the trap, | | wash it with warm water to re- move the grease or any parti- cles of lint and you will have no | further trouble. | If the crown of a straw hat has sunk down in the middle, remove the lining and turn the hat up- side down on an froning board, lay a piece of damp cloth inside the crown and press well with a hot iron. This will shrink the straw to its original shape. WORLD FAMOUS STORIES OLD GRAVES BY JOHN (Epitaphs and old gravestones, though o somber subject. can now and then be bright- ened with touches of interest and incon- gruity bordering on that humor which light- ens all life.) In passing through New England, a stranger will be struck with the va- riety, in taste and feeling, respecting burial places. Here and there may be seen a solitary grave, in a desolate and dreary pasture lot, and anon under the shade of some lone tree, the sim- ple stone reared by affection to the memory of one known and loved by the humble fireside only. There, on that gentle elevation, sloping green and beautiful toward the south, is a family enclosure adorned with trees and filled with the graves of the house- hold. How many breaking hearts have there left the loved till that bright morning! Here in this garden, beside the vine-covered arbor and amidst the shrubbery which her own hand 3 is the monument to the fal wife and loving mother, How appropriate! How belutu;l! ropos burying in gardens, I heard a story of an old man who was bent on interring his wife in his garden, despite the opposition of all his neigh- bors to his doing so. Indeed, the old fellow avowed this as his chief reason, and to all their entreaties and depreca- tions and earnest requests he still de- clared he would do it. Pinding every- thing they could do to be. of no avail, the people bethought themselves of a certain physician, who was sald to have great influence over the old man, and who owned an orchard adjoining. the very garden, so, going to him in a body, they besought him to attempt to change the determination of his obstinate friend. The doctor consented to do %0 and went. After offering his con- dolence on the loss of his wife, and proffering any aid he might be able to Tender at the funeral, the doctor said: I understand you intend to bury your deceased wife in your garden.” Ax;’dyet.h: answered Elhe %d man, “T do. more people object the more I'm_determined m‘:lo it “Right!” replied the doctor, with an emphatic shake of the head. “Right! I applaud the deed. I'd bury her there, it I were you. The boys are always stealing the pears from my favorite three that overhangs your garden, and by and by you'll die, Uncle Diddle, and theyll bury you there, too, and then I'm sure that the boys will never dare “Not T b Ranged 0! if I bury her there.” said the old man in great wrath. Tl bury her in the graveyard.” New England can boast her beautiful laces of sepulture, but as a common g they are too much neglected, and attractive only to the lover of oddities and curious old epitaphs. Oc- casionally you may see a shaped tomb, ar, g2 in & well known CARVER. his family vault by some odd specimen of humanity, When asked the reason for doing so singular a thing, one man gravely replied that “when the old gentleman should come to claim his own, the tenants might have the pleasure of saying, ‘not at home,' or of fleeing out of the back door.” In passing through these neglected goundl you will often find some touch- gly beautiful scriptural allusion— some apt quotation or some emblem so lovely and instructive that the memory of it will go with you for days. Here in a neglected spot and amid a cluster of raised stomes is the grave of the stranger clergyman's child, who died on its journey. The inscription is sweet when taken in connection with the por- tion of sacred history from which the quotation is made: “Is it well with the child? And she answered, It is well.” Again the only inscription is an emblem—a butterfly rising from the chrysalis. Glorious thought, embodied in emblem so singular! “Sown in cor- ruption, raised in incorruption!” Then come you to something strange- ly odd, as for instance: ‘“Here lies John Auricular, who in the ways of the Lord walked &emendlcuhn" Again: “Many a cold wind o'er my body shall roll while in Abraham's bosom I'm feasting my soul”: appropriate certain- ly, as the grave was on a cold north- east slope of one of our bleak hills, Again, a Dutchman'’s epitaphs for his twip babes: “Here lie two babes. dead as two nits, who shook to death mit ague fits, They was too good to live mit me, so God He took ‘em to live mit He.” ‘There is the grave of a young man who, dying suddenly, was eulogized with this strange