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The St. Louis Star and Times from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 17

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St. Louis, Missouri
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17
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1 THE ST. LOUIS STAR WEDNESDAY EVENING, SEPTEALBJSK 28, 1327. THE ST, LDUIS STAR 15 THE ST. LOUIS STAR'S DAILY PAGE FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN. WOMAN PHOTOGRAPHER ACHIEVES SUCCESS Uncle Wiggily's Adventures Dorothy Dix Talks Notes on Civic Meetings of and Social Women's Clubs NANCY PAGE Blue Flannel Dresses Matches Chinchilla Coat Hospitality Is Help to Woman in Photography ANY prominent women are working for the success of the bazaar Jl which will be given at Anchor Hall, Park and Jefferson avenues, tomorrow afternoon and evening, for the benefit cf the St.

Louis Parent-Teacher Scholarship Foundation. i A I Sill rrsf A tl I rr AJ JsA Uncle Wiggily's Acorn Necklace By HOWARD R. GARIS. HL Uncle Wiggily! Please wait a minute!" called a voice back of the rabbit gentleman as he was hopping along the woodland path near the. Orange Ice Mountains one morning.

"All right; 111 wait, answered Mr. Longears sitting down on a pile of leaves. He knew there would be no danger from any of the bad chaps just then, for none of them took the trouble to be polite enough to say "please." "This must be a friend of mine," thought Uncle Wiggily. And. surely enough, it was Baby Bunty.

I just want to show yon what I made for her birthday," said the little girl. "Whose birfhday?" inquired the bunny uncle. "The Lady Mouse Teacher's," Bunty answered. "It's her birthday this afternoon and every boy and girl in school is taking her a present. This is mine, I made it myself," and Eunty held cut a piece of bark on which was fastened, with sticky pine tree gum, some soft, fluffy cotton stuff from the milkweed plant.

I "Ah, very pretty, Bunty!" said Uncle Wiggily. "Is it something so the Lady Mouse Teacher can powder her nose?" "Our nice teacher doesn't powder her nose!" declared Bunty. "This fluffy thing is a pen wiper. I made it myself. Everybody that gives the Lady Mouse a birthday present has to make it himself." "Who said so?" asked the rabbit gentleman.

"Miss Mouse," answered Bunty. "In some way she heard that each of us" was going to give her a present and she tried to stop us. But we like her so much we said we must give her present. So she said, in that case, we must not buy anything, but must make the presents ourselves. So I made mine and Jackie Eow Wow made, her a paper weight out of an old bone and Jacko Kinkytail, the monkey, made ner a drinking cup out of half a cocoa-nut shell, and all things like that.

So if you're going to give the Lady Mouse a present, Unkie Wig, you Letter hurry and make it." So while Bunty hurried on to school with her pen wiper present, Uncle Wiggily hopped through the woods wondering what he could make fcr Miss Mouse, for it would not be fair for him to buy any present in the six and seven cent store, whereas everyone else made theirs. As the rabbit gentleman was hopping beneath an oak tree, all of a sudden an acorn fell down and hit him on his pink nose. "Ouch!" cried Mr. Longears. And when he saw the pretty brown acorn on the ground at once it gave him An acorivfell andLKit him en his puik nose a thought, or idea.

Tn make Miss Mouse a necklace of acorns!" he exclaimed. There were plenty of acorns on the ground and, gathering his two paws full, Uncle Wiggily sat down on a log to make the necklace. First he tried sticking the acoms together with gum from the pine tree, but they soon fell apart. "The acorns should have holes in. them and be strung on a cord like beads," decided Mr.

Longears. He found a long, slender piece of wild honeysuckle vine that would do for a cord. Eut when he tried to bite holes in the acorns he found he cculd not. A rabbit's teeth are broad and 1 YOUR BABY AND MINE ET MYRTLE MEYERS ELDRED Colds Follow First Days of School Confinement. ONE isn't being a pessimist, 1 when he looks forward to the first school days being punc- tured with much coughing and sneezmg and nose blowing, for this inevitably happens when a child who has spent months in the open air Is cooped upNin school.

