Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, August 01, 1914, Page 8, Image 8

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    THE MORNING OREGONIAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 1. 1914.
8
SMART event of today will be
I the auction bridge tea at wnicn
J Mrs. C. S. Jackson will be hostess.
Six tables will be arranged in the ar
tistic rooms of the Jackson residence.
and the interesting game will be fol
lowed by the serving of tea in the at
tractive garden surrounding the home.
Presiding at the samovars ana cuiiing
ices will be Mrs. FrederlcK Aiva jacuos,
Mrs. James (J. Gauld, Mrs. Walter V.
Smith and Mrs. Roger B. Sinnott.
A itt of Dretty girls will assist.
Among these will be Miss Elizabeth
iambs. Miss ileien nonmao,
Helen Whitney, Miss Ruth Teal and
Miss Isabella Gauld.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nau and children,
Frank, Jr.. and Hermine, have returned
from a motor trip to Crater Lake.
A delightful surpise party was ten-r,-
nn Frederick Thursday at
Columbia' Park by the members and
friends of Portland Hive ro. i, jwc
eabees. Luncheon was spread on the
tables In the park, ar.d Mrs. Frederick,
who has been quite ill for some time,
was brought to the park by her daughter-in-law,
Mrs. Gertrude Frederick.
Ice cream was served during the after
noon. The guests brought their fancy
work and a most enjoyable time was
spent by all. Among those present
were: Mrs. Flora Frederick. Mrs. Ger
trude Frederick. Mrs. Lyla Clark. Mrs.
Fuegy. Mrs. Mattie Neglespach. Mrs.
Gosnell. Mrs. Mae Wilson, Mrs. Nash.
Mrs. Carr, Mrs. Clara Knott. Mrs. Ber
nice Loby. Mrs. Maud Rarfoall. Mrs.
Stetson. Mrs. Flannigan, Mrs. Mary
Krall Mrs. Beatrice Little, the Misses
Beryl Wilson. Gertrude Knott, Lelainne
M. West. Lillian De Mars. Margaret B.
Shuter Florence Neglespach. Mildred
and Renne Stetson and Kenneth Clark,
Jack Allen. Leonard Flannigan, Jack
Krall. Marion Riley, Charles Coghlan,
David Loby. Harold and Elmer Negle
spach, Howard Harvey ana
Frederick.
Miss Jane Mahoney. accompanied by
her mother. Mrs. D. J. Mahoney, aijd
other members of the family, are pass
ing a vacation at Sunset Beach.
Mrs. J. Williams, accompanied by her
Brand-daughter. Miss Louise Williams
Watson, are visiting at North Beach.
Wash.
The Degree of Honor Convention
Sewing Society met at the home of Mrs.
Lydia Graham. July 28. There were
about 30 members and friends present.
The spacious lawn was converted into
a sewing-room, where two machines
and sewing tables were laden with use
ful garments which were finished and
ready for the bazaar which will be held
in September. A luncheon was served
at noon.
Mr. and Mrs. George Cadwell, of
Portland Heights, are receiving con
gratulations upon the arribal of a baby
boy. , '
Mrs. Clarence Newton Sampson enter
tained informally four tables of bridge
recently at her apartment In the Han
thorn Mrs. Rockey D. Hodgkin win
ning 'the first prize. Those to enjoy
the afternoon were: Mrs. Henry Shof
ner Mrs. Fred Slade. Mrs. Charles Field,
Mrs'. West, Mrs. Rockey Hodgkin, Mrs.
Frank Lowry, Mrs. Willis Bacon, Mrs.
Chester Drake. Mrs. Andrew Deuschel.
Mrs. H. P. Harrison, Mrs. Charles Dean,
Mrs. Fred Benson, Mrs. Jacobson, Mrs.
W. A. Kesdorf.
A marriage of interest, to a large
number of Portlanders is that of An
drew G.- Horner, formerly of this city,
and Miss Virginia Callahan, of San
Francisco. The ceremony took place
last Saturday and the couple will re
side' in Klamath Falls, Or., where the
bridegroom has large lumber Interests.
