IHIiW with -HighEnergy tonic A I' in catch aoll easily?heeaoso &gSJ you lack aB tha natural AAD Vitamiaa and owrn-bvOdtu; Jr\M>ijW natural oib 70a need-yon nay f f / ba amasad how Scon's BanUn It f | caa help build aaarpv. alamtaa III f\ and raws tone*. Try ltt^Saa why LV rood-tustin*. hi*h energy, food U>nlc. Buy at yonr dqwirfafsi CANT YOU SLEEP? TT7HEN the stress of modern VV living gets "on your nerves" a good sedative can do a lot to lessen nervous tension, to make you more comfortable, to permit restful sleep. Next time a day's work and worry or a night's wakefulness, makes you Irritable, Restless or Jumpy?gives you Nervous Head ache or Nervous Indigestion, try Miles NERVINE (Liquid or Effervescent Tablets) Miles Nervine is a time-tested sedative that has been bringing relief from Functional Nervous Dis turbances for sixty years yet is as up-to-date as this morning's news paper. Liquid 25c and $1.00, Effer vescent tablets 35e and 75c. CAUTION?Take only as directed. - ????i ^OROt?H J 1 I LAMOUR I I informed Powdet. ? ? oie Colo* Bobbin* 1,e- I ? McK??? *_L H Brideoport. Cooo | c M.W 1&^'L!a!A!J r COLD PREPARATIONS Liquid ? Tablets ? Sahro? Nom Drops Has sats^iod millions for yoam. Caution. Uh only a* <fcr*cied /fMEaznani m " i^ioioiio* linen ? if ?-mn*iu , ro.ujuiwy? ,,t ??*?? PAZO IN ftfBISI MOHoae of ywpl? oaftortat from eCmpie Pllee, hart fmaf prompt relief with PAZ? otaramt Hero'* why -^Flmt^PA^^^ tmoanaw hm tuhla? S?oo!^.'PAZO ateimSl lahrtcatee kardtntd, MM Mrt^ help* met?t oatif mad oore acoo Third, PAZ? olatamat trade to red ace tweUlnft oad chock mlonr Hwdlaj. Fourth, It'e eaoy to aoo. PAZO ointatart perforated Pile Pipe makce sppHcetlon aim pie, thorojath.^Yoor^doctor caa tell ?com per tone, aod many doc tore, prefer to at oaappooltorlm, to PAZ? comae la heady eoppooitorleo aleo. The aaoae ooothlad relief that PAZO aloafi |ha. ASSURANCE E ni^anaaiidaainm I -j i.fh.cA.mliuihi.w I W That - d? bvywr's gmW I< (rib lb. I ft Pmmm,mummpK,mrW.Lm*, I ? ?| Woman's World ^ Smart Cottons Now Available For Youngster's Easter Clothes (t>ij flrtla J4a(ey \4 OTHERS who have been econ omizing on their children's clothes budget will be happy to learn that gay cottons are again becoming available. That will ba good news for Suzie, too, who can have more dresses without spending any more on clothing provided mother can sew. Youngsters' clothing is so easy to make, and so gratifying, too, be cause the sewing goes so much more quickly than for an adult. An aver age homemaker, if she sets aside one whole day for sewing, can actually turn out two dresses for daughter without rushing. In looking over the patterns for the younger set, you'll notice how much "high style" is being shown. Youngsters, today, look just as smart and nice as their well-dressed mothers and big sisters and broth ers. We no longer make the same style of dress for them year after year. Nor do we make the dresses or coats "just a wee bit" longer be cause the youngster will soon grow into them. Child experts say that good fitting clothes contribute just as much to children's morale and behavior as they do for grown-ups. You who sew at home will be able to give the exquisite details of tailoring that these garments for youngsters should have. Hand stitching at the front, in pockets and collars will add greatly to the at tractiveness of the outfit. As for the availability in cottons, plaid gingham and striped cham bray lead the style parade. These are lovely made up in square necked dresses and insert belts for little girl's dresses. Eyelet embroi dery detail, too, is very much at home on these dresses. They will \ // you have some new cotton material... stand up through many, many laun dering?. If you are making a dress-up dress for young daughter for Eas ter, you will undoubtedly use one that is ruffled. In making ruffles, remember to cut all but the shaped ones either on the true bias or crosswise. The more sheer the fab ric, the more full the ruffle must be. It takes one and one-half times the length for skimpy ruffles and three times as much for billowy ruf fles. To make the ruffles as pretty as possible, use a little shirring in making them. The shirring, of course, should be evenly spaced, and this can be marked with pins, notches or chalk. Put the marks to gether after the shirring threads are drawn up and fastened. In most pat terns, you'll find that fullness is usually indicated. More ruffling is needed for limp fabrics, less for bulky ones. Bow to Manage Fitting And Sewing Easily Modern mothers are as consid erate of their youngsters as possible in the matter of fitting. If the young ster is anxious to get outdoors to play, don't keep her indoors while you pin and fit. Make a basic mus lin pattern to follow as a guide and save your energies. Another big help is to do your cutting all at one time, and the sewing or machine work at an other sitting. You can even cut sev eral dresses from the same pattern at one time, and don't worry about monotony in style. There's a good deal of variety in fabrics, so you don't need to worry about their