Evening Star Newspaper, January 3, 1924, Page 35

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WOMAN’S PAGE.. Headdresses Are More Elabo BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE, It is sometimes difficult to tell the difference between one of the frame- less' toques of metal cloth such as some of the milliners are making at present—notably Caroline Reboux— and an evening turban. For hats are apparently becoming smaller and Jlghter and ‘headdresses are becoming (ore elaborate. In fact more than cne of the frameless toques sent out from Pgrls earlier in the season have Leen wern as evening turbans. The: sk6tgh shows an evening head- dress Sof 1 mold cloth studded with Jewels of*rather Egyptian line. Like many of “the sevening headdresses it <ompletely Covers the brow, even en- ITingIng on', the “eyebro: It is no ionger a matier of comment when vomen hide this part of their face @5 though there.were something in- decent about showmgt it. But so much latitude does the spresent mode llow that we may go with per- :-cll_\' e brows—if we, like—and quite as fashionable “@s- thoug « hide them. ey Vithin the past few weoks: lg.fact, many young women—women doultiess With fair, smoath broks to show-=have taken to wearing their filets and-dia- dems rather high on the forehead. ut this is only by way of vamety. t of the smart turban, of that it has been draped t is put on. But the man does not attempt this, knows that it takes the fingers the knowing eves of a very elever this drapery cor- is always a lght tis made to fit the head | v CLOTH OF GOLD HEADDR! STUDDED WITH COLORED CR peffectly and on top of this the meatallic ¢loth is draped and fastened | securely. i (Copyright, ]lu.s.band Who Can’t Take a Night Offi—Orphan (nrlv Whose Uncle Makes Love to Her—Girl Who Doesn’t Allow Good-Night Kissing. J)BAR MISS DIX: 1 have been marrled two years, and my wife and I have Sne many disputes because I think that I should have one night a week off. She will not and during my entire married life I have n £one out by mys ven a servant has one day off. Don't you think a husband is entitled to shat much liberty? CHARLES S. T certainly do, Charles, and if T were you | would take it, no matter how big a domestic rumpus it kicked up. There Is no virtue In submitting | to tyranny, and the more you give in to the despot on the hearth the more | you will have to give in, until the time will come when you won't even dare to call your soul your own Of course, when I say that you are entitled to an evening off I am presuming that you are goins to spend it like a gentleman. If you are Eoing to us to chase a skirt cr get drunk or gamble away money you | can’t afford, then your wife i justified in locking you up in your prison cell. But if vou just want to go to your club, or your lodge, or to a show, or have some real man-talk with men, or just get off by vourself and do as you darn please for a few hours, without having to consider anybody else's tastes and desires—and we ali get like that sometimes—why, then your wife is most unreasonable to deny you this pleasure. 1t is a pity that women can't understand that life is just as much a grind for men as jt is-for the and that men need relaxation and pleasure, | and to have thelr thoughts turned into different directions just as much as ey do, and that the only possible time a busy man can get this relaxation is at night, for he is at his work all day. It is also a pity that a woman has not sense enough to know that the more she forbids her husband to go out in the evening the more he desires to go, and the tighter she tries to nail him at home the more he hates home and domesticity. Make a man free to go when he pleases and he sta Bar the door, and he climbs over the transom. For that is the | contrariness of human natur: So_take your evening off, Chagles. good. But play fair with the wife. Tell her that she may also take off one evening a weelk, and that you will mind the baby while she goes downtow and has dinner with her friends, or goes to the theater, or does anything that diverts her. i Home would be a cheerier place if both husband and wife spent an evening away from it every week, getting new ideas, a fresh fund of cdotes and something interesting 1o talk about. DOROTHY DIX. THY DIX Please help a poor orphan girl. I am not, yet v years of age, and 1 live with my aunt and her husband." hey are both very good to me and have promised to educate me. Recently my uncle has begun to act very strangely toward me. and kisses me and tells me that he will give me money and fine clothes jewels, and that it my aunt dies he will marry me. He 18 About fifes-sna years of age. I love m she has heart trouble and it might Kill her. in helping my poople, who are poor. at his actions. What must I do? My uncle has been ver: ood T am fond of him, but I am hgrxgfigd PERPLEXED. Your uncle only safety lic poorhouse erself in My ad ome place afet is an unspeakable dastard and villain, my child, and your in immediate flight. Leave his house, if you have to go to Any girl of twenty, however, can earn an honest living for uys. of 5 he is bound soon to sense her husband's toward you, and the shock of finding out that you, to whom silde ll:.;"l‘:g:‘:x‘l kind and good, have acted traitorously toward her will be far greater than | knowing that her vwn husband has been false to her and to every principle | of honor and n i For there is n takes advantage of of a girl who is ad her into a ee from him as yo D AR DOROTHY DIX: like very much. time, the inevitabl le disagreeable after other crime on earth equal to that of the man who | «rorance and innocence; of the affection and dependence | nember of his own household, to win her heart and to | that can bring her nothing but shame and misery. »uld from some venomous beast! DOROTHY DIX. : 1 go out a good deal with a young. man whom I| We get along spiendidly together, except that, every | uabble about the good-night kiss arises. I hate to | © splendid time my friend has given me, but I can't seem to make him understand that right and wrong have been schooled | into me S0 well that I can't do what will belittle me in my own eyes just | because no one else will know. i This young man does 1ot belleve that there are any girls who do not | allow ng, and he feels that I am stringing him, or trying to play the | Innocent. He tells me it is Lecause I do not care enough for him. Why | should he expect to Kiss we? Also, why should I tell him whether or not | are for Irim. just to satisfy his vanity? Tell me what to do about this . as ‘he has not called for time, and T do miss him. y SAD BLONDIE. | S H not to kiss the young man. A cha a good deal of a cad Who n a girl pay for his attentions by doing | thing that both He and sie kiow brushes the .down from the peach. | a girl who 18ts every nuin Liss her and paw her gets to be a shep- | worn article, with none of the d-licate sensibilities, none of the freshmies and innocence that should belon denhood. If I were a girl, 1 would rather pay out my owngood, hard money ick a Fldesthin 30 pay for dhem with w1 Hissen oo Lok and automobile The only man who has a right to expec v tell nim (hat she loves Kim is the one wiho has asked hee to we s Oied Apparently this chap has not ponied tho question. He wants vou to kis m and to give him your heart for the poor g vou v times, which. would be & bad bargain o' your necte! 'SKIRE ¥OU out a few Let him go. He isn't worth ng ov e may bo surc. 'You may have 10t hix wciety, but you have won it mE ool and i€ he had any intention Whatever of proposing. 10 xow, yone ottt will bring him to the point, for e unkissed wirl {8 the Kind of o it 1'}';.& every mun would like to Rave. LSRR TR fe some I think you are exactly right yright When We Go Shopping BY MRS. MARLAND H. ALLEN. Sheets and Sheeting. able the Real linen ranks with old lace and V] fine eilvef in the hearts of many housewiy And a clean, cool, smooth linen sheet does carry’ yith it a feeling of chaste cowfort. Ldinen sheets, however, are a luxury that does not come cheap. They are, for most of us, unnecessary ex- avagance, for the finest grade of cotton sheeting is almost ‘as .hand- some, does not wrinkle so badly and wears well. d Linen is eold, smooth and leathery to the touch.. Not every one likes the “feel” of llmen sheeis on the bed. Their irresfstible attraction seems to Le their great beauty, due to the high Juster and -brilllancy. And it is the most cleanly fabrie, because the gber is longer and does not fuzz up Vike the cottog in swinning. so the woven surface is. sinooth and stays clean longer. lanen does have the disad- vantage that it wrinkles badly, so linen sheets miust be changed fre- quently in order to retain thelr fresh housewife to have sheets e Size tha ving sheed to have it torn el quently vou “torn " sheets stock.” This m 4 she desirds. by the vard ask ead of cut. Fre- ce sheets advertised as akil o the ready-made gtad akes a stralghter sheet, de’;_li:":;'“x“ not pull crooked in laun- There are many on the market. 7 are often very sized, they v grades’of sheeting The cheaper qualities coarse, and heavily stzed, Mhex aro rough 'fo the touch #nd heavs to wash and jron. The ot _grade of ton sheeting is AoV fercale. It is very white, | fine and durable, but is more expen- Make these tests befors v y the sheeting harsh and ;t"n"rcli:“ does it feel firm and soft? Does it feel smooth? Is 'its weight in the hand due to sizing. or to & firm cop. struction of the cloth? Are the varns close. together, regular and strong? Does it look as well on the wrong side as on the right? Most important where ‘all bed ‘linen is concerned is the cleansing quality; it must be easy to wash and iron Size is jmportan & comfortable and convenient sheet must be from twelve to eighteen inches larger than the matiress on all sides in order to tuck in securely. 1s or {Heers It will freshen you up and do you | He makes love to me { aunt devotedly, but T am afraid to tell her about my uncle, as | to tell your aunt the whols story, and get her to send vou | appearance. If you can afford yinen sheeting, however. by all means have it. A standard double sheet in linen cdsts from two to three times as much s a goud cotton sheet, That 15 why the fine cotton is replacing the linen in so many instances. Linen is the coolest sheet to use in the summer. fecause linen radiates the heat from the body; cotton, on. the contrary, tends to hold the heat. and is warmer, Many women imagine that they savo money by purchasing sheeting| by the yard and making it up at liome. ‘Thero does not seem to be 43 much of a saving on the money lde a8 some. think, but it.does en- Plain hems on sheets are cheaper than the hemstitched or scalloped and are Jmore _ serviceable for hard, everyday | wear. Searlet and Gold. Sattiday nite me and pop and ma started to take a wawk, pop saying, Lets go out tords the park and then it we wawk far enuft we'll be in the park without axually making eny promises. * No, lets wawk this way for a change, jest for a change, we never wawk this way, ma sed. The majority rulgs, pop sed. Meen- ing m: and we started to wawk up along the stores, pop saying, Speek- fng meerly as a bizniss man out for relaxation, this is my Ideer of no place to wawk. Well, it we ony bad a radio set home we'd proberly be sitting there lissen- ing to it now, ma set, and pop sed, Yes, thats so, youre never so bad off but wat you could be werse. Yo meen the other way erround, wat could be nicer than having a radio? ma sed. 5 Not having orie, pop sed. Ask me eny question you wunt to know and Iil anser it rite out of my hed, pop sed. Wich jest then we came to a store with a'lot of noise of diffrent kinds of music coming out of it, ma saying, a radio store now and theyve ot some terned on. Just think of all that coming through the alr without a single wire to push zent it wonderfill to think o 1ts terriftying to imagine, pop sed. And he wouldent stop to lissen and pritty soon we came to another store with even more sounds coming out, ma saying, Well, well heers another one. Yes, and you knew it before we startéd, this has all the earmarks of a put up job, pop sed. Lets cut out this wawk and go to a movie, lets go to the Little Grand, he sed. No, lets go to the Narsissus, ma sed, a. all rite, a movie And wen we got to the t was outside but a big By popular demand we have installed a radio set wich will be connected between picktures. After all, theres no place like home, lets go home, pop sed. Wich we did. COLOR! CUT-OUT Peggy’s Peculiar Name. “Do you know why we call her Pigeon-toeld Peggy the boy in the third cot at the Children's Hospital usked David. “Because she stumbles over her own feet!” “I don't!" cried a little girl brown braids. “Then how'd you break youn arm with if it wasn't by falling down because You stepped on your own toes? Peggy turned a deep pink. “But I'm never going to fall again, because 1_made 'a New Year's resolution at Fatty Barnes' party. 1 resolved to toe stralght all year long. Every time I walk I say to myself as I go, “Turn—your—toes—straight!’ ~ Next time you see me walk pigeon-toed 11 drink your beef tea for yo “T'11 take you up on that,” grinned the boy, who hated his beef tea worse than medicine. Make Peggy's hair brown, her cheeks pink, dress blus and hose brown. (Copyright, 1024.) N Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Oranges. Oitmeal with Cream. Buckwheat Cakes. Doughnuts > Baked Macaroni Graham Bread. Baked Apples with Rajsins. Cocoanut Cookles. Tea. DINNER. Clear Tomato Soup. Baked Whitefish. Egg Dressing French Fried Potatoes. Stewed Tomatoes. Asparagus Salad. Cranberry Pie. BUCKWHEAT CAKES. Mix % cup of buckwheat with 1 cup of flour and % teaspoen of salt; add 2-3 cup of warm water, 1-3 cup of milk and 1 tablespoon of dark 'molasses and le¢t stand over night. In the morning add 1-3 teaspoon of soda, dissolved in a little hot water, heat thoroughly and bake on a soapstone griddle. BAKED MACARONIL Break % pound of macaroni in small pieces, boil in salted water until tender; drain, rinse in cold water and drain again. Chop 1 peeled onion and 2 green peppers from which the seeds have been removed and cook until tender in 3 tablespoons of butter, Add the solid portion ol a can of tomatoes, 1 tea- &poon of sugar and 1 tea- .spoonful of salt, cook 10 min- utes; add the macaroni, mix thoroughly, turn into a but- te! baking dish, sprinkie with i [/butferea crumbs and bake about 15 hour, or until crumbs are | brown. 2 “y CRANBERRY PIE. & Cut the cranberries Ip halves, Chop_some sweet red, pgppers fine, mix them Wwith some cream ' cheese and form balls of the mixture. Serve one or two balls with every dlice of gingerbread. The spicy flavor gingerbread and the savory ta: the mashed cheese and peppers make a delicious cpmbination.. rinse in cold watei drain. Mix 1 tablespoon oficornstarch to & thin-paste witlrcold water, fill_the cup with boillng water and add 1% cnpledql sugar and 3 cups of prepaved ecranberries. This quantity wtll make two ples and is to be baked in two crusts. = GTON, D. ¢, THURSDAY, JANUARY 3, 1924 TREES OF WASHINGTON BY R. A EMMONS. AUSTRIAN PINE—PINUS NIGRA. This foreign tree has been widely planted as an ornament in the east- ern United States and to some extent as a forest crop. Though without the grace and beauty of the white pine and without the majestic proportions of the red pine, which it otherwise resembles, it is an exceedingly beau- tiful tree, with an appearance of sturdiness and lusty health. There are other good features, such as hardiness, resistance to extremes of heat and cold, rapld growth, de- pendability, flourishing in any soil: trees may be safely transpianted, even in the growing season. ltg native home is from southern Eurbpe to western Asla, a_tree to 100 feet and occasionally to 150, with stout, spreading branches in regular whorls. in youth usually forming a compact, regular pyramid, in old age sometimes broad and flat-topped. The leaves are stiff, sharp-pointed, three to tix inches long, usually twisted. in bunches of two, In relatively short sheathes. They are of a very dark green, darker than any other ever- BY WILLIAM Phantoms of the Dawn. A little while ago I suggested a practicable excuse for remaining out 5% school a day or o, to wit, coryza. That this suggestion found a wide Welcome seems certain. One attend- ance clerk in a large school tells me fhat there has been a frightful cpi- demic of coryza. since T offered this simple hygienic advice. Today I take great pleasure in bringing science %o the support of the schoolboy and schoolgirl who do not deny that they heard mother calling, yet fail to {get up themselves 1% a plain physiclogical eircum- !gtance, children. It is a valid excuse {for being a little late in the morning. ‘he fact is that in the normal process of awakening from sleep one first re- gains consciousness to sound sensa- ftions and a little later the capacity of voluntary movement, So you see It is quite true that a feller hears inis mother calling and telling him {it is time to get up. although he has tardy in arriving at fup. ~ Of course, this excuse, like !eoryza, won't do to use habitually, but ifor an occasional tardiness it is ab- solutely tight and scold proof. The twillght state, if I may so call it, between sleep and waking is a strange state of half or fractional consclousness, during which weird things happen or seem to happen. 1f one can carry the memory of these weird things over into the fuly con- scious state, likely enough ‘one will have a very good yarn, maybe a real idea, an invention, a plot for a story, or something - else of practicable value. With some persons the dream so vivid, as recalled to the waking consclousness, that the phantasms of the dream are assumed to have oc- curred in reality. Thus many a man has ocme to swear he has seen ghosts, received visits from spirits or otherwise entertained phantoms. People who sincerely believe they have experienced these actual spirit manifestations are akin to. the h terical, not in the common or vulgar sense of the word hysterical, but toes—all ready for you to shape and 'DEM}*P PHLLPS ML OF MAGNESHA | SAY “PHILLIPS” to your druggist, or you may not get the _ original Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physicians for 50 years. Refuse imitations in time, and consequently find | not yet recovered the power to get| happenings of this twilight zone are | green except the red cedar. The cones are two to three and one-half inches long, egg-shaped, yellowish brown, glossy. The scales are thick- ened at the apex and usually bear a short, dull spine. They ripen the second autumn, but do not open until andther crop is ripe. The small trees illustrated are among a group of Austrian pines that are growing in the Mall about a hun- dred yards west of the south end of the bureau of engraving and print- ing. There are others in the Mall and other Washington parks. It is a very variable species, with numbers of geographical and horti- cultural varietles. Varlety austriaca is the more hardy form from Austria to southeastorn Asia and is the one tsually planted in this country. Va- riety calabria 15 the Calabrian pine of Ttaly and Sicily. Variety poiretiana is the Corsican pine of Corsica. Of the horticultural varieties there is & dwarf, dense, bushy form, one of prostrate habit, a\ compact dwarf form, with-needies which turn golden yellow in winter. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BRADY, M. D., Noted Physician and Author. |in the true medical sense. Hysterla |means to the physician a state In which an idea controls the body. About the nearest a normal individual comes to hysteria Is zone between sleep and waking. One who has true hysteria is no more to blame for the manifestations of disease than is the epileptic for his fits, for some part of his conscious- ness is to all purposes asleep or in abeyance, very much as Johnny's power of voluntary movement is in abeyance although he hears mother |calling him, all right. We might say that Johnny is suffering for the mo- ment with total hysterical paralvsis —a _paralysis which seldom fails to respond to vigorous suggestion, but which ‘is nevertheless real paralysis until Johnny gets fully awake. On |the same ground we might properly | consider all who testify to having | actually seen spirits or talked with | them as subiects of hysteria minor. {These people are all abnormally | susceptible to suggestion, ! (Coprright.) e Squash and Tomato Soup. Sift together two cupfuls of cooked squash and a pint of canned tomato. Cook together two tablespoonfuls of butter and two tablespoonfuls of flour. Add two slices of onion, and when lightly browned stir in two cupfuls of milk and let cook until thickened. Add the sifted squash and tomato, season with salt to taste, white pepper and celery salt and stir the whole until it boils. Stock may be used instead of milk. Garnish with cheese balls. | Oatmeal With Apples. Core some apples, fill the centers | with some cold cooked oatmeal, and place them in a baking dish. Sprinkle some sugar on them, then add sofic water. Bake the apples in a moderate oven until they are soft. Garnish crea S - Reafl_y-m-cfiz a : Cod Fish Cakes ‘The kind of fish cakes you make yourself when you have time. Gorton’s famous Codfish (No Bones) in generous proportions with fine mealy pota- fry. The original prepared fish cakes. PROTECT Your- Doctor and Yourself MILK of genuine “Phillips” 25-cent bottles, also larger. size, conttain’ directions, and ‘vises. this twilight | his | the dish with oatmeal and serve with o |'BEDTIME STORIES Danny and Nanny Find a New Home. . 0D S diednier maten e bt e 3 —Old_Mother Nature. Danny and Nanny Meadow Mouse stopped just long enough to see that the great man-bird had & broken wing and was standing on {ts head. Then they hurried away as fast as their short legs could take them. They had had such a fright in their dreadful fall that their only thought was to get away from there as soon as pos- stble. Now, the great man-bird had fallen on .the edge of the garden of the owner of the little house Danny and Nanny had looked down on. That house wasn't much of a house. It was the home of a settler. You know a settler is a man or woman who goes into a land where few or no other human beings live and there cuts away the trees and plants orops, and 80 makes a farm. This place was the boginning of a farm, and it was a long, long way from any other farm. But, of course, Danny and Naany didn’t know this They ran until they Wem_fllul(. out of breath and had to stop. Then they began to take notlce of things. N&nny was very much upset. “Whatever are we going to do now?” she whimpered. “We haven't any place to go. We don’t know where we are. “Yes, we do,” said Danny. *We know we are right here.” But Nanny was too much upset to join in_Danny's chuckle at his own joke. Danny saw this. “Don’t you worry,” said he, “I guess if we look around we can find a place to make a new home. That place where we fell is a garden, or I don't know one when I see it. That means there iz sure to be plenty of food, for wherever man is there is food. I suppose we can go back to that man- bird.” N declared Nanny most decided- ly. ne fall out of the sky I8 enough for me. Now I am on the ground, I mean to stay here.” “All ‘right” replied Danny cheer- tully. “We'll look around for a place for & new home.” Now, on the Green Meadows up HEALTH HINTS By Bernard MacFadden. The bent-over position of the spine, with the stooping shoulders that go with i influences the body in two ways. 5 First, the body and its functions suffer from the direct effect of bad posture upon the internal organs. The chest is flattened and cramped, thereby crowding the heart and pre- vepting the free expansion of the lungs. It thus means an immediate loss of the proper supply of oxygen in the lungs and consequently in the blood, but it also means a displace- ment’ downward of all of the vital organs. This faulty position of the body involves not only a cramped chest, but the sagging and protruding abdomen. In the normal position the abdo- minal, region is never extended. In the slumping position, however, char- acteristic of the extremely aged, or of the one who has prematurely aged, the abdomen is relaxed and prolapsed, and the stomach, liver and other in- ternal organs sag several inches be- low the normal, crowding upon the intestines and 'other parts below. There is considerable strain of all ligaments and tissues in this pro- lapsed condition, and there is also congestion due to pressure of these organs upon one another. Under such circumstances poor functioning is_inevitable. But impaired functioning also re- sults from bad posture im another way. That Is through the obstruction of the spinal nerves, due to the bend- ing of the spine from: its nowfial posi- tion and the improper aligninént of the vertebrae. Saas oy An idcal posture correctfve.ls the {simple exercise of clasping the hands back of the head,. then pulling the head and elbows backward. " This will straighten the spine; raise the chest and give good standing position. To “vitolyse' according to my idea of impro¥ing the posture, straighten- ing the upper spine and arousing latent nervous energy, is as follows: i | FEATURES. | By Thornton i 'W. Burgess. North Nanny had always been the one to lead whep they were loolfln‘l for a pew home. But down here, in this new, -lnndu Sunny South, it was Danny who led the way. Danny al- ready had had some experience. Be- sides, in him was the spirit of ad- yentucs. 8o Danny led and Nanny meekly followed. She kept right at Danny’s heels. She was afrald of losing Danny and being left all alone. Danny kept along the edge of that garden. He remembered how easily he had lost his way the first time he had left the great man-bird. He didn't intehd to get lost this time. By and by they came to the stump of & tree on the very edge of that garden. “This is the piace.” declared Danny. 1, “WHATEVER ARE WE GOING TO DO NOW?” SHE WHIMPERED. And between two roots, which grew very close together, he began to dig. The soil was very sandy and it was easy digging. Danny never had found easler digging. RIght in under the stump he dug and made a little room there. Of course, Nanny helped him. When at last they had .a little room blg_enough they stopped digging. “There,” said Danny. “We'll make a nice bed in here, and then we'll have as good a home as anv one could ask for. Those roots will keep any one from digging us out I don’t think ;a’ll have anything to worry about ere.” (Copyright, 1023, by T. W. Burgess.) “Just Hats” By Vyvyan. Another Ribbon Turban.” This is a turban that can be made either of grosgrain or metal ribbon. The former, in a fashionable shade of grey-green or ten, is delightful. And In metal ribbon it is extremely smart for evening wear, and very effective, | as each loop at the sides catches the | Tlight and scintillates. Instead of tipping the head back, it is | brought back while the chin is kept down and drawn inward. Think of drawing the chin inward, downward | and backward and you have it. This is done simultaneouly with the rais- ing and expanding of the chest at the | solar plexus. Repeat this movement | several times whenever you think of | it, it possible dozens of times each | lay. Jelly Sauce for Game. Cook one onien ir three table- spoonfuls of butter until just brown. Add one bay leat, one stalk of cele chopped, two tablespooa‘uls of flour, half a teaspoonful of salt and one- fourth teaspoonful of pepper. Blend all smooth and add gradually ons pint of stock. Keep stirring until it boils. Let simmer or cook in u double boiler for fifteen minut Strain, add half a cupful of curra: delly and stir over the fire until i: Jelly is melted. —_— ‘What is sald to be the first elect cally operated pipe-line dredge in t world is now at work In the Colu bia river at Longview, Wash. It us ltnslbthln half the normal amount el Washington’s newest lunch delight OR something new, piquant and delicious: for something to make your lunch delightfully different: for something so temptin:: and creamy you will seck to enjoy it again and again— try Sar-a-Lee Sandwicl Spred between thin slices of bread. A treat awaits you; for Sar-a-Lee is just the right combination of tangy pep pers, pickles, olives, spice and shredded fresh-baked ham—the finest of their kind —blended in most delicious proportions with creamy- smooth mayonnaise. You will want to keep Sar-a-Lee in the home for quick, delightful serving . . . for teas, dances and firc- light lunches. Sar-a-Lee is irresistible in salads, sand- wiches, tartare sauce and Thousand Island dressing; or on toast-strips and butter- thins. No troublesome mixing— no waste—just creamy de- liciousness! Sar-a-Lee is waiting for you at your favorite grocery or delica- tessen. THE SAR-A-LEE COMPAN Cleveland, Ohio Sar-a-Jee =\ e — Doing What He “Oughtn’t” To IT isn’tas bad for a little boy to do what he oughtn’t to as it is to eaf what he oughtn’t to. For in play he spends energy—which helps him grow. But unless he eats nutritious food, he doesn’t get that energy back. It is easy to give your growing children vigor and robust health when you serve them such food as Karo, for they love its delicious, uausual taste and want “lots of it”’. And in eating Karo, they add to their blood and tissue almost directly a large per- centage of Dextrose. Karoisrich in Dextrose, which, as any doctor can tell yon, is ca= of our great energy foods. B Every day in svery way the ckildren like it better than butter. Serve Karo, either Blue Label or Red Label onsliced bread. Both highly nutritious. OU eould mot live long without Destress, The sterch sod sugar in ell food you est—bread, vege- mm—nfi into Destrase before your system be changed ©can use it e en energy food. FREE-—A booklet sbout Destrese every should read. Bxplains why .thrive on Destrese. Sent free with besutifully illustrated 64 page Cook Book. Write Cora ~ Bldg.7 Baltimore; Md. .

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