Evening Star Newspaper, March 2, 1923, Page 38

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38 FEATURES. BENEFITS FROM INTELLIGENT FOOD SELECTION IN MARKETS Efficiency and Economy Must Be Consid- ered for Best Results in Preparing Meals for Family. N order to pian meals in the In- bone and trimmings used for soup or terest of family efficiency :mdl;“""“- h‘\'hfn‘tlm trimmings :m:lnox i 4 e aken home, the butcher throws them economy atl the am time n“ln('v box under the counter and housewife does not need to docells them to some one clse for a few elaborate figuring in calorles or (vcnlflt“r‘{l, but thoy belong to you. e hass an g Standine of hen buying hamburger steak in- 0 have an intimate understanding #i95 Bhoh haning the o Br i such terms as “protein” and “carbo- round steak and watch it when hydrates.” 1f she will group the ground, S to be sure that no stale various foods in her pantry, vegeta-|MEAalS or strings or gristle go inlo hle bins and refrigerator into five the chopper. If vou like corned beet, simple groups, and will see that I:‘mhl | buy about five one time to reserve for ma om each of groups appear he can ferl Fresh her fan ; , cither raw it m of suluds or steamed un- til tender, should be eaten whenever {they can be obtained. Uncooked green leaves, such as lettuce, endive ure’ good blood puri- d be eaten all the year small young cabbage is & luable food than an old | cabbage with & hard heart. Among vegctables of the cabbage va in five groups, according (e Pl T ementator frx uliflower 1s probably the most anning (¢ o|in the fa | 3 the s grouping will he money and time meals without sided or Incomplete given show food ma A {far more v e fiar erials | D& Iy »suy digested. tor cash when possible. By £ cash you will not be subject |10 overcharge. By being pi he weighing you will not b weight or at, or more than you two expensive items in a bills. Whenever possible ages home with you, or it wrappe to be delivered ame placed on the pack- will reccive the which has Usually group is safer than u ticing economy ng lacking in for build-{ D good ! arc ages Buy the best. gton you matter of sure and full weight vou buy. ~The city's and dfet they make it mc 15 ot want 3 A e These | You Will be welcomed by the market- 1 and be received with respe How Long Shall It He Cooked? Keep st vour kit Roastir 3 loin ¢ jto 16 minut 12 to well fillet fil Meat & the following handy loin or ribs, rare, 10 minute done, per pound, beef, ribs, roiled, rare, iinutes; beef, ribs, rolled, 1 to 18 minute: to 30 minutes: to we bLeans and Foods r s wheat, worn, sweet, com ‘gods, and 1 nore of tl ik done, to being complete nt tban 1d not be € ely on cerea )n come cere cereal break-|\: roni and other gt cak cookies po! done, per poun rare, per pound, per pound, 15 to . nine pounds, ¥ . ~ pounds, 23y hours: ic, 1 hour; duck, wild, 20 5 to 30 mi 18 to 22 d, a. four pounds, small fish and fil- Beans with pork, Bread, white loaf, 45 to to 45 king powder biscuits, 12 Gems, 25 to 30 ml to 15 minutes. utes, Ginger: Sponge calke, ake, layer, 20 to Cake, loaf. 40 to 60 min- ake 2 to 3 hour: ki 5 hours. Cake: Batter puddin, Pies, 30 to 50 mi 20 minutes. Pat: Muflins, yeast, . baking powder, ndian pudding. or tapicca pudding, , 45 to 60 15 to 20 Foods very rict smportant & Without a littlo would not be T mood. Among ream, lard, suet fats, £alt pork a and salad o Wow and What to Buy. The thres great assets of toda: the b.siness of the srouer are the telephone, falls for your order and the charged account. It {s much o go to the telephone to order the | 1ay's food, oT d an errand boy | utes, o place th y nally at of them h enough these are nd other « bacon, and tabl 45 to 60 minutes 30 minutes, the £TO a cer leavir rket basket is the famil fr ourse at, 4 to 6 hours. Ox tongue f when possi-|$ to 4 Lours. Ham, ubout fourteen ble. _Select fo urself the article|pounds, 4 to 5 hours. Turkey, ten vou desire to purchase. Inquire fis| 3 to 4 hours. Fowl, about price before buying. If the quality! pounds, 2 to 3 hours. Chicken, and price suit you, be sure that you | thr pound: hours. Fish, about Zet in welght or measure the amount | 30 to 45 minutes. Lob- vou pay for. Watch the scales. m tes. Asparagus, 20 at your change. Beans, shell or string, When buying meat Bee ung, 50 min. food, don't go in a 20 min- 25 cents’ worth of m Car- food it 1s, and leav to 30 to decide how much meat vou s