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FEATURES A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT C. PLUMMER. WOMAN'’S PAGE D. O, TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1929 Home in Good Taste Entrees Served as Main Dishes BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. NANCY PAGE s What About Child Who Says “I Won't?” BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. Does Man Who Saves for Future Miss Joy of Present?>—When Should Wife Go to Work for Husband? i It seems like s long time since were considered just about the “last word” ‘in the furnishing of the up-to-date room; and a bay window which did nct boast of at least one of ‘The main dish for & family luncheon dinner can be one of the hearty risties of entrees, Such a dish may feven be sufficient for a meal when there 4s company, although it would not do 8t all for a formal feed. For example, JFROM Capitol Hill to the White recuperating from an {illness at her Saent, is egarded by the are y hotels home at RE‘ Beach, N, Y. She hll:, upon this met to amuse her- self. The smart set was quick in taking it up. She was urged to go into the . i Peter was quite concerned over & new phase which was developing in Joan. to p 'hen he told her do some- these t (usuale e e cuiies 5 i S S L9 e unicts "By St | [DEAR Miss DTE: % am maredto o fine man who o ey god and ind oS St PSR AP S | Y 20, 061 I £ v Sl y He was ready to pun! T, me Vi y for every way, but we cannof e on " y Soeve) ate many B MINSSIINL ity DUt Nancy® diverted his anguish the | matter of saving money. I came from & family Were we spent everything We | finished. (Pt L L S T g e e lpt Fntrus. ‘Two are given today to help Now we find in a modern plece made and we didn’t own our own home or have anything laid up for the future. first time and then talked the mat- since the sales goes to the tuberculosis fund of ter over when Joan was in bed. My husband came from a family where they were taught to save and 100K | gometh! which remin Hoo took the Association for I ing the Cone m"’"'!h'h'“ ""“c"'“ w pota-|, In my child rymolon class we | out for the future and they have houses and money in the bank. But I think muu‘l“ubh because its top is just | the b ey ,::;f dition of the pw?'m"m'v‘,"y,,f,k. ‘ toss inky medium sized diee and fry in telked about Just this thing, Xt sesms | S IAmALYS WY 18 BeL e e beut pecause Jou. 656, X i ous Toy | e Tieht sis”for w Bowl of fowers|slon. It was s _proud moment in the life deep "Tat untl brown, Fili sach Aliet | that Syery mother there conte 2 long V. What do you'think? Lo i) of Felix "Weinberg, | 18-year-old art THE CAULIFLOWERETTES MAKE AN ATTRACTIVE GARNISH. #implify the homemaker's task of se- g:::nng satisfying but not too hearty ot-weather dishes. Supreme of chicken with caulifiower =—One cupful finely minced chicken or iveal, or a mixture of both; three eggs, half pint medium cream, two cupfuls of jcaulifiowerettes, half teaspoonful salt, pepper to taste and paprika to decorate, mnd three-quarters cupful broth from the chicken or veal. Cook the cauliflowettes after sepa- Tating them from the head of the cauli- flower. Mince the chicken very fine indeed. Season it with the salt and pper, add a little of the broth and {cream 'and beat one egg into the mix- ure. When thoroughly incorporated continue to beat in more milk and proth, then another egg, then more of ghe liquids, and finally the third egg. e mixture must be smooth and deli- ate. Pour into a& well buttered mold mnd bake slowly. Set in & pan of boil- ing water for one hour, or until the top f the mold seems firm to the touch. XCover the mold during the time it is fpoach-baked. Unmold on serving dish, gurround the mold with the cooked icaulifiowerettes, sprinkled well with poprika, and serve. If the meat mix- gure does not unmold perfectly, sprinkle the top with finely minced parsley. ring with the potatoes seasoned with salt and pepper. Arrange parsiey tips and lemon slices around the platter ;rem serve theh wm;:n egr tartar sauce. as, s ans, IC Asparagus or spinach can be used to fill the cups, and potatoes may be served as a separate vegetable if preferred. (Copyright, 1939.) SUB ROSA BY MIMIL Pockets. A man's sult has sbout & dozen pockets to it, and the merchandise he carries would start a small-sized 5 aiid 10 cent store. When woman bern to imitate the straight line effect of male attire, she clung to the idea that there new outfit. Imitation was all right up to a certain point, but the boyish frock has no goekeu to carry the goods which a girl as to store away in her handbag or hoslery. We are still feminine in spite of our appearance. We want to wear sensible costumes, but don't want to have them humped up like a camel At the same time, we need pockets even when these are not found in a graduating gown or & shroud. We don’t want the valuable things of life to roll off us like haillstones must be gl:w!ded wit] carrying the stuff we want to keep. Now, pockets are found in other places than coats and vests. There is a pocket in the rock for the gold. Another such