Some families seem subject to constant colds. One or the other of the children forever has a or a "running" ear from the beginning of cold weather. Such a family lacks the resistance to overcome cold germs which are always seeking a home. More sunshine, better food or the proper food, is needed to build up their resistance. What such a fimly needs is a better understanding of what foods are necessary to keep children in good health and able to fight off germs.

Milk, fresh vegetables and fruits, and whole grain cereals should make up the diet of any child. Cod liver oil is a better tonic than any other that can be bought in a bottle. Keep the sick child in bed and hi3 body at an even temperature. Give him plenty of water to drink Give him simple, wholesmoe food. If he has even a low temperature keep him in bed a day after this is gone.

Make him comfortable by putting warm albolene in his swollen nose. If other remedies are needed a doctor should davise them. These are just measures that any mother can follow safely. Head colds can very easily result in ear infections, for the nose chan- Helping a Wondering Girl Choose Between Two Suitors The Problem of the Wary Bachelor and the Young Married Woman Why a Tightwad Husband Kills His Wife's Love. DEAR DOROTHY DIX I have two suitors.

The good points of one are that he comes of a long line of college graduates and is a college graduate and student himself, line physique. Good dresser. Good conversationalist when in-c'lned to talk. Strictly moral and temperate. Ambitious to be rich.

His bad points are: Very temperamental. Too frequently glum. Selfish. Sarcastic. Lacking in common courtesy.

Dominated by jealous mother. Undecided as to future vocation. Is either lazy or physically unfit. Trie second young man's good points are that he is a tireless worker. Very ambitious to make a fortune.

Lover of home. Kindly and considerate. Generous. Good talker. Good physique.

Physically fit. Refined taste. Has already accumulated a nice little fortune. Bad points: Only one year high school. Parents middle class.

Homely at first sight. Only fair dresser. I myself have graduated from high school and have -had one year of college, am a good musician and successful In business. Which one of these young men would you bet on In a matrimonial venture. WONDERING GIRL.

Answer: I would have no hesitation in putting my money on No. 2. He has all the earmarks of the Great American Husband who is the blue ribbon prize winner husband of the universe, with none other like him. Evidently No. 2 is a go-getter and that is a bis factor in his favor, not only because to have a comfortable homp and good clothes and a nice car are a potent source of happiness to every woman, but because every wife thrills with pride over a husband who has in him the ability to rucceed.

and to hold his own with ether men. But the thing that would make me decide in favor of No. 2 is his disposition. That's the thing that a wife has to live with, day in and day out, and it is what makes or mars her happiness. A man may be as handsome as Valentino, as wise as Solomon, as moral as a saint, and as rich as Henry Ford, but his wife will be a miserable woman if Jie is grouchy and surly, or sarcastic and cutting in his speech, and if treats her with rudeness arid selfishness.

As for No. 2's disabilities, they r.mount to nothing. Every man gets as much education as is coming to him, and some of the most cultured and highly intelligent people I '-now have never seen the in-tide of a college. Eooks are free to all. And out of middle-class homes all over this country of opportunity of ours have come the men that ha done the big things that put nz on the map.

And any girl certainly Is hunting for trouble when she marries a man who is dominated by a jealous mother. DOROTHY DIX. DEAR MISS DIX. I am a young man who has gone out with many different girls without ever finding the "right one." But now I find that there is a young married woman in love with me. She is the mother of three children.

I cou'd learn to think a great deal of this woman, but there are several different things that keep me from it. Should she get a divorce, and should I marry her if she does. PERPLEXED BACHELOR. Answer: Inasmuch as you are not in love with the lady but only hovering on the brink of it, I should advise you to flee from temptation while the fleeing is good. The Golden Rule is a pretty good code to live by, and you know how you would feel about it if some other man was flattering your wife and telling her how beautiful and wonderful she was, and how you Lift Off-No Pain! Drop "Freezone" on that old, bothersome corn.