Mr. Horner is the son of Mr. and Mrs,
A. L. Horner, of Oakland. Cal. The
family resided in Portland several
years ago, when A. L. Horner was
superintendent of the Northern Pacific
here. The bride is a beautiful and ac
complished girl and sofcially promi
nent. After a week's visit at the delight
ful country home, "Airy-Holm," of Mr.
and Mrs. Elmer E. Mink, near Mount
Hood. Mrs. H. M. Hayles and her
guests, the Misses Gertrude and Lillian
Hayles. of Kansas City, have returned
to their Rose City Park home.
A picnic to Crystal Lake Park has
been planned for tomorrow by the
Ancient Order of Hibernians. Games
and special amusements have been ar
ranged. A baseball game between the
Knights of Columbus and the Foresters
of St. Andrews Court will be a feature.
Luncheon will be served. The fol
lowing committee, which is divided
Into sub-committees, is in charge of
the affair: Mrs. W. J. Smith. Mrs. A
O'Hanlon, Miss C. Kavanaugh, Mrs. T.
J. Murphy. Mrs. ML Driscoll, Mrs. -J.
Keenan, Miss Etta Washer, Miss Cecelia
Flynn, Miss Anna Whitney, Miss Mar
garet Whitney. Miss Cecelia McMahon,
Miss Mary Francis McCarthy, Mrs.
James Foley, John McGreal, P. J.
Powers; Dr. T. J. Fox, M. M. Flynn,
A. B. Cain. F. J. Riordan, F. A. Mc
Menamin, Edmund J. Murnane, T. L
Maloney, J. B. Drennan, John Ryan,
Dan Smith, Andy Weinberger, T. J.
Healey, T. McGuigan, Eugene Valiant,
Daniel J. Curran, J. D. Doyle.
-
Mr. and Mrs. Zachrias Davenport an
nounce the marriage of their daughter,
Creta, to Archie LeRoy Pease, Jr., son
of Captain and Mrs. A L. Pease, of this
city. The couple were married at the
Methodist Church, Salem, January 21,
1914, and have since .resided at 109
East Nineteenth street.
Paul Edward Vollum, son of the late
General Edward Perry Vollum, U. S. A.,
who has been visiting In Portland for
the last seven months, has decided to
locate permanently In Portland.
-
Mrs. Charles A. Craft and her little
daughter, Carol, have returned from the
beaches after an absence of six weeks.
They are at home in the family resi
dence In Ladd's Addition.
NNE'KTHEN
HOUSE
11. (Special.) Mme.
Paquln is persistent. She likes the
full skirt and she has continued making
it for two years. Again It is on the
market, or rather at the fashionable
places where well dressed foregather.
Will It really succeed? Aren't women
now educated to think it Is ugly? Do
they want to forsake the narrow short
skirt for the full longer one?
The theorists think that a return to
the full skirts will be the most decent
thing women could do In the way of
clothes, but the women who must use
the skirts are not so sure they could
go back with happiness to those yards
of full material dangling around the
ankles. ' "
Paul Polret is also persistent. He
likes full skirts, too, but he thinks
it should be adopted from the Orient.
He designed the roost comfortable
full skirt that woman could possibly
wear, which Is merely a bag of soft
material made out of orie long width
sewed together at the sides and slashed
at the ankle line.
There is nothing Immodest about this
P
SUMMER ATTZRNOON'GOWN IS FETCHING.
'II v-v x y . i
i ' . var
I II I :f . W far kX
" r ' ' ' ""'
, -
This model of black satin and tulle vis extremely attractive for after
nnnn wear. Th underskirt is exceed! ngly narrow and over It is placed a
full apron tunic of tulle, made even m
suggestion of a waist line is lost signt
satin girdle.
skirt. It could really claim the blue
ribbon for decency for it only shows a
speck of the ankles at each sloe wnicn
is much less than the full skirt shows
in a wind storm.
