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- WOMA New Wraps fo ] If you have ever played hostess to a Frenchman or a French woman you know with what concern they regard & draft—a current of air, as we would literally translate their way of say- ing it. Your true French woman can wear with apparent comfort thinner clothes on a damp, cool day, and warmer clothes on a warm day than American. She is more of a stoic in the matter of clothes. If she is dressed to suit the occasion she can stand a little less or more clothes without a murmur. Only she does hate a draft She hates them but she finds them Indispensable. American hostesses , kindly notice—for Amerfcan = women finding drafts as necessary. “It was a fairly warm when the Bob Joneses ga and dance, but the guests were seated at small_tables placed in the dining room and two drawing rooms. With doors and windows left open, quite a draft was created. so that many o the women wore their light evening raps over their shoulde “At_the reception to meet Mr. and Mrs. Robinson, given at the .country club. the receiving line stood in the spacious hall. where the draft made it necessary for many of the ladies to_keep their wraps You may have read such comment many times this summer. And you may have dined at some restaurant where folk foregather on warm sum- mer evenings and you may have been surprised to see some woman on en- tering signify to her escort a table placed directly in a draft. possibly ushed by the breezes of an electric fan. Of course the woman was wearing charming vening wrap. or an evening wrap which “she thought charming. It is charming evening wraps that are re- take eveni: s for drafte. e and tactful hostess you'll ma o pro- vide a draft at vour next party for the benefit of the women invited who possess wraps they wish to display It must be a gentle draft. remem. her. because these charming wraps are not proof against real wind Were they more substantial they would not be so becoming. It s their lightness and effervescence that make them o attractive. Even when fur trimmed they are in part tran: Parent 8o as not to mask too closely the shoulders over which they are thrown,. Sometimes that make: L it is a the draft s mong the s Wraps with ms to rfectly anish shawl » popular, for seanon's best- these embroidery. but be swinging to plain crepe an | are | their dinner | enor- | new enthusiasm | N’'S PAGE. r Evening Wear BY ANNE RITTE! | | THIS 1S ONE OF THE CAPES THAT MAKE A DRAFT INDISPENSABLE TO THE SUCCESSFUL HOSTESS. 1T IS MADE OF ORANGE YELLOW AND SALMON PINK VOILE NINON, IN LAYERS NE_OVER T} OTHER. IS TRIMMING | OF GOLD LACE, AND THE COL- LAR IS A RUFFLE OF THE G LACE UPHELD BY PINK ROS! weighted with long fringe Collars of lace, sometimes rose Ilrmm\ed, have taken precedence for | the monce of collars of fur. The cape | shown in the sketch has a collar of \rufflus of lace accented with pink | roses. The cape itself is of two la lers of crepe, ome in salmon and one in n'rflngu-\l'ilh gold lace embellish- ment. isten,World ! By Clsie Tobinsan Betty of Burkburnett. Texas. asked me to write an article affected people. S here goes. I went to a tea room vesterday. I am not a tea-room addict, having been has on brought up in one of those families where you expected at least three helpings of corn beef and cabbage— and got 'em. But this tea room was the nearest place at my lunch hour and I took a chance. A charming Young person brought me food. It was pretty food. Real pretty. As a square meal, however, it was merely passementarie. Being Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL. A Garden Kneeling Mat. While early spring is the time when the amateur gardener spends most at her time on her knees sowing seeds, transplanting seedlings, and moving no lady. I am. perchance, mo judge of such matters. However. there was one article to which I'm going to give free publicity. That article was the potato. At least, I think - it was potato. But it was a long, time since that potato had left home. and what a lot of things it had learned in the city! It was mashed and minced and molded and flavored with everything from a dill pickle to | eau de cologne. Heaven knows what the personality | of that potato had been to begin with. | If it had followed its natural bent it | might "have been a regular Liloyd George among potatoes. But when that cook xot through with . | tasted just Tike biting into a lad |lace handkerchief. 