be ing look-alikes. Before you actually begin sewing, it's a very wise idea to try the stitch on your fabric. You may want to regulate the stitch or change the tension depending upon how the fab ric behaves. Shoulder seams are stitched first and collars before sleeves. When you put the sleeve in, it is often possible to stitch the underarm at the same time. Sleeves are best stitched on twice: once on the same seam line and the next time a scant quarter of an inch outside this first stitching. Always stitch the armhole lightly as there is some give in the stitching line. As someone once expressed it, just ease the sleeve in as tucks are out of place in aleeve-armhole sewing. In making a washable garment, it is important to bear in mind that the garment must be durable and last throughout many launderings. Guard against raveled edges. Simple lace or edging ? here again, something that will bear qp under laundering ? makes the youngsters' dresses look exceeding ly becoming. Decorative stitching on cuffs, collars, plaits and pockets will do much for the garment. Gathers are easily made with the gathering foot, and buttonholes need be no problem if you have that particular attachment for your machine. I can't emphasize too highly the importance of keeping your iron and ironing board out while sewing. You can save a lot of basting by press ing seams before sewing them, and the garment will be much better ap pearing if it is pressed frequently while you sew. Pressing Pointers Before using a pressing cloth, ! be sure that it is washed to re move all sizing. A muslin cloth is excellent, provided that it does not leave lint on the garment. A sponge kept in a small dish of water is also a big help. Always test the temperature of the iron on a scrap of fabric before using it on the gar ment itself. There are so many , different kinds of material on the market now, it is difficult to , tell just how they react to heat j Keep the iron moving con stantly while pressing to prevent marking the fabric. Press all seams up from the bottom or in towards the center of the garment Darts on light fabrics are pressed to one side, either upwards or towards the center. On heavier fabrics, slash darts and press them open. ' Graceful Tunic The tonic suit is a perfect choice for this season because it rives graceful, soft lines. The one above Is made in per Miron gab ardine, carefully fltted and tai lored. The hat is a springlike num ber by Lille Dacbe. Make your daughter ? dress. Spring Fashion Notes ??J Belts on coats are proving exceed ingly interesting. Nailhead trims make them appear more glamorous, and coin-trimmed leather belts also accent some of them. For coats that are worn over dresses, the trend is a soft, full silhouette. The skirts, you will Bnd are more full, but waistlines are sharply accentuated by vertical tucks aod insets. Thi? Mason hats are really hats, and there's a lot to them. There are larfe picture hats, small hats with lota of flowers that welcome spring, and hairline hats that show your bright, pretty face. A smart note is to have a contrasting col ored veil for your bonnet. Flange sleeves, slit pockets and unusual bottoms complete the pio ture. ? Swank and the Bad Parks "Get me a table up front at tha ball game!" . . . "How"! about a reservation for six at the double header. And will you put on four quarts of champagne! . . . Never mind who's pitching; what I wanna know is who's in the floor show!" ? These may be routine cracks in American big league ball parks this season. Two private club rooms with bars and 4M boxes to which members only will be permitted will be a feature of the games at Yankee Stadium. ? The boxes and club rooms will be open to members paying from $600 to $900 a season, and most of the memberships have already been grabbed by bankers, brokers, busi ness men, theatrical men, etc. ? Thus will exclusiveness, social distinctions be introduced to that stronghold of democracy, the Amer ican national game of baseball. Down through baseball history the millionaire has rubbed elbows with the street cleaner at the ball parks. "Take your coat off, let your hair down, relax and be one of the gang!" has been the traditional cry. . ? All men may not have been posi tive they were equal but at the ball game they felt closer to it than any where else. And now?of all places?the base ball park is to find class conscious ness, the upper and lower levels of society, financial distinction and a touch of the night club and country club flavor. One club room will be modernistic with chromium fixtures and red leather chairs; the other will carry the mood of an old Eng lish inn' of the Heathcliff-on-Finch ely-Finchely type. The bar and res taurant will be a deluxer. ? Bleacher tans arise) ? We demand that the bottle of beer, the pop bottle, the frankfur ter and the cause of democracy re main intact at American baseball parks, never to give way to the breast of chicken under glass, the magnum of vintage wine, cafe so ciety, the gossip columns and special privileges for the bourbons I ? ? ? The beer shortage may