Evening Star Newspaper, June 3, 1926, Page 39

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Q'l:lw.v All Learn to BY LYDIA LE B. 30 gapital idea that will help chil- “n fo put their things away without wing reminded and which will aid in eeping a house tidy is followed out household where there are four e children. ‘The parents never the voung folk. Instead, they timulate the voungsters to be and tidy children H have little allow- | | awa. N WOMAN’S PAGE. Put Things Away ARON WALKER. rubbers, etc. This is of importance if you would carry out the plan devel- oped so successfully by the parents about whom I am speaking. Unless thiere are places for the articles, of course, the children would be handi- capped and could not put things away in any systematic or orderly fashion. The Rummage Box. Tn the back hall and under the stairs is a large box. Any article not absolutely needed for daily use and which is left lying about and is not properly put away goes into this rum- mage box until Saturday. The person who spies the article first when it is ieft around is entitled to put it in the box. By the box are a pad and pencil. The person putting the article in the box writes his or her own name on a piece of paper and puts it with the article. When the box is opened and the things distributed on Saturday morning the one whose name is on the article is paid a nickel by the owner of it. It is only by doubling the re- | ward that a child can get anything from the box before the stated time. Wearing Apparel. the box is another pad. and things must be used immedi- he person who puts another's p, overcoat or such a thing y, writes down what it was, to whom it belonged and his or her name By when ately, hat, ¢ | | | | | and the date. A nickel is the reward for this help in keeping things tidy and the money is paid by the one to whom the article belongs. Reciprocal Plan. The parents did the clearing up and ihe putting of the things away at first {and the children paid them when the w | wouldn't pa ONLY BY DOUBLINC ARD THAT A CHILE ANYTHING FROM | | “OR TATED | 30X RF . HOWE when they are bi; are | ng at firs vears old, and neve for the things they but a ut sufficient cxpected to 5 definite p whether rennis r: whether few hooks. balls IS or hats, caps, t cquets, they are clothes, have seldom been in a home that was .| move spick and span, and where the | box aw was opened or the things put y. But they concluded that it < wiser to inciude all the family in the plan and make it reciprocal. It has worked like a charm. When one of the boys objected and said he the father sald: “That's quite all right. You need not pay, but of course it would not be fair to the others to have you get an allow- ance.” It was stopped for but one week, and then the lad entergd of his own volition. He is now one of the most zealous followers of the plan. It Pays to Be Tidy. | fever. And I put my hand on my for | could feel eny, wich T THE EVENIN SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY Ain't it great? He's on'y paintin’ on our house 'bout a nour an’ just look at me! to be a drippin’ mash! (Copyright. 1926.) LITTLE BENNY LEE PAPE. This morning 1 sun was shining in mutch ke Summer it felt like cation, me thinking, Aw gosh, haff to go to skool today, aw (& Wich jest then ma called up. Benny do you realize what time it is? and it felt va do 1 been | By night I'd or't G _STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX | | The Folly of a Big Wedding for Those in Moderate! Cifcumstances—The Young Girl Whose Par- ents Help to Entertain Her Men Callers. | | | | I am engaged to be mariicd and my fiance wants us to | ch wedding, while T prefer 1o be quietly married at home. | 50 don't you think it would be hest to have a less| ur money to put into a comfortable little| LUCY. [DEAR Miss DIX: | have a big chu; | Neither of us | expensive wedding home? i = | Aunswer: 1 certainly do, Lucy. T think of all the foolish ways in which| money can be spent, none is sillier than to throw it away on a show wedding. where for 10 minutes’ pomp you pay a price that frequently bankrupts the family for years. Of couree, the rich are a law unto themselves. If those wWho do not have to count the cost desire to spend their money on a display wedding, it is their own affair, though why any one should want to make a spectacle of the | most sacred and critical moment of thefr lives is a mystery past finding out.: is where a man and a_ woman | s long as life shall last and t human lips can utter, go t to the church, and there, ping, curious crowd looking In reality, the ideal marriage ceremony | who are taking each other-for hetter or wo! s who are going to take the most solemn oath th | with only one or two of their nearest and dearc | with no fuss and feathers to ¢ ct them, no { on and