1t was a nickel's worth of nothing, that's what it was, valuable neither an article of food nor an object d'art. Now. I like potatoes—piain potatoes that don’t pretend to be truffes or orchids or caviare. There's nothing nobler in the whole bill of fare than an honest potato, nothing more con- | vincing and efficient. Every potato has a message to express which is all its own. If it expresses that message it is as worthy of a niche in West- minster as Shakespeare. But If it | wastes its opportunity in a vain at- | | tempt to ook like a night blooming cereus; it has cheated the Providence | that invented spuds. | ,And so now we come to talk on | affected people. But there's very i =Ihule more to say. For the lesson of e | ity. Most of us are spuds. spuds. Thats enougn. ‘A pofato Is & power. but there’s nothing mo piti- | ful and silly and doggoned irritating | than a spud that tries to be something that it isn't. That's all Bacon Wisdom. refrigerator and should not become moist. For this reason the package containing bacon should never be | placed next to the ice. 1 Usually a pound of choice package | bacon, ready sliced, goes further than | a pound of uncut bacon., because it | is difficult to cut it at home as thin | as it can be cut by machinery at the | packing houses. i If You must cut vour own bacon be | sure that your knife is very sharp. | The bacon should be taken from the ' refrigerator v cold and cut at! ollcc.h“l]] ‘;Iou try to cut it when it is not chilled you will find it m: difficult. e Do not start frying bacon untll you can give it your undivided atten- | tion. Bacon will not fry itself. but must be watched constantly to see ! that each piece is done evenly. As the pileces are done to a turn they should be 1ifted from the frying pan and placed on a platter or serving | dish in a warm place. They should not be left to soak in the grease in the frying pan. If you cannot give the bacon your undivided attention, cook it in the oven. “Just Hats” By Vyvyan A Voile Trim. long | | stamps only. Me and Puds Simkins wi along tawking about diffrent subjecks sutch as ware you get the biggest ice cream cones and wich would be the easiest deth in case you had to die, and all of a suddin some kid standing | in a parler window made a fearse face at me and I sed, Hay, who's that kid think he is, I bet I can lick him, the darn kid. Who, ware? Puds sed. Rite there in that parler window. I sed, and Puds Jooked and jest then the kid' made a even fearser face, me say- ing. G. he jest made one at you, good nite, the nerve of that. I wont stand for eny kid that size making a face at me, Puds sed. Darn it I will either, 1 sed. “And I yelled, Come on ®ut heer and do that it you' want to get killed alive. Come out heer and 11l fite you with one hand behind my back and one eye shut. Puds velled. The kid not saying enything. jest making 3 more fearse faces in a row, and Puds yelled, You do that once more and 11l come in there and get you without waiting for you to come out. And 111 come in with him and you"ll never have the ambition to make an- other face, 1 yelled. And the kid kepp on_making more faces at us and me and Pudds kepp on velling at him wat we was Eoing to {do to him, and some little gerl came up saving, Hay, he aint making faces at vou. hé's making them at himself, he's got a nerviss habit -and he use teo be even worse. its a nerviss habit. Well its a good thing for him it is, I sed, and Puds sed. You jest saved his life by telling us that. kepp on wawking d shio |7§ orecdast L4 Annabel ‘woerthngton Serviceable and Attractive. { | i A good house dress style is onme iwhich can be made easily, economic- {ally, is easy o launder, practical for This model answers all five requisites. Whether or not, you need another potato is the lesson of all human- | morning dress right now, you should | {1s the best possible and you will be iglad to use it sooner or later. | pattern cuts in sizes 35, 40 and |inches bust measure: size 36 roquire {3% vards of 36-inch material and 51 { yards of binding. { The model this drawin 1" {could use gingham, cretonne or cham- bray with equally good results. You | could probably complete the garment in an afternoon at very little expense. Price of pattern, 15 centa, in postage Orders should be ad- dressed to The Way Kton Star Pat- tern Bureau, 22 East 18th York city. Please write dress clearly. MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN Picnic Meals. One mother says: Children whose appetites lag in hot weather should be allowed to eat as voung plants to better positions, vet | «dere is one garden task that must ve attended to the summer through— and that is weeding. By this time of vear the hardy plants and tall an- nyals have attained such strength that the weeds cannot choke them out, but the weeds have grown tall and lusty as well, and they must be re- moved if our garden beds are to look neat and well cared for. Moreover, by next month the gar- den_ lover ‘must