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"Various Fillings for Pincushions BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. PINE NEEDLES MAKE A FRAGRANT FILLING. Pincushicns whether plain or ornate must have one thing in common if they are to be satisfactory, and that is the right sort of filling. Unless pins can be thrust into them easily they are useless. No one likes to push and work pins into a cushion that is resistant. The pins should be held firmly when lightly stuck into it. Today I am giv- ing some unusual fillings for pincush- jons that have the desirable quality and suggestions about those to avoid. ‘There are two fragrant fillings: One is pine needles; the other is coffee grounds. Now is the time to begin to gather the pine needles. Before filling the cushions see that the needles are sun dried. Pack them close together, for a pincushion should be firm. Make the first container for the needles of cotton cloth, or muslin, as it is called in some parts of this country. A lightweight is preferable as the pungent fragrance of the pine will penetrate it easlly. The outer cover ‘may be anything the maker chooses, but a somewhat loose weave will be best for the same reason. Coffee grounds, like pine needles, cost nothing. Save the grounds after all the essence has been extracted when mak- ing the beverage. Spread the grounds on a metal or enamelware plate and de- hydrate by sun or dry heat. When every bit of the moisture is gone put the grounds into an air-tight container and add them from day to day until a sufficient quantity to fill a pincushion has been collected. Make the cushions a8 described above. Curly horsehair is the finest filling for pincushions. It is light and fills a cushion without making it heavy. This filling is also the most costly. Sawdust and sand are two fillings that are cheap and good, as pins can be pushed into them easily. Sand is heavy, and is not recomfmended for large cushions. Saw- dust is not so heavy and as it is ab- sorbent pins will not rust quickly in it. Wool is light, easily penetrated with Eelru and is not hard tc get, for it can bought as wool wadding. Cotton should not be used. It is re- sistant. =Absorbent cotton is less re- sistant than ordinary cotton wadding and can be used in emergencies, if it is available and none of the other fillings are when one is making & pincushion in a hurry. (Copyrisht, 1920, DIET AND HEALTH BY LULU HUNT PETERS, M. D. Care of the Teeth. “What are you doing in there—tak- ing a bath?” Ray's father sang out to her this morning. She didn't happen to be; she was just washing her beau- tiful teeth as they should be washed. How many minutes do you take in washing your teeth? Probably .less than one-half of a minute! Did you ever time yourself? Do you know you should be three or four minutes by the clock, and if you have irregular teeth, or pyorrhea, as long a$ five minutes, and this three times a day? (Gardner.) (Twice a day is enough if the teeth are normal.) One of these cleanings should always be before going to bed, so your teeth and mouth are clean for the night, with no foods allowed to remain to _ferment. You should have two brushes, to alternate them so the bristles will be kept stiff and in good condition. The best type of brush is a small one, with bristles of uneven lengths and in groups far apart, so they can better get in be- tween the teeth, and so they them. selves can be kept clean. And use them so that the bristles do get in be- tween the teeth., If you want to see how ineffective the usual brushing is, MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. Cod Liver Oil. One mother says: Most children like cod liver ofl un- turned against it by the remark of some older person. Mine love it, and to make sure that they continue to think it a treat I use the following version of the little pigs: This little pig went to market, this little pig stayed home, this little pig had roast beef, this one had cod lver ofl, this little pig oried, Wee! wee! wee! Give me some! Give me same! And the little pig him some! The children enjoy this 1y and if by chance I forget and use the old-time wording I hear, “What about the one that had cod liver ofl, mamma?” (Copyright, 1020.) e o Gives your skin @ "weather proof” complexion that re- | mains beautiful under all conditions. Far superior to powder, as it does not streak, got or rub off. Made in White, lesh, Rachel and Sun-Tap. look at your teeth afterward in one of Uoilt oo pupried “at te Semosia surpr al e deposits you'll find ltllrlp!h!r!. o ‘Toothpicks are to be discouraged, but dental floss may be used if used gently so_that there is no injury to the gums. Dentifrices.