Evening Star Newspaper, April 28, 1924, Page 22

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- back his lips and showed WOMA N Vanity Case Hidden in Watch Fob BY MARY MARSHALL. There's a man who says that he can make a pretty accurato study of & woman's temperament, habits and disposition just Ly examining her handbag. But how many women, we wonder, would grant this handbag psychologist leave to undertake this sort of analysis. 1f individual women can be judged by thelr handbags, then races and classes of women can be judged by what they carry with them. Five hundred years ago, when it Was the THE WATCH FOB VANITY SET. LIP-STICK IS USED AS HANDLE, WITH POWT ATTACHED IS A UK _CORD WITH A LIPSTIC IN A GOLD TAS; TO W WITH EVENING GOWN their b 3 fashionable women about with them little and metal tweezers pluck out any hair h their elaborate | lucked their fore- | within our own | ucked their eye- | d to the use of s much as the| ort to powder and | BEDTIME STORIES When Size and Might Didn’t Count. re big, i¢ yo Jimmy Sk r how often people who strong appear 1 do just as they | s, sir, they do. ¥ want, because o one can Of course one form elfishnes: Buster Bear is very big. (Also strong. He has great 3 bout ns he 1y he does. Flat- about the only one Forest whom Buster fear to fight. So Buster bit of doing just about among the other people of Green Forest the Green would the b pleases - | There are just two of the smaller | people for whom Buster has respect, and who in turn are not afraid of Buster. One is Jimmy Skunk. This HE ORDERED JIMMY SKUNK TO CLEAR OUT. is the reason that Buster was So certain as he sat in the moonlight in the clearing where Farmer Brown's sugar house was. Jimmy Skunk was there, too, and Jimmmy was right in front of the door of the sugar hout Buster was sure t he could brea] nto that sugar house if he really T Indeed, it was for this purpose that he had come ver there. He Xnew that neither Iarmer Brown's Boy nor Farmer Brown were there. His tongue fairly dripped with long- ing for some of the sweets he knew pad been made inside that sugar house. So Buster was much upset , when he discovered Jimmy Skunk. Now, Jimmy Skunk_was so small compared with Buster Bear that Bus- ter could have flattened him right out with one blow of a big paw. He Enew it. Yet Buster didn't dare go near enough to try it. He walked back and forth at a respectful dis- tance, or_cat up and stared long and hard at the sugar house. All the time he grew angrier and angrier. He knew, he just knew he could get into ibat sugar house if he tried. There wasn't a thing to prevent him ex- cepting the presence of that little fel- jow in black and white just in front of the doér. Buster growled and grumbled and muttered to himself. = He walked .-around behind the sugar house. There was no way of getting in from that side. He returned once more to the front, hoping that Jimmy Skunk might have disappeared. But Jimmy ’ “was still there. Buster growled his very deepest, most ugly-sounding growl. He drew his big, strong teeth. . He- ordered Jimmy Skunk to clear oul. He told him that ho_ certainly would be killed if he dida’t. At first Jimmy made no reply at all. "It tickled him to see great lpstick today, and doubtless the bolder of them sought to attract at- tention by using their tweesers in public. A traveler in the desert of Arabla tells us that the women of certain Bedouin tribes carry always with them three things hanging from an ornamental cord—a thimble, the key to their food box, and the pair of small pinchers with which to pull the thorns from their bare feet. And in ghese trifilng trinkets you have the story of their miserable wandering existence, What of the woman of our own generation and country? Judging from the displays the jewelers and dealers in trinkets have to show us, she has need most of all for powder and lipstick. Apparently these are things she must always have at hand, whether dressed for a dance, the theater, for tennis, church, or shop- ping. And what else do the hand. bags of the day provide for? Change, to be gure, for one must have money, a handkerchief, possibly a pencil and a tiny celluloid tablet on which to write shopping lists, and some place to carry cigarettes! The sketch shows a clever little vanity case, which is hidden in an ornagental watch fob. is ufed as a handle and the powder bos is attached to the black ribbon. Then there is a jeweled powder box hanging on a black cord, with the lipstick hidden in the jpweled tassel It is designed to be worn with an evening gown. (Copyright, 1924.) Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST, Orange Juice. Dry Cereal with Cream. Creamed Finnan Haddie. Buttered Toast. Coffee. LU ¥ish Chowder. Pickles. aragus with Butter Sauce. Crushed Strawberries. DINNER. Vegetable Tenderloin Delmonico Potatoes. Creamed Onione. Cucumber Salad. _ Bunana Pudding. -Coffee. CREAMED FINNAN HADDI Put the fish in dripping pan, cool with water. place on back of range swhere it will heat slowly. Let stand twenty-five minutes. Drain fish and pick into small pieces. Make a white sauce with ons table- spoonful of flour, une table- spoonful of butter and one cup of milk. Season with salt and pepper and stir in the fisH. Cock until thoroughly heated. FISH CHOWDER. Bring one quart of milk to the scalding point before add- ing one-half pound of halibut, cut in small squares. Cook twenty minutes, then add a pint of oysters, and when edges curl remove from fire. Season with salt and pepper to taste and add @ generous lump of buttes. Oyster crackers finish the dish. A PUDDING Slice_half a small loaf of stale bread, theu toast and spread with butter. Peel and slice four bananas have at hand one-half cu raspberry jam. Butter ng dish, in the toast, b in alternate BANA rs, beginning and ending with toast: pour in two beaten eggs diluted with two and one-half cups of milk and bake in a slow”oven until firm in the center. Serve with hard sauce. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS | big Buster Bear working himself into | | such a rage, yet taking care not to| come a step nearer. [ | But after a while Jummy Skunk be- | came annoyed. He was tired of "“"l ! ing this big, blustering fellow about. | | Then in his turn he became angry. | He stamped with his front feet, a| | way he has of doing when he is an- | &ry. Then he took a few steps to- | ward Buster Bear, and his big, | | plufmy tail ‘was raised. That tail is | Jimmy's danger signal. Buster Bear had bfs eves on it. He backed away | somewhat hastily, all the time growl- | ing and making dreadful threats. | Jimmy didn't hurry, but he kept | straight on. Buster tried to get cour- age enough to stand his ground, but | the thought of that little scent gun | 0f Jimmy's was too much for him. | He backed away as fast as Jimmy pproached. = At last he turned and ‘hhu ed off into the Green Forest. | {Jimmy Skunk chuckled and returned to the sugar house. (Gopyright, 1924, by T. W. Burgess). | | WHAT TODAY MEANS | TO YOU. BY MARY BLAKE. . Taurus. ! The eonditions in the early part of | the day are quite favorable. later | | on, however, the adverse vibrations | | are more apparent and induce undue depression, nervousness and contrac- tion, producing fears of various kinds and dem#nding great circumspection and care. Do not assume any un- necessary risks. A child born today will be normal in health but rather abnormal in mind. Given good training and proper environment, it will grow up to be a great thinker and has possibilities of | becoming a leader. 1f surrounded in | its' youth with undesirable influences, | it is liable later in life to become a | power for evil. If today is your birthday, you have many stegling qualities and refined taste, comblned‘wlth a great love of culture, You are a great observer, but are disposed to attach greater mportance to trifles than they really rit, and by o doing you often over- look the great things that are really worth while. You are very prone to judge persons and to estimate their Teal worth by appearances rather than by character. A “diamond in the rough” has no attraction for you. Although you at heart are sincere and affectionate, you are very much given to unnecessary fault-finding, and are ever ready to criticize the minor failings or trifling weaknesses of those with whom yoy come in con- tact. This causes hard feeling, and your friends and acquaintances do not Eive you full credit for the good qual- ities you possess. In private life, as in business, it does very little good to decry the methods of your competitor. It is always more profitable to adver- tise the merit¥ of your own salable commodities. In your home life, as well as in the career which you promise, you would find greater happiness in the former and acquire a greater success in the latter if you could cultivate a warm- hearted appreciation of others’ ef- forts and a little more indulgenes of other people’s foibles. Disraeli once sald, “It {s much easier to be critical than to be cor- rect.” Well known persons born on this date are: James Monroe, fifth Presi- dent of the United States: Le Wilson, author and editor: Cox, artist and painter; Frank Hat- ton, journalist. (Coprright, 19249 [ ot The lipstick | ————s After Larvin green, red is the most popular color in the milinery world. Bright, bright, very bright red. Un- mistakable red. Red unrelieved. ‘Here is such a hat, self-trimmed with a target pierced by a lfl&lchinf quill.” The shape is & brimless model. My