Will We Wear Full Skirts 1 .
No one can tell what women 4u mass
will do. If they should take an idea
to wear the harem skirts of Paul
Poiret, they would make It the fashion
tomorrow, say the world what It may.
But, in the present state of affairs,
their full skirts will be popular, but
that women will decide upon the
Grecian skirt which Polret Introduced
in Aphrodite.
It Is comfortable and more becoming
than either of the other styles. One
sees a great number of such skirts
here with Jersey waists and broad
sashes around the hips. These skirts
are not extra short. One notices a
tendency for covering the ankles and
cutting skirts off at the Insteps. After
all, the extremely short skirt is merely
an evolution made necessary by wo
men not being able to "walk In narrow
skirts, and with the straight pleating
hanging from waist to instep one has
entire freedom at all times.
White Taffeta Gowns Popular.
For the Deauvllle faces there are
frocks of white taffeta which show the
flaring Paquln skirt and the Premet
buttoned Paquin skirt and the Premet
basque buttoned down the front.
Beneath these flaring skirts are worn
white colonial pumps with silver
buckles and on the hair immense
sailor hats of black velvet with a
single burnt ostrich feather in front or
at one side. The feather is either
black or white.
THE CAKE THAT KEEPS.
It Is a fortunate housewife who al-
The flarlns; Pqnl akirt aad the
wrinkled Premet basque, buttoned
down the front, are effectively corn-
blued In this blue taffeta frock.
: .'
"rr i
ore frilly by the ruffle of tulle. Any
01 unaer tne Diacic ana wmie buhjcu
ways has cake on hand when she wants
it. For the unexpected cup of after
enoon tea, for the cooling glass of
lemonade, we often turn in vain to the
cake box. If. however, you make a
habit of keeping on hand some one
of the many kinds of cake that im
prove, rather than deteriorate, with a
moderate lapse of time you will never
be caught cakeless. Here is the rule
for an inexpensive and not too rich
fruit cake that Is not difficult to make.
Cream together one cupful of butter
and two cupfuls of sugar and add one
cupful of back molasses, four eggs
well beaten, and one cupful of sour
milk in which have been dissolved two
level teaspoonfuls of soda. Ihto four
cupfuls of flour sift one heaping tea
spoonful of cloves and one grated nut
meg. Stir this into the cake mixture
gradually. Then add one pound of
seeded raisins and a quarter of a
pound of candied lemon peel. Bake In
a loaf and when cool wrap In oil paper
and keep in a stone Jar.
White Fruit Cake. .
To make an especially delicious cake
of the lasting variety cream together
one cupful of butter and two cupfuls of
sugar and add one cupful- of milk. Sift
three cupfuls of flour and one tea
spoonful of baking powder three times
and add to the mixture and stir well.
Slice very thin one pound of citron,
blanch one pound of almonds and chop
fine and grate one medium sized fresh
cocoanut and add to the mixture with
one wineglassful of white wine, stir
ring enough to mix only. Last fold in
the beaten whites of eight eggs. Bake
in two loaves and cook in a moderate
oven.
Sour Milk Drop Cakes.
To make a delicious drop cake that
will keep, if carefully covered, for two
weeks proceed as follows. Cream one
and one-half cupfuls of sugar with one
cupful of butter. Add one cupful of
sour milk, one cupful of currants, three
cupfuls of sifted flour, two eggs, a
pinch of salt, a ' teaspoonf ul of soda
dissolved in a little hot water, and
one nutmeg grated. Mix these in
gredients well together and drop on
buttered tins, leaving a good space be
tween drops. Bake in a hot oven and
sprinkle with powdered sugar. When
thoroughly cool lay away in a box
with oil paper between each layer of
cakes.
Walnut Wafers.
