Evening Star Newspaper, April 30, 1925, Page 50

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

FEATURES. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1925, WOMAN’S PAGE. ome Americans Favor Redingotes MOTHERS DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX N THE GARDEN WITH BURBANK ST S £ AND THEIR CHILDRE} 2 BY MARY MARSHALL. 1 [onq 1o dress with As Reported by Elizabeth Urquhart and Edited by Luther Burbank = - Love of Poetry. How Can Stepfather Train Unruly Boy of 16? care and taste — e one-plece reding coat|with it. One day we wear Winter A 3 3 e The Flower Garden. garden, to select the kind known a dress " has' siways been dear (o 4o | oats And the west we tesach forth Advice to Girl Who Fancies Herself in Als, ] 2lways.lose Ta or pmureLEathes ithan e heart of well dressed French womeR, [ wrapless in georgette or taffeta. We my oninal™ Before passing on to the planting |Italian, or formal, Thi vie gives and, crestingly enough, many |wear suits because there is always : . 2 B of flowers, T asked Mr. Burbank about | greater opportunity for wide border American women in wre won [the comfort that in case of a rapid [ > Love With Married .Employer. And:when 1t enter the famous hybrid eln tree at his| Of perennials and triendly little gro “At my old home in New England | set plans g rise of the temperature we could lay {off the jacket. (! S e e any: shop | still, the one-piece coat frock might | { 5 ¥ ’ y E v e e e MISS DI T have a stepson who is past 16, and with only one| [T act both there grew a very large and veryl Mr. Burbank here made a st e i vear's experience in trying to control him I am at my wits’ end about ] oy beautiful weeping elm tree, the largest tion tume for the woman who goes out e \ g do, and his mother insists that he be given his way over my protests, wild and 2 for miles around, for which I always| “If we are to have fruit trees late | gostume or M vomAn Moo oL although T have to support him. [e Is utterly unruly, and as a consequence | | 1. 110 44 68 TEeRt affection. .and. o OrisOF ion. Weimmay ‘uge thain a#'part of the | something trim, smart and “all there" § sent him to a military school. But after one month’s experience his mother ! Tz wliftst 0 Tameaster T cut somsl| Beckaiotn® of thevgarden, whethe ] oo taand ran permitted him to return home, because he was not willing to submit to the |meCanme tips of the branches from the tree|they are planted in rows that wi s s A\~ discipline: I am anxious to do my duty by this boy and willing to put him S to0k them 6 Califorata. These!| §1v6.vistas.pr whether they fort pa e R 4 \ / through college, but he has neither gratitude nor appreciation of what I do tantiie v LiadiE o (s roots of| of 'iHe Afivabhery” antl iboliidaries of ) for L.tm, and his mother sides with him. What can I do? 3.8 5 Eeciling 'of the coraraon American| @i garden i = - elm, at the surface of the ground As he spoke Answer: Nothing, unless you can make his mother realize what a 4 iy e o il Lt e | g swizasE on criminal thing she is doing in ruining her son, and to make a mother see any produced a tree which, when only | these dimensio fect in her idolized child is the most difficult task on earth. Such women 16 years old, measui 215 feet in|by tall hedg re deaf to all reason and blind to all consequences, and though you speak @Y rater. ehs® Gt atcdars: o be ||broken by | Just to show the popularity of the with the tongues of men and angels, you cannot turn them from their folly. aTine on s oWy 1octe) but tha| Aorin | redingote costume in France the : " connecting line where the two elms/|plum tree, an apple pear | story is told of one tailor there who| One mother says When you tell a woman that a boy of 16 is at the turning point of SPRINGTIME united may be easily seen. to say mnothin L grape tre | woman who goes forth early and % wants something suitable for varying § i | temperature and v ing occupations. 3 | Then it is that the ensemble costume, with thin frock and long coat, is | more desirable. | within one short month made 140 copies| I want my children to love, poetry | his life. and that it he is not controlled and taught to control himself he will As the old tree in Massachusetts | small fruits trainec f fence fof a single model of & redingote. or |an naturally as they love prose. Often | "un Wild luter on: that if he is not S I e has since been destroyed by a storm, | the rear. |coat frock. Many of these French|I read them some little poem and we|flocipline fum with a rod of jron; that i€ he 18 not made to SR te BY D. C. PEATTIE. this Western hybrid is doubly prized,| “Was there vegetables redingotes are quite tailored and often | decide which verse of it we like best.