Evening Star Newspaper, November 29, 1923, Page 38

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SEEN IN THE WA BY ELENORE the fabric. moderate home dressn YEAR ago ' the housewife who had a “knack’ at needlework frocks hops for beauty income, the problem ing is becoming more und more difficult, for drapery is the order of the present. day, and skillful ulres the practiced hand The gowns one sees n the exclusive establishments look too, but nothing is so de- ecptive as the apparent simplicity of these very models and nothing is so drapery re of a modiste. #o simple Rifticult to reproduce. Afternoon gowns are, for the mos ¥ SIL ILLFULLY part, fashioned from piece of material, and in consequence the drapery must supply what a belt or glrdie otherwise would, and deftly suggest a waistline at the front and ght panel at the back enlng creations frequentiy com- a bodice of rich brocaded silk cloth with a skirt-of con- trastingly plain velvet or satin, and the latter must hang in graceful folds, else the beauty of the model fs lost. Some evening gowns have lons tunics of metal brocade over foundations of plain velvet or silk one CHAPEAU OF BROWN PANNE VEL- VET., TRIMMED WITH DROOPING OSTRICH FEATHER. Just a inches of h extend below the colorful fab The tunics Lave no defined waistline, and must be skillfullv tapered in to save a “sack of flour” effect. The secret of the smartness of the afternoon frock sketched les in its center-front bow—ia bow which Jarge and soft, draped in an inimita- ble' manner from navy —moire silk of which the gown ix fashion Blouse and skirt are apparently in one, but the bow radiates drapery which adds a bit of fullness above the walstline, draws the silk smooth- 1y about the hips, and forms two fow h EVENING GOWN OF BLACK VEL- VET, EMBELLISHED WITH AP- PLIQUE FLOWERS. cippling panels at the skirt front, the fur borders of which continue around the skirt hem. The upper part of the gown is cut with a verely plain ‘bateau neckline, and shoulder straps which ure widened a trifle 8o that they suggest kimono Eleavelets. Another afternoon model is of black velvet trimmed with biege lace of such a heavy mesh that it rese bles the weave of a shawl. The la Is cut in two square bertha collars, one of which hangs at the front, the other at the back of the bodice, and Poth are outlined with a narrow tracery of brown fur. Bits of lace BERln appear as turned-back culls could make that rivaled .those in|and . of line and of | 96€P &Ik fringe in self-c But, alas for the woman of | eral Inches below the of ¢ | With little sprigs of green is SHINGTON SHOPS DE WITT EBY. industrious’ for the long fitted «le taper in to the wrist fur gives them a flufty Anish. kirt is straight and guite narrow, long lace panels. bordered by 1o, vell it dipping sev- al ; hemline. he evening gown pictured is of black chiffon \'P]l:' T, {n:h ned on the quaint bouffant 1 8 50 appropriate to the jeune fille. The basque bodice fits in ‘snugly to the walst, where a few folds are lightly introduced to revenl the full beauty Of the rich fabric. The skirt flares perceptibly at each hip. and widens even more at the hemline. which ripples gracefully around the ankles of the wearer. A riand of large silk flowe delicate pastel that {s intertwine leaves forms an effective girdle against the womber background, and a spray of similar flowers winds its wuy over one shoulder to add the final bit of ‘trimming. - An attractive dinner froc is of soft black satin crepe, with a bloused bodice and gathered skirt. An in- set of white crepe circles the upper part of the bodice, so that the effect i# that of a separate yoke with the blouse gathered to it, and the con- trast of light and dark fabrics is hoth striking ‘and unusual. Fur- ther contrast is added In the trim ming, which consists of small whit satin’ petals outlined with sparkling vari-colored beads. Groups of these are scattered over both bodice and skirt, lending touches of hrightness to_the gown. The chapeau illustrated is of brown velv, erushed into a shape. The lower part of the has been turned up like that a narrow brim is sugges though in reality it doesn’t The long ostrich ther droops at one side to add the only trimming is dyved to match the rich tone of the velvet. and is curled so that it makes a graceful sweep over [ the shoulder. ITTLE STORIES !56’ BE%TH&E: Looking Down on a Strange Land.’ By THORNTON W. BURGESS. Things in themselves are never strange, Tour point of view bas chanced to change. —O0ld Mo ture Nanny Meadow Mouse was no long- er afrald of the great man-hird or of the aviator. She knew now that it was just as Danny Meadow Mouse had said—this man” who made the great man-bird fly was really thelr triend, even though he kept them | prisoners. So when their cage was rlaced up in front where ther were | protected, but where they could look down and see the Great World spread below them, Nanny actually began to enjoy fiying, just as Danuy 1 at each side, the frin ark smull { | They were looking down strange land. That is, it was strange to them. They saw forests and mead- ows and brooks and rivers and but all were strange. They wer: on a Fred Feernots Biszy Day. cene: 1red ecrnot wawking along Fred Feernot: 1ts a nice day If it dont rain. G, look at that horse run- ning away with thut bewty looking gerl Bowty me! 1 Fred Feernot: Me to the rescue! Bewty looking erl: Thank you, In;. muteh obliged. You saved my life. Fred Feernot: That's nuthing. G wizz_did_you see that baby fall in the river? Ixcuse me a minnit wile I Jump in and save it. Babys mother: Help, my baby cant swim a stroke! O thank you. Youre a noble youth and I dont care who heers me say so. Look at you, youre 0 1ook. looking gerl: Help! Save all wet, Fred Feernot: one of the lions Wimmin & help help help Fred Feernot: Nev the broot back in its the attempt Some man: tdo a thimg like Naturilly. has ixcaped! children: Help help | feer, T drive ke or die in Youre a brave boy to that. e mite of ate @ duzzen peeple without mersey. Fred Feernot: Thats wat [ thawt. Theres some guy running away with some guy's pockit-hook. T think 111 jest cateh him and give him to a cop, rybody he cawt him. Maybe that kid cant run! Fre F nots mother: pir's redd Fred F a ¥Fred, sup- ernot: 8o am I, bleeve me. The end. MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN Medicinal Dainties. One motner says: When my children take these do of andy medicine the perhaps do not realize how fortunate they are to have b born a generation when children we forced to y-tasting medicine. The know that they re ving a dainty to eat. I use large, clean fig: stewing them in olive oil until t are tend the add a little lemon e and honey d boil them until sirup is th . One fig is the p seribed “dos COLOR CUT-OUT Thanksgiving Feast. THEY PASSED CLOSE TO A ! BIG BIRD SAILING HIGH IN THE ke the Green Yorest. the Green | Meadows. the Laughing Brook end | the Big Ri , which they had known all thefr lives. When the great man- bird came down near the ground the very plante seemed different and 1 thetime the air grew warmer. There were times when Danny and Nanny sniffed and sniffed and won- dered why the air was so different. That was when they were near the ocean and the alr was salt. There were times when they looked off in 1 o direction and saw nothing but ter. There was water, water, water, as far as they could sec. The sky and the water semed to meet. It was as If in that dire tion , the whole Great World had jturned to water. They knew not | what to make of it. Of course, they | {were looking out to sea, and of course they knew nothing about if. | It was exclting. It was very ex- citing, There was sgomething new | every instant. When they were low enough they saw houses that w e very different from Farmer Brown's | house. They saw ships on the water | #and they thought th must be some new and strange living creatures. Once they pussed clo: to a big bird | sailing high in the sky, and they ree- ognized him. It sent_ funny little thrills all over them. That big bird way OI' Mistah Buzzard. Yes, sir, it | was OI' Mistah Buzzard, whom they had watched so many times sailing | above the Green Meadows at home. | They knew then bevond a doubt that | they must be down in the Sunny South. How they did want to talk ove things they saw. But it was usele to try while the; s flying. You see, that great man-bird made such that they couldn’t hear euch | ¢ all. They must wait for the great man-bird to come down to earth before they could talk. Tt was | all so exclting and so wonderful that they quite forgot that they were be- ! ing carried farther and farther from their old home. In fact, they were already beginning to think of that man-bird as their home. At last they began to glide down, down, down in a strange silence, be- cause the engine of the airplane had stopped. They knew that this meant that they were coming down to earth. How eagerly they looked down. And how strange it @il looked. There were some pine trees, but even these were different from the pine trees they had known in the Green Forest. But there were many other trees wholly unlike any trees they had ever seen before. Something told them that at last they were really and truly way down in the Sunny South, the land they had so often hear: about. They fairly ached to get out and run about and see what it was all like. | h! The curtain’s goivg up,” whispéred some one, and all Billy and Betty Cut-out's relatives and Polly Mount's nefghbors that crowded the farmhouse to sec the play, “The First Thanksglving,” drew "an excited breath old-fashioned setting # actors in their =tift umes behind the foot- winter of famine, then, at the end, how their crops prospered and they celebrated a day of Thanksgiving with a feast of wild turkey. As soon as the curtain fell at the end, Sam Mount shouted, “Find your places a: the big table in the dining room! and in trooped the whoie crowd to the turkey dinmer Mrs. Mount had prepared. .Betty and Biily and Polly and Sam ate drumsticks and white meat and. dumplings and cranberry jelly and pumpkin ple until their Pilgrim suits nearly popped their seams! Eve: and 1 knows the colors palat oo "dlanee st “Hho Thanbupiving Foust." Our Birds in Verse By Henry Oldys. KENTUCKY Bright as the gleaming wi To the wand’rer farin, WARBLER. indow light g home Is thy lovely form when it greets my sight, As the brook-fed woods I Sweet as the tinkle of lig! roam. ht guitar, Or the wind-blown note of the flute, That comes through the Is the sound of thy sil The triple charm thou be: Of beauty, art and modes! dark of the night afar, Iv'ry lute. ar'st with thee ty. THURSDAY; The Young Bride-to-Be and Her Friends—Shall She Give Up Her Sweetheart to Please Her Mother?—The Engaged Girl Who Borrows Trouble. [DPAR MISS DIX: Tam elghteen years old and { am thinking about getting married. The young man to whom I am engaged is & splendid fellow, and I am very fond of him, but every now and then I just long to go about and play around with the other boys and girls that 1 used to, and to go to the shows and dances, and have #00d times with the bunch. I don't do it, because it would make my flance so angry that I would lof him, and 1 don’t want to do that. But what Keeps me from being perfectly satisfied with him? What keeps me wanting to go with the old gay Srowd instead of Just wanting to ba with one? ‘What makes me o0 chan ble? ANXIOUS TO KNOW. Answer: Youth, my child. 1t is because you have not yet had your 1l of the playtime of 1ife. Your fest still_ ache to dance. You still erave amusements, lights, crowas, laughter, the joy of living. The gang spirit belongs to youth. No young person wants to do -nK- thing by himself or to ko alone. The young must go in crowds, must do what the crowd doe It is only age that makes us aeek solitude. Belleve me, my dear, you are too young to marty because marriage 3 means that a man and woman giv G up all the balance of the world for each other, and make a little world for themaelves. To be happy they must be sufficient to themselves, and able to give each other what they need of companionship. . You cannot do this when you are eighteen, You still want the gang. You &till want to flirt with the boys, and have all the innocent sky-larking that belongs to your girlhood. You want to be free and untrammeled as the other girls are. If you marry while you are still just a girl in heart and spirit, you will find yourself wanting to do ail the things that your friends do, craving all the pleasures of girlhood, and when you cannot have them you will be very bored and minerable. That is why there is such an enormous percentage of divorces among couples who marry young. The boy husband and the mirl wife cannot endure the restrictions of matrimony. They want all the pleasures, and privileges, and treedom of boyhood and girlhood, and when they take them trouble ensues. Don't marry until you have had are fed up on flirtal v to settle down. Girlhood doesn't iast lon, It is the happlest time of & woman Dl: read man whom she loves very dearly. and well-to-do, and would certainly make her not long ako a question arose with regi the mother and her intended on-in- very serious quarrel between them. S the home for the girl. Her mother in your fling. Don't marry until you ons, and all that you ask is the love of ona good mal % Don't mafry until you are tired of dancing and gadding about, and are |3 #mall tree, not over ten feet high, |} Don't be in & hurry to ive up yours. lite. : . DOROTHY DI AR MISS DIX: A very dear friend of mine Is engaged to a fine young The young man is of n excellent ard to the couple’'s futu ver which aw disagreed. and the sult was a ince then there has been no peace in sists upon her breaking the engage- ood standing, usband. B ment, «aying that the young man will never treat hef right, since he insulted her mother. and that she must Th not like, yet she loves her sweethcart The question ix, shall the girl g herself miserable for the rest of their or that the two she loves will make up 1 ave Answer girl she surely has the right of chole are to be suited, not her mother' {4 @ drunkard, or that he is brutal-tempe then the daughter should listen to th up by her own common Sse keep her from m man with the nose rose to the height As for the man quarreling with map out thelr future for them, that The bossy mother-in-law Ureaks up thing. 8o the divorce courts may, and who {8 to be the head of the house bef In this p along and marry her sweetheart. than there is Letween the average m EAR/MISS DI I am a girl twent man thirty-three. me better than any one on earth, but with aother girl for seven vears. two veans’ her, and wish that he had married he: I am so miserable I do not know Answer: If you are going to that mikht happen if something clse are in for a nice dark blue existence. provide, and let it go at that. The best proof that the man di that he didn't marry her. So forget to fall in love. In two vears, why, Furthermore, it doesn't make & in the past. All that counts is t and buy your wedding dress. (Copyright, 192 hat h Picks Screen's Six Greatest. ‘The director ought to know. After all, if you are interested in who the real geniuses of the screen are, and why they are If they are, you prob- ably can get no more authoritative opinion than you can from the di- rectors who work fn the most inti- mate contact with them. Directors have all sorts of things to do with the stars; they sometimes discover them; they frequently work over them to attain results that the plas- tie clay might never have achieved of itself; and they are constantly on the lookout for new ‘and inspired “material.” Every director naturally varles in his idea of greatness here and there. Just as every one cannot admire or revere all of the same books, so di- rectors vary when asked to select, say, six of the screen’s greatest. 1 wrote in my diary not long ago about asking Herbert Brenon whom he considered the six greatest gen- iuses of the screen and he gave mé thi Pola Negri, Alla Nazimova, Mary Pickford, Conway Tearle, Doug- las Fairbanks, and Valentino. Well, the other day I asked Edwin Carewe the same question. Mr. Carewe directed, among others, “The Girl of the Golden West" “Mighty Lak’ a Rose” and Is now en route for the Sahara to do “The Son of the Desert,” or some such title, with a company_including Bert Lytell, Rnlelmnry Theby, Claire Windsor, et al. These are the six painstakingly selested by Mr. Carewo as belng mos authentically endowed with * . First came Mary, Mary Plckford they all agree about y. Mr. Carewe called her “Our Incomparable Mary. ‘l‘gen came Charlle Chaplin. “He was born a genius,” sald Mr. Cerewe, “he always gave proof of it, and now, with his gr innovation in motion plctures, ‘A Woman of Paris,’ he-has proved it beyond all shadow of doubt or cavil. ; f “And,” Mr. Carewe sald, “T couldn't conscientiou: make a list of the screen's great, without ‘mentioning Mary Philbin. Did you ses her in ‘Merry Go Round?” Ah, that child has qrulnm. ‘True grestness. She has ‘that something' Walt just fow years and you will find bayond doubt that Mary Philbin will be one of the very great of the screen. “Harold Lioyd is In the ranks to me. Any man who could come ahead from mere slapstick stuff in so few Years as he has dona f{s sound and Worthy and full of further patential- itles. ¥Lillian Gish is the fifth on my list. sn.ul- an artist of suffering in all fts most subtle and delicate shades. She brings the tears of the world be. ou. fore Y% he sixth I would nominate one with whom You may not agree— Holbrook Blinn. I directed hl ‘The Bad Xlni' and I admis extravagantly in ‘Rosita. of the six greatest artists on the screen today.’ Alma, Arksnsss: Olga Petrova will ippear this sason in & play written A Barselt Waich she el all she stick by him for better or worse as she promi Who s to marry the man, the girl or the mother? ular case 1 should say that the There will prob: He seems devoted to me, Do you think Could @ man Kive up a seven-year frian s Do you think that after we hat to do. plays the s nothing further to do with him. girl loves her mother, and hates to marry & man her mother does too much to give him up. fve the man up, and make him un lives to s 'y her mothers grudge, and trust n the end? A FRIEND. If 1t is the €, and it Is her taste and heart that sther opposes her daughter's marriags to & man for any good reason; if the mother can prove to the girl that the man (s immoral or red, or that he cannot make a living, e maternal counsel which is backed . But a girl is foolish who lets her mother rrying the man she loves for any frivolous reason. I know a mother who once broke off Aaughter because she did not llke the man's nose. the girl living in abject poverty with a ne'er-do most desirable match for her And she lived to see 1 husband, while the Tession. of his pro: the {irrn mother when she tried to speaks well for him, instead of ill. more homes than any other one perhaps ore marriage as after it ®irl would he wise to go ably be no more love lost W and son-in-law. DOROTHY DIX. age, and am engaged to a and tells me that he loves met him he had been golng an really loves me? d for a girl he has known only Wwere married ha would think of r. and be sorry that he married me? LEILA. other-in-la: . y vears of before I As a trouble borrower, Leila, you are a world's wonder. Take yourself miserabl e speculating over somethi happened that hasn't happened, you So cheer up and take what the gods dn't want the seven years' lady that. And as for a man being 'nbl‘: two minutes Is ample time for it particle of difference whom a man loved e loves you now. So can vour tears DOROTHY DIX. tellar role. It is called T understand that Dagmar Godowsky and Frank Mayo have separated, ves. As to the preclse legal status of thelr matrimontal ar- rangements I cannot say. Yes, Dag- mar is Leopold Godowsky's daughter. (AM1 rights reserved.) Turkish Coffee. In Turkey. coftee beans are ground in a small mortar to a powder as fine as flour. - One teaspoonful of the coffee fa allowed to each emall cupful of water. Boll the water in a kettle, re- move from the fire, and add_the coffee. Return to the fire two or three times, but Keep it there only a few secondd at a time. Set aside for half a minute, then serve at once. If you use sugar, drop it into the bolling water with the coffee, or put it into_the cup and pour the coffes over it. Never drop it into the water before you add the coffce. Pavlova’s Understudy Miss Boot. Paviova, the world famous dancer, has an understudy. though she very seldom is ever calisd upon to dance in place of the star. Mme. Botsova, whose real name {s Hilda Boot, an English girl presumably, is the pres- ent understudy. She was ‘“discov- ered” in & dancing academy in Lo don by Paviova 12 years ago, and she hms: underntudied the danseuse’s every new gyration during allthattime, so t she could take over the burden of the program any minute. She re- sembles Paviova quite decidedly in her photographs. e Upholstering, Furniture Repairing A NO. 1 WORK AT LOWEST PRICE Cla; » Upholsterer fl{mfln WORK DON! Al UITES A SPECIAL Get your orders in now to get your upholstering by Christmas. one Franklin 7483. - Drop Postal 1233 10th St. N.W. I usti(yins‘:lour Confidence 2 s Our Success FRECKLES Quickly and Essily Removed Dur- ing Winter Months with Othdne. Why not rid e e unsight) ot A duep-beatsd Treckies while the son oo a3t 0 active? Get an ounce of Othine—double » irug or _department store and oty e R clear complezion by (hs elmpies rte that it is just as well to settle! lmofuwenllseuyonlhe NOVEMBER 29, 1923 GOLDEY CHAIN—LABURNUM A few days ago in Lafayette Park, wag delicately sprinkled over with lttle clusters of smail, yellow, pea- like flowers; blooming cheerfully and nonchalant! In the face of Novem- ber's cold winds and in the face of overwhelming portents, in the lcaf- leasness of surrounding tree the the retreat of sap and of the ‘end of fruition for this vear. But s im- prudent courage proved but a blasted effort. Fertllization was never mn- plished und on the morning of No- | vember 20 on the ground beneath nnxl tree might be scen thes o, vet | unwise flowers, still bright yet impotent and discarded stern, clemental forces of 1 This little tre is a the golden chain, a native of Europe and western Asia, grow namentally for its racemes of low flowers, a handsome 1| not over 20 feet high, well for planting on rocky slon borders of shrubbery, where ed space enough, | droopineg ters of vellow flowers will how to splendid effect in contract with the dark green foliag One of its advanta being rarely injured by insects or fungi, and it does as well also in partl >)nulfl‘;l‘ flt;"unliorx us in unob- cted sun e Branches are erect and spread- ing; bark a grayish olive green The leaves are on relatively. long stems, and are compound, compo. ed of but three leaflets. The leaflets are one to one and thre uarters inches long, elliptic, deep green, wsilky pubescent beneath when young. They hang on laté in the autumn and full without turning. The flower clusters appear in May to June. They are four to elght inches long. The flowers followed by narrow flat peds twa inches long which, after splitting and releasing their seeds, remain on the tree till late into the year. Several vyarieties hav been duced by the gardener. fety tumnale is the tree pictured es is that of pro- au- It Spiced Blackberry Sauce. Stew one pint of canned blac ‘When they are well cooked, gtrain them through a coarse sieve, but do not masi them. Add half a teaspoonful of pow- dered cinnamon or one-fourth teas ful of cinnamon extract to the liquid, and mix it in well. T is delicious served cold with plain ice cream. e Peanut Omelet. lice of bread in half a cup- ruf'i.'rk.fii'&“umn it is soft. Beat sep- arately the whites and yolks of two eggs and pour them, together with some chopped peanuts and ealt and pepper, over the bread. Pour the mixture into buttered pan and cook it as you would a plain_omelet ould & plaIn O e E HOUSEWIVES RUREAU 0«’!‘:‘1’!: service for the Absolut qution of r otel r " Buildings ether Bullth soxD B plone e Beauty Contented You are always confi- dent that your beauty, has been developed to its highest possibilities after using Gouraud’s Oriental Cream. White Flesh-Rachel. 1 Send 10c for Triel Size . T.HOPEINS & SON. Now York i G QOriental Cream NEWER, BETTER WAY | TO TAKE LAXATIVE Split Dose Into Timy Little Doses—Easier On Your Stomach. WORKS BETTER, GENTLE, THOROUGH AND EASY The easy, scientific way to get all the benefi’u of a big dose of Salts, | Calomel, Cascara, Purgative or Lax- | ative is to take the dose divided up into tiny jittle doses. Then you avoid the cramps, haste, griping and awful exhaustion next morning. | Sphitting up the dose makes it easier | on your stomach and next mornin you feel fresh, vigorous, clear huJ. ed, hungry and of zest. _The chemists have succeeded in ting into tiny little tablets hardly mer than a pinhcad—a fractiopal dose. You take one, or two, or three, or four, or five, according to result you want and how power- ful a dose r system requires. Sult yourself e: iy, (See direc- tions “on_ bottle.) They arc called EsZ Tablets. Take them half hour apart or altogether at one swallow —they work separately—each one cleanses the bowels and en- r"yml lazy Nver. The combined re- curaud’s tem and more thorou, Tamliies wse BoF Tabtcts in es use E- ington. You'll be delighted once you try this newer, better way to take a lsxative. We recommend EeX Tablsts, Pooples Drug Stores. 60 FEATURES Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Orange Ju! Cornmeal Must: Fish Hash Hot Corn Cake. Coffee. LUNCHEON. $plit Pea Soup. Lettuce and Olive Sandwiches Baked Custard. Cookles. Tea. DINNER. Vegetable Soup. Broiled Bluefish, Potato Cakes. Byttered Beets. Pumpkin Pie. Coffec. CORNMEAL MUSH. Boil 314 cups of water. Add 1 teaspoon of salt and pour in gradually t cup of cornmeal, either white or yellow. Hoil for 10 minutes and cook In double boiler for two hours. Serve as & cereal or pour into pound baking powder box cool. When cold, slice saute in a small Serve with maple to BAKED CUSTARD. Almost 1 quart of milk, beat , not too light, pinch of 4 tablespoons sugar and sprinkle cinnamon and nutmes on top. Bake about one hour in a moderate oven. POTATO CAKES. Mash potatoes, season with salt, add a very small piece of butter and 1 egg. Make into flat ca ry in lard or drip- pings until a nice brown. In the Impossible Class. ; lr‘r;u’v‘ |;o‘.'l| {of his tim 4 Times-Dispatch man who spent studying the advertis models of perfect women in vari stages of dress. Then he reached a great r Since that day he has invi -r cent of his fortune in c! cusories, And_ the frankly t able to emblan t n late summer [ H other he aplish > between his wi modele. says he ca derst is near the north|we can, We used 1o buy secd Park, opposite | raise vegetables ke the | the envelo; day ha at ANAGYROIDEN, blooms a second time or autumn_and rder of Lafayette 16th street, Washington hostesses welcome Sar-a-Jee JST the delicious newness of Sar-a-Lee Sandwich Spred—so piquant, so different!—is delight ing Washington hostesses. They let its sweet, tangy creaminess en- rich cubes of toast, or tempt from hollow egg-whites, or make de- licious canapés. Appetizing in all its goodness, Sar-a-Lee with the first course carries the dinner! Sar-a-Lee is irresistible, too, for tea and dance sandwiches. Snowy bread-stars prove most tempting filled with this luscious spread. Sometimes thin bread is folded around it and daintily tied for the bridge chocolate or reception tea; and often Sar-a-Lec furnishes all the rich flavors needed for salads, tartare sauce, and Thousand Island dressing. Sar-a-Lee ‘gives you velvety mayonnaise, spices and peppers, olives, pickles and shredded ham— all blended for you in most delicious proportions. For formal and home occasions you will find Sar-a:Lee Sandwich Spred an economical treat. You can obtain it in groceries and delica- tessens anywhere in Washington. THE SAR-A-LEE CO. Cleveland, Ohio

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