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FEATU b RE PAGE. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D, &, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER- 3, 1t&i. ... FEATURE PAGE, ITTLE GTORIES | lfiflr:lgm%e Peter Remembers Jerry FROM NOW ON BY FRANK L. PACKARD. “I guess I got a right to step if he has!" with out she steps. the goose Is sauce for the gander— isn’t ft? LISTEN, WORLD! BY ELSIE ROBINSON. Cfficient @ thouseket sniffs Mary Ellen, and forth- “What's sauce for Strengthening the Ankle. Most of ue at this season of the Then relax back so that you } toes will curl downward the foot and draw and not the toe. Muskrat Well, has a wife just as much . i i . ] “aten” « i and the {year are regretfully laying aside our pogition it B THORTON, V5, BURGIESS opyright, 1081, by Publio Ledger O, . right to "step” as o husband? Sure| Helpful Letters From Readers. | -ups of flour untit smooth And /| oo e amhasine o e - Copyright, w: by B. H. Davis Corp. she has. She hns'exact!y the same Mother of Six: “From time to time|Let cool, then beat this vigorously, high atises o wiiter wes: J¢ your and repeat Who to my signs gives careful heed Will be prepared for every need —O0ld Mother Nature. Peter Rabbit sat just inside one of Johnny Chuck's back halls and wait- ~d for Reddy Fox to go away. Peter landing, lay a woman's form that was still and metionless. And he ughed like the maniac he was now, (Continued from Yesterddy's Star.) With a quick, sudden wrench, Dave 1ding 1o it three beaten ¢ggs. Drop e mixture in gem tins, brush over iops with white of egg. Bake three minutes in a quick oven m filling for créam puffs.—"One f suzar. one pint her in a sauce- boillng add one-half young married women ask me what is needed for a layctte and how inexpens |sively it may be hought. In return Ifor the many helps you have given ime in personal letters, I am sending | ankles are weak I would advise you, instend of wearing high shoes, to purchase yourself some woolen stock- ings which will ki kles anid s warm. and to aring Ox- ords until the weather sbecomes 80 and cold that cven this is not suflicient you the following flgures to publish;|pan, times paste is made by £ a pound cach of ana % thems very fine and < a half of a half of a pire - slowly for put in nenied of s of hoiling was I no hurry. He had Just a8|ifenderson tried to free himsell. It|:nd the wriggling thing screamed in conty a soGn B¢ there for a while as any- [resulted only in a wild swirl in @ half ihis grasp, screamed as it went up lthey inay help some’ of the jyoung[CUB of cornstarch or_flour mited nrocettion. Bt Yor most of ue e ARG D L on where else. He was quito safe and | Cifcle that almost pitched him. iy Aon NP hend ond mnen g-*m‘e‘fi)’:' {mothers who read your coiumn: aad a 'Title hutter; scason with low shoes and wool stockings prac- t an inch 3 = » d oor., del - i & v iaie s 4 g T ; i 2y pe d 2 knew it. The only way Reddy FoX|he saw the Scorpion now. The tom of the stairs. | Alayette ghat costs §20.— 1“0“11\.,;{::31 and it is regdy to put into al fu‘,m{m;l ‘(« Mliaito Coms: i 'wa. ”’,f.,” reg could get In would be by digging that | on had risen to his feet from Bookie | He {urned. and flung himselt on his | and-wool Vests at $1.5% cach, $3.10: o B ot e G e oS Et e Peliics (18 aakiles o e Fate hack hall larger, and he felt sure |SKarvan's side and was balwacins i |knees beside Teresa. He called her 1two bands at 95 cents AL W {and o strengu em, wear 1oy Tho chds of bobbud hate N vl 5 revolver in his hand; and now wame again and again—and there !binders at 45 cents e Leul foras 8 i cre Do not roll e Reddy"wouldn't waste any time do- |Scorpion's veice Secmed to hold was no answer. She lay there, half i gowns at $1 euc Sl "W of the natr than ie nec y to hold ILg taat. S0t Of purring mote, velvet in ils|on her face on the floor, her arma;® i half yards of flannel at 89¢, e Sy coue it Y 13t on the cu = Ho was quite right. Reddy had|® 8. 