Instantly it stops aching; then shortly you lift that sore, toucly com right off with your fingers. You'll laugh, really! It is so easy and doesn't hurt one bit! It works like a charm every time. A tin? bottle of "Free-zone" costs only a few cents at any drug store, and is sufficient to remove every Kara corn, soft corn, corn between tht toes and calluses Try It! a Cfif fie BY FLORENCE LA GANKE Even though Nancy's niece was going to attend school in California her mother was familiar enough with the cjimate to realize she would need some warm clothes. She chose a dress of dark blue flannel made two-piece style. The tie at neck and at low hip Una was of blue crepe de chine.

A collar of white was gay with large dots of fed. There was one pocket, and of course, lonj sleeves. With this dress she had a blue chinchilla coat. It had collar and pockets of beaver. The raglan sleeves of the coat helped to give a good appearance to the girl, even at the age when clothes and girls are hard to put together successfully.

Her mother told her that on some of the foggy winter nights she would welcome the tight fitting cap of beaver. This seemed impossible to any, easterner, but Louise wrote back to Aunt Nancy telling her that her mother was right, as usual. She wore plain gloves, wool stockings and dark brown oxfords with this outfit. Copyright, 1927, Publishers' Syndicate. sharp, like a carpenter's chisel, made for gnawing, and not for piercing holes.

"I need thin, sharp, pointed teeth like Tommie Kat or Jackie Bow Wow," said Uncle Wiggily, "to make holes in these acorns. I guess I can't finish this necklace for Miss Mouse." "I'll help you!" cried a voice overhead and Uncle Wiggily saw a woodpecker bird, with along, sharp bill, just made for drilling holes. "You're just the friend I need!" cried Mr. Longears. So the woodpecker held one acorn after another down on a log in his claws and with his beak drilled holes through them.

Soon enough acorns were drilled to make the necklace, and when the shiny brown nuts wer threaded on the stand of honeysuckle there was a necklace fit for a queen. "Did you make it all yourself. Uncle Wiggily?" squeaked the Lady Mouse Teacher as she put it around her neck. "All but the holes the woodpeck er bird mad? them," said the rabbit. And it was a very happy birthday party Miss Mouse had in the Hollow Stump School that day.

So, if tht milk pitcher doesn't give the loaf oi bread a lump of sugar to make stuck up and proud like the chocolate cake, I'll tell you next about Uncle Wiggily's fried carrots. Copyright. 1327. Nice Buttonholes. To work buttonholes in sheer material dip the end a match in the white ot egg and mark exactly the length of buttonhole desired, in the correct place cn the material.

Let dry, then proceed in the usual way with the work. In this way beautiful buttonholes may be worked on only cne ply of goods, even if the roods is verv sheer material. 1 ,1 Ak a "4 AAM AT AGE 83 handy io emergencies. It is paiticuT.riy pleasing to know that the most cf it is tough ty mothers for themselves and the children, thcrgh Syrup Pep-in is as vaiuabl3 fcr people. .411 drug stores have the.

generous ottles. We would be glad to have ycu prove at our esper.se new much Dr. CaldweL's Syrup Pepn can mean to vcu and ycurs. Jurt wri "Syrup Pepsin." Mor.ticeir. IHircis, and we will send you prepaid a FREE SAMPLE BOTTLE.

Advertisement. i i The purpose of the Foundation is to provide means to keep in school wcrthy children who would be compelled by circumstances to go to work without this help. A scholarship allows $3 per week to the family of the child assted. All applications for scholarships are carefully considered by a beard of trustees, all of whom are members of the St. Louis Council of Parents and Teachers, and are elected by that body.

As the fund is limited, only the most worthy of those applying can receive help. In the past, most of the funds have been donated by the parent-teacher units, which form the St. Louis council, and now they are asking their friends to assist them by attending the bazaar and purchasing some of the attractive articles, which will be displayed. Handwork, suitable for Christmas gifts, should encourage those attending to do their Christmas shopping early. Home-made cakes and candies, rosettes and other dainties may also be bought.

Luncheon will be served at reasonable prices. A cafeteria will furnish dinner. This is in of the Lowell School Parent-Teacher Association. All the usual attractions of bazaars will be arranged. Perfection Mothers, De Molay.