Mac- have for Lo cen 2 30 of meat yourself, 45 to 60 min- pound, 0 45 _minutes. ant, minutes. Tomatoas, u get wutes. Rice, 20 to the: precautions me wmarket or store v other 4 ask for| utes. . or whatever | utes to _the cierk | rots, ould | minu aroni, onc s, Cor 20 to the loss of | 30 minute uite a sum of mone ng a year. Broiling—Steak, one Inch thi You will lose more t vou gain 1f to 10 minutes. Lamb or mution Ju buy meats in large quantities. It|chops, 6 to 10 minutes. Chicken, 20 well to bu ough to provide cold | minute; 1s, & minutes. Squabs, ‘neat, or hash, stew or patties for |10 to 1 had, whitefish and luncheon for th following day, but| bluefish, 20 minutes. Liver, § here let it end. | minutes. You are e d to all the bone and| Frying—Smelts and_ other emal yrimmings of a plecs of meat that|fish, 3 to 5 minutes. Breaded chops. “ou buy. You should take home and |5 to 8 minutes. Potatoes, raw, 4 to make use of such bone and trim-| minutes. Fish balls and croquettes, mings. The fat can be rendered and | one minute. Muffins, fritters and for cooking purposes and the ' doughnuts, 3 to b minutes. kamQhfld%%!E] WRITTEN AND 1LUsTRATED By Elswe Tohnsan ve somewhat iterpreted my ideus about “being 15 to t “Dear Mada Alimony for THE WHEN APPRECIATION EBBS. | | i ‘[ui“li‘ L | | i | b N ] e | i o SR When the Sippeys invited their new neighbors, the Mortons, to dinner, there was something said about | their all being so fond of music, and having heard that Mr. Morton had a lovely voice, and so on, and more fair to keep the spotlight till dawn. Black Pussy Discovers Spooky’s Home. Thts much {s true beyoad & doubt: Some tbiogs ure better sot fouad ou ussy Black Pusey’s disappointment over not catching that young Mouse didn't discourage her in the least. She continued to prowl around in the Old Orchard. She felt quite sure that that iparticular Mouse was not the onl one tn the Old Orchard. And in thi she was right. She saw no more of Spooky the Screech Owl | | { { “] HOPE THAT WILL TEACH HER A L ON,” HISSED SPOOKY. {a week after her quarrel Wwith him over that young Mouse. Then she !caught just a glimpse of him and {didn’t know that it w Spocky. She had happened to glance up in an old lapple tree just as Spooky @isap- | peared in a hole in the trunk of that {tree. All that Black Pussy saw was Spooky's rather short tail as he dis- ared. HMack Pussy didn't recognize that disappearing tail. To her it was {simply the tail of a bird. It had di {appeared In a hole in that tree. Of | course, that meant that the bird wat in that hole. ack Pussy’s vellow eves glowed with eagerness. ~ More than once, I am sorry to gay, had Black Pussy found the homes of i PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BEDTIME STORIES besides. It is now 9:20, and Mr. and Mrs. M. have been squirming for an hour to get going on their best songs (Mrs. M. plays the accompaniments), but the two Sippey children, with piano and squeaky violin, bid (Copyright, 1923.) By Thornton W. Burgess. birds trees. She knew just what to do at such & hole. She knew that ouldn’t get her head in, but sn't necessary. She could get a paw in, and that was enough. e could feel around in- side and hook those dreadful sharp | claws of hers into whoever might be in thers, and so pull them out. Black Pussy didn't climb that tree at cnce. She wafted a while. She| didn’t want to alarm that bird. When | at last she did climb she did it slow. 1y and carefully, trying to make no noise. The only thing the feared was | that that bird would become alarmed jand leave that hole before she could get up there But nothing of the kind happened. Rlack ¥ kept her eyes fixed on d 1o bird came ou where it didn't_matter She was ald strike any bird Jeav- Then sho worked her- f into a gond position and re at hole with one paw. oes spread and the hooked claw each toe stretched out its furthest. she began to feel around. At first she felt nothing. Then i seemed to her that one of her claws touched feathers. She stretched that paw a little further and struck down with {t. Things happened right then and there. Yes, sir, things happened right then and there. Things hap- pened which Black Pussy hadn't ex- pected at all “Wow! Yow!’ yelled Black Pussy her paw out (‘f[ Annabel ‘worthington l The College Girl ! and tried to snatch that hole. But it didn’t come at first. No, sir, it didn't comse at first. You see it was being held. When it did come it