—The function of the dentifrice is simply that of a mechani- cal aid to clean the teeth. It should not be too gritty or too soapy, nor have any particular medication in it, Mouth ‘ashes.—The best mouth wash is a salt solution, according to many specialists. Usually normal salt solution is recommended—on- teaspoon- ful to a pint of water; but Dr Louise Bell tells me that if it is twice the strength of the normal solution—one level teaspoonful to the full eight- ounce glass of water—it is very much more effective in killing off the germs of the mouth. Bhe advises after brush- |, ing to rinse the mouth thoroughly, drawing the water in between the teeth, and then gargling the throat three times. Then hold a small mouth. ful for five minutes (one can be dress. ing meanwhile), expel this, and gargle three times again. This care of the teeth that I have outlined, plus the balanced diet (yes the integrity of the teeth does also depend on the diet, even in adult life), plus regular visits to the dentist, will help prevent infections of all sorts, in- cluding pyorrhea. “Is a pimple which forms regularly every four or five weeks and has been doing this for the last six years, likely to end in cancer? My husband will not see a doctor about this, and I would like your opinion. MRS, B.” A pimple in itself isn't any indica- tion of cancer, but there must be some chronic disturbance there to have one occur every few weeks for the last six years, Mrs. B. It may be an overac- tive oil gland which fills up like a blackhead and gets infected. But since it is around the head, it certainly should be investigated because it is under suspicion of having cancerous possibilities. Your husband should go to a competent skin specialist. Skin cancers are curable in the large ma- Jority of cases, if not too far advanced, by fl"lse X-ray, radium and other treat- ments. Eggs Goldenrod. Make a thin white sauce with one tablespoonful of butter, one tablespoon- ful of flour, one cupful of milk, half a teaspoonful of salt and a pinch of pep- per. Separate the yolks from the whites of three hard-boiled eggs. Chop the whites fine and add them to the sauce. ©ut four slices of toast in halves lengthwise. Arrange on a platter and pour over the sauce. Force the yolks through a potato ricer or strainer, sprinkling over the top. Garnish with pnm:v and the remaining toest cut in points. e Enrollment in night classes in Lon- | don 1is rapidly increasing. Cool x5a p lunge married my| very much in rflzé [ friends and eliminated everything except money:gettifnig. evety moment of the day to toll. g else but forging ahead in bu: not even devote any time to re I am one of a thousand college students calling from door to door to offer these Sgtclll bargains. I should be pleased to show _you sampels, he sed, and ma sed, Yes I dont doubt it, but Im afrald I have all the stockings I require at pres- *PWell ‘of “corse Im werking ell_of corse wel my through college and Ive ony mm sales so far today, the boy sed, and ma sed, Well Im sure I wish you better luck in the future, but I say I dont need stockings, and after all thats the deciding factor after all, And the red headed h{ went and ma sed, Well if he ony e 2 sales he cant be much of & salesman so I dont see what he's blaming me for. And she put on her hat and started to go out and another boy in long pants was just wawking up the steps, saying, Parden me madam but Im representing the Ironclad Silk Btocking Company to enable me to werk my way through college. Being & boy with shiny black hair and shiny white teeth and long eye lashes, ma saying, My goodness your the living image of Ronnel Ronnell in the movies. So my frends tell me, the boy sed, and ma sed, Have you made many sales today? About 15, the boy sed, and ma sed, izzent that marvelliss, well of corse I can always use a few exter pairs of stockings, being & woman, hee hee. And she looked at the sampels and ordered 6 pairs. NANCY PAGE Playthings of Yore Treasures Today. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. Lois and Nancy were on an “an- tiqueing” trek. They had gone with their families for the Labor day outing and then stayed over a day or two to motor around in the small country towns. They found a little shop in = little house which yielded all sorts of things. Pirst was a luster ictpure in copper with & band of dark biue around the neck of the pitcher. This dark blue had coppery figures on it which caught the light. Lois took that. Then they found a plece of Spode in old ivory. The dish was a sauce boat of some kind. It was egg-shaped and fastened to a leaf of china for base. The cover was perforated in a lattice pattern and had embossed and raised vi and flowers trailing here and there. A china ladle was included. Nancy took that. But her find which thrilled her mast was a little girl's tea set. There were four cups and saucers, & tea pot, sugar bowl and pitcher. The cups were two inches high, a little over three inches wide at the top. The saucers were five inches in diameter, The ware was creamy with age and decorated with a scrool pattern of most intricate and lacy pattern. Then in the hottom of each cup and on the sides of the tea pot, pitcher and sugar bowl was & group of figures—two girls with & gypsy te&n: the fortunes from her reas the palms. The stamp on the bott “gipsey” all done up in a lacy scroll. Nancy was enchanted. She planned to use the cups for after-dinner coffee. She carried the parcel home, eager to show it to Peter. (Copyright, 1929.) of read does: one serve after-dinner coffee? Nancy Page, care of th a stamped, self. d e 3 fof' Ber Jeaiet on table eciauerte P . Pickles. Cucumber Pickles—Slice some cu- cumbers or leave them whole and pack in jars as tight as possible. Dissolve one cupful of sugar and half a cupful Lo soe et of v 134 oo 25D001 of mi spiees, the jars with this brine. away in a coal place. Carrot Sweet Pickles.—Wash, *scraj and botl the carrots in salt water lmm md:r. then plecdk num’ in jars. a.v: egar prepared as for any swee! pickle. Pg\u over the carrots and seal while hot. When write to inclosing asking Why, No Wife Can Be All-in-All to Her Husband. Sage ‘Advice to a Neglected Wife Who Is Provided With Good Home. : Why should I give up the l6vé and friendship of &ll my tances fof & woman whose love, but as soon a: thought o on an; time visiting n:z friends. I musf It I did, aded me. I gave I did everything i g\ and my wife naj home and established my of all my associates. world and am perfectly willing to be a but I am not willing to give up every of do you think? ew how to please my wife and keep her fr¢ ‘was successful in business, but with success came a larger circle of d about it until conditions became unbearal business where I can enjoy the love I would like & pleasant home as well as any man in the terest ifi e seems t6 bé on! ofs wlbt% wgom was drove away all my 1 must not waste a single ess. I rhust not spend any 2. 1 suffered mysel! to bs henpecked. nagging. I acquaintances , and 1 left and friendship od and faithful husband to my wife, er human association for her, Whal A HENPEOKED HUSBAND. Answer: I think that a woman never makec a greater mistake than when she tries to monopolize her husband and to make of his home & place in which he is kept & prisoner practically incommunicado, ‘Yet all-in-all jonthip and affection. many a bride starts out with the foolish idea that she is going to be to her husband and that she is going to supply his every need of Bhe thinks she is going to be & satisfactory substitute for mother and father and sisters and brothers, for old friends and old pals and all the associates of a lifetime. Nothing but the colossal conceit of ignorance could inspire such an egotistic dream. For we are all many sided and no one person, however versatile, can meet our evel the tender, calm, abiding, faithful, enduring, understanding need. We want the love htat we give to our mates, uncritical love of our fathers and mothers, and the love of our brothers and sisters with whom but_we also want we have grown up and with whom we have every memory in ecommon. We ;-nt Irlendflx‘lp to which "l“;n opm o&r hml";; :n a) juaintances with whom we merely pass the time ol Y. $iin wh have worked shoulder to shoulder, our comrades who have fought with whom we by our sides and those with whom we There are times when men want to talk with men, heart-to-heart talks with other women. confidence, and We want those have merely trod a measure at a ball. In a word, we want variety in love.and in our social relationship just as much as we do in our food, and the most beloved person and the most brilliant conversationalist palls upon us as much as do the 30 quails in 30 days if we are forced to an unrestricted diet the East that no two travelers who the world together ever get as far as Yet the first thing that most young wives do is to male and female. that his house was to be their home and that there and a place at the table for them and he has some old woman friend, who has been like & mother to him, of how husbands’ old friends, !