Evening Star Newspaper, April 6, 1926, Page 35

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WOMAN'S PAGE THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGT D. C, TUESDAY,’ APRIL 6, 192 Producing Charm and Beauty in Hair ONNYSAYIN'GS . DOROTHY \DIVX’S LETTER BOX HOME NOTE?I DAUGHTERS OF TODAY BY LYDI\ LE BARON WALKER. BECERRNT SN OUNE > . L BRI R Curse of the Overtender Mother—How Can a = ; - . . a b 5 seasi g of which this There is n 3 that ean 4y more |Since woman's hair has been called i 17-Year-Ol e seaside cottage « e T 3 ; contiitate to T e = g SEnL A Jer ~Year-Old bay,_window is an interesting detail Martha Dennison at i1 faces the Martha's replies were all in the neg e lone bt o 8 Sher sopuning BonUine oy S Parent Prevent Her 5 { i boan tmed to hotse & collection of | fact that her husband has drifted |ative, - Arthuc had not been home. in el prsade s e i B Ul e : i o Fr Marrving valuable Amerfeans, for which it| @way from her, as well as her tiro | several days. No, she hadn't worried uall . 8 reaction | amount of attention Son rrom varryimg. makesa a perfect setting. children, Natalie and Arthur. She |about him, because he had often been Individual Care. ¥ with its small diamond.| meets an attractive bachelor, Perry |awav for days at a time. Natalie ] o 1o has oK olnie - Macdonaid, and accepts his atten- gnhlzm know scmething about him >erhaps some one has told you [ gk . i 3 's do their children a great| [& tions without realizing the danger |She would speak to her as soon as of soap or shampoo that is “the | R MISS DIX: Don't you think mothers L a She v “‘«”\‘;‘ n‘;w»m ! (Y’n“ ‘wm' own hair, | s o l) injustice by treating them too kindly and waiting upon them as though in such an attachment. Arthur is h?..n""',”,..',? A1) o ¥ however, it may not bring the desired P . they were invalids? My mother has been too geod to me all my life. She m(r,rlu:'.vr'rl’ mv;: I_{m.m. Iq »m.m‘-rI;'. L :‘vnh‘a ik ne oo iver (;,S“ - vesult. A little study of soaps for ¢ has spoiled me by overiooking my faults and bad habits, Instead of helping TN No e Al Doe e I L e o uisted st o ow air will repay the slight k3 me to overcome them, and instead of teaching me to stand on my own fee Lucie lett, ", d A o , matte n D o e . thial fiia frisndiwhi i and struggle through the world myself, she has protected me from every Mimi is deceiving Arthur, who has | family. anywa Couldn't they be -ccommends a_certain kind of treat- ) > SRtabHin become suspicious, and Perry firat | \rusted to take care of themseives’ O for ibe heir and! soalp shas an < Lib ’ arvied, ind, as she has always watched and directed )ecomes interested in Natalie e e other s ::.‘1\"‘~t(al‘|\(:‘\phv):':L \'-::" l-\‘ a : ! my :\el;n\ay'r‘\‘::ilp‘;d': 1".i ¢ "n \-:‘r hard because | refuse to live with her Uvr;mqlrd nhrm;.rln to protect M): lhr“h-hur;?:‘ln; 'hrv"n":';-x ;r;r:::&;\_::ni:z 40 i i - ¢ i realive that my v v vay fro % X ling in love witl s % e hese two suggestions may be safe. after I am married, but 1 realize thal my only salvation is to get away from / :n vln s by falling v 3 J | ; - e i e | Te realizes that his situation |MONeY to take care of his family | Iy followed: Oily hair should be w ” her and try to make a woman of myself. I have a 9-yearold hrother who is er el ! & wvltmmv- frequently than dry halr being spolied as 1 was and 1 hate to think of his growing up to be one of is embarrassing hecause of the at- MP;‘;';SN;’"}I 1’:3.’;»:1’?"!::7'.;’::1,;,’[1. v\_;:'r’l; |and brushed less. Brushing s very | the helpless men who are always tied to their mother’ n strings Bt (Gl e ;'""-n"r"’""’ Martha: on? | knowledge that at homs everything o ¢ e ha at is inclined ) MISS TWE - TWO. A 2 ‘ her and tel r »rythin Sl g B heiva o 3 What'can ene do? r ) the truth. Martha is maturally |WAS at sixes and sevens annoved him st I through the scalp ’ d " stirhnicd by the' nes: ond in. the ade him restless. And where on fistribute Stheadls ot g Answer:! 1 agree with you, Miss Twenty-two, that the overtender mother : GRS TN D Nobre th was Arthur? 1° it were true and hair where it is need is the greatest curse that any child can have. Terrible as it is for a child > = cectain rumors that disturb him. | Pt the bov was drinking heavil Tonics and Oils, : never to know any mother love at all, it I« hetter for one to have such a fate < : © 'and he had no doubt that he was—al tvc | 1o ~Trouble with ‘at baby is, Ther legs | (O, 10 KIOY R I whe laves avermuch f A : most_anything might have happen s Aoy Mg il W8 aFearly Such mothers absolutely unit their children for life. - Thev rear them ] HAPTER XXXVITI to him. He might do something rash hould avoid using tonies and colognes | up to bhe weaklings hy protecting them from every harsh wind that blows J | e . ring discredit on the family. There o svaverate Suici i, \'\’,:',,t:‘;::'}“‘ and standing between them and every hardship. They Kill every particle of W e L Arthur Disappears. might be a scandal, which would be better 1o find a good o 3 / initiative by doing all of their children’s thinking for them efore John had a chance to speak | the worst thing that could happen as " anplied tnee a week. A very little What Tomorrow Means to You 8 5 W to Martha or Natalle, or to inquire | far as business was concerned B.put on the.patm of the hand. The e They are so afraid of their children getting hurt that they make them into what was going on. he was called| At home in the apartment Martha b of the fingers are dipped into I BY MARY BLAKE. cowards who dare not take. the slightest risks. They cultivate selshness in out of town. When he returned the | was oppressed by a feeling that some. jpd_rubbed briskly Into the scalp. them by sacrificing themselves for them and making them think that they|panel windotvs, heamed ceiling, and |#ffairs of his wife and daughter were | thing terrible had happened. Arthur v this application brush with long e the center of the universe, and they make them overbearing and{old pin Te with heir thick eamt | forgotten in the knowledge that|had disappeared, and she hadn't the it vour hair is not bobbed i nne setties with: thelr thicl, com. | had not heen at the office for |slightest idea where Natalie was. Nat hort, brisk ones if it is Aries. vrannical by spoiling them and pampering them xo that they ean never et | fortable pads, might have heen lifted | ATThur i along with other people. bodily from a New England cottage |tW0 davs. lie had often remained away over MOITOW's planetary aspects are el OE too centhualok it 1% authen. | In his usual brusque way John|night and Martha had thought fassaging lluulr. : \p | fvorable until noon. They then be. These mothers forzet that in a few years their children are zoing to he | ¥ (D (OIS B T00 L 5 ship-s | A%ked certain questions of the differ- [ nothing of it. Now the fact seemed i'his effect of massaging the scalb |come rather, although not definitely. | thrown out into & werld that is not padded with mother love in which | 1.6 ot TEhts it quite adequatels, and |“Pt men in the office. He discovered | ominous, probably because of what very restful to the head il it 15 |adverse. The undertaking initiated | there will be no mother to protect them. It is a hard world. in which the shines as a ,,,,,,,.,,,',, ht out meross the | that Arthur had borrowed heavily | Perry Macdonald had said only the fied. A well wroomed head will dojunder today’s excellent auspices can | battle goes to the strong and the race to the swift, and in which mother's | Sres 8 night in a most romantie | (foM several of them and that he was | night before. He had been worried ich to restore one’s peace of mm;‘l be prosecuted with energy during the | pet s trampled underfoot because he has not heen taught to fight, he has!\wa " L s o | drinking steadily. This *hought dis. | #bout Natalie, afraid the girl might er a hard day. It gives one a feel- fmorning. In the afterncon, however, | not heen disciplined, he has not even heen taught to stand alone Fron the: wing siienadidiov ll:uu d him. That any son of his could | do something reckless. Had it been of serenity to be assured that this it would be desirable, if possible. to > of the xen 15 to he had so t s m locets |P® $0 weak as to Yield to the lure of [only last night that Perry had told 1 of one’s appearance ix Well |review what has been accomplished f of the men who are fallures could point their fingers at their | P (0% 568 8 10 be Bad 50 It 1 8 lovels |, nything but gratifying. [ her of his love for Natalie? It seemed i for. Tt ix a measure which re-}and the influences that prevail will, in | mothers and say: “You did it. You never made me stick at a task wuntil :Jv’)» ik ,I':F“» ]L_'f"; i :‘"‘;\:r " :; Arthur was heavily in debt | now as if eterniifes had passed, for fres very little time and_less ex-|all probability, tell you if any errors | I finished it when T was a hoy. You never made me do anvthing I didn’t | . i s T i e i and can be converted into a dining |*e¢med a ZiNg Martha had not sleep all night. Hurt pse. if one is one's own haudresset- | have been made and. if <o, how they | want to do. and so I formed no habits of industry or perseverance. You let [ an) s Z | How did he spend his maney He|pride and hroken fllusions had kep! fr iy be washed and allowed temay best be rectified. ‘The evening, | mie loaf and idle and so I have never heen able to settle down to hard work. | ¢ O CCimalon. @ 1ava. received a good salary--more than he | her awake, not fear for Natalie. She while performing some household |owing to the presence of good vibra. [You never tauzht me to do without . and so I hecame extravagant factually deserved and plenty to take | had heen too occupied with herself i« k. It is auite a rest after heing | jons, promises success for all social|and wasteful U never taught mo to control my temper, and I have lost | care of even extravagant tastes. Fur-|think of her daughter until now, an one's feet 1o down for a bit Jentertainments or family reunions. [ zood joh after good joh heciuse I could nat get along with those with whom ] v T thermore, he lived at heme, so that [the thought made her sick with eurl the hair There will be an entire absence of &ll [T worked. 1 enervated me. You made the very museles of my soul flabhy.” ll ] l LE BE\N‘ he spent his salary as he pleased. As|<hame. ing elements. And while you may | John thought the matter over he| (Continued in tomorrow's Star.) BY HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR (Copy roke: nd i e . " | not be full of pep, there will he experi And many a divorced woman knows that she owes her wrecked marriage | Ainally reached the conclusion that | Puzzlicks enced a sense of contentmeny and |10 her mother's rearing. which made her xo soft and self-indulgent: which RY LEE PAPE. there was but one explanation of the Puzsled ki ”r‘;fh”"\'» made her so lazy and idle and extravazant. which made her so selfish and matter ,\nhm-duaq Iul:nu,uxnd with hyzzle-Limericks Children horn tomorrow will. in | self-centered that she killed her hushand's love and drove him from her some woman and was spending every 5 their infancy, enjoy normal health, You are a wise woman and a brave one, Miss Twenty-two, to leave your | . -t¢" me and pop came out of the [”.": of money_he coiild get on her. s p ain old lady named —1 and the few ailments to which they | mother and to try to corvect. the faulis in vour eharact she has | CIFCUS We started to go pass the side | With this thought in mind he asked | | The rve would ha } ilts In Yyour chavacter that she has|ghow, being grate b cktures out- | . ! ram ¢oes rushing parrot whose nerve would have | .l he supjected will denote that they | fostered. It is your one chance to make a real woman of vourself. Eod LB blg picktures out | more questions, but could discover 3 may be attacked by at least one 4 POROTHY DIX side showing the different freeks. and | nothing. Arthur had not discussed his down the street. stress would —3 rather serfous allment. While there CEEE % e {“"* G. lets go in, pop, shall we, will in%a:v'fl \'vy)vn any of the men in the Have a ——4—?2" will he no occasion for alarm, this 3 a8 ¢ 4 - F O PO office. e was too wary for that S hird would ask, “Fire, nut oF [will tax oo to” parm, this| FYEAR MISS DIN: 1 have a bov of 17 who tells me that he is going to| Far be it from me to neglect vour | Besides, It is doubttul if ‘ans of the 12 Tempevarnentally. the vl be frik marry a girl I have never even seen. and he wants to bring her to my |education. pop sed. Wen vour grand- | men in the office would have told the Iv famous for its poisons. | mirthful and affectionate. They wili | NOUSe to live. T am a poor woman who makes a living taking roomers. My | children beg you to tell them about |truth to John Dennison. even if they Bmily famous for s poisons, | [mirhial and ater aptitude for | 70 has no trade ov vocation hy which he can make a decent living. How |the timg you saw the side show, how [had suspected what was going on. | hocked m;\u “:...';u 2 SABhT STbits 2l Teleition. ”m" can T prevent thi age that is bound to hring disaster on all{do vou think 1'd feel if you were |His subordinates respected John Den . colloquial (two words). Fal : nd. recreatio AN | concerned? ANXTOUS MOTHE | obliged to tell them your father would- [ nison. but had little liking for him rike; teminine pronoun (two for work involving study. They will {ent take vou in? he sed He was a hard man and commanded ave a spirit of adventure which e i a A ALl o0 glish call them “biscuit.” |less ca refully gulded, {3 Hable 1 Answer: The anly thing yar can do is to tell vour bov that if he v”-"l'w*a G oo A sbion st 8 b ol B s 2 e T ihe "Southern United [them into trouble. : he cannot hring his wife to vour house. that he must set up his own home !0 @nd there was tome man in there | worked for hi g y to be companionable and able to count | AN Support his own family without anv heip from vou. Then hunt up the /" A high hat people all | On his return to the city John had | lon the loyalty and support of a large | £l and tell her the same thinz. and impress it upon hoth your hoy and the | it the different freeks and he was |not gone to the apartment. hut had (Note—"This limerick is rather off | . | 5 %000t & . girl that you mean exactly what vou say { ng about the living skelletin, say- |taken a taxi directly to his office. At the beaten path and, if only for this | “/'fl J ng. He ways ony 9 pounds in the about 11 o'clock he instructed his| reason, is worth puzzling out.” de- | o ! Pt ! HEO0E toolish Al COUDIE aRe oAl Toa Gals S et hade, ladiés and gentlemen, and it is | secretary to get Mrs. Dennison on the | | clares . R. J.. of Indianapolis, who | FoRESs a1 "\qfi:“'arl‘i::\ h”.’w;:r\,‘,‘p?‘:: e ) nrttse 0h ot e o e Will mever o it beenine |°0¢ his grate love for the fat lady | wire THE CHARM OF WELL KEPT |sends it in. Why not forward your jo ltie, O ZUELES, PXRETICNCe | they know that mother will nevarshave the nerve tn put her chitiren o on| N4t Keeps ‘body and sole -together. | His voice was sharp as he spoke to HAIR ER WOMAN'S | favorite limerick? The answer to this | T . AN volcs! i the street. So they will spend their mone s 4 P = 3 | Mr. Skinzo w now give each and | Martha AIR EVERY MAN'S I ) { when the “still, small voice™ tells you pend their money for clothes and gzadding around. | | » PRIVIL one and another “Puzzlick” will "fl“i“vh t RRouIALe idorie. “youiate itv | and they won't even be grateful to vou for slavinz for them ke {every one of you opportunity to! Was Arthur at home? When had | states. tomorrow is your hirthday. von . | pear tomorrow.) dissuaded from doing it. and this is | perehase one of hig artistic fotograffs, | she seen ';"m L ”rm-;'ha Bab i not well kept. i e as Yesterday's “Puzzlick.” the chief secret of your failure to Your son knows well enoush that he couldn't get married if he had to| - POP. Wy don't vou buy one. if |of where he was or of what had hap- | Skt | PSS | e bright Lexington of Kentucky |achieve that position’ to which your | PAY rent and couldn't take his bride home to live an mother. So does the | Y08 400t wunt it Tl hang it up in my | pened to him c cal effect upop one's charm as | In the bright Lexinglor of ReROKY | inherent ability entitles. you. ° Re. | Kirl. for any. voung woman. who has earned her own living has a very|'00M: I sed. and pop sed. Perish the appearance when the | Lives a fellow exceeding) ¥ [ sourcefuiness is one of your principal | Shrewd idea of how short & way & dollar zex. So do hrace up and try. o] DAL vee sods D e iae G T | Eesaton: sojprabiel | characteristics ‘and vou rould travel | have sough cournze and firmncus (o stop this affuir at ance B convineing |, V1% 155 Uhen, the man in he bich | fe 1o he at her hest in regard | And if she says “Yes,” he'll be Iurk."»; ar L you rond seehe up your mind | gt Ser it volirdooriin helr taces I they: geb Ly Will wtho. thiway | will leadison | - once and for at you v d Iy i e T i r all, what you wanted to ntlv but fermly from the redickuliss -1: "(r;.i nl‘:nnzzle\:?i?;vl:m-,f:\nd ,‘f.’,']\‘,r,r:”:‘,’, For a lad of 17 to zet marvied is the absolute ruination of his every hope | 7 the sublime. in other werds to Miss OF course, no trained others, went ahead and did fr. Stuh. | ANd chance and prospect of happiness and success in life. It is moral suicide, | 110Y, Schmitz the werlds most perfeck ’ PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE [Pornness s ot a virtue. but pusil. | 2d ou wil fail in vour duty to him i vou do not do eversthing posaible. 