pocket in the ghell for the pearl. Surely there must be places of such capacity as to enable us to carry what we want. Eyes and ears are pockets of & cer- tain sort, and there are plenty of things to see and hear just as there are spe- clal tone pictures, nowadays. If we use our sense organs properly, we can carry away the kind of goods out of which ob- servant minds have made discoveries, to say nolhlnfi‘ol fortunes. Great minds are always well equllpped with deep pockets. Milton was blind- but he could see without his eyes when he wrote Paradise Lost. Beethoven was deaf when he wrote his Ninth Sym- phony. And then we have Helen Keller- who developed a fine mind with hardly any senses at all. These people have in- side pockets. ‘We make our mistake when we think that the successful people have lived different lives and had better luck when ‘we should know that they were just like us and in the same kind of a world. The difference between those hum- dingers and oursglves is merely one of pockets. They fitted out their mental wardrobe with clothes in which there were plenty of pockets to carry what they might want to use later on. Look your mental outfit over as it hangs in the closet of the brain and see whether it is fitted out with pockets capable of retalning the real goods of lite. (Copyright, 1929.) —_—— Iced Coffee Cup. ‘To one pint of freshly made strong black coffee add one teaspoonful of vanilla extract. Strain through a fine sieve and heat in » double boiler to the bolling point. Then add two well beaten eggs, mixed with two tablespoon- fuls of sugar and four tablespoonfuls of thick cream, and cook until the cus- tard coats the spoon. Remove from the fire, beat well and cool. Just be- fore serving one cupful of whipped cream sweetened to taste, a pint of shaved ice and one quart of charged water. Put into tall glasses with a little whipped cream on top. KEEPING MENTALLY FIT BY JOSEPH JASTROW. Is There a Real Witcheraft? sive |the ages without som: | which suspicions arose in the mind of th observer? I belleve that witcheraft is Teality today, but limited to the youn | unsophisticated. "And Low untrain ple unugine things! Is not ning of all our trouble in life due to the intim |1dating spell ‘laid on us by other people's manners or looks or feelngs? I Iy a man called iIpon to say som| public dinner: d | trary, he is sl cause he knows he is amon| If he happened to belleve that he could e finished in all younk people are tender-minded. do we mean by & sneer or & leer or chiding but & way to cast s spell on another per- been & morbidly sensitive by being spelled, 10 the machinist trade, my foreman turned suddenly from being & friend to an ogre Within sight of my hands: I seemed to go blind. s 1his analogous to the farmer's belief in the “hex” when his cattle and poultry be- came {117 A farmer’'s success depends upon having the good will of his neighbors: Do we not all become disconcerted by a fear or belist of getting some evil-disposed Der- son’s fll-will> We. can be “buffaloed.” A bird loses power of flight under the ince of a snake or a hawk. Witcheraft is a Teality. Only today we cannot say the evil person is allied with some supernat. ural of oecult power. The power 1§ mone the less. . Reply. ! ‘These extracts from s very long let- ter convey just that mixture of truth and error that leads to confusion. It isn't all wrong, it certainly isn’t all 'right; and, like & ehord, with one of the notes wrong, the whole is a discord. If we believe that some people are Jonahs and others mascots and act on that bellef, we are foolish, We may be foolish about little things that don't matter much or foolish about big ones that do; the folly is of the same kind. If I conclude that the reason my stocks went down is that I followed the Judgment of & broker who is & hopdoo and not one with bad judgment, I am superstitious just as I should be it I belleved the cause was that I bought the stocks on Friday, the 13th. The whole question s one of how you put together causes and effects, the basis of & bellef and the effect of & belief. I can’t disentangle all the confusions ©f this letter in & short space, focus of discussion is fear; but fear As a blanket term for & reaction to very igifferent types of situations; the nawmeé - OMe A 4 Sop \ \ Sluggish—slow — sleepy? Eat vitalizing, appetizing uncheons —salads is the same (because ordinarily we don’t make fine distinctions), but the actual response is different. When & man breaks down at an after-dinner speech it 1sn’t because some one is cast- ing an evil eye u) him. On the con- med of it just be- friends. not speak when his chief enemy 1is present snd was disconcerted, we should still have & ?ertecny natural explana- tion and not call it witcheraft, The fact that if you belleve in witchcraft you act somewhat in the same way as if you were nervous doesn't put the two things in the same class. ‘The very recognition that these sev- eral cases of fear, for which being spell- ed or hexed or buffaloed is a way of rationalizing or rather irrational- izing the situation, occur