Evening Star Newspaper, November 26, 1926, Page 44

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WOMAN’S PAGE Development of BY LYDIA LE BAROM There are two things parents have guard against with their children. is the forcing of them to do lings that are distasteful, and for which they have no natural bent, and other is to permit childish whims fancies to dictate what is best them. It is not easy to steer a course’ between these two paths. They run so close together. The question comes up continually— Does thechild actually this thing which appears best, or is it merely a passing whim, which he will get over later? Many a child has been helped or hindered all his life } use of the term. MANY SORY. I D THOSF COMPUL ENJOY HAS 2 Johnnie lessons, for done about it? take them be: music X is to be Should he be made to wuse later on he may re- gret not being able to play the piano or whatever musical instrumeng is un- der consideration” Is it an aversion to music that deters him from want ng to study is it merely that he BEDTIME STORIES Wher Who It isn't wise to keep one’ rries oneself much. Sometimes a help a whole lot, and to oo » sure to tell your worries it friend. had seen Brown's from a 3oy GROUSE S0 had Chatterer the S0 had cky the Man Coy had_gritted nd - snarled under his thought that Farmer had robbed him of a Fox was more glad He looked over ned teeth 1l Boy Reddy his breath. he knew t he happen Red Squirrel was quite besid Lt wasn't often that he had so many scolc one was to tie mer irown’s he scolded Old Man Co: colded Reddy Fox, he Jay and he scolded Blacky the Crow ested. Everything At th me time pleased that neither nor Reddy Fox would dine on hi scolded w Cold dislike to do Natural Abilities N WALKER. ates to be kept indoors while the “gang” of other boys is out plaving, and would he like to study it other- wise? A Child's Attitude. It takes a real understanding of the child to make the correct decision. Parents have to realize the child’s at- titude toward music apart from the question of lessons in it. If he likes music, some lessons will help to give him an insight into its beauty of har- monies and appreciation of the lassic compositions, even though he never becomes more than a casual performer him: Artistic Bes s well to have him take some les- 'sons if he shows any liking for music, and then decide whether Lo should study longer or not, according to his Progre and his mental attitude to- ward the subject in general. On the other hand, if Jackle is al- ways drawing things and you find that it is one way he has of express- ing himself, give him lessons in draw- nd painting instead of music. He may be an artist in embryo. But do not force him to study music or art or anything outside the scl 0ol curricu- lum just because other children are studying them. City children are not as much hampered by having to do what other children do as those wha live in a small town, where group studying is more usual. When all the children of a certain set are do- ing definite things or studying certain subjects outside of school, a child is often compelled by parents to join classes or take lessons just because 5 do. A Whim or Aversion are ugh _compulsory studies in school for children to cope with for them to get the discipline of | Ities and winning with There : an aversion to the thing parents wish, let the sub- | ject drop for a period. 1f the dislike |is @ whim it will pass, if it is an in- h nt aversion, it will persist even | when opportunities to do it under the most delightful clrcumstances are offered. HOW IT STARTED NEWTON. sid “Grass Widow.” In the eleventh century in England it was a law of the church that a widow must “remain under God's pro- tection _and “that is, mot mar, ar after the death of her husband. Such women were called “grace widows.” which often Wwent into the parish registers as | “grasse widowes.” This was the first Of more recent origin, however, 1s ither inelegant adaptation to i s i divorced woni Thi: kes | us to the days of the forty-niner: in | California, with whom it was not un- | common for men to *“board out” their Wives In the town while they went to If in work ml(-l dig for gold. Seeing humor in the situation, one of them unlquely re- ferred to the s tion “putting his widow out to gra: with refer- ence, of course, to pasturing of cattle. | The term evidently struck what }_uls | heen called the “American affliction of the funny bone,” for, applied to the rcreasing number of divorces, soon intrenched itself xicon { in our 5 | (Copyright. 