Perfection Chapter Mothers Circle, Order of rJe Molay, at its meeting held yesterday at Scottish Rite Cathedral completed arrangements for a dinner which will be given October 3 at 6:30 p. m. at Rose Hill Hall, Maple and Hamilton avenues. Mrs. A.

ll Eastin presided. A musical program will follow the dinner. A dance will be given Thursday evening at Rubicam Hall, 3469 South Grand boulevard, in honor of WTilton Willmann and Oscar Brand, both past master councillors, and their line of officers. All members of Perfection chapter will be admitted on presentation of their dues card. Mrs.

F. Gerber is chairman. Tickets for the dinner may be had from Mrs. J. Singer, 5741 Theodosia avenue, or any member of the Mothers' Circle.

County League Women Voters. The first meeting of the year i 1927-28 of the St. Louis County Board of League of Women Voters held at the City Hall in University City forecast in its departmental reports, extensive work to be undertaken this year. The child welfare department having been active throughout the summer, brought in reports of a survey made in the county of Shepherd Towner work. Mrs.

J. H. Herron, county presi dent, announced that the directory, being compiled by the county board, would soon go to press This book SONNY SAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY YESUM. I AM GETTTN MY FACE WASHED FER DINNER; 1927.

by Public Ledger. "Improved My Skin in a Short Realizing the problem of women generally in beautifying and protecting their skin, radiant Iris Gray, Paramount Junior Star of Wichita, Kansas, tells how Blcck and White Beauty Creations helped her solve that problem. "Due to the large amount of cream and powde: it is necessary for me to use in my stage and picture work," says Miss Gray, found it necessary to purchase the various theatrical preparations. They made my skin dry and chapped. Then I began using Black and White Cold Cream and in a short time my skin returned to its former smoothness." You, too, will be delighted to see your skin improve with the aid of the socthir.g, nourishing and softening Elack and White Cold Cream Like the ether Elack and White Eeaut? Creations, it is cf a quality acceptable to these who seek the best, at prices within the reach of alL BLACKEWHiTE Cold Cream Ittocr' J' V7.0 :r.yJ A r- Ac.

THE "Look peasant, please!" admonition beloved by photographers of old, has nothing to do with the picture making of Jessie Tarbox Beals, one of the foremost women photographers in the United States, who is spending this week in St. Louis before leaving for the Dakotas on a lecture and picture-taking tour of persons and places in the west. Not that Miss Beals subjects do not look pleasant. They do.and they evidently have had such a good time having their picture taken that her camera has revealed them in the more natural poses, with face alight with the expression which is no doubt their most be coming one, put there by her tact and ability for finding the real person under the skin. "I try to temper my lens with justice and mercy," said Mrs.

Beals, laughingly, to a group who were admiring her pictures, at the Town Club. And while I do little or no retouching, I usually do manage to make my subjects look as they th'nk they should in a picture without resorting to too idealizing means to make the thing I abhor, a pretty picture, with little likeness. In her New York studio, Mrs. Beals gives them tea, and a hospitable informal social time to get a good picture. But not all of her pictures have been taken in her New York studio, for she has traveled to many far corners of the earth to snap the person or the place in which she has become interested.

Personality Photographs. Many celebrities have made delightful studies for her. Reproduced is one of a group of poses of Booth Tarkington, which she took in his summer home in Maine. She has one of John Burroughs, which is a genuine work of art and yet is perfectly unstudied in its effect. Mark Twain is another and her Sara Teasdale pictures are a joy to her St.

Louis admirers. Lady Lauderdale, General Pershing. William Hodge, Senator Lodge, Theodore Roosevelt and dozens of others have been willing subjects. St. Louis is an old stamping ground for Mrs.

Beals for during the Exposition, she made more than GO.OOO prints. She came as the official photographer for a Buffalo paper and soon she almost became the official photographer of the Exposition, so much in demand were copies of her pictures. No telegraph pole was too high or good vantage point for her camera too inaccessible, if the interior of an Eskimo village or Japanese tea garden required it. Once Taught School. It took the evidence of a picture of Mrs.

