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wWOoM Smart Beret BY MARY ‘The milliners are already showing the nNew hats for Spring, but there still Temain two months of Winter to spend us. Unless you are planning to spend these months at one of the Winter re- soris, you will find an additional Win- ter hat of some sort quite acceptable. The smart beret shown in the sketch AL 15 just the thing to wear on cold, windy or snowy days, when you want some- thing that is warm with being dif- ficult to wear. The original was made from fab: fur, but it may be copied in cordurcy or any attractive wo terial. It is, as you see. no more nor less than a close-fitting beret, but by a simple arrangement of elastic it is made to fit down well at the back. The pattern for this beret is very easy 3. AN’S PAGE. for Cold Days MARSHALL. from the fabric fur or \ther material and cut a lining from' thin satin or silk crepe of the same size. Seam up the ouside pieces and the lining pieces as described, and put together with seamed | sides tog:ther. Attach the lining at | the lower edge of the bani piece, insert the elastic, and the little hat is done. BY BETSY CALLISTER. First Aid. You may know what to do for first aid in case of a cut or burn or bruise, but if you haven't the first-aid tools and materials at hand where you can get at them in a hurry, your skill as a first aider isn't worth a good deal. It is possible to buy inexpensive small sities, but for practical home use a rather larger box is a good selection Possibly you have a covered pasteboard box left from Christmas. 12 or 14 inches square and 5 or 6 inches deep. Into this you can put the smail iin Kit and additional supplies or you can buy separately all the small articles needed and put them into the pasteboard box. { which should be marked with a “ed | cross. cut from red paper or applied | with on or paint and left in a conspicuous place in the bathroom Your box should c in a pair of scis- | sors never used for any other purpose, | because in case of emergency precious | seconds may be wasted looking for scissors o cut the bandages. there should be one or two roll | bandage, a roll or box of sterilized absorbent cotton. a small package of gauze and a pair of tweczers to use for removing splinters. In this box you should also keep a_small bottle of fodine and a bottle {of alcohol. The alcohol is used to |Tub the surface of the skin before removing splinters or to remove dirt from the surrounding surface of a cut or bruise. Before using tweezers or other instruments you may be sure that they are clean by dipping them in hot water and then in alcohol. Thi: does not. of course. make them sur gically sterile, but it is a generall satisfactory precaution in case of emer- gency. | tin boxes equipped with first-ald neces- | to cut. It consists merely of a circular portion for the top and a straight bias| A 5 strip for the sides. It is a good plan to cut the pieces first from ssnw H‘:CX- Salford, England. city (.n“nf“l has pensive cotton material, 52 as to be sure | Placed a ban on capital expenditure for that you have the right size. First,| 12 months. measure the top piece, and then, meas. uring the circumference of this circular | portion, cut a strip about 3 inches Jonger, cut'ing the ends in.a diagonal| line. 'Seam these ends together and| appiy the band to the top in a seam,| easing the band on a littlc at the back and sides. A strip of elastic about 6 inches long is inserted in the lower edge of this band to take up the full- ness at the back. Having cut your pattern of the right size, cut the circular piece and the band AUNT HET (Copyright, 1931.) BY HOLLYWOOD, January 20(N.AN.A). | —There is motion’ picture history in the making; that is, if all the infallible signs and portents are to be taken as having the same significance they have had in previous motion picture criscs. Sylvia_Sydney, brunette, pretty, pos- sessed of plenty of “it.” went in yester- | day to play the role Clara Bow was to | have playcd in the picture opposite Gary | Cooper, and the Paramount corporation | declares that Clara Bow's doctor has | demanded that the star take