in timid and sensitive as well as {gnorant and young people means that they are the re- sult of lively fear. They are subjective and no more real than was the belief in animal magnetism as a force to account for what we recognize as suggestion; and suggestion is heightened under a peculiar state of the. mervous system ot "g’t’:'u"?u it isn't because ghosts see 5 are real (and they also have been be- lieved in and described for ages), but because if you believe that ghosts look like that you will, if suficiently fright- ened and imaginative, see them that way; and they are white use you couldn’t see them if black, not because they are really white. In brief the two orders of belief arise out of two opposed habits of thought, the one of which is helpful and the other harmful to understanding the kind of a world we live in and by that route affects mental fitness. 1t is familiar that one of the ways to affect people is by the look we give them: we are accustomed to vead others’ emotions in the expression of the eyes. 8o influence by staring became the center of & system of belief—that of the evil eye—of the same mental origin as the belief in bewitchment. The whole subject has & natural explanation; if we follow that clue, we shall avoid the con- fusion of truth and error. (Copyright, 1920 i e e e /-w—\ @ milk and must be practically no pockets to the | her child was, or had been rebeilious. Usually this phase develops around two or three. Joan is getting it later, that's all. The psychologists call it negativ- ism.” “I ‘don’t care what they call broke in Peter, “no child has a right to be s0 ornar{; If I thought that our son——" “Oh, he will be the same, Peter; don't fool yourself. But let's talk about the cure. “We expect instant obedience from children, forgetting that their play means as much to them as ouyr work does to us. When Joan calls me and asks me to see something she has made I find myself saying, ‘Not just now, Joan; Aunt Nancy can’t come, she is busy,’ and yet if she said that to me I would think she was rude. They S8y ‘no’ because they haven’t formu- lated their reason for not wanting to be disturbed. That's one explanation. I have found that if I make too much of her ‘won’t’ she gets set in the way of saying it. But if I find some playful way to interest her she comes right along and forgets she started a rebel- lion. The other day she started to go to a neighbor’s house. I called her back. She went right on, looking back to see what I was going to do. I was having a wonderful time smelling some flowers and she was so excited about that that she forgot about going away and came over to have a good time with me. I belleve we do not make our demands interesting and exciting enough. We issue a command and ex- pect them to obey and it is not in human nature to do that.” MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. After Every Party, One mother says— After Easter, Christmas, New Year, Thanksglving, Halloween and Valen- tine’s Day isn't it & problem to dispose of all the never-to-be-forgotten decora- tions snd knickknacks? For several years I resurrected the papler-mache jack o'l anterns, the gay Santa Claus #nd other jollitries from here and there about the house until it seemed that the house was fairly overflowing with such pretties. One day I toox a large pasteboard box, covered it with gay wall paper and placed it on a shelf in the store room. Decorations, which too often hang in the dust, are now carefully put away in our holiday box. Once the decorations begin to seem commonplace, they are stored away for future use, Party favors and clever pictures from calendars are also added to the box. This has proved an asset on many occasions. Its economic value is obvious. Cherry-Almond Pudding. Mix two cupfuls of stale bread erumbs with half & cupful of three table- sugar, spoonfuls of melted butter and one cup- ful of . Let stand for half an hour, then add beaten egg mold. Cover and steam for two E:u . Serve with the Juice thickened with cornstarch mw with lemon juice. [ Answer—I think your husband ot age com husband’s parents? 3 It isn't hard to answer these has a standing that the floater w! inch of ‘wel in bank. Sickness and lack of nothing else in If you could save your mone) thing you made ym{ ‘would b.y.’r:‘!llure 'l:‘“’l‘ Job you will have to stick to it you find out that your talents lie in which you are traveling. More than that, no the end to have no results. old and hard times comes to fall back upon in that evil hour, 8o, my dear Mrs. J. P, try to Poverty Flat. §reat as having an extravagant wu.e. . nothing and are always dodging of chance. question of sticking to a hard job. work and support her breadwinner for her family, she can do one or the other of two something to take care of an seem to have. far outweighs any obligation you hi ignore him if do everything Moreover, if there is you care to. Bes for your chiidren by do will fan it into flame and make him his family. Habits With New Money. ‘You have been handling the new cur- rency long enough to have become quite familiar with