was bleeding, and Black Pussy didn't even stop to climb down from that tres. She just dropped. and then she started for Farmer Brown's on three legs as fast as she could make three legs go. Even then she didn't know what had happened { She was too frightened and too hurt] to even look back. Had she looked back she might have seen the head | of Spooky the Screech Owl sticking out of that hole in the tree. All his feathers were ruffied up and he was snapping that stout, hooked lttle bill of his as only he can when he is It was that same stout littie! Ibill that had had hold of Black | Pussy’'s paw. lia {mp: that will teach her a les- son,” hissed Spooky. “I wish I could | have bitten her paw off. 1 do so.” |Ana for a long time Spooky con- tinued to hiss and talk to himself. (Oopyright, 1023, by T. W. Burgess.) Was catered to by the de: this charming frock, the pattern for which cuts in sizes 14, 16, 18 and 20 years; only three and one-half yards of forty-inch material is needed to make this dress in the As illustrated, the froc of crepe de chine. It could for the pockets, cuffs and collar, and then you wouid be carrying out the latest fdea of the handkerchief col l lar effect. | gingham with the collar of organdy | or batiste of a contrasting color. This | would make a very pretty frock and | would be casier on yqur pocketbook edium stze. | was made | s0 be | | made with a printed crepe de chine ! EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. O, FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1923. Bigtory of Dour Name. BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN, GOODWIN VARIATION—Godwin. RACIAL ORIGIN—Angio-Saxon. SOURCE—A given name. There s no particular distinction in being able to trace one's family name back to a Norman-French origin In old England. Probably a majority of English family names are derived from Norman sources, which is lstrange at first thought, constdering | that at no time was the bulk of the| population in England Norman. The paradox is explained by the| fact that the Normans, being for| several centurfes the rulers of the| land, dominated it in the matter of| language and names, though numeri- | cally weaker than the Anglo-Saxon| element, until finally they were ab- sorbed, and following the political severunce with their old land, Nor- mandy, drifted willingly into the “melting pot.” Thus, during the period of domi- nance of the French tongue, say through the twelfth centuries, the historica {a very small minority of the old Anglo-Saxon glven names. Anglo- Saxon names, indeed, disappeared for a time more completely even YJ'mn| Anglo-Saxon speech. { But here and there they wers to be found. Among thess rare i are several Godwins, spelled | ously “Godewin,” “Godwyne” and| “Godun.”” They _became family, names, ‘as did other given names, b the addition of the termination “‘Son or the prefixing of the Noman ‘itz { with the =mame meaning, and in the course of time these again havebeen dropped. The form Goodwin is explained by | the fact that the “o” in Godwin orig{- nally was pronounced long, as in| “hole,” and that the spelling 2 | ! toc | also at one time had the sams Pro- nunclation. i H ] MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN, The Forgetful Child. My son had a habit of asking me to write down everything I wanted him| to get from the grocery. When 1} | wanted more than one article he| would say that he could not remem- | ber g0 many 0 I named his fingers. ! His thumb was bread finger. e | would run to the store, holding out| {as many fingers as he wanted arti- cles. I told him to have the grocer he could not remember grocer hever Green Cheese for Salad. Take two ounces of fresh parsiey, one ounce of watercress and one ' jounce of celery. Dry the paraley in {the oven untll it is crisp and can | | be crumbled, but not until it has lost | { its color. Chop the cress and celery iadd to the parsley and mix with four | ounces of fres ream cheese. Flavor with one-fourth teaspoonful of sal {and a little cayenne pepper. Pas jthe whole through a colander {form into tiuy clieeses to pass with {malad. Keep in the refrigeratoruntil; | needed. Californta, Washington, Oregor, {xdaho and Montana possess more than }one-half of all the standing timber {in the United ate: 'KEEPS BOY'S AR CONGED Mother! Boy's Hair Stays Combed, Well-Groomed (RS — Or you could make this model of ' and thirteenth {ters from