aim at the sublime: “He lived, He died.” Not a 100 miles from Boston is a gravestone the epitaph on which, to all who knew the parties, bordered strong- Iy mn the burlesque; a farmer who wit a few months buried his wife and adopted daughter, the former all her life long a thorn in his flesh, whose death could not but have been a re- lief, wrote thus: “They were lovely and beloved in their lives, and in death were not divided.” Poor man! Well he knew how full of strife and sorrow an evil woman can make life! He 'was worn to a shadow before her death, and his hair was all gone. Many of the neighbors thought surely that he well knew what had become of it, especially as it disappeared by the handful. But grave covers all faults; rest from her labors and her work follow her. On & low, sandy mound far down on the cape rises a tall slate stone, with fitting emblems and epitaphs as follows: “Here lies Judy and John, that lovely pair, John was killed by s village, & knocker d on the door of whale, and Judy sleeps here.” PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM Beware the Sickly Bunny. Rabitt fever or tularemia has been Tecognized in animals for several years, but only recently many cases have been reported in man. The diseace is quite serious in man. Among 500 reported cases theye were 20 that terminated fatally. Only wild rabbits have tularemia— tame rabbits and Belgian hares do not have it. Other animals may have the disease, notably rats and squirrels. In a few instances the infection has been conveyed to man by the bite of a cat, dog or hog that had probably eaten an infected rabbit, rat or squirrel. Sufferers who recover from an attack yemain permanently immune thereafter. Many laboratory research workers have been infected through their animal ex- perimentation. The infection occurs as a rule by inoculation of a puncture, scratch or cut on the hands of a person who has dressed the diseased rabbit Thorough cooking will destroy the germ, but some cases of infection of man by tularemia have been traced to DAILY DIET RECIPE BRAN MACAROONS. Egg, 1. Salt, % teaspoon. Brown sugar, ¥z cup. Melted butter, not hot, 3 table- spoons. Bran, 11, cups. Vanilla, 1 teaspoon. MAKES 24 LITTLE MACA- ROONS Beat egg light, add salt, sugar, vanilla, melted butter, beating constantly. Then fold in bran. When thoroughly mixed, quickly place on buttered pans by tea- spoon, some little distance apart, as they spread. Bake in fairly hot oven (350 deg. Fahr) about 10 minutes. Be careful not to burn. DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes protein, much fiber, Very rich in iron, some lime present. Vitamins A and B furnished. Good in laxative diet. Can be given to children 6 and over., Can eaten by adults of average or under weight. BRADY, M. D, the eating of rabbit meat which was not thoroughly cooked. * Scientific investigators assert that the meat of an infected rabbit is perfectly harmless when cooked and eaten if it has been kept in cold storage or frozen | for 30 days. Do not handle or use a rabbit that seems at all dopey, slow moving, dull eved or rough or ragged of fur. A rab- bit that the dog or cat catches is probably sick. A rabbit that doesn’t run from you on sight is probably sick. It is & wise precaution to wear rub- ber gloves when handling or dressing or cleaning wild rabbits for market or for meat. One who must handle such meat, or the skins, ought to use a good hand disinfectant reguhrly afterward. The surest sign of tularemia in a rabbit or other rodent is the ice on and in the liver of many little white specks the size of a pinhead or a little finger, If the liver shows no such specks the rabbit is probably sound. ‘Tularemia in man develops with an intense headache a few days after in- oculation, then pains in every bone and a high fever, usually with chills, and a swelling under the armpit. At the site of inoculation there is an inflamed papule or boll. ‘Wood ticks and the rabbit louse prob- ably are the carriers of the infection from rabbit to rabbit in nature, but blood sucking insects may carry the in- fection to man in their bites, notably deer flies, wood ticks, perhaps in a few instances’ squirrel fleas, rat bits, bed- bugs and the mouse lice. No effective serum or cure for tular- mia_has as yet been foun: ATWOOD GRAPEFRUIT TREE-RIPENED WHOLESOME DELICIOUS N anan-u r h HEITMU] 3 B fren MW o0 For the benefit of the woman who | | rest of the time they should be easy Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Mrs. W. P. L. writes: “I read in K?.ur column of the baby who refused milk from a glass, and as I had the same difficulty I wonder if the mother would be