cuazin Artie stayed at my houss all nite last nite on account of f{t starting to rain jest wen he would of had to go home if it hadent of, and sleep and tawking, the going to sleep, and after @ wile he {the tawkin and Artic doing most of sed, Hay, for the lover mud shut up, glve us a rest cant you, I want to go to sleep, nock kneed hunk of cheese. © is that so, you dont say so, well if Tm a nock kneed hunk of cheese youre a parrit tovd bandy legged hunk of cheese, 1 « . And we started to could call the other one the werst kind of a hunk of cheesc, Artie say- ing, Youre u cross eved nurro chested pug nose hunk checse and you cant back it up or down Well thats mild to the kin hunk you are because voure t footed, hump back. bald hedded short waisted hunk of cheese and thats the werst kind there iz, 1 sed No it aint. either, because its net alf as bad as a slab sided, flop ca crooked neck hunk of chees thats jest the kind of « bunk Artie sed. Well if T am darn i | than being a ignorent d less hunk of cheese | good nite Im asice you see wich one of a o better mbell tooth- d now o other and gave a king it would be a go0d wa ony Artie sed, Like | skinny ~ footed, jomted. pink haired hunk of Me still pertaining to be usleep | artificial tnores, and 1 kepp liss and pritty soon Artie was asleep, wich I could teil by the I he was breething to sed, O is that s , sandy mouth, rusty s elbowed, square stummicke chees Artie not saying enything on ae- count of not being awake, and I went to sleep peacefill and drcemed 1 was @ cowboy in hea: The Guide Post1 By Henry Van Dyke ribbed, d. hollow -d hunk of Joyfulness. e of good cheer. Matthew, 0.2 A gloomy Christian 18 a contradie- tion in terme And yet one of the chief perils of | our Christianity is that of joyless- | ness, If our joy is to be lasting it must | be superior to circums’ances. | Once when Livingston wagon | train wes attacked in Africa and all his_possessions carried off, he wrote iz his diary: | “We shall move more easily now that we are lightened of our furni- | ture. “They have taken away our sofa I never had a good rest on it . . . “Well, they can't take away all the stones. We shall have a seat in spite of them, and that, too, with a merry heart, which doeth good like & medi- Our joy must be independent of what other people do against it This does not mean that it sheuld be sclf-suflicient. There are some joys which can only be conferred or with- | held by others.” | But Christian joy must be inacees- siblo fo the hostility of others. It must abide, despite indifference or | enmity. | Our joy must have room for sor- row and pain and sacrifice. “Ye shall weep and lament,” said Jesus, “but the world shail rejoioe. ... Your joy no one taketh away from you.” The happiest lives have always in- gluded sorrow and pain and sacri- esus, for the joy that was set be- ;ore Him, endured the cross.” be (Copyright, 1924.) BHistory of Dour Name. BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN, CRAFT. VARIATIONS — Croft, Meadoweroft, Ryecroft, Bancroft, Berecroft, Hay- eraft. RACIAL ORIGIN—Englih, SOURCE—A locality. Here is a group of family names which were applied first to individ- uals actually born and raised in or near the communities responsible for the first use of their family names. Craft in this sense has no connec- tion with the word “crafty.” In the speech of the medieval English “craft” or “croft” meant an inclosed field or yard. “Craft” was the pronunclation developed in the north of England and Scotland. “Croft” was the pro nunciation in the south. Of cours in their first descriptive use all of the surnames {n this group were pre- fixed by words meaning “of the,” “at the” or “by the,” whether it was the Norman “de 1a” or the Sazon “a," “atte” or “by the.” The meaning of “meadoweroft” will give you no trouble. Tt was, of course, inclosed meadowland. And “ryecroft” was an inclosed fild of rye. “Bancroft” might prove difficult, but all you have to do is to insert an “e" and you have “beancroft” the meaning of which is‘obvious. “Bere- croft” meant “barleycroft.” But “hay- croft” or £t” did not mean a field of hay. ay” in this case is our modern word “hedge,” and the “haycroft” was any field.that was fenced in by a hedge. we was lying in bed waiting to g0 to | me doing most of | ed, ‘WhAat Bvery Woman Wants to Enow |DorothyDix| " & Riddle the Sphinx Has Brooded Over for Centuries Without Solving—Stress Your Femininity if You Have No Charm. g VER and over again girls ask me these questions: What is charm? What is the secret of the attraction that some women have for men? What is the “come hither” look in the eye that some women have that makes every man who beholds it get up and follow them? Why do some girls always have hosts of beaux flocking about them, while other girls just as good-looking, just as clever, just as good dancers, just as anxious to please, never have a date or a single sweetheart to bless themselves with? And to all of these questions I have to answer, sadly and discon- solately, that T do not know. I have to give up the conundrum, which is perhaps the riddle that the Sphinx, who s also a woman, has brooded over through the centuries in her desert solitude, without ever being able to solve it. In Barrie's delightful play, “What Every Woman Kpows' Maggie's brothers, discussing her with the brutal frankness with which brothers approach the subject of a sister, agreed that she wasn't young, nor brilliant, and that she was homely, yet all the men were after her. ¥inally one of the brothers said: “But she's got that damned charm.” And that was that When & woman has that damned charm she can snap her fingers in the face of flappers and living pictures, and marry as early and as often as she pleases, as is witnessed by the many fat, pic-faced women we all know who have had two, and three, or more husbands apiece, and who still have a walting list in case anything untoward and fatal should happen to the gentleman to whom they are at present united the holy bonds of matrimony - BUT what is this charm, what is this rabbit's foot that some lucky women carry, and others do not? To say that it is personality is to attempt to explain one mystery by another mystery, for we do not know in what personal magnelism consists, or by what power one individual draws us, while another repulses us, We know that it isn't beauty, because the best lookers among girls are seldom the most popular, and men who profess to worship beauty are gen- erally content to adore it from a safe distance, and show no diepesition to marry it. 1t is notorious that beautles seldom make good matches. Nor does ‘charm consist of intelligen Being a highbrow booms no wom stock, soclally or matrimonially, while a witty woman cuts her throat with her own tongue, To be a spellbinder is for a =irl's falry godmother to have wished a curse instead of a blessing upon her, for no woman is more anathema to men that the human phonograph. Even @ancing, chief of accomplishments in these jazzy days when it Is of greater profit for a woman to have her brains in her heels than in her head, is but a passing attraction, while amiability and a sweet nature, woman's traditional one best bet, are like 8 sticking plaster, potent to hold a man after marriage, but of small value in luring him into it. | Undoubtedly, charm In its perfection is a gift of the gods, but happily, In these days, when Nature proves a cruel stepmother who is o mean and stingy that she ducs not give us ll that is coming to us, we have learncd to circumvent the lady. No woman need be as ugly as God made her, nor as unattractive as sh was born. Drug-store compl=xions can put the inherited ones to the blus and any girl who is willing to take the trouble can acquire a line of lures and graces that will make any bona fide siren tremble for her job. To the girl then, who wishes to wequire charm, and who' especially wishes to attract men, T would say, first, stress your femininity. pact b ont mean nd wcepy and dishragey, without any hack bon hat type of fashion as co: y 4 bustles and hoopskirts AR Rplatilyas . . remains still 2 woman BUT, the eternal fe; and the more womanly sweeter, the mor: she sppeals to men speaks of the woman he loves, he i e eternal attraction for men, the gentler, the tenderer, the | If you will notice when a man | | variably calls her “little” no matter { 1€ she is six feet high and weighs pounds. What Lie means is that | she &tve nim the reaction of depending upen him, of looking up to him, and that In soine subtle way she flatters his vanity by givi i sense of masculine superifority ZERTIRxBE pinyithe ! You never see an aggressive, double-fisted woman |like a man. ket anywhere. And In his soul every m: | furbelows. and likes to see women dolled up. | a terrible mistake when they | When a girl puts on knic discard | To girl who wishes | secret: Make of yourself a mirror | selves. 3 men sec a f eyes. personal v other peopl of their explc who fights her way | an adores frille and | That is why girls make such | pe mannish wayes, and wear mannish clothes. | [ vckers she throws her frump card into the | rm I would also whisper this other people look upon them- & reflection of themselves in your listen with bated breath while . but never mention your own. se over thelr cars. their dog: with their disappointments. and you will be universally re Marvel their adventures. K"u.fl\;e the glad hand thelr suc- | 28 4 woman of perfect taste. | wonderful insight. profound judgment, a brilliant talker & " of whom one could never weary, M empRRIan | in the tirelcss listeners, ond not the endless talkers. |t o 1o the alkers. whom men take DOROTHY DI yright, 1924.) ) foLD “Oh, i day costumes and practicing our dances, we forgot to make any May baskets!" “Let's make them now,” suggested Alice, “and have them ready to fill with ‘violets, Thursday morning!” Thess are the twe kinds of baskets the s et T feis o olie: . G ‘aper longthwiss, thed crosewise: No tice where the folds are and cut around the sid dear!” cried Betty Cut-out. That folds in and is pasted. the cornucepia, fold the paper inte s teen parts. Mark the ones that wre stri in the diagram, them cut out thoss feur. the sides together and tum the out. acher, and Alice will give hers to Lillian, & ew girl. - (Copyright, 1924.) Celery and Dried Beef. Take two cupfuls of diced celery, obtained by boiling until tender some ofiter stalks. water and add to dried beef. Simmer gently. white sauce from one cupful of milk, two tablespoonfuls of flour and one tablespoonful of butter. Add this to the cclery and beef. Cook for about ten minutes in a double boiler. Serve on toast or with baked potatoes. it four ounces of Rbubarb Sherbet, Ut up a pound of rhubarb in a granite kettle and cook until moft. | Strain off the juice, of which there | should be about three pints, because [ you should have put on a quart to |start it cooking. Cut up one lemon |fine and put in a stone jar with one cupful of sugar and pour the bolling Juice over. Set in a cool place until cold, then chill on fce. like the lfllflflfinnn'fcafl lsl?(';.: &/ BY HELEN KENDALL : Thoughtfulness With Flowers. The woman who has a garden—| either & large old-faghioned garden people | ger o been go busy making May| Do not cut the detted line at the te Batty is going to give her May basket to her Save one cupfu! of the | Make a FEATURES. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D., Noted Physicicr: and Auther. Going Away for Health. A hundred years ago or more peo- ple lving alorg the Atlantic coast were sent to the Alleghentea for their health. As population fncreased slowly wesward (nvalids were ad- vised to visit the pine woods of Michigan, then later Minnesota, and later still, the Rocky Mountain re- glon became the messa for health seekers. But population kept fol- lowing along, and the doctors finally had to ship invallids clear to the Pa- cific coast in quest of the proper cii- mate. Population, however, chased the poor invalids even there, and for a while the doctors were nonplused. They picked out a few isolated spots in the far southwest and presently Arizona, New Mexico and other more or less hopeless places began to boom. But, alas, the boom is already waning. Population follows business. The doctors are now without & place to send their patients. So they have concluded that, after all, there Is no place like home, when a patient de- sires a good climate. The porch, the roof, the back yard, anywhere out of doors. Consumptives used to get well in the Alleghenies, once in a while, It was accidental, of course, for sidered a sultable medium of respira- tion. Consumptives used to zet well every Httle while in the Michigan and Minnesota woods. By that time a few invalids were leaving their windows up, with window boards in- serted to kgep qut drawts, Quite a lot of the consumptives who went to the Rocky Mountains recovered—re- turned east and died a few years later. Others recovered, remained in the west and lived out their lives there. Those who remained west con- tinued slecping with wide open dows. Those who get batter too strong for then windows %n cold On the coast reco - eral rule. By that time night air was freely inepired. In the arid south- west, almost everybody got well, be- cause it wasn't necessary to live in a house at all. practically. At home all over the country now it is a disgrace to die of tuberculogis. The disease is one that has a strong tendency toward spontaneous heal- Ing if you giwe it & show. The open air life, in town or eounary, on moun- tain or in the valley, is curing thou sands of cases e where. The cx- sentlals of cure are very simple: (1) and closed the nd damp nights. ery became u ge throughout the day all able: 3€ reasonable variety; (6) graded exer- cise, under strict regulation by the doctor, according to the condition in each case; (7) occupation which gives peace of mind. iliness; the year around; available or 0z) endur- 1s it harmful to apply vaseline to { the evelashes to make them grow? Is it harmful to check under-arm per- spiration’—E. R Answer—Vaseline no harm. but no such application will really make eyelashes grow. The checking of the sweat in the armpits is harm- less. does Which is the most