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WOMAN’S PAGE. Modes in Hand-Painted Slippers BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. HAND-PAINTED SLIPPERS HAVE THE INDIVIDUALITY SOUGHT BY | WOMEN OF FASHION. of slippers for boudoir or evening wi nd painting upon them. S lippers are among the most exquisite that can be imag- may be of either kid or There is the feeling of individ- uality about them which women who are fastidious in their dress always like to have. No two pairs of slippers will be absolutely identical. Just as in the case of handmade lace, there are bound to be slight variations. | What is of especial interest is fact that the hand palnting of such slippers can be done at home, with the | motif and coloring chosen to go with | one's own gown: Placing Decoration. Some of the slippers hear tiny land- scape scenes in s. These | may e on the toes but more often are Tound on the part of the slpper just above the toe. Still more novel is the slipper, when the decoration is on the | eide, just above the ins ter p 1z of the decoration is appro: priate when the >lipper is of the strap sort. Then the decoratlon tapers up into the strap. When there is no strap | the decoration is placed where the | strap would start. Usually its general shape takes the form of a triangle, | becs that fills the space best. If | the slipper itself has a piece of goods | or leather inserted in the side, as do the decoration nat- urally comes within the edges of that. The Painting. ! the decoration on " s are employed. The | « liquid th which the re thinned to the i instead of being the i painting | in oils; Gasoline can be succe the sort, fAuid. | of used. In doing so be very careful that there Is no exposed flame nearby, as fumes will be very dangerous, and might ignite. It is well to try your luck on an old pair of slippers before venturing on a new one. If you have no old pair, you can take a piece of satin or an odd kid glove, according to the kind of ma- terial you are to paint. ‘Worsted for Chic. A very smart ornament for a boudoir| lipper uses a worsted pompon on the side. The porapon is made to resemble flowers growing on a stem about two inches long. The blossoms themselves are tiny. This is a very novel arfid un- usual pompon which looks much more effective than it sounds. A’ needle, threaded with worsted, is passed twice through a small circular piece buckram, leaving two two-inch loops which form the stem. A wee blossom is made from four single, or two double, loops of colored worsted, passed under the stem, which is closed underneath, it holding the blossom at the end. A French knot forms the center of the blossom. Tiny pieces of felt can be used in- stead of worsted if preferred. Make as many flowers and stems grow from the buckram as you like. If any of the buckram is visible when you have finished, cover it with stitches of worsted like the stem. When the pompon is finished sew it on the side- front of the slipper. Ostrich. chic trimming slippers ade from strips of ostrich of which the ends only are curied A straight plece of such trimming is Another v wed to the slipper from the front | around to the side. The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright. 1926.) EEEE EE EaEE | too intelligent—too understanding a for | . Chances of success conceded to one's contestant. Down. . Pack tightly. . Not in. . Explosive device. . Reverential fear. . One thousand and fifty (Roman). . Selzes for food. Eternity. Cease from action. A unit. . Woe. . Western Indian. Gave money. . Lair. . Officer attending a general. . Mohammedan commander. . Behold. Make. Upon. . Increases. . A limb. - Twisted out of shape. . The smallest amount. Preposition. . Swift Malaysian vessel. . Girl’s nickname. . Finishes. 40. Over. 41. A metal. . Ancient. 45. Egyptian sun god. . Contend. . Exist. . One who mimics. . Regret. . Wise birds. . European deer. . Harmonizes. . Uncloses. . Devoured. . Heavy wagon. . Exist. Cherry-colored. . Cover. Incline the head. State on the Mississippi (abbr.). A hypothetical force. . Southern constellation. Be victorious. . Church officials. Distant. Town in Holland where cheese is made. . Negative. 9. Cook in an oven. . Large fish. . The letter O (plural). . Ireland. . Old times. . Crafts. . Indefinite article. . Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle. Kidney-Stuffed Onions. Peel some Spanish onions and take out the centers, then parboil the cups in salted water for 10 minutes. Prepare a flling by chopping the outer part of a cooked veal or lamb kidney, adding the -chopped onion centers and a high seasoning. Fill the onlon cups with this and place them close together in a baking pan with a little stock poured over, and bake in a moderate oven until the cups are tender. Any other filling may be used in place of the kidneys. Lisbon, Spaln, is to have a’ sub- way for elght lines running radially from the Rocio Square, the total cost to be nearly $15,000,000. THE EVENING STAR, WAS SUB ROSA BY MIMI That Older Man. Is there any wickedness in the mar- riage of a man, 40 years of age, to a girl 20 years younger? Not necessarily. Those” marriages have often proved happlest. Young, foolish, headstrong brides have found peace and contentment with their old- er, wiser mates. This article isn’t concerned with the older man who strives to be a good husband and succeeds In making his wife happy throughout the years of their life together. No, this talk is aimed at the experi- enced man of affairs, who comes breezing into a girl's life, tells her that she's been brought up all wrong, and assures her that she hasn't the freedom which is due her. What is there about these slick, smooth-speaking old boys, which blinds you girls to their selfishness and utter lack of interest in your wel- tare? You're flattered, of course, when a rather sophisticated man-about-town begins to take notice of little you. He knows the ropes—knows just how to make a hit with you—sends you flowers, makes you thoughtful little presents—and tells you just how ! your family and friends misunder- stand you. ‘When he makes suggestions for an evening’s entertainment, which you now will rate disapproved from your family, he says gently: “But my dear child, you mustn't let ur people manage you that way. You're much person to allow your relatives to rule your life. Take a stand about this matter.” 3, And you feel pleased over that. You decide that you are a bit too good to be treated as a baby. Time somebody gave you the respect due you. So you start to quarrel with mother and dad. You “take a stand.” You hurt them terribly, and they turn on the man who has set you | against them. Instantly vou're wild with anger. They don't appreciate this wise, kind friend of yours, who has so honored you with his aftentions. You turn from those who are really keen about you, and rely on the ad- vice of the kind gentleman who doesn’t give a darn about what is good for you. He may not mean any real harm— but ve gods! What good does he do you? You may think you're crazy about him but the chances are, you're just crazy. He advises you to break away from the home circle—get a place with an- other girl in town. He does this so he won't be bothered with the everlasting family. He doesn't want to hear that tiresome phrase: “I can't stay out too late. Mother will be furiou: He's not being thoughtful and, hel, ful. He’s just being selish and’ I Why take him so serfously just be- cause he's much older than you? So are your parents. If 'you are wild about an older man, who shows his devotion to your fam: v, and who asks you to marry him, hesitate a long while, and then, if vour love is true, marry him. If you are wild about an older man | who tells you your family are a crowd of antiques, who advises you to start a mew life, and who shows no desire to marry you, don't hesitate a min- | | | ute—sget rid of him! Mimi will be glad to answer any Inquiries directed to this paper, provided a stamped, addressed envelope 1s Inclosed. Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. A satisfied mother writes this tes. timonial girl is three| I months ola - 17 pounds. | | She weighed { ana sleey : 1 nurse her ! every four houl | no complementa; feedings, just water. She has her own little ‘bed; sleeps all night with- | out waking once. She has her f feeding at 6 and sleeps again until 9. | She is bathed, put to bed again on | the sun porch and sleeps until the | next feeding. Between 6 and 10 p.m. is her most wakeful period. “After reading Mrs. J. J. M.’s letter 1 wonder if she could not help her baby by drinking more milk herself, also soup and all kinds of liquid food, | and positively use no laxatives, buf | depend on fruit and vegetables for her own elimination. By drinking| plenty of milk herself the baby would get the amount of lime necessary for | its needs. i Answer. This is good adwice, and since this | mother has such a splendid example | of babyhood to point it, Mrs, J. J. M. | would certainly profit by trying it | out. A quart of milk a day i3 a fine addition to a nursing mother's diet end is far better than tea or coffee | as a milk maker. Thin cereal gruel, | cornmeal or oatmeal is a good thing | to take once a day, and this may be made thin enough with milk and| agreeably sweetened with sugar so that it can be sipped instead of eaten. This latter often works wonders in| increasing a deflcient breast milk sup- ply. Try Three Meals. Mrs. W. G. O. The baby of 11 months who weighs 25 pounds is! surely doing spiendidly. The diet you | outlined is fine. Perhaps changing from four meals a day to only three will spur her appetite. She can take three cups of milk daily and if she seems disinclined to take this amount, give her less to drink and incorporate the remainder in the cooking of her| food, using it with her cereal (letting the cereal absorb it after it has been boiled in