-tunu:\{ told his chums ‘would aiways be & seat by the fire assured his wife will love her and how grateful she will of his or her society. They will tell you in ever set out alone to make & journey around Shanghai on speaking terms with each other. bar their doors to their Before he was married John has be to her. But the old friends shake their heads behind his back. They know better. They have had it happen before and lost they will be given such a hunk of cold they know that when John marries he is to them, that when they call the doormat will be frozen to the floor and shoulder that they will never come again. For the bride isn't going to have any old friends with their don't-you-remembers and their talk of ls?renturu and experiences of which she knows nothing. She feels they separate her from him. But it she were wiser she would know that a wife's best way of keeping her husband is by palling with him and she can never do that unless she draws interesting people and people he likes about them. And she ‘would know also that other people act as a from getting on each of all, she would know band and doses of their society. BEN having him bore her would be for them not to liv;;o buffer between husbands and wives and keep them other's nerves by furnishing fresh interests. And, most that the only way she could keep from boring her hus- each other over- ROTHY DIX. Dm DOROTHY DIX: I have been married for 24 years to 8 man who has 800! d habits and a position that pays him $10,000 a year. which to clothe the two children and myself, keep help that I need. He keeps himself handsomely He is out of town about five times a year gives me $3,000 a year on the table and pay for any dressed and gratifies his every desire. and while away never writes a line. He just niggardly to me and neglects me. Now I am ‘wondering if I should go A NEGLECTED with this lonesome, loveless life or not. Out of this he is not unkind to me in any way; he is : You know the old proverb, my dear lady, about the unwisdom of Answer: jumping out of the frying pan not minimize the dreariness of your lot. perience for a woman to be mfhrried to a man who is cold and selfish eonsiderate, who pays her none of the little attentions that of life to & woman’s heart, who never tries to make her happy, It is hard to endure loneliness and lovelessness, interest in her. That is one side of the picture. fortable home. your children safe with you educated and launched in life. into the fire. You have an adequate, and you know that they will be cared for and Whether he does it graciously or ungraciously, Consider that for a while. I do Certainly it is a heart-breaking ex- and in- are the very bre: The other side is that you have a com- if not a liberal, allowance. You have you have a man to stand between you and the world. Suppose you leave lmng world with young girls. for T take it that you would not endure the agony of seeing your him. What ‘1]1"'};;7“ dl:? e own. You are a middle-aged woman with no trade by which you and you would find it- practically impossible to compete ‘You have no money of your CAn earn a in the business H uld you support yourself? How would you support your children, e i i be‘ willing to give them up? How would you little ones hungry and cold and ragged, sink- ing down in the social scale, without the advantages their father could give them? Could you bear it even to in an orphan asylum because you happen. Often. So my advice u know not of. so full of love in study, clubs, in doing g become of minor im| 1ife disagreeal shoulder. Copyright, BEAUTY CHATS About Reducing. ‘There is one thing I must now and then warn my too stout readers about. That is, don’t become too enthusiastic and reduce too fast! If you are over- welght and lose flesh too quickly, you're bound to look old and haggard. Your skin has stretched over a lot of flesh; it can't shrink so fast. If it hangs Joosely over