begin to plan her next year's garden. She will want to move plants that have finished blooming and put them in their new homes. so that they will establish root adjustment before winter comes. All this means that there must be much bending and kneeling, and we all know what this does to faithful backs and knees. The thoughtful de- signers and manufacturers, therefore, have produced for our comfort a gar- den kneeling mat of soft, pliable Chinese rush, padded so deeply that the knees sink into it as into'a pil- low. It has & waterproof bottom, so that it ‘ma¥ rest in the wettest grass ‘without ‘Mufl the dampness throdgh to 'the < smock or 3 e ! e many meals as possible out-of-doors, elther on the porch or in the yard. 1 bought a tray for each of us, and these each. one fills up from the kitchen table and carries out to the garden swing. This makes the “picnic” no bother for me, as we all clear up our own things. (Copyright, 1933.) — ey herry Ambrosia. Take the pulp of.a ripe pineapple. Shred finely and sprinkle with granu- lated sugar. To this add a quart of very ripe cherries which have been stoned, two bananas sliced and two limes cut in small pleces. Either I plain or carbonated 'water may be A satin model trimmed in a sash of finest voile, tied at the side and edged with lace. The above hat happens to be black and white; but a copy worked out in navy, with. th dipped in a faint violet hiue? :v.l:g matching facing, would be charming. ——————————— stockings. and a guard around the front to keep flying dirt from soiling one’s skirt, as the busy trowel does its work. This kneeling mat, which is very inexpensive, will be of special con- venience mext. spring, when the hardest work of the gardemer Is to be done, S 5 added just before serving. Baked Stuffed Quemben. /Peel two cucumbers, split léngth. wise and take out the seeds. Make stufing of soft bread crumbs mixed with melted butter and salt, cayenne and grated onion to season. Fil] the cucumbers and bake until brown, ‘basting with hot water or stock and melted butter. . Wages linld to compositors and ressmen in Buenos Alre Rio de laneiro and other of the large cities of South America are only about Balt the remuneration recetyed by mem e same ci n the United States. and Canada. > b3 i And we | 'house work, and attractive enough for | presentation to the unexpected caller. | The | was made | Bacon should always be kept in the | from was made of percale, but you | i How One Girl “Made” the Screen. A bathing suit! A letter of introduyction! A Broadway stage success! All of these have been the various ! mediums by which pretty girls have |gotten on the screen. There have been other: cours®: too, of Beihg a star's sister or MARIE CAMPBELL USED HER TYPEWRITER AS A MOVIE SPRINGBOARD. brother, cousin, best friend or mother. Marrying a director, cameraman. Any number traneous ways and means. But Marle Campbell reached screen via the typewriter. She told a friend of mine about it of ex- the Battl 3 had four vears' dramatic coach- ing when 1 was in the Waco High Era. Peter Has to Give Up. Don’t boast of what you mean to do, Dut walt uatil you've made it true —Danny Meadgw Mouse. Peter Rabbit knew that he really Mouse where his new home was. was too personal a question It of any of the little people of Danny refused to tell him where that home was. But Peter's curlosity mit him to be satisfled with Just knowing that I nny had a hew home. ows to prevent one from looking for Ithe home o nother. 11 right for you. Danny. id Peter. “All right for you. that home is, I'll find The little eyes of Danny Meadow Mouse twinkled. “That's fair enough, Peter,” said he. yIf you can find it. 1 won't have a wdrd to say. Excuse me now. please, for.I have a great deal to do. and T have gossiped long enough Danny dodged back into his private little path which was almeost like a little tunnel through the tall grass He was out of sight before Peter could blink his eves. Peter sprang {after him, but Danny had disappeared. Tt was just as if that grase had swal- {lowed him. The grass was so tall that ! Peter couldn’t follow Danny's private {little_paths. After the first jump or two Peter had no idea at ail where those paths were. He knew there {must be more than ome. Danny {Meadow Mouse always has a lot of jlittle paths leading {n all diréctions. ! But he couldn't find them because the |grass was so tall that it wholly icovered them. - Peter sat still and listened. hoping jthat he might hear Danny running ialong one of them. But he didn't | He sat up and watched sharply, hop- ling to uee the grass move where Danny was running. But he didn’t Peter began to feel foolish. He Plain | obtain a pattern of this style for # !wished that