Evening Star Newspaper, June 28, 1923, Page 39

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WOMAN'S PAGE, ——. Boat-Shaped Neck Baby Sleeves BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. “I am no longer young—but I may 8till be charming. When I was young Yyouth was essentlal to charm, but it is different now. A woman need no! longer become passe. She need no longer put away youthtul clothes just because youth has gone.” So says the woman of forty-five. 8he says It now and she has sald something very much like it sinee the Btone age, no doubt. She always feels that it is all quite recent—this possibility for the older woman to charm. She feels that today—always today —the woman of her age may have the advantage over the woman of twenty. She Is wise, however, if she does not wear the clothes that are designed for the woman twenty. Is it now enough to persuade yourself—Mrs. For five—that there are certain fashions, ceftain fabric certain decorations that you may wear that vouth may not? If you te'as your own the elegance c drapery, the dignity of he sumptuousness of beautiful , of jet, or of plumed hats— beautiful things too stately for a girl to wear—are You not willing to leave for her the ruffled afd flounced and scalloped skirts, the looped ribbons, WRITTEN AND of ! the bowknots, pink roses and baby sleeves? Beldom has there been such a dis- | tinet line beétween the styles that the Frefich call “jeune filla” and over which they lay for the older woman a warning that reads: “Danger ahead, | B0 ®low"-—and the other styles that | we refer to as “matronly.” | Beware of the boat-shaped neck- { line, says a dressmaker of more than ordinary wisdom yhen advising older customers. Also¥avoid the “line of decapitation,” the round collariess effect. Anq Miwaws avold pink foses<on your hat or in your hair or as orna- ment to your gown. If you must buy them, buy them for your daugh- ter or for some.one €lse's daughter. You may think it charming—the frock shown In the sketch—but if you are on the plump side of twenty-five don't try to wear one like it. 1It's light pink satin crepe with silver lace, and it is trimmed with pink ribbons, and it has baby sleeves, and it has the bateau neckline—so be- wate. It ls a thing for youth. (Copyright, 1023.) Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL. The Family Luggage. As July and August—the nation’s vacation months —approach it be- hooves the housewife to get out the tamily luggage and make it present- able for its summer travels. Suit cases, vallses, trunks, large handbags, hat boxes and week end cases will all need dusting, perhaps a thorough cleaning and oiling, and possibly a bit of mending in case a strap has broken or a gash has been made In the sur- face. The care of good leather is one of the Algns of a goofl housekeeper. - To make heavy leatMer waterproof and keep It soft, pliable and glossy, there isn't anything better than neat’s-foot oil. Rub this ofl thoroughly Into calfskin bags, hamper covers and heavy walking shoes if you would | keep” them in good condition. A cleansing, softening cream may be made of neat's foot-oll blended ~with ¢ melted laundry soap and rubbed to & smooth paste. 8uit cases, valiges or trunks of pat- ent leather or any highly polished | leather may be made to look like new by the application of no less an arti- cle than the shiny hat varnishes that come in bottles for the brightening up of old straw hats. These concoc- tiong excel any preparation I know of {Tor refinishing battered, marred, soll- ed luggage of glossy leather. It flows on freely without leaving any brush marks, dries instantly and lasts fot two or three vears. Several years ago 1 gave a coat of navy blue hat polish to a handsome wardrobe trunk that had been on many hard trips and voyages. It was dulled, smeared with ink and chalk marks, sdratched bad- 1y and looked in general like a_hard- worked scldier just out of the trenches. The chalk marks and ac- tual dirt were wiped off, the hat pol- ish applied. and an hour later the trunk looked as if it had just come | olit of the store. .The dull black leather finish of many of this season's suit cases and | bags 1s more difficult to freshen suc- {ceratully. One woman of my ac- quaintance treated hers to a coat of | fast black dve put on with a brush, | allowed to dry and then rubbed with | & soft cloth to remove the superfiuous | dried dye. This does not crack ot rub {9 on her garments and has no shiny finish. 