Evening Star Newspaper, May 20, 1926, Page 41

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. WOMAN’S PAGE. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1926. FEATURES. 41 Luxury Added to Leisure at Home BY LYI A LE 0 BARON WALKER. The special the during man of attention the when it is his good fortune to be at |vited to the home. home. for it is his pleasure ground. It is the thoughtful and wise wom READING IS ONE OF THE WAYS IN WHICH COMPANIONSHIP CAN BE COUPLED WITH REC EATION ll A1t whoe sees things from the man’s point of view. He comes home from A strennous day’s work, not neces wkaraly of manu: labor. hut one of equally fazigninz mental work. He lnoks forward fo companionship. to vest and to recreation, and with a hope that during his presence the home will he run for his especial com- fort In fact, he pather expects that It will be. and in some instances he demands that it shall he. It is ac- cording tn his ideas on this subiect that running the place for his com- fort hecomes a joyful task or an irk- house deserves|and also see that friends for a table | time or two of bridge are frequently in If he has a iaste for interior decoration, she can advise with him about arrangement of rooms. Most men rather enjoy this part of homemaking, and then they will aladly de some pottering about the place which helpx decidedly in [ keeping the home looking its best at Ithe minimum cost. i Perhaps he ix fond of the social {1ite. Then it is up to the wife to see { she is not ton tired to el that | oing about with him when evening [comes. If he loves sports she can [take 2 szenuine interest in game: [ Fither in watching professional games {With him or in playving such games as tennix or gelf. If her zame is| poor. she should practice to perfect | herself hetween time of pluying with | him. Happiness for Wife. In trying to give the husband ples ure during his hours at heme. the wife will find not only satisfaction. but pleasure also. It will he seen that | while she is catering to his home hap. | piness she is seeing to it that it in | cludes her. 1t is evident that she is | making herselt an actual part of the | pleasure in such a manner that it selfish |does not tend to make him but to include her not only In the actnal zood times bhut in the thoughts of them also. When this is accom- | plished there is a reciprocity of in 1erest a focusing of attention that <tvengthens the honds of home life. While no home should be run en tirely 1o suit the man or the woman. the man's leisure hours do deserve special attention. and should he ziven a place in the scheme of things. MENU FOR A DAY. RREAKFAS Strawherries Faripa with Cream Creamed Codfish on Cream Toast Crullers Coffee ’ LUNCHEON. Cream of Tomato Soup Brown Bread Sandwiches Stuffed Celer Spice Cakes DINNER. Tomato Soup with Creutons Broiled Halibut ked Potatoes Green Peas Hearls of Lettuce, Tea Mix grated tart raw apples with cream cheese and season Russfan Dressing Pineapple Pie Coffee CRULLERS. One enp sour eream. nne cup sugar. one egz, one small tea i =poon soda, little salt, spice to | | “taste. Mix soft. Fry in boil- 1| ins tard. | BROWN BREAD | SANDWICHES. | | 3 B vith salt and pepper. Spread some one. Fortunately it is irne vlmv‘ ki e the husband is usually gratetul and| | Detween thin slices brown appreciative when a wife strives fo bread. have his home hours just the sort hp; PINEAPPLE SPONGE PIE. o hand. By Bhastping Samiliar with| || feven:eizhths cup sugar, grat hin: favorite’ anbyects saheiican leaty | 108 of lemon rind fone teaspoon Rl o T vead out tnud. or to jet her| | lemon juice and one and one. d | | third cups canned shredded y 1o him and couple co o h ot him and couple companion-| | pineapple Fold in stiffiy-heat <hip with recreation When Games Are Enjoyed. 1f the man de can hts in plaving card: cand games for fwe, learn 150 YEARS Story of 1t BY JONATHAN en ezg whites, turn into pie plate lined with paste and bake | mti! firm in center. AGO TODAY he U, S. A A. RAWSON, Jr. Penn Will Oust King's Men. PHILADELPHLA, May 17 The peonle of Pennsylvania have to. day taken into their own hands the question whether thelr colony shall take its stand in favor of a separation from Great Britain. Seven thousand persons assembled in mass meeting and unanimously determined to dis- place the old Haonse of Assembly with a new government formed by the peo. ple Maj. John Ravard ealled the meet ing to erder, and Col. Daniel Rober- dean was chosen to preside. The people by their close attention gave | eloquent testimony 1o the seriousness with which they regarded the present crisis Iirst. the resolution passed by the Continental Con five days ago was read is resolution urgzed the colonies 1o establish new governments to replace the old Rritish administra tlon, which in Pennsylvania centers When I have sternly Judged my friends As 1 'am moved to do at times I so embarrassed afterwards To contempl'&te my own reat crimes. /_3 . 9) 2. o RCH Healing Cream Clears Complexion While You Sleep PPLY this dainty, antiseptic skin cream at night before retiring. It works all night long, soothing, purify- ingand cleansing your skin of all erup- tions and blemishes; This healing, vai- ishing cream, called Noxzema, makes Enexeellentpowderbase. Useitduring ihe day andits medication will quickly complete healing and rebuilding the skin tissues, You will be amazed at how quickly your skin becomes tlear and beautiful. - Noxzema i dainty to apply. It's greaseless—does not Muss or stain. Get atrial jar today. Over 1,150,000jars Were used last year—conclusive v dence of its popularity. On sale atall Rood druggists. NOXZEMA “Feel It Heal” lin the House of Assembly. Then the instructions given by the House of Assembly to the delegates in Con gress on November 9, 1 [These instructions, still in force, for hid the delegates to agree to sep- aration from KEngland or to the set ting up of a new government. The Assembly has refused to withdraw | these instructions, although request- ed to do so by the com e of the {City and Liberties of Philadelppia. It was (hereupon resolved ' unani- mously that the said Instructions have a dangrois tendency to with- draw this province from that happy union with the other colonies which we consider both as our glory and | proteciion”; that the Assembly, under present conditions. is unable to pro- ceed without assuming arbitrary |power; that a protest he entered |against the powers of the Assembly; and, finally, that the present gover: ment s not competent 1o the exigen cies of onr affairs. 1t was urged that a provincial con vention he chosen by the peopie for the express purpose of carryving the resolve of Congress into effect. {a call will he issued for such a con vention, to be attended hy representa. tives from everdy county. The convention will first determine the hasis of representation in the hody which will frame the new gov ernment and specify the method of s members’ election. » the members of the Assembly will be directed a notice sayinz that they |are not proper persons to represent the people, because of their alleglance {to the king and becanse the peop! |have alarming apprehensions that * new government modeled by persons s inconsistentl) circumstanced would be the means of subjecting our- selves and onr posterity to greater ievances than we have hitherio ex- perienced Over-Sleep Yet have breakfast ’ cooked in time for the N THREE to five minutes, Quick Quaker is cooked and ready. hat’s faster than plain toast. It's food that stands by you through the morning. 1 It's the “balanced ration” of pro- | tein, carbohydrates, vitamines and | “bulk” (to make laxatives less often needed) that doctors and authorities | now so widely urge. © Get Quick Quaker today. All the | wonderful Quaker Oats flavor is | there . . . all its creamy richness. You will he delighted. Your grocer has Quick Quaker— alsa Quaker Oats as you have always known them, ‘Quick Quaker [ were read. | and | BY FANNY Y. CORY l SONNYSAYINGS | | | I'll give yuh a bite as quick as 1 kin. Nipper, but we ain't out of dan ger yet! (Copyright. 1926.) What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. Taurus. Tomorrow's planetary aspects are fuvorable, and there are present | stimulating vibrations, which will {create an urge to do something in the way of accomplishment. Every advantage should be taken of these influpncees. as courage, perseverance and dogged determination will be sensed. und these are important fac tors of success. Enterprises of a financial character are most favored by the signs, and initlative will be { benefited. Not only do the signs be- wpeak encouragement for material in- 1erests, but they also promise to stir the emotions. It is an excellent oc- casion for marrlage. as the indica- tions point to harmony, constancy and mutval forebearance. Children born tomorrew will not ascape the ailmenta peculfar to the in fantile period. Careful nutrition and good environment will, however, rob these flinesses of all gravity. After overcoming these vicissitudes physi- ieal normaley wil he established, and | proper development will ensue. Their eharacters will be determined and, if not checked, they are liable to hecome stubborn. Under such conditions. | great forbearance must be shown, as { thwwe children will resent force, but { will alwaz=-2 amenable to persuasion jand affection. It tomorrow is vour birthday you are of a “happy-go-lucky” type and are seemingly indifferent. or impervi ous to vour surroundings. You great success as though you had a right to expeet it. You treat misfortune though it were all a part of the day's work. Yeur attitude is at no time influenced by either optimism or pes- simism. You have fair ability, but are too phlegmatic ever to attempt to use it to its greatest advantage. It vou can “rub along” vou are satis- fied and vour ambitions are mot ap. | parent to any one. You have no deep emoilons and. although vour friends ave legion, vour feelings are never violently stirred. In the more inumate relations of life. with your whimsical outlook on lite, you make a genial companion. but vou never hecome an ardent lover. You are saved many trouhles and sof¥ows hy such a temperament. On the orher hand. you will never ex perience the thrills of happiness that fall to the lot of those who jove devotedly and passionately. Well known persons born on that daie ar Réverdy Johnson. states- man: 1son Silzer. phrenologist: Stanley Waterloo, author and jour- nalist: Bdmund J. James, educator: Edward W. Secripture. psycholegist; Glenn Curtiss, ploneer aviator. 1Copyright. 1926.) PRI o H T 8 Clues to Character BY 4. 0. ABERNETRY. What Eyelashes Tell. The eyelashes are primarily profec- tive and the more they are adapted to that purpose the more perfect and elaborate they are. Muscular persons possess the longest and most beautiful lashes and they are also more curved in this type than in the bony clas: 1t is among the esthetic and art classes that we find the best developed lashes. both under and upper: for the prejection of the bony brow of these subjects is-s0 slight as 1o necessitate a compensating development of these featur Coarse, straight, thick and project- ing lashes are associated with persons more blunt and vigorous than refined. Thin. scatiered, light colored lashes indicate delicacy of physique and sometimes are found on persons of tuberenlar tendencies. Scattered brown lashes hespeak a degree of constitutional vigor, but the nervous system will he rather sensa- tive. Very long, cnrved lashes indicate thelr owner is too shy or too timid to he frank and outspoken. You may ex pect a modified form of secretiveness behind these lashes, Short, thick lashes are indexes to di- rect speech and often to rudeness. Long. drooping lashes are found on ardent lovers and coquettes and speak eloguently when raised or lowered. (Copyright. 1926.) - . People of the Philippines are now making alcohol from molasses instead of from nipa and coconut sap as be- “TASTY" breakfast which you ean have ready in good time to ‘A get the family off to business or to school. -fry fish cakes, made frem famous Gorton's Cod | Fish—No Bon I—DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX {Will She Lose Husband by Demanding Daily Pro- | gram of Love-Making—Second Wife Jealous of Husband’s Funeral Plans. I)HAR MISS DIX: What do you think about married people frolicking together? I always feel that my husband is sick or angry if he doesn’t use a little ugh stuff” with me while I am trying to cook breakfast. And I also feel that he s unfair to me unless every night when he comes home he pets me and hahies me. His mother thinks T am =o silly. and tells me that I will lose my husband with such Insane pranks. Rut we have been married two years and he still thinks T am just precious. Do men love their wives better when they frolic with them and when they make them be affectionate” 1 JUST WONDERING. Answer: Depends entively upon the m: If a man is of a jovial tvpe that delizhis in horseplay, undoubtedly he would enjoy a wife who fiked to be mauled around like the rag doll in the side show. The main factor in keeping a husband's love is congeniality, and there is no danger of your husband growing tired of you as long as you like to do the things that ‘he does and meet him on his own ground. So if he enjoys & trolic, play with him. If he gets any kick out of being a cut-up, applaud is antics. But. of course. you must realize that A man can’t keep up that sort of buffoonery indefinitely. It is hound to go stale after a while, so be wise enough to let such schoolboy pranks die their naturalgeath, and don't force our husband to simulate a false gayety when he gets sobered down by the ares of life.. 1t is only when we are very, very youns that we are gay and humorous before breakfast. As for your demanding a certain amount of love-making every day, that is a different matter, and I should say that your procedure is exceedingly dangerous, Personally 1 can think of nothing that would unloverlike as 10 know that he was scheduled for a petting party that had to be pulled off on the strike of the clock, whether he felt like it or'not. [ can imagine him dreading the ordeal as he would zoing to the dentist's and breathing a sigh of thanksgiving when it was ove A man may have the deepest and truest affection possible for his wife. His love for her may be so great that it is a part of life itself, but he isn't ke a hushand feel 80 xln;\;~ in a sentimental nfood. He doesn’t always want to bill and coo| and kiss. When s mind ix filled with husinexs cares and worries, he doesn’t want any fool woman asking him “Oo’s ducky is or When he is wondering how he can get the hank to extend his note, he fecls more like swearing at his wife than swearins that If she should die he will never. never. never marry again. And when he comes home tied and nerveworn, he deesn’t want to be slohbered over. He wants to he let alone. There is o time and a place for everything under the =un. FEspeclally is there a time and place for love-making, and wise is the woman who awaits the appointed psychological hour when her husband wants to make love to her, instead of forcing him to make ft one of his daily duties that he comes to loathe. One kiss with some real feeling in it is worth a peck of hit or miss pecks on the ear that a man hestows upon his wife because he is expacted to kiss her. . POROTHY DIX. IDFAR DOROTHY DI I married a widower who i= good and kind to me and who professes to love me. Rut he is always reminding me that when he dies he wishes to he buried hy the side of his first wife. Do you think I am just a SECOND FIDDLE? Answer: You should worry about where vour hushand is buried! If you { die before he does. it will not matter to you where he is huried; and if he dies before youn do, you can bury him where von please. Anyway, why does it matter? The thing that concerns you is not where vour hushand’s dead hody will lie, but how he treats you while he is still in the flesh. If he is good and kind and tender and affectionate to you, enjoy that and forget his funeral arrangements. Don't let something that may never happen in your lifetime spoil yvour happiness Of course, vour hushand is stupid heyond helief not tn keep his plans for the disposal of his remains a secret between himself and his executor. Any man who knows so little of a woman's heart that he doex not realize that a second wife is always tortured by jealousy of the first wife ix so dumb that he should not he allowed out without a keeper. But many men are like that, and it is just lack of intuition. just lack of realization of how cruel they are. that makes them continually harp to their second wives upon the charms and perfections of their first wives—charms and virtues which grow hrighter as they fade. For many a man canonizes a wife after she is dead with wom he quarreled while she was alive. So wipe your eyes and call your sense of humor ta vour aid. and recollect that it vou should die and your husband should marry again, he weuld doubtiess demand of No. 3 that he be huried hetween you and No. 1. Neasg NDOROTHY DIX. EAR MISS DIX: What is a duty of a father toward twn daughters who have married men who seemingly dn not want to support them in the same comfort that they were accusiomed fo hefore marriage My daughters seem to think jt my duty virtually to clothe the grand- children. Thig T cannot do without cutting in an my wife's small luxuries, as you up. their own children Perhaps if vour sons.n.law realize that thev will have to clothe they will go to work and do it. 1t does voung people good to be thrown on their own responsibi NFhen ths Voungiters know thit they must elther alffic of swits thes sl‘-’»’i‘fi’é out and swim. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. 19261 BEAUTY CHATS A Change of Treatment. ""‘lnxvnl!s f]rt;m m. heauty shops, | change to plain cold water f L cently and asked what I meant by cleanse your skin =top it for a day giving the skin an occasional rest|0r 1Wo and rub the face with powder- from beauty treatments. If the treat-|ed oatmeal after vou have washed it ments are good, she asked, how can it with hot water, rinsing the oatmeal benefit the skin to do without them? |0t With fresh hot water. The answer Is that a change is usual- | There are so many thousands of | Iy beneficial. Sea air is healthy and |(reatments that it is impossible to | 0 18 country air, but the person who |SURgest more than a few of them. | lives the vear round in the country|YOU mMUSt experiment again and oen to the sea for his or her health, |A%ain to find out what is best for your and those who live by the shore are |8kin, and even when you have’ dis. helped when they change to inland [covered an ideal treatment you will alr for a time. have to change it from time to time, Intelligent beauty just as you have to change your eye. certainly helpful. hut klasses from time to time. The con- 3 dition of your skin varies, some faults BY EDN. KENT FORBES. treatments are with the best intentions in the world they can be lavish use of cold overdone. Too cream I apt to make the skin heavy | and greasy. Ton many astringents | will dry it up: even too much soap and water will make it harsh. Give | it a rest now and then from every treatment excepting the primary -one of keeping it clean. i Also change vonr treatments now and then. If you have been using fce as an astringent use cold salt water u_have been xpensivi /send you this full ackage N\ A e . Remarkable offer! Full CHASE-O sent FREE. Used with laundry soap, soap chips or soap pow- der, brings out dirt and ns without rubbing. Blues cAs It Useful every day is this dainty Kleinert's BRASSIERETTE —a pretty slip-over of fine soft net equipped with dress shields. One of the nicest things about this—and all of the Kleinert’s Shields—isthe ease with which you can rinse it out along with your other lingerie, press the shields with a warm iron, and have it good as new again. They have ne right (o expect their parents ia deny themselves in order to | a1 give ta them. and yon will be perfectly right if vou refuse to let them hold | p; For sale at all grocers Postal card request brings FREE package. Address J. L. PRESCOTT CO. Front & Wharton Sts. Philadelphia, Pa. i Dress Shields keep your dresses free from odor Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN “I never played marbles for keeps but once, an’ that was with a boy I didn’t know could shoot so good.” (Cooyright. 1926.) LITTLE BENNY RY LEE PAPE. Glasses Magee's mother came to ses ma. this afternoon, bringing Glasseses new baby sister with her, being ixactly the same age as my new bahy brother but not twins, ma saving, Duzzent she look sweet sleeping xo peacefilly, you can put her rite upstairs in the same | sysiem e room with my baby and they can sleep ! plished. their sleep out together and we can!came healthy. tawk comfortably That's a splendid ideer, Mrs. Mages sed. And she went upstairs and put her baby on ma’'s bed and came down Milk. When Mary Jones reaches 20 whe thinks her milk drinking days are over. Milk is only for little children, she thinks. Now that she is & young lady she feels she dosen't need it any more, and hesides, “I can't digest it,” announces Mary. Milk fs a most valuable food. Tt containa all the elements necessary o life. Before Mary decides that milk disagree: up on why it does. In a great number of cases the Marys enly think thev can't digest milk. The seed of disltka of milk may he rooted in childhood contrari ness and has been allowed to grow untll, like the mustard.seed in the parable, it becometh a tree. If the indigestibility ‘is founded on real or imaginary dislike, the milk can be camouflaged into the diet in oyster stew, cream of tomato soup, creamed chicken, baked custard, i cream, milk sherbet. I personally know lady who developed tuberculosis. She lovely hadn't drunk milk in 30 years-had | an aversion to it; made a face when it was mentioned: believed it didn't agree with her. Of course, the first food prescribed was milk—six glasses a day for her. It took a good deal of ingenuity on the part of her nurse to get that quantity into the lady's v day. But it wa he gained weight. She he- with her she should check | EAT AND BE HEALTHY Dinah Day's Daily Talks on Diet The Right Food Is the Best Medicine accom- | peppers | Mixed [or afternoon, won't burden the stem- ach and is especiallv zood for any- body needing to build up. Also the milk should not_be tao cold and it should be sipped” slowly. Milk combinex well with breakfast or a light lunch A few drops of limewater in a glass of milk will render it more digestjhle. milk and viehy m good for those who have gastric troubles, Ar tificial huttermilk may, be heneficial in_introdneing digestibility into the milk quata At any rate, hecause of the great nutrition milk gives, even the grown people should try to find soma wa to drink « glass, or even a pint, milk a day so anv digestiva turbances won't follow. “Where there's a will there's a way " applies to milk drinking as well as everything else in life. a simple dis- Miss I,.—Can a person reduce one of body withouf reducing other arts” Answer—Yes, but it is a slow process and involves exercise as well as di pa Readers _ desiri auestions should envelope to Dinah personal answers to nd aelf-addressed. stamped Day. care of The Sta Chicken Tomales. Chop, cooked chicken meat enough to make three cupfuls. Chop six red and onion enough to make h cupful and soak these in one-fo And now she enjovs | half a cupful of vinégar for one hour. milk. She takes it straight. She cails | Drain. add one eupful of fine bread for it, and feels very much neglected | crumbs. one cupful of tomatoes. ten if by some oversight her giass of milk | chopped olives, one egxz and a season doesn’t grace her three square meals ing of salt, pepper and paprika. Shay agen and her and ma started to 1awk | and her nightly snack at hedtime. like croqueties, roll in corn meal ay about diffrent things sutch as how | Milk. bheing a righ food in itself.