he hadn't boasted that {he would find Danny’s home. But To Pass Is Too Frequently to Fail. | About one-third of all school chil- dren are subjects of malnutritien: of all who are malnourished the majority {are the children of familles in com- fortable financlal circumstances. Such a very common condition is ignored by parents and physicians in many cases: since the child is not sick in bed or not under the care of a doctor. he is considered fair game for every- Ihody to pick on. If he falls behind in his school studies, more pressure Is _used at home and in school. If he { fails, he 1s probably deemed “lazy.” It he passes, it is probably at grave t to his subsequent health. From the ranks of malnourished children wrongly treated or managed are re- crulted life's failures and misfits, neuroties and physical wrecks. The examination of recruits for Army service showed barely 50 per cent of the young men of the country physi- cally fit; all of these unfit young men Were school children Yesterday. many of them malnourished, but it was no- ‘s concern. Ibogia'erwelgnt in proportion to height is only one of the signs of malnutri- tion. “The malnourished child is irri- table, tires easily, has poor physical and mental endurance and is some times neglected on the theory that | he or she. is “nervous” like mother or some other member of the family. Often there are lines under the eyes, palior, “kernels” oR the sides of the Patie or enlarged tonsils or adenolds. An important sign is faulty posture, especially fatigue posture; that is. an appearance similar to the stoop which ocours in elderly persons from muscu- Jar weakness, instead of the vigorous, brect posture of the normal child. Frequent posture changes in malnu- | trition are round shoulders, flat chest, llnenl curvature of the spine (one r higher than the other). shoulder, prominent sagging stomach and pronated feet (weak ankles) et. flak ‘:ommon mistake of well-to-do parents, once they are awakened to Phe ‘fact that a child is malnourished. {s that the child will do better in some other climate. 1If any journey is undertaken- with this purpose it is usually futile, for the child returns With little evidence of progress unless the fundamental cause of the condi- tion has been sought and remedied. The fundamental cayse of malnutri- tion in & given case is not determined by intuition, the opinion of neighbors, grandmother's lore or Mrs. Jones fittle boy’s case which had the identi- cal symptoms Johnny present: It can’t be glibly pointed out by nurse, condemning tonsils a noids eenie-meenie fashion. it erroneous to ascribe the malnutrition to -the faney that Uncle Henry or Grandfather Brown was “nervous,” too. No physician can indicate the cause of malnutrition by feeling the child’s pulse and glancing at. the ton, . The individual case must be studied by the physiclan; when care- fully studied the real cause | | marrying a|a chance to drop upon her head from the other day between scenes at the jample is one of the not-too-many well | Enited Studies. where she s doing her | worth the following. i i . first bit in Maurice Tourneur's “The |did do things in this sort of way BEDTIME STORIES had no business to ask Danny Méadow | It was | a question no one has a right to ask | the Green Forest and the Green Meadows. | So Peter wasn't at all surprised when | wouldn't per- | There is no law on the Green Mead- | If you won't tell me where the very fact that he hadn't the least | {idea where to look for it made him PERSONAL HEALTH BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D., H Noted Physician and Author. i i | U e i H ! can. be .and sexve cold.. R Y | Levee. ' At last he ybranches of this nerve may cause ipersons " with a plug of hardened | cerumen in the ear canal have a most D. C. MONDAY, JULY 16, 1923. The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY GLADYS HALL. School,” she sald. “I took part in ail of the high school plays, and later in the dramatic soclety's present: tions at the University of Michigan. My teachers all urged me to go on the stage or screen. ‘Girls who had tried told me how hard 1t wi to attract attention In | Hollywood; told me direful tales of the tens of thousands of extras striv- ing to maintain an existence on one or two days’ work a week. I r solved to walt until T hac some defi- nite plan. “I spent two years in Oklahoma as secretary to bank president iIn Sapulpa and also as a Young Wom- en's Christian Assocfation secretary in Tulsa. Then one day my inspiration came to me and 1 quit my job and went to Los Angeles. “Once in Los Angeles I made the rounds seeking a place as secretary to a studio executive and eventually I got one. For two years | was mecretary tc M. C. Levee, Drelldenll of the United Studios. I made the! acquaintance of producers and di- rectors by the score. I handled end- less scenarios. I watched many pic- tures in the making. 1 became fa- | miliar with all departments in the | studlo and all the detalls of produc- tion. “Those were two bad years for pic- tures. There was little production work going on, - But I had a good salary. Then business picked-up. The seript of “The Brass Bottle” passed through my hands on its way to Mr. It had in it the part of a maid, a good opportunity for a be- ginner. T asked for the chance of the mald—and got it And now the story is told. Miss Campbell left the typewriter for the make-up box. She hax a good “bit.” She can get an audience with direc- tors and producers because they have known her as a wsenSible, eflicient, capable girl, working make char.ce for herself, and not expecting to a some impossible heaven crowning her with stars Her typewriter has made a place for her on the screen. It would seem to me that her ex- It more girls there would be fewer tragedies. fewer disappointed hearts and more chances | of eventual succe By Thornten W. Burgess. want all the more to find it. So he kept on looking and looking and look- | ing and looking. He didn't get another glimpse of | Danny Meadow Mouse. No, sir. he | didn’t get another glimpse of Danny | Meadow Mouse. But Danny saw him. i Yes, indeed. Danny saw him. Danny Meadow Mouse was watching and aughing at Peter. It was a noise- less laugh. It tickled Danny to see how hard Peter was trying to satisfy | his curiosity without the least idea ! “IT 1€ LIKE LOOKING FOR A LO: GRASSHOPPER IN THE MIDDLE OF THE GREEN MEADOWS,” SAID PETER. where to look to do it. Peter that if he should find that home of knew | fail { parsley Meny for a Day. BREAKFAST. Stewed Plums. Cereal. ‘Thin Liver and Bacon. Popovers. Coffee. LUNCHEON. Salmon Sandwiches. Olives. | A'ssorted Cakes. Lemonade. DINNER. Green Pea Soup. Veal Pot Ple. Pickled Beets. Asparagus. Pineapple Ple. Coffee. COLOR CUT-OUT A Picnic in the Woods. Nuts. “When 1 run in the win, marked Betty Cut-out, “my skirts fly out lke butterfly wings. The butter- flies think I belohg to their fami and so they aren’'t afraid of me!" “Well, when I'm going fishing. 1 don't try to look like a fish.” replied Botty's brother. Billy. They were on their way from their cottage at the seashore into the woods on a plenie. “But I can catch more fish than vou can butterfiles.” Billy challenged “Let's have a contest.” Betty sug- gested. 5 Billy agreed. “All right, let's!” ‘What would be & good color fer a but. terfly dressi Suppe you use oramge and ceior B'_tr‘t{ straw it yellow with vio] tl Sower. embroidered butterfiies may b | colors. Isn't this a pretty frock for Betty! (Copyright, 1923.) Green Peas With Ham. Cut half a pound of uncooked ham into dice. Parboil, drain and fry. Dredge with flour and add three pints | of shelled peas. three sprigs of pars- | ley and two green onions. Add salt and pepper to season, cover and cook | slowly for half an hour. Remove the Danny’s, it would be through acci- dent.” He knew that his only chance ! to find it was to stumble on it. So he kept on hopping about this way | and that way. but finding nothing. | ad to admit to himself | that he mizht just as well give up. | “It is like looking for a lone grass- hopper in the middle of the Green Meadows.” said Peter, talking to him- self aloud as he had a way of doing. “Yes, sir. it is just like that. T may ! as well give up._Of course that home | of Danny's is hidden in the grass | somewhere. Perha; when Farmer Brown cuts the grass I'll be able find it. Anywa T give it up now «Copyrizht, 1923, by T. W. Burgess.) SERVICE determined almost without exception, | the correct remedy applied and the child placed in a condition free to gain. The gains made in such eir-| cumstances _are often marvelous. Nature seems to indulge a joyous| spurt to make up for the handicap | which has so long restrained her. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Sticks Like Tar. l On our vacation last summer we | drove from Buffalo to Cantoh. Ohio, { in one day, and when we got lherc] we were sick in bed with tonsilitis and sick stomachs. Now this year should we bundle up our necks make that trip again? Answer—Surely caused by automobile riding. family's illness was probably some coincident infection. I should not ad- Vise bundling up any more than in- | dividual comfort requires. The catch- ing cold delusion is almost as hard to remove as tar. Cough from Heart Trouble. Kindly explain how a cough can be due to heart trouble.