Evening Star Newspaper, August 20, 1922, Page 34

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R TETTECATATOS Service 11 A.M. to 8 P.M. L iday Dinner, 4 to 8 1315 New York Ave. Through to 1330 H St. N. Crowds That Do Not “Crowd” Come when you may at Blossom Inn Cafeteria, you ' will find none of the usual ! atmosphere of “cafe- teriaism.” There are crowds, but no crowding — everything proceeds in quiet and orderly fashion—in other words, it’s better—and dif- ferent. No tips—moderate prices. FRANK P. FENWICK N T eat youy airloayreal HE question of the passing of the chaperon is one which has been rather generally neglected by many of the _authorities on the “younger degeneration,” as John V. A. Weaver picturesquely character- izes the flappers and cake-eaters of to- In the June issue, under the heading, day. But the subject is amusingly dis- cussed in two articles in recent issues of the Atlantic Monthly. “Who Killed the Chaperon?’, some very Interesting material is set forth by a young woman who signs herself “A Young Barbarian.” She says: “We (young people) don’t mind things We enjoy ourselves; we don’t miss refinement. At fifteen we would have liked to enter into our families’ responsibilities and to meet our mothers’ friends; now, we don't miss them, and we get along very well. But of course, since we have lived among ourselves so long there is no point to a chaperon. A chaperon is the last link between us and the elder gen- eration. We hardly understand he we pity her, she seems so bored and be- wildered among us. She is passing, and we young people are letting her pass. | We have forgotten her as we have for- gotten manners. “Who is responsible? I think I have shown the system in modern life which keeps us ~from appreciating the chaperon—the chaperon, a symbol of the connection between young and old.” as they are. * % * X o a"woo IT_DOES indeed seem true that these extremely self-centered, speedy young barbarians of the present genera- tion are growing unconsciously cal- loused to the feelings, even the very existence, of their elders to & point that is almost outright cruelty. They have taken to treating life as they treat the stories in motion pictures—with sneer- ing contempt—and only the most inti- mate and tragic kind of a Kknockout seems to be able to cut through the rhinocerous hide of these conceited young people. Conditions indicate that it was really up to the previous generation fifies. Never cau. fcess. |to just haul out the paternal slipper o 868 1 and take the young culprits into the ive drymess. Package for; |family woodshed. The older genera- fravelers use mu’md.l tion has evidently forgotten the proper and most convincing method MRS. E. DAVIS, ?ut that will leave it glossy; soft aufp(b'a&k AROMATIQUE SHAMPOO| nof only cleanses but barbarian” brings an interesting light on this phase of the subject. It is signed “The Old Grouch,” and con- tains the following. published in the August Atlanti “Wherever in the world they came from, the flapper and her older sister, the flapperoid (by which I mean a molting fapper, whose plumage is changing with the advent of mid- summer responsibility), have brought a vivacious, aromatic and parti-col- ored joy into life. They are like shimmering butterflies in a fleld of clover, and the grouch delights in the bobbed heads and Josephine ral- ment, their graceful agility and amusing independence. They are the prettiest things going. But where vour young barbarian strikes a wrong note is here: She speaks of the things that ‘keep us away from the older generation. the things which ‘have made us forget the older gen- eration,’ etc. “The barbarian must be told plainly that the older generation is running this world. She must not make any mistake about it. She is attractive, but in her present state she is noth- of saying “No” to the children. 723 11th St. N.W. A rumble of retort to the “young ‘Washington, D. C. DEFY GRAY HAIR O matter what your age, gray hair pro- ¥ claims you old; _If at 30 or 40 your hair has grayed, “‘Brownatone” will be boon. “Brownatone” is %}“fl'fl‘ K ing but a fricky bobveal that has no 's best friend in preserving the |.N& DU o e - 3 value to the world. She is composed k of youth.” It bas restored girlish | ;¢ ops 2 rainbow and a shocked Her boarding school ‘educa- tion” does not amount to a hill of beans. It is not what she fs, what she is to be, that justifies her. charm to thousands. Easy to use and quickly tints gray, faded, streaked or bleached hair to any shadé of brown or black. Odorless, greaseless, will not rub or wash off. Guaranteed harmless to the hair, scalp or skin. Sold at all dealers Just now she is of no more real im- sfi:l'ndil Trisl bottle mailed di- | portance to the real welfare of the rect for 16c. The Kenton Pharmacal |world than is an organ grinder. In a Co., 609 Coppin