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RaV R A Collar Lark OING to the Tolman | transparent, smooth and velvety. ¥ v Sz . ] W W E- S { ordinary oatmeal Laun to th G ! taste TO F. W. MacKE ADVERTISEMENT. Cleaned snowy white, starched by a special process, its very ap- pearance is but a fore- you take in wearing it! The Tolman Laundry . 6th and C Streets N.W. Feelings and appearance the better—both you and your collar will agree. Ring Franklin 71. TOLMANIZE! SIS N 20 NN % A AN THE: EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ©C. D A New Exercise. When we wake up in the morning. relaxed and probably rather tired— since few of us these modern days are ever healthy enough vo be glad to get up in the mornings—the first thing we do it to stretch, to tense °the muscles that have been relaxed while we sleep. Unconsciously we are waking our- I selves, starting the blood flowing fast iagain. Few of us know how good !this “stretch” is for all the little imuscles that usual exercises do not reach. Scientifically done, a stretch- ing exercise first thing in the morning | would be of enormous benefit. Try it. Turn over on ‘the right side, and ‘clasp the hands over the chest, the hands grasping the urms just above the elbows. Throw the head well back. Stretch your body as much as possible, making the muscles as tense and rigid as you can, and at the same time pull against your arms as hard as you can. The effect is quite astonishing. You seem to stretch and pull at every muscle. It is somewhat like lifting a heavy object. Hold this rigid pose dry is but a lark e starched coua,r. of the pleasure LMANIZE! NZIE, Manager T S ¥ ¥ v 2 L v v s 2 W S Housekeepers groan and grumble over the canning season—and yet I nou«.e that they enjoy canning, just he same. The most enthusiastic | facial expressions T have ever seen ADVERTISHMENT have been those stamped on the faces How to Beautify Your Complexnon and Bring Roses to Your Cheeks /A _Free Oatmeal Prescription Does | | Its Work Overmight. You Can Prepare It at Home. | New York—Exposure to | atmosphere, bright sunlight, |and cold wind has a very fect upon the skin and complexio: | When vou come in contact with artificial heat you have often no- ticed that the dry atmosphere | causes your skin to feel drawn and | puckery. This is very harmful and there is a way to overcome b 1 is my own discovery and takes just one mnight to get such marvelous results,” says Mae Edna Wilder when her friends ask her about her wonderful complexion and the im- proved appearance of her hands and ar “You can do the same thing it you follow my advice,” she says. “I feel it is my duty to tell every girl and woman what this wonder- ful prescription did for me. Just think of it. all this change in a single night. [ never tire of tell- ing others just what brought about such remarkable results. Here Is the fdentical prescription dry dust that removed every defect from my face, hands, arms, neck and | shoulders. Until you try it you | can form no idea of the marVelous change it will make in just one ap- plication. The prescription which 'ou can prepare at your own home is as follows: Go to any grocery store and get 10 cents’ worth of and from any drug store a bottle of Derwillo. Prepare. the oatmeal as directed in every package of Derwillo and apply night and morning. The first pplication will astonish you. Tt makes the skin appear rosy-white especially recommended this method for a dark. sallow skin, shiny nose, coarse pores, rough chapped skin, ruddiness, wrinkles and, in fact, | every blemish the face. hands and | arms are heir to. | duce or stimulate If your neck or chest is discqlored from exposure. apply this combination there and the objectionable defect will dis- appear as if by magic. It is abso- lutely harmless and will not pro- a growth of of housekeepers who point to a pre- serve closet stocked with canned fruits and vegetables. So I am sure that women are at this moment look-| ing forward to putting up the tomato, |jand X ofter, the following recipes: To Can Tomatoes Whole.—This is il the most satistactory way of canning them, for they do not shrink. Select firm, ripe tomatoes and lower them into boiling water, in a_cheesecloth bag, for from ome to two lr.;unm!en hair.. No matter how rough or ||l then plunge the bag into cold water ungainly the hands and arms, or |||for an instant; the skins are now loose and may be removed with the fingers. Also remove cores with a pointed, slender-bladed knife, taking care not to cut into the soft flesh of the tomato. Pack these whole, skinned and cored tomatoes into hot. sterilized and wide-mouthed jars (quart size), add one teaspoon salt to each jar, and flll the jar to within one-quarter inch of top with boiling water; adjust rubbers and cover and seal completely. Place jars on the rack in your wash_ boiler, or in a large saucepan, in boiling water to cover themi-that is, water which has been boiling up to this moment, but