—B. P. P. Answer—In case of a valvular le sion the backward leakage of blood or back pressure often causes conges- | tion in the region of bronchial tubes ! or lungs. Then, too. the tenth cranial nerve (vague or pneumogastric nerve) supplies the heart and the lungs, so that reflex irritation through we w tonsilitis can't _be The cough. ~A branch of th# nerve goes to the external ear canal; sometimes persistent, harassing cough from re- flex irritation. Very deceptive and misleading is cough. Probably no other common symptom so frequently misleads the layman who tries to “doctor himself.” For instance, a most impressive cough which “the victim feels certain comes from deep within the chest is likely to arise from a lesion of the back of the nasal passages or the upper part of the throat; on the other hand, a slight, almost unnoticeable cought which the patient assumes is a mere clearing of the “throat sometimes depends on early tuberculosis of the lung. oftf for the West. Being eighty vears old but still_in good health, and intending to make & journey from St. Louls to Seattle, I should be pleased to learn whether the change of climate and altitude in crossing the mountains are likely to have any bad results—F. G. A. Answer—Not if you take care to avold the exertion which the stimu- lating effect of the air at higher alti- tude may tempt you to make. Pineapple Pie. - Grate a pineapple and ‘weigh it Add its. weight in sugar, half its weight in butter beaten to a cream, one cup of cream, the yolks of five egEs well beaten and the stify beaten whites. Bake with one crust ‘£ Take Your Choice! skim off the fat salt pork may be ' used instead of the ham and a pint of water added with the peas. Sl UL UL U LT T IO LEither the famous THERMAX"” ELEC- TRIC TRON (guaranteed by the Universal factory) DISON"™ 2 oy (o) (o) ~n oy * =] - o [ (COMPLETE) only *[ cash and $1 per month, 4 months C. A. Muddiman Co. Now In Owr New Store 709 13th St. H (One Door dbove G SR [ times, FEATURES PARIS, July 2—Dear Ursula—In spite of all temptations to the con- trary I have a weakness for my bobbed halr. To bring it into line for | evening wear, these bunches of blue silk_berries, with stray ends and a band in the back, are most becoming, and match the iarge blue spots on my gown. PAMELA. (Copyright, 1923.) The Guide Post By Henry van Dyke Good-Bye and Mizpah. Mizpah: The Lord watch between thee and me when we are absent one from another.—Gen. 1:49. The word “‘good-bye” has a beauti- ul, sacred meaning, which is lost to view when we spell it “good-by.” Tt is really a contraction of the phrase God-be-with-ye, and is even lovelier than the French “adieu’— a deep. holy word. But I have often wondered why we have no parting phrase in English to express what we so clearly hear in other tongues—the lively hope of meeting_again The Germans say auf Wiedersehen, and the Italians. a rivederci, and the French. au revoir. All these are fitting and graceful words; they solace the daily separa- tions of life with the pleasant prom- ise that we shall see each other again —a bientot. the French - some- as if to underline the wish that the next meeting may be soon. Mizpah is the Hebrew word. The nearest to it in glish is “so lon A little bit of sl lke it (Concrizht 1923, lectrical “Our Recommendation ts Your Protection THE WRINKLE-PROOF ELECTRIC IRON Price, $6.75 1g, perhaps—but I It takes lots of energy just to stand the heat. Let The Energy Spread for Bread kesp your energy up and your temperature { and Spread bills down. Although Resinol Ointment is pri- marily intended for the treatment of skin affections and the control of itch- ing, it has such a strong healing action that it is highly and widely recor- mended as a J}esxinz for the most stubborn boils, sores, wounds, etc. Itis mild, soothing and does not s sting when applied. Many satisfied users -estily that it has healed quickly and easily, sores that bave refused to yield to other treatments. Sold by all druggists. Clear Baby’s Skin With Cuticura Soap and Talcum Soep,Ointment, Talenm 25e ev, here. oo 20N Cuicun Livaraorios S e TRS “Trade Mark known _in_Every Home HE “UNIVERSAL” Electric Iron is sold by good stores through- out the city. Its added satisfac- tion and service is beyond price—there- fore be sure to get the genuine UNI- VERSAL. There is most likely Look Patronize HIM! neighborhood. display. a dealer in your for his window Wholesale Distributors for District of Columbia National Electrical Supply Co. 1328-30 NEW YDRJ[C AVENUE MAIN 6800 “UNIVERSAL” = THE WRINKLE PROOF IRON Round Heel — Beveled Edge — Tapered Point . Irons backward and sideways as easily as forward. PRICE $6.75 One of the many guaranteed “Universal” Household Helps. Sold by all Good Dealers and Electrical Companies ° KNOWN IN EVERY HOME