Evening Star Newspaper, June 6, 1923, Page 35

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J 1 WOMA Cretonne Jacket When cretonne was first appropriated by the designers as a possible fabric out of which to construct summer frocks it took much courage to wear it. One hes- itated in making one’s self look like an animated chintz-covered chair. When a certain well known woman blazed the trail by buying several of these cretonne frocks people used to keep an eye ope for her arrival at a certain restauran where she was in the habit of lunching. ‘When she appeared in one of her cre- tonne frocks she was outrageously con- spicuous among a_crowd of women who had always thought of that material as suitable only for summer draperies and | 4 siip covers for chairs and lounges. - Whether you would choose a cretonne | frock for luncheon at a smart restau- rant ot mot, you surely would not attract much attention if you did, for the world hag accustomed itself to seeing women dressed in cretonne. But the all-cre- tgnne frock is not especially well liked Ahis season, though onne has been sed in making women's apparel more this vear than ever before. This spring women seem to like most of all the little sports jackets or gilets, with hats to match, that have been shown with so-called sports clothes. The jdea of making these little sets came where sets of this sort or were m: ne or printed linen. seem rather marvelous tha there were available So many pleces of really old cretonme. thing that been h old bed h ins of genuine antig- which these accessories have must enou window cu out of ity were made Tt is all a matter of taste, whether or not the bits of autique’ cretonne were worth the price that some Americans in France were persuaded to pay for them. As far as effective- ness goes the chintzes and cretonnes run the looms in the spring of 192, e quate as good Though these cretonne or chintz the product of high-priced usuall BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. e of bits of an- | Bits of cretonne | v of us should | available | ngings | N’'S PAGE.’ and Hat Popular Me and Puds Simkins was wawking along and some man was going erround a automobeel wiping it with a rag warever he thawt there was a 6pot weather there was or not, being ]l big shiney red automobeel looking as If it cost 1000 dollers a ride, and 1 wispered to Puds, Hay Puds, lets make him mad. lets ask him if its a Ford And we went up to the man and Puds sed, Hay mister would you mind please settling a argewment, this guy wunts to say that car aint a Ford and I say it is, wich is rite? Go on away from heer, I never saw 2 more ignorent looking kids in my life, g0 on beet it before I throw a spunge at you. the man sed. Being a long man with a long neck, and me and Puds kepp on going, lafiing inside and allmost outside, and pritty soon we came to a man ‘poring watter in the frunt of a reel Ford, being a short man with red hair and a blue shert and a exter small Ford with cute little wheels, Puds wisper- ing. Lets ask him if its a Packerd? | Wy, as a matter of fa as a matter of fact wat it recly is, its a Ford, its a_snappy looking little car though and fools a lot of people, the man sed. And he kepp on poring watter in it looking proud as enything, and me and Puds asked him If we could t the horn and he sed, Sure, go ahed, help yourselfs. Wich we did, trying it about 10 peece, and then the man got in drove ‘away waving his hand £00d by to us. its neither, time a and ' THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, — RSONAL HEALTH SERVICE Listen,World! 