Bldg., Covington, Ky. BROWNATONE few years she will become a persim- mon, and then she will scowl at the audacious super-flappers that follow in her train. But she may content herself with the assurance that her successors can never be more attrac- R Will Pay College Cost By Decorating Windows MISS CECILIA MARTIN. Eastern High graduate, won scholar- ship in Syracuse. she accepted a position in a local ten- cent store. “If you ever want to study other people in what the movies ca ‘close-ups,’ work in a ten-cent store said Miss Martin emphatically. “You surely can get some experience. And some people say the funniest things. One day an old lady came up and, pointing to some hairpins clearly labeled ‘ten cents’ said: ‘Miss, how much are those ten-cent hairpins? Another time a quietly dressed lady came in and looked carefully over all the pieces of braid on the counter and then asked my opinion as to which would be better for a dress, silk or cotton braid. I told her it seemed to me it depended on the ma- terial of the dress and how the braid was to be useds She hesitated a long time, then finally she said: ‘Well, 1 guess I'll think it over and then send my dressmaker in to buy it later in the week.' " While with the ten-cent store Miss Martin edited a snappy little weekly paper, complete in every detall from editorials to “did-you-know fillers- in.” This became very popular with the employes. Miss Martin was an editor on the Easterncr for Lwo years while at the school. Previous to her accepting the position at the golf clubhouse Miss Martin learned window trimming by practi- cal experience, and since then has handled a number of “jobs” of such work for small stores very success- fully. It is by window trimming that she intends to earn the money neces- v to pay for her college education e at Syracuse. She leaves Wash- ington on September 10 for Syracuse, and if she doesn't make the shop windows and other things hum while she is in Syracuse it won't be her fault. She's one clever child. LETTERS BY JUNIORS. Miss Campbell Has Charge of Child Correspondence. NE of the most important phases of the famous youth movement which is being carried on all over the world and is one of the outstand- ing factors for world peace is the wonderful work being done by Junior THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., AUGUST 20, 1922_PART 2. ° The Home With a Personality V—Quality in Furnishings. By Celestne B. Hodges Breaks Local Record In Playground Tra B in_some other vJ;B signifying his willingness and abiMty for service, shows the excellent fundamental prin- ciple of the entire structure. The American children helped the Csechoslovakian children. Now _these latter have already put their bands to the plow, and in three months made more than 16,000 practical gifts of clothing, etc., for needy Russian children. Tt is especially easy to understand the vast spread of the correspondence work of the Junlor Red Cross when one has met the energetic young woman who is In charge of this work. She fs Miss Dorothea Campbell of {Berkeley Springs, W. Va., and is in charge of the bureau Oof intern tional_school” correspondence, Junior Red Cross, Miss Campbell was edu- cated in Virginia and received her B.A. degree from Hollins College of that state. She then taught in both the grade and junior high schoois of Roanoke until the war time, when she joined the Y. W. C. A. work, act- ing " as general secretary of the branch of the soclety in that city. Then she came to Washington with the Potomac division of the Red Cross, and about a year and a half | | MISS ANASTASIA WALSH, South Carolina girl, completed work in seven weeks. ington playgrounds and the enthusi- asm and ability® developed by the work have attracted attention of people interested in educational and civic wark all over the country. Miss Walsh, who has just returned to Charleston, spent her first week in training directly under Miss Mahon as a member of the regular trainees’ class. She then spent a week on the New York avenue play- ground, where the facilities for ath- letic sports of all kinds are excep- tionally good. Next she spent a week at the Garfield playground, which is a federal park and is fur- nished with model equipment do- nated for use there after having {served its primary purpose as an exhibit at the Jamestown exhibition. Then Miss Walsh studied at the Georgetown and Rosedale playgrounds. whero water sports are especially pop- ular. Among the industrial lines of work which she took up so as to in- | Note: Miss Hodges, who is 2 professional interlor decorator, will answer questions addressed to her in care of The Star, pro- vided stamped and seif-ad- dressed envelope are inclosed for reply. Such inquires as are of general interest will be published, with their answers, | using only the initials of the | inquirers. ! have, MISS