1LLUSTRATED By Elsre Tohunsan Sir Arthur Conan Doyle says that life after death is certain. That is & supremely interesting statement and one which we'd all llke to see proved. The comments which this statement have aroused are almost as Interesting as the original theory, Strangely enough, there are many Who resent su¢h a contention. “It borders on sacrilege!” they say, “There would be no ground for faith it we could prove that there is life after death, for faith only exists in the face of the unseen and unproven. If you destroy faith you destroy re ligion, faith being the essence of re- WERE NOT NECES~ SARILY ANGELS AFTER WERE ligton. Therefote, all this dabblin in spiritualism is wrong. We shoul simply believe, not try to know.” Such an argument kcems to me to BEAUTY CHATS Reduction Warnings. In one way or another we have talked the need of reducing—tor who wants to be fat these active days? But we haven't talked much about the dangers of reducing. For there are dangers, though easily avolded ones. Buppose you weigh 180 pounds at about forty years, and your {ideal ‘welght, according to insurance tables, ehould be 135 or go. And suppo you have been fat for a great many vears. Woell, all those dellcately ad- justed orgens inelde the stomach and abdomen, organs of digestion, liver, kidneys and-so on, are held in pos! tion by this great amount of f (Of course they're held, too, by the natural structure of the body.) Now, it yo! e this flesh too suddenly there’'s danger that some of these organs may grow slightly out of place—this is very untechnical; a physician will give it to you with proper detall; I merely want to make my point as briefly as possible. B2t slow reduction will do away with this dsnger—eay, two pounds oft each week—and exerclse will strengthen the body so that the m: es and cords, and so on, will hold przfierly. Drastle reduction, too, upsets the digestion. I know of on cass where a woman took almo: nothing but ds to reduce, and so ruined her stomach that It would not take proper food when she tried to eat normally again. She went down five or more pounds a week and | be both fgnorant and fanatical. Why | should we confound the discussion of { a possible future life with “religion”? | The future life would not necessarily { function on a purely religious plane any more than the presént life.” A religious attitude might animate & man “over there,” just as it might animate him ere, ‘but there is no more reagon to think that such a life would jbe composed of “religious in- terests” alone than to contend that life tn New York or Chicago or 8an Antonlo is 80 programmed. Our brains here go Oh numbers of curious, wholesome adventures, which are not of purely spiritual signifi~ cance. Why should not those older braing of ours also have their diverse interests and eccentricities? We are not necessarily angels after we're dead. .We may etill be the same old Bill Brown or Mary White, with a corned-beef complex and heaven a long way off. This insistence on the narrowly re- ligious significance of the future life proves a grave obstacle to study. 1t there is a future life we want to know about It and we do not want to be deterred in our search by supersti- tious scruples. The contention that such knowledge would destroy falth is such a seruple. As a matter of fact, the future life is only one of the concerfs of faith. Faith does not depend on any one cir- cumstance. It is a general attitude, which reaches out for help to some power beyond ourselves. The proof of immortality should have no more effect on such an attitude than the discovery of a cure for cancer. Life must be attacked from many angles, and the sooner we begin to attack the subject of a future life from the angle of common sense and cold science, rather than mysticfsm, the sooner we'll drrive at some sane conclusion. (Copyright, 123. BY EDNA KENT FORBES | looked seventy when she was only forty. But she was foolish about re- ductlon. Two pounds a week is a safe rate. ——— My Neighbor Says: Keep in your work basket large sized safety pins, and ut to string loose buttons, hooks, eyes. éte. Keep those of the same slze on the same pin, black hooks on black ins, white eyes on white pins, eto. n doing sb you will never have an untidy workbasket or be delayed by not bLeing able to find at _once what you are looking for. Fasten the safety pins to one side of the lining of your basket, and method of secur- ing neatness will be complete. rAL¥AYS 8Weep rugs the way the nap Ink stains, a rule, are rather difficult to eradicate, but the follow- ing simple directions will succeed in restoring the material to its natural oolor. Spread the yolk of new-lald ©EK over the stains and let it remain for about ten minutes; then plunge the fabric into bolling water and aHow it to soak for & short time. ‘When