interested in what I did? My son refused milk but liked his egg, 50 I let him watch me beat an egg in a bowl and add a bit of vanilla and sugar and some milk, and then offered him a little as a treat and he drank it. “The next time T offered him mifk I put a little chocolate into it and call- ed it a chocolate milk shake, and his curiosity was aroused so he drank it. For several days I added different fi vorings of fruit juices, such as prune and pineapple, so that shortly he grew accustomed to milk in a glass. “Will you set me right on a problem of discipline? My 2-year-old boy is very bright; he can carry messages and fulfill commands, but he does not stay interested very long in anything and drops his toys. His father thinks they should be picked up. I feel that if he to pick things up le. Who is right? “Should a child of that age obey every command at once? If I order t with it, but sometimes it takes half an hour." Answer: I liked your method of in- troducing the milk into the diet. If it is done casually and using natural in- terest and curiosity about the taste, the child won't refuse it long, but if the mother assumes a “do-or-die” spirit and goes after that milk drinking as if to refuse it were a crime, the child will certainly balk at taking it. ‘Toys should be cleared up once a day and put away for the night. The to get at and the child not frritated by constant commands to pick them up. A playroom does away with the annoy- ance of toys all over the floor, or even just a fenced-off portion of a room with all the toys in that space. In ff]\‘ing a command to a child be | sure first that it is absolutely a neces- | sary one. Then get the child’s atten- | tion. If his attention is busied else- where he may not hear you, Even if he hears he may not heed. Go up to him. Look right at him and speak slowly and clearly. A child's com- mand of language is limited. We often | couch our commands in useless lan- guage, talking on and on far beyond the simple request we want to make. Give the child time to stop doing what he is occupied with, but stand there until he moves, or take his hand and, talking about something pleasant, trot him right off to whatever it is you want him to do. If we want children to heed us we must make ourselves heard and understood and then act as if we expected the right response. SONNYSAYINGS BY PANNY Y. CORY. I made ‘iss in kindlegarter fer a 'sprise fer Muvver. The hangle has came off so it won't do fer a May back- set, but it will make a berry nice bong- bong dish. . (Copyright, 1929.) MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. One Mother Says: A mother I know keeps a record of her children's conduct, grading them closely every night. I didn’t care for the idea, but thought I might try grading myself, using such points as “softness of voice,” “evenness of tem- p'e‘l:'.” number of times I sald “Don’t, ete. My grade the first day was only 26! It is running about 80 now, I hope to raise it still more. The children react beautifully, much better I am sure than if I were to YToasues PARIS.—Longchamps brings out Saw Talbot's coat with the bowknot collar recently. and three overlapping scalloped bands arranged elaborate, but effective. The Sidewalks many interesting models on fine days. It has a drop-shoulder yoke like flat flounces. Quite RITA. of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. Some men are natural bargainers. Starting with nothing, they contrive to possess the best, whether in homes, automobiles or radios. Wasn't it Tom Sawyer who made fence painting so attractive to other boys that they bar- gained for the privilege of reliev- ing that young worthy of the job of doing it him- self. Bargainers like that are born and not made. A ‘Washington man has a de- lightful home. By series of ex- HE TRADED WIS ARST HUMBLE HOME one, which in turn was traded for an- other, until he now has & home coveted by many of his acquaintances. Another man has an_artistically de- signed and mechanically perfect re- ceiving set. He obtained on of it through shrewd trading. Otherwise, he could not have owned it. Then there is the automobile trader, the man who starts out with a litter of junk and manages somehow to run it up to an elaborately appointel town car for the wife and kiddies. * ok K % ‘There is the person, too, who always contrives to be on hand when some- thing is given for nothing. He is in- vited to join & club to swell the mem- bership. The newly organized outfit desires the prestige of his name and, Jo, he is unanimously elected, It didn't cost him a cent. * ok kK A friend of ours saved & few thou- sand dollars. This was rather remark- able because