has stopped because the wash Boiler has been pulled to the back of the range—or off it completely. Cover the wash boiler and do not touch for five or six hours or until the; water is almost cold, then remove: jars and store. (This method s vefy. confus- ing to some women who are used to allowing the water to boil up around the partially sealed jars for a eertain number of minutes prescribed by the cold-pack chart. But you will have splendid success if you follow these directions lbuolu!ely. completely seal- ing the jars :nre putting them in the wash boilef. then merely remov- ing_the wash boller from the fire to cool, as above directed.) Chili . Sauce—Remove skins from twelve ripe tomatoes by lowering them into boiling water as above di- what abuses they have had through hard work and exposure, this oat- meal - Derwillo combination will work a wonderful transformation in 12 hours at the most. Thou- | sands who have used it report the || | same results I have had.” Miss O. C. says v complexion was poor and my skin rough. My face, neck, chest, hands and arms were dark from exposure. The very first_application of this wonderful Derwillo oatmeal combination con- vinced me that my poor complexion and_skin blemishes would soon be | a thing of tha past. In a few| weeks all these unsightly defects | had entirely disappeared and shall always use it to keep my complexion at its best all the time. 1 have recommended it to my girl| friends and<they are just as en- thusiastic over it as I am. We all use it before going to the theater, dances or parties and it's wonder- ful what a difference it makes in our appearance.” Mrs. G. V. writes: “Oatmeal and | Derwillo have worked miracles | with my complexion. d many | despised wrinkles and a_dark, sal- low, rough skin. My hands and arms were covered with freckles. After eight weeks' use of Mae FEdna Wilder's wonderful com- plexion prescription these objec- tionable defects have entirely van- i{shed. I now use it just as a rected, then cut them into slices and ars . e A vise Cevery. wirl and ||| Put them into an agateware kettle off the fire. Peel and slice two large onions and cut two red peppers also into small pieces; add these two vege- tables to the tomato in the kettle. To this mixture add four cups_of vinegar, two tablespoons of salt, fwo cups of granulated sugar and two teaspoons each of ground cloves, cin- namon, allspice and grated numeg. Let the mixture boil slowly forttwo hours, stirring it often to preyent burning. Then turn it at oncé into hot sterllized glass jars and jgeal immediately. Yellow Tomato Prefervé~s] yellow tomatoes Into boiling wa Ta cheesecloth, for about two minutes, woman to try it, and I feel confi- dent that after one or two appli- cations they will use it continually and be just as favorably impressed with it as I am. I recommend it to all of my friends.” NOTE—To get the best effect be sure to follow the complete directions contained in svery package of Derwillo. You have ouly to Eet Derwillo and oatmeal. ~You need noth- ing else, and it js so simple that anyone can use it, and so Tnexpensive that any girl or ‘woman can afford it. The manufacturers and druggists guarantee that there will be a no- ticeable improvems after the first applica- tion or they will refund the money. It is sold in this city under a money refund guarantee by department stores and all druggists. er then dip them swiftly in and out of You can see the difference My in Boscul Coffee Take a handful of any other ground coffee and compare it with some Boscul Coffee. All through the ordinary coffee you will notice innumerable white flecks. Those white particles are the bitter chaff. Every coffee bean has a layer of this woody, fibrous chaff. It is largely responsible for that rank, harsh flavor which so often mars what might other- wise be a good cup of coffee. This chaff is absent in Boscul Coffee. Boscul is an even brown throughout. Before the roasted beans are cut, they are cracked into large pieces and the chaff removed by our special process. Therefore Boscul is all coffee, full weight of the best parts of the bean—making a full, rich, satisfying beverage. Your eyes can ac- tually see the difference: your taste will realize it immediately. Sixty-three years of specializing on fine coffees developed Boscul—our finest. Ask your grocer for Boscul— In tins &nd sealed cartons, (including handy half pounds.) Never in bul Wm. S. Scull Company, Camden, N. J. For 63 Years Importers, Roasters and Blenders of High-Grade Coffees fhcienf buseke Laure. A Kirkman for about five counts (five seconds) and relax, Rebeat, relax, repeat and relax againg Three times- is enough the first 1ly a dozen times is morning; eventua o vt ised how this best. You will be surprl starts the blood running, how it makes “getfing up” much easier and pleasanter thap when you consider the matter fromv'a relaxed and sleePy point of view. M. A. M., Ada R M. C. Y.