| 46 (oSt AL (0 (0, Ul that B onehs Just bacatse It Iz hagd and unpisas. — for this glant was without a doubt a | this garden?” as have a smack of the directoire about|This we commit to memory together. | o e & et - G S » natural hybr! a quizzical smi | them, rather wide revers and high|Sometimes, also, I ask one of them | #nt: he will be a quitter as a man—why, she will agree with you. Azaleas. As Mr. Burbank described this won-| “T know it soun waistcoat. Detachable white waist-|to vead a simple narrative poem to derful tree, it seemed to be a fitting | 1 said, “but there coats of pique sometimes lend dis-|the others while we are at work, turn symbol of his life and work both in|garden p and fl netion about. In this way 1 am trying to native flowering tree, azalea is assur- | the East and the West, and to typify | and in beds in lov The sketch shows an American- | make them see that poetry is not an the union and harmony of the tv | in tubs flower | made frock of beige kasha with red|artificial pleasure to be enjoyved on delic: plins St So for the present the amateur and | There linen collar and piping, worn with a ated occasions, but may be a very icate, fragrant charm it has no|the master turned from the trees and | garden, |1ed straw hat This is quite closely | real part of their daily 1iv e e o Bt e s otion it 1o the eraslest thing on | FIVls In the ary woods where we find | shrubs to the garden ltself and ¢ e den, tted, as clothes go nowadays, anc d. So sometimes. I t as - he crueles Vi : ¥ chat lav- | flowers that were to beautify of ahows fitted hips with fullne q‘-’m”‘,';f earth, and the greatest misfortune that can happen to a child. :L‘;;I::gb’ltw:‘l\l:jk Dt what e | 1l nafialiaeny baan daciden to malke || EGE 4 ng from below the pock iRt 2 S il T Heeritifal e seldom. 5o com. | @ garden plan, and this had been done | ized th (Covyrignt,” T once heard a wise woman ‘God gave my sister angels, but she | beautiful & 0 Subieee Lo suggections and alterations, | mus What TomorrowMeans to You | | made devils out of them.” "And it was true. These children were beautiful in | mon as the azalea, and rarely are the | \GHSE, t0 FUEEASTINR §IC §OSHTONG | SRAF, e i i body. unusually gifted and talented in mind, but their mother adored them so | Well known charms of a home product | JI8 ©8 FO% 89 JatS HE LEenon 00| 200 1o BY MARY BLAKE. that she never corrected them, she never made them do anything they did not | 50 alluring a5 the s o I e e it Feou e bewk: fore tspicei - want to do; they were permitted to indulge every whim and caprice, and they “‘Z“""“‘““"‘ i ' Rear ? grew up utterly selfish, purposeless, undisciplined, with no strength save the | l‘"“. e e N NEWTON Taurus. Strength of their own desires and passions. They married, and were divorced | Number of kinds in the So | " ; from their husbands and wives. They tried a dozen professions, but failed in | mountains, and from Maine, to Flor The aspects tomorrow are quite | tpem all because they had never been taught to stiek to a thing and carry on [ dla. and even on the Puctle Cont Red Herring Across Trail. l"““‘:‘ and ”"!“‘ o *;;"9“"“‘ con- | when the novelty wore off and the grind commenced. And so they ended utter | there a1 ohc or more df.ng] o s | = tented frame of mind without creating | gailures in every way ovely elf of the dom. o This phrase. originally "o draw a|any special urge to do things out of That will be the fate of this boy. unless vour foolish wife can be induced [ The District boasts of two kinds- ed he lllxv‘. f‘l.’”» the ‘li.-fl.k Hlfr(\ | the ordinary. This is a ;\lulvlnva\IHr\ to let vou control her son and send him back to school, and mu';;\mm :\1!