This recipe calls fr one cupful of
brown sugar,- one tablespoonful of but
ter, one egg, one and one-half heaping
table-spoonfuls of flour and one cup
ful of chopped English walnuts. Mix
the butter and the brown sugar, and
the egg well beaten and mix In the
flour. Add the chopped walnuts and
drop with a teaspoon in well-buttered
tins and bake in a hot oven. Cool
slightly before removing the tins.
Four o'clock Tea Cake.
A simple fruit cake is made with one
half pounJ of butter, one pound of pow
dered sugar, the whites of five eggs,
one cupful of milk, one pound of flour,
two tablespoonfuls of baking powder,
one-half pound each of currants, sliced
citron and raisins.' Cream the butter
and sugar, add the milk and half of
the flour with the baking powder
sifted in. Then add the fruit with the
other half of the flour sifted over It,
and lastly add the whites of the eggs
well beaten. Bake one hour in a slow
oven.
(Copyright by the McClure Newspoper
Syndicate.) -
1b-NlGHfJ
&y Vj?s Walker.
Brasilia's Trip (Continued.)
THAT night when the house was
quiet Drusilla called very softly to
Bobby Jones, and he did not need a
second invitation to hear the rest of
Drusilla's story. He popped out of his
box with a bound that nearly tipped It
oyer. ,
"I never before realized how much
that nurse disliked me, but she found
out that she could not get my little
mother to go anywhere .without me,
and what do you suffpose she did?"
asked Drusilla. - '
Bobby shook his head.:
"She took my little mother to a place
where they make dolls," announced
Drusilla. . .
"We went In a train a long way
from where we had that first break
fast," said Drusilla, "and one day when
the rest of the family went on a trip
that nurse said, 'I will take you where
they make dolls and I guess you will
want to leave that old .creature when
you see all the beautiful dolls we shall
see
"And she tried to make my little
mother leave me at home, but she
wouldn't, and I went along. Bobby
Jones, I never knew there were so
many dolls in the world and so many
kinds. Dolls as big as my little mother
and as small as as as you, yes,
smaller."
"Mercy!" exclaimed Bobby, "didn't
you feel little beside the big one?"
"Of course I didn't," said Drusilla. "I
was In my little mother's arms and
that made me look down on all of them.
But some of them had Just beautiful
hair and eyes that opened and shut
with real eyelashes and some of them
could walk, too.
"And some of them said "papa and
mamma' and then ,one doll sang a
song. She was very handsome, and she
walked about while she was singing."
"My,"- said Bobby Jones, "I should
have thought your little mother would
have wanted one of those wonderful
creatures."
"Well, that is just the part I was
coming to," said Drusilla. "That nurse
said to her, "Don't you want one of
these dolls to take home with your and
i,he put one of the big dolls close to
my little mother, who took it in her
arms. Then the nurse took me as
though she was going to hold me while
my little mother held the big doll, and
just as soon as my little mother was
Interested In the big doll that nurse
said to the man who owned the shop.
"Here, you take this doll and put It out
of sight. We have, been trying to get
her to have a new 'doll for a long time,
but she will not give up this old thing.'
' "I was pretty well frightened, I can
tell you, Bobby Jones, when that man
took me and put me on a shelf back
of a pile of legs and arms, and I won
dered if he was going to cut off mlno
and put them with those I saw.
"That nurse kept talking to my little
mother, and they made the new doll
say 'papa and mamma,' and that nurse
said, "We will go to the shops and get
her a hat and shoes and stockings."
Shn never ,onco said a thing about a
dress, and that doll only had on a thin
white sliD: but that is just like that
nurse: she never once thousht of that
poor doll. crossing the ocean and being
cold; all she thought or was somemins
that would be pretty. Well, she got my
little mother out of the store, and there
T lav trembling with fear. I had given
up all hope, when the door was opened
and In came that nurse, leading my lit
tle mother by the hand.
She was crvlnd and screaming 1
want my doll; where Is my poor Dru
silla? I want her. don't want that
great big doll; I can't hold her in my
arms' and love her.'