|wrap in a puddinz cloth, or latér i hard 1t is to keep a ecook and how | sometimes causes indigestion when | the sesson in corn husks ia the mutch trubble and ixpense thev are|iaken with a heavy dinner. In that ends to keep the mixture in. Steam even if vou keep them, and wila there was i after a heing a baby eryving. ma seyinz. O/ deer, there goes your baby, Ars. Magee. | O, no. that's vour haby, Mre. Mages | sed. My babv neve ies wen she | wakes up and 1 knew her vofce eny- | way, that yours, vou hetter go up and see to him, she sed. - I dont haff to. the ideer, 1 tell you my baby pracktically dont know the meening of the werd cry. ma sed. And if ft& not my baby it must be vours. that stands 1o reasen in a honse with only 2 babies in it. she sed. Well Im so sattisfied that jts not my baby that Im jest content fo sit heer and lissen to your baby ery, gee sed. Thats Ixactly the w your hahy, the poo don't see how yvou sed. v 1 feel ahout little thing. 1 can stand it, ma You must have a hart of stone, Mrs. | Magee sed. Benny. vou hetter run up and see wats 4 maiter with your haby | brother, she sed. Wich T did. velling down, | ma. hay. Mrs. Magee, its hoth of them, their hoth erving like the dooce. Wich they was and ma and Mrs Magee pritty neer nocked .each other over trving to be the ferst one nup- stairs Strawberry Buns. Rub 3 quarter of a pound of hutter into three.quariers of a pound of flour. and add a quarter of a ponnd of sugar. Beat up two eg; well and stir into the flour. Mix one 1tea-| spoonful of cream of tartar and half a teaspoonful of haking soda in a cup with five tablespoonfuls of but termilk and stir it into the mixture If not wet enough add a little more buttermilk. Mold into buns, them on a huttered tin. make a hole in the tep of each and put a little my income is limited. A PERPLEXED FATHER. | strawberry jam in, drawing up the - o dough 10° cover it ke in a mod Answe T think that after chiliren are grown and married and have|era'e oven far ahout 15 minutes. gone off an their ewn. they should stand on their own feet and support . themselves, Handhags of suedo leather with her dic designs in colors are popular in aris. BLEMISHES yield to its antiseptic action. Permanent de- fects are concealed by a subtile film of adorable beauty. A pure skin of exquisite loveliness is yours thru jts use. Made in White - Fleah - Rachel Send 10c. for Trial Size Ford. 7. Hopkins ASon, New York Gourauo's ORIENTAL CREAM “New again— I tinted them with Tintex!” SKLK stockings in delicate colors fade long before they wear out. So if I:u use Tintex your stocking bill will cut i;::’lu.lf. For Tintex restores their on lor-or gives them a olor to match oF conirse with, your gown. A:d 90 easily~juse “tint as you rinse. ‘Biue Box — for lace-trimmed (—foe tintis i e tocing 4 deing i 15¢ at drug and dept. stores Tints & Dyes Anything any Color Mrs. Ma-| place | woise from upstairs, | o | | i i | case a drink plece of crisp 1 st, midmorning UST close the doors of milk with a cracker | for threa hours Dry Serve hot in the oven for 15 minnt death mist for FLIES! and windows. Spray - IMPROVED DETHOL till the air is misty. Wait a few minutes. Then sweep out the dead flies. Every last one. Made by a wonderful new secret formula, IMPROVED DETHOL is the surest fly-killer ever shot from a sprayer. You need IMPROVED DETHOL., Get it today. Simple — Safe. Sure. Guaranteed. spray 1t you don't think Improved Dethol is as good as we Get it toda pint only 78¢: quarts, $1.25; gallons, $4. int can and handy sprayer, $1. e., Inc., Richmond, Va. money back, every cent Containing full Manufacturing to guard @ Inuer bag @ Cardboard cavton Triple-urapped their crispness \( Z y it is—your Half pint trial size, S0c; full Big combination package At dealers or Dethol 240 -T'o3] o, . R Juaslies We flaked Post Toasties Double-Thick - and made corn flakes Doub.lé-Crixp and Double-Good! The Donble-Thick. flaking process for Post Toasties set a new standard for corn flakes. Thousands of new users were won by the wonderful flavor and crispness that resulted. Try Post Toastics and know their Double-Goodness, their Double-Crispaess. They come to your.table, oven-fresh from the t toasting rooms at Battle Creek—triple-wrapped to guard their crispncss and their natural corn flavor. How to make the test: To make the Milk or Cream Test, get some Post Toasties at your grocer's. Shower some of the golden. crisp flakes into a bowl. Then add milk or cream. You will marvel at the wonderful flavor. You will find that even the last few flakes at the bottom of the bowl are still deliciously crisp. Be sure you get gemwine Post Toasties, Double-Thick corn flakes. Laok for the red anid yel- low, wax-wrapped -package that wears the Post Health Products seal. A free test package wibl gladly be sent om requers. LT b Postum Cereal Compan: RO Battle Creek vrs of Post Health Fran Chocalate. Poxt WAL Comn Plak real! Tostant Postum. G Fasi'a Tiran Flakes “Inc.. Dent. higan. Ml ducts: Post onsties (Do~ ). Postum Ce. “Nute and Post Toasties Double-Thick Corn Flakes : engo Sty orisp in ’ milk or cream »

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