5 e Lo wound around a torn package of tjackct (crocheted), 98 & , anarled angrily when Peter hud |ag L rIEht. then, Mazgot! We mikhl|uuknotes. He rose, and rocked on WHAT'S SAUCE TOR iblanket, 75 cents; two boote« e lof lnsw The mastaE Ay sikeneans ted tonzue, try A angrily o ud a8 well have a clean-up here, simce | 1is fior and his Kaotted Ats went THE GOOSE 15 SAUCE | Cente 5. mate 50 conta: ORe chocolate, sinvedtnin: one Liasion | rubbjge motion with both husd e atove in thumped & warning to Johnny Chuck and Johnny had shown Reddy a pair of black heels as he dived down in- slde his house. Then Reddy had rushed for Peter. who, just In_the nick of time, dodged into this back hall of Johnny Chucl “I'll dig you out,” 8. snarled Reddy, he's staried it. I guess we came just about in time, or he'd have had the money as well as our fat friend there —that he got. It looks as though we cught to even up the score.” The revolver lifted in the Scorpion's hand. “Jump away, Maggot—I'm go- ing to lead the acc of trumps! The eyes were white—not blue; there was no blue in them; they were {up abdve his head. And then ne laughed again, as though his reason were gone—laughed as his eyes fixed {on a red-headed thing that made an unshapely heap at the foot of the stairs; and laughed at a slinking shadow that went along the hall, and scurried out through the front door. That was Mazgot—like a rat leaving —to sm TOR THE GANDER® right to violate the code of decency the baby's arrival, cloth. $1.40 for. the ten-yard bo! little betier grade diaper cloth, $ | for the bolt; two crib pads & 49 cent a pad, 98 cents; four dresses at cents, §3. - Total, $19.24. Of course 1 this list does not include outdoor gar- ! mentd. but it is a complete list for and the oth eak and waste and cheapen | things can be gotten when ncedcd. Mrs. F, B. Here are sons ¢ 7 the leg. It exerc!s-s and strength- 18 the little mus and it stimu- lates the circulation of the blood. Beside the masba the i8 one special little cxercise which you should practice. £it on a chair or 8tool with the shoes off, point the te out, stretching the foot and leg as far as you can and tensing all the mus- cther. add the 12 dissolved in :11 beatdn, the he rhocolate | dissol haif cup of bolling waer. Bake 1'nutes in loaf form | or about 30 minutes In layer form.” PR S N butter sour n it, then add the flour. ar @ ction of > system. liver and r oung Mother. your doctor ut this condition. If you had sent s I should have been pleased ve mailed vou a reply, but there is not space in this column to do jus- tice to suck an inquiry. B. B. E—Bobbed hair is still worn oking his nose in at the doorway. i i f ia sinking ship—Maggot who— v 1w P .,(:D:m on.” retorted Peter. It is|‘thite—two littie \\'hl(sd s!rl\‘m A.c:g::l Then ‘}c“'o'l. P mgblsnim Tpe po- hefiefilt-wom,‘“ whi out” for Tecipes ‘which other women mignt of. an average, have|cles olr u%e foot. ankle and calf of the very much. 80 30u would not be out of fine weather for digking. tho room They held a devil's menacc | )i ment now—the Dpo- |revenge on & falthless husband, the . like: Sure dumplings—one quart flour, liends i proportion io their |leg. 1f you streteh out us far as pos- if you chose it, but it is mot Roddy started to dig a8 it he really | N _them—like the 3“169—}‘,& O Be e ant he had caught |wer K" Who ey, tis B i nas | thre€ teaspoons baking powder. one! length. and darker eyes and hair!sible you cannot fail to make these sen as often now as it was a year ntended to do just what he had saiq | PUITing voice that was hideous ! Tere She wasn't {and stornts arecin cxaetly. the sime half teaspoon salt, ecnough milk or' than men. muscles tense; at the same o1 “eter chucl “It is |cause it was so soft. God, could he 4 up In his arms: e : he would do. T'eter chuckled. “It is Hola this "‘ wrench | d¢ad—he eould hear her breathing— |wont. They are hoth of them |r,1"g!wnler to stir to a gtiff dough. Drop X cilling. aggot now—not i Bood to see some one so willing Lo |0l 1 o, Bat hold the man here!oBly it was weuk—pititully weak. |“cures” that will not work, snoonfuls, of¥ this mixture In Reddy Stopped digzing. He knew |in his arms—keep Magzot between [ There 'should be an exit to”the firc use the cures haven't th L and Jeive Tmagy. that Peter knew he \f‘,.s only blum,‘,g. him and those white es, that looked :;_L;_:ll(ul"m‘firy)x? hlhdls fllfin——bux it w logicul rela o]r;shl_n ||o t}l’lled tl Y 2 wpoon ““;,r cun\lx(‘“r:gtl;- n‘lxl.n: ANYwWay, one of these davs I'll muke |lke wicked little plague spots which dark 1o ad no tims to they act as if sinning had been a{ /s ind then cook 10 minutes longe [t was quicker to go up th affront for which they 1 eaten into that grotesquely red- you pay forfcheating me out of a fine pufis. Heat one er” of fat Chuck v o itehed face. iwhere he knew the way—and oul nand personal mpensga-) {ream pub CUD_ wate ?