taken out rub* the marks thoroughly, and all traces of ink, 1 whether quite recently or of long duration, will entirely disappear. oCanned frults should be kept in a cold, dark and dry place *When choosing a lobster, take one with the tall curled tightly to th body, as thip is & sign that it fresh. il veral them THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, JUNE 28 1923. } Bistorp of Pour Name. | RY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. MACLURE VARIATIONS~—McClure, Macl Leod. RACIAL ORIGIN—Norse.Scottish, SOURCE—A given name. It's hard to know whether to class this Highland Scottish name as Scot- tish, Norweglan or Irieh, because in a fense it is each one of them, Beginning as the old Norse given name of “Leold,” it beoame the name of two Highland clans as MacLeod, was taken to Ireland, where It be- came Maclure, and was brought back to Scotland in that form. “Leold” was a son of Olave, a brother of Magnus, the last king of Man, for fairly early in the Christian era the Vikings had donquered and established themselves along the western coast of England and Scot- land. His ancestry traced back through six generations to Harold the Black, who was king of the Norsemen about the time the Normans invaded England. There are two branches of the clan he founded, the Macloeds, or, if you choose to call them so, thé two clans. One of these is known in Gaellc as ‘8tol Tormod™ (Clan Norman, or Nor- manson), and the other as “Siol Tor- quil” (Thurkildson), though in Eng- lish they are referred to as the Mac- leods of Harris and the Macleods of Lewls After their defeat at the battle of Worcester, certain of the Macleods of Harris fled to the north of Ireland, where the tendency was to pronounce the “fnal “d" in their hanfe as an “1," thus giving “Macleor,” or Ma- clure. In this form the name re- turned to Galloway In the seven- teenth century. The Funny-Face Clown. Trumpets, drums, horses, fine la- dles! Such a procession you never saw as the one Billy and Betty Cut- out rode in. “Oh, that funny, funny clown!” roared the children on the sidewalk. Nobody guessed who was a drummefr yesterday, for goodness! how different he looked in his mask with a long putty nose and bright orange hair like a real comedian! * The remarks he made were side- splitting and the colors of his gaudy clown suit caused everybody to rock with laughter; his coat was green, striped trousers blue, derby brown, and tie red! When he got to the middle of the block he changed his face to that of 2 bald-headed clown with red dots on the cheeks. ‘The costume luflh over Freddie's drum- mer suit, the dotf lines of his leg being out g0 that his leg hangs over the side of !h; t and the bi mm& llv"l. " ow o o ‘g0t an the foal and.the clown suit toyether: Watch for more of the great parade temorrow. (Copyright, lm.l “Just Hats” By Vyvyan Pieces of Four and Pieces of Eight Those early birds that flew across the ocean and back, all before the middle of June time, say that the newest crowns are coming in sec- tions—sections of four and eight. Here is a little hat In striped eilk |with & erown in_four sections, each section bound In cherry-colored cording. Of course, this model is rather bizarre, in that the crown is squarish. The majority of the new crowns men- tioned are well rounded to the head. But this little thing was seen dash- ing along a boulevard and was thought rather novel. Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST Cantaloupe Dry cereal with cream Parsl melet Coftes cake: "t com LUNCHEON Salmon and pea salad Crisp rolls pe cutrants One-egg cake Toed tea DINNER Tomato boulllon Baked beet loaf Asplo Jelly String beans eén peas and etmc': Gooseberry fool ftee Learn a Bird a Day By Lucy Warner Maynard CHJMNEY SWIFT. Chimney Swift; Chimney Swallow: Chaetura pelagica Length about 514 inches. Qentral color, sooty; throat whit- ish. Wings long and slender; tail short and tipped with spines. Resident (abundant) from April 15 to October 16; winters in Central America. “Few sights in the bird world are more familiar than the bow-and-ar- row-like forms of these rapidly fly-| silhouetted against the (Chapman). It is interesting to watch a flock at dusk circling about a big chimney, into which, with a twit-| tering goodnight to the darkening world, they drop one by one, until the last has disappeared. b BEDTIME STORIES The Grouse Family Also Feasts. The more one knows the better Atted [o c0 ith people quicker witted S —Mrs. Grouse. makes it her busine to know all about her neighbors. She doesn’t meddle in their affairs. Oh, my, no! No, indeed. She isn't that kind. She absolutely. But she considers it a