he was and is an artist. These savings represented years of labor and extraordinary thrift. One day an old friend of his dropped in to see him. During the course of the conversation the caller sald, “I have just returned from a health resort, to | find my business partners have de- parted leaving me high and dry and broke, All I have in the world is this.” (He tossed 50 cents in the air.) ‘The man had been a money maker. The t's sympathy was roused and he said, “Well, Bill, I have a few dol- lars I can let you have to start over again, It isn’t much, but you're wel- come to it.” His friend refused the offer with thanks and assured the generous one that e'verythh& would come out o. k. Then he left the artist's studio. Several weeks later the friend re- turned and said, “I'll take that offer up of yours. We’'ll organize a company to sell what I have been dealing in for. many years. Youll be the treasurer and handle the money and I'll be presi- dent.” ‘The artist didn’t know a bill of lad- ing from accounts receivable, but he knew his friend. That was enough. The first week they were in business the partners netted something like $3,000. Soon after they did a business of $11,000 in one week. Since that time both men have become independently wealthy. Conscious-stricken because he re- You can be sure of requests for a second cup when you serve this delicious | garded his friend as the man deserving the most money, the artist wrote his resignation as treasurer and explained that while he was willing to share in the profits, he was not, in his opinion, entitled to one-half of the proceeds. This may be hard for the reader to believe. Only an artist would be so | “You will remain a one-half owner. If | | it had not been for your cash I should | have lost this opportunity, perhaps, to | ‘come back.’ " | scparated homes in different parts of | the cuunlri' and several automobiles. | Lots of folks have said that he got something for nothing. They forget | that he had saved the ready money and was willing to gamble it on the char- acter of his friend. * ok ok X There is luck in the game, of course. An all-wise Providence so often guards the fortunes of those unable to care for themselves. Men sign on the dot- ted line sometimes without knowing what they do. A young fellow unac- customed to the purchase of property chose a home in the suburbs. He was not familiar with clauses containing provisions about restrictions, As a mat- ter of fact, he knew nothing about such things as restrictions. It proved to be a good thing. The bulilder of the house, an honest man, told him that the sur- rounding property was restricted against public garages, glue factorles, etc., but nothing was said about the erection of apartment houses. It happened that the buyer’s home was on a corner. The three other corners were vacant ground. Sitting on his porch he confidently ex- pected that private homes would adorn the lots opposite his property. One day the surveyors came along. Short- ly afterward exca- vating machines arrived, and it was not long be- fore two tall apart- ments began to in- with - his lew. ‘The young man immediately looked up the restrictions and found nothing pertaining to ¢he erection of apart- ments. Had he thought that he would be surround- ed by high buildings he would not have purc] d the place, He was sadly dis- appointed. The -gn!.menn were scarcely com- pleted when a realtor visited him and in behalf of clients made the young house owner an offer of twice the amount pald for his home. The man was dizzy. He couldn't belleve it. In due time he sold, took his profit and went his way rejoicing. It was what the boys call “dumb luck.” Had he known that there were no restrictions against the building of apartment houses het might not have purchased the prop- erty. e More than 150,000 tourists visited the Panama Canal in the past ye: Seal Brand Tea is of the same bigh guality, foolish. The head of the company said, | The artist now has three widely | SUB ROSA BY MIML Sixth Fine Art. The number of arts is equal to the number of fingers on your right hand. The familiar five are—architecture, seulpture, painting, poetry and music. The sixth art is personality! Art demands personality of its maker. Beauty is he realm of genius. Phidias, Michelangelo, Shakespeare, Beethoven, Raphael, Bernhardt, Duse. The beauty which came forth from these souls was like the web from the spider. It was their self-expression. Personality is an art, not built, carved, designed, phrased or composed, but still an art. You must form yourself ac- cording to a pattern, just as you would a frock. You must create your person- ality in your own