-le" r‘l(l.ll,\hf;‘.l L.nlnuxli '::u\‘xfu‘;d&ms)u;:t wot was fighting like a demon ugh his own room. tion. It's nothing of the sort. Tne':{;ll:'n ll_z\i"l'i" f"“'l}"li otr:?m?;obfm <7 snarled Reddy. to tear himself free. A sweat| Stumbling, staggering in the dark |man has failed them. to be sure, but ! 5 8 ne- o for the warn riliead spurted out on e Hender- | ness. holding Teresa in his arms. he |he has failed himself infinitely more. Keep it in mind” chuckled Peter. |sm's forehead and rolled down his!made h upstairs, The police— | fle ix strucgling in the morasses of : Madily . made ot oy drendgul ! fice. The white eyes cime dancing ' his mind centered on that again. 1f [his own spirit, and if they truly love ¥ 10 4o to Ieter | noarer—noarer. They cireled and cir-|sie and he werg caught here, his|and truly wish to help, they should ten him, and the circled—Mazgot | identitication as ¢ Dave Henderson. {arrive on the scene with iife pre- i e LU whirled this way | which would ultimately ensue. wou'd |servers instead of a lot of denunci- | Unbelievable atwns and schemes of revenge. { You can never save a wandering | soul by appealing to his duty to you he this money, wrapped S0 iously in her arms, wou.d damu and, on top of-that old score of hes s of his they swung and around in furiows gyrations. ere i was for a long time, and | having nothing else to do he feli to | nking of Johnny Chuck and how You can hardly realize the wonderful im. positive Johnny was that the comi A shot rang out. Something sing|the’ police in San Francisco, therc|——tor, after all, that Isn't his hignest | D winter would be long, hard and cold. ' with an angry hum and hot breath [had been ugly work here in this|duty and he knows it. The loss of y provement to yourskin “I wonder If he is right?” thought ;hast Dave Henderson's cheek. The | house tonight. If it were not for the ur happiness is only an incident In and complexion your Teter. “I don’t see how he can know. | velvet voice laughed. Maggot scream- [ mon. the criminal hoax playecd |1 vast tungle he must mirror will reveal to you ,But he thinks he knows He has!.d in a mixture of rage and fear. upon e in the disappearanc. [So the best and most s 1 after ssingGouraud'sOriental ‘made his house deeper than ever be-| “Curse youse, youse fool! Youse'll|,f Dave Henderson would not be so|vou can do to right things is te fur-' Cr 8 e fore and never since I have known |hit me! serious—but the money was here, |Ret the clamorings of your own eam for the first time, him, and I have known him all his| -7 t him next time, Mazgot.”land in that hoax she had had a par:.|spirit,_stand steady, and emanate Send I5¢. for Trial Size Jife, has he been as fat as he is now. [purred the velvet voice. and the shadow of Nicolo Caprianc |cheerfulness. = FERD. T. HOPKINS & SON And he savs it is all because we|' Pie white «oes kept too far away— | sill lay e o A It ‘anyihing cap bring him back to | are going to have a long. hard. cold that was what was the e Mokt ai oame gratarail 1 | sanity. that will. “And if it won't,| winter. He is sure of it. yet he can't | iy 11 they would e e BTy ot |You will at least have kept faith Lell how he I8 Surei fays It 18 Iustincar—near enouch so that of a sud- L .| With yourself and you will emerge a ‘feeling.’ Huh! I don't put muchigey he could let go his grip | S Jungrils | from the mix-up with vour moraie | faith in feclings of that kind. I Won-|i unch this squirming human sh 0 o o bins.d |unshaken—however red” your eyes | der if a dy else has t feel= | AN Tike o battering ram, into those and now he paus, | ing. | don't believe anybody doe +hite eves. That was the only chance r the first time to listen. There was Right then TPeter “remembered | nof (HE8 o T8 L o was to | W seund, Back there lnside the something he had quite forgotten. | OFe WS, DIy U1e EEOTIIAn WO8 fir | 6 1 was as still as death. Death He remembered how, very early one & Well, Why shouldn't it be, there wus away. deth th v, o P PsO] 4 ad’ ! R ey arms tightened suddenly in a s the pion darted to one overwhelning _paroxysm ot nd then suddenly, and for the ir around Teresa, and he bent his t lower, lower still, u: wus close to thit white d. an@ through the dark- arched it in an agony of apprehension. Ang then he started forward again, nd began to descend the fire escape. and now he groped uneasily for foot- hold us he’went. It scemed rickety {and unstable. this spidery thing thai sprawled axains thg s1de of the wall and it was k, Bnd without care the foot would slip through the open- inzs between the treads. It had nut ‘med that way when he had gone d down when disposing of the ses. Only now it wis a priceless burden that he carried—this form Ithat lay close-pressed against his | breast, whose touch. alternately now. {brought him a sickening sense of dread, and a surging hope that sent the blood leaping like a millrace through his ‘veins. He went down, step after step, his mind and brain 'shrieking at him to hurry because there was not a sinzle second to lose—but it was slow, mad- deningly slow. He cduld not see the treads, not only because It was dark. lbut because Teresa’s form was in his {arms. He couid only feel with his | teet—and now and. then his body | swaved to preserve his balance. Was there no end to the thing! It |seemed like some bottomless pit of blackness into which he was descend- | ing. And it seemed as though this pit ime a sound from bent i lips—a low cry of first time, there Dave Herderson per- mps light S ! Just a gl o the ay where the, m the room streamed out of a flgure on the = self-poisoning that comes _from eating wrong foods that fermentinthestomachandin- testines. Itisaslow butdeadly form of poisoning. Avoid _auto-intoxication by eating Shredded Wheat a perfectly balanced food that sup- death itself ? seemed to grip and ing to the banister rail as though were welded there. Teresa!- He grew sick at heart as he strugeled now. Teresa! If he could | only have kept her out of this; if only, at least, she were not there to sce! It could much lonzer! | Frue, Maszgot doubt, beyond {shadow of trickery now, had had his {4l of fighting, and there was fear = : 5 upon the man. the fear of an unlucky PETER POKED HIS HEAD OUT FOR | 200 from the Scorpion, and he sy A LOOK AROUND. whimpering now, and 'he struegled { only apathetically, but it took strensth to drag even a dend weight around {and around and that strength woul! inot last forever. Tercsa! She had {hrard those shofs from up above— #aid becaus: the winter was going !<h had seen the Scorpion fire once, 10 be unusually cold. He remem-!anq nie SO0 Gp0 760 bered how he and 1most of the other | " Tha Searpion laughed out. Tt looked ittle people had laughed at Jerry ke a suve shot now! Dave Hender- and made fun of him for thinking |son jerked Maggot In front of him, at he could tell what the winter lyy¢ his swirling, mad gyrations had to be like. H brought him into the aneie that the when the winter had come it |q.sk made with the wall, and, turn < he would now, the Scorplon could Vi N H fall, Jerry Muskrat had gone to work on his house, making the walls thicker than usual, and when he had been asked why he was doing it had membered, 00, it how had been just as Jerry said it would | be, the coldest, hardest winter for ' .cach in around the end of the dosk a " |held an abominable signification in . YPeter scratched 3 long ear with a | Toiver muats Haelf " ("¢ T its blackness and its depth, as thougl plies every element needed for long hind foot. Then he scratched | “I got him, Magmot!" purred the |it beckoned him on to engu em; i the othwr long ear with llfle o(ht‘r(Scr.mlr/n ot him now. thee—- | it Sfism%‘})—;aiffi‘flm;fl- '{f’t““;: keepingthe bOdymeP-HOtCh con- long hind foot, and on his face was| The man's voice en in a startled | Would only Ves H R H a puzzled look. Perhaps there was|ery. The sweat was runnipg into| o still. so terribly still in his arms! dition. Contains all the bran and something in that “fecling” after all. , Dave Henderson's eyes. hé could | Anothe B 