it, both as to size and appearance, Of course, women in general have been criticizing it. Some say it is like “cigar store coupons,” others say 1t is easily mistaken in denomination, and s few find it loses itself in the voluminous folds of their purses. Anything new is first criticized and then praised, and money is no excep- tion. At first it would be well to be a little overcautious in using the new currency. Make certain of the denomination. It is easily distinguished, as we pointed out some time ago, by both the clear D ar purte 5 Jarge, get 8 clip for r , get & yuuf’:h“h Such devices are excellent in any event, because they keep one's money her. encourage one to keep the roll of bills in & particular part of her purse or dbeg. Until your currency is all of the new muv&lufiymawmbhymxng 1o keep the old and new bills separa The two are quite dissimilar in size, and it is possible to confuse them when paying out cash hurriedly. ou will find that it is unnecessary to fold and roll these new bills as you did Lucky Children Indeed, If Their Mothers Know and Serve WHEA With all the bran of the whole wheat your old age, but that is a long way off yel . J. P. student of Baltimore, when he was ey it and tagune Sy gmmimed o Sl % It pv is exac it b are capital on Great Bri 's new million- "’M'.llt of mmmybefll‘ dollar embassy on Massachusetts band’s. " 3 avenue, wrong, and I do not see what better proof trast the position of your family and your ‘Which has the better posftion in the community? Which has the respect whom the members lve? If l'lf:m- should come, which one hold would es, what will be the fate of your parents estions.: ‘The man who owns his own house moves from house to house, possessing no Emp-rw of his own, never has. The ht in every community, are the solid, I&Hl:ymfll& are misfortunes to the forehan but they are un&t.dlu to those who have nothing laid up for a rainy day. And world 15 80 terrible and piteous as dependent old age. A very wise man once sald that the abllity to save was the test of success. would succeed in life. i t'.:’nd Tdu htt.nu, m’ it yal:n l‘t?a no& n:u you will never hx.f“ the hl:\em ing advantage o oppor s that come your way. you have & "o because you cannot take l{u risk on the chance of finding & better one. ‘You must go on with work thi in which you can never do your best because you ai thing breaks down s man’s morale worse than never tiing abead. It takes all of the courage and ener im to toll day after day, and month after month, an Just a plle of bills for automobliles you have worn out, for dresses that are in the rag bag, for people who care nothing for you, for theaters age seems a long way off from you now, but it will be upon you be- fore you know it, and then, if you have spent lverhuun‘ 4 went along and saved up nothing, you will know how bitter Kenflenet and how steep another man's stairs. umiliation you will not suffer and you will be forced to accept grudging charity from relatives or live upon your children, unwelcome guest of your in-laws. And in the meantime you live in the shadow of disaster because sickness and sad is the fate of those who have nothing to realize how much wiser your husband’s family is than yours, and learn to deny yourself the foolishness you want today in order that you may have something worth while later on. Remember that these first few years of your married life will settle whether you will be prosperous and live on Easy street at middle age, And remember that just as there is no blessing that a man can have equal to a thrifty wife, so there is no curse that can befall him so Dnfl. DOROTHY DIX: I am married to a man who has no earning capacity, He will not work regularly and when he does make a few dollars he throws them away on automobiles and gas, with the result that we have bill collectors. children and I am determined they shall have an education, but with such uncertain work as my husband does they have small chance of getting even the first years of schooling. My husband is fond of his children, even if he doesn’t care enough about them to work for them. Now here is my problem: Shall I stay at home under the present circumstances and probably bring more unfortunate children into the world that we cannot provide for nor educate? Or shall I leave my husband and go back to my old job, where I can make enough 1o take care of these children I have and educate them proper Ml Answer: When a woman has & husband who is lazy and shiftless, as yours apparently is, she is sensible if she just accepts the fact that he is and that she cannot change him and organize her life on that platform. For the ne'er-do-well is the most hopeless proposition in the world. drunkard frequently reforms and gives up liguor and becomes sober. philanderer gets tired of chasing women and gambler often recognizes that the odds are against him and eschews games But no miracle ever happens that galvanizes and puts energy into the inert body of the loafer and makes him willing to work or gives him the strength to carry on_when the novelty wears off a thing and it is