DOROTHEA CAMPBELL, tain net or a piece of furniture. hemstitching, rag-rug weaving, furniture making from pasteboard boxes, house building apd enameling. All in ail, Miss Walsh spent an ex- tremely busy seven weeks here. but she mude many friends as well as learned many things and proved, among other things, that there are many sides to the American girl be- sides the too much-talked-about super-sophisticated flapper side. Miss Walsh doesn’t worry about flap- pers She thinks they are rather a bore, in fact. She said Anybody can be a flapper and wear clothes just like everybody else. These flappers don’t use any brains or cleverness in picking out their clothes or their talk, which they simply memorize from magas zines and newspapers, or their ac- tions in apy line. They're not a bit original. Now, to my mind, it takes a girl with real backbone to dress as she believes suits her individual- ity and to do and say the things which she has. in her own mind, de- SPEED IN WORK. clded were the right things for her Miss Walsh Studies Here do, not because somebody else : R for Playground Duties. Was ‘doing them and_ they seemed ISIE right for them, but 'because they \/JRS: SUSIE ROOT RHODES, su-| ecmed the things for her, as an {IV1 “pervisor of the District play- | individual." grounds, is exceptionally and Miss Walsh surely justly proud of the unusual accom- the outstanding features of the junlor work. Miss Campbell is most enthusiastic about her work, which is undoubtedly the reason of her greal success with it. She feels a personal interest in all of the many children whose corre- spondence and gifts to each other pass through her hands while on their way around the world. “I do think it is just wonderful, the spirit which these children are show- ing in the careful precision of their work and writings to show and tell other boys and girls about their own country and thelr eagerness to learn about the other countries,” said Miss Campbell, “and 1 consider some of these letfers among the most beauti- ful and sincere things that I have ever been privileged to see, or ever hope to see.” better grade. come within their power t pathy and is not the case. of small experience that only wear. Often, too, thei natural craving. much better their homes when they table. reasons. In know they seems to be taking her own prescription and fill- the first place, O often people come to me and ask for “the cheapest thing” I either in a cretonne or an upholstery material, a cur- The foremost consideration in their minds ago took up her presert work, which | struct those on her hom z v v p e play- 2 3 j has flourished wonderfully under her|grounds were basketry, art coloring, i giico, [Beaniy ol tslbuns ane fodior: direction until it has become one of v suitability and durability of the beadwork, article have no weight in determin- ing their choice, and it takes good | salesmanship indeed to sell them a If it were the really poor people in the quest for something which would limited buying would ‘léave my fu;l sym- it “woul be my pleasure || P o A the pest thing for||| Overnight. You Can Prepare their use, but as a general rule this Nearly always people means, especially those of education and refinement, appreciate the fact that what they buy must last a long time, and they know from materials of good quality will give the necessary love and ap- preciation for good things leads them fo spend more than they really can afford to in order to satisfy a very It is people who really can afford who sp often, though not always, by any means, are con- tent to put the cheapest things in would not think of wearing poorly-made cloth- ing of sleazy material or of serving anything but the best food on their I believe this is due to two they can easily replace an paramount importance, there _are many wito do not feel as I do about it, but the influences of home are so far-reaching and so all-important in molding the character of the nation, as well as the individual, that it be- hooves all of us to study its needs, and be sure, as nearly as we can, that we are puttiing the emphasis on the most important things. After all, it is manly a matter of education, and when people realize the many sound arguments in favor of carefully and tastefully planned homes the stores will not be com- pelled to carry so many chea ADVERTISEMENT. and the things that go into it of| ugly ‘ things which, even at the price they bring, are not worth buying. We should get our keenest happi« ness and satisfaction in our home, and If we do not give to that hcme our best effort and affection how can we hope to shine before the outside world? If only the meandst things are put into it; if everything is a makeshift and one shoddy thing quickly replaces another, how can we feel any satisfaction In it or revel in its comfort, its quiet restfulness, its