water) and in puddings, soups and custards. Cabbage Salad. Shave the cabbage, let it stand in a pan of ice water until very crisp, then drain and dry in a towel. Rub the yolks of two hard-boiled eggs to a smooth paste. Add one-fourth tea- spoonful of salt, a little white pepper and one-half a cupful of thick, sweet cream. Very gradually add one table- spoonful of vinegar and pour at once over the cabbage. Brings Out The Hidden Beauty Do you know that just beneath that sofled, discolered, faded or aged complexion is one fair to look upon? Mercolized Wax will gradually, gently absorb the de- vitalized surface skin, revealing ‘the youthf-lly fresh, white and beautiful skin underneath. The process is a purely hygienic one and leaves no trace but that of enhanced loveliness. = Cutaneous defects like freckles, pimples, moth patches, liver spots, roughness, etc., of course disap- pear with the discarded scarf skin. Mercolized Wax bas hundreds of thousands of enthusiastic users all over the world. Mies Constance Bush, 3501 Third Ave., Detroit, Mich.. says: “Have not found an: ook B I hing oy o meet has & nice word (0 say about. my lovely skin. on and off the stage. Peo. | pla turn the second time to look st me O fereclized’ Wax is sold by mil Drug e 3 | and Department Stores: 95c a box. 'MERCOLIZED WAX | Brings out the hidden beauty | Advertisemens. HINGTON, D. C, TUE DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Why Modern Young Men Rebel at the Expensive Sport of Courting—Is the Youth of 25 in Love With the Rich Woman of 60? (QUR DEAR MISS DIX: Since the war there has been a marked decrease in marriages. We wonder, does the modern woman realize why? The following reasons are the opinions of a club of 40 bachelors: Today's courtship is unfair. Young men do not make fabulous salaries. A great many young women make as large, and even larger, salaries than the young men. Living is egpensive, vet it is expected, and claimed as a right, that the young man shall at all times be treating the young woman to shows, dinners or what not, while the young woman can spend her money on clothes or save it. By what inherent right the modern woman expects and can ethically permit a man to spend his money on her is more than we bachelors know. Furthermore, is not the modern woman selfish and unfair not to reciprocate by inviting the modern man to dinner at her home occasionally or by suggesting a quiet evening at her home once or twice a week? The modern young man is getting tired of the independence and selfishness of the modern young woman. He is refusing to indulge in the expensive sport of courtship, when the whole burden is placed upon his shoulders. He s refusing to marry a type of woman who puts her home secondary to bright lights, entertainment and lavish dressing. We therefore register with you our complaint, but we beseech you not to suggest that the young man should find a different type of woman, for there “ain’t no such animal.” THE MISOGYNISTS. Answer: T have frequently warned girls that they were making the high cost of loving so pocket-wrecking that it left a young man nothing on which to marry. Also I have pointed out from time to time that in the old days, when a maiden entertained her best beau at home, there were far more weddings than there are in these days, when the girl expects a young man to amuse her by taking her out to restaurants and dinner-dances and cabarets. As my correspondent ably points out, if a young man spends all of his money in giving a girl a good time he has none with which to buy wedding rings or set up a home. Furthermore, he figures out that if a sweetheart is such a costly indulgence, a wife will be a prohibitive luxury. Undoubtedly the young woman who when he calls meets the young man with her hat on and the query, “Where do we 02" Kills the goose that lays the golden egg, because in demanding expensive entertainment she puts it out of the voung chap's power to marry, even if he wanted to. That is mistake No. 1. Mistake No. 2 is depriving herself of the suggestions that she would derive from a domestic background. There Is nothing that inclines a man’s thoughts toward matrimony in a jazz dance hall, nothing that softens his heart to sentiment in a restaurant, where he is subconsciously flguring the price of the meal and won ering if he has money enough to pay for it. But it is far different when he is sitting ;1uh>;(li\; x}l‘mi comfortably in the girl's parlor or helping her to make fudge in her kitchen. Of courle, the idea that the man should pay all the score when he takes + girl out for a good time is a hangover from the days in which women were dependent and had no pocketbooks of their own. Now, when the girl may have as good a salary as her beau, there is no reason why they should not £0 50-50 on the price of courtship. And if it Is not feasible to go Dutch treat, the girl should at least even up by entertaining the young man in her home n:ul