0 r— | T Wondur it Jerry T got it this | soareely Soe-Just a hiurred vision|his foot, searching outfound oniy mineral salts in the whole-wheat rear, «d he, talking to himself. iover Maggot's shoulder. a blurred |Space benea . pRe . - T don't sce wity s shouldn’t have, if [ vision of A slim fizure running like arm now, o that he could cling to . grain. A perfect food for childzen Johnny Chuck his it. I'll run over {the w into the room. and stooping | the bottom tread and lower himself wnd find_out. Its all nonsense, of |to tha fleor wicre the backage of to the ground. It was only a short and grown-ups. course, still, I would like to know {hanknotes lay. and snatching it up, drop, he knew, for the lower scction |of the fire escape was one of those that swung on hinges, and when, pre- viously, coming up, Teresa had hcld it down for him, he had been able to, reach it readily’ with a spring from {the ground. But he dared not jump {even that short distance mow with i Teresa, wounded, in his arms. He changed her position now to 4 starting for the a~or agaln. And then the Scorpion fired—but “ac way was clear. Reddy |the revolver was pointed now across | s nowhere to be seen. Peter | the room, and the slight. fleeing fig- ed for the Smiling Pool, lipperty- [ure swayed .and staggered, and ro. lipperty-lip. jeovered ‘herscit, and went' on. and - over her shoulder her voice, though (Copyright; 1081, by - W ey |it faltered, rang bravely through the Jerry thinks about it.” er poked his head out for a look hat For a warm, nourishing meal heat two Biscuits in the oven to restore their crispness and pour hot milk over them, adding a little cream and a dash of Nothing so strengthening and room: | . e " . . “I — 1 thought he'd rather|throw her weizht into the hollow of, satisfying—and the cost is only a few With Kidneys. have this than you. Dave |his left arm, lifting, her head so tha? cents. Delicious with fresh or stewed i It was the only chance. Don't mind it lay high upon Kis shoulder—s»« by fruits, with the movement her hair brueied : !his lips. It brought.a sudden, cno%- { |ing sob from Dave Henderson, 'and | lin a great yearning impulse he let "his head sink down until his cheek | for an instant was laid agalnst hers | —and then, the muscles of his right arm straining until they cracked, he |lowered himself down and dropped to i the ground. He ran now, lurching, across the iyard, and out into the lane, and here he paused again to listen. But he | heard nothing. He was clear of that {cursed trap-house now-—if he could oMy keep clear! He ran on_agalin, I stumbling again, with his burden. i And now, though he did not pause to {1isten_any mere, it seemed as though his throbbing eardrums caught the me. Dave. He won't get me. The whimpering thing in Dave Hen- derson's arms was flung from him, and it crashed to the floor. It wasn’t dishes. To begin with, first wash the | his own strength, it yas the strength of one demgnted. and of a maddened kidneys thoroughly and remove the | veine and sinews. Then blanch them |DRgin, that possessed Dave Hender- by throwing them into boiling water | SOh now. And_ he leaped forward, and leaving them there for five min- |running like a hare. Tcresa had al- tes. 'Then proceed 28 the recipe|ready gained the stairs—the Scorpion directs. in pursuit was halfway along the Teem.mber that kidneys require Iit- {hall. And now he saw nothing else— tle cooking—that, indeed, longer cook- | ‘ust that red-haired fisure running,| ing makes them tough. A little cook- | running, running. There was neither ing, and they will be tender. heuse, nor hall,” nor_stairs, nor any Stewed kldneys—After blanching |other thing—only that red-haired the kidneys put them {n cold water!flgure that the soul of him craved, for four or flve minutes to chilljfor whom there was no mercy, that them, drain and cut in small pieces,; With his hands he would tear to or In slices. Now put these in a!picces In insensate fury. stew pan with a spoonful of butter,| A flash came, blinding his eyes: a|sounds at last that they had been | Salt and pepper, and stew for five report roared in his ears—and then|straining to hear. Wasn't that the minutes. Have ready an equal bulk | his hands snatched at and caught a'police behind there now—on the of fresh mushrooms stewed in butter.