Italy 1 records showlln effort to sav Im more will kill me. WOMAN"’S PAGE. Love Letters That Made History BY JOSEPH KAYE. John Keats and Fanny Brawne. “Oh, God! God! God! Everything that I have that reminds mo of her es through me ke a spear. . can bear to dic—I cannot bear to er.” This was John Keats, dylng of con- sumption in faraway Italy, crying out in the agony of his soul for his be- loved. The ~passion that the great English poet bore for the eighteen- year-old girl who was not beautiful, and whom he once called “ignorant, monstrous in behavior, a minx,” amounted at the time near his death to a frenzy. It may have been that distance lent added fuel and created more enchantment to his love, for otherwise his extreme, passionate cryings for Fanny Brawne, left to us in letters to his friends, would be somewhat_ inexplicable. Keats lived only twenty-six years, but during this short span of life he created poetry that has mads his name immortal. Fanny Brawne, whom he met at twenty-two, ruled his emotions, but it was his tragedy leave n Ithat his ailing condition precluded thoughts of marriage. In his let- hers he was sent in a him from tubercu- s, he w Lis pes tes: asion that T shall ses her - I should have had her wien I was In health and I should have remained well.” ¥our months after he wrote this he was dead. His remains were buried His love letters to Fanny ars gems of loving expression, though thelr delicacy and figured phrases have caused stronger men to uccuse Keats of being effeminate. One of these letters follows: “Ask yourself, my love, whether you &re not very cruel to have 0 entrammelcd _me,” &0 destroyed my freedom. Will you confess this in the letter you must write Immedi- |ately 2nd do all you can to console me in it? Make it rich as u draught of happiness to intoxicate me; write the sofest words and kiss them, that I at least may touch my lips whers yours have been. For myself, I do |not know how to express my devo- tlon to o0 fair a form. 1 want a brighter word ‘bright,' a falrer word than ‘fair’ 1 almost wish we wero butterflies and lived but thres summer days. Thres such days with you I could fiil with more delight than fifty common years could eve: contain.” (Copyright, 1923.) —_—— Pineapple Custard Pie. Chop a can of pineapnle and co in its juice until it bolls. Mak “ soft rd of two eggs, one cupful of nd about o »ful of sugar or little less. St into this on= cupful of rolled and sifted bread |crumbs. Add the pineapple, mix alt | toge r and bake In a pastry shell ‘This pie may or may not be garnished | with mer: than The Value of Quality is appreciated by housewives, inter- ested in the welfare of their homes. "SALADA" T E.A H3 Supplies the utmost in quality. JUST TRY IT the excep- T{Efilflfimflhnolmm« tion. Designers, recognizing the beauty of physical maturity, have used their tal- ents to create gowns, lingerie and corsets that will render justice to the full or generously developed figure. Rengo Belt Reducing Corsetsare designed —through their exclusive feature: —to mould stout figures into lines of grace and beautiful proportion. They are strong and excellently tailored. They assure that poise and dignity that are the rightful charms of the woman of well developed figure. THE CROWN CORSET COMPANY 295 Fifth Avenue, NoW York Sold at all good stores Price $2 and ugward A cream cheese is a soft, white cheese wrapped in foil BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D.. |dependent on those we do not love.” Noted Physician and Author. Marriage is one way of earning a liv- It may ore than that, of| h_adventure, 1 communion But funda- it is an economic problem i rries the restrictions and obli- Breathing Dust. gations of all economic problcms-f "The inhalation of dust more or less Vhich same may be summed up ini . fod of years, as e b i D s | constantly over a perio a pendence on omcone you no longer. the working girl's slogan: “You can't| "SI0 U ™ aqes or occupations, Sl . as to you.,Dbe too choosey g’o‘:'t“ycf it e s mara Way|, Wives are apt to be too choosey.!causes a Kind of hardening of lung ! tissues with thickening of the walls |They won't vse half the forbearance, humor and sense in the home which t3%E N EC 1 "o 4" enronte bron- {they would expect to use in an office. | © dren s undoubted] woman can’t suport take care of b 1 baby and have very 10w I nt her rea Perl | ‘deas are not an an others. | but I couldn’t bear to