s‘;aymg at home sometimes, instead of always requiring to be amused abroad. But I most emphatically disagree with my correspondent that there are no girls who are willing to be fireside companions to a man. There are plenty of them everywhere. DOROTHY DIX. DEAR MIS comp e o s e DIX: Iam a young man 25 vears old and have been keeping with a lady who is past 60. She fs very good to me, gives me clothes for me and has recently bought me a new car. But if With me she takes the car away from me and everything else she can get that she has given me and doesn’t return them until I smooth things over again. Do you think I am in love with her? ANDREW. Answer: Certainly not. All that you are in love with is her pocketbook, ind you are playing a most contemptible role, wheedling money out of o silly old woman who 1is infatuated with you Brace up and break off your relationship with her. that most loathsome of all creatures, the poor, a living from a woman You are young now. You can make anything you please of yourself. You can becbme one of the men whom other men honor and respect, but you will never do it hanging on to x rich woman’s skirts. e "Be 2 man, and not weak, male parasite who grafts Every man who knows you now sneers at you and despises you, and it vour old woman gave you a million a minute and every car that was turned out of every automobile factory in the country, it wouldn't pay you for the thing you are becoming in your own eyes and every decent man's eyes, T DOROTHY DIX. EAR MISS DIX: Before I married T was a successful working woman earning a good s=lery. I was interesfed, happy an beca had something to do and because I could help. m',’-"rymx%f?\f}ftf"é_ff "very ‘;;rl Now I am married and my husband refuses to let me work. e bogrd. We have no children. I am well and strong, yet for 10 years I have doné nothing but walk backward and forward in one room like a caged mnimey I am miserable, having nothing to do. But the real reason I want. to oy back to work is because my relatives are in destitute clrcumstances. They bo cold and hungry, sick, without the money to buy medicines. “;'hen !yfill down to the tabie to eat my food chokes me, because I know they are hungrs hen my husband gives me something e ¢ il B r;;g:u\d, e thing especially fine to wear I hate it My husband will not give me a dollar to give to my people, all the time to his. Isn't this unfair? o inlzes Al HAPPY. Answer: It is most unfalr and cruel. If your husband willinot give you the money to help your pecple who need it so badly, he should fpot object to your working and earning it yourself. Strange that a man should think that when a woman marries she severs all the ties of blood and that she no longer aches with the sorrows of her own people! Strange that a man should think that a woman could be ten- der and loving and loyal to him and yet be hard and callous and disloyal to the mother who bore her, to the father who cherished her, to the brothers and sisters who grew up with her! When a man marries a woman he monopolizes & woman’s time. He keeps her from earning money with which she can do as she pleases, and in just common, ordinary honesty he owes it to her to give her some money that she can do with as she pleases. Many men do not do this, however, and so they drive their wives to stealing from themyand to making padded accounts at the stores where they have charge accounts. 5 And the woman whose husband forces her to deal dishonestly with hates him for it. DOROTHY DIX. (Covyright. 1926.) BEAUTY CHATS Take Exercise. him BY EDNA KENT FORBES. along the backs of the legs and the backs of the knees that will surprise Most people hate exercise; hate it 80 much that lots of them have to join classes and do their exercising in company, just to keep up one an- other’s courage and interest. Exer- cise in {tself probably is a bore, but then, cold creaming one's face or | powdering one's nose is also a bore. The only thing is to think ahead to the good results that will be pro- duced. You must exercise every day. Housework may be sufflcient for you, or you may be able to get in a brisk walk, even doing your household er- rands and shopping. That's better than nothing. But the housework of a small apartment isn't enough exer- cise for the day. It may be tiring; that’s different. Work that repeats certain motions over and over again to the point of semi-exhaustion is not exercise—not beneficial exercise at_least. Real exercises must develop mus- cles all over the body, or certaln sets of muscles not ordinarily used. If, for instance, .you hold your hands over your head, and then bend down, keeping your knees stiff, and touch or strain to touch the floor with your finger tips, yow'll feel a pull ki Wl you. After a few day’s practice you'll be able to bend easily, and you won’t feel the strain, neither will those muscles be sore. Even your second attempt at bending over will be much more successful than the first, mere- ly because you've used those muscles. Fach day you should practice a bending exercise, a waist-revolving or waist-bending exercise, and arm and a leg exercise and deep breath- Ing. If you have special weaknesses, exercise to get rid of them. And if you do not know what to practice, ask your doctor; he'll tell you. Or get & book on exercise and choose the ones you think you need. Doing it yourselt may be dull, but it will be good for vou. Inquiring H. K. L.—The sediment in the bottom of the bottle is the sul- phur included in the pilocarpine hair tonic formula. Be sure that you shake the tonic each time you use i s0 that the sulphur will be distril uted through the tonic and have chance to get on the scalp. Sulphur does not dissolve, but it is, neverthe- less, very important in a hair tonic, as it purifies the scalp so that it can resist most scalp troubles. PLEASING flavor—whole- some goodness —never-vary- ing quality. No wonder Chase & Sanborn’s Seal Brand Coffee has won the friendship of a nation! Chese&Sanboms SEAL BRAND Seal Brand Tee is_of the same kigh guality SDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1926. FOOD AND HEALTH BY WINIFRED STUART GIBBS. Food Speclalist. We all remember the proposition in geomeétry that things that are equal to the same thing are equal to each other. We might make an | application of this to diet problems and state our proposition thus: Foods tnat agree with the body agree with one another. So many are wont ‘o speak of a food as agreeing with them and of another as disagreeing. They quite forget that there are numerous ele- ments which enter Into this propo- sition. Foods that agree with one another are like persons who agree. They are comfortable in the same condi tionsand find it agreeable and profita- ble to work with one another. Some zood examples of brothers In the food family, those that agree with one an- other, are: 1. Bread and milk. 2. Meat and potatoes. 3. Vegetables and fruits. The fact that bread and milk agree g0 well is accounted for because iheir respective flavors are pleasant when the foods are eaten at the same time. When bread and milk are eaten bread gives body to_the meal and milk provides fluid. But these are only the first among the nccom- plishments of these two foodstuffs. The most fmportant work comes later. After the bread has been acted upon by the starch-digesting ferment and the milk by the gastric ferment that takes care of some of its chief con- stituents the resulting food is ready to take its part in nourishing the body. Meat and vegetables are good brothers partly because of the very reasons outlined for bread and milk and, besides this, because each one supplements and complements the work 0f the other in a pecullar way. The aclds formed in the digestion of meat, for example, are neutralized by the alkaline salts in the digestion of potatoes. Fruit and vegetables are even closer brothers, in_that they both are needed to supply the important mineral salts, without which the body should hardly function. There is another food combination that we do not always consider. The matter of garnishing is usually thought of in relation to decoration. In reality the garnishment of a dish frequently adds materially to the food value. Take a dish of planked chicken that is surrounded with an artistic border of well cooked rice | { interspersed with greens and punc- | tuated by slices of lemon. Here the brotherhood of the foods begins even in the very serving. When such a lish is brought to the tabl: we know that we have protein of body-building food in the chicken, energy in the starch of the rice and regulative min- eral salts in both the green in the border and the slices. After which we are much more dis posed to make a_ study of the b sibilities of all sides of the question of food comblnations. 1f a food is to fulfill its true function it cannot be an individualist any more than thi is possible for a human being. Com- mon service for a common aim, nourishment of the body, is nature’s plan for all our foodstuffs. (Copyright. 1926.) HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN. Every woman owes it to herself to have a chaise longue in her room. Nothing can make one feel quite so deliciously pampered and lazy as to curl up In it for a little snooze every afternoon, if only for flve minutes. ‘The chaise longue sketched is a very versatile style. The two end pleces can be used separately, the larger one as an easy chair and the emaller one as a slipper chalr. The center por- tion is a low, comfortable stool which would serve as dressing bench or be- fore the fireplace. When all three are assembled one has a chaise longue which is the last word in luxurious comfort. ‘This chaise longue is covered with old rose velvet, an upholstery which seems exactly to suit it. (Copyright. 1926.) Lamb With Cucumbers. The remains of a roast of lamb or mutton will make a savory luncheon dish by freelng the meat from fat and coarsely chopping sufficlent to meas- ure one pint.” Pare and dice one large cucumber, put into a saucepan with one pint of the gravy or a good brown sauce and simmer until tender, then add the meat, stir until very hot and serve garnished with triangles of fried o Mre Blackhééd; No excuse nl?w for blackheads and en- pores. For a new, safe treatment has been discovered which cleanses your ekin almost overnight. Blackheads and all blemishes vanish s if by magic. This new discovery gently removes them leaving a new skin free from all imperfections. Make this test. Right before bedtime smooth some of this cool, f; t creme on your skin. The next morning you will a.lmgdy sec how the blackheads have begun to disappear. Get your jar today atall good drug and department stores. Ask for Golden Peacock Bleach Creme (concen~ trated). Sold with an absolute guarantee of money back if it does not show satisface tory results in § days. Atall good dealers O Donneil's Drug _Stores, Peoples Drux 3tores, Gilman's Drug Store. Christiani o.. - Golden Dept. Store, Palais gg'y"J tore. Bleach Creme | | | | PHONE FEATURES. FLAGSTAFFS OF WASHIN GTON Y GIRTON WALKER 2 IMHM i FLAG OF THE SERBS, CROATS AND SLOVENES. The fia’ of the national coat of arms. surmounted by |the coat of arms. a royal ero The large shield dis- | also the silver eagle on playing a white eagle. On the eagla’s breast | for Serbia, Croatia d Slovenia. lhehmnld of ‘.Ynnu Alvil Serbia and Montenegro were both T B anta aten e placed | Kingdoms, and could give a crown to Montenegro gives the go shield. The two heads are supposed to represent dominion over both East |.'|nd West. On the red field of one- When the kingdom of the Serbs, third of the small shield the white cross and the four C's, one in each Croats and Slovenes was proclaimed |, 01 of the cross, are Serbian. Tho at Corfu in 1917 the third article ‘“}](‘Lters stand for the Serblan motto what is known as the “pact of Corfu” hich means “Only Unity Is Savin 5 ., ¥ Vi Serbia.” The red-and-white checks provided that “the state shall have & | U)o 4o second third of the shie single coat of arms, a single flag and | are Slovenian. The crescent and stars a single crown. These emblems will {on blue at the bottom belong to be composed of the present existing |Croatia, and are reminiscent of for emblems. The unity of the state will |Mer Turkish dominfon. ; be symbolized by the coat of arms and | All of these symbols are plainh the flag of the kingdom.” It was | shown in colors on a large shield further provided that the special Serb, | the base of the flag staff at the lex Croat and Slovene flags and coat of |tion, 1520 Sixteenth street. arms ranked equally and might be (Copsright. 1926.) freely used on all occasions. ear_later, in this city al d Jugoslavic people in’ nation: ume celebrated the first birthday of the new nation by formally adopt- ing a symbolic flag. The new covered, was carried in a proce and unveiled in front of the De; ment of Agriculture. The Serblan Min- ister led in the oath of allegiance, say- i “The fact that this flag b seen the light in this at country is the token that we will carry it into our liberated country. We swear to be ready to die for the flag of liberty id union we have raised and never to rest until it has an abiding place in its own land.” | The provisional flag unveiled at | that time had the colors of the present flag and some of its emblems. Later, the Kingdom of Montenegro definitely joined the union and several other ter. ritories were added. In fact, the do- main of Jugeslavia, which means outh Slavs” in distinction from the Slavs of the North, has been affected by more treaties since the World War than any other state in Europe, and a combination flag and coat of arms presented a somewhat difficult prob. lem. A common meeting ground for many was found in the red, white and ag of Serbla | e il E hite, and the stripes of Montenegro’s naval flag were the| same. Croatia had a red, white and | blue flag: Gallcia one of blue and red and Bosnla had a red stripe on her old flag. ==T aste the Difference!=—= good old-fashioned rolled oats Cook in Parking With Peggy | “The man who ‘wants but little’ i- sometimes very particular whethe that trifle 18 a blonde or brunette.’ minutes Compare Armour’s WHOLE FLAKE Oats with any you have ever eaten. There’s no equal for its creamy flavor. Full of nous ishment, vitamins, and healthfal bran. Doctors recommend it. Be sure to ask for ARMOURS WHOLE FLAKE Signs of Good Health BRIGHT eyes, cheeks with color, glad 7 smiles—these are the ions of Ld,ifi kiddies who drink plenty of Whole In Milk—the Whole Milk—your kiddies benefit from every food factor necessary for normal growth, development and strength. It is Nature’s complete food. There is no substitute for it. Be sure they get enough of it. Give to each, every day, at least a quart of Fresh, Wholesome Thom RSO Pai 1 NORTH 5997 2012 11th ST. N.W. ;