17 | o i At thelmmetines the saleswoman would ever Well known persons horn on that And can't you inveke the law to help you? Can a hov of that age he 20 POUNds and a few hundred ounces try to sell a substitute for . Jate are: Williem, Bilery Cha legally married without the consent of his parents” Tt aze be in the sun and who will now perseed g ; g BY WILLIAM BRAD skl ol etk et vl pnbd POROTHEADEX [in her big haried way o sell her price Van Raalte Silk Stockings! i lergyy : ; ess ffs at the small sum of lanthropist: Lewis n. shipbuilder | e e | S| v 9 When Washington Had the Cri. | practice in old times. Today it is only fand politician: William A. Pinkerton, L g ok i e | She knows as well as her ¢ o e | B G pop. buy me one? | sed. and pop | ¢ ¥ employed, but it is a pro- | detective; William Wordsworth, poet. BEA v s DDy P customerthat thereis none! One John Fitzpatrick, ed edu ilue in suitable cases (Covyright, 1026.) £ M 8 BY EDN (E : | sed. Nuthi is ferther from my | “hot to relieve “too much blood™ nor 4 KENT FORBES. | |ihawts h the fat lady herd him, | ",,. lower blood pressure, but to re he ideer of g | ove quick e blood a consid. | 11; 113 big ke you, refusing, ral's last illivens pagNd v wedkeneal] moye QUICKIY roniine blood s conpky Willie Willis Pretty Ears. the ears. making it very short in hack, | b ane, of My PeRtures ] the patient so thit he was unable 10 |in the body) x i v Fars are coming very much into nother variation of this style of |And she smiled at pop. having bis N 3 3 o M W ARBlRE i nta sbletaky i oHetnlane 3 haircut is to bring a short fringe down | hlue eves and a lot of little wite teeth st Hear et Cnetd (el s i e e i e BY ROBERT QUILL. fashion now. The Eton crop. which | the forehead, useful for softening a and pop bawt 2 of her picktures and commentators » have intimated that r EensInls e o {means any very short style that veur |lonz. sharp-featured face: another i we went out of the side shew on ac- | SILK STOCKINGS the quinsy. All the folks in those days e U actic bled to | called it a “cold,” and they assumed { hairdresser happens to do hest, has|!0 PArt the hair in the middle, with- \count of pop saving he dident wunt | b out a fringe. keeping it very long in | the bearded lady to smile m | <o commentators | he “took cold” on a ride of five hours : Drought ears into greater prominence | fi,t [H"EE. keening it very Tong in ted. : T e e e e g LG R R o £0 recordl hstars: eTeat 9 ooy iroin and AAEIo et jof the middle parting and the low knot | short. and the effect is very demi L very pop reme- | of the weather. and the tightly plastered coiffure. sl L:'\‘]""""K" to be known day.| What did the Father of His Coun 4 KLl et as il ihey (A8 AN EHON, FY]E Nbwever, d in | try die of, anyway? Surely not just a » 7 | and close inspection? Are they nice. | 4 San ‘ ’ ipon | “cold”—for Health Commissioner Har- TR i e | e Unilass vorun haic aplite i some hours | vis of New York and Health Commis color® " The size ‘does mot matter |ANd breaks off, the dryness of the | ivived. In this | sioner Mundesen of Chicago were not e forthe ears anoild he nhaw | <calp does not appear tn he anything | by Mr. Rawlins, who | then in office. g the mose, %o large ones |L? Worry over. From vour letter, 1 ed that small se | "Was it lobar pnenmonia—lung — must go with a long nose: small ears [$hould judge that your sealp is friends Washing- | fever? 1.am afraid Drs. Craik, Diek and a big nose would 100k very odd. | healthy, and the dryness just due to a ! . A | L ot | comewhat inactive s 1 . 