| Wriggling thing. And for the first.street in front of the fron Tavern? When the kidneys are ready mix in[time he realized that he had reached |It sounded like it—Ilike the arrival the mushrooms, a pinch of mustardthe head of the stairs, realized it be- |of a police patrol. Veal, lamb or mutton kidneys maye| sll be made into many palatable " You can buy it ready-made While your mother and your grand- mother used Fruit of the Loom in perhaps even more ways than you do, you hate one advantage they did not enjoy. Nowadays you can buy articles ready- made of Fruit of the Loom. And when you see the Fruit of the Loom label on sheets, pillow cases, pajamas, nightshirts, nightgowns, men’s and boys’ shirts, hand- «nd_ some chopped parsley. Have cause, pitched forward over the]| (Continucd in ‘Tomorrow’s Star. i endy“some " croutons. Thicken the A ker;‘hll:fs, you }:nn relyhnot a_lolne on the iidney sauce slightly with corn- starch. Serve in a deep dish, gar-!|[\=— clot ut on the way the article 1s made. nished with the croutons. § _ Kidneys en Brochette.—Six kid- Weiste sttt sy o e -~ neys; onejquarter pound of bacon, sliced thin; one tablespoon of butter. Take a skewer, run a slice of bacon on this, then a kidney that has been pre and blanched kidney, and 30 on, until the skewer is filled. Place on a hot broiler for five minutes over a very hot fire, basting with melted butter. /Sprinkie with salt and pep- per and serve on the skewer. Chopped parsiey and lemon juice may be added. There are a number of garments, such as dust-caps, children’s clothing, for which Fruit o'f the Loom has been used for seventy years, that are not yet sold ready- made of this standard fabric. You will find Fruit of the Loom by the yard in nearly every dry goodsstore, and in many of the leading ones articles made of it. Ask for it by name and look for the label. B. B. & R. KNIGHT, Inc. Makers of Alpise Rose, Hero, Cameo and other Fine Cotzom Fabries + , Dessert Pancakes. Use the recipe for any good pan- cakes. Spread one psncnke‘vnh 7m.. using about a tablespoontul. Highly | flavored jams such as raapberry, Rgrape or strawberry are bes: Place: another pancake on top and sprinkle vary lightly with sugar, using no more than’ one-fourth teaspoon of | powdered sugar or one-third teaSpoon ! of granulated sugar to a serving, or | place two pancakes on & plate and | pour over them preserved berries of ' any kine Stewed dried frult may be used, sweatened with corn sirup. Apple sauce is an ex3sllent pancake Alling. For vamety in flavor, cook the apple sauce with & stick of cinna- mon. a blade of mace or a bit of dried or fresh orange or lemon peel. " Drpsden Patties. Make & sauce of one cup of ltaek,| thickened with one rounding table- | spoonful of butter creamed with one ' of flour, cook thfee minutes. Season | with a teaspoonful of lemor julce and one-half teaspoonful of the yel- low rind of lemon, grated. Chop moderately fins one-fourth of a pound when our doctor, several years ago, prescribed it for an epidemia of sore throat. You know bow it runs through a family, "Walihl’ormml::nbenml;t:::emnqdcuyudhn smch more convenient garg] sprays, especially for the children who hate such remedies. ' - *Then you remember the ‘fiu’ epldemic. How fearful we all were of crowded, stuffy places; theatres and shops; crowded cars and sily. ventilated school rooms. Again the whole family ‘Forma- minted’ their throats and mouths, by, using the pleasant tasting tablets freely, whenever there was danger of contagion. "meintmutflemflyufi-pfie,bo&mmofu had the *flu,’ and few had sore throats, that whole winter. You can put our family down as Formamint enthusiasts.” | Rembuip e ormami, § With a Coupon From Next | Sunday’s Star, November 6 Redeemable at All Dealers Sweetheart Soap is a pure white toilet soap that- fl; .:re.]l lo-;f g{l'd '!':;n ’nme mount o I3 oaf. to t! . P - iad " cook” until 'q\flg'm&fixyh heated, | lathers best in Washington’s city water ture, ‘Dlace (e thp o each and s GERM-FIGHTING THROAT TABLETS Fermamint ls our trade mack. Jtidentifies our produst. Baser Chem. Co., Ine., LY. e on 8 hot Dlate@y in & wreath of shred- ded lettuce.