1926.) BY THORNTON W. BURGESS Grouse. But Mr. Yes, sir, Mr. Grouse worried. You see, he wasn't at all sure that he ever would Grouse again. The appe: that” hunter with that te had destroyed all his faith in those two-legzed creatures called men. So Mr. Grouse looked forlorn and mourn- ful “I'll never see her again,” sobbed Mr. Grouse. “I'll never, never see her again. neighbor, Mrs. Grouse worried. vou will,” probably sald Sammy sec her more Chatterer | its to he “perhaps you'll see But they tell me those two- atures are very fond of “I konw it,” sobbed Mr. Grouse. “No one knows it better than I do. That hunter might just as well have killed her in_the first place. Reddy Fox or Old Man Coyote might just as well have caught her. I would rather furnish a hungry Fox with a dinner than one of those two-legged creatures, and I know Mrs. Grouse felt the same way.” “Fie, fie!” cried Sammy Jay. “Have you forgotten what happened | to Mrs. Grouse when Farmer Brown's | Boy found her frozen beneath the ! crust in the Winter? Ilave you for- gotten that?" | 7 Mr. Grouse had to admit that he “But that wasn't the same as * said he. “This is the dreadful hunting season now, and Iarmer Brown's Boy may feel differently.” “He may, but I don't believe he {will,” replied Sammy. “Now _stop { your worrying and as soon as I can (J.'ll let vou know all about Mrs. | Gro . | “How are you golng to know about | her”” asked Mr. Grouse. | “T'm going over to Farmer Brown's “;md find out,’ replied Sammy prompt- . ————e Salmon and Cucumber. This 13 a modification of an after- | noon tea sandwich. Allow onequar- ter of a cup of salmon meat, either fresh, boiled or canned, and one-half a | encumbgr with one-half tablespoonful of u sauce for making these din- | ner sandwiches. The bread should be | cut in very tiny shapes, either round or any other shape desired. The fish and cucumber ar choped and mixed with the sauce and the sandwiches made as usual. When these tiny bits of sandwiches are used as dinner ap- petizers they should literally not have more than two or three mouthfuls in h Little cutters | pretty dinner sandwiches. TEA one cup calls for another! suggestion for the pros- pective home bullder. This fireplace, with the arched cupboard on one side and the arched doorway on the other, makes a very nicely balanced archi- tectural grouping for the dining room wall. Fireplaces are especially to be coveted in dining rooms, since they give the room that furnished, cozy air which seems so hard to achieve there. Although this mantel is very plain, the effect of the whole group is unusually decorative. This room has walls painted dull lemon yellow and putty gray wood- work. The cupboard is lined with soft Jjade green and the floor is painted a grayish leaf green. The rug is very dark taupe. Splashes of color are seen in the china on the cupboard shelves and the old stenciled tray on the mantel. The lighting fixtures are pewter candle sconce: (Copyright. 1926.) Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Mrs. I. W. K. writes: “I have a problem which I hope belongs to your column. It s about my normal, well baby, 10 months old. lie is considered very good-natured and cries very little, but at times he will burst into an ac- tual scream of anger. If I put him down on the table to dress or undress him, when he is not permitted to do anything he wants to do, these occa- sions will provoke this outburst. 1 want to train him while he is still ung and break him of that habit. hat is to be my method? Spanking, scolding, or what form of punishment for one so young? Ile welghs 21 pounds, is 29 inches tall, has six teeth, stands up, and can walk with assist- ance. He coos and gurgles adorably and loves to cat. He has 28 ounces of milk daily, orange juice, soup with vegetables zwieback. e i so unusiual in his look plexion, light brown hair and bright blue eves. nt your help, for I abhor spoiled children.” Answer- but sometimes it helps a lot to just stop and think what would have the effect on you if you were a baby. Put- ing yourself in his wee shoes would solve a lot of problems that look like dark secrets to the conscientious mother. If you spanked the child, what would he learn? Nothing, except that when he cried you did something that made him cry harder. It wouldn't affect his crying much, but it would make his temper take on an uglier color. If any child who spanked for everything he does ever been helped to better behavior by it, I should love to know about it. The mother feels that hav- ing dome that duty she is exempt from any other, and she ceases to Worry about it. The baby has beén punished and that is all she is called upon to do, she thinks: Scoldi; ‘What happens to you when a person speaks In a cross, whiny or truculent tone? You want to answer in kind. If you are & baby, all you can do is scream a little more venomously. And vou do. But suppose mother smiles at you sweetly, is unruffled by your screams, goes on calmly about what she is do- ing, dressing or undressing, whatever it may be, puts you down quietly in vour bed and 1 s you alone. What happens then? become questioning, then fainter. You decide it's a lot of effort with mighty little result. And if you're a sensible baby—and I am, sure this husky baby is—you will stop crying and proceed about other and more lu- crative business. No baby will scream long when such