1 pint of blood. When 4nd Brown did not use the stetho | Do they lie flat? That's a great point, | SO™MeY g e M . cided on a second bleed- | goope. But Dr. Craik does speak of - | for outstanding ears are really very :‘4“,'”"" ""r" ency with some people. M iter, the “bleod ran | having found no signs of the bron- DEly. ‘Bt ithey are w0 eanlly eured | SONONSD (2SS 18 a0y ElgEhnede: a e ls e 1 produce any. symp. filling he that no one need be troubled by them. MAssage Will ‘help it. as it improves | |g ? Washington's diaries. permits himself to =av that theiblesdinzs in the gens . — ""hecaute you love mice things" MADE 3y THE MAxTRS OF VAN RAALTE Snx Groves, $nx Unprmwaan American cars are playing an im- | portant part in the automobile show Spring. : i a 2 2 ae T Y Y Y Y Y Y ¥ ¥ chial 1 up. whatever srgpn el meant that. Was it quinsy? Te 1f you have a thin face, or a hoyish 7 _"‘j’_";' g e il st blush that this | my mind that is what the available [ifdce [tryithe Bfoncrop In any one of | £ XOUT TEEDIENS offi JUSE miRssaEe e idea of injury | dgescriptions of the illness suggest. It lits numerous forms—if, of course rops of olive oil into the scalp vas "I"” ' was not until 1 had consulted Ford's vour ears are nice to look at You can |V henever you find the hair is too dry. { A leedings | writings of Washington thai | brush the hair straight off the fore . ; u S fife | of it » “Me an’ Puz thought we smelled | ton's learHE A that Stlis stary called it n head and down the back of the head.| The lonzest pastorate in the Protes note on the | quinsy. Prof. Rosenau. in his “Pre. |3 Fhost in that old Taylor house to-|where it ends in a shingle, combing tant Episcopal diocese of Pennsyl. | | diavies Fitz- | ventive Medicine and Hygiene,” haz- | 73y, but Papa sald it was just Pug’s it hehind the ears: or you can part it ‘vania is held by Rev. J. A. Good. | B oy arararayarara Ford’s writir of | ards the opinion that Washington diad | €0t that was with us.” in the middle or, preferably, to one fellow, rector for 5% years of one| I was deeply [of diphtheria. if it was diphtheria, (Copyright, 1 side and cut it, like a hoy's, around |church in Philadelphia UY a can of Farboil Enamel Paint, put it on a strip Be: woitienits ey | oo Dbl Gl g e | : side by side with any other white enamel that ter written by 1<k tors for lett 40 ounces lood. | . % ] : i'had 10 have diphtheria without anti- e you may have. See for yourself why experts say this oxin I'd like to dispose of about a {6t my micea e et ; is the whitest white enamel that has ever been made. il G Whatever the exact diagnosis might s b ; non in | e D 0B Veithton Sa R THE POWDER ; Compare its hard, thick surface, its tile like gloss, to s, | versationat Spra of & cnrree =t he P : that washes like a piece of porcelain. Watch it . | e o 35 UFF Box after 2 or 3 years, and see why we say that Farboil A Enamel Paint wears like iron. These are facts scientifically achieved and thoroughly proven. For Beautiful Walls Do not confuse it with ordinary kalsomines or water paints. Because Farbo won't rub off. It gives a deep beautiful tint to the walls of every room in the house. It comes in thir- teen lovely colors and white and goes on right over the old ’ 3 b b b b o o e i b e }TT is a luxurious pleasure to open a box of COTY FACE POWDER, with its perfume so rich and lovely—but it is an even greater delight to use it and see the smooth, fresh clearness it brings to the complexion. [ AN AROMA that whets the appetite . . . a “Tintex tinted fyluvor that capti- H: this faded ‘step-in’ S meucee MY | it (] LES POUDRE itvsince 1864 . . . J andforeconoms, too! When "undies™ q‘uaht) Brate 4 : i i filac, | 0 ol o by mgwionge. Chase & Sanborn’s =i Jus tin them with Tintex. In a minute Seal Brand Coffee! |7 Dy i caloeful e much money Tintex will save you ina -Chase&Sanborn's oo e e e S -SEAL BRAND T e T e i COFFEE ' O Bt e it Seal Brand Tea is of 15¢ at drug and dept. stores the same high quality | > (i = o Ill]EQC» e T e i <<= . 2 %2 5 3 < ¢ 2 S We make only First-grade paints 7 7 33333333 If your dealer can’t supply Farboil Products, phone or write, we will tell you where to get them. . 59 A INTS AS YOU RINSE 4 7 FARBOIL- PAINT COMPANY If your dealer ecan't suppl Farboil, products. phone or ‘write. BALTIMORE : MARYLAND £ We, wifl tell you where to get them. ‘Farboil Paunt Co.. Balti- more, Md. " S A e R e e e e B e T e i as L] 4 Tints & DyCS One dollar the box IXII}’th1 Ilg BLANC ROSE NO.1 ROSE NO. 2 NATUREL any Color A e ro, TR RACHELNOG. 5" << <<= <y

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