leave my ba with someone that was just paid to take care of her. The idea of de- | In fact, the cost of the completed gar. | ment would be only about $1.25. { l Price of pattern. i5 cents In poatage | stamps only. Orders should be ad-| of industréal health hazards in Ohlo, | dressed to The Washington Star Pat- | lists the varlous dusts in _the f0llow- | tern Bureau, 22 East 18th street, New | ing order, the least injurious firsi York city. Please write name and | 1. Dust arising from the patural| agdress clearly. { onrith, atich as that to which & farmer | TR e exposed. o hl"l:urvand starch dust. King George has a marvelous mem. Talc and soapstone dust, ory for faces. His majesty has only Wood dust. to meet a person once and that person’s features seem permanently Bran dust. Coal dust, registered in his mind. tested mill All the milk and cream from which MacLaren’s Cream Cheese is made, comes from one small dai- ! t a_home is the housewife's office {and her husband is virtually her !partner. It's far more joyful if you {can love and respect your partner, {but you are sometimes forced to work ;with him whether you love him or inot. And it seems to me that if the {child is_too young to be left with {others, it _is better for the wife to {remain with her husband than to de- {mand support for herself while di- vorced from him. | Support for the ohild is, of couree, i understood. But support for the mother should entail a decent pride land sense of obli ion. One cannot {draw_a pay envelone when one quits an office job in a huff. Why should |the quitting of the matrimonial job carry such special exemptions? = if {he's good enough to pay the bulls, good enough to live with, sistcrs: (Copyright, 1923.) VERSIFLAGE that the endowment of motherhood could be worked? That would give ‘women more dignified and secure Dosition. “R. 1. C” A good many people have asked that | wmame question, R. L. States and mation have discussed and are dis- oussing it. It is one of the most im- tenets of socialism. Prob it's a & but have consider would in- “Vain Longings.” Today I suddenly felt blue. thought: Dear me! ~I'm getting old, d certain things I'll never do. For stance, seck for hidden gold. Nor | Will T ever learn to skate. Oh, how i T've longed to waltz on ice! Buf now, alas, it is too laloI_ and watching others is not nice. never skim- volva? Federa nt of moth med the snow on skis, and _r:-:kl“l:/‘e hood would ean federal yoq, thy it desire; but T'm too suparvision If the Goobbly I dare not to taxpayers of BOILE 101 such feats aspire. A “shower” has Jay your @ perfect!naver drenched my house—vou know right to see how vou upend theirjihe kind of mean, when, money. me of that supervision|quiet as the well-known mouse, one's snight be intelligent and heldful,ifriends arrive all unforseen. One ? _Politics being what they|prings a strainer for the sink; an- ure, we'd probably have ex-barkeep- | other one a biscuit cutter: a measur- ors’telling us how to mix the modi-|ing giass for baby's drink; a cute sled milk for the baby. 1 haveknown contraption for the butter. ~But mo, mx-barkeepers who Wwere experts on|g “shower” I've never had, nor graced ;nodified milk. But I have alsola “float” in royal state. 'No wonder known those who were not. I at times feel sad, and write a verse No, I'm .o& oking, R. I C. I'm try-Jagin' my fate! SBE 10 Dot ‘ sTITCH, of i matter on & commons { chitis, the condition being known as | pneumonokoniosis which s medical | Greek for dusty lung. If the dust is coal dust, the condition is called anth- { racosis; if it is iron or other metallle | dust, siderosis; mineral dusts cause chalicosis, and s0 on. Coal miners are strikingly free from tuberculosis, notwithstanding | their exposure to coal dust and sh«: !Jack of sunlight in their work, ve! ek iners Tungs are invariably black from coal dust after several | years of work. Tuberculosis of the lung is less frequent in miners than | in members of their families. Indeed, exposure to coal dust has been ser- | fously advised as & treatment for in- ipent or at the beginning of tuber- | culosis. Pneumonokoniosis is seldom dlag- nosed. Persons who have it usually assume they have chronic bronchitis, sthma, pleurisy, or tuberculosis; the octor with & very large number of | patients is not likely to insist on careful examinations when patients i tell him what is the matter instead f telling him of what they are