Beals in the prim dress and pose of a school teacher in the early nineties with her prim little class to convince her audience at the Town Club that once she had taught school in a little Massachusetts town at the munificent salary of $7 a week. She didn't like school teaching, but she kept at it until one day she invested $1.75 in a little tin camera bought through a magazine. The fifth week she had it she earned $10, so she forthwith gave up teaching and went at photography in earnest. Her career was not actually launched, however, until one day she spied in Buffalo a procession of a waddling drake followed by seven ducks. To her they were so ridiculous that they her in mind of a political boss about whom there was much agitation at the time which happened to be election tune.

She snapped the ducks, labeled the picture "On to Albany" and found a ready sale for it to a newspaper editor who was so impressed with her cleverness that he immediately put her on the staff of his paper. Cites Inspire Iler. Her camera delineation of cities' souls has been another outstanding phase of her work, although Mrs. Eeals says she likes to photograph men and babies best. New York, she has done in all moods and at all times from dawn to midnight and in all weathers.

One misty study of the Flatiron building fairly drips the moisture of a drizzly day. Plenty cf co'-r ge, a sense of beauty, strength of body, intuition as well as a knowledge of her tools is the formula handed out by Mrs. Beals to other women who would follow in her footsteps. "Determination will gain anything," she says, optimistically. Mrs.

Beals bears the title of poet-photographer, which, to the casual observer, might have been applied to her because of the peculiar insight and artistic conception she has exhibited in her making of pictures. Eut she writes verse and her greatest lament is that her poems have not yet received the recognition accorded her photographs. Her verse-making began when her now sixteen-year-old daughter, Natalie, was but a baby and she was rocked to sleep with her mother's rhymes fcr iullabys. Now she writes poems to fit rier pictures and -ives at happy combinations. While in St.

Louis. Mrs. Eeals is the guest of Miss Cornelia Dcbyns Weil, 5S19 Julian avenue. nail Accessory. The frcnt haill stairway, if it is plain and ascends without a turn, usually is a poor place fcr anything, and if nothing is placed there, makes a poor spot in appearance.

A semi-oval console table with candle-sticks and perhaps a colored bowl, makes just the kind of accessory needed for such a place. Painted Woodwork. Woodwork at this season shows ihe dust which has gathered cn it through the open windows during the summer. This dirt can be soft ened with tepid scad suds." To clean spots that are particularly dirty. apply a cloth which has first been lubbed directly cn a bar cf soap, Wipe off with a clean dry cloth.

will contain, besides the organizations cf the county, valuable and up-to-date information about every section of the county. Authentic maps will be an outstanding feature of the publication; Mrs. E. L. Rothganger.

chairman of public welfare, who is in charge of the health exhibits and baby clinic, which will be a part of the Greater St. Louis Fair, to be held October 1-10 at Upper Creve Coeur Lake, gave detailed reports as to the progress of the arrangements. This committee will co-operate with Dr. A. E.

Walters and the County Health Department. Plans for a conference, participated in by the county board and the boards of the ten local leagues, with Miss Louis Griffith, assistant treasurer of the National League, to be held October 11 at 10 m. at the City Hall in University City were completed. A luncheon at the Cas-tlerqagh Hotel will follow the conference. St.

Louis W. C. T. V. The annual meeting of the St.

Lcuis Woman's Christian Temperance Union will be held Friday ia the assembly room of the Y. W. C. 1411 Locust street, Mrs. J.

W. Shankland, president, presiding. The morning session will open at 9:30 o'clock with devotional service conducted by AXiss Ada Birkich.t, director of the evangelistic department, with Mrs. Mary F. Harrington in charge cf the congregational singing.

At the conclusion of the devotional service annual reports will be received from the general officers and presidents of local unions. At 12 o'clock a memorial service for deceased members will ba conducted by Mrs. T. H. Whitehall, followed by the annual address ot the president.

The afternoon program will include the election of officers, reports of the Americanization Center. Mrs. M. D. Anderson, chairman, and Young People's Branch, Mrs.

E. F. Cowee, general secretary. At 3 o'clock Rev. Owen Livingood, pastor of the Dover Place Christian Church, will deliver a memorial address cn the life and work of Wayne B.