1.LUSTRATED By Elsie Ttobinson This is not a talk about the late stupld, selfish, slavering war. It is sbout any war—all that|beast in man And the glory of war u: upld and selfish an have passed—those that may come— | heastly as the gluttony of war, or those that most certainly will come |the grim apathy which succeeds it. unless we alter our viewpoint on|Strip the surface manifestation, and wars in general. under it all lies the beast. The only way in which we can do 1 have been talking to Jim Tolland. It is hard to understand Jim Tolland when he talks. Gas did dreadful things to Jim's vocal chords over there in France. And his poor face— you must try not to look long at Jim's face. But the most terrible mark of all was left on Jim's spirit. It is as though some particularly virulent acid had_eaten it through and through with bitterness. Jim doesn’t blame the war. He's angry at what has happened after the ‘war. The war itself was all right—a_cording to Jim. £ only people had kept on feeling the way they did when we marched | away. They were mighty proud of us ! then—mighty fond of their country, | stubborn, THE TUMULT AND THE SHOUTING DIES; THE CAPTAINS AND THE KINGS DEPART —= (] and they promised to do anything | for us. How've they kept that prom- ise? Look at me—I haven't a steady job for eight months. Who cares now for the boys who went over there? They're as cold as dead fish when we go around.” And on and on, in a deadly crescendo of resent- ment. 0ddly enough, it has never dawned | on Jim that this “cold\as fish” atti- | tude is as truly a part of war as the cheering and shouting and away with the cruelty which succeeds war is to do away with everything { which pertains to war and begin, golden | at last, to think and act like humans o R L promises. It's all—war. instead of hunting beasts. Are you Hay mister, 10 Settle a Lot woutd you | ,, War isn’t founded on justice, intel- | willing to forego gold braid and mind telling. ne conthar " ooad you | ligence, logic. It is ‘emotionalism | hurrahs for the pity of wrecks like Dk e O e ather 1un riot. It's the triumph of the|Jim By Thornton W. Burge: BEDTIME STORIES iher skin was tougher than Littlest Bear's skin. Moreover, she had been | stung many “times before and she knew that the pain would not last long. She pulled out a piece of comb and tossed it so_that it fell at the A Sorry-Looking Little Bear. Stung once, think twice before you take ~—Littlest Bear. Such a treat as Mother Bear and ressmaliers, there is no reason why the | clever woman who makes some of her | THIS LITTLE CRETONNE JACKET| Proving wats a compliment one . Bear and | ¢ ot of Littlest Bear. Then Littlest own clothes at home should not copy | HAT AND BELT TO MATCH |time may be a insult the next Brother and Sister were having! My, | Bear knew that she no longer had this fashion quite successfully. ND 18 WOR: WHITE my. my, such a treat! Mother Bear | anything to fear from Mother Bear (Copstight. ) CREPE DE C : | because of her disobedience. had torn wide open the storehouse| ™0y ;i jog¢ Bear thought that she was of the bees. She would scoop out|ioo miserable to eat anything. She MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN Property Rights. T ng to develop a regard for rights in my children | by giving each child its own plavthings and insisting that! each child ask permission of the owner before using the other's pos- sessions (Copyright. 1823.) Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL. The Exterior Decorator. We hear much nowadays of interior decorators and the wonders they can perform in transforming old homes or planning new ones. Sometimes, however, I wish there were more ex- terior decorators —talented designers who would take the outside walls of some of our boxlike houses and beautify them until they had the same charm that often exists within those very walls. To be sure, many of our modern suburban cottages and country houses have beautiful exteriors—quaintness, colorfulness, and a decorative qual- ity: but shut your s and visualize street after street full of square structures with plain bare walls Lroken only by upright windows with uninteresting blinds. Now and then there is gome planting done around the base of the house that softens its connection with the soil, but the clapboarded or stuccoed walls rise in blank stretches from ground to roof. The exterior decorator would find many charming aids to her art. She would _discover paneled trellises to place between windows. She would replace the old dark green shutters with solid blinds in which a crescent or a flying bird had been cut, and she would paint these in some soft shade that would harmonize with the gray of the stucco or the white of the clapboards. She would learn to paint roofs a dull terra cotta. She would attach pergolas to side walls, put little hoods over back and side doors, hang great wall vases in empty spots and fill these vases with hanging vines and bright geraniums. The list of artistic articles for ex- teriors is, indeed, a long one—window ‘boxes, door knockers, weather vane: wall fountains (from which the birds will drink and in which they will bathe), unusual awnings, and so on. ¥or stuccoed houses there are deco- rative tiles in color, to be set into the plaster, or placques of bronze en- graved with the family coat of arms. There are sundials for outside walls, and bird houses to tuck beneath the eaves for the friendly wrens. There is no house (unless it be the erdecorated gingerbread horror of |} the eighties, trimmed with wooden jace and embroidery and covered with an erupticn of gables) that cannot be transformed by the judicious wiles of the exterior decoraton { son. 'The Guide Post | had thought that she no longer had any desire for that food which had smelled so delicious and made her mouth water. But she tasted that honey at her feet. My, such sweet- ness! She hadn't supposed that there great pieces of comb, dripping with | honey, and toss them to Brother and | Sister. The air was no longer filled th bees, fighting mad. When Mother Bear had finally torn up their store- that it was house they had known By Henry van Dyke Moirss to) fight lomger and had at | could be anything in the Great World E Aw";\gmam once begun loading themselves with | as sweet as thal. She took another True Neighbor Love. honey to take away to start a new |taste. Then she lnmmz all about her | . . storehouse with. troubles. Yes., sir, sorry-looking Lit- Speakingitheftruih dnlove Hph Brother and Sister, who had obeved | tlest Bear forgot all about her o Mother Bear and remained right troubles. She gobbled up that piece Religion does not tell us to love or where she had told them to. hadn't | of comb as greedily as the two other | oo g been stung once. But Littlest Bear little Bears were gobbling up what to encourage our neighbors' faults: was a sorry sight. Yo indeed, Lit-|they had. She licked up the honey | but to love them in spite of their| faults and to do what we can to bet- | ter them. | True neighbor-love. then, will not |be a weak. gelatinous, sentimental | thing. It will have a conscience. It will be capable, on occasion, friendly warning and reproof. It will even accept, If need be for the protection of ourselves and other neighbors. the duty of restraint or| punishment I may have a rowdy or a thief for a neighbor, but my love ought not to embrace rowdiness or thievery In him any more than in myself. The same thing | tenvy or laziness 1 tongue. | i | i of i i true of malice or | or a slanderous 1 (Copyright FEED THE BRUTE Favorite Recipes by Famous Men. BY WINCHELL SMITH. Buckwheat Cakes, Up to 1890 the natives of New Eng- land, particularly those brought up fon a farm. indulged frequently in buckwheat cakes. Buckwheat cakes, pie or doughnuts were sure to be on the breakfast table at the farm where I slaved. For twenty years T have tried to get buckwheat cakes with the old- time flavor, and I've got 'em at last. The real flavor can't be obtained with the adulterated prepared flour in vogue today, but the trick may be done by following these directions: First buy a farm of not less than fifty acres of fertile, tillable land, Engage a good superintendent, and within two or three years you should { be able to produce enough buckwheat | grain to supply a small family with cakes every morning during the sea- Full-Figured Woman at Home. ! No. 1685 is a morning or house | dress designed especially for the| women of mature build. The pattern cuts in sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48 and 50 inches bust measure. As illustrated. this style in a me- dium size requires 4 vards of 36-inch [ materfal with 1 vard contrasting ma- | {terial and 3 vards of binding. The pattern provides for long or short sleeves. i Price of pattern 15 cents, in postage stamps only. Orders should be ad- dressed to The Washington Star pat- | tern bureau, 22 East 15th street, N York city. Please write name and address clearly. COLOR CUT-OUT Playing Nursemaid. Next purchase a grist mill—an an- clent one, with old-fashioned burr stone, is preferable—then add ma- chinery for thrashing, cleaning, wash- ing, drylng and polishing the grain. You will, of course, need the service of an expert miller. It may also be difficult to obtain buttermilk, but this can be overcome by purchasing two jersey cows. The other ingredi- ents may be procured from the gro- cer. Here's how you do fit, or,| rather. how I do it: At night mix two cupfuls of buck-! wheat flour, one and a half cups of | buttermilk, half cup of warm water, | one tablespoonful of molasses and-one teaspoonful of salt. Dissolve one- | quarter cake of yeast in a little of | the warm water, and add to the above | mixture. Let stand in a warm place, | In the morning take out one cup of batter and set aside to use in place of yeast next time. To the remainder of the batter add half a cup of sweet milk_and one teaspoonful of soda dissolved in half a cup of bolling water. Bake on smoking hot, well-greased griddle. (Copyright, 123.) Things You’ll Like to Make Ribbon-Trimmed Parasol. The parasols to be used this sum- mer wiil be ornamental, many rib- bon-trimmed. The one in the illus- tration is ornamented with wide rib- end of each strip. “Good morning,” greeted Betty Cut- with me and see him? I've just put a clean little dress and sack on him and he's sitting on his blanket on the floor playing with his ball. Flkaplows 3] center top under the frill or other ornament around the ferrule. Make one-inch loops of embroidery =silk along the edges of each strip of rib- bon. Use harmonizing, though bright, colors. Cut the other end of each plece straight across and turn in a small, narrow hem. Make a three. So Betty gave a little jJump over over the hedge, and in they went. This is one of baby's everyday dresses and a little flannel sack which he wears when he's creeping around the hous The dress should be left white, but you will need your wc“ crayon to color the sack and the tiny | to be a movie actor. so to speak. One | bon (egsad with lt;oved fringe of tried to answer them by yourselves. silk). Have a strip of ribbon to cover “ I Neila: each rib of your parasol. Gather one Not long ago Marshall eflan Fasten it to the evolved a questionnaire for fans, s a sorry tlest Bear w ooking little | that had run out on :ue ground. Then | Bear. One cye was so swollen that she took a few.step3 nearer. Mother she couldn't see out of It at all. Her |Bear tossed her some more. Littlest lip were swollen. One side of her Bear reached for it eagerly face was swollen. She had been stung It was a wonderful f t that on her body in many places where the | Mother Bear and the triplets had They remained right there until th couldn’t find another drop of hon bees had worked down into her fur. She had been stung on her paws of rushing to join her|to be licked up. By that time the nd sister, Littlest Bear hung Stomachs of the little Bears were so ck. In the first place she was, full that they were almost like little balloons. As Mother Bear led them away to lie down for a nap Littlest Bear kept close to Mother Bear's heels. She wa still a sorry-looking little Bear. S still ached and smarted, but she no longer whined. Mother Bear stopped at the Laughing Brook and rubbed her face in mud on the edge of it. She told Littlest Bear to do the same thing. It took out some of the ache shamed. 2 In the second place she was still afraid. She was afaid that there night still be some of those bees around. She was afraid of Mother B So Littlest Bear hung back. Yum. yum' said Brother, as he crammed a big piece of comb dripping with honey into his mouth “Oh-0000!" sald Sister, as she greed- ily reached for an even bigger piece. Mother Bear looked at sorry-looking Littlest Bear. There was a twinkle in Mother Bear's s. She knew how very. very miserable Littlest Bear felt. She herself had been stung much worse than Littlest Bear. But moved on again Littlest Bear was an even sorrier-looking Bear than she had been before. (Copyright. 1923, by T. W. Burgess.) The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan I BY GLADYS HALL. Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse"? 3. Who became a star in that pic- Are You Real Movie Fans? Well, are you? ture? You know, after all, one has to, 4 What two great foreign direc- | qualify to be a movie fan as well as tors have recently come to this country? 5. In what Pickford play a dual role? 6. Who played the leading role in “The_ River's End"? 7. Who was the first vampire of the | screen? |~ 8. Who was the first male comedian | of the screen? | 9 Who played the leading role In Passion” 10. What is the length of a reel? 11. Who is playing “Merton of the Movies” on the stage? Now, here are the answers. side cannot very well do without the | other side, or there'd be nothing to it The movie actors and actresses have Let. | right_without looking! 1. “The Birth of a Nation.” 2. June Mathias. 3. Rodolph Valentino. 4. Victor Seastrom and Ernest Lu- bitch, 5. “Little ‘Stella Maris. 6. Lewis Stone. 7. Theda Bara. 8. John Bunny 9. Pola Negri. 10. One thousand feet. 11. Glenn Hunter. If you have answered all of these questions correctly you may go to the head of the cinema class. If you an- swered 75 per cent of them you are a f]al,n If you did worse than that— we rd Fauntleroy” and ERNEST LUBITCH'S PICTURE HALF ANSWERS ONE OF THE QUES- APART FROM WHICH DIRECTING MARY PICK- FORD'S LATEST PICTURE. L incoln said to know what the fans like and the fans, to qualify as fans, have to b possessed of certain knowledge con- cerning the players. Just like base ball fans and everything. Just by way of passing a test I'm going to play a game with you, but T'll have to put you strictly on your honor. I'll give you a set of ques- tions and almost immediately there- after T'll give you a set of answers, but you've got to promise not to look at the answers until you have first which I shall take the liberty of using, along with some additions of from her swollen face. But when they | two pictures did Mary me know how many of them you got | [ * Savin You SAVE when you buy "SALADA’ X A The Best is Always the Most Economical = 300 Delicious Cups to a Pound - BLACK (Orange Pekoe Blend) MIXED and GREEN Scld in Sealed Metal Packets Only. 1923. PE BY WILLIAM More Oxygen. The best antidote we have yet found for excessive acid retention, be it urle, lactic or carbonic, is more oxy- gen—that is, more oxygen than the rordinary sedentary valetudinary ab- sorbs In the course of a day's loaf- ing interest of these groups of per- ons sadly neglected. Merchants who are addicted to all play (around the store) and no work (around the garden, lawn, links or diamonad). Folks who are victims of flivver trouble. Such acld substances as are formed in the body and sometimes retained in excess, or rather not so promptly destroyed and eliminated as the should be, are products of combustion. Take urlc acid an example. It is normally produced in certain quantity by ordinary func tional and muscular activity, from the partial oxidation of nitrogenous matter. More complete oidation of the same nitrogenous matter pro- { the sugar of the blood, which is the fuel that furnishes muscle energy. If this oxidation of sugar is complete the product is not lactic acid, but water and carbon dioxide. There is a_ pair of little glands which have become popular lately owing to the g s produced by their internal secretion. The r supradenal glands furni { | [13 " . I Just Hats By Vyvyan | 1 [} I | Those Summer Ear-Muffs. each hat trim- effect ming and as omewhat to b | The paa slips down through a slit i the head band, half appea the brim and half below. PARIS, May 23.—Dear Ursula—My Inewest lamp is a'“fish.” He is made | ot delicious transparent-looking mar- ble substance in pure white. Some of his brothers and sisters, in sap- phire blue, are equally lovely. PAMELA. (Coprright, 1023.) e Scalloped Tongue. into small pieces and allow to each pint a teaspoonful each and minced parsley. Season with pepper and lemen juice and add a icupful of stock. Put (dish, sprinkle with crumb: butter and bake in the oven. is Having” Has ot = itie aiyly. lmy own. Hero goes: The lady who had Just moved into the | 1. What ls the title of the produc- house next door was out in the yard | flon which made D. W. Grim looking at the rose bushes. “Oh, good 2. Who wrote the scenario for “The mornifg" ahe. veplled, aniling. - Wouf o are to be our little neighbor, aren't BEST WAY TO WASH DOG “Yes,” answered Betty, “and I see you Menu for a Day. have a baby. I think babies are so BREAKFAST. Best way to wash your dog is witl S. cunning. Can I play with yours Stewed Prunes. ‘ S-rmnl’-y Sldp-lf-‘lo.y S«ap‘:lg l’: killl: A SAFE sometimes?" Cereal. fleas and lice, destroys odors and cleanses l “Oh, yes, indeed,” replied the lady. Fresh L Caise thoroughly. Leaves the coat clean, soft “Don’t you want to come into the house Popovers. and fluffy. Does not irritate eyes or skin. omplete | Cut some cold cooked beef tongue | of capers into a baking dot with Coffee. LUNCHEON: Vegetable-Lamb Ple. Cold Slaw. Brown Bread and Butter. Filled Cookies. Cocoa. DINNER. Asparagus Soup. Stuffed Steak with Tomato Cut out the dress and sack, fold back the Saps, and the baby is ready to put on his drst dress, (Copyright, 1623.) —_— The River Jordan has an average fall of fifteen feet to the mile, and its name means-the deacender, inch looped fringe to finish each end Tack the ribbon to the edge of the rasol. Be very careful not to pull the ribbon too tightly. Try opening your parasol before you tack on the trimming. It is nice to have the rib- bon match your best summer frock. Sauce. String_Beans. Pickled Beets. Riced Potatoes. Salted Almonds. Lemon Layer Cake. Coffee. Strictly a high-grade soap, effective also for human use. Sergeant’s Skip-Flea Powder, for dogs and cats—will not irritate or nauseate. Price 25c each, at stores, toilet eporting Eoods Hor, sest Sores Sad pet shepe. Free I)og B_;k Polk Miller's ook bepares . 64 pages on care,feeding and training, with ailment chart I‘Hfl Senator Vest's “Tribute to a Dog.” Write today. = Sergeant's Sure Shot Capsules for worms, 60c; Condition Pills for generalweakness, 60c, There’s also & Sergeant Medicine for every dog ailment. Standard for 50 years. A& Our Free Advice Dep't will asiswer any question about your dog's health free. Polk Miller Drug Co, Inc., 224 Governor St, Richmond, Va. FEATURES, BRADY, M. D, Noted Physician and Author. l {blood an internal secretion called | epinephrin or adrenalin, which seems | to be the spark which insures good | ignition, complete combustion, active metabolism, good health and all that. A momentary increase in the output of epinephrin” occurs under various circumstances and has much to do with the marked influence of emo- tions upon ail functional activity. ing. I hope this may catch the fleet- | Probably the mysterious process of | getting second ‘wind” is merely an Increased secretion of epinephrin un- der the stimulus of exercise which Teachers, whose education has been | enables the. cells of the body to re- | | ceive the increased amount of oxygen they demand. Certainly when a sedentary indoor worker finds him- self_constantly inclined to yawn he | needs some more oxygen; there are | several ways to get it | " Certain individual {istic type know | vagotonia complain of a feeling of to expire fully; actually have asthma are endowed with “large” of a character- to physicians as | inability them some of They pulse rate, spare bulld, cold s and feet, and probably an inefficient adrenal gland system. Their oxi- | cation is’ below par. ey need something to Increas. the oxidation . this is my favorite stopping duces urea, not uric acid, and further | place. But for the sake of varety oxidation of the same matter pro-|well go on with the story. 1 said duces ammonia. Th a there are several w s of getting duced by muscular activit more oxygen. A tank might do very | largely to the production well if one had a rel. of carrlers to lacid as a result of the oxidation of | keep it always at hand. A bi wee of fodin sometimes seems to fill the bill, not more than one drop of tinc- ture of iodin once a day for a month or two each spring and fall, the drop to be taken in a glassful of water The lodin stimulates thyroid glan function and the thyroid internal se- cretion excites the adrenal glands to do their work 1923.) ']E)iztury of Pour Name. BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. MACKINNON VARIATIONS — MacKinney, Mac- Kinning, MacKinven, Love. RACIAL ORIGIN—Scottish. | SOURCE—A Given Name. The Gaelic form of name of 1 Highland clan from which the: jfamily names ar {Mhic Fhionghain It is, apparently, one of the oldest {of the Highland clans, belonging as 11t does to that group of clans which ?had their origin in the ancient Clan | Apline. no longer existent as such iand tracing back to Kenneth MacAl- pin, whose progenitors came over from ] Ireland with the Dalriadic Scots. and who became the first king of a united ‘otland. The chieftain from whom the clan takes its name was Fingon a grandson of Gregor, who was a son of this king. The clan name appears in various ancient documents writ- ten in other tongues than Gaelic as MacFingon, ‘MacFinnon” and “Ma nnon,” the last named spelling ha become the dominant one in more modern times In the uprl out for the Stua The forms MacKinney and Mac- Kining are varjations developed in the lowland among members of the jclan who settled there. In Kintyre the name became Mac- Kinven, whence developed a fanciful render in Gaelic, owing to the | sim of Maclonmhuinn | (pronour . which ia !turn has been Anglicized by its fan- |ciful meaning ir g of 1715 the clan was derived is “Clann | Love-son or Love. | | R NV ST R Isaak Walton mazdaed the {way to one of the most healthful cf sports. Too bad he isn’t here to enjoy a “catch” with his follow- ers—a catch pan—broiled and spread with GICO& The Energy Spread for Bread Served in camp—with Johnny cake spread with Nucoa—uum—! 1 i 1 | i | “Every Tintex “Tint is fashion- able, radiant, <beautiful! i | ! 15 Fashionable Tints e all Drug and Dcpartment Stores i | | 1 i SMOOTH HANDS No Matter What You Dy DAME NATURE CREAM Ends skin dryness or roughness from wind, work, water or age. Remarkable soothing liquid- makes dry, hard kin, soft, weil, delight- fally smooth, fie Kéeps hands smooth prevents withered look . Gor. & Druggists GET it, it Dot, we mail it. DAME NATURE CO.,119 W. 40 5t., N.Y. Use a Good Sauce or None Sauce has a purpose. It brings out the flavor oi your food. A good sauce stimulates appetite, aids digestion and enables you to adjust the skill of a good cook to your individual taste. You must have EA & PERRINS’ SAUCE THE ORIGINAL WORCESTERSHIRE by now savin| For this jam it is nec- essary that each berry be broken up. Therefore, crush about 2 quarts ripe berries in separate por- tions, so that each berry is mashed. This allows fruit to quickly absorb the sugar_during the short boil. Measure 4 level cups (2 ibs.) crushed berries into large kettle, add 7 level cups (3 lbs.) suzar and mix well. Use hot test fire andgstir con- stantly before and while boiling. Boil hard for one full minute. remove from fire and stir in % bottle (scant 13 cup) Certo. From time jam s taken off fire allow to stand not over 5 minutes. by the clock, before pouring. In the meantime skim, and stir_occasionally to cool slightly. Pour quick- CerTO then ly. If in open glasses : 5 parafin at ‘once, CI€ in Douglas-Pectin Corporation ToR for 1o min: o/ ster Dongis Backing Co.. Inc: ve ;0 ster- o ilize tops. Pectin Saies Co., Inc. Use same recipe for Granite Building, Rochester, N. Y. Blackberry, Sopey aspberry R 1Ty Jae ANYONE can make Perfect Jam or Jelly By following a simple CERTO recipe you can 4 make pcrfeaP J at fruit and have a bountiful, varied supply of the most delicious jams and jellies you have ever tasted. With CERTO, jam or jelly- making is delightfully easy and economical. Only one minute’s bmlmgzvteqmred, thus and delicacy of ripe fruit. No re-boil —the right consistency the first time. juice being lost in boiling, you get one-half more jam and jelly at less cost per jar. Contains No Gelatine Nor Preservative by grocers everywhere, or sent postpaid for 35 cents. Recipe Book of 76 recipes wrapped with every bottle. Start in with Strawberries, fruits in season, and make a large supply of Jams and Jellies. the CerTO Process jam or jelly with any the natural color, flavor, fragrance A is a pure fruit product. It is sold follow with other

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