Thnt nurse was trvlne to make ner
stop, but she cried all the louder, and
at last the man had to take me out
from behind the legs and arms.
You should have seen my liii-ie
mother's face when she saw me; she
stopped crying and ran towara me
man smiling through her tears ana
saying, 'You' darling Drusilla, you was
most scared to death, wasn't you?'
Then she hugged me so tight In her
arms that I was afraid I should burst
But I can tell you, Bobby Jones, I was
Just as glad to see her as she was glad
to see me. only I did not say anything
befdre that nurse. 1 woumn-i lei nor
know I cared a bit."
Bobby Jones waited a minuxe dux.
Drusilla was nodding, and he knew
the story was ended. - .
Your certainly did nave a nm
escape, he remarKea, uui .nv
had an adventure and a little fright
does not matter, does It?"
"Of course not," answerea urosma,
I lust could not live without having
an adventure once in a while. Good-
nitrht Rnhhv Jones."
(Copyright, ini4, Dy tne juciuro
Syndicate, ew xoi-k v,n.y.
' '1
Divoreedlife
JfeJenffessanjfUcssle.
Copyright The Adams Newspaper Service.
Mr. Wiley and His Body.
THE Mr- "Wiley who ate at Marian's
X table at Placid Inn was In love,
deeply and supremely In love-with his
body. He lookeu young 'for his 55 or
60 years because of the infinitesimal
precision with which he fed, cared for
and pampered himself. This quiet
mannered, genteel, widely-traveled man
. . . n,rn ..la (nf.rot
laid strong noia on V . 7
He knew food values ana i-ieicnefuou.
w ota miaHtativelv and quantitative
ly He was a mathematician of masti
cation. He struck the proper balance
with the nicety of science. He ate
n.iih ton much nor too little. He
took a bit of claret with his dinner.
One cigar a day he smoked, never more.
Once at dinner, observing that he
ate no meat, Marian made a remark
about the matter.
Mr. Wiley smiled in a kindly, supe
rior sort of way. "I am eating no meat
because I am unusually fond of spinach,
asparagus and parsnips, all three of
-which are on the menu this evening.
If I ate these, and meat besides, I
would overload my stomach. That is
a thing I never do."
After dinner, on the veranda, when
Mr Wilev had finished his cigar, one
of the men offered him another. He
refused, explaining tnat it was nis ruio
never to smoke more than one cigar
a day. "That's all," he said. "I en
Joy one. The second would not give
me as much pleasure. Therefore my
enjoyment of It would be impaired."
"Mr. Wiley is a refined and perfect
sensualist," said Mrs. McCarrens to
Marian a little later. "His ability to
take the proper care of himself
amounts to genius. He never crosses tne
line of differentiation between enough
and too much. He is an apostle of
superlatively correct diet. He Is a perr
ennial wonder in an age of fatness,
gout and acute Indigestion." she
laughed. "Really, he's an uncanny sort
of creature. You must become . better
acquainted with him. He's Interesting
to study like an odd, sleek bug of
some Bort."
"What .Is he a widower?" Inquired
Marian. '
"Oh, my no! He's never been mar
ried," said the other. "If he got mar
ried he'd have someone to worry about.
That's out of his line. His own scheme
of life is perfectly solved. His Income
Is nicely adjusted to his needs. He
travels north and south with the sun.
Get him to tell you about himself some
time. He has conquered all the pit
falls of callow youth. He Is a superb
materialist."
The more Marian saw of Mr. Wiley
the more she began feeling a mischiev
ous obsession to upset his selfish sched
ule of life by making the curious old
fellow fall head-over-heels In love with
her. The supreme and ever-apparent
-oifiaiiness of the man seemed to mock
at all the world which was playing such
havoc with tne lives 01 otnera. mu
coid, uncanny immunity from every
thing that savored of impulse or the
impetuous made Marian eager to try
her hand at upsetting his reckonings.