criticizing, are married to each other. You are certainly an nnusually sensible girl, Lucy, to perceive that a show wedding is the height of folly for people in mode cumstances. The average girl feels that life will be cinders, ashes and dust if she doesn't have a wedding with white satin and orange blossoms and bridesmalds and ring bearers and all the balance of the fluminer) v So, only too often, she woyks herself nearly to death and runs her poor old father into debt 1o pay for her splurge up an aisle and down again, while her dear 500 friends gossip in the pews and say: “My, but did you ever see her look &0 ugly? And is that little shrimp the bridegroom? “Why do vou suppose she picked him out? And how do you suppose they are ever going | o pay for all of this grandcur Everyvbody Knows they oa afford it I i woke up and the | | It is all over in 10 minutes, except pavi the bills Figure it out and sce if you think it is worth the money. For what the useless bridal costume | cost, what the flowers cost. what the music and the motors and the presents! and souvenirs to bridesmalds and ushers and ring beavers cost, would start a! respectable account in a savings bank that might grow a home | little business of your own. Me thinking, G. 1 wish I had a little | | hed to see if I couldent, and then I rubbed my for hed hard and tried it agen and it feit a little like a fever, and pritty soon ma. called up, Benny, are you up yet? No mam, I think I got a little fever, 1 sed. ‘Wat? The ideer, ma sed. And she ran up and started to feel my forhed, and pop ran up saying, Wats all this about a fever, how could a fever get in this house now that the screens As you can readily see, it all depends | ape 47 upon the child whether he pays for having his things put away or into the If he s careful he soon realizes | at it is worth while to be tidy. I children never please put your your coat is on the chair don’t forget to put your the closet.” ete. It is been tried out successfully were told or v, rubbers in MARRIAGE MEDDLER BY HAZEL DEY tinsic d Conrad Morgan They are so much in love that | hey do mot stop to consider the conse quences, and it isn’t until afterward that Jean discovers her mother-n-law wiust live with them. Mrs. Morgan has taken dislike Jean ichich makes it very difiicult. Conrad has a sister, Florence, whom M Morgan s constan’ly ertolling. As a maiter of fact, Florcnce bored with her husband and fancies herself in love with Merton Thorne, a college senior | Jran has known before her marriage. | Vrs. Morgan thinks Merton is inter- rsted in Jean and succeeds in planting | tiie seed of jealousy in Con’s ind. In the meantime F ‘once has ta. to mecting Merton at her friend’s Fldredge One afternoon Richard. Florence's husband. secs Merton k her, but ricard when he tares her sdth it she makes him belicve that it was Jean, aus ’ sreen i [ ghort trip and Florence has Merton to tea. Jean arrives and interrupts their telc-a-tete. and later Merton offers to take Jean home. Rebellion. CHAPTER In spite of Jean's protests Merton insisted upon walking home with he! ere was no of it unless she him 3 Con was feal- | whic out of the question t the minute Florence’s door closed | hind them J id quickly “I wish you wouldn't come with me, veally 1 do. Florence will only be gry with me for bursting in on vou way.” Nonsense Jean to bee t ouwn | | il | why should she be will, she already is. | Do go back, like good boy Just as ough it weren't safe for me to walk sack at this hour in a town like | milton!” That {sn’t the point want come with you I don't get a «hance to see vou these days. vere vou in earnest ab chaperon- ng the (ilee Club dance? There's a ee meeting on tonight and ing to arrange things.” < in earnest,” Jean . and as they talked he plans for the af- about her wor s un almost home, they the 1k lead « up to house. rwever, her dread re- ed. Merton ould think it nge if she didn 1sk him in, W f she did how « she explain that <he had heen Flore She ouldn’t explain that she had met him here: she could give Florence away that Just as they reached the porch) uick footsteps sounded behind them, | and Con came up the walk. He | <topped short when he saw Merton | 1d his greeting sounded forced. Mer- | ton’s, however, s cordial enough. ife slapped Con on the back heartily. “How's the boy I was just telling | Tean that T never sce anything of you | neopie.” “You Recause she 1 A he scem to see Jean quite fre- auently.” Con’s voice was tense and | his face wore the expression his' other's did when she disapproved of | anything. Jean felt herscheeks grow | hot with shame, but she tried to i the thing off lightly. She struck a | dramatic pose and said in a theatrical | tone: i ““Behold. the misunderstood other man, Merton, only you don't' look the part a bit." | Con had the grace