screaming gets him nothing and leaves his mother unper- turbed. Such a method isn't punish- ment, but it brings the right results. o Cabbage and Pepper Relish. To one pint of mulx chopped cab- bage add one green and one red sweet pepper chopped fine, one teaspoonful of celery seed, one-fourth teaspoon- ful of mustard seed, one-half tea. spoonful of salt, and one-fourth cup- ful of brown sugar which has been dissolved in one-fourth cupful of vinegar. Mix thoroughly and serve in lemgon skins cut in halves and freed from the pulp. ir;ised Cabbage. Quarter the cabbage, parboil, then cool it. Pull apart the quarters, re- ject the outside leaves and the mid- tibs, season the desirable cabbage with salt'and pepper and put in a saucepan garnished with slices of bacon and containing one quartered carrot, one onion stuck with a clove, a faggot of herbs, two-thirds pint of consomme and serveral tablespoonfuls of stock fat for 2 pounds of cabbage. Cover | with slices of bacon, boil and then braise gently for 2 hours. etty soon your cries | decidedly | | cup—an after-diner coffee cup woul FRIDAY, NOVEMBER Gives Bache- Tors Tips on Picking Wives How to 3 = |DorothyDix First Note Whether the Girl Is Sweet or High Tempered; Watch How She Treats Her Family; | Check Up on Her Brain Power. | §§(YAN you tell me any sort of a thirty-third degree test that you can apply to a girl before marriage that will reveal if she has the objectionable traits that put the kibosh on things later?” asks a man. | You cannot tell with absolute certainty, son, what kind of a wife a girl | will make, because occaslonally a sweet young thing does turn a complete | mental and moral somersault on the way from the aitar and reverses all of her ways and habits and previous record: T have seen butterflies turn into grubs. I have seen lazy, selfish girls, who never had a thought for anybody but themselves, make of thmeslves | doormats for their husbands and children. I have seen girls who threw papa’s money away as if it were water become nickel nursers when it became their own money they were spending. SO you never can tell. Miracles do happen every now and then, but if 1 were a man I would not take any chance on one being worked in my behalf. I should try to be my own guardian angel, and when I went to pick out a life companion I should watch several points. e e s . First. T should ascertain whether the girl was sweet-tempered or high tempered, for the wife's temper is the barometer of the home. There is sunshine and fair weather in it if she is jolly and good-natured, and there are storms and hurricanes that make a man want to set sail for another port if she is peevish and cross. Watch out, then, for the girl who is nervous and whose voice gets a razor edge on it; who is irritated by little things, and who takes offense at trifies. She will make the sort of a wife who is cross and fretful, and who keeps her husband walking on eggs for fear of offending her. 1t you marry her, you will have to wipe your fect on the mat before you enter your own doorway; you will have to punch the time clock on ‘the dot, or get a bawling out for being late. You will have to furnish an alibi for every hour vou are away from home and live in a state of perpetual apologies for the things you have done that you should not have done and the | things that you have left undone that you should have done. * But the girl who takes life as it comes, the bitter with the sweet; who laughs when things go wrong, who can -atch up a substitute meal and get fun out of any situation, and whose geniality even thaws out grouches, will make the kind of a wife who turns matrimony into a pleasure jaunt, instead of an endurance test. Her husband will never be afraid to bring a friend home to dinner. Tler husband will never have to lie to her. Her husband will never have to live in the dread of precipitating a scene, and every time he thinks about being married to & woman who is a reasonable human being instead of a bunch of | nerves and temper he feels like burn.lng. jufs sticks to his luck, i 0 TIIE next thing I should consider was how much ballast in the way of brains the lady carried. If she were brilliant and talented and highly educated, so much to the good, but what would concern me most was how much good, hard, horse sense she had. Only fools are hopeless. If a woman has intelligence, she can be reasoned with. She can be brought to see her mistakes. She can be changed. an adapt herself to any environment. But the less sense she has, the mor set in her ways she is, the more convinced she is that her narrow viewpoint is the only outlook, and the more impossible it is to change her. Next, I should try to determine whether the girl carried interesting conversation, or whether she just twittered like winary bird. | The reason why most men wander from their own firesides is that they are bored to death by wives who have nothing on earth to talk about but the children, and the cost of meat and the back-door gossip of the neighbor- hood. And it is the man's own fault that he has this kind of a wife. Te picked her out. ny real line of | Therefore, if T were a man who was seeking a woman with whom 1! expected to spend many thousands of evenings I would be very sure that T had found one who made me sit up and take notice when she opened hex mouth, and who was so entertaining that I was thinking up things to talk over with her when I was away from her. Ca-a INJEXT, T should observe a girl in the bosom of her family, and seo it ler mother and sisters and brothers were afraid of her; if Angelina corrected ‘mother’s grammar and told mother where she got on'and off about things generally. 