—To re- fine the skin aund cleanse it, use & cleansing cream several times each week. Remove it with moist hot cloths and follow this by massaging the face and throat with a fine cream, until the skin has absorbed all that it needs. Wipe off the surplus and tone the skin with a small plece of ice. This. will close the pores and keep them from taking up so much s0il from the atmosphere. Troubled.—Any good toilet water will help you overcome this oily con- dition of the skin. The ice rub will also assist it, but an oily skin needs an improved digestive tract, which is often being abused by overeating or choosing food that is too rich, or that is made up of starch, without enough frult or green vegetables to counter- act it. cold water; now rub off the loosened skins, welgh them, and put them into bowl with granulated sugar to stand over night, using two cups of the sugar to each pound of the weighed tomatoes. In the morning drain off the sirup which has formed during the night and boil it up for five minutes in your preserving kettle, skimming often. Add the tomatoes to this boiled sirup and also add two ounces of chopped preserved or crys- tallized ginger, two ounces of chopbed crystallized citron peel and two thin- ly sliced seeded lemons- for every pound of the tomatoes. Let simmer until the tomatoes are well cooked then turn into hot, jars and seal completely while hot. HOME ECONOMICS. BY MRS. ELIZABETH KENT. Practical Clothes Budget. Analyses of a good many typical outlays for clothing result in_fixing 14 per cent as the average and suit- {able portion of the income to be 80 luaed. As. women's clothing usually costs more than men's, it is practical to assume that two-thirds of this 14 per cent is spent by and for the women. A typical list of necessary clothing for a woman includes two suits. one for summer and one for winter, at least one good frock for evening wear, a coat, several blouses of different sorts, plain and fine, a good afternoon summer gown, a white skirt, a summer coat or sweater, two or three everyday sum- mey gowns. two or more house dresses, several aprons, winter and summer underwear, nightgowns, petticoats for summer and winter, shoes and boots for house, street and evening wear, three or four pairs of gloves, four hats, a plain and a fine one for summer and the same or winter. Most of these articles can be bought to Berve two years, many of them three and more. In planning the budget for the year ahead careful a Imfim should be made of the expendi- ture of several past years. Even |if one has not a complete record. a fairly close estimate can be made. The when the closets, bureau, at- | season. THURSDAY, AUGUST 18, 1921. Cuts and Scratches. “It was only a scratchy’’said a man ruefully surveying Bis artificial arm. “And here I am in the flower of my manhood with a wooden arm and the only job I can do is deliver. ing papers, because 1've got rheuma. tism and a wooden arm.” ° “How did you do it?" ‘questioned the young man, whko had;stopped in the rain to buy a paper. frdm the one- armed man on the cormer. It was a dismal Sunday morning end the young man was hurrying to-work, for it was his Sunday on, but he paused to talk with the lonely max, was indeed but a year or so older’than himeelf. The differcnce was that one was well and strong and decently clad. The other maimed and-shivering in the rain, with some spattered papers un- der the ragged canyas bag at his side and hopelessness i his eyes. “It was a big scra of course,” admitted the paper man, “but 1 didn't believe in babying myself. So I let it go and it got infected: and went up my arm and thep I 'put salve and stuff on it. The doctors said they could have saved it if I had come to them soon enough. Buf I never had much use for dectoring unless a fel- low was real sick—so 1 waited too long.” The tall youth looked sym- pathetic and pulled up his trouser leg, disclosing & long, smooth scar. “Over there?’ questioned the paper man_wistfully. “Yes, sir. there. 1 _carry in my chest. But I didn't get this my bits of shrapnel Never did get them out.” smiled the youth. “This was just a plain old “tax cut. The ax slipped and_ split my leg open, just like that. But there was a fellow there—we were in the bush at the time—who knew a lot about wounds. Seemed to come natural to him. He said the thing about wounds was to keep them clean and get the edges| together, so he manipulated the little | old bottle of iodine and didn't it sting? Worse than the ax when it struck me. “Then he strapped the edges of the! wound together with little narrow strips of adhesive stuff, far apart, | you know. and it didn’t even granu- “Granulate? Oh, proud flesh, some folks call it. You know, little masses that look white and bleed easily. When a fellow’s wound got that way in the army they.always burnt the edges, you know, touched them up with stuff that smarted for'a min- ute, but it made them heal. Oh, 1 was lucky. That fellow sure knew the dope. But I hated to be babied, too. We men are like tht, you know; sort of hate to give in to things. Well. so long. buddie, see you tomorrow."” And a fortunate youth strode off in the rain, leaving a thrill in the heart of the man who hadn’t got across be- cause of his wooden arm. For he had called him “buddie.” —_— Prices Realized on Swift & Co. s-lu of carcass beef in week ending Saturday, 192 “bipments #old out, runged from 10 cenis 1o 17.50 cents per pound and averaged 13.47 cents per pound.