just a So the woman who finds eut that she is married to a man who won't had as well face the truth that she has to be the and the sooner she gets at it the better. husband out of the door or she can keep him along as a domestic pet as she would house & house dog. And sometimes he is to pay for his board and keep by his society an d caress—a necessl In your particular case it seems to me that your duty to your children to your husband. He has reneged on his obligation as your husband and a father and so you have a perfect right to ides, you glving them their chance in the worl gny spark of manhood left in fact that you are leaving him In order to do for your children what he should (Copyright, 1929.) Straight Talks to Women About Money BY MARY ELIZABETH ALLEN. one or more per- But it was even a prouder moment when he found that his knowledge of heraldry enabled him to find a tech- nical flaw in the drawing which was submitted to him. He fashioned his model along lines which he deemed correct and on com- pletion it was declared perfect in every detail by experts. The flag mast capital is perhaps that portion of the structure which is most truly emblematic of his majesty'’s em- pire. ‘Young Weinberg, who is one of the youngest students at the Maryland In- stitute of Arts in Baltimore, first molded his piece in clay, then cast it in" plaster of paris, and finally in bronze, It rep- resents & royal crown surmounted by a defiant lion. At present it is on display iIn Baltimore. President Hoover has his own ideas on how to solve the crime prob- l;m. He !ln\ered The mos! Wash- | them several years ington dus 2 "'i'i‘;‘.':"éom.u s is | 320 in an essay, “In Praise of Izaak that of a policeman on Capitol il Walton.” A magazine prints them in A Winter uniform with its close-fit- | its current issue. neckband and heavy serge trousers Says the President: is their Summer garb. “There were lots of people who com- While the policemen on the beats | mitted crimes last year who would not downtown change to lightweight cloth- | have done so if they had been fishing. ing, those on the Capitol force go out | I belleve that the increase of crime is to meet the hot Summer sun attired in | due to lack of these qualities of mind uniforms built to withstand the chill of | and character which impregnate the ‘Washington Winters. souls of all fishermen—except those ‘Their dutles are not arduous. They | Who get no bites.” tell inquiring tourists how to find vari- ous places in the Capitol. They are statloned as guards about the huge structure. Some of them sit at desks near the entrances. Others enforce traffic regulations on the plaza. ‘They are supplied one uniform a year. rst went to a hotel. He had not been there long. however, before a White House messenger sought him out and bade him come to the mansion. The thing has happened on several same re occasions. :uuv‘?guldunt Ofl-:o“dn. however, recent visit elected to stay at the hotel where he and Mrs. Coolidge lived when he was Vice President. His old suite was turned over to him. And his stay & picture of the former President was displayed in a corner near the elevator to his suite. Mrs. Hoover’s automobile has been equipped with radlo. ‘The other day it was driven to a garage for minor adjustments. It was {cam was eogaged in-an uismly tght for the smoker; and on this | team was en b uf y box as well as at the bottom are | B8me. The garage employes are ardent fans, small trays on which removable ash| ™75 o 4 Lady's radio was turned on, it T The foreman found most of his em- t finish for s tall, slender v ployes grouped.around the car listening table such as this is either walnut or | ¥ O DISy-by-piay sccount of the g} mahogan! specially if it is to be used in the living room should it appear conservative. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. on le who are respected, who mnnfl.ll citizens with mon If you spent every- or 1fouad plant; but it has gone a step further and has incorporated in it com; nts with other uses. About half wn& down from the top is a little box-like part with a little door that of , 8N t may be kept small miscellaneous articles, per- of quitting Nor can you shift your oceupation if some other direction than the way in 1s distateful to you and driven on by the day's and ambition out of year after year, and at rties that you have given to t bored you. you made as you 18 the bread of de- ‘There will not be a depth of or whether you spend your old age in DOROTHY DIX. . Summerall, chief of staff of Gen. the Army, makes it a practice to call high-ranking officers in the War De- partment and congratulate them on their birthdays and anniversaries of cn%m:a t!::to the ':rmy. issatory e other morning, o the story goes, he telephoned a certain major. “Good morning,” said the general; “I want to congratulate you on your thirty-fifth birthday.” ‘The major thought he was being kid- ded by one of the War Department Jokesters. . His reply was quick, irate and pro- ane. ‘There'’s probably no_connection, but the major has been ordered to the War College for a course of