Evening Star Newspaper, February 16, 1923, Page 33

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WOMA VARIOUS TABLE N’S PAGE. DECORATIONS AND SOME FOOD GARNISHESI Suggestions Are Offered for Household Use, With Special Directions for the Season’s HE colorless charming, dumask table spotless lace cloth, silver and spark- hag glass, and its fine porcelain, the white of which is only relieved by a of gold or a floral decoration in Qeilcate tints. but for every-day pur- Poses a color scheme iz good. The worst thing to however, Is a Tadle where there is a jumble of ceiors witn no relation to each other. Inacerd of having a whols service in an claborate design, it is the best taste, as well as good economy, to have the greater part of a table serv- ice of a simpler and to give It emphasis by the roduction of a Tow pieces of stranger color and more elaborate design A blue and white table service is excellent; white, with the merest line of blue. "Such a service is enhanced by «n elaborate fern dish of Itallan pottery in bright orange and dark biue, which looks equally well with White and gold porcelain for speclal occasions. To relleve an elaborate desizn, 4 plain surface is needed You can do cl arming things in table decorations hy mbining Howers and fruit. but you must be careful in your selection, especlally in flowers, For instance, red carnations might clash badly with other decorations, whereas ferns and lilies might be very harmonious. 1If pink and green takes Your fancy, place & silver dish in the venter of the table, pile it high with 105y apples or peaches and pale Efeen Srapes. and place at the corners ©f the table tall vases holdin, flowers and ferns. Eipihe Food Garnishes, To make food attractive by garnis Ing takes very litte more time trouble and counts strongly in the final result. For instance, green pep- ¥ be used with equal success a decoration and as a foun- dation. There berless com- iations that worked out dining is with i or heavy its shin nything may | ng for them they any lad. Le used as & gars 'me tired of parsle aluable to use in llions cut fine and added to a oked winter vege- wonders. ves of lettuce roll- nd kept cold make an at- fish garnish. Cut the leaves neil pieces. These form Rreen roscttes, which, if When re a good addi- sh Several large el tight tractive d with small pieces of | yarsiey and sliced cgg, make a pretty dressing. { Warmed-cver dishes served in pret- ramekins with browned mbs over them will be eaten with pleasure when the same thing cream- and put on the table in a covered dish will often be refused. When you make a stew, cut the po- tatoes into little balls with a scoop. the carrots into strips, and bring to tho table with the meat in a neat heap in the center, eurrounded with & row of vellow carrots and with an- other row outside that of little white Totatoes, and the whole thing covered With rich brown gravy and a sprin- %ling of parsley. \ broiled steak is appetizing when surrounded with parsley and little browned potato balls and covered Tith brown sauce with mushrooms. | Jlake hamburg steak into a large flat | shape. broil it carefully, and serve it piping hot, with a decoration of par- sley or cress, and surround it with French fried potatoes. Serve bread and rice puddings in| giierbet glasses with a bit of me- ringue or a spoonful of marshmallow Whip or whipped cream on top. When you cut up an orange, add a . dd a few almonds to Stiffen apple sauce latin and mold it. Washington's Birthday. The globe the light above the t X birthday with a could be at- blue ribbon to the silver arving, sliver candlesteks vs would add | glistening ess to the decorations. Tiny tehets could be fastened to the les, At ¢ place set for the illon course of a dinner place a tricorn hat. some d, ome white and some blue. These may be used red In addition Jockey Jacket of Bright Colors BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE, We have not sufficient interest in horse races in this country to give them as a reason for the revival of the jockey jacket. But it's here, nev- ertheless. The jockey cap has been a favorite among milliners off and on for two| decades. Its last revival inltlated the sectional crown in a varfety of hats, JOCKEY'S JACKET OF SKY-BLUE LINEN WORN WITH FROCK OF WHITE CREPE DE CHINE. THE WHITE LINEN COLLAR AND POCKET ARE EMBROIDERED IN BLUE. THESE _SLEEVELESS JACKETS WERE LAUNCHED AT PALM BEACH. and it reappears in spring millinery. Its success may have suggested the slim, sleeveless jacket that looks like a walstcoat and gives a chance for wolor schemes. Tt was bullt for winter gayeties in or| | theee slices on Celebrations. {for holding candles or nuts. pots of cherry {as favors. la Tiny trees could be used 1f the hostess dresses in Martha Washington costume the idea would he carried out still further. Old-fashioned selections, elther by musicians or on phonograph records, chould be used in preference | to modern music. For the same rea- | son, the minuet and other old-fash- | loned dances are more suitable for a ! | Washington's birthday celebration. | Washington Cake.