image. Then you be- come yourself. Nature gives each one of us a start. aves on the same maple are dupli- cates. not nature. The individuality of each person finds expression in the face. Forehead and chin, cheek and cheek, two eyes and ears and noestrils, But no two faces are alike, And no two fingers, for that matter. But nature must have aid from with- in if she 15 going to produce personality. She gives you the key, you must im- provise the individual. She sets the pace, you must run your marathon. She draws the outline, but you yourself must fill it in. Then you are you. Every personality must have a pat- tern, or the painting of the person will be a smudge. You can find a kind of pattern, for & while, in another person. One artist observes the other. One scientist builds on the other’s work. But you must pattern yourself in this semi-original way and fit your perso: ality to yourself as a semi-ready suit re- quiring ‘alterations. ‘Then there must be power. The pat- tern must be cut out and formed. The artist works over his picture. The actor studies and rehearses his part. The real individual develops herself the way Helen Wills developed her technique and physique. Personality means playing a part, your part, in the big tent, where there is room for all. The freaks are in the side shows. You do not pose or pretend. No, you push the pattern of your per- sonality the way a swimmer pushes the water in order to keep afloat. ‘The number of artists is limited, be- cause nature hasn't thrown talent away. But the number of individuals is indefi- nite, so that each one has a chance to be the artist of her individuality. (Copyright, 1929.) JABBY | “Tom's my idea of a skin-flint! He's got nine lives and won't risk one.” (Copyright, 1929.) SPRINGTIME BY D, C. PEATTIE. ‘The city full of visitors, from every iState and town—sunny streets—the white fountains playing—the balloon men, and the old colored women sell- ing primroses—that’s & Washington { April, to my mind. One can live the year round in New York without any more knowledge of the seasons than that it is hot or cold, | time to wear straw hats, or time to stop wearing them. Not so in Washington. The stately avenues that bear the names of States, with their elm trees just showing greeny-gold 50 feet over- head, the lawns of the Mall heginning to freshen, blossoming with chickweed and speedwell; the lilacs of old George- town gardens, the forsythia around the Monunient, the magnolias on the White House lawn, and the Japanese cherries around the Tidal Basin, make of the Capital the Nation’s garden city. Now, of all times of year, is Washington at its loveliest—now we need envy no man any other climate, town or season. On such a fine day as comes to us at just this season, Washington, to me, always seems to take on a Parisian gayety and snap. Not even the fiacres, so reminiscent of times gone by, so pretty an anachronism outside the dcor of the Corcoran, or in Franklin Park, are lacking to give the city an Old ‘World charm. And best of all, I think, I love the pushcarts full of flowers so abundant around Dupont Cirele. In no other city do they, so far as I know, peddle Spring flowers in this delightful fashion. No ?eas in the same pod are really alike. | No le: History may repeat itself, but | FEATUR ES.” MILADY BEAUTIFUL ‘Whiteheads. Dear Miss Leeds: I have been using |a good grade of powder and rouge, but I have noticed small whiteheads on my cheeks under the skin. Is this caused by the rouge? How can I encourage scanty eyelashes to grow? JANE A. Answer.—I do not think the rouge caused the whiteheads. They are ob- structed glands and result from slug- | gishness of the skin. Perhaps you have enough. Remove the make-up With cold cream and then wash your face | with plenty of warm water and soap, using a soft complexion brush and work in the lather. Rinse very thoroughly in clean warm water, then bathe your face in cold water for several minutes before drying it. Be sure to exercise outdoors every day. If you are em- ployed in the daytime, join a gymna- sium class or go swimming two nights a week. Take a warm cleansing bath | each night and a stimulating cold or | tepid bath in the morning, followed by |a hard rub-down. Every night apply white vaseline to your lashes. LOIS LEEDS. Red Blotches on Limbs. Dear Miss Leeds: Since last Sum- mer I have had red blotches all over my legs and arms. How can I get rid of them before Summer. WINIFIELD. Answer—If you did your swimming in a swimming pool that was not kept perfectly sanitary you may have con- tracted a skin disease. 