your face and body, of course it is going to go into wrinkles and slack lines. You've taken away the foundations from under it. On the other hand, the skin posseses marvellous elasticity. Cold eream mas- sage and ice rubs will asist in keeping it fresh looking and in shrinking it as u reduce. But even so, keep yourself ¥|?um reducing more than 2 pounds a week. I know a woman who is rather stout. She was going with some friends to the shore and could not bear the idea of putting on a bat] suit. In three weeks she took off 15 pounds. While it improved her figure, it made her look 10 years older, She should have started reducing earlier, and taken more seven weeks to lose this Here is another suggestion for a of rmuetu menus: Breakfast—Hal cantaloype, a poached egg on a slice of lute fi“ and .u t:u“}’d of coffee. celery nu!la ‘with cottage cheese ‘(ellxt of fihl.l), 8 hu? E;:n .flf{esh ruit cup and a glass of milk or bnmmgk Dinner—Clam boutllon, a chln;k“. spinach, hall po- slice of f a ta combinstion green salad with Good Health So Cheap And So Pleasant To Take With all the bran of the whole wheat . to you is to bear the ills you have rather than fiy There are worse things than grumpy hubsands. for your children that it will suffice you and find interest 0od to others, so that your husband's portance to you. Just one of the ‘unavoidable pin pricks of ble incident that you meet with philosophy Agg Rnoll'tru‘ of the have them taken away from you and put could not provide for them? Such things to those Fill your indifference will THY DIX. 1929, BY EDNA KENT FORBES reducing mayonnaise, a bran muffin and some fruit ice and a small cup of black coffee. Tea with lemon and a small biscuit is allowed midafternoon and at bedtime also, if you are hungry. But never sugar, never butter, and never cream. Miss M. D.—You cannot dye lashes 50 the color will be permanent; in fact, you could not permanently dye hair at all, as the new hair will be coming out from the roots all the time in whatever color is natural. Lashes are no differ- ent than any other halr. You can dust some shampoo powder into your hair whenever it gets too oily, and then rub it through the hair with your fingers for a few minutes before you shake all of it out again, In taking sulphur for your skin you should mix it with sirup so it wil} make a paste that is easily swallowed. The dose is a_dessert spoonful three times a day for three days. Rest for three days to let the sulphur clear out of your system and then repeat for another three days. Continue this way for a couple of weeks and then stop taking it, as it should have done all that 1§ expected of it by that time. e e S South Africa now has 10,000 miles of railways. on | or show any | Everyday Psychology BY DR, JESSE W. SPROWLS. one's first real ambitions are likely to suffer a seétback. Young people are, of course, lonlln,‘.(or explanations for their 4l and the inferjority compléx is readily accepted as & llkelyl candidate smong a host of causes. following are some of the defense reactions which indicate an inferiority complex; it 1. Extreme sensitiveness to criticism, ‘This must be extreme, for any normal person is always somewhat sensitive to eriticism; at least he should be. 3, This condition of sensitivity is ¥ | followed by the development of what are known as ‘“ideas of reference.” Those who suffer from “ideas of reference” en- tertain the suspicion that some person or group of persons is plan: to em- barrass them. They get to the place where they hesitate to take part in the most innocent of social contacts. Some- times they imagine that even a group of strangers on the street is talking about them. In one case that has come to my attention the individual felt un- easy on street cars with seats so ar- ranged that the passengers faced one another. 