1¢ Angelina @id not permit father to wear his slippers or smoke in the parlor, and if little brother and sister slunk out of the room when Angelina entered it, I should go also while the going was good. For the girl who bosses her own family will boss her husband, and 1 should not care to be one of the meek, henpecked husbands whose wives always walk in front and tell them where they are going and where to sit in the street car. Finally, in picking out a wife I should take particular note of whether a girl can say a thing once and let it alone. For therein lies the,acid test | of the nagger. i And, although a woman has all other charms and virtues, they ave as | the cracKling of thorns under a pot if she nags. | And most of all would I notice whether the girl loved me well enough i to put my happiness before her own, for, after all, that is the great thing in marriage. The wife who loves is nearly always a successful wife. DOROTHY DIX. | (Copyright. 1926.) t i BEAUTY CHATS done with or without cold cream on | : A Cup Treatment. the face, though I think it a little| Here's a treatment not often used, | yore effective if cream is used. { probably because it takes more time | than massage, v-hich, however, isoften | Rosemarfe—An_exercise for reduc- | very helpful in toning up flabby or |ing shoulders and upper parts of the wrinkled skins. It is called the cup |arms is as follows: Place finger on the | treatment. tips of the shoulders and rotate th : ). or any small |@rms and shoulders until all the mus- You use an egE cun. OF ANy Sould | cles have been exercised. Repeat the exercise many times a day until there 18 no need for it. v BY EDNA KENT FORBES. | do. Tt must be antiseptically clean, which is quite a different matter from or it ordinary cleanliness. Dip it in boiling | Mrs. R. J. C.—You may permanently water before you use it. Now, press|Scar your baby if you try to bleach it against the skin until you feel a off the red mark on her face. | tr | They are also rich in energy. { and moderate bulge and hold it there. The pressure will draw the blood to the skin at this point, and when you remove the cup you'll see a red circle. Hold it on another part of the face until the same thing happens. And it the skin has any sort of eruptions, wipe the edge of the cup each time with peroxide or & little alcohol to make it antiseptic again; otherwise you might spread the infection. And keep changing the places where you put the cup—don’t repeat over a place until the color has become normal or vou might cause a little congestion there. It is supposed to be very good for wrinkles. I've seen it done, and cer- tainly the skin was stimulated wher- ever the cup had been pressed. And that was good for wrinkles. only know its good permanent effects by hearsay. I've fever given it a thorough trial. I you like, try it. Every one must find the treatment best suited to her complexion by ex- periment after experiment. Cupping cannot pull the skin, as unskillful massage can. Or, you might try tap- ping the face, This is stimulating and does not pull at the muscles. Cupping, as well as tapping, can be FOOD confection famed through th tions. Made after that requires Thanksgivi ree genera- a recipe the purest and most wholesome ents obtainable. For iving, of course. Hables of four weeks do not usually have much halr, especially on the front of their heads, neither are lashes always as tull or as dark as they will be later on. Eve.—At 18 years, with a height of | 6 feet 6 inches, your weight should be about 125 pounds. - Bitter aloes painted under the tips of the nails will usually cure you of the habit of biting | them. ———s Oyster Salad. One dozen oysters, half head celer chopped; half head lettuce, one-qua ter cup mayonnoise dressing. The oysters are first stewed in thelr own juice. Then the juice is drained until the oysters are quite dry. They are hen chopped and mixed with the | and the mayonnaise and served on lettuce leaves. Science for this new hy- gienic pad that discards easily as tissue — no laundry HERE {s now an exquisite suc- cessor to the old-time “sanitary pad” A new way that offers far greater protection. A way that ends the old problem of disposal. Eight in 10 better-class women | mow use “KOTEX.” ! Discards as easily as a plece of tissue. Nolaundry. Noembar- rassment. Five times as absorbent as ondi- sary cotton pads. Deodorizes, thus ending ALL .danger of offending. Obtainable at all drug and depart- ment stores simply by saying “KOTEX.” You ask for it without hesitancy. Package of 12 costs coly a few cents. Proves old ways a needless risk. In fairness to yourself, try k. KOTEX No laundry—discard like tissue S 26, 1926 What Do You Know About It? Daily Selence Stx. 1. From what is cocalne de- rived: 2. From what is oplum de- rived? 8. From what 1s hashish de- rived? 4. From what is.asafoetida derived? . 6. From what is digitalis de- rived? 6. What is a non-medicinal use of castor oil? Answers to these questions in tomorrow’s Star. The Deadly Upas Tree. Fiction is full of references to the deadly upas tree. According to legend, it grows in desert places, where its shade is tru: ought. But all hade are sup- posed to die later In hor This is not quite all related to the poi and to the poison tree of Florida. If you touch it vou get a poisonous blister. If it comes to that, our own country has some queer superstition Many persons believe that if you touch a bit of poison ivy you must eat some in order to counterict its effects. Now, what do you know about that? Answers to Yesterday's Questions. 1. Alpha Centauri is & huge sun, the nearest to our sun. 2. Vega i8 a large sun, rather dis- tant, but one toward which our sun is now headed; Vega, however, is trav- eling away and will not be there when we are, An ecliptic is the plane of the wrth's orbit extended to meet the sun and inclined to the celestial equator of the sun. 4. The angle of the earth's axis to its orbital plane is inclined 23 degrees, A nebula is a faint, self-luminous, Jaseous mass. 6. Orion is a great constellation of stars, resembling the flgure of a hunter bending his bow. (Copsright. 1926.) trition Nuggets l Marshmallows lend themselves to a wimber of very attractive dishes. From favorite toasted marshmallows marshmallow fllling for sweet sandwiches or for the top of a cake, nurshmallows are always ready to 1dd to the attractiveness of a meal. When you serve them take Into ac- ount their value. ' This means sim- Jly to be careful not to overdo the iumber of starchy foods in a menu n which marshmallows fizure. Sleep 1s an important aid to diges- n. Not every one realizes that a wmber of hours sleep should he pportioned carefully as food iten. For example, children from | 5ix to eleven years should have be- inning with the vounger one from to eleven hours sleep. Children m iwelve to thirteen should have | Those from thirteen to four- | should have nine and one-half | those from fourteen to fifteen | and one-half. Most people think of olives merely s something to give attractive flavor meal. As a matter of fact, olives iave a distinct place in the dlet. xht ones especlally may be de- sended upon to sive alkaline food, hus helping to balance the diet ac- ‘ording to special and alkaline ele- ments. When The he o vou read that some foods ine and some acid in their tion, do not jump at the n that the alled ac ‘o0ds are harmful to the health. | word avid, used in this connection, | simply tells of a normal and impor- | ant action that these foods have in the body. In other words, a well- | alanced diet must have some acid | ome alkaline foods in t. i A fruit cup or fruit cocktail served | the beginning of a meal adds normously to its food value. A ‘ombination, for example, of pineap- ple. grapefruit, orange and apple, will contribute first an important di- sesting prineiple to a good supply of it least two of the most important vitamins, two minerals such as lime for making hard bones and phos-| phorus for keeping the body in good | irim. It takes at least three very | Wholesome fruit acids and an appre- | ble supply of alkaline food to help in balancing the diet in this regard. If a member of your family needs to be built up and is tired of eggs and milk, make a study of different ways of serving them. The hiding of milk is fairly well understood, but eggs may also be given. If the pa- tient is willing to eat one or two eggs, at breakfast, he may take egg sandwiches or an egg salad for luncheon and a baked custard pud- ding for dinner. After he is espe- cially tired of eggs, they may have to be hidden a little more carefully, in which case the basis of the pud- ding_may be rice, taploca or corn- starch and the custard part may tucked in as a final touch. FEATU 150 YEAR RES AGO TODAY Story of the U. S. A. BY JONATHAN War Board Speeds Army Aid. PHILADELPHIA, November 1776.—The entire Government of the United States—for that is what Con- gress actually is—Iis standing loyally behind Gen. Washington in his cn deavor to keep a fighting force in the field in our War for Independence. John Hancock, president of Congress is virtually President of the United States, and committees of Congress such as the War Board. the Marin Committee, and the Committee of cret Correspondence, are in fact the War, Navy and ign or State D partments of this new Natioi difficulties are many, age is strong, upon to support thei chief in ever in their power. War measures are taking their attem tion now to the exclusion of every- thing else. The Pennsylvania Committee of Safety is-ordered to call out the Asso ciators of Philadelphia and four near- by counties for six weeks' service. Volunteers who enroll to ser the United States until March 10 are sured that they wiil discharged even before that date if the situation of public affalrs will possibly admit of it. Gov. Patrick Henry of Virginia is requested to order the Virgini: Light Horse troops to march with all There s a certaln wise man who manufactures an excellent food prod- uct. He 1s careful to announce that his product in its composition has a wide variety of food elements. He is also careful, however, to point out that because it is composed chiefly of very digestible starch this prod ct is oftered as a vehicle for carrying other nourishing food, such as egg and milk and fruits. There is a real lesson for the housewife in this little anecdote. We all remember how our mothers and grandmothers used to put the old-fashioned pills or unpleas- ant tasting medicine in fruit juic molasses or whatnot. In other they were used as vehicles for & the desired elements into the achs of those who needed attention. Our modern way of using the ve hicle idea is even more interesting. Like the man who makes @ point of his starchy product being a good car- rier for milk and eggs, the housekeep- er may well devote some little study to planning just hew many food ve- hicles she has at her command. A well known illustration of this fact is that which has to do with hiding A. RAWSON, JR expedition to . Gen. Mifflin, now ¥ headquar to o1 nents, is ord to purpose unt him in ca ss 0 i Y in this eity; | principles inimical to' the canse | America. and with views of avan land extortion. have monopolized and | engrossed shoes. stockin s\ othe saries of the Armw whilst he Continent, fighting f f their ¢ " arve o injuries of the weatbe wlement season.” Co requests the Pennsylva today to adopt immediat for preventing like per ctices in the fut P. Board today calls for the Virginia artillery reg armed with muskets anid ord Pennsylvania n. Washingto: fieldpicces be instructs the nploy as many [ versons to scour the {city’s shons and buy all the army | necessities they can find, and reques: the Council of Safety to appeal to the housekeepers of the entire State for as many blankets and woolen stock ings as they can s (Cosri join Gen. Wasl here frov courage e ren w ! possible I 2 [ An 1 st | that | requires 1 s shil s¢ governed 1 ne sol posed to. th bayonets, | the br. { tonging | commissary nd tate, milk for children. Many mothers make rice pudding or ice cream chiefly for the purpose of introducing milk in the children’s internal cconomies. Quite seriously, this is 2 good wor ing principle for the one who wis to study the practical side of dietet e. Decide first which foods vor mily should have represented fn tie dietary. If for any reason it is no: serve these foods in thei original form, decide upon the vehicles which will transfer them to the stom achs of the various members of the tamily. One interesting point in this plan 1« that it works both ways. For example the food which we desire to introduce into the dietary is usually an import ant one. On the other hand, the fonds Ithat are used as the vehicles for this o something more than ve v usually are important in their own rights. This making use of certain foods for the administration of others is only one of the advantages to he de vived from eareful study of fuod com binations. It is, however, an import- ant one and one that las perhaps | been given less attention than others | which are more obvious in their ap- peal You take the stairs... TWO at a time. You eat breakfast with a gulp and a promise, and grabbing your hat you’re off for town. But that is no way to start the day. No, sir! Take time to eat your breakfast, leisurely. Prop up the morning paper on the sugar bowl. Fruit. Then cereal. Then eggs and a crisp slice of bacon. And plenty of hot coffee. Chase & Sanborn’s Seal Brand Coffee. As the proverb has it, “Good coffee and good tempers go together.” Try it and see!l Chase&Sanborn's SEAL BRAND COFFEE "®| Chase & Sanborn’s Seal Brand Tea is of the same high quality. Now!aBathroom Paper 20 times sterilized [ at no added cost to you} Northern Tissue comes toyouas softand whiteand clean as surgi- cal gauze. For, it is made from YOU may never Prauritis Ani or other ill con- sequences if you de notusethissterilized bathroom paper. But, inasmuch as this extra hygienic protection costs you nothing—why take chances! Ask your Grocer or Druggist the pure northern balsams—20 times sterilized at 250° of heat.

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