Evening Star Newspaper, September 10, 1923, Page 20

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o ‘Aprons on Frock MAN'S PAGE s May Be Paletots BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE, We think of transformation frocks and reversible wraps as something quite modern. Likewise we regard presto-chango furnituré as' some- thing characteristic of the twentieth century—Chesterfields that are beds by night, dressing tables that fold up with all the appurtenances of the toilet and serve for little incidental tables when need be, refrigerators that do duty as kitchen tables, and so on. But service both in . really and truly this double- idea is as old as the hills frocks and furniture. The bed of the middle ages served as sottee and lounge by day, and the doughty knight never needed a drinki cup 80 long as he had his helmet. Convertible frocks of some sort or other were quite usual in the, middle ages and the renalssance period. There were lined tunics and wraps that could be worn either side up and the good wife usually wore overskirts that could be worn full 2nd Jong in the street and looped up, fish,wife fashion, when there was work to be done—thus getting rid of clumsy fullness and length at the ankles and protecting the outside of the skirt from wear and spotting. The habit of some of the religlous orders of the present day retains this overskirt that may be looped up, long sloeves that may be turned down to Jkeep the hands warm in cold weather or turned $hack to give greater free- dom indoors—details all that were commonplaces in women's costumes in the day when these religidus or- ders were founded. * 8o that. reversible wraps transformation frocks devised by the French dressmakers at the present are merely revivals. In re- cent collections shown in Paris Bechoff had many of these. There vas a reversible coat with one side black velvet and by upholstery galloon os well as his much-talked-of apron frock—the apron of which may be used as a little sleeveless palet®t. the pocket slits serving as armholes. One such frock w made of black satin em- broildered in gold, blue and lacquer red with bandings of seal. The paletot-apron is of the black satin similarly trimmed, ' Then there o scarf to be use¢ sash or knotted The large and scarf frocks—the a sort of gypsy around the neck. decorative handkerchief flowing with studied negligence from | the pocket of one of the new mavy blue coat frocks may be quickly and easily converted into a knotted neck- erchief when a cool breeze blows. (Copyright, 1923)) The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY GLADYS HALL. There Are Two Funny Men. My life, lately, has just been one laugh after another. Flora Finch one week, Gallagher and Shean the next. Now I ask you, could any one do bet- ter than that, comically speaking? Undoubtedly you all know Galla- gher and Shean on your phonograph. | Very shortly you are going to know them on the screen, too. For they are making a picture for Willlam Fox, entitled “Around the Town with AT ABSOLUTELY, POSITIVELY, M MR. SHEAN— Mr. Gallagher and Mr. Shean.” They play the roles of detectives and, Mr. Shean observed, “‘We are boobs 1 the way through.” Judging from heir make-ups and from some of the scenes 1 saw “shot,” the picture will be a close rival to their now famaus song. Life. you may know, has not al- been a comedy for them. ears ago they were singing flirting with success, then e little mishap arose between m. they separated, and for the owing fifteen years each went his ¥, playing the two-a- LA [ . 1ing more obscurity than mutual friend, realizing Which comes first in your home— folks or furniture? sten,Wo Lizzie can’t understand why her folks don't appreciate her twenty years of faithful service. “I've just them.” mourns Lizzle. “I haven't had an int outside my home an' they don’t care any more for me than they would for an old shoe. Edith and Burt want to spend every evening somewhere e¢lse won't even bring their friends home now and then— act just as if they were ashamed of the place, and goodness knows there fsn't a better kept house in town, if 1 do say it myself. Everything's ‘most as new and shiny as the day we Fifte toget or, for dnstance. SHE KEERS SUCH (OUELY HOME — FOR HER FURNITURE. (2] Sadn i smoved in. ven little Bob, who's only eight, ‘actually seems to hate the house. An' my husband's worst of all. Night after night out with the boys or pertendin’ he's got to work late—! And that's all the thanks I get for working my hands to the bone!” Whereupon she Weeps bitter, angry tesrs at the Ingratitude of ‘famili How outraged Mrs. Taylor would be if some one wére to tell her that Tier own selfishness has wrecked her home and estranged the love which might have been hers. That is ex- actly what has happened, Everything is “'most as new and-shiny as the day they moved in." She hag kept it shiny at_the cost of her family's home life. She has mdde them slaves to_her possessions. There was that beautiful set of dishes Aunt Abble them ~for @ wedding present. Ho: roud she was of them!. And how furious when . o the other covered | By Clsse Tobinsan FROCK | CONVERTIBLE BE APRON THAT CAN A8 CAPE. | thelr co-value, gave a dinner, brought | them together again, and the results have been the Follies and the movies and a reputation well-nigh inter- national. “What about the movies?” 1 asked them, sitting, as eeriously as I could, betwoen the pair, serfous enough | themselves, by the way, when you catch them “out of hours.” “You tell her, Mr. Gallagher." “No, you tell her, Shea “Well, jt's this way,” sald Mr. Shean. “We had several offers to go on the screen during the past year, but never felt that we were reaily ‘Screen ma- terfal’ Is that right, Mr. Gallagher?" ositively, Mr. Shean.” “But when'I was on the coast last winter all I heard was the names and songs of Gallagher and Shean and so we realized that providing we céuld have a big enough production it might be the thing to do. We have got the ‘blg enough production. e wouldn't have considered anything loss than a six-reel picture, with a good story, exploitation and all that sort of thing. “We haven't planned any definite film future. We're going to wait to see what happens in this picture. 1f it goes over big—well, then we'll see.” “Are you both movie fans?' I asked. | “T %o to sleep at 'em,” sald Mr. Shean, with what is his habit of un- rving honesty. hat comes from overeating," interpolated grave Mr. Gallagher, | “You never saw a man could eat so much.” G “I alwaye g0 before meals,” Mr. Shean, “What has success meant to you?”’ 1 asked them, as & pair, “Lost us most of our friends,” said Mr. Gezllagher, who is, in the main, spokesman for the pair. “Are you together a lot off stage and screen?" “Never,” sald Mr. Gal “The boy is right, “Well, where said gher. A Mr. Shean. 0 you spend most of your time?” 1 pressed them. “With my wife,” sald Mr. Shean. Mr, Gallagher made no reply. His pensive gaze rested upon a young lady from the Follles who was romp- ing about the “set.” (AIl rights reserved.) rid! Edith, then three, broke one through baby ‘clumsiness! She spanked Bdith and thenceforth the beautiful dishe were stored on the shelf and brought forth only for state occasions. The family ate on the heavy kitchen ware. Mostly they at in the Kkitchen too, on oflcloth—*“Children made such dreadful spots on linen.” And that living room which they furnished when Bob got his raise— it was the pride of her lfe with its heavy plush curtains, fringed lamp. Turkish rug and array of gift books on the table. But what a storm there was when she caught her husband, pipe in mouth, sprawling on the won- derful davenport, the Sunday paper scattered all over the floor, and little Bob nosing into the gift books, one torn page already to his credit! Didn't he know that she'd spent all Saturday polishing and dusting every- thing in that room and that that old pipe would simply ruin the curtains? And Bobby was a bad, bad boy to {touch the lovely booka and she'd jteach him not to do it again! So Big Bob, driven from pillar to post with his pipe, camped for awhile jon the back porch and now seems to have taken permanent quarters “down with the boys” at night. And Little Bob, in perpetual fear of spill- ing trumbs or leaving finger marks or mussing something, lives at large {in the neighborhood. Edith and Burt, after one disastrous’ attempt at “roll- | ing up the rug-and having the gang | in for an evening,” treat the hou: as_though it were a prison. Whose fault is it? If you plac curtains, floors, books, rugs, chin above: the worth of loving human | hearts, what can you expect? Lizaie Taylor hasn't lived for her family as she loudly protests. She has lived for her possessions, and her posses- sions alone repay her. (Copyright 1923.) .Ham With Spinach and Eggs. Scrub a ham, then let it soak over night in cold water. Put it into an earthen casserole on a bed of finely cut vegetao, Half cover with boll. Ing water and sprinkle over more! vegetables. Put on the cover and cook in a moderate over for about six kours.: Add more water if necessary. When baked, remove three-fourths of the skin, leaving a portion around the shank bone. Cut the edge of this In vandyke: Brush over the rest of the surface with ‘heaten yolks of egg, sprinkle with sugar and bread crumbs and return to the oven to brown the crumbs. Serve hot on e bed of spin- ach. Garnish with hard-bojled egg: BServe with a brown sayce, Me and pop was taking & wawk be- fore suppir, me asking qliestions and pop ansering them and me asking more, and we came to a liitle dog running up and down the street and different peeple yelling, Mad dog, mad dog. G. pop. mad dog, I sed. Mad nuthing, pop eed. That dog is as sane as those peeple and proberly a darn site more s0. No wondfr he's acting a little ixcited with all those darn fools running erround makin, faces that would scare a horse, mutci less a dog, he sald. And the dog kepp on running u and down but not looking eny madd than enybody elts, and some lady ran up to pop saying, Somebody awt to throw & buckit of cold watter over that dog Wy 807 How would you like some- body to throw a buckit of cold watter over you? pop sed, and the lady sed, I think somebody awt to throw one over you, the way youre tawking. There's nuthing the matter with the dog and I'l prove it, Heer doggle, heer doggle, pop sed, and the lady sed, Dont prove it to me, for good- niss sakes. And she ran away and pop reetched down his hand to the dog saying, Nice doggle, come to Mr. Potts. - Wich the dog did, biting pops little finger_and_keeping on going, pop saying, He bit me, he bit me, that dogs proberly got the hyder- ofobla in its werst form, wares a drug store? ich as soon as we came to one we went into it, pop saying to the man, Do something to this finger quick. Ive bin bittin by a mad dog. pop, I thawt you sed he wasent mad, 1 sed, and pop sed, Who asked you to think? Proving everything is personal. BEAUTY CHATS. e e e Inexpensive Powders. There is no special secret in the production of face and tollet powders, nor is a great deal of Care necessary in making them The best face powders are so exceedingly fine that only complicated machinery can pro- duce the basic ingredients, but fortu- nately for the woman who must be economlical these ingredients can be bought separately for less money than the mixed powder. Bad powder contai muth. _Avoid these, they harm the skin. Good powder is almost entirely a vegetable product, with a base of starch and talcum which is finely ground French chalk. The starch is made from wheat, potatoes or rice and is probably all ‘sold as rice starch Mostly it's made from potatoes and it's very good, thougn it ver can be_as fine as rice starch. If you want a powder that clings well to the skin, mix eight parts of taloum and two of borie acld. If you want a cheaper powder, for bath pur- poses or for cooling a perapiring skin. mix two parts of boric acid powder corn starch—the sort you make puddings of. If you want & face powder, one ounce of bhoric acid powder, two of talcum, two of corn starch. will give you an excel- lent one. Tint by adding very slowly a little powdered rouge, brunette rouge if vou are dark, light blonde rouge if you are falr. Perfumg by mixing a little sachet powder, or bury in the powder bowl & bit of absorbent cotton soaked in perfumed oil (oil of rose, oil of geranium, or what you will) etirring from time to time. Liquia powders are harmful. In my opinion, they are too drying and al- ways look artificial. Compact powders are hard to make. Buy them if you like to carry them about in your purse. J. MacC.—Henna s a tonic for the hair, so it cannot injure it in any way. it will take too much space for me to explain to you why you failed to get the right shade, but I will be glad to mail full directions for using henna if vou send a stamped self-addressed en- velope repeating your request Grace—The formula you sent me shows that it was put together in order to sell one of the Ingredients, which is a hair dye; however, you should have known that, as the formula must have stated, it was' an advertisement. As . new hair grows out from the scalp, the nat- ural shade of your hair will return. The dyed part will grow lighter in shade. Mag—You can help to keep your hair a light shade if you add a table- spoonful of lemoh juice and a quarter of a teaspoenful of baking soda to each quart of witer, to be used in the last shampoo rinse. 1 do not know anything about the preparation you mention, (Copyright, 1023.) COLOR CUT-OUT Forward, March! ns lead or bis- and eight of On Saturday Betty did not have to go to school except for an hour in the morning when all the children went to the gymnasium, All the girls looked alfke in thelr uniforms of dark blue bloomers, white middids, red ties, bleci stockings, and white shoes. Betty felt quite at home, for Billy had taught her how to march and swing Indian clube. " I think I will Jet Betty lead the line; she seems to know how to march'better than the others” the teacher said. Betty feit very proud. She stepped to the head, and when the teacher said “Forward march” she held her head very bigh and marched right down the full length of the room, “Where are you going?" she heard a voice call, and she turned to find that _the teacher had halted the line, and Betty, not notluln‘ the command, had walked on all by herself, (Copyright, 1928.3. The Other Children. Of course i's too bad, but, like many other things in this world, it can't be helped. You can’t bring up the children without reference to the other children. Just when you think you hove grounded them in the faith, the oti : children come along and spol it all. You teach Max that his family do not smoke cigarettes because it is not good for them. You teach him that his growth might be checked, that his lungs might rebel and his nerves suffer shoula he smoke them. He seems to have accepted it all calmly enough, until one day he an- nounces that Harold smokes and that he says all that talk bout injuring health with a few whiffs of cigarette smoke is all nonsense! “He says look at his father! He smokes all he wants to, and he’s the biggest man in the town! And {sn't it true? ‘And he says during the war we sent'loads of cigarettes to soldiers to make them fight better, and we did, didn’t we? So I'm for smoking!” “Now fsn't It just too bad?" you say to yourself. “Why should that troublesome neighbor boy come along just when we had things fixed up so nicely?” What's the use? Wouldn't he have come along in some form or other? Tsn't he coming along all the time wherever you go, whatever you try to @0? You have always to reckon with the other children. They with yours make the world. Wouldn't it be silly to train up your children in disregard of the others? Of couree it is not wise for grow- MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN A School Day’s Convenience. One Mother Says: I give my children common safety clips to keep in their desks at school. They always clip their rubbers to- gether with them as soon as they take them off, which prevents the rubbers from getting separated and mixed in with others in the cloak- room (Copyright, 1923.) My Neighbor Says: Hairbrushes can be washed very satisfactorily if warm water and ammonia are used. Don't put back of brush in water; just soak bristles up and down until clean. Dry slowly, but not in the sun, as that makes them yellow. Rub nickel stove trimmings and the plated handles and hinges of doors with kerosene and whitening and polish with a dry cloth | If the wheels of the wringer { | run jerkily and the rubber rolls { | seem tough, try a tew drops of kerosene on the former and “wipe off the latter. Some one may warningly say that the oil eats the rubber, but one set of rolis used by a personal friend of the writer has been recelving this treatment for nearly 10 years and is still in service. 1f furniture casters are put away for some time they be- come so stiff that they are thrown away as useless, while if they were only given'a pre- liminary bath of kerosene they | | would be loosened and prepared for the oil which would make | | them run smoothly. ~Rusted nuts and bolts likewise respond to_the bath of kersosene. { White sllk, whether em- broidery or woven, should be washed in cold water if it is desired that it retain its pure, lustrous, silvery whiteness with no suspicion of a yellow shade. Pam’s Paris Postals PARIS, August 27.—Dear ' Ursula: There is always something so rest- ful about candlelight. This wall bracket, a lovely brass bird with a candle in his head, contributes greatly to “the serenity of my .soul. PAMELA. e > SEPTEMBER 1 ing boys to smoke. and that's flat. But how are you going to teach them that? The best way to do it is to stick close to the facts. Some people can smoke cigarettes all day without | suffering by the performance. and some other folks can't. Besides the effect of the smoking there is a soclal side to it that has many dangers for the growing lad Tell him about them and appeal to his reason. Piling up the agony won't get anywhere, because the children will laugh it away. It is well on the whole to know as much about the other chjldren as we can. They are the public opinion that has the last word on what we are teaching. Invite them to come in and make themselves heard. Teach them to speak right out and thrash out the thing that you differ upon. Don't make the old-fashioned mis- take that what children say does not matter. It matters tremendously to your children. It is no longer possible to dominate the lives of our chlldren. We train them when they are little, but when they are old enough to think they become part of the great democracy of childhood and the other children v count éo much that when you are placing the children in school you look well to the kind of children that compose It. You know they will | have a powerful inflience on the | Ghild you place among them. Then why not acknowledge that, to begin with, and get the power on your side, if possible? Above all, be honest With them.| Let them know that they count, and 50 carry a great responsibility. That helps much. (Copyright 1923.) Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL. Seasonal Window Boxes. Many home makers believe there are only two seasons of the year when they can have bounteously filled window boxes at ‘their sills. They know the charm of early pink Eng- lish daisles and pansies, and per. haps follow these with jonquils, daf- fodils and narcissus. When these spring blossoms fade. they replace them with the summer's red or pink geraniums, petunias, ageratum and trafling vine But there is a window-box plan for every season of the year; autumn and winter as well as spring and summer. Now is the time to take out the geraniums (which have perhaps grown rather rusty-looking, anyway) and to fill your boxes with the gor- geous little dwarf French marigolds, which will stay until the heavy frosts. ‘These hardy marigolds will bear transplanting while !a rull bloom, and if you haven't any In your own gar- den you can get them fo a few cents each at any large nursery. They come In all orange, reddish-brown and a beautiful mahogany of velvet texture. Some of them are variegated with delicate stripings and spottings. Set them as close together as they will go and you will have a box full of autumnal coloring that will delight your heart. When at last the frost takes off these little annuals, All up the Loxes with small evergreens—about three little formal ones, with two branchin feathery ones between. They Wil stay green during the winter, even if they do not survive the very bitter cold. The roots are so exposed in a box that thay rarely live, though their foliage remains bright until spring. Branches of hemlock, without roots, if stuck into boxes of earth, will look green throughout the winter. The same is true of pine tips and small cedars. The first warm breath of spring turns them yellow. but mean- while you have had boxes of ever- greens at your windows all winter. Fruit and Nut Sandwiches. Wash equal quantities of figs and es, and stone the dates. Add blanched almonds in quantity about one-fourth of the entire bfik, then run the whole mixture through a meat chopper. Molisten with orange jufce and press tightly into baking powder tins. When ready to use, dip the tins ir hot water. Turn out the mixture, slice, and place between thin slices of buttered bread. the shades of yellow. | Menu for & Day. BREAKFAST. Cantaloupe. Dry Cereal with Top g‘llk. Dried Beef. Cream Cornmeal Gems. Coffee’ . LUNCHEON. Spinach with Poached Eggs. French Fried Potatoes. Raisin Bread. Prunes. Cocoa. DINNER. Chicken Soup. CHeese Timbales with Tomato Sauce. Succotash, Baked Sweet Potatoes. Coftee Jelly with Whipped Cream. Sponge ke. Tea. CORNMEAL GEMS. (Without Eggs) One cup of flour, 1 eup of cornmeal, 2 tablespoons of sugar, sour milk to make a thick batter. Mix all night; in the morning add 2 tablespoons of melted butter and 1 tea- spoon of soga. Bake In gem pans. FRENCH FRIED POTATOES. Slice tha potatoes lengthwise into_slices about a quarter of an inch thick. Let them re- main.in cold water for an hour or longer. Dry in a cloth and try in hot lard until somewhat puffed up. Drain and sprinkle with salt. Serve hot. COFFEB JELLY. Cover 15 box of gelatin With cup of cold water; when soft add 1 pint . of boilin, strong black coffee, 1 cup ol sugar, a few grains of sait, the thin yellow rind of 1 lemon und the juice of 2. Stir until dis- solved, let stand 5 minutes, strain through cheesecloth, add 1 teaspoon of vanilla and turn into small wet molds. Un- mold when firm and serve with whipped cream. “Just Hats” By Vyvyan 2% | Fickle Fortune Favors Feathers. —— - 5 Small hats are still in high favor— small hats plain and small hats fancy, with tailored trims of ribbon or softly flattering decorations of coq like this that frames a face adorably atop a turban of soft brown velvet. The feather is a lighter brown. Potatoes With Cottage Cheese. Chop some cold boiled potatoes fine and season with salt, pepper and onion juice. Turn upon & hot frying pan lightly greased with fat, and cook the potatoes slowly without stir- ring until they are browned next the ! pan. Meanwhile soften a generous | Guantity of cottage cheese with cream or milk until it will spread easily. Mix with it any desired eeasoning, such as chopped parsley or plmentos, a little left-over ham or bacon, chili sauce or piccalilli, and spread it over the potatoes. Let the mixture stand long enough to warm and soften the cheese, then fold over the potatoes like an omelet, turn it upon a hot platter, and serve at once. I FEATURES BEDTIME STORIES Happy Jack Disappoints Red-| tail. ° When disappointed fust keep cool: You'll find it quite & worth-while rule. poy Jack Squirrel. Mrs. Happy Jack peeped out of their summer home to watch Happy Jack. Bhe looked a wee bit anxlous. Truth to tell, she was anxious. She felt that Happy Jack was doing a foolish thing. “There never is any use in taking risks one doesn't have to,” sald Mrs. Happy Jack to herself. ~“If people ~ i “I_HOPE THAT OLD SI} TRY_ TO CATCH ME. TO HIMSELF. didn’t do foolish things of this kind it would save a lot of trouble and worry for others. Happy Jack might have stayed in here with me just as well as not. Insteag of that he is going out to tempt Redtall to try and catch him. I guess he s smart enough to keep out of Redtail's claws, but just the same I think it a foolish thing to do.” Meanwhile Happy Jack had seated imself on a branch above his home, nd in plain sight of Redtail the awk, who was cireling high over ead. He pretended not to be paying attention to anything. He pretended that he was just sitting there for a sun bath. But all the time he kept an eve on Redtall far above him in the blue, blue sky. ER WILL SAID HE “I hope that old sinner will try to| catch me,” said he to himself. “Noth- ing would tickle me more than to dis appoint him. He thinks he's very He thinks I don’t know that been watching us ever since Delightfully By Tharntou ‘ 4 W. Burgess. { we built that new honwe. for him to learn betters” Meanwhile Redtail the Hawk was chuckling to himself. /Looking down from way up in the Iblue, blue sky he had seen Happy Jack come out of his summer home in the big beech tree and scramble near the top. Now he was sitting talking a sun bath right in plain sight. and appearing not to be noticing anything. Redtail swung a little lower atnd a little lower and’ a lttle lower. .11l Happy Jack appeared as if he hadn't the slightest ides that an enemy' was anywhers about. Redtall decided that he was near enough to swoop His eyes grew suddenly intent and flerce. He shot down with his great. claws stretched to_seize Happy Jack. Now, Happy Jack 'had all the time been watching. He had seen Redtall circling lower and Tlower and lower, and he had been prepared for tha: sudden swoop. The instant Redtail had started that smwoop Happy Jack d nimbly jumped to the trunk of the tres gnd whisked around it. With a scream of disappofintment and anger the big hawlk spreed his great wings and checked himm:lf. Then Redtall lost his temper coynpletely® He made swoop after swoép down into that beech tree, and each time Happy Jack nimbly dodged around to the other side of the trunk. It tickled him to see the rage of Rodtail the Hawk. He knew that Redtafil never could catch him at that game. To Happy Jack it was simply 5 lively and exciting game. (Copyright, 1925, by T. W. Burgess.) Three-Color Se_e—ing. ¥ @ discussion before the Royal &o- clety in London of the phenemena of “trichromic vision,” reference was made to the case of a man famous for his researches in electrical sclence When looking at the bright spectrur of sunlight, thiss gentleman sees only three colors—ned, green and viol For him there is no aefinite co that part of the spectrum whic pears to persoms with normal visio pure blue. He can distinguish noth ing of the nature of pure yellow the spectrum. Reddish green would describe the arange and vellow parts and greenish 'violet the blue parts ke seed them. In testing with colored yarns two wobls changed color to him When contrasted, although a normai- sighted person saw no difference These facts show how different our favorite colors may possibly app It is time to some of our friends. Fragrant LAD T E A A’ has a pure, fresh flavor beyond compare. Ask for a pacKagé today. Remember “the name POST'S BRAN FLAKES with other parts of WHEAT the onebran food that tastes good and does good ! youll like Bran/ W you! TS De Goode—When does a woman feel the need for spiritual guidance most? De Gay good-looking, News. ve—Why, when the pastor's of course.—Baltimore Here’s a Dish That Everybody Likes ixed Grill A Lamb Chop, a coun- Readng—Riting—Rithmetic 22,000,000 x 2=44, as possible. This means ,000 GOLD MEDAL M ayonnaise mixed with cold chopped meat, fish or egge. A GOLD MEDAL MAYONNAISE Sandwich is never dry, has an added de- liciousness and the added food value new-laid eggs and the in growth—promoting vitamines. T THE BEST FOODS, Inc, NewYork Chiesge KassasCity Ses Francisce sausage, a kidney,a baked tomato. Each piece ~ well dong and sessoned at the table with LEAPERRIN SAUCE ‘THE ORIGINAL WORCESTERSHIRE WOMAN'S HEAD is level and her & Judgment good when she pu her faith 1 Dr. Piere Favorite Pre- seription. There is no beauty without mood health. Nobody expects to be- come really beautiful from the ue of com- plexion beauti- fiers. Bright - clear wki rosy cheocks follow the use Plerce’s Favorite P'rmrl:;lol " When suffering from rvousness, dissiness, faintnoss, thix' temperasce medicine will benefit, eye VOR of Gorton’s good“No Bones” Cod Fish—mixed with boiled potato—ready to fry. Perfect for breakfast, luncheox or supper. o You'll kike them. At Dinner or After Dinner PEREE ne -TO SUGAR. WAFERS Open a box of Sunshine Per-fet-to Sugar Wafers when the dessert is served. See how delightfullv they fit in. Their delicate flavors satisfy the desire for something sweet and light. Delicate crisp wafers with cream centers—vanilla, lemon and choco- late. After dinner put a box on the living room table. Jopse-Wiirs Biscurr (PMPany Branches in Over 100 Cities Telepho: North 5200 Washington

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