com- | plaining. This Is not so serious a | matter, perhaps, save when the dusty | lung is assumed to be tuberculosis. Another dust which seems not only harmless to the lungs, but possibly an actual preventive against tuber- culosis iz lime dust. For instance, among 400 employes in a gypsum factory, there w Lerculosls in sc iciuns have advised patient: |early stage of tuberculosis to live {or work about lime kilns. In many cases the result of such exposure to iime dust is apparently good. Dust particles having sharp or ir- regular surfaces are naturally most irritating and injuricus to the air passages and lungs. Stone dust is probably the worst of all. Stone cut- ters are fifteen times more suecep- tible to tuberculosis than mem en- gaged in dustiess trades. PR Ph; nteen vears. Phs in the s no death from tu- | ADVERTISEMENT Stop Hair from Falling With \Parisian Sage Way Makes Hair Grow, Too Get 14 of dandruff and your halr will stop fallisg out. A fow rubbings with Parisian Sage will a nv'; every particle of dandruff from your al Those who use this remarkebie hair i j| nourisi and invigorator never need l| worry about ecalp ltch, dandruff or fall- | tog batr. It you are ome of those whoms hatr || needs attention there is_nothing you can use that is o good as Parisian Sage. | | | | It's a clean, fragrant, refreshing liquid that dees not dye or change the color of the hair, and easy fo use. No matter whether young or old, blonda or brunetts, Parisian Sage is just what you need. All scalp. ftch and dandruf go in a few daye and the hair ceases to fall ont i and takes on 2 beautiful sheen aad eoft- ness that compels admiration. Do mot delay—take care of your hatr fore it's too late. A large bottle of Parisian is not expensive at Peoples Drug Stored o7, A5y Eved drug or totlet counter, Satisfaction guaranteed or money Clay dust Ore dust. . Mineral dust 10. Stone duat. I Lead, arsenic and mercury are the | || chief mineral dusts. Workers in nu- Imerous trades and industries are ex- {posed to these polsonous dusts. | I Lime, cement and hair workers suf- fer from chronic inflammation of the ¢yes and throat. The dust of mussel' I<hells (pearl button manufacture), {according to some physicians, causes ‘inflammation in the bone marrow of ivoung persons. The dust in the tex- itle industries, such as the carding, \roving, epinning and winding of cot- ton and the heckling of linen, causes la chronic bronchitis. : QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Druggist a Bit Confused. You recommend using citrate of 'soda in & solution for dressing bolls. iY tried several druggists, who said they would not sell it, as it is & {deadly poison.—G. L. Answer—Elither the druggists mis- vnderstood what you asked for or |they were & singularly uninformed lot. Citrate of soda is really less “poiscnous” - than epsom salts. The w ect it can produce is purga- ition, it taken internally in consid- erable doses. Citrate of soda was formerly used as an alkali in modity- ing milk for infant feeding (lime, water, milk of magnesia or perhaps| a cereal water is generally preferred, today). So you see it can't be so very “deadly.” Notwithstanding the | peculiar notions of your druggists, thousands of persons are taking citrate of soda freely as a home remedy for acute “coughs and colds” and oxpnu"l.:f the: 'ves as pleased ‘with the ts. {IIt’s the Quickest and Easiest}| Few Cents Buys Jar any Drugstore Not 8ticky, Greasy or Smelly “Halr-Groom”™ keeps any boy's une !ruly or stubborn halr combed, either | pompadour, straight-back or parted, | | As the boy's hair is combed in the | morning, so It staye all day. If ap- | ! plied after @ shampoo, the halr can be | | combed as neatty and lly as bee | fore. “Cow-licks" stay down, { Greaseless. Doss not taln pillowl | Halr.Groom fe a dign'fied combing cream | witich s quickly absorbed; therefore | does not show on the hair. It fea the hair_glossy and lustrous, but not |sticky. Fine for halrl | Nothing eise gives a boy or man more ldignity “than " neatly combed, weli roomed hair. Millions of women buy “Halr.Groom" for their boys—also for helr_husband: OLD EVERY WHERE H RYZON | BAKING POWDER ess rying section—another reason for the uniform goodness of MacLaren’s. Whenwe take somany pre- cautions to give you Mac- Laren quality, it's surely worth while for you to Make sure you get LY MACLARENS CHEESE

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