3. They dislike contests of all kinds. And since normal life 1s full of competi- tion they are hard put to find ways and means to keep from displaying their self-lm&:ted weaknesses, They engage in contests only with those whom they may easily surpass or with those whom they are not expected to surpass. In other words, they shun normal competi- ~4 women want to have | tjon 4. They develop a chronic tendency to criticize other people, even strangers. ‘They go about offering confidential criticisms of people, many of whom they have only read about or heard about. At the same time, in order to make this criticism appear just, they will offer one or two conservatively toned complimen- tary remarks, usually at the beginning of their tirade. ‘To sum up, the real indications of in- feriority complexes are extreme sensi- tiveness, ideas of reference, dislike of competition and derogation. (Copyright, 1920.) Home in Good Taste BY SARA HILAND. ‘Who can resist the charm of a corner c\?bolrd, especially if it has on each side a window with those little square panes and ruffied curtains of sheer ‘white material? In the fllustration is shown one of two corners in a small and informally furnished dining room. Between the two groups is sufficient wall space to ac- commodate a tilt-top table over which G AULHRE g b 1 3 S a banjo clock would be effective. On the table might be placed a silver can- delabra or tea service. ‘The floor might be painted and covered with a plain carpet, hooked rugs or a large oval bralded rag ruh. ‘The woodwork in this room is finished in ivory and the walls in a pale shade of parchment, having just enough yel- low to appear warm. ‘The floor is tan, the rug plain medi- um !reen and the curtains of white or- gandie. ‘The interior of the cupboards are fin- ished in a light shade of coral and the furniture is mahogany, which looks elpuci:lly rich against its lovely back- ground. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y, CORY. No'm, her ain't easy seared, an' I m}:* her you p'obably isn't as bad as y 3 Roaches—Moths— Anta—Fleas S —Fli —quw—lcw— RN :.m—fldehn many otherinsects 8 E Write for educational booklet, McCormick & Co., Baltimare, Md. ~ BeeBrand | INSECT POWDER orLiquid Spray | Great Triumphs of Children Mosart at 6 Won Hearts of Emperor and Empress of Austria. BYJ P GLASS, “THEY WERE ALL ENTHRALLED BY THE CHILDREN, ESPECIALL THE MIDGET OF A WOLFGANG. it “Next to God comes papa,” Wolfgang Amade Mozart used to say as a very small child. 1t was fine that in succeeding days he made that parent w he so res and loved very proud and happy. Leopold Mozart, himself a most seri- ous and accomplished musician, was naturally on the lookout for talent in his daughter, Marianne, and his son. He began to ‘h Marianne to play 'on the harpsichord when she was 7. Then Wolfgang's great genius came out. Though scarcely 3, he tried. with strik- results, to imitate his sister. e father taught him a few minuets in his fourth year. He learned each in 30 minutes, playing with marvelous pre- cision and ness. 1d Mozart was awed. Hence- forth he pushed his son to the front and himself remained modestly in the und. ‘The child made his first appearance at Balzburg before he was quite 5 years old. He moved his audience to tears, he was so tiny and so serious, and withal so unaffected. In the next year, 1762, when the boy was 6 and his talented sister i1, Leo- pold Mozart took them on a tour, with Vienna as their ultimate goal, - The children's fame had preceded them. They had scarcely arrived in t‘:. elplulmbel:;: f.E;y w‘e‘? instructed come per palace of Bchoenbrunn. “The imperial family was extraordinar- ily fond of music. The Empress Mario ‘Theresa sang extremely well, and her children were talented, too. The Em- peror Francis I had & thorough under- standing of music. ‘They were all enthralled by the chil- dren, especially by the midget of a Wolfgang. When the boy had finished his first number Francis I was heard to murmur, amid awed silence, “The child is a sorcerer.” After another number Wolfgang called for the court composer, George Chris- topher Wagensail. The Emperor, who had been hanging over him. stepped back and summoned Wagensail to come forward. With the utmost dignity and seriousness, the child said to the com- poser: “I play a concerto by 3 You must turn over the pages for me. ‘The imperial audience was completely captured. The Emperor made him play a tune with one finger. Then he had a cloth brought. “Ah,” he said, “I have a trick for you.” He covered the keys with the cloth. “Now let me hear you,” he sald. Wolfgang conquered the test bril- liantly. ‘These personages were only people to him. He sprang onto the lap of the Empress and kissed her. He treated the princesses as sisters. He particu- larly liked Marie Antoinette, She picked him up when he fell on the slippery floor, and he said gravely: “You are good. I will marry you.” For Wolfgang Amade Mozart it was the first signal triumph of many that he was to taste before he ceased to be a child. Life was short for him, but full. He died at 35. (Copyright. 