“’401\1\1}:\.h l| k and the ewa P eard in everyday speech to|portunity for eéngaging in important | gy there DOROTHY X. il e opiage i signify « means used to divert one's | correspondence and for entering into | > e chiefly “down-rive To see the attention. to throw one off the scent | agreements or contracts after careful ZAR MISS DIX: 1 am in the ‘employ of a young man who is very|&eous flame azalea one must g by injecting into the matter in hand |and thoughtful deliberation. The vi D Facoritile sk Dhotn T aAMIEs Seri-vhook.l FTA 18 aitleimin; and' T ;;‘i:;ewr‘ai\u,:‘wm\ or anywhere in th [onSeachieer Upor whichtheimtientloniinationstindicere Iy ITe problem | would sooner die than break up his home. He loves his wife unr} children, AL e L thet has vexed you u the pas but there are times when his eyes tell me that he loves me. It is very FITTED COAT DRESS OF BEIG The expression dates back to the|under the favorable conditions of to-| ottt BICRE B0 CRNGS e at T like it. When I feel that he cares, though T KASHA WITH RED LINEN COL- | Seventeenth century for its origin, be-|day, become easy of accomplishment | xyow T shall never have him, life is very sweet, and when he is indifferent LAR AND PIPING, WORN WITH | Ing a survival of the old practice of |and difficulties that have existed here: | 1'\Vatt to ery T %o wretched. Do most men fall in love with thelr girl | them. though not nearly so manx. 1n RED STRAW HAT. i«;mx V‘r\Pn to (lr;x(\lvhl)w carcass of a |tofore Mtl) be easily "":_‘l “1“"“‘ n“‘mm:; employes? What uld you advise me to do? 1 must work for“aolr!{\lltf‘\ll\'vn were the rage in England, many of A cat or fox or a red herring across the | evening the same conditions preva y ED. e et { track in training dogs for hunting. and denote that you will experience o ;::éi’xl ‘.‘.F'T[,L“‘i,;.'qu. ’km‘m"‘r‘;; lgu‘res over to this type of k. w | The uniqueness of the phrase made | exceptional happiness and content- Answer: My first vice to vou, my dear. is to cultivate a little | By, FRETETR O NG U0 T SEHR I — never so well liked 3 c v. | it stand out, and it soon became popu. | ment in the home and social circle. common sense. = Don't zining that vou see things in men's eyes. v derhaps the ¢ ctions | She knows that that is what happens to pampered and spoiled boy: If dogwood is the District's finest general. but she believes that some miracle will take place that will sav her own precious darling. And, anyway, she is too weak and too foolishly fond of him to take what she knows to be the right course with him. | edly tts loveltest flowering shrub. In We talk of mother love. We idealize it and make it the most beautiful and sacred thing in the world, and the greatest blessing that can befall a | Tt should not be th. leag are: exclusively Ame: The old werld has some share of them, though not nearly so many. In jon in flowers changed. Today Amer. - lar in the figurative sense in which it | A child born tomorrow will be both | A}} that you see is the reflection of your own image, the thing that you put| o, zuteas are rather n Ever notice how different people ®f the <o Somicthing {6 101 1s neat et physically and mentally erratic. At |{here vourse , man’s eyes tell a woman a single. solitary fact. Seh ticulture, 2 in| take the hot ther? times it will inspire much hope and | The longing that 3 vou perceive is prol e T kol ebery o X ¢ the hot weather? confidence by its wonderful physical | thinking of his lunch. 2ht of joy that you see leap his eyes at Your | gouble flowered hothouse azaleas are | - It's really amatter of figures. Thealen- - 7 condition. Just as ddenly it will | 4 pproach is not caused by but by the stock market having gone up.! 1o’ G000 T . BEDT] IE STORIFS BY THORNTON create dismay and worry by transitory | The despair {hat von interpret into his grief over u blighted love is 4 reflex | “qyor L lams L are O musile b u,f,,":‘,,";‘,fi,‘}”f.’; S ESS but none the less serious ailments. | of the pancakes he had for breakfast yweve 1 wonders in impro . St teristics will at times appeal to one A wit once said, “The lizht that lies in woman's eyes lies ;n‘m lies. and | (& ing extremities does. - jand all, and it will then rank as one | jies.” and tha twice for men, so cut out the eye-reading busin in zalea is a ose i i Jimmy's Adventure. He looked b Far down the road | of the best. At other times the things ‘:'4.”,» gy I8 man w]':v.ln]pr tence is nn-v.u:};\m b mi’h "'";:-n" 'm.mh”“,;ty‘ s Sadvent e were two glaring eyes, the biggest | that it does will cause anguish and My secc f advice is to quit playing with fire. which vou arel njo"\ho profess to love flowers P B aghonecds iar s o Eves o die . . illey .,\,‘,'!',,‘ had seen. Even the great | distress, if not despair. Its disposition | doing in delibers stering i yourself a passion (‘:)rl th '<"mnr|;lml man. | lsual, the worst offender is the person except fat. eves of Hooty the Owl were small | Will be complex—at times very gay, | Love is mostly wwpnosis, and any woman can think her: §ii Jove WItR L e e or sale-- Wha ‘st i * Jimmy. Skunk was a very good fa | Beside these. at other times depressed. Its char-|any man that she wants to. Ste ‘Turn your attention to some unattached | Wioy Ficks for, sale—wwhe ’ };‘:‘lyi::\:'n? f;;;h lo‘“m:""::s fher and Tiked to. wallk out With his | Jn‘nlm_\”\\nwlnrwl‘ Wt Be et | Mer will Be Juer oK chasseaiie | young man i ant, to saye yoursclf trouble. v public. withered. Aza- | gucraing. It is clean and without waste. amily and show the yotngste ore | afraid e turned and ambled on.|certain times dependable and reliable, — 3 ely survive picking. b 3 = = 5 P ipleddi s Ll R Suddenls it became iigh, A I‘mlm wa | at others -undependable and unreli Certainiy most married men do not fall in love with their irl mrioves L et b bead, tail or bones. It'sguaranteed fresh. w still liked to slip off by himself once 94¥ around him, and for a short dis. |able. At no time will it show for any [The percentaze who do is very small. A man’s thoughts in business hours | ,.jeas home unfaded 2 in a while. You see, he bad oeeq oy | tance ahead of him in the: roeq. it | considerable period constancy or con. |are centered on money-making, not on love-making. Besides, a business | ““1¢%5o."want azaleas to pick (and it| Order by telephone from your dealer BAY STATE FISHING CO. himself so lon at he had grown |the same time there w the most | tinued force. house does not foster love between the sexes. Men and women see each other | ¢, hatyral desire) collect some next and rest assured you'll get the best fish 30 Fish Pier, Boston, Mass. rather independ The family was | 2Wful noise behind him. Again Jimmy | If tomorrow is your birthday vou |at too close range and get too well acquaintd with each other’s faults. T dare| ry)) and grow vour own. They dis you ever tasted. Largest Producer of Fresh Ocean Fish in all right, but once in a while a fellow | 100ked behind. Those big eyes had be- | Should, by birth, be a leader. You [say vour b is more concerned about your spelling than he is about the|jke rich soil and lime, and will do Aoeiia does like to be by himself. Then there | C0me like great moons and almost | have great determination, remarkable | state of your heart DOROTHY DIX well in the most sterile clay earth - blinded him with their light He | Will power, attractive personality, and & Al e ! couldn’t see very clearly because of | POSSess the ability not only to plas :D R DOROTHY DIX: 1 am a young woman. well educated. and was| them, but he made out that they he.|but to create. You are gifted with | zht up in a refin mosphere. I am married to a man for whom longed to some gre : uch as | Many talents and hawe read very |1 care very much. My unhappiness is caused by his five sisters. They are he never had seen before, 4 monster | MUch and absorbed all that is good | uneducated. coarse and ill bred i that filled the road from side and side | {fom what you have read. In spite, My husband insisis that [ visit them with him. but T don't care to/ and that ran along the road. Never|however, of these assets. you P jnte with then man the right to thrust his people upon his had he dreamed that such a monster | terial success has not been as } EXTREMELY PERPLEXED 1ld_exist as vour friends were Jed to bei RS R If Jimmy was frightened he didn't | Would be. This regrettable condition Answer: When you marry # man, you marry his family. You take their {show it. No, sir, he didn't show it. |15 ©only attributed to the fact that|name. Your child are of their blood and you become one of them. | Ll At first he couldn’t imagine what that | #t times mercy_is lacking in vour de It seems to me that your husband would have a right to feel that you | b thing was making such an awful noise | C18Ions, as vou fail to treat those | offered him insult if you refused to associate with his sisters, or to go | {for. but"as it arew nearer and began | Under ' vou. with that " conside ation | with him to see them, or 1o receive them into your ho which is also