She-longed to try the experiment. She
was curious as to where it would lead.
She felt certain of one thing. No
repetition of the fiery experiences withj
Calhoun, the Southerner, lay ahead of
her should she venture on this partic
ular experimental undertaking. She
was sure that under the cold, almost
fishy, exterior of Mr. Wiley no emo
tional embers burned. That was ut
terly beyond belief.
Snapshots
.Barbara Boyd,
Making Your Town More Valnable.
DID you ever Ffbp to think a bit
how the right sort of civic spirit
increases the value of the property In
a town? Or even if you do not own
property, how it makes a town pleas
anter to live in?
Probably you have thought of It, for
most of us are interested in civic mat
ters nowadays. But It was brought
home to me very forcibly this Summer
by my vacation trip.
I left a town where the civic spirit
is of high order: It is a town with
some delightful natural advantages,
but they are but the background for
the town itself and what the towns
n.iA have done. Every person ii
that little town seems filled with the
desire and ambition to make that town
as clean, as beautiful, as healthful as it
is possible for a town to be. The streets
are kept as Immaculate as a good
housewife's kitchen. The lawns and
gardens shine as If dusted. Flowers
are everywhere. There is not a. dis
Hguring spot or nook or corner In tne
place. No matter how tiny the house,
how small the yard, all is attractive,
neat and overrun with blossoms.
Everybody who comes to the town, and
walks or rides up ana flown in
- nl-tma A1TAP It hfl.UtV.
T" V. nt root a Are well-lighted, the
drinking water good. A boulevard has
been laid out to take In all the bits of
pretty scenery. There are little parKs
with public croquet grounds and ten
nis courts. A municipal lighting plant
has brought down the cost 01 eiei.
.it untu the tiniest home can af
ford it In a recent heavy storm, the
Commissioner of Streets and Highways
spent days and nlgnts in ram "a
...i n vnrt nil damage possible.
Everybody in the place works with all
his heart to make it the finest little
city in the country.
What is the result?
It is not only a delightful place to
live in, but people who go to visit Te
maln to become residents. Real estate
booms. New hotnes are going up all
the time. The town Is growing rapidly,
and the more It grows the more It has
to offer Its citizens.
The town I came to has far more nat
ural beauty than the one I left. It has
a great bay with water of sapphire
sparkling in front of it. It has a
coast-line over-arched with green pines
and broken with gigantic rocks where
snowy spray dashes high. It has hills
climbing up behind it clothed with
great forests of the murmuring pines.
It has wild flowers growing in the
country around about till the earth
seems a magnificent Oriental rug of
glorious hues yellow poppies, Indian
paint-brush, verbena, nasturtium, ge
ranium and great masses of a lovely
little purple flower like violets.
But the town has no civic spirit
The .houses straggle as they please
up and down little narrow streets, the
houses unpalnted, the streets unpaved.
Weeds are everywhere. Vatfant lots
are filled with rubbish. Most of the
houses are hideous architecturally.
Dingy curtains hang at their windows.
Real estate agents refuse to show you
many of the houses on their list, saying
apologetically, "They are too dirty."
When you enter the one little street
car that yowls occasionally through
the town, you feel as If you do not
want your Bklrts to touch the floor:
anrl its windows still bear traces of
subsidence of the flood. The electric
light costs twice what It does In the
other town. And so you might run
through the things that affect comfort
and nleasure in living. You look at
the sea and the pines and the wild
flowers, but you have no desire to
look at much else. And you doubt if
you would take as a gift a house or lot
in the place.
Tet commercially, real estate in this
town could be made worth a lot more
than It Is In the other. If the towns
people would take hold of their little
place and make It beautiful. They
have a fortune rignt wimin ineir oor
ders. But they are sound asleep, or
else lazy, indifferent or lgnorant.
So you see that the right kind of
civic spirit pays, does it not? It Is a
good commercial asset.