a four weeks' Test. So adversely have court appearances dealt with Clara Bow's nerves that the district attorney, who had earlier in the case signified his intent of recalling her to the witness stand later, now says he will probably do withou: further ap- pearances of Miss Bow. crowds surpassing any that have here- tofore collected at the famous “it" girl's suit against her former companion and secretary, Daisy De Boe, have blocked | the vicinity of the courthouse. The most significant factor in this entire case is the rumored ire of club- wemen who have been credited with a restless rumbling and a tendency to de- I mand less shenanigans in the stars put on the screen for their delectation and that of their husbands and children. ¢ : “That the romantic adventures tro, Seleve that story about manua |igra Bow should make her-an object scrape up s-me kind o' dinner for that |Of Broup disapproval seems almost missionary an’ run over the nicest kind | \aughable in 1931. But not so very o ke a5 |long ago this thing happened to Mary IR carien | Miles Minter, involved in an unsavory (Copy. | murder mystery, and to Mabel Nor- | mand, who, although pl;;vefll hcyu{ndhn { shadow of a doubt to clear of the MENU FOR A DAY. ‘sn;;k;ust mn:it of par'impanannln the — Taylor_tragedy, was destroyed by con- BREAKFAST. e win e 4 Diced Grapefruit and Orange. Women's organizations at that time Cerzal with Cream strenuously objected to Mabel Nor- French Toast. Coffee. mand’s screen appearances, and the - | world lost the best comedicnne of pan- LUNCHEON. {tomime it ever had. Edna Purviance Prizzled Beef with Tomatoes lost out in pictures because of unpleas- on Toast. | ant publicity. Waldort Salad. At this telling that is the thing which Tea. threatens Clara Bow—the thing which binner Veal Cutlets in Gravy. Cream:d Potat Boiled Onio 1931) Ccokies. | producers fear may destroy box-office returns. For some time now the cor- poration has been trying to build Clara Bow as a dramatic actress. They feel she has ability along that linc. So her stories have been bolstered with an in- | teresting and capable cast instead of the usual matcrial given a Bow type FRENCH TOAST. Two_eggs, one-half cup milk, | one-half teaspoon salt, six large | | slices stale raisin bread. Beat ( eggs slightly; add salt and milk. Dip bread in mixture until cov- ered on both sides. Fry in a lit- tle hot melted butter on a hot greased griddld. Serve plain or with sirup ! FRIZZLED BEEF. One-quarter pound dried beef, 4 tablespoons bacon fa!, two tablespoons chopped onions, one- |, half teaspoon salt, one-fourth teaspoon paprika, three table- spoons flour, one and one-half cups tomatoes. Heat fat in a frying pan. When hot add beef, onicns, zalt and paprika. Cook until well “frizzled.” Add flour. Cook well and stir constantly until brown. Add other ingredi- ents, cook two minutes and serve on the toast. BUTTERSCOTCH PIE. Mix one cup brown sugar, ti egg yolks, two tablespoons b ter, ‘one cup milk; put i double botler, let come to a boil, then add three tablespoons flour mixed with three tablespoons water. Cook until thick, then add one teaspoon vanilla. When cold, put in a baked pie crust and cove ith two stiffiy beatcn Gradually the entire quality of Clara THE KIND 0O THAT DENTI THE MOST Do You sometimes wor taking the best care of sands of Ameri agree on one kind of de A leading rescarch in gation among 50,000 p authori might " be MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE MOLLIE MERRICK. But meanwhile | of | why not try f vour tecth Then, you'll welcome the expert 1 dentists, They overwhelmingly that this question of the most effe atively THE EVENING Flower Garden Quilt Pattern Carnation. The appliqued pattern of the carna- | tion will carry a bright motif in the| |garden quilt. Its slender leaves are dark green. Directions—The designs should be appliqued on_fine white muslin or broadcloth. Cut each block 9 by 12 inches. If the white fabric used as a | background is fine enough, it may be | placed over paper ‘and the pattern| | traced in’ the middle of the biock in | | pencil. “Otherwise use carbon paper for | tracing. First, trace the pattern in the | | center of the white block. Second. trace { the floral design on the different col- | ored materials, allowing for seams for | 1 | i each petal, leaf and stem. Third, turn narrow hems and applique, following | | traced pattern on white block. Bowls may be appliqued in any color desired. | The narrow stems may be embroidered in s strand embroidery thread. vlique the heavier ones. Join comp! blocks by 4-inch strips of green ma- | terial | N. B.—These designs may be don- in | colored embroidery threads, using out- | line stitch. Designs also may be usad for | pillows, cushions, lampshades, waste- | paper baskets. corners of curtains, bed- spreads and paneled on doors of chil- dren’s cupboards. i You may obtain the full-sized pattern | for the carnation applique free if you will write for it. Address your letter to the Managing Editcr of The Star |and inclose a stamped, addressed en- | velope. Bow's work would have changed, yet the metamorphosis would have been so | imperceptible that audiences would have felt no jol:. The role opposite Gary Cooper was the first of thess big chances in a new field. And the Daisy De Boe business bhas undoubtedly checked it. | Will Clara get another chance if the women of the world allow her to pro- | ceed as before? It's hard to say. Strange litle twists can make great havoc in a public life, and this little | | twist comes at a very bad time. When Daisy De Boe tells that she has been secretary, companion, maid and a | lot of other things to Clara Bow there | is a tendency to forget that all this was {done by Daisy De Boe for a considera- | tion. It was a job for which she was| well paid, even at the $75 a_week rate| on which she was begun. A lot of girls | who work very hard from morning till night for far less than $75 a week would | have regarded Daisy De Boe's job as a | sinecure. But the lawsult is revealing to an! avid public a Jot of things about a star | which shouldn't be revealed. The fa-| mous red hair is dyed, says Daisy over the vigorous denials of Clara, from dark garden variety brown. (That's| true of most of the red heads of Holly-| wood.) Daisy paid Clara’s bills, and the pub- lic is learning that some of the large | checks were written for poker debts and some to buy presents for boy friends.| The public has heard about these boy | friend from time to time, but seeing| them indexed, so to speak, has them| all worked up. | It might be a very sane thing on the part of the women of the vorld to re-| gard motion picture actresses as mo- | tion picture aciresses, to think of | them only from the standpoint of thel work as_entertainers and to forget the! private lives completely | Sarah Bernhardt carried on to the| finish in_spite of a lot of boy friends| and exciting publicity. So did Anna| Held nd a lot of others. In the inter-| csts of good sportsmanship it might be | a good idea not to identify the work of | | i public characters with their private lives, Cop: | 193k by North American News- | Paper Alliance.) | Australia’s wheat crop this season has just been officially estimated at 200,- 000,000 bushels F DENTIFRICE TS CONSIDER EFFECTIVE? rder if you actually are and gums? lvice of thou- cream. stitution made an investi- ‘ticing dentists in order tive dentifrice answer Read the | grinding tyrant who makes cowering j of the hous egg wiu To each egg white add cne teaspoon iced water, three tablespoor gar, one- fourth teaspoon powd-r ow oven. n A MODERN FACE POWDER FOR MODERN WOMEN _The modern woman, smart, beau- tiful, pop and a_keen shopper —prefers Plough’s “Favorite Bou- quet” Face Powder! She recognizes its supreme quality, its beautifying pover and the smart thrift denoted Y its popular price, That’s why vou, too, will like this marvelous face powder....will qu ly understand why it is the large: selling face powder in the world for 23c, Be sure {0 ask for Plough’s “Favorite Bouquet” in the square shape red box! 2 “FAVORITE BOUQUET” FACE POWDER If you prefer a heavier textured powder, ehoose. Plough's ““Exquiite” Face ovger §n the round red box, sc. For oil n, choose Plough's “Incense of Flower: wvowder, in the red oval box, 75¢, st | Face Powder, | 1 | | | | cummary of the replies received: % of the answers stated that germ acids most frequently cavs tooth decay and gum irritation; aereed that the most serious trouble occurs at the place where teeth and gums meet ; sated that the best product to prevent these acids from causing decay ond irritating the gums is Milk of Mognesia. 05% 85% rely this is real assurance that you could select no better dentifrice to protect your teeth and gums than Squibb Dental Cream. For it is made with more than 509 Squibb Milk of Magnesia. Squibb De teeth quickly gleam. And it is safe. Contains no grit, no astringents—nothirg which might injure, Get a tube from your druggist. Copyright 1931 by E. R. Squibb & Sons DENTAL GUARDS THE DANGER LINE al Cream cleans thoroughly— STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, EAR Miss Dix—1I heard a man assert the other day that the woman either made the home or broke it, and that if the husband and wife did not get along it was the wife's fault, because she had failed somewhere. What do you think?—A. B. C. Answer.—Many men appear to have the naive belief that women are miracle workers who can make a happy homo out of thin air, and who possess some occult power of charming even a surly beast of a husband into amiability and good nature. But this is a superstition that has no foundation in fact. Making & happy home is a_two-hand-d job that it takes a man and woman working tcgether to achieve. No woman alone and unaided and without any co-operatior 1sband can any more make a happy home than he could Inasmuch as the home is a woman's province, her vesponsibil'ty for it is greater than the mar’s, and its welfare is more dependent on her than on him She strikes its note of cheerfuln-ss or of gloom. She makes its atmosphere of serenity or peace. She makes it a piace of comfort and ease or of discomfort. No heme can be & happy home in which tha woman at the head of it is peevish and frctful and compla‘ning or nagging or melancholy or high-tempered. No home can be a happy hom: unless it {8 well kept, unl:ss it is clean and orderly and has well made beds and well cooked food. No ons can imagine a husband and children hastening joyfully to a homo in which there is a shrew of a wife and mother, or to a home that is slovenly and dirty and where they will | sit down to a meal that would kill an h. But, on the other hand, no woman, not even if she has the disposition of an ang-1 and can cook like a French chef, no matter how kind and good 2nd intelli- gent she may be. can make a happy home if there is a man who is a drunkard in it or if tiere is a surly grouch in it, or if the man at the head of it is a mean, | aves of his wif> and childran. All of us know homes where the wife and children live in terror of the man | d the v und of his key in {he lock hushes even the baby's | pratile and sends the cat scurrying for the collar. We know men who &t up in sulky silence in their homes, with nev:r a pleasant word for anybody, and whose | very presence in & room sends the temperature down to zero. home conversation censists in insults to the mem- v that any woman can make a happy home when h is fco’'ish. No human being could do We know men whose only bors of their families, and to she has such a killjoy on the ‘There s not one of us who ham't known some home that was a gloomy. in which nobcdy ever laughed and in which thers was never any i nd that w ed into a place of sunshine and mirth and ath of the husband and father, whose dark and brooding ypirit t a pall over it. lous to sayv that when a husband and wife don’t got along e's fault. Sometimes it is. Just as ofte; isn't. d tactless and eantankerous, probably hu.sands | 1t Is cqu 3 s alwa 1 it comes to by As a general thing wives m wore effort to pleass their husbanis than their hushands make to please t Most wivas try to adapt themselves to their husbands’ ways 2nd to learn how to gumshce around their peculiarities and to generally handle them with gloves. any effort 1o try to manage {heir wives prop- their wives and find out how to work ihem. ~s0ap their Marias, they don't take fhe irouble DOROTHY DIX. But very few men ever make erly. They don't bother to stud Even when they know how to so to do it, (Copyright, 1931.) ASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. shows that his enthusiasm for the sub- | ject with which he is so familiar is Just as great as ever. In fact, at present he is crusading for a review of all legislation which has to do with employing postal con- tracts as an aid to this country's| merchant marine. Bald, gray-mustached and faced, he is a familiar figurc on Scnate floor He does not speak very often. he does, it is with a rather low sometimes difficult to hear. H His career in th> Scnate has been distinguished. When the Democrats | controlled the Senate organization un- | der Woodrow Wilson, Fleicher was chairman of the important Committee | on Commerce. At present he is the| ranking Democrat on that committee, | as well as No. 1 minority member of | the Banking and Currency and Military | Affairs Committees. ]LET the subject of ships or shipping < Db> mentioned on the floor of the United States Senate and it's a pretty safe bet that you'll hear from the senior r from Flor- For it is a 2ct which lies close to the of Duncan v Fletcher. ing the more 20 years he has been & Sena- tor he bas made this subject his legislative hobby. A”colleague of his is authority for the statement that Fletcher has given more attontion to merchant marine problems than s oth-r man in pub- lic life. | - He prides himself on that. Nothing | Next to the merchant marine in his apparently pleases him more than tointerest are inland waterway: have the opportunity to discuss the | Gulf-to-Maine inland project was one subject of his dreams, and he saw it become a It was Flecher who, immediately after | reality. ) the World War, advocated establish-| He also proposes the buliding of a ment of regular routes to keep engaged C¢anal from the mouth of the Mississippi the great war-time fleet of merchant River to the Atlantic Ocean and has craft. And it was he who opposed in Worked untiringly for the project. the Senate the sale by the International | __Senator Eletcher also interested him- Mercantile Marine of its ships to Brit- |Self in rurai cradits and was the chair- ish interests and held out for Govern- |mMan of the United States commission ment operation as a means of Keeping ‘\)\r’]ll:(k)’:\s subject appointzd by President the American. flag on the seven seas. | Ty /\Uig after the findings of this com- Now 71 years old and continuously!mission that the farm loan act was a member of the Senate since 1909, he passed in September of 1916. 6 SOUP PLATES ruddy- | the ‘When voice The kind you would buy with your own good money . . . yours for only 75 coupons from OCTAGON -2 PRODUCTS $ix coupons must be from Octagon Soap Powder Six very lovely soup plates—in the 8-inch size that the modern housewife prefers. They're made of porcelain—with a most attrac- tive Rose and Poppy decoration. Just the sort you'd buyif you were spending your own good money—and they cost you nothing. Save all your Octagon Coupons carefully. Remember that there are six Octagon Products, each of which does its bit to lighten your household tasks. And each one has a premium coupon. The coupons from Octagon Toilet Soap count double value on this offer, which expires on June 30, 1931. Note: Write for big cata- log showing hundreds of other fine. Octagon Pre- miums. AddressOctagon Premium Dept., 17 Sus- sex St Jersey Ciev, N, J. OCTA SOAP CHIPS 'OCTAGON 0AP CHIPS. Take your coupons to any of the jollowing: OCTAGON SOAP PREM OCTAGON SOAP PREMIUM STORE OCTAGON SOAP PREMIUM STORE OR . N.W., Washington, D. C. 521 N. Eufaw St. Baltimore, Ma. ALEXANDRIA. VA. C. Page Waller, 601 King St. BRENTWOOD, MD. Max_Hoffman: Bunker Hill Road and Hill St. ER. VA, Hudson & Roberts, Main St. FALLS CHURCH, VA. Clarence M. Sale, Broad St. FREDERICKSBURG, VA. W. A Bell & Bros. Main St. FRONT BOYAL VA, arren Furniture Co., 26-30 East Main. HYATTSVILLE, MD. Max Dietz, Maryland Ave. LAUREL, MD. Laurel Furniture Co., Main St. LEESBURG. VA. Edwards Drug Store, King St. MOUNT RAINIER, MD. Pryor’s Dry Goods Store, 3604 34th 8t. ORANGE. VA. Grymes