their NOW YOU CAN MOTHPROOF THE €LOTH ITSELF 10ve’ more slowly Tie' understood. | Which they merit. They are att acted | brother's house nionster wah teobe oo you Batyou not_ attracted to B ont of o saer T " DENIER | e B vt B Te b et Probubly there can never be any real friendship :\:u;:;vr\",\:;x Jand them, “Humph!” mu red - i of interest and reciprocal respec though often women who have little education and n 1 ot e “’,h'“,',"‘o TeEard, any Pl o et e AN e have hearts of gold under thelr uncouth exteriors and make the sort by noise he has another think coming | PrePared. cannot be carried out to a | of friends that you can tie to. But you owe it to your husband to keep up an to him. If he isn't afraid of me what | Successtul finish. outward show of friendliness, and not to slight them openly is he trying to scare me for? What| Well known persons born on this If you have had better ntages than they have had, why not help 15 ho slowing Up for? e 14 Just N | date are: Junius Brutus Booth. actor: | to raise them to your level ren vour children will not have aunts of whom 2 =53 lall the rest of them-—afraid of George Inness, artist; Daniel B. Wes- | they will be ashamed DOROTHY DIX. 80 JIMMY CONTINUED TO AMBLE | -, SN OF -1he. | 4. gt = 4 Hid - Lt | T've a perfect right to this road. I'm |SoN. inventor and manufacturer: Rob. ALONG IN THE RUT AT HIS|not tokin b tauch of It If that|ert Clarke, plonéer publisher: Whar f LEISURE Apjaechy of e SIE 1 to e BT et A S e whw‘ wants to pass me let him .‘H"'fffl wwker, financier; Marie Corelli, { Stocking Spectacular. | Beauty Contented is nothing to wo out. So aroun g L S in a while Jimm ; o 4 So continued to amble along | b The striking stocking is no ‘l ger You are always confi- 1;-}nn\ and go off adventuri v him ‘l he rut u’v”lnv leisure. . \u.: km;\\ 0 l‘Cfi' =Sy T \’n').s:’: “M”\l.' I\' ‘nv‘r“_nl e dent that your beauty ot 1e neve e v few steps he [Tt is an accomplished fac o . e ai sider it would pause and look behind fo. won Elale et <hops and on the legs of women who has been developed to Al "an " independent littie | der at that great creature with the |, Aelt one rounded tablespoon of but-| xo in for all the fads and fancies of its highest possibilities B afraid, that it is rarely | flaming great eves. And behind Jimmy | ter and one-half cup sugar in one-half | fashio after using Gouraud's that real adventure. You mobile crawled along honking | €UP hot milk, add onehalf level tea-| First. there is the stocking with Oriental Cream. White know every one steps aside for him. |and honking for Jimmy to get out of | SPOOD salt, one teaspoon lemon juice. | the row of roses or the single rose Flesh-Rachel. 1 only when food is scarce and |the way. At last the road widened ggfu"xvxrf:;:!:'& ;“a:;r mmm..&_\mn and | at the knee. here are L-\ovkn)'l:fl 3 Send 10c for Trial Size the Gireat Torned Owl is very | ever o Ttile and the driver of the | Shoush graham flour to make a_soft | with o rip woven in at the | N\ 7- T BOPEINS £ SON , 50 hungry that he cares noth- | automobile pulled out and, as he after- Dro spo height of the garter. decorated, lik il Jimmy's little bag of scent,|Ward said, “with his heart in his|distance apart, on a greased pan,|real garters, with tiny doll heads like that Jimmy feels that necessity for|mouth,” passed Jimmy. Jimmy am- ;‘:;;fm‘:élg\;"n“" knife and bake in | tiny Pierrettes. There are x.tnck\_lmj watching out. It it then that some. |bled along without more than a glance, . like snake skins, in beautiful blotched times he knows what real adventure |attending strictly to his own business e signs of browns and grays. el Golhrand = is. When the car had passed the driver Mayonnaise Sandwich. Ther ) rts and conditions | But one night Jimmy had a new and | sighed. It was a sigh of relief. As premtcdl Oriental Cream very real adventure. Tie had slipped | for Jimmy Skunk, he turned up his| Two slices of white bread. Wash |are made to wear with all sorts and The Husband— T e sy ctoavs clot s i @ Frircy and. away by himself early in the eveni nose. “What an awful smell!” he ex- | thoroughly the lettuce. Place be of colored froc! Fieunioial thav ll coris oiit’ b sonwe Box. and to make sure that he would be I claimed ol e tween the y;rev‘»m'wl bread and add W!inklsdmdreeking of moth-balls.” ks g A (Covsright, 1925, by T. W. Burgess.) | mayonnaise to taste A : : Soredinbadn e - ! The Wife— “They're not wrinkled! Nor smelly, either! B0 5o #hhie Shoit Tacs or hEs They're hanging right in the cioset. This children to follow. So i 1 vear, I made them mothproof with Larvex.” presently he came out ¢ cut through the Gr 5 ol 55 ot very Touch waea S| wonaer ‘New—a sure protection from moth-damage! He had gone onl X 3 i o e o Larvex makes woolen things mothproof . 