1929.) Movies and Movie People BY MOLLIE MERRICK. HOLLYWOOD, Calif., September 3 (N. A. N. A).—Now that the village is installing cooling systems in its Bev- erly Hills mansions, there are possibili- ties galore for interesting results. Motion picture players, faced with the added burden of memorizing lines and with early rising and late going still to their credit, cannot stand the enervating results of too intense heat. So a few of the colony's financial leaders are hwmldennx the cooling system for the ome. ‘The private Turkish bath has long been an accepted fact here. Any one who is in the upper-salary class has a steam room and showers and electric cabinets and the reducing paraphernalia. Of course, the swimming pool is the first | indication of a well-lined purse, so the steam rooms are generally adjacent to the pool. In many cases a well equipped gymnasium is to be found in this neigh- borhood also. Now the sybarites of the village will be able to turn a lever and make their homes as cool as their theaters. No longer need village belles become beleaguered by overimportunate suitors Picture the lady stepping to the wall. drawing a lever and releasing a nice coating of rime in the drawing room. The cooling system might be used to advantage by some Hollywood bachelors who have difficulty getting girl friends away at a conventional hour. It's a better hint for the homeward start than yawning or glancing at the clock. Alice White has adopted & new coif- fure for the benefit of the fad watchers. If you remember your “Alice in Wonder- land,” you'll recollect that this lady of many adventures wore her hair brushed straight back and tied about the head with a blue ribbon. A perky, small bow ‘was directly on top of the hepd. The little White adds a wondering * expression and a gentle gravity which is very alien to her former obvious ani- mation. It is most effective. This is known as “changing one's type” in the village, and happens quite often, and usually with beneficial results. i ‘The depredations of a spider known ' as the “black widow" have caused no small amount of annoyance here lately. | ‘The “black widow's” bite, often fol-| lowed by convulsions, is considered a grave matter. The spider tried it on a | columnist, not knowing that any one who has been writing about movies has | sufficient stored-up venom to counteract even a “black widow.” The victim came | off with flying colors. I'll admit the colors were chiefly black and blue end | Ln an area of about 4 inches about the ite. ‘The gentlemen of the press who have found their way behind megaphones here are doing amazingly well. Realism creeping into gelatin finds these dealers in truth right on the mark. Monta Bell, formerly of the press, is doing outstanding work, and Gregory La Cava, who did a comic strip until his sense of humor became so over- worked that he turned to the camera for rescue, now is in the front rank of the realistic group. And whether you believe it or not, some of the most precious village laddies are having their suits fitted quite snugly at the waist line. The coat buttons on the left side, tra la! (Copyright, 1929, by North American News- paper Alilance.) '¢ DISCOVERY FATAL TO BED BUGS-for 50 years) Bedbugs live and breed down behind baseboards, picture moldings, and such hard-to-get-at places, as well as in beds. Peterman’s Discovery Liquid flows down and kills ALL the bugs, their young, their eggs. It is sure, safe, stain- less and economical. It hasn't failed in 50 years. At All Druggists Full quarts 60¢ (2 smaller sizes) 9 KILLE_FLIE PURE WHITE, FINER Take a Blue Box of Jack Frost Granulated Sugar—open its exclusive clever pouring device —pour some of it out—and examine it for yourself. You will see at once how fine it is, how white, snow white. N Jack Frost Sugar is uniformly white and fine, uniformly pure. It’s made of 100% pure cane sugar; and it comes to you packed for protec- tion in the sanitary Blue Box. When you buy Jack Frost Granulated Sugar you know it is clean and pure, something you can never know about sugar bought in bulk. Remembeyr, there’s a JACK FROST SUGAR for every purpeses POWDERED BROWN * GRANULATED TABLET CONFECTIONERS Don’t ask your grocer for & », Insist n Jack Frost Sugar in the Blue Box. Sold by all steres that feature e quality Refined by THE NATIONAL SUGAR REFINING CO. ofN.J.