to look ashamed, | ed into a grin. | the jealous husband and, wife. You're the I hate those mc.t,ly ¢'xmpor~'lng moods That just possess me at a tea — £ I fael thut helplessly I 2ct Like some one else burlesquing me. o ! evenly hard goes away on a | i to me. |and I tell 0 BATCHELOR They stood and chatted for a moment, but Con did not ask Merton into the house, and Jean was uncomfortably aware of the fact that the situation hetween the two men was strained. | Merton knew that Con's remark had | been made in earnest and would not forget it. How absurd it all was! As Jean und Con entered the house together, Mrs. Morgah met them in the hall “I've started dinner id vou forgot all seems a pity to keep ¢ Jean. I'm about it. It ‘onrad waiting n't hurt him flippantly. “Where have you been?” Mrs. Mar- gan insisted. “You said you would be gone only a short time.” “I changed my mind,” Jean said [ have the right to do that, 17 I'm not a prisoner.” how can you speak to mother t?" Conrad’'s was sharp, d on him suddenly. “Because I'm not a child, and I'm tired being treated like one. Haven't I the right to go and come as T choose? Do I have to account to vour mother for every minute of my Jean returned | time Mrs. Morgan had begun and Jean was abor ®o upstairs when by the arm. “If vou don't have to account to nother for your time perhaps you will 1f you persist in acting like a child you'll have to be treated like one ou right now that 1 won't stand for any more of this business with Merton Thorne.” (Copyright. 1926 to weep, to turn away and Conrad seized her (Continued in tomorrow's Star.) Strawberry Shortcake. Mix together two heaping cupfuls of flour, 1wo teaspoonfuls of baking powder, & quarter of a teaspoonful of salt and two teaspoonfuls of sugar, and sift three ' times. Rub in a quarter of a cupful of butter with the tips of the fingers and add three- quarters of a cupful of milk gradually Toss onto a floured bidking board, d vide into two parts, pat, and roll out. Bake in buttered and floured layer cake tins m a hot oven for 15 minutes. Split and butter. Sweeten some strawberries to taste, and place on the back of the stove until warmed. Crush slightly and put between and on top of the stortcakes. Cover the top with whipped cream, sweetened and flavored with vanilla extract. To one cupful of whipped cream add a quarter of a cupful of sugar and half « teaspoonful of vanilla. ~ Healing Vanishing Cream n compliment me on my clear, P%on,e";};:u?mllere I-pthe secret. I neveruse any ordinary vanishing cream for a powder base. So manyof them clog the pores,enlarge them, maketheskindry,rough,coarsegrained. nsiead, just before powdering, I use a de. lightful new snow-white healing vanishing Cleam, called Noxzema. This splendid cream is a perfect powder base, but also Dl buen and cRapping. Mildly stri gent: reduces enlarged pores; makes skin delightfully smooth and fine textured. ‘Noxzemaisthe best beauty aid I know. Why don'tyou ti atany good drug store. NOXZEM “Feel It Hi | plan that has i i i ! And there mite be a still funnier one | | I | | | small jar? It may be purchased It feels something like the meezles coming out, T sed. I thawt I felt a sispicion of some- thing but now I dont feel a thing, ma | »d still holding my forhed, and pop wonder tarted to hold it, saying. I if you hav eeny of the other simptims of meezles? I dont know, I mite, 1 sed Well how about your scalp. do you feel a sort of ftching between hairs, he sed. Kind of, I sed. Well how about your elbows they kind of bern, pop sed. Sort of, 1 sed. nd is their a funny feeling hehind our kneez? pop sed. There mite be, I sed, and pop sed, some other place if your not up out of that and all through vour brekfist in .15 minits. ‘Which I was. What TomorrowMeans to You BY MARY BLAKE. Gemini. Tomorrow's planetar: day, prov a ver set, ing the morning are more inimical to activities than to the emotions. probability is that you will feel capa- ble of handling any task, and be full of enthusiasm and pep of the ordinary that you may attempt however, promises to mater accordance with your wish It would be advisable 1o c efforts to routine work. will_prove to be but toward noon show an im: - favorable condition about sun- - hopes. Children born tomorrow will, al though well developed along physical | lines, suffer from many minor ail ments during thelr infanc 1s devoted 1o nutrition and the envi ronment is all that it should be. Their disposition will be complex. they will be cheerful and bright, as well as ambitious and persevering; at other times moody and uncongenial. with spells of indifference and lack of They will possess intellects above the average and will strive for energy. achievement, but just as they are ap parently on the road to final success. | something will snap,’and they will fall “to go