instruction. Now it’s the “picture puzgle art.” 1 have two wonderful 1y? RS, H. T. Baby berry ‘tickler to carry & um- brella 'ese hot days on account Rag- Washington's smart set has gone The | Anna got such a delicate complexion. | pack 20 years this Summer and revived es & home body. Even the (Copyright, 1920.) this method of whiling away the time. At the Summer resorts, at Summer homes, on shipboard, in the Capital or wherever the social set gathers, the| game is being played. At almost any party one is likely to find the guests seated at small tables with hundreds of pieces of colored paper before them. When put together they form a piece of art, a famous painting. ‘The game’s great popularity is attrib- | uted to the fact that one of Washing- ton soclety’s own members worked it | out. | the oyster beds. It is a fortunate thing Miss Josephine Flood, daughter of |that the hen oysters do not cackle every in the mold of jelly and pour the re-| Col. and Mrs. Ned Arlen Flood, was |time they lay an egg, for the total egg mainder of the jelly around it. Chill, | product. of the oyster is 5.000,000 eggs. man remove the tumblerl by ‘fl'f.‘"‘u'x | e warm water into it, which wi |zoften the felly enough to allow it to BRAIN TESTS be easily removed. Meanwhile whip Each sentence that appears below contains a wrong word. The wrong three-fourths cupful of heavy cream, add s little vanilla and one-fourth word is in capital letters. It must be replaced by another word. cupful of sugar, stir in half a table- spoonful of gelatin softened in enough cold water to cover, then dissolve by Trie clus 1o the eorrect word i that it contains the very same letters as the wrong word. standing the cup eontaining it in boil- The MELON is & sour “There’s some places in this world where everything that goes down comes up.” Coffee Cream Jelly. Soften one and one-half tablespoon- fuls of gelatin in just enough cold water to cover, then pour three cupfuls of freshly made coffee over it. Add three-fourths cupful of sugar, a few ains of salt, and stir until thoroufialy issolved. ~Set aside until cold, then pour a little into a deep mold which has been lightly rubbed with salad oil. Allow this to set, then stand a tumbler (Copyright, 1929.) Champion Egg Layer. Delicate instruments recently devised have proven that the oyster is not as silent as it has been supposed, for there is a constant undertone to be heard in Then things. She can kick her no-account leasant and amusing enough by furnishing his wife with ity that women unfortunately can do nothing for him lndfiw can your husband, the §0 to work and do a man's part toward DOROTHY DIX. |ing water. Pour the cream into .the space from which the tumbler was re- moved and set aside to stiffen. Un- mold when set and garnish with a little additional whipped cream and a few maraschino cherries. Willie Willis Take four minutes to change words in the sentences below: (1) A SHORE is & useful animal. (2) The sun SIRES in the east. (3) A DERANGE is a Spanish noble- man. (4) Flowers should be placed in a SAVE. (5) A wanderer is called a DAMON. (6) Only & thief will LEAST. (7) 80! are beautiful when in oom. -~ 4I£.The little POOLS sailed down e bay. (9) The SHORN blew when the parade approached. (10) The SLID fell off the boxes. | (11) The POLES of the hill was very great. | (12) There was & PART expression on his face. Write the correct words at the end of each sentence. the old. This makes them easler to handle, because they are actually larger in one’s hand than the folded up speci- mens of the old bills. They fit compactly into even & small handbag, and do not form & bulky lump, as did any sizable amount of the old bills. Because they need be folded and creased less, they will keep in better condition. It will pay you to memorize the faces that identify the bill; that is, Wash- ington on the $1, Lincoln on the $5, and 50 on. If you do that you will never fall heir to a “raised” bill. In other respects the new money is quite like the old. It is as easy to spend, and, as one humorist has sald, it seems to fall into the same hands in the same amounts as the old. Our belief is, however, that it is & vast improvement and one that women will iate fully as the newness Beauty, Ulaffecte by Water, Sun or Wind Gives your skin & “weather proof” complexion that re- mains beautiful under all conditions. Iar superior to powder, as it does not streak, spot or rub oft. Made in White, Flesh, Rachel end Sun-Tan. QIENT, RIENIAL OCREAM L BY ROBERT QUILLEN. bl ize 4 7, New York TOSeS . Ferd. 1, slope; 13, fapt. — wears the bills and their many con- oere <| “I wouldn’t have to wash dishes be- rency while the old is g out of g % eiase Wi cbviste cance of | Sase M ;‘:‘,‘wfl,:{fl,yfin-'fln“ Full flavored or loss. (Copyrigh! and delicious— Seal Brand Percolator Coffee is specially roasted and ground for £ cuES use in percolators frnfoet D by MeGarmick & Company . 1988 KILLS —Flies—M¢ BeeBrand W/ , w INSeEcT POWDER orLiquid Spray Seal Brand Tea is of the same high quality THE CARPEL CO., Distributors, 2155 Quesgns )’ Rd. N.E, Washington,