harmony and its fulfilment of vur physical and spiritual needs? A child, whose early impressions are gained in his own home, may have his appreciation for, and pleasure in. the csthetic and beautiful things of life either deveioped or lost entirely his_carly environment, and who shall xay that these purely phys surroundings may not go far toward influencing, not only his mental growth, but his spiritual and moral nature as well To gum up briefly, when buying for your home, look for the best value at the lowest price, first of all value, propriateness, NAMES FOR GIRLS | And What They Mean | EORGIA, sometimes called Geor- giana, and an especially populor name for girls in England—for this 18 the feminine form of George, and St. George is the patron saint of vex, but consider quality and ap- that country—has a most unusual meaning. It is interpreted as mean- | ing_“farmers wif Rural life is supposed 1o be symbolized in this name and the flower for a girl named Georgia is the tulip. Just why the philologists should have 1o this conclusion is hard to under- stand, but the name was originally ap- plied to the kingdom of Georgia in the central part of Russian Transcaucasia, bounded by the Caucasian mountains on the north and the Armenian moun- ! tains on the south. It is thought prob- able that the name Georgia is a for of the old Persian Gurjestan, or one the principal provinces, Guria. There is a very pretiy legend about 8t. Georgia, who is said to have been very virtuous maiden of Clermo: France. She literally starved to death with perpetual prayer and fasting, and when she was carried to her grave a gigantic flock of snowwhite pigeons ap- | peared and settled on top of her coffin 1l it was lowered into the grave. The most famous Georgia of histors was undoubtedly the Duchess of Devon- shire, whose exquisite grace and charin were pictured in portraits by many famous artists. She was the first wife jof the fifth duke and lord treasurer of {Treland: - Before her marriage she was Georgia Cavendish. The name has many charming varia- tions. Most prominent among them are corgiana and_ Georgina (English) Georgette and Georgine (French), and Georgeta _(Portuguese). The oddest versions of the name are Uriena, the Welsh form, and Seorgi, the Irish for Georgia. | A Free Prescription Does Its Work It at Your Home. New York—It is my own discovery | and it takes just one night to get such marvelous results, says Mae | Edna Wilder, when her friends ask | her about her wonderful complexion | and the improved appearance of her | same thing if you follow my advice. | she says. 1 feel it my duty to tell | every girl and woman what this wonderful prescription did for me. | Just think of it. All this change |in a single night. | telling others just what brought | about such remarkable results. Here |is the identical formula that re- | moved every defect from my face, neck, hands and arms. Until you | try it you can form no idea of ‘the | marvelous change it will make in | just one application. The prescrip- | tion which you can prepare at your own home is as follows: Go to any ‘Famous in a Day for Her Beautiful Complexion, Oatmeal Combination Does It | hands and arms. You can do the| 1 never tire of | \ | The first application will astonish vou. It makes the skin appear | transparent, smooth and velvety. 1 especially recommend it for dark. allow skin, freckles, tan, sun spo coarse pores, roush skin, shiny nose, ruddishness, wrinkles, and, in fact. | every blemish the face, hands and arms are heir to. If your neck or chest is discolored from exposure. | apply this combination there and the objectionable defect will disappear |;u- if by magic. It is absolutely { harmless and will not produce or stimulate growth of hair. Since short sleeves are in vogue it is nec- essary to have beautiful hands and arms and no matter how rough and ungainly the hands and arms, or what abuses they have had through | hanl work and exposure to sun and | wind, this combination will work a wonderful transformation. Thou- sands who are using it have had the same results 1 have had. ‘ NOTE—To get the bext effect be sure to ing it very satisfacterily. article when it gets shabby looking; and, too, a good many people rather like to change lhll;‘s Oflfnl. kBu'. ‘ the primary reason is a real lack of e appreciation for. and understanding || Derwillo- of. good_color, line fabric, beautifui | diTec |Tineand _proportion and excellent ||| Willo. follow the complete directions contained in every package of Derwillo, and it is %o sl Dle that any one can use it and s0 inexn sive that any girl or woman can afford it Department storex and druggists guarantee that there will be a noticeable improve- ment after the first application or they will grocery and get ten cents worth of | ordinary oatmeal. and from any de- partment or drug store a bottle of Prepare the oatmeal as in_every package of Der- | Before applying Derwillo | plishment of Miss Anastasia Walsh of Charleston. S. C., who came to Washington, en route for Columbia University, where she was to study playground work methods. Instead, tive and diverting than she is now. 3 Hve and diver i ar ot not faen | Red Cross units in all countries. Last herself over her desertion of the|vear there were 5,000,000 Juniors in older (enanfl:ni" ¥ the United States, and it is expected that this year's figures will show a HIS reply would indicate that, % Personal Notes. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin West are tak- ing a motor trip as far north as LITT SPECIALIZES it seems to be merely P atter all, ainting. the flapper herself and those of —Paperhanging. her ;eneratlog who l:l" rwm—rylng = about her, and the older folks are Upholstering. Just lying back, apparently listening Have thes Worke DossyNow: intently and in reality not bothering 1326 14th 8%, | their heads about our awful youns Geo. Piitt Co., Inc., Main 42348 | people of today at all. All of which PIMPLES ON FACE For Two Years, Hard, Large and Red. LostSleep. Cuticura Heals. wonderful amount of advertising that, has been put into the subject of the flapper and her flapping. As for the chaperon, nobody ever did consider { her, anyway, so why worry about her now? LEADS IN ATHLETICS. Eastern High Girl to Take CO“PSG at Syracuse . ASTERN HIGH SCHOOL has an alumnus of whom students and teachers are especially proud. She W is Cecelia Martin, better known as f Jack” Martin, who received a schol- iarship for Syracuse University when she graduated from Eastern in 19 She was president of the famous Mer- rill Girls Club one vear while at- tending the school and organized the | very first girls' rifle club in the city at that school. During her senior year she won the silver marksman- ship medal and shot 49 out of 50 three times. Last year Miss Martin was a mem- ber of the basket ball team of the Y. W. C. A. which won the mouth At- jantic championship for 1922. She “'1 was troubled with pimples and blackheads on my face for about two =2, years. The pimples were hard, large and red, and were in blotches. They itched and burned caus- ing me to scratch and ir- ritate the affected parts, and I lost a lot of sleep. “1 read an advertise- ment for Cuticura and sent for a free sample. 1 ‘more, and after nsing four cakes of Soap and four bozes of Ointment I was healed.” (Signed) Miss Berlon ‘Thempson, R. F. D. 3, Bowdon, Gs. great increase. In Czechoslovakia there are 100,2 000, and units are in a state of or- ganization in France, England, Po- land, Austria, Scotland, Rumania, Ttaly, Sweden and China. Belgium has just made the preliminary ar- rangements for organizations, and Japan is considering the proposition. | The Junior Red Cross is doing a good work_in Ru: through the labors of the Friends' Society there. Switzer- land has a flourishing junior depart- ment of the Red Cross, and splendid work is being done by the units in Australia, New Zealand. Canada, Ha- vaii and Porto Rico. There are 41 000 Juniors in the Philippine Islands. Through these units of the society a most i ting method of inter- national carrespondence has been de- veloped on a practical plan by using classes in different schools "in the various countries as the units. The jdea of a Junior Red Cross and the idea of correspondence between un of the Jjunior members of the society originated during the war, when. quite naturally, the children of the countries involved in the war became interested in the children of those other countries whose fathers and ! brothers were fighting side by side with their own or were fighting against them. Naturally, France, England and Belgium were among the first which interested the young American boys and girls, and many gifts, as well as correspondence, have been exchanged between the pupils of classes in schools of these countries. During the war times the American Junlors raised $10,000,000 to aid the children of war-stricken countries, and they have continued to ald them ever since. Maine. workmanship. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sigmund and Mrs. Leona Kaufman returned yes- terday from a three-week stay at Bedford Springs, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Kahn, Mr. and Mrs. Max Rich and two daughters are among the Washingtonians at Atlantic City. - she stayed in Washington, took Mrs.