over the top. If tomorrow is your birthday. you have pleasing mannerisms and a charm all your own that is ingratiat ing and seductive. You have, how ever. a ver blased point of view. Thi does not make for succe: eration for the opinions o as consid- be they commercial or social. Your mind i: You. however. shut the door the experience of others and only al lowing vourself to be influenced by your own.' Your home life, as a result of vour hould ronstancy, devotion and loyalty. be productive of great happiness, pecially if mated with one born July or October. Your inherently un selfish nature begets, not only admira tion, but affectio es “A Lovely Skin from Head to Foot” the do Mmeasles. aspects are adverse during the early part of the ment, and _conditions develop into The influences that prevail dur- The | Nothing out | lize in nfine your The evening profitable and en- Jjoyable from a family or soclal stand- | poirt None of them need cause alarm, if great care At times v stubborn character, and can only judge issues from vour own | of course, others isan important factor in all rvelationships. | keen and you have ample in- telligence. together with an aptitude for work and a love of independence. to achievement by refusing to benefit by in | And tell your fiance, who wants the show wedding. that he is making a poor investment, for in a display wedding nobody ever notices the bridegroom. He is merely an excuse for the wedding. DOROTHY DIX. . D SJAR MISS DIX: Our home is small. We have only one sitting room. and when 1 entertain my gentlemen callers my family has to be with us. That is all right: but on other nights my father and mother retire early. vet when T have company they sit up until my company goes and monopolize the conversation. The result is that few voung men ever come back. What can I do about it? LETTY. Answer: Why. if 1 were yvou I should have a perfectly frank talk with my parents and tell them that the young men came to see me and not to see them, and that they were queering my chances. Undoubtedly they are. for too much family is a handicap too heavy for any girl to carry in the race for popularity. B | .. It is a hard thing for older people to realize how they bore voung ones | Father never dreams that young Smith doesn’'t put an extra v: ish on his hair and doll himself up in his stepping out clothes for the purpose of | Spending an enthralling evening listening to him discourse about the state | of the grocery trade or to his reminiscences of when he was a youngster or | to his opinion about the political situation how they ought to settle the League of Nations business. Nor does it dawn on mother that that nice Jones boy fs yawning his head off while she babbles along about the price of butcher’'s meat and what happened to her second child when it had the | Older people are crepe hangers in an) They take all of the pep out of the occasion. And love's voung dream has to have the proper environment fn which to flourish. It has to have the soll;ud- of two, with the certainty that nobody is within eyveshot or is listening in It withers and dies in the family circle. At least, the Ameriean variety does. If father and mother want their daughter (o be an old maid, they can take no surer way to achieving that result than by sitting with her company And that fsn't maybe DOROTHY DIX. assembly of young people PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. 1926 i Basal Metabolism. In one respect basal metabolism is just like blood pre uric acid. temperature, spots before the eyes, that tired feeling at times, and auto- intoxication—evervbody has it. A normal adult at rest in bed and fasting and under no excitement children should, require rather more fuel energy or calories than ordinarily | sedentary or dignified adults do, for the young persons need a quota _not jonly for the repair of wear and' fear but also for growth. So a boy of 14 should normally eat rings around his dad and a girl of 16 should show her mamma how to en joy life without piling on the siacker flosh : L 3 5 The basal metabolism rate is lower ansiety ) hody | = m: ';:.‘n:?n:rt-rhm Pass e By | sl normal standard in old age, | ’ F bout. one calorie |in cases of hypothryroidism. Tt is per hour per kilogram of body weight. | higher than the standard in cases of | A calorie is the amount of heat re.|¢iCPhthalmic goiter or hyperthryroid quired to raise the temperature of a | 181 €Ven when no apparent thicken | Kilogram of awater 1 degree - contl.|inE or enlargement of the thyroid | grade. A kilogram is equivalent to nd is present. about pounds. ! instruments ov forms of This heat production when the en. | LS een el e e gine is idling occurs from the oxida- | 1ASt Year or two for the convenient tion or combustion of fuel for the|US® of physiclans in measuring or a1 e | estimating hasal metabolism. When T cheulnsonsible FUNC | the determination of basal metabolism respiration, mainly. Therefore the|Was first proposed as a clinical or measurement of this minimal energy | Practical procedure the physiologists measurament of ihis minimal SNEKEY | considered the surface area of the e about 14 Tors o set | Dody, rather than body weight, an Teal of ‘the day, for the process of| impottant factor, For a while it digestion itself increases metabolism. | Iovked as though. at last. we had The measurement is made when the | found an earthly use for algebra. But individual is at rest in bed, for any |it soon developed that the body muscular effort, even sitting up in| Weight was mearly if not quite as bed or in a chalr, requires energy |accurate or dependable a factor in A horERseY MEtAB OliET the metabolism tests and so we fell It this basal metabolism be taken | back on simple arithmetic. ~Algebra, as the standard for comparison in|&after all. seems to be as essential estimating energy requirements. and |as the crossexamination questions in it is remarkably constant, as constant |4 income tax report as body temperature or pulse rate, | (Coright. 1926, it is simple to determine how MANY | mm——— calories a normal adult weighing 132 | pounds requires just to keep him | alive a day and prevent loss of body | weight. He weighs 60 kilograms, so he requires G0 calories per hour, or 1,440 calories for the day. But if he | exerts himself even to the extent of | turning over or sitting up in bed, | or talking or visiting or reading, he | | requires more caloriex. Physicians | ordinarily assume that an adult sick | abed requires around 1.800 calories as | a minimum maintenance dfet, and | from 1,800 to 2,500 calories a day for | convalescence. A soldier on the march or an ath- | lete requires 5,000 or 6.000 calories a day. | -1 Young, persons, {dren in their teens children who play ive, or especially | s actively as real | "My colored clothes wash brighter ~— this easy way 'S wonderful to watch everything come out so fresh and clean. I never knew colored things could get so bright and new-looking. And I don’t even touch a washl I just soak the wash in rich Rinso suds’.u Dirt and stains float off by them- selves. Clothesget whiter and brighter than I could scrub them. = Rinso is a granulated laundry soap, and it’s all I need on washday. No bar soaps, chips or harsh chemicals. Ilike jt because itsoftens the water andgives thick suds. So easy on my hands! They don't get a bit red or washworn. Try Rinso now—see what a won- derful help it is. Send a_postcard or letter to Lever Bros. Co.. Dept. A39, Cambridge, Mass., and they will send you, free, a fullsize package of Rinso—also a package of Lux for your fine fabrics. granulated that soaks T*thbu ;hlur:’:: u:'ubluh' 4 Madame’s Costume Is Much-Revealing whether she be attired for her bed, the morning, the ball or the opera. As never before “a lovely skin from head to foot” is essential to beauty. The loving care which woman once lavished on her complexion may now be extended to' the entire body—thanks to EAVENSON'S COLD CREAM SOAP. Eavenson's is a pure soap of “facial” quality combined with # generous measure of fine cold cream. J. EAVENSON & SONS, Inc. Camden, N. J. Makers of Fine Soaps Since 1856 EAVENSONS Cald Soap JUNE Willie Willis ; | content it would bri | growth | mentally up because [ teeth would | a hammer, an’ | “I'm eatin’ standin’ tried to see if grandm: bust if T hit ‘em with they did.” (Conyright. 1926, What Do You Know About It? cience Six. What i« the metric system? 2. 18 the metric system ever used in America . What is the chief character istic of the centigrade ther mometer? How long 18 a red? . What is a calorie” How long is an ell? Answers to these questions in tomorrow’s Star Shrinking Standard Measures. The need for standard weights ml‘ measures was recognized in the trade of even the ancient world. Today every government maintains official standards in the form of a vessel holding a standard quart, a platinum bar, a standard foot long, and so forth. Jt is difficult, though, to keep these standard measures from chang- ing shape. Tt has been found that a slight change in shape will accom pany the most imperceptible 4-h;|n;:v\_<; in temperature. A noted case is that | »f some steel balls maintained b GGovernment for gauging the diameter of pips and tubes. These standard balls are supposed to be perfect spheres, but by constant use it has! been found that the balls flatten a little on one side. or become slightly elongated. The difference would not be perciptible to the eve. but would show up when vou tried to pass the balls through a tube sup posed to fit them exactly. The cause and cure of this trouble is not vet known. vow what do vou know about that? wers to Yesterday's Questions. 