Drug’ Co., 212-214 Main St. OSSLYN, VA. irginia Hardware Co., 13-15 Harlowe St. JANUARY 20, 1931. “Ahoy!" says Capt. Ee says, “Ahoy! This salt sca air has made me feel as if T were a boy.” Our hero and the Bunny say the same is true of them— So all three dance a hornpipe from the stern clear to the stem. Heron, and again Stuffing for Goose. Mix four cupfuls of soft bread crumbs with one cupful of unsweetened cooked prunes cut into pices, two grated ap- ples, two tablespoonfuls of minced onion, two teaspoonfuls of salt, two teasp-onfuls of sage, half a teaspoonful of paprika, 2 teaspoonful of curry pow- der, half a teaspoonful each of Sum- mer savory, thyme, and sweet mar- joram, one-third cupful of melted but. fer, and one cupful of water, or enough to moisten Pack this stuffing loosaly in the fowl, which should first he wipad | dry after washing, and roast. Baked Mashed Potatoes Boil the required amount of potatoes antil soft. Mash, add butter, cream. and salt, and whip until light and fluffy. Pile rcughly into a shallow buttered baking dish. Whip a small amount of | thi FEATURES! Billy Mink Is Indignant. at fair for vou s fair for me: ith this You 'cannot-disasree. —Farmer Brown's Boy. To be indignant is to bé cross, angry, you know. Bill Mink was indignant. | He was very much so. And Farmer | Brown's Boy was the object of that| indignation.” You see, it was this way: Farmer Brown's Boy pecred between the | bushes an the bank of €ha Ris River just in time to see the tail of a pick- | erel disappear. It disappeared in the | end of an old snow-covered log lying | there in the bushes, and Farmer Brown's Boy knew that the log was hol- | low. He grinned. | “So this is-where you are hiding my fish!" he exclaimed as he stooped over to look in that log. Finally he had to lie down in order to look in. He was grected by a snarl. That was Billy | Mink. Yes, sir. that was Billy Mink. It was his way of telling Farmer Brown's Boy that he wasn't welcome. Farmer Brown's Boy could see the tail | of a pickerel. He reached in and got | hold of that tail. When he started to | pull that fish cut he found that some | one objected. Yes, sir, some one ob. | jected. ‘That some one was Billy Mink | he had fast hold of the head of that | | fish. He was pulling In the opposite | }mmcmn. He didn't propcse to have | that pickerel taken from him if he could help it. | Slowly, very slowly, Farmer Brown's | Boy drew that pickerel out, Billy Mink all the time hanging on. It was not until Billy had actually been drawn out of that hollow log that he let go of that pickerel. But when he was faltly out of that log he let | g0 and bounded to one side so_quickly | that it was hard for Firmer Brow | Boy to follow h's movements. Thcn Billy arched his back and fairly shrickad at Farmer Brown's Bov. Billy’s cyes were red with anger and the air | was filled with a strong, rather unpleas- ant od-r of musk, all of which was proof | of how very indignant h= w. Farmer Brown's Boy g | “Keep your temper, you litle rescal,” | said h>. “What is fair ior one is fair for the other. You robbed me. but I am | not _reaily robbing you, f-r I am only getting back what was mine. It was very clever of you. Yes, indzed. it was | very clever. But now th> tables are turned you don't like it. Well, I suppese that were I in your place I surely BEDTIME STORIES but he had disappeared. Then he picked | did_so : cream until stiff and spread a | Wouldn't like it. ¥ou feel tnat you arc thin layer over the potatoes, sprinkle being robbed by a great giant who s with grated checse. and place in a |taking advantags of his siz>, but ycu are moderate oven until the checse is meited | ot E;egh"'fl‘r?;’?;h’éihu‘:‘fllag"l i E tatoes ] | s e of the TRRLESP GRS SO TR | Green Forest and th> Green Meado :\}:m'}d m-k: u;:;m m:lm now—the law S . ~ at seys to him who can take and SONNYSAYINGS | keep a ‘thing, that_thing belongs. Al the little peopie of th> Grecn Forest and . | the Green Mecadows w that law and BEVEANNESS. live up to it. It h~s aiways been the law and always will be. We humans have a | better Jaw. It is that only those thin-s | honestly obtained belong to