} Rhodes’ popular course of training, and broke all records by completing the work_with flying colors in seven weeks. During the seven weeks Miss Walsh did a whole vear of col- lege work under the direct super- vision of Miss Florence Chambers and Miss Elizabeth Mahon, special ists_in training girls for the work ofdirectors of playgrounds. Miss Walsh, who Is only twenty vears old, is a Charleston high school graduate and had already spent one vear working on the play- grounds of her native city. §he is a Junior in college in Charleston. She says that while there are four very successful playgrounds in her cit none of them have introduced the industrial work which has proved of equal importance to all Belle and Wallflower. From the St. Louis Poat-Dispatch. Tn international society Columbia cannot- play the anomalous role of wallflower and belle of the ball. Of course, it is only natural that the same things do not appear to be of us, and, while I may consider the home | cleanse the skin thoroughly with a ! good cleansing cream. (Liska cold | aream I have found to be the best). | | refund the mones. It ix sold in this eity | By the Peoples Drug Stores and at all toilet | counters upder & money refund guarantee. so unusually popular here and which is Mrs. Rhodes’ own lidea. There are 14,000 children taught every day on the Wash ANSELL, BISHOP § | 5 & TURNER 4 1221 F Street NW.H | T one (R P S || ’ If savings of many dollars mean anything to you, examine the of- ferings at our T Rely on Cuticura S8oap, Ointment and Talkum to care for your skin. Bash Fres by Madl. Addrem: *-Outicara Lab- s Aspirin They are among the most effective auur};ea of putting those children of war-worn countries on their feet, I AUGUST FUR SALE. played guard on the team. She also Plaims the honor of holding the south Atiantio champlonshlp 22 8 €10 Niven | Potn financislly and spiritually, Snder the auspices of the Unitea| The cé’h""’c‘;:“d:;“‘;,“‘;’;““fi"“:;; o class States Bicycle Astoclation at the|giniries shows & wonderful feeling Do e ot two. yoars anss|of _(risnilinees underiying, Stocy M RE s won silver cups at the|Dhrase. and the Fact o ches to join annual Eastern High School alumnl|he Junior Red Cross must prove his L R e i T I L A I = 3 n £3 Isjaucn i splendiacall folmt X DY §eed for helping other children or ing the goal which is now one of I s 2 WOMEN who will buy their Fall Shoes now, instead of two weeks hence, are offered— 25% Discount On more than a dozen good- ) ) THIS GENUINE VICTROL HANSAA T the le of many sales at mnlrm-. BAY SEAL C:).A.TS, genuine -km:‘, ver and squirrel collars and "$150 HUDSON SEAL COATS, extra fine Summer Stationery came in early. first girl page at the Capitol—and she almost got it, at that. But not quite. They discovered that there really was a ‘clause in the United States Constitution which barred girls from occupying these positions and they could only be granted to boys. Miss Martin put up a good fight, however, and Representative Kelley of her state, Pennsylvania, Miss Jeannette Rankin and Joseph Tumulty all did their best to help her. She was undoubtedly the youngest woman lobbyist and could have had a good position'in the civil service had she wished to accept it, but Miss Martin's father deemed it wiser that she go to school. She was born in No Payment Until Sept. THEN YOU PAY $5 MONTHLY NO INTEREST —AT— . Ansell Say “B % oo ., | mo%, onietsmbitions_getting . piace . ay “Bayer” and Insist |"ssescing of ambitions, they seem g looking styles of Tan, Brown an ) i 23 Every garment aranteed. . on Bayer Package :;eh:lxle.:ouv;:tl‘:l:l;tl::l?:::t e Distinctive Styles Prine, auality sling: Vocte tod a ey - Black Calf and Kid, Goodyear — girl of fourteen years (of course, she istinctive Sty by expert furriers. Properly < - Welt Strap Pumps and Oxfords. — mismna ek in = Period Cabinet | : = T ‘5o "have the honor.of being the Monogram and e e o Tnitashe £ Brand-new $5.95 stocks that 21 . s * During this sale, you may buy them at $4.50—and some wo- men are buying two or more pairs! C e W Nhen you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are getting the genuine Bayer product prescribed by physicians over twenty-two years and proved safe IR by millions for Filaburgh and won her first race In quality, genuine skunk 2 .- ount ark, jadelphia, n b'. gg{;fiuche &;gfl:fic A 1917, ‘when she became definitely tn- ‘“g 40_' er collax (!' .:?f i . B ety e sieus ot e sufls, 40-nch and 42- || |} Bishop & Cor. 7th & K Sts. Neuralgia Pain, Pain Study at Syracuse, but will specialize ) i 414 9th St. in athletics. At present Miss Martin is book- keeper at the clubhouse of the fed- eral golf courss in Potomac Park and is adding a growing expertness at this game to her already long list of athletioc accemplishments. She did not go to oollege last fall, bécause she decided she wanted a job, and, Jobs Deing quite goarce articles thea, “City Club Sho$” 1914-16 Pa. Ave. Turner | 1318 G St. 233 Pa. Ave.SE. Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Drumh also_sell bot- tles' of 24 'and ~Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of l(oqn/moufundutef of Salicylice "$265 ouraud’s Oriental Cream

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