—Advertisement. —— The three-piece dress with its de- tachable cape will be worn for early all. ADVERTISEMENT. Dancing Frocks. The phrase “cutting a wide swathe” will take on new and poignant mean- ing on the dancing floors this fall, for practically all the dancing frocks of newer design sre crinolined or dis- tended at the hips with hoops or padding. Chiffon velvet plays an im- portant part in the foundation ef these frocks which feature the quaint tight bodice with a neck line which hugs the shoulders closely. One such frock of blue carries out an unusual color effect is a diagonal design, one line showing a dull light and the next a bright one. Single large silk flowers frequently catch the fullness on one hip. e Fruit Foam. Take one-half a box of gelatin. one- half cup of water, two and one-half cups of fruit juice and three eggs. Soak the gelatin in vold water until dissolved, heat the fruit juice, which may be strawberry. raspberry, black- berry, currant, grape or other fruit, pour over the gelatin, sweeten 10 taste, stir ail together and strain and cool. Beat the whites of the eggs stiff, beat into the jelly until it is a solid foam, pour into a wet mold and serve with whipped cream. Pre- pare the day before using. ADVERTISEMENT. venient Tablet Form. Run-down, weak and thin people, | | who were eating yeast for health, |have found that yeast brings far | | better and quicker results when it | is taken with iron. | Through this splendid combina- {tion of tonics, now embodied in | Ironized Yeast, folks who for years | suffered with loss of strength, nerv- | late.” The paper man looked a lmle at a, loss. “What's that?” he asl tic trunks or boxes are overhauled. A notebook and pencil in the pocket { of the house gown during the day's work then provides” much food for | | thought and calculation in the even- sterilized glass|time to make a budget is between |ing. (Copyright, 1921.) | ousness, anaemia, thinness and {other “rundown” conditions, are]ZZ78 TTETYIAY 1|l quickly regaining normal health | = |and strength. This is because Ironized Yeast | supplies run-down bodies with just ' | the elements they very often need— i vitamines and iron. These two sub- stances have been found absolutely | essential to good health. Yet the DON'T TAKE YEAST WITHOUT IRON! Both Are Necessary for Best| R e s ul ts—Thousands Now Take Ironized Yeast in Con- | modern diet. in many cases, is al- | most entir lacking in them. No wonder so many thousands of men and women become sickly, run- down, and old before their time. Ironized Yeast in many cases brings a noticeable improvement in two or three days. Get Ironized Yeast today! Sold at all druggists in patented sani-tape packages. Each contains 10 dayvs' treatment and costs only a dollar—(just 10c a day), or no more per dose than ordi- veast. Special directions for package. Made by t- Company, At- sale by all the oNIZED YE R Tablets s.' IGHLY CONCENTRATED Vlfmmt I'ONIC Ga. lanta, People’s Drug Zists evervwae thoroughly dissolve Riaeo in two quarts of boiling water. Where water is hard or clothes extra dirty use more Rineo. DISSOLVE: For each tab of clothes a haif package of POUR INTO TUB of lukewarm water— mixwell. Keepadding the solution until You geta good, rich, lasting, soapy sude, even after the clothes have been putin. Whether youy use a washing machine or tubs These two easy steps save you . the hardest work of washday HE most soiled spots, the dirtiest things that even your washing machine fails to get clean, are cleaned without any rubbing when you use Rinso. Rinso is so perfect a combination of pure cleansing materials that it loosens the dirt from. even the worst soiled pieces of the family wash without injury to a single fabric. After soaking your clothes in this pure soap product, a few minutes in your washing ma- chine gets them beautifully clean. Follow the simple directions given above. Soak the clothes. Then before operating the machine, add a fresh Rinso solution, using the same amount of Rinso as you used for soaking. No other soap product is needed when Rinso is used. iy ; ‘Whether you use a washing machine or tubs, get Rinso today at your grocer’s or depart- ment store. LeverBros.Co. Cambndge,Mass. Made in U.S. THEN LET YOUR CLOTHES SOAK. S;nk one hour, two hours, overnight—whatever time is convenient. Then, before operating the machine, add a. fresh Rinso solution, using the Al same amount of Rinso as you used for soaking. The ideal soap product for any kind of washing machine