any man | Well, this pickersl is all right. Now T'll s2e what more you have in here.” |~ He thrust his arm in the ho'low log and presently drew out several minnows Then he f>und what he w>s searching for, the other pickerel. This was the | first one taken from the bank. Billy | had tak=n a bite from just back of th» | head, but ctherwise it wes all right Farmer Brown's Boy loox>d for Biily, MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. CORY. When Telking to Child. When my youngster is playing out- doors cr in another room and I want to talk to him, I call him to me. I not shout from cne room to another through a window. By bringing him t- me I can impart my message in a quiet | volce. T know that Billy is listening t~ | me and understands what I require. By | following this plan I have leirned to spare both him and myself many mis- I wist T had somsbody to hide behind. | taxes, A Misunderstandings and ~much (Copyright. 1931.) | (Copyright, 1931.) | Woobpwarbp & Lo 10™ 11I™ F aND G STREETS FRAN By Thornton W. Burgess. up the minnows he had taken from the log. What do you think he did with them? He put 'm back in that hollow log._Yes, sir, that is just what he did. “1 won't take all your spoils, mni said he. “T'll keep the pickerel, but I’ give you the minnows. What is more, when I get through fishing I'll give you Hlaov “KEEP YOUR TEM! . YOU LITTLE RASCAL,” XAID HE. the minnows that remain on the hocks Now what do you say to that?” Of course. Billy didn't say anything He hadn't understood a word and he couldn't have rcplied if he had. But when at the end of the day's fishing Farmer Brown's Boy put another hand- ful cf minnows in that hollow log, Billy forgot his indignation. Yes, sir, he “T would rather have these minnows any way " said he (Copyright. _1931.) i :l‘(_)i",nd aCough InaHurry, Mix This at Home To end a_stubborn cough \| quickly, it is important to soothe \\ and heal the inflamed membranes, get rid of the germs and also to aid_ the system inwardly to help throw off the troubl For these purpos home-madé med anything ¥ou ¢ the cost. " From any drug 214 ounces of Pinex. Pour this inte a pint bottle, and add plain granu- lated sugar syrup or strained honey to fill up the pint. 7This takes but a moment, and maket a remedy so effective that you will 1 ever do out, once you have usid it. Keeps perfectly, and children like it. This simple remedy does three necessary things. Firs . it loosens the germ-laden phlegm. Second, it soothes q“*ng the in'lammation. Third, it is absorbed intn the blood, where it acts directly on the bron- chial tubes. This explaine why it byings such quick relief, even in the obstinate bronchial coughs which follow cold epidemics Pinex is a highly concentrated compound of gennine Norway Pine, containing the active agent of creo- sote. in a refined, palatable form, and known as one of the great- est healing agents for severe coughs, chest ®olds and bron- chial troubles. 3 Do not accept a substitute S for Pinex. It is guaranteed (5 to give prompt relief cr. ‘fiéfit \money niundod. s Lo ionnd for Coughs,, THROP CES DENNEY Nnit V@?‘SCLI‘y @peeé Once a year we celebrate this event, To those seeking beauty it will be a thrilling adventure. Bring your beauty problems and Miss Denney’s representative will study your skin and advise you—(consultation with- out charge). You will receive the same personal attention that is ren- dered in her fascinating Salon in Philadelphia. You will learn how FRANCES DENNEY has devoted her entire lifetime to the art of mak- ing women more lovely. For many years Miss Denney re- stricted her clientele to women who could visit her Salon, but during re- cent years her wonderful prepara- tions have been introduced to the women of this city. Today, and ail this week, in honor of this Anniversary, every woman who selects a treatment of Frances Denney Preparations is presented— without charge—her regular $1.50, full-size Jasmin Flowers Powder. Listen in to the Frances Denny Program Over WRC Wednesday morning, at 9:30 AM., Hear Miss Leed's message on the sc tific care of the skin-and artistic make-up & ‘ToILETRIES, AIsLES 14-16, FirsT FLOOR