1. The hands may be disinfected by vashing them in strong carbolic acid D . Rusty nails unless in contact with the sofl do not usually have tetanus germs on them: but tetanus from dust easily gains entrance in the wound made by a nail in the foot and, or, in fact, in any wound. . Typhoid fever germs are not spread by afr, but through drinking water. milk, or other food. | 4. Sleeping sickness as we know it | in America is a purely physiological | aftermath of influenza: sleeping sick- | ness of Africa is caused by micros- cople parasites conveved by the bite of the tse-tse fly. | 5. Agaragar is a gelatinized forny! of a seaweed used as a culture in| which to grow bacteria: it is also made_into a human food. 6. Beri-beri is a physiological dis ease caused by the eating of very limited diet poor in vitamines. | (Copyright. 1926.) 1 our | | | | Lin s 1 with the | sure FEATURES. Our Children Possession. One secret of happine little. Possession so Jittle, | the pai vet the hunger for it 4 ENAWINE | window ? of the soul. Bruce Barton geix hap piness out of window shopping. he cause he sees things he does not w i teacth | childven that game early it would bring much contentment into their present lives, to sayv nothing of the 10 old age things s prod we wanted nothin grow spiritually’ or We must continue to want | in order to make prog That | seems to he one of the principles of | growth in civilization, | Wants are o many and as varied | as the people who cherish them. | Some of them are worthless and | should be cast out and some of them are the rootspring of our 1 and should he fostered to fulfilim To this end we try to teach childrer he discriminating in the nt evervthing one se in the end. Ene is limited 1 our space in time is a short spe nust choose what we shall pos- and bend all our efforts toward that end and waste as little as we By Angelo Pals [ new dres | red thing to want | anyw I hate blue and 1 “You insiste e ont but 2 wanted F the secret of tor | happy life, &f i happy home. let’s tr children want choose them with ¢ in. sily is his ind you mmst part you . i &0 I tried Wanting i never we would An o Wouldn't he For his income, W hundy On which he i iy marke Euogland. Hurried tive ¢ . Learn fer ) words) through Fifty two weeks Placed elothes of second lin Note speeci promptly, throws it behind him s ks for the rocking horse his bi If he gets it he will toss that ach for the t thing should be given t and nothing is 1o become and e its possibihtios nother on, s If this IS cur ligently the child will learn not to ask what he i< not | Be wants to keep for some time. | s possession of one thing means the exclusion of something else | As the children grow in, intelligence and discrimination it is weil to let them choose what they will have at this time. Discuss the choice with them, whether it be clothes or vaca tion or party or gift. and let them abide by their choice Gussy begged for a bright red part, dress. “Are you sure you want that You know you will very soon tire of so striking u_gown. It is the only one vou can have this year. remem- ber.” % nt. She got it, hung it in Quaker Puffed Wheat Tastes different, looks different, is different from any cereal you have ever tasted Proves “food that’s good for you can be won- derfully delicious, too.” Almost 20% is bran but you would never guess it! Tastes like toasted nutmeats, oaly richer; melts like butter in the mouth. por L) evident is his that L time acq 1o hin out pos v rday’s “Puzziick.” e with) “Please, the neat precipice Will vou give e Kiss?™ sees!” Tripe Ragout. Wash thorough! o s of tripe and cut | strips for servin, in | tablespoonfuls « ter chopped onion add i ine fine 1 b then 1 know. That's the only one I of tomato and simmer ver 1ot and after wearing it twice |: E 1 piece the closet and asked for Provides vital energy clements of wheat in quickly digested form. Each grain is steam puffed to 8 times its natural size by an exclusive process. Obtain today at your grocery store. Treat the family to the change they crave. Variety is the secret of breakfasts that attract. Totally and wholly different from any other cereal known - new experience <+« to which the nation \ “Gaod to the last drop” 1t has pleas has suryendered A few years ago, known to only a few discriminating families and famous hotels—today, America’s largest sell- ing high-gradecoffee! A difference of extragoodness—full-bodied,delicious ~—that has come to Americans with thezest of anewadventure. Inall the ‘great cities of the country, the smooth richness of Maxwell House Coffee is bringing to thousands daily a new, unexpected pleasure, It offers you an experience you cannot afford to miss. ed more people than any other coffee ever offered for sale

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