Wheeler. Mrs. Ellen P. Hayes, chairman for the resolutions committee, will report on resolutions and platform for the coming year. Vocal selections will be given during the day by Mrs.

Fred C. Buchrucker, and Miss Roslyn Franklin, accompanied by Miss Jessie Hayes, musical director. Owing to the length of the program, the annual department reports will be deferred to the regular monthly meeting October 3. Coffee and Sale. The annual fall coffee and sale to be given by the Ladies' Aid Society for the benefit of the G.

G. Protestant Orphans' Home, 4447 Natural Bridge avenue, will take place tomorrow afternoon. Flag: Presentation. A flag lor every room of the De Mun Public School, Clayton, was presented this morning in an interesting ceremony by St. Louis Circle No.

37, Ladies of the G. A. R. Miss Corinne E. Bruckner, patriotic instructor of the circle, made the presentation.

A demonstration in drumming was given by William C. Pfeffer, adjutant of Blair Post No. 1, and John W. Lanley, past commander of the Department ot Missouri, Meumann Post, delivered the Gettysburg address. A delegation of G.

A. R. veterans was present. Following the indoor ceremonies a large flag was raised in front of the school building. The program was in charge cf Mrs.

Lester W. Depue, president cf the St. Louis Circle. Don'tWorry About Fat There 13 a tray to tler.Jerness, easy pleasant, eciactifLc. No ebnonnal exercise or diet 13 required.

I'ccple have U3 it or 20 years minions bcxes cf it. You can eee the results in every circle. Excess is nowhere near as cozruaoa as it was. That ws7 is Marnola prescription tablets, based on wide scientific research, proved by thousands cf experiments, f.ledicai men have four.d a rubstanee which turns food into uel end energy, raiher than into fat. MarmoSa contain that sutstance, to combat cver-welght ia the natural way.

I.larmola is no secret. The complete prescription in every package, also the reasons for results. So you may know why fat disappears, and know that it means r.o harm. Go try Marrrwla. tzke.

four tablets daily until the weight comes dowa to ncrmaL Watch the new ccw tcsith aid vitality. Ycu will be delighfed. This is the modern, the scientific vrsj to combat the formation cf fat. Learn hen? much it means to ycu, at once. Then, when it brings you you wish, tell ycur friends about it.

Tell them hew a t'ecder figure is cow easy to attain. Do this before yoa forget it Order new. There are few things more important than v.hst Marmola brings to people. You v. lit be delighted.

i.lsmoia pre-ertpion fcUet era fdd by at $1 per bos. If your timgf out. he Ji g-t taeoj 8t ois from bis yi br. MARMpLA Pleasant 1 IlLE THIS RECIPE Cut out Recipe along black line and fJe. Send 50 cents in stamps to COOKING EDITOR and we will mail you index filing box to keep your recipes.

The size of the box is -44 inches long, 4 inches wide and Si inches high. CREAMED EGGS With Pimento Sauce Hard boiled eggs, 6 Toast, 6 slices Pimento cheese, lb. Milk, cups I 1 'v 4 A 1 i Above are shown Mrs. Jessie Tarbox Deals of New York City and a study of Booth Ta jkington, which she made in the author's summer home, Kenncbunkport, Maine. nels run directly to the ear.

The first indication will be a high fever and ear-ache and later this may result in the pressure of pus behind the ear bursting the drum. If there is pressure which must be relieved, this had better be done by the doctor who will make a neat puncture in the ear drum that will drain the pus, and heal quickly. Ear-aches should be treated with heat. Put a hot water bag over the ear and wash the ear itself with quite hot boric acid water, using a bulb syringe. But it is far better when the child has a severe ear-ache and fever to consult a doctor and by the proper treatment prevent more serious troubles.

EGGS Butter, 2 tablespoons Flour, 3 tablespoons Salt, teaspoon Chopped parsley, 1 teaspoon is making things as miserable for me as possible so that I will? MILDRED. Answer: It certainly looks that way to me. I can imagine r.o method by which a man cculd kill his wife's love for him quicker, cr make her more anxious to leave him. then to be the sort of selfish tightwad your husband is. And I cannot imagine why any woman with a particle of self-respect stands for such treatment, especially if she is a competent business woman able to earn her own living.

DOROTHY DIX. Copyright, 1927, by Public Ledger. Make Milk Tempting. The mother's problem is to make milk a delight insieadof a duty for the kiddies. The new cocoa and chocolate malted milk preparations provide an easy solutionfor children love them.

On a warm dav shake up a glassful of cold milk with three teaspoons of the prepared malted powder floating on top a mason jar with a cover provides a good shaker. Shake until it is all bubbly, wield a soda-jerker's arm in pouring it into the glass so that it retains the bubbles, put in a ccunle of straws and watch the results. It's as good as going to the soda fountain. On a cocl day heat the milk and add the malted powder, stirring to a perfectly smooth consistency. Those cocoa malted preparations add nourishment to the milk more protein to build muscles, more mineral salts to build strong bones and teeth, and more carbohydrates to supply energy.

Effective Trimming. Inserts of tucking runnine crws- wise are effective trimmings for crepe or chiffon dresses. A4 X. 'sf SERVES 6 PEOPLE Arrange slices of toast on a hot platter. Slice 1 egg in 5 or 6 pieces over each piece of toast.

Keep warm. Melt butter. Add flour and salt. Stir until well mixed. ACi milk slowly.

Cook well until thick, stirring constantly. Add pimento cheese and beat until smooth. Pour sauce over toast and eggs. Sprinkle with parsley and serve at once. Recipe contains much protein, minerals, lime, iron and vitamins A and B.

Can be eaten by normal adults of average or under weight; Millions of Families Depend on Dr. Caldwell's Prescription didn't appreciate her, and giving her k.sses with a real tnrin to them. And if you had little children, wouldn't you think the man was a Drettv. mean, yellow dog. who broke up your home and took I them away from you? And why on earth do you want to marry a divorced woman and saddle yourself with a ready-made family when there are so many pretty young girls around? So my advice to you is to urge the lady to stay with her husband and make a home for her children, and to forget all about being in love with you.

And I certainly urge you to seek safety in flight. It does no young man any good to be mixed up in a scandal with a married woman. DOROTHY DIX. DEAR DOROTHY DIX I have been married three years and I love my husband, and he tells me daily that he loves me. BUT during all of that time, when it becomes positively imperative for me to have clothes, I have to go outside of the home and work for several weeks to earn them.

My husband strenuously objects to this, but he refuses to give me any money to buy them with, although his income is $250 a month, all of which, ex cept cur bare living expenses, he spends upon himself. He refuses to make me a personal allowance, and i says I dont love him or I wouldn't ask for it. The result is that when I spend a dollar of the grocery money for a pair cf stockings I feel like a thieving housemaid, and when he very occasionally makes me a magnanimous gift cf a very badly needed $3, I feel like a combination unpaid maid -cf-all-work and his mistress He is at home very little Td complains because I do not go out and make friends of my own, but I can't, because I have no decent clothes. Do you think my husband wants me to leave him and When Dr. Caldwell started to practice medicine, back in 1375, the needs for a were not as great as they are tcday.

Pe.pl i lived ncrmal, quiet lives, ate plain, wholesome food, and got plenty ot freh air and sunshine. But even that early there were drastic physics and purges fcr the relief of con-st-paticn whi.h Dr. Caldwell did net were gooJ for human brings to put in.o thrir ryste.n. he wrcte a prescription fcr a ia to be by his pat.ents. The for constipation that he used early in h.s practice, and which h3 put in drag stores in 1SS2 under the name cf Dr.

ell's Svrup Pepsin, a liquid vegetable remedy, intended for women, children and elderly people, and they just such a rni'd. sale, bewei stimulant as Syrup Pepsin. Under successful maagemer.t prescription has prove.i its and is new the largest seiimg larati in th world. Th? fact that millions of bottles arc ctei a year prcves that it has won the confidence of people who needed it to get rs'i from headache, til ou-n-ss, tad gestlcn. loss of and sleep, bad breath, cold? and Villi ci farrilics are r.cw rever without Dr.

Caldwell's Syran Pepsin, and if you will ccce start using it you will also always have a bottle I i If.

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