—Bake any good ! {cake mixture in a ring mold, Cover | with almerd frosting, and _while warm decorate with candled cherries and tiny cleron hatchets. i St. Patrick’s Day. A pretty St. Patrick's day dinner salad Is made with cabbage, celery and lettuce, all finely chopped and mixed with mayonnaise. Cover with | fine strips of green pepper, olives and celery tips. Ice the cake with white icing, palnt green shamrocks upon it with green fruit coloring, and {decorate with miniature clay plpes. Wash half a dozen or more large potatoes, grease them with lard, and serve them with roast pork and ap- |ple sauce or baked apples. Decorate the table with green ferns and green or white carnations or both. A bowl {of maldenhair ferns makes a pretty | centerplece. Orchids are beautiful | jwith fine ferns, but they are ex-| pensive. Deep red carnations are cffective and less expensive. | very { Use paner napkins with a green sham- {rock pattern upon them, and give | each guest a little green flag. St Patrick's Cream.—Color green | with vegetable coloring one quart of rlch cream. then whip one pint of it | |te a dry froth. Cook one-half a cup- washed rice until thor- Liul of ‘well oughly done. Drain and press through fine sieve. Add to this puree half a cupful of sugar and the juice and grated peel of one-half a lemon. Soak one-fourth of a box of gelatin in a littlo cold water, and when it is soft place it over hot water until entirely digsolved. Stir in the rice, and when it ts cool mix in the whipped cream. ill & crimped mold or plain bowl and set aside to become perfectly cold. urn the mound out when ready to {rerve, place the remaining whipped « m o top, arrange shamrock :ha\»( cut out of thin slices of citron {uround the sides &nd on top, and place whipped cream at the base with | more of the citron shamrock leaves Lenten Dishes. getable Bouquet lad.—Bouquet {ralads are usually cerved on flat! | dishes, so that the contrasting colors {nd arrangement of the vegetables used may appear to best ad- vantage. ny favorite salad dress- ing may be used. A pretty salad s made with radishes cut rose fashion |and placed in the center of the dish | with lettuce around them, then a row | of green peas or string beans, more ! lettuce and some cold diced bolled po- ' |tatoes making another circle, outside | of which is the last border of lettuce. | Egg Bouquet Salad—Heap some | lettuce in the bo m of a dish. Boil ome eggs hard, take out the volks | carefully, put them in the middle of i the dish let a little of the lettuce | heart surround them closely and out- side of this put the whites cut into Strips or rings. Beyond this place a border of lettuce. Other bouquet | jilads may be made with other com- | binations.” A very pretty one i5 com- posed of eggs boiled hard, with rad- es put In the center of the bowl, the egg white arranged as described | for the above salad and the yolks of | the eggs rubbed through a sieve and | sprinkled over all. H Green Pepper Stuffed with Cheese.— | To make a very decorative salad, re- move the seeds from a green pepper, Stuff it with cream cheese and let it get very cold. Cut across it with a very sharp knife and arrange two or e lettuce leaves, gar-: nishing them with stuffed olives. Top | with French dressing. i Potato and Stuffed Egg Salad.—| fake a mound of potatoes cut in dice | nd season to taste. Garnish with | watercress and stuffed_eggs. i Deliclous Baked Fish.—Select a large lake fish or fresh salmon and clean it thoroughly, removing the head, fins and tail. ~ Sprinkle a little salt over it wrap it in a mualin cloth | and boll until tender. The water should be changed twice. When well cooked, shred. remove all the bones and prepare for baking by placin, alternate layers with cru in a baking dish. Fill the h two-thirds full and add sufficient salt, pepper and butter to season. Cover with milk, place a cover on the pan and bake. When done, remove the cover, allowing the top to brown. Serve' in the baking di i B & dish garnished summer temperatures; worn for a month in places where one can flit about In _shirtsleeves. The sketch shows one of bright blue linen worn at Palm Beach. It goer with a white flannel frock; it is worn, also, with thin camel's-hair suits; but it is at its best when one is turned out for sports. There {s a wide collar and pocket in this jockey jacket, both embroidered with blue cotion threads; the buttons are of white pearl, and a strip of white linen punctuates the wide hip band which tightens the| skirt. Other jackets are of green crepe de chine, silver embroidered, with small walstcoat pockets in the hip band. Others ars of cretonne, vividly flowered, and fastened with colored buttons. Probably the cretonne Jjacket catches the imagination because it suggests eummer in a more strident manner. It makes one think of wide porches and blg bamboo chairs. Woolen materials are not used for the jacket, but crepe de chine holds its own with cotton, especlally when it is covered with curious embroldery that resembles a Chinese laundry bill, The jockey jacket is only one Of many sleeveless garments that have become a fashion of importance at pleasure plac The simplest sport frock is now without sleeves, a fact which you would not discern until the wearer slips off the jumper jacket or blouse sweater and shows that her arms are bare. It appears that one garment must be sleeveless this season. When women play golf or tennis they wear wash blouses with sleeves beneath these jackets. They are also part of a riding habit, one fanciful horsewoman yielding to the lure of salmon and mulberry satin, as though she represented a certain stable, (Copyright, 1923.) Gateau-Au-Chocolate. Melt three squares of sweet chocolate in one-half a cupful of water. Cook four | tablespoonfuls of cream of wheat in one {pint of milk sweetened with two table- :Foonmll of sugar. Flavor with vanill Vhen the mixture {s thick, add th melted chocolate. Take from the fire and add one egg beaten separately. Melt about ome cupful of sugar in 4 frying pan over a hot fire. When cara- melized, pour into a hot baking dish, spreading the sides as well as the bot- tom. Then pour in the chocolate mix- fure and cook one-half hour in a slow oven. ! — | Very Thin Pancakes. Mix_together three eggs beaten, one and one-half cupfuls of milk, one cup- ful of flour, salt to taste and one table- spoonful of cooking oil. Beat thoroughly Cook very thin in large cakes on a hot, greased griddle. When brown on one #ide, turn and brown the other. Spread with a little Jam and roll up. Dust with powdered suga: it has been H |used the word THE EVENING STAR,- WASHINGTON, D. ©., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1923. - Listen,World! Elsie Tohinson & il | PyA] Doris, clever gir’, impresses you: his gifts, by keeping his violets in t of them, knowing ho: ng Mr. Gossett, her current swai he refrigerator between wea , with her thrift as well as her delight in gs, thereby getting at least four days out immensely flattered Mr. (iossett is at the way she treasures them. Doris had planned to don them again for this crucial evening when she is going to the theater with him, but finds that some clumsy dumbbell has turned over upon them a bow! of roast beef gravy. By Vyvyan East Is West. A turban, close-fitting, of printed #flk, boasts an oriental sort of feather trim of shining black that shimmers at every step. Suggest the east {n a Parisian manner. Bistory of Pour Name. BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN, WHITTAKER. VARIATIONS — Whiteaker, Whitacre, Whitecar, Whitfield, Whitefield. RACIAL ORIGIN—English. SOURCE—Locality. As was explained in the discussion {of the names Ackerman and Atkman the medieval English “acre” (which wa more often spelled “aker” and “ace: some time ago, in those days) more in a general sense | than as a specific measure of ground. We have a survival of the old use in | our occasional modern phrase “broad acres.” To the medieval English it meant tilled land, farm land, in its more re- stricted sense, and just ground, land. in its broader use. i In the middle ages the English were more general in their designation of color than we are today. Anything of dark color was likely to be refer- red to as “black,” and anything light in color as “white.” There are many crops which give a cultivated field a “white” appearance in contrast with either uncultivated land or flelds cus- tomarily given over to other crops. Hence the expressions “white acre" and “white field” became very wide- spread throughout the country as lo- cal designations. It is quite the fad to! or| 19231 BEDTIME STORIES |Bright Eyes Watch Sammy Jay. A horrd tiing it So never. never. never t Told Mother Natur { Sammy Jay isn't the only one with | bright eyes. Oh, my, no! There are { many other bright eyes, and some of these were watching Sammy Jay. Une pair belonged to Happy Jack Squir- rel. Another pair belonged to his |cousin, Chatterer, the ited Squirrel :Tlul you may be sure that neither {Happy Jack nor Chatterer allowed iSammy Jay to know that he was be- {ing watched. They pretended to be {busy with their own affairs There is very little that such bright eyes mi and the very first day that Sammy Jay had discovered peanuts on the window shelf of { Farmer Brown's house Happy Jack and Chatterer had known that he had i found something new in the way of food. Now both of them knew a great deal about Sammy’s ways. Both knew that, like themselves, Sammy | Jay often hides food away. 'So when they saw him flying from that win- dow shelf to different parts of the Old Orchard, always with something in his mouth, and then hurrying back to the window shelf, they knew that he was hiding the things he was get- ting from that shelf. “What do you suppose Sammy Jay is getting?” sald Happy Jack to Chat- terer. 8 | “I havem't the least idea.” replied | Chatterer. “Whatever it is. he seems i to think a lot of it. 1 mean to find lout what it is.” “So do 1,” replied Happy Jack. “If {1t is good for him it ought to be good for us. I tell you what. you hunt in | one part of the Old Orchard and T'l {hunt in another part. Between us we ought to find some of those things. He thinks himself smart, but he isn't {as smart as he thinks he is." | 7"So Happy Jack watched until he 1 saw Sammy with something in his {In a moment Sammy was on his way back to that window shelf with noth- ing in his mouth. Happy Jack knew then that he had hidden something lin that particular apple tree. Happy | Jack didn’t go right over to that tree. He went over to the next tree to it and climbed that. After a while when Sammy was somewhere over | toward the Green Forest, Happy Jack jumped across into the next tree. Then very carefully he went all over that tree. Wherever a big branch sprang out from the trunk he looked in the crotch which it made. He ex- amined every knothole. Happy Jack looked for some time without finding anything. He was beginning to be discouraged. Then ! he came to a crotch in which a little heap of snow had remained. He was { | The family names in this group, of | course, were all originally descriptive of places of residence, and were first used with the prefix “atte” (“‘at the”) or “de la" (“of the"). with in the thirteenth century day, are “Whytacre” and “Whitacre.” A peculiar transposition of letters has | which it were derived from given one modern variation, but shich really isj | Vegetable Roast. Mix together one-half a cupful of boiled canned corn. one-half a cupful of baked beans mashed to a pulp, one- half a cupful of boiled rice. one-half a cupful of strained stewed tomatoes, half a teaspoonful of minced onion, two tablespoonfuls of melted butter, one- fourth of a cupful of sweet milk and} salt and pepper to taste, Add enough stale bread crumbs to make a stiff dough, roll, and bake in a greased pan. Serve with tomato sauce. Pork Cake. Take one pound of pork chopped fine, one cupful of molasses, two cup- fuls of sugar, three eggs, one pound of raisins, one pound of currants, one teaspoonful of soda and spice to taste. Mix and bake in a quick oven. First Aid. From Pittsbursh Sun. The wrecking of a ship on the coast of Cornwall enables a Britisher to roport a brief but amusing ecmer-} gency lecture. 1t appears that all the crew had been saved, but one poor fellow was brought ashore unconscious. The Britisher mentioned turned the bystanders and asked: “How do you proceed in the case of one apparently drowned?’ “Search his pockets” was the prompt reply from an cxperienced rescuer, to ‘Variations met rec- but which are not common to- I { mouth fly over to a certain apple tree. : By Thornton W. Burgess. a glance, when he noticed that the ow looked as if it had recently een disturbed. Happy Jack sat down | with his hands and dug aw the ow. He uncovered a peanut! Yes, sir, he uncovered a peanut! How his eyves did snap with pleasure! He lRumg to pass this with no more than WRITTEN AND ILLUSTRATED BY Do you want to know why boys go wrong? Because we have not made a suffici- ently alluring adventure of going right. I recently received a protest against the “comic strips” and movie sce- narios which depict juvenile mischief. “Why should we punish boys for crime when we permit such amuse- | ments?” asked the writer. Now I disagree with that argument, in that 1 do not believe that our comic strips and movie reels are the main cause of juvenile crime, An instinct for ad- Venturing in the heritage of every normal human, Most of our degen- eracy is due to the fact that we haven't enough adventuring and Gon't get into enougk clean, foolish mischief. Show me the small boy who doesn’t dream of belng a pirate or spend glorious hours contemplat- ing the crimes he'd commit if he “hadda chanct” and I'll show you spineless little prig or an embryo crook. The comic strips and wild west movies, stupid and vulgar as they often are, are nevertheless true to_the urge of youth. The danger lles not in the desire to ralse a rumpus, but in the fact that modern life offers few adequate outlets for that desire. There's nothing for our youthful dynamos to do. You cannot” quench the fires of young humanity—but what does the voungster find in life to feed those j fames? } What are the rewards we offer to good little boys? Bank books, coun- try clubs, keeping-out-of-jail. ' What inormal boy ever wanted a bank book, a country club, or looked upon a jail with anything’ but joyful curiosity? On_the “other hand. the bad little boys get all the heroic roles. Skinny ladles shudder at them, fat police- imen chase them, palpitating little girls adorc them. And what larks they have—running away to the swim pool. snooping around gypsy camps, gorging themsclves at mid- feasts of stolen poultry! Who would not be a desperado at nine! No, you cannot redesm humanity Three Minutes With a Headliner BY FREDERICK L. COLLINS, (Editor McClure’s Mag: i Prince Jaimie of Spain. didn’t have to be told what that was. | He sat right there and ate that pea nu | “My, that was good'" Happy Jack. “That was the best thing I have had for a long time. 1 wonder if T can get up on that win- | dow shelf. That is where Sammy Jay | is getting these nuts, and if 1 can | &et_up there I will have a feast. 1f1 | can’t get them there Sammy will have to get them for me. Tll watch just where he goes each time. It will he fun. My, how mad he'll he when he discovers that the peanuts he has hidden have been found:” Meanwhile Chatterer the Red Squir. : in just the overed exclaimed of a post them there. He had taken them away 80 that Sammy Jay would not see him around that post. (Copyfight, 1923, by T. W. Burgess.) The Housewife’s Idea To Remove Ink From Ivory. it immediately. oft the polish. THE HOUSEWIFE. (Copyright, 1923.) _— grocer's clerk in his youth. “SE-SANBOT Purveyor of Fine ffe to Her Majesty It is a mark of distinction to be able to The new President of Brazil was a naving its plctures taken: }in her regal robes, mother in her Paris gowns, mother opening a fair or patting poor children in the park; father at the bullfight, father taking ir-, at Deauville, father shaking Lye- bycs to Castilian bables; datghters in their best dresses or in no dresses at all on the beach at San Sebastian: baby Gonealo digglng in the Spanish {sands: the dashing young Prince of the Asturias cloaked in honors and decorations—but almost never do we see a picture of poor, little, invalid Jatmie. This boy, to speak frankly. | seidom done of rovalty, was deficfent, Four times a year mother takes him to London to re- celve treatment at the hand of Dr. May, a famous chiropractor. The treatment has apparently done won- ders for him. Already, the little fel- low--he is still on! fourteen—un- jderstands what is said to him and is mildly interested in gardening and other simple pleasures. 1 would not mention this affiction so frankly if it were not that Dr. May himself is authority for the st ment that the youngsters brains vill make him absolutely normal—a statement which will warm the hearts of Spaniards everywhere. For it is a curious fact that one of the strongest holds which Spanish roy- alty has upon its people is the very zeneral popularity of the “sick prince. But the Spaniards do not call him prince; they do not even call him Jaimie; they have chosen for their own one of the less im- portant of his cluster of names and call him just plain “Henry His brother, the heir, is a manly lttle fellow. The two little girls, the Infanta Beatrice Isabel thirteen, and the Infanta Marla Christina, eleven, are bonny as can be. And | the baby is as ail babies should be {To all these children, the people of Spain, regardless of political ions, are whole-heartedly devoted, 1f ink should be spilled on the fvory keys of your piano or on any other tvory article. rub the stain with the inside of a squeczed lemon rind. Wash It you do not wash it_quickly enough. the acid may take 11 there and that time and treatment | opin- | continuously satisfy Her Majesty—the American Housewife. In most homes, her royal taste is reflected nowhere so much as in the excellence of her coffes. The distinction of having provided fastidious homes with good coffee since 1864, belongs to Chase & Sanborn. that year we set out to In produce coffee for those who thoroughly enjoy the best. Year by year, an increasing number of households recognize the unfailing good- ness of Seal Brand—as the steadily growing volume of sales indicates. .Seal Brand is always fresh, always packed in one, three and five pound sealed tins. everywhere. Sold by reliable merchants Chase 6-Sanborn’s SEAL BRAND COFFEE i ! every package The name alone could not have made MacLaren’s Cream Cheese such a fa- vorite; though the name MacLaren has stood for highest quality in cheese for more than forty years. It required something else. And you will find that i something else in every | package of MacLaren’s Cream Cheese—purity and matchless flavor. that Tie Spanish royal family is {orr\'cr] Mother | FEATUO RES. by trying to repress the adventure instinct of youth, cr its expression in plcture, play or story. But you can redeem it by giving that instinct ad- venturcs worthy of its mettle ‘We have one institution which does exactly that—the Boy Scouts of America. It makes no pretense ol | being a religious institution, but no religious institution ha ever solved the ‘boy problem as successfully. It understands kids. It knows their trail hunger—that hunger which wiil invarfably lead to dangerous or deadly trails unless given whole- some ones. It answers that hunger with exactly the right response and teaches morals in the only way in which they can be taught to boys with any lasting results, not as ab- stract, lofty princinles, but as the necessary woodcraft for a brave ad- venture T tell Il rather be a leader than the explorer, v that ever It's the you, Pals, popular Boy Scout greatest bank president, opera singer or missiona carried home the laurels. real job: (Copyrizht, 1923.) ine, 1913-20) but it is to the voung invalid Jai: they give their hearts For a long time his mother's manv trips to London were a cause of much spicion and unrest among the Spanish people, leading to charges of pro-British sentiments and pol- icles. They were also taken as em- phasizing her lack of affection for her husband. But when the soft- learted Sparish people found that their English queen had not been plotting against them or their king, but devoting herself, as a mother should, to poor little “Henry,” they took her and her entire family fur- ther into their hearts than otherwise | would have been the case. Prince Jalmie may never be strong enough to fight for his country on he field of battle—but who shall say that he has not already served his royal house® Prince Jamie Luitpold Henri is fourteen vears old. Born June 23, 1 Second son of King Alfonso and = Queen Victorla Eugenla of Spain._ Unmarried. Health: Improv- ing. Prospects: Miraculous, i Copyright. 1923. —_— Lord Leverhulme, the eminent Eng- I lish philanthropist, sleeps in a cage in the open air, both winter and summer. baing convinced that fresh air is one of the chief necessities for health. Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Grapefruit _Hominy With Milk Salmon, With White Sauce Apple Marmalade sin Muffins Coffee. LUNCHEON. Baked Oysters Lorain Bacon and_Onion_Stew French Fried Potatoes Bread and Butter Jelly Roll Te DINNER Cream of Turnip Soup Roast Lamb, With Mint Sauce Savory Ricc' Asparagus Salad Cheese Relish Pumpkin Pie Coffee “Pies and Presidents” and Nucoa Make this a festive month— Every President from Washing- ton o President Taft, whose aunt was the most famous pie maker of her day, has had a favorite pie. Washington’s favorite with its rich, creamy, chocolate filling —Tlike his mother Mary Washing- ton used to make—still bears his name and appears on the menus of the best restaurants today as ‘Washington Pie. Abraham Lincoln, preferred the good old-fashioned apple pie that is now called America's National Dessert. Nucoa The Delicious Spread for Bread —the rich, delicate cooking medium that delights famous pie makers of today—will enable yon to celebrate February’s two big birthdays with even better pies than Washington or Lincoln ever enjoyed. N. B. Nucoa makes that crisp, flakv pastry — the melt-in-your mouth kind that is the ambition of every good home maker. Make your pastry with Nucoa—and for a new apple pie a la mode -Cream Nucoa with sugar, flavor with vanilla—and heap high on the pie—uum, it’s like ice cream! Ways to use “left-over” Comet Rice When cooking Comet_Rice for dinner, prepare sufficient. o allow for serving Rice and Milk for breakfast. For dessert rebeat plain Comet-Boiled Rice and serve with a sauce of thickened canned fruit juice or fresh stewed fruit. SOLD EVERY WHERE YZON BAKING POWDER You use (ess KEEPS BOY'S - HAIR COMBED A cream cheese is a so[l, white cheese wrapped in foil Be sure you get | plicd after a Mother! Boy's Hair Stays Combed, Well-Groomed Few Cents Buys Jar any Drugstore, Not Sticky, Greasy or Smelly “Hair-Groom” keeps any b ruly or stubborn_hair can pompadour, straight- As the boy's hair is combed morning, so it sta hamipoo, neatly ow-licks” | tive 1f ap. ir cax be combe as before Greaseless—does not_stain pilloy Hair-Groom is_a dignified combi cream which is quickly absorbed therefore does not s! on the ha It leaves the hair glossy and lw trous, but not sticky. F for haiel Nothing else gives a boy or man more dignity than neatly combed. well-groomed _ hair. Millions o women buy “Hair-Groom” for th boys—also_for their husbands. n “TH valescence from pneamonia, fevers, of other debilitating _ diseases, yout quickest way to get flesh and strength is with Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical That gives purity to youg blood and plumpness (o your hodyw 1t makes thoroughly effective eve: natural means of repairing a nourishing your system. - All druggists sell it I nboth flulg and tablet form. Send 10c to Hotel, Buffalo, N. of Tablets, . Pierce’s Invalidw or trinl packag®

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