be so serious this summer that we trill be applying for priority to get a small glass of suds. But we can stand anything up to the point where, in order to get a schooner of beer, we are compelled, through a tie-in sale, to buy a crate of sweet eider. ? ? ? A rich New York landlord and real estate speculator who worked the old game of charging a war veteran several thousand dollars for a few bits of cheap furniture in order to get a small apartment, got ten days in jail and a fine of $100 the other day. Our idea, if that is the max imum penalty, would be to make the landlord come across with at least $5,000 for the chair in his cell. ? ? ? ? A. A. Milne says that years of war have hardened the British so that they "are now Immune from the scourge of victory." ? ? ? It seems more and more appar ent that what UNO needs more than anything else are bumpers front and rear and a bullet-proof wind shield. m w m VANISHING AMERICANISMS "Bock Beer, Fire Cents." a "Here'i a quarter. Go get a quart of ice cream." "I don't make a lot of money but I can get all I need and have some fun." ? "Let's buy him two new suits for Easter." ? HEBE AND THESE They say General Marshall, back from China, took one look at the American scene and exclaimed, "And I thought it hard to under stand Chinese!" . , . Are-We-Gonna Get-Inflation Item: the $3.SO diet mlgnon without vegetables Bakery inquiry, now that the size of the loaf of bread has been cut, "Do you want the small loaf or the in visible one?" ? ? ? Winston Cbnrebin, getting still an other degree, mast wish he eenld repeat Ms famens line, "This may net be the beginning of the end, bnt It is the end of the beginning." ? ? ? Shopper's Lament The shop windows beige with the loveliest things; A feast far the greediest eyes! It seems to hart more with rare ob jects galore To dnd that they dea't have yeur size. REMEMBER? Wkm s om'i msvUs "He tpmit kit wnkt salary so Sense" implUd Mm be get man ikon mm Main? Bach isbaa k wmm'l sirmwj ta bafts each day by elurldy Sa Ma basa Jar mtwy How to Make Your Own Draw Curtains 1UST pull on a cord and these J curtains swish open or closed. The booklet Make Your Own Cur tains gives step by step directions for making and hanging them. This 32-page booklet also Illustrates how to make all types of curtains from formal draperies to simple curtains for every room. Readers may get a copy of this booklet by sending 15 cents with name and address direct to: MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS Bedford Hills, N. Y. Drawer IS Enclose 15 cents for booklet. "Make Your Own Curtains." Address , Uncle DICK a real tough job tor your 1 Bell and you'll find you won't have too much competition. Be like the crow, who never complains without caws. A good way ol keeping poor is pretending to be rich. One tweet maid declares the best thing to keep her hair looking nice at all timet it a bashful boy friend. He that cannot understand at a glance, will not understand by much explaining. Very often we think if we were in the other fellow's shoes, we would shine them. Date-Bran Muffins, good as cake! (Take no sugar, no shortening!) These delicious, new iu-iui mnren. nude with chopped dates win hare a big appeal for the "sweet toothers" In your family I They're so moist *And they're so tender?so good. That's be cause xxtLooo'a stL-stas Is milled extra-line for golden softness. 1 cops KeDoggh 1 cap sifted floor SLL-saae 1 teaspoon soda H cup mrlsssee H teaspoon salt 1V4 cupe milk 14 cugchopped Add KXLLOOC'S SII-SSSW tO TTMllSTS and milk and allow to soak for IS minutes. Beat egg and add to first mixture. Add sifted dry Ingredients and fruit Pill greased muffin pans two-third* full and bake In moderate ly hot oven (400*F.) about 20 adn ata*. Make* U light, hndou* muffli* ? ? Mill ili .1 i--| vooa nuirinon, iwi Ai-L-bkam la made from the vttai. ocm LATKK8 Oi finest wheat?contain? a ? trotio^of^th? protect}*? food th? w hoi? yrai n. J On?-half cap pro- / ride? over \k J*** illZPT^U dally minim am /4[/j/i|H Serv? KclioCr*? flHBflfil atx-aaaw dally t I J&l yoiUL fisAAonaL S^cu bitty dhuy IL.S-. SavinqA* fiondh,! /^"s PRflVlis" Tn D" STR Al MS-\ I \$,\ MIK?UI IOB Ul WW . WM ? milil UjgV wutjwuWeepid. %J ^e&SLOAW'S UNiMENtl tl I i; . . kctei to do., ? Drive to far ? tterea(h ttra tnapectliai (There la m chart# far thia aarrlaa.) . Toar ?eath ttraa *U ba replaced vtth laaaara, aa yea aaa ? drive poor ear. Tear ttraa win ba reeapped bp the faawaa Ptraatana Factory Matted (Tea (at a qialttj leeapptac Jab.) ? Whan new Ttreetone Da Lasa Champion Tlraa are avaO abU to yea, we will equip roar ear aad bop pear recapped ttraa. (Tea (at the beat ttraa aMoep aaa bap.) Tirt *fo it* DELUXE CHAMPION THE TIRE THAT STAYS SAFER LONGER B* mi FlrortoM Da Lux* Chaatploaa taeorparmU aS th< Htntrf ud aeMn ?il nmtlim (MtBM which leaf Un ?4* Tlr?ono ttrx futon* for atn Klluc* ?ad axtra afity. And an a* a* axtra cut to jm. Thoy an tho *Wy ttrm that an mil* **? md jM?r-pr?d oa tho spoodvay far y*m julanllaa m tho hiftwiy. VWHRVM HMRI I

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