And tne Desi OI ll is. every uue ul ui
Buyers to Share in Profits
Lower Prices on Ford Cars
Effective from August 1, 1914, to August 1, 1915,
and guaranteed against any reduction during that
time:
Touring Car
Runabout
Town Car -
- - -
- - - -
- - - -
F. O. JB. Detroit, all cars fully equipped.
(In the United States of America only)
Further, we will be able to obtain the maximum
efficiency in our factory production, and the mini
mum cost in our purchasing and sales departments
if we can reach an output of 300,000 cars between
the above dates.
And should we reach this production, we agree to
pav as the buyer's share from $i0 to $(30 per car
(on or about August 1, 1915) to every retail buyer
who purchases a new Ford car between August 1,
1914, and August 1, 1915.
For further particulars regrardins these low prices and
profit-shariiij plan, see the nearest Ford Braneh or Dealer.
Phones: Sellwood 2323, B-2341
After a Dip in the Surf
A Glass of Good Old
GAMBRINUS BREWING CO..
Main 49. A 1149.
can help make a civlo spirit In our
community if we will, that will in
crease the value of our homes and
make our own town pleasanter to
live In.
Complexion perf ection-Santiseptic Lotion
Adv. ,
TODAY
Everybody Will Be Able to
Buy Clothes on
Welcome to CHERRY'S
Opening!
When CHERRY'S doors open today.
Portland's public will be Introduced to
an exceedingly attractive new ShoppInK
Place possibly the most Interesting
that has ever appeared in this city.
Liberal, square and honest CREDIT
TERMS will be offered every purchaser
at CHERRY'S CLOTHING STORE. The
first payment may be small; convenient
Installment arrangements will be made
and the garment may be worn all tho
time It's being paid for.
CHERRY'S are firmly established In
other coast cities. The firm's prosper
ous stores of growing popularity bear
witnesH to the practicability and won
derful convenience of Cherry's Credit
System.
Today, Portland will have one of
these unique Clothing Shops! where
Clothing of real excluslveness ami
marked style is sold to men and
women at very moderate prices and
ON CREDIT. You'll be glad you haven't
spent your "Autumn Suit Money" when
you see the handsome fabrics and
snappy designs at Cherry's.
Today is the day to select your new
Suit! You're particular about its
every detail you'll appreciate the dis
crimination of Cherry's wide assort
ments! Visit CHERRY'S, in the t'it
tock Bloek. at 389-391 Washington
street, sometime today (Saturday), and
make a new store acquaintance that
will prove a delight a convenience
an economy! Cherry's courtesies will
be waiting for you. Adv.
CREDIT!
$490
440
690
THE CHARM
OF MOTHERHOOD
Enhanced By Perfect Physi
cal Health.
The experience of Motherhood is a try
In? one to most women and mark dis
tinctly an epoch in their lives. Not oni
woman in a hundred is prepared or un
derstands how to properly care for her
self. Of course nearly every woman
nowadays has medical treatment at such
times, but many approach the experi
ence with an organism unfitted for the
trial of strength, and when it is ovei
her system has received a shock from
which it is hard to recover. Followina
right upon this comes the nervous strain
of caring for the child, and a distinct
change in the mother results.
There is nothing more charming than
happy and healthy mother of children,
and indeed child-birth under the right
conditions need be no hazard to health or
beauty. The unexplainable thing is
that, with all the evidence of shattered
nerves and broken health resulting from
an unprepared condition, and with am
ple time in which to prepare, women
will persist in going blindly to the trial.
Every woman at this time should rely
upon Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound, a most valuable tonic and
isvigorator of the female organism.
In many homes
once childless there
are now children be
cause of the fact
that Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable
Compound makes
women normal,
healthy and strong.
If you want special adrice write to
Lydia E. PinVhara Medicine Co. (conQ.
dential) Lynn, Mass. Tour letter will
be opened, read and answered by a
woman and held in strict confidence.