4 ! Larvex is odorless T LAST you can know that your spraying, put your clothes back in the 9 » Hel‘es a sim Way woolen things are absolutely pro- closet. No moth-worm will eat them. to overcom ]nsmma tected from moth-damage. Larvex, a Larvex is as odorless as water. It is c great new P;'t’d“‘:;l'rpmtfic'-s ;}:;mt‘“ laf stainless and colorless. It won't burn or : TEW S WEN- s CRRIELEy SUCHIDL I e explode. It is non-injurious. Spray it A GLASS of Borden's, the Improved Malted mothproof. i anywhere—except on furs. It is very Milk, piping hot, taken just at bedtime, will Spray Larvex on anything woolen. It easytouse. Simply insert the Larvex At- often induce sound sleep. Because it nour- penetratesthewoolfibresand becomesa omizer in the bottle of Larvex. Pumpup S \ ? ishes your tired body and soothes your over- part of the cloth. Once an article is and down with one finger. This throws Leaves Lace White! strained nerves. :lprayed& nt;1 mothti:vormfw:ll eatit. Un- apowerful spray that mothproofsevery Nol need hesitate to X B s lerstand, the moth itself isharmless. It woolen thing it touches. Larvex, with P el e ) - Sorcen silalted Millo gived youf 11 the it simply lays eggs. But these eggs hatch new-type atomizer, is $1.50. Once you things. For if their delicate color o\ ] s isfying nourishment of a light meal — which into the tinymoth-wormsthatdoallthe have atomizer, .buy Larvex only at washes out you can restore it /\ \ = = you so often crave at night — without taxing damage. And they eat all year round. $1.00. At drug, department and furni- with Tintex in the rinsing water. ‘A your digestion as hearty foods do. Already But moth-worms will not touch any ture stores. Get Larvex today. And, most important—the new ; s partially pre-digested, it is quickly absorbed fabric which is protected with Larvex. The Larvex Corporation, Brooklyn, N. Y. Tintex Tints (in the blue box) Weariness vanishes—cares disappear before the witchery of by the system. Many leading American textile manu- will tint only the silk—the lace \ Banquet Orange Pekoe Tea. Such a perfection of flavor—such No other malted milk has as high food facturers have found Larvex such sure THE new-type Larvex : wonderful fragrance! = Ft comes only from skillful blending of b ted s H : Atomizer is a mechan- :;T;":Z;f;olmdy“"m“‘hd a7 selected hill-grown tea, yet the delicious flavor of genuine value or is as easily digested as Borden’s. A protection that they use it to make ical masterpiece. It is as i Banquet Orange Pekoe costs no more! Makesluncheon a feast. ici = . their products mothproof for you. You near perfection as any 5 i e ; ~ more delicious flavor, too—free from cloying can now buy many woolen things in the piece of machinery ever Ask to see the new Tintex Color Most grocers can supply you with genuine Banquet Orange sty c o e i e ollmactiecy e Card—at drug and department | Pekoe Tea in the air-tight orange canisters. If not, write ores which are already protect: R : for free sample and our booklet, “A Wonderful Flavor,” and Sold in 7 and 15 oz. square glass prekege with Larvex. R e and give name and address of your dealer. Teapot coupons in all and in 5 1b. tins. More than a of restful Spray your woolen things with thorough job. Never use T'“‘fifli‘;’}""."‘?}'fl:g S g“::q‘f:f {,‘t’rig‘l’:‘;ffiri‘:;z:’pl“" bl e e e nights in one small package! Start taking it Larvex. Then you needn’t wrap and i bt Bhe i them LarvexAtomizer in the Blue Box - 15¢ | g i tonight. pack away. Larvex needs no ith L Tintex for all materials —silk, McCormcx & Co., Baltimore, Md. g Larv cotton, wool, mixed goods Importers, Blenders and Packers Your druggist sells it. assistance. It is sure protection. After in the Gray Box - 15¢ " LARVEX [ nteX | OUET ZQZM MAKES FABRICS MOTHPROOF TINTS AS YOU RINSE e "mm:bu“;:::“ :::::: Tints & Dyes s MALTED MI R s R 5 AR OO ANYTHING — : : (Copyrizht. 1925.) (Co t 1025 |

Other pages from this issue: