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Margaret Anglin’s New Clothes Miss Anglin, one of the best-dressed women on the American stage, taboos tz bizarre in clothes and chooses only garments that are simply designed, with beautiful, dignified lines. In addition to her exclusively posed photographs, there are several new serge frocks that interpret her perfect tastejin dress. Ina Claire Poses as a Bride and selects for you a number of new frocks for Eastertime. The Hat of Milan is the hewest thing. Eight stunning models are More Fullness Marks thespringtime clothes, but the silhouette is straight— specially cabled to the HOME JOURNAL from Paris. Tucks and Bands trim the suit blouse—shown in designs with patterns. Two Smart Cloth Coats for general wear, and a formal wrap of satin—one of them Miss Anglin’s. Of Cream Chiffon and black lac, is the newest dreary blouse—a nice Sports Frocks ares . Straight Lines make the matron’s street clothes smart and wear- able—patterns are shown. You'll A Dressmaker’s Sewing Secrets A woman who manages & smart dressmaking estab- lishment in New York City has written for the HOME JOURNAL an article revealing some of the secrets of needilecraft that ordinarily distinguish the costumer’s garments from those that are made at home. The ideas will be helpful to every woman who makes her own clothes or any of the accessorics for them. Waistcoats are Modish and will be a feature of many coats for spring. Every fabric, from brocades to embroidered stiks, wools and linens will be used, often with the new favorite Czecho-Slovakian embroidery. Ideas are shown for embroidery, and there are patterns for the waistcoats. Every Smart Costume this year is apt to boast of ribbon—so here are ruffs and girdles and hand bags and sashes and panels of skirts, all of ribbon. The HOMB JOURNAL tells you how to make them. Three Matron’s Frocks for church anda fourth for formal wear—also with patterns, : The College Girl who chooses the clothes shown on page 76 will have no dress problem From Two to Fourteen one would be happy in such Easter array as Mother can make from these new designs, Your Initial Full-sized capital letters, nicely designed for mark- ing linen of the prospective bride or of the estab- lished housewife. With a choice of a diamond or an oval frame for the initial letters, THe SRATTLE STAR You'll Save on Clothes Save on Food % And You'll be Better Dressed and Better Nourished Here Are Many Ways to Do It: Your Income—How to Spend It Do you have a hard time to pay your bills, or are you living ye hg your income? Do you your money HOME JOURNAL S. Agnes Donham tells how to save where you have wasted; how to get more for mre Faster Eggs as they know them in France—some recipes from a French cook that will vary the monotony of break- fast and luncheon, Time and Dollar Savers Ten cooking suggestions that you'll never find in a cook book—they’re new ideas discovered in the home-economics schools. And they will save time and money in the kitchen, Knitted Frocks for Children with full directions for making them. If you can knit at all you can make these attractive little Pine-Needle Work Now is the time to get busy with this fascinating work for use on the summer porch—baskets and flower vases and hand bags and cake baskets. You can make them all, French Sauces Marie Jacques sends us recipes for some of the sauces that she uses in her own home in France— they make things taste better, somehow. Plan Your Home Garden Now! It will soon be time to plant the vegetables for summer and fall use. Here are plans that will fit your own back yard. Letters to an Amateur Mother Are you a real mother to your children? Do you Ieseay Now 00, talee. cave OE shein Mitie sii. Gall bodies? Read Edith Howard's sencible advice in the article on page 120 of the March JOURNAL. A Little House that you may build this year. oo architects—one in the Far West, one in the Middle West, and one in the East—for their ideas of the right house to build in 1921. The plans they sent us are unusually interecting, This Year’s Flowers No home is complete without some flowers—here are directions for growing both annuals and peren- nials, in a variety of kinds and colors. Early Spring Colds and Coughs How to keep the children well during the unsettled weather of March. Practical Politics Aine depertenet 5 the Oe Se fnew woman voter. It will appear each month and questions and exercise their new power in national, state toca politics. Five Senses’ Worth of Fun A party for young people that sounds like a whole barrel of fun! Make-Believe Sunshine Are your rooms dark and ? Maybe it’s bee catise your furniture, your wall-paper, your hang- ings are al] too dark. Here, in full color, are some suggestions that will lighten and brighten your A New Citizen in the White House—by Mary Roberts Rinehart Stories by E. Phillips Oppenheim, Grace Sartwell Mason, Fannie Kilbourne, Margaret Belle Houston, Eleanor Hallowell Abbott T All in the Big March Issue of Ss? OME JOURNAL: 168 Pages—20 Cents BOYS everywhere are wanted to deliver copies of THE HOME JOURNAL to regular customers. Any bright boy can earn from one doflar to five doflars or more monthly, after echool hours. For full details write to Circulation Department, The Curtis Publishing Company, 965 Independence Square, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,