beneficial way to take eggs? Is it true tk are indigestible Answer—Suit $300 A doctor who attends regularly and | L?) open air| wholesome food in | cEgs are digestible enough for asy body but a feeble invalld. The lras nutritious and least digestible way 1 take eggs is raw, because ravy cg albumen is not so completely diges: ible as cooked albumen, owing to the presence in raw albumen of some thing which tends to prevent absor tion of the albumen. This aceounts for the diarrhea which s sometim, st up when many raw eggs a: eaten. Our physiology class in high sche would like to know what you thi of children from thirteen to fifte: years of age drinking coffee Geraldine O. M. Answer—It is injurious for childre under fifteen, though I think coffes i» wholesome and healthful for mox: adults. Milk should be the beveras. of children under fifteen, MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN A Cutting-Out Hint in those days night air was not con- | win- | and | went back east found pyblic opinfon | One mother says: “In making one-piece dress for a ‘teen-age gir who i3 roun-houldered the ‘hike' | the back may be avoided if when outting the back vou add to the |shoulder length & littie at the top of |the shoulder at the neck edee anc |then taper off. ‘The same methor |may be used to aveid a similar 'hike {in the front of a dress made for o {stout girl Prices realized on Swift & Company |eales of carcass beef in Washington. D. € for week endiog Baturday, April 35, 1924, on suipments sld out, ranged from 120 d aversged mayonnaise and French e 4 to $23% WKimldrk oven R“&'l, i price from in "$5.00 10 823.00 in the country or a strip of bright spring bulbs or summer annuals in her back yard-—can spread beauty and color over a large territory and bring pleasure to many persons whom she may never sce. If you doubt this, take a handful of tulips or daffodils around to your local library, give | them to the librarian, who will grate- fully place them on the desk—and girls, who comse to return books or take away others, Almost every visitor will bend over to smell the flowers or look into their hearts, smiling a little as they do so. As a matter of fact, the large ma- jority of people have mo flowers ex- cept the occasional ones they buy. Yet the love of flowers is universal, 1 was amused recently by a colored | advertisement in one of the magu- | zines, showing 2 asleep under a signpost on a warm spring day, with a daisy in the but- | tonhole of his ragged coat! To put | a bow! of gray biossoms within eve | reach and nose reach of the flowar- Tess is like giving food to the hungry or shelter to the homeless. One does not need to have many flowers to do such things as this. | Half a dozen blooms will do as weli | as a score. 1 know & woman who | always gathers a few tulips, jon- Quils, or sprays of lilac_when she Jeaves her home during spring days, and leaves them with the young woman who shampoos her hair, or with the clerk at the notion counter, or the bookkeeper imprisoned in the little box at the back of her butcher | shop. She very cannily sends a bunch every now and then, too. to the local telephome exchange, with the request that the supervisor put them in the rest room. She never has to wait for the operator to ai swer! She never gets a wrong num- ber! In midwinter she varies her thoughtfulness by sending an occa- sional box of candy. It pays! ‘This woman often goes forth armed with a few flowers, which she gives to, persons on the street—wistful lit- tle children, dreary old women, in- valids walking slowly in the sun, per. sons who merely look at the flowers lingeringly and then look up at her. Her garden is 2 jrained nurse, a for- cign missionary, un eloquent aund then you sit back and watch the pro- | cession of men and women, boys and | red-nosed tramp | persuasive preacher. And she is the hagpiest person I knowa or nutmeg to each glass. Add sugar If needed wh‘en served. L] Kimlark RUGS A most com- plete array in the newest patterns and designs. You will find your Kimlark Rugs here. Feurth Floor—The Hecht Co. The Hecht Co. 7th at F one! that in-the- dishpan look e L e sk Have You Ever Seen Such Lovely Woven Rugs Priced So Low? look at Kimlark Woven Rugs in the better stores. Picture th:o:mflom—hright.chm designs for sun rooms; quiet, mmmuviumm 3 8aY, ly colorings for surface. Think Then look at the price mark~to make sure that such lovely rugs can be so amazingly low. Two rugs cost about what @Jfiqf«m And every rug, being reversible, Wh:ual':mmdmntinnhmunym Write for our booklet and the nearest dealer’s name. Menufacrured exclusiosly by TEXTIL! MPANY NATIONAL FRESTEETLE coppANY KIMLARK wovex RUGS F O R EVERY F A LOOR EVERYWHERE

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