1 cannot tell | just from your description of “red blotches” what the trouble may be, but suggest that you consult a doctor. LEEDS. Mister Sixteen. Dear Miss Leeds: I am a boy 16 vears old, 5 feet 5 inches tall and weigh 103 pounds. If I am under- | weight, how ecan I build myself un? | My measurements are: Waist, 28; | ankle, 9; hips, 30: chest, 31; wrist, 6. | T have a few._pimples and sores on my | face. How can I get rid of them? INTERESTED. Answer.—The average weight for your age and height is 124 unds. Your measurements are slender for | your height, but I think you will fill |out as you grow older. ‘Be sure to eat three square meals a day and drink a quart of milk daily. Avoid consti- | pation. Exercise moderately—enough to work up a good appetite, but not |enough to fatigue you greatly. Sleep nine or ten hours every night. Do not smoke or indulge in other bad habits. Have a thorough physical ex- amination by your family physician to see if there is any internal condition like diseased tonsils or bad teeth that may be keeping you too thin. You will outgrow the pimples in & few years: keep your skin clean with soap and water. LOIS LEEDS. Dark Upper Lip. Dear Miss Leeds: I have a very dark upper lip; it 18 not due to dark hairs, |but to the skin. How ecan I correct this? I am 5 feet 4 inches tall and 16 years old. What should I welgh? BOOTS. Answer.—Perhaps the dark hue is due to tiny blackheads. Examine the skin very closely to see if this is the | not ben washing your face thoroughly | BY LOIS LEEDS. case. At bedtime, when you wash your face, be very particular to lather the lip- with plenty of soap. ve the soap on until dry and then wash it all off. Dry the skin. De this | every night for a week. If your lip is | not ‘much lighter by the end of this period, try using a bleaching lotion or cream after washing. You may use a mixture of one part each of glycer- in, lemon juice and water. The aver- age weight for your age and height is | 120 pounds. LOIS LEEDS. (Copyright, 1929.) e - > || Postage Stamps. | i° = < Our Uncle Sam has learned seme things while busy years have spread | their wings and chased themselves away; we see him now comercialize the little fads of harmless guys, and make the business pay. The postage stamps he used to sell performed their mission very well, but never knew a change; the same old stamps, year after year. would on our valued mail appear, no models new and strange. S$o stamp eol- lectors had to send to countries at the planet's end, if they'd have something new; if they would have their minds at peace they had to send away to Gresee, or far-off Timbuetu. Then Uncle Sam at last awoke, and said, “If all these nutty folk demand a frequent ehange, I'll give them new stamps every week. 50 they'll no longer have to seek abroad for models strange.” And now' there are new stamps on sale until it uses all our kale ta buy them all, by jings: old Uncle Sam commemorates the - days of our sovereign tes, and fifty other things. He's printing stamps to honor gents who were m! up in great events a hundred years ago: he's print- ing stamps so bl ing fast the poor eollector stands a as he digs up the dough. There'll be a stamp full seon, I ween, In honor of Darius Green, who first conceived a plane; therell be a stamp for old John L., who used his mauleys wildly well, and polished Jake Kilrain, When first our Uncle Sam broke. lJoose with stamps en any old excuse, I thought I'd buy them all; but he kept up so swift a gait I 't keep my assets straight, I'm backed against the wall, (Copyright, 1899.) ———— United States has more than 80 per cent of .the world's autes. DENTIFRICE SHALL YOU USE? " ONE product on the market answers to all the qualifi- cations of a good dentifrice—Squibb’s Dental Cream: It is made with more than 5 decay and gum irritations. abrasive, non-irritating. It tissues and helps to keep DENTAL CREAM © 1919 by E. R. Squibb & Soss. With all the bran of the whole wheat 0% Squibb’s Milk of Mag- nesia. Each time you use it, it reaches into every tiny crevice at The Danger Line—where teeth and gums meet. It neutralizes the acids there and thus brings pro- tection against the most treacherous form of tooth In addition, Squibb’s Dental Cream is mild, non- soothes the delicate gum the entire mouth healthy. It cleans beautifully, leaving the teeth white and lus- teous. You will enjoy using it. Only 40c & large tube. SQUIBB’S For Clear-thinking and Quick-acting SHREDDED EAT 12 full-size biscuits Crisp oven-baked shreds of whole wheat— light, nourishing and strengthening—serve it with hot milk for the chilly days—with cool milk for the warm days—Delicious for break- fast or luncheon. Ready-cooked, ready-to-eat. SAVE THE PAPER INSERTS IN EACH PACKAGE