part of her business to know all that can be found out about her neigh- bore. Such knowledge is useful some- times. In the,case of Mrs. Grouse it is useful very often. Now, Mrs. Grouse had known Bus- ter Bear ever since he came to the Green Forest to live. She had known Mrs. Bear ever since she came to the Green Forest to live. She had watch- ed their twins, Boxer and Woof- Woof, growing up. And now that there was a set of triplets in the family she knew just what to expect. Mrs. Grousé® knew that Bears pull over a great many -logs and tear apart a _great. many rotted old stumps. More than ohce she had picked up a good meal just by fol- lowing Buster or Mother Bear,' and pigking up the ants and insects which they did not bother_with, after hav- ing torn open an old stump or rolled over an old log. So now Mrs. Grouse led her twelve bright-eyed babies in the direction Mother Bear and the triplets had taken. When she got near enough to hear little whines and grunts of plemsure as they licked up ants she told her bables to hide. As soon as she was satisfled that they were safely hidden she flew up in & tree where she could look down and see what was going on. The round, bright little eyes of Mrs. Grouse twinkldd as they saw Mother Bear ‘and the triplets licking up the ants, which were angrily pour- ing out from the castle In the big mound Into which Mother Bear had thrust oné of. her paws. “They won't get all of them,” sald Mrs. Grouse to herself. “They won't get all of them. They won't have pa- tience to stay to get all of them. When tRey move on there will still be a great many afts running about Mre. Grous The Weeper. “Pussy” was the youngest of flve children. She was a scrawny child, much given to weeping.» The others were healthy, hearty creatures, who talked at the top of their lungs, slammed doors, muddied the halls and littered the furniture with their | “things,” ran errands for the neigh- bors and waited cheerfully on thelr mother. But ther’s pet. She shadowed him. sat beside father at table, in church, in the car. ®hen one of the others claimed the privilege Pussy wept and father said, “Never mind.” She's the youngest. Don't make your sister cry.” nis aldn't make the others happy in their minds régarding Pussy as one might wish. Richard crinkled his face in exact imitation of hers preparing for a week, pointed a pro- voking finger at his eye and the rest laughed. Pussy wept and ran crying to her father, “Dick’s making fun of .. “Dick! Come into the house! You ought to be ashamed of yourself making a little girl cry! Your own o ! Shame on you) sald mother, 1Ple e eat he doctor ald you must not eat at your vegetables wit] off her chair and on strokang her hair and saying: ever mind the old doctor. Just eat what you like. There, there!” “Pussy, stand on_ both your The firet 'thing you know you'll have that foot all out of shape. Stand straigh “00-00-00,” Wept Pussy, “I'm go- [y | There are many | chimneys in and about the city which are the summer homes of swifts, and out in the coun- t there are but few old ones un- ovcupled by them. . Swifts ure pe- | culiar in never perching as other birds do, but hang themselves up |against the brick or stone wall of a «himney by catching their claws into a crevice and using the short, stift tail as a prop. | The nest Is a basket of twigs fast- | pned together and against the wall | with glutinous saliva. They gather the material for it on the wing. breaking off dead twigs with beak or feet. The cggs, four to six, are pure white, as in the hidden home no pro- tective markings are needed. A swift's nest in a section of old chimney may bw seen at the Smith- v!Umlflr\. (Copyright, L. W. Maynard.) By Thornton 'W. Burgess. I think the ba- st her kept watch until Mother Bear and the triplets moved on. Then she hurried back to her bables. Hardly were the Bears out of sight when Mrs. Grouge and her |gutside their cast) bies will haveea fe So Mre. Grouse minds her own' business |. SO MRS. GROUSE KEPT WATCH UNTIL MOTHER BEAR AND THE TRIPLETS MOVED ON. ltwelve babies appeared in the open- ing where was that mound of sand which was the home of the ants. Everything was as Mrs. Grouse had expected it to be. Ants were still angrily running this way and that way, looking for the enemy who had disturbed their home. The babies saw them at once, of course. Such bright little eyes couidn’t have missed those scurrying ants, They gathered arouna that mound and_then busily fell to plcking up every ant they saw. They ran eagerly this ‘way and that way, searching for such ants as had strayed away, and they missed very few. Such a good timp as they had! And such a feast! When at last Mrs. Grouse led her family away it was with a most satis- fled air. “Those Bears gave us a fright,” sald she, “but they've paid for it. Yes, sir, they've pald for it, |We've had ‘a fgast where we would have found only a few bites, had not those beafs stirred up that nest of ants. I guess we are even with them now. Yes, sir, I guess we are even with them now.” (Copyright, 1928, by T. W. Burgess). ing to tell father that you're all the time scolding me. 00-00-00." (that was her rcal name), said the teacher, “put both book as I told you. I can't allow you to grow ‘lop-sided.” “00-00-wow,” wept Pussy. going to tell my father on you.” “Indeed,” said the teacher, grimly. “There’s nothing like having some- thing to tell while you're about it! In the meantime you'd better learn that we have no time for howlers here. The study room is empty. You can have it all to yourself and cry as loud and as long as you wish. Out you g Pussy sat In the quiet room and wept a few weeps and then busied herselt with the roader she had car- ried to exile. Soon the teacher called her and said: “Have you finished | weeping? Are_you ready to work with this class?” “Yes,” said Pussy. Now the weeper wept only for father. The teacher had no trouble with her and the brothers ahd sis- ters were free from her tyranny until father came home. “That's some- thing,” they said. The best curé for a weeper—one who weeps to an audience—is to de- prive him of the audience. Give him no sympathy. ‘Withhold the thing he cries for. Hand him a handkerchief. (Copyright, 1923.) Cherry Sherbef. Remove the stones from a can of ‘white, red or black cherries, and press the cherries ugh a sleve, reserving the juice. dd two cup- ls of thin svrup and the unbeaten *whites of two eggm Freeze and serve in glasses. “r'm your feet on the floor and hold your ; There was & Kut Up Komedy er- reund at the Little Grand Sattiday aftirnoon, and pop was smoking and thinking, saying, I thawt I mite go to the ball game today, but I think 1 wont, no, I wont, sutch I8 the power of thawt. Mo thinking, G, heets a good chance. And I sed, Well pop, if you aint going to the game wy dont Nou take me to the movies, wy dont you? Wont you pop, will you, I sed. 1 mite at that, nop Bed, and ma sed, §, lnink that boy is seeing Intirely 00 meny moving picktures, he'll rane his imagination or something. Imposaible, theres nuthing like imagination and if Benny seems to have a tendency tords imagination 1 think we awt to Incourage it, pop ded, and ma sed, Hee hee, that re- minds me of something, hee hee hee. Lets heer it, theros nuthing more unsociable than keeping a joke to vourself, pop sed, and ma sed, Well I was jest thinking theres nuthing rong with Bennvs imagination as far as thats conserned, hee hee, this norning wile you were taking your shower and singing, if you could call it singing—- Kindly stick to the essentials, pop sed, and ma sed, Enyway, wile you were In there spiashing afd exerciz- ing your voice Benny started to wawk up and down the hall outside imitgting one of these men in ‘frunt of a nldeshow, saying. Step this way Iadies and gents, to our rite we hav the original wiid mans of Borneo, dont be afrald. he's only tawking In hig pative landwidge and beeides he cant get out of his cage. He was born in the jungles and educated by munkeys and he eats them alive. Hee hep I thawt I'd die. ma sed. I doft call that imagination, thate more like impudents, pop sed. Mo thinking, Aw heck. now he wont take me 1o the movies. Wich he dident. Gingham Frock. Patterns for this snappy little model are cut in sizes sixteen years, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust measure. For the dréss In the 36-inch size, you will need 3% yards of 36:inch material and % of a yard 36-Inch white organdie, batiste or lawn for vest, collar and cuffs. This is also an excellent model for tissue gingham, printed lawn or ratine. Price of pattern, 15 cents, if post- e stampx only. Orders should be dressed to The Washington Star ttern Bureau, 22 East 18th street, w York city, Please write name d address clearly. Mint Sherbet. Mix the juice of two oranges and four lemons with six tablespoonfuls of sugar syrup, using four table- spoonfuls of the mixture over each glassful of shaved ice. Place some sprigs of mint on top of the ice and fill the glasses with mineral water. a n P: a The 0ld Gardener Says: Do not be afrald to take long stems when cutting your roses. This advice is intended more particularly for gardeners who are growing the hybrid thas. The hybrid perpetuals, with a few exceptions Iike Gruss_and_Teplitz and Frau Karl Druschki, do better if cut back hard after the June burst of bloom. Such treatment, with the addition of bone meal or well rotted manurc, will induce another display of flowers in the fall. | i Wrinkles Smoothed Away Like Magic by New Cream Marvelous Discovery Guar- anteed to Remove Every Line and Wrinkle HOUSANDS of women, whose beauty ‘was once spoiled by unsightly lines and wrinkles, now possess entirely new complexions—complexions wonderfully fresh and youthful, and free from even the slightest trace of wrinkl These women owe their present youthful beauty to a wunderful new discovery—a discovery which smoothed away every line and wrinkle as it by magic. This new treatment i ed Domino Wrinkle Cream. It works on an entirely mew plan. It | goes right to the cause of wrinkles, re- moves it, and as it does so each wrinkie is gently Iifted away. It's almost mi- raculous. Even after the first few days the face appears years younger looking. Why let wrinkles add age to yoar face | when they can now be banished 8o easily? Domino Wrinkle Cream is GUARANTEXD to banish every line and wrinkle—or your money {i ntly refunde A speclal bank deposit of $10,000 ,protects this ‘guarantee, #0_you risk nothin h:“ordyln‘ it, Get it today. Sold at all drug end_ de- rtment etores, wuch us all Peoples Drug tores, O'Donnéil's Drug Stores, 8. Kann Sons Co.—Advertisement. R o When you wash children's hair be careful what you use. Mhny soaps and prepared shampoos con. tain too much free alkali, which is very injurious, as it dries the scalp and makes the hair brittle. * The best thing to use is Mulsified co- coanutoil shampoo, for this is pure and entirely greaseless. It is inexpensive and beats anything else all to pieces. Two or three teaspoonfuls is all that is required. Simply moisten the "Don’t Spoil Your Child’s Hair by Washing | hair with water and rub it in. I | makes an abundance of ich, creamy | lather, which cleanses _thoroughly, and rinses out easily. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and is soft, fresh looking, bright, fluffy, wavy and easy to manage. Besides, it loosens and takes out every particle of dust, dirt and dandruff. Yoy can get Mulsified cocoanut ol shampoo at any drug store, and a few Gunces will last for months. Winter May Seem Far Away— : But the Fuel Problem Isn’t It is the heavy traffic on the railroads NOW that may cause winter., the fuel shortage next The more. shipping in the summer, the fewer cars available for hauling reserve fuel. The less fuel stored now—the greater tHe shortage to come. NOW THE COKE SUPPLY IS ADEQUATE, Just now there is a solidation By-Product C sufficient quantity of Con-- oke on hand to prevent any discomfort next winter. Can be used satisfac= torily in hot-air furnaces, plants, cook stoves and much less than anthracite coal. , hot=water plants, steam latrobes. Now costs Consolidation By-Product Coke should not be confused with gas-house coke. Phone your coal dealer TODAY—if he can not supply you promptly, communicate with us. "THE CONSOLIDATION, COAL COMPANY INCORPORATED Union Trust Baildin, g—Washington, D. Cu ‘W. A. Leetch, Manager. MUELLER’S EGG NOODLE PUDDING Serve Hot or Cold Yow'll Never Belisve Dessert This Is 1 paciage Mueller's Wide etitine. 3 exgs, 1 lemon (gra 3 apples (cut in slices), 3§ te Method: Boil Egg Noodies Cream putter and sugar, add e Whata Delicions Unnil You Tvy It mNafll&lmmr. 24 cup butter or sub- cup raisins, *5 cup walnuts (chopped) n salt. salt), 5 minutes and drais (with 1 teas Temon riod, ralsins, walnut, apples & it. Mix thoroughly with loodles. Pour into a well greased LRy A S Ll ‘Tear out this recipe and save it! ©C.F.M.Co. Don’t Let the Washboard Make . You OLD Don’t wearyourself out“knuckling” the dirt out of clothes. Chase-0O washes and blues clothes, without in15 minutes—no rubbing. with bar soap—powder or means an easier, quicker, wash and a saving on soap. hard water soft. A-1 MANUFACTURING CO., streaks, Chagt-O flakes— cleaner Makes Philadelphia Use Chase-O in Your Washing Machine scribing new u: this famous mustard,ie packed in each carton with bottle and paddie. For Eveyy Meal in the Week — there’s a use for FRENCH'S MUSTARD. Whether it's for the breakfast sausage; bacon and eggs; grilled chops; dinner with its meats, sauces and entrees; or for luntheon sandwiches and salads, you need FRENCH'S MUSTARD in the kitchen and on the table. It’s the perfect prépnred mustard-for use in cooking as well as on foods. Backed by 87 years’